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Title: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 07, 2010, 09:36:41 AM
Former ATF Agent Pleads Guilty (to stealing money, planting drugs and framing innocent people.)
ktul.com ^ | 05/06/2010 | ktul.com

Posted on Friday, May 07, 2010 12:31:49 AM by The Magical Mischief Tour

________________________ ________________________ ____________


Tulsa, OK - A Tulsa federal agent pleads guilty. He admits to stealing money, planting drugs and framing innocent people. His arrest is part of a larger investigation into possible corruption within the Tulsa Police Department.

34-year-old Brandon McFadden confessed to the crimes as part of a plea deal with the US Attorney's office. McFadden will also be a witness for the prosecution in other cases against law enforcement officers.

Former ATF Agent Brandon McFadden finally has his day in Tulsa Federal Court and pleads guilty to a host of shocking charges including the possession and conspiracy to distribute drugs, possession of a firearm during drug trafficking, and money laundering.

Neal Kirkpatrick is McFadden's attorney.

"He was involved for a couple of years in some dealings with TPD and he wanted to be able to look his children in the face and this is the first step," Kirkpatrick says.

Prosecutors say McFadden stole money, planted drugs and framed innocent people partly because of greed, a clear abuse of both his power as a federal agent and an abuse of the public trust.

"I would agree with that. In his confession, he asked for a special enhancement for abusing his position of trust and he will," explains US Attorney Jane Duke, the prosecuting attorney in the case.

McFadden's arrest is part of a larger investigation into possible corruption in the Tulsa Police Department and at least one TPD officer will also face trial.

In the meantime, several convictions have already been thrown out and innocent suspects freed because of tainted or fabricated evidence and witnesses, like Brandon McFadden, who just plain lied under oath.

McFadden is out on bond under house arrest until his sentencing hearing on July 28.

________________________ ________________________ _

disgusting. 

Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 07, 2010, 09:43:36 AM
Disgusting is right.   >:(
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Tito24 on May 07, 2010, 09:44:16 AM
Skin him, and have people stone him to death...
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 07, 2010, 09:47:32 AM
bet that happens more often than people would like to think it does.  skip jail, it's the gator pit for him :D
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 07, 2010, 09:49:40 AM
bet that happens more often than people would like to think it does.  skip jail, it's the gator pit for him :D

Damn right it happens more than you think. 

To them we are all civilians, not citizens.  The ATF is another agency that should be eliminated entirely. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: MRDUMPLING on May 07, 2010, 01:15:40 PM
Don't get me started on the BATF, if one government law enforcement agency shouldn't exist it is definitely them!
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: BM OUT on May 07, 2010, 01:34:25 PM
Randy Weaver is laughing his ass off somewhere saying 'I told you so".
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Purge_WTF on May 07, 2010, 02:04:22 PM
  It's too bad the Branch Davidians aren't alive to do the same.

  Damn the ATF.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: 240 is Back on May 07, 2010, 03:21:55 PM
they bulldozed the building and MELTED and BURIED the DOOR to the place the next day, so that nobody would ever be able to count the rounds fired INTO the waco complex.

Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 07, 2010, 06:04:38 PM
lol.  The CTs never end. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: chaos on May 07, 2010, 06:30:26 PM
they bulldozed the building and MELTED and BURIED the DOOR to the place the next day, so that nobody would ever be able to count the rounds fired INTO the waco complex.


It's a double edged sword there.....had those people just come out fo the compound a couple of months earlier..........
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 07, 2010, 06:40:49 PM
It's a double edged sword there.....had those people just come out fo the compound a couple of months earlier..........

And had Vernon Howell not been a child molester. . . .
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Skeletor on May 07, 2010, 08:16:34 PM
Some older info but gives insight as to what the scumbag did:

Tulsa Police Officer, Former ATF Agent Accused Of Corruption
Posted: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 7:14 PM EST
By Lori Fullbright, The News On 6


In federal court records, a federal prosecutor accuses the police officer and agent of making up a drug bust, then lying about it on the witness stand, which sent a man and his daughter to federal prison.

Records say a confidential informant also testified at the trials of Larry Barnes and his daughter Larita but later claimed he lied along with the officers.

Records say after the informant passed a lie detector test, a judge released the Barneses from prison and dismissed their case.

Records show Larita Barnes was sentenced to 10 years in prison after a confidential informant named Ryan Logsdon, Tulsa police officer Jeff Henderson and ATF agent Brandon McFadden all testified that the informant bought meth from her and her father for $3,000.

Later Logsdon - the informant - claimed he lied, that the officers actually gave him the cash and told him to say he bought it from the Barnes.  Logsdon says the officers told him the Barneses were drug dealers, but the cops couldn't make a case against them.

Records show Logsdon passed a polygraph test so Larita was released after serving nearly two years behind bars.  Her father had been sentenced to five years. He was also released and their cases were dismissed.

While she was in prison, Larita's son, 9-year-old Hershel Clark, was killed by an accused drunk driver when the boy got off the school bus near Mannford.  He was the only boy of five children, and since Larita was in prison in Texas, she wasn't allowed to attend the funeral.

Court records show Larry Barnes told the judge at his sentencing, "I don't take drugs.  I don't use drugs.  Ryan Logsdon is a liar. H e's a proven liar."

Now, another person accused in a drug case where Agent McFadden was involved wants his case dismissed.  Records show McFadden testified he found nearly six grams of cocaine on Allen Shields.

Shields' attorney argues if McFadden could have lied in the Barneses' case, he could have lied in Shields' case as well.

In an unrelated case, Shields was recently ordered to stand trial for holding his girlfriend at gunpoint, while the woman's 9-year-old daughter hid in a back room and called 911.

Prosecutors say Shields is also a suspect in the disappearance of Tulsan Angie Tucker and the murder of Tulsa businessman Neal Sweeney, although he's not been charged with either.

Records show a federal prosecutor from Arkansas has been and still is investigating possible corruption among some officers in Tulsa.  No charges have been filed against either officer Henderson or Agent McFadden.

Henderson has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation by an outside agency. Agent McFadden is no longer working for the ATF.  He resigned in September.



http://www.newson6.com/Global/story.asp?S=12237659
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: brooklynbruiser on May 07, 2010, 08:32:59 PM
If you are an agent and you are caught breaking the same laws you are supposed to uphold, you shouldn't be able to plea bargain. It's an insult to everyone.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 02:19:38 AM
they bulldozed the building and MELTED and BURIED the DOOR to the place the next day, so that nobody would ever be able to count the rounds fired INTO the waco complex.


that's not all, they also removed the portion of the concrete safe room that they blasted a hole in killing the remaining women and children that could have survived the fire otherwise.  There's another documentary that goes through that in slow motion and shows the detonation separate the propane tank explosion.  Pictures of the breach still exist but that they took the time to remove the breach area from any analysis says everything.  When the went to do explosive analysis of the reinforced concrete safe room, the blast area was the only area missing.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 02:28:01 AM
lol.  The CTs never end.  
this isn't really a nutty CT imo, but if you really want to call it that, you'll be calling out mostly conservative/right leaning people for it.  back in the 80's they are the ones that raised the biggest questions, concerns and accusations.  many I agree with and many put into rightwing funded documentaries.  you should watch some of them, they're filled with testimony from both people involved and proffesionals who would know and or did know, cia, fbi etc.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: drkaje on May 08, 2010, 04:10:12 AM
lol.  The CTs never end. 

Every single time some whackos get corrected there's a conspiracy theory that turns them into martyrs.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 05:00:51 AM
Every single time some whackos get corrected there's a conspiracy theory that turns them into martyrs.
not sure I understand your point, who is the martyr in this?  :-\
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2010, 05:14:02 AM
Waco was truly a disgusting act by the vile pigs in govt. Jack bootery at its worst.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 05:19:26 AM
Waco was truly a disgusting act by the vile pigs in govt. Jack bootery at its worst.
I'll have to remember that, call it "Jack Bootery" so people don't get their panties in a bunch ;D


I should have studied to be a lawyer :D
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2010, 05:21:11 AM
I made it up just now thinking about it.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2010, 05:37:08 AM
Why do people get upset when we call them jack boots? 

That's what most of these bitches are.  Get any one of these punks alone wo a gun badge and ten of their buddies next to them and they aint swat. 

Most of these agencies are nothing more than high paid street gangs.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 05:46:13 AM
Why do people get upset when we call them jack boots?  

That's what most of these bitches are.  Get any one of these punks alone wo a gun badge and ten of their buddies next to them and they aint swat.  

Most of these agencies are nothing more than high paid street gangs.
well that's what I'm willing to call them when they are busting into some home with a full squad, shooting dogs and ruining lives over a little pot.  But when they're saving someone from a psycho taking hostages, I don't call them that then.  So there's a disconnect somewhere...  You have all these states with masses of people trying to legalize pot.  Even mothers forming groups to support it lol... That's probably because by now almost everyone knows someone or knows of someone that had their lives totally fucked over for smoking some fucking goddamned weed.  how lame is that?  People want them to go after the real criminals, not people just living their lives and blowing a little steam off with a bowl.  The people have the power, it's time they start using it with the initiative power they have.  Get what you want on the ballot and cram it down the department's throat
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Skip8282 on May 08, 2010, 09:06:06 AM
well that's what I'm willing to call them when they are busting into some home with a full squad, shooting dogs and ruining lives over a little pot.  But when they're saving someone from a psycho taking hostages, I don't call them that then.  So there's a disconnect somewhere...  You have all these states with masses of people trying to legalize pot.  Even mothers forming groups to support it lol... That's probably because by now almost everyone knows someone or knows of someone that had their lives totally fucked over for smoking some fucking goddamned weed.  how lame is that?  People want them to go after the real criminals, not people just living their lives and blowing a little steam off with a bowl.  The people have the power, it's time they start using it with the initiative power they have.  Get what you want on the ballot and cram it down the department's throat



Couldn't agree more.  It's a shame that a little bit of weed can fuck with a person for life.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 09:15:33 AM

Couldn't agree more.  It's a shame that a little bit of weed can fuck with a person for life.
I would call it outright goddamned fucking retarded :D  And I don't even smoke the shit.  Beer man myself ;D  But I doubt beer is any better than pot.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 08, 2010, 09:53:04 AM
this isn't really a nutty CT imo, but if you really want to call it that, you'll be calling out mostly conservative/right leaning people for it.  back in the 80's they are the ones that raised the biggest questions, concerns and accusations.  many I agree with and many put into rightwing funded documentaries.  you should watch some of them, they're filled with testimony from both people involved and proffesionals who would know and or did know, cia, fbi etc.

This

Quote
they bulldozed the building and MELTED and BURIED the DOOR to the place the next day, so that nobody would ever be able to count the rounds fired INTO the waco complex.



= nutty CT.  "They" means who?  The federal government?  So Clinton, Reno, etc. ordered that the building be bulldozed and "MELTED and BURIED the DOOR" the day after the child rapist Vernon Howell burned down his complex to cover up shots being fired into the complex.  I don't know anyone even typing that nonsense can do so with a straight face. 

And I don't really care about political affiliation.  Conservatives can believe in nutty conspiracy theories just like liberals. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 11:11:44 AM
BB, you really need to research this before shooting your mouth off on it.  It's NOT a crazy CT... There is so much damaging material it's retarded; it would have anyone of the rest of us in prison for 6 consecutive life sentences.  Go ahead and laugh, it's easy to do when you haven't done a lick of research on it. Again, you're mainly accusing conservatives/the right of being nuts on this.  They did most of the work uncovering the truth.  So keep on with it BB.  Tell us why conservatives are off their rocker on this?  It'll be amusing to hear you tell us why the right is totally wrong on Waco.....
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 11:14:28 AM
BB, quick question.... I've taken the time to post several documenteries on Waco.  Did you watch even part of one? 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2010, 11:16:07 AM
The govt made outlandish claims to justify their actions and could have easily ended the situation by waiting it out.  There was no justification for using the tank over there.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 08, 2010, 11:19:40 AM
This is an internet message board, so I will shoot my mouth off as much as I like.   :)  

So let me see if I understand this.  Someone makes the ridiculous allegation that the federal government bulldozed the compound and melted and burried the door to cover up how many shots were fired into the building, and I'm supposed to disprove this?  lol.  

Uh . . . no.  

No I did not watch the documentaries you posted.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 11:20:14 AM
The govt made outlandish claims to justify their actions and could have easily ended the situation by waiting it out.  There was no justification for using the tank over there.
And even that's a gross oversimplification of what and why, but I know what you mean.  For those who have actually studied Waco, fucking balls it's hard to listen to jackasses just wave it off as a crazy CT...  This is nothing remotely on the level of alien/ufo/reptilian shit etc...
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: 240 is Back on May 08, 2010, 11:22:59 AM
they might have melted and buried and bulldozed for another reason.  who knows.

Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 11:25:44 AM
This is an internet message board, so I will shoot my mouth off as much as I like.   :)  

So let me see if I understand this.  Someone makes the ridiculous allegation that the federal government bulldozed the compound and melted and burried the door to cover up how many shots were fired into the building, and I'm supposed to disprove this?  lol.  

Uh . . . no.  

No I did not watch the documentaries you posted.
oh, aren't you special then ::)

"No I did not watch the documentaries you posted"

Nothing much else needs to be said, you admit not giving enough of a shit to spend the time researching what happened.  You don't care to listen to the people involved or the experts who brought valued testimony to the case.  

By all means, shit on the right with this.      
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 08, 2010, 11:35:44 AM
oh, aren't you special then ::)

"No I did not watch the documentaries you posted"

Nothing much else needs to be said, you admit not giving enough of a shit to spend the time researching what happened.  You don't care to listen to the people involved or the experts who brought valued testimony to the case.  

By all means, shit on the right with this.      

Special Ed maybe (to quote my kids). 

This is funny.  So I don't watch some youtube (or whatever) clips you posted and this is a problem?  lol.  As if whatever you posted is somehow the authority on what happened.   ::)

I remember Waco.  I followed the story very closely.  I read quite a bit about it.  I could care less what you think about some nutty conspiracy.   

I've also read Danforth's report.  http://www.cesnur.org/testi/DanforthRpt.pdf 

I know, I know.  It's a fraud.  He was paid by Janet Reno.  He's part of the conspiracy, yadda yadda. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 08, 2010, 11:42:21 AM
whatever, go to hell.... They were not youtube clips they were posted on youtube you fucking assclown.  They have been televised many times.  You're just the kind of fucking tard that thinks just because someone uploaded it from their dvr it invalidates it ::)

maybe I'll just wait for the next time it shows up on TV for you to take it serious?  hahaha, not.....
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 08, 2010, 11:48:05 AM
Oh look.  A meltdown.  How unpredictable.  lol. 

Yes, I will continue to believe that Vernon Howell was a child rapist, that Vernon Howell set fire to the complex, that Vernon Howell and others murdered and wounded ATF agents, and that Vernon Howell is responsible for the Waco tragedy. 

And I will continue to believe that the allegation that the government bulldozed the complex and burned and buried doors the day after as part of a mass federal government conspiracy is another loony conspiracy theory. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: 240 is Back on May 08, 2010, 12:09:04 PM
I dont know what the Waco "conspiracy" was ???

They had a chance to arrest him alone jogging or soemthing the day before, and passed.  instead they sent a team to the house and the Davidians started firing.

After a standoff, the feds moved in, and we have video to show they did a hell of a lot of firing...then they destroyed the crime scene in less than 24 hours.

Maybe you know of other crime scenes where 50+ died, where they bulldoze in 24 hours.  LMAO

Of course.... some of you on this thread are CLINTON VOTERS .... haha libs... of course you're going to defend waco...

Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: Dos Equis on May 08, 2010, 12:14:38 PM
I dont know what the Waco "conspiracy" was ???


Yes you do. 

Quote
they bulldozed the building and MELTED and BURIED the DOOR to the place the next day, so that nobody would ever be able to count the rounds fired INTO the waco complex.



Educate yourself.  Read the Danforth Report.  And stay off the nutty CT websites. 
Title: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 05:36:48 AM

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly
By Erin Alberty

The Salt Lake Tribune


Published: December 24, 2010 06:54AM

 
Shouts break the evening silence.

“Police! Search warrant!”

Officers burst through the door. A man appears across the room. Metal glints from his clasped hands. Shots echo from a police-issue Glock 22. Todd Blair slumps to the floor.

“Five seconds,” said Blair’s mother, Arlean. “In five seconds, he was dead.”

Officers entered Blair’s home Sept. 16 during a drug raid when he stepped into the hall, wielding a golf club, police video shows. Ogden police Sgt. Troy Burnett shot Blair, 45, in the head and chest.

The shooting was deemed legally justified.

“They could have handled it a lot better,” Arlean Blair countered. “They could have tasered him. They could have done a lot of things other than shoot him.”

Investigation reports obtained by The Tribune depict an operation that took some unexpected turns away from protocol before that one explosive moment.



Grounds for search • Whether Todd Blair was a meth dealer or just a well-connected addict is a matter of dispute. Investigators from Weber and Morgan counties began watching Blair in 2009 after hearing that he was letting drug dealers live at his home in exchange for their products, according to the search warrant request. There were previous reports of meth traffic to and from the home, near 5900 South and 2600 West in Roy.

Investigators gathered evidence that it was Blair’s roommate, Melanie Chournos, buying and selling meth — a factor in the no-knock search that would precede Blair’s death.

Detectives later saw Blair leaving for short, nighttime trips, which suggested drug trades, they wrote. Two tipsters claimed that they had seen Blair — not just Chournos — handing drugs to customers.

Investigators, however, didn’t report seeing Blair make a transaction.

“He was not a dealer,” Arlean Blair insists. “I know that he used ... but he was not a drug dealer. A drug dealer has lots of money and nice things. If you looked in his house, he had nothing. He gave everything away to people who were having trouble.”

Two of Blair’s friends claimed they never saw him even use drugs, but others told police he had caved in to his meth addiction.

“He was paranoid,” Candice Coburn — Blair’s on-again, off-again girlfriend — is quoted as saying in a police interview. “His brain was fried. He would punch and yell at invisible people and me.”

Coburn has told The Tribune that she described no such delusions to police, nor did she ever witness them.

“He really was a nice person,” she said. “We had our fights, but ... he was always giving, always helpful.”

On Sept. 16, the day of Blair’s death, Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force investigator Shane Keyes received word that Blair had 2 ounces of heroin and would be getting more that night. Keyes asked 2nd District Judge Scott M. Hadley for a no-knock, nighttime search warrant because house “lookouts” were known to give warning when police were nearby. Meth dissolves quickly, Keyes added, and “if given the opportunity, Chournos will destroy the evidence.”

However, the warrant doesn’t mention that Chournos had already moved out of Blair’s home — a development officers noted in interviews after his death.

“I had been told that there was some ... domestic violence,” said Weber County sheriff’s Sgt. Nate Hutchinson, who was involved with the raid.

Blair was living alone. Because of the reports of violence, officers decided to wait until he left, pull him over in his Pontiac Grand Am and then search the empty house.



“Dynamic entry” • That night, officers saw people come and go from the home. Finally, a man matching Blair’s description got into the car with a woman and drove away.

Officers pulled them over, but instead found it was Blair’s friend, who had been staying with him. Police released the couple and returned their attention to Blair’s home.

The SWAT team prepared for a “dynamic entry” — breaking through the door and subduing anyone inside.

Normally, that involves extensive planning, officers said in investigation interviews.

“A PowerPoint presentation is typically put together (and) a briefing of everybody sitting around the round table in our office ... and all the details are laid out as far as the suspect, the location, the route in, the ... evacuation points and ... where the closest medical [facility] is,” officer Brandon Beck said in a transcribed interview with county investigators.

Instead, the team gathered at a nearby retirement home to go over the plan.

To do a dynamic entry without the in-office briefing is “absolutely not our standard,” said Burnett, the officer who shot Blair, during an interview with investigators.

On the video, minutes before the raid begins, an officer can be heard asking the group, “Did somebody grab a copy of the warrant off my desk?”

“Oh, don’t tell me that,” Burnett replies. He then tells the other officers, “He doesn’t have a copy of the warrant.”

Because the warrant was for a no-knock search, the copy wasn’t necessary to enter the house, Weber County Attorney Dee Smith said.

“Someone could have easily hurried and brought it back [from the office],” he said.

There is no time limit for when a warrant should be presented to a subject, agreed Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner — “it depends on the situation” — but generally when a warrant is served, “It’s in [officers’] possession at the time.”

As the raid played out, Blair wouldn’t ask for the warrant anyway.



Officers rush in • Burnett was assigned to lead the team in. It wouldn’t be his first use of deadly force — in 2006, he shot and killed white supremacist William Glen Maw after Maw fled from a traffic stop and then turned and pointed a gun at Burnett. Then-Weber County District Attorney Mark De Caria commended him for his bravery.

Outside Blair’s house, Burnett held his .40-caliber Glock 22 “at the low ready,” with a round in the chamber. Six other officers were behind him. It was about 9:30 p.m. when they began to yell, “Police! Search warrant!”

After three strikes on the door, it burst open.

Accounts of what happened next vary by a second here and a foot there.

Those minutiae matter, Smith said.

“We actually broke [the video] down frame by frame,” he said.

The second man in, Ogden officer Jared Francom, said Burnett had gotten “about one foot in the door” when gunfire erupted.

Burnett recalled:

“The door flew open. I was first in the door. I went to the right to ... a living-room area. ... I moved to the right to dig my corners.

“[The number of] feet from the front door to where I first saw him, I don’t know ... eight feet from inside the front door, but I had went ... to the right. I don’t know how far.”

Blair appeared in the door frame holding a MacGregor Lite golf club in the stance of a right-handed batter.

“He had some silver thing. ... I thought it was a sword or something,” Burnett said. “It was silverish and thin.

“I didn’t think about saying words. I just thought about not getting hit, or slashed or whatever.”

The distance from Burnett to Blair has been estimated between “a little more than an arm’s length away,” according to Burnett, to 8 feet, as reflected by a scale diagram showing positions of the shell casings.

“There’s no way to say an exact measure,” Smith said.

Also important is whether Blair was moving toward the officers. Blair initially wasn’t in the doorway but appeared about a second later — technically an “approach,” Smith said. Then he appears to take “about two steps into the doorway with the club raised,” Smith said.

Burnett didn’t remember Blair advancing.

“I’m sure that I was moving forward,” he said. “I don’t know if he was. He was just — it seemed like he was just kind of still. ... I can’t recall him chasing after me. I don’t recall that. He was just right there.”

Francom said, “It appeared to me that he was coming toward us. But there wasn’t much time for him to make too much of an advance before.”

Ultimately, Smith said, it was Burnett who didn’t have time to wait.

“Our best conclusion is it would have taken less than half a second for Mr. Blair to close that gap and strike the officer,” he said.



Aftermath • Video after the shooting shows an officer putting handcuffs on Blair and searching for a pulse. Burnett orders a call to medics and stays in the front room, while other officers search the house.

“Everybody out,” Burnett says. “This is a different crime scene now.”

It isn’t clear from evidence logs whether investigators found the drugs they were looking for. There was paraphernalia and “a small, pink plastic bag with a white crystal substance.”

But neither the substance nor its amount is identified, and officials with the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force didn’t return The Tribune’s calls for comment.

Ogden police investigated the shooting independently and agreed it was justified.

“He had less than a second to make a decision with a guy swinging what looked like a sword in his hands,” Greiner said. “We train these officers regularly on how to defend themselves and be able to go home at night.”

He said his department also reviewed strategies for no-knock search warrants.

“We’ve discussed a couple of ways as to how we can be more careful,” he said without elaborating. “The problem is, what you’re looking for could easily be destroyed and there’s generally weapons. ... I just don’t know an easy way to get in there.”

Blair’s family has obtained a copy of the video and reports. Neither Arlean Blair nor her two daughters have viewed them.

“No way,” said Todd Blair’s sister, Delene Hyde. “How could I watch my brother’s murder?”

The family has discussed suing police but hasn’t finalized anything.

“We decided to let it rest until after Christmas,” Arlean Blair said. “Christmas is a special time in our family — him [Todd Blair] included.”


Editor’s note: The story has been updated to reflect that Candice Coburn’s remarks were quoted from police reports. Coburn has since told The Tribune that she never saw Blair “punch and yell at invisible people” and made no such statement to police.

Utah’s deadly force law

76-2-404. Peace officer’s use of deadly force.

(1) A peace officer, or any person acting by his command in his aid and assistance, is justified in using deadly force when:

(c) the officer reasonably believes that the use of deadly force is necessary to prevent death or serious bodily injury to the officer or another person.

(2) If feasible, a verbal warning should be given by the officer prior to any use of deadly force under Subsection (1)(c).



Video online

In order to show the public how the events unfolded, The Tribune has posted a video of the raid online at www.sltrib.com.

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/50932722-76/blair-burnett-officers-police.html.csp#


________________________ _________-


Disgusting.   I used to respect cops when I was a kid.  Now -  well - we will leave that alone.  

Taxpayer financed street gangs.

  

Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 05:37:52 AM
This is total fucking bullshit.  "Protect and serve"  my ass. 

They murdered that guy.   


Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 05:50:24 AM
Wonder why these "bravest" are not going after bloods, crips, ms-13, vatos loco, etc?   


We all know why now don't we.   Fucking pussies. 
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on December 31, 2010, 06:21:50 AM
The worst is when they shoot those little dogs about 5-6 times for their own sick pleasure as I just cant figure out how a shitzu or a Russell Terrier or even a Lab, for that matter, could be a threat.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 06:24:53 AM
The worst is when they shoot those little dogs about 5-6 times for their own sick pleasure as I just cant figure out how a shitzu or a Russell Terrier or even a Lab, for that matter, could be a threat.

"Life on the line"    ::)  ::)   
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Skip8282 on December 31, 2010, 08:04:25 AM
Looks legit to me.  I don't have any problem with this one.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 08:11:26 AM
Looks legit to me.  I don't have any problem with this one.

Come on skip.  They did not have a warrant.   The guy was probably thinking his place was being burglarized by people and screaming police.   

These guys were armed to the teeth with helmets, assault rifles, kevlar vests etc.   

Dude had a golf club. 

Even if he did have drugs?   So what?    Its not like this was a hostage situation or thre was danger of imminent violnce to others.   


I'm totally against the militarization of the police force.         
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Skip8282 on December 31, 2010, 08:18:51 AM
Come on skip.  They did not have a warrant.   The guy was probably thinking his place was being burglarized by people and screaming police.   

These guys were armed to the teeth with helmets, assault rifles, kevlar vests etc.   

Dude had a golf club. 

Even if he did have drugs?   So what?    Its not like this was a hostage situation or thre was danger of imminent violnce to others.   


I'm totally against the militarization of the police force.         



They had a warrant, just not on them and didn't have to as it was no-knock.  We know now he had a golf club, but the only thing the officers could see was a metal glint.

It's easy to sit back and play Monday morning quarterback.  When you're the cop whose life is on the line, and you have a second to make a decision, it's completely different.  Talk is easy.

We can agree that a lot of times the cops use way too much force, but in this case, I think they were justified (just going off the vid).
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 08:26:03 AM
The only reason their "life was on the line" was brecause they broke into a guys house in the middle of the night.   If they knocked on the door and the guy fled into the batheroom and then came out with a club, I could see that.

I'm just imagining a scenario where in the middle of the night my house gets busted in to and I a startled and grab my gun.   

Do I deserve death for trying to protect my house? 

I totally disagree with no-knock warrants.   

I don't think obtaining drugs as evidence is worth the risk of loss of life.   

I'm very conservative on a lot of issues, but not on criminal procedure stuff.   I know a few cops and know how they "build" these cases, an its often on bullshit evidence, like this case.         
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Hugo Chavez on December 31, 2010, 09:18:57 AM
saw this on another forum.  It looks like flat out murder to me.  Same with the father that was shot holding a hose sprayer ::)
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: 240 is Back on December 31, 2010, 10:01:29 AM
Obviously, Obama hasn't responded from his vacation in his pseudobirthplace.

No surprise there!
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 10:14:03 AM
That's cuz a cracka wuz clipped.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: SAMSON123 on December 31, 2010, 10:42:34 AM
Wonder why these "bravest" are not going after bloods, crips, ms-13, vatos loco, etc?   


We all know why now don't we.   Fucking pussies. 

Don't you know that the Bloods, Crypts, MS-13, etc etc are "tools" of the police ?!?!!?!?. They were created by the Police and CIA as a way of terrorizing a neighborhood/city/state thereby justifying hiring more police... Also these "gangs" are given and allowed to sell and transport drugs for the CIA/police for the sake of funding their coffers. With this created "crime atmosphere", new totally brainless police are being hired to give the illusion of dealing with crime. These new cops react like they are playing a video game and the HUMAN is just a character on the screen that means absolutely nothing and is ripe for being killed. Sadly the only ones being killed are the innocent citizens and notice the cops murdered without even a flinch in this video.

I have said this before that nothing in america is as it seems. Few are the HONEST things...much are the DISHONEST things. Much to the CHAGRIN of others...this criminality is what CAPITALISM brings. when a society is built upon GREED and WANT then there is nothing that society will not do to achieve that end..EVEN IF IT IS ILLEGAL AND/OR DEADLY!!!
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 10:53:15 AM
I thougfht the same thing.  Was like a video game.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: 225for70 on December 31, 2010, 11:00:01 AM
I thougfht the same thing.  Was like a video game.

Shit is crazy, There's a thread about this topic on the G&O...

They say that this killing is justified...

However, it doesn't look right in my book. They gave the guy no change to surrender.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 31, 2010, 11:03:24 AM
I think that guy had no idea what was going on.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: 225for70 on December 31, 2010, 11:05:00 AM
I think that guy had no idea what was going on.

http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=360404.msg5096912#msg5096912

Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Hugo Chavez on December 31, 2010, 03:29:25 PM
spot on lol...

Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Dos Equis on December 31, 2010, 07:06:12 PM


They had a warrant, just not on them and didn't have to as it was no-knock.  We know now he had a golf club, but the only thing the officers could see was a metal glint.

It's easy to sit back and play Monday morning quarterback.  When you're the cop whose life is on the line, and you have a second to make a decision, it's completely different.  Talk is easy.

We can agree that a lot of times the cops use way too much force, but in this case, I think they were justified (just going off the vid).

I agree with this.  Cops had to make a split second decision. 
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 12, 2011, 05:54:16 AM
New case of this bullshit.   "Protect and Serve" my ass.   Cops are mostly organized and taxpayer financed street gangs and mafia rackets. 

________________________ ________________________ __________________

Medical care blocked for Marine Veteran killed by SWAT - update
KGUN9-TV ^ | May 11, 2011 | KGUN9-TV


________________________ ________________________ _________________


TUCSON (KGUN9-TV) - 9 On Your Side has uncovered startling new information in the case of a man SWAT team members killed Thursday.

Medical attention was standing by to try to save Jose Guereña.

Paramedics waited more than an hour.

Then deputies sent them away

By then Guereña was dead.


(Excerpt) Read more at kgun9.com ...

Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 12, 2011, 05:55:41 AM
Former Marine killed by SWAT was acting in defense, family says
kgun9.com ^ | May 11, 2011 | Joel Waldman



Jose Guerena, 26, was killed when a SWAT team came to his house to serve a search warrant

Guerena's wife, Vanessa, said the SWAT team did not identify themselves

Thinking it was a home invasion, Guerena got his rifle

Now, Pima County Sheriff's officials are refuting original claims that Guerena fired at the SWAT members. In fact, they confirmed his safety was still on when his gun was recovered. Also, officials said that reports that some SWAT officers' shields were riddled with bullets are also untrue.

SWAT gunned Jose down with 71 rounds fired in just about seven seconds; officials said they did not expect Vanessa to be home with their four-year-old son, Joel, who ended up witnessing his dad's death. Now he has questions about what happened, like so many others.

"The only thing he asked me, 'Mom, my dad a bad guy? They killed my dad! Police killed my dad? Why? What did my dad do?'" explained Guerena.

Jose's relatives want his children to know he did his best to be a great husband, dad and patriot.


(Excerpt) Read more at kgun9.com ...

Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 12, 2011, 06:01:10 AM
SWAT team fired 71 shots in raid
Fernanda Echavarri
Arizona Daily Star Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Wednesday, May 11, 2011 12:00 am
BENJIE SANDERS / ARIZONA DAILY STAR



 Lt. Michael O'Connor, of the Sheriff's Department, discusses the shooting death of Jose Guerena. .


..The Pima County Regional SWAT team fired 71 shots in seven seconds at a Tucson man they say pointed a gun at officers serving a search warrant at his home.

Jose Guerena, 26, a former Marine who served in Iraq twice, was holding an AR-15 rifle when he was killed, but he never fired a shot, the Sheriff's Department said Monday after initially saying he had fired on officers during last week's raid.

Six days after Guerena was shot, few details about the investigation that brought the SWAT team to the southwest-side home Guerena shared with his wife and their two young sons are known. Guerena's role in the narcotics investigation is unclear and deputies would not comment on what was seized from his home.

Three other homes within a quarter of a mile from Guerena's house, were served search warrants related to the investigation that morning. The addresses and the names of people who live in the other homes have not been made public.

Vanessa Guerena says she heard noise outside their home about 9 a.m. Thursday and woke her husband who had just gone to bed after working a 12-hour shift at the Asarco Mine, she said. There were no sirens or shouts of "police," she said.

Guerena told his wife and son to hide inside a closet and he grabbed the AR-15 rifle, his wife said.

The department says SWAT members were clear when identifying themselves while entering the home.

"Tucson is notorious for home invasions and we didn't want to look like that," said Lt. Michael O'Connor of the Pima County Sheriff's Department. "We went lights and sirens and we absolutely did not do a 'no-knock' warrant."

When five SWAT members broke through the front door Guerena was crouched down pointing the gun at them, said O'Connor.

"The suspect said, 'I've got something for you,' when he saw them," O'Connor said. Guerena's wife denied he said that.

Deputies began shooting.

A deputy's bullet struck the side of the doorway, causing chips of wood to fall on his shield. That prompted some members of the team to think the deputy had been shot, O'Connor said.

The Sheriff's Department put in a call to Drexel Heights fire at 9:43 a.m. requesting assistance with a shooting. But crews were told to hold off.

Guerena was dead by the time they were allowed in the house, fire officials said.

Vanessa Guerena vividly remembers seeing her wounded husband.

"When I came out the officers dragged me through the kitchen and took me outside, and that's when I saw him laying there gasping for air," Vanessa Guerena said. "I kept begging the officers to call an ambulance that maybe he could make it and that my baby was still inside."

The little boy soon after walked out of the closet on his own. SWAT members took him outside to be with his mother.

"I never imagined I would lose him like that, he was badly injured but I never thought he could be killed by police after he served his country," Vanessa Guerena said.

The family's 5-year-old son was at school that morning and deputies say they thought Guerena's wife and his other child would also be gone when they entered the home.

Guerena says there were no drugs in their house.

Deputies said they seized a "large sum of money from another house" that morning. But they refused to say from which of the homes searched that morning they found narcotics, drug ledgers or drug paraphernalia. Court documents showing what was being sought and was found have not been made public. A computer check on Guerena revealed a couple of traffic tickets and no criminal history.

Guerena was a Tucson native and Flowing Wells High School graduate. He joined the U.S. Marines in 2002. He served two tours in Iraq in 2003 and 2005 as part of the Yuma-based MWSS-173 under direct supervision of Master Sgt. Leo Verdugo.

Verdugo was with Guerena's family Tuesday afternoon. He gave them a Marine Corps jacket and gloves to use at Guerena's burial.

"He was an excellent Marine, with a bright future ahead of him," Verdugo said.

"We had just bought a home and he was working graveyard shifts and overtime just to help pay the bills, we were just starting to make this house our home," Vanessa Guerena said.

"I know I can't have him back but I want justice. I want explanations for what happened," she said.

Contact reporter Fernanda Echavarri at fechavarri@azstarnet.com or 573-4224.


________________________ ________________________ _____________-


Unbelievable.   I wish I was on the jury for this.  I would vote for the death penalty for every one of these murderous disgusting pigs. 


   
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: whork25 on May 12, 2011, 06:17:35 AM
Wonder why these "bravest" are not going after bloods, crips, ms-13, vatos loco, etc?   


We all know why now don't we.   Fucking pussies. 

Thank you
Fuck these pricks
Agree 100%
Seen to many times. These fuckers are all though when they outnumber some guy but when there is a risk they themselves may be in danger they dont do shit.
Somehow they always feel thretened and forced to act violently when the opponent is a easy prey. But when their opponent is some who might actually be a threat  somehow they always keep cool. Fuck em i hope they get their entitlements and pentions cut
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 14, 2011, 11:30:21 AM
SWAT raid fatal drama is revealed in 911 call
Story
Audio
Fernanda Echavarri Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Saturday, May 14, 2011 12:15 am
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Submitted Photo
Jose Guerena
Related Audio Clips


The wife of a Tucson man killed in a Pima County SWAT raid May 5 pleaded for five minutes with 911 dispatchers to send an ambulance for her mortally wounded husband, audio records show.
Often through tears and sometimes in broken English, Vanessa Guerena, tells 911 operators that her husband had been shot by a "bunch of people" who opened the door of their southwest-side home and "just shoot him." Meanwhile, dispatchers worked to determine if she was calling from a house where the SWAT team was serving a search warrant, audio released Friday by Drexel Heights Fire Department reveals. It takes about an hour for waiting medics to know what happened, and the man is dead before fire crews are allowed into the home.
Jose Guerena, 26, a former Marine, was sleeping after the graveyard shift at Asarco Mission mine about 9:30 a.m. when his wife woke him saying she heard noises outside and a man was at their window. Guerena told his wife to hide in a closet with their 4-year-old son, his wife has said. He grabbed an AR-15 rifle and moments later was slumped in the kitchen, mortally wounded from a hail of gunfire.
For about five minutes after Guerena was shot, his wife stays on the phone trying to explain what happened and asking for an ambulance.
More than a week later, few details about the investigation that brought the SWAT team to the home Guerena shared with his wife and their two young sons are known. Details of the search warrant have not been made public and deputies would not comment on what was seized from the home.
The Pima County Sheriff's Department has provided no details about the investigation that prompted the raid and little information about the moments leading up to 71 gunshots being fired at Guerena, whose gun had the safety on. He was shot 60 times, doctors told the family. Initially the Sheriff's Department said Guerena fired at officers, but they retracted that this week. Drexel Heights provided audio of the 911 calls after the Star filed a public records request.
Vanessa Guerena, 27, continuously asks the operator to "please, please" send somebody to help her husband in a call in which she seems desperate, frustrated and panicked and says she could hear people talking outside.
About a minute into the 911 call a dispatcher who says she is with the Sheriff's Department comes on and asks if the SWAT team was at her house. Guerena sounds confused, and says her husband isn't talking to her anymore. She then talks over two operators who are trying to figure out if the house in the 7100 block of South Redwater Drive is among those targeted to be searched that morning as part of an investigation.
The operator asks again if there were law enforcement officers at her house and Guerena says yes, that they're outside. She then adds that they had come inside earlier, shot her husband and pointed a "big ol' gun" at her. She grabbed her son and worried she would be shot.
"Please send me an ambulance and you can ask more questions later, please!"
Guerena tells the dispatcher that her husband had returned home about 6:30 a.m. after work and was sleeping.
Prompted by the dispatcher, Guerena says her husband was shot in the stomach and hands.
The dispatcher asks Guerena to put her cheek next to her husband's nose and mouth to see if he's breathing, but she replies in Spanish that her husband is face- down.
The operator tells Guerena to grab a cloth and apply pressure to his wounds, but the wife responds frantically: "I can't! I can't! There's a bunch of people outside of my house. I don't know what the heck is happening!"
A dispatcher asks if the people outside are the SWAT members. "I think it's the SWAT, but they ... Oh my God!" Guerena says.
A dispatcher asks that she open the door for the SWAT, but Guerena replies that the door was already opened by police.
"Is anybody coming? Is anybody coming?" she asks.
The operator tells Guerena help is on the way, but they're still trying to figure out what happened.
"I don't know, that's it, whatever I told you, that's it," Guerena says.
Just after the five-minute mark, Guerena's end of the line goes silent.
The two dispatchers spend about four minutes talking to each other and calling out for Guerena while trying to figure out if the call is coming from the same residence where the warrant was served. At the end of the 10-minute 911 call, a dispatcher says she has confirmation that Guerena is outside with deputies on the scene.
Other audio records Drexel Heights released to the Star Friday indicate the agency dispatched a medical unit at 9:43 a.m. but was told by the Sheriff's Department to hold off.
Dispatchers said there were several addresses where the SWAT team was going that morning and they were not sure if this house was one of them, the audio shows.
The Sheriff's Department dispatcher said she had not received any requests for medical help from deputies on scene. Drexel Heights fire dispatcher asked: "You don't want us going in, right?" The sheriff's operator then said: "I don't know what is going on. You guys go ahead and hold off until we know what it's going to be."

The Sheriff's Department operator said people at the scene wanted the medical help to stay back because they might be dealing with a "barricaded subject."

Three other homes within a quarter mile of the Guerena house were served search warrants that morning as part of the sheriff's investigation. The addresses and the names of people who live in the homes have not been made public. However, the Sheriff's Department has said they found drugs and money.
Guerena was a Tucson native and Flowing Wells High School graduate. He joined the Marines in 2002. He served two tours in Iraq in 2003 and 2005 as part of the Yuma-based MWSS-173.
 
Contact reporter Fernanda Echavarri at fechavarri@azstarnet.com or 573-4224.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 04:10:43 AM
West Point grad shot, killed at Nevada Costco
united states military academy at west point 12 July 2010 | 0 Comments

From the Las Vegas Review-Journal:

The man shot by police outside a Summerlin Costco store on Saturday was a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point with a master’s degree from Duke University, friends said.

Army veteran Erik Scott, 39, was at the store near Charleston Boulevard and the Las Vegas Beltway with his girlfriend before three officers fatally shot him in a confrontation.

Friends and an attorney speaking on behalf of Scott’s relatives, described him as a good man from a military family. His father was in the Air Force, and his grandfather fought in World War II, friend Mike Pusateri said.

“The most loyal, honest, trustworthy, salt-of-the-earth guy you could meet,” said Pusateri, 38. “You only meet one or two of those kinds of guys in your life, and Erik is one of them.”

Scott worked for Boston Scientific, a medical devices manufacturer, as a sales representative for the company’s pacemakers. Attorney Ross Goodman, who represents Scott’s family, said Scott was one of the company’s top sales employees.

Pusateri and Goodman said Scott and his girlfriend were at the Costco because they were moving in together and wanted to buy the things they needed. The two men declined to discuss the events that led to the shooting.

According to Las Vegas police, officers were called to 801 S. Pavilion Center Drive at 12:47 p.m. by a store worker who said a man was destroying merchandise. Police were told the man had a gun.

Capt. Patrick Neville described Scott as “kind of going berserk.” Workers evacuated the store. Officers stopped Scott outside as the customers were leaving.

Neville said an officer tapped the man on the shoulder and identified himself as police. Scott then spun around and reached for a gun, law enforcement officials said.

“They ordered him to the ground,” Neville said of the officers on Saturday. “He does not comply with that order. He reaches for the weapon, pulls the weapon out, at which time, the weapon was out of the waistband.”

Three officers fired multiple times, killing Scott.

One witness interviewed Saturday and three others interviewed Sunday by the Review-Journal gave accounts that differed from what police described.

With a few minor variations, the witnesses recounted matching sequences of events. The witnesses interviewed did not see what happened inside the store that prompted workers to call police. Three of the witnesses, upset by the event, asked that their names not be published.

Once Scott was outside, none of the witnesses saw him brandish a weapon or make any movement that would seem like he was brandishing a weapon.

The first witness already had made his purchases and was waiting in line for a worker to check his receipt when he saw an officer enter the store. The officer whispered something to the worker checking the receipts. The first witness then heard that employee turn to another employee and say, “He said we should let him through.”

The four witnesses described a calm rush of customers exiting the front of the store after Costco workers told everyone to leave.

Attorney David Amesbury said he arrived in time to see shoppers leaving. He described the customer exodus as being “like the aftermath of Disneyland.”

A customer told Amesbury that he couldn’t go in, so the attorney waited on a bench west of the entrance. He said he had a clear view of two officers standing beside the entrance with their guns drawn.

All four witnesses said they were within 20 feet of the store’s main entrance. They said Scott walked out of the entrance with the crowd.

They described an officer shouting at Scott, then a quick succession of gunshots.

The witnesses differed in their recollection of what one of the officers said.

Amesbury heard, “I told you to stop. Stop.”

Two witnesses interviewed Sunday heard, “Drop it.”

A fourth witness, interviewed Saturday, heard, “Get down,” “Put it down,” or “Get out of the way.”

A second anonymous witness said Sunday he saw Scott pull up his shirt and turn toward the shouting officer. Then he saw the man get shot, drop to his knees and fall face-first in front of the entrance.

“There wasn’t even time for someone to react,” the second witness said. “The guy didn’t pull a gun. There was no gun in his hand, there was no gun on the ground.”

The second witness said he was interviewed by homicide detectives and gave them the same account.

The first anonymous witness also didn’t see Scott make a threat.

“I certainly did not see the guy do anything with a gun that would threaten anybody,” the first witness said Sunday. “It appeared to me that if he had guns on him, that they were literally in his pocket or in his waist.”

The first witness also was interviewed by homicide detectives about the shooting.

Amesbury said he did not see the man get shot, but, “When I go around the corner, I see this guy laid out. I didn’t see a gun.” Amesbury’s view of the shooting was blocked by stone pillars. He was not interviewed by police.

Before the shooting, Scott was walking with a woman that three witnesses thought was his girlfriend. They said she became distraught after the shooting. The incident also left the witnesses shaken.

It’s just incredible “with all these people around that Metro would provoke something there,” the second witness said. “I don’t want to second-guess the police, but wouldn’t it have been better to confront him out at his car?”

After the shooting, some people in the crowd panicked. An elderly woman was knocked down and cut her elbow in the chaos, the second witness said.

Only Scott was struck by gunfire .

Police said Scott had two handguns on him when he was shot. Goodman said Scott had a concealed-weapons permit.

Pusateri said his friend was a “safety freak” around guns. He said that “absolutely not in a million years” would Scott be careless with them around others.

Scott graduated from West Point, in New York, in 1994 and was stationed for a time at Fort Hood, Texas, as a tank platoon leader. In 2003, he graduated from Duke University in North Carolina with a master’s degree in business administration.

Friends said they noticed nothing strange about Scott in the days before the shooting.

On Friday, Scott’s vehicle was struck by another vehicle while he was rushing a pacemaker to Summerlin Hospital Medical Center, Pusateri said. Scott was not injured in the collision, and a firefighter took the device from the crash scene to the hospital, he said.

Friends were distraught and puzzled as to why police shot and killed Scott.

“He’s a stand-up guy in the community,” Goodman said. “This guy is not somebody to put himself in a situation like that.”

Pusateri, who also sells medical devices, said Scott worked closely with patients in his job. He called Scott’s job the “pinnacle” of the business.

“It’s very, very sad,” Pusateri said. “I’m shocked by it. It’s the tragic loss of a great man.”

Contact reporter Lawrence Mower at lmower@reviewjournal.com or
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 04:17:44 AM
Atlanta Woman, 88, Shot Dead in Drug Raid

Posted by Tim Lynch

Today’s New York Times reports on another drug raid gone awry.  Kathryn Johnston thought criminals were breaking into her home–so she retrieved a handgun and shot at the people who were at her front door.  As it turns out, the men at the door were cops on a drug raid.  The officers were wounded, but they returned fire and killed Ms. Johnston.  According to the Times report, the cops involved may have lied to get the search warrant and may have lied about the shooting afterward.  These incidents are far more common than most people believe, as this Cato raidmap shows.

Tim Lynch • November 28, 2006 @ 12:01 pm
Filed under: General; Law and Civil Liberties
 Www.Cato.org


Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 15, 2011, 04:46:43 AM
I guess there is no comment from the morons that were all for this shit....
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 04:48:29 AM
I guess there is no comment from the morons that were all for this shit....

The drug war is total bullshit.   
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Deicide on May 15, 2011, 05:07:16 AM
I agree with this.  Cops had to make a split second decision. 

Anything to support state authority, right Beach? ::)
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 05:12:56 AM
I don't support this swat crap.   It's pure bullshit.   
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 15, 2011, 05:31:30 AM
Anything to support state authority, right Beach? ::)
bb is pure neocon but doesn't even know what that means, what do you expect?
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 05:32:51 AM
Just once I'm hoping for some dude like in the professional to take out a whole swat team when one of these bullshit no knock warrants go to the wrong house and terrorize some innocent family. 

Until that happens, these jackboots and bitches w badges will only get worse.
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 15, 2011, 05:39:42 AM
Just once I'm hoping for some dude like in the professional to take out a whole swat team when one of these bullshit no knock warrants go to the wrong house and terrorize some innocent family. 

Until that happens, these jackboots and bitches w badges will only get worse.

great movie
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 05:39:56 AM
Oh another thing - guess who is the pofs sheriff in pima county?   Take a long guess? 

No other than that disgusting fat pofs dupnik who trashed rush limbaugh, blamed talk radio for the giffords shooting etc. 

The far left pofs posters on this site like benny and blacken were praising that scumbag to the hilt for that.  Ill bet they won't say shit about this dead marine at the hands of the states' modern say praetorian guard. 
Title: Re: Police are Out of Control - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 07:42:44 AM
Co-defendant: High-ranking cop stole from hookers
San Francisco Chronicle ^ | May 14, 2011 | Justin Berton




PLEASANT HILL -- The former commander of a law enforcement task force in Contra Costa County robbed prostitutes whose operations were competing with his own brothel in Pleasant Hill, his co-defendant in a drug theft case told investigators.

The former commander, ex-state Department of Justice agent Norman Wielsch, said prostitutes and drug dealers deserved to have their money stolen, said Christopher Butler, a private eye in Concord and Wielsch's former colleague on the Antioch police force.

In a 34-page narrative that he wrote for investigators detailing his alleged criminal exploits and obtained by The Chronicle, Butler also said a woman accused of prostitution had told him that she had sex with Wielsch in exchange for having charges against her reduced.

In 2009, at Wielsch's suggestion, the woman helped the task force commander and private eye set up a massage parlor on Gregory Lane in Pleasant Hill that fronted for a brothel, Butler said.

Wielsch, 50, and Butler, 49, were charged in February with stealing drugs from evidence lockers in Contra Costa and selling them. Separately, Butler has been charged with arranging the false drunken-driving arrests of men who were targets of his investigations firm. Wielsch and Butler have pleaded not guilty.

Lawyer's denial

.......


(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on May 15, 2011, 07:48:41 AM
You're quickly becoming one of my favorites! Keep up the good work 333386!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 07:57:54 AM
You're quickly becoming one of my favorites! Keep up the good work 333386!

I try to be as honest as I know how to be.   I know sometimes I piss off some of the real  GOP or Bust types, and obviously piss off the far left commie types, I only go by my own experiences in lower westchester (Yonkers, New Ro., Mt. Vernon) as well as NYC (Bronx, Brooklyn) experiences for my belief system.

I grew up with a ton of terrible people.  About 35% became cops, 15% firemen, 10% mafia, 20% moved away, 20% the rest of us.

I know the deal all too well.  The guys I grew up with who became cops are far worse than those who pursued crime as a living.   I say this regrettably as I was and am still friendly with a lot of them.   Every single firehouse and police station in Yonkers is littered with BMW's, mercedes, etc.  Coincendece?   Hardly.   

The cops I know, and have known since 10 y/o, are worse than any gangster you will ever see on tv.   I'm not kidding.   I have seen and have been witness to things that would make the average taxpayer puke for months. 

                         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 08:16:11 AM
What is funny is that people like Benny, mal, Blacken, et al attack me endlessly for attacking Obama.   what they dont grasp is that obama is part of the police, tyranny, authoritarian  police state, than anyone.   

Because obama has darker skin than bush, these I D I O T S like benny, mal, blacken, straw, etc, think he has their interests at heart.  They are suckers and dupes.   People like Judge. Nap., RP, Celente, etc know the deal, yet because of racial alliegiance, the suckers still follow obama.         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on May 15, 2011, 08:25:03 AM
What is funny is that people like Benny, mal, Blacken, et al attack me endlessly for attacking Obama.   what they dont grasp is that obama is part of the police, tyranny, authoritarian  police state, than anyone.   

Because obama has darker skin than bush, these I D I O T S like benny, mal, blacken, straw, etc, think he has their interests at heart.  They are suckers and dupes.   People like Judge. Nap., RP, Celente, etc know the deal, yet because of racial alliegiance, the suckers still follow obama.         

I've got an aunt that loved Obama, it boggles my mind.  What's truly strange, is the worse Obama gets or the stranger his policy the more she supports him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on May 15, 2011, 08:33:46 AM
What is funny is that people like Benny, mal, Blacken, et al attack me endlessly for attacking Obama.   what they dont grasp is that obama is part of the police, tyranny, authoritarian  police state, than anyone.   

Because obama has darker skin than bush, these I D I O T S like benny, mal, blacken, straw, etc, think he has their interests at heart.  They are suckers and dupes.   People like Judge. Nap., RP, Celente, etc know the deal, yet because of racial alliegiance, the suckers still follow obama.         
You get so convoluted when you try to tie shit to the left.

Just because you really want something to be doesn't make it so.

You should be more honest with yourself.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 08:35:22 AM
I've got an aunt that loved Obama, it boggles my mind.  What's truly strange, is the worse Obama gets or the stranger his policy the more she supports him.

1 My dad called me last night.  Cops has a check point in yonkers last mnight license and reg.  My dad is like 65 y/o old school - and said to the cop -
 
" Whats going on a hostage sitation?"   told me the cop was totally rude to him and my mom and was a dick about the the license and registration, etc.  my dad has busted his ass his whole life and the thought of some pofs cop being rude to him makes me want to take that asshole out on the spot.   i'm sick of cops.  99.9% of them are pofs assholes in need of getting KTFO'd for about 5 months straight, and then, maybe they get their badge back.   I say this as someone who knows dozens of cops and go to their houses for BBQ's etc.   I know cops who stage drug busts to frame people, place guns on scenes, rip security cameras out wall to hide the assaults they commit on people, hide in the squad car, etc.

If someone is looking for me to be sympathetic to cops - sorry charlie.    When I see these lazy grossly overpaid thugs with guns get out of the car and treat the general public with some dignity and respect, I will change my mind.      
  
Did you ever see My KRS 1 thread on obama?

He nailed it more than anyone.

Check this out.

       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 08:36:44 AM
You get so convoluted when you try to tie shit to the left.

Just because you really want something to be doesn't make it so.

You should be more honest with yourself.

Yawn - Sheriff Dupmick, DA Niphong anyone?   
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Dos Equis on May 15, 2011, 08:57:59 AM
Anything to support state authority, right Beach? ::)

Nope.  Never said that. 
Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Dos Equis on May 15, 2011, 08:58:52 AM
bb is pure neocon but doesn't even know what that means, what do you expect?

Neither do you nor a lot of other people.  So now it means "police state"?  lol . . . .
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on May 15, 2011, 09:01:33 AM
If you want to argue that the US is a police state, the biggest piece of evidence is the incarceration rate.

No one on Earth now or in history has put its people in prison like us. It really is out of control.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 09:04:46 AM
If you want to argue that the US is a police state, the biggest piece of evidence is the incarceration rate.

No one on Earth now or in history has put its people in prison like us. It really is out of control.

Agreed 10000000000000000000000%


Its totally ridiculous.   Jail needs to be reserved for violent criminals ans little else.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 12:28:08 PM
Teacher cleared of sex assault reveals his nightmare
dailymail.co.uk ^ | 5-15-11 | Katie Silver





A PE teacher falsely accused of molesting a 12-year-old schoolgirl has spoken of his pain at telling his children he was going to be arrested.

Sean Lanigan was pulled out of a class in Fairfax, Virginia, and told he was going to be arrested for allegedly carrying out the offences.

In reality his 'crimes' had been invented and the schoolgirl bore a grudge against him.

Despite being cleared of all the offences, the teacher’s $125,000 legal fees still haven’t been repaid by the state and he is struggling to get his life back.

The young girl claimed that the teacher had taken him into the gym and said he was going to ‘treat her like a Queen’ and briefly groped her.

This line, it turns out is a lyric from one or her favourite music bands, the Ataris.

He had told his ‘victim’ off for being abusive on the school bus and the girl apparently told her friends: ‘Mr Lanigan’s a jerk. I’m going to make him pay.’

When it came to trial, the jury took only 47 minutes to decide he was not guilty. Such a short deliberation in a child sex abuse case is extremely rare.


They described it as an ‘easy decision’ since ‘there was no evidence.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RUDE BUOY on May 15, 2011, 12:31:05 PM
unreal
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 12:42:47 PM
Raw video: Sheriff's Office interview on fatal SWAT raid
KGUN9 ^ | 5/13/2011 | Jim Shields, Forrest Carr


________________________ ________________________ ________



This week, KGUN9 News reporter Joel Waldman interviewed Pima Co. Sheriff's Department Lt. Michael O'Connor about the shooting of Jose Guerena, who died last week when a SWAT team tried to serve a search warrant at his Tucson home. The victim's wife Vanessa has stated that neither she nor her husband knew that the people breaking into her home were deputies. She said that her husband, who pointed a rifle at deputies, was only trying to defend himself. Guarena never got off a shot. But SWAT team members fired a total of at least 71 rounds, leaving the home riddled with holes. Ms. Guerena was hiding in a closet at the time with one of the couple's children. Neither was hurt.

A clip of raw video from that interview is presented in the Video Gallery at left. Below are selected quotes from the interview.

O'Connor: "This case involves a narcotics conspiracy case, which means that we are looking for a lot of different narcotics related material. That can be drug ledgers, scales, anything that would be in furtherance of this narcotics conspiracy. And it involved all four residents that we were looking at in that quarter mile of so of each other."


(Excerpt) Read more at kgun9.com ...



________________________ ________________________ ___________


I hope this woman bankrupts the city and every pofs cop in that whole county personally for what they did.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 12:49:11 PM
http://www.kgun9.com/story/14643812/this-case-involves-a-narcotics-conspiracy-case-which-means-that-we-are-looking-for-a-lot-of-different-narcotics-related-material-that-can-be-drug?redirected=true#



Unbelievable.  And cops wonder why the geneeral public hates them?   GMAFB.   Bitches and Bullshitters w Badges.   

Until a few of these happen - nothing will change.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2011, 01:01:14 PM
Teacher cleared of sex assault reveals his nightmare
dailymail.co.uk ^ | 5-15-11 | Katie Silver





A PE teacher falsely accused of molesting a 12-year-old schoolgirl has spoken of his pain at telling his children he was going to be arrested.

Sean Lanigan was pulled out of a class in Fairfax, Virginia, and told he was going to be arrested for allegedly carrying out the offences.

In reality his 'crimes' had been invented and the schoolgirl bore a grudge against him.

Despite being cleared of all the offences, the teacher’s $125,000 legal fees still haven’t been repaid by the state and he is struggling to get his life back.

The young girl claimed that the teacher had taken him into the gym and said he was going to ‘treat her like a Queen’ and briefly groped her.

This line, it turns out is a lyric from one or her favourite music bands, the Ataris.

He had told his ‘victim’ off for being abusive on the school bus and the girl apparently told her friends: ‘Mr Lanigan’s a jerk. I’m going to make him pay.’

When it came to trial, the jury took only 47 minutes to decide he was not guilty. Such a short deliberation in a child sex abuse case is extremely rare.


They described it as an ‘easy decision’ since ‘there was no evidence.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...



Insane, this person will never truly get his life back and will always carry the stain. (And the little shit that accused him will probably claim in the future she's been "traumatized" by the whole process).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 01:03:35 PM
I blame all levels of law enforcement for shit like this.  I had it happen to a friend of mine who was ultimately cleared on appeal, but it ruined his life.   

I handled all the way up to trial, and the cops and DA were unbelievable in how they handled it.  Truly disgusting.   

Presumption of innocence my ass.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2011, 01:07:38 PM
33 do you have inquest panels in NY for cases were cops are involved?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 01:17:00 PM
33 do you have inquest panels in NY for cases were cops are involved?

I don't handle that much criminal stuff.  my buddy was framed by a corrupt detective looking for a huge civil settlement for his lying daughter and it was obvious.   the DA's knew it was bogus and just pushed it along and the daughter lied her ass off the stand and the judge bougt it.

It was tossed outr on appeal and upon a tape later surfacing showig it was impossible for him to have done it.   It was unbelievable. 

Honestly - I have ZERO respect for 99% of cops, DA's, law enforcement in general.

Most law enforcement in this country is nothing more than a well financed street gang and organized crime cartel.   
________________________ _____________________-


 
San Ramon officer delays plea to charges stemming from CNET scandal
By Robert Salonga
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 05/13/2011 10:04:48 AM PDT
Updated: 05/13/2011 12:02:05 PM PDT



Click photo to enlarge
San Ramon police officer Louis Lombardi arrived in Department 20 courtroom in Martinez, Calif....«1»MARTINEZ -- A San Ramon officer's newly hired attorney delayed a plea Friday to corruption charges in a growing scandal involving the sale of drugs stolen from police evidence.

Louis Lombardi, 38, became the latest law enforcement member ensnared in a widening corruption probe when he was arrested last week and his Discovery Bay home searched. Prosecutors charged him with five felonies May 6, alleging he sold drugs to confidential informants and embezzled cash, drugs and guns from police seizures.

Lombardi appeared in a Martinez courtroom Friday wearing a gray pinstriped suit and was clean-shaven; he had a mustache when he was arraigned. His next scheduled court appearance is May 19 in Walnut Creek alongside three defendants who have been previously charged. He has hired Concord-based attorney Dirk Manoukian.

"I'm anxious to see the discovery and separate fact from fiction," Manoukian said outside a Martinez courthouse. "Mr. Lombardi is anxious to look at the discovery and start sifting through it."

Lombardi is free after posting $500,000 bail last week; prosecutors have asked the court to determine if that money was illegally obtained. He declined to answer reporters' questions and remains on administrative leave from the San Ramon Police Department.

His arrest was part of an ongoing, wide-ranging investigation by both the District Attorney's Office and state Department of Justice that surfaced with the February arrests of Norman Wielsch,


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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former commander of the Central Contra Costa Narcotics Enforcement Team (CNET), and Christopher Butler, a former Concord-based private investigator. Wielsch and Butler are accused of multiple felony counts based on allegations they conspired to sell drugs confiscated in police raids.

Wielsch's attorney, Michael Cardoza, said last week that Lombardi's arrest was connected to Butler's activities but his alleged crimes appear to have stronger ties to Wielsch and CNET. Lombardi was a CNET agent from 2004 to 2009 during his tenure with the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office.

Prosecutors say Lombardi stole money from at least three seizures, and in 2007 solicited a confidential informant to burglarize a building that he had executed a search warrant on to steal money. Prosecutors have asked the court to keep secret the identity of several informants they say Lombardi has threatened.

Since his drug arrest, Butler has also been charged with conspiring with former Danville officer Stephen Tanabe based on allegations they set up men for DUI arrests to tarnish their standing for upcoming divorce and child custody hearings. Tanabe has also been served with drug and bribery charges.

Butler, 49, Wielsch, 50, and Tanabe, 47, are all out on bail and have pleaded not guilty to their charges. All three served on the Antioch police force in the 1990s. Lombardi, authorities said, became friends with Butler from his mutual connection to Wielsch.

On Wednesday, it was revealed that in a typewritten confession of sorts that has not been released publicly, Butler accused Wielsch of using his expertise and influence as head of CNET to run a short-lived brothel out of a Pleasant Hill storefront between 2009 and 2010. Wielsch's attorney said it was Butler who operated the brothel and that the allegation was offered as a way to negotiate a lighter prison sentence.

Robert Salonga covers public safety. Contact him at 925-943-8013. Follow him at Twitter.com/robertsalonga.



   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2011, 01:24:18 PM
Here is a pic of the marine these disgusting assholes gunned down.   I wish I were on that jury - I would pull the lever myself.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2011, 09:41:43 AM
In bad economy, drivers buckling under traffic tickets
St. Pete Times ^ | Monday, May 16, 2011 | By Michael Van Sickler, Times Staff Writer


________________________ ________________________ __



Rosemary Smith saw the motorcycle cop's flashing lights behind her, and her eyes immediately started to well up.

She was going 17 mph over the speed limit and faced a $256 fine, the officer told her after she pulled into a parking lot off Fourth Street N.

As she fought back tears, her life story spilled out. She was a full-time college student, her only income from part-time work as a bank teller. She had a wedding coming up in November.

"I've got house bills to pay," said Smith, 21, visibly shaken as she clutched the wheel of her blue Saturn. "I'm freaking out."

Motorists complaining about tickets is nothing new for traffic cops. But officers say they are sensing growing distress.

"A day doesn't go by when I don't see someone cry," said Officer Mauricio Steffek. "They can't believe how much the ticket costs. They'll tell me, 'Give me a break. I don't have a job now. I'm falling behind the mortgage or car payments.' "

Once a minor, if stressful, inconvenience, the everyday traffic citation is becoming a life altering breaking point for many.

And more and more, drivers aren't paying them — creating a ripple effect in city and county budgets across Tampa Bay.

In St. Petersburg, the money collected from traffic tickets has dropped from $681,000 in 2008 to $494,214 in 2010. It's projected to dwindle even further this year — despite the fact that police handed out 1,500 more tickets last year than they did in 2008.

"It's a drastic drop that means we have to find revenue from other places," said Tim Finch, St. Petersburg's director of budget and management. "It makes it tougher on other departments."

Pinellas County has seen its ticket revenue fall by $700,000 in two years. In Tampa, police estimate they will bring in $900,000 less than they did in 2008. In Hillsborough, fine collections are down nearly $3 million since 2008.

"It's directly related to the economy," said Hillsborough Clerk of Courts Pat Frank. "People are being more cautious because they can't afford it. And police officers are more reluctant to give out tickets when the fines are more costly."

In recent years, Florida's tax adverse politicians have raised fees to generate new revenue. Traffic law-flouting motorists are a tempting target because they don't garner public sympathy.

State lawmakers in 2009 approved new measures to produce more than $63 million, all from the pockets of wayward motorists. Included: a new $10 charge on all traffic infractions, cutting an 18 percent discount for attending traffic school, and a $25 increase for exceeding the speed limit by 15 to 29 mph.

Local governments tack on more charges. In Pinellas County, for instance, each citation can get assessed an extra $30 for court costs; $3 for driver education safety programs; $3 for teen court; and $2 to pay for public safety applicant screenings.

Tickets range from $62 for a bicycle infraction to $456 for traveling 20 to 29 mph over the limit in a school or construction zone. If a driver is hit with multiple violations, such as speeding, not wearing a seat belt and having an expired tag, fines can climb to nearly $700.

In times like these, a ticket can be a severe blow to those living paycheck to paycheck.

Officers have the discretion to waive the ticket if they think the driver would be better served with a warning. Traffic cops like to say it's about public safety, not the money.

On a recent Tuesday morning, Steffek listened to Smith's tale of woe. He called up her driving history. Clean. He decided to waive the fine.

"It would have been hard for me to pay," said Smith, grateful and smiling.

As she drove away, Steffek said he had imagined himself in her predicament.

"She was shaking really bad," he said. "She was scared."

• • •

Pain felt by drivers is so evident their biggest supporters are often the cops who stop them.

"Our deputies feel that because of the way the economy is, they give out a lot more warnings," said Detective Larry McKinnon, Hillsborough sheriff's spokesman.

Same with Pinellas.

"We're very aware of some of the cost," said spokeswoman Marianne Pasha. "If there is an opportunity to write a warning, rather than write a citation, that's what we'll do."

In many cases, deputies won't write multiple citations like they did in the past. If someone with a clean driving record is caught speeding without wearing a seat belt, McKinnon said, they'll be cited for a seat belt violation.

"We're more tolerant," he said. "People have lost their jobs and are struggling. A lot of times you'll see families in the car. How do you write someone a $700 ticket when they have a carload of kids?"

Empathy comes with a price.

Pinellas is on track to write 2,000 fewer tickets than it did two years ago. Hillsborough tickets dropped by 40,000 from 2008 to 2010. Not all of that stemmed from deputies waiving tickets, McKinnon said.

The other reason also is economic: There are fewer deputies out there writing tickets.

In St. Petersburg, police are handing out more tickets than ever, but fewer people are paying, said Lt. William Korinek, who oversees traffic enforcement.

"People are saying that the tickets are too expensive," Korinek said. "For the most part, they're not criminals. They're people like you and me, average people going about their day. "

On a recent Tuesday, Chris Robinson, a retired 64-year-old, was running errands when he was stopped for speeding.

He was going 48 mph in a 35 mph zone. The fine: $206.

"I can't pay it," Robinson said as his shoulders sagged and he cradled his face in his hand. "I'm on a fixed income. It's going to kill me."

Fined drivers can pay the full sum within 30 days, or spread the fine out in six monthly installments.

An increasingly popular option: People can work off the debt with community service.

"Economic conditions are driving that," said Hazel Bure, director of the court and operational services at the Pinellas County Clerk of Court. "The traffic fines are very high."

Drivers calculate the hours they need to work for a nonprofit by dividing the fine by the $7.25 hourly minimum wage. A $206 fine would be almost 29 hours. The fine isn't waived until the courts get a verification letter from the nonprofit.

The option is a boon to groups like Habitat for Humanity. Since 2008, the nonprofit has seen the number of people volunteering to pay off tickets double to about 12 a week, said Kevin Klucas, the group's volunteer coordinator.

"It works well for us, and hopefully becomes a good experience for them, too," Klucas said.

While some turn the experience into a productive one, officials say others let a ticket disrupt their lives. If a fine isn't paid, a motorist's driver's license is suspended, a misdemeanor that can mean going to jail. The state doesn't track the number of suspended licenses, but some law enforcement officers say there has been a rise.

A look at Pinellas County jail records show that more than 7,000 people were processed for that charge since 2005.

The majority of those were people arrested on the charge for the second or third time.

• • •

During rush hour last week, Steffek and fellow St. Petersburg Officer Chris Dort stopped more than a dozen drivers in two hours. Nearly everyone fretted about the fine.

"I work hard and make just enough to pay my bills," said Bob Samples, a 47-year-old restaurant worker facing a $206 speeding ticket. John Zurek was looking at $256 for going 17 mph over the limit. A 20-year-old St. Petersburg College student who recently quit his job at a sandwich shop, Zurek said he didn't know where he'd get the money.

Whatever strain motorists are feeling, it may only get worse.

St. Petersburg officials are installing red light cameras to catch offenders and will likely start handing out $158 tickets this summer. Hillsborough County already does. Tampa soon will.

"I feel bad for some of these drivers," Dort said. "People are busy. They're running around, trying to make ends meet. It's real rough out there."



________________________ ________________________ _________

I'm so sick of these asshole cops.   They pull the same shit near me and harass people over everything. 

We have illegals all over the place they dont do dick about yet bust balls from people coming to and from work.   

figures - lazy fat disgusting pofs cops attack easy targets instead of addressing real crime.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on May 16, 2011, 09:44:21 AM
I can just about find weekly stories of this type of thing.

(http://extras.mnginteractive.com/live/media/site36/2011/0513/20110513__20110514_B02_CD14ERIEDOG~p1.JPG)

Cops called for help with threatening phone call. Cops show up and shoot family dog dead.

Family Dog Killed By Police Officer

Erie Police Officer Feels Threatened, Shoots German Shepherd

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news...47/detail.html

ERIE, Colo. -- A call for help to police ends with a family dog getting shot and killed by the responding officer.

Brittany Landis called Erie Police after she said she got a threatening phone call. She said she was on her porch with her two dogs, a 4-year-old German shepherd and an 11-year-old golden retriever, when Officer Jamie Chester approached through her neighbor's yard.

"As soon as I saw him, the dogs also saw him and started just trotting over there, not rushing over there, not barking, not growling, just curious," said Landis.

"The two made contact, eye contact, and the officer put his hand on his weapon," said neighbor Andy Feero. "He said something to the dog, motioning her not to move and then he started walking backwards."

Landis said she called her dog back.

"I said, 'Ava, nein!' -- our German Shepherd was trained in German," said Landis.

Nein is German for no.

"She heard me. She turned and looked at me and the police officer shot her," said Landis. "I started screaming, 'Oh my God! What did you do? What did you do?' He came towards me and said, 'Ma'am, I had to do it. I had to do it.'"

Neighbors Call Shooting 'Senseless'

"It was a senseless shooting. I didn't hear any barking noises out of her until she got shot," said Feero. "I saw the weapon come out and he let her have it -- (from) six feet away."

According to Erie police Lt. Lee Mathis, Chester perceived a threat to his safety and shot the dog to avoid personal injury. Mathis said the officer reported the dog was baring her teeth and had her hair standing up. He told 7NEWS officers have no obligation to get bit by a dog before protecting themselves.

"Before shooting, did the officer say anything?" asked 7NEWS reporter Marshall Zelinger.

"Nothing. No warning. No, 'Get control of your dog.' Not, 'You get your dog or I'm going to shoot,'" said Landis. "To me, that's scary. You have a police officer out on the force that is that quick to draw out his deadly weapon. That's scary."

Family Took Dog To CSU Vet For Necropsy

Landis told 7NEWS the dog's body was taken to Colorado State University for a necropsy. She said she was told Ava was shot through the back.

"I was told it severed her spinal column. And it went through her liver and her lungs; it ended up in abdomen, so it hit a lot of vital organs."

Mathis told 7NEWS the bullet went through the left shoulder of the dog.

"I want justice for my dog, for my family," said Landis.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2011, 10:00:40 AM
Like I said - I used to respect law enfocrcement and cops.   No longer.   I really consider them to be 99% pofs no different than the rude scum at the DMV. 

I grew up with one asshole pofs thug who has 5 police brutality civil lawsuits against him for beating the piss out of people.  it has cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlements.   

Guess what - the jerkoff was promoted to detective. 

I have another friend who is a cop who has broken his hand five times on peoples faces, most of which were cuffed at the time.  He was promoted to detective despite a ton of terrible crap he has done.   


Its awful.   Most people who dont know what goes on think its like Mayberry.  Its not, most police departments are publicly financed street gangs and little else.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on May 16, 2011, 10:16:40 AM
Like I said - I used to respect law enfocrcement and cops.   No longer.   I really consider them to be 99% pofs no different than the rude scum at the DMV. 

I grew up with one asshole pofs thug who has 5 police brutality civil lawsuits against him for beating the piss out of people.  it has cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlements.   

Guess what - the jerkoff was promoted to detective. 

I have another friend who is a cop who has broken his hand five times on peoples faces, most of which were cuffed at the time.  He was promoted to detective despite a ton of terrible crap he has done.   


Its awful.   Most people who dont know what goes on think its like Mayberry.  Its not, most police departments are publicly financed street gangs and little else.   

At worst they get suspended WITH PAY. wow, what a punishment. ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 16, 2011, 11:47:34 AM
You can find weekly stories about good cops too. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2011, 08:22:50 PM
Skip to comments.

Long Arm of the Law Penalizes Texans Who Nab Catfish by Hand
WSJ ^ | 16 May 2011 | ANA CAMPOY
Posted on May 16, 2011 10:54:28 PM EDT by Palter

State Noodles With Decriminalizing Fish-Grabbing; Watch Out for the Tail

Brady Knowlton believes it's his inalienable right as a Texan to shove his bare hand into the mouth of a 60-pound catfish and yank it out of a river.

But wrestling a flapping, whiskered giant as it latches onto your arm with its jaws isn't among Texas's accepted methods of capturing fish. It is, rather, a class C misdemeanor, with fines of up to $500.

So Mr. Knowlton, a 30-year-old-private citizen, oilman and outdoor enthusiast here, is pushing a bill in the state Legislature to legalize hand fishing, also known as noodling, grabbing or hogging. Noodlers go into the water, then reach into holes, hollow tree trunks and other underwater nooks to find the fish.

Nothing beats "the heebie-jeebies you get underwater, in the dark, with this little sea monster biting you," he says. He recalls that his arm looked like "the first stage of a chili recipe" after his first noodling experience about 15 years ago. Catfish are equipped with bands of small but very abrasive teeth.

The bill swam easily through the state house, but now rod-and-reel anglers are speaking up against the proposed law, currently in the state Senate.

They say noodling is unfair to the fish, since they're grabbed in their burrows without a chance to swim away.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2011, 07:57:14 PM
Dupnik won't release more info about SWAT shooting of Tucson man
Arizona Daily Star ^ | May 17, 2011 | Fernanda Echavarri
Posted on May 17, 2011 10:17:28 PM EDT by george76

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department will release no more information about the circumstances surrounding the killing of Jose Guerena during the serving of a search warrant by the department’s SWAT officers May 5 at his home.

Two weeks after the shooting the department has yet to disclose exactly what they were searching for in the Guerena home ...

...

On May 5, five members of the SWAT team fired 71 shots at Guerena while serving a search warrant at the 7100 block of South Redwater Drive. He was shot 60 times.

The 26-year-old former Marine was sleeping at about 9:30 a.m. after working the graveyard shift at Asarco’s Mission Mine when his wife woke him saying she heard noises outside and saw a man was at their window.

(Excerpt) Read more at azstarnet.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2011, 08:05:56 PM
I certainly don't see them... Maybe once every year or so you might get a "good cop" story.

Cops don't protect shit... They don't stop crime... They just report on it.

I ask everyone who reads this to be honest with themselves and tell me a time when a cop actually HELPED you... I haven't got a SINGLE story and I'm 36 years old.

You guys?

When seconds count, the cops are only minutes away.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 17, 2011, 09:19:16 PM
You can find weekly stories about good cops too. 


???

Do they want a cookie for doing their job correctly?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 17, 2011, 09:36:45 PM
I certainly don't see them... Maybe once every year or so you might get a "good cop" story.

Cops don't protect shit... They don't stop crime... They just report on it.

I ask everyone who reads this to be honest with themselves and tell me a time when a cop actually HELPED you... I haven't got a SINGLE story and I'm 36 years old.

You guys?

Really?  You live in an awfully small world tu. 

I've had great experiences with law enforcement.  My kids loved the DARE program at their school.  They have been guest speakers in numerous college classes.  I know of numerous examples of cops investigating and arresting criminals.  They helped protect my car when I had a flat tire.

They risk their lives to protect the public. 

Are there bad ones?  Of course.  Every profession has its bad apples.  But there are tons of great people who work in law enforcement. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 17, 2011, 09:37:19 PM

???

Do they want a cookie for doing their job correctly?



I don't know.  Ask them. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: roccoginge on May 18, 2011, 02:25:36 AM
Dupnik won't release more info about SWAT shooting of Tucson man
Arizona Daily Star ^ | May 17, 2011 | Fernanda Echavarri
Posted on May 17, 2011 10:17:28 PM EDT by george76

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department will release no more information about the circumstances surrounding the killing of Jose Guerena during the serving of a search warrant by the department’s SWAT officers May 5 at his home.

Two weeks after the shooting the department has yet to disclose exactly what they were searching for in the Guerena home ...

...

On May 5, five members of the SWAT team fired 71 shots at Guerena while serving a search warrant at the 7100 block of South Redwater Drive. He was shot 60 times.

The 26-year-old former Marine was sleeping at about 9:30 a.m. after working the graveyard shift at Asarco’s Mission Mine when his wife woke him saying she heard noises outside and saw a man was at their window.

(Excerpt) Read more at azstarnet.com ...

I just watched this on the local news here.  I have a dfeeling the cops are going to loose on this one.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2011, 03:27:16 AM
BB - 99 percent of the ones I grew up w either were or later become thugs and power crazed psychos doing real bad stuff. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2011, 06:58:10 AM
Indiana Supreme Court rules Hoosiers have no right to resist unlawful entry of homes by police
Hotair ^ | 05/16/2011 | Bruce McQuain


________________________ ________________________ _________-



No, you read it right. That’s what the Indiana Supreme Court decided in what would be a laughable finding if it wasn’t so serious:

Overturning a common law dating back to the English Magna Carta of 1215, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Hoosiers have no right to resist unlawful police entry into their homes.

The author of the story reporting this is right – somehow the ISC managed, in one fell swoop, to overturn almost 900 years of precedent, going back to the Magna Carta.

In a 3-2 decision, Justice Steven David writing for the court said if a police officer wants to enter a home for any reason or no reason at all, a homeowner cannot do anything to block the officer’s entry. [emphasis mine]

Or said another way, your home is no longer your castle.

Remember the 4th Amendment to the US Constitution?

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

Bzzzzzt.

Wrong – in Indiana

“We believe … a right to resist an unlawful police entry into a home is against public policy and is incompatible with modern Fourth Amendment jurisprudence,” David said. “We also find that allowing resistance unnecessarily escalates the level of violence and therefore the risk of injuries to all parties involved without preventing the arrest.”

David said a person arrested following an unlawful entry by police still can be released on bail and has plenty of opportunities to protest the illegal entry through the court system.

One has to wonder what part of “unlawful” Justice David doesn’t get. What part of the right of the people to “be secure… shall not be violated” wasn’t taught to him in law school.

How secure is anyone in their “persons, houses, papers and effects” if, per David, a police officer can waltz into any home he wants to “for any reason or no reason at all?”

The given reason by the Justice is resistance is “against public policy?” What policy is that? For whatever reason, most believe our public policy as regards our homes is set by the 4th amendment to the US Constitution. Since when does Indiana’s “public policy” abrogate the Constitutional right to be “secure in our persons, houses, papers and effects”?

Additionally, most would assume it is the job of the police not to “escalate the level of violence”, not the homeowner. Like maybe a polite knock on a door to attempt an arrest instead of a battering ram and the violent entry of a full SWAT team to arrest a suspected perpetrator of a non-violent crime. Maybe a little pre-raid intelligence gathering, or snagging the alleged perp when he leaves the house to go to work, or walk the dog, or go to the store.

Now citizens in Indiana are to give up their 4th Amendment rights because it might “elevate the violence” if they attempt to protect themselves from unlawful activity? Sounds like the “don’t resist rape” nonsense that was once so popular.

And check out this “analysis”:

Professor Ivan Bodensteiner, of Valparaiso University School of Law, said the court’s decision is consistent with the idea of preventing violence.

“It’s not surprising that they would say there’s no right to beat the hell out of the officer,” Bodensteiner said. “(The court is saying) we would rather opt on the side of saying if the police act wrongfully in entering your house your remedy is under law, to bring a civil action against the officer.”

So we’ll just throw out your 4th amendment right to satisfy the court’s desire to “prevent violence,” is that it?

One hopes the decision is destroyed on appeal and if the Justices are in an elected office they become very “insecure” in their probability of staying there.

The two dissenting Justices got it mostly right:

Justice Robert Rucker, a Gary native, and Justice Brent Dickson, a Hobart native, dissented from the ruling, saying the court’s decision runs afoul of the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

“In my view the majority sweeps with far too broad a brush by essentially telling Indiana citizens that government agents may now enter their homes illegally — that is, without the necessity of a warrant, consent or exigent circumstances,” Rucker said. “I disagree.”

Rucker and Dickson suggested if the court had limited its permission for police entry to domestic violence situations they would have supported the ruling.

But Dickson said, “The wholesale abrogation of the historic right of a person to reasonably resist unlawful police entry into his dwelling is unwarranted and unnecessarily broad.”

I say mostly right because they indicated that in the case of domestic violence, they too were willing to throw the 4th amendment under the bus.

How does one say “it runs afoul of the Fourth Amendment” and then later agree to a partial abrogation of the 4th under certain circumstances? What part of “shall not be violated” don’t they understand? It doesn’t say “shall not be violated except in case of domestic violence” does it?

Oh, and just to point out that this likely isn’t an outlier for this crew:

This is the second major Indiana Supreme Court ruling this week involving police entry into a home.

On Tuesday, the court said police serving a warrant may enter a home without knocking if officers decide circumstances justify it. Prior to that ruling, police serving a warrant would have to obtain a judge’s permission to enter without knocking.

Because, you know, it would be just asking too much to have the police actually justify a no-knock entrance to a judge, wouldn’t it?

Amazing.

And you wonder why you have to constantly protect your rights daily from attacks within?

This is why.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:31:02 AM
Wait... You are saying that cops protect people? Who? They protected your CAR? That's what you have?

You think speaking at schools is "helping" people?  Your view of how people are "helped" is what's small.

So you are saying that talking to kids and doing lectures and protecting your car in the event of a flat tire is helping people?

Hahahaha!!!

Hil-ar-ious.



Here is what you asked:  "I ask everyone who reads this to be honest with themselves and tell me a time when a cop actually HELPED you... I haven't got a SINGLE story and I'm 36 years old." 

I just gave you several examples, from personal experience, of cops helping me and other people. 

The fact you claim to be 36 and have never heard of a single instance of a police officer helping someone is alarming.  Do you live in a Michael Jackson bubble?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:33:08 AM
BB - 99 percent of the ones I grew up w either were or later become thugs and power crazed psychos doing real bad stuff. 

33 I can't argue with your personal experience.  I'm sorry you had such bad experiences with those folks.  

I do think it's unreasonable to say that all, or even most, cops are bad because of experiences in your neighborhood.  Just to put this in context, there are over 800,000 people in law enforcement in this country.  Hard to use a broad brush.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:34:09 AM
You gave one example actually... They watched your car for you.

I do not consider that "helping people" sorry... I can pay a valet attendant 20 bucks and he'll do that all night.

None of the other stuff you mentioned is actually helping people... It's not stopping crime what so ever.

You have a reading comprehension problem.  Go back and read your statement, your question, and my response. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2011, 11:40:31 AM
I personally grew up with an know today in social settings a cop who have 5 police brutality cases against him.   This guy is a roid freak and is worse than any gangster i have ever met, and what did the police department do for his service and hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlements the taxpayers got stuck with?

They promoted him to detective.

I have another friend who is a cop who is even worse than him who made detective and who in no exaggeration is a one man crime spree all on to himself.     


Their attitude towards the public ?   Treat taxpayers and citizens like utter garbage and dirt.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:43:32 AM
I personally grew up with an know today in social settings a cop who have 5 police brutality cases against him.   This guy is a roid freak and is worse than any gangster i have ever met, and what did the police department do for his service and hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlements the taxpayers got stuck with?

They promoted him to detective.

I have another friend who is a cop who is even worse than him who made detective and who in no exaggeration is a one man crime spree all on to himself.     


Their attitude towards the public ?   Treat taxpayers and citizens like utter garbage and dirt.   

I know of examples of bad cops too.  Not much worse than a bad government employee with police power.  Try dealing with federal government regulators.  Scary stuff. 

But I also know of many good ones. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:52:44 AM
Then you are the only person so far in this thread.

Pretty much the minority so far.

lol.  Yes, the empirical evidence in this thread, and your 36 years of never hearing of a single instance of a cop helping someone, has this issue all locked up.   :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:56:13 AM
Well, we can sit around and hit refresh until someone else comes by to take up your stance on the matter.



Seriously?  lol . . . .

Even if ten people chime in and agree with me, it wouldn't prove squat. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 18, 2011, 11:59:28 AM
It would at least give some credence to what you're saying... So far it's about 20-1 or so I'd say.

No it wouldn't.   ::)  Where is tony when I need him?   :D  Educate this dude on statistics and empirical evidence would ya? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2011, 12:49:14 PM
Sheriff’s Dept. defends SWAT shooting silence
Story(152) CommentsSheriff’s Dept. defends SWAT shooting silence
Fernanda Echavarri, Arizona Daily Star Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Wednesday, May 18, 2011 11:45 am | Comments
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2721700/posts

Benjie Sanders/Arizona Daily Star, File

 

This January 2011 file photo shows Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik. The Sheriff's Department said Tuesday it will provide no further information on a fatal May 5, SWAT shooting until the investigation is complete. .
..Related Stories

Related: SWAT officers' 71 gunshots require an explanation.


Tucson attorney Michael Storie, who represents law enforcement officers, has called a news conference at 10 a.m. Thursday to discuss the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT shooting.

Storie says in a news release that he represent officers on the PCSD SWAT involved in the fatal May 5, incident.

Storie said he will answer questions on behalf of SWAT officers involved.

The Pima County Sheriff's Department issued a statement today trying to explain its policy regarding the delay in information about the SWAT raid in which a Tucson man was killed.

Here is an unedited copy of today's statement:

Officer Involved Shooting - Update

May 18, 2011

"As a result of the need for information surrounding the shooting of Jose Guerena by members of the Pima Regional SWAT Team, the public has received misinformation and emotionally-charged speculation.

The investigation that lead to the service of the search warrants on May 5 is a complicated one involving multiple people suspected of very serious crimes. Sometimes, law enforcement agencies must choose between the desire of the public to quickly know details, and the very real threat to innocent lives if those details are released prematurely. Sheriff Dupnik has made it a departmental policy to be open and forthcoming with information released to the news media. When the decision is made to withhold information, as it has been in this case, there is a legitimate reason for that decision. The day the search warrant was served, we reported to the media that Mr. Guerena fired at SWAT officers. This is what was understood at that time. After a more detailed investigation, we learned that he pointed his assault rifle at SWAT officers, however, the safety was on and he could not fire. This is a clear example of erroneous information being provided without careful investigation. Rather than risking the release of further information, it is imperative that we complete all aspects of this investigation.

Complicating matters is the fact that multiple agencies were involved in this incident. The criminal investigation must be completed, in addition to the investigation by the County Attorney's office, prior to any administrative review of the actions of the officers involved in the shooting. By mutual agreement, that administrative review will include officials from the Pima County Sheriff's Department, the Marana Police Department, the Oro Valley Police Department and the Sahuarita Police Department. Each of these agencies had officers involved in the shooting as members of the Pima Regional SWAT Team.

Since the Sheriff's Department has had such a long-standing practice of open and timely communication with members of the news media, it is understandable that questions are asked about when more information will become available. However, it is unacceptable and irresponsible to couch those questions with implications of secrecy and a cover-up, not to mention questioning the legality of actions that could not have been taken without the approval of an impartial judge. As a law enforcement professional with decades of experience, Sheriff Dupnik will make the decision to release the information when the investigation is completed, the danger to innocent lives has been mitigated, and all agencies involved have been given the opportunity to review the actions of their personnel."

Deputy Jason S. Ogan

Public Information Officer

Pima County Sheriff's Department

Here is today's news article about the shooting:

Dupnik won't release more info about SWAT shooting of Tucson man

The Pima County Sheriff's Department will release no more information about the circumstances surrounding the killing of Jose Guerena during the serving of a search warrant by the department's SWAT officers May 5 at his home.

Two weeks after the shooting the department has yet to disclose exactly what they were searching for in the Guerena home as well as three other residences in the area that were subjects of a drug investigation. Court documents that show what officers were searching for in the case have been sealed and what was seized as evidence has also been sealed.

Sheriff Clarence Dupnik, through a department spokesman Tuesday morning, declined an interview request.

No one from the department will comment about the case until the investigation is complete, Deputy Jason Ogan said Tuesday. There is no timeframe for when the investigation will be over, he said.

On May 5, five members of the SWAT team fired 71 shots at Guerena while serving a search warrant at the 7100 block of South Redwater Drive. He was shot 60 times.

The 26-year-old former Marine was sleeping at about 9:30 a.m. after working the graveyard shift at Asarco's Mission Mine when his wife woke him saying she heard noises outside and saw a man was at their window. Guerena told his wife to hide in a closet with their 4-year-old son, his wife said. He grabbed an AR-15 rifle and moments later was slumped in the kitchen, mortally wounded from a hail of gunfire.

Guerena did not fire a shot and his gun had the safety on, deputies said, after initially saying he had fired on the SWAT officers


________________________ _______-

Dupnik is the typical powermad freak like Nifong, Spitzer, etc. 

I hope every member of the squat team, Dupnick, and anyone else involved in this hang in the town square.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 04:24:11 AM
http://abcnews.go.com/US/tucson-swat-team-defends-shooting-iraq-marine-veteran/t/story?id=13640112



Disgusting.   This dupnik asshole needs to be Nifonged
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 21, 2011, 04:38:11 AM
Police strip searched me last year on the NYC subway platform at 4 in the morning.

Fuckers.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 21, 2011, 09:25:49 AM
Police strip searched me last year on the NYC subway platform at 4 in the morning.

Fuckers.

Ne-kid?  Why? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 12:33:33 PM
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Old Man Says Cop Beat Him for Trying to Help
Courthouse News ^ | Wednesday, May 18, 2011 | By STEVEN CALLEGAN
Posted on May 21, 2011 3:15:50 PM EDT by Fitzy_888

Fairhope, Ala. (CN) - A police officer beat an elderly man who called 911 to report an accident and stop a drunken driver from leaving the scene of a crime, according to a complaint in Baldwin County Court.

Dorsey Henderson says he investigated an auto accident that happened across the street from his house. After determining that one of the drivers was belligerently intoxicated, he told the man not to leave and called the police.

When Officer Trent Scott arrived on the scene, Henderson tried to tell him what had happened and that he had put the driver under "citizen's arrest" because he was trying to leave. Officer Scott told Henderson there is "no such thing as citizen's arrest in Alabama," adding "get out of the way[,] old man."

While citizen's arrest is a gray area in Alabama, Henderson says he had "only been trying to help."

Nevertheless, Scott put him in an arm bar, tearing the man's rotator cuff, and walked him across the street.

When they were back in Henderson's driveway, Scott "slammed" the elderly man face first into the driveway, breaking his nose and his glasses. Scott "proceeded to beat" Henderson in "the back of the head, neck and arms." Scott did not arrest Henderson or charge him with any crime.

Henderson's wife, Dorris, watched from a wheelchair 18 feet away and called 911, saying that Scott was "beating the hell out of my husband." When the ambulance arrived, Scott sent it away, handcuffed the man and put him in the back of his patrol car.

Scott's superior showed up, released Henderson and called the ambulance back to treat Henderson and bring him to Thomas Hospital.

As of May 16, 2011, Officer Trent Scott was still employed by the Fairhope Police Department.

Henderson and his wife seek damages for constitutional violations. They are represented D. Keith Landers of Daphne, Ala.

TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; US: Alabama; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: baldwincounty; dorseyhenderson; moralabsolutes; standingarmy; trentscott; Click to Add Keyword
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Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 21, 2011, 02:57:53 PM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 03:04:43 PM
Henderson's wife, Dorris, watched from a wheelchair 18 feet away and called 911, saying that Scott was "beating the hell out of my husband." When the ambulance arrived, Scott sent it away, handcuffed the man and put him in the back of his patrol car.



________________________ ____________________-


That pofs cop is still on the payroll soaking up tax dollars.  Imagine being a taxpayer learing thatyou are slaving away at work and some of your tax dollars are going to pay this disgusting thug with a badge?   

And why didnt the EMT call 911 and report this thug with a badge?   

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 03:13:44 PM


Fellow dago who makes me proud. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 04:47:41 PM
Guerena family attorney responds to SWAT lawyer (Wants Pima Sheriff Dupnik to release reports)
KGUN9-TV (ABC) ^ | 5/19/2011 | Craig Smith, Layla Tang




TUCSON (KGUN9-TV) - Guerena family attorney Christopher Scileppi said he's working with a dead Marine's honor, and a family's grief.  He wants to see proof to back up attorney Mike Storie's account of the SWAT raid that left Jose Guerena dead.

Storie held a news conference Thursday and released several new details about the May 5 raid at the Guerena house that have been kept private until now.  He detailed why SWAT was serving a search warrant and what they found, and gave a reason for why paramedics waiting at the scene were not allowed inside the house to treat Guerena after he was shot.  Storie told KGUN9 that a SWAT robot was sent into the home to examine the threat level, and by then, it was too late for Guerena.  Scileppi has continued to argue that Guerena thought he was defending his home from an invasion when SWAT broke down his door.

"The SWAT team has lawyered up and all Mr. Storie, their lawyer, did today was attempt to discredit a Marine who served two tours abroad and put out statements unsupported by facts," Scileppi told KGUN9 News.  Now he's calling for Storie and Sheriff Clarence Dupnik to release the reports and documents about the raid.

[Snip]

Scileppi disputed Storie's account that Guerena ducked or fell into a room where SWAT couldn't see him and be sure he was no longer a threat, and that's why they didn't order medical care for him.  Scileppi says blood stains in the house make it look like Guerena went down in the hall where SWAT could see him easily.

 


(Excerpt) Read more at kgun9.com ...

________________________ ________________________ ________



Damn I hate the fucking cops.   Trying to discredit this hero vs. taking responsibility for their murderous bullshit.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2011, 05:02:21 PM
This is why i loathe 99% of police.  At the end of the day - they will cover up and support criminal cops who commit the worst of offenses as opposed to doing what is right.  A decorated vet of two wars lost his life due to this murderour police department, and they are still palying games?  Oh fuck that!  put me on the jury, and I will march every member on that swat team on up to the gallo with their families watching.  Sorry - these pofs taxpayer financed pieces of trash needto suffer severe penalities.         

So in my mind - if there were say 10 members on that raid, and not one speaks out - they are all equally culpable and damnable IMHO considering this family lost a loved one due to their bullshit tactics.  That is at least 99% as they will all hide behind the wall of blue while a family is grieving.   Sorry, I cant support that and only wish each of those cops suffers the same fate in front of their own families.   

I grew up with so many thug cops its not funny.  They dont do dick but harass commuters on their way to work, write up millions of bullshit tickets to oft targets, avoid tough assignments, never get out of the damn car and walk the beat to talk to taxpayers, act rudely to people, lie on the stand routinely, FRAME INNOCENT PEOPLE, complain about pensions, pay, vacations, etc, and otherwise are no different than the worst pofs at the DMV.  Most are on roids, treat the general public like cattle, and are on 24/7 power trips.   BTW - drive by any police station near me, all you see are BMW's, Mercedes, decked out Jeeps, Hummers, etc.  These guys are cashing in on the taxpayer like no tommorow and creating a crime way all on to themselves.     

I know I will piss off many here with saying that, but I have seen this my whole life, cops are far worse than the criminals in 90% of cases. 

I would trust neighborhood patrols over a "professional" police force any day of the week.   i have seen far too much from those I grew up with and still am "friendly" with to come to any other conclusion.         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 07:27:41 AM
TSA at the prom now? 


http://www.koat.com/r-video/27979990/detail.html



Title: Re: Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly - Video - Looks like murder to me
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2011, 10:53:17 AM
Shit is crazy, There's a thread about this topic on the G&O...

They say that this killing is justified...

However, it doesn't look right in my book. They gave the guy no change to surrender.

The time it takes for the guy to surrender is about the time it takes for the same guy to point and shoot a gun....  tough call for the cop...unfortunate for the club wielding guy...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 10:56:37 AM
Unfortunate for the taxpayer who now has to shell out MILLIONS for these thugs with badges who simply could have waited till the guy went to work to pick him up.   


This is total bs on the sheriffs' department.  I wish I were on the jury - every one of these dirtbag cops would be walked to the gallows at high noon, including Sheiff Dipshit. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2011, 10:57:01 AM
It would at least give some credence to what you're saying... So far it's about 20-1 or so I'd say.

I know a LOT of good cops..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2011, 10:58:00 AM
Unfortunate for the taxpayer who now has to shell out MILLIONS for these thugs with badges who simply could have waited till the guy went to work to pick him up.   


This is total bs on the sheriffs' department.  I wish I were on the jury - every one of these dirtbag cops would be walked to the gallows at high noon, including Sheiff Dipshit. 

I doubt you would qualify for a jury.. no offense
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 11:01:40 AM
I know a LOT of good cops..

I don't.   I know steroid addicted thugs raping the taxpayer blind all while they are driving bmw's, mercedes, etc, trating the public like crap, beating innocent people, focsed only on their vacations and pensions, etc.   

I know tons of cops.  Probably 40% or better of the people I grew up with became cops or firemen.   The fire people are way better IMHO.   The cops I know are are nothing but a taxpayer financed street gang and crime wave.   

   

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2011, 11:20:06 AM
This.

Fire people actually HELP... show up to do good. Cops are the foot soldiers of the criminal justice enterprise system... Making money on the hard work of decent people.

Not many firemen show up to a bank robbery, aggravated assault in progress, Domestic violence, rape, shooting, bar riot etc etc. Love the firemen, I do, but there are a couple of guys on this thread who are unrealistic with their hatred of cops... sad..really is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 23, 2011, 11:24:53 AM
Not many firemen show up to a bank robbery, aggravated assault in progress, Domestic violence, rape, shooting, bar riot etc etc. Love the firemen, I do, but there are a couple of guys on this thread who are unrealistic with their hatred of cops... sad..really is.

Agree.  Some of the cop hatred is irrational.  And some of these folks would be the first ones calling 911 if they need help. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 11:28:37 AM
Not really - cops don't do dick in 99% of cases but write up a report after the real crap went down.  

Actually if you look at job hazard stats -  there are many more professions far more dangerous than police work.      Many cops like to tell themseves they have the hardest job in the world and the most dangerous, etc, which is pure bullshit and nit supported by th facts.   

Where I live - they now have these trucks that we call "end of the world" trucks to where its decked out with everything from soup to nuts, yet they never do a damn thing but sit at Dunkin donust on Central Ave., in Yonkers, NY.   

Foot patrol?  ha ha ha ha! ! ! !    most of these assholes are too busy giving tickets for drivers without seatbelts or cwell phones while they theselves sit all day on their own cell phones, bucking red lights and stop stop signs, doing nohing, etc.   

 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 23, 2011, 11:39:35 AM
Not really - cops don't do dick in 99% of cases but write up a report after the real crap went down.  

Actually if you look at job hazard stats -  there are many more professions far more dangerous than police work.      Many cops like to tell themseves they have the hardest job in the world and the most dangerous, etc, which is pure bullshit and nit supported by th facts.   

Where I live - they now have these trucks that we call "end of the world" trucks to where its decked out with everything from soup to nuts, yet they never do a damn thing but sit at Dunkin donust on Central Ave., in Yonkers, NY.   

Foot patrol?  ha ha ha ha! ! ! !    most of these assholes are too busy giving tickets for drivers without seatbelts or cwell phones while they theselves sit all day on their own cell phones, bucking red lights and stop stop signs, doing nohing, etc.   

 



It is absolutely a dangerous job.  I wouldn't want to carry a gun and walk some of the streets in high crime neighborhoods.  They deserve a medal just for signing up for the job. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 11:48:03 AM
Many more jobs are statistcally far more dangerous.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 23, 2011, 11:54:21 AM
Many more jobs are statistcally far more dangerous.     

Even if that's true, it doesn't make being a cop any less dangerous.  Would you feel safe being a patrol officer in a high crime neighborhood?  I know I wouldn't. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jadeveon Clowney on May 23, 2011, 11:55:35 AM
Ever hear of a deterrent?  The idea that a cop is around deters people from doing stupid shit.  The reason I haven't killed someone driving 155 mph on a regular basis has more than a little to do with cops.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2011, 11:58:02 AM
Ever hear of a deterrent?  The idea that a cop is around deters people from doing stupid shit.  The reason I haven't killed someone driving 155 mph on a regular basis has more than a little to do with cops.  

Maybe it has something to do with no wanting to kill yourself or be sued into bankruptcy?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jadeveon Clowney on May 23, 2011, 12:00:31 PM
Maybe it has something to do with no wanting to kill yourself or be sued into bankruptcy?   

also deterrents.  but I know what I'm thinking when I'm driving and being sued isn't ever it.  Getting thrown in jail for driving like a maniac always is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2011, 12:55:20 PM
Most cops don't show up at any of those things in progress... They show up after the crime has been committed.

Cops report on crime... they do not stop it.

Ridiculous statement. We make arrests for things like that on a regular basis. Granted a lot of the time we get there after the fact, collect evidence, write the reports, it goes to detective cops who work the case, get the warrants, then the street cops or specialized units make the arrests..

But we arrest for those things on a regular basis. I think you're hatred has warped your view of what cops really do. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 24, 2011, 06:20:45 AM
Not really... I know a lot of cops... Was even going to be one at one time... Changed my mind when I saw how you don't really do anything.

You never saw me not really doing anything. Don't know what town you are measuring by.. Probably worked out for both of us... you not being a cop..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 24, 2011, 11:38:46 AM
You never saw me not really doing anything. Don't know what town you are measuring by.. Probably worked out for both of us... you not being a cop..

lol.  Tell me about it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on May 24, 2011, 11:41:37 AM
lmao
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on May 24, 2011, 11:43:33 AM
seriously good thread.. Dont really hear this a lot coming from a white dude..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 11:44:54 AM
lmao

ha ha ha ha! ! ! !

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on May 24, 2011, 11:45:57 AM
cops shot my roomates dog (he is white) back when he was living in carona. He was letting off fireworks.. people confused them for guns (he didnt own any) police busted in his house. his dog barked.. they shot him with a pump action.. then tore up the house.. and found fireworks
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 11:50:18 AM
There may be a few good cops, and I know they convince themselves of this, but what they don't get is that its the entire police structure that is the problem! 

They act like zoo keepers more than anythig else and then wonder why the public barks at them.  sorry - these cops, ALL OF THEM!  are paid by the taxpayer and should treat those who pay their salaries, pensions, health care, etc, as a paying customer and and show a littl damn respect.   

And this whole nonsense of "officer safety" trumping everything else is also getting way out of control too.  I know it sounds harsh, but sorry, peoples' rights under the US const. come first.   If a cop or other govt worker is notprepared to accept those risks, dont take the job.         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on May 24, 2011, 11:55:50 AM
There may be a few good cops, and I know they convince themselves of this, but what they don't get is that its the entire police structure that is the problem! 

They act like zoo keepers more than anythig else and then wonder why the public barks at them.  sorry - these cops, ALL OF THEM!  are paid by the taxpayer and should treat those who pay their salaries, pensions, health care, etc, as a paying customer and and show a littl damn respect.   

And this whole nonsense of "officer safety" trumping everything else is also getting way out of control too.  I know it sounds harsh, but sorry, peoples' rights under the US const. come first.   If a cop or other govt worker is notprepared to accept those risks, dont take the job.         
if you feel like this.. dont come to LA  and dont go to the south bay and mess with the lennox sheriffs dept.. they will let your ass know where you stand..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 11:59:50 AM
if you feel like this.. dont come to LA  and dont go to the south bay and mess with the lennox sheriffs dept.. they will let your ass know where you stand..

I grew up with and am friendly with tons of cops in yonkers/bronx NY.    i know first hand how they treat the public.   I actually know this guy.   Thinks he did nothing wrong at all and attacks everyoneon his facebook and youtube who question him.  

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on May 24, 2011, 12:04:18 PM
Cops like this are everywhere... Of course the only 2 people who think cops are good in this thread are a old white mega Christian and a cop.

Big shock they are giving each other reach arounds about how great cops are.


Ok.. i have mixed feelings. Which i think is normal. There are cops that work in high crime areas like south central (where im from) and about half of them are really fucked up and make generalizations about the community. Which we all do.. but for a cop to do it is irresponsible.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 24, 2011, 12:04:40 PM
lmao

Hahahaha!   ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 12:14:23 PM
This guy didnt have a dog license. 

Again - each of these cops is costing the taxpayer 125k and up a year in salary alone and will retire with crazy pensions at 45 years old.

Sorry - my sympathies are with the average homeowner payng 10k a year plus in property taxes alone in Yonkers, not the cop. 

 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 01:33:46 PM
USDA fines Missouri family $90k for selling a few rabbits without a license
Daily Caller ^ | 5/24/11





It started out as a hobby, a way for the Dollarhite family in Nixa, Mo., to teach a teenage son responsibility. Like a lemonade stand.

But now, selling a few hundred rabbits over two years has provoked the heavy hand of the federal government to the tune of a $90,643 fine. The fine was levied more than a year after authorities contacted family members, prompting them to immediately halt their part-time business and liquidate their equipment.

The Dollarhite’s story, originally picked up by conservative blogger Bob McCarty, has turned into a call to arms for critics of the government’s reach and now has both Democratic and Republican lawmakers vowing to intervene.

John and Judy Dollarhite began selling rabbit meat by the pound in 2006, and as pets to neighbors and friends in 2008.

Raised on the three-acre lot on which their home sits, the rabbits were heralded by local experts for their quality and kept in pristine condition.

When a local pet store asked them to supply their pet rabbits, the Dollarhites had no idea they would be running afoul of an obscure federal regulation that prohibits selling more than $500 worth of rabbits to a pet store without a license from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Under the law, pet stores are exempt from regulation.

But by selling to pet stores for resale, the humble Dollarhites became “wholesale breeders of pet animals,” said Dave Sacks, a spokesman for USDA who defended the fine, even while admitting it “looks curious” to the average person.

That’s especially so since the Dollarhites face no accusation they mistreated any animals. Instead, they committed what’s called in regulatory parlance a “paperwork violation” under the Animal Welfare Act, a 1966 law intended to prevent the abuse of animals.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 24, 2011, 02:09:51 PM
This guy didnt have a dog license. 

Again - each of these cops is costing the taxpayer 125k and up a year in salary alone and will retire with crazy pensions at 45 years old.

Sorry - my sympathies are with the average homeowner payng 10k a year plus in property taxes alone in Yonkers, not the cop. 

 



Sorry I missed the part where they brutalized the guy.... is it in another film?

And if you have never arrested someone surrounded by a crowd, you probably wouldn't understand why there were several cops on scene.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2011, 03:19:15 PM
Ok here is what I am talking about -

My car got broken into an hour ago and they cleaned it out.   Right in broad daylight.  Probably took about 600 worth of stuff. 

I called insurance and have window coverage and needed to make police report to file the claim.  Cops come by and say to me "Bro - you know where you are right?  This is the Box, this is how it is."

Now, I know my hood is not great at all and car thefts are huge near me.   But the cops dont do dick around here, no foot patrols, no thing at all. 

Sit in the damn car and dont do a damn thing while cimes get committed in broad daylight, then write a report afterwards ad tell me that I shoudaccept the thugs committing crimes because that is how it is.   

       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on May 24, 2011, 04:16:22 PM
I grew up with and am friendly with tons of cops in yonkers/bronx NY.    i know first hand how they treat the public.   I actually know this guy.   Thinks he did nothing wrong at all and attacks everyoneon his facebook and youtube who question him.  


Unacceptable. Plain and simple.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 11:23:47 AM
Seventy-One Shots: The Death of Jose Guereña
Pajamas Media ^ | May 25, 2011 | Bob Owens




Jose Guereña survived two tours in Iraq, but he couldn't survive his own government.

Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik infamously railed in January of this year that Arizona is a “Mecca for prejudice and bigotry.”

One must wonder if the “prejudice and bigotry” he considers endemic to Arizona is to blame for the death of U.S. Marine veteran Jose Guereña, killed when Dupnik’s deputies gunned him down in his home. They fired 71 shots. They hit him 60 times. And then, as if this wasn’t enough, Dupnik’s deputies blocked paramedics for an hour and 14 minutes from approaching the scene, denying Guereña treatment until he was assuredly dead.

Dupnik’s SWAT team initially claimed that Guereña fired at them while they were serving a warrant — as he slept. They claimed that his bullets hit the bulletproof shield that the entry team hid behind, and that the barrage of bullets they fired back was in self-defense.

Only, Guereña never fired his weapon. Awoken by his wife with screams that men with guns were invading his home and threatening his family, Jose Guereña armed himself with a AR-15 rifle and crouched in the hallway. The SWAT team unloaded upon Guereña on sight. He apparently recognized the home invaders as police. He took 60 rounds, but never — as the Pima County Sheriff’s Department was forced to admit — took off his weapon’s safety as he was being killed.

Prejudice and bigotry?

It was, you’ll recall, a claim Dupnik made in the wake of Jared Loughner’s bloodly rampage at a “Congress in your Corner” event at a Safeway supermarket in Tucson, where six were killed and 14 others were injured — including, gravely, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Dupnik was attempting to blame the conservative Tea Party movement for the shooting when he made the comment. And even after it was revealed that Loughner’s few known political views had been described as “quite liberal,” and were in fact muddled at best, he refused to retract his slur.

So when Dupnik’s teams attempted a complicated four-house raid of minority families looking for drugs, perhaps bigotry and prejudice really was in play.

Perhaps Dupnik’s officers assumed every Hispanic accused of being a drug dealer really was one, and perhaps they assumed that the tenant of a home protecting his loved ones must be a bloodthirsty cartel member waiting in ambush. Is that why they gunned down a tired, hard-working father sleeping off a night shift at the local copper mine? A Marine veteran of Iraq that had the discipline not to fire — a discipline that a trigger-happy SWAT team which has now killed three men in less than a year cannot itself exercise?

Not only has the Pima Sheriff’s Department tried to justify firing 71 shots at one man in a small hallway, hitting him (thankfully, just him) 60 times in a home where his wife and child were present. They’ve attempted to justify their refusal to let a team of paramedics treat Guereña, who was still miraculously alive after being sprayed mercilessly with bullets. It takes a competent SWAT team just a handful of minutes to “clear” a residential home during a raid. Dupnik’s SWAT team refused to declare the scene “clear” for an agonizing one hour and 14 minutes, and not until Jose Guereña had already died.

A cynic might be tempted to suggest Dupnik’s SWAT team was waiting for the only witness to their assault to die. Considering how the Sheriff’s Department has acted since they stormed the home, a rational person might be tempted to agree.

Not content to blame the victim for his own death, they attempted to insinuate he was a drug dealer, even though they were forced to admit under direct questioning that no drugs were found in his home, and that a clumsy cop falling down may have triggered the bloodbath.


Vanessa Guereña claims that neither she nor her husband heard the officers announce themselves as police. As anyone who has ever seen an episode of any popular police reality show knows, no entry team waits 15 seconds after announcing themselves to batter down a door and rush the inhabitants — as Pima County Lt. Michael O’Connor claims his SWAT team did. Identical scenes of immediate entry upon announcement (or after breaching), without giving those inside a chance to react, is a standard tactic captured again and again.

Why Lt. Michael O’Connor decided to tell a mistruth about a well-known, heavily documented, and highly standardized technique isn’t immediately clear. Perhaps it is because of the inevitable wrongful death lawsuit to be filed against the Pima County Sheriff’s Department on behalf of Vanessa Guereña and her two children. Or perhaps it is because of the possible DOJ civil rights investigation. Perhaps Dupnik’s employees simply are unable to act any more professionally after a raid than they do during one.

No-knock warrants are typically used to surprise the target of raids and keep them from disposing of evidence, with possible violence from the offender cited as justification for the military-style use of heavy armor and machine guns.

Jose Guereña’s death was entirely preventable. Over-armed, over-amped law enforcement is causing far more harm to the public than other tactics and techniques possibly could.

The over-militarization of law enforcement agencies and over-use of SWAT teams is an idea that needs to be revisited in a sane society. Too many good people have been traumatized, and too many killed, under the flimsiest of circumstances.


After surviving two tours of duty in Iraq, only to lose his life in an encounter with Clarence Dupnik’s keystone cops, Jose Guereña was buried with full military honors.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 11:42:54 AM
DOJ letter:'TSA would likely be required to cancel any flight'(FEDs threaten air blockade of Texas)
The Lone Star Report ^ | 5/24/2011 | Andy Hogue





The U.S. Department of Justice sent a letter to House and Texas Senate leaders Tuesday -- reportedly in person -- threatening a shut-down of airports if HB 1937 is passed.

The letter claims Rep. David Simpson's (R-Longview) anti-TSA-groping bill is against federal law and the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution. We include the text of the DOJ's letter, as well as a portion of Simpson's reply, below.


(Excerpt) Read more at lonestarreport.org ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 225for70 on May 25, 2011, 02:39:31 PM
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2011/05/25/congressman_on_recent_flight_tsa_patted_down_child_little_old_lady_ignored_man_in_arab_garb.html

The Hill reports: "I walked through … right behind me there was a grandmother — little old lady, and she was was patted down," Rep. Paul Broun (R-Georgia) said on C-SPAN's "Washington Journal."

"Right behind her was a little kid who was patted down. And then right behind him was a guy in Arabian dress who just walked right through. Why are we patting down grandma and kids?"

Go to the website there is a video.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2011, 02:49:33 PM
Seventy-One Shots: The Death of Jose Guereña
Pajamas Media ^ | May 25, 2011 | Bob Owens




Jose Guereña survived two tours in Iraq, but he couldn't survive his own government.

Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik infamously railed in January of this year that Arizona is a “Mecca for prejudice and bigotry.”

One must wonder if the “prejudice and bigotry” he considers endemic to Arizona is to blame for the death of U.S. Marine veteran Jose Guereña, killed when Dupnik’s deputies gunned him down in his home. They fired 71 shots. They hit him 60 times. And then, as if this wasn’t enough, Dupnik’s deputies blocked paramedics for an hour and 14 minutes from approaching the scene, denying Guereña treatment until he was assuredly dead.

Dupnik’s SWAT team initially claimed that Guereña fired at them while they were serving a warrant — as he slept. They claimed that his bullets hit the bulletproof shield that the entry team hid behind, and that the barrage of bullets they fired back was in self-defense.

Only, Guereña never fired his weapon. Awoken by his wife with screams that men with guns were invading his home and threatening his family, Jose Guereña armed himself with a AR-15 rifle and crouched in the hallway. The SWAT team unloaded upon Guereña on sight. He apparently recognized the home invaders as police. He took 60 rounds, but never — as the Pima County Sheriff’s Department was forced to admit — took off his weapon’s safety as he was being killed.

Prejudice and bigotry?

It was, you’ll recall, a claim Dupnik made in the wake of Jared Loughner’s bloodly rampage at a “Congress in your Corner” event at a Safeway supermarket in Tucson, where six were killed and 14 others were injured — including, gravely, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Dupnik was attempting to blame the conservative Tea Party movement for the shooting when he made the comment. And even after it was revealed that Loughner’s few known political views had been described as “quite liberal,” and were in fact muddled at best, he refused to retract his slur.

So when Dupnik’s teams attempted a complicated four-house raid of minority families looking for drugs, perhaps bigotry and prejudice really was in play.

Perhaps Dupnik’s officers assumed every Hispanic accused of being a drug dealer really was one, and perhaps they assumed that the tenant of a home protecting his loved ones must be a bloodthirsty cartel member waiting in ambush. Is that why they gunned down a tired, hard-working father sleeping off a night shift at the local copper mine? A Marine veteran of Iraq that had the discipline not to fire — a discipline that a trigger-happy SWAT team which has now killed three men in less than a year cannot itself exercise?

Not only has the Pima Sheriff’s Department tried to justify firing 71 shots at one man in a small hallway, hitting him (thankfully, just him) 60 times in a home where his wife and child were present. They’ve attempted to justify their refusal to let a team of paramedics treat Guereña, who was still miraculously alive after being sprayed mercilessly with bullets. It takes a competent SWAT team just a handful of minutes to “clear” a residential home during a raid. Dupnik’s SWAT team refused to declare the scene “clear” for an agonizing one hour and 14 minutes, and not until Jose Guereña had already died.

A cynic might be tempted to suggest Dupnik’s SWAT team was waiting for the only witness to their assault to die. Considering how the Sheriff’s Department has acted since they stormed the home, a rational person might be tempted to agree.

Not content to blame the victim for his own death, they attempted to insinuate he was a drug dealer, even though they were forced to admit under direct questioning that no drugs were found in his home, and that a clumsy cop falling down may have triggered the bloodbath.


Vanessa Guereña claims that neither she nor her husband heard the officers announce themselves as police. As anyone who has ever seen an episode of any popular police reality show knows, no entry team waits 15 seconds after announcing themselves to batter down a door and rush the inhabitants — as Pima County Lt. Michael O’Connor claims his SWAT team did. Identical scenes of immediate entry upon announcement (or after breaching), without giving those inside a chance to react, is a standard tactic captured again and again.

Why Lt. Michael O’Connor decided to tell a mistruth about a well-known, heavily documented, and highly standardized technique isn’t immediately clear. Perhaps it is because of the inevitable wrongful death lawsuit to be filed against the Pima County Sheriff’s Department on behalf of Vanessa Guereña and her two children. Or perhaps it is because of the possible DOJ civil rights investigation. Perhaps Dupnik’s employees simply are unable to act any more professionally after a raid than they do during one.

No-knock warrants are typically used to surprise the target of raids and keep them from disposing of evidence, with possible violence from the offender cited as justification for the military-style use of heavy armor and machine guns.

Jose Guereña’s death was entirely preventable. Over-armed, over-amped law enforcement is causing far more harm to the public than other tactics and techniques possibly could.

The over-militarization of law enforcement agencies and over-use of SWAT teams is an idea that needs to be revisited in a sane society. Too many good people have been traumatized, and too many killed, under the flimsiest of circumstances.


After surviving two tours of duty in Iraq, only to lose his life in an encounter with Clarence Dupnik’s keystone cops, Jose Guereña was buried with full military honors.


60 out of 71 is impressive!

How slanted and prejudiced the author was who wrote the article..obvious
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 02:51:20 PM
Have you paid attention to this story? 


 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2011, 02:53:42 PM
Ok here is what I am talking about -

My car got broken into an hour ago and they cleaned it out.   Right in broad daylight.  Probably took about 600 worth of stuff. 

I called insurance and have window coverage and needed to make police report to file the claim.  Cops come by and say to me "Bro - you know where you are right?  This is the Box, this is how it is."

Now, I know my hood is not great at all and car thefts are huge near me.   But the cops dont do dick around here, no foot patrols, no thing at all. 

Sit in the damn car and dont do a damn thing while cimes get committed in broad daylight, then write a report afterwards ad tell me that I shoudaccept the thugs committing crimes because that is how it is.   

       

Out of 10 burglary of  vehicles that occurred in Region 2 yesterday, all 10 had either purses, briefcases, shopping bags, GPS devices etc in plain view.

It is frustrating for cops when citizens won't even take the time to remove their expensive items from plain view, then whine that their car got broken into.

We set up traps, we catch the bad guys, judges give them a slap on the wrist because it's a property crime, and we start the process over again. If only the citizens would give us a little help and not leave $600 worth of stuff protected only by glass.    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 02:55:57 PM
It was in the trunk.  They busted the side window and opened the trunk.   Oh, they took a gym bag with dirty clothes, a water bottle  and Axe deoderant in it too.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2011, 03:14:36 PM
It was in the trunk.  They busted the side window and opened the trunk.   Oh, they took a gym bag with dirty clothes, a water bottle  and Axe deoderant in it too.   

those bastards stole your axe deodorant??
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 03:20:52 PM
those bastards stole your axe deodorant??

Yes, and my freaking swimming stuff.  I can imagine some ghetto thug animal trying to hawk my speedo goggles and fins to some doper on the street.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 08:43:21 PM
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The Police State Is Personal
The Ludwig Von MIses Insitiute ^ | May 25, 2011 | Wendy McElroy
Posted on May 25, 2011 10:43:26 PM EDT by danielmryan

Does America now qualify as a police state? And, if so, where do you — or will you — personally draw a hard line and say, "No! That is a law or a police order I refuse to obey"?

As an anarchist, I view all states as police states, because every law is ultimately backed by police force against the body or property of a scofflaw, however peaceful he may be. I see only a difference of degree, not of kind. But even small differences in the degree of repression can be matters of life or death, and so they should not be trivialized.

A police state is more commonly described as a totalitarian government that exerts extreme social, political, and economic control. It maintains this control by a pervasive surveillance of its own citizenry, by draconian law enforcement, and by granting or withholding "privileges" such the ability to travel. Typically, there is a special police force, such as a Stasi, that operates with no transparency and few restraints. Unlike traditional policemen, who respond to crime, the purpose of such state police is to monitor and control society.

Let me restate my opening question: does America now embody this common description of a police state?

Clearly it does. The American government exerts extreme control over society, down to dictating which foods you may eat. Its economic control borders on the absolute. It politicizes and presides over even the traditional bastion of privacy — the family. Camera and other surveillance of daily life has soared, with the Supreme Court recently expanding the "right" of police to perform warrantless searches. Enforcement is so draconian that the United States has more prisoners per capita than any other nation; and over the last few years, the police have been self-consciously militarizing their procedures and attitudes. Travel, formerly a right, is now a privilege granted by government agents at their whim. Several huge and tyrannical law-enforcement agencies monitor peaceful behavior rather than respond to crime. These agencies operate largely outside the restrictions of the Constitution; for example, the TSA conducts arbitrary searches in violation of Fourth Amendment guarantees.

The Internet would run out of electrons before I could complete a list of the specifics that constitute an emerging Police America. The extent to which you are personally oppressed by the state, however, can be estimated by answering several more abstract questions:

How many peaceful activities would make you a criminal if you chose to do them?

How much of your life is spent working to pay taxes and other government fees?

How freely can you relocate your assets and person outside state jurisdiction?

How freely can you use your assets and person within state jurisdiction?

Few people aside from the state apparatchiks can answer in a way that makes them feel anything but economically enslaved and physically trapped.

No one should have to chose between family and the state, nor their wealth and the law. When confronted by such choices, there is no easy or correct answer. An increasing number of Americans are becoming expatriates for their own safety and that of their families. But the great majority of people are rooted in place by extended family, friends, work, inertia, emotional attachments, or other compelling reasons.

Those who recognize the emergence of Police America and yet feel a need to stay should ask themselves a question: where is the limit at which you withdraw your cooperation and say "no!" to a state law or a state agent's order? Would you inform on a neighbor, as the authorities already urge you to do? Would you assist a friend or family member even if it made you criminally an accessory; if so, whom? Would you steal from or harm an innocent person on command? If ordered, would you assist a police officer to do so, or would you interfere and, so, become vulnerable to a charge of "obstructing justice"?

There are several reasons for asking yourself such questions now. They include:

The consequences of your act may depend not merely on where you draw a line but also on how you do so. Planning can help you draw your line in a prudent way.

You may be reluctant to draw the lines you wish because you fear endangering your loved ones, your wealth, or something else valuable to you. If possible, secure these in advance. Prepare.

If you don't know where the lines are, then you are far more likely to act against your own principles or interests when suddenly confronted by a distressing, demanding situation like an officer barking commands.

Knowing where your limits are makes it more possible to avoid situations that trigger them.

Harry Browne advised people to pay a price as soon as possible because it costs less overall; this applies to psychological prices as well as to financial ones. It will never be easier for you to consider this question than right now, in privacy and comfort.

There are no correct answers. The purpose of the exercise is merely to become more aware of how you, personally, could live under a police state while retaining your safety and your self-respect.

The author of several books, Wendy McElroy maintains two active websites: wendymcelroy.com and ifeminists.com. Send her mail.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2011, 08:45:14 PM
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Big Brother Is Watching You
Reason Magazine ^ | 05/25/2011 | A. Barton Hinkle
Posted on May 25, 2011 11:43:55 PM EDT by The Magical Mischief Tour

In 1991, George Holliday filmed the LAPD’s arrest and beating of Rodney King. The videotape provoked national controversy. If a similar incident happened today, it might provoke something else: the arrest of George Holliday.

Cell phones and cameras with video-recording capability have become ubiquitous. This has led to an increase in the filming of police officers, which has led to a backlash: Cops have begun arresting those who film them, on charges such as interfering with an investigation—even when the filmer is not interfering and the officer is not investigating.

In one now-famous example, motorcyclist Anthony Graber’s helmet cam was rolling when Graber was pulled over last March by a Maryland State Trooper. The Trooper came out of an unmarked car in plain clothes, yelling, with his gun drawn. Graber didn’t like that—and posted the video on YouTube. In short order he was arrested and charged with felony wiretapping. A judge eventually threw the charges out—six months later.

Such incidents have led to a national conversation about the propriety of videotaping cops, even as dashboard cameras have become standard in squad cars. There seems to be some tension in the assumption that, as Graber’s lawyer put it, "the officer has a privacy expectation, but the motorist doesn’t."

That asymmetry has been underscored by recent rulings over global positioning systems. Last year the Virginia Court of Appeals said Fairfax County police did not violate a suspect’s right to privacy when, without a warrant, they surreptitiously put a GPS device on his vehicle to track his movements. Individuals have no expectation of privacy on the public streets, the court ruled—a position also taken by the Ninth Circuit in California.

Yet this past January, Kathy Byron, a member of Virginia’s House of Delegates, introduced legislation that would have forbidden the use of GPS tracking devices for the purpose of following political candidates. People running for public office "are still entitled to some privacy," she argued.

If ordinary citizens have little claim to privacy in public places, then what about their electronic devices? U.S. border-patrol agents often search the phones and computers of American citizens who cross the border—routinely "accessing email accounts, examining photographs and looking through personal calendars," according to The Constitution Project, a watchdog group. "In some cases, electronic devices were confiscated for as long as a year." And in Michigan, the State Police have high-tech forensic devices enabling them to download information from the cell phones of stopped motorists—something they have been doing without a warrant.

In New York, a cell phone alert system will send text messages with a unique ring tone in the event of a terrorist attack or other emergency. By next year the system will go nationwide, and all new cell phones will be required to contain the special chip needed to relay the messages. Orwell comparisons are overdone, but it is hard not to think of 1984: "The voice from the telescreen paused. A trumpet call, clear and beautiful, floated into the stagnant air. The voice continued raspingly: ‘Attention! Your attention, please! A newsflash has this moment arrived from the Malabar front. Our forces in South India have won a glorious victory. . . .’ "

Soon Americans might have no right to expect privacy even in the privacy of their own homes. Earlier this month the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that police officers may force their way into your domicile without your consent, without a warrant, and without what are usually referred to as "exigent circumstances"—e.g., someone inside the home yelling for help. The case, Kentucky v. King, concerned an incident in which police officers chasing a drug suspect ran into an apartment building, smelled marijuana, heard noises they thought might indicate someone was destroying evidence—and broke down the wrong door. This, said the Supremes, was perfectly fine.

Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg asked an apposite question: "How ‘secure’ do our homes remain if police, armed with no warrant, can pound on doors at will and, on hearing sounds indicative of things moving, forcibly enter and search for evidence of unlawful activity?"

The Indiana Supreme Court recently issued two rulings of a similar nature. The first said police officers serving a warrant can enter a home without knocking if officers decide they need to. The second said residents have no right to prevent the unlawful entry of police officers into their homes.

Before long the police might not even need to enter your home to search it. Last year Forbes reported that a company called American Science & Engineering racked up $224 million in sales of ZBVs. Those are Z Backscatter Vans, equipped with x-ray machines that can see through walls and clothing. The magazine says the vans have become "powerful tools for security, law enforcement and border control."

Let’s be clear about one thing: Asymmetry is not the same as injustice. The police can pull you over for speeding, but not vice versa—and that is as it should be. The whole idea of having police departments is to allow only certain authorized individuals -- the ones with badges—to raid homes, arrest suspects, and so on. And many of the developments noted above will help law enforcement catch bad guys, which is a good thing.

But it is not the only thing. It is not even the primary thing. Catching bad guys is an ancillary goal for government, whose first duty is to protect the rights of law-abiding citizens. It’s hard for government to do that while simultaneously chipping away at them.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: _bruce_ on May 26, 2011, 03:39:06 AM
It's similiar here in Austria.
If there's a fine e.g. parking ticket, driving too fast, license for your car expired, etc. the police is fast and furious.
If for example a citizen needs help then the tides turn...
...for example a friend of mine and some buddies of his were attacked by a dog from a shitty owner... they called police for help...

...answer: "Stop screaming and fuck off."
A patrolling police car didn't stop when taunted and asked for help.
After 30 minutes and numerous calls from many people in the same street police arrived...

a whole swat team(15+) for a single idiot with his dog.

This has been going on for a long time and the only difference is now it's becoming obvious... cameras everywhere, silent public unrest.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 26, 2011, 04:01:06 AM
It's similiar here in Austria.
If there's a fine e.g. parking ticket, driving too fast, license for your car expired, etc. the police is fast and furious.
If for example a citizen needs help then the tides turn...
...for example a friend of mine and some buddies of his were attacked by a dog from a shitty owner... they called police for help...

...answer: "Stop screaming and fuck off."
A patrolling police car didn't stop when taunted and asked for help.
After 30 minutes and numerous calls from many people in the same street police arrived...

a whole swat team(15+) for a single idiot with his dog.

This has been going on for a long time and the only difference is now it's becoming obvious... cameras everywhere, silent public unrest.


Ja? im Ernst?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: _bruce_ on May 26, 2011, 04:15:05 AM
Ja? im Ernst?

Ja.
Ich kann mich auch erinnern, dass seit Ewigkeiten die cobbs, besonders in kleinen Städten den Bürgern gerne am Arsch gehn.
Wenn du draussen sitzt - immer langsam vorbei fahren und herschaun - das mehrere male -> "Wer, warum, wieso?"
Oft ist es auch so dass, wenn du am abend wo "herumlungerst" ohne laut oder so zu sein, du aufgefordert wirst dich zu verziehen... is seit gut 20 Jahren so.
In einer Anstalt in Wien, wo du einen Bachelor absolvieren kannst, es so ist, dass wenn du am Gang mit anderen stehst und plauderst, das ganze aufgelöst wird da eine Möglichkeit des versammelten Protests besteht.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2011, 02:32:27 PM
New LAPD Patrol Car To Sport Infrared Night Vision, License Plate Scanner
May 26, 2011 1:03 PM




The Los Angeles Police Department is expected to debut the Chevrolet Caprice Police Patrol Vehicle (PPV) in mid-2011. (credit: Translogic/AOL)

LOS ANGELES (CBS) — If you thought the patrol car in the 1987 action movie “Robocop” was high-tech, wait until you see what L.A.’s finest will be soon be driving.

AOL’s Translogic caught a sneak peek of the new squad car of choice for the Los Angeles Police Department: the Chevrolet Caprice Police Patrol Vehicle (PPV).

Billed as the “sum total of all the law enforcement community has learned about patrol cars to date”, the PPV boasts a 6.0L V-8 engine with 355 horsepower, 18-inch steel wheels, and a host of gadgets that puts any Hollywood squad car to shame.

The Caprice, which replaces the long-used Ford Crown Victoria, is equipped with an infrared night vision camera, automated license plate scanner, and a touch-screen center console that replaces the older computers traditionally used by officers.

In addition to horsepower and firepower, the cruiser is also outfitted with the latest in information technology, with ethernet, Wi-Fi and an experimental wireless-mesh network in the trunk.

Even the bad guys can ride in comfort: cut-outs in the back seat are custom-made to accommodate any handcuffed suspect.

At a taxpayer cost of $20,000, LAPD officials say vehicle wrapping was used on the all-black sedans instead of the traditional paint to minimize repair expenses and protect resale value.

Drivers can expect to see the new 2012 Chevrolet Caprice PPV cruising city streets as early as mid-2011.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: _bruce_ on May 26, 2011, 02:55:47 PM
New LAPD Patrol Car To Sport Infrared Night Vision, License Plate Scanner
May 26, 2011 1:03 PM




The Los Angeles Police Department is expected to debut the Chevrolet Caprice Police Patrol Vehicle (PPV) in mid-2011. (credit: Translogic/AOL)

LOS ANGELES (CBS) — If you thought the patrol car in the 1987 action movie “Robocop” was high-tech, wait until you see what L.A.’s finest will be soon be driving.

AOL’s Translogic caught a sneak peek of the new squad car of choice for the Los Angeles Police Department: the Chevrolet Caprice Police Patrol Vehicle (PPV).

Billed as the “sum total of all the law enforcement community has learned about patrol cars to date”, the PPV boasts a 6.0L V-8 engine with 355 horsepower, 18-inch steel wheels, and a host of gadgets that puts any Hollywood squad car to shame.

The Caprice, which replaces the long-used Ford Crown Victoria, is equipped with an infrared night vision camera, automated license plate scanner, and a touch-screen center console that replaces the older computers traditionally used by officers.

In addition to horsepower and firepower, the cruiser is also outfitted with the latest in information technology, with ethernet, Wi-Fi and an experimental wireless-mesh network in the trunk.

Even the bad guys can ride in comfort: cut-outs in the back seat are custom-made to accommodate any handcuffed suspect.

At a taxpayer cost of $20,000, LAPD officials say vehicle wrapping was used on the all-black sedans instead of the traditional paint to minimize repair expenses and protect resale value.

Drivers can expect to see the new 2012 Chevrolet Caprice PPV cruising city streets as early as mid-2011.


Love it how those assholes phrase it like it's a good thing.
Will be helpful "gathering" more money from the tax payers.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2011, 03:08:30 PM
http://articles.cnn.com/2008-08-07/justice/mayor.warran...


A Maryland mayor is asking the federal government to investigate why SWAT team members burst into his home without knocking and shot his two dogs to death in an investigation into a drug smuggling scheme.

"This has been a difficult week and a half for us," Cheye Calvo, mayor of Berwyn Heights, Maryland, said Thursday. "We lost our family dogs. We did it at the hands of sheriff's deputies who burst through our front door, rifles blazing."

The raid last week was led by the Prince George's County Police Department, with the sheriff's special operations team assisting, after a package of marijuana was sent to Calvo's home.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2011, 05:05:31 PM
Love it how those assholes phrase it like it's a good thing.
Will be helpful "gathering" more money from the tax payers.

Technology is a good thing. The plate scanner has the capability to read and log hundreds of plates in a short amount of time and will red flag and annouce any stolen vehicle, felony wanted person and can be used to place suspects in the vicinity of a recent serious crime.

Night vision? Hell yeah... looking for that suspect that just stabbed an old man for his cell phone and ran down a dark alley or into a field?

Where they lose me is the horsepower. We've come a long way since the catch em at any cost days and there isn't a lot of need for horsepower. It will likely result in more collisions going to hot calls because the rookie officers tend to let the adrenaline go to their heads.

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 04:14:15 AM
Documents: SWAT officer fired 'until his weapon ran dry'
KOLD news ^ | 5/26/2011 | Sonu Wasu


________________________ ________________________ _________-

The Pima County Sheriff's Department released video, audio, and more than 500 pages of incident reports and interview transcripts related to the May 5 shooting death of a former Marine.

The shooting took place while officers were serving a warrant in a drug conspiracy case at Jose Guerena's home, on Redwater Street.

The SWAT team arrived at the home just before 9:30 a.m., hoping that children would be out of the house and at school at that time.

The video of the whole incident times out at 1 minute and 17 seconds.

It starts with a team of SWAT officers driving up to the Guerena home.

It appears to be peaceful and quiet, but in transcripts officers stated they were on high alert, after being told the suspect they were about to encounter could be armed, and that they were heading to a home where the residents may be linked to home invasions, drug deals and possibly murder.

When they get to the scene they quickly take up their positions.

In an audio recording provided to KOLD News 13 by the Sheriff's Department, you can hear SWAT officers knocking on the front door and announcing who they are at least three times. They do this in both English and Spanish.


(Excerpt) Read more at kold.com ...


________________________ ___________________-

This is the definition of the police state.   

There were so many better ways to handle this its not even funny.   

War on Drugs is such total nonsene its not even funny.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 04:19:06 AM
Here is the video.

Total bullshit.

http://azstarnet.com/online/video/vmix_79f8c3e2-8804-11e0-a06f-001cc4c002e0.html



I hope these cpps and dupnick go away a long time.   Total nonsense. 


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 04:27:57 AM
Obama signs 4-year Patriot Act extension in France
YahooNews (AP) ^ | 5/27/2011 | Jim Abrams





WASHINGTON – Congress on Thursday passed a four-year extension of post-Sept. 11 powers to search records and conduct roving wiretaps in pursuit of terrorists. Votes taken in rapid succession in the Senate and House came after lawmakers rejected attempts to temper the law enforcement powers to ensure that individual liberties are not abused.

Following the 250-153 evening vote in the House, the legislation to renew three terrorism-fighting authorities headed for the president's signature with only hours to go before the provisions expire at midnight.

With Obama currently in France, the White House said the president would use an autopen machine that holds a pen and signs his actual signature.


(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 04:58:12 AM
That plate scanner sounds pretty fascist to me. Just like DUI checkpoints.

Check out the video I posted.  Disgusting.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 05:59:25 AM
That plate scanner sounds pretty fascist to me. Just like DUI checkpoints.

License plates have no expectation of privacy and they can be observed from a public place and are clearly designed as such. I just don't see the connection at all. In fact, it is quite a stretch..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 05:59:51 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 06:09:04 AM
Here is the video.

Total bullshit.

http://azstarnet.com/online/video/vmix_79f8c3e2-8804-11e0-a06f-001cc4c002e0.html



I hope these cpps and dupnick go away a long time.   Total nonsense. 




I saw the video. Looks legit to me. I will post a comment I saw on the site that pretty much echos my sentiment.

 SWAT doesn't accidentally arrive at your house. They were there executing a just and valid warrant. They had corroborated information that the people involved in this investigation were violent and carried firearms. The shooting was ABSOLUTELY justified and any of you that are crying for this criminal shocks me. What would you do? Ask the guy if his safety is on and politely ask him to put the assault rifle down?

The Supreme Court has established that police shootings are not to be held to the reasonableness standard of the general public, and listening to you guys crying over this I am thankful for that. This shooting will be evaluated under the standard of what a reasonable OFFICER would do. And PCSO takes many pains to identify themselves, with markings, sirens, yelling police, etc..for the exact scenario that presented itself in this case.

Any subject who levels a firearm at these HEROS did it knowlingly and in wreckless disregard of the safety of him and that of his wife and child. He knew it was the police. His lying wife knew it was the police. And when the family, if they even try it, loses in court, I hope you all will apologive to the HEROS of the PCSO Regional SWAT Team.

I'll add that they were more than reasonable by running the siren. They took longer to make entry after announcing than was probably prudent. You have information there are guns and they may be involved in home invasions you really don't want to allow the suspects to arm themselves like this guy apparently did. When confronted with a suspect with an assault rifle during a dynamic entry you shoot. In fact, placed in that situation, everyone on this board would shoot or likely be dead within a couple years of working the street because you can't make a hard decision under pressure. That the gun was on safe plays no part of the overall situation.

The only thing technically wrong with that entry in my opinion is with the info they had, they waited too long to make entry. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:12:13 AM
They did not have a warrant for his house and found nothing at all in the house!   Guess why Sheriff Dipshit wont release the warrant?  Because there was none! 

Please -that video is horrific.   

The siren was only going for a few seconds and did not even sound lke a police siren.  The van was unmarked and there were no marked cars identifying this as police.   

Finally - they did not give the man an adequate time to come to the door before kicking it in.   

This is total bullshit.     

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 06:19:47 AM
They did not have a warrant for his house and found nothing at all in the house!   Guess why Sheriff Dipshit wont release the warrant?  Because there was none! 

Please -that video is horrific.   

The siren was only going for a few seconds and did not even sound lke a police siren.  The van was unmarked and there were no marked cars identifying this as police.   

Finally - they did not give the man an adequate time to come to the door before kicking it in.   

This is total bullshit.     



Really? You know for a fact they had no warrant? I call bs on it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on May 27, 2011, 06:22:34 AM
I saw the video. Looks legit to me. I will post a comment I saw on the site that pretty much echos my sentiment.

 SWAT doesn't accidentally arrive at your house. They were there executing a just and valid warrant. They had corroborated information that the people involved in this investigation were violent and carried firearms. The shooting was ABSOLUTELY justified and any of you that are crying for this criminal shocks me. What would you do? Ask the guy if his safety is on and politely ask him to put the assault rifle down?

The Supreme Court has established that police shootings are not to be held to the reasonableness standard of the general public, and listening to you guys crying over this I am thankful for that. This shooting will be evaluated under the standard of what a reasonable OFFICER would do. And PCSO takes many pains to identify themselves, with markings, sirens, yelling police, etc..for the exact scenario that presented itself in this case.

Any subject who levels a firearm at these HEROS did it knowlingly and in wreckless disregard of the safety of him and that of his wife and child. He knew it was the police. His lying wife knew it was the police. And when the family, if they even try it, loses in court, I hope you all will apologive to the HEROS of the PCSO Regional SWAT Team.

I'll add that they were more than reasonable by running the siren. They took longer to make entry after announcing than was probably prudent. You have information there are guns and they may be involved in home invasions you really don't want to allow the suspects to arm themselves like this guy apparently did. When confronted with a suspect with an assault rifle during a dynamic entry you shoot. In fact, placed in that situation, everyone on this board would shoot or likely be dead within a couple years of working the street because you can't make a hard decision under pressure. That the gun was on safe plays no part of the overall situation.

The only thing technically wrong with that entry in my opinion is with the info they had, they waited too long to make entry. 
Go fuck yourself
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on May 27, 2011, 06:23:50 AM
They found nothing and shoot a man X times for it

How the fuck does that make them heroes???

Then any gangbanger who makes a driveshooting is a hero too right?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:29:36 AM
Really? You know for a fact they had no warrant? I call bs on it.

Yes, they had a general neighborhood warrant because they claimed they were investing drug dealing or some shit.   Total nonsense.

Why could they just get this guy on his way to work?   

And since when is swat used to do general warrants?   

Don't you see why the general public increasingly distrusts and has nothing but utter scorn for most cops?       

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 225for70 on May 27, 2011, 06:30:19 AM
Go fuck yourself

X2,

Only a cop could rationalize the way agnostic does.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:51:50 AM
X2,

Only a cop could rationalize the way agnostic does.


Almost every cop i have ever met looks at everyone as a criminal in one form or another.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on May 27, 2011, 07:01:49 AM
Yes, they had a general neighborhood warrant because they claimed they were investing drug dealing or some shit.   Total nonsense.

Why could they just get this guy on his way to work?   

And since when is swat used to do general warrants?   

Don't you see why the general public increasingly distrusts and has nothing but utter scorn for most cops?       


All valid points. We talk a lot about cutting spending right now how about firing these fuckers. Lots of nutjobs with guns why do we have to pay their salary? And doesnt it say on the police cars: "To protect and serve?" How the hell is this protect and serve?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: _bruce_ on May 27, 2011, 07:19:11 AM
Go fuck yourself

x3
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 07:38:54 AM
well this conversation has developed rather well..

Here is a clip from a report out a few hours ago..

Jose Guerena died May 5 after a SWAT team descended on his home in a Tucson suburb with a search warrant. His home was one of four believed to be associated with a drug smuggling operation in the area.

A video released Thursday by the sheriff's department shows the uniformed SWAT team pulling up outside his house, sounding their sirens, banging on the front door -- before kicking it in -- and opening fire shortly after entering the home.

Watch video on CNN affiliate KGUN9

Officers fired more than 70 shots, the investigation showed. Deputies said they opened fire after Guerena, 26, gestured at them with an AR-15 -- a semiautomatic rifle.

Some of the officers said they believed that Guerena fired on them, but the investigation showed that no shots were fired from the weapon and it was never taken off the safety position.

Initial news reports indicated that he had been struck by more than 60 bullets. However, CNN has seen an initial report from the medical examiner that details 22 bullet wounds.




So they had a warrant. To state they had no warrant is untruthful and removes credibility. I call a duck a duck. I acknowledge when officers do wrong, got no problems being critical of police. Being fair after considering all information and known facts is what I'm good at.

I just wish you guys could be more rational with your conclusions...  ;)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 07:48:41 AM
No they didnt.  The warrant was not specifically for his house from what I understand.  It was a neighborhood wide warrant and did they same thing to another house in the hood.  Notice too how they did not find a damn thing in his house showing that the information supplied to get the warrant was most likely bullshit as well.   

And again -why use SWAT and dynamic entiries for drug search?   Seriously?  It getting some drugs more important than the high likelihood of physical injury and death?  Seriously?  Is retrieving some drugs so important that you literally invade a mans' home with special forces operators in unmarked cars and having military weaponds and tactics?  ?   

And don't get me started with the "CI told m so nonsense".  That is pure bullshit too.  They get some junky to drop dimes on others to avid prosecution and the junky says whatever will keep his ass from getting a felony.   Anyone with a clue knows the deal.   

I grew up with tons of cops and know exactly what they do and the bullshit scams they pull in drug cases to get warrants.  Additionally, most judges rubber stamp warrants anyway.     

Oh and if they thought this guy was involved in the crimes and had credible info - why not get an arrest warrant as well as a search warrant, pick him up at wok and do the search while he is in custody?

Answer - because it was bullshit from day 1.   





   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 09:05:29 AM
Menlo Park Cops Raided Wrong House, Says Claimants in Lawsuit
Officers accused of raiding wrong home during execution of a Nov. search warrant.
By Chris Roberts|  Wednesday, May 18, 2011  |  Updated 2:51 PM PDT





When Menlo Park police officers busted into an East Palo Alto home and pointed a firearm at a two-year old girl in November, they had the wrong house, say the two homeowners, who are filing a $500,000 claim against both cities.

The cops did have a search warrant for a home on Garden Street on Nov. 2, 2010, but it wasn't for the home of Carlos Nava and Melissa Verduzco, whose door cops broke down at 6:45 a.m. that day, reported the Palo Alto Daily News.

The East Palo Alto City Council rejected the claim on an unanimous vote. The Menlo Park City Council has yet to consider the case.

According to the claims, "A sergeant Cowans slammed (Nava's) face to the ground and kneed him in the back of the head. Later, this officer punched (Nava) about the body," the newspaper reported.

Other officers entered Verduzco's room and "pointed laser-sighted firearms" at Verduzco and her 2-year-old daughter, the claims state.


It's unclear which house cops intended to hit and what they were searching for. Menlo Park cops did not comment on the story, according to the newspaper.

Because of the alleged botched raid, Nava suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, stutters occasionally and has back and neck problems, the claims state. All three have suffered nightmares and "general fear and violation of their civil rights," according to the claims.

East Palo Alto City Attorney Valeria Armento said that the case is a Menlo Park matter, not an East Palo Alto matter. All of the raiding was done by East Palo Alto cops.

Copyright NBC Local Media

 
 
 
 

 
Find this article at:
http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Menlo-Park-Cops-Raided-Wrong-House-Says-Claimants-in-Lawsuit-122191569.html

 

________________________ _____________________



They should have sued for millions instead.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 09:24:15 AM
No they didnt.  The warrant was not specifically for his house from what I understand. By law a warrant has to state certain criteria. It would not be for a nieghborhood as that is general. It can list more than one specific address, but they would contain specific addresses  It was a neighborhood wide warrant and did they same thing to another house in the hood.  Notice too how they did not find a damn thing in his house showing that the information supplied to get the warrant was most likely bullshit as well.   

And again -why use SWAT and dynamic entiries for drug search?   Seriously?  It getting some drugs more important than the high likelihood of physical injury and death?  Seriously?  Is retrieving some drugs so important that you literally invade a mans' home with special forces operators in unmarked cars and having military weaponds and tactics?  ? 

Prior to running any warrant a threat assessment is done. At my department it's an actual checklist. If there are indicators that there are weapons in the house and the suspect(s) have a history of violence, in this case there were allegations of home invasions then SWAT runs them. So it would be SOP for SWAT to run such a warrant   

And don't get me started with the "CI told m so nonsense".  (no one said anything about CI, but even with CI's there is criteria that has to be met. CI has to have been in premise and observed specific things within a given period of time, usually the observation has to be within 72hrs )That is pure bullshit too.  They get some junky to drop dimes on others to avid prosecution and the junky says whatever will keep his ass from getting a felony.   Anyone with a clue knows the deal.   

I grew up with tons of cops and know exactly what they do and the bullshit scams they pull in drug cases to get warrants.  Additionally, most judges rubber stamp warrants anyway.  Often times warrants are denied. But generally before a judge is approached with a warrant the officers have made certain they have enough information to meet the criteria. That is probably why you get the impression it is rubberstamped    

Oh and if they thought this guy was involved in the crimes and had credible info - why not get an arrest warrant as well as a search warrant, pick him up at wok and do the search while he is in custody? Easier said than done. A confrontation at a Wendy's full of people isn't as easy or as safe as the home. Approaching and getting into position on many places of employment is not easily done. Many factors go into where and when to run a warrant.

Answer - because it was bullshit from day 1.  Your conclusion ignores a lot of facts, but then, if you are prejuduced against something, it's expected.  





   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 09:27:27 AM
Yeah ok, this guys only record was a few traffic tickets.    Enough for your theory.   FAIL.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 09:30:07 AM


Right - because is safer taking out a dudes house like Navy Seals in daylight.   ::)  ::)

As for the CI - obviously that was bullshit as they found nothing at all.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 09:54:06 AM
We've Gone from a Nation of Laws to a Nation of Powerful Men Making Laws in Secret
zero hedge ^ | 5/27/11 | George Washington


________________________ ________________________ __



Preface: Some defendants are no longer allowed to see the "secret evidence" which the government is using against them. See this and this.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that judges can throw out cases because they don't like or believe the plaintiff ... even before anyone has had the chance to conduct discovery to prove their case. In other words, judges' secret biases can be the basis for denying people their day in court, without even having to examine the facts.

Claims of national security are being used to keep the shenanigans of the biggest banks an corporations secret, and to crush dissent.

But this essay focuses on something else: the fact that the laws themselves are now being kept secret.

America is supposed to be a nation of laws which apply to everyone equally, regardless of wealth or power.

Founded on the Constitution and based upon the separation of powers, we escaped from the British monarchy - a "nation of men" where the law is whatever the king says it is.

However, many laws are now "secret" - known only to a handful of people, and oftentimes hidden even from the part of our government which is supposed to make laws in the first place: Congress.

The Patriot Act

Congress just re-authorized the Patriot Act for another 3 years.

However, Senator Wyden notes that the government is using a secret interpretation of the Patriot Act different from what Congress and the public believe. Senator Wyden's press release of today states:

Speaking on the floor of the U.S Senate during the truncated debate on the reauthorization of the PATRIOT ACT for another four years, U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) – a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence -- warned his colleagues that a vote to extend the bill without amendments that would ban any Administration’s ability to keep internal interpretations of the Patriot Act classified will eventually cause public outrage.

Known as Secret Law, the official interpretation of the Patriot Act could dramatically differ from what the public believes the law allows. This could create severe violations of the Constitutional and Civil Rights of American Citizens.

***

I have served on the Senate Intelligence Committee for ten years, and I don’t take a backseat to anybody when it comes to the importance of protecting genuinely sensitive sources and collection methods. But the law itself should never be secret – voters have a need and a right to know what the law says, and what their government thinks the text of the law means, so that they can decide whether the law is appropriately written and ratify or reject decisions that their elected officials make on their behalf.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 10:02:39 AM
I read in the article the wife saw the police outside through a window and yelled to her husband.... Now with the siren, knock on the door more than once with an announcement more than once that they were the police, and her visual that they were the police, care to explain why he still thought he should grab his assault rifle and meet up with em?

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 10:14:36 AM
I read in the article the wife saw the police outside through a window and yelled to her husband.... Now with the siren, knock on the door more than once with an announcement more than once that they were the police, and her visual that they were the police, care to explain why he still thought he should grab his assault rifle and meet up with em?

   

How did know they were police?  They were in an unmarked vehicle and dressed like commandos.    Again - this goes to even something more basic - where do the police think its ok to do this for the sole purpose of retrieving some drugs with such a high liklihood of physical harm and danger to others?   
   

Total bullshit.   The war on drugs, and I dont or have ever used drugs in any form, is nothing but a massive scam on the taxpayer and does nothing but keep far too many govt workers employed at a tremendous cost to the taxpayer. 

Even if he did have marijuana in his house - does that justify this crap?   In a police state run by thug cops - yes of course they will justify anything.   

This whole swat team nonseseis pure bullshit.   Were they trying to apprehend a fugitive for murder?   Responding to a hostage situation? Responding to a violent crime in progress like a violtent home invasion? 

No.  These wannabes were all jacked up to retrieve some drugs and killed a former marine and now two kids are without a father. 



AGAIN - DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND WHY THE AVERAGE PERSON HATES THE POLICE NOW?   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:26:27 AM

AGAIN - DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND WHY THE AVERAGE PERSON HATES THE POLICE NOW?   



I don't think the average person hates the police.  It's usually people who have had bad experiences with the police who "hate" them. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:30:28 AM
I don't think the average person hates the police.  It's usually people who have had bad experiences with the police who "hate" them. 


Not where I live for sure.    Did you watch the video I posted?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:33:22 AM

Not where I live for sure.    Did you watch the video I posted?   

Which one? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:34:53 AM
Which one? 

The one of the ex-marine getting killed.   Short of an active hostage situation or fugitive wanted for capital murder - I dont see how anyone condones that.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:36:27 AM
The one of the ex-marine getting killed.   Short of an active hostage situation or fugitive wanted for capital murder - I dont see how anyone condones that.     

You'll have to link me.  You posted a number of videos in this thread. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:38:02 AM
Here is the video.

Total bullshit.

http://azstarnet.com/online/video/vmix_79f8c3e2-8804-11e0-a06f-001cc4c002e0.html



I hope these cpps and dupnick go away a long time.   Total nonsense. 




BUMP
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:41:38 AM
BUMP

Thanks.  How could you possibly draw any conclusions based on that 1:17 minute clip?  Impossible for me to say whether they acted reasonably or not. 

Why was the SWAT team called?  What happened when they entered the home? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:41:50 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:42:54 AM
Thanks.  How could you possibly draw any conclusions based on that 1:17 minute clip?  Impossible for me to say whether they acted reasonably or not. 

Why was the SWAT team called?  What happened when they entered the home? 

Very easily - SWAT should not have been there in the first place and is signs of a growing police state. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:44:09 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:52:47 AM
Very easily - SWAT should not have been there in the first place and is signs of a growing police state. 

Sounds like they had the right to be there if they had a warrant.  A judge must have signed off on it.  Police obtaining and executing a warrant isn't evidence of a police state. 

I watched the second clip.  Still not enough information.  The wife saw the SWAT team.  Pretty obvious it wasn't a home invasion.  He shouldn't have pointed a rifle at armed men with "SWAT" signs all over the place.  It's a tragedy that this guy was killed, but I would have shot him too if he pointed a gun at me. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 11:57:09 AM
Why do you feel that it's OK for the police to point a gun at you, but you not to point one back?

If the police knock on my door with search warrant and guns drawn, I will not be stupid enough to point a rifle at them.  That's essentially suicide by cop. 

If I'm a cop with a search warrant and someone points a gun at me, I would shoot them in a heartbeat.  Sounds like they followed proper use of force guidelines.  You don't wait for someone to pull the trigger before you fire. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:57:29 AM
Sounds like they had the right to be there if they had a warrant.  A judge must have signed off on it.  Police obtaining and executing a warrant isn't evidence of a police state. 

I watched the second clip.  Still not enough information.  The wife saw the SWAT team.  Pretty obvious it wasn't a home invasion.  He shouldn't have pointed a rifle at armed men with "SWAT" signs all over the place.  It's a tragedy that this guy was killed, but I would have shot him too if he pointed a gun at me. 


Again - its the police state that enables this shit in the first place!   Why couldnt they get this guy at work or in his car and then done the warrant?   Mind you there were no drugs in the house.  

Again - without an active hostage situation or horrific crime in prgress like terrr event or something of that nature - why would SWAT be employed for this?  

ts utterly absurd.  
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 11:59:51 AM
If the police knock on my door with search warrant and guns drawn, I will not be stupid enough to point a rifle at them.  That's essentially suicide by cop. 

If I'm a cop with a search warrant and someone points a gun at me, I would shoot them in a heartbeat.  Sounds like they followed proper use of force guidelines.  You don't wait for someone to pull the trigger before you fire. 

Oh yeah, cause the really knocked and waited for someone to come downstairs and repond on that.   again - they were in an unmarked car, no uniformofficers, all dressed like commandos in a way no one would know WTF is going on.   

This is the gestapo plain and simple. 

And again - lets say he did have drugs -does that justify such reckless tactics in a residential hood in the first place?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:03:17 PM
So what you're really saying is that if this were WW2 and the gestapo showed up, you'd just go willingly?

You do realize that this is exactly how that shit started.




What gets me is that is that this was for a general search warrant, not even an arrest warrant!    

Think about that - this guy was not even accused of a crime in the first place and they sent the gestapo to his house over what most likely was a tip from a CI tryig to avoid prosecution ad save his own ass and had motive to supply bullshit info to the cops. 

This s where I turn all lib on some stuff - the war on drugs does not justify this crap. 
    

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:04:47 PM

Again - its the police state that enables this shit in the first place!   Why couldnt they get this guy at work or in his car and then done the warrant?   Mind you there were no drugs in the house.  

Again - without an active hostage situation or horrific crime in prgress like terrr event or something of that nature - why would SWAT be employed for this?  

ts utterly absurd.  
 

A police state would be the police busting down the door without a warrant.  Or a situation like Amadou Diallo.  

I don't have a problem with cops who use the system to do their job.  If they had no basis to search the guy's house, the judge wouldn't have given them a warrant (unless they lied to get to the warrant).  

And we can't judge whether their search of the house was reasonable based on what they find or don't find after the search is over.  I think we have to look at whatever information they had when they got the warrant to determine whether it was appropriate, followed by whether they followed proper use of force guidelines for their department.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:07:35 PM
A police state would be the police busting down the door without a warrant.  Or a situation like Amadou Diallo.  

I don't have a problem with cops who use the system to do their job.  If they had no basis to search the guy's house, the judge wouldn't have given them a warrant (unless they lied to get to the warrant).  

And we can't judge whether their search of the house was reasonable based on what they find or don't find after the search is over.  I think we have to look at whatever information they had when they got the warrant to determine whether it was appropriate, followed by whether they followed proper use of force guidelines for their department.  


I'm not arguing cops showing up to execute to do a search warrant.  Im saying you dont send Spec Ops decked out for combat for stuff like this, which used to be done by uniform officers.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 12:07:44 PM
How did know they were police?  They were in an unmarked vehicle and dressed like commandos.    Again - this goes to even something more basic - where do the police think its ok to do this for the sole purpose of retrieving some drugs with such a high liklihood of physical harm and danger to others?   
   

Total bullshit.   The war on drugs, and I dont or have ever used drugs in any form, is nothing but a massive scam on the taxpayer and does nothing but keep far too many govt workers employed at a tremendous cost to the taxpayer. 

Even if he did have marijuana in his house - does that justify this crap?   In a police state run by thug cops - yes of course they will justify anything.   

This whole swat team nonseseis pure bullshit.   Were they trying to apprehend a fugitive for murder?   Responding to a hostage situation? Responding to a violent crime in progress like a violtent home invasion? 

No.  These wannabes were all jacked up to retrieve some drugs and killed a former marine and now two kids are without a father. 



AGAIN - DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND WHY THE AVERAGE PERSON HATES THE POLICE NOW?   



The average person likes the police. I didn't know we were arguing what the average citizen thought. Recent polls in my city show a better than 80% positive response to the question "Do you think the police are doing a good job?"

I'm discussing this particular incident. Anybody above the age of 6 can recognize a swat team outside their window. You are wanting me to suspend logic and believe that she actually thought, with the sirens, the knock, the announcement of police, the "POLICE"  on the uniforms and having movies and television shows for the last 20 yrs showing what SWAT looks like she decided she must be being invaded by commando troops? Riiiiiight.

Reports say the suspect was "also was involved in drug smuggling, strong-armed robberies and human smuggling"

Let me play you for just a second and use your ability to jump to conclusions ...


Here is what must have happened..

Suspect is a drug dealer who also was a suspect in home invasions and human smuggling. He had several guns and body armor along with an assault rifle. What innocent person owns body armor? The military doesn't let you keep theirs when you leave.. No, people who commit home invasions have lots of guns and body armor.

Wife spotted what was obviously police outside the house. She's like "oh shit, did we get rid of the evidence already? Did we forget anything?" She yells to hubby "Baby, the police are outside with helmets and guns and looks like they want to come in!"

Hubby, waking up says "Shit! the pigs are here!" no way I'm going down without a fight and grabs his AR-15 and confronts them forgetting the safety is on because he's half asleep. As he shouts out to come and get some he is surprised to find its on safe. In the meantime the SWAT officers open up on the obvious threat..

NOW we are discussing it on an even playing field...  

When you want to discuss the issue rationally, give me a shout..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:09:02 PM
So what you're really saying is that if this were WW2 and the gestapo showed up, you'd just go willingly?

You do realize that this is exactly how that shit started.



No, I'm saying what I said:  if SWAT shows up at my house with guns drawn, I will not be stupid enough to point a rifle at them.  

This is not WWII.  There is no gestapo.  

Not sure what you mean by how this got started?  You mean this guy getting shot?  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 12:09:35 PM

I'm not arguing cops showing up to execute to do a search warrant.  Im saying you dont send Spec Ops decked out for combat for stuff like this, which used to be done by uniform officers.       
Yes, until a large number of uniform cops kept getting killed... now when there is a potential and articulable threat of violence SWAT, with better training and equipment does it. Makes perfect sense ..  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 12:10:18 PM
A police state would be the police busting down the door without a warrant.  Or a situation like Amadou Diallo.  

I don't have a problem with cops who use the system to do their job.  If they had no basis to search the guy's house, the judge wouldn't have given them a warrant (unless they lied to get to the warrant).  

And we can't judge whether their search of the house was reasonable based on what they find or don't find after the search is over.  I think we have to look at whatever information they had when they got the warrant to determine whether it was appropriate, followed by whether they followed proper use of force guidelines for their department.  

exactly
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:11:32 PM

I'm not arguing cops showing up to execute to do a search warrant.  Im saying you dont send Spec Ops decked out for combat for stuff like this, which used to be done by uniform officers.       

Why not?  If they suspect the person is armed, the police should do whatever they can to protect themselves. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 12:13:16 PM
Why not?  If they suspect the person is armed, the police should do whatever they can to protect themselves. 

X2
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:17:47 PM
Yes, until a large number of uniform cops kept getting killed... now when there is a potential and articulable threat of violence SWAT, with better training and equipment does it. Makes perfect sense ..  

Sorry - you signed up for the job.  You knew exactly what you were getting in to and "officer safety" IMHO is not nearly as important as the constitution and the presumption of innonence of people  

Again - "reports"  ? ? ?    By who?  

And if there were sufficient reports  to warrant an arrest, why not go for an arrest warrant and take the guy at work or in his car instead of playing Navy Seal?  

Bro - you may be a good cop, but you are like 99% i have ever met, you will defend  almost anything othe cops do, even when it means innocent people getting killed like this ex marine who did two tours in Iraq.  

 

     "Officer safety" should not mean people having to give up their rights just because the "bravest" all of a sudden can't deal with  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:18:28 PM
Why not?  If they suspect the person is armed, the police should do whatever they can to protect themselves. 

For real?   Beach  - the why not just shoot everyone first?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:22:39 PM
For real?   Beach  - the why not just shoot everyone first?   

Because that would be murder. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:25:15 PM
Why not?  If they suspect the person is armed, the police should do whatever they can to protect themselves. 


So if the cops execute a search warrant in the middle of the night in my house, of which i have no idea about, and I have my gun because I think my house is being broken in to since its the middle of the night, I should be killed?

Sorry beach, that is bullsit - this is where I really dont give a damn when police get lit up when these raids go wrong.    They bring it on themselves though these tactics yet they are so caught up in the culture of "bravest" bullshit which encourages his stuff.  

Again - these cops needs to take a lot more lessons in con law, crim pro, basic common sense, and less playing wannabe navy seal.  
  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 225for70 on May 27, 2011, 12:27:44 PM
Sorry - you signed up for the job.  You knew exactly what you were getting in to and "officer safety" IMHO is not nearly as important as the constitution and the presumption of innonence of people  

Again - "reports"  ? ? ?    By who?  

And if there were sufficient reports  to warrant an arrest, why not go for an arrest warrant and take the guy at work or in his car instead of playing Navy Seal?  

Bro - you may be a good cop, but you are like 99% i have ever met, you will defend  almost anything othe cops do, even when it means innocent people getting killed like this ex marine who did two tours in Iraq.  

 

     "Officer safety" should not mean people having to give up their rights just because the "bravest" all of a sudden can't deal with  

Great post..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:29:35 PM
Because that would be murder. 


Yeah - and in cases like this, and that guy with the golf club - that is exacty what happened.    

Lets say this guy thought the house was being broken in to and realized it was the cops at the last minute yet still had the AR15, do you honestly believe he still would have walked out of there alive?


Sorry - peoples' rights to be secure in their house are more important to me than the cops' navy seal act.  Its total bullshit and changing thenature of the society.

This is EXACTLY why the colonists started offing the red coats, and we will get there too before long unless these wannabes change their tactics.            
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:30:17 PM

So if the cops execute a search warrant in the middle of the night in my house, of which i have no idea about, and I have my gun because I think my house is being broken in to since its the middle of the night, I should be killed?

Sorry beach, that is bullsit - this is where I really dont give a damn when police get lit up when these raids go wrong.    They bring it on themselves though these tactics yet they are so caught up in the culture of "bravest" bullshit which encourages his stuff.  

Again - these cops needs to take a lot more lessons in con law, crim pro, basic common sense, and less playing wannabe navy seal.  
  

If cops execute a search warrant in the middle of the night at your home, identify themselves, and you point a gun at them, then yes you or anyone else who does so should be shot.

Not sure that is a realistic scenario, because I doubt most search warrants are carried out in the dead of night.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:34:47 PM
Yeah - and in cases like this, and that guy with the golf club - that is exacty what happened.    

Lets say this guy thought the house was being broken in to and realized it was the cops at the last minute yet still had the AR15, do you honestly believe he still would have walked out of there alive?


Sorry - peoples' rights to be secure in their house are more important to me than the cops' navy seal act.  Its total bullshit and changing thenature of the society.

This is EXACTLY why the colonists started offing the red coats, and we will get there too before long unless these wannabes change their tactics.            

Don't you need more information before concluding the police murdered the former Marine? 

Do you really believe this guy thought his house was being invaded when his wife saw the SWAT team and told them she had a baby?  This was broad daylight. 

The peoples' right to be secure in their homes is the reason why police ordinarily have to get a search warrant from a judge before entering someone's home.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:40:35 PM
If cops execute a search warrant in the middle of the night at your home, identify themselves, and you point a gun at them, then yes you or anyone else who does so should be shot.

Not sure that is a realistic scenario, because I doubt most search warrants are carried out in the dead of night.  

Yeah cause at 2am and people screaming I can really ascertain what is going on.   

Did you read my story about the West Point grad who was killed at COSTCO?

Cops gave conflicting instructions and he was shot because he was folloing the instructions of one and the other shot him.   

Dude was totally innocent and the jackboots came blazing in like wild fire and killed him.   

There are way too many of these cases happening lately, and its not the fault of the public.     

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:44:36 PM
Yeah cause at 2am and people screaming I can really ascertain what is going on.   

Did you read my story about the West Point grad who was killed at COSTCO?

Cops gave conflicting instructions and he was shot because he was folloing the instructions of one and the other shot him.   

Dude was totally innocent and the jackboots came blazing in like wild fire and killed him.   

There are way too many of these cases happening lately, and its not the fault of the public.     



Did not see the story.  I'm not going to defend cops who engage in misconduct.  But I also will not say all or a majority of cops are bad, or we're in some police state, because a handful of cops break the law. 

You've mentioned the "animals" who live in or around your city a number of times.  How do you think law enforcement should deal with those folks? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:47:47 PM
Don't you need more information before concluding the police murdered the former Marine? 

Do you really believe this guy thought his house was being invaded when his wife saw the SWAT team and told them she had a baby?  This was broad daylight. 

The peoples' right to be secure in their homes is the reason why police ordinarily have to get a search warrant from a judge before entering someone's home.   

What ih she was like "go downstairs and see what it is, I cant tell they have guns"   He goes downstairs with the gun ON SAFETY not knowing what it is, they see him through the glass with the gun and just light him up.  

Utter bullshit.  No uniformed officers, no squad cars, nothing.  

Again - why not call up the house and say they are there to conduct a search warrant?  oh god forbid some drugs get tossed in the toilet -oh the horror, lets instead conduct a delta force operation to "preserve" evidence, mind you in a house to where the owner has no history at all but some tickets, etc. 

Dont you see how nuts this is?     


  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 12:55:33 PM
Did not see the story.  I'm not going to defend cops who engage in misconduct.  But I also will not say all or a majority of cops are bad, or we're in some police state, because a handful of cops break the law. 

You've mentioned the "animals" who live in or around your city a number of times.  How do you think law enforcement should deal with those folks? 

According to the law, constiution, and presumption of innocence lik we are all afforded.   

Most cops are of the mind set that you are guilty until proven innocent.   

Another thing - cops are supposed to hand you the warrant for review and you let them in.   If the guy smashes the dor closes, then they go in. 

From what i can tell in the video - there was may 10 seconds at best of muddles yelling at the door before they bashed it in like gestapo jack booted thugs. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 27, 2011, 12:56:32 PM
What ih she was like "go downstairs and see what it is, I cant tell they have guns"   He goes downstairs with the gun ON SAFETY not knowing what it is, they see him through the glass with the gun and just light him up.  

Utter bullshit.  No uniformed officers, no squad cars, nothing.  

Again - why not call up the house and say they are there to conduct a search warrant?  oh god forbid some drugs get tossed in the toilet -oh the horror, lets instead conduct a delta force operation to "preserve" evidence, mind you in a house to where the owner has no history at all but some tickets, etc. 

Dont you see how nuts this is?     


  

Beach Bum will defend the State and state authority no matter what. Just a fact.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:58:09 PM
What ih she was like "go downstairs and see what it is, I cant tell they have guns"   He goes downstairs with the gun ON SAFETY not knowing what it is, they see him through the glass with the gun and just light him up.  

Utter bullshit.  No uniformed officers, no squad cars, nothing.  

Again - why not call up the house and say they are there to conduct a search warrant?  oh god forbid some drugs get tossed in the toilet -oh the horror, lets instead conduct a delta force operation to "preserve" evidence, mind you in a house to where the owner has no history at all but some tickets, etc. 

Dont you see how nuts this is?     


  

They were wearing clothes that said "SWAT."  The wife spoke to them.  I don't know all the facts, but based on what I've watched in the clips you posted, I find it hard to believe they didn't know SWAT was at the door.    

It doesn't matter if the guy had his rifle on safe.  The police don't know that.  It's unreasonable to require police to determine whether someone actually intends to fire a weapon if the weapon is being pointed at them.  I can't imagine their rules of engagement would require them to try and figure out whether a weapon is on safe.  

Don't you think it's reasonable to assume that someone holding a weapon in a firing position has every intention to fire the weapon?  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 12:58:54 PM
Beach Bum will defend the State and state authority no matter what. Just a fact.

Decide will drop into a thread, make an unsupported absurd comment, and run away.  Just a fact.   :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:03:19 PM
They were wearing clothes that said "SWAT."  The wife spoke to them.  I don't know all the facts, but based on what I've watched in the clips you posted, I find it hard to believe they didn't know SWAT was at the door.    

It doesn't matter if the guy had his rifle on safe.  The police don't know that.  It's unreasonable to require police to determine whether someone actually intends to fire a weapon if the weapon is being pointed at them.  I can't imagine their rules of engagement would require them to try and figure out whether a weapon is on safe.  

Don't you think it's reasonable to assume that someone holding a weapon in a firing position has every intention to fire the weapon?  


Again - they bashed the door down and started shooting after about 10 seconds.  There is no evidence he knew they were swat.  

He never fired a shot and they lied about that too, no to mention keeping EMT from him for an hour.  

By the way - whatever happened to "drop your weapon"        ? ? ?    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:04:10 PM
Wait.

What time of day was this?

You can see writing on things in pitch black darkness?

Didnt you watch the vid?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:05:53 PM
I wish I were on this jury.   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:20:10 PM




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:23:36 PM
Remember this gem? 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 01:55:03 PM

Again - they bashed the door down and started shooting after about 10 seconds.  There is no evidence he knew they were swat.  

He never fired a shot and they lied about that too, no to mention keeping EMT from him for an hour.  

By the way - whatever happened to "drop your weapon"        ? ? ?    

That does not sound accurate to me.  The wife said she saw them, held up something telling them she had a child, then went and woke her husband up.  No way that happened in ten seconds.  The fact the wife saw SWAT and they were wearing clothes identifying them as SWAT makes it pretty obvious they knew it wasn't some home invasion. 

"Drop your weapon"?  Seriously?  Who says that outside of the movies?  I would think pointing the weapon is enough. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 01:56:58 PM
That does not sound accurate to me.  The wife said she saw them, held up something telling them she had a child, then went and woke her husband up.  No way that happened in ten seconds.  The fact the wife saw SWAT and they were wearing clothes identifying them as SWAT makes it pretty obvious they knew it wasn't some home invasion. 

"Drop your weapon"?  Seriously?  Who says that outside of the movies?  I would think pointing the weapon is enough. 


Watch the video again.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:01:11 PM
Another thing Beach - she clearly stated on the 911 phne call she had no idea who they were.  

And the cops are lying again here.    They are disgusting.  They have already been caught in about 5 lies so far   

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:03:14 PM
She clearly says she did not know who shot him.  This disgusting vermin ketp EMT away for an hour. 

I hope each of them gets life.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:04:23 PM
You should only fire your weapon if you or someone you know is in imminent danger.

It's why you can't shoot someone in the back.

You are in imminent danger when someone points a weapon at you.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:05:27 PM
You are in imminent danger when someone points a weapon at you.  


Like the gestapo nazis who showed up at this innocent guys home?   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:07:46 PM
Another thing Beach - she clearly stated on the 911 phne call she had no idea who they were.  

And the cops are lying again here.    They are disgusting.  They have already been caught in about 5 lies so far   

 


Why are you assuming she is telling the truth? 

She did say she told them she had a baby.  How could she talk to them and not know who they were? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:09:35 PM
Like the gestapo nazis who showed up at this innocent guys home?   



Nah.  Just in general.  You disagree that you are in imminent danger when someone points a weapon at you? 

C'mon dude.  Are you really saying that if someone points a weapon at you, you will tell them to drop their weapon, ask them if it's loaded, ensure it's not safe, etc.?   You know good and well if someone pointed a weapon at you, and you were armed, you'd cap them.  I know I would. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:10:23 PM
Ha ha ha ha.   Oh lord.   

She said she saw mwn w guns attacking the house.  She is supposed to assume they are cops when no marked cars or uniformed police are rthere? 

How you defend this really is beyond my comprehension, especially since they have already been caught in about 5 lies so far.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:17:35 PM
Ha ha ha ha.   Oh lord.  

She said she saw mwn w guns attacking the house.  She is supposed to assume they are cops when no marked cars or uniformed police are rthere?  

How you defend this really is beyond my comprehension, especially since they have already been caught in about 5 lies so far.

I'm not defending what happened.  I need more information.  But . . . based on what I've seen so far, I find it hard to believe she didn't know SWAT was at the door.  I also think the guy was dumb to point a weapon at the police, especially if the weapon was on safe.  

Not sure how you can condemn the police without knowing what really happened.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:19:45 PM
That's not inherently true and it's not what is taught at most police academy training... at least not the ones I used to assist with.

;)

I call BS.   ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: kcballer on May 27, 2011, 02:20:53 PM
Don't point a gun at police officers or you will be shot.  He pointed a gun, and got shot. 

Officers will get off and move onward and upward in their careers. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:23:51 PM
I don't believe there is any justification on a search warrant alone for these type of tactics in the first place.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: kcballer on May 27, 2011, 02:24:46 PM
I don't believe there is any justification on a search warrant alone for these type of tactics in the first place.

It's not your call.  You aren't putting yourself in danger are you?  So STFU. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:31:34 PM

Unless a person has killed someone already, there is no call for imminent danger, now if he has already killed someone, then you are well within legal law to kill that person.


If you had police training, and this is what you were taught and/or believe, then you should demand a refund. 

I don't believe any legitimate law enforcement agency taught you that kind of nonsense.  That is absolutely ridiculous.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:40:49 PM
No kidding TU. We are all guilty until proven innocent now.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:43:59 PM
It's often a judgement call, but considering who you are, and you are simply believing this on your own opinion, I'll let you slide.

This is not a "war" there Beach... These are citizens of the United States of America we are talking about... Not enemy combatants.

When a police officer kills an individual he is becoming the judge and jury and denying that citizen due process... So no... I don't think my training and education in the criminal justice field needs a refund.

You simply need to be educated.

Absurd.  Nobody taught you that crap.  I challenge you to find one piece of paper from the use of force guidelines from any law enforcement agency in the country that says:  "Unless a person has killed someone already, there is no call for imminent danger, now if he has already killed someone, then you are well within legal law to kill that person." 

I'll apologize to you if you find something.  But I doubt you will, because that's just retarded. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 02:52:59 PM
They created the situation by showing up like that. 

Regular search warrants are not supposed to be served like this. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 02:58:32 PM

You don't have to go far... A quick google will show you the extreme instances when the use of deadly force is warranted.

There are hundreds of cases to back my opinion and many less to back yours.

Since you disbelieve... and are in the minority, why don't you prove ME wrong... You're the one who says I'm full of shit... so you show me.

Being a cop doesn't give you some ability to choose to use deadly force more so than the average citizen.



You pull something out of your rear end and ask me to disprove it?  Absolutely not. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:03:07 PM
Today a three-judge panel of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that in a deadly force case brought under the Fourth Amendment, the jury must affirmative be instructed that: "The use of deadly force is inappropriate unless the police officer had probable cause to believe that the suspect posed a threat of serious harm to the officers or others." 

Sorry, but this does not support your position.  An officer has probable cause to believe that a suspect poses a threat of serious harm to officer if the suspect is pointing an assault rifle at him.

To quote Drinking With Bob:  It's common-freaking-sense.  

Since you claim to have had police training, post something (if you still have it) from the portion of your training that discusses the use of deadly force, which confirms your earlier claim about when it's appropriate.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:06:05 PM
Right... So you know more than me, even though I'm the one with experience, but I have to prove it because you choose to not believe it.

Bullshit.


No. You made a retarded statement and asked me to disprove it.  Not going to happen.  
  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 27, 2011, 03:06:10 PM
If you had police training, and this is what you were taught and/or believe, then you should demand a refund. 

I don't believe any legitimate law enforcement agency taught you that kind of nonsense.  That is absolutely ridiculous.   

You also believe that the Gulf of Tonkin incident was legitimate and real.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:11:45 PM
You think I'm just hanging on to police policies... Fuck off Beach.

I have been involved in the scenarios... you haven't... go fuck yourself.

Of course you don't believe it... You just wanna claim you know everything. Guess what genius... You don't.

::)

LOL!  Is that all you got?   :)  I don't know quite a bit.  But one thing I do know is you are full of crap on this.  I can't believe you actually believe some of the stuff you say.   :-\ 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:12:18 PM
You also believe that the Gulf of Tonkin incident was legitimate and real.

What??  lol.  What the heck?  lol . . . .
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Deicide on May 27, 2011, 03:15:03 PM
What??  lol.  What the heck?  lol . . . .

That's just another way of saying that you are incredulous when someone makes known that the government has done something fishy.The Gulf of Tonkin is just one example. Another would be multiple instances of our CIA helping to assassinate elected leaders of other countries, installing dictators and turning a blind eye to their crimes. You think it simply did not happen.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:17:02 PM
That's just another way of saying that you are incredulous when someone makes known that the government has done something fishy.The Gulf of Tonkin is just one example. Another would be multiple instances of our CIA helping to assassinate elected leaders of other countries, installing dictators and turning a blind eye to their crimes. You think it simply did not happen.

What the heck you talking about?   I thought the issue was when a police officer can use deadly force?   ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jadeveon Clowney on May 27, 2011, 03:18:47 PM
You think I'm just hanging on to police policies... Fuck off Beach.

I have been involved in the scenarios... you haven't... go fuck yourself.

Of course you don't believe it... You just wanna claim you know everything. Guess what genius... You don't.

::)

You've been meltdowning at an alarming rate lately... que pasa, holmes?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:19:19 PM
That's because you're scared to fucking look.

What I find the most funny... is that one day, you're gonna be fucked over, or your kid is going to get fucked over, and then you will be the one bitching and complaining.



So now you're resorting to the elementary school "you're scared" approach?  C'mon man.  lol . . . .

I tell you what, this is only the internet.  It's only a message board.  You don't have to support anything you say.  I aint mad atcha.  Take a few deep breaths.   :)

But what you said is still retarded.   :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 03:19:35 PM
That's how I look at it.  Beach I am sure is well meaning, buts needs to realize that happened to that ex marine could happen to him or anyone just even the smallest change of circumstances.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jadeveon Clowney on May 27, 2011, 03:21:26 PM
That's how I look at it.  Beach I am sure is well meaning, buts needs to realize that happened to that ex marine could happen to him or anyone just even the smallest change of circumstances.

Probably not.... you're taking what happens to maybe .001% of the population and trying to act like it's happening all over the place.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:22:28 PM
That's how I look at it.  Beach I am sure is well meaning, buts needs to realize that happened to that ex marine could happen to him or anyone just even the smallest change of circumstances.

Abuse of police power can happen to anyone. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:23:02 PM
No... I'm just tired of talking to you because you're a fucking idiot.

I ain't mad at you either... you're just a buffoon.

Here is an easy solution:  don't engage me.   :)

This is the part where say you're not posting in the thread anymore.   :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 225for70 on May 27, 2011, 03:24:09 PM
Abuse of police power can happen to anyone. 

It's just happens to the police with a greater frequency.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:24:17 PM
Probably not.... you're taking what happens to maybe .001% of the population and trying to act like it's happening all over the place.

Correct.  We have nearly a million law enforcement personnel in this country.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: kcballer on May 27, 2011, 03:31:18 PM
No kidding TU. We are all guilty until proven innocent now.

Not at all.  You are presumed dangerous until proven otherwise.  That is different.  And that stems from the need to protect oneself and the community at large. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:37:25 PM
It's just happens to the police with a greater frequency.

Um, wouldn't all abuse of police power happen to the police? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 03:38:40 PM
No... I will post in this thread, because it's in the right area and the topic starter is keeping it on point and not bitching and moving it to the girls board.

You can still go fuck yourself.

LOL!

(http://www.socalbubble.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/denial-and-the-coming-data-meltdown.jpg)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jadeveon Clowney on May 27, 2011, 03:39:08 PM
somebody needs to get tu his blankie.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 04:13:55 PM
Just read this report.  According to this, the police were announcing in English and Spanish who they were for 30 minutes: 

At 9:34 a.m., the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish: "It's the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT team. Anyone inside the house, come out with your hands up, no weapons in your hands."

Complex drug probe triggered SWAT raid
By Fernanda Echavarri Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Friday, May 27, 2011 12:01 am

The man shot and killed by SWAT officers, as well as his brother and another man, were listed as suspects in a complex drug investigation being conducted by the Sheriff's Department, according to documents released Thursday.

That investigation was the reason heavily armed SWAT officers went to Jose Guerena's house to serve a search warrant that ended in his fatal shooting May 5, reports show.

More than 500 pages of officers' statements, evidence lists and witness interviews were released by the Pima County Sheriff's Department. Also released were audiotapes from the shooting scene, radio transmissions and other communications made by law enforcement personnel during the serving of search warrants on four homes on the southwest side.

A short video showing Pima County Regional SWAT team members serving the warrant was also released. The written documents detail what sheriff's personnel did during the incident.

The short video recording shows that deputies approaching Jose Guerena's home turned the sirens on for a few seconds as they approached. It also shows them announcing themselves, then knocking down the front door and firing their guns.
Audiotapes reveal that no SWAT officers entered Guerena's house. Law enforcement officers went into his home only after a robot was sent in and it was determined about an hour after the shooting that Guerena, a former Marine, was dead.

The reports state Jose Guerena; his brother, Alejandro; and Jose Celaya were named as suspects in briefings given to officers before the search warrants were served. Many of the officers' reports refer to the sheriff's long-term drug investigation as the reason for the search warrants.

Reports show about $100,000 in cash, marijuana and firearms were seized that morning from the four homes that were searched.

Items found in Jose Guerena's house included: a Colt .38-caliber handgun, paperwork, tax returns, insurance papers, bank statements and a bank card, reports showed.

Another report said detectives found body armor in a hallway closet and a U.S. Border Patrol hat in the garage.
Some search warrant documents remained sealed and were not released Thursday.

Dramatic video

In the video released by the Sheriff's Department, about five SWAT team members are seen jumping out of the vehicle with shields, helmets and bulletproof vests, all marked "POLICE" across the front and back. The sirens stop and the officers begin shouting "Police, search warrant, open the door," alternating with the same command in Spanish three times before they break down the front door of Guerena's house.

A couple of seconds after the door is opened, one officers says, "Hit him," and all the officers begin shooting from the doorway.

One of the officers falls down a couple of seconds after they open fire, and then all SWAT team members back away from the door, the video shows.

The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena pointed an AR-15 rifle at officers as they entered the home. It was determined that Guerena did not fire at officers.

At 9:34 a.m., the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish: "It's the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT team. Anyone inside the house, come out with your hands up, no weapons in your hands."

Michael Storie, an attorney representing the five SWAT officers who shot at Guerena, said last week that all those officers were separated immediately after the shooting so they could be interviewed and provide objective statements of what happened. The audiotapes reveal that after about 45 minutes, all the SWAT officers are together. They can be heard talking about what happened, according to tape recordings made at the scene.

"That was um, like a movie, the way he jumped out," said the SWAT team leader.

"Well, he waited, he waited and once Hector came up ..." said another SWAT member just before being interrupted by the SWAT leader who said, "What did he say?" Hector is the name of one of the SWAT officers.

Two other voices say they "couldn't hear anything" and that they didn't know if Jose Guerena said anything before the shooting began.

"He yelled something, 'I got something for you' or something," the SWAT leader told them, according to the audiotapes.
The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena said something as he pointed his gun at officers.

"I just started boom, boom, boom, boom," said another voice on the tape.

"Yeah, we were all out of ammo when we got back," the SWAT leader said.

While this conversation is going on outside, the robot was sent into the house to check on Jose Guerena, who was shot at least 60 times.

A SWAT deputy directed the robot into the home and observed Guerena lying face down in the kitchen area.

The deputy operating the robot used its arm to apply pressure to Guerena to see if he would respond.

He then used the robot to push down on Guerena's lower and middle back several times but received no response.

While outside, a SWAT member asked the team leader if they were going inside the house. The team leader can be heard on the tape saying no, and the team member said, "Why not? ... Might as well finish what I started."

The deputy operating the robot did not see Guerena's chest rising or falling, as if he were breathing, and said he was "Code 900" or dead, about 50 minutes into the audiotape.

One officer wrote in a report that in a briefing before the incident he was told there was an ongoing narcotics investigation and that suspects may be linked to a double homicide.

Other officers were briefed about a double slaying in Tucson in which a man and his wife were killed during a home invasion that was witnessed by the couple's young daughter.

According to a report, a detective interviewing Jose Guerena's younger brother, Jesus Gerardo Guerena, asked him about the slayings of Manuel and Cynthia Orozco. Jesus Guerena said he knew the couple because they were related to his brother Alejandro's wife.

According to Star archives, Manuel and Cynthia Orozco were killed during a home invasion in March 2010.

A second home

A second SWAT team served a search warrant at a nearby house in the 6200 block of Oklahoma Street at the same time as the shooting. Later that morning officers also served a warrant at two other houses all related to the same investigation, the reports show.

Detective John Mawhinney wrote in his report that he conducted a search of the residence in the 6200 block of West Oklahoma Street in connection with this case and found a large shoebox full of cash under a bed.

A later tally showed the box contained nearly $94,000. He also found a bag of marijuana in the stove and ammunition, his report stated.

Inside the home on Oklahoma, a report states, an AK-47 rifle was found. Guns and ballistic vests were found at several of the residences, the reports show.

Seven vehicles were also found at the house on Oklahoma. Several reports indicated drug dogs used in searches at the house alerted officers to the smell of narcotics on most of the vehicles there.

While investigators were searching the Oklahoma residence, a pickup truck pulled up to the house. A report states that Alejandro Guerena was driving the truck. He was detained.

The report states Alejandro Guerena told investigators there was a "pistola" in the truck. Detectives recovered a .45-caliber handgun from the vehicle.

WIFE INTERVIEWED

Also released were statements made after the shooting by Vanessa Guerena, Jose Guerena's wife.

She and the couple's young son were in the home at the time of the shooting.

She described having to talk to her 4-year-old son about his father after he asked what had happened to his dad. She told him he had been shot but would be OK.

"All I want to know, if he's alive," she told a detective.

The detective replied: "I'm sorry, he died."

"No! What were you guys thinking?" she said.

The detective told her the team was serving a search warrant and "never intended on shooting him. That was not the intention."

Vanessa Guerena said her husband was left alone for a long time after the shooting.

She said her son told her, "Mommy, I saw my daddy on the floor, with all this blood. What happened? Is he gonna be OK?' "

The Sheriff's Department would not comment on the reports and tapes.

http://azstarnet.com/news/local/crime/article_ffd3cd6b-6564-59a9-8b43-a1635ae66bd4.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on May 27, 2011, 04:44:13 PM
Thats the first time in this type of situation I've read that SWAT calls out for someone for about 30 minutes. Is that usual procedure cause all I ever see is movement so fast it doesnt allow anyone time to react.

All they found was weed from what I gather, another reason to legalize the fucking stuff already.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:00:15 PM
Look at the damn tape.  30 minutes my ass.   More lying.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 06:10:12 PM
Look at the damn tape.  30 minutes my ass.   More lying.

They are reporting on what the audiotapes show, not what the police say the audiotapes show.  Sounds like the reporter actually listened to the tapes.  At least that's the way I read the article.  ("the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish")
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:19:17 PM
Did you watch the video I posted? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 06:26:14 PM
Did you watch the video I posted? 

I watched two of the videos you posted. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 06:28:34 PM
I'm gonna post the wifes entire statement later. I believe her over the cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 06:39:12 PM
I'm gonna post the wifes entire statement later. I believe her over the cops.

In the short clip I saw of her, she did not sound believable, but I'll watch a longer statement if you have one.

But what about the reporter apparently saying he/she listened to the audio of the cops announcing their presence for 30 minutes?  Do you interpret that part of the article the same way? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2011, 07:45:12 PM
I watched the video. Where are they saying the thirty min occured? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 08:30:54 PM
I watched the video. Where are they saying the thirty min occured? 

I got if from the article I posted: 

At 9:34 a.m., the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish: "It's the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT team. Anyone inside the house, come out with your hands up, no weapons in your hands."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 10:41:46 PM
What typically happens in a case like this is some segments of the public immediatley condemn the officers before the investigation is complete. When that happens, you can pretty much discont their opinions as biased.

It really shows the level of ignorance when it is suggested in cases where there is a potential for violence that regular street cops knock on the door and announce they are there, then wait patiently while the people inside grab weapons and destroy evidence. That "it is there job they signed on for" is perhaps the most ignorant statement I have read on Getbig.

I've been in law enforcement over 25 yrs and I've assisted in removing unfit officers from the force. I've called a duck a duck in every case, weighing all the facts and circumstances. I wish some segments of the public would educate them on what it actually takes to arrest bad guys on a regular basis instead of running off at the mouth about shooting the guns out of their hands or judo chopping unconcious instead of firing at someone with a knife who is charging you, as I have actually heard ignorant people suggest.

The fact police officers have in the past killed innocent people in high stress situations making bad decisions is tragic and obviously something we train hard not to do. I have personally drawn my weapon in probably over a hundred instances making high risk felony stops, arresting people who are armed, or had committed violent crimes and likely armed. I've never shot anyone. Of the 1600 sworn on the force, only about 10 have ever shot anyone. There is a lot of restraint shown on a regular basis. I've had situations where I could have legally shot someone and at risk to myself took a calculated risk and did not. I know many others who have done the same

Lets let the facts come to light before we conclude what they should or should not have done in this case 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 10:43:51 PM
You should only fire your weapon if you or someone you know is in imminent danger.

It's why you can't shoot someone in the back.

I agree... and if an AR 15 is pointed at me I am in imminent danger...wtf??
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 10:47:49 PM
According to the law, constiution, and presumption of innocence lik we are all afforded.   

Most cops are of the mind set that you are guilty until proven innocent.   

Another thing - cops are supposed to hand you the warrant for review and you let them in.   If the guy smashes the dor closes, then they go in. 

From what i can tell in the video - there was may 10 seconds at best of muddles yelling at the door before they bashed it in like gestapo jack booted thugs. 

You watch too many movies... cops are NOT required to hand you the warrant at the time of service but have a signed warrant available to show when the scene is secure.

The classic "let me see the warrant before you come in " is just for the movies
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 27, 2011, 10:53:44 PM
What typically happens in a case like this is some segments of the public immediatley condemn the officers before the investigation is complete. When that happens, you can pretty much discont their opinions as biased.

It really shows the level of ignorance when it is suggested in cases where there is a potential for violence that regular street cops knock on the door and announce they are there, then wait patiently while the people inside grab weapons and destroy evidence. That "it is there job they signed on for" is perhaps the most ignorant statement I have read on Getbig.

I've been in law enforcement over 25 yrs and I've assisted in removing unfit officers from the force. I've called a duck a duck in every case, weighing all the facts and circumstances. I wish some segments of the public would educate them on what it actually takes to arrest bad guys on a regular basis instead of running off at the mouth about shooting the guns out of their hands or judo chopping unconcious instead of firing at someone with a knife who is charging you, as I have actually heard ignorant people suggest.

The fact police officers have in the past killed innocent people in high stress situations making bad decisions is tragic and obviously something we train hard not to do. I have personally drawn my weapon in probably over a hundred instances making high risk felony stops, arresting people who are armed, or had committed violent crimes and likely armed. I've never shot anyone. Of the 1600 sworn on the force, only about 10 have ever shot anyone. There is a lot of restraint shown on a regular basis. I've had situations where I could have legally shot someone and at risk to myself took a calculated risk and did not. I know many others who have done the same

Lets let the facts come to light before we conclude what they should or should not have done in this case 

Agree.  It takes a special person to risk his or her life to be a public servant.  Tough job.  Thanks for your service. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 10:58:08 PM
I simply ask. Do you feel you have a right to point a gun at someone else more than the average citizen does?

If you think you do. Then I'm sorry. But you are in fact a fascist.

Holmes, lets exit la la land for just a minute and discuss this. Police are citizens and some citizens are police. I actually have MORE rules regarding the use of my weapon than the average citizen. You have state law, I not only have the same state law, but I am also given additional rules with General Orders and Standard Operating Procedures.

Without police you would be in a world of trouble if you thought about it. Your dream of having no police would quickly become a nightmare. Someone has to keep the thugs from destroying the good people. Someone has to stop the drunks from driving their cars into your families SUV, arrests the rapists and killers, keep the freeways from becoming high speed death traps.. the list goes on.

Reasonable people realized that in order to do that job, which isn't so easy, we would need some protections. Some of the rules are if we are in uniform, displaying a badge  and all the trappings that let you know we are police, you can't point a gun at us. We have been screened and the odds are a lot better I am not the drug smuggling home invasion human trafficking suspect...so in that case... sorry, but tie goes to the police..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 11:07:57 PM
So you're saying you DO have more of a right to point a gun than I do?

Can you be more specific? If you come home from work tonight, and you are attacked by a man in a jogging suit who knocks you to the ground and starts to pull out a gun while yelling "You stole my money I'm gonna kill you" then you have the exact same right as me to shoot the man.

If I am clearing a warehouse at night due to a burglar alarm and I come around the corner and we see each other at the same time, me in police uniform and you in plain street clothes, my right to point my weapon at you trumps your right to point your weapon at me. Does that make sense to you?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2011, 11:16:29 PM
I appreciate your specificity but I think its wrong. Maybe I own the warehouse. Maybe you aren't a real cop.

Perhaps I think you are the one who set the alarm off.

The fact that you feel that your badge allows you to point a gun at me is what's fucked up. I certainly wouldn't pull a gun on someone just because they are there.

Did you read the article about the guy in Pennsylvania I posted?

What do you have to say about that?



If the people just go with your word. Then you're saying that your word means more than mine and that all cops words mean more. That's how the police state starts.

I won't be silent. Sorry.

I'm sorry, your statements show you and I are just too far apart to continue any meaningful dialogue
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 04:18:30 AM
Question for beach and agnostic.   

Do you guys agree with the statement

"it's better for 100 guilty men to go free than for 1 innocent man to be convicted"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 05:06:32 AM
This Is Your War on Drugs
Friday, May 27th, 2011
We have another video of a raid by the Columbia Police Department. The action starts at 5:30. There’s more violence. More perfunctory dog killing. (I didn’t hear a single menacing growl, and the dogs were shot while retreating.) There’s more careless tossing of flash grenades. (They threw five, then, bizarrely, two more “to prove that the previous 5 grenades had done no damage.”) This raid, once again, was for marijuana.

I’ve become somewhat inoculated to the outrage in many these stories. I think you probably need to in order to write about this stuff every day. But I was shaking while watching this one. Then I let out a string of profanities. Then I gave my dog a hug.

All of which is why you need to watch it. And help distribute it as far and wide as the Columbia raid video from last year. This isn’t like watching video of a car accident or a natural disaster. This doesn’t have to happen. You’re watching something your government does to your fellow citizens about 150 times per day in this country. If this very literal “drug war” insanity is going to continue to be waged in our name, we ought to make goddamned sure everyone knows exactly what it entails. And this is what it entails. Cops dressed like soldiers breaking into private homes, tossing concussion grenades, training their guns on nonviolent citizens, and slaughtering dogs as a matter of procedure.

More details from the good people at Keep Columbia Free.



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This entry was posted on Friday, May 27th, 2011 at 9:31 pm by Radley Balko and is filed under General Drug War, Police Militarization. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


http://www.theagitator.com/2011/05/27/this-is-your-war-on-drugs-2/




Video at site.    Ridiculous.   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 05:08:53 AM
http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 05:35:31 AM
Source: San Francisco Chronicle

A San Francisco judge dismissed 26 more felony cases Friday involving plainclothes police officers who allegedly lied about the circumstances of drug searches and arrests or stole from suspects, bringing the number of prosecutions lost in the widening scandal to nearly 120.

Superior Court Judge Lillian Sing granted the dismissals at prosecutors' request. Outside court, prosecutors said the cases - nearly all of them involving drug charges - had been dropped largely because of potential credibility problems with an undercover officer at the Mission Station, Ricardo Guerrero, whose testimony in a preliminary hearing this year was called into question by videotape evidence that defense attorneys secured.

Prosecutors had already dropped eight cases in which Guerrero was involved since the video surfaced this month.

The video was of an arrest that Guerrero and other undercover officers from the Mission Station made at a Tenderloin residential hotel Dec. 30. It shows Guerrero carrying a gym bag from the suspect's room that he did not account for and was not booked as evidence.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/0...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 28, 2011, 10:01:04 AM
Question for beach and agnostic.   

Do you guys agree with the statement

"it's better for 100 guilty men to go free than for 1 innocent man to be convicted"

I do not.  I think guilty men should be punished and innocent men should not.  It's not an either/or. 

And it really makes no sense.  I would ask the question this way:  is it better for 25 serial child molesters, 25 serial rapists, 25 serial killers, and 25 Bernie Madhoffs to go free than for 1 innocent man to be convicted.  Neither is acceptable. 

Where is the clip you were going to post with the extended interview of the Arizona woman?  I'd like to watch it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 10:03:36 AM
Sorry forgot.  I'm on my phone.  Its not a video but a transcript of the interogation she got.  Its like 30 pages long and she claims the cops may have dropped the AR on the body as she had no idea he had an AR at all.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 28, 2011, 10:06:54 AM
"it's better for 100 guilty men to go free than for 1 innocent man to be convicted"
I'm sure BB actually thinks it's better for 100 innocent men to be convicted because it feels better knowing someone is doing time for the crime regardless if they are actually guilty or not...

THE BIGGER CRIME IS AN INNOCENT BEING CONVICTED.  The true perpetrator is still out there AND an innocent man has lost his life.

If BB thinks that it's ok to trade an innocent life, then maybe he should step up and sacrifice himself.  He'd be talking different if he was the one accused, that's for sure...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 28, 2011, 11:57:55 AM
I'm sure BB actually thinks it's better for 100 innocent men to be convicted because it feels better knowing someone is doing time for the crime regardless if they are actually guilty or not...

THE BIGGER CRIME IS AN INNOCENT BEING CONVICTED.  The true perpetrator is still out there AND an innocent man has lost his life.

If BB thinks that it's ok to trade an innocent life, then maybe he should step up and sacrifice himself.  He'd be talking different if he was the one accused, that's for sure...

 ::)  This is what's known as a "false dichotomy." 

"The fallacy of false dichotomy is committed when the arguer claims that his conclusion is one of only two options, when in fact there are other possibilities. The arguer then goes on to show that the 'only other option' is clearly outrageous, and so his preferred conclusion must be embraced.

Either you let me go to the Family Values Tour, or I'll be miserable for the rest of my life. I know you don't want me to be miserable for the rest of my life, so you should let me go to the concert.

Either you use Speed Stick deodorant, or you will stink to high heaven. You don't want to stink, so you better by Speed Stick.

Either I keep smoking, or I'll get fat. I don't want to get fat, so I better keep smoking.

Either we keep Charles Manson in jail, or we release him, thus risking murder, carnage, and mayhem. We don't want murder, carnage, or mayhem, so we had better keep him in jail."

http://mind.ucsd.edu/syllabi/98-99/logic/falsedichotomy.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 28, 2011, 12:21:05 PM
I'm sure BB actually thinks it's better for 100 innocent men to be convicted because it feels better knowing someone is doing time for the crime regardless if they are actually guilty or not...

THE BIGGER CRIME IS AN INNOCENT BEING CONVICTED.  The true perpetrator is still out there AND an innocent man has lost his life.

If BB thinks that it's ok to trade an innocent life, then maybe he should step up and sacrifice himself.  He'd be talking different if he was the one accused, that's for sure...

as sure as you were that you knew what BB would say, you were wrong which was shown my his answer. Does this cause you to doubt other things you were so sure about?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2011, 12:21:12 PM
BB - the statement is about how the legal system treats the accused.  In theory, there are supposed to be adequate safeguards afforded the accused to where its far easier for guilty to get off than an innocent man convicted. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 28, 2011, 12:22:41 PM
Question for beach and agnostic.   

Do you guys agree with the statement

"it's better for 100 guilty men to go free than for 1 innocent man to be convicted"

No, I don't agree with it. It's better for no innicent man to be convicted and all guilty people be convicted.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 28, 2011, 12:25:35 PM
BB - the statement is about how the legal system treats the accused.  In theory, there are supposed to be adequate safeguards afforded the accused to where its far easier for guilty to get off than an innocent man convicted. 

There should be safeguards.  We have plenty.  It's not a perfect system, and definitely benefits those who have means, but we an outstanding system already in place. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on May 28, 2011, 12:25:54 PM
No, I don't agree with it. It's better for no innicent man to be convicted and all guilty people be convicted.

Precisely. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2011, 06:24:02 PM
The Jose Guerena Raid: A Demonstration of Tactical Incompetence
 captainsjournal.com ^ | 27 May, 2011 | Herschel Smith




Helmet camera footage of the SWAT team raid on the home of Jose Guerena has been released.

Bob Owen noticed the same thing I did. One of the team members fell in the doorway upon breaching and entering the home. The video speaks for itself, but by way of summary, let’s observe the following.

First, Mr. Guerena’s weapon, contrary to initial accounts by the SWAT team, was never taken off of safety. The team took no shots from him. Second, the team mills around for a while before breaching the home. Third, they don’t form into a stack. Fourth, absurdly, they knock and allow only four seconds for a response. Fifth, one of the members falls in the doorway. Sixth, upon shots being fired (by the SWAT team), more than one team member begins backing away from the incident. Seventh, one of the team members who initially backed away moves forward to fire shots over the heads of other team members who are in the home (it’s a wonder that SWAT team members didn’t get shot by their own team). All the while, several team members are standing aimlessly outside the home, doing nothing. Then to top it all off, even though medical responders arrived within minutes, they weren’t allowed into the home for one hour and fourteen minutes.

The Sheriff may as well have sent the Keystone Cops to raid the home. These clowns shouldn’t be allowed anywhere near weapons.

UPDATE: Thanks to Glenn Reynolds for the LINK.

UPDATE #2: So I asked a certain former Marine I know (combat tour of Fallujah in 2007) what he thought about this particular raid. Here are his thoughts. This would be hilarious if a man hadn’t died in the process. Tactically speaking, their raid was foolish, and they are guilty of murder. So this SWAT team wanted to “get some?” Great. Go join the Marine Corps and deploy to a foreign country and fight insurgents. You’re supposed to be peace officers, to prevent things like this from happening. As it was, Mr. Guerena thought his home was being invaded, and so what would you do in this circumstance? Well, you go get a weapon and post up. You send rounds down range to protect your family. Mr. Guerena even had the good discipline not to do that. This whole incident was evil.

UPDATE #3: I’ve had a chance to talk with my son about this some more, and a good summary of what this raid was like is to say that “It looks like the Iraqi Army raiding a house.” I had known that the ISF wasn’t present during much of his time in Fallujah (most of the security forces were Marines and IPs), so I asked him, “Why do you say that? Have you seen the Iraqi Army raiding a house?” He said yes, and I responded by asking him what it looked like? He said “It looks like that. Just like that. People falling all over each other, emptying their weapons, shooting at everything, and shooting at nothing.”

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2011, 06:56:35 PM
FBI Joy Ride Wrecks Ferrari, DOJ Refuses to Pay Damages
 www.theNewspaper.com ^ | 05/26/2011 | n/a




US government refuses to pay damages for Ferrari F50 destroyed during an FBI joy ride.

 The US Department of Justice is deploying all of its legal muscle to avoid paying the price after an FBI agent destroyed an exotic car during a joy ride. After nearly two years of trying to recover the money owed by the government, Motors Insurance Company filed a lawsuit against the government seeking the full $750,000 value of the wrecked 1995 Ferrari F50.

The vehicle originally had been stolen in 2003 from a Ferrari dealer in Pennsylvania. Motors paid the $630,000 insurance claim, giving the firm title to the missing exotic. On August 12, 2008, the FBI stumbled upon the car in Kentucky during a separate investigation. The agency held the vehicle with permission from Motors. On May 27, 2009, FBI Special Agent Frederick C. Kingston got behind the wheel of a 1995 Ferrari F50 with by Assistant US Attorney J. Hamilton Thompson in the passenger seat.

"Just a few seconds after we left the parking lot, we went around a curve, and the rear of the car began sliding," Thompson wrote in an email to Managing Assistant US Attorney E.J. Walbourn on the day of the incident. "The agent tried to regain control, but the car fishtailed and slid sideways up onto the curb. The vehicle came to rest against a row of bushes and a small tree. Both myself and the agent exited of our own power."



 A claims adjuster noted the frame was bent, rendering the vehicle -- now worth $750,000 in working condition -- a total loss. DOJ began stonewalling when Motors tried to get information about what happened. The agency refused to honor a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for any documents regarding the storage and use of the vehicle on the day of the accident. The request was denied as "an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." Motors filed a separate lawsuit to force the disclosure of agency records concerning the Ferrari.

 "Based on the denial of Motors Insurance Company's claim, plaintiff anticipates that DOJ and FBI will claim immunity against civil liability under 28 USC Section 2680(c) and assert that the vehicle was damaged while in the detention of law enforcement authorities," Motors attorney Richard C. Kraus wrote in an April 14 lawsuit. "The information requested under FOIA and withheld by DOJ and FBI will be necessary to determine whether 28 USC Section 2680(c) applies."

 That is precisely what DOJ has done. The agency insists sovereign immunity prohibits the suit, and no negligence claim can arise because federal law prohibits claims against the government for goods damaged while detained by law enforcement.

"The exception applies to bar suit against the United States and does not permit litigation over the reasonableness of the law enforcement officer's conduct in question," Assistant Attorney General Tony West wrote in a May 9 brief to the court. "The broad interpretation of the detention-of-goods exception, coupled with the necessity that the court construe the United States' waiver of sovereign immunity strictly in favor of the sovereign, require a finding that the United States has not consented to this sort of suit and plaintiff has failed to state a claim under federal law. Accordingly, the United States respectfully requests that the above-captioned action be dismissed with prejudice."

US District Judge Avern Cohn on Tuesday set a June 22 date for final briefs on the government's motion to dismiss the suit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2011, 07:29:22 PM
Albemarle Road church fined $100 per branch for excessive tree pruning
 


By Brittany Penland
Correspondent
 
Posted: Saturday, May. 28, 2011

 






Eddie Sales looks over some of the trimmed crape myrtles on the grounds of Albemarle Road Presbyterian Church. Diedra Laird - dlaird@charlotteobserver.com
 
Buy Photo | Store

 

Every two to three years, Eddie Sales trims and prunes the crape myrtles at his church, Albemarle Road Presbyterian Church.
 
But this year, the city of Charlotte cited the church for improperly pruning its trees.
 
"We always keep our trees trimmed back because you don't want to worry about them hanging down in the way," said Sales, a church member.
 
The church was fined $100 per branch cut for excessive pruning, bringing the violation to $4,000.
 
"I just couldn't believe it when I heard about it," Sales said. "We trim our trees back every three years all over our property, and this is the first time we have been fined."
 
The fine will be dropped if the church replaces each of the improperly pruned trees, said Tom Johnson, senior urban forester for city of Charlotte Land Development Division.
 
"When they are nonrepairable, when they have been pruned beyond repair, we will ask them to be replaced," Johnson said. "We do that for a number of reasons but mainly because they are going to come back unhealthy and create a dangerous situation down the road."
 
Charlotte has had a tree ordinance since 1978, and when trees are incorrectly pruned or topped, people can be subject to fines, Johnson said.
 
Trees planted as a result of the ordinance are subject to the fines if they are excessively trimmed or pruned. These include trees on commercial property or street trees. They do not include a private residence.
 
"The purpose of the tree ordinance is to protect trees," Johnson said. "Charlotte has always been known as the city of trees. When we take down trees, we need to replace these trees."
 
Individuals who would like to trim their trees should call the city foresters to receive a free permit to conduct the landscape work.
 
Foresters will then meet with the person receiving the permit and give instructions on how to properly trim their trees, Johnson said.
 
The state Division of Forestry recommends that anyone trimming trees should be certified by the National Horticulture Board, but certification is not required to receive a permit.
 
On private property, fine amounts are based on the size of the tree improperly pruned. For small trees such as cherry trees or crape myrtles, the fine is $75 per tree. Excessive cutting can increase that fine to $100 per branch.
 
For large trees such as oaks or maples, the fine is $150 per tree.
 
Because there is a widespread lack of understanding on how to prune crape myrtles in the Charlotte area, Johnson said, residents found in violation regarding these trees are asked to simply replace them, and the fine will be lifted.
 
Sales said trees found in violation at the church must be cut down and replaced with new trees by October, but the church plans to appeal. Sales doesn't know how much it would cost to replace the trees.
 
"We trimmed back these trees in the interest of the church," Sales said. "If we were in violation, we certainly did not know we were."
 
Typically during the course of a year, Johnson said, about six private residents are found in violation of improper topping or pruning.
 
"We are trying to be pro-active and not trying to fine people excessively," Johnson said.

Brittany Penland is a freelance writer for the Observer's University City News. Have a story idea for Brittany? Email her at penland.brittany@gmail.com.
 
Subscribe to The Charlotte Observer.


Read more: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/05/28/2333197/church-fined-for-improper-tree.html#ixzz1NnasBxHu

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on May 30, 2011, 06:44:49 AM

The following statistics only count state, city, and county law enforcement agencies. The statistical rates are based on the NPMSRP statistics and employment data provided by the 2008 US DOJ/FBI UCR.

The first map in this series displays the Police Misconduct Rate (PMR), which is the number of law enforcement officers per 100,000 law enforcement officers per state associated with reports of police misconduct within the time period:



(http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/2010-Q2-PMR-Map.png)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on May 30, 2011, 06:51:43 AM
By projecting this month’s NPMSRP* totals out to one year, the following comparisons can be made between the reported police misconduct allegation rate and the reported 2008 general crime rate* as published by the FBI and DOJ for 2008

(http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/UCR-v-NPMSRP.png)


*National Police Misconduct Statistics and Reporting Project

Basically what these statistics show is that your chances of being sexually assaulted increse with contact by the police, as well as having excessive fatal force used against you. The other numbers are close to even across the board, when compared to the general crime rate.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 30, 2011, 06:58:57 AM
My of the yahoos I know get very little training after the academy and suffer from high doses of "group think" since the ones I know usually only spend time with each other before and after work and have adopted an "us vs them" mmentality. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2011, 07:21:01 AM
My of the yahoos I know get very little training after the academy and suffer from high doses of "group think" since the ones I know usually only spend time with each other before and after work and have adopted an "us vs them" mmentality. 

We have a 7 month long academy. After that, you ride with a field training officer, actually several, for 3 months. You are then on probation for 18 months at which time you can be fired at will.

I have never been to New York but have fellow cop friends who are from there or visit there. I get the impression they are quite a large family and do spend a lot of time together.

We used to be like that but I've noticed over the last 15 yrs things have changed considerably. We used to have "choir practice" on a regular basis. Meeting after your last shift and having a beer or two and talking over the weeks calls or fishing or whatever. Those have become extinct. Cops these days don't really hang out after work. We have seperate lives and friends. I "work for the city" as far as most people know and have 1 or 2 cop friends I will socialize with on occassion. The young cops are more family oriented and most are on health kicks it seems, rarely drinking and god forbid you offer them a donut. I think it's a good thing that cops are starting to leave the job at the job. This will lead to longer and healthier lives after retirement.

I hear you about the us vs them mentality. I've seen it but never understood it. I've qouted Robert Peel before,  a guy who is considered the father of modern day law enforcement who said "The police are the public and the public are the police" and I like that qoute. That mentality too is falling to the wayside. At least here it is. There are a few hold outs but as standards continue to increase for these positions, I think we are getting a better pool of applicants, who grew up in a different time, and it reflects in the attitudes.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2011, 10:08:46 AM
I don't know why you think it's not like that today.

Cops hang out with cops... That's just the way it is...

 All my cop "friends" are gone now that I don't deal with that line of work... It didn't take long either... I have a buddy who dated a cop for a bit... She told us on a double date once that almost all of her friends were cops and if it weren't for our group, she wouldn't have any non-cop friends.



I don't think it's like that today because I am a cop and make observations. My observation is that it's not like that today. If you have a different opinion thats cool.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 31, 2011, 11:20:32 AM
Your observations seem very flawed.

How many of the guys you hang out with aren't involved in law enforcement in some way? That can even be rhetorical... You can just ask yourself honestly how many you really hang with that aren't.



I have two that I hang out with on any regular basis. The remainder of my friends are not involved in the business. I am hurt that someone who thinks cops should have no additional authority than any citizen thinks my observations are flawed.. ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2011, 04:44:37 AM
AlterNet / By Rania Khalek
America's Creeping Police State


Imperialism abroad is destroying what is left of our democracy at home. From warrantless wiretapping to warrantless door-busting, this is what a police state looks like.

May 31, 2011 |


The late Chalmers Johnson often reminded us that “A nation can be one or the other, a democracy or an imperialist, but it can’t be both. If it sticks to imperialism, it will, like the old Roman Republic, on which so much of our system was modeled, lose its democracy to a domestic dictatorship.” His warning rings more true by the day, as Americans watch the erosion of their civil liberties accelerate in conjunction with the expansion of the US Empire.

When viewed through the lens of Johnson’s profound insights, the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Kentucky v. King makes perfect sense. On May 13, in a lopsided 8-1 ruling, the Court upheld the warrantless search of a Kentucky man’s apartment after police smelled marijuana and feared those inside were destroying evidence, essentially granting police officers increased power to enter the homes of citizens without a warrant.

Under the Fourth Amendment, police are barred from entering a home without first obtaining a warrant, which can only be issued by a judge upon probable cause. The only exception is when the circumstances qualify as “exigent,” meaning there is imminent risk of death or serious injury, danger that evidence will be immediately destroyed, or that a suspect will escape. However, exigent circumstances cannot be created by the police.

In this case, the police followed a suspected drug dealer into an apartment complex and after losing track of him, smelled marijuana coming from one of the apartments. After banging on the door and announcing themselves, the police heard noises that they interpreted as the destruction of evidence. Rather than first obtaining a warrant, they kicked down the door and arrested the man inside, who was caught flushing marijuana down the toilet. ..............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.alternet.org/rights/151150/america%27s_creep... /
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2011, 10:11:25 AM
The Guerena Shooting: Initial Analysis
The Confederate Yankee ^ | 28 May, 2011 | MikeM





The Guerena Shooting: Initial Analysis

As regular readers know, I’m a USAF veteran (I was a security police officer in SAC during the cold war) and have extensive civilian police service, including SWAT duty. I have been writing on the Erik Scott case In Las Vegas since August of 2010. Those extensive posts are available in our Erik Scott archive.

The Jose Guerena shooting, which took place on May 5, is similar in many ways. My co-blogger, Bob’s May 25 story on the Pajamas Media site (here) has stimulated considerable interest in the story on the Net. What I’ve yet to see is concise information that would allow people who don’t have police and/or tactical team backgrounds to better understand what appears to have happened in this case. To that end, I’ll explain why SWAT teams exist, what purpose(s) they should serve, how they should work, and proper police procedure in any case where the police have shot a citizen.

I’ll also analyze the brief—less then 60 seconds—police video of the actual shooting (it may be found here). Please keep in mind that I am working only from media and Internet accounts, including the aforementioned video and other documents released by the Pima County Sheriff’s Office, the law enforcement entity involved. As such, I don’t have all of the facts, and as Donald Rumsfeld might say, there are unknown unknowns. In other words, I don’t know enough about this specific incident to know precisely what I don’t know.

That said, I hope to produce at least a reasonable foundation for understanding what seems to have happened on May 5. Go here and here for local media accounts of the incident.

UPDATE 052911, 1329 CT: Go here for an updated news story reporting the Guerena, according to the medical examiner, was actually hit 22 times, not 60 as was originally reported by the doctors who examined him. See the "Analysis" section below for additional commentary.

SWAT TEAMS: RATIONALE AND REALITY

Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams have, over the last thirty years, become relatively common in American law enforcement. Their primary reason for being is to provide a highly trained, enhanced capability beyond the training and equipment available to patrol officers. Patrol officers are most commonly armed only with their handguns and perhaps .12 gauge shotguns in their patrol vehicles, though some police agencies have begun to also equip them with carbines, such as variants of the AR-15 family. This is rational in that the effective range of shotguns with reasonable accuracy is essentially the same as handguns. Many people think shotguns are extraordinarily powerful, long range weapons, but in fact, their enhanced effectiveness—compared with handgun ammunition—depends entirely on keeping the shot column together, which again, limits them to essentially the same practical range as handguns. Patrol officers commonly wear bullet-resistant vests (there is no such thing as a bullet-proof vest) sufficient only to stop common handgun rounds. Tactical vests such as those worn by SWAT operators are simply too large, bulky and heavy for daily patrol wear.

The classic scenario for a SWAT callout is a barricaded hostage taker, a situation that commonly ends with a negotiator talking the suspect or suspects out without bloodshed, or more rarely, with a single shot from a sniper’s rifle. More rare still is an assault by SWAT operators. This is rare because no matter how much SWAT types love to do this sort of thing, it is horrendously dangerous to everyone involved. SWAT teams are also commonly employed for the service of no-knock warrants, where absolute surprise, speed, and overwhelming action are a necessity to minimize danger and prevent the destruction of evidence.

SWAT teams are very expensive to equip, train and to maintain. Generally speaking, only major cities have dedicated SWAT teams whose focus is constant training. Such officers generally have no other primary duties and work together on a daily basis learning and honing their craft.

It’s particularly important to understand that one of the fundamental principles of professional SWAT philosophy and training is that each operator be superior to his police peers in physical prowess, mental and emotional stability, quick thinking skills, situational awareness, shooting skills, and every other skill specific to SWAT operations. What this essentially means is that SWAT operators are expected to be faster, smarter and more capable than the average cop. Where most officers would shoot, and shoot a great many rounds, they are expected to be able to take the extra few seconds—or fractions of a second—necessary to more fully and accurately analyze any situation before shooting. And when they shoot, they are expected to do it with far greater restraint and accuracy than most officers.

Note the Navy SEAL who took out Osama Bin Laden with two rounds and two rounds only, one to the chest, one to the head. This is a classic example of cool, perfect shot placement under stress, and is precisely the sort of thing SWAT troops are supposed to be able to do. After all, if they are no better at this sort of thing than the average street cop, all that has been done is to give average street cops more destructive, longer ranged weapons.

In recognition of the generally greater danger SWAT personnel face when properly employed, most teams are armed with fully automatic weapons, such as the ubiquitous H&K MP5 in 9mm. Many also use AR-15 variant carbines in .223 with 16” or shorter barrels. So arming SWAT teams is reasonable and necessary—again, if they are properly employed—but it is also a contributing factor to many potential problems.

Many people assume that the police are generally expert shots. Not so. Many officers aren’t particularly fond of guns, and a surprising number own no firearms other than their issued handgun. Because ammunition is expensive, particularly when one is equipping an entire police force, most Law Enforcement Organizations (LEOs) tend to hold qualifications only once a year. The courses of fire for such qualifications tend to be relatively easy, require less than 50 rounds, and qualifying scores are generous. Officers are often allowed to shoot as many times as necessary to achieve a barely passing score. Most LEOs do not provide practice ammunition for their officers, so a great many officers only practice with their handguns consists of their annual qualification shoot. They may, or may not, clean their weapons thereafter. A great many civilians are far more proficient than most police officers simply because they are more interested in firearms and shooting, and are willing to take the time to practice.

During my police days, my most effective training was that I undertook on my own time and money, taking courses such as those offered by Chuck Taylor, among others, where I learned proper submachine gun handling and tactical employment. I am, in fact, certified by Taylor’s American Small Arms Academy to teach, among other things, the submachine gun. I also hold NRA training certification. No such training was available though my LEO which simply could not afford it, particularly for an entire SWAT team.

It is at least in part in recognition of this reality that SWAT teams try to obtain advanced training, and sufficient time and money to practice—a great deal--with their weapons. Exposed only to cinematic machine gun handling, many people have formed a very wrong idea of the proper employment of submachine guns, which consists primarily of spraying magazines of ammunition with a seemingly endless number of rounds from the hip, ventilating the landscape as far as the eye can see. In reality, such weapons should virtually always be employed only from the shoulder, sights must be used, and only two to three round bursts employed. With proper training, this is much faster and far more accurate. In SWAT missions, putting the minimum number of rounds necessary precisely on target at precisely the right moment with no margin for error is the expected level of performance. In fact, many real pros consider any mission where they had to fire a single round a failure. They understand that this will certainly not always be possible, but it is their goal.

Most LEOs cannot afford a full-time, dedicated SWAT team. There is simply not sufficient call for it, and it is far too expensive. They deal with this by appointing various officers from various bureaus to a team, equipping them as they can afford, and indulging in what training they can afford. This is a significant limitation because when the team trains, all of those officers are not doing their usual duties, which often requires calling in off-duty officers to work overtime shifts to cover for missing SWAT troops. Many agencies try to minimize this significant problem by forming joint teams comprised of officers from two or more local agencies. While this helps somewhat with costs, it produces unique problems in terms of arguments over authority, leadership, cost sharing, and a variety of other issues.

The paramilitary structure of LEOs can also interfere with proper staffing of a SWAT team. Ideally, because of the very nature of such teams and the situations for which they should be employed, the most qualified people, regardless of their daily rank or position, should be placed in each and every team position, from leadership positions, to snipers. Unfortunately, rank has its privileges, and people with rank are often placed in leadership positions commensurate with their rank in their LEO while far more capable people are passed over entirely or relegated to entry or perimeter team duties. I know of one team that appointed as its primary sniper—they’re most commonly called “marksmen” or something similarly non-threatening sounding—a detective who had never before fired a rifle, and whose entry level skill was far less than that of many available officers. It is this odd internal dynamic that might see a former special forces troop expert in small unit tactics, relegated to the most distant position on a perimeter or doing coffee and sandwich runs for the command post. Less competent and experienced "leaders" tend not to want far more experienced and capable underlings too close lest they look bad by comparison.

Beyond the enormous expense of time and salary for training a team is the cost of equipment. To equip a single operator with body armor, handgun, submachine gun, helmet, eyewear, radio and proper headset, Nomex protective gear, uniform, boots, and the various other necessary items can easily run to $5000.00 and more. In LEOS where shift supervisors are constantly being brow-beaten over an extra hour or two of necessary and justifiable overtime—virtually every LEO in America--such costs might as well be $500,000.00.

SWAT teams should generally be used only for high-risk situations requiring specific skills and equipment not available to a patrol force. However, many agencies have, for many years, used them for serving high-risk warrants, including arrest warrants for violent felons, and general search warrants in drug cases. While SWAT guys love to don their gear and practice their craft in the real world, this tends to develop a mindset within an agency that makes use of SWAT teams routine rather than rare. This can lead to complacency, which any competent cop can explain is potentially deadly. Particularly in drug cases, there is a heightened risk of bad information, which can lead to teams assaulting the wrong homes and even killing the wrong people. Police lore is full of such true stories, which are taught as cautionary tales in competent SWAT training.

Remember this: Your local SWAT team responding to a hostage situation in a bank where your wife works as a teller may be a highly trained, unified, competent group of operators expert in the use of their first-rate equipment and professional tactics. More likely, they’re a group of well-meaning, undertrained and underequipped cops with uninformed and inexperienced leadership. Their knowledge and skill levels will likely vary widely, and in fact, some may be less capable than many street cops. Any combination is possible, but the operator coming through the bank door with an MP5 may be expert in its use, or he may have only fired 50 rounds through the weapon a year ago at the last qualification, and have no real idea where its actual point of aim is today.

ORGANIZATION AND TACTICS:

I will not go into great detail here on specific SWAT tactics, as most importantly, the bad guys just don’t need to know. But secondarily, such information is available to those with a need to know, and in far greater detail that it is possible for me to provide in this single article.

Generally, SWAT teams are divided into command, assault, sniper and perimeter elements. The command element commonly includes the leader(s) of the team who will be responsible for making tactical plans and giving tactical orders. The sniper element will normally consist of a sniper and spotter, hopefully trained to function as two bodies sharing the same mind. Many teams can afford only one such team (a competent rifle can easily cost $3000.00 alone). If one of the members of the team is sick or unreachable when a call-out occurs, someone less trained and experienced will have to fill in—or not. The perimeter team’s job is to establish a safe perimeter around the target building or area and keep unwanted people out and the bad guys in.

It is the entry team that is of greatest interest to us here. Such elements commonly consist of an operator leading with a heavy, bullet-resistant shield or “bunker” as it is sometimes called. One or two operators are designated to break open doors using specialized tools. As soon as a door is opened, a “stack” immediately enters. A “stack” commonly consists of several men—usually three or four in addition to the man with the shield—following single file on each other’s heels through the doorway. In such stacks, operators commonly place one hand on the shoulder of the man in front of them, allowing them to stay together and to communicate readiness with a simple squeeze passed up the stack as they begin.

All police officers are taught to avoid the “fatal funnel,” or placing them selves in a narrow, tight area where it is easy for bad guys to shoot them. Being silhouetted in a doorframe is a classic example, as is being stacked up in a narrow hallway. If one can’t avoid such areas, it is imperative to minimize the time spent in them.

Each member of the “stack” has a specific area of responsibility, a portion of the space(s) they will enter they are responsible for checking out visually. Only they are authorized to engage—shoot—potential threats in their area of responsibility. This is essential because there can easily be more than one threat in more than one place. If an entire stack focuses or fires on the first perceived threat, the entire team may be wiped out by an unseen shooter. In addition, shooting in enclosed spaces is extraordinarily loud. Officers must be careful not to inadvertently deafen each other, or blind each other with the muzzle flash of a weapon fired too close to the eyes of a fellow officer. This kind of discipline requires constant training and conditioning and cool thinking under fire.

A significant part of training for entry teams and SWAT teams in general involves “deconfliction,” or muzzle awareness. Any police officer can attest to the fact that it is surprisingly easy to unintentionally point weapons at other people. In high stress situations where many people simultaneously occupy the same small place, particularly when sound and rapid movement in an unfamiliar area are also present, it is ridiculously easy to make deadly mistakes. By assigning very specific areas of responsibility, areas from which an operator’s muzzle should not stray, the possibility of accidently shooting another operator, rather than a bad guy, is minimized. It is minimized, but always a real danger, and such shootings are far more common than the police are comfortable admitting. Officers are also taught to keep their trigger fingers “in register,” or outside the trigger guard of their weapons, off the trigger, in direct contact with the frame or receiver of their weapons, until milliseconds before it is necessary to fire. This too minimizes the risk of accidental or unintentional discharges (ADs).

Generally, the stack’s duties consist of “clearing” every potential danger area in a structure. They do this by going room to room, never turning their backs—so to speak—on un-cleared rooms or areas, securing—by whatever means necessary—any hostiles. Only when the entire structure has been cleared, do other officers enter and conduct a search. Even so, no one relaxes prematurely. Properly done, a normally sized, three bedroom home may be properly cleared within a few minutes.

In some particularly dangerous cases, the stack will be preceded by one or more “flashbangs.” These are specialized hand grenades, which do not produce fragmentation, but a brilliant flash of light and very loud report, both effects being magnified by close quarters. The advantage of these devices is that they can render bad guys senseless long enough for the police to subdue them with little risk to themselves. The disadvantages are that if they detonate too close to a bad guy, they can seriously injure or kill them, and they can start fires.

Once a dynamic entry has begun, it must not hesitate. The stack must enter with speed and determination to surprise and overwhelm any resistance. Particularly in serving drug search warrants, one immediate goal is to prevent the destruction of evidence, which might be easily flushed down a toilet, for example. To that end, retreat or hesitation is not an option.

If anyone is injured, SWAT operators, as police officers, have the same duty to see that they receive aid as quickly as safety will allow.

THE LAW: SEARCH AND SEIZURE AND SHOOTING

Every aspect of search and seizure is governed by the Fourth Amendment, which states:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2011, 10:12:10 AM
Despite the claims of some of the self-appointed “elite” that the language of the late 1700s cannot be read or understood by the modern liberal mind, this, like the rest of the Bill of Rights, is quite clear. If the police want to search someone’s home, they need a warrant. To get a warrant, they must have probable cause, which is defined as facts or circumstances that would lead a reasonable police officer to conclude that a crime has been committed and that a specific person has committed it. A vague, general suspicion or inference is not probable cause. Saying for instance that Joe is a drug dealer and that Steve has been seen in Joe’s company does not implicate Steve in the drug trade absent specific evidence of his involvement.

To obtain a warrant, an officer must write a complete affidavit, which, as the Fourth Amendment so clearly states, describes his probable cause, and which particularly describes the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. “Particularly” is an important word. Not only is it necessary to, for example, provide the address of a home to be searched, the home itself should be carefully described. If, for example, the SWAT team shows up at 1506 Walnut Street to search a two story red brick home with a detached single car garage and finds instead a single story ranch, painted tan with brown trim and no garage, they know something is very wrong. This is not uncommon, particularly with drug cases. Insufficient probable cause or vague descriptions will usually cause a judge, who must review each affidavit and approve each warrant, to refuse to issue a warrant.

There are exceptions to the warrant requirement, such as hot pursuit or exigent circumstances. In this case, the police apparently had a warrant. In servicing warrants, officers must commonly knock, clearly identify themselves and their purpose, and allow sufficient time for the occupants to respond. No-knock warrants may be granted, but only upon a convincing showing of specific danger and need.

Keep in mind that if anyone lies to obtain a warrant, everything that occurs as a result of the service of the faulty warrant may be tainted and many not be used in court. However, generally speaking, officers who are acting on good faith, who have no reason to believe that the warrant under which they are acting is faulty, are generally not legally liable. This, of course, does not excuse criminal behavior, negligence or incompetence.

The use of confidential informants in drug cases is always problematic. Such people are virtually always criminals and drug users and are inherently unreliable. Even so, they are often the only way to successfully penetrate drug operations. Professional, capable judges are always suspicious of such people and commonly require a higher standard of proof than just the word of a CI.

Search warrants must generally be served during the daytime, and within a specific, brief window of time, usually within 24 hours of their issuance. A judge may grant exceptions, but they must be spelled out in the warrant. After the warrant has been served, officers are required to promptly file a “return,” which is an after action report that specifically describes everything found and seized as a result of the warrant. Lying on any portion of the related paperwork is perjury, a serious criminal offense, usually a felony.

Prior to searching any home, particularly if a forced entry is likely, professional teams will have conducted sufficient surveillance, and will have produced detailed diagrams of the interior of the home, which will include likely locations of any firearms or defensive preparations, and hiding/storage places of any drugs. They will want to know how many people are usually in the home, their identities and everything about them. Even if the police cannot get inside a home, a great deal may be learned from merely observing the home and the manner in which it is constructed. Remember that professional teams try to avoid forced or “dynamic” entries because of the great danger involved. Professionals seek, prior to searching, to isolate and capture the primary suspect outside the home whenever possible. This is why careful surveillance and accurate information is so important; it can greatly lessen the risk to everyone involved.

WHEN THE POLICE MAY SHOOT:

Police officers may use deadly force when there is an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or death to them selves or another. It cannot be a possible threat that might manifest itself within the next few minutes. It must be obvious, real and about to happen at the instant that deadly force was used. If these conditions exist, an officer may use whatever force is necessary to stop the bad guy from doing whatever gave the officer justification to use deadly force in the first place. If the bad guy dies as a result of the application of that force, bad for him, but the police always shoot to stop, never to kill. If they shoot effectively—and SWAT teams are supposed to always shoot effectively and with the minimum expenditure of ammunition—the bad guy will usually be killed, but he will surely be stopped.

If a single 9mm round from an officer’s handgun stops the bad guy, that’s a good thing. If five rounds from a shotgun are reasonably required, that’s perfectly permissible under the law. However, the second a bad guy ceases to be a threat, all shooting must stop. The law--to say nothing of professionalism, common sense and decency--does not allow gratuitous magazine emptying or “me too” shooting when the danger has clearly passed.

In such circumstances, some will claim that when confronted by someone holding a gun, or even when the police suspect someone is armed—as in the Erik Scott case—the police may blithely fire away. This is dangerous nonsense. Remember that SWAT operators should be better trained and more experienced than their patrol brethren. They are expected to be able to wait those few fractions of a second longer before shooting necessary to be certain that shooting is absolutely required. In a nation with a Second Amendment, and where citizens may carry concealed handguns in most states, police officers simply cannot shoot anyone seen holding a weapon. In fact, officers deal with people who are openly carrying weapons, or who are carrying concealed weapons, every day without injuring anyone. Was this not true, our streets would be littered with the bodies of law-abiding people shot by panicky cops who had no legal reason to be certain of a threat before emptying their weapons.

Remember, again, that a SWAT team making a dynamic entry understands that citizens within might very well mistake them for home invaders and might meet them with firearms in their hands. Merely holding a firearm, or even pointing it in their general direction, does not automatically constitute an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or death, particularly for officers wearing highly effective body armor behind a bullet resistant shield. Remember too that SWAT operators are supposed to be more capable of correctly making just this kind of split second judgment.

Professional teams are extensively debriefed after each mission. Each and every discrepancy is minutely analyzed and discussed. An officer firing when he might have avoided it, or firing more than reasonably required, is in trouble. An officer crossing the bodies of his teammates with the muzzle of his weapon because he was distracted and didn’t cover his area of responsibility is likewise in trouble. SWAT teams work for perfection, but understand that human beings seldom reach it.

THE GUERENA RAID:

With all of these factors in mind, let’s analyze the 54 second video clip released by the Pima County SO. The video seems to have been shot from a helmet-mounted camera worn by an officer in the back seat of a vehicle parked in the driveway of the Guerena home. The vehicle is apparently parked behind another vehicle, which is directly in front of the garage. Throughout the video, music, apparently from the radio in the police vehicle, can be heard. As the officers are preparing to enter, I can hear them speaking, but for whatever reason, most of what they say is unintelligible. No doubt, others using other equipment might be able to more clearly hear what is being said.

Before I begin a second by second breakdown of the action, some general observations. Not counting the two officers who are apparently in the vehicle—one in the driver’s seat clearly in the view of the camera as the video begins and the officer recording the incident—there are as many as seven officers clustered around the door and front yard of the home. And I do mean clustered, as in having no apparently coherent organization. In fact, throughout the tape, they appear to be more or less constantly shifting their positions, apparently aimlessly.

The viewpoint of the camera is apparently through the left side, back window of the police vehicle and is slightly to the right of the plane of the front door of the home. Immediately to the front of the police vehicle is a garage, to the left of that, the front door, and to the left of that, what appears to be a living room picture window. It is bright daylight. The camera appears to be approximately 25 feet from the front door of the home.

The officers making a sort of entry can generally be seen only from the back and the camera is somewhat shaky throughout the clip. Brief glimpses of the faces of a few of the officers are possible, but it is very difficult, perhaps impossible to identify them. Keep in mind that the time frames are based on the time stamp running with the video, so I may be off by fractions of a second here and there.

THE VIDEO:

Seconds 0-8: The clip begins with the camera focusing on an officer in tactical gear and helmet in the front seat of a police vehicle. The field of view shifts around, finally settling, shakily, on a consistent view of the front of the home and of the approximately seven officers in tactical uniforms and gear in the front yard, driveway and near the front door. An officer with a bullet-resistant shield is consistently standing, more or less, in front of the door.

5: The police vehicle siren begins.

7: It stops for about a half second and begins again.

14: The siren ceases. The siren sounds very much like a car alarm, and is not very loud, even within the vehicle that is apparently broadcasting the sound. It has sounded, with a brief interruption, for only about nine seconds.

15: An officer can be heard saying “do it.”

17: An officer says “bang, bang, bang,” apparently over the radio. It’s not clear what he means or why he is saying this.

26: An officer holding a large, purpose-built pry bar, approaches the door and knocks lightly several times. He immediately retreats backward toward the garage.

33: An officer advances and apparently kicks the door open (officers standing in the way obscure the action, but the pry bar is apparently not used). That officer withdraws to the area of the garage. Officers immediately start moving around, but in no organized fashion. There is no stack, and no one seems to have any idea what to do. There is no organized attempt at a dynamic entry.

38: At this point, it appears that another officer actually enters the home to the right of the officer holding the shield. It is difficult to be sure, because various officers shift directly in and out of the view of the camera, which does not change. The shield-holding officer stands in the doorway, but does not enter. Another officer is standing to the left of the officer with the shield. He too does not enter, but only points his weapon into the home through the doorway. Again, officers are apparently speaking, but I cannot make out what they are saying.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2011, 10:12:45 AM
40: Shots start, and are apparently a combination of semi-automatic and automatic fire. No muzzle flashes are visible and it is impossible to tell exactly who is firing. In addition, their specific weapons are not visible. Two officers immediately retreat out of the frame of the camera, to the right, in front of the garage. This leaves the officer who is apparently inside the house, the officer holding the shield who is blocking the doorway and the officer leaning over his left shoulder, at the left side of the doorway, leaning in, apparently firing. It appears that the officer with the shield is armed only with a handgun (normal procedure when carrying a shield) while the others are armed with long guns of various types. I can make out the distinct reports of at least three weapons.

Almost immediately, an officer in the background, who was closer to the camera, has slung his long gun behind his back. He draws his handgun, and runs to the front door.

44: Positioning himself between the officer holding the shield and the officer on the left, he sticks his handgun between them, apparently one-handed, and begins to fire. By this time, the officer holding the shield can be clearly seen to be on his back on the ground in the doorway. His shield is now oriented so that it is between him and the camera.

48: The shooting stops. The officers seem disoriented, not knowing what to do. There are no apparent attempts to reload. Only the three who remained outside are visible. The officer who apparently entered, ahead of the shield man, is not visible.

50: One final round is fired. It’s not possible to tell who fires it or why. The camera quickly shifts downward, away from the scene of the shooting, and the video stops at 54 seconds.

OBSERVATIONS:

(1) There appears to be no organization at all. The officers are not organized into an entry stack, they are not apparently taking pre-determined positions, and they mill about, apparently not knowing what should happen next.

(2) They are apparently announcing themselves, but their words are muted. It would be entirely possible for people in the home to be unable to hear what they are saying.

(3) The activation of the siren appears to be uncoordinated with the action at the door. I cannot hear any radio traffic asking for such activation, and there are no visual signals requesting it. If the residents heard it at all, it could be easily mistaken for a car alarm.

(4) Music, apparently playing in the police vehicle, is a very disturbing sign. It indicates a lack of training and concentration that would be potentially deadly in any SWAT operation. This is an amazing bit of foolishness. It is hard enough to clearly hear radio traffic and voices in fast moving, stressful situations. Adding extraneous music is incredibly stupid and dangerous.

(5) Whoever knocks does so very quietly and makes only 4-5 knocks. It’s not possible to tell whether the home has a doorbell, but from the knock to the kick that opens the door only about seven seconds elapse, not nearly enough time for any resident to answer the knock even if they did hear it.

The evidence currently suggests that Vanessa Guerena, Jose’s wife, spotted armed men roaming about the yard. Telling Jose, he directed her to hide in a closet with their four year old child, and taking up an AR-15, crouched in a hallway to intercept what he likely thought were armed home invaders. The exact time frame of these actions is currently unknown.

That the officers take the time to knock and sound a siren indicates that they did not consider time to be of the essence. They were apparently not concerned that the residents of the home would be armed and waiting for them, or that they might be trying to dispose of evidence. Had this been the case, they would have obtained a no-knock warrant and entered without warning, maximizing shock and surprise and minimizing the danger. As it is, their actions indicate a poor state of planning and readiness, haphazardly combining elements of a low-risk warrant service-albeit with a fully armed SWAT team, which makes no sense—and a high-risk, no-knock entry, for which a SWAT team makes sense.

(6) When the door is kicked open, the officer who apparently opened the door has to hastily retreat through several other officers, indicating very poor planning. In proper dynamic entries, the breaching officer or officers are positioned so that they can immediately swing out of the way without obstructing others, allowing the stack to immediately enter. Here, no one moves toward the door in a coordinated manner.

(7) After the door swings open, it takes about five seconds for an officer to apparently enter the door on the right, the shield man to stand in the doorway, blocking it, and the officer on the left of the door to lean in and point his weapon into the home.

(8) An important consideration here is that the officers were standing in bright sunlight. Upon entering, or looking into the home, unless they took appropriate steps to compensate, their vision would be compromised. Anyone who has been outside in bright sunlight and stepped into a building without lights on understands what I’m talking about. It is likely that when they saw Guerena, and the specifics of that encounter are far from clear, they saw only a dark and/or indistinct outline. It is impossible to see if the officers are wearing goggles or dark glasses, which would allow them to see clearly in a darkened dwelling upon entry, but there is no apparent sign of them adjusting such eyewear off their eyes as they stand in the doorway. It is entirely possible that those who fired had no real idea why they were firing because they could not clearly see the “threat” that was drawing their fire.

(9) The shooting begins with 4-5 evenly spaced shots, apparently on semi-automatic. Those shots are quickly joined by a wild melee of fire which lasts about eight seconds, followed by a two second silence and one final shot. According to media accounts, the SWAT team “leader” said that the officers involved exhausted their ammunition. That’s not at all hard to believe, and it is possible that more than 71 rounds were fired.

What is absolutely clear is that the firing was not professionally done. Professional operators fire in two-three rounds bursts, take the milliseconds necessary to asses whether their fire has had the desired effect, and fire again, in a carefully controlled, highly accurate manner, only if necessary. What I heard on the video was panicky fire. Two officers heard the first firing, and they simply opened up and held their triggers down, or kept pulling the trigger, until their bolts locked back, their magazines having been emptied. No doubt their trigger fingers were still jerking even then.

Considering the nature and volume of fire, it is amazing that Guerena was hit some 60 times. It is also amazing that the entire neighborhood was not ventilated. Apparently at least one round did strike a neighboring home—which indicates that the police recognized the reckless manner of their fusillade sufficiently to check out the surrounding area—which caused to police to break into that home to ensure they hadn’t killed anyone. Apparently, they were lucky and did not. It is equally amazing that they did not shoot each other.

UPDATE 052911, 1329 CT: According to a more recent local news story, the medical examiner has reported that Guerena was hit not 60 times as originally suggested by doctors, but only 22 times. This is far more in line with common results of police shootings where most rounds fired do not hit their intended targets. This is also far more in line with what would be expected of the wild and uncontrolled fire of the SWAT shooters in this particular incident, particularly those firing on full-auto. Highly skilled operators can control fully automatic fire in a submachine gun or light carbine such as the AR-15, untrained operators cannot. In any case, carefully controlled and aimed short bursts are always preferred. Police officers are directly responsible for each and every bullet they fire. In this case, nearly 70% of the rounds fired by the police missed. This might make more likely my contention that the officer's vision was compromised and that at least some of them had no real idea of their target or why they were shooting at it, other than the knowledge that one of their number was initially shooting at something. As shocking as all of this might be, the hit rate is about average for police shootings. SWAT teams should do much better. Knowing this, it is even more incredible that the officers did not shoot Mrs. Guerena, her child, themselves, or anyone else in the neighborhood.

(10) That the shield man never actually entered the home, but merely stood in the doorway, perfectly silhouetted, in the very center of a textbook fatal funnel speaks very poorly of the team’s training and experience. It’s not clear how he ended up on his back in that doorway. Did he trip and fall? Perhaps he was knocked off his feet by his teammates, eager to get in on the action. It is also possible that the fourth officer who hastily ran up to the door and thrust his handgun between two of his fellow officers may have fired it so closely to the head and face of the shield man that he was momentarily stunned--or injured--and knocked off his feet. Other officers block the view of the camera, so it is not, from the video alone, possible to know what happened.

(11) Perhaps the most egregious and telling indicator of little or no training, planning, experience and ability is the officer who runs to the doorway, thrusts his handgun between two fellow officers, likely shooting very close to their ears and eyes, to fire off some “me too” rounds. It is highly unlikely that this officer could have had any idea of his target, if he saw one at all. To be completely fair, he was probably acting as police officers do, tending toward action rather than inaction, but proper SWAT training teaches only appropriate, effective action. There is absolutely no room for “me too” shooting, on the street or during SWAT operations.

(12) It is not, of course, possible to know what the officers did prior to the video, but they had obviously been there for at least a short time before the videotaping began.

FINAL THOUGHTS:

The information available through media accounts does not present clear probable cause for a search of Guerena’s home. One media account noted:

“The reports state Jose Guerena; his brother, Alejandro; and Jose Celaya were named as suspects in briefings given to officers before the search warrants were served. Many of the officers' reports refer to the sheriff's long-term drug investigation as the reason for the search warrants.

Reports show about $100,000 in cash, marijuana and firearms were seized that morning from the four homes that were searched.

Items found in Jose Guerena's house included: a Colt .38-caliber handgun, paperwork, tax returns, insurance papers, bank statements and a bank card, reports showed.

Another report said detectives found body armor in a hallway closet and a U.S. Border Patrol hat in the garage.”

Notice that there is no information to indicate that any drugs or money were found in Guerena’s home, or that Guerena or his home, were in any way directly related to criminal activity. In fact, the police have, to date, not released the search warrant affidavit, warrant and return for Guerena’s home. However, there is no evidence to indicate that they found anything at all illegal in Guerena’s home. If they had, considering the public and Internet attention this case is generating, they surely would have made it public. Any drug case they were working has long been blown. Secrecy is no longer an issue.

None of the items listed as having been found in Guerena’s home are illegal, or indeed, unusual, particularly for a former Marine who had served two combat tours. One reason that the warrant information has not been released is likely that it was non-specific. In other words, the grounds for searching Guerena’s home may have been shaky at best.

Another media reports notes:

“According to a report, a detective interviewing Jose Guerena's younger brother, Jesus Gerardo Guerena, asked him about the slayings of Manuel and Cynthia Orozco. Jesus Guerena said he knew the couple because they were related to his brother Alejandro's wife.

According to Star archives, Manuel and Cynthia Orozco were killed during a home invasion in March 2010.”

This seems to indicate the police straining to find justification for SWAT involvement in the search, to say nothing of justifying the search itself. Guerena’s younger brother knew two people killed in a 2010 home invasion because they were related to his brother’s wife? Hopefully this is not the extent of the police’s justification for the search, or of Guerena’s being “linked to a double homicide.”

Very disturbing is the fact that the police did not allow Guerena medical help for about an hour and a quarter. In fact, they may not have entered the home after their fusillade of fire, instead withdrawing and eventually sending in a robot to poke and prod Guerena to make sure he was dead. That the SWAT team apparently did not immediately follow up their fire and completely clear the home is further, damning evidence of unbelievably poor leadership and execution. For those who have experience in such matters, the apparent behavior of the police is simply mind-boggling.

What is also unknown is how the police handled the aftermath of the shooting. Officer involved shootings are probably the most demanding situations officers face. The need for absolute perfection in the handling and collection of evidence, the interviewing of witnesses and involved officers, even the precise accounting for each round fired and its final resting place—a nightmare in this case—is of the utmost importance. The slightest deviation from proper procedure can indicate incompetence, cover-up or both.

As you read further accounts of this situation keep in mind that the actions of the police must be judged only on what they knew, or reasonably should have known, when they arrived to serve the warrant that morning. Post-shooting attempts to paint Guerena as the worlds most dangerous drug dealer and homicidal maniac (who, faced with four armed men he likely recognized as police did not take his weapon off safe) mean nothing at all, other than that the police are furiously spinning to justify what may turn out to be unjustifiable.

I don’t have all the facts. No one does. But based on the video, and what is currently known, it is very hard indeed to see how the police acted with anything less than amazing incompetence, incompetence that cost the life of a former Marine, a man who was apparently a solid citizen working hard in a copper mine to provide for his young family.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2011, 10:14:08 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 06:56:49 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 07:20:49 AM
By Claudia Grisales | Wednesday, May 25, 2011, 01:15 PM

Austin police and city officials this morning awarded Cpl. Javier Bustos, who wounded an armed man following a September police pursuit, the medal of valor, a departmental recognition used to honor courage displayed while on the duty.

On Sept. 25, Bustos shot Pat Allen Faith in the shoulder when Faith raised his gun at other drivers in Southeast Austin following a high-speed chase with police, officials have said. Faith then shot and killed himself, police said.

“What was displayed that day was true bravery,” Police Chief Art Acevedo said before presenting the award to Bustos with Mayor Lee Leffingwell at his side. “Cpl. Bustos did what we trained him to do.”

The award comes days after former Travis County Sheriff Margo Frasier, in her first review as the newly installed police monitor, criticized certain actions of officers and raised concerns about a series of communication failures among 911 operators connected to the September incident.

Acevedo has said his department continues to review the events of that night, while Sgt. Wayne Vincent, president of the Austin police union, has described Frasier’s comments as unreasonable “second-guessing.”

In her memo, Frasier agreed that Bustos appropriately used deadly force.

On Wednesday, Bustos expressed gratitude for the honor, following a standing ovation from dozens of fellow officers, family and friends who attended the event at a police training center in Southeast Austin.

“If I could take this medal and break it into little pieces, I would give it to the people involved that night” along with those who trained me, Bustos said upon receiving the award. “Those officers involved that night, those are my heroes.”

Note: This story has been edited to correctly attribute a quote to Sgt. Wayne Vincent, president of the Austin police union.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 07:22:57 AM
The point of my thread here is no to say there are not individual acts of bravery, heroism, etc, its to show that in general as a society we are becoming more of a police state as a whole.   

And we are.   There is no denying that by any rational person. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 07:26:26 AM
The point of my thread here is no to say there are not individual acts of bravery, heroism, etc, its to show that in general as a society we are becoming more of a police state as a whole.   

And we are.   There is no denying that by any rational person. 

If that is the point of your thread, you've failed miserably  :-\
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 07:27:23 AM
If that is the point of your thread, you've failed miserably  :-\

I really don't think you are the best person to make that assessment.    ;D  ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 07:36:29 AM
I really don't think you are the best person to make that assessment.    ;D  ;D

you may have a point
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 08:01:05 AM
I don't know if you are familiar with Alex Jones or not but he is a local here. Met him a few times, nice enough guy in person. I used to listen to his radio show just because I knew him and he would often talk about local law enforcement. I would listen to him on many occassions talking about an incident that I had intimate knowledge of, and he would be putting a ridiculous police state spin on it. It was funny at the time because it was so ridiculous. One example was a situation where we were looking for a  couple guys who had committed an aggravated robbery of an individual and fled the scene in a vehicle. Cops located the car and a pursuit took place ending with the guys bailing out and running into the neighborhood where Alex happened to be living. A perimiter was established, and the police helicopter was up so we called for their assistance. The copter showed up, flew around the area we eventually located the guys on top of a shed in a backyard.

That Sunday Alex did 2 hrs on how black helicopters were spying on him because of what he does.

I say I used to find him funny. Now not so much because there are a lot of people out there just gullible enough to start believing half the things he says.           
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 08:33:07 AM
I dont listen to AJ. 

I only know what I deal with on a day to day basis.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 09:38:19 AM
I dont listen to AJ. 

I only know what I deal with on a day to day basis.   

Give me an example of what you dealt with yesterday 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 09:47:51 AM
Give me an example of what you dealt with yesterday 

Yesterday - lets see - County Cop stationed at the exit on to Bronx River PKWY backing up traffic at rush hour checking seat belts causing chaos. 

Traffic madness backed up for a while.  i dont blame the cop himself cause heis following directions, but seriously?   Seatbelt check during rush hour at an already over used traffic area?   

GMAFB.   

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2011, 10:01:21 AM
Yesterday - lets see - County Cop stationed at the exit on to Bronx River PKWY backing up traffic at rush hour checking seat belts causing chaos. 

Traffic madness backed up for a while.  i dont blame the cop himself cause heis following directions, but seriously?   Seatbelt check during rush hour at an already over used traffic area?   

GMAFB.   

   

How did you determing he was checking seatbealts? Just curious
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2011, 10:02:38 AM
How did you determing he was checking seatbealts? Just curious

Asked him.   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 02, 2011, 12:13:49 PM
I don't know if you are familiar with Alex Jones or not but he is a local here. Met him a few times, nice enough guy in person. I used to listen to his radio show just because I knew him and he would often talk about local law enforcement. I would listen to him on many occassions talking about an incident that I had intimate knowledge of, and he would be putting a ridiculous police state spin on it. It was funny at the time because it was so ridiculous. One example was a situation where we were looking for a  couple guys who had committed an aggravated robbery of an individual and fled the scene in a vehicle. Cops located the car and a pursuit took place ending with the guys bailing out and running into the neighborhood where Alex happened to be living. A perimiter was established, and the police helicopter was up so we called for their assistance. The copter showed up, flew around the area we eventually located the guys on top of a shed in a backyard.

That Sunday Alex did 2 hrs on how black helicopters were spying on him because of what he does.

I say I used to find him funny. Now not so much because there are a lot of people out there just gullible enough to start believing half the things he says.           

He's a nut.  You are correct that there are a number of gullible people out there who believe what this nut says. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 03, 2011, 08:32:00 AM
He's a nut.  You are correct that there are a number of gullible people out there who believe what this nut says. 

It's funny but people like Alex Jones, and many anti police folks like your ACLU and NAACP etc etc share something in common..

When they speak, they paint all cops with a broad brush. They will generalize and say how the cops brutalize the minorities, or the cops are nazi thugs in blue uniforms etc etc. But I notice that every once in awhile they let it slip that every cop they KNOW,or meet is cool, or a good cop. Kind of like a lot of bigots. They hate all blacks except Jim, and Joe and Bob and ...who are different than the other blacks... No, the fact is, you have an inaccurate preconception of blacks, or cops and you keep meeting good ones but can't get your mind around the realization that maybe it's not that you are just sooo lucky to meet the good ones, but that most of them are good, and you are simply wrong about them.

I hear it all the time. We have a local activist who is friends with half the force, but he can't help saying "APD is racist against blacks".. If you ask him, will what about officer Smith? "Oh no, he isn't" what about Officer Townes?" Oh, he's a good cop.."Well what about..." so on and so forth till you've named half the force. Ask them specifically who is racist and he doesn't have an answer, just that the police are...

Anyhoo, I've noticed that little gem over the years..   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 03, 2011, 11:19:41 AM
It's funny but people like Alex Jones, and many anti police folks like your ACLU and NAACP etc etc share something in common..

When they speak, they paint all cops with a broad brush. They will generalize and say how the cops brutalize the minorities, or the cops are nazi thugs in blue uniforms etc etc. But I notice that every once in awhile they let it slip that every cop they KNOW,or meet is cool, or a good cop. Kind of like a lot of bigots. They hate all blacks except Jim, and Joe and Bob and ...who are different than the other blacks... No, the fact is, you have an inaccurate preconception of blacks, or cops and you keep meeting good ones but can't get your mind around the realization that maybe it's not that you are just sooo lucky to meet the good ones, but that most of them are good, and you are simply wrong about them.

I hear it all the time. We have a local activist who is friends with half the force, but he can't help saying "APD is racist against blacks".. If you ask him, will what about officer Smith? "Oh no, he isn't" what about Officer Townes?" Oh, he's a good cop.."Well what about..." so on and so forth till you've named half the force. Ask them specifically who is racist and he doesn't have an answer, just that the police are...

Anyhoo, I've noticed that little gem over the years..   

Excellent point.  I talk to my kids all the time about the importance of avoiding overstatements. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 04, 2011, 12:41:09 PM
It's funny but people like Alex Jones, and many anti police folks like your ACLU and NAACP etc etc share something in common..

When they speak, they paint all cops with a broad brush. They will generalize and say how the cops brutalize the minorities, or the cops are nazi thugs in blue uniforms etc etc. But I notice that every once in awhile they let it slip that every cop they KNOW,or meet is cool, or a good cop. Kind of like a lot of bigots. They hate all blacks except Jim, and Joe and Bob and ...who are different than the other blacks... No, the fact is, you have an inaccurate preconception of blacks, or cops and you keep meeting good ones but can't get your mind around the realization that maybe it's not that you are just sooo lucky to meet the good ones, but that most of them are good, and you are simply wrong about them.

I hear it all the time. We have a local activist who is friends with half the force, but he can't help saying "APD is racist against blacks".. If you ask him, will what about officer Smith? "Oh no, he isn't" what about Officer Townes?" Oh, he's a good cop.."Well what about..." so on and so forth till you've named half the force. Ask them specifically who is racist and he doesn't have an answer, just that the police are...

Anyhoo, I've noticed that little gem over the years..   



I generally don't have a problem with cops and my brother is one, but IMO most of this generalizing is brought on by yourselves.  Lawyers, shrinks, and educators seem to have similar problems.  Anyway, you all often fail to police yourselves.  So, even though most of you are good, your failure to strictly weed out the bad ones causes those bad apples to overshadow a lot of what the good cops do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 04, 2011, 12:47:13 PM
My point in starting this thread was not really about individual officers, but society in general on levels.   There are plenty of good cops, but as a nation we seem to be going over the top in what we criminalize and penalize.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 04, 2011, 12:49:17 PM
My point in starting this thread was not really about individual officers, but society in general on levels.   There are plenty of good cops, but as a nation we seem to be going over the top in what we criminalize and penalize.   




I agree, we criminalize and penalize way too much.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on June 05, 2011, 09:04:05 AM
Right on, bros.

Should be more penilize and less penalize. (No homo)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2011, 08:32:07 AM
Sheriff Dipshit Strikes again.     Will he blame Limbaugh and talk radio again for this? 

 





Pima deputies charged with theft of drug money
KOLD 13 ^ | June 3, 2011 | Brian White


________________________ ________________________ __


TUCSON, AZ (KOLD) - Unsealed court records allege that two former Pima County Sheriffs deputies worked together to pull over known drug traffickers to steal their money.

In the "superseding indictment" that was unsealed Thursday, prosecutors allege that then-Deputies Miguel Arvizu and Francisco Jimenez arranged to also provide "security" while others stole drugs and money from a storage facility in Green Valley.

Arvizu was a deputy for nearly seven years, from June 8, 2003, to when he resigned April 28, 2010. Jimenez was hired June 23, 2006, and resigned March 17, 2011.

The charges paint a picture of two allegedly corrupt deputies who ran drugs and stole the profits, according to the indictment.

In all, Arvizu is charged with eight counts that include theft of government money and attempted distribution of 3 kilograms of cocaine. Jimenez faces similar charges.


The indictment, which was unsealed Thursday, alleges Jimenez used his position at Pima County Sheriff's Department and his patrol car in the commission of several offenses. The indictment also alleges that Arvizu, a former Pima County Sheriff's deputy, assisted Jimenez and his other co-conspirators in stealing drugs and drug sale proceeds.

The indictment alleges that on June 26, 2010, Arvizu arranged a traffic stop on a vehicle that that purportedly contained drug proceeds, according to court documents. Jimenez allegedly stole $4,000 from the car's glove compartment, and later gave Arvizu a portion of the money.

On October 8, Jimenez searched a vehicle parked at the Tucson Mall that purportedly contained drug proceeds, and stole another $4,000 from the glove compartment.

On November 24, Arvizu arranged for Jimenez to provide "security" while co-conspirators broke into a storage facility in Green Valley and allegedly stole controlled substances and drug proceeds, according to court documents.

Arvizu has been charged with eight counts, including: conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States, theft of government money and property, attempted distribution of three kilograms of cocaine, attempted possession with the intent to distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijuana, and assaulting a person having lawful charge, custody, and control of money and other property of the United States, with the intent to rob, steal, and purloin said money and property of the United States.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 07, 2011, 01:41:07 PM


I generally don't have a problem with cops and my brother is one, but IMO most of this generalizing is brought on by yourselves.  Lawyers, shrinks, and educators seem to have similar problems.  Anyway, you all often fail to police yourselves.  So, even though most of you are good, your failure to strictly weed out the bad ones causes those bad apples to overshadow a lot of what the good cops do.

I respectfully disagree. Again, speaking for my department, we do a very good job of weeding out the bad ones. We have a systems in place that  help us do that. Everytime any force is used that requires more than just putting someone in handcuffs we are required to do use of force reports. A supervisor reviews them and depending on the seriousness it can be a level 3 which just requires notes be added to the report by the Sergeant, pressure points, pepper spray, wrist locks are an example. A strike to any part of the body is a level 2 and he Sergeant must respond, interview witnesses and suspect... a strike to the head, or any force that requires hospitalization is a 1 and a special unit investigates. Then there is the video cameras in every car and mikes on every patrol officer. We are just now starting to outfit our bike and walking beat officers with body cameras. I think we are going a little too far for the sake of being transparent and trying to show we are doing things right, but once in awhile you have an officer that does something stupid, or criminal and some segments assume it is a large portion of us.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 07, 2011, 05:02:24 PM
I respectfully disagree. Again, speaking for my department, we do a very good job of weeding out the bad ones. We have a systems in place that  help us do that. Everytime any force is used that requires more than just putting someone in handcuffs we are required to do use of force reports. A supervisor reviews them and depending on the seriousness it can be a level 3 which just requires notes be added to the report by the Sergeant, pressure points, pepper spray, wrist locks are an example. A strike to any part of the body is a level 2 and he Sergeant must respond, interview witnesses and suspect... a strike to the head, or any force that requires hospitalization is a 1 and a special unit investigates. Then there is the video cameras in every car and mikes on every patrol officer. We are just now starting to outfit our bike and walking beat officers with body cameras. I think we are going a little too far for the sake of being transparent and trying to show we are doing things right, but once in awhile you have an officer that does something stupid, or criminal and some segments assume it is a large portion of us.



It doesn't matter, you could have 100 checks and balances.  The only thing the public cares about is the end result, and in the end, the police do a horrible job of policing themselves.  Rarely are cops terminated. 

I'm not exempt by the way.  As a public employee myself, we also do a horrible job of weeding out the incompetent lackies.  Just trying to get one out is a bureaucratic nightmare.  And the public does take notice.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2011, 07:33:47 AM
Education officials break down Stockton man's door
12:15 AM, Jun 8, 2011 

 

STOCKTON, CA - Kenneth Wright does not have a criminal record and he had no reason to believe a S.W.A.T team would be breaking down his door at 6 a.m. on Tuesday.

"I look out of my window and I see 15 police officers," Wright said.

Wright came downstairs in his boxer shorts as a S.W.A.T team barged through his front door. Wright said an officer grabbed him by the neck and led him outside on his front lawn.

"He had his knee on my back and I had no idea why they were there," Wright said.

According to Wright, officers also woke his three young children ages 3, 7, and 11 and put them in a Stockton police patrol car with him. Officers then searched his house.

As it turned out, the person law enforcement was looking for was not there - Wright's estranged wife.

"They put me in handcuffs in that hot patrol car for six hours, traumatizing my kids," Wright said.

Wright said he later went to the mayor and Stockton Police Department, but the City of Stockton had nothing to do with Wright's search warrant.

The U.S. Department of Education issued the search and called in the S.W.A.T for his wife's defaulted student loans.  

"They busted down my door for this," Wright said. "It wasn't even me."

According to the Department of Education's Office of the Inspector General, the case can't be discussed publicly until it is closed, but a spokesperson did confirm that the department did issue the search warrant at Wright's home.

The Office of the Inspector General has a law enforcement branch of federal agents that carry out search warrants and investigations.

Stockton Police Department said it was asked by federal agents to provide one officer and one patrol car just for a police presence when carrying out the search warrant.

Stockton police did not participate in breaking Wright's door, handcuffing him, or searching his home.

"All I want is an apology for me and my kids and for them to get me a new door," Wright said.

News10/KXTV

http://www.news10.net/news/article/141072/2/Dept-of-Education-breaks-down-Stockton-mans-door



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 11:08:38 AM
Source: The New York Times


POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — For Bill O’Brien, summer has meant the serene bliss of the Hudson River ever since he went out fishing for stripers as a boy. But last year, after he was stopped once too often by law enforcement patrol boats with armed officers, he decided he had had it. He sold his 22-foot jet boat, convinced that a restful afternoon on the Hudson was just becoming too stressful to enjoy.

“One time I got stopped four times in one day.” Mr. O’Brien, 45, an M.R.I. technologist from Orange County, said. “It feels like every agency and municipality on the Hudson has a boat, and they’re all out there trying to justify themselves by finding someone doing something wrong. It’s just gotten out of control.”

Ten years after the terror attacks downriver made security checks a commonplace aspect of everyday life, a tea party of sorts is brewing on the Hudson, as boaters and marine businesses complain bitterly about being stopped too often and questioned too closely by officers wearing flak jackets and holstered pistols — many of them on the lookout for terrorists.

And as boating season begins, that vigilance has become one of those vexing flashpoints, like baggage searches and airport body scans, in the shifting definition of what is normal — post-9/11 overreaction to some, and a response to real risks to others.

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/11/nyregion/stepped-up-s...



________________________ _-


This is definately true.


Between the coasties, every damn PD, Rockland Westchester county,  Fire Department, etc, its become like the gestapo out there.   

 
Its a royal pain in the ass dealing with these jerkoffs.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 11:18:56 AM
Janet Napolitano Visits NYU Law School to Discuss Need for Citizen Spies
The Activist Post ^ | June 9, 2011 | (unattributed)





Homeland Security head, Janet Napolitano, continued her campus tour in a recent stop at NYU Law School where she gave a speech about the state of security as we approach the 10-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, and following the announced death of Osama bin Laden.

In the video below Napolitano lays out a sweeping surveillance agenda that includes citizen spies who have a mission of "shared responsibility" to thwart "Core" al-Qaeda, foreign groups "inspired by" al-Qaeda, as well as domestic "extremist" groups, which apparently include an increasing number of plots by U.S. citizens. She added that "there is no single portrait" of today's potential terrorist, citing recruiting tactics "including Hip Hop videos, if you can imagine that." And, naturally, cyberspace. Each of the four key ways that she stated as critical to Homeland Security's mission will widen the Stasi-style network of unpaid employees of the State virtually deputized to spy on their neighbor in the private and public sector and issue reports to the DHS federal security matrix.

Strengthen the nation's 72 fusion centers, which coordinate with local police, businesses, churches, universities and more in a cooperative effort to federalize local communities.

Continue the expanded use of Suspicious Activity Reports (SAR), initially used for IRS reporting and for businesses to alert government officials to large cash purchases at their establishments. The new initiative will cover all sectors that will share back to DHS.

Launch the National Terrorism Advisory System to replace the general color-coded terror alert system and set up a "base level" high risk, which will be augmented with specific messages. One component of this new system that she does not address is that it will be directed toward the individual by utilizing a text messaging system, as well as social networks to issue government statements and warnings (or propaganda).

Continue expansion of a national "If You See Something, Say Something" campaign that began with the NY Metropolitan Transit Authority, and kicked off at private businesses like Wal-Mart whereby people can receive ongoing messages via telescreens in government buildings, private businesses and public areas, then report on anyone for any reason without consequence for false reports.
She also predictably suggests that the counter-terrorism apparatus is a useful tool that can save citizens in need of rescue from natural disasters.

 More likely, it is the roll-out of soft martial law that will create a permanent state of fear, suspicion, false arrests, police brutality, and the end of the American republic in the same fashion that led to the end of every society that chose the path of security over freedom.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 11:27:52 AM
Hudson Boaters Angered by Security Checks
Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times

The Westchester County Police marine unit patrolling the Hudson River near the Indian Point nuclear power plant. Boaters are far more likely to be stopped than they were in the past, law enforcement officials say, but that is just a fact of life after 9/11.  

By PETER APPLEBOME




POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — For Bill O’Brien, summer has meant the serene bliss of the Hudson River ever since he went out fishing for stripers as a boy. But last year, after he was stopped once too often by law enforcement patrol boats with armed officers, he decided he had had it. He sold his 22-foot jet boat, convinced that a restful afternoon on the Hudson was just becoming too stressful to enjoy.

Enlarge This Image
 
Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times

Last year, after being stopped on the river once too often by armed law enforcement officers, Bill O'Brien sold his 22-foot jet boat.
Enlarge This Image
 
Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
Boaters near Croton-on Hudson. The authorities say increased vigilance of small boats is needed, given that antiterrorism experts cite


“One time I got stopped four times in one day.” Mr. O’Brien, 45, an M.R.I. technologist from Orange County, said. “It feels like every agency and municipality on the Hudson has a boat, and they’re all out there trying to justify themselves by finding someone doing something wrong. It’s just gotten out of control.”

Ten years after the terror attacks downriver made security checks a commonplace aspect of everyday life, a tea party of sorts is brewing on the Hudson, as boaters and marine businesses complain bitterly about being stopped too often and questioned too closely by officers wearing flak jackets and holstered pistols — many of them on the lookout for terrorists.

And as boating season begins, that vigilance has become one of those vexing flashpoints, like baggage searches and airport body scans, in the shifting definition of what is normal — post-9/11 overreaction to some, and a response to real risks to others.

A petition drive among boaters has generated hundreds of signatures and scores of angry comments. Boat clubs are mulling strategies, and the largest boating-industry group along the river, the Hudson Valley Marine Trades Association, recently wrote the Coast Guard commander in New York to protest “an incredible increase of recreational vessel boarding.”

Boaters say the stops have multiplied in large part because they are only minimally coordinated among roughly two dozen agencies that watch the river: federal authorities, state police from New York and New Jersey, county sheriffs’ departments and a host of other organizations, familiar and obscure, including the Border Patrol and the New York Naval Militia.

But Coast Guard and law enforcement officials say much of their watchfulness reflects a bigger concern: In addition to its quiet joys and natural splendor, the Hudson is home to some potentially rich targets for terrorists — including the Indian Point nuclear power plant, West Point and the Tappan Zee Bridge — and could become a pathway for attackers to reach New York City unnoticed.

Those officials say that, yes, boaters on the Hudson and on other waterways are far more likely to be stopped than they were in the past, but that is just one way in which life has changed.

“We get a lot of complaints, but maritime safety and security has taken on a whole new direction since 9/11 — we’re more proactive, we’re more vigilant,” said Lt. James Luciano, who oversees the Westchester County Police Department’s marine unit. “Before 9/11, you could access buildings more easily than you can today. Look at airport security.”

No one compiles figures for all the agencies patrolling the Hudson, so it is unclear how much enforcement has escalated. The Coast Guard says its boardings vary from year to year, and dropped to 300 last year, from 741 the previous year.

But the authorities say increased vigilance is needed, given that antiterrorism experts cite small boats as a particular threat — as evidenced in the deadly 2008 attacks in Mumbai, India, that were begun from two inflatable speedboats. About 45,000 boats are registered in counties along the Hudson.

Lex Filipowski, a businessman and motivational speaker, said he had been furious about the situation since he was stopped four times in two days by four agencies. “If they stopped cars on the roadways the way they stop boats on the river, there would be a revolution” he said.  

As he launched his 25-foot-long boat, “Carpe Diem,” at the Pirate Canoe Club here, another boater, Frank Bergman, seemed as concerned with boating politics as with boating.

“We understand they have a job to do to keep the bridges safe and protect Indian Point, but it’s just overkill,” said Mr. Bergman, president of the Hudson River Boat and Yacht Club, which represents 36 boat clubs. “The question in my mind is, is it homeland security or boater safety or just harassment and justifying their jobs?”

Boaters, a sometimes cantankerous and self-regarding lot, have grumbled for years about the stops, which can involve being pulled over for a check of credentials and required safety gear like life vests, or a demand to board the boat for inspection.

The discontent began to escalate when Mr. Filipowski posted an angry statement and petition last June on the Web site of the magazine Boating on the Hudson. More than 250 people signed, many expressing their own grievances.

“I’m thinking about selling my boat, stopped all the time,” one wrote.

“We are not terrorists and criminals,” wrote another. “We are citizens who own and use boats.”
 

Marinas and boat sellers, their customers already buffeted by high gasoline prices, also raised alarms. “We are operating in tough economic times and cannot afford to lose customers who are discouraged by law enforcement operations,” Gabe Capobianchi, president of the marine trades association, wrote the Coast Guard last month.

It was not always this way. Before 9/11, some boaters complained of too little law enforcement. “Back then the Hudson felt like the Wild West,” said George Samalot, who has owned a sailboat repair business in West Haverstraw since 1985.

But since the 2001 attacks, security and enforcement have been transformed, aided by grants from the Department of Homeland Security that have underwritten more and better boats and manpower. Westchester County did not have a marine unit until 1999; now it has two high-tech surveillance boats that cost $250,000 and $400,000 and can patrol around the clock.

That can be a good thing. When Detectives Kenneth Hasko and C. J. Westbrook cruised from Tarrytown to Cortlandt one recent Friday, their one stop involved rescuing a couple in a new $40,000 boat with a dead battery, stuck on a sunken barge. The officers found the couple’s knowledge of marine safety and their own boat to be somewhat lacking.

“You have your flares?” Detective Westbrook asked.

“What’s a flare?” the man replied.

They towed the couple in and made sure they got help. “They could have ended up with a new boat with a hole in the hull,” Detective Westbrook said. “And we’re the bad guys?”

Officials say that while they are sensitive to the complaints, there is no going back to the world before 9/11.

“Job No. 1 is keeping people safe,” said Charles Rowe, a Coast Guard spokesman. “Even the ones who are complaining.”



http://www.guy-boaters.html?_r=1



________________________ ______________________-


I deal with this shit EVERY weekend by this assholes.   

I had a coast guard cutter with a .50 cal trained on me down near the empire state building last year. 

I didnt have the fire extinshuisher updated and the guy threatened me w impounding my boat.  They had four guys in BDU's with AR's and glocks and "escorted" me 1 miles north to the marina and made me get my car and tae the boat out of the water over an overdue fire extinshuisher.


The govt is killing everything in this country.   The terrorists have definately won. 

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 02:06:55 PM
Unlawful Police Entry Ruling Could Be Reconsidered (Indiana)
theindychannel.com ^ | 06/10/2011 | uncredited




INDIANAPOLIS -- The Indiana Supreme Court may reconsider its ruling that eliminates the right of homeowners to resist unlawful police entry into their homes.

The attorney for Richard Barnes, whose criminal case in Vanderburgh County led to the court ruling last month, filed a formal petition for a rehearing Thursday.

Barnes' attorney argues the ruling violates the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

"We believe however that a right to resist an unlawful police entry into a home is against public policy and is incompatible with modern Fourth Amendment jurisprudence," part of the petition read.

The court issued its controversial 3-2 ruling May 12, declaring that Hoosiers no longer had a legal right to resist police officers who are entering their home without a legal basis to do so.

The ruling said homeowners could instead seek legal remedies through court proceedings after the fact.

The decision sparked large public outcry, including from state officials. Seventy-one Indiana lawmakers filed a joint brief with the Supreme Court on Wednesday, asking the court to reconsider its opinion.

Gov. Mitch Daniels and Attorney General Greg Zoeller have publicly questioned the decision.


(Excerpt) Read more at theindychannel.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 02:28:17 PM
Today I Learned The Department of Education Has a Police Force
Right Across The Atlantic ^ | Mike Merritt





Honestly, the first thing that comes to mind when I think “Department of Education” is No Child Left Behind, followed by a lot of trouble coming up with what else the DOE actually does in the government. Never in my life would I have thought that it contains its own set of federal agents that apparently have the power to raid people’s homes.

Yet, that’s what happened on Tuesday morning, as a California man woke to find feds from the DOE breaking down his door. And it gets uglier:

As Wright came downstairs in his boxer shorts, he said the officers barged through his front door. Wright said an officer grabbed him by the neck and led him outside on his front lawn.

“He had his knee on my back and I had no idea why they were there,” Wright said.

It turns out the agents had the wrong man. Not only the wrong man, but the person they were after wasn’t even a man, but his estranged wife! This poor guy was popped into a police car for six hours in front of his children. I suppose it’s better than the team shooting him down, like happened to Iraq vet Jose Guerena last month, right?

Not really. The militarization of our federal police force(s) has gotten ridiculous. When you hear more about raids than good ‘ol search warrants based on the fourth amendment then something is seriously wrong. Going further, there is absolutely no reason that so many federal agencies need the power to raid homes. The FBI? Sure. The DEA? Okay, I can see that in certain situations.


(Excerpt) Read more at theatlanticright.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2011, 07:46:53 PM
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Guest Post: Police State Amerika
zero hedge ^ | 6/10/11 | David Galland, Casey Research
Posted on June 10, 2011 8:33:27 PM EDT by Nachum

Police State Amerika

I just had a conversation with constitutional lawyer and monetary expert Dr. Edwin Vieira. I first became acquainted with Dr. Vieira, who holds four degrees from Harvard and has extensive experience arguing cases before the Supreme Court, at our recent Casey Research Summit in Boca Raton, where he spoke on how far off the constitutional rails the nation has traveled. Here is a summary of what he told me…

Dr. Vieira and I covered a lot of ground in our lengthy conversation, most of it related to the U.S. monetary system – its history, nature, and likely fate. But in between the details and analysis of how it is that the nation’s fiscal and monetary affairs have deteriorated to the current dismal state – and how the global sovereign debt crisis is likely to be resolved – a couple of deeply concerning truths emerged.

Concerning because, taken together, these truths have set the stage for a full-blown police state.

The first of these two truths has to do the nature of today’s money. To set the stage, I present the following excerpt from Dr. Vieira’s paper A Cross of Gold related to the original Federal Reserve Act.

Section 16 of the Act provided that:

Federal reserve notes, to be issued at the discretion of the Federal Reserve Board for the purpose of making advances to Federal reserve banks are hereby authorized. The said notes shall be obligations of the United States, and shall be receivable by all national and member banks and Federal reserve banks and for all taxes, customs, and other public dues. They shall be redeemed in gold on demand at the Treasury Department of the United States, or in gold or lawful money at any Federal reserve bank.

Observe: From the very first, Federal Reserve Notes were denominated “advances” and “obligations”—that is, instruments and evidence of debt. True “money”, however, is the most liquid of all assets, not a debt that might be repudiated, and certainly not a debt that has been serially repudiated.

And if Federal Reserve Notes were from the start to be “redeemed in gold or lawful money”, they obviously were never conceived to be either “gold” or “lawful money”. So, because by definition the only “money” the law recognizes is “lawful money”, by law Federal Reserve Notes were never (and are not now) actual “money” at all, but at best only some sort of substitute for “money”.

The monetary conjurers’ trick has been, slowly, steadily, and stealthily, to reverse this understanding in the public’s mind. That is, to make the substitute pass for the real thing, and then remove the real thing from the operation.

This subterfuge was not overly difficult to put over. After all, in the term “redeemable currency”, which is the noun and which the adjective? When people deal with a “paper currency redeemable in gold”, the natural uninstructed inclination is to treat the paper currency as “money” and the gold as something else. The paper currency, as the saying goes, is merely “backed” by gold—but of course is not itself gold. And because the currency is not itself gold, the money-manipulators can remove the gold “backing” farther and farther into the background, without affecting the nature of the paper as “currency” (at least nominally).

Thus, a “redeemable currency” can be converted into a “contingently redeemable” or “conditionally redeemable” currency, through temporary suspension of specie payments (as happened repeatedly during the Nineteenth Century); and then into a full-fledged “irredeemable currency”, through permanent suspension of specie payments, as with Federal Reserve Notes after 1933 domestically and 1971 internationally.

Yet, to the average citizen (whose most serious liability is mental inertia), even though a paper currency’s promise of redemption has been dishonored, it nonetheless remains “currency”.

Thus one grasps that the so-called “right to redemption” attached to any paper currency is actually a liability, inasmuch as it exposes the holders of that currency to repudiation, because they possess only the paper, not the gold.

Even in the best of times, the holders of redeemable paper currency are not economically and politically independent. Rather, they depend upon the honesty and the competence of the money-managers.

This is why America’s Founding Fathers, realists all, denominated redeemable paper currency as “bills of credit”. They knew that such bills’ values in gold or silver always depended upon the issuers’ credit—that is, ultimately, the issuers’ honesty and ability to manage their financial affairs.

The unavoidable trouble with “bills of credit”, though, is that they can (and usually do) turn out to be “bills of discredit”, when the holders discover that the money-managers are dishonest and incompetent—or worse, as is the situation today, highly competent at dishonesty. Then the holders of the paper currency (if they are sufficiently astute) realize how unwise it is to allow the gold to be held by the very people with the greatest incentive, and the uniquely favorable position and opportunity, to steal it.

But when the money-managers refuse to redeem their currency, what can the holders of that currency do to protect themselves? Well, what were they able to do in 1933 and in 1971? Nothing. If the holders of Federal Reserve Notes had enjoyed an effective, enforceable “right” to the gold that the Federal Reserve System and the Treasury of the United States promised to pay in redemption of those notes—that is, if the currency had been “redeemable” in the only meaningful sense that redemption was absolutely assured as a matter of law and especially fact—the gold seizures of 1933 and 1971 would never have happened.

Thus, the ostensibly “redeemable” character of paper currency of the pre-1933 and pre-1971 type did not protect the holders of that currency. Instead, it turned out to be the very device used to deceive, defraud, divest, and dispossess them of gold—proving in the most palpable manner that a society’s acceptance of “redeemable currency” is the product of confusion and the invitation to inevitable economic and political disaster.

In our conversation, Dr. Vieira ticked off eight specific ways in which the current monetary system is unconstitutional. While I won’t go into the specifics here, the important thing to understand is that, as currently operated, the federal government has managed to manipulate things to avoid any constitutional restrictions on its ability to spend.

This, of course, gives the government free rein to reward favored voting blocs with expensive social programs, buy fleets of limousines, launch expensive overseas adventures, bail out well-connected donors, and otherwise spend the country into ruin.

To understand why this is so important as a precedent to the evolution of fascism, view the matter in reverse by considering how different things would be if the constitutionally mandated requirement that the government’s currency be redeemable in good money – gold or silver – was still enforced. In that case, the government’s ability to spend would be effectively limited by what it collected in revenues. That, in turn, would have greatly curtailed its ability to grow into the bloated juggernaut it has.

In other words, the American ideal of a limited government would have been hard wired.

As it stands, though, exactly the opposite has been allowed to evolve – unchallenged by anyone, including the Supreme Court. Why has the nation’s highest court chosen not to tackle this clear breach of the Constitution?

According to Dr. Vieira, it is likely because if they were to void the current system as being unconstitutional, they would effectively blow apart the U.S. and global economy. But as they have no authority to even suggest an alternative system, they are faced with the reality that while they have the power to do great damage, they have no power to cushion the blow. And so, the Supreme Court does nothing.

As a result, the ability of the federal government to continue its insane spending and rolling out new initiatives designed to win over voters continues with no legal restraints – the latest example being the health-care initiative.

Put another way, in cahoots with the Fed, the federal government is able to wage war, bail out the banks, foster socialism, and otherwise bankrupt the nation – to do whatever it wants – largely thanks to its continued operation of an unconstitutional monetary system.

It Gets Worse…

The second fundamental truth is that the Supreme Court has been a co-conspirator and instrument of the government’s degradation of individual liberty.

Dr. Vieira and I spent a fair amount of time on this topic – of how the nation’s highest court could let stand the egregious excesses of recent decades; the Patriot Act, Guantanamo, institutionalized torture and renditions, domestic spying, eminent-domain abuses, warrantless searches, etc., etc. In his view, there can be only one of two reasons that the Supreme Court has been so accommodating – one is that the justices are incredibly incompetent, and the other is that they are working within the context of an unseen agenda.

Ruling out the first, his final conclusion is that they are operating with an unseen agenda in mind. In his view, that agenda revolves around the rising potential for widespread social unrest emanating from the nationwide monetary Ponzi scheme. Doing its part to prepare, the Supreme Court has been establishing the precedents necessary for the government to cope with that unrest.

Too radical a thought? Returning to Dr. Vieira’s point – ask yourself how else to explain the Supreme Court’s actions. Are they collectively of low intelligence, or otherwise so stupid as to be unable to understand the Constitution? Or do they now view the Constitution and the Bill of Rights as dead letters, freeing them up to respond to the government’s overheated demands for new and previously unimaginable new “emergency” (read “fascist”) powers?

Is there an alternative explanation?

On this general theme, Dr. Vieira correctly points out that, in order for a fascist state to exist does not require the government to actually arrest anyone – but only that they can arrest anyone. Do you think you broke a law over the past week? I can assure you that every one of you dear readers broke a lot of laws. Sure, you may not have realized you were breaking a law – but, as the old saying goes, “Ignorance of the law is no excuse.”

The Stage Is Set

Unrestricted in its growth by any constitutionally mandated limits on its ability to create and manipulate money – the official currency now being nothing more than IOUs redeemable in nothing more tangible than coins made out of base metal alloys with inflated face values – and supported by a Supreme Court that has unequivocally demonstrated a willingness to ignore or sign off on egregious tramplings of the Constitution, the stage is set for the U.S. government to evolve into something far more dangerous on the domestic front.

All it requires now is a triggering event, and it would be naïve to think that such an event won’t occur. Maybe not tomorrow, maybe not this decade – but when it inevitably does, the federal government already has all the precedents it needs to do “whatever it takes.” This absence of legal restrictions on its actions is the very foundation of fascism.

When I asked Dr. Vieira how the nation has progressed on a scale from 1 to 10 towards becoming a police state, with 10 being a full-blown version, he put us currently at about 7.

There really is no investment angle to be derived from this situation – well, at least nothing new. Owning tangible investments that will hold up in the face of a continued currency debasement continues to make sense – but with the caveat that FDR’s unconstitutional gold confiscation of the 1930s was let stand and there is zero reason to think that the accommodating Supreme Court wouldn’t go along with it again. One would hope to see straws in the wind before any moves toward confiscation would begin. Until those straws start flying, the precious metals – as well as other tangibles – belong as part of your portfolio.

And I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the importance of politically diversifying your life and your money as one of the few steps you can take to avoid the serious risk that comes from being “all in” in a single jurisdiction.

Some readers have berated me for often writing on what might be considered gloomy topics. To which I would respond: If you are sitting in a theater and see a fire breaking out, would you fail to make others aware of it, because you didn’t want to interrupt their entertainment?

Well, we can see a fire blowing up – the kindling for which has been piled up deep by a series of out-of-control governments. Unless and until there is something akin to an “American Spring.” this fire is going to spread and consume even more of the accumulated wealth of the broader public – and maybe worse.

Do what you can to protect yourself and your families – then get on with your life. You may not be able to do much about the bigger-picture trend, but you can certainly take steps on a personal level to mitigate the ill effects.

Hope for the best, plan for the worst… but then live life to the fullest

TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Miscellaneous; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: amerika; default; economy; police; state; teachers; zombies; Click to Add Keyword
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1 posted on June 10, 2011 8:33:29 PM EDT by Nachum
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To: Nachum
Bfl.


2 posted on June 10, 2011 8:35:25 PM EDT by Vigilantcitizen (I got a fever and the only prescription is more watermelon trickworm, better known as bass crack.)
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To: Nachum
bump


3 posted on June 10, 2011 9:02:40 PM EDT by Paperdoll (No more Bushs!)
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To: Nachum
How about a new currency: the Zombie dollar?


4 posted on June 10, 2011 9:15:40 PM EDT by familyop (We Baby Boomers are croaking in a thunderous avalanche of rottenness heard across the universe.)
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To: Nachum
May as well get this ball rolling...

The 16th Amendment

was not ratified! The Income Tax is therefore illegal.
Note: As goes our nation in the push by the Socialist Council on Foreign Relations, so goes the rest of the “free” world. The CFR through its enforcement arm, the Communist United Nations, will eventually eliminate all
freedom in this world. Only you and I can stop it. Removing the funding provided directly by the US Taxpayer (all of our income taxes go out of the country) will be a huge blow to the Elitists who seek to be the world
dictator thru the UN.

{Philander Knox, Sec of State, 1909-1913, the Taft Administration, proclaimed the 16th amendment to be ratified just a few days before he left office in 1913 {sound familiar?}, to make way for the Wilson administration, even though he knew it had not been legally ratified.

Philander Knox had for many years been the primary attorney for the richest men in America, including Carnegie, Rockefeller, Morgan, the Vanderbilts, the Mellons, and others. He had created for them the largest cartel in the world, then was appointed, at their request, as the Attorney General in the McKinley/Roosevelt administrations, where he refused to enforce the Sherman
anti-trust laws against the cartel he had just created.

The income tax amendment was pushed through Congress in 1909 by Sen Nelson Aldrich, father-in-law of John D Rockefeller Jr, and grandfather and namesake of Nelson A Rockefeller, and would not have been ratified if Knox
had not fraudulently proclaimed it so.

http://www.apfn.net/Doc-100_bankruptcy20.htm


5
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 11, 2011, 10:20:26 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 12, 2011, 10:51:29 AM
great video, 33
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 13, 2011, 09:06:39 AM
THE EDITOR'S COLUMN: America, what is happening here?
Morning Journal ^ | 6/12/11 | Tom Skoch, Editor



HERE’S a story that is so screwy it sounds like a script from “The Simpsons,” but it’s real, and it’s about our federal government at work. That’s what makes it so scary.

At 6 a.m. last Tuesday, a good citizen, Kenneth Wright of Stockton, Calif., was awakened by the clamor of about 15 armed SWAT team members breaking through the front door of his house.

Wearing only his boxer shorts as he came downstairs, Wright was grabbed by the neck and put down on his lawn with an officer’s knee on his back.

His kids, ages 3, 7, and 11 were terrified. Wright, confused and upset, was handcuffed, stuffed into the back of a hot police cruiser and held there for six hours while the agents searched his home.

What’s going on here?

The commandos were armed agents of — really — the U.S. Department of Education. And they bashed their way into his house and held him and his children while they apparently searched for evidence of alleged student loan fraud involving Wright’s estranged wife.

Amazing. Alarming.

Why does the U.S. Department of Education need a SWAT squad? And why would they need to bash their way into an ordinary person’s house and terrorize everyone there at 6 a.m., just to look for student loan paperwork?

Those are good questions for the uber-bureaucrat who requested the search warrant, one Special Agent Howard Nance of the Education Department’s Office of the Inspector General.

But Nance isn’t answering questions. And his Education Gestapo is refusing public requests to explain themselves, citing an ongoing criminal investigation.

Unbelievable. Now faceless bureaucrats can tear up the Fourth Amendment and bash their way into your house brandishing heavy weapons in search of paperwork. And they refuse to explain themselves.

Your papers had better be in order, citizen.

Back in March 2010, I was puzzled to read an obscure account of the Department of Education seeking to buy a couple dozen short-barreled shotguns. Now we know what that was about.

Other unlikely federal bureaucracies have their own armed agents, too, including the Small Business Administration and even the Railroad Retirement Board, according to Quin Hillyer, writing in the Freedom Line Blog at the Center for Individual Freedom, based in Alexandria, Va.

Dealing with government bureaucrats is bad enough, but Americans are really in danger when the bureaucrats can send gunmen to break down your door for any stupid reason they can get a deranged judge to sign off on, as Kenneth Wright and his kids discovered this past week.

There’s no reason for these agencies to have their own little armies. And there’s even less reason for those agents to confront citizens with deadly weapons. Somebody is going to get killed, if for no other reason than negligent handling of those firearms. Check out the YouTube video of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency agent who shot himself in the foot while telling a classroom audience he was the only one in the room qualified to handle the pistol he was holding. Now imagine 15 jumpy, macho Education Department commandos with loaded shotguns milling around in your living room.

Apparently all these bureaucratic armed squads in the Executive branch of government have their roots in a law adopted in 1978 setting up Inspector General offices. Shame on Congress for not thinking that one through. Now Congress needs to undo that damage.

Similarly, President Obama needs to tell the Department of Education and all the other oddball armed Inspector General units in his Executive Branch to stand down and turn in their guns before they hurt somebody.

Obama might be a little gun-shy right now, though. That’s because tomorrow, Republican Congressman Darrell Issa of California is to open a congressional hearing into the Project Gunrunner Operation Fast and Furious scandal that has barely made the national news yet.

That’s the scandal in which the U.S. Department of Justice led by Obama crony Eric Holder has been stonewalling congressional inquiries into why the Justice Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) allowed hundreds of firearms to be purchased illegally in the U.S. and taken into Mexico supposedly for tracking to narco-gangsters, and how some of those guns the ATF lost track of turned up in connection with the murders of two U.S. agents and who knows how many Mexican citizens.

Whistleblowers indicate that the OK for this insanity went high up into the Justice Department. How could such a dangerous international operation get started without approval of the attorney general or the White House?

And how could anyone who is competent and in their right mind, possibly allow such a ridiculous and potentially deadly scheme to go ahead?

So far, Obama has said only that he and Holder did not authorize the Gunrunner Fast and Furious scheme, which falls short of saying they knew nothing about it.

The answers Rep. Issa is seeking could be, well, explosive.

Meanwhile, make sure not to fudge your college loan paperwork, lest you get a rude awakening at the end of a Department of Education shotgun.

America, what is happening here?

Tom Skoch is editor of The Morning Journal and www.MorningJournal.com, where his Tell the Editor blog appears. He is on Twitter as MJ_Tom_Skoch and can be contacted by e-mail at tskoch@morningjournal.com.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hereford on June 13, 2011, 12:24:47 PM
So what is so bad about a police state? If they police and contain the shitbags that are causing the problems in society, isn't that a good thing?

The majority of issues and social rot that is taking place today is due to liberalism and scaling back the policing of society.  If drug addicts wern't typically thieves and con-artists, then society probably wouldn't be so adverse to drug-use.

And another thing... the coast guard isn't going to waste time liek that for a bad fire-extinguisher. There is more to that story. You were probably being a prick and pissed them off.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 13, 2011, 12:28:36 PM
So what is so bad about a police state? If they police and contain the shitbags that are causing the problems in society, isn't that a good thing?

The majority of issues and social rot that is taking place today is due to liberalism and scaling back the policing of society.  If drug addicts wern't typically thieves and con-artists, then society probably wouldn't be so adverse to drug-use.

And another thing... the coast guard isn't going to waste time liek that for a bad fire-extinguisher. There is more to that story. You were probably being a prick and pissed them off.



Absoutely not.   Out on the water, the last thing you wan to do is piss off the coasties.   They can really ruin your day.   

And I'm not bs'ing one bit on the fire extinguisher.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hereford on June 13, 2011, 12:43:44 PM
Well fortunatly, I'm far enough away from the coast that I typically dont have to deal with them. Most of them I've run across out here are pretty cool.

Must be a New York thing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 14, 2011, 04:54:48 AM
SWAT Team Mania: The War Against the American Citizen
ww.rutherford.org ^ | 13 June, 2011 | John W. Whitehead


________________________ ________________________ _______________



“He [a federal agent] had his knee on my back and I had no idea why they were there.”--Anthony Wright, victim of a Dept. of Education SWAT team raid

The militarization of American police--no doubt a blowback effect of the military empire--has become an unfortunate part of American life. In fact, it says something about our reliance on the military that federal agencies having nothing whatsoever to do with national defense now see the need for their own paramilitary units. Among those federal agencies laying claim to their own law enforcement divisions are the State Department, Department of Education, Department of Energy, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service, to name just a few. These agencies have secured the services of fully armed agents--often in SWAT team attire--through a typical bureaucratic sleight-of-hand provision allowing for the creation of Offices of Inspectors General (OIG). Each OIG office is supposedly charged with not only auditing their particular agency’s actions but also uncovering possible misconduct, waste, fraud, theft, or certain types of criminal activity by individuals or groups related to the agency’s operation. At present, there are 73 such OIG offices in the federal government that, at times, perpetuate a police state aura about them.

For example, it was heavily armed agents from one such OIG office, working under the auspices of the Department of Education, who forced their way into the home of a California man, handcuffed him, and placed his three children (ages 3, 7, and 11) in a squad car while they conducted a search of his home. This federal SWAT team raid, which is essentially what it was, on the home of Anthony Wright on Tuesday, June 7, 2011, was allegedly intended to ferret out information on Wright’s estranged wife, Michelle, who no longer lives with him and who was suspected of financial aid fraud (early news reports characterized the purpose of the raid as being over Michelle’s delinquent student loans). According to Wright, he was awakened at 6 am by the sound of agents battering down his door and, upon descending the stairs, was immediately subdued by police. One neighbor actually witnessed the team of armed agents surround the house and, after forcing entry, they “dragged [Wright] out in his boxer shorts, threw him to the ground and handcuffed him.”

This is not the first time a SWAT team has been employed in non-violent scenarios. Nationwide, SWAT teams have been employed to address an astonishingly trivial array of criminal activity or mere community nuisances: angry dogs, domestic disputes, improper paperwork filed by an orchid farmer, and misdemeanor marijuana possession, to give a brief sampling. In some instances, SWAT teams are even employed, in full armament, to perform routine patrols.

How did we allow ourselves to travel so far down the road to a police state? While we are now grappling with a power-hungry police state at the federal level, the militarization of domestic American law enforcement is largely the result of the militarization of local police forces, which are increasingly militaristic in their uniforms, weaponry, language, training, and tactics and have come to rely on SWAT teams in matters that once could have been satisfactorily performed by traditional civilian officers. Even so, this transformation of law enforcement at the local level could not have been possible without substantial assistance from on high.

Frequently justified as vital tools necessary to combat terrorism and deal with rare but extremely dangerous criminal situations, such as those involving hostages, SWAT teams--which first appeared on the scene in California in the 1960s--have now become intrinsic parts of local law enforcement operations, thanks in large part to substantial federal assistance. For example, in 1994, the U.S. Department of Justice and the Department of Defense agreed to a memorandum of understanding that enabled the transfer of federal military technology to local police forces. Following the passage of the Defense Authorization Security Act of 1997, which was intended to accelerate the transfer of military equipment to domestic law enforcement departments, local police acquired military weaponry--gratuitously or at sharp discounts--at astonishing rates. Between 1997 and 1999, the agency created by the Defense Authorization Security Act conveyed 3.4 million orders of military equipment to over 11,000 local police agencies in all 50 states. Not only did this vast abundance of military weaponry contribute to a more militarized police force, but it also helped spur the creation of SWAT teams in jurisdictions across the country.

In one of the few quantitative studies on the subject, criminologist Peter Kraska found in 1997 that close to 90 percent of cities with populations exceeding 50,000 and at least 100 sworn officers had at least one paramilitary unit. In a separate study, Kraska determined that, as of 1996, 65 percent of towns with populations between 25,000 and 50,000 had a paramilitary unit, with an additional 8 percent intending to establish one.

While the frequency of SWAT operations has increased dramatically in recent years, jumping from 1,000 to 40,000 raids per year by 2001, it appears to have less to do with increases in violent crime and more to do with law enforcement bureaucracy and a police state mentality. Indeed, according to Kraska’s estimates, 75-80 percent of SWAT callouts are now for mere warrant service. In some jurisdictions, SWAT teams are responsible for servicing 100 percent of all drug warrants issued. A Maryland study, conducted in the wake of a botched raid in 2008 that resulted in the mistaken detainment of Berwyn Heights mayor Cheye Calvo and the shooting deaths of his two dogs, corroborates Kraska’s findings. According to the study, SWAT teams are deployed 4.5 times per day in Maryland with 94 percent of those deployments being for something as minor as serving search or arrest warrants. In the county in which the Calvo raid occurred, more than 50 percent of SWAT operations carried out were for misdemeanors or non-serious felonies.

This overuse of paramilitary forces and increased reliance on military weaponry has inevitably resulted in a pervasive culture of militarism in domestic law enforcement. Police mimicry of the military is enhanced by the war-heavy imagery and metaphors associated with law enforcement activity: the war on drugs, the war on crime, etc. Moreover, it is estimated that 46 percent of paramilitary units were trained by “active-duty military experts in special operations.” In turn, the military mindset adopted by many SWAT members encourages a tendency to employ lethal force. After all, soldiers are authorized to terminate enemy combatants. As Lawrence Korb, a former official in the Reagan Administration, put it, soldiers are “trained to vaporize, not Mirandize.”

Ironically, despite the fact that SWAT team members are subject to greater legal restraints than their counterparts in the military, they are often less well-trained in the use of force than are the special ops soldiers on which they model themselves. Indeed, SWAT teams frequently fail to conform to the basic precautions required in military raids. For instance, after reading about a drug raid in Missouri, an army officer currently serving in Afghanistan commented:

My first thought on reading this story is this: Most American police SWAT teams probably have fewer restrictions on conducting forced entry raids than do US forces in Afghanistan. For our troops over here to conduct any kind of forced entry, day or night, they have to meet one of two conditions: have a bad guy (or guys) inside actively shooting at them; or obtain permission from a 2-star general, who must be convinced by available intelligence (evidence) that the person or persons they’re after is present at the location, and that it’s too dangerous to try less coercive methods.

Remember, SWAT teams originated as specialized units dedicated to defusing extremely sensitive, dangerous situations. As the role of paramilitary forces has expanded, however, to include involvement in nondescript police work targeting nonviolent suspects, the mere presence of SWAT units has actually injected a level of danger and violence into police-citizen interactions that was not present as long as these interactions were handled by traditional civilian officers. In one drug raid, for instance, an unarmed pregnant woman was shot as she attempted to flee the police by climbing out a window. In another case, the girlfriend of a drug suspect and her young child crouched on the floor in obedience to police instructions during the execution of a search warrant. One officer proceeded to shoot the family dogs. His fellow officer, in another room, mistook the shots for hostile gunfire and fired blindly into the room where the defendant crouched, killing her and wounding her child.

What we are witnessing is an inversion of the police-civilian relationship. Rather than compelling police officers to remain within constitutional bounds as servants of the people, ordinary Americans are being placed at the mercy of law enforcement. This is what happens when paramilitary forces are used to conduct ordinary policing operations, such as executing warrants on nonviolent defendants. Yet studies indicate that paramilitary raids frequently result in misdemeanor convictions. An investigation by Denver’s Rocky Mountain News revealed that of the 146 no-knock raids conducted in Denver in 2000, only 49 resulted in charges. And only two resulted in prison sentences for suspects targeted in the raids.

General incompetence, collateral damage (fatalities, property damage, etc.) and botched raids tend to go hand in hand with an overuse of paramilitary forces. In some cases, officers misread the address on the warrant. In others, they simply barge into the wrong house or even the wrong building. In another subset of cases (such as the Department of Education raid on Anthony Wright’s home), police conduct a search of a building where the suspect no longer resides. SWAT teams have even on occasion conducted multiple, sequential raids on wrong addresses or executed search warrants despite the fact that the suspect is already in police custody. Police have also raided homes on the basis of mistaking the presence or scent of legal substances for drugs. Incredibly, these substances have included tomatoes, sunflowers, fish, elderberry bushes, kenaf plants, hibiscus, and ragweed.

All too often, botched SWAT team raids have resulted in one tragedy after another for the residents with little consequences for law enforcement. Judges tend to afford extreme levels of deference to police officers who have mistakenly killed innocent civilians but do not afford similar leniency to civilians who have injured police officers in acts of self-defense. Even homeowners who mistake officers for robbers can be sentenced for assault or murder if they take defensive actions resulting in harm to police.

And as journalist Radley Balko shows in his in-depth study of police militarization, the shock-and-awe tactics utilized by many SWAT teams only increases the likelihood that someone will get hurt. Drug warrants, for instance, are typically served by paramilitary units late at night or shortly before dawn. Unfortunately, to the unsuspecting homeowner--especially in cases involving mistaken identities or wrong addresses--a raid can appear to be nothing less than a violent home invasion, with armed intruders crashing through their door. The natural reaction would be to engage in self-defense. Yet such a defensive reaction on the part of a homeowner, particularly a gun owner, will spur officers to employ lethal force.

That’s exactly what happened to Jose Guerena, the young ex-Marine who was killed after a SWAT team kicked open the door of his Arizona home during a drug raid and opened fire. According to news reports, Guerena, 26 years old and the father of two young children, grabbed a gun in response to the forced invasion but never fired. In fact, the safety was still on his gun when he was killed. Police officers were not as restrained. The young Iraqi war veteran was allegedly fired upon 71 times. Guerena had no prior criminal record, and the police found nothing illegal in his home.

The problems inherent in these situations are further compounded by the fact that SWAT teams are granted “no-knock” warrants at high rates such that the warrants themselves are rendered practically meaningless. This sorry state of affairs is made even worse by recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings that have essentially done away with the need for a “no-knock” warrant altogether, giving the police authority to disregard the protections afforded American citizens by the Fourth Amendment.

In the process, Americans are rendered altogether helpless and terror-stricken as a result of these confrontations with the police. Indeed, “terrorizing” is a mild term to describe the effect on those who survive such vigilante tactics. “It was terrible. It was the most frightening experience of my life. I thought it was a terrorist attack,” said 84-year-old Leona Goldberg, a victim of such a raid. Yet this type of “terrorizing” activity is characteristic of the culture that we have created. As author Eugene V. Walker, a former Boston University professor, wrote some years ago, “A society in which people are already isolated and atomized, divided by suspicious and destructive rivalry, would support a system of terror better than a society without much chronic antagonism.”
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 16, 2011, 07:02:23 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2011, 07:20:10 AM


Couple things to consider here..

We heard one side of the story. It sounds awful. IF the what was reported turns out to be the facts of the case then the officers over reaction was unprofessional and quite possibly a civil rights violation. If what was reported turns out to be the facts, then the officers will likely be terminated and face civil and or criminal charges.

Having been at similar scenes many many times I can tell you that those kinds of situations are horribly sticky. The officers are trained to consider that scenario as a possible homicide. No assumptions can be made that it is just a suicide as history as shown us that isn't always the case. Any evidence lost or contaminated from the start can impact the end result of the investigation later on. So EMS is working on the subject, step father is over their shoulder, possibly intervening with the process due to being emotionally distraught. Officer, not knowing yet if this is a homicide, if this is the suspect, or if the persons actions are impeding the life saving measures being undertaken attempts to remove the person from the crime scene to A. let the paramedics do their job and 2. Protect the crime scene.

At this point is where the cops lose me. I wasn't there, but I've been at many a suicide, many a traffic fatality where family wants to rush to their childs/mother/dad/daughters side but we can't let them for the above reasons. It is heart breaking to keep them away, it is one of the most difficult things I've had to do, but I just don't believe the need to use force to the extent he was pretty beat up was necessary. I can understand physically removing a person from a crime scene. But you really have to weigh all the facts you have at the moment before deciding how far you have to go with it.

Like I said, I wasn't there, we haven't heard both sides of the story, but it looks bad. Many departments have a policy about not discussing a case like this while it's under investigation. My department used to do that and it drove me crazy. We would have a very legit incident happen, witnesses, video audio to back it up, but our Chief at the time would not make a single comment. So the media would have a field day for months with their version of what happened. By the time the video and audio was released 6 months later showing the officers did an outstanding job, no one cared. Our current Chief doesn't do that and it helps out a lot.
 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 17, 2011, 08:28:28 AM
County shuts down kids’ lemonade stand, fines parents $500 BARF ALERT!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20110617/ts_yblog_thelookout/county-shuts-down-kids-lemonade-stand-fines-parents-500 ^ | 6/17/2011 | Zachary Roth






A more wholesome American scene could hardly be imagined: a bunch of kids selling lemonade on a summer's day.

But local authorities in Montgomery County, Md., saw things differently. They shut down the kids' venture and ended up fining their parents $500.  

The Marriott and Augustine kids had set up their stand Thursday right next to the Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland, where the US Open golf tournament has been taking place--bringing thousands of thirsty fans to the neighborhood. The kids planned to send 50 percent their profits to a charity that fights pediatric cancer. But a Montgomery County inspector said the children needed a vendors' license to run the stand, according to a report from local TV station WUSA9. And after the stand proprietors allegedly ignored a few warnings, the inspector slammed the kids' parents with a $500 fine.

"Does every kid who sells lemonade now have to register with the county?" Carrie Marriott, the mother of one of the would-be entrepreneurs, asked the inspector.

"Cute little kids making five or ten dollars is a little bit different than making hundreds," replied the inspector. "You've got coolers and coolers here."

"To raise money for pediatric cancer," Marriott replied.


(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...



________________________ ______________________

At some point, people are just going to pull out a rope and hang these govt pieces of shit, well deserved too. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 17, 2011, 08:47:48 AM
Bellevue family sues FBI over 'terrifying' raid
Describing the fear
Keith Hodan | Tribune-Review
Brian Bowling is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review staff writer and can be reached at 412-325-4301 or via e-mail.
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, June 16, 2011



________________________ ____________________-



The lasting impact of the raid on Gary Adams' home became clear in a comment from his 3-year-old granddaughter during a recent trip to the pharmacy.

"She said, 'Granddad. Police. Hide,' " Adams, 57, of Bellevue recalled Wednesday while discussing the federal lawsuit he filed against the officers who burst into his home March 3.

Led by FBI Special Agent Karen Springmeyer, about a dozen officers used a battering ram to enter Adams' rented Orchard Street home in a search for Sondra Hunter, then 35. But Hunter hadn't lived at that address for almost two years, while Adams and his family had been living there for more than a year, according to the lawsuit filed by Adams and 10 other family members.

The family crowded into a Downtown conference room with their lawyer, Timothy O'Brien, to discuss the case.

An FBI spokeswoman referred all calls to the U.S. Attorney's Office, where a spokeswoman declined to comment.

The lawsuit says that officers knew, or should have known, that Hunter no longer lived there. By executing an arrest warrant at a residence that wasn't Hunter's, they violated the family's Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure, and their Fifth Amendment right to due process, the lawsuit says.

The officers were part of a local, state and federal task force rounding up more than three dozen people suspected of being members of the Manchester Original Gangsters street gang. Hunter was still at large at the end of the sweep, and court records show that she was living in Long Beach, Calif., at the time. She returned to Pittsburgh when she heard she was wanted by the police.

She is charged with conspiracy and heroin trafficking and is free on a $25,000 unsecured bond.

Adams said he knew Hunter's family from when they lived in Manchester, but there was no other connection between them and no reason for police to believe that Hunter lived in the house.

Other than citations for traffic violations and scalping tickets without a permit, Adams has been a law-abiding citizen.

The incident destroyed his confidence in the police and his ability to sleep through the night, he said.

"They had guns on my wife, my babies. I'd like to know how they would feel -- the people in my house -- if that happened to them," he said.

Denise Adams, 58, said seeing the red dots from the officers' targeting lasers crawl across her children's faces also has cost her faith in law enforcement.

"I don't want to, but this was terrifying," she sobbed.

Duquesne University law professor Bruce Ledewitz said arrest warrants don't give police carte blanche to enter any building because they think a suspect is inside. Instead, such warrants only authorize police to go to the person's residence.

Police usually enjoy "qualified immunity" from lawsuits even when they make mistakes, as long as they were carrying out their duties responsibly, he said. Entering a residence without probable cause, however, would strip the immunity away from those officers.

University of Pittsburgh law professor David Harris said the family faces several obstacles in winning. In particular, he thought it would be tough for them to overcome the officer's qualified immunity because the Supreme Court has repeatedly raised the bar for suing police officers.

"Not only do they have to make a mistake, it has to have been particularly egregious," for them to lose immunity, he said. "They have to be violating a law that was absolutely crystal clear, and they have to have known it."



Read more: Bellevue family sues FBI over 'terrifying' raid - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_742235.html#ixzz1PY4sMjQJ


________________________ _____________________

And some of you wonder why many hate the police? 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 20, 2011, 09:05:36 AM
Bellevue family sues FBI over 'terrifying' raid
Describing the fear
Keith Hodan | Tribune-Review
Brian Bowling is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review staff writer and can be reached at 412-325-4301 or via e-mail.
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, June 16, 2011



________________________ ____________________-



The lasting impact of the raid on Gary Adams' home became clear in a comment from his 3-year-old granddaughter during a recent trip to the pharmacy.

"She said, 'Granddad. Police. Hide,' " Adams, 57, of Bellevue recalled Wednesday while discussing the federal lawsuit he filed against the officers who burst into his home March 3.

Led by FBI Special Agent Karen Springmeyer, about a dozen officers used a battering ram to enter Adams' rented Orchard Street home in a search for Sondra Hunter, then 35. But Hunter hadn't lived at that address for almost two years, while Adams and his family had been living there for more than a year, according to the lawsuit filed by Adams and 10 other family members.

The family crowded into a Downtown conference room with their lawyer, Timothy O'Brien, to discuss the case.

An FBI spokeswoman referred all calls to the U.S. Attorney's Office, where a spokeswoman declined to comment.

The lawsuit says that officers knew, or should have known, that Hunter no longer lived there. By executing an arrest warrant at a residence that wasn't Hunter's, they violated the family's Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure, and their Fifth Amendment right to due process, the lawsuit says.

The officers were part of a local, state and federal task force rounding up more than three dozen people suspected of being members of the Manchester Original Gangsters street gang. Hunter was still at large at the end of the sweep, and court records show that she was living in Long Beach, Calif., at the time. She returned to Pittsburgh when she heard she was wanted by the police.

She is charged with conspiracy and heroin trafficking and is free on a $25,000 unsecured bond.

Adams said he knew Hunter's family from when they lived in Manchester, but there was no other connection between them and no reason for police to believe that Hunter lived in the house.

Other than citations for traffic violations and scalping tickets without a permit, Adams has been a law-abiding citizen.

The incident destroyed his confidence in the police and his ability to sleep through the night, he said.

"They had guns on my wife, my babies. I'd like to know how they would feel -- the people in my house -- if that happened to them," he said.

Denise Adams, 58, said seeing the red dots from the officers' targeting lasers crawl across her children's faces also has cost her faith in law enforcement.

"I don't want to, but this was terrifying," she sobbed.

Duquesne University law professor Bruce Ledewitz said arrest warrants don't give police carte blanche to enter any building because they think a suspect is inside. Instead, such warrants only authorize police to go to the person's residence.

Police usually enjoy "qualified immunity" from lawsuits even when they make mistakes, as long as they were carrying out their duties responsibly, he said. Entering a residence without probable cause, however, would strip the immunity away from those officers.

University of Pittsburgh law professor David Harris said the family faces several obstacles in winning. In particular, he thought it would be tough for them to overcome the officer's qualified immunity because the Supreme Court has repeatedly raised the bar for suing police officers.

"Not only do they have to make a mistake, it has to have been particularly egregious," for them to lose immunity, he said. "They have to be violating a law that was absolutely crystal clear, and they have to have known it."



Read more: Bellevue family sues FBI over 'terrifying' raid - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_742235.html#ixzz1PY4sMjQJ


________________________ _____________________

And some of you wonder why many hate the police? 



No, we just wonder why a small percentage of you take relatively isolated incidents (10,000 search warrants a day are run throughout the nation, very few are like this) and try and paint a picture of a police state.

I too want police to do their due diligence when gathering information for search warrants. I think it should be a rare event that something like this happens. I know from experience that if you put the effort in, this should rarely happen. You can not avoid it completely because of various problems like people leaving vacating a house and the new occupants continue paying utilities without changing the names out of convenience. It's rare but it can happen. I think in EVERY case of a search warrant run on the wrong address that police must show they excercised due diligence and circumstances were highly unusual, or they lose in court.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2011, 09:46:06 AM
U.S. NEWS
JUNE 20, 2011.Police Scandals Hobble Prosecutors

Hundreds of Criminal Cases Dismissed in San Francisco Bay Area as Allegations of Law-Enforcement Corruption Persist.

By JUSTIN SCHECK




SAN FRANCISCO—Bay Area prosecutors have been forced to dismiss more than 800 criminal cases in the past year because of allegations of police corruption that include selling drug evidence, conducting unlawful searches and conspiring to get men drunk and then arrest them on drunk-driving charges.


San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon requested that the FBI examine arrests at low-income hotels

.The series of police scandals has taxed the budgets of the district-attorney and public-defender offices, and prompted two federal investigations.

In some cases, defense lawyers found that security-camera videos in residential hotels—showing police making drug arrests—apparently contradicted the officers' sworn statements.

In one case, a suspect was seen in a video of his arrest wearing a different jacket from the one the officers entered into evidence.

Last year, the San Francisco district attorney dismissed about 700 criminal cases after a drug crime-lab worker was accused of stealing evidence. This year, since March, the district attorney has dismissed about 125 cases, mainly felony drug prosecutions.

East of San Francisco in Contra Costa County, the state-run County Narcotics Enforcement Team, or CNET, has been caught up in a widening scandal resulting in the dismissal of 15 cases, according to the county district attorney. The district attorney said earlier this month he was turning the investigation of the cases over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The CNET chief, two police officers and a private investigator are charged with a range of gun, drug and other crimes, including selling methamphetamine, steroids and marijuana stolen from evidence lockers.

The four also are charged with masterminding a plot to get men drunk and then arrest them for driving while intoxicated.

In November of last year, prosecutors charge, the private investigator "arranged to have a female decoy" invite men to a bar. The men were going through divorce proceedings in which he represented their wives.

After the man and the decoy drank for a while, one of the police officers would call another and ask him to stop the man's car on suspicion of drunk driving, the indictment says.

Lawyers for the CNET chief and the investigator say their clients admit some wrongdoing and are cooperating with investigators.

Peter Keane, a professor at Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco and a former defense lawyer, said the scandals raise questions about whether there is a "systemic problem" in the oversight of state and local narcotics investigators in California. Mr. Keane blames the problem partly on the intrusive nature of drug investigations.

"So much of making drug arrests involves going into somebody's house," he said.

Lt. Troy Dangerfield, a spokesman for the San Francisco Police Department, said no officers have been charged with misconduct, though the investigation is ongoing. He said several officers have been reassigned from undercover duty, and that some dismissed cases could be refiled if officers were cleared of wrongdoing.

George Gascon, appointed district attorney in San Francisco this year after serving as San Francisco police chief since 2009, said the scandals have resulted in his office "having to spend a lot of resources to make decisions on mistakes and bad practices in the past."

Defense lawyers have credited Mr. Gascon with trying to investigate, rather than conceal, the problems. At his request, the FBI is examining arrests made at low-income hotels. The investigation is looking into "allegations that SFPD officers were conducting unauthorized searches," an FBI spokeswoman said.

San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi has held news conferences to show videos that raise questions about police searches. Mr. Adachi said his office is reviewing about 7,000 cases for possible police wrongdoing.

Jesus Reyes, 65 years old, a resident of the Julian House hotel in San Francisco, was arrested Feb. 25 on drug charges. ,In an interview and in court filings Mr. Reyes said that police searched him and a van he was in without his consent.

They took his keys, entered his apartment and searched it, he said.

"I asked them if they had a search warrant, and they just ignored me," Mr. Reyes said.

During the apartment search, police confiscated a laptop computer and camera, and found a small amount of methamphetamine. They arrested Mr. Reyes and jailed him for three days, Mr. Reyes said.

The laptop and camera weren't recorded in the police report as confiscated evidence.

In May, a judge dismissed the case after Mr. Reyes's lawyer obtained a video showing officers entering the room and leaving with bags apparently containing the belongings that were later not booked as evidence.

The police declined to comment on the case.

Write to Justin Scheck at justin.scheck@wsj.com


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304563104576363522151841968.html?mod=WSJ_WSJ_US_News_5






Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 20, 2011, 10:50:24 AM
No, we just wonder why a small percentage of you take relatively isolated incidents (10,000 search warrants a day are run throughout the nation, very few are like this) and try and paint a picture of a police state.
 

Agree.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2011, 11:03:11 AM
Lawmaker Seeks More Transparency for SWAT Team Raids
Capitol Confidential ^ | 6/20/2011 | Ken Braun


________________________ ________________________ ______



The part-time mayor of an upper middle class Maryland suburb of Washington, D.C. found himself and his mother-in-law handcuffed in his own home by a Prince George’s County SWAT team one July evening three years ago. His two black Labrador retrievers had been shot dead, the second one from behind as it fled the officers who had broken into the home in a ‘no knock’ raid as part of a drug investigation. Five months later, Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo and his entire family had been cleared of all wrongdoing and suspicion, but the county police were still refusing to provide documentation to justify why they had violently entered the home of an innocent man.

One expert analyst on SWAT raids says the use of them for non-violent offenders, let alone innocent targets, has become alarmingly routine, yet way under the public radar because most of the targets are not as high profile as Calvo. A Michigan lawmaker will soon introduce legislation aimed at giving citizens a better look at what their militarily-equipped police teams are up to.


(Excerpt) Read more at michigancapitolconfident ial.com ...



________________

Its always an isolated incident when dogs get capped.   ::)  ::)  ::)

I wish the law allowed for the homeowner to personally sue these scumbags into poverty.    Maybe they would think twice before playing rambo with peoples' property. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2011, 07:43:56 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2011, 09:34:01 AM


The cop was very professional in his demeanor, I'll give him that. The yard issue is irrelevant though it weighs in the citizens favor. For example, I can chase a bad guy, tackle him in your front yard, and be handcuffing him. You can be in your own yard, looking over my shoulder, and I would be right in telling you to get back if I felt exposed to you while performing my job of arresting the individual.

IN this particular case, reviewing the tape, arrest would not be the likely result in most cases. If an officer felt concerned they may ask to frisk the person for weapons before continuing if the person refused to leave the immediate area of the activity. They may position an officer in an "overwatch" position to keep the bystanders in observation. In this case the citizen was in error by refusing the officers request, but the officer was also in error by resorting to arrest to solve the safety concern.

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2011, 12:48:33 PM
Yes, but the citizen didn't remove anyone's liberty... The officer did.

which is within an officers pervue. 2 things at work here... Had the citizen obeyed the cops reasonable request of vacating the yard into her home until the situation was over then it ends there. Or, had the officer, rather than using his authority to arrest when a lawful order is disobeyed, resolved the safety concern in another fashion, it would have been fine.

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2011, 12:54:23 PM
which is within an officers pervue. 2 things at work here... Had the citizen obeyed the cops reasonable request of vacating the yard into her home until the situation was over then it ends there. Or, had the officer, rather than using his authority to arrest when a lawful order is disobeyed, resolved the safety concern in another fashion, it would have been fine.

 


Screw that.   Its her home, not the officers' fiefdom to bark orders to people.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2011, 01:22:55 PM
Exactly... This is her yard... She has to pay the taxes on that property, not him. He is the one trespassing.

Its cops like that I wish got KTFO'd about 50 times over until hey got an attitude adjustment towards those who pay their damn salary, pensions, and benes.

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2011, 02:07:39 PM

Screw that.   Its her home, not the officers' fiefdom to bark orders to people.   

I didn't hear any barking.. and a yard is considered under the law in this circumstance as a public place.She was not in her home.  She could not stand in HER yard naked, or waving an assault rifle, nor blaring loud music. There are limitations to her rights in her yard. While I don't agree in THIS case an arrest was necessary to resolve the concerns of the officer, just being in her yard does not negate culpability 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 22, 2011, 02:28:12 PM


Oh brother.  What an idiot.  She was asking for a confrontation.  She needed to stay outside for "fresh air," while taping some guy being arrested?   ::)  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: sync pulse on June 22, 2011, 04:35:37 PM
Why would anyone object to being photographed?...If you are doing nothing wrong,...why be afraid?...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on June 22, 2011, 05:31:42 PM
lol @ Beach Bum...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 09:17:54 AM
Why would anyone object to being photographed?...If you are doing nothing wrong,...why be afraid?...
This would apply to red light cameras, police cameras in high crime areas... and yes I agree, why would anyone object. I didn't hear the officer though mention anything about objecting to being filmed. It was her close proximity presence while they conducted their business that concerned him. While I didn't share his concern from my computer desk, I don't think it was the filming
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 23, 2011, 09:46:51 AM
What the cop shuld have said is


"Mam - here is what is happeneing, we arrested the suspect for ____, he is being brought to the station for booking, this isthe procedure, I dont mind you filming us, but can you please just step back a bit as there may be some hostilities if the suspect tries to escape or flee" 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 10:10:24 AM
I disagree on all fronts... I don't think you should just go around randomly filming people in general, however, as the police state grows, the premise of having footage of the police during the course of their work is probably one of the more invaluable things the citizens have in their arsenal.

I think that filming me at the stop light and everything else is pretty much fascist... but I'm John Q. Public and I don't get to take away liberty without any repercussion like the police do. If I take away your freedom wrongly, even if I believe it's for the best of intentions, I get charged with a crime... I believe it's a felony as well.

Cops just get to say "Oh, I'm sorry, and move on."

So the idea of filming the public and filming a public servant (That is what you are right?) is not the same.

No, I agree it is not the same. What I do should be available to the public. I have nothing to hide. If you can safely film me, have at it. Hell, I'm usually filming myself with video in the car and a mic on my shirt.

As far as filming you running a red light...the camera only snaps shots of people busting a red light. When you bust that red light you could and often do kill me and others.. so if you're feelings are hurt getting your picture taken running a red light..tough sh*t ya know?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 10:12:05 AM
What the cop shuld have said is


"Mam - here is what is happeneing, we arrested the suspect for ____, he is being brought to the station for booking, this isthe procedure, I dont mind you filming us, but can you please just step back a bit as there may be some hostilities if the suspect tries to escape or flee" 



and she would have said "why? I'm just getting fresh air, I'm in my yard, "

Then what would you say?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 23, 2011, 10:15:56 AM
and she would have said "why? I'm just getting fresh air, I'm in my yard, "

Then what would you say?

Maybe, maybe not.   But when you start the conversation in an adversarial way, like most cops i have dealt with do, you get a predictable reaction from the person paying your salary and pension.   


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 10:38:33 AM
Maybe, maybe not.   But when you start the conversation in an adversarial way, like most cops i have dealt with do, you get a predictable reaction from the person paying your salary and pension.   




Trust me, she would have said it.. he was professional and he asked her nicely. She was going to be stubborn no matter what he said... so then what?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: sync pulse on June 23, 2011, 11:47:18 AM
When the social neocons put up red light and survellience cameras they use the trite saying,.."If you are doing nothing wrong..." to justify it.  Turnabout is fairplay...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 12:24:50 PM
When the social neocons put up red light and survellience cameras they use the trite saying,.."If you are doing nothing wrong..." to justify it.  Turnabout is fairplay...

agreed...whatever neocons are....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 23, 2011, 12:33:27 PM
Aren't you basically stating that you absolutely knew what was going to happen?

isn't that perpetuating the us vs. them mentality?

Not at all... I've been in similar situations over the course of a couple decades hundreds of times.. there are always exceptions but it's been my experience that people like that, and when I say "like that..' I mean those who for whatever reason have decided they are going to ignore the cop and continue doing what they want, rarely change course until arrest is upon them or has occurred. Often times new cops will spend ungodly amounts of time trying to talk to these people mistakenly thinking "if only I explain my side, they will understand and comply" not realizing some people aren't rational.

For example, 25 yrs ago I may have spent a lot of time trying to explain to you why there is a difference with an officer in uniform at a burglary call and a citizen with a gun.. But my experience told me it would be a complete waste of time.

Often times we get 1 yr law students, or someone who listened to the wrong person and they mistakenly feel they have the right to do something when in fact they don't. Rather than do as they are ask, then complain later, they feel compelled to stay their ground, regardless of what the cop says. For example, we are called to a home because the wife is being beat by her husband. Wife is bleeding and crying. Officers can see and hear her while they are standing on the porch, with the husband standing in the doorway saying "You can't come in, I know my rights, you don't have a search warrant!"

Well, he is right, we don't have a search warrant. He is wrong in that we don't need one in this case.. But you can't tell him that...he knows the law. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 23, 2011, 01:48:10 PM
When the social neocons put up red light and survellience cameras they use the trite saying,.."If you are doing nothing wrong..." to justify it.  Turnabout is fairplay...

How do you define a social neocon?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: sync pulse on June 23, 2011, 02:01:58 PM
Some one who is in favor of routine survellience of daily life fits here,...red light cameras, video survellience of public places, prohibition of marijuana, prohibition of Docotor's supervision of steroid cycles...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 23, 2011, 02:05:17 PM
Some one who is in favor of routine survellience of daily life fits here,...red light cameras, video survellience of public places, prohibition of marijuana, prohibition of Docotor's supervision of steroid cycles...

Thanks.  Never heard that before. 

We chased the van cams out of here. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 10:13:08 AM
Doesn't seem like a good comparison, only because of course it's visible by the officers at the door.
The comparison is good because in both cases the person was wrong about their knowledge of existing laws

None the less, I don't agree with the "I know this is what would happen." in any scenario... people can, will, and have done what you don't expect.

You are kind of right. She could have responded by pulling out an uzi or hand grenade or she could have went inside when the officer again explained the situation. If you recall, he had already explained his position. But based on similar situations in the past, the outcome can be predicted with reasonable accuracy. 

This is why people feel they can convict people based on belief and not fact... Innocent people going to jail.

Sorry, you lost me there..

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 10:26:42 AM


Funny you have not commented on my ATF thread.   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 10:27:55 AM
Funny you have not commented on my ATF thread.   



haven't read it. If I read every thread you posted I'd be unemployed  :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 10:54:01 AM
Funny you have not commented on my ATF thread.   



I looked over the thread, watched a couple of the videos, what do you want to know?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 10:57:08 AM
I looked over the thread, watched a couple of the videos, what do you want to know?

What is your thought on that and do you accept that the fact that stories like this greatly undermine any respect whatsoever for law enforcement?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 11:15:09 AM
What is your thought on that and do you accept that the fact that stories like this greatly undermine any respect whatsoever for law enforcement?

Based on just what I read on your thread it looks like someone probably had good intentions, i.e. they are going to get the guns regardless of whether we arrest someone for buying 5 or not, so lets let them operate, follow the supply line, then bring down the big fish.

This method is used daily when dealing with drugs and suppliers. Why arrest for a kilo when you can arrest for 2,000 kilos.

In hindsight and possibly forsight it wasn't well thought out. Were basic questions asked? How many guns do we plan on letting go through? How long will we continue this operation? What is the realistic outcome of taking this risk? What is the best case scenario, what is the worst case scenario?

As far as undermining respect for law enforcement and calling for all agencies to be done away with as you have called for, I think that;

1. Government agencies are accountable for their actions and should be held accountable. That doesn't happen all that often and its a shame. but most americans are sheeple and "scandals" are forgotten when the next season of American Idol airs. When errors like this are made, heads should roll if the facts support it.

2. The ATF and many Govt Agencies do an overall great job and the call for doing away with them is ridiculous and ill informed.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 11:16:42 AM
Based on just what I read on your thread it looks like someone probably had good intentions, i.e. they are going to get the guns regardless of whether we arrest someone for buying 5 or not, so lets let them operate, follow the supply line, then bring down the big fish.

This method is used daily when dealing with drugs and suppliers. Why arrest for a kilo when you can arrest for 2,000 kilos.

In hindsight and possibly forsight it wasn't well thought out. Were basic questions asked? How many guns do we plan on letting go through? How long will we continue this operation? What is the realistic outcome of taking this risk? What is the best case scenario, what is the worst case scenario?

As far as undermining respect for law enforcement and calling for all agencies to be done away with as you have called for, I think that;

1. Government agencies are accountable for their actions and should be held accountable. That doesn't happen all that often and its a shame. but most americans are sheeple and "scandals" are forgotten when the next season of American Idol airs. When errors like this are made, heads should roll if the facts support it.

2. The ATF and many Govt Agencies do an overall great job and the call for doing away with them is ridiculous and ill informed.     




Are you kidding?  Good intentions?   Fucking really?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 11:25:14 AM



Are you kidding?  Good intentions?   Fucking really?    

Absolutley.

Fact... Drug cartels are getting drugs through no matter what we do
Fact... Drug cartels are getting access to guns no matter what we do

Letting some drugs through to catch bigger dealers is a tactic used every day. A cop will not arrest for a small amount, follow the trail up the ladder and when they have the bigger fish, they make the arrest. The impact is far greater than if they arrested the street dealer.

They were applying that tactic to guns. I don't think their reasoning was "Hey lets let them get a lot of guns so they can kill our agents". It was, lets allow the small fry to buy guns for the cartels and stop the flow at the top......

I could be wrong and it could be a huge dirty ugly conspiracy to destroy america as we know it...

But it's more likely a bad idea with good intentions that went really bad  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 11:29:11 AM
Good intentions my ass.   GMAFB.   Good intentions.   ::)  ::) 

Yeah, give a 5 y/o a loaded gun hoping the kid will learn gun safety and after it blows its head off tell the judge and jury - "but we didnt mean for him to kill himself"


Fucking please.  these disgusting pieces of trash with badges were playing russian roulette with others lives to fozster their own sick agenda and now people are dead.   Fuck that good intentions. 

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 11:29:58 AM
Good intentions my ass.   GMAFB.   Good intentions.   ::)  ::) 

Yeah, give a 5 y/o a loaded gun hoping the kid will learn gun safety and after it blows its head off tell the judge and jury - "but we didnt mean for him to kill himself"


Fucking please.  these disgusting pieces of trash with badges were playing russian roulette with others lives to fozster their own sick agenda and now people are dead.   Fuck that good intentions. 

 

Ok I'll play... what were their intentions?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 12:11:27 PM

Play CBS News Video
(CBS News)  Congress holds its first hearings Monday on the "gunwalker scandal" that CBS News first uncovered back in February.


Officials at the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) encouraged gun shops to sell thousands of assault rifles and other weapons destined for Mexican drug cartels.



On "The Early Show" Friday, CBS News Investigative Correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reported those who defend the strategy say their goal was to let the little fish go -- to get the big fish. But insiders say, in the process, lives were needlessly put in danger.


Attkisson initially broke the story for CBS News.


Last June, about nine months into the ATF operation known as "Fast and Furious," suspects had "purchased 1,608 firearms for over $1 million in cash transactions at various Phoenix-area gun shops," according to internal documents obtained by CBS News. The documents indicate ATF already knew that 179 of those very weapons had turned up at crime scenes in Mexico, and 130 in the U.S.

Issa subpoenas ATF over gunwalking allegations
ATF agent cooperates in gunwalking investigation
Agent: I was ordered to let U.S. guns into Mexico


Yet, ATF allowed some of the same suspects -- accused of being middlemen for Mexican drug cartels -- to continue to buy and transfer assault weapons. Sometimes, agents say, they videotaped the buys, but didn't interdict the guns.


Documents indicate intentions were good. The idea, according to those documents, was to "allow the transfer of firearms" to pinpoint big cartel crooks rather than the small-time traffickers supplying them.


Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/10/earlyshow/main20070475.shtml#ixzz1QDq9f0Qv


Looky what I found.....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 12:15:18 PM
ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING? 

Damn bro - you are seriously a boot licker for the govt.  The DOJ has not complied with Issa' requests and has sent only a few docs and even at that were HIGHLY redacted. 

Go read through my thread.  Damn bro - seriously - wake the hell up. 

2009 Obama and Hillary were slamming gun dealers and sayng guns wer flooding the border WHILE THEY WERE FORCING THE FUCKING DEALERS TO DO THIS AGAINST THEIR WISHES! 

Guess why? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 12:35:10 PM
Traffic tickets to cost Tennesseans more
WSVM ^ | 06/24/2011 | WSVM


________________________ __________________


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Tennesseans could be charged up to nearly $70 more for traffic tickets under a new state law that takes effect next month and is intended to fund crime lab services for law enforcement agencies.


The law that takes effect July 1 adds $13.75 onto each traffic violation, and motorists can be cited for as many as five violations on a single ticket.


The fee applies only to people who chose not to contest their tickets in court and pay the fine before a court date or a compliance date.


Proceeds will help offset the costs of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation's crime lab services.


But motorists complain the extra charge is too much on top of already expensive fines.


Sen. Randy McNally, a Republican from Oak Ridge, sponsored the legislation, which he said was necessary to prevent massive TBI layoffs or increased costs to local law enforcement agencies that need the lab services to investigate crimes.


(Excerpt) Read more at wsmv.com ...



________________________ ______________

And what happens if everyone drives as they say and no tickets get written?  Oh wait - its abut safety, not revenue . . . . . . .
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 12:37:30 PM
Traffic tickets to cost Tennesseans more
WSVM ^ | 06/24/2011 | WSVM


________________________ __________________


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Tennesseans could be charged up to nearly $70 more for traffic tickets under a new state law that takes effect next month and is intended to fund crime lab services for law enforcement agencies.


The law that takes effect July 1 adds $13.75 onto each traffic violation, and motorists can be cited for as many as five violations on a single ticket.


The fee applies only to people who chose not to contest their tickets in court and pay the fine before a court date or a compliance date.


Proceeds will help offset the costs of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation's crime lab services.


But motorists complain the extra charge is too much on top of already expensive fines.


Sen. Randy McNally, a Republican from Oak Ridge, sponsored the legislation, which he said was necessary to prevent massive TBI layoffs or increased costs to local law enforcement agencies that need the lab services to investigate crimes.


(Excerpt) Read more at wsmv.com ...



________________________ ______________

And what happens if everyone drives as they say and no tickets get written?  Oh wait - its abut safety, not revenue . . . . . . .

Then drive legally, no problem...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 24, 2011, 12:41:19 PM
I got pulled over the other day for an expired safety sticker.  My wife's car.   >:(  Got off with a warning.  Cop was friendly.  I was friendly.  Not a big deal. 

Now, if I had been pointing a video camera at him as he approached my car, I bet I would have gotten a ticket. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 12:42:02 PM
Did you read the article?   The funding for the lab is based on anticipated revenue by writing a certain amount of tickets.  and you wonder why people feel this whole thing is a sham?    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 12:43:27 PM
I got pulled over the other day for an expired safety sticker.  My wife's car.   >:(  Got off with a warning.  Cop was friendly.  I was friendly.  Not a big deal. 

Now, if I had been pointing a video camera at him as he approached my car, I bet I would have gotten a ticket. 

Beach - do you wear a high and tight? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 24, 2011, 12:47:00 PM
Beach - do you wear a high and tight? 

Nope.  Why?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 12:56:35 PM
Did you read the article?   The funding for the lab is based on anticipated revenue by writing a certain amount of tickets.  and you wonder why people feel this whole thing is a sham?    

Listen up...


I can go back and review tickets written from 2008, 2009, 2010 and within the ballpark, predict tickets written for 2011. People violate traffic laws. You can count on it. Wish they didn't but they do. Cops write tickets for those violations on occassion... no mystical conspiracy here..   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 24, 2011, 02:20:51 PM



Documents indicate intentions were good. The idea, according to those documents, was to "allow the transfer of firearms" to pinpoint big cartel crooks rather than the small-time traffickers supplying them.


Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/10/earlyshow/main20070475.shtml#ixzz1QDq9f0Qv


Looky what I found.....



And?  Their intentions are completely immaterial.  If a guy's wife goes into labor on the freeway and rushes to get her to the hospital and kills people because of his rush, his intentions are good, but he's going to prison.

These guys should get exactly the same thing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 06:08:47 PM
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Supreme Court puts extra burden on crime labs
The Los Angeles Times ^ | June 24, 2011 | David G. Savage
Posted on June 24, 2011 8:04:06 PM EDT by Lurking Libertarian

The Supreme Court on Thursday put an extra burden on crime labs, declaring that a man accused of drunken driving has the right to demand that a lab technician testify in person about a blood test that showed he was impaired.

The 5-4 decision was the latest to extend the reach of a defendant's constitutional right "to be confronted with the witnesses against him." And once again, the outcome was driven by an unusual coalition of conservative and liberal justices.

Two years ago, the court said a crime lab technician was a witness for the prosecution and, therefore, must be available to testify. In Thursday's decision, the court went a step further, saying it will not suffice to send any technician or lab analyst who can explain the testing. Rather, the prosecution must supply the same technician who conducted the blood test and signed to certify the result.

"We hold that surrogate testimony … does not meet the constitutional requirement," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote for the court majority, which also included Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. The Constitution does not permit shortcuts, the court said, and in many cases, a crime lab report is the prosecution's strongest evidence.

(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...






Good decision. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 07:18:36 PM


And?  Their intentions are completely immaterial.  If a guy's wife goes into labor on the freeway and rushes to get her to the hospital and kills people because of his rush, his intentions are good, but he's going to prison.

These guys should get exactly the same thing.

Intentions are taken into consideration in both cases. Called mitigating circumstances and used in court all the time
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2011, 07:38:15 PM
Intentions are taken into consideration in both cases. Called mitigating circumstances and used in court all the time

That is only sentencing.    Not in innocence or guilt.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2011, 09:36:15 PM
That is only sentencing.    Not in innocence or guilt.

During sentencing yes,

But during the initial phase of filing charges and during trial intentions are important. some crimes require culpable states of the mind, i.e. negligent, intentional, gross negligence, knowing, should have known, are some elements of an offense.

As someone argued it's only the results that matter. Not correct. If I intentionally murder you, it is a different charge than if I kill you through negligence (manslaughter). That is just one of several examples.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 25, 2011, 07:05:05 AM
Not in the course of another crime. If I kill someone in course of robbing a bank or stealing a car. Even of it's an accident. That's murder. No matter if you meant to do it or not.

That has nothing to do with what I was talking about
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on June 26, 2011, 02:29:16 AM
The cop was very professional in his demeanor, I'll give him that. The yard issue is irrelevant though it weighs in the citizens favor. For example, I can chase a bad guy, tackle him in your front yard, and be handcuffing him. You can be in your own yard, looking over my shoulder, and I would be right in telling you to get back if I felt exposed to you while performing my job of arresting the individual.
IN this particular case, reviewing the tape, arrest would not be the likely result in most cases. If an officer felt concerned they may ask to frisk the person for weapons before continuing if the person refused to leave the immediate area of the activity. They may position an officer in an "overwatch" position to keep the bystanders in observation. In this case the citizen was in error by refusing the officers request, but the officer was also in error by resorting to arrest to solve the safety concern.

I just listened to Ian Punnett on Coast to Coast AM tonight.  The entire show was devoted to this.  It was a really great show, several members of law enforcement called in from all over the country.  They had as a main guest, George DeAngelis, former assistant chief of police in El Paso, TX, and professor of criminology at Park University.  They covered this topic and a lot more around law enforcement.  It was a really great show.  Almost all of the cops seemed to agree that this cop went to far but there was also points made in favor of understanding what goes on at a scene...  If anyone wants to watch it, it'll probably be on youtube tomorrow, search it, it was good...



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on June 26, 2011, 03:38:31 AM
here it is:  Good show....

(posted under FAIR USE for commentary and criticism)







Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: roccoginge on June 26, 2011, 07:05:06 PM
There's a video on Alex Jones's site showing the Rochester police ticketing all the protestors for curb violation on all of their parked cars, pathetic.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 26, 2011, 07:16:30 PM
Not in the course of another crime. If I kill someone in course of robbing a bank or stealing a car. Even of it's an accident. That's murder. No matter if you meant to do it or not.

I think it is a separate issue. There is culpability dealing with what someone will be charged with, and at what level.

"Murder" is a generic term. There is negligent homicide, manslaughter, capital murder etc etc.

You statement is not correct as it stands. If I am stealing a car, and in the course of stealing a car, I accidentally run over a pedestrian while escaping and kill them, intentions come into play. It may be a homicide, but it may be classed as a 2nd degree felony rather than 1st degree.

There are exceptions to that rule too. If I kill someone I kidnapped then it is 1st degree.. if I kill more than one person in a single episode it would be 1st, if I kill a police officer, or elderly or handicapped etc etc.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 27, 2011, 02:03:23 PM
Intentions are taken into consideration in both cases. Called mitigating circumstances and used in court all the time


Not the type of intent we were talking about.  You're referring to the degree of responsibility, I was under the impression we were talking about responsibility period.

That may not have been what you meant, but when, right off the bat, you start talking about their intentions, it certainly comes across that you were trying to dismiss any responsibility they may bear for their actions.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 28, 2011, 07:26:26 AM

Not the type of intent we were talking about.  You're referring to the degree of responsibility, I was under the impression we were talking about responsibility period.

That may not have been what you meant, but when, right off the bat, you start talking about their intentions, it certainly comes across that you were trying to dismiss any responsibility they may bear for their actions.

Skip, I wasn't talking in the legal sense in the beginning if I recall correctly. It was a choice between the ATF either purposefully orchestrating the plan knowing agents would die, knowing they wouldn't be able to successfully impact gunrunning and with a deeper motive to somehow further their cause to remove guns from american citizens homes or;

They hatched the plan with the intentions of tracing the weapons to the big fish and making a positive impact.

It was my opinion and according to at least one article authors opinion after reviewing documents, that they had good intentions, but they were wrong.

I think it matters what their intention was, though they should still be held accountable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on June 28, 2011, 10:15:22 AM
Happened last year around the same day

http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-chipotle-deputy-shooting,0,6720848.story

this is sad.. right by my house.. like i walk to this chiptole all the time
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 28, 2011, 10:43:19 AM
Happened last year around the same day

http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-chipotle-deputy-shooting,0,6720848.story

this is sad.. right by my house.. like i walk to this chiptole all the time

what's this world coming to?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 28, 2011, 06:14:03 PM
Happened last year around the same day

http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-chipotle-deputy-shooting,0,6720848.story

this is sad.. right by my house.. like i walk to this chiptole all the time


There's not enough in the story.  Was the guy trying to get away or made an innocent mistake and a corrupt cop shot him?



Chipotle got good food?
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 28, 2011, 09:41:12 PM
beach, can you merge this with my police state thread? 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: roccoginge on June 28, 2011, 11:54:01 PM
Do you maybe think that sometimes people become cops to rape the system and help criminals?  The movie "Departed" is serious.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 29, 2011, 11:17:11 AM

There's not enough in the story.  Was the guy trying to get away or made an innocent mistake and a corrupt cop shot him?



Chipotle got good food?

Yes, the story is a shell at this point and way to early to determine anything with that info.

Chipotle will make you a burrito the size of an infant with 2000 calories, or you can go the bowl route and eat pretty healthy there. Food is not bad.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 29, 2011, 02:33:46 PM
Chipotle will make you a burrito the size of an infant with 2000 calories, or you can go the bowl route and eat pretty healthy there. Food is not bad.



Hmmm...certainly will have to try that some day.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 29, 2011, 04:01:39 PM
Yeah.  Chipotle is good. 
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Dos Equis on June 29, 2011, 04:22:54 PM
beach, can you merge this with my police state thread? 

Done.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 29, 2011, 05:15:23 PM
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Army, Navy Photographer Accused Of Passport Fraud
News4Jax ^ | Monday, June 27, 2011
Posted on June 29, 2011 7:59:21 PM EDT by nickcarraway

Elisha Dawkins graduated in August from nursing school in Jacksonville.

He put on hold his plans for taking the board exams because the Navy called him into action as a photographer.

Dawkins photographed happenings at Guantanamo Bay, an act that's evidence he's a trusted member of the military with top secret clearance.

Now, Dawkins, a Navy reservist and decorated Army combat photographer who served in Iraq, is in jail, charged with passport fraud. He's facing 10 years in prison for what could be a simple misunderstanding.

"Suddenly, he's picked up and thrown in jail? Then it's time for this senator to start asking questions," U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson., D-Fla., said.

Nelson has questions echoed by Dawkins' friends, including Dianne Rinehardt.

Elisha Dawkins served with the Army in Iraq.

"It's a travesty, and we're trying to stop it," Rinehardt said.

Rinehardt went through nursing school with Dawkins and is a veteran herself. She's upset about the trouble her friend is in. In sharing his story with other vets, Rinehardt said that lots of people who don't know Dawkins can't believe it. "We're all appalled that, how can you serve this country and be more dedicated to the ideals of this country, and serve this country and then be told, 'Guess what, you made a little clerical error. You're out of here.' And that's a travesty," Rinehardt said. A federal indictment states that Dawkins started to fill out a passport application in 2004, didn't complete it, then filled out a new application two years later. On that new application, he checked a box "no" for the question, "Have you ever applied before?" according to the indictment.

Dawkins got the passport, but three months ago, the government issued a warrant for his arrest. He was taking photos for the Navy at the time.

When Dawkins got back to the U.S. in April, he was arrested about a week later and has been in jail for two months since.

"The state department is implying there's something more. I want to know, and that's why I've written them," Nelson said. "We've sent emails through our standard home, family email chains throughout the country," Rinehardt said. "The more attention we bring to this, the more people will see this as a disservice."

Dawkins' attorney calls the case an "absurd prosecution," saying that filling out a "no" box "did not merit criminal charges."

Because the trial is scheduled for next month, if Dawkins is still in jail at that point, he will insist on going to trial.

A pretrial hearing Tuesday in Miami is the next step.







Truly freaking nuts. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 30, 2011, 03:11:30 PM
Government sues Apollo 14 astronaut over lunar camera (Edgar Mitchell)
Yahoo ^ | 6/30/11 | Terry Baynes - Reuters


________________________ ________________________ _______________________



NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. government has sued a former NASA astronaut to recover a camera used to explore the moon's surface during the 1971 Apollo 14 mission after seeing it slated for sale in a New York auction.

The lawsuit, filed in Miami federal court on Wednesday, accuses Edgar Mitchell of illegally possessing the camera and attempting to sell it for profit.

In March, NASA learned that the British auction house Bonhams was planning to sell the camera at an upcoming Space History Sale, according to the suit.

The item was labeled "Movie Camera from the Lunar Surface" and billed as one of two cameras from the Apollo 14's lunar module Antares. The lot description said the item came "directly from the collection" of pilot Edgar Mitchell and had a pre-sale estimate of $60,000 to $80,000, the suit said.

Mitchell was a lunar module pilot on Apollo 14, which launched its nine-day mission in 1971 under the command of Alan Shepard. The sixth person to walk on the moon, Mitchell is now retired and runs a website selling his autographed picture.

He has made headlines in the past for his stated belief in the existence of extraterrestrial life.

"All equipment and property used during NASA operations remains the property of NASA unless explicitly released or transferred to another party," the government suit said, adding NASA had no record of the camera being given to Mitchell.

The suit said the government had made repeated requests to Mitchell and his lawyer to return the camera but received no response.


(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 30, 2011, 03:15:33 PM
Collars for Dollars; How the drug war sacrifices real policing for easy arrests.
Reason Magazine ^ | 06/30/2011 | Peter Moskos


________________________ ____________________



When I was a police officer in Baltimore, one sergeant would sometimes motivate his troops in the middle of a shift change by joyfully shouting, “All right, you maggots! Let’s lock people up! They don’t pay you to stand around. I want production! I want lockups!” He said this while standing in front of a small sign he most likely authored: “Unlike the citizens of the Eastern District, you are required to work for your government check.”

In the police world, there are good arrests and better arrests, but there is no such thing as a bad arrest. In recent years, measures of “productivity” have achieved an almost totemic significance. And because they are so easy to count, arrests have come to outweigh more important but harder-to-quantify variables such as crimes prevented, fights mitigated, or public fears assuaged.

There’s an argument that putting pressure on rank-and-file officers to make lots of arrests is a good thing. After all, we pay police to arrest criminals. But there’s a difference between quantity and quality. Quantity is easy to influence, and the rank and file can easily increase their output of discretionary arrests for minor offenses like loitering, disorderly conduct, and possession of marijuana. They are also influenced by what is known in New York as “collars for dollars”: Arrest numbers are influenced by the incentive of overtime pay for finishing up paperwork and appearing in court.

Police would love to arrest only “real” criminals, but that isn’t easy. It’s difficult to find a good criminal. There’s never a felon around when you need one. Fishing for low-level drug arrests is a far easier way to generate overtime.

When I worked in Baltimore, officers would pull up on a drug corner and stop the slowest addict walking away. While conducting a perfectly legal “Terry Frisk”—a cursory search nominally conducted for officer safety—cops would feel some drugs in a pocket. That easy arrest and lockup likely meant two hours of overtime pay.

In some cities, like New York, it’s trickier. Overtime for court testimony is harder to get, and the state’s highest court has ruled—precisely to prevent the Baltimore-style approach—that feeling drugs during a Terry Frisk does not allow an officer to search that pocket and remove those drugs. The court reasoned that the drugs are not a threat to the officer’s safety, and safety is the only justification for these sorts of frisks.

In New York state, small-scale possession of marijuana is virtually decriminalized. It’s not even an arrestable offense. But police in need of overtime are nothing if not wily. So a group of officers might approach a man in a high-crime neighborhood and, in no uncertain terms, “ask” him to empty his pockets. Fearful, resigned, or simply taking the path of least resistance, the suspect might do so, and in the process he might reveal a small “dime bag” of weed. While possessing that amount of marijuana is not an arrestable offense, it becomes one as soon as the drug is placed in “public view.”

Supporters sometimes say these small-scale drug arrests are part of a “broken windows” approach to preventing crime. This tactic comes from an influential 1982 Atlantic magazine article by George Kelling and James Q. Wilson that combined the 19th century police theories of Robert Peel with the 20th century urban philosophy of Jane Jacobs. The idea is that if you take care of the little things—disorder, quality-of-life issues, and public fear—then the big things like robbery and murder will take care of themselves.

Since Police Commissioner William Bratton implemented a broken windows policing strategy in the early 1990s, homicides in New York dropped more than 80 percent. But the crime didn’t drop because police were cracking down on drug users; overall, illegal drug use is as high as ever. When the murder rate was falling fastest in the 1990s, police never arrested more than a few thousand people per year for public-view marijuana. Only after the crime drop slowed did police turn to small-scale drug arrests to meet their “productivity goals.” It’s as if real criminals became too difficult to find, and the addiction to overtime pay remained strong as ever.

Last year in New York City, 50,300 people—mostly young black and Hispanic men—were arrested solely for misdemeanor “public-view” possession of marijuana. It’s true that some may have been up to no good. And some might have been walking down the street proudly smoking a spliff in front of the police. But nobody really believes this accounts for most of those 50,300 lockups. Many were people just going about their business, intending to smoke later, in private, in the very manner the law was intended to decriminalize.

“What is it with the drugs?” a man once asked me while I was policing a 7-11 for coffee, “When there’s shootin’ or fightin’, you don’t seem to care! But when there’s drugs, you come right away.” It’s a fair question to ask. Why do we do it? What do we gain? Especially when we know drug arrests are expensive and turn a lot of otherwise law-abiding citizens into cop-hating criminals?

The drug war, because it can’t be won, encourages outward signs of police effectiveness at the expense of good old-fashioned policing. Hard-working cops, especially those who ask for little more than a middle-class income in return for the dangerous work they do, turn to drug arrests to make ends meet. The Baltimore sergeant was right: Police officers do need to work for their government check. It’s a shame “collars for dollars” has become the easiest way to do it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 30, 2011, 07:18:14 PM
You know... There is are areas that cops are just to chicken shit to go.

I was talking to a local dispatcher the other day and they actually told me that there are areas where if there's a call for a shooting, the cops just ignore it and wait for the EMTs to show up first.

Talk about a bunch of punk ass bitches.

Of course, according to the anonymous cop on here, I'm lying, but whatever.


I don't know about ignoring it, but my brother has let me know that there are plenty of cops who cower when shit goes down.  Not sure if I hold it against them or not.  None of us really knows how we're going to react when bullets are flying at us (fortunately I've never been in such a situation).

But, if someone is in that situation and can't handle it, they need to get rid of them pronto.  And as I noted before, the police repeatedly fail to police themselves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 08:20:54 AM

I don't know about ignoring it, but my brother has let me know that there are plenty of cops who cower when shit goes down.  Not sure if I hold it against them or not.  None of us really knows how we're going to react when bullets are flying at us (fortunately I've never been in such a situation).

But, if someone is in that situation and can't handle it, they need to get rid of them pronto.  And as I noted before, the police repeatedly fail to police themselves.

Again, I can only speak for the police agencies I have worked for..

Over the 29 yrs I've been in the business, there have been ocassions when an officer failed to act due to being afraid. In every case I have been aware of or a witness to, that officer was immediatly dealt with. In most cases, cowardice is identified when an officer is new and on probation. Because usually, if you are in a department of any size, it doesn't take long before you are facing a hairy situation. Those officers are at will employees, on probation and are typically fired if they demonstrate they are scared and won't act. Nothing wrong with being scared, I've been scared many times, but you cannot fail to respond because you are scared.

So I am surprised your brother knows "plenty of cops" who cower when the shit hits the fan. I know of zero that are currently employed in this department who do. And tomorrow if one is identified, he/she will be terminated as they always are.

And Tu... your dispatcher mislead you. I don't think you are lying about this thing, but just fed some questionable information. EMS will NOT respond to a shooting if police have not arrived and deemed the scene safe to enter. So we don't have an option of waiting for EMS to go first. They will "stage" down the street and wait for us to give them the all clear. That is their protocol.  Now if there is information there are no suspects on scene like a self inflicted wound, well that's different.

I've been to plenty of shootings. I've been to plenty of shootings in really bad areas. It's not something cops look forward to because you have million things going through your head as you are driving there.  It's usually always chaotic, you don't know if the shooter(s) still there. If there is a crowd, you figure everyone is armed because you just don't know but there is little you can do about it. You have to give first aid to the victim and hope you have back up to watch the crowd. You have to gather suspect info and get that out over the air, find out who saw what and seperate the witnesses, establish a crime scene perimeter and make a lot of notifications. So its not an easy call but I've never seen or heard of any officers here shunning that call or any call because it's dangerous..

But I will tell you this... if there is a call of a large fight....cops usually don't kill themselves getting to those. The rookies will want to rush in, but then you have 20 people trading punches and it's impossible to control. The veterans know from experience most of them have the stamina of a 70 yr old and usually the fight runs it's course. You bump the siren as you get close and it helps break them up and scatter them. When we get there it's over with some bumps and bruises... If the info changes and weapons are involved, we do get there as soon as possible. but fist fights... not so much.     
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people.
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 08:33:32 AM
Do you maybe think that sometimes people become cops to rape the system and help criminals?  The movie "Departed" is serious.

I do. I don't know if that is their original intent, but over the last 20 yrs we have examples of cops who were criminals. New Orleans had it's share at one time and I recall San Antonio busted some cops who were providing security for a drug cartel to transport drugs and money. I can't say if that was their intention from day 1 but who knows..

I think screening applicants and doing thorough background checks is paramount to avoiding those issues. Also having a management that makes it clear lying, or any criminal activity is grounds for termination in every case.

Then they need to go further and terminate any officers who are shown to have covered for them. We are pretty strict here. You can screw up and make an honest mistake, get days off and move on with your career. But if you lie during the investigation, and it is uncovered, you are fired. If your buddy lies for you, he is fired. If you stop a drunk cop and don't arrest him, and it is discovered, you are fired. The cop who was drunk gets discipline but he is not fired. Any cop who knew about it and didn't report is is fired.

I think in that atmosphere, it would be hard to function as a criminal cop. That is the atmosphere we have here. You can survive screwing up in most cases, or mistakes of the heart, you can't survive criminal acts or lying. You can't survive covering for your buddy.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on July 01, 2011, 09:07:38 AM

There's not enough in the story.  Was the guy trying to get away or made an innocent mistake and a corrupt cop shot him?



Chipotle got good food?

http://laist.com/2010/07/13/questions_arise_about_police_shooti.php

A deputy-involved shooting that left an 18-year-old dead has some questioning whether law enforcement should have used deadly force. On June 24th, plainsclothes officers from a multi-jurisdiction task force were meeting in a Studio City parking lot when they noticed a man apparently casing cars, including one of police's unmarked ones.
A task force member approached the man, who became uncooperative, prompting a struggle. A sheriff's deputy who came over in aid and drew his gun ordering the suspect to the ground was then hit by another vehicle. The driver, 18-year-old Granada Hills honors student Zac Champommier, was fatally shot.
The man being detained was 29-year-old Douglas Ryan Oeters. He told the LA Times that although Champommier hit a sheriff's deputy, he was driving slowly and didn't post a threat.
"They did not show any badge before rushing at me," Oeters explained of the officers, who more resembled red necks than police. "I am sure Zac was scared just like me and left the parking lot due to a panic they started for no reason. This has caused an innocent 18-year-old to be shot after he reacted to the group surrounding me."
Sheriff's officials told the Times that "the two officers who fired their weapons did not have time to identify themselves to" Zac. They also said they clearly identified themselves to Oeters.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on July 01, 2011, 09:10:17 AM
Just type in google. Chipotle shooting studio city
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 11:59:55 AM
So I should believe the anonymous police officer over the dispatcher who I know and trust 100 percent?

apparently...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on July 01, 2011, 12:06:54 PM
apparently...

Sorry... I don't trust the government.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 12:10:51 PM
http://laist.com/2010/07/13/questions_arise_about_police_shooti.php

A deputy-involved shooting that left an 18-year-old dead has some questioning whether law enforcement should have used deadly force. On June 24th, plainsclothes officers from a multi-jurisdiction task force were meeting in a Studio City parking lot when they noticed a man apparently casing cars, including one of police's unmarked ones.
A task force member approached the man, who became uncooperative, prompting a struggle. A sheriff's deputy who came over in aid and drew his gun ordering the suspect to the ground was then hit by another vehicle. The driver, 18-year-old Granada Hills honors student Zac Champommier, was fatally shot.
The man being detained was 29-year-old Douglas Ryan Oeters. He told the LA Times that although Champommier hit a sheriff's deputy, he was driving slowly and didn't post a threat.
"They did not show any badge before rushing at me," Oeters explained of the officers, who more resembled red necks than police. "I am sure Zac was scared just like me and left the parking lot due to a panic they started for no reason. This has caused an innocent 18-year-old to be shot after he reacted to the group surrounding me."
Sheriff's officials told the Times that "the two officers who fired their weapons did not have time to identify themselves to" Zac. They also said they clearly identified themselves to Oeters.

I wonder who wrote the article..it's "pose" a threat not "post" a threat..

I would prefer to wait until the investigation is complete to comment but I will comment on the article itself. I've read a few articles written by otherwise good folks that dealt with incidents I had direct knowledge of and they got a lot of things wrong or wrote the article with a slant to sell papers.

First, there are very few police shootings where "some people" haven't wondered if it was a good shooting. I know of one where the officer shot 1 time at a person who was kneeling over a victim with a buther knife poised to stab the victim in the chest. The cop had yelled to drop the knife as the suspect was approaching the victim, waited until the last moment to take the shot and killed the suspect just before they could stab the victim.

You would think..ok, they don't get any better than that...... but you would be amazed at the outcry from the minority community over the shooting. So knowing there is rarely a police shooting where some people don't bitch, that first line in the article is a given..

Then Oeters says Zac (the deceased) must have been scared and left the parking lot due to the panic.... but also says that when Zac struck the deputy he was driving slow and didn't "post" a threat. Seems a little contradictory in nature.

So I still think at this point, it's best to wait till the smoke clears.      
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 12:11:26 PM
Sorry... I don't trust the government.

irrelevant to our conversation at this point
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 12:21:06 PM
So I should believe the anonymous police officer over the dispatcher who I know and trust 100 percent?

1. If your dispatcher is so sure cops are ignoring shots fired calls and letting EMS go in first then ;

A. Why doesn't she/he report the behavior so it can be addressed?
B. Why isn't EMT raising hell because they have to go into a hot area because police aren't responding?

Dispatchers have limited insight because they dispatch. How is he/she arriving at the conclusion they purposely duck those calls?

I'm not a dispatcher, I'm the guy who actually goes to the calls. Believe what you want..

   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 01:42:39 PM
Hardly... You hate the idea that your amazing government paycheck profession might actually have faults in it.

I don't hate the idea, I hate that it does have faults. I believe I acknowledge that and have spoken about some of them. I call a duck a duck

It's commonly understood that these calls go unanswered and no one cares because it's the "ghetto".

The EMTs avoid the places too when they can... or just wait until daylight or what have you.
If that is happening, that's sad. Wouldn't and doesn't happen here. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 01, 2011, 02:29:23 PM
Again, I can only speak for the police agencies I have worked for..

Over the 29 yrs I've been in the business, there have been ocassions when an officer failed to act due to being afraid. In every case I have been aware of or a witness to, that officer was immediatly dealt with. In most cases, cowardice is identified when an officer is new and on probation. Because usually, if you are in a department of any size, it doesn't take long before you are facing a hairy situation. Those officers are at will employees, on probation and are typically fired if they demonstrate they are scared and won't act. Nothing wrong with being scared, I've been scared many times, but you cannot fail to respond because you are scared.

So I am surprised your brother knows "plenty of cops" who cower when the shit hits the fan. I know of zero that are currently employed in this department who do. And tomorrow if one is identified, he/she will be terminated as they always are.

And Tu... your dispatcher mislead you. I don't think you are lying about this thing, but just fed some questionable information. EMS will NOT respond to a shooting if police have not arrived and deemed the scene safe to enter. So we don't have an option of waiting for EMS to go first. They will "stage" down the street and wait for us to give them the all clear. That is their protocol.  Now if there is information there are no suspects on scene like a self inflicted wound, well that's different.

I've been to plenty of shootings. I've been to plenty of shootings in really bad areas. It's not something cops look forward to because you have million things going through your head as you are driving there.  It's usually always chaotic, you don't know if the shooter(s) still there. If there is a crowd, you figure everyone is armed because you just don't know but there is little you can do about it. You have to give first aid to the victim and hope you have back up to watch the crowd. You have to gather suspect info and get that out over the air, find out who saw what and seperate the witnesses, establish a crime scene perimeter and make a lot of notifications. So its not an easy call but I've never seen or heard of any officers here shunning that call or any call because it's dangerous..

But I will tell you this... if there is a call of a large fight....cops usually don't kill themselves getting to those. The rookies will want to rush in, but then you have 20 people trading punches and it's impossible to control. The veterans know from experience most of them have the stamina of a 70 yr old and usually the fight runs it's course. You bump the siren as you get close and it helps break them up and scatter them. When we get there it's over with some bumps and bruises... If the info changes and weapons are involved, we do get there as soon as possible. but fist fights... not so much.     



haha, please.

Dude what police agency do you work for?  It's amazing the utopia going on.  Bad officers are dealt with swiftly and firmly.  Few, if any cops cower.  Piss poor behavior is identified early and dealt with.  Professionalism rules the day.  There is no blue wall.  Cops who cover for each other are harshly dealt with.

lol, I've never even heard of such a close to perfect police department much less encountered one.

Like I said, I don't have a bad view of you guys having a brother as cop.  I don't even have a problem with you all giving each other passes for speeding and other minor traffic violations.  But some of this is just nuts.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 02:43:48 PM


haha, please.

Dude what police agency do you work for?  It's amazing the utopia going on.  Bad officers are dealt with swiftly and firmly.  Few, if any cops cower.  Piss poor behavior is identified early and dealt with.  Professionalism rules the day.  There is no blue wall.  Cops who cover for each other are harshly dealt with.

lol, I've never even heard of such a close to perfect police department much less encountered one.

Like I said, I don't have a bad view of you guys having a brother as cop.  I don't even have a problem with you all giving each other passes for speeding and other minor traffic violations.  But some of this is just nuts.

Austin Police Department

It's all accurate information. The blue wall for all intents and purposes came crashing down about 8-10 yrs ago. Not only the holding officers accountable, but with advances of video cameras in every car, some officer now carrying body cameras, there is little left to the imagination.

They pay us very well here, you will never hear a cop complaining about the pay. And for that pay, they expect a lot. It's a pain sometimes because on ocassion the citizens expect too much, but I get it.... we say we are professional, we expect to be paid as professional, it's only fair the public expects us to be professional.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 02:45:08 PM


haha, please.

Dude what police agency do you work for?  It's amazing the utopia going on.  Bad officers are dealt with swiftly and firmly.  Few, if any cops cower.  Piss poor behavior is identified early and dealt with.  Professionalism rules the day.  There is no blue wall.  Cops who cover for each other are harshly dealt with.

lol, I've never even heard of such a close to perfect police department much less encountered one.

Like I said, I don't have a bad view of you guys having a brother as cop.  I don't even have a problem with you all giving each other passes for speeding and other minor traffic violations.  But some of this is just nuts.

and kudos to your brother. My brother is a retired cop. I kinda owe him for leading me down this path. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 01, 2011, 07:35:32 PM
Exactly Skip... It's complete crap.

From Youtube below.

Not exactly the perfect department he makes Austin out to be.

(Note... I'm not saying the guy below is guilty or innocent, just that the same shit happens everywhere)



Dec 8, 2007 - Gary Griffin can now return to the force after he won an appeal after losing his job as a police officer with the Austin TX police department due to excessive force. He had been an officer for 10 years previous. It is not known when he will be back on the streets.

A man was restrained and beaten by a Austin TX police officer last year and now officer Gary Griffin can return back to the force after losing his job. Griffin appealed the decision by acting chief Cathy Ellison of the Austin police department.

The chief made the decision to kick Griffin off of the force for six months after reviewing a police dash cam video that showed Griffin using excessive force.

It took a whole year but Griffin has finally won the appeal and he is returning back to work and that is not going over well with the family of Joseph Cruz. Cruz is the man in the video who was beaten.

Cruz was sleeping at a bus stop when Griffin tried to wake him up and that is when things got out of hand.

Before Griffin returns to the force he will have to see a psychiatrist.

The Austin City Council on Thursday approved a $55,000 settlement for the family of a mentally ill man who was beaten by an Austin police officer.

According to court documents, Griffin responded to a "person down" call in July 2006 and found Cruz, who has schizophrenia, asleep on a bus stop bench. When Cruz did not wake up, Griffin repeatedly hit him with his billy club and then punched Cruz in the face, breaking his nose, the documents said.



a great example of what I was talking about. The officers actions were out of line. Another officer brought it to the attention of the supervisor. The supervisor reported it and the officer was terminated after an investigation. The officer excercised his right to appeal and against our wishes he was reinstated by the arbitrator. The arbitrator is independant and the department is bound by civil service law to abide by the ruling. He has since bneen removed from patrol
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 02, 2011, 06:34:26 AM
a great example of what I was talking about. The officers actions were out of line. Another officer brought it to the attention of the supervisor. The supervisor reported it and the officer was terminated after an investigation. The officer excercised his right to appeal and against our wishes he was reinstated by the arbitrator. The arbitrator is independant and the department is bound by civil service law to abide by the ruling. He has since bneen removed from patrol



No, this is actually a great example of what I said earlier in thread:




It doesn't matter, you could have 100 checks and balances.  The only thing the public cares about is the end result, and in the end, the police do a horrible job of policing themselves.  Rarely are cops terminated. 

I'm not exempt by the way.  As a public employee myself, we also do a horrible job of weeding out the incompetent lackies.  Just trying to get one out is a bureaucratic nightmare.  And the public does take notice.



That's why federal employees also get a bad rep.  Nobody gives a shit about us crying about the bureacracy.  The end result is we fail to police ourselves.  Laws, rules, policies, negotiated agreements all need to be changed so that we can weed out the bad apples.

Until then, they will continue to overshadow the rest.

My brothers in Dallas, not far from you.  Not buying the Blue Wall stuff for a minute.  8-10 years ago, you were all denying it existed.  Now it's well, it did exist but it's gone, haha.  Sorry, he's told me way, way too much.

When measured in the balance though, I think overall the police do a solid job.  A lot that needs work, but a lot of good stuff too that never gets noticed or appreciated.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 02, 2011, 08:13:11 AM
But the cops DID police themselves. The cops did everything they were supposed to when this was brought to light by another officer.

And my brother was Ft Worth. He would agree with you that Dallas isnt where Austin or Ft Worth is yet. But give it 10 more years. And the blue wall is gone here. There are just too many real world examples where cops have reported cops illegal or unprofessional behavior to think otherwise. And frankly, I don't miss it. I was never into the us vs them mentality
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 02, 2011, 09:47:38 AM
You make a lot of us vs. them statements in this thread.

I'm with Skip on this one.

Can you produce a couple us vs them statements I've made I would love to see some

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on July 02, 2011, 12:10:18 PM
a great example of what I was talking about. The officers actions were out of line. Another officer brought it to the attention of the supervisor. The supervisor reported it and the officer was terminated after an investigation. The officer excercised his right to appeal and against our wishes he was reinstated by the arbitrator. The arbitrator is independant and the department is bound by civil service law to abide by the ruling. He has since bneen removed from patrol

Agree.  This is an example of cops policing themselves. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 05, 2011, 09:55:30 AM
But the cops DID police themselves. The cops did everything they were supposed to when this was brought to light by another officer.




Now it really seems that you are just being flat out dishonest.

3 supervisors got temp suspensions because they failed to acknowledge what this guy did was wrong.  Only ONE cop, (acting Chief Ellison), found the guys actions out of line and took action to remove him.

Further, he was represented by Stribling, an attorney for the police union!!  You don't get to argue the cops "did everything", when it's the cops' union representing the guy.

Finally, the arbitrator ruled that Austin PD (you know, the uber professional force) never gave the guy appropriate training in the use of excessive force and that's why he got his job back.

BTW, 3 supervisors supporting this guy = the blue wall.

So, one cop at the very top tried to do the right thing, 3 supervisors tried to cover for the guy, the department failed to correctly train the guy, and the police union argued and won on his behalf.  Sorry, but to any reasonably objective person - that's a failure to police yourselves.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 05, 2011, 10:23:04 AM


Now it really seems that you are just being flat out dishonest.

3 supervisors got temp suspensions because they failed to acknowledge what this guy did was wrong.  Only ONE cop, (acting Chief Ellison), found the guys actions out of line and took action to remove him.

Further, he was represented by Stribling, an attorney for the police union!!  You don't get to argue the cops "did everything", when it's the cops' union representing the guy.

Finally, the arbitrator ruled that Austin PD (you know, the uber professional force) never gave the guy appropriate training in the use of excessive force and that's why he got his job back.

BTW, 3 supervisors supporting this guy = the blue wall.

So, one cop at the very top tried to do the right thing, 3 supervisors tried to cover for the guy, the department failed to correctly train the guy, and the police union argued and won on his behalf.  Sorry, but to any reasonably objective person - that's a failure to police yourselves.





How did the cop at the top find out about it?

And as far as Stribling, he is a contract attorney for CLEAT which represents officers who are members of the Association. Any officer who is fired, or suspended for over 3 days has a right to an appeal. That's how it is set up with civil service. Most of the time the arbitrators ruling is correct, sometimes it is off in the administrations opinion. IN this case they obviously didn't agree with the arbitrator.

This incident was brought to the attention of I.A. by the supervisors. In this case, the supervisors (which included a Commander) were disciplined because they did not watch the entire tape which ran for an hour. They watched the incident itself just before and after and addressed the incident. What they missed was comments made by the officer to another officer that appeared on tape well after the incident happened that I.A. found. And honestly, it would have caught most supervisors because until that point it wasn't common practice to watch videos well past the incident.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 05, 2011, 11:09:43 AM


And as far as Stribling, he is a contract attorney for CLEAT which represents officers who are members of the Association. Any officer who is fired, or suspended for over 3 days has a right to an appeal. That's how it is set up with civil service. Most of the time the arbitrators ruling is correct, sometimes it is off in the administrations opinion. IN this case they obviously didn't agree with the arbitrator.

So?  Police officers collectively negotiate for, lobby, and benefit from union representation like this.  Just because it's codified doesn't mean a free pass.  Like I said earlier,
   "Nobody gives a shit about us crying about the bureacracy.  The end result is we fail to police ourselves.  Laws, rules, policies, negotiated agreements all need to be changed so that we can weed out the bad apples."

 


Quote
This incident was brought to the attention of I.A. by the supervisors.

That's your claim, for all we know the guy that took the beating filed a complaint that brought it to light.




Quote
In this case, the supervisors (which included a Commander) were disciplined because they did not watch the entire tape which ran for an hour. They watched the incident itself just before and after and addressed the incident. What they missed was comments made by the officer to another officer that appeared on tape well after the incident happened that I.A. found. And honestly, it would have caught most supervisors because until that point it wasn't common practice to watch videos well past the incident.



The facts released thus far don't support your claim.  They were suspended because they failed to acknowledge what this guy did was wrong - they covered for a corrupt cop.

"Ellison also handed three of Griffin's supervisors – Cpl. Andrew Haynes, Lt. Deborah Sawyer, and Cmdr. Michael Nyert – temporary suspensions for failing to conclude that Griffin's actions in arresting Cruz were out of line"

http://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2007-01-05/433594/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 05, 2011, 12:24:41 PM
So?  Police officers collectively negotiate for, lobby, and benefit from union representation like this.  Just because it's codified doesn't mean a free pass.  Like I said earlier,
   "Nobody gives a shit about us crying about the bureacracy.  The end result is we fail to police ourselves.  Laws, rules, policies, negotiated agreements all need to be changed so that we can weed out the bad apples."

 


That's your claim, for all we know the guy that took the beating filed a complaint that brought it to light.






The facts released thus far don't support your claim.  They were suspended because they failed to acknowledge what this guy did was wrong - they covered for a corrupt cop.

"Ellison also handed three of Griffin's supervisors – Cpl. Andrew Haynes, Lt. Deborah Sawyer, and Cmdr. Michael Nyert – temporary suspensions for failing to conclude that Griffin's actions in arresting Cruz were out of line"

http://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2007-01-05/433594/

Sorry, but I've little confidence in the Austin Chronicle. Had my own experience with Jordan Smith where she had access to the truth, but chose to ignore it because she does not like cops and the truth didn't fit her story. The supervisors failed to review the entire tape and missed a comment by the officer. Otherwise, had 3 supervisors had no problem with the officers actions, the chief would have never known about it. And the citizen didn't complain.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 05, 2011, 01:48:58 PM
Upper East Side Woman, Darbe Pitofsky, Ticketed For Using City Trash Can
newyork.cbslocal.com ^ | 07-05-2011 | Staff


________________________ ________________________ ____________________-



An elderly Upper East Side woman claims a sanitation agent chased her, threatened her with arrest and slapped her with a ticket for putting day-old newspapers in a city trash can.

Darbe Pitofsky, 83, said she was on her way for a cup of coffee around 6:30 a.m. on June 25 when she threw a brown bag filled with old papers in a city litter basket near her apartment on East 71st Street.

She said a sanitation worker quickly jumped out of his vehicle and demanded her information to write a summons.

“I froze,” Pitofsky told 1010 WINS’ Carol D’Auria. “He just frightened the hell out of me, scared me to death, I was terrified.”

She said the worker demanded a form of identification and threatened to “put her away” if she didn’t comply.

Pitofsky said it took the worker 25 minutes to write the summons and when she complained that it would cost her $100, she said he threatened to make it $300.

A representative for the Sanitation Department said street baskets are for pedestrian use only but added Pitofsky can challenge the ticket if she thinks there has been a mistake.

Litter baskets across the city are marked with stickers that read “no household trash” or “no business trash,” along with a warning of a $100 fine for violation. The Sanitation Department has a platoon of enforcement agents tasked with enforcing litter basket laws. Their duties even include doing detective work on trash suspected of being illegally dumped.

Pitofsky says she has already filed a complaint.

Her story is similar to that of 80-year-old Delia Gluckin, who last December, was also fined $100 for “improper disposal” for throwing her newspaper in a trash can in Inwood.

Do you think the city’s enforcement of the rules are too harsh? Let us know below…
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 05, 2011, 01:57:57 PM
Sorry, but I've little confidence in the Austin Chronicle. Had my own experience with Jordan Smith where she had access to the truth, but chose to ignore it because she does not like cops and the truth didn't fit her story. The supervisors failed to review the entire tape and missed a comment by the officer. Otherwise, had 3 supervisors had no problem with the officers actions, the chief would have never known about it. And the citizen didn't complain.   



Bullshit.  More flat out lying from you.  The link below takes you to the memo written by acting Chief Ellison detailing all of the facts and why Commander Nyert was suspended.  The "full video review" is a minute fraction.

The Chief found out about this from the District Attorney's office who reviewed the tape and recommended an investigation be launched!!

Not to mention that the civil rights suit was also against the 3 supervisors - not the acting Chief.

And, when the corrupt cop Griffin sued for discrimination, he only named the acting Chief, not the 3 supervisors.

How much more evidence is needed?  They tried to cover for the guy.  You're trying to cover for them.

lol, dude, you're a walking case study of the blue wall.

http://home.kxan.com/news_PDFs/Nyert_memo.pdf 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 05, 2011, 02:13:04 PM


Bullshit.  More flat out lying from you.  The link below takes you to the memo written by acting Chief Ellison detailing all of the facts and why Commander Nyert was suspended.  The "full video review" is a minute fraction.

The Chief found out about this from the District Attorney's office who reviewed the tape and recommended an investigation be launched!!

Not to mention that the civil rights suit was also against the 3 supervisors - not the acting Chief.

And, when the corrupt cop Griffin sued for discrimination, he only named the acting Chief, not the 3 supervisors.

How much more evidence is needed?  They tried to cover for the guy.  You're trying to cover for them.

lol, dude, you're a walking case study of the blue wall.

http://home.kxan.com/news_PDFs/Nyert_memo.pdf 

Skip I read the letter and you are right! I was talking about an incident that happened 5 yrs ago from memory but I do recall the officer direct filed the case to avoid getting it reviewed. The officer not only charged the guy with Public Intoxication, but he added Assault on a Police officer or resisting arrest, I can't recall which charge but had he not done that he may have gotten away with it. Because he placed that bogus charge on the guy it was reviewed by the D.A. who raised the flag.

I'm no blue wall, I'm just old. I remember viewing the tape in a room full of officers. I was appauled by the officers actions and to me he was clearly using excessive force. I was surprised that a few officer looking at the same tape thought it was "borderline". I didn't think it was borderline at all and I was not happy with the arbitrators decision. Most of the force wasn't.

I recall his lawsuit against the Chief. She was the decision maker and therefore the only one he could sue. Again, I thought it was a baseless lawsuit and it was.

 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 05, 2011, 02:17:02 PM
Haha.. It's "the liberal media".



Still waiting on those "us vs them" statements....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 05, 2011, 03:12:19 PM
Skip I read the letter and you are right! I was talking about an incident that happened 5 yrs ago from memory but I do recall the officer direct filed the case to avoid getting it reviewed. The officer not only charged the guy with Public Intoxication, but he added Assault on a Police officer or resisting arrest, I can't recall which charge but had he not done that he may have gotten away with it. Because he placed that bogus charge on the guy it was reviewed by the D.A. who raised the flag.

I'm no blue wall, I'm just old. I remember viewing the tape in a room full of officers. I was appauled by the officers actions and to me he was clearly using excessive force. I was surprised that a few officer looking at the same tape thought it was "borderline". I didn't think it was borderline at all and I was not happy with the arbitrators decision. Most of the force wasn't.

I recall his lawsuit against the Chief. She was the decision maker and therefore the only one he could sue. Again, I thought it was a baseless lawsuit and it was.

 





That's fine, but in any event, we as public employees really need to help get some changes through so that dirtbags can be more easily dealt with.  Some people I've come across are so fucking lazy it would make a 3 toed sloth proud.

IMO, until we start truly removing red-tape and administrative crap and really start policing ourselves, the public image isn't likely to change anytime soon.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 05, 2011, 04:29:05 PM
No Tu, I didnt

Skip, here is the delimma. Without recourse, or arbitration, civil servants would not be able effectively enforce the law. Gave my wife a ticket? Your fired.. didn't vote for me for ____ your fired.  Small group of citizens don't like how you handled that call? Your fired...
 
So I think it IS important to have some protections in place like arbitration so that an officer who is disciplined has recourse to in theory make sure he or she got a fair shake. I have seen where a particular officer was fired and reinstated by an arbitrator 3 times before a firing that held up. It does make it harder to get rid of officers who might better serve another career. I've been very frustrated at times by an arbitrators ruling I understand why it's there.

I was involved in a case where a cadet was terminated for incompetence and safety issues. He was also dishonest. He sued because he said the department was biased against christians. It went to federal court and we won, but I could not believe with 6 inches of documentation and video of his incompetence we had to go through a week of court hearings in order to get rid of him. THats a rare case, but it happens.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 06, 2011, 02:27:20 PM
Teen faces prison after sex doll prank goes awry (Prosecutors gone wild, kid faces 8 years prison)
WSVM ^ | 07/06/2011 | AP News






INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - When 18-year-old Tyell Morton put a blow-up sex doll in a bathroom stall on the last day of school, he didn't expect school officials to call a bomb squad or that he'd be facing up to eight years in prison and a possible felony record.

The senior prank gone awry has raised questions of race, prosecutorial zeal and the post-Columbine mindset in a small Indiana town and around the country, The Indianapolis Star reported in its Tuesday editions.

Legal experts question the appropriateness of the charges against Morton, and law professor Jonathan Turley at George Washington University posed a wider question about Morton's case on his legal blog.

"The question is what type of society we are creating when our children have to fear that a prank (could) lead them to jail for almost a decade. What type of citizens are we creating who fear the arbitrary use of criminal charges by their government?"

(Excerpt) Read more at wsmv.com ...








Typical Nazi police state bs.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on July 06, 2011, 02:30:06 PM
LMAO.. Thats fucked up.. blow up dall=bomb
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 06, 2011, 02:33:57 PM
City turning red-light cameras back on
http://blog.chron.com/houstonpolitics/2011/07/city-turns-red-light-cameras-back-on




The city of Houston will turn its red-light cameras back on today, Mayor Annise Parker announced after this morning’s City Council meeting.

According to a statement from the mayor’s office, tickets will be issued after a “short period of equipment testing.”

Houston voters approved a referendum to turn off the cameras in November, but a federal judge ruled last month that it had been improperly placed on the ballot, rendering the results invalid. As a result, the city faced a choice to turn the cameras back on or canceling its contract with American Traffic Solutions, which could cost the city $16 million.

At the same time, Parker said, the city seek permission for an appeal of the ruling by U.S. District Judge Lynn Hughes in attempt to honor the will of the voters.

Here is what the city filed with Hughes:




________________________ ________________________ _______

How would it cost the city 16 Million? 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 06, 2011, 06:10:03 PM
No Tu, I didnt

Skip, here is the delimma. Without recourse, or arbitration, civil servants would not be able effectively enforce the law. Gave my wife a ticket? Your fired.. didn't vote for me for ____ your fired.  Small group of citizens don't like how you handled that call? Your fired...
 
So I think it IS important to have some protections in place like arbitration so that an officer who is disciplined has recourse to in theory make sure he or she got a fair shake. I have seen where a particular officer was fired and reinstated by an arbitrator 3 times before a firing that held up. It does make it harder to get rid of officers who might better serve another career. I've been very frustrated at times by an arbitrators ruling I understand why it's there.

I was involved in a case where a cadet was terminated for incompetence and safety issues. He was also dishonest. He sued because he said the department was biased against christians. It went to federal court and we won, but I could not believe with 6 inches of documentation and video of his incompetence we had to go through a week of court hearings in order to get rid of him. THats a rare case, but it happens.   


This is not an either/or issue.  There is a comfortable middle ground.  I'm just arguing, we haven't found it yet.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 07, 2011, 08:10:25 AM
Yes you did... However, you are so warped you don't even see it.

Anonymous cop says he's right and everyone else is wrong.

Oh well.

wow, you really explained it well and made your case... debate team experience Tu?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 10:56:12 AM
Most cops don't do dick but pat themselves on the shoulder and cry a river why they are not paid 500k a year. 


I grew up with tons of cops, they are by far the worst of the lot.   Mostly overpaid bitches w badges who would be washing cars if they were not cops and will find any reason whatsoever to justify their rape of the taxpayer.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 12:57:51 PM
Cop shoots, kills dog during Adams Morgan festival
TBD.com ^ | September 12, 2010 | TBD, ABC7





UPDATE 7:47 p.m. Sept. 13: The Washington Post has obtained the police report on the incident. It describes the dog as appearing "to be out of control" and says the dog "charged" at the officer before it was fatally shot.

10:16 p.m. Updated with a statement from Third District police that conflicts with the dog handler's spokesman's statement, and an e-mailed statement from the handler himself.

There's never a shortage of police officers at Adams Morgan Day, just in case someone gets out of hand. Today, that someone was a dog.

An officer with the D.C. police department shot and killed a dog — possibly a rottweiler or pit bull — outside The Brass Knob antique store at 2311 18th St. NW. The shooting followed an intense, two-minute scuffle between the dog and what witnesses describe as a "smaller" white dog.

In dispute of the what the dog's handler has said, police tonight released a statement saying the dog was out of control and also bit the handler. Here's the entire e-mail from Third District Capt. Aubrey P. Mongal:

Earlier this afternoon, during the Adams Morgan Day events, an MPD officer encountered a dog in the crowded pedestrian area that got out of the control of it’s handler. The dog attacked another dog and also bit it handler. The officer, after making several attempts to subdue the dog by training tactics, had to finally shoot one time to stop the dog.

On the contrary, says the handler, who only wants to be identified as Aaron. In an e-mail to TBD, Aaron said the apparent foster dog, Parrot, didn't bite anyone.

In my recollection and as the eyewitness accounts will coroborate, the dog was completely under my control when the k9 officer removed me. Parrot bit no human, the only blood he drew was when i thrust my hand into his mouth to get him off the other dog. The k9 officer's injury, which he showed me at the station after, was nothing more than a rope burn from Parrot's leash, suffered when the officer was throwing my dog down a flight of stairs.

 D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier, in an earlier response to an e-mail from advisory neighborhood commissioner and candidate for the Ward 1 D.C. Council seat Bryan Weaver, said three people, including a K9 officer, were bitten by the dog. Here's an excerpt of the e-mail:

I don't know all of the facts at this point so it is very difficult for me to comment beyond the facts that I have been given. All I know is that there is one dog who was attacked by the pit bull and 3 people, including a K9 officer, that were bitten by the pit bull.

Police sources had earlier told ABC 7 the officer who shot the dog was a canine handler who was experienced with dogs. He was trying to separate the dogs, and attempted to choke hold the larger dog. While he was trying that, the dog attempted to bite him or did bite him, and he threw him down the stairwell in an attempt to injure the dog. The dog charged the officer and the officer opened fire, the sources said.

An unidentified spokesperson for the dog's handler said the cop didn't try hard enough to subdue the dog.

In an e-mail to TBD, Weaver said the dog had seemed friendly at his booth at the festival just 15 minutes before the incident:

"Aaron is a good guy, he said he had the dog under control and the cop grabbed it from him and threw him down the well at [Marie] Reed and shot him. Dog was playing with kids at my booth 15 min earlier. Aaron is really shaken."

One witness, 46-year-old Harriet Winslow, said that at first, she saw the two dogs — the white-sandy pitbull-looking dog and a cute white fluffy lap dog — barking and fighting.

"Everybody glanced over and the owners of these dogs were frantically trying to pull them apart. We're all looking concerned. Suddenly, the owner of the pitbull was down on the ground trying to subdue his dog. He was really trying hard — I have to give him credit. He was on the ground wrapping his arms around the dog. I could see him down on the ground. I mean he was really trying."

After the two dogs were pulled apart, Winslow says she could see that the smaller dog was fine. But the dogs were still barking at each other.

Then a cop appeared.

"I glanced over again and I saw a very able bodied police officer fully a stride the dog — the cop straddling dog. The pitbull was still animated, still trying to get up. But this cop — I thought 'Wow this guy is good at this, he subdued a really angry dog.' Then I thought 'Good, this is now over.' Then I walk just five or 10 feet away and I hear a gun shot."

Before she heard the shot, she said she thought "the cop was totally in control. ... It's not something I would want to do. He really was on top of this dog."

Noah Siegel, who works at nearby Spaghetti Garden restaurant, says he saw "two or three cops" surrounding the dog. One of the officers, says Siegel, had the dog on a leash and attempted to drag it away from the commotion.

The dog began "trying to attack the cop," says Siegel. "Next thing I knew, they had it down there in the corner and I heard a shot and that was it," says Siegel, who was interviewed by ABC 7's Brianne Carter.

An onlooker who attempted to intervene in the dogfight sustained a scrape or two. "He's fine," reports ABC 7's Carter.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 07, 2011, 01:04:13 PM

I think your job is fascist and brings no real value to society at large.


I think your opinion is ridiculous on this point.... but you're welcome to it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 07, 2011, 01:05:48 PM
Most cops don't do dick but pat themselves on the shoulder and cry a river why they are not paid 500k a year. 


I grew up with tons of cops, they are by far the worst of the lot.   Mostly overpaid bitches w badges who would be washing cars if they were not cops and will find any reason whatsoever to justify their rape of the taxpayer.     

Thanks for sharing your opinion of cops. Fortunately your opinion is in the small minority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 01:07:35 PM
Thanks for sharing your opinion of cops. Fortunately your opinion is in the small minority.

You know what they say about opinions.   ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 01:14:04 PM
Jailed for cashing Chase check at Chase bank
King 5 ^ | 07/07/2011 | King 5






AUBURN, Wash. - Buying his own home was a big accomplishment for construction worker, Ikenna Njoku, of Auburn. He’s only 28 years old. “I was really excited. For the first time, I actually got to buy a lawn mower, mow my lawn and everything,” said Njoku.

Njoku qualified for the first time home buyer rebate on his tax return.

"It was really important, I had a vehicle I was looking on paying off," said. Njoku. And it wasn’t just any vehicle. “It was a 2001 Infinity I-30, silver…just like my favorite car, “he said.

Njoku signed up to have the rebate deposited directly into his Chase Bank account. But when the IRS rebate arrived, there was a problem. Chase had closed Njoku’s account because of overdrawn checks in the past. The bank deducted $600 to cover what he owed them and mailed him a cashier’s check for the difference--$8,463.21.

But when Njoku showed up at the Chase branch near his house intending to cash the check, he was in for a nasty surprise.

The check had Njoku’s name and address on it and was issued by JP Morgan Chase. But the Chase Customer Banker who handles large checks at the Auburn branch was immediately suspicious.

“I was embarrassed,” Njoku said. “She asked me what I did for a living. Asked me where I got the check from, looked me up and down—like ‘you just bought a house in Auburn, really?’ She didn’t believe that,” he said.

The Customer Banker said the check looked fake, so she took it, along with Njoku’s driver license and credit card, and called Bank Support.

After waiting for about 15 minutes, Njoku said he got impatient and told Chase he was leaving to do an important errand. By the time he got back, the bank was closed. Njoku said he called customer service and asked them what he should do. He says they told him to go back to the bank the next day to get his money.

But when Njoku arrived, it wasn’t the money that was waiting for him.

“They just threw me in jail; they called the police and said this guy has a fraudulent check,” Njoku said.

Auburn police arrested him for forgery - a felony crime.

“I was like - you’re making a mistake, you’re making a mistake, don’t take me to jail, I got work tomorrow. I can’t afford to miss work,” he said.

Njoku was taken to jail on June 24, 2010, which was a Thursday. The next day, Chase Special Investigations, realized it was a mistake. The check was legitimate. The Investigator called Auburn Police and left a message with the detective handling the case, but it was her day off. So Njoku stayed in jail for the entire weekend. Finally, on Monday, he was released.

Auburn Police Commander Dave Colglazier said Chase could have done a lot more to let them know they’d locked up an innocent man.

“We do have a main line that comes into our front office,” he said. “There are ways to reach someone 24/7 at a police department.”

For Njoku, going to jail for five days meant a lot more than just losing his freedom. He said the entire time he was “just stressed out…trying to figure out what was going on with my vehicle. I love my vehicle,” he said.

Njoku’s car had been towed from the bank parking lot and his check seized as evidence.

“I had to wait a couple of weeks,” he said, “and my car got sold, auctioned off."

Njoku says he didn’t have the money to pay the impound fees and fines to get his car back before it was sold. He said he also lost his job because he didn’t show up for work while he was in jail.

After all of that, Njoku said he never heard a word from Chase.

“They haven’t even sent me a letter or apologized,” he said. “It’s been a year we’ve been trying to contact these guys.”

Finally, A Seattle attorney offered to help. Last week, Felix Luna sent Chase a scathing letter. Read the attorneys' letter to Chase

“It’s one thing to make a mistake,” Luna said. “It’s one thing to make multiple errors of judgment like Chase has made and then, once you realize that your error has caused such harm to somebody else, to just ignore it for a year. I think he deserved better. I think all their customers do.”

Like Njoku, KING 5 had a difficult time getting answers from Chase. A week after first contacting them, they sent a two line e-mail.

"We received the letter and are reviewing the situation. We'll be reaching out to the customer," wrote Darcy Donoahoe-Wilmot, from Chase Media Relations.

Njoku said that even after he got out of jail, he said was confused and upset. "For a month, two months, I was just down and depressed," he said.

He’s still happy he bought his house, but sad that his experience with his own bank was so humiliating.

“They treated me like a criminal,” he said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 08:48:16 PM
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New Bill Prevents Cops from Visually Judging Speed (OH)
Fox8News ^ | 7/7/11
Posted on July 7, 2011 11:15:33 PM EDT by EBH

AKRON, Ohio— State lawmakers have passed a bill forbidding law enforcement officers from 'guesstimating' the speed of a moving vehicle.

The law was changed after a Summit County man was ticketed on Route 21 by a policeman who visually determined how fast he was driving. Last year, he fought the ticket all the way to the Ohio Supreme Court and lost. But his attorney worked with legislators who recently re-wrote the law.

"I knew it would probably upset a few, but not to the level that it did," said Attorney John Kim, from Akron. Kim represented the defendant for more than two-years and he's thrilled the issue has been resolved. "It all begins with principle and looking my client directly in the eyes, he was absolutely adamant that he was not guilty of speeding," said Kim.

State Representative Barbara Sears, R-Lucas County, worked to get the measure passed. "I took the cause up, just because, to me it didn't seem appropriate, it seemed like we certainly have the ability to have a better, more concrete way of measuring speed and that seemed like the best way to do it," said Rep. Sears.

Bath resident Jonathan Emerson isn't comfortable with the idea that a police officer could make a visual determination of speed. "It seems unrealistic to think that a police officer would be able to judge within five miles an hour," said Emerson.

(Excerpt) Read more at fox8.com ...

TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; US: Ohio; Click to Add Topic
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1 posted on July 7, 2011 11:15:39 PM EDT by EBH
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2 posted on July 7, 2011 11:16:48 PM EDT by EBH ( Whether you eat your bread or see it vanish into a looter's stomach, is an absolute.)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 08:50:11 PM
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TSA employee arrested after theft string
7 News ^ | July 7, 2011
Posted on July 7, 2011 10:44:19 PM EDT by BulletBobCo

FORT LAUDERDALE-HOLLYWOOD INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, Fla. (WSVN) -- Police have arrested a TSA employee after he is responsible for a string of thefts over the past months.

Thirty-year-old Nelson Santiago was arrested Thursday after stealing electronics from passengers checked luggage and then sell them online. "He had this down to a science. He'd take an item then he would photograph it with his cell phone, post it on Craigslist and most often it was sold by the time his shift had ended," said Broward Sheriff's Office Dani Moschella.

According to Broward Sheriff's Office, Santiago was allegedly caught by a Continental Airlines employee slipping an iPad out of a suitcase and into his pants.

BSO said the scam when on for six months and the sale of the stolen items added up to $50,000. "He stole most of the electronic equipment. A lot of iPads, computers, some small video cameras, a GPS device," said Moschella.

Rosanne Ambrico is a frequent travel and is in shock with the news. "It's a TSA worker. They are screened, they go through background checks and obviously he should have been cleared but I don't know what happen,"

Santiago has been charged with grand theft. He has been a TSA officer since January 2009 but no longer works with the agency.

TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Florida; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: tsa; Click to Add Keyword

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1 posted on July 7, 2011 10:44:22 PM EDT by BulletBobCo
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2011, 10:09:34 PM
Child pornography found on Assistant U.S. Attorney’s computer
The Daily Caller ^ | 7 Jul 2011 | Caroline May
Posted on July 7, 2011 6:22:41 PM EDT by mandaladon

Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder Thursday requesting an explanation as to why the Justice Department declined to file charges against a federal prosecutor with child pornography found on his work computer.

The finding against the Assistant United States Attorney (AUSA) was made by the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG).

According to the Inspector General’s report, the AUSA admitted to spending a significant amount of time each day viewing porn at work.

“The OIG conducted an investigation concerning allegations that an AUSA was using his government computer to view inappropriate material on his government computer,” the Grassley letter quoted from the OIG report. “The investigation determined that the AUSA routinely viewed adult content during official duty hours, and that there was at least one image of child pornography recovered on the AUSA’s government computer. The AUSA acknowledged that he had spent a significant amount of time each day viewing pornography.”

Grassley further questioned why the department kept employing the individual for at least two months following the report; what types of cases this AUSA prosecuted; the status of the individual’s pension; and what types of Internet filters the Department now uses.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on July 08, 2011, 02:21:39 AM
I think your opinion is ridiculous on this point.... but you're welcome to it.

I share his opinion
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on July 08, 2011, 02:22:16 AM
Thanks for sharing your opinion of cops. Fortunately your opinion is in the small minority.

Not that small i support it to for 70% of the cops out there its spot on
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 08, 2011, 11:27:24 AM
BSO: TSA Worker Steals iPad, Electronics From Luggage
Baggage Screener Accused Of Stealing Electronics, Selling Them Online

POSTED: Thursday, July 7, 2011
UPDATED: 10:21 am EDT July 8, 2011


 
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- A Transportation Security Administration worker is accused of stealing from the luggage of travelers at Fort Lauderdale - Hollywood International Airport Monday.

Broward Sheriff's Deputies said a Continental Airlines worker saw Nelson Santiago, 30, slip an iPad out of a suitcase and into his pants.

 Video


That worker reported the theft to his supervisor and Santiago was arrested.

Deputies said Santiago is responsible for a string of thefts over the past six months. They said he told detectives that he stole computers, GPS devices and video cameras from luggage he was screening.

He then allegedly took pictures of the stolen goods with his cell phone, and posted them for sale online.

BSO said the items would often sell by the time Santiago's shift ended.

Detectives estimate Santiago stole about $50,000 worth of electronics. So far, he was charged with two counts of grand theft and has been released on bond.

Detectives are trying to locate possible victims, though most will never recover their property.

Santiago had worked as a TSA officer since January 2009, but no longer works with the agency.

Other News: Photos: The Many Faces Of Casey Anthony

Copyright 2011 by Post-Newsweek Stations. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 09, 2011, 07:44:56 PM
Thursday, July 7th, 2011


Oak Park, Michigan:

Their front yard was torn up after replacing a sewer line, so instead of replacing the dirt with grass, one Oak Park woman put in a vegetable garden and now the city is seeing green.

The list goes on: fresh basil, cabbage, carrots, tomatoes, cumbers and more all filling five large planter boxes that fill the Bass family’s front yard.

Julie Bass says, “We thought we’re minding our own business, doing something not ostentatious and certainly not obnoxious or nothing that is a blight on the neighborhood, so we didn’t think people would care very much.”

But some cared very much and called the city. The city then sent out code enforcement.

“They warned us at first that we had to move the vegetables from the front, that no vegetables were allowed in the front yard. We didn’t move them because we didn’t think we were doing anything wrong, even according to city code we didn’t think we were doing anything wrong. So they ticketed us and charged me with a misdemeanor,” Bass said . . .

City code says that all unpaved portions of the site shall be planted with grass or ground cover or shrubbery or other suitable live plant material. Tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers are what Basses see as suitable.

However, Oak Park’s Planning and Technology Director Kevin Rulkowski says the city disagrees. He says, “If you look at the dictionary, suitable means common. You can look all throughout the city and you’ll never find another vegetable garden that consumes the entire front yard.”

So what is suitable? From another local news report:

 . . .  we asked Rulkowski why it’s not suitable.

“If you look at the definition of what suitable is in Webster’s dictionary, it will say common. So, if you look around and you look in any other community, what’s common to a front yard is a nice, grass yard with beautiful trees and bushes and flowers,” he said.

God forbid your yard doesn’t include beautiful trees, bushes and flowers. It’s your job, Oak Park citizens, to give Kevin Rulkowski pretty things to look at. According to Bass’s blog, she’s demanding her right to a jury trial. So the city plans to throw the book at her.

our attorney spoke to the prosecutor today. (for the record, my crush on him is totally finished after today.)

his position: they are going to take this all the way.

officially, this means i am facing 93 days in jail if they win.

no joke.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on July 10, 2011, 05:09:22 AM
Bump.... I understand Agnostic may have missed it the first time while he was out saving the citizens of Austin from themselves.

Probably out with some collegues shooting dogs or some people who pose no risk at all but somehow Agnostic felt "threatened"

Funny how these trained professionals feels threatened when they can get away with shooting something

Weird they never get threatened by someone who fires back

Fucking cowards
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2011, 02:43:00 PM
Officials identified 1 out of every 17 Denver police officers as having serious discipline issues
Pajamas Media ^ | 0710/2011 | Pajamas Media
Posted on July 10, 2011 5:16:02 PM EDT by The Magical Mischief Tour

“City officials have identified one out of every 17 Denver police officers as having discipline issues serious enough that their courtroom testimony may be suspect.”

Denver’s Police Department has been stupidly run and marginally corrupt — not as bad as Chicago perhaps — as long as I can remember, so much so that the city more or less has a budget item in the millions of dollars every year for settlements with people unjustifiably killed or wounded by police. (After a real surge in those cases, the City of Denver hired a new Director of Public Safety who has been firing some bad eggs … so of course now the police union is lobbying to fire him.) In this case, the Denver PD is required to notify defense attorneys of any possibly important facts; when they have a cop who is one of these, the Denver PD sends a notice, quote:

“The District Attorney has received notice that this officer has been subject to an administrative finding that may or may not prove relevant if he or she testifies in a criminal matter. Information regarding this administrative proceeding should be obtained through the Denver Police Department’s Civil Liabilities Bureau.”

When the defense attorneys try to find out what the issue is, they’re often told those are personnel records, and thus cannot be released.

(Excerpt) Read more at pajamasmedia.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2011, 02:44:29 PM
http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com





Wow.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 10, 2011, 06:53:53 PM
I can go through the thread and pull out specific pieces, but I don't really like to spend the time doing that.

And I could show you were wrong but if you don't have the time, I don't have the time to post them, that's cool

I don't find it worthwhile and if I make a point, such as your defensive nature against the media, the constant position of the "police policing themselves" even when it's quite obvious it's not, and your position in threads about how your rights to do certain things (such as point a gun at me) are much more valid than my right to defend myself, then I'm pretty sure that even quotations to that effect (which are all there) certainly won't matter to you, so why bother?

The above are  your reasons you don't want to post examples. No response required. I don't agree with your reasons, but we already knew that.

You like your job. You think you do a fantastic job at it... Well, good. I'm happy for you.

Thanks. I love most aspects of my job, dislike others. I'm pretty good at it, not  the best but above average  

Here's some nice statistics for you... Look them up if you don't believe it.

Currently 1 dollar for every 15 dollars in tax money is spent on corrections AND while the US population has grown by less than 33% in the past 25 years, the incarceration rate has risen by 400%.

Don't doubt it. Not a fan of a multitude of laws we have on the books. But then I'm not a fan of people who beat up or shoot or rob other people. I'll take your numbers at face value for the sake of the argument.  


In the Soviet Union, during the height of Stalin, Stalin had incarcerated 20 people per 100,000 in the Gulags for NON-VIOLENT crime. Today, in the FREE democracy of the United States of America, we incarcerate 19.7 per 100,000 for (again) NON-VIOLENT crime.

Again, for the sake of argument I'll take your numbers at face value. Personally, I am not in favor of incarceration for most drug offenses, but I'd like to see the guy who rips off the old lady out of her life savings with bogus construction scams get a few years in the slammer.  

I think your job is fascist and brings no real value to society at large.

I think you would be hard pressed to arrest bank robbers, rapists, aggravated assault suspects, burglary suspects etc on your own or control traffic, work accidents, investigate child abuse, sexual assaults, forgeries, thefts and other various crimes without us. Who would respond to 911 calls?  

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 11, 2011, 07:21:11 PM
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'State of emergency' in 'Nazi'-cop town
WorldNetDaily ^ | July 10, 2011 | July 10, 2011
Posted on July 11, 2011 10:17:08 PM EDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

The Arizona town that's become a YouTube sensation for its police department hauling away a woman speaking at a town-hall meeting declared a state of emergency this afternoon, leaving many local residents in fear of what officers dressed in full riot gear might do.

Jennifer "Jade" Jones, 45, the woman forcibly removed by police from a recent public meeting in Quartzsite, Ariz., despite the vocal objections of the mayor, says an illegal secret meeting was held today with the public locked out of the building.

"About noon today, the town council, at the request of the police chief, declared an official state of emergency," Jones said online. "Please help!"

The Arizona Republic reported the emergency meeting was held "to beef up security after receiving death threats."

Jones told WND there's actually no emergency of any kind, as it's a peaceful Sunday with people attending church; but in the wake of a WND report which exposed allegations of wrongdoing by local government officials, the town council and police convened an unpublicized meeting to declare an emergency for their own protection.

"Obviously it has put a fear into them, as they realize, 'Oh my God, everyone's looking at us now,'" she said. "There's been no incident to warrant this. They did this to protect themselves. The people are in danger."

She says local residents have no idea what may be coming next.

"They've got their tactical gear on, the police chief and his sergeant," Jones said. "I don't know what that means. I need to get the word out in case they come here. I am very concerned for my safety. We're two hours from Phoenix, out in the middle of nowhere. A lot of things can go wrong before someone gets here."

(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 11, 2011, 07:24:53 PM
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State Employees Caught Stealing Welfare Benefits
News Channel 5 ^ | 07/11/2011 | News Channel 5
Posted on July 11, 2011 9:29:15 PM EDT by The Magical Mischief Tour

It's the state agency responsible for Tennessee Welfare programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly called Food Stamps and Families First.

But a NewsChannel 5 investigation discovered employees at the Department of Human Services illegally taking benefits for themselves.

Our investigation revealed a series of cases in just the last year that have embarrassed the department.

We found employees fired, even convicted of food stamp fraud and welfare fraud.

But what may be equally surprising is that more than ten percent of the employees working at DHS actually qualify for welfare programs their department oversees.

In just the last year, DHS has fired seven employees in connection with welfare fraud investigations and at least two others for taking cash meant for flood victims.

"For our employees to violate the public trust like this is just despicable," said Alan Hall, Inspector General for the Department of Human Services.

His department is responsible for finding fraud and abuse. Investigators discovered employees ripping off the program as part of separate schemes.

"It's embarrassing to prosecute your own employees for fraud and theft," Hall said.

Many of the cases involve the use of Electronic Benefit Cards or EBT cards.

They work like debit cards, and they are the way the state provides money to buy food or even cash to Tennessee citizens who qualify for assistance.

Last year surveillance cameras at a Nashville store caught DHS employee Leslie Alexander using an EBT card to buy items. The problem is the card wasn't hers.

Investigators say she used her position at DHS to set up fake EBT accounts.

She then gave EBT cards to her friends. Investigators say they stole tens of thousands of dollars.

Alexander was convicted and sentenced to 12 years. Much of her sentence will be suspended and she will be on probation.

But she is not alone.

Joe Cloyd worked as an eligibility counselor at the DHS office in Wilson County.

He's accused of taking someone else's EBT card and withdrawing money for himself.

NewsChannel 5 Investigates asked him, "Why were you using this EBT card inappropriately?"

Cloyd responded, "Well I won't have the time, but it was not so black and white."

He now faces criminal charges and admits he's repaying money to the state.

DHS Inspector General Alan Hall said, "He took benefits entitled to someone else who needed them at the time and took them for himself."

Documents show DHS has prosecuted four employees in the past year.

Leslie Alexander was convicted.

Joe Cloyd's case is still pending.

Alisa Harrison was an eligibility counselor charged with using a card that wasn't hers.

And Felisa Trotter was convicted for illegally getting food stamp benefits.

Investigators proved that she and her husband lied -- claiming they weren't married, which enabled her to qualify for benefits.

Ironically, Trotter worked in the appeals division and heard from people doing the same thing.

But what may be most surprising is that 593 DHS employees are currently receiving food stamp benefits.

That's more than ten percent of all the employees in the department.

The starting salary for an eligibility counselor is just over $26,500 a year. Eligibility Clerks make as little as 17,500 according to an ad for an open position on the state website.

"When you know the rules very well, if you're not honest, you start thinking about how to break the rules," Hall said.

Hall promises the department is stepping up efforts to find fraud and says no employee will get away with it for long.

"I believe they're the rare occurrences, because all of our employees want to do the right thing," Hall said.

The department has a welfare fraud hotline. The number is 1-800-241-2629.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 11, 2011, 07:30:20 PM
Former Newark police officer says he was fired after blowing whistle on cops
The Star-Ledger ^ | 07/11/2011 | James Queally/The Star-Ledger
Posted on July 11, 2011 2:03:59 PM EDT by The Magical Mischief Tour

A former Newark police officer says he was fired for telling department investigators about a group of detectives accused of stealing money from drug dealers in 2007, according to a civil lawsuit filed last month.

Eugene Collins, 42, says he was harassed and run out of the department after he told internal affairs investigators when an unknown man accused Collins’ former partner, Samad Washington, and several other officers of keeping confiscated drug money.

The information given to internal affairs, he said, resulted in his being fired on charges of neglect of duty and conduct unbecoming an officer. His lawsuit, filed in Superior Court in Newark, seeks damages.

In the lawsuit, Collins says the man approached him in March 2007 and claimed Washington had stolen $71,000 in drug money during an arrest. Both officers were detectives and periodically were partnered.

Collins told his ex-partner about the allegation, according to the suit, but when Washington asked him to file a report without mentioning the money, Collins refused.

Two weeks later, internal affairs Detective Antonio Domingues approached Collins to question him about a report Washington filed, detailing Collins’ conversation with the unknown man who "threatened Washington’s livelihood and members of his family," according to the suit.

(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 12, 2011, 09:42:37 AM
Collins may very well be telling the absolute truth.

I'll tell you about another real life story of alleged firing for wrongful reasons. Around 2005 a 42 yr old cadet graduated our academy class. He was a self proclaimed minister, former AMWAY salesman and satellite installer. He had issues with his first Field Training period. He could not take constructive criticism, had an excuse for everything and was found to have lied in at least one report. In an effort to give him another opportunity (I would have sought his termination when he lied) he was transferred into my command and given a new set of trainers and a fresh opportunity. He again failed with officer safety and integrity issues. After 4 months and no progress, including an angry outburst when his unsafe response to a robbery was critiqued he was terminated.

We had 3 videos of his unsafe actions and 5 inches of documenation on his lack of progress and safety issues as well as a pyschological report stating he was untrainable for policing.

He went to the local Chronicle which by the way, hates police and said he was fired because he is Christian. They disregarded that 95% of the department are Christians, the Commander who chaired his termination board was also a minister, etc etc and they ran with the story because they could not pass up an opportunity to bash the department. He also said he was fired because he refused to taser an old man. They titled the article "God Vs. Taser" (you can look it up) and ran the article.

Our policy at the time was not to comment on something under litigation so for a long time I had to sit quietly while he ran his mouth lying about the facts. Jordon Smith, the author of the article printed all his claims as truth.

It finally went to federal court where 12 jurors listened for 5 days. His side presented their case, our side presented ours. We showed where he lied about being a minister, about having a following of thousands (he included his amway distributors as his church goers) about graduating the academy "with honors" and about lying on his income taxes as well as reports.

The jurors took about an hour to come to a verdict. After it was all said and done, they said they knew he was lying from the first day on...

Jordon Smith, the original author attended 4 hrs of the entire trial..never followed up on my offer to interview us now that we could talk about it. What she did was run another article saying how the jury was wrong and we got away with firing a great officer because he was god fearing and would'nt taser old men with heart conditions. The old man by the way was about 50 yrs old and 6' 240 lbs. He was just scared and wouldn't engage when the other officer was trying to arrest him for beating his wife.

So I tend to read articles like that with a grain of salt until both sides have a chance to present their case.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 12, 2011, 09:51:03 AM
Litigiation?   WTF.  No wonder we are so screwed!  Even though I am a lawyer - I am sickened by many of the cases that make it to court without getting dismissed out right. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 12, 2011, 09:53:44 AM
Litigiation?   WTF.  No wonder we are so screwed!  Even though I am a lawyer - I am sickened by many of the cases that make it to court without getting dismissed out right. 

Me too. We moved for summary judgement but the Judge said something to the effect of because he claims he was fired due to religious beliefs, he deserves a trial. We had ample evidence to show he was fired for anything but religious beliefs.. but to no avail..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 12, 2011, 09:55:28 AM
Me too. We moved for summary judgement but the Judge said something to the effect of because he claims he was fired due to religious beliefs, he deserves a trial. We had ample evidence to show he was fired for anything but religious beliefs.. but to no avail..

Absurd what goes on in the legal system.   

I favor a system now requiring some level of mediation before litigation at this point.  the cost to the taxpayer for this craziness is beyond insane.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 14, 2011, 08:33:29 PM
Sheriff's Deputy Kills Former NFL Player Outside a Convenience Store
Reason.com ^ | July 12, 2011 | Jacob Sullum
Posted on July 14, 2011 11:46:12 PM EDT by yup2394871293

On Sunday a Kern County, California, sheriff's deputy shot and killed David Lee "Deacon" Turner, a 56-year-old former running back for the Cincinnati Bengals, outside a convenience store in Bakersfield. Police questioned Turner, who was coming out of the store with his 19-year-old son, while investigating reports of teenagers asking adults to buy them alcohol and cigarettes. The Kern County Sheriff's Office says Deputy Wesley Kraft fired twice at Turner after the former football player hit Deputy Aaron Nadal over the head with a bag containing two 24-ounce cans of beer. Turner's son offered a strikingly different account:

Turner's son was too shaken to speak with Eyewitness News on Sunday, but he told his sister what he witnessed.

"They asked my dad if he was the person buying alcohol for underage youth," Jerrica Cor-Dova said.


(Excerpt) Read more at reason.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 09:48:57 AM
A former pro football player swinging a bag with 2 24 oz cans of beer at my head... sounds dangerous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 09:54:11 AM
A former pro football player swinging a bag with 2 24 oz cans of beer at my head... sounds dangerous

Yeah, too bad most cops are pussies without the badge and gun and are woefully inept at unarmed self defense and disarming anyone without killing them. 

I get cops in my self defense class all the time, most are really unable to handle themselves in unarmed combat situations.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 09:58:53 AM
Yeah, too bad most cops are pussies without the badge and gun and are woefully inept at unarmed self defense and disarming anyone without killing them. 

I get cops in my self defense class all the time, most are really unable to handle themselves in unarmed combat situations.   

Sure wish people realized that before taking swings at them.. bad things can happen. What with us being pussies and all..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 10:00:32 AM
Sure wish people realized that before taking swings at them.. bad things can happen. What with us being pussies and all..


you are suppoed to be trained for that and be able to deal with that.  You signed up for the job knowing what it entails. 

If you can't disarm someone with a beer can without killing them, quit and get another job or seek additional training. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 10:09:16 AM
you are suppoed to be trained for that and be able to deal with that.  You signed up for the job knowing what it entails. 

If you can't disarm someone with a beer can without killing them, quit and get another job or seek additional training. 

Spoken like a guy who's only experience with violence is in a self defense class where fake guns miraculously come out of their hands, rubber knives are easily taken away, and no one is swinging a bag containing metal weights at your head. It says "after he was struck".. you need to consider he was likely dazed, big man may have been continuing the attack, officer felt he was in grave danger, might be passing out..

Don't know, it may be ruled a bad shooting. It may be ruled a good shooting. I wasn't there, haven't read the investigation or seen the video. But guys like you crack me up with your self defense class talk.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 10:12:34 AM
Spoken like a guy who's only experience with violence is in a self defense class where fake guns miraculously come out of their hands, rubber knives are easily taken away, and no one is swinging a bag containing metal weights at your head. It says "after he was struck".. you need to consider he was likely dazed, big man may have been continuing the attack, officer felt he was in grave danger, might be passing out..

Don't know, it may be ruled a bad shooting. It may be ruled a good shooting. I wasn't there, haven't read the investigation or seen the video. But guys like you crack me up with your self defense class talk.



Dont' they give you tazers, pepper spray, batons, etc? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 10:14:05 AM


Dont' they give you tazers, pepper spray, batons, etc? 

Yep... and we'll use them if given a chance.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 10:20:22 AM
Yep... and we'll use them if given a chance.

Or a gun if its easier to shoot someone.    ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 10:28:10 AM
Or a gun if its easier to shoot someone.    ;D

Had a lady in a town meeting ask why the officer didn't just shoot the knife out of the suspects hand rather than shoot the suspect... you sound an awful lot like her ya know..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 10:32:42 AM
Had a lady in a town meeting ask why the officer didn't just shoot the knife out of the suspects hand rather than shoot the suspect... you sound an awful lot like her ya know..

That is insane.   Knives are no joke at all, and to be honest - I would rather fight a guy with a club, bat, chains, brick, pipe, etc over someone with a knife.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 12:39:48 PM
Police in Ga. shut down girls' lemonade stand
AP News ^ | 07/15/2011 | AP News

Posted on Friday, July 15, 2011 3:49:27 PM by The Magical Mischief Tour

MIDWAY, Ga. (AP) -- Police in Georgia have shut down a lemonade stand run by three girls trying to save up for a trip to a water park, saying they didn't have a business license or the required permits.

Midway Police Chief Kelly Morningstar says police also didn't know how the lemonade was made, who made it or what was in it.

The girls had been operating for one day when Morningstar and another officer cruised by.

The girls needed a business license, peddler's permit and food permit to operate, even on residential property. The permits cost $50 a day or $180 per year.


(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 01:10:19 PM
Police in Ga. shut down girls' lemonade stand
AP News ^ | 07/15/2011 | AP News

Posted on Friday, July 15, 2011 3:49:27 PM by The Magical Mischief Tour

MIDWAY, Ga. (AP) -- Police in Georgia have shut down a lemonade stand run by three girls trying to save up for a trip to a water park, saying they didn't have a business license or the required permits.

Midway Police Chief Kelly Morningstar says police also didn't know how the lemonade was made, who made it or what was in it.

The girls had been operating for one day when Morningstar and another officer cruised by.

The girls needed a business license, peddler's permit and food permit to operate, even on residential property. The permits cost $50 a day or $180 per year.


(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...


Well uh..the cops...uh...there is an ordinance..uh....the girls should have...uh......oh hell, what the fuck were the cops thinking??? 

Did their supervisor say that morning that news was slow, the spotlight isnt on the department, go out and do something to garner media attention. Even better if it's little girls.... I mean come on!!! Man these podunk cops make life hard for us!

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 01:13:57 PM
With the above post I throw in the towel. Police State is apparently what we've come to. A lemonade stand for Christs sake! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2011, 01:16:01 PM
With the above post I throw in the towel. Police State is apparently what we've come to. A lemonade stand for Christs sake! 

ITS CALLED DISCRETION
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 01:17:44 PM
ITS CALLED DISCRETION

or common sense..those cops had neither.. I'm embarrassed...  :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 15, 2011, 01:27:46 PM
Had a lady in a town meeting ask why the officer didn't just shoot the knife out of the suspects hand rather than shoot the suspect... you sound an awful lot like her ya know..


hahahahahahahaha


How the hell do you guys even respond to that kind of stupidity?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2011, 03:08:14 PM

hahahahahahahaha


How the hell do you guys even respond to that kind of stupidity?

Well, we don't actually say what we're thinking..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 18, 2011, 06:35:04 PM
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MS Police Officer Shoots Chained Dog Six Times
Wordpress.com ^ | March 23, 2011 | Yesbiscuit
Posted on July 18, 2011 9:49:02 PM EDT by Immerito

MS Police Officer Shoots Chained Dog Six Times March 23, 2011

In Gulfport, MS, police were called to a subdivision to investigate a possible break-in. During the course of the investigation, an officer went into the backyard of a neighbor’s home where she encountered the owner’s chained dog. The owner, who was just coming outside to get his dog, says the officer was standing approximately 30 feet from the end of the dog’s chain when she put half a dozen bullets in the dog.

Samuel Lovato rushed his beloved pet – named Melmo – to the vet but the injuries were too extensive and euthanasia was performed in order to relieve Melmo’s suffering. Mr. Lovato:

“I’ve had her for 11 years. Eleven years. She was a great dog, a good dog and she was just in her yard doing her job and just being a dog.”

Police will investigate themselves, as usual:

Police are looking into the incident, according to Lt. Craig Petersen with the Gulfport Police Department.

“First, we need to conduct our internal investigation,” Lt. Petersen said. “I feel really bad for the gentleman and the loss of his dog, but we’ll conduct the internal investigation.”

He also said that officers have to make life and death decisions in an instant, including assessing threats from animals.

“The officer has discretion in how to protect themselves in these situations, totally up to the officer based on the facts and circumstances of that particular case.”

Sound like they’ve already got the “Justified Killing” stamp all inked up? But wait, there’s more:

There is no timetable for when the investigation will be completed. The officer involved in the shooting remains on active duty.

So I guess it’s ‘Gulfport dog owners, hide your dogs’? Maybe while you’re at it, hide your kids too. I hate to think of a kid being in a yard with a dog where half a dozen bullets are flying.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 18, 2011, 06:36:04 PM
Laura Ingraham: Airport Workers Stole My Baptismal Cross!
http://dailycaller.com/ ^ | July 18, 2011 | Mathew Boyle
Posted on July 18, 2011 8:34:08 PM EDT by Biggirl

Laura Ingraham’s baptismal cross went missing from her checked luggage at the Newark airport this weekend, and the syndicated radio host says either a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) worker or a Continental Airlines employee is responsible.

Ingraham had just finished several radio and television appearance in New York City and was in a rush to the airport. She told The Daily Caller she normally carries her luggage on planes, but since she was pressed for time and was carrying copies of her new book, she checked a suitcase before her Friday evening flight from Newark to Denver.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 20, 2011, 09:52:42 AM
Law enforcement to begin iPhone iris scans amid privacy concerns
 11:02am EDT
By Zach Howard



CONWAY, Mass (Reuters) - Dozens of police departments nationwide are gearing up to use a tech company's already controversial iris- and facial-scanning device that slides over an iPhone and helps identify a person or track criminal suspects.

The so-called "biometric" technology, which seems to take a page from TV shows like "MI-5" or "CSI," could improve speed and accuracy in some routine police work in the field. However, its use has set off alarms with some who are concerned about possible civil liberties and privacy issues.

The smartphone-based scanner, named Mobile Offender Recognition and Information System, or MORIS, is made by BI2 Technologies in Plymouth, Massachusetts, and can be deployed by officers out on the beat or back at the station.

An iris scan, which detects unique patterns in a person's eyes, can reduce to seconds the time it takes to identify a suspect in custody. This technique also is significantly more accurate than results from other fingerprinting technology long in use by police, BI2 says.

When attached to an iPhone, MORIS can photograph a person's face and run the image through software that hunts for a match in a BI2-managed database of U.S. criminal records. Each unit costs about $3,000.

Some experts fret police may be randomly scanning the population, using potentially intrusive techniques to search for criminals, sex offenders, and illegal aliens, but the manufacturer says that would be a difficult task for officers to carry out.

Sean Mullin, BI2's CEO, says it is difficult, if not impossible, to covertly photograph someone and obtain a clear, usable image without that person knowing about it, because the MORIS should be used close up.

"It requires a level of cooperation that makes it very overt -- a person knows that you're taking a picture for this purpose," Mullin said.

CONCERNS

But constitutional rights advocates are concerned, in part because the device can accurately scan an individual's face from up to four feet away, potentially without a person's being aware of it.

Experts also say that before police administer an iris scan, they should have probable cause a crime has been committed.

"What we don't want is for them to become a general surveillance tool, where the police start using them routinely on the general public, collecting biometric information on innocent people," said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the national ACLU in Washington, D.C.

Meanwhile, advocates see the MORIS as a way to make tools already in use on police cruiser terminals more mobile for cops on the job.

"This is (the technology) stepping out of the cruiser and riding on the officer's belt, along with his flashlight, his handcuffs, his sidearm or the other myriad tools," said John Birtwell, spokesman for the Plymouth County Sheriff's Department in southeastern Massachusetts, one of the first departments to use the devices.

The technology is also employed to maintain security at Plymouth's 1,650 inmate jail, where it is used to prevent the wrong prisoner from being released.

"There, we have everybody in orange jumpsuits, so everyone looks the same. So, quite literally, the last thing we do before you leave our facility is we compare your iris to our database," said Birtwell.

One of the technology's earliest uses at BI2, starting in 2005, was to help various agencies identify missing children or at-risk adults, like Alzheimer's patients.

Since then, it has been used to combat identity fraud, and could potentially be used in traffic stops when a driver is without a license, or when people are stopped for questioning at U.S. borders.

Facial recognition technology is not without its problems, however. For example, some U.S. individuals mistakenly have had their driver's license revoked as a potential fraud. The problem, it turns out, is that they look like another driver and so the technology mistakenly flags them as having fake identification.

Roughly 40 law enforcement units nationwide will soon be using the MORIS, including Arizona's Pinal County Sheriff's Office, as well as officers in Hampton City in Virginia and Calhoun County in Alabama.

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Jerry Norton)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 20, 2011, 10:44:36 AM
Fascism meets the 21st century... Holy shit.


I'm not letting this shit go TU.



   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 20, 2011, 10:54:34 AM
And you shouldn't... I have no doubt that if people didn't speak up about it, this would be like Nazi Germany all over again.

It's bad enough now, but just imagine if we didn't have the Bill of Rights in the first place?

I blame those who willfully accept this bullshit just as much as the thug law enforcement "community"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on July 21, 2011, 12:31:11 AM
Funny how a almost bancrupt country can afford all that control..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 21, 2011, 08:24:45 AM
Video: Police officer threatens concealed-carry driver with execution, beating

http://hotair.com/archives/2011/07/21/video-police-officer-threatens-concealed-carry-driver-with-execution-beating



Ohio’s concealed-carry law requires anyone stopped by police to immediately notify the officer if they are armed. Failure to do so is a first-class misdemeanor that can result in a six-month jail term and a thousand-dollar fine, as well as losing the license to carry. It’s usually not considered a death penalty offense, unless one gets pulled over in Beachwood Canton, Ohio, in a case highlighted today by Ohioans for Concealed Carry:

"William pulled his car to the side of the road to let out two passengers, but only the female occupant managed to exit before the police pulled up and began screaming at all three parties. “Stay in that car, I’m not going to mess around,” screamed one of the officers at the two people attempting to exit the vehicle. The driver and concealed handgun licensee, William, remained seated in his vehicle when an officer entered the rear of the vehicle."

"William stated, “I have a concealed carry, and…” when he was abruptly told to shut up. Dash camera video footage shows the driver turning his head, and his voice can be heard, but the words are inaudible. A few minutes passed while the officer continued to berate the two passengers. He proceeded to the driver’s side and tries to open the door but is delayed by a seat belt. William states “I have a conceal…” and the officer demands that he better tell the truth or else! This interruption causes William to “tell the truth” and his attempt to notify is interrupted. William exited the vehicle with his driver’s license in the same hand as his concealed handgun license. He held it up for the officer to see, and the officer said, “Why are you having that?” This gave William the opportunity to say, “I have a CCW, and…” The officer then said, “Do you have a gun?” William answered yes, causing the officer to grab it from William’s waist."

"At this point, William was handcuffed and put into the police cruiser. The officer then started to berate William, stating: “I should blast you in the mouth right now … I’m close to caving in your head.” and “you’re just a stupid human being!”

The officer continued to berate the driver after arresting him and locking him in the back seat, offering such bon mots as “people like you don’t deserve to @#$%#$ move throughout public. Period!” Just after the discovery of the licensed firearm (and caught on tape), the same officer threatened to “put lumps” on a woman who had been outside of the car if he saw her in the area again.



________________________ ________________________ ___

This is when I wish there were a venue to allow the public to take on these pigs, only they get no badge, no gun, no backup, no nightstick, nothing. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork25 on July 22, 2011, 04:45:20 AM
90% of cops aint shit without their badge and gun and they now it
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2011, 09:04:54 AM
Ex-officers indicted in police Explorer scandal
San Francisco Examiner ^ | July 22, 2011 | From Associated Press




Two Richmond officers who resigned in the midst of a police Explorer scandal have been indicted on allegations they intimidated two young Explorers they illegally armed and put to work for their private security firm.


A federal grand jury in Oakland on Thursday indicted 31-year-old Danny Harris and 34-year-old Ray Thomas on conspiracy counts for allegedly trying to prevent the Explorers from telling authorities that Harris illegally bought them guns and sent them into crime-plagued neighborhoods.


Federal law prohibits people under 21 from buying or owning guns.


(Excerpt) Read more at sfexaminer.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 22, 2011, 09:14:52 AM
Little confused... is POLICE STATE - OFFICIAL thread for examples of a police state, or pointing out there are some bad officers among the rank and file? I suggest you start a different thread where you can post the reported allegations of corrupt cops and keep POLICE STATE for more clearer examples of your perception of Government officials, using the authority of the police, to supercede your constitutional rights and establish an enviornment where US citizens are helpless against the jack booted storm trooper thugs in uniform.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2011, 09:20:52 AM
Little confused... is POLICE STATE - OFFICIAL thread for examples of a police state, or pointing out there are some bad officers among the rank and file? I suggest you start a different thread where you can post the reported allegations of corrupt cops and keep POLICE STATE for more clearer examples of your perception of Government officials, using the authority of the police, to supercede your constitutional rights and establish an enviornment where US citizens are helpless against the jack booted storm trooper thugs in uniform.

Wrong - its not a few - its WAY TOO MANY and its pervasive at all levels of this disgusting govt you are nothing but an enforcer for. 

Cops are not protectors of the public, they are enforcers and henchmen for the govt. and the horrible policies that are put in place. 

We all make choices in life, you make the choice to be an agent of the police state, it is what it is. 

Whether its DHS making videos targeting whites, ATF & DOJ running gun scams, local police stealing cash and $$$ from dealers, etc, you are all part of the same bullshit and war on the average joe blow going to work and subject to this nonsense.

     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 22, 2011, 09:37:35 AM
Wrong - its not a few - its WAY TOO MANY and its pervasive at all levels of this disgusting govt you are nothing but an enforcer for. 

Cops are not protectors of the public, they are enforcers and henchmen for the govt. and the horrible policies that are put in place. 

We all make choices in life, you make the choice to be an agent of the police state, it is what it is. 

Whether its DHS making videos targeting whites, ATF & DOJ running gun scams, local police stealing cash and $$$ from dealers, etc, you are all part of the same bullshit and war on the average joe blow going to work and subject to this nonsense.

     

I think you are mistaken.. we'll just have to agree to disagree. Good luck with your cause
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2011, 09:47:50 AM
Yeah, like you would ever admit to anything else?


Talk to the average citizen off the record what they think of 99% of law enforcement and your eyes might open a bit.   


Between bullshit speed points, onerous regulations on all levels of activity, over zealous arrests and prosecutions for what used to be minor crap, "zero tolerance" bullshit, etc, most law enforcement agencies are nothing more than a praetorian guard for the govt.   


I am not kidding, i feel safer on the subway with the thugs and gangbangers than I do around a place with 3 or more cops.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 22, 2011, 10:09:18 AM
Yeah, like you would ever admit to anything else?


Talk to the average citizen off the record what they think of 99% of law enforcement and your eyes might open a bit.   


Between bullshit speed points, onerous regulations on all levels of activity, over zealous arrests and prosecutions for what used to be minor crap, "zero tolerance" bullshit, etc, most law enforcement agencies are nothing more than a praetorian guard for the govt.   


I am not kidding, i feel safer on the subway with the thugs and gangbangers than I do around a place with 3 or more cops.       

Again, I support your right to believe what you want, your right to vote in and out those who make the laws, and seek change for things you disagree with.

I just don't share your personal belief on this matter. Simple as that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2011, 10:20:11 AM
Here is the difference: 



1.  The cops are looking for OT, collars, etc. and have quotas to bust balls and raise  $ $ $ $.  They have a financial incentive to bust my balls.     

2.  The gangbangers on the subway typically don't mess with me cause I usually give a head nod and they don't want to bother. 


 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 24, 2011, 02:07:29 PM
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TSA worker stole watches, debit card from LAX bags, officials say
Los Angeles Times ^ | July 22, 2011 | Allen J. Schaben /
Posted on July 24, 2011 5:08:31 PM EDT by george76

A Transportation Security Administration officer has been indicted on five charges in the theft of four watches and a pre-paid debit card from luggage at Los Angeles International Airport, officials announced Friday.

A federal grand jury indicted Paul Yashou, 38, of Torrance, on two felony and three misdemeanor theft counts Friday afternoon.

Yashou is alleged to have stolen the items from luggage going through security at LAX’s Terminal 1,

(Excerpt) Read more at latimesblogs.latimes.com ...

TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; US: California; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: tsa; Click to Add Keyword
 
A dollar a day keeps the 404 away. Thank you very much!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 26, 2011, 05:47:28 AM
As Criminal Laws Proliferate, More Are Ensnared
By GARY FIELDS and JOHN R. EMSHWILLER

www.wsj.com


________________________ ___________________

Eddie Leroy Anderson of Craigmont, Idaho, is a retired logger, a former science teacher and now a federal criminal thanks to his arrowhead-collecting hobby.

 With the growing number of federal criminal statutes, it's become increasingly easy for Americans to end up on the wrong side of the law. Kelsey Hubbard talks with WSJ's Gary Fields about the impact.

In 2009, Mr. Anderson loaned his son some tools to dig for arrowheads near a favorite campground of theirs. Unfortunately, they were on federal land. Authorities "notified me to get a lawyer and a damn good one," Mr. Anderson recalls.

There is no evidence the Andersons intended to break the law, or even knew the law existed, according to court records and interviews. But the law, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act of 1979, doesn't require criminal intent and makes it a felony punishable by up to two years in prison to attempt to take artifacts off federal land without a permit.

Faced with that reality, the two men, who didn't find arrowheads that day, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and got a year's probation and a $1,500 penalty each. "We kind of wonder why it got took to the level that it did," says Mr. Anderson, 68 years old.

Wendy Olson, the U.S. Attorney for Idaho, said the men were on an archeological site that was 13,000 years old. "Folks do need to pay attention to where they are," she said.

The Andersons are two of the hundreds of thousands of Americans to be charged and convicted in recent decades under federal criminal laws—as opposed to state or local laws—as the federal justice system has dramatically expanded its authority and reach.

As federal criminal statutes have ballooned, it has become increasingly easy for Americans to end up on the wrong side of the law. Many of the new federal laws also set a lower bar for conviction than in the past: Prosecutors don't necessarily need to show that the defendant had criminal intent.

See a breakdown of the rise of federal sentences by the type of offense.

U.S. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

.The first federal criminal statute, signed into law on April 30, 1790, includes only a handful of offenses: treason, counterfeiting, piracy, and murder, maiming and robbery in federal jurisdictions. It fit on to two sheets of parchment, each around 27 inches by 22 inches, and was handwritten in iron gall ink.

The law is currently kept in a vault in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. See a digital copy, or click here to read the text.

.
.These factors are contributing to some unusual applications of justice. Father-and-son arrowhead lovers can't argue they made an innocent mistake. A lobster importer is convicted in the U.S. for violating a Honduran law that the Honduran government disavowed. A Pennsylvanian who injured her husband's lover doesn't face state criminal charges—instead, she faces federal charges tied to an international arms-control treaty.

The U.S. Constitution mentions three federal crimes by citizens: treason, piracy and counterfeiting. By the turn of the 20th century, the number of criminal statutes numbered in the dozens. Today, there are an estimated 4,500 crimes in federal statutes, according to a 2008 study by retired Louisiana State University law professor John Baker.

There are also thousands of regulations that carry criminal penalties. Some laws are so complex, scholars debate whether they represent one offense, or scores of offenses.

Counting them is impossible. The Justice Department spent two years trying in the 1980s, but produced only an estimate: 3,000 federal criminal offenses.

The American Bar Association tried in the late 1990s, but concluded only that the number was likely much higher than 3,000. The ABA's report said "the amount of individual citizen behavior now potentially subject to federal criminal control has increased in astonishing proportions in the last few decades."

A Justice spokeswoman said there was no quantifiable number. Criminal statutes are sprinkled throughout some 27,000 pages of the federal code.

There are many reasons for the rising tide of laws. It's partly due to lawmakers responding to hot-button issues—environmental messes, financial machinations, child kidnappings, consumer protection—with calls for federal criminal penalties. Federal regulations can also carry the force of federal criminal law, adding to the legal complexity.

With the growing number of federal crimes, the number of people sentenced to federal prison has risen nearly threefold over the past 30 years to 83,000 annually. The U.S. population grew only about 36% in that period. The total federal prison population, over 200,000, grew more than eightfold—twice the growth rate of the state prison population, now at 2 million, according the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics

Tougher federal drug laws account for about 30% of people sentenced, a decline from over 40% two decades ago. The proportion of people sentenced for most other crimes, such as firearms possession, fraud and other non-violent offenses, has doubled in the past 20 years.

The growth in federal law has produced benefits. Federal legislation was indispensable in winning civil rights for African-Americans. Some of the new laws, including those tackling political corruption and violent crimes, are relatively noncontroversial and address significant problems. Plenty of convicts deserve the punishment they get.

Roscoe Howard, the former U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, argues that the system "isn't broken." Congress, he says, took its cue over the decades from a public less tolerant of certain behaviors. Current law provides a range of options to protect society, he says. "It would be horrible if they started repealing laws and taking those options away."

Still, federal criminal laws can be controversial. Some duplicate existing state criminal laws, and others address matters that might better be handled as civil rather than criminal matters.

Some federal laws appear picayune. Unauthorized use of the Smokey Bear image could land an offender in prison. So can unauthorized use of the slogan "Give a Hoot, Don't Pollute."

The spread of federal statues has opponents on both sides of the aisle, though for different reasons. For Republicans, the issue is partly about federal intrusions into areas historically handled by states. For Democrats, the concerns include the often lengthy prison sentences that federal convictions now produce.

Those expressing concerns include the American Civil Liberties Union and Edwin Meese III, former attorney general under President Ronald Reagan. Mr. Meese, now with the conservative Heritage Foundation, argues Americans are increasingly vulnerable to being "convicted for doing something they never suspected was illegal."

"Most people think criminal law is for bad people," says Timothy Lynch of Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. People don't realize "they're one misstep away from the nightmare of a federal indictment."

View Full Image

Associated Press
 
Driver Bobby Unser got a criminal record after being lost in a blizzard.
.Last September, retired race-car champion Bobby Unser told a congressional hearing about his 1996 misdemeanor conviction for accidentally driving a snowmobile onto protected federal land, violating the Wilderness Act, while lost in a snowstorm. Though the judge gave him only a $75 fine, the 77-year-old racing legend got a criminal record.

Mr. Unser says he was charged after he went to authorities for help finding his abandoned snowmobile. "The criminal doesn't usually call the police for help," he says.

A Justice Department spokesman cited the age of the case in declining to comment. The U.S. Attorney at the time said he didn't remember the case.

Some of these new federal statutes don't require prosecutors to prove criminal intent, eroding a bedrock principle in English and American law. The absence of this provision, known as mens rea, makes prosecution easier, critics argue.

A study last year by the Heritage Foundation and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers analyzed scores of proposed and enacted new laws for nonviolent crimes in the 109th Congress of 2005 and 2006. It found of the 36 new crimes created, a quarter had no mens rea requirement and nearly 40% more had only a "weak" one.

View Full Image

Associated Press
 
Justice Anthony Kennedy, pictured, recently voiced concern over a statute.
.Some jurists are disturbed by the diminished requirement to show criminal intent in order to convict. In a 1998 decision, federal appellate judge Richard Posner, a noted conservative, attacked a 1994 federal law under which an Illinois man went to prison for three years for possessing guns while under a state restraining order taken out by his estranged wife. He possessed the guns otherwise legally, they posed no immediate threat to the spouse, and the restraining order didn't mention any weapons bar.

"Congress created, and the Department of Justice sprang, a trap" on a defendant who "could not have suspected" he was committing a crime, Judge Posner wrote.

Another area of concern among some jurists is the criminalization of issues that they consider more appropriate to civil lawsuits. In December, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which is considered liberal, overturned the fraud conviction of a software-company executive accused of helping to issue false financial statements. The government tried "to stretch criminal law beyond its proper bounds," wrote the Circuit's chief judge, Alex Kozinski.

Civil law, he said, is a better tool to judge "gray area" conduct—actions that might, or might not, be illegal. Criminal law, he said, "should clearly separate conduct that is criminal from conduct that is legal."

Occasionally, Americans are going to prison in the U.S. for violating the laws and rules of other countries. Last year, Abner Schoenwetter finished 69 months in federal prison for conspiracy and smuggling. His conviction was related to importing the wrong kinds of lobsters and bulk packaging them in plastic, rather than separately in boxes, in violation of Honduran laws.

According to court records and interviews, Mr. Schoenwetter had been importing lobsters from Honduras since the mid-1980s. In early 1999, federal officials seized a 70,000-pound shipment after a tip that the load violated a Honduran statute setting a minimum size on lobsters that could be caught. Such a shipment, in turn, violated a U.S. law, the Lacey Act, which makes it a felony to import fish or wildlife if it breaks another country's laws. Roughly 2% of the seized shipment was clearly undersized, and records indicated other shipments carried much higher percentages, federal officials said.

In an interview, Mr. Schoenwetter, 65 years old, said he and other buyers routinely accepted a percentage of undersized lobsters since the deliveries from the fishermen inevitably included smaller ones. He also said he didn't believe bringing in some undersized lobsters was illegal, noting that previous shipments had routinely passed through U.S. Customs.

After conviction, Mr. Schoenwetter and three co-defendants appealed, and the Honduran government filed a brief on their behalf saying that Honduran courts had invalidated the undersized-lobster law. By a two-to-one vote, however, a federal appeals panel found the Honduran law valid at the time of the trial and upheld the convictions.

The dissenting jurist, Judge Peter Fay, wrote: "I think we would be shocked should the tables be reversed and a foreign nation simply ignored one of our court rulings."

Robert Kern, a 62-year-old Virginia hunting-trip organizer, was also prosecuted in the U.S. for allegedly breaking the law of another country. Instead of lobsters from Honduras, Mr. Kern's troubles stemmed from moose from Russia.

He faced a 2008 Lacey Act prosecution for allegedly violating Russian law after some of his clients shot game from a helicopter in that country. In the end, he was acquitted after a Russian official testified the hunters had an exemption from the helicopter hunting ban. Still, legal bills totaling more than $860,000 essentially wiped out his retirement savings, Mr. Kern says.

Justice Department officials declined to comment on Messrs. Kern and Schoenwetter.

View Full Image

Charlie Litchfield for The Wall Street Journal
 
Would-be inventor and felon Kirster Evertson: 'If I had abandoned the chemicals, why would I have told the investigators about them?'
.One area of expansion has been environmental crimes. Since its inception in 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency has grown to enforce some 25,000 pages of federal regulations, equivalent to about 15% of the entire body of federal rules. Many of the EPA rules carry potential criminal penalties. Krister Evertson, a would-be inventor, recently spent 15 months in prison for environmental crimes where there was no evidence he harmed anyone, or intended to.

In May 2004 he was arrested near Wasilla, Alaska, and charged with illegally shipping sodium metal, a potentially flammable material, without proper packaging or labeling.

He told federal authorities he had been in Idaho working to develop a better hydrogen fuel cell but had run out of money. He had moved some sodium and other chemicals to a storage site near his workshop in Salmon, Idaho, before traveling back to his hometown of Wasilla to raise money by gold-mining.

Mr. Evertson said he believed he had shipped the sodium legally. A jury acquitted him in January 2006.

However, Idaho prosecutors, using information Mr. Evertson provided to federal authorities in Alaska, charged him with violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, a 1976 federal law that regulates handling of toxic waste. The government contended Mr. Evertson had told federal investigators he had abandoned the chemicals. It also said the landlord of the Idaho storage site claimed he was owed back rent and couldn't find the inventor—allegations Mr. Evertson disputed.

Once the government deemed the chemicals "abandoned," they became "waste" and subject to RCRA. He was charged under a separate federal law with illegally moving the chemicals about a half-mile to the storage site.

"If I had abandoned the chemicals, why would I have told the investigators about them?" said Mr. Evertson in an interview. He added that he spent $100,000 on the material and always planned to resume his experiments.

Prosecutors emphasized the potential danger of having left the materials for two years. "You clean up after yourself and don't leave messes for others," one prosecutor told the jury, which convicted Mr. Evertson on three felony counts. Prosecutors said clean-up of the site cost the government $400,000. Mr. Evertson, 57, remains on probation, working as night watchman in Idaho.

In a statement, Ms. Olson, the Idaho U.S. Attorney, said that by leaving dangerous chemicals not properly attended he endangered others and caused the government to spend more than $400,000 in clean-up costs. "This office will continue to aggressively prosecute" environmental crimes, she said.

Critics contend that federal criminal law is increasingly, and unconstitutionally, impinging on the sovereignty of the states. The question recently came before the Supreme Court in the case of Carol Bond, a Pennsylvania woman who is fighting a six-year prison sentence arising out of violating a 1998 federal chemical-weapons law tied to an international arms-control treaty. The law makes it a crime for an average citizen to possess a "chemical weapon" for other than a "peaceful purpose." The statute defines such a weapon as any chemical that could harm humans or animals.

Ms. Bond's criminal case stemmed from having spread some chemicals, including an arsenic-based one, on the car, front-door handle and mailbox of a woman who had had an affair with her husband. The victim suffered a burn on her thumb.

In court filings, Ms. Bond's attorneys argued the chemical-weapons law unconstitutionally intruded into what should have been a state criminal matter. The state didn't file charges on the chemicals, but under state law she likely would have gotten a less harsh sentence, her attorneys said.

Last month, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled Ms. Bond has standing to challenge the federal law. By distributing jurisdiction among federal and state governments, the Constitution "protects the liberty of the individual from arbitrary power," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the court. "When government acts in excess of its lawful powers, that liberty is at stake."

During oral arguments in the case, Justice Samuel Alito expressed concern about the law's "breadth" by laying out a hypothetical example. Simply pouring a bottle of vinegar into a bowl to kill someone's goldfish, Justice Alito said, could be "potentially punishable by life imprisonment."

—Tom McGinty and Louise Radnofsky contributed to this article.
Write to Gary Fields at gary.fields@wsj.com and John R. Emshwiller at john.emshwiller@wsj.com
.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 27, 2011, 03:28:15 AM
She should sue the shit out everyone.  Insane.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 27, 2011, 05:59:57 AM
Feds told to return nearly $650k to fishermen
By Laura Strickler Topics Law and Order .2 Comments
www.cbs.com




The U.S. Commerce Secretary has ordered his agency to return almost $650,000 from 11 cases against commercial fishermen in the Northeast involving "excessive" fines and "selective enforcement" that were levied against them by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office of Law Enforcement.


In February, CBS News reported on complaints from Northeast fishermen that they had been subject to overly aggressive law enforcement. The Commerce Department appointed an independent judge to conduct a review of 30 cases against the fishermen.


"For too long, our fishermen have been the victims of intimidation and enormous penalties" said Senator John Kerry (D-MA) in response to the report, "Now unfair fines are being refunded and now the reality of what happened has been publicly exposed which may be just as important."


According to the report released today, the independent judge, Charles Swartwood, found fishing regulations to be "complex, complicated, constantly changing, and in some cases, contradictory."


In his report, Swartwood said he also found a "siege mentality throughout the fishing industry" where fishermen feel they are treated as "criminals".


Swartwood noted that fishermen are "paranoid" about violating a regulation because they could end up paying a "coerced amount" or run the risk of losing in the appeals process "which could force the fisherman out of business".


In a memo today Commerce Secretary Gary Locke said the cases where Swartwood found fault with NOAA showed "a lack of supervision, oversight and standards in the work of NOAA law enforcement."


Today Senator Kerry and other members of the Massachusetts Congressional delegation called for NOAA to take action against the staff who were responsible. However, Locke stopped short of calling for any disciplinary action against NOAA employees. Locke pointed to a series of regulatory reforms that have been made since the complaints first came to his attention.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 27, 2011, 03:54:41 PM
Woman gets jury trial for displaying plastic testicles on truck
Posted: Jul 27, 2011 8:09 AM EDT
Updated: Jul 27, 2011 6:00 PM EDT
 
www.drudgereport.com



 
Virginia Tice of Bonneau was given a $445 ticket for displaying big plastic testicles like these on the back of her pickup truck. (Source: Flickr)

 BONNEAU, S.C. (AP) - A Berkeley County woman will get a jury trial for a ticket she was given by police for displaying big plastic testicles on the back of her pickup truck.

Virginia Tice of Bonneau was given a $445 ticket July 5 that accuses her of violating the state's obscene bumper sticker law.

Police Chief Franco Fuda asked for a jury trial, saying questions of obscenity should be determined by community standards.

Tice's attorney, Scott Bischoff, expects a trial next month. A relative said Tice didn't want to talk about the case before the trial.

She was ticketed after pulling into a gas station in her truck with big red fake testicles hanging from the trailer hitch.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 27, 2011, 07:14:44 PM
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2754875/posts


Check this out.   Pics are heartbreaking.    Disgusting.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 27, 2011, 07:21:09 PM





This bs with killing people's dogs is getting way out of control too.   Sick of this shit. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 28, 2011, 01:39:42 PM
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2754875/posts


Check this out.   Pics are heartbreaking.    Disgusting.   



Saw it this morning.  That's pretty fucked up - especially when he was screaming for his dad.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on August 01, 2011, 05:47:12 AM
She should sue the shit out everyone.  Insane.
I'm confused. You are against law and order but you want all the blacks in jail?

Who's going to put them there, hotshot?


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 01, 2011, 05:54:14 AM
I'm confused. You are against law and order but you want all the blacks in jail?

Who's going to put them there, hotshot?




Where have I said I want all blacks in jail? 

I just want the lazy leeches and parasites who are on welfare, section 8, food stamps, WIC, medicaid, etc , popping out babies like a pez dispenser on a work farm in the sweltering heat with basic hand tools from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm daily. 

and that is both black and white.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 01, 2011, 07:52:56 PM
(VIDEO) Police officer facing probe after beating up videographer
Daily Mail ^ | July 31, 2011 | Daily Mail Reporter
Posted on August 1, 2011 10:42:41 PM EDT by Do Not Make Fun Of His Ears

A police officer is being investigated after being caught on tape beating a videographer outside of his home in March.

A Las Vegas police department review found that Officer Derek Colling violated police policies when he used 'excessive force' on Mitchell Crooks.

The incident happened on the night of March 20 when Mr Crooks, 36, was in his driveway videotaping police as they investigated a burglary report across the street.

Mr Crooks said that when he refused to stop filming, Mr Colling arrested and beat him, with the sounds of the altercation recorded by the camera.

In the video, Mr Crooks can be heard yelling in pain while Colling can be heard telling him to 'shut up.' At one point the officer tells him that his decision not to turn off the camera put him in 'a world of hurt.'

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 01, 2011, 08:07:44 PM
DA: Elk Grove police officer justified in shooting handcuffed suspect
blogs.sacbee.com ^ | 8-1-11 | Kim Minugh
Posted on August 1, 2011 10:59:52 PM EDT by smokingfrog

An Elk Grove police officer acted lawfully in January when he fired his AR-15 rifle at a handcuffed suspect, seated in the back of a patrol car, who officers thought may still have been armed, according to Sacramento County District Attorney Jan Scully.

No weapon was found on then-32-year-old John Hesselbein when officers searched him for the second time after the shooting.

In her 11-page letter to police Chief Robert Lehner absolving the officer of any criminal liability, Scully argued that the officer had reason to believe Hesselbein was dangerous and that the officer "had the right to act in self-defense and in defense of his fellow officers."

Hesselbein was shot Jan. 30 after his wife called police to report he was drunk and abusive. His cheek was grazed by the rifle round.

Later, Hesselbein pleaded no contest to battery on a spouse in connection with the incident.

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.sacbee.com ...





Wtf!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 02, 2011, 07:32:07 AM
Unbelievable!

The guy had his liberty removed and got shot, yet it was totally justified?!

Where's Agnostic to tell us how it makes perfect sense?

Got no problem with taking the liberty away  from a wife beater. Having said that, any subject in the back seat of the patrol car should have already been searched prior to putting him in. It's  SOP and if the officer still thought the subject was armed then he did not think he did a good search the first time. I have a problem with the officer who could have killed a person needlessly because of poor procedure.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2011, 09:08:08 AM
Police shut down 4 year old girl's lemonade stand
Omaha.com ^ | 8/2/2011 | Omaha.com




CORALVILLE, Iowa (AP) — Police closed down a lemonade stand in Coralville last week, telling its 4-year-old operator and her dad that she didn't have a permit.

An officer told Abigail Krutsinger's father Friday that she couldn't run the stand as RAGBRAI bicyclers poured into Coralville.

A city ordinance says food vendors must apply for a permit and get a health inspection.

Abigail's dad, Dustin Krutsinger, said the ordinance and its enforcers are going too far if they force a 4-year-old to abandon her lemonade stand.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 02, 2011, 09:11:35 AM
Police shut down 4 year old girl's lemonade stand
Omaha.com ^ | 8/2/2011 | Omaha.com




CORALVILLE, Iowa (AP) — Police closed down a lemonade stand in Coralville last week, telling its 4-year-old operator and her dad that she didn't have a permit.

An officer told Abigail Krutsinger's father Friday that she couldn't run the stand as RAGBRAI bicyclers poured into Coralville.

A city ordinance says food vendors must apply for a permit and get a health inspection.

Abigail's dad, Dustin Krutsinger, said the ordinance and its enforcers are going too far if they force a 4-year-old to abandon her lemonade stand.



saw this one already
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2011, 10:20:16 AM
Mother fined $535 after daughter, Skylar Capo, 11, saves endangered woodpecker from hungry cat
http://www.nydailynews.com/ ^




Never let a good deed go unpunished.

An 11-year-old Virginia girl trying to rescue a baby woodpecker instead earned her mother a $535 fine when it turned out the bird was a protected species.

Skylar Capo saved the bird from the clutches of a cat which was about to turn the feathered friend into lunch.

"I've just always loved animals," Skylar told WUSA-TV. "I couldn't stand to watch it be eaten."

When she was unable to find the baby's mother, she asked her own mother if they could adopt the orphaned bird.

"She was just going to take care of it for a day or two, make sure it was safe and uninjured, and then she was going to let it go," said Skylar's mom Alison Capo.

As they were headed home they stopped into a store and brought the bird inside where they incidentally encountered an officer from the Department of Fish & Wildlife.

The officer informed them that the bird was a protected species, and it was illegal to transport it.


(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2011, 12:22:55 PM
“They Killed Him.” New Video Shows Aftermath of Fullerton Police Beating.
OC Register ^ | 8/1/2011 | DENISSE SALAZAR and ERIC CARPENTER





FULLERTON – Surveillance video surfaced Monday of two witnesses describing a fatal confrontation between a homeless man and six police officers.

The video from an Orange County Transportation Authority bus shows a woman and a man getting on the bus shortly after the July 5 incident between the officers and Kelly Thomas, 37, a homeless man who suffered from schizophrenia.

The woman, who appears agitated, gets on the bus at the Fullerton Transportation Center and tells the driver "the cops are kicking this poor guy over there. ... He's almost halfway dead."

The male witness tells the driver that the man, later identified as Thomas, was sitting on a bench when he was approached by two officers and ran from them. "They caught him, pound his face, pound his face against the curb ... and they beat him up," the man said. "They beat him up, and then all the cops came and they hogtied him, and he was like 'Please God! Please Dad!"


(Excerpt) Read more at ocregister.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2011, 12:33:17 PM
Retired Military Translator's Home Reportedly Raided in DEA Mix-Up
Published July 31, 2011 | FoxNews.com



A retired military translator who served in Iraq says he was treated like a criminal when agents from the DEA barreled into his Detroit home just after 2 a.m. Tuesday morning, MyFoxDetroit.com reported.

"As soon as I opened the door, somebody grabbed me and took me outside and put me on the grass," Ramsey Tossa said. “The first thing I thought was they were terrorists who want to kill me because I served in Iraq.”

Tossa and his family were asleep at the time. He woke up when he heard loud banging on the door. He was taken outside, had lasers trained on him and saw agents dragging his wife and daughters who were “half naked.”

“I kept asking, what’s going on?” he said. “And they held my neck to the ground so I can’t talk.”

He began to have chest pains and paramedics eventually took him to a nearby hospital, reported the station.

According to the report, the DEA was executing a search warrant for Tossa’s landlord’s son, who apparently uses Tossa’s one-story house’s address for mailing.

The DEA told the station that it is taking Tossa's complaint seriously.

“Before they raid any house, they should have more information,” Tossa said. “Not rumors.”

Please click here for more from MyFoxDetroit.com


http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/07/31/retired-military-translators-home-reportedly-raided-in-dea-mix-up/



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/07/31/retired-military-translators-home-reportedly-raided-in-dea-mix-up/#ixzz1Ttxs7gGu


________________________ ________


My only hope is to see some of these cops' wives, daughters, dogs, and kids, have undergo the same bullshit right in front of them. 


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2011, 12:52:09 PM
Imagine if this man (a veteran no less) had a gun and tried to protect his family from intruders (and he had valid reasons to fear intruders).. All his family would die from the gunfight and he would be blamed for it..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2011, 01:16:29 PM
Breaking news: Multi-agency armed raid hits Rawesome Foods, Healthy Family Farms for selling raw milk and cheese
Wednesday, August 03, 2011
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
Editor of NaturalNews.com (See all articles...) 

 
 

(NaturalNews) This is a NaturalNews exclusive breaking new report. Please credit NaturalNews.com. A multi-agency SWAT-style armed raid was conducted this morning by helmet-wearing, gun-carrying enforcement agents from the LA County Sheriff's Office, the FDA, the Dept. of Agriculture and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control).

Rawesome Foods, a private buying club offering wholesome, natural raw milk and raw cheese products (among other wholesome foods) is founded by James Stewart, a pioneer in bringing wholesome raw foods directly to consumers through a buying club. James was followed from his private residence by law enforcement, and when he entered his store, the raid was launched.

Law enforcement demanded that all customers (members) of the store vacate the premises, then they demanded to know how much cash James had at the store. When James explained the amount of cash he had at the store -- which is used to purchase product for selling there -- agents demanded to know why he had such an amount of cash and where it came from.

James was handcuffed, was NEVER read his rights and was stuffed into an UNMARKED car. While agents said they would leave behind a warrant, no one has yet had any opportunity to even see if such a warrant exists or if it is a complete warrant.

Note to NaturalNews readers: This was an ILLEGAL raid being conducted mob-style by government thugs who respect no law and no rights. This is an all-out war by the government against people who try to promote healthy raw and living foods.

James is now being held at the Pacific division police department at Centinela and Culver in Los Angeles. He is being held at $123,000 bail with no possibility of using bail bonds. Law enforcement has demanded that if he comes up with the money to cover bail, he must disclose to them all the sources of that money. (This is an illegal demand!)

Law enforcement is now destroying all the Rawesome Foods inventory by pouring the raw milk down the drain and collecting the raw cheese for destruction.

Massive public protests are needed to teach these criminal law enforcement agencies that they cannot illegally arrest and persecute individuals merely for buying and selling raw milk and cheese. We are organizing a public protest day in cooperation with James. Please watch NaturalNews for an announcement of that. Story is developing...

Right now, James needs help raising money with his legal defense needs. Our non-profit Consumer Wellness Center is currently serving as the collection point for donations. You may donate right now at www.ConsumerWellness.org (100% of the donations go directly to James' legal defense needs, the Consumer Wellness Center keeps nothing).

See this video of James Stewart talking about his farm:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foKg...

Here's background on Healthy Family Farms which was also targeted in the raid:

Healthy Family Farms in Santa Paula, California:

"Healthy Family Farms is a sustainable, pasture-based farming operation. We raise all our livestock on pasture. We raise all of our animals from birth. We do not feed any of our animals soy, choosing instead to feed animals as they are designed to be fed. This results in healthy, sturdy animals needing no hormones, antibiotics, or other artificial "enhancements." We harvest our animals humanely by hand before they are delivered to the farmers markets. We never freeze our products. In addition to farmer's markets sales, we have an active CSA, which offers discounts to our valued members."


About the author: Mike Adams is an award-winning journalist and holistic nutritionist with a passion for sharing empowering information to help improve personal and planetary health He has authored more than 1,800 articles and dozens of reports, guides and interviews on natural health topics, impacting the lives of millions of readers around the world who are experiencing phenomenal health benefits from reading his articles. Adams is a trusted, independent journalist who receives no money or promotional fees whatsoever to write about other companies' products. In 2010, Adams created NaturalNews.TV, a natural living video sharing site featuring thousands of user videos on foods, fitness, green living and more. He also launched an online retailer of environmentally-friendly products (BetterLifeGoods.com) and uses a portion of its profits to help fund non-profit endeavors. He's also the founder of a well known HTML email software company whose 'Email Marketing Director' software currently runs the NaturalNews subscription database. Adams volunteers his time to serve as the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, and regularly pursues cycling, nature photography, Capoeira and Pilates. Known by his callsign, the 'Health Ranger,' Adams posts his missions statements, health statistics and health photos at www.HealthRanger.org

 


Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/033220_Rawesome_Foods_armed_raids.html#ixzz1TzzMYGx0

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2011, 02:37:21 PM

http://www.infowars.com/raw-food-raid-armed-agents-bust-raw-milk-cheese-sellers

Raw Food Raid: Armed Agents Bust Raw Milk & Cheese Sellers
         



Assault on independent health accelerates as retailers charged with conspiracy, ‘mislabeling cheese’

UPDATE: We have learned that in addition to James Stewart, two other people have been arrested in this raid and are being charged with conspiracy to sell unpasteurized raw milk products. Sharon Palmer of Healthy Family Farms is currently in jail, with bond set at $120,000. Palmer was featured in the documentary Farmageddon. Victoria Bloch, an L.A. county liaison for the Weston A. Price Foundation has also been arrested.


Activists are planning a protest tomorrow morning outside the L.A. county courthouse (details pending) to send a strong message that we have a right to healthy, natural foods. Help rally people to this cause, tell people about this outrageous and backwards persecution and fight for our natural rights. Check back at Infowars.com and Natural News.com for further updates.




VIDEO OF RAID: Police Seize Cash, Produce, Dump Raw Milk




UPDATE: Trio of Los Angeles raw food advocates reportedly charged with conspiracy, ‘mislabeling cheese’

Mike Adams
Natural News
August 3, 2011

(NaturalNews) The raid on Rawesome Foods by a combined force of agents from the FDA, Dept of Agriculture, CDC and the LA County Sheriff’s office wasn’t the only SWAT-style armed raid that took place today. Sharon Palmer, a mom and owner of Healthy Family Farms was also arrested and taken to jail. A third woman, Victoria Bloch, the LA County liaison for the Weston A Price Foundation (www.WestonaPrice.org) , was also reportedly arrested, NaturalNews has learned.

All three are reportedly being charged with conspiracy to commit a crime. What crime? The “crime” of advocating raw milk for consumers!

As NaturalNews previously reported (http://www.naturalnews.com/033220_R…), the SWAT-style raid was conducted like a terrorist operation, where the cops immediately went after Rawesome’s cash and then began vandalizing and destroying the store’s entire inventory. This raid was an act of economic terrorism against a legitimate, ethical business selling wholesome, healthful products to a very happy group of members.

A massive public protest on the front steps of the LA courthouse is being planned for the morning of August 4th, where James Stewart has been promised a hearing before a judge. NaturalNews is calling on its readers and supporters to join in this protest to help send a message to the law enforcement tyrants that we will not tolerate our health food stores being terrorized by criminal cops and rogue federal agencies. We will announce the time and place of the protest as soon as we are provided the details. Watch for that announcement here on NaturalNews.com or on our Facebook page: www.Facebook.com/HealthRanger

Video coverage of the event is being provided by a contributing reporter whose name we will reveal after the video reports are filed (in order to protect him from possible oppression by L.A. law enforcement thugs).

Matt Drudge is linking to this story from www.DrudgeReport.com and Alex Jones is also covering it from www.InfoWars.com

We’ve also posted a CounterThink cartoon on this raw milk topic. You can view the cartoon at:
http://counterthink.com/Raw_Milk_Li…

Spread the word, folks. Enough is enough! We must take a stand against this government-run campaign of terror against health food retailers. It is time to stop government-run terrorism against health food stores.

It’s time we fought back and let these criminals know we will not be treated like food slaves by a corrupt, criminally-run government that wishes to force everyone to drink DEAD MILK and DEAD CHEESE (which they know causes disease).

This is it, friends! Big Government has declared war on the innocent. The Obama administration, which has already gone out of its way to promote yet more GMOs in the food supply, is now overseeing government-sponsored terrorism against the health food movement. If you don’t take a stand against this, you might as well lay down, surrender to Big Brother, and eat your soylent green…

We are collecting funds for the legal defense of Rawesome Foods. Please donate through the Consumer Wellness Center at www.ConsumerWellness.org where 100% of the donations go directly to their legal defense.

Thank you all for your sharing of these stories and your concerns. We are fighting for our basic rights and freedoms against a police state cabal of criminals who now run our federal government and will stop at nothing to turn innocent citizens into gulag prisoners.




Breaking news: Multi-agency armed raid hits Rawesome Foods, Healthy Family Farms for selling raw milk and cheese

(NaturalNews) This is a NaturalNews exclusive breaking news report. Please credit NaturalNews.com. A multi-agency SWAT-style armed raid was conducted this morning by helmet-wearing, gun-carrying enforcement agents from the LA County Sheriff’s Office, the FDA, the Dept. of Agriculture and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control).

Rawesome Foods, a private buying club offering wholesome, natural raw milk and raw cheese products (among other wholesome foods) is founded by James Stewart, a pioneer in bringing wholesome raw foods directly to consumers through a buying club. James was followed from his private residence by law enforcement, and when he entered his store, the raid was launched.

Law enforcement demanded that all customers (members) of the store vacate the premises, then they demanded to know how much cash James had at the store. When James explained the amount of cash he had at the store — which is used to purchase product for selling there — agents demanded to know why he had such an amount of cash and where it came from.

James was handcuffed, was NEVER read his rights and was stuffed into an UNMARKED car. While agents said they would leave behind a warrant, no one has yet had any opportunity to even see if such a warrant exists or if it is a complete warrant.

Note to NaturalNews readers: This was an ILLEGAL raid being conducted mob-style by government thugs who respect no law and no rights. This is an all-out war by the government against people who try to promote healthy raw and living foods.

James is now being held at the Pacific division police department at Centinela and Culver in Los Angeles. He is being held at $123,000 bail with no possibility of using bail bonds. Law enforcement has demanded that if he comes up with the money to cover bail, he must disclose to them all the sources of that money. (This is an illegal demand!)

Massive public protests are needed to teach these criminal law enforcement agencies that they cannot illegally arrest and persecute individuals merely for buying and selling raw milk and cheese. We are organizing a public protest day in cooperation with James. Please watch NaturalNews for an announcement of that. Story is developing…

A d v e r t i s e m e n t
Right now, James needs help raising money with his legal defense needs. Our non-profit Consumer Wellness Center is currently serving as the collection point for donations. You may donate right now at www.ConsumerWellness.org (100% of the donations go directly to James’ legal defense needs, the Consumer Wellness Center keeps nothing).

See this video of James Stewart talking about his farm:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foKg…

Here’s background on Healthy Family Farms which was also targeted in the raid:

Healthy Family Farms in Santa Paula, California:

“Healthy Family Farms is a sustainable, pasture-based farming operation. We raise all our livestock on pasture. We raise all of our animals from birth. We do not feed any of our animals soy, choosing instead to feed animals as they are designed to be fed. This results in healthy, sturdy animals needing no hormones, antibiotics, or other artificial “enhancements.” We harvest our animals humanely by hand before they are delivered to the farmers markets. We never freeze our products. In addition to farmer’s markets sales, we have an active CSA, which offers discounts to our valued members.”

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2011, 12:13:46 PM
TSA Confiscates Pregnant Woman's Insulin, Ice Packs
Security Tells Woman Isulin Vial Was An Explosives Risk

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/28773212/detail.html



POSTED: 9:55 pm MDT August 4, 2011
UPDATED: 10:55 am MDT August 5, 2011

DENVER -- A Denver couple has filed a formal complaint with the Transportation Security Administration after a pregnant woman's insulin and ice packs were confiscated by screeners at Denver International Airport.

The couple has traveled around the world with her medical supplies, including insulin and syringes, and have never encountered any troubles before, they said.

"It made me feel upset and made me feel somewhat helpless," said Aaron Nieman.


Nieman's wife was traveling alone to a baby shower in Phoenix when she was questioned by a TSA agent as she went through security around 4 p.m. Thursday.

"He's like, 'Well, you're a risk.' I'm like, 'Excuse me?' And he's like, 'This is a risk ... I can't tell you why again. But this is at risk for explosives,'” Nieman's wife said. She asked 7NEWS not to use her name for fear of retaliation for speaking out.

"I got a bottle of nail polish. I got hair spray bottles. I got needles that are syringes. But yet I can't take through my actual insulin?” she asked.

The mother-to-be said she brought the appropriate doctor's note and the medication was labeled correctly, so she's perplexed as to why her insulin would be confiscated this time.

She said she was able to get half a vial through security, apparently unnoticed by TSA agents.

"It was at the bottom of my lunch box because they didn't search it all the way through. They just took out every thing on top,” she said.

The woman has since made arrangements for additional insulin to be delivered to her while she's in Arizona.

The TSA would not get into specifics of this case, but provided 7NEWS this prepared statement.


TSA's mission is to safely, efficiently and respectfully screen nearly 2 million passengers each day at airports nationwide.

We are sensitive to the concerns of passengers who were not satisfied with their screening experience and we invite those individuals to provide feedback to TSA through a variety of channels. We work to balance those concerns with the very real threat that our adversaries will attempt to use explosives to carry out attacks on planes.

It is the traveler's responsibility to have proper government issued identification and a boarding pass; to cooperate with applicable screening procedures and instructions and to communicate their disability or health related needs.

Liquid medications should be labeled, and those in quantities larger than 3.4 ounces (100ml) each need to be separated from other carry-on items and declared to the security officer as medically necessary. A declaration can be made verbally, in writing, or by a person's companion, caregiver, interpreter, or family member. Liquids in excess of 3.4 ounces will require additional screening
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on August 05, 2011, 12:20:13 PM
another government agency growing to powerful. 

Who the hell started the TSA anyway?

Who gave more power after it was started?


BTW,  went through security a half a dozen times last week with liquids in my carry on and wasn't caught. 

fucking posers lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2011, 12:22:03 PM
another government agency growing to powerful. 

Who the hell started the TSA anyway?

Who gave more power after it was started?


BTW,  went through security a half a dozen times last week with liquids in my carry on and wasn't caught. 

fucking posers lol.

Bush started it, obama doubled down on it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on August 05, 2011, 12:24:25 PM
Bush started it, obama doubled down on it. 

What did Obama do to give more power? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2011, 12:25:02 PM
What did Obama do to give more power? 
]

He appinted napolitano 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on August 05, 2011, 12:27:56 PM
]

He appinted napolitano 

and what did Napolitano di?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2011, 12:29:39 PM
and what did Napolitano di?

They unionized these thugs and made them less accountable tot he public and taxpayer. 

Its another GWB disastrous policy that obama latched on to. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2011, 02:45:04 PM
DOD, DHS Among Agencies Dedicated To Environmental Justice
Judicial Watch/facebook ^ | 8/5/11 | staff




Though it is unrelated to their mission, the Department of Defense, Homeland Security, Commerce and Housing are among the federal agencies that will focus on helping minorities get green under an Obama Administration plan that aims to bring “environmental justice” to poor and underserved communities nationwide.

The effort was launched by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) last fall and the agency has doled out millions of dollars in “environmental justice grants” to dozens of leftwing groups, including some dedicated to helping illegal immigrants. Earlier this year the administration dedicated an additional $7 million to study how pollution, stress and social factors affect “poor and underserved communities.”

http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2010/oct/u-s-gives-liberal-activists-environmental-justice-grants

http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2011/jan/another-7-million-environmental-justice

The goal is to help low-income populations obtain the same degree of protection from health and environmental hazards as wealthy communities. The organizations that receive U.S. tax dollars reportedly teach black, Latino and indigenous folks how to recycle, reduce carbon emissions through “weatherization” and participate in “green jobs” training.

As if it weren’t bad enough that millions of dollars have already gone to this initiative, the president is further wasting valuable taxpayer resources by forcing other federal agencies, most with unrelated duties, to participate. Besides the previously mentioned, the Department of Education, Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, Transportation, Justice, Health and Labor have all been forced to develop “environmental justice strategies to protect the health of people living in communities overburdened by population.”

This week the agencies signed an official Memorandum of Understanding on Environmental Justice outlining some of their new duties. Under the agreement the agencies will make environmental justice part of their mission and they will provide the public with annual progress reports on their efforts. In a written statement, the Obama Administration proclaims that it’s the latest effort to address the inequities that may be present in some communities.

http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/bd4379a92ceceeac8525735900400c27/28420a5ae8467cf5852578e200635712!OpenDocument

Obama’s EPA administrator, Lisa Jackson, has promised to bring minorities environmental justice since getting appointed, saying that all too often they live in the shadows of our society’s worst pollution and, as a result, face disproportionate health impacts and greater obstacles to economic growth. She assures that every agency has a “unique and important role to play in ensuring that all communities receive the health and environmental protections they deserve.” The broad collaboration will translate into real progress for overburdened communities, according to Jackson.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 07, 2011, 04:55:38 AM
America's Third War: The U.S. Cut a Deal With the Sinaloa Cartel, Say Court Documents
By William Lajeunesse
Published August 05, 2011 | FoxNews.com
  Print  Email  Share  Comments
U.S. federal agents allegedly cut a deal with the Sinaloa drug cartel that allowed it to traffic tons of narcotics across the border, in exchange for information about rival cartels, according to documents filed in federal court.

Click here to view the Sinaloa Cartel case document.

The allegations are made by Vicente Zambada-Niebla, a top ranking cartel boss extradited to the U.S. last year on drug charges. He is a close associate of Mexico's most wanted man, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman and the son of Ismael "Mayo" Zambada-Garcia. 


Both remain fugitives, in part, because of the deal Zambada- Niebla made with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, according to a defense motion filed last Friday in the case.

Alvin Michaelson, the Los Angeles attorney representing Zambada- Niebla who wrote the brief, refused comment.

The deal allegedly began with Humberto Loya-Castro, a Sinaloa cartel lawyer who became an informant for the D.E.A. after a drug case against him was dismissed in 2008. 

According to the motion, the deal was part of a 'divide and conquer' strategy, where the U.S. helped finance and arm the Sinaloa cartel, through Operation Fast and Furious, in exchange for information that allowed the D.E.A. and FBI to destroy and dismantle rival Mexican cartels. Operation Fast and Furious is the failed Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives anti-gun trafficking program which allowed thousand of guns to cross into Mexico.

"Under that agreement, the Sinaloa Cartel, through Loya, was to provide information accumulated by Mayo, Chapo, and others, against rival Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations to the United States government. In return, the United States government agreed to dismiss the prosecution of the pending case against Loya, not to interfere with his drug trafficking activities and those of the Sinaloa Cartel, to not actively prosecute him, Chapo, Mayo, and the leadership of the Sinaloa Cartel, and to not apprehend them.”

Zambada- Niebla was arrested in Mexico City in March 2009 and extradited to the U.S. in February to stand trial on narco-trafficking-related charges. The indictment claims he served as the cartel's "logistical coordinator" who oversaw an operation that imported tons of cocaine into the U.S. by jets, buses, rail cars, tractor-trailers, and automobiles. Zambada-Niebla is now being held in solitary confinement in a Chicago jail cell.

The motion claims Mayo, Chapo and Zambada- Niebla routinely passed information through Loya to the D.E.A. that allowed it to make drug busts. In return, the U.S. helped the leaders evade Mexican police. 

It says: "In addition, the defense has evidence that from time to time, the leadership of the Sinaloa Cartel was informed by agents of the DEA through Loya that United States government agents and/or Mexican authorities were conducting investigations near the home territories of cartel leaders so that the cartel leaders could take appropriate actions to evade investigators- even though the United States government had indictments, extradition requests, and rewards for the apprehension of Mayo, Chapo, and other alleged leaders, as well as Mr. Zambada-Niebla.”

In 2008, "the DEA representative told Mr. Loya-Castro that they wanted to establish a more personal relationship with Mr. Zambada-Niebla so that they could deal with him directly."

In March 17, 2009, Loya set up a meeting at the Sheraton Hotel in Mexico City with two D.E.A. agents, identified as Manny and David. There, the four men met and Zambada-Niebla claims he received immunity from an indictment out of federal court in Washington D.C.

"There is also evidence that at the hotel, Mr. Zambada-Niebla did accept the agreement and thereafter in reliance on that agreement, provided further information regarding rival drug cartels. Mr. Zambada-Niebla was told that the government agents were satisfied with the information he had provided to them and that arrangements would be made to meet with him again. Mr. Zambada-Niebla then left the meeting. Approximately five hours after the meeting, Mr. Zambada-Niebla was arrested by Mexican authorities. “

Experts who reviewed the document say the U.S. typically has written agreements with paid informants that spell out each other's responsibilities. They doubt Zambada-Niebla had one, although Loya probably did. The defense here is hoping to obtain DEA reports that detail the agencies relationship with the Sinaloa cartel and get the agents on the stand.

In response in court, the U.S. doesn't dispute that Zambada-Niebla may have acted as an informant - only that he did not act with D.E.A. consent.

The D.E.A. and the federal prosecutors in Chicago had no comment.

Former D.E.A. director Karen Tandy told Fox News "I do not have any knowledge of this and it doesn't sound right from my experience.”

  Print  Email  Share  Comments
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 08, 2011, 05:10:04 AM
DEA Agents Raid Wrong House in Sterling Heights
Updated: Monday, 01 Aug 2011, 10:15 AM EDT
Published : Saturday, 30 Jul 2011, 11:38 PM EDT


http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/dpp/news/alexis_wiley/agents-raid-wrong-house-in-sterling-heights-20110730-rs




STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. (WJBK) - Drug Enforcement Agency Officers bust into a home in Sterling Heights, armed with a search warrant. The only problem? The guy they were looking for doesn't live there. Fox 2 talked to the man who opened the door, and was stunned by what happened next.

Click on the video player to watch Alexis Wiley's report.

Ramsey Tossa is a lot of things. He's a U.S. citizen, a retired military translator and a proud father. But a criminal, he's not. Still, he says he was treated like one Tuesday morning around 2:00 a.m. when he woke up to find DEA agents banging loudly on the door.

"As soon as I opened the door, somebody grabbed me and took me outside and put me on the grass," Tossa said. "The first thing I thought was they were terrorists who want to kill me because I served in Iraq."

The DEA agents were executing a search warrant. Tossa said he started having what he thought was a heart attack. Paramedics took him to the hospital. When it was finally over, the agents took a few pieces of mail addressed to someone the Tossa's say they've never met. The DEA says the person they were looking for is actually the landlord's son. He uses that house as his address. The Tossa's are demanding answers. The DEA tells us they are taking the complaint seriously. They deny anyone was thrown to the ground. They also indicate there was likely cause to search the house.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 14, 2011, 05:14:25 AM
Government calls buying 'night flashlights,' making 'extreme religious statements' indicators of terrorism
Posted: August 12, 2011
11:00 pm Eastern

By Bob Unruh
© 2011 WND



Just days after the White House announced a community-based approach to combating terrorism in the United States, the FBI and other agencies are asking managers of surplus stores to spy on their customers, watching whether they pay in cash, make "extreme" religious statements or purchase products such as waterproof matches.

And the request from the government also is going to gun shops, fertilizer suppliers, motels and hotels, authorities say.

Earlier this month, the Obama administration announced a new plan titled "Empowering local partners to prevent violent extremism in the United States." In it, Obama wrote, "Communities – especially Muslim American communities whose children, families and neighbors are being targeted for recruitment by al-Qaida – are often best positioned to take the lead because they know their communities best."

The report warns that while the Constitution recognizes freedom of expression, "even for individuals who espouse unpopular or even hateful views," it also is the responsibility of government to deter "plots by neo-Nazis and other anti-Semitic hate groups, racial supremacists, and international and domestic terrorist groups."

Get the prescription for reclaiming America's heritage of liberty, justice and morality – Joseph Farah's "Taking America Back," autographed only at the WND Superstore.

"The best defenses against violent extremist ideologies are well-informed and equipped families, local communities, and local institutions. Their awareness of the threat and willingness to work with one another and government is part of our long history of community-based initiatives and partnerships dealing with a range of public safety challenges," the report says.

(Story continues below)


    

 
 

One of the apparent elements of the White House strategy is a series of brochures being handed out to farm supply stories, gun shops, military surplus stores and even hotels and motels. The brochures ask proprietors, clerks and others to watch out for "potential indicators" of terrorism, including "paying with cash," having a "missing hand/fingers," making "extreme religious statements coupled with comments that are violent or appear to condone violence" and making bulk purchases of "Meals Ready to Eat" or "night flashlights."

The following was handed out to surplus stores by agents of the FBI in Denver in recent days.


The flyer was reminiscent of the Department of Homeland Security's 2009 report "Right-wing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment" that suggested "the return of military veterans facing significant challenges reintegrating into their communities could lead to the potential emergence of terrorist groups."

The report from the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis defined right-wing extremism in the U.S. as "divided into those groups, movements and adherents that are primarily hate-oriented (based on hatred of particular religious, racial or ethnic groups) and those that are mainly anti-government, rejecting federal authority in favor of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. It may include groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition to abortion or immigration."

The DHS report had followed only by weeks a report from the Missouri Information Analysis Center that linked conservative groups to domestic terrorism.

The Missouri report warned law enforcement agencies to watch for suspicious individuals who may have bumper stickers for presidential candidates such as Ron Paul, Bob Barr and Chuck Baldwin. It further warned law enforcement to watch out for individuals with "radical" ideologies based on Christian views, such as opposing illegal immigration, abortion and federal taxes.

Officials with Oath Keepers.org noted the document was similar to one earlier given to gun store managers in Utah. Authorities in Denver confirmed to WND that related brochures are going to surplus stores, hotels and motels, farm supply companies that handle fertilizer and gun shops.

"This new handout expands the absurdity by now also targeting customers of military surplus stores, and by specifically targeting the purchasing of very common, and very popular, preparedness items such as Meals Ready to Eat (MREs) as 'potential indicators of terrorist activities,'" said a statement from Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes.

"Islamic terrorists are not known to hang out in local Army-Navy surplus stores, stocking up on MREs, high capacity magazines and bi-pods for their long range rifles," the statement said. "As Brandon Smith, over at Alt-market.com notes, 'These are very common purchases, not for terrorists, but for Preppers and Survivalists, who are obviously the targets of the FBI profile, not secret al-Qaida agents.'

"Spot on," Rhodes wrote. "Obviously, the current crop of FBI 'leadership' considers anyone who wants to be self-sufficient and prepared to be a 'threat' that should be relentlessly tracked and reported."

An FBI spokesman in Denver confirmed to WND that the flyer is genuine.

"It has been disseminated throughout the United States by the FBI. The flyer and the information on it, stands on its own merit. It was created by FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C., the Denver Division has placed our contact information on the flyer and distributed it to local businesses within the states of Colorado and Wyoming.

"I assure you the process and the information has been well vetted by the Department of Justice before being released."

In addition to contact information for the FBI, the flyer also had a telephone number for the Colorado Information Analysis Center, a law enforcement "fusion" center where director Dana Reynolds told WND it's just part of the information-collecting done by the government.

He said when tips are turned in about suspicious activity, they are evaluated to determine whether there should be a police investigation.

"If it turns out to be nothing, if there's no probably case, then the contact is ended there."

However, when asked about profiling for suspicious behavior, such as that done successfully by security authorities in Israel, he said that was not being done, and why it is not being done "is a good question."

One-time Colorado congressional candidate Rob McNealy, who also is a decision-maker in the Libertarian Party, told WND he came across the flyer to surplus stores among his circle of friends and quickly confirmed it was genuine.

He pointed out to WND the irony that the government, through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, specifically advises citizens to collect "ready-to-eat canned meats, fruits and vegetables" as well as "flashlight and extra batteries" and "matches in a waterproof container."

Then the FBI asks store managers to report the "suspicious" activity of buying the same items.

"It's almost like entrapment," McNealy said.

He warned that such practices could be used as attacks on free speech, the right of association and other constitutional provisions. And he believes authorities are targeting Americans who choose to prepare themselves for emergencies.

"Al-Qaida terrorists are not running around buying MREs," he said.

McNealy said he has information "from somebody who sat in on one of the [fusion-center type] training things in their class they will talk about all the groups out there who are dangerous to cops, sovereign citizens, neo-Nazis – and Oath Keepers and tea party groups."

"They lump them all together," he said.

Oath Keepers reported last year that it appeared the Southern Poverty Law Center had become "officially" part of DHS. That was because the chief of the SPLC "now sits on the DHS 'Working Group on Countering Violent Extremism' along with the leaders of other so-called non government organizations," the group reported.

The move came after a government agency accused a father of being associated "with a militia group known as Oath Keepers."

"It should come as no surprise to see Joint Terrorism Task Forces in states now listing the purchasing of firearms, high capacity magazines, bi-pods, night vision, MREs, weatherproofed ammunition containers, etc. as 'potential indicators of terrorist activities' since SPLC is almost entirely focused on going after the militia movement and the Patriot Movement, and is also focused on relentlessly demonizing and smearing nearly any individual or group on the political right that advocates strict adherence to the Constitution or who advocates for the right to bear arms, for state nullification of unconstitutional federal laws, etc. which is why SPLC also has a special animus toward Oath Keepers, which it has labeled as one of the most worrisome groups out there, because it contains active duty police and military who advocate for strict obedience to the Constitution and who pledge to refuse to obey unconstitutional orders," Rhodes wrote at the time.

"They see all of us on the patriot right as being terrorists or potential terrorists, and they intend to use all the power of government to control, suppress, marginalize, investigate, track, and if possible, prosecute us all until they stamp out our beliefs and views," Rhodes told WND.

"How far we have come from the Founder's ideal of a 'well regulated' (well equipped and well trained) citizen militia where ALL able bodied citizens were expected to keep and bear their own weapons, ammunition, field gear, and other supplies essential to personal military capability and competence. And the Founders expected us to keep that military gear at home and to actually train together in its use so we would 'be prepared' for anything, you know, like the Boy Scouts motto. That motto is a sad remnant of the Founders' ideal of a prepared citizenry," Rhodes wrote.

"Under the logic of this most recent handout, the Boy Scouts should be reported as 'suspicious,'" he wrote.

"The Founders would have wanted all of us, every one, to 'be prepared' for 'any old thing.' They would have wanted us to have night vision, gas masks (which come in handy in many situations), 'high-capacity' magazines – and the powerful military pattern rifles that use them – bi-pods so we can shoot accurately at long distance, and plenty of ammunition in 'weatherproofed' containers (also known as surplus ammo cans). They would have wanted us to have plenty of MREs for handy field use, and even 'night flashlights.' I suppose 'day flashlights' are OK with the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force, but those dangerous 'night flashlights' are verboten, and anyone who buys one must be reported! I certainly hope it wasn't actually someone at the FBI who wrote that.

"Funny thing is, who exactly do the authors of these handouts think they are talking to when they ask gun store and military surplus store owners and staff to spy on their customers and serve as a network of government snitches? These stores are usually owned and staffed by veterans, who are also very preparedness minded – in other words, just like the customers the government wants them to inform on. That's like handing the MIAC report to Ron Paul and Chuck Baldwin supporters and asking them to keep an eye on those pesky, subversive, and potentially dangerous Ron Paul and Chuck Baldwin supporters. It's absurd," Rhodes wrote.

The U.S. administration has made clear in a number of cases that it is concerned about conservatives as a potential danger and even has argued in court that it wants the authority to track American citizens in order to develop "probable cause" needed for search warrants.

That argument is being made before the U.S. Supreme Court in a dispute over whether police investigators and other authorities should be allowed to track American citizens who have not done anything that would ordinarily prompt a judge to issue a search warrant.

"The court of appeals' decision, which will require law enforcement officers to obtain a warrant before placing a GPS device on a vehicle if the device will be used for a 'prolonged' time period, has created uncertainty surrounding the use of an important law enforcement tool," said the government's brief in the case, U.S.A. v. Antoine Jones.



http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2763382/posts

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 14, 2011, 06:58:16 AM
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FBI adds ‘preppers’ to potential terrorists list
Gun Rights Examiner ^ | 11 August, 2011 | David Codrea
Posted on August 12, 2011 8:39:07 AM EDT by marktwain

“An FBI Denver Joint Terrorism Task Force handout being distributed to Colorado military surplus store owners lists the purchase of popular preparedness items and firearms accessories as ‘suspicious’ and ‘potential indicators of terrorist activities,’” an exclusive report by Oath Keepers reveals.

Essentially, the government is conflating Americans who believe in being prepared for disruptions in normal circumstances with potential domestic enemies who bear scrutiny, and are recruiting those they patronize to spy and snitch on their customers. As potential terrorists. For such suspicious activities as buying storable food. And paying in legal tender.

This is not a new tactic. Oath Keepers themselves have been targets of a campaign to portray their organization and membership as “militia extremists” and haters, due in large part to the smear efforts by the Southern Poverty Law Center. It has been used against people who champion the Constitution and warn against the United Nations. And it’s not confined to the FBI, but is also used by the Department of Homeland Security and so-called “Fusion Centers” and…

(Excerpt) Read more at examiner.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 15, 2011, 08:35:59 PM
Police officer shot dead after pointing stun gun at man's dogs as he attended domestic
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2025812/Police-officer-Robert-Lasso-shot-dead-pointing-stun-gun-mans-dogs.html ^
Posted on August 15, 2011 6:43:35 PM EDT by Orange1998

A police officer killed while responding to a domestic disturbance in a small eastern Pennsylvania borough had pointed a stun gun at two dogs before being shot, court records reveal.

Freemansburg police officer Robert Lasso had pointed at the attacking dogs when the homeowner pulled out a shotgun and fired the fatal blast on Thursday evening.

In police custody, the alleged gunman, 46-year-old George Hitcho Jr, said he had told Mr Lasso to get off his property and not come on unless he had a warrant, authorities said. Killed: Robert Lasso was shot dead as he attended a domestic disturbance

'He tried to kill my dogs and pointed a gun in my face,' Hitcho said, according to the documents. 'I do not care if you a cop or not ...Unbelievable.'

The officer had been responding to a report of a disturbance and ended up at the back of Hitcho's house, authorities said.

Police Chief George Bruneio, who arrived after Mr Lasso requested assistance, instructed him to 'shoot the dogs' and that's when the homeowner pulled out a shotgun and fired, authorities said.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 18, 2011, 11:15:00 AM
Woman’s yard sale to pay medical bills gets shut down
Salem.katu.com ^ | 8/18/11 | Emily Sinovic, Reporter




A woman fighting a terminal form of bone cancer is trying to raise money to help pay bills with a few weekend garage sales, but the city of Salem says she’s breaking the law and is shutting her down.

Jan Cline had no idea, but the city of Salem has a clear law that states a person can only have three yard sales a year.

Cline has been selling her stuff in the backyard for a few weekends and said she thought she’d be fine by keeping the sale out of everyone’s way.

“It’s a struggle,” Cline says. “It’s a struggle for me because I’m very independent, used to taking care of myself.”

She’s run businesses and supported herself for years but this summer she was diagnosed with bone cancer.


(Excerpt) Read more at salem.katu.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: garebear on August 18, 2011, 02:05:02 PM
Woman’s yard sale to pay medical bills gets shut down
Salem.katu.com ^ | 8/18/11 | Emily Sinovic, Reporter




A woman fighting a terminal form of bone cancer is trying to raise money to help pay bills with a few weekend garage sales, but the city of Salem says she’s breaking the law and is shutting her down.

Jan Cline had no idea, but the city of Salem has a clear law that states a person can only have three yard sales a year.

Cline has been selling her stuff in the backyard for a few weekends and said she thought she’d be fine by keeping the sale out of everyone’s way.

“It’s a struggle,” Cline says. “It’s a struggle for me because I’m very independent, used to taking care of myself.”

She’s run businesses and supported herself for years but this summer she was diagnosed with bone cancer.


(Excerpt) Read more at salem.katu.com ...


Tea Party to this woman: Fuck you. You should have been rich. Don't be a socialist and try to get medical help. Die in the fucking ditch. God bless America.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on August 18, 2011, 02:14:33 PM
No, no,   she should ask Michelle Bachmann to bail her out.  After all, Bachmann voted yes to 190 Billion in bail outs. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 18, 2011, 02:28:46 PM
No, no,   she should ask Michelle Bachmann to bail her out.  After all, Bachmann voted yes to 190 Billion in bail outs. 

Bachmann took care of 23 foster kids, so most likely she would have helped her out. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on August 18, 2011, 02:36:34 PM
Bachmann took care of 23 foster kids, so most likely she would have helped her out. 

That's right.  Ayone who voted for billions in bail outs can't be all that bad. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 19, 2011, 08:01:32 PM
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Family gets $333,000 for 2009 raid in which cops killed dog
Chicago Tribune ^ | August 19, 2011 | David Heinzmann
Posted on August 19, 2011 7:20:35 PM EDT by Immerito

A federal jury awarded $333,000 to a Chicago family Thursday after Chicago police officers raided its South Side home with guns drawn and shot its dog in a search that found no criminal activity in the apartment.

Teenage brothers Thomas and Darren Russell were in their second-floor apartment in the 9200 block of South Justine Street in February 2009 when officers announced they had a warrant to search both units of the two-flat. Thomas Russell, then 18, opened the door and found officers with their guns drawn, according to the lawsuit. Russell said that he put his hands in the air and asked permission to lock up his 9-year-old black Labrador, Lady, before they entered.

Police refused the request and came into the house, the lawsuit said. When Lady came loping around the corner with her tail wagging, Officer Richard Antonsen shot the dog, according to the suit, which alleged excessive force, false arrest and illegal seizure for taking the dog's life.

(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on August 19, 2011, 08:06:32 PM
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Family gets $333,000 for 2009 raid in which cops killed dog
Chicago Tribune ^ | August 19, 2011 | David Heinzmann
Posted on August 19, 2011 7:20:35 PM EDT by Immerito

A federal jury awarded $333,000 to a Chicago family Thursday after Chicago police officers raided its South Side home with guns drawn and shot its dog in a search that found no criminal activity in the apartment.

Teenage brothers Thomas and Darren Russell were in their second-floor apartment in the 9200 block of South Justine Street in February 2009 when officers announced they had a warrant to search both units of the two-flat. Thomas Russell, then 18, opened the door and found officers with their guns drawn, according to the lawsuit. Russell said that he put his hands in the air and asked permission to lock up his 9-year-old black Labrador, Lady, before they entered.

Police refused the request and came into the house, the lawsuit said. When Lady came loping around the corner with her tail wagging, Officer Richard Antonsen shot the dog, according to the suit, which alleged excessive force, false arrest and illegal seizure for taking the dog's life.

(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...

good!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on August 19, 2011, 08:56:33 PM
Did the cops lose their jobs?
Who pays for their fuck up, meaning where does the money cone from?
Did the cops have to pay any money out of their own pockets.
Seems like a hollow victory under tragic circumstances. I love dogs, especially lovable labs. Pisses me off. I'd wanna find the cop later and kick his face in.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 20, 2011, 08:59:32 AM
Did the cops lose their jobs?
Who pays for their fuck up, meaning where does the money cone from?
Did the cops have to pay any money out of their own pockets.
Seems like a hollow victory under tragic circumstances. I love dogs, especially lovable labs. Pisses me off. I'd wanna find the cop later and kick his face in.

Cops unlikely lost their job. It would depend on many things. Unfortunately in this case a dog was killed and that's horrible. I'm glad the family got compensation to ease the pain but I'm sure they'd rather have their dog back.

The money comes from the taxpayers. The cops likely didn't pay any of it. There are some protections for cops otherwise we would have none. In cases where the officer acts so far out of policy or the law, then they are not covered and have to pay. In this case, it COULD be argued on the cops behalf;

1. The cop who fired was part of a team and was operating in good faith that due diligence was done on the part of the person who secured the warrant.

2. It is NOT good policy when serving a warrant to allow the person answering the door to then leave your sight or control. This was learned by trial and error in which occupants would then retrieve a gun and shoot the officer or would destroy evidence. So you can understand their reluctance to let the person do that.

3. is "the dog wagging his tail" version from both parties or the plaintiffs only? I've entered many a residence in intense and stressful conditions and have yet to shoot fluffy or bowzer just because..

So when you find out those circumstances, it MAY not be the prudent thing to do. If you find that the officer was willy nilly set on blowing a way a lab just for fun, then not only should he pay, lose his job, I'd suggest a little prison time for cruelty to animals.

I've run search warrants many a time and I still can't figure out how I still read about cops who run them on the wrong address. There is no excuse for it.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on August 20, 2011, 09:34:48 AM
Cops unlikely lost their job. It would depend on many things. Unfortunately in this case a dog was killed and that's horrible. I'm glad the family got compensation to ease the pain but I'm sure they'd rather have their dog back.

The money comes from the taxpayers. The cops likely didn't pay any of it. There are some protections for cops otherwise we would have none. In cases where the officer acts so far out of policy or the law, then they are not covered and have to pay. In this case, it COULD be argued on the cops behalf;

1. The cop who fired was part of a team and was operating in good faith that due diligence was done on the part of the person who secured the warrant.

2. It is NOT good policy when serving a warrant to allow the person answering the door to then leave your sight or control. This was learned by trial and error in which occupants would then retrieve a gun and shoot the officer or would destroy evidence. So you can understand their reluctance to let the person do that.

3. is "the dog wagging his tail" version from both parties or the plaintiffs only? I've entered many a residence in intense and stressful conditions and have yet to shoot fluffy or bowzer just because..

So when you find out those circumstances, it MAY not be the prudent thing to do. If you find that the officer was willy nilly set on blowing a way a lab just for fun, then not only should he pay, lose his job, I'd suggest a little prison time for cruelty to animals.

I've run search warrants many a time and I still can't figure out how I still read about cops who run them on the wrong address. There is no excuse for it.     

I have a few friends that are officers, I understand some of the bullshit they go through but there seems to be an epidemic of dogs getting blown away by law enforcement.

 In this instance the officers didn't just break the door open, they announced they were there and offered enough time for  the kid to  open the door for them and he obviously didn't have a weapon at that time.  He was complying to their orders and had his hands up. He asked permission to do something. Doesn't sound like a situation where you have some belligerent asshole refusing orders that would create cause for concern.  I also think officers need more training on dog breeds and what to look for. Why didn't they ask, is your dog aggressive after they were informed that there was one there? How many aggressive labs does a person come across in a life time and even so I don't feel threatened by one even without a gun, especially when I'm around a group of my peers, I'd rip its head off bare handed if I needed to.

I think there are way to many trigger happy or nervous police officers around that shou;dnt be in the position they are in. They aren't able to make proper decisions in a short amount of time. I see how some people react to my dog sometime, they shit themselves and he isn't even doing anything. Those types of people shouldn't be executing warrants like this.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 20, 2011, 09:43:40 AM
I have a few friends that are officers, I understand some of the bullshit they go through but there seems to be an epidemic of dogs getting blown away by law enforcement.

 In this instance the officers didn't just break the door open, they announced they were there and offered enough time for  the kid to  open the door for them and he obviously didn't have a weapon at that time.  He was complying to their orders and had his hands up. He asked permission to do something. Doesn't sound like a situation where you have some belligerent asshole refusing orders that would create cause for concern.  I also think officers need more training on dog breeds and what to look for. Why didn't they ask, is your dog aggressive after they were informed that there was one there? How many aggressive labs does a person come across in a life time and even so I don't feel threatened by one even without a gun, especially when I'm around a group of my peers, I'd rip its head off bare handed if I needed to.

I think there are way to many trigger happy or nervous police officers around that shou;dnt be in the position they are in. They aren't able to make proper decisions in a short amount of time. I see how some people react to my dog sometime, they shit themselves and he isn't even doing anything. Those types of people shouldn't be executing warrants like this.

You raise some good points. But I have been to some scenes where the dog has torn up a neighbor and the owner is still saying "Fluffy never did that before" so you really can't rely on what your told anyway.

I was a K-9 trainer/handler in the military for 10 yrs and we had Labs for police dogs that were aggressive. But I hear what you are saying.. the breed is important as far as size, if it is a poodle, yorkie etc.. changes things.

I consider myself very experienced when it comes to dogs. But I could not tell a group of cop cadets that they don't have to be concerned with ______ breed because that would be opening them up to injury when they need to climb a fence to get a 360 on a house with a burglar in it and they see breed _____ in the back yard and think.. Oh, they told me that breed is ok, and then they get their ass handed to them when they enter the yard. taco bell dogs and the like excluded.. they will nip the hell out of you but are more an annoyance than a danger. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on August 20, 2011, 10:02:25 AM
This is the kind of cop you want doing what that other asshole cop was supposed to be doing. Stayed cool under pressure and didnt have to execute the dog, (even though the dog is probably toast after that incident). That lab probably would have been alive if they had just tazered it instead and the tax payer wouldnt have to dish out 300 000 dollars for the screw up.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 20, 2011, 03:04:48 PM
This is the kind of cop you want doing what that other asshole cop was supposed to be doing. Stayed cool under pressure and didnt have to execute the dog, (even though the dog is probably toast after that incident). That lab probably would have been alive if they had just tazered it instead and the tax payer wouldnt have to dish out 300 000 dollars for the screw up.




Good response by that officer. In the entry case, likely the officers didn't have a Taser in his hand but a hand gun. By the time he put it away and drew the Taser a lot of time elapses. Tasers have no lasting effects on the dog so that one was probably fine.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 20, 2011, 07:08:41 PM
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Beach ATV cop: My blood test was illegal
miamiherald.com ^ | 20 Aug 2011 | David Smiley
Posted on August 20, 2011 9:55:54 PM EDT by smokingfrog

The fired Miami Beach police officer accused of plowing his ATV into a man and woman during a drunken, on-duty joyride last month says he was illegally blood tested and deserves his job back.

Derick Kuilan, who faces two felony counts of reckless driving with serious bodily injury and two of DUI with serious bodily injury, wrote in a grievance filed with the city of Miami Beach that investigators wrongly took his blood after the July 3 crash.

Prosecutors say the blood test — taken more than five hours after the pre-dawn crash — showed Kuilan’s blood-alcohol levels were above the legal limit. Police Chief Carlos Noriega told The Herald during a recent interview that his department took steps to ensure that Kuilan’s blood test was drawn legally, including contacting the state attorney’s office, before taking a sample. He said those efforts are what led to the five-hour delay.

But Kuilan and his defense attorney, Evan Hoffman, are challenging the test.

“The city based their arbitrary decision to terminate me on an unconstitutional/unlawful test and false, inflammatory and unsubstantiated allegations and information,” Kuilan wrote in his grievance, filed July 27, the day after he was charged by prosecutors.

(Excerpt) Read more at miamiherald.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 22, 2011, 07:19:04 PM
Federal Asset Seizures Rise, Netting Innocent With Guilty (Big Government Tyranny Alert)
The Wall Street Journal ^ | 2011-08-22 | John R. Emshwiller & Gary Fields
Posted on August 22, 2011 10:12:50 PM EDT by rabscuttle385

New York businessman James Lieto was an innocent bystander in a fraud investigation last year. Federal agents seized $392,000 of his cash anyway.

An armored-car firm hired by Mr. Lieto to carry money for his check-cashing company got ensnared in the FBI probe. Agents seized about $19 million—including Mr. Lieto's money—from vaults belonging to the armored-car firm's parent company.

He is one among thousands of Americans in recent decades who have had a jarring introduction to the federal system of asset seizure. Some 400 federal statutes—a near-doubling, by one count, since the 1990s—empower the government to take assets from convicted criminals as well as people never charged with a crime.

Last year, forfeiture programs confiscated homes, cars, boats and cash in more than 15,000 cases. The total take topped $2.5 billion, more than doubling in five years, Justice Department statistics show.

The expansion of forfeiture powers is part of a broader growth in recent decades of the federal justice system that has seen hundreds of new criminal laws passed. Some critics have dubbed the pattern as the overcriminalization of American life.

(snip)

The more than 400 federal statutes allowing for forfeiture range from racketeering and drug-dealing to violations of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act, according to a December 2009 Congressional Research Service report. The report shows that seizure powers were extended to about 200 of those laws in 2000 in a major congressional overhaul of the forfeiture system.

Top federal officials are also pushing for greater use of civil-forfeiture proceedings, in which assets can be taken without criminal charges being filed against the owner.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 26, 2011, 11:29:28 AM
Class action suit says Florida Highway Patrol illegally tickets
motorists who warn others about speed traps


 9:51 AM, Aug 26, 2011  |   comments

  Tampa, Florida -- When the Florida Highway Patrol pulls someone over on the
highway, it's usually because they were speeding.



But Eric Campbell was pulled over and ticketed while he was driving the speed limit.


Campbell says, "I was coming up the Veterans Expressway and I notice two
Florida Highway Patrol Cars sitting on the side of the road in the median, with lights
off."


 Campbell says he did what he always does:

flashed his lights on and off to warn drivers coming from the other direction that there
was speed trap ahead.

According to Campbell, 60 seconds after passing the trooper, "They were on my tail
and they pulled me over."

Campbell says the FHP trooper wrote him a ticket for improper flashing of high beams.
Campbell says the trooper told him what he had done was illegal.

But later Campbell learned that is not the case. He filed a class action suit which says
"Florida Statue 316.2397" -- under which Campbell was cited -- "does not prohibit
the flashing of headlights as a means of communications, nor does it in any way
reference flashing headlights or the use of high beams."

However, the FHP trooper who wrote the ticket either didn't know or didn't
care. "You could tell in his voice he was upset," Campbell says. "He was



http://www.wtsp.com/news/topstories/article/207550/250/FHP-sued-for-giving-out-illegal-tickets

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 27, 2011, 04:18:29 AM
When Heroes Become Bureaucrats: Why cops and firefighters stood by as a man drowned in San...
City Journal ^ | Summer 2011 | Steven Greenhut
Posted on August 27, 2011 1:50:33 AM EDT by neverdem

Why cops and firefighters stood by as a man drowned in San Francisco Bay

On Memorial Day, a suicidal man waded into San Francisco Bay outside the city of Alameda and stood there for about an hour, neck-deep in chilly water, as about 75 bystanders watched. Local police and firefighters were called to the scene, but they refused to help. After the man drowned, the assembled “first responders” also refused to wade into the water to retrieve his body; they left that job for a bystander.

The incident sparked widespread outrage in northern California, and the response by the fire department and police only intensified the anger. The firefighters blamed local budget cuts for denying them the training and equipment necessary for cold-water rescues. The police said that they didn’t know if the man was dangerous and therefore couldn’t risk the safety of their officers. After a local TV news crew asked him whether he would save a drowning child in the bay, Alameda fire chief Ricci Zombeck gave an answer that made him the butt of local talk-show mockery: “Well, if I was off duty, I would know what I would do, but I think you’re asking me my on-duty response, and I would have to stay within our policies and procedures, because that’s what’s required by our department to do.”

If you stand a better chance of being rescued by the official rescuers when they are off duty, it naturally leads people to question the purpose of these departments, which consume the lion’s share of city budgets and whose employees—in California, anyway—receive exceedingly handsome salaries. In Orange County, where I worked for a newspaper for 11 years, the average pay and benefits package for a firefighter is $175,000 a year. Virtually every Orange County deputy sheriff earns, in pay and overtime, over $100,000 a year, with a significant percentage earning more than $150,000. In many cities, police and fire budgets eat up more than three-quarters of the city budget, and that doesn’t count the unfunded liabilities for generous pension packages, which can top 90 percent of a worker’s final year’s pay. It’s hard to argue that these departments are so starved for funds that they’re entitled to stop saving lives.

After I wrote a newspaper column deploring the Alameda incident, I received many e-mails from self-identified police officers and firefighters. Though a few were appalled by the new public-safety culture they saw on display, most defended it; some even defended Zombeck’s words. Many made reference to a fire in San Francisco that week that had claimed the life of at least one firefighter. The message was clear: Don’t criticize firefighters, because they put their lives on the line protecting you. There’s no doubt that firefighters and police have tough and sometimes dangerous jobs, but that doesn’t mean that the public has no business criticizing them—especially as they become infected with the bureaucratic mind-set spread by public-sector union activism. The unions defend their members’ every action; to the extent that they admit a problem, they always blame tight budgets.

The unions that represent first responders also have a legislative agenda to reduce oversight and accountability. I recall when a state assembly member closely aligned with public-safety unions contacted me about a union-backed bill that was too egregious even for his taste. Sponsored by a firefighters’ union after a district attorney prosecuted an on-duty firefighter for alleged misbehavior that led to a death, the bill in its original form would have offered immunity to firefighters even for gross negligence on the job. The legislation failed after the media started paying attention and ignited a contentious public debate. Perhaps the outrage at the Alameda incident will likewise cause a far-reaching discussion—one that helps restore the principle that the real constituency for public safety is the public, not bureaucrats and government workers.

Steven Greenhut is the director of the Pacific Research Institute’s Journalism Center, editor-in-chief of CalWatchdog.com, and a columnist for the Orange County Register.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 27, 2011, 12:25:41 PM
When Heroes Become Bureaucrats: Why cops and firefighters stood by as a man drowned in San...
City Journal ^ | Summer 2011 | Steven Greenhut
Posted on August 27, 2011 1:50:33 AM EDT by neverdem

Why cops and firefighters stood by as a man drowned in San Francisco Bay

On Memorial Day, a suicidal man waded into San Francisco Bay outside the city of Alameda and stood there for about an hour, neck-deep in chilly water, as about 75 bystanders watched. Local police and firefighters were called to the scene, but they refused to help. After the man drowned, the assembled “first responders” also refused to wade into the water to retrieve his body; they left that job for a bystander.

The incident sparked widespread outrage in northern California, and the response by the fire department and police only intensified the anger. The firefighters blamed local budget cuts for denying them the training and equipment necessary for cold-water rescues. The police said that they didn’t know if the man was dangerous and therefore couldn’t risk the safety of their officers. After a local TV news crew asked him whether he would save a drowning child in the bay, Alameda fire chief Ricci Zombeck gave an answer that made him the butt of local talk-show mockery: “Well, if I was off duty, I would know what I would do, but I think you’re asking me my on-duty response, and I would have to stay within our policies and procedures, because that’s what’s required by our department to do.”

If you stand a better chance of being rescued by the official rescuers when they are off duty, it naturally leads people to question the purpose of these departments, which consume the lion’s share of city budgets and whose employees—in California, anyway—receive exceedingly handsome salaries. In Orange County, where I worked for a newspaper for 11 years, the average pay and benefits package for a firefighter is $175,000 a year. Virtually every Orange County deputy sheriff earns, in pay and overtime, over $100,000 a year, with a significant percentage earning more than $150,000. In many cities, police and fire budgets eat up more than three-quarters of the city budget, and that doesn’t count the unfunded liabilities for generous pension packages, which can top 90 percent of a worker’s final year’s pay. It’s hard to argue that these departments are so starved for funds that they’re entitled to stop saving lives.

After I wrote a newspaper column deploring the Alameda incident, I received many e-mails from self-identified police officers and firefighters. Though a few were appalled by the new public-safety culture they saw on display, most defended it; some even defended Zombeck’s words. Many made reference to a fire in San Francisco that week that had claimed the life of at least one firefighter. The message was clear: Don’t criticize firefighters, because they put their lives on the line protecting you. There’s no doubt that firefighters and police have tough and sometimes dangerous jobs, but that doesn’t mean that the public has no business criticizing them—especially as they become infected with the bureaucratic mind-set spread by public-sector union activism. The unions defend their members’ every action; to the extent that they admit a problem, they always blame tight budgets.

The unions that represent first responders also have a legislative agenda to reduce oversight and accountability. I recall when a state assembly member closely aligned with public-safety unions contacted me about a union-backed bill that was too egregious even for his taste. Sponsored by a firefighters’ union after a district attorney prosecuted an on-duty firefighter for alleged misbehavior that led to a death, the bill in its original form would have offered immunity to firefighters even for gross negligence on the job. The legislation failed after the media started paying attention and ignited a contentious public debate. Perhaps the outrage at the Alameda incident will likewise cause a far-reaching discussion—one that helps restore the principle that the real constituency for public safety is the public, not bureaucrats and government workers.

Steven Greenhut is the director of the Pacific Research Institute’s Journalism Center, editor-in-chief of CalWatchdog.com, and a columnist for the Orange County Register.

I think you can agree that it is refreshing when the government honors a persons personal rights to do what they want as long as it doesn't hurt anyone else. This falls in line with your mantra that the government intrudes in our lives way too much. In this case, I think some of them were reading your posts and recognized they would be violating that guys rights if they intervened and there would be a post on here titled "First responders violate citizens rights"

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 27, 2011, 05:13:54 PM
http://www.dailypress.com/news/gloucester-county/dp-nws-gloucester-sheriff-abbott-0827-20110826,0,3563854.story

MIDDLESEX ——
Sheriff Guy L. Abbott was indicted Thursday on 25 felony criminal counts that include embezzlement and bribery following a nearly two-year investigation.

Abbott was arrested on the charges Thursday and processed at the Peninsula Regional Jail in James City County, said Brian Gottstein, spokesman for the Virginia Office of the Attorney General. Abbott was released on a personal recognizance bond.

A special grand jury that began meeting earlier this year in the basement of the Gloucester County Courthouse indicted Abbott on 18 counts of misuse or misappropriation of public assets, four counts of embezzlement and three counts of bribery. The crimes are alleged to have occurred from 2000 through 2008, Gottstein said.

Abbott declined to comment under advice of his attorney.

Abbott was elected to the office of Middlesex County Sheriff in 1999 and was sworn in on Jan. 1, 2000. He has continued in his capacity as Middlesex Sheriff throughout the investigation that's spanned nearly two years.

The Attorney General's Office authorized a criminal investigation of Abbott in November 2009 and his office was raided in March 2010. Affidavits filed in courts in York, James City and Chesapeake have sought Abbott's emails from a Gmail account, records of purchases with a credit card he used as sheriff and other documents.

Some search warrants and other documents related to the cased that have been filed in Middlesex Circuit Court remain sealed.

Affidavits filed in other courts by Jennifer S. Brown, special agent accountant for the Virginia State Police, list crimes related to the investigation as embezzlement, embezzlement by officers of public or other funds and other charges.

Abbott's first appearance in Middlesex County Circuit Court will be Sept. 7 at 9:30 a.m. Abbott has filed for re-election this year and is being challenged by three other candidates.

Glad to see an example of the system working when a criminal in uniform is uncovered and indicted...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 27, 2011, 08:49:50 PM
I know right... It only took 11 fucking years.

Wonder how many peoples lives he ruined in that time.

ruined? probably none.. but it's time he faced the music. Embarrassment to law enforcement everywhere.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 29, 2011, 07:38:26 AM
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2011-08-25/19-of-50-slain-police-killed-in-ambushes/50138148/1

WASHINGTON – Nearly 40% of police officers fatally shot this year have been slain in ambush-style attacks or when they were surprised by suspects with firearms, according to a USA TODAY review of officer deaths.


The killings, many stunning for their brutality, have some law enforcement and Justice Department officials scrambling to provide additional protection or training for their forces.

Of the 50 officers killed by gunfire this year — a 32% increase from the same time last year — at least 19 were victims of ambush or surprise attacks, according to a review of the case summaries and interviews with police officials.

The increase in gun-related officer deaths is particularly troubling since violent crime in much of the nation has been in steady decline. "This is a devastating and unacceptable trend," Attorney General Eric Holder told law enforcement officials this month in Washington. "Too many guns have fallen into the hands of those who are not legally permitted to possess them."

Holder has launched a broad review of officer-safety in the wake of rising gunfire fatalities, citing the need for more research to help officers survive violent encounters, including ambush-style attacks.
(excerpt)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 29, 2011, 07:40:28 AM
Police officer11 of 11
Police recorded a big jump in fatalities in 2010, especially when it came to shootings and vehicle accidents.Fatality rate per 100,000 workers: 18
Median wage: $55,620

The number of police officers killed on the job skyrocketed 40% in 2010 to 134 from 96 the year before.

Craig Floyd, CEO of the National Law Enforcement Officer Memorial Fund in Washington, said that the increase in police fatalities has continued into 2011 with year-to-date deaths up 22% through early August.

"They're taking away training dollars, equipment dollars and manpower dollars," said Floyd. "When you cut law enforcement budgets people, including officers, die."

Floyd said that, with fewer officers on the streets, criminals also seem more willing to shoot at them than in the past.

However, one of the main culprits when it comes to police killings are traffic accidents, said Floyd.

Traffic-related accidents were up 37% in 2010 and represented 56% of all fatalities. Only two occurred in high-speed pursuits, he said, with the rest occurring on routine patrol.

"We see a lot of crashes when officers are responding to emergency calls," he said. "Officers are different. They want to help and they put themselves at potential life-threatening peril to help others."


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2011, 12:10:54 PM
Surveillance photo shows officer in sex act: Some viewers may find this photo offensive
KOB.com ^ | 8/29/11 | E Garcia




KOB Eyewitness News 4 has obtained surveillance pictures of a State Police officer having sex with a woman on the hood of a car in broad daylight.

State Police aren't saying anything about the photos, but KOB Eyewitness News 4 is pressing for answers.

Two weeks ago KOB reported a story about an officer caught on camera having sex while in full uniform, an act shown on security camera at the Santa Fe Canyon Ranch.


(Excerpt) Read more at kob.com ...





LMAO - I hope it was worth it for this guy.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2011, 12:12:51 PM
Surveillance photo shows officer in sex act: Some viewers may find this photo offensive
KOB.com ^ | 8/29/11 | E Garcia




KOB Eyewitness News 4 has obtained surveillance pictures of a State Police officer having sex with a woman on the hood of a car in broad daylight.

State Police aren't saying anything about the photos, but KOB Eyewitness News 4 is pressing for answers.

Two weeks ago KOB reported a story about an officer caught on camera having sex while in full uniform, an act shown on security camera at the Santa Fe Canyon Ranch.


(Excerpt) Read more at kob.com ...





LMAO - I hope it was worth it for this guy.   

"Stop resisting!"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2011, 12:34:29 PM
 :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 30, 2011, 12:50:12 PM
:D

Daaaaaang!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 30, 2011, 12:51:49 PM
They always told us in the academy, the badge will get you pu**y but the pu**y will get your badge... not worth the job...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2011, 01:16:07 PM
Woman Faces 15 Years in Prison for Recording Police
Forbes ^ | 24 Aug | Kain



“The felony charge against Tiawanda Moor has finally reached a courtroom.

Moore faces up to 15 years in prison for recording her attempt to report a Chicago cop who she says sexually assaulted her. Moore says she recorded the conversation because she felt Internal Affairs officers were pressuring her not to file a complaint. The Tribune article focuses on whether or not that claim is true. Which really misses the point.

State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez ought to be tossed on her tuckus for bringing this case in the first place. In a city with a long history of police abuse and corruption, where we only recently learned that for two decades people were tortured in police stations while Chicago police supervisors, prosecutors, and politicians looked the other way, it’s an absolute outrage that Alvarez would prosecute a woman for trying to protect herself while trying to file a complaint. And shame on the Illinois legislature for not having the courage to repeal this ugly, blatantly unconstitutional law."

So let me get this straight. A woman is allegedly sexually assaulted by a police officer. Worried that the police might be corrupt – can’t imagine why – said woman records her conversation with internal affairs. The state attorney then proceeds with criminal charges because…okay, I can’t continue. My brain hurts. What is wrong with these people?

I hear this a lot from people who say we need to trade off civil liberties for security: If you’ve done nothing wrong you have nothing to fear (from cameras, domestic spying, DNA gathering from innocent people, the Patriot Act, etc.)...


(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2011, 02:08:19 PM
Feds go after Idaho man who shot grizzly bear to protect his family (Jack boot thug alert)
Michelle Malkin ^ | 8/31/2011 | Michelle Malkin



Maybe it’s time to start a Jackboot Watch feature.

We’ve got DOJ lawyers going after Gibson guitars. There’s the ongoing Fast and Furious debacle. Add the eco-nitwit rogues at the Interior Department. Then there’s the War on Lemonade Stands.

And now, we’ve got the U.S. Attorney in Idaho filing federal charges against Jeremy Hill, a father who shot a grizzly bear on his property to protect his wife and kids — even though state officials who investigated the case thoroughly took no action against the man. He now faces up to a year in prison and a $50,000 fine. He pleaded not guilty last week and faces trial in October:
**snip**
Having lived in bear country for three years now, I can say with certitude that I’d do the exact same thing if faced with the situation Hill found himself in. Absolute certitude.


Idaho GOP Gov. Butch Otter has appealed to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to intervene on Hill’s behalf. Not likely that Obama’s Loathsome Cowboy Salazar will do anything to help, but Otter’s letter will at least bring needed attention to this injustice.


(Excerpt) Read more at michellemalkin.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 10, 2011, 05:21:13 AM
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Owners Angry After Cops Shoot Dog in Backyard
NBC ^
Posted on September 10, 2011 2:13:55 AM EDT by Borough Park

-snip-

But Samuelson's neighbor, Fernando Perez, said he told the cops several times that Ozzy was roaming in the back.

When the security alarm system at the home went off, Samuelson called Perez to check it out while she made the 20-minute drive to her house, he said. Perez said he knew not to go into the backyard because of the dog and when officers arrived, he warned them.

"'Be careful. It’s a big dog,' I told them. They told me to go back to my house," said Perez, who repeated the warning several more times. "Before I get to my driveway, I hear the two shots. They walked into the backyard with the guns in their hand. Then they ran from the backyard like they were scared or something."

Samuelson said she got Ozzy to protect the house and deter thieves. Police have not said what triggered the alarm.

"He was our protector," Samuelson said. "He’s a huge part of our family."

(Excerpt) Read more at nbcmiami.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 10, 2011, 05:22:58 AM
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2776299/posts


Pic at site.     Hopefully these pigs will do this to the wrong homeowner some time in the future.
Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
Post by: pillowtalk on September 10, 2011, 05:40:35 AM
And had Vernon Howell not been a child molester. . . .

"the guy's real name was Vernon, FFS!! let him be a messianic child molester for a while, what's it to ya??"

Not x1 child from the compound, reported being sexually molested & there was NO evidence of a Meth lab either. Another Goy eats up the MSM party line ::)

"Why do we not see 'Bradley Tanks' shooting fire into blockaded Catholic church's?? If child molestation is your concern that is"

Another enemy of the state painted as a nonce, quell surprise!! If he had of survived he would have died in a car accident. With the other party mysteriously vanishing into thin air.
Never seen that before......

Timothy James McVeigh (April 23, 1968 – June 11, 2001) RIP

PT
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 13, 2011, 08:28:49 AM
TSA officers arrested on drug charges in Conn.
Last Updated: 10:35 AM, September 13, 2011




STAMFORD, Conn. — Federal prosecutors in Connecticut say a state trooper, a police officer and three Transportation Security Administration officers based at airports have been arrested on charges of participating in a conspiracy to distribute tens of thousands of highly addictive painkiller pills.

Authorities say the TSA officers, based at airports in Florida and New York, a Westchester County, N.Y., police officer and a Florida state trooper received cash payments to help transport oxycodone pills from Florida to New York and Connecticut and/or transport cash proceeds from the sale of the drugs back to Florida.

Authorities plan to announce details of the arrests at a news conference in Stamford on Tuesday afternoon.



Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/tsa_officers_arrested_on_drug_charges_hyGeqc8GW8r27TFmGcMX6K#ixzz1XqYLCOe1

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on September 14, 2011, 11:11:58 PM
LOL, 3333, got a graphic you'll love...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 21, 2011, 01:45:22 PM
APNewsBreak: CA Police Officer Charged With Murder (Kelly Thomas beating)
ABC News/AP ^ | September 21, 2011 | GILLIAN FLACCUS




A defense lawyer says a police officer has been charged with murder in the death of a mentally ill homeless man in Southern California.

Attorney John Barnett says his client, Fullerton police Officer Manuel Ramos, surrendered to authorities Wednesday and was being charged with second-degree murder.

The Orange County district attorney's office was set to announce the charge in the death of 37-year-old Kelly Thomas after a violent confrontation on July 5 with Fullerton officers.

Six officers were placed on paid administrative leave after the incident that occurred while police were investigating reported vehicle break-ins at a transit hub.

Thomas suffered severe head and neck injuries and was taken off life support five days later.


(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...



________________________ ____________


Good - disgusting what happened to this guy.   I only hope the father gets some peace of mind knowing his son was calling out for him. 


and for this scumbag killer cop? 
 I hope he rots in a cell and gets raped daily and bleeds out of his ass to death.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 21, 2011, 02:24:43 PM
Solyndra execs to plead Fifth in hearing
The Daily Caller ^ | 9/20/11 | C.J. Ciaramella




The chief executive and chief financial officer of Solyndra will invoke their Fifth Amendment rights and decline to answer any questions at a congressional hearing on Friday.

According to letters obtained by Reuters, Solyndra attorneys have advised CEO Brian Harrison and CFO W. G. Stover to not testify at a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. (RELATED: Rahm Emanuel on Solyndra: I don’t remember)

“I have advised Mr. Harrison that he should decline to answer questions put to him by this subcommittee based on his rights under the Fifth Amendment,” Harrison’s attorney, Walter F. Brown Jr., wrote to the the committee. “This is not a decision arrived at lightly, but it is a decision dictated by current circumstances.”

The House Energy and Commerce Committee opened an investigation into Solyndra after the solar panel manufacturing company — which received a $535 million loan from the Department of Energy — announced it would be declaring bankruptcy earlier this month.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 21, 2011, 04:55:16 PM
Solyndra execs to plead Fifth in hearing
The Daily Caller ^ | 9/20/11 | C.J. Ciaramella




The chief executive and chief financial officer of Solyndra will invoke their Fifth Amendment rights and decline to answer any questions at a congressional hearing on Friday.

According to letters obtained by Reuters, Solyndra attorneys have advised CEO Brian Harrison and CFO W. G. Stover to not testify at a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. (RELATED: Rahm Emanuel on Solyndra: I don’t remember)

“I have advised Mr. Harrison that he should decline to answer questions put to him by this subcommittee based on his rights under the Fifth Amendment,” Harrison’s attorney, Walter F. Brown Jr., wrote to the the committee. “This is not a decision arrived at lightly, but it is a decision dictated by current circumstances.”

The House Energy and Commerce Committee opened an investigation into Solyndra after the solar panel manufacturing company — which received a $535 million loan from the Department of Energy — announced it would be declaring bankruptcy earlier this month.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




I was reading this earlier.  Below is a link to the DA's report, spelling out exactly what happened from their investigation and reasons for the charges.

It's really fucked up to read what was done to this guy.

2 officers charged, the others skated IMO.

http://documents.latimes.com/charges-kelly-thomas-police/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 23, 2011, 07:46:15 PM
New Jersey Cop Attacked Woman Who Filmed Him at DWI Checkpoint
Reason.com ^ | September 16, 2011 | Mike Riggs
Posted on September 23, 2011 10:38:48 PM EDT by Immerito

Leslie Rosario and Jessamine Roman have filed suit against the Ridgefield Park Police Department, claiming that an officer assaulted Rosario when she refused to hand over her cell phone at a DWI checkpoint. The Record reports that Rosario filmed the stop as the car's driver, Juan Calle, was being administered a sobriety test:

(Excerpt) Read more at reason.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on September 23, 2011, 08:05:59 PM


I was reading this earlier.  Below is a link to the DA's report, spelling out exactly what happened from their investigation and reasons for the charges.

It's really fucked up to read what was done to this guy.

2 officers charged, the others skated IMO.

http://documents.latimes.com/charges-kelly-thomas-police/
I don't get the connection?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 25, 2011, 04:20:30 PM
I don't get the connection?


You mean why I think the other officers should be charged?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 25, 2011, 06:51:04 PM
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The Federal Reserve Plans To Identify “Key Bloggers”& Monitor Billions Of Conversations About....
The Economic Collapse ^ | ???
Posted on September 25, 2011 9:02:53 PM EDT by blueyon

**The Federal Reserve Plans To Identify “Key Bloggers” And Monitor Billions Of Conversations About The Fed On Facebook, Twitter, Forums And Blogs**

The Federal Reserve wants to know what you are saying about it. In fact, the Federal Reserve has announced plans to identify "key bloggers" and to monitor "billions of conversations" about the Fed on Facebook, Twitter, forums and blogs. This is yet another sign that the alternative media is having a dramatic impact. As first reported on Zero Hedge, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has issued a "Request for Proposal" to suppliers who may be interested in participating in the development of a "Sentiment Analysis And Social Media Monitoring Solution". In other words, the Federal Reserve wants to develop a highly sophisticated system that will gather everything that you and I say about the Federal Reserve on the Internet and that will analyze what our feelings about the Fed are. Obviously, any "positive" feelings about the Fed would not be a problem. What they really want to do is to gather information on everyone that views the Federal Reserve negatively. It is unclear how they plan to use this information once they have it, but considering how many alternative media sources have been shut down lately, this is obviously a very troubling sign.

You can read this "Request for Proposal" right here. Posted below are some of the key quotes from the document (in bold) with some of my own commentary in between the quotes....

(Excerpt) Read more at theeconomiccollapseblog. com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 30, 2011, 12:02:04 PM
South Florida ICE Chief Indicted on Child Pornography Charges
Right Side News ^ | 9/29/2011 | Erick Hamme







Mugshot of ICE director for Miami, Fla., Anthony Mangione, charged with the transportation, receipt, and possession of child pornography.

(CNSNews.com) - The chief of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in south Florida has been indicted on charges of transportation, receipt, and possession of child pornography.

Following a nearly six-month investigation, federal investigators searched 50-year-old Anthony Mangione’s home in April and found “one or more” images of “a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.”

Mangione has served 27 years in law enforcement and has headed up ICE’s regional office since July 2007.

He entered a not guilty plea on Wednesday, and at the request of the both the defense and prosecution, the judge ordered that he be sent to Miami for a psychological evaluation.

The indictment states that Mangione knowingly transported “by any means, including by computer, one or more visual depictions, where the production of such visual depictions involved the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct and the visual depictions are of such conduct.”

The transportation and receipt charges carry minimum sentences of 5 years. The possession charge carries a maximum of 10 years and if convicted on all charges, a maximum of 50 years in prison.

According to the press release announcing the indictment, Mangione also faces a “term of supervised release of five years to life following his prison sentence, and will be required to register as a sex offender in any jurisdiction in which he lives, works, or attends school.”

In a 2008 press release after ICE put a man behind bars for 10 years for using the Internet to lure in a minor for sexual activities, Mangione was quoted as saying, “This case reveals the disturbing truth that child predators will go to great lengths to sexually exploit minors ... ICE is committed to identifying and arresting these individuals who seek to victimize children and help ensure that justice is served.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 09, 2011, 07:54:35 PM
US Department of Homeland Security developing system to predict criminal intent
engadget.com ^ | Oct. 8, 2011 | Donald Melanson
Posted on October 9, 2011 10:40:09 PM EDT by Free ThinkerNY

We're not exactly lacking in opportunities for Minority Report references these days, but sometimes they're just unavoidable.

According to a new report from CNET based on documents obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, the US Department of Homeland security is now working on a system dubbed FAST (or Future Attribute Screening Technology) that's designed to identify individuals who are most likely to commit a crime.

That's not done with something as simple as facial recognition and background checks, however, but rather algorithms and an array of sensors and cameras that can detect both physiological and behavioral cues that are said to be "indicative of mal-intent."

What's more, while the DHS says that it has no plans to actually deploy the system in public just yet, it has apparently already conducted a limited trial using DHS employees -- though no word on the results of how well it actually works, of course.

(Excerpt) Read more at engadget.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 13, 2011, 08:14:48 AM
Edited on Thu Oct-13-11 10:56 AM by meow2u3
Source: New York Daily News



A former NYPD narcotics detective snared in a corruption scandal testified it was common practice to fabricate drug charges against innocent people to meet arrest quotas.

The bombshell testimony from Stephen Anderson is the first public account of the twisted culture behind the false arrests in the Brooklyn South and Queens narc squads, which led to the arrests of eight cops and a massive shakeup.

(snip)

The city paid $300,000 to settle a false arrest suit by Jose Colon and his brother Maximo, who were falsely arrested by Anderson and Tavarez. A surveillance tape inside the bar showed they had been framed.

A federal judge presiding over the suit said the NYPD's plagued by "widespread falsification" by arresting officers.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2011/10/13/201...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 15, 2011, 08:18:19 AM
FBI begins recording call-ins (talk radio)
wnd ^ | October 14, 2011 | Kathy Shaidle




Next time you call a talk radio station, beware: The FBI may be listening.

According to WMAL.com, "The FBI has awarded a $524,927 contract to a Virginia company to record as much radio news and talk programming as it can find on the Internet. …

The FBI says it is not playing Big Brother by policing the airwaves, but rather seeking access to what airs as potential evidence." The agency's reasons for recording all these radio programs don't get any clearer as the news report goes on. No doubt that is intentional.


(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 15, 2011, 01:58:09 PM
Justice Department Silent on Pornography Found on Assistant U.S. Attorney’s Computer
Grassley senate.gov ^ | october 14, 2011 | Chuck Grassley
Posted on October 15, 2011 1:52:15 PM EDT by opentalk

WASHINGTON – Senator Chuck Grassley today said that 100 days after he sent a letter to the Justice Department questioning why the department declined to prosecute an assistant United States attorney after the Inspector General found that the attorney had spent hours online viewing adult content during work hours, he still has not received a response.

According to the Inspector General, the Assistant U.S. Attorney acknowledged he had spent a significant amount of time each day viewing pornography, including one case of child pornography. The report indicates that the U.S. Attorney’s office declined to prosecute the case.

Grassley said his staff has contacted the department several times since the letter was sent, but has yet to receive an official response from the Justice Department.

In a July 7, 2011 letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, Grassley questioned the department’s decision to not prosecute and delay disciplinary action against the attorney. He also asked the types of cases the attorney worked on and the steps the department has taken to update its technology to keep pornography off its computers. Grassley said he’s looking to be sure these types of activities are stopped in the future.

Last year, Grassley learned that 33 employees at the Securities and Exchange Commission who were found to have viewed pornography during work hours were not terminated and were given uneven and light disciplinary action.

(Excerpt) Read more at grassley.senate.gov ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 18, 2011, 08:42:02 PM
Skip to comments.

Wrong Door Raid and Flash-Bang Grenade Heart Attack Provoke Lawsuits
Reason ^ | October 13, 2011 | Lucy Steigerwald
Posted on October 18, 2011 11:44:26 PM EDT by Immerito

A few victims of the drug war's "standard procedure" are fighting back in court. First, a Colorado Springs woman who suffered a heart attack during a raid has brought a lawsuit:

Rose Ann Santistevan, 71, is suing for medical expenses and noneconomic losses such as pain and suffering.

An emphysema sufferer, Santistevan was alone in bed receiving oxygen on Oct. 6, 2009, when a multijurisdictional SWAT task force with a search warrant surrounded her home in the 200 block of South Prospect Street. They threw in a flash-bang grenade before rushing in with guns drawn, authorities have confirmed.

Stricken by a heart attack, Santistevan was admitted in critical condition at Memorial Hospital Central, where she remained for several days. A search of her home yielded no arrests and turned up no drugs, the family said.

(Excerpt) Read more at reason.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 21, 2011, 07:55:51 AM
Jawbreaker justice
bostonherald.com ^ | 10/21/2011 | Michael Graham




If the Occupy Boston movement has you convinced that America’s 20-somethings are spoiled brats waiting for someone else to solve all their problems, meet Anthony McKay of Swampscott.

McKay was at home celebrating his 29th birthday with his family when he heard someone outside breaking into his truck. While his wife called police, McKay confronted the would-be robber, who happened to be a druggie known in the neighborhood for carrying a knife.

McKay caught the robber, foiled the crime and — as an added bonus — broke the druggie’s jaw during their scuffle. It’s what I like to call “good news all around.”

And what is McKay’s reward for not being the guy who closes his door? For stepping up and doing the right thing?

He’s facing jail time, charged with assault and battery.

It seems the Swampland police plan to make an example of this solid citizen.

Police Sgt. Tim Cassidy told The Daily Item that citizens should leave the protection of your property and family to the police . . . period. “We don’t urge anybody to (fight back),” he said. “We want them to call us.”

The message from the cops is clear: If someone wants to rob you or your wife or kids, let ’em!


(Excerpt) Read more at bostonherald.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Disgusting. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: pillowtalk on October 22, 2011, 04:52:57 AM
Into the fire - G20 Torronto.



PT
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 23, 2011, 06:25:25 AM
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At least 93 Milwaukee police officers have been disciplined for violating law
Milwaukee J-S ^ | 23 oct 2011 | Gina Barton
Posted on October 23, 2011 8:24:25 AM EDT by rellimpank

At least 93 Milwaukee police officers - ranking from street cop to captain - have been disciplined for violating the laws and ordinances they were sworn to uphold, a Journal Sentinel investigation found.

Their offenses range from sexual assault and domestic violence to drunken driving and shoplifting, according to internal affairs records. All still work for the Police Department, where they have the authority to make arrests, testify in court and patrol neighborhoods.

Officers who run afoul of the law often aren't fired or prosecuted, the newspaper found. Consider:

At least six officers disciplined by the department for illegal behavior suffered no legal consequences whatsoever. One was Reginald Hampton, accused of sexually assaulting two women he met on duty. Another was Mark Kapusta, suspended after a woman said he pointed a gun at her head during a drunken road-rage incident. Neither officer was charged or ticketed.

Twenty-three officers got breaks from prosecutors that allowed them to avoid being convicted of serious charges - or any charges at all - as long as they didn't commit more crimes and followed prosecutors' instructions. One was Patrick Fuhrman, originally charged with a felony for a beating that sent his wife to the hospital and, according to a witness, left blood in every room of their house. A conviction on that charge could have gotten him fired from the department, banned from carrying a gun for life and imprisoned for 3½ years. Instead, he ended up with two tickets for disorderly conduct.

TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Click to Add Topic
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 24, 2011, 09:06:41 PM
http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2011/10/24/stockton-homeowner-wants-police-to-fix-trashed-house



Disgraceful.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 25, 2011, 06:16:39 AM
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NYPD Officers Charged With Gun Running
Friends of Ours ^ | 10/25/11 | Friends of Ours
Posted on October 25, 2011 9:13:20 AM EDT by AtlasStalled

Eight current and former NYPD officers have been arrested "on federal charges including gun trafficking and conspiracy to smuggle cigarettes" as reported by William K. Rashbaum for The New York Times: "the charges allege that the officers — five are still on the force and three are retired — were involved in smuggling more than a dozen illegal handguns as well as M-16 rifles and shotguns, the people briefed on the case said."

It's been a rough month for the NYPD.

Earlier this month a former detective testified at the corruption trial of a fellow officer that "it was common practice to fabricate drug charges against innocent people to meet arrest quotas" in the Brooklyn South and Queens narcotic squads as reported by John Marzulli for the Daily News, and a Bronx grand jury indicted seventeen cops for their alleged roles in a wide-spread ticket-fixing ring within as reported by Erin Einhorn and Rocco Parascandola for the Daily News.

(Excerpt) Read more at bitterqueen.typepad.com ...






Nice.   Yeah, let's toss another 35 billion at the "first responders".   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 25, 2011, 12:14:27 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/ap-sources-5-nypd-officers-arrested-gun-sting-121040308.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 25, 2011, 12:16:50 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/ap-sources-5-nypd-officers-arrested-gun-sting-121040308.html



This story is on all our news stations today.  Also included cigarettes and slot machines.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 25, 2011, 09:00:41 PM
This story is on all our news stations today.  Also included cigarettes and slot machines.   

Yep. Glad they got caught. Apparently their internal affairs got wind of it and followed up. Good for them. I hate bad cops
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 28, 2011, 07:51:22 PM
Hundreds of union members back 16 NYPD cops in court over 'huge traffic ticket scam'
dailymail ^ | 10.28.11
Posted on October 28, 2011 10:22:49 PM EDT by InvisibleChurch

Hundreds of police union members turned up outside court today to support 16 New York policemen charged with abusing their authority by helping family and friends avoid paying traffic tickets.

The 13 officers, two sergeants, one lieutenant and five others were arraigned in a Bronx court on Friday after handing themselves in last night following a mammoth city investigation.

But union members made their voice heard by clogging the street near the courthouse, filling the hallways near the arraignment room and applauding in court after the officers left.

Patrick Lynch, president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said ticket fixing was sanctioned at the highest levels of the department, and he vowed that when the dust settled, they would prove it.

'Taking care of your family, taking care of your friends is not a crime,' he said. 'To take a courtesy and turn it into a crime is wrong.' The case began with a 2009 internal probe into Bronx officer Jose Ramos, who was suspected of associating with a drug dealer, officials said.

While listening to the NYPD officer's phone, investigators allegedly heard calls from people seeing if he could fix tickets for them. Ramos has been working for the department for nearly 18 years. He and his wife were arrested at their home on Thursday night. All other 15 policemen turned themselves in, reported the New York Post.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 30, 2011, 05:16:18 AM
Officers Jeer at Arraignment of 16 Colleagues in Ticket-Fixing Investigation
New York Times ^ | October 28, 2011 | N. R. KLEINFIELD and JOHN ELIGON
Posted on October 29, 2011 8:41:02 PM EDT by Immerito

A three-year investigation into the police’s habit of fixing traffic and parking tickets in the Bronx ended in the unsealing of indictments on Friday and a stunning display of vitriol by hundreds of off-duty officers, who converged on the courthouse to applaud their accused colleagues and denounce their prosecution.

As 16 police officers were arraigned at State Supreme Court in the Bronx, incensed colleagues organized by their union cursed and taunted prosecutors and investigators, chanting “Down with the D.A.” and “Ray Kelly, hypocrite.”

As the defendants emerged from their morning court appearance, a swarm of officers formed a cordon in the hallway and clapped as they picked their way to the elevators. Members of the news media were prevented by court officers from walking down the hallway where more than 100 off-duty police officers had gathered outside the courtroom.

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 30, 2011, 07:30:24 AM
Hundreds of union members back 16 NYPD cops in court over 'huge traffic ticket scam'
dailymail ^ | 10.28.11
Posted on October 28, 2011 10:22:49 PM EDT by InvisibleChurch

Hundreds of police union members turned up outside court today to support 16 New York policemen charged with abusing their authority by helping family and friends avoid paying traffic tickets.

The 13 officers, two sergeants, one lieutenant and five others were arraigned in a Bronx court on Friday after handing themselves in last night following a mammoth city investigation.

But union members made their voice heard by clogging the street near the courthouse, filling the hallways near the arraignment room and applauding in court after the officers left.

Patrick Lynch, president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said ticket fixing was sanctioned at the highest levels of the department, and he vowed that when the dust settled, they would prove it.

'Taking care of your family, taking care of your friends is not a crime,' he said. 'To take a courtesy and turn it into a crime is wrong.' The case began with a 2009 internal probe into Bronx officer Jose Ramos, who was suspected of associating with a drug dealer, officials said.

While listening to the NYPD officer's phone, investigators allegedly heard calls from people seeing if he could fix tickets for them. Ramos has been working for the department for nearly 18 years. He and his wife were arrested at their home on Thursday night. All other 15 policemen turned themselves in, reported the New York Post.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...





WTF??

How can this be?  Agnostic told me that there's no such thing as the blue wall anymore.

hahahahahaha
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 30, 2011, 09:37:37 PM



WTF??

How can this be?  Agnostic told me that there's no such thing as the blue wall anymore.

hahahahahaha

I think I have said many a time Skip, I can't speak for other departments. Plus, how again was this practice of fixing tickets uncovered? Oh yeah, by other cops..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 31, 2011, 07:17:23 PM
I think I have said many a time Skip, I can't speak for other departments. Plus, how again was this practice of fixing tickets uncovered? Oh yeah, by other cops..



Again??

Uh, I already clearly demonstrated you were a liar and the cops did not do shit.  Better go back and read tool.

You decided to claim "bad memory".  ::)

I have no idea who went after these cops and doubt you do either.  But, maybe when I have some free time I'll look into it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 31, 2011, 07:21:19 PM
In my self defense class tonight I got the whole skinny from a cop in the Bronx in one of the precincts.  Told me five of the cops are in his precinct and detail.   Hve known this guy for about 6 years. 

here is what happened - cop who was on the take from a drug dealer got caught on a wiretap fixing a ticket.   From there the whole thing unraveled.   


cops did not uncover this, it was a dirty cop taking from the dealers that led to this. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 31, 2011, 07:39:12 PM
In my self defense class tonight I got the whole skinny from a cop in the Bronx in one of the precincts.  Told me five of the cops are in his precinct and detail.   Hve known this guy for about 6 years. 

here is what happened - cop who was on the take from a drug dealer got caught on a wiretap fixing a ticket.   From there the whole thing unraveled.   


cops did not uncover this, it was a dirty cop taking from the dealers that led to this. 



So one bad cop decided to roll.  I'm guessing to get his sentence reduced or plea bargain?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 31, 2011, 07:43:25 PM


So one bad cop decided to roll.  I'm guessing to get his sentence reduced or plea bargain?



No one rolled at all.  It all got started on wiretap and unfolded from there. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 31, 2011, 07:45:53 PM
No one rolled at all.  It all got started on wiretap and unfolded from there. 


Ah, I see.  Interesting.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 31, 2011, 08:34:57 PM

Ah, I see.  Interesting.


I have many contacts skip!   

I love NYC on the one hand cause it's 24 7 and I am A man on the go 24 7, but I am tired bro. 


I haves lived this for 36 years.   I know the cops and the criminals. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 31, 2011, 09:42:08 PM


Again??

Uh, I already clearly demonstrated you were a liar and the cops did not do shit.  Better go back and read tool.

You decided to claim "bad memory".  ::)

I have no idea who went after these cops and doubt you do either.  But, maybe when I have some free time I'll look into it.

"While listening to the NYPD officer's phone, investigators allegedly heard calls from people seeing if he could fix tickets for them. Ramos has been working for the department for nearly 18 years. He and his wife were arrested at their home on Thursday night. All other 15 policemen turned themselves in, reported the New York Post.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 31, 2011, 09:47:22 PM
"The case evolved from a 2009 internal affairs probe of a Bronx officer suspected of associating with a drug dealer, officials said. While listening to the officer's phone, investigators heard calls from people seeing if he could fix tickets for them, they say."


on another thread there is video of an officer arresting another officer for speeding and reckless driving.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 01, 2011, 02:37:49 PM
"While listening to the NYPD officer's phone, investigators allegedly heard calls from people seeing if he could fix tickets for them. Ramos has been working for the department for nearly 18 years. He and his wife were arrested at their home on Thursday night. All other 15 policemen turned themselves in, reported the New York Post.


And you know these investigators are cops?  Or members of the DA's office?  Or feds?  Or are you trying to play the old DA = top cop, etc.?

Whatever.  Yes, eventually other cops at some level have to arrest the bad ones.  If that's your pathetic attempt at denying the blue wall exists, then bahahahahahaha....how sad.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 06, 2011, 07:13:34 PM
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Cops suspected of illegal gun sales in Calfornia probe
sacbee.com ^ | 6 Nov 2011 | Sam Stanton
Posted on November 6, 2011 9:41:59 PM EST by smokingfrog

SACRAMENTO — The federal probe into suspected illegal gun sales by local law enforcement officers involves at least four major police agencies in the Sacramento region, officials confirmed Friday.

Two deputies from the Sacramento County Sheriff's Department, one Sacramento police officer and one Roseville police officer are the focus of the probe that spilled into the open Thursday, the Bee has learned.

In addition, a Sacramento firearms dealer allegedly involved with some of the officers is under investigation, sources said.

Agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives served a number of search warrants Thursday at officers' homes and a Sacramento gun shop.

At least three officers were placed on administrative leave Thursday: the Roseville officer and the two Sacramento County sheriff's deputies.

Roseville Police Sgt. Cal Walstad confirmed one officer from his agency was placed on leave but said he could not name the officer or provide further details. Two deputies who worked out of the Sacramento County sheriff's Rio Cosumnes Correctional Center also were placed on leave Thursday, sources told The Bee.

Sacramento police confirmed that one of their officers is under investigation in the case but would not release details. In addition, a California Highway Patrol officer based in the Sacramento region is considered a witness in the case, CHP spokeswoman Fran Clader said.

Sheriff Scott Jones said he understands the public has a lot of unanswered questions about the investigation, including the number and type of weapons involved, the relationship among the targets and the people to whom the guns were being sold illegally.

"Frankly, they're all legitimate questions," he said.

But Jones said he cannot speak in detail about the case because it is ongoing and because the ATF is the lead agency.

(Excerpt) Read more at sacbee.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 07, 2011, 12:29:30 PM

And you know these investigators are cops?  Or members of the DA's office?  Or feds?  Or are you trying to play the old DA = top cop, etc.?

Whatever.  Yes, eventually other cops at some level have to arrest the bad ones.  If that's your pathetic attempt at denying the blue wall exists, then bahahahahahaha....how sad.

You need some help skip.. you went from semi reasonable to unpleasant overnight..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 07, 2011, 04:38:30 PM
The fact you are blind to the fact is laughable.

True story... I know this girl who was beat up by her bf... His cousin is a sheriff in a local county, that sheriff made a call to the Judge in the county of the infraction and the girl's domestic case was immediately dismissed.

She didn't even get to say her mind in court, the judge simply heard 2 questions and the commonwealth attorney requested a dismissal and they granted it!

Sounds like you got a screwed up system up there... what are you doing about it?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 08, 2011, 04:23:47 PM
You need some help skip.. you went from semi reasonable to unpleasant overnight..



Nope, same guy.  I just see no point in lying.  You, on the other hand, seem to be very dishonest.  And if you're dishonest on a message board, I can only imagine what you're like at work.

I've said before, I think most cops are good.  Hell, my brother's a cop not far from you (but he's honest too).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 08, 2011, 04:25:52 PM
I rail against it constantly.

However, I'm in the minority. Be honest.

Most people don't care because the system doesn't get everyone. It gets a small percentage and those people get shafted.

The powers that be are stalin-esque in that they follow a policy of benevolent dictatorship.

Take advantage of the few but allow the overall majority to feel as if it's working well enough for them.

When you screw over 1 in 50 or 1 in 100 the other 99 are happy and there is no upheaval. If you fucked over 1 out of 10 you would have a lot more malcontents.



Yes, this goes right back to my initial argument that people in public service fail to police themselves.  And that makes EVERYBODY else look bad.  We have to do a much better job.  Constant uphill battle with the unions sometimes, but sometimes we've got people who are just assholes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 08, 2011, 05:18:21 PM


Nope, same guy.  I just see no point in lying.  You, on the other hand, seem to be very dishonest.  And if you're dishonest on a message board, I can only imagine what you're like at work.

I've said before, I think most cops are good.  Hell, my brother's a cop not far from you (but he's honest too).

Yeah skip, you are honest, your brother is honest, but I'm not... awesome conclusion based on... well, nothing.. but hell, that hasn't stopped you from concluding many things on these boards has it
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on November 08, 2011, 05:52:36 PM
Yeah skip, you are honest, your brother is honest, but I'm not... awesome conclusion based on... well, nothing.. but hell, that hasn't stopped you from concluding many things on these boards has it
Skip is probably one of the most reasonable people here IMO.  He's more willing to listen to opinions he may not like and answer in an unbias way or an understanding way even though he doesn't agree.  We would do good to have more people like Skip posting here.

His only fault that I can see, he's a Steelers fan :-\  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 08, 2011, 06:59:50 PM
Skip is probably one of the most reasonable people here IMO.  He's more willing to listen to opinions he may not like and answer in an unbias way or an understanding way even though he doesn't agree.  We would do good to have more people like Skip posting here.

His only fault that I can see, he's a Steelers fan :-\ 



Ouch.  It's been a rough Mon and Tues too.  I was shit talking at work about how it's going to be hard for Baltimore to beat us twice in the same season, yada, yada...

Now I'm getting smacked around every 10 minutes or so.

Sucks...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on November 08, 2011, 07:12:20 PM


Ouch.  It's been a rough Mon and Tues too.  I was shit talking at work about how it's going to be hard for Baltimore to beat us twice in the same season, yada, yada...

Now I'm getting smacked around every 10 minutes or so.

Sucks...
You'll live ;D  I'm a Broncos fan and look at what I've had to cheer for year after year... not much...  If all you have to do is get a little shit.... lol... you can take it... ;D

At least Ben wears number 7 in honor of Elway ;D  That's about the only positive thing I see in that team lol...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 09, 2011, 02:06:17 PM
Pregnant mom: Sandwich arrest was horrifying
pantagraph.com ^ | 5 Nov 2011 | AP story

Posted on Wednesday, November 09, 2011 1:09:41 PM by smokingfrog

HONOLULU -- Nicole Leszczynski couldn't imagine that two chicken salad sandwiches would land her and her husband in jail and her 2-year-old daughter in state custody. But it happened five days ago, when the 30-weeks-pregnant woman forgot to pay for her snack while grocery shopping.

"It was the most ridiculous chain of events that happened," she said while sobbing Monday. "It's still hard to believe what happened."

Leszczynski, 28, and her husband Marcin, 33, were handcuffed, searched then released on $50 bail each. Their ordeal at the police station lasted a few hours, but their daughter Zofia spent the night away from her parents in a case that has sparked nationwide outrage and forced the Safeway supermarket chain to review the incident.

The family had moved to an apartment near downtown Honolulu from California two weeks ago. Still settling in, they ventured out Wednesday to stock up on groceries, took the bus, got lost, and ended up at a Safeway supermarket.

Famished, the former Air Force staff sergeant picked up the two sandwiches that together cost $5. She openly munched on one while they shopped, saving the wrapper to be scanned at the register later.

But they forgot to pay for the sandwiches as they checked out with about $50 worth of groceries.


(Excerpt) Read more at pantagraph.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 09, 2011, 03:53:21 PM
You'll live ;D  I'm a Broncos fan and look at what I've had to cheer for year after year... not much...  If all you have to do is get a little shit.... lol... you can take it... ;D

At least Ben wears number 7 in honor of Elway ;D  That's about the only positive thing I see in that team lol...



yeah, I think you all are like 3-5 or something?  I believe you play a little better on road.  Is KC taking lead in your division?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 12, 2011, 12:25:34 PM
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Occupy Blue Wall Street?
The American Interest ^ | November 6, 2011 | Walter Russell Mead
Posted on November 12, 2011 2:46:15 PM EST by neverdem

New Yorkers are getting an uncomfortable look at the ugly realities behind what we like to think of as the country’s bluest, most European and most enlightened city. A series of trials now underway in the Bronx reveal the harsh truth of embedded corruption and contempt for the public at the heart (if that is the right word) of the New York City police union.

A palpably shocked New York Times covered the story last week as union-organized cops hurled their venom and hate at the law they are sworn to uphold:

As 16 police officers were arraigned at State Supreme Court in the Bronx, incensed colleagues organized by their union cursed and taunted prosecutors and investigators, chanting “Down with the D.A.” and “Ray Kelly, hypocrite.”

Many of the approximately 1,600 allegations against the Bronx 16 are low level ticket-fixing charges. In the Bronx (as in many other American jurisdictions) it has been a police perk for many years that officers can quietly fix tickets for family, friends and, one supposes, the occasional generous stranger. Those perks seem to reflect an informal, parallel power structure in the police force which gives long serving cops and union connected officers what those involved no doubt see as just and fair recompense for services rendered and dues paid...

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.the-american-interest.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 13, 2011, 11:44:48 AM
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Occupy Blue Wall Street?
The American Interest ^ | November 6, 2011 | Walter Russell Mead
Posted on November 12, 2011 2:46:15 PM EST by neverdem

New Yorkers are getting an uncomfortable look at the ugly realities behind what we like to think of as the country’s bluest, most European and most enlightened city. A series of trials now underway in the Bronx reveal the harsh truth of embedded corruption and contempt for the public at the heart (if that is the right word) of the New York City police union.

A palpably shocked New York Times covered the story last week as union-organized cops hurled their venom and hate at the law they are sworn to uphold:

As 16 police officers were arraigned at State Supreme Court in the Bronx, incensed colleagues organized by their union cursed and taunted prosecutors and investigators, chanting “Down with the D.A.” and “Ray Kelly, hypocrite.”

Many of the approximately 1,600 allegations against the Bronx 16 are low level ticket-fixing charges. In the Bronx (as in many other American jurisdictions) it has been a police perk for many years that officers can quietly fix tickets for family, friends and, one supposes, the occasional generous stranger. Those perks seem to reflect an informal, parallel power structure in the police force which gives long serving cops and union connected officers what those involved no doubt see as just and fair recompense for services rendered and dues paid...

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.the-american-interest.com ...


"and one supposes, the occasional generous stranger".......what ever happened to real news reporting .. ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2011, 07:48:53 PM
Seriously dude?

So you read the entire article, and the one thing you mention is that that the statement of "the occasional generous stranger" isn't real news?

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

You have got to be joking.



nah, dead serious. When I read an article for example and it is written by Fox news, I can't depend too much on the article being unbiased. When I read something or watch something on MSNBC I have to take it with a grain of salt because it is biased news. When someone is writing an article and leaves the fact reporting to start making suppositions that they have no idea are true or not, it again hurts the credibility. What the officers were doing and have done for years in my book is obviously wrong. That officers are defending their actions with "thats the way we've always done it and the administration knew and didnt care" doesnt make it right. It's a no brainer that doesnt need my comments. But I just miss the old school days of journalism where the news was reported and the authors biases were kept out for the most part.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 19, 2011, 08:49:21 AM
That cop really is a sadistic bully. 

What these power craven union thugs in the pd don't grasp is that it is crap like this that will make those on the fence feel sympathy for some of these kids. 

Maybe the next time this thug cop writes some bogus ticket or makes a false arrest to boost his bloated OT and pension, maybe, just, maybe, for once someone will pepper spray this thug till he coughes up blood.




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2011, 08:22:59 PM
Family Says Police Killed Their Dogs and Slammed Grandmother to Ground
WHO-TV (NBC) Des Moines, Iowa ^ | November 18, 2011 | Aaron Brilbeck
Posted on November 20, 2011 8:50:57 PM EST by bamahead

Matthew Spaulding says he and his family were terrorized at their own home by police who slammed his grandmother to the ground and shot his dogs-- missing his head by less than an inch. "Told us to get on the ground. I got on the ground they put me in handcuffs," Spaulding recalls, "Then they threw my dad to the ground and my dog Sadie was right here sniffing my head. She was next to me. They shot her. The blood got on my face and then she took off running behind me and they shot her like three more times."

Tuesday morning, Greene County Sheriffs Deputies and Perry Police officers arrived at Spaulding's Jefferson farmhouse to deliver a search warrant. The Spauldings say they were immediately ordered to the ground.. even Matthew Spauldings' disabled father, Chris. "My son hit the ground I hit the ground but I didn't make it too fast so (the officer) jumped on the middle of my back, shoved his knee in and held a gun to the back of my head and handcuffed me. After they shot my first dog my mom come out"

"They had taken me to the ground," Chris Spauldings' mother Susan Mace says, "So I was laying with my face in the ground. And I asked them why they shot the dog because the dogs weren't close to them"

The Spauldings say after the first dog was killed, a second dog running away from the shots --- and away from police--- was also shot. "They weren't barking. They weren't attacking nobody." Matthew Spaulding says, "They didn't even give us a chance to put them in the kennel. We have a big kennel outside our house we could have put them in but they wouldn't give us a chance."

Perry Police are not commenting. And they're refusing to turn over any paperwork or reports about the incident saying it's part of an ongoing investigation. But we were able to get copies of the search warrants. One warrant shows police were looking for any kind of legal or illegal drugs. The other shows police were looking for a stolen X-Box video game system. No drugs and no stolen games were found--and no one was arrested.

Chris Spaulding says he's furious his dogs were killed--his mother was ruffed up and his son was almost killed by police---all over a missing video game system. "Some of these officers should be fired because they kinda took their job too far. No common sense. No public safety when you got a kid on the ground," he says, "That's messed up man. Right beside his head. You could have shot my son."

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 21, 2011, 11:02:55 AM
That cop really is a sadistic bully. 

What these power craven union thugs in the pd don't grasp is that it is crap like this that will make those on the fence feel sympathy for some of these kids. 

Maybe the next time this thug cop writes some bogus ticket or makes a false arrest to boost his bloated OT and pension, maybe, just, maybe, for once someone will pepper spray this thug till he coughes up blood.






It's been our experience in dealing with similar protests that pepper spray is not the answer. The better option is to explain that they have to move, explain what will happen if they don't then calmly and methodically remove each person one by one. Had they skipped the pepper spray, it would have ended the same
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 26, 2011, 04:59:03 AM
Senate To Vote On Legislation That Allows U.S. Military to Detain Americans Without Charge or Trial
The SHTF.com ^ | 25 Nov, 2011 | Mac Slavo
Posted on November 25, 2011 6:06:35 PM EST by Errant



Remember that debate between Ron Paul and Newt Gingrich, where Mr. Gingrich suggested we should expand and strengthen the Patriot Act in the name of protecting US citizens from terrorists? Mr. Gingrich indicated that there exists a line between criminal law and the war on terror, and that we need not worry the government will overstep its bounds.

While Americans enjoy the Thanksgiving weekend and join the annual running of the bulls celebration at malls and retail outlets, something sinister is taking place in Congress – and it should scare the hell out of you. If the President and Senate have their way, your front lawn will soon become a battlefield, and you’ll be subjected to military, not criminal, law.

From the ACLU Via The Daily Sheeple:

The Senate is gearing up for a vote on Monday or Tuesday that goes to the very heart of who we are as Americans. The Senate will be voting on a bill that will direct American military resources not at an enemy shooting at our military in a war zone, but at American citizens and other civilians far from any battlefield — even people in the United States itself.

The Senate is going to vote on whether Congress will give this president—and every future president — the power to order the military to pick up and imprison without charge or trial civilians anywhere in the world. Even Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) raised his concerns about the NDAA detention provisions during last night’s Republican debate. The power is so broad that even U.S. citizens could be swept up by the military and the military could be used far from any battlefield, even within the United States itself.

The worldwide indefinite detention without charge or trial provision is in S. 1867, the National Defense Authorization Act bill, which will be on the Senate floor on Monday. The bill was drafted in secret by Sens. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) and passed in a closed-door committee meeting, without even a single hearing.

I know it sounds incredible. New powers to use the military worldwide, even within the United States? Hasn’t anyone told the Senate that Osama bin Laden is dead, that the president is pulling all of the combat troops out of Iraq and trying to figure out how to get combat troops out of Afghanistan too? And American citizens and people picked up on American or Canadian or British streets being sent to military prisons indefinitely without even being charged with a crime. Really? Does anyone think this is a good idea? And why now?

This is happening right now – IN AMERICA! A law that is designed to specifically bypass Constitutional protections and one that will undoubtedly be used against the American people to further advance and expand the national police state.

Once signed into law the President (or anyone of his minions within the Justice Department or Homeland Security acting on his behalf) can issue orders to arrest, detain and imprison an American citizen in the United States without due process. Since most terror arrests fall into the realm of national security, and therefore are secret, no evidence would ever need to be presented for the permanent detainment (and who knows what else) of an American imprisoned under this law.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 26, 2011, 11:29:40 AM
Driven By Drug War Incentives, Cops Target Pot Smokers, Brush Off Victims Of Violent Crime
11/25/11 11:20 AM ET Updated: 11/25/11 12:38 PM ET


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/21/drug-war-incentives-police-violent-crime_n_1105701.html




CHICAGO -- As Jessica Shaver and I chat at a coffee shop in Chicago's north-side Andersonville neighborhood, a police car pulls into the parking lot across the street. Then another. Two cops get out, lean up against their cars, and appear to gaze across traffic into the store. At times, they seem to be looking directly at us. Shaver, who works as an eyebrow waxer at a nearby spa, appears nervous.

"See what I mean? They follow me," says Shaver, 30. During several phone conversations Shaver told me that she thinks a small group of Chicago police officers are trying to intimidate her. These particular cops likely aren't following her; the barista tells me Chicago cops regularly stop in that particular parking lot to chat. But if Shaver is a bit paranoid, it's hard to blame her.

A year and a half ago she was beaten by a neighborhood thug outside of a city bar. It took months of do-it-yourself sleuthing, a meeting with a city alderman and a public shaming in a community newspaper before the Chicago Police Department would pay any attention to her. About a year later, Shaver got more attention from cops than she ever could have wanted: A team of Chicago cops took down her door with a battering ram and raided her apartment, searching for drugs.

Shaver has no evidence that the two incidents are related, and they likely aren't in any direct way. But they provide a striking example of how the drug war perverts the priorities of America's police departments. Federal anti-drug grants, asset forfeiture policies and a generation of battlefield rhetoric from politicians have made pursuing low-level drug dealers and drug users a top priority for police departments across the country. There's only so much time in the day, and the focus on drugs often comes at the expense of investigating violent crimes with victims like Jessica Shaver. In the span of about a year, she experienced both problems firsthand.

THE BATTERY

On the night of May 13, 2010, Shaver was smoking a cigarette with her friend Damon outside the Flat Iron bar in Wicker Park. She said she saw a woman walking away from the bar alone when two men began shouting profanities at her. The men then began walking toward the woman. "I made eye contact with her, and she looked like she was in trouble," Shaver said.

Shaver shouted at the men to leave the woman alone, at which point she says the the two men turned their attention to her, approached her, and began shouting at her. Damon told the men to leave Shaver alone. They jumped Damon and began to beat him. Shaver said she then tried to pry the men off her friend, and managed to free him long enough for him to get away and call 911. Shaver said she was punched repeatedly, including in the face. She fell, stood up, and was hit in the face again. The men then robbed her and left. When she woke up the next morning with bruises, she went to the hospital. Doctors found a concussion and several contusions.

Two weeks later, Shaver still hadn't heard from the detective assigned to her case. When she finally went to the police station in person to get an update on the investigation, she was told there was no record of the incident. She filed another report, but was told it was unlikely police would be able to track down the witnesses again, and that even if they were, the witnesses' memories were likely to have faded. Shaver says she decided to investigate on her own. She went back to the Flat Iron and questioned customers and employees herself. A bartender gave her the men's nicknames: "Cory" and "Sonny," the guy who hit her. Shaver learned that Sonny was also a reputed cocaine dealer. She heard he had a violent streak, and had been banned from a number of neighborhood bars.

"I was scared," Shaver said. "I'd heard bad things about this guy, and he knew who I was."

Shaver is thoroughly tattooed, which makes her easy to recognize. So she dyed her hair, covered her tattoos with clothing, and kept investigating. She worked her way through social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace until she was able to put actual names to her attackers' faces and nicknames. And yet she still couldn't get anyone at Chicago PD to help her. "I gave them the guy's name and everything," she said. "There were even hip hop videos online with him in them. I told them, 'That's the guy!' They still wouldn't listen to me."

In August 2010, three months after the attack, Shaver contacted a reporter for Time Out Chicago, who began asking around about her case. Shaver also met with Chicago Alderman Joe Marino. Shortly before the Time Out article went to press, a detective finally called Shaver down to the police station to identify her attacker. But even with her identification, the police didn't arrest "Sonny." He wasn't charged with the assault until the following month, when he was arrested on an unrelated domestic violence charge.

Shortly after she finally identified her attacker at the police station, Shaver said the detective in charge of her case told her, "Now I don't want to hear any more bitching from you."

MISPLACED PRIORITIES

Arresting people for assaults, beatings and robberies doesn't bring money back to police departments, but drug cases do in a couple of ways. First, police departments across the country compete for a pool of federal anti-drug grants. The more arrests and drug seizures a department can claim, the stronger its application for those grants.

"The availability of huge federal anti-drug grants incentivizes departments to pay for SWAT team armor and weapons, and leads our police officers to abandon real crime victims in our communities in favor of ratcheting up their drug arrest stats," said former Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police Stephen Downing. Downing is now a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, an advocacy group of cops and prosecutors who are calling for an end to the drug war.

"When our cops are focused on executing large-scale, constitutionally questionable raids at the slightest hint that a small-time pot dealer is at work, real police work preventing and investigating crimes like robberies and rapes falls by the wayside," Downing said.

And this problem is on the rise all over the country. Last year, police in New York City arrested around 50,000 people for marijuana possession. Pot has been decriminalized in New York since 1977, but displaying the drug in public is still a crime. So police officers stop people who look "suspicious," frisk them, ask them to empty their pockets, then arrest them if they pull out a joint or a small amount of marijuana. They're tricked into breaking the law. According to a report from Queens College sociologist Harry Levine, there were 33,775 such arrests from 1981 to 1995. Between 1996 and 2010 there were 536,322.

Several NYPD officers have alleged that in some precincts, police officers are asked to meet quotas for drug arrests. Former NYPD narcotics detective Stephen Anderson recently testified in court that it's common for cops in the department to plant drugs on innocent people to meet those quotas -- a practice for which Anderson himself was then on trial.

At the same time, there's increasing evidence that the NYPD is paying less attention to violent crime. In an explosive Village Voice series last year, current and former NYPD officers told the publication that supervising officers encouraged them to either downgrade or not even bother to file reports for assault, robbery and even sexual assault. The theory is that the department faces political pressure to produce statistics showing that violent crime continues to drop. Since then, other New Yorkers have told the Voice that they have been rebuffed by NYPD when trying to report a crime.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on November 28, 2011, 07:28:09 AM
Police State

http://nation.foxnews.com/newt-gingrich/2011/11/22/gingrich-and-paul-debate-patriot-act
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 28, 2011, 07:59:06 AM
Senate Moves To Allow Military To Intern Americans Without Trial
         

NDAA detention provision would turn America into a “battlefield”

Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
Monday, November 28, 2011




The Senate is set to vote on a bill today that would define the whole of the United States as a “battlefield” and allow the U.S. Military to arrest American citizens in their own back yard without charge or trial.

“The Senate is going to vote on whether Congress will give this president—and every future president — the power to order the military to pick up and imprison without charge or trial civilians anywhere in the world. The power is so broad that even U.S. citizens could be swept up by the military and the military could be used far from any battlefield, even within the United States itself,” writes Chris Anders of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office.

Under the ‘worldwide indefinite detention without charge or trial’ provision of S.1867, the National Defense Authorization Act bill, which is set to be up for a vote on the Senate floor this week, the legislation will “basically say in law for the first time that the homeland is part of the battlefield,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who supports the bill.

The bill was drafted in secret by Senators Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.), before being passed in a closed-door committee meeting without any kind of hearing. The language appears in sections 1031 and 1032 of the NDAA bill.

“I would also point out that these provisions raise serious questions as to who we are as a society and what our Constitution seeks to protect,” Colorado Senator Mark Udall said in a speech last week. One section of these provisions, section 1031, would be interpreted as allowing the military to capture and indefinitely detain American citizens on U.S. soil. Section 1031 essentially repeals the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 by authorizing the U.S. military to perform law enforcement functions on American soil. That alone should alarm my colleagues on both sides of the aisle, but there are other problems with these provisions that must be resolved.”

A d v e r t i s e m e n t
This means Americans could be declared domestic terrorists and thrown in a military brig with no recourse whatsoever. Given that the Department of Homeland Security has characterized behavior such as buying gold, owning guns, using a watch or binoculars, donating to charity, using the telephone or email to find information, using cash, and all manner of mundane behaviors as potential indicators of domestic terrorism, such a provision would be wide open to abuse.

“American citizens and people picked up on American or Canadian or British streets being sent to military prisons indefinitely without even being charged with a crime. Really? Does anyone think this is a good idea? And why now?” asks Anders.

The ACLU is urging citizens to call their Senator and demand that the Udall Amendment be added to the bill, a change that would at least act as a check to prevent Americans being snatched off the streets without some form of Congressional oversight.

We have been warning for over a decade that Americans would become the target of laws supposedly aimed at terrorists and enemy combatants. Alex Jones personally documented how U.S. troops were being trained to arrest U.S. citizens in the event of martial law during urban warfare training drills back in the 90′s. Under the the National Defense Authorization Act bill, no declaration of martial law is necessary since Americans would now be subject to the same treatment as suspected insurgents in places like Afghanistan and Iraq.

If you thought that the executive assassination of American citizens abroad was bad enough, now similar powers will be extended to the “homeland,” in other words, your town, your community, your back yard.

*********************

Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a regular fill-in host for The Alex Jones Show.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 05, 2011, 11:57:30 AM
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2011/12/02/7-year-old-accused-of-possible-sexual-harassment-for-kicking-boy-in-groin




We have lost our fucking minds as a country.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 21, 2011, 07:03:13 AM
Local Cops Ready for War With Homeland Security-Funded Military Weapons

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/12/20/local-cops-ready-for-war-with-homeland-security-funded-military-weapons.html



A decade of billions in spending in the name of homeland security has armed local police departments with military-style equipment and a new commando mentality. But has it gone too far? Andrew Becker and G.W. Schulz of the Center for Investigative Reporting report.

by Andrew Becker  (/contributors/andrew-becker.html) , G. W. Schulz  (/contributors/g--w--schulz.html)  | December 21, 2011 4:45 AM EST


Nestled amid plains so flat the locals joke you can watch your dog run away for miles, Fargo treasures its placid lifestyle, seldom pierced by the mayhem and violence common in other urban communities. North Dakota (/cheats/2011/12/12/police-use-predator-drones.html) ’s largest city has averaged fewer than two homicides a year since 2005, and there’s not been a single international terrorism prosecution in the last decade.

But that hasn’t stopped authorities in Fargo and its surrounding county from going on an $8 million buying spree to arm police officers with the sort of gear once reserved only for soldiers fighting foreign wars.

Every city squad car is equipped today with a military-style assault rifle, and officers can don Kevlar helmets able to withstand incoming fire from battlefield-grade ammunition. And for that epic confrontation—if it ever occurs—officers can now summon a new $256,643 armored truck, complete with a rotating turret. For now, though, the menacing truck is used mostly for training and appearances at the annual city picnic, where it’s been parked near the children’s bounce house.

“Most people are so fascinated by it, because nothing happens here,” says Carol Archbold, a Fargo resident and criminal justice professor at North Dakota State University. “There’s no terrorism here.”

Like Fargo, thousands of other local police departments nationwide have been amassing stockpiles of military-style equipment in the name of homeland security, aided by more than $34 billion in federal grants since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a Daily Beast investigation conducted by the Center for Investigative Reporting (http://centerforinvestigativereporting.org/)  has found.

Interactive Map: States Spend Billions on Homeland Security (http://projects.cironline.org/police-grants) 
 Atlanta Police S.W.A.T. members searched a building for a shooting suspect in July of 2010., John Bazemore

The buying spree has transformed local police departments into small, army-like forces, and put intimidating equipment into the hands of civilian officers. And that is raising questions about whether the strategy has gone too far, creating a culture and capability that jeopardizes public safety and civil rights while creating an expensive false sense of security.

“The argument for up-armoring is always based on the least likely of terrorist scenarios,” says Mark Randol, a former terrorism expert at the Congressional Research Service, the nonpartisan research arm of Congress. “Anyone can get a gun and shoot up stuff. No amount of SWAT equipment can stop that.”

Local police bristle at the suggestion that they’ve become “militarized,” arguing the upgrade in firepower and other equipment is necessary to combat criminals with more lethal capabilities. They point to the 1997 Los Angeles-area bank robbers who pinned police for hours with assault weapons, the gun-wielding student who perpetrated the Virginia Tech massacre in 2007, and the terrorists who waged a bloody rampage in Mumbai, India (/articles/2009/11/19/reliving-mumbais-911.html) , that left 164 people dead and 300 wounded in 2008.

The new weaponry and battle gear, they insist, helps save lives in the face of such threats. “I don’t see us as militarizing police; I see us as keeping abreast with society,” former Los Angeles Police chief William Bratton says. “And we are a gun-crazy society.”

“I don’t see us as militarizing police; I see us as keeping abreast with society.”

Adds Fargo Police Lt. Ross Renner, who commands the regional SWAT team: “It’s foolish to not be cognizant of the threats out there, whether it’s New York, Los Angeles, or Fargo. Our residents have the right to be protected. We don’t have everyday threats here when it comes to terrorism, but we are asked to be prepared.”

The skepticism about the Homeland spending spree is less severe for Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and New York, which are presumed to be likelier targets. But questions persist about whether money was handed out elsewhere with any regard for risk assessment or need. And the gap in accounting for the decade-long spending spree is undeniable. The U.S. Homeland Security Department says it doesn’t closely track what’s been bought with its tax dollars or how the equipment is used. State and local governments don’t maintain uniform records either.

To assess the changes in law enforcement for The Daily Beast, the Center for Investigative Reporting conducted interviews and reviewed grant spending records obtained through open records requests in 41 states. The probe found stockpiles of weaponry and military-style protective equipment worthy of a defense contractor’s sales catalog.

In Montgomery County, Texas, the sheriff’s department owns a $300,000 pilotless surveillance drone, like those used to hunt down al Qaeda terrorists in the remote tribal regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan. In Augusta, Maine, with fewer than 20,000 people and where an officer hasn’t died from gunfire in the line of duty in more than 125 years, police bought eight $1,500 tactical vests. Police in Des Moines, Iowa, bought two $180,000 bomb-disarming robots, while an Arizona sheriff is now the proud owner of a surplus Army tank.

The flood of money opened to local police after 9/11, but slowed slightly in recent years. Still, the Department of Homeland Security awarded more than $2 billion in grants to local police in 2011, and President Obama’s 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act contributed an additional half-billion dollars.

Law enforcement officials say the armored vehicles, assault weapons, and combat uniforms used by their officers provide a public safety benefit beyond their advertised capabilities, creating a sort of “shock and awe” experience they hope will encourage suspects to surrender more quickly.

“The only time I hear the complaint of ‘God, you guys look scary’ is if the incident turns out to be nothing,” says West Hartford, Conn., Police Lt. Jeremy Clark, who organizes an annual SWAT competition.

A grainy YouTube video from one of Clark’s recent competitions shows just how far the police transformation has come, displaying officers in battle fatigues, helmets, and multi-pocketed vests storming a hostile scene. One with a pistol strapped to his hip swings a battering ram into a door. A colleague lobs a flash-bang grenade into a field. Another officer, holding a pistol and wearing a rifle strapped to his back, peeks cautiously inside a bus.

The images unfold to the pulsing, ominous soundtrack of a popular videogame, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (/cheats/2010/11/11/ldquocall-of-dutyrdquo-biggest-videogame-launch-ever.html) . Though resembling soldiers in a far-flung war zone, the stars of this video are Massachusetts State Police troopers.

The number of SWAT teams participating in Clark’s event doubled to 40 between 2004 and 2009 as Homeland’s police funding swelled. The competition provides real-life scenarios for training, and Clark believes it is essential, because he fears many SWAT teams are falling below the 16 hours of minimum monthly training recommended by the National Tactical Officers Association.

“Luck is not for cops. Luck is for drunks and fools,” Clark said, explaining his devotion to training.

One beneficiary of Homeland’s largesse are military contractors, who have found a new market for their wares and sponsor training events like the one Clark oversees in Connecticut or a similar Urban Shield event held in California.

Special ops supplier Blackhawk Industries, founded by a former Navy SEAL, was among several Urban Shield sponsors this year. Other sponsors for such training peddle wares like ThunderSledge breaching tools for smashing open locked or chained doors, Lenco Armored Vehicles bulletproof box trucks, and KDH Defense Systems’s body armor.

“As criminal organizations are increasingly armed with military-style weapons, law enforcement operations require the same level of field-tested and combat-proven protection used by soldiers and Marines in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other high-risk locations,” boasts an Oshkosh Corp. brochure at a recent police seminar, where the company pitched its “tactical protector vehicle.”

The trend shows no sign of abating. The homeland security market for state and local agencies is projected to reach $19.2 billion by 2014, up from an estimated $15.8 billion in fiscal 2009, according to the Homeland Security Research Corp.

The rise of equipment purchases has paralleled an apparent increase in local SWAT teams, but reliable numbers are hard to come by. The National Tactical Officers Association, which provides training and develops SWAT standards, says it currently has about 1,650 team memberships, up from 1,026 in 2000.

Many of America’s newly armed officers are ex-military veterans from the front lines of Iraq and Afghanistan. Charles Ramsey, who was police chief in Washington, D.C., on 9/11, upgraded the weaponry when he moved to Philadelphia in 2008. Today, some 1,500 Philly beat cops are trained to use AR-15 assault rifles.

“We have a lot of people here, like most departments, who are ex-military,” Ramsey says. “Some people are very much into guns and so forth. So it wasn’t hard to find volunteers.”

Some real-life episodes, however, are sparking a debate about whether all that gear also creates a more militarized mind-set for local police that exceeds their mission or risks public safety.

In one case, dozens of officers in combat-style gear raided a youth rave in Utah as a police helicopter buzzed overhead. An online video shows the battle-ready team wearing masks and brandishing rifles as they holler for the music to be shut off and pin partygoers to the ground.

And Arizona tactical officers this year sprayed the home of ex-Marine Jose Guerena with gunfire as he stood in a hallway with a rifle that he did not fire. He was hit 22 times and died. Police had targeted the man’s older brother in a narcotics-trafficking probe, but nothing illegal was found in the younger Guerena’s home, and no related arrests had been made months after the raid.

In Maryland, officials finally began collecting data on tactical raids after police in 2008 burst into the home of a local mayor and killed his two dogs in a case in which the mayor’s home was used as a dropoff for drug deal. The mayor’s family had nothing to do with criminal activity.

Such episodes and the sheer magnitude of the expenditures over the last decade raise legitimate questions about whether taxpayers have gotten their money’s worth and whether police might have assumed more might and capability than is necessary for civilian forces.

“With local law enforcement, their mission is to solve crimes after they’ve happened, and to ensure that people’s constitutional rights are protected in the process,” says Jesselyn McCurdy, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. “The military obviously has a mission where they are fighting an enemy. When you use military tactics in the context of law enforcement, the missions don’t match, and that’s when you see trouble with the overmilitarization of police.”

The upgrading of local police nonetheless continues. Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio (/articles/2011/12/16/sheriff-joe-arpaio-slammed-in-federal-civil-rights-probe-report.html)  now claims to operate his own air armada of private pilots—dubbed Operation Desert Sky—to monitor illegal border crossings, and he recently added a full-size surplus Army tank. New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly boasted this fall he had a secret capability to shoot down an airliner if one threatened the city again. And the city of Ogden, Utah, is launching a 54-foot, remote-controlled “crime-fighting blimp” with a powerful surveillance camera.

Back in Fargo, nearby corn and soybean farmer Tim Kozojed supports the local police but questions whether the Homeland grants have been spent wisely. ”I’m very reluctant to get anxious about a terrorist attack in North Dakota,” Kozojed, 31, said. “Why would they bother?”

Tags:
•U.S. Politics (/politics.html)
©2011 The Newsweek/Daily Beast Company LLC




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 24, 2011, 05:35:16 PM
America as a Totalitarian Dictatorship
SATURDAY, 24 DECEMBER 2011 07:43 RAY PEACH





Since my first deployment to South East Asia, I have seen this great country gradually slip away. America has gone from being the world's greatest creditor nation, standing as a beacon of hope for the world, to the world's biggest debtor nation, where 42 million Americans rely on food stamps to survive. All of this prompted me to write a book, where I detail how this all came about, and how America will end. This isn't some conspiracy theory, it is happening right now in front of us. Like it or not, America is a Totalitarian Dictatorship, and this article will help you understand why.

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After the Oklahoma City Bombing, my job required that I attend a two-day briefing on counter terrorism. At that meeting, several people from the DoD, NSA, and FBI repeatedly stated that the biggest threat to National Security was domestic terrorism. The specific examples they provided were members of the National Rifle Association, Right to Life Organizations, Military Veterans, and others who were merely exercising their constitutional rights, or in some cases, doing nothing at all. Myself and others were encouraged to engage in a program where we would report on coworkers, employees, and neighbors about such things as “subversive” bumper stickers. Since it’s the role of the government to protect constitutional rights, including the freedom of speech, I understood this was no longer a country dedicated to liberty and the rule of law – since none of these activities are illegal.

Obama’s Marxist mentor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and his associate, Carl Friedrich, equated socialism and totalitarianism saying, “[It] is a system of revolution, which seeks to destroy the existing political order so it can be changed economically, socially, and culturally.” so as to comply with socialist ideology. “Totalitarian movements, motivated by the general goals which their ideologies outline, have thus not stopped at the seizure of power.”

In reality, while socialists are constantly talking about how great things will be, stated plans are never realized, because the elite never had any intention of implementing them in the first place. To hide this, socialists say that things would have worked, if only the elite had more power, money, or time. Failure is always someone else’s fault.

The intent of a socialist regime is to increase the political control of the elite, or to maintain the status quo. However, as Utopian symbols are replaced with political reality and the economy starts to fail, the state must incrementally apply pressure and violence to maintain control. This creates a problem for the state, as a free society is composed of interlocking and overlapping groups with various interests. It is almost impossible to subject one social group to punitive, or “re-educative,” measures without producing a hostile reaction, not only from the group concerned, but also from other groups, whose vested interests dictate their response. In time the socialists really have no choice but to resort to massive terror. Totalitarian terror is, therefore, the vital nerve of the socialist system.

The compulsive emphasis on the total support of the regime forms part of, “the great universal religion” that mirrors the Hebrew-Christian faith, while persecuting all heretics. In time, the dissenter commits an intolerable offense to the grandeur of the socialist enterprise, and must be liquidated because he or she has no place in a world that the socialist movement is bent on building. The bourgeoisie (middle class), the Christians, and the Hebrews remain outside of that unanimity and are therefore traitors. Terror makes certain that the masses are not infected, while the misfits are liquidated. In this way, all brutal premeditated violence and terror becomes rationally justified to the socialist. The citizen’s support for the state’s use of terror must be active not passive; and in time all members are expected to participate in whatever ritual of violence is required of them.

At first, terror centers on the liquidation of open and secret resistance but soon moves to the hunt for “potential enemies.” Only in this later stage does terrorism come into its own, as it aims to fill everyone with fear and vents its full passion against humanity.  The state hunts actual or potential enemies, and in many cases, actual enemies are purposely passed over in favor of the liquidation of innocent people, so as to instill fear in everyone. Soon terror reigns supreme as the bodies’ pile high and the corpses rot and stink.  Lenin summed this up when he said, “When the old society dies, the corpse of bourgeois society cannot be nailed down in a coffin and put in the grave. It decomposes in our midst, this corpse rots and contaminates us.”

A Terroristic State Police

Friedrich and Brzezinski make no secret that the plans for the destruction of our existing society are total, and will lead to a massive use of terror.  This has always been the case with such plans, as any reader of communist or fascist history can tell you. In every respect, human life and the nature of social existence is subjected to extensive revisions; provided for in the ideology and the subsequent expedient requirements of the new order.

The history of socialism tells us that, socialist dictatorships initially adopt a step-by-step program that gradually increases in violence.  When the cognitive strain between dogma and reality becomes so great that it can no longer hold its illusion, massive terror becomes necessary to maintain the party’s grip on power. In 1934, this was officially made part of Soviet law, giving the MVD (secret police) a free hand in political cases. Similarly, the German Gestapo dispensed “justice” through administrative processes from which there was no appeal. Eventually torture, murder, purges, and concentration camps became a way of life, where no legal procedure was followed at all.

The machinery of terror is based on defending the “people” from its “enemies,” and is glorified for its heroism and efficiency. It relies on a pliable criminal code that broadly defines a political offense in terms of its potential threat to the state (the people). Socialism depends on a national system of terroristic police to control and supervise party members and non-party members, exploiting modern science – including scientific psychology.  Supervision and enforcement of such laws requires a national court system that is structured on socialist ideals, the abject degradation of police and judicial procedures, and a disregard for the stated purpose of the law.

While at the Harvard School of Government in the 1970s, Carl Friedrich taught that the state has a monopoly on violence, along with the right to use it whenever the elite deem it appropriate.  Friedrich pointed out that in socialist states, the role of the police consisted of enforcing the socialist agenda, not with protecting the citizen, or maintaining law and order. He said that with the coming authoritarian American state, the role of the police would be “vastly expanded” to enforce extensive new regulations and views on morality, saying, “The guardian of law and order is no longer… the protector of the weak against the strong and the attacker, but the agent of the government in all its ramifications”.   One of Friedrich’s students was George Bush (V2.0).

In 2009, the Rand Corporation developed a report entitled, “A Stability Police Force for the United States, Justification and Options for Creating US Capabilities.” The stated purpose of this police force is to merge the functions of the Department of Homeland Security with military units to create a “high end” police force like those currently being developed in Europe. This organization would have jurisdiction over local civilian police departments. The report provides information on funding, manpower, training, and political considerations. It makes no secret that it is directed against the U.S. citizen.

According to the Whitehouse web site, on January 11, 2010 Obama signed an executive order for the “Establishment of the Council of Governors,” granting the president the authority to appoint a ten-person council to rule the country in case of an emergency, further expanding NSPD-51 and HSPD-20.  Max Weber did a similar thing in Weimar Germany after WWI when he worked to create Article 48 that would give the German Chancellor dictatorial powers in case of an emergency.  Hitler took advantage of Article 48 by having his own Storm Troopers burn down the Reichstag (German Parliament) while blaming it on the Jews. Using this as a pretext Hitler then declared martial law and the world would never be the same.

Things had been somewhat different in Russia where the Tsarist government, mostly through manipulation and propaganda, was regarded as being too corrupt and evil to support. Not realizing that the Bolsheviks were much worse, the average Russian, including the Army and Navy, would no longer support the existing government. As a result the Bolsheviks literally just walked in and took over.  It was only after the hope and change occurred did the Bolsheviks show that they were infinitely worse than the Tsars had ever even been purported to be, igniting revolution.

The Crossover

Friedrich & Brzezinski said the end of America would come with the acceptance of fraud, especially the acceptance of propagandistic fraud on a large scale, followed by the ideological acceptance of force and violence. Not so much physical violence at first but psychological violence that is done to the mind and to moral sentiment. Friedrich and Brzezinski predicted 50 years ago that this would be the result of the ice cold reasoning of an ideology that is built on pseudoscientific principles.  The final phase, they said, would be rapid radicalization, the seizure of power, and the total transformation of the economic system. This would soon be accompanied with use of physical violence and terrorism on a large scale, along with the liquidation of enemies of the state.

As I write this, Obama has said he will sign a bill that will remove all pretext of law in this country. It injects the military directly into domestic affairs, giving them the ability to detain and execute, without trial, any American Citizen they want to in the US - simply by calling them a terrorist. Say goodbye to Posse Comitatus.

While this is portrayed as a mechanism for protecting Americans from Al-Qaeda, section 802 of the USA PATRIOT Act (Pub. L. No. 107-52) expands the definition of terrorism to cover “domestic,” as opposed to international, terrorism.   A person engages in domestic terrorism if they do an act “dangerous to human life” that is a violation of the criminal laws of a state or the United States, if the act appears to be intended to:  (i) intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii) influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination or kidnapping.  Additionally, the acts have to occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States and if they do not, may be regarded as international terrorism.

Another provision of the USA PATRIOT Act entitled “Disclosure of educational records - Sec. 507.” This section requires a judge to issue an order permitting the government to obtain private educational records if the Attorney General or his designee certifies that the records are necessary for investigating domestic or international terrorism.  No independent judicial finding is required to verify that the records are relevant.  This means that the Attorney General may obtain the private educational records by asserting that the records are relevant to a domestic terrorism investigation.  These records may include information such as a student's grades, private medical information and counseling, which organizations the student belonged to, or any other information that the educational institution collects about its students.

This means that anyone can be called a terrorist if the government says they are, if it merely appears that someone wants to intimidate or coerce someone else; but the definition of intimidation and coercion have been redefined under hate crime legislation, where the mere appearance of improper thought represents terrorism as evidenced by anything the state wants, including the church, school, or classes you attended. Today people and organizations listed as terrorists include: The TEA Party, people who pay in cash, military veterans, and anyone else exercising their right to disagree with the Government.

To further illustrate the real meaning of this legislation, it should be pointed out that in 2009, La Raza member Sonia Sotomayor was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, although she and her organization have a history of advocating the violent overthrow the United States. Just 48 hours after Obama announced her nomination, George Bush (v2.0), Carl Rove, and John McCain attended a La Raza meeting, where they voiced their approval of the radical organization. This and other actions such as refusing to control the boarders, shows that the target of the Federal government is middle class America.

Simultaneously with the decision to throw the concept of a “trail by a Jury of your peers” out the window, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano has announced the activation of detention camps around the nation, under the guise of housing large number of illegal aliens. However, the DHS has also announced they are reducing the number of border patrol agents by half, and are not working to detain or deport illegals, so this argument is obviously false.  These camps were constructed under a 2006 contract with Halliburton, again for the supposed detention of illegal immigrants.

America as a Totalitarian Dictatorship

A dictatorship is defined as an autocratic system of government that is ruled by an individual. A totalitarian government is one where every aspect of human behavior is controlled by the state, defining right, wrong, good and evil – where all disagreement is forbidden

As I am writing this, Obama is suing the State of Arizona for passing a law that essentially says that they will enforce existing Federal Statutes. In the suit, Obama’s argument is that Presidential policy trumps Federal and State statutes, and a federal judge agreed. Meanwhile, Congress did nothing - making this a dictatorship. In September, a Christian schoolboy was suspended from Western Hills High School in Texas for saying he thought that being a homosexual is wrong - making this a totalitarian dictatorship.

The American people have been complacent for too long, and they need to wake up. On January 5th, 1967 Ronald Reagan said, “Freedom is a fragile thing and is never more than one generation away from extinction. It is not ours by inheritance; it must be fought for and defended constantly by each generation, for it comes only once to a people. Those who have known freedom and then lost it have never known it again.”

It’s this generation’s turn and if we choose to ignore the call because our favorite show is on TV, the next generation won’t have any hope at all.

Copyright © 2011

Mr. Peach (visit his website)  is a retired engineer who spent a great deal of his life traveling the world to solve problems for fortune 500 companies and the U.S. Government. After serving 8 years in U.S. Naval Air he went to work for Litton Guidance Systems as a field engineer, working in the Middle East and Asia. For the next 12 years he worked as a systems engineer for Hughes Aircraft where he was involved with the F-14D, F-15E, and the F/A-18 tactical aircraft...........read more
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on December 24, 2011, 06:32:57 PM
Wow.....
He makes a lot of very valid points....
And low and behold.... no party line bullshit.
Very good read from someone who can look beyond the bullshit and see what is really happening, something so many others cant.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 26, 2011, 04:01:32 PM
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-terror-checkpoints-20111220,0,3213641.story



Awesome - Obama and Janet Incompetano greatly expanding the TSA.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 27, 2011, 12:47:17 PM
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70878.html



Do these pofs ever stop?    The SOPA Act is a disaster.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 30, 2011, 07:44:04 AM
In futile car search for drugs, Pompton Lakes police inflict $12K worth of damage (Asset Forfieture)
NJ.com ^ | December 29, 2011 | James Queally




When Pompton Lakes police seized Darren Richardson’s car on a rainy September afternoon, they told him it was headed for an impound lot. When they returned it three weeks later, he says, the 2004 BMW belonged in a junk yard.

The instrument cluster and leather dashboard were gone. The caramel-colored seats were torn up. The gear shift was ripped out and stray wires hung limp everywhere. Geico, Richardson’s insurance company estimated the damage at $12,636.42 — more than he paid for the car — and declared the vehicle a "total loss."

According to police reports, the damage to the black BMW 325i came in the aftermath of a traffic stop during which officers detected a "strong odor of raw marijuana" inside the vehicle. Searching for a cache of drugs, members of three different police agencies and a detective from a federal drug task force spent two days tearing the car apart, the reports said.

So what did police find after their $12,000 search?

Absolutely nothing.

Richardson, 28, of the Haskell section of Wanaque, filed a notice of claim against the department last week, seeking damages for false arrest and malicious prosecution. He also said Geico may sue the department to recoup the cost of the claim it has already paid to Richardson.


(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 30, 2011, 07:51:40 AM
In futile car search for drugs, Pompton Lakes police inflict $12K worth of damage (Asset Forfieture)
NJ.com ^ | December 29, 2011 | James Queally




When Pompton Lakes police seized Darren Richardson’s car on a rainy September afternoon, they told him it was headed for an impound lot. When they returned it three weeks later, he says, the 2004 BMW belonged in a junk yard.

The instrument cluster and leather dashboard were gone. The caramel-colored seats were torn up. The gear shift was ripped out and stray wires hung limp everywhere. Geico, Richardson’s insurance company estimated the damage at $12,636.42 — more than he paid for the car — and declared the vehicle a "total loss."

According to police reports, the damage to the black BMW 325i came in the aftermath of a traffic stop during which officers detected a "strong odor of raw marijuana" inside the vehicle. Searching for a cache of drugs, members of three different police agencies and a detective from a federal drug task force spent two days tearing the car apart, the reports said.

So what did police find after their $12,000 search?

Absolutely nothing.

Richardson, 28, of the Haskell section of Wanaque, filed a notice of claim against the department last week, seeking damages for false arrest and malicious prosecution. He also said Geico may sue the department to recoup the cost of the claim it has already paid to Richardson.


(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Good for him, hope he wins plus damages
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 30, 2011, 08:54:01 AM
Wake deputy kills dog while searching for runaway teen (another 'isolated incident')
WRAL (Raleigh-Durham) ^ | December 29, 2011 | Beau Minnick




A Wake County sheriff’s deputy shot and killed a couple’s 3-year-old dog Wednesday night while searching for a runaway teenager.

John and Linda Super say two deputies came to their home on King Circle, looking for a 15-year-old neighbor who had run away and had often spent time with them.

One of the couple’s dogs, Elvis, forced his way out the front door and ran outside as the couple talked to the deputies, they said. One of the deputies shot Elvis twice, including once in the back of the head, killing him, according to the Supers.

“All we’ve got is a dead dog and a lot of questions that need answers,” Linda Super said. “(Elvis) came running out, never bothered a soul, never opened his mouth, never woofed or nothing when he came out the door.”

Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison said the deputy, Roderick Belfield, said the dog was barking and running towards him. Belfield will not be punished for shooting the dog.

--SNIP--

Harrison said he is investigating whether Belfield or the other deputy, Kenneth Edward Kay, used profanity while subduing John Super, who was upset after the shooting. John Super says the deputies were rough with him.

One of the runaway teen's guardians said Elvis was "vicious" and had lunged for the deputy, something the Supers dispute

“(Elvis) was my fourth child,” Linda Super said. “He was like the center of our lives.”


(Excerpt) Read more at wral.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 30, 2011, 12:21:51 PM
Wake deputy kills dog while searching for runaway teen (another 'isolated incident')
WRAL (Raleigh-Durham) ^ | December 29, 2011 | Beau Minnick




A Wake County sheriff’s deputy shot and killed a couple’s 3-year-old dog Wednesday night while searching for a runaway teenager.

John and Linda Super say two deputies came to their home on King Circle, looking for a 15-year-old neighbor who had run away and had often spent time with them.

One of the couple’s dogs, Elvis, forced his way out the front door and ran outside as the couple talked to the deputies, they said. One of the deputies shot Elvis twice, including once in the back of the head, killing him, according to the Supers.

“All we’ve got is a dead dog and a lot of questions that need answers,” Linda Super said. “(Elvis) came running out, never bothered a soul, never opened his mouth, never woofed or nothing when he came out the door.”

Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison said the deputy, Roderick Belfield, said the dog was barking and running towards him. Belfield will not be punished for shooting the dog.

--SNIP--

Harrison said he is investigating whether Belfield or the other deputy, Kenneth Edward Kay, used profanity while subduing John Super, who was upset after the shooting. John Super says the deputies were rough with him.

One of the runaway teen's guardians said Elvis was "vicious" and had lunged for the deputy, something the Supers dispute

“(Elvis) was my fourth child,” Linda Super said. “He was like the center of our lives.”


(Excerpt) Read more at wral.com ...


Sounds like a very possible necessary  shooting . Not a very good example of "police state 2010"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2012, 01:45:23 PM



LOL    FAIL!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2012, 02:04:22 PM



LOL!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2012, 02:06:37 PM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 15, 2012, 08:49:11 PM
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/01/15/10-reasons-the-u-s-is-guy-the-land-of-the-free


read it and weep.   Literally
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 15, 2012, 08:53:59 PM
Suit alleging MPD executed search warrant at wrong home (Maui, HI)
The Maui News ^ | January 14, 2012 | ILIMA LOOMIS
Posted on January 15, 2012 10:19:28 PM EST by bamahead

A Kihei couple is suing the Maui Police Department in federal court after officers allegedly raided their home while executing a search warrant on the wrong address last year.

April and Norman Freeland allege that police forced them outside and searched their home for nearly half an hour, even after they knew they were at the wrong location. Attorney Sam MacRoberts of the Law Office of Philip Lowenthal said the couple still has never seen a warrant for the search.

--SNIP--

The Freelands' lawsuit naming Maui County, Maui Police Chief Gary Yabuta and Maui Police officer Jerald Perkett was filed Oct. 14 in U.S. District Court in Honolulu. The suit alleges police violated the Freelands' constitutional rights and asks for $250,000 in damages and $1 million in punitive damages. Trial has been set for January 2013.

--SNIP--

According to the Freelands' complaint, they were at home hosting a dinner for three guests on April 15 when they heard a loud noise from their front lanai at around 9 p.m.

When the Freelands approached the door to their lanai they found armed men who did not identify themselves but were later identified as Maui Police officers, according to the complaint.

"When Norman Freeland touched the door, the men rushed into the Freelands' home without permission," the complaint alleges, adding that the officers did not "knock and announce" their presence as required by state law.

The officers "screamed and yelled" as they entered the home, grabbed Norman Freeland by the wrist and forced him and his wife outside, where they were held by a man carrying a "combat-type weapon," according to the complaint.

The men told the Freelands that they had a warrant but did not show it to them, according to the complaint.

(Excerpt) Read more at mauinews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 15, 2012, 09:51:01 PM
62 Year old grandfather on vacation dies in Florida police custody
The Daily Mail ^ | 01/12/2012 | Lee Moran
Posted on January 14, 2012 3:01:24 PM EST by Duke of Qin

A mentally ill grandfather died after police officers strapped him naked to a chair, smothered him with a 'spit hood' and pepper-sprayed him 10 times during a 43-hour ordeal, it has been claimed.

Nick Christie, 62, was allegedly tortured in the 'Devil's Chair' at Lee County jail after being detained by Florida police officers in March 2009 following a 'mental breakdown'.

The hood, designed to stop him from spitting at officers, meant he could not escape the noxious spray's fumes - and he was never allowed to clean the residue from his body.

His family is now suing Lee County Sheriff's Department for 'wrongful death'.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2085628/Nick-Christie-Mentally-ill-prisoner-strapped-Devils-Chair-pepper-sprayed-death.html#ixzz1jSkweFsk

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 08, 2012, 12:33:02 PM
Officer who beat motorist on video identified
fox5vegas.com ^ | 8 Feb 2012 | Matt Guillermo


Posted on Wednesday, February 08, 2012 3:39:58 PM


HENDERSON, NV (FOX5) - One of the officers videotaped beating a man during a traffic stop was identified Wednesday as a 9-year veteran of Henderson police.

Sgt. Brett Seekatz was one of the officers videotaped beating Adam Greene near Lake Mead Boulevard and Boulder Highway in 2010, according to Keith Paul with Henderson police.

Seekatz is still working for the police department, although officials said he was disciplined following the beating.


Man beaten by police gets $158K settlement According to the website Transparent Nevada, Sgt. Seekatz was paid a base salary of $96,869 in 2010, but his total pay, including overtime, was $109,460.

Greene was suffering a diabetic shock at the time of the videotaped beating, which also involved Nevada Highway Patrol troopers.  

Henderson City Council reached a six-figure settlement with Greene Tuesday.

Stay tuned to FOX5 and FOX5Vegas.com for the latest updates on this breaking news.

Copyright 2012 KVVU (KVVU Broadcasting Corporation). All rights reserved.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 11, 2012, 09:58:34 PM
Believe In A Return To The Gold Standard? You Are Now Officially An Extremist According To The FBI
ZeroHedge ^ | February 11, 2012 | Tyler Durden
Posted on February 12, 2012 12:58:03 AM EST by SaveOurRepublicFromTyran ny

Just when we thought the US could not sink any further in its usurpation of civil rights, here comes the FBI to advise all those who tend to think that the broken economic model of the past century is the cause for the global insolvency, that wanton fiat diluation and reckless debt issuance does not 'fix' the problem of uber-leverage, and that the gold standard is the proper way to return to monetary stability, will henceforth be considered extremists. From Reuters: "Anti-government extremists opposed to taxes and regulations pose a growing threat to local law enforcement officers in the United States, the FBI warned on Monday. These extremists, sometimes known as "sovereign citizens," believe they can live outside any type of government authority, FBI agents said at a news conference." And the most epic line ever written: "The extremists may refuse to pay taxes, defy government environmental regulations and believe the United States went bankrupt by going off the gold standard."

(Excerpt) Read more at zerohedge.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 13, 2012, 09:58:29 AM
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/feb/13/feds-shut-down-amish-farm-selling-fresh-milk/print


Unreal.   I really cant believe we are at this point.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2012, 02:25:53 PM
http://myfox8.com/2012/02/14/nc-preschooler-fed-nuggets-because-packed-lunch-wasnt-healthy


Another invention of that fat thug and pig Mobacca 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on February 14, 2012, 02:34:37 PM
when your toilet plugs is that obama fault too ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 15, 2012, 09:45:17 AM
FBI Fliers Reveal Profile Of A Perfect Terrorist (They Pay For Coffee With Cash, Apparently)


http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/02/14/fbi-perfect-terrorist-coffee-cash_n_1276494.html?just_reloaded=1


Paying for coffee with cash might be a sign of a suspicious person, the FBI said
 
14/02/2012 17:28 Updated: 15/02/2012 14:47


If you're in Starbucks and notice a nondescript individual paying for their coffee with cash - watch out.

According to the FBI you might have found evidence of a terrorist plot.

A series of fliers distributed to companies around the United States by the FBI and the Bureau of Justice Assistance appear to give workers and business owners exactly this advice.

The fliers, as highlighted by the miscellania blog BoingBoing, are intended to help various businesses from hobby shop owners to car rental services identify suspicious people who might be involved in terrorist activity.

They have been collected online by the Public Intelligence collaborative research project, and are not normally released en masse by the FBI.

The fliers include much salient advice, such as pointing out the need for valid ID from customers purchasing large quantities of chemicals.

Reassuringly each of them also states that "it is important to remember that just because someone’s speech, actions, beliefs, appearance, or way of life is different, it does not mean that he or she is suspicious."

However the fliers also reveal the slightly more bizarre side of counter-terrorism.

For one, the fliers advise internet cafe owners that "evidence of a residential based internet provider (signs on to Comcast, AOL)" could be a sign of a suspicious character. The FBI says that such services can mask IP addresses, and that may be a sign the person does not want their tracks followed.

The Huffington Post UK is owned by AOL - but thankfully we didn't make it onto the list.

People who pay cash for small purchases, including coffee, are also highlighted in the fliers. They may be attempting to avoid a paper trail of their whereabouts by not using credit cards.

Owners of electronics stores visited by regulars with missing fingers, chemical burns or strange odours are also told to watch out.

And if you're a paintball proprietor and you have a regular customer who alters his appearance ("beard shaved off, hair colour changed") on each visit, you might also have a dangerous character in your midst says the FBI.

Tattoo parlour owners are asked to watch out for groups requesting the same tattoos or placement of tattoos.

More obviously, perhaps, the FBI warns paintball range owners that if groups want to mimic security checkpoints, practice kidnapping or refer to jihadi training materials during games, that might also be a clue something's up. Which seems fair.

Proprietors of hobby shops are informed that anyone purchasing large quantities of model rocket motor igniters or model aircraft fuel might be suspicious.

The full range of fliers so far gathered together can be read at Public Intelligence.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 16, 2012, 08:08:43 PM
Minn. Police, Attorneys Oppose Deadly Force Bill (Stand Your Ground)
KSTP.com ^ | 2/16/12 | Lauren Radomski/AP
Posted on February 16, 2012 10:53:15 PM EST by ButThreeLeftsDo

Key police chiefs and county prosecutors joined together on Thursday to urge Minnesota lawmakers to not pass legislation that would give people more freedom to use deadly force when protecting themselves.

The legislation creates the presumption that a person in their home or other dwelling who uses deadly force does so believing they are in danger of harm or death. The bill also removes the obligation for that person to retreat from such a situation. It's headed for a full Senate vote soon.

Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said at a Capitol press conference that the bill shifts the standard to use deadly force from the current "reasonable person" standard to a more subjective one.

"Under this proposal, it would become what is in the person's mind as to whether they feel threatened," Backstrom said. "That is the controlling factor. Not what a reasonable person would have done when facing similar circumstances."

SNIP

Dayton said last week he wasn't sure if he'd sign or veto the bill, but mentioned that opposition from law enforcement officials would likely influence his decision.

(Excerpt) Read more at kstp.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on February 17, 2012, 08:03:15 AM
FBI Fliers Reveal Profile Of A Perfect Terrorist (They Pay For Coffee With Cash, Apparently)


http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/02/14/fbi-perfect-terrorist-coffee-cash_n_1276494.html?just_reloaded=1


Paying for coffee with cash might be a sign of a suspicious person, the FBI said
 
14/02/2012 17:28 Updated: 15/02/2012 14:47


If you're in Starbucks and notice a nondescript individual paying for their coffee with cash - watch out.

According to the FBI you might have found evidence of a terrorist plot.

A series of fliers distributed to companies around the United States by the FBI and the Bureau of Justice Assistance appear to give workers and business owners exactly this advice.

The fliers, as highlighted by the miscellania blog BoingBoing, are intended to help various businesses from hobby shop owners to car rental services identify suspicious people who might be involved in terrorist activity.

They have been collected online by the Public Intelligence collaborative research project, and are not normally released en masse by the FBI.

The fliers include much salient advice, such as pointing out the need for valid ID from customers purchasing large quantities of chemicals.

Reassuringly each of them also states that "it is important to remember that just because someone’s speech, actions, beliefs, appearance, or way of life is different, it does not mean that he or she is suspicious."

However the fliers also reveal the slightly more bizarre side of counter-terrorism.

For one, the fliers advise internet cafe owners that "evidence of a residential based internet provider (signs on to Comcast, AOL)" could be a sign of a suspicious character. The FBI says that such services can mask IP addresses, and that may be a sign the person does not want their tracks followed.

The Huffington Post UK is owned by AOL - but thankfully we didn't make it onto the list.

People who pay cash for small purchases, including coffee, are also highlighted in the fliers. They may be attempting to avoid a paper trail of their whereabouts by not using credit cards.

Owners of electronics stores visited by regulars with missing fingers, chemical burns or strange odours are also told to watch out.

And if you're a paintball proprietor and you have a regular customer who alters his appearance ("beard shaved off, hair colour changed") on each visit, you might also have a dangerous character in your midst says the FBI.

Tattoo parlour owners are asked to watch out for groups requesting the same tattoos or placement of tattoos.

More obviously, perhaps, the FBI warns paintball range owners that if groups want to mimic security checkpoints, practice kidnapping or refer to jihadi training materials during games, that might also be a clue something's up. Which seems fair.

Proprietors of hobby shops are informed that anyone purchasing large quantities of model rocket motor igniters or model aircraft fuel might be suspicious.

The full range of fliers so far gathered together can be read at Public Intelligence.




Wow.....
Theyve conviently signed NDAA which lets them indefinatley detain citizens...
Now theyre conviently defining terrorists as any citizen who pays with cash....

And people laughed when I said the government has a larger plan judging by all the recent laws theyve passed (or tried to).

Theyre preparing for something big. And its the citizens that are gonna take the brunt.

I guess the best case scenario is that theyre preping for war with Iran.
This sure seems like it could be something to try and push everyone into using banks, as well.

The government doesnt like cash, cause they cant trace it. Banks dont like cash, cause they dont make any money off it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 17, 2012, 10:23:05 AM
Wow.....
Theyve conviently signed NDAA which lets them indefinatley detain citizens...
Now theyre conviently defining terrorists as any citizen who pays with cash....

And people laughed when I said the government has a larger plan judging by all the recent laws theyve passed (or tried to).

Theyre preparing for something big. And its the citizens that are gonna take the brunt.

I guess the best case scenario is that theyre preping for war with Iran.
This sure seems like it could be something to try and push everyone into using banks, as well.

The government doesnt like cash, cause they cant trace it. Banks dont like cash, cause they dont make any money off it.

Yeah, that's what I took away from that article...  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on February 17, 2012, 10:28:08 AM
Yeah, that's what I took away from that article...  ::)
Heres what I see - an FBI warning people to be wary of those that pay with "cash", check their email other than at home, or change their appearance as they might be terrorists.
Another FBI article was talking about how "anti gov" types are the new "big threat" to america, and may be terrorists.
NDAA - authorizes the gov to indefinatley detain citizens as long as theyre "terrorists".

 ::) ::) ::)

Take away what you want, but people that constantly say "thats not whats happening" will be saying that right up until the day theyre locked up.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 04, 2012, 08:56:02 PM
'Tix Fix' In Reverse. Some NYPD cops ‘lie’ in court to avoid pay dock
NY Post ^ | 3/4/2012 | Brad Hamilton
Posted on March 4, 2012 11:47:19 PM EST by GreaterSwiss

Cops deemed to not have performed well risk losing as many as 10 vacation days or two weeks pay, sources said. “They manage this through a spirit of fear,” said one veteran cop. “Maybe the officer doesn’t present his testimony good enough. So they say, ‘OK, we’re going to take a week’s pay from you.’ ” The result is higher conviction rates — and a tense atmosphere in which officers sometimes falsify their notes and don’t tell the truth in court to avoid being punished, police and defense lawyers say. Defense lawyers say sympathetic judges even coach cops on what to say. “They see these cops every day, and they get to know them,” said one. “If a guy’s going to get into trouble, it’s, like, ‘I don’t want to let that happen.’ ”

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 05, 2012, 02:34:22 PM
'Tix Fix' In Reverse. Some NYPD cops ‘lie’ in court to avoid pay dock
NY Post ^ | 3/4/2012 | Brad Hamilton
Posted on March 4, 2012 11:47:19 PM EST by GreaterSwiss

Cops deemed to not have performed well risk losing as many as 10 vacation days or two weeks pay, sources said. “They manage this through a spirit of fear,” said one veteran cop. “Maybe the officer doesn’t present his testimony good enough. So they say, ‘OK, we’re going to take a week’s pay from you.’ ” The result is higher conviction rates — and a tense atmosphere in which officers sometimes falsify their notes and don’t tell the truth in court to avoid being punished, police and defense lawyers say. Defense lawyers say sympathetic judges even coach cops on what to say. “They see these cops every day, and they get to know them,” said one. “If a guy’s going to get into trouble, it’s, like, ‘I don’t want to let that happen.’ ”

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...




Seems to me that would be grounds to appeal a conviction.

Wonder what idiot in the PD decided to go after cops like that?  Is the union cool with this?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 05, 2012, 04:32:12 PM


Seems to me that would be grounds to appeal a conviction.

Wonder what idiot in the PD decided to go after cops like that?  Is the union cool with this?

I've been surprised before but I have to say in reading the article and attempting to apply it to my department a couple things come to mind..

How would an I.A. Detective determine the difference between doing a "good" job and losing and doing a "good job" and winning the case? Very subjective. What is more likely and I base this purely on my experience here, there was a time when some cops would go to court for the overtime, then simply tell the prosecutor at the beginning of the morning that they couldn't recall that particular stop. The prosecutor would then have to try and plead the ticket or lose the case. The cop was dismissed and on his way home in 20 minutes with 3 hrs of OT minimum in his pocket.

So I could see where they would want to monitor something like that, but trying to determine the other stuff the article eludes to doesn't add up.

About the citizen seeing the cop write on the ticket just before the trial.... another thing that doesnt add up. Cops are usually in a room awaiting their time, not in the general public area where the citizens are. With I.A. in the building etc etc, I just find it suspicious a cop would just start writing on a ticket then just show it to someone who asked.. again.. sounds made up.

"If" the entire article is accurate, that's pretty messed up. But looking at it from the inside out, it sounds way to stupid, even for us cops, to be on the money   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 05, 2012, 05:57:08 PM
What is more likely and I base this purely on my experience here, there was a time when some cops would go to court for the overtime, then simply tell the prosecutor at the beginning of the morning that they couldn't recall that particular stop. The prosecutor would then have to try and plead the ticket or lose the case. The cop was dismissed and on his way home in 20 minutes with 3 hrs of OT minimum in his pocket.

So I could see where they would want to monitor something like that, but trying to determine the other stuff the article eludes to doesn't add up.
 



Monitor?  Fuck that...we need to encourage this type of behavior from the cops.

Let's say $40 bucks an hour OT, 3 hours = $120.00

Fine = $5.00
Court Fees, Surcharges, EMS, Penalty for being alive = $150.00
Total = $155.00


So I'm estimating $35.00 savings, MINIMUM if we encourage this behavior.

I hope your memory fails on a regular basis.

Ciao
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 05, 2012, 10:52:03 PM
That's not true... Every courthouse I've ever been in has the Cops sitting in the booth up front close to the bench, but still visible and accessible to the general public.


Depends Tu.. For example, any given day there may be 20 cops scheduled for trial. We always report to the prosecutor office to review our records and go over the case prior to the trial. We then wait in back until our case comes up, THEN we would move into the court room or the booth you observe us in.

Now if you are seeing 20 cops in the booth, then maybe your court does it differently
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 05:17:47 AM
State agencies, colleges demand applicants' Facebook passwords (Communism around the corner)
msnbc ^ | 3/6/2012 | Bob Sullivan




If you think privacy settings on your Facebook and Twitter accounts guarantee future employers or schools can't see your private posts, guess again.

Employers and colleges find the treasure-trove of personal information hiding behind password-protected accounts and privacy walls just too tempting, and increasingly, they are demanding full access from applicants and students.

In Maryland, job seekers applying to the state's Department of Corrections have been asked during interviews to log into their accounts and let an interviewer watch while the potential employee clicks through wall posts, friends, photos and anything else that might be found behind the privacy wall.


(Excerpt) Read more at redtape.msnbc.msn.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 06, 2012, 07:03:49 AM
State agencies, colleges demand applicants' Facebook passwords (Communism around the corner)
msnbc ^ | 3/6/2012 | Bob Sullivan




If you think privacy settings on your Facebook and Twitter accounts guarantee future employers or schools can't see your private posts, guess again.

Employers and colleges find the treasure-trove of personal information hiding behind password-protected accounts and privacy walls just too tempting, and increasingly, they are demanding full access from applicants and students.

In Maryland, job seekers applying to the state's Department of Corrections have been asked during interviews to log into their accounts and let an interviewer watch while the potential employee clicks through wall posts, friends, photos and anything else that might be found behind the privacy wall.


(Excerpt) Read more at redtape.msnbc.msn.com ...

One thing we know, its that the government fucking hates the idea of citizens being able to keep information private from them.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 06, 2012, 07:19:43 PM
You don't stagger your docket?

yes,  but traffic court moves fast, cops coming in all day 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 07:29:18 PM
yes,  but traffic court moves fast, cops coming in all day 

Cops where I live pull scams regarding ot and traffic court near me like you can't believe.

come in for 30 minutes, make a few deals, get 4 hours OT. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 06, 2012, 07:50:03 PM
Cops where I live pull scams regarding ot and traffic court near me like you can't believe.

come in for 30 minutes, make a few deals, get 4 hours OT. 

lawyers pull the most unethical crap you've ever seen here...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 07:53:10 PM
lawyers pull the most unethical crap you've ever seen here...

I don't do crim law, but I have a few buddies who have mattered the art of testilying to a tee.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 06, 2012, 07:59:49 PM
I don't do crim law, but I have a few buddies who have mattered the art of testilying to a tee.

I gathered from your posts you don't do criminal law. No offense
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 08:03:01 PM
I gathered from your posts you don't do criminal law. No offense

 Don't.   I don't want to defend violent thugs.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 06, 2012, 08:12:48 PM
Don't.   I don't want to defend violent thugs.   

And you have to have a grasp of what evidence means, often supporting your statements with facts. I can't recall too many cut and paste FOX news articles in criminal court.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 08:14:48 PM
And you have to have a grasp of what evidence means, often supporting your statements with facts. I can't recall too many cut and paste FOX news articles in criminal court.   

I know crim procedure well.  I loved law school.   Great education.  considering I am in the Bronx, the worst of the worst is in crime court in the Bronx and I don't want to deal w those apes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 06, 2012, 08:30:52 PM
I know crim procedure well.  I loved law school.   Great education.  considering I am in the Bronx, the worst of the worst is in crime court in the Bronx and I don't want to deal w those apes.

You feeling okay tonight? You seem suspiciously coherent and civil.. Long day?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2012, 08:34:22 PM
You feeling okay tonight? You seem suspiciously coherent and civil.. Long day?

I'm always fine.   I would say 95 percent of the trash in criminal court is guilty as sin and are recidivist scum who we would be better off without. 

Having represented a few thugs in my career, no thanks.   worse than blood money to represent violent repeat offenders. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on March 06, 2012, 11:50:07 PM
3333s hate for black > hate for police.

Enemy of my enemy and all that tonight.
3333, plays like that on the board, but is he really like that?  I have my doubts...   I don't think he's the racist he pretends to be. I have some speck of faith that 3333 actually judges people for who they are and not by their colour.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 07, 2012, 03:26:35 AM
Oh, I'm just busting his balls... I don't think it's race with him... It's attitude and action.


It's the urban ghetto culture, not the race. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 12, 2012, 05:14:48 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/09/us-crime-newyork-statistics-idUSBRE82818620120309


Ridiculous.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 12, 2012, 11:53:15 AM
CompStat - short for computer statistics - is a police performance management system put in place in 1995 under former NYPD Police Commissioner Bill Bratton that tracks and analyzes crime data in real time, and holds police district and precinct commanders to account for crime-fighting performance in their respective commands.

The weekly CompStat meetings - where commanders have been reduced to tears under withering attacks from their bosses, according to several media reports - soon became the stuff of police legend, and even ended up being dramatized in a scene on HBO's cop drama "The Wire."


We have the same thing here. I've attended close to 100 CompStat meetings and have yet to see a Commander reduced to tears. Can't speak for New York but I doubt too many Police Commanders cry when answering questions about crime in their precinct.

2 issues in New York as far as the article goes. 1. Crime stats being manipulated. If they are getting beat up then they probably are fudging the numbers. That's too bad. They should have been big enough to explain what they are doing to address the crime and then keep adjusting the plan until they got results. 2. Bosses fail to realize there was crime when they joined the force, thre  will be  crime when they retire.  Instead of withering questions, how about doing what CompStat was invented for, brainstorming, finding out other cities best practices or other precincts best practices for addressing the hot spots they are having..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2012, 09:31:51 PM
Didn't watch it all but did watch enough to know the narrator is clueless about drug dog handling. The officer is trained to start down wind of any area or object he is searching. In the case it was likely the front of the vehicle

The officer doesn't tell his dog to "sit". he gives the command to "seek" which is the command used to tell the dog to start sniffing for contraband.

The dog comes off the back of the suspect car towards the front of the police car only because an odor caught his curiosity. He satisfied his curiosity and moved on. Could be drugs had been placed on the hood of the patrol car in recent history during another arrest, could be the cop ate breakfast off the hood that morning. 

The video showing the dogs sitting passively as an alert are BOMB dogs and trained to not show aggression during an alert for obvious reasons. In narcotics, typically the dog will scratch, bite and try to reach the drug. Not all do, but most do and it is encouraged as it helps pinpoint the location.

At this point it became obvious to me the narrator was off base and didn't know what he was talking about.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on March 15, 2012, 10:06:10 PM
Didn't watch it all but did watch enough to know the narrator is clueless about drug dog handling. The officer is trained to start down wind of any area or object he is searching. In the case it was likely the front of the vehicle

The officer doesn't tell his dog to "sit". he gives the command to "seek" which is the command used to tell the dog to start sniffing for contraband.

The dog comes off the back of the suspect car towards the front of the police car only because an odor caught his curiosity. He satisfied his curiosity and moved on. Could be drugs had been placed on the hood of the patrol car in recent history during another arrest, could be the cop ate breakfast off the hood that morning. 

The video showing the dogs sitting passively as an alert are BOMB dogs and trained to not show aggression during an alert for obvious reasons. In narcotics, typically the dog will scratch, bite and try to reach the drug. Not all do, but most do and it is encouraged as it helps pinpoint the location.

At this point it became obvious to me the narrator was off base and didn't know what he was talking about.   
Ok, big deal, he doesn't know the details of drug dog handling even though he posted videos to prove his point and you have only posted your opinion, but I trust you... He's a freaking trekkie geek coming from a trek show who obviously is a little upset that the officer made up a bunch of bogus crap to pull him over and search his vehicle.  Are you saying that everything else is totally normal in this video?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on March 15, 2012, 10:16:59 PM
Don't you know?

The anonymous cop Agnostic007 is supposedly more trustworthy than the person who puts his name out there on the internet for the world to see.

e
I'm not going to dog on Agnositic.  We've talked a bit and he seems like a good person to me.  He's a vet and I hope he's one of the good cops.  I'd rather just focus on debating this rather than call him out for being anonymous.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2012, 10:37:30 PM
That's funny because had you watched it, you would have seen actual drug sniffing dogs and their HANDLERS having the discussion about what drug dogs do and do not do.

You say they weren't drug dogs, but there were drug dog handlers talking about their dogs.

What's even MORE funny is how the cop has a criminal history... Of course you didn't get to that part.

I understand you are too busy to watch it though... Saving those lives and protecting the shit out of people.


Did you read any of the corresponding articles?

Doubtful... You're busy right?

http://www.stltoday.com/suburban-journals/illinois/news/crime/new-hearing-planned-in-officer-s-legal-battle/article_c6fda5b4-c8c5-51f6-ba20-6c786c48cbef.html?mode=story

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-01-06/news/ct-met-canine-officers-20110105_1_drug-sniffing-dogs-alex-rothacker-drug-dog



I trained drug and bomb dog teams for 10 yrs. Did I really have to watch the entire clip? I saw the dog team work the car, I saw the narrators example of why he thought something was wrong.. why he thought the team started where they did, why he thought the dog sniffed near the cop car... again, having DONE that for 10 yrs, I figured the narrator had a hard on for the incident and wasn't seeing  clearly. You know, how YOU sometimes get blinded to the facts by your hatred of cops..

Now.. is it possible the dog handler induced a false response? Sure..... it's possible. However, NONE of what he talked about as reasons were pertinent   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2012, 10:51:07 PM
This board is overwhelming slanted against cops. My role here as I see it is to offer some insight into the other side. In doing so I may come across as Tu complains as a cop who never sees that a cop does wrong. I think I've said many times on many occasions that there are great cops, good cops, mediocre cops, negligent cops and bad cops. It's my perception most are good cops.

The dog teams I trained in narcotics had to be 95% accurate. They were certified annually and trained extensively on a regular weekly basis. If a dog feel below 90% the team was De-certified until they came back up to standards. There are 12 million ways to Sunday to cause a dog to give a false response. When that is done, either on purpose or accident and the dog is rewarded, it ruins the dog.

I understand the concept of residual odor. I think SOME leeway must be given for this situation, however, if I had a dog team that was out in the field finding drugs only 50% of the time the dog alerted, I would have cause to be concerned and would require re-certification testing to determine the issue. I would also review the handlers in car video to see if I could pick up on the cues causing the false alerts. If it appeared to be intentional and was a pattern, he would be history.         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2012, 10:53:55 PM
I'm not going to dog on Agnositic.  We've talked a bit and he seems like a good person to me.  He's a vet and I hope he's one of the good cops.  I'd rather just focus on debating this rather than call him out for being anonymous.

Thanks, I'm glad my intentions come across this media. Appreciate you're candor and benefit of the doubt.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: outby43 on March 15, 2012, 10:59:54 PM
Oh boy, I drive past there every day on my way to work.  Hope he doesn't pull me over.  I never have anything on me but the minute he looked at my arrest record I would be in the same situation as this guy because I was arrested for weed before.  I was never convicted by the way.. :D.  I would just let him search so I could be on my way.  It fucking kills me to say that but cops got all day to more or less detain you.  I don't have time to play those games.  Once I got pulled over and the cop asked if I had drugs.  I told him to search and he said no that's OK.  They would probably do that most of the time if you ask them to search right off the bat.  Of course if I was holding I sure wouldn't say that...lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2012, 11:06:10 PM
I guess it's different everywhere. Our searches are recorded on video and on paperwork. Everything is tracked. Race, gender, age, if contraband was found. The stats are monitored for patterns. We've come a long way over the last 20 yrs and now-a-days it is not uncommon when someone turns down a search request for the officer(s) to call it a day and move on. Back in the day it wasn't uncommon to turn over every stone looking for enough PC to search the car. These days, at least around here, we have enough on our plate without spending an hour trying to get into a car that may or may not have a "no one cares" amount of drugs.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 16, 2012, 10:57:35 AM
The CIA wants to spy on you through your TV: Agency director says it will 'transform' surveillance
Daily Mail ^ | March 16, 2012 | Rob Waugh




When people download a film from Netflix to a flatscreen, or turn on web radio, they could be alerting unwanted watchers to exactly what they are doing and where they are.

Spies will no longer have to plant bugs in your home - the rise of 'connected' gadgets controlled by apps will mean that people 'bug' their own homes, says CIA director David Petraeus.

The CIA claims it will be able to 'read' these devices via the internet - and perhaps even via radio waves from outside the home.

Everything from remote controls to clock radios can now be controlled via apps - and chip company ARM recently unveiled low-powered, cheaper chips which will be used in everything from fridges and ovens to doorbells.

The resultant chorus of 'connected' gadgets will be able to be read like a book - and even remote-controlled, according to CIA CIA Director David Petraeus, according to a recent report by Wired's 'Danger Room' blog.

Petraeus says that web-connected gadgets will 'transform' the art of spying - allowing spies to monitor people automatically without planting bugs, breaking and entering or even donning a tuxedo to infiltrate a dinner party.

'Transformational’ is an overused word, but I do believe it properly applies to these technologies,' said Petraeus.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 11:17:26 AM
I think my alarm clock is on to me....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 16, 2012, 11:27:53 AM
I think my alarm clock is on to me....
Why do you continue to mock this kind of shit?
Its happening right before your eyes, and youre going to be one of those dumb fucks that sits there going "How did this happen to me? I never saw it coming!"  ::) ::) ::)
More like refused to open your eyes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 16, 2012, 11:31:11 AM
Why do you continue to mock this kind of shit?
Its happening right before your eyes, and youre going to be one of those dumb fucks that sits there going "How did this happen to me? I never saw it coming!"  ::) ::) ::)
More like refused to open your eyes.

His continued employment depends on this police state bullshit. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 11:34:20 AM
Why do you continue to mock this kind of shit?
Its happening right before your eyes, and youre going to be one of those dumb fucks that sits there going "How did this happen to me? I never saw it coming!"  ::) ::) ::)
More like refused to open your eyes.

I'm tied down in reality..it is a flaw I am working on..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 11:36:01 AM
His continued employment depends on this police state bullshit.  

Nah... I'm good with or without the "police state" or whatever that means.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 16, 2012, 01:24:00 PM
I'm tied down in reality..it is a flaw I am working on..
No, youre tied down in IGNORANCE because you refuse to accept reality when its right in fucking front of you.

Youre in Law Enforcement arent you? People in L.E. are the only people Ive ever seen dismiss this kind of shit even when faced with facts right in front of their face.

I guess I dont really blame you, itd be hard for me to come to grips with the fact that my constituents are no longer honoring their sworn oath but are instead becoming a corrupt perversion of themselves, I wouldnt want to face that either.

*Edit*
just scrolled up and read the rest of the thread that you were in L.E.

Hope youre one of the good ones, because it seems more and more that the bad are starting to outweight the good.
BTW bro, I understand why you defend them all, I do the same for the Marines I seen unjustly persecuted, but the fact is, there is just no defending some of the shit your constituents do, and the fact is, that their is an increasingly oppressive police and government presence (more federal than state), and they ARE finding new ways to keep tabs on us - it may not be at your level, but it sure as hell is at the Federal level whether you want to open your eyes to it or not.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 02:03:41 PM
It means the fact that you get to keep getting a paycheck for oppressing hard working tax payers who pay for your salary due to being forced to with the power of the gun.

You're idea of police work and mine obviously don't match...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 02:13:57 PM
No, youre tied down in IGNORANCE because you refuse to accept reality when its right in fucking front of you.

Youre in Law Enforcement arent you? People in L.E. are the only people Ive ever seen dismiss this kind of shit even when faced with facts right in front of their face.

I guess I dont really blame you, itd be hard for me to come to grips with the fact that my constituents are no longer honoring their sworn oath but are instead becoming a corrupt perversion of themselves, I wouldnt want to face that either.

*Edit*
just scrolled up and read the rest of the thread that you were in L.E.

Hope youre one of the good ones, because it seems more and more that the bad are starting to outweight the good.
BTW bro, I understand why you defend them all, I do the same for the Marines I seen unjustly persecuted, but the fact is, there is just no defending some of the shit your constituents do, and the fact is, that their is an increasingly oppressive police and government presence (more federal than state), and they ARE finding new ways to keep tabs on us - it may not be at your level, but it sure as hell is at the Federal level whether you want to open your eyes to it or not.

I've been known to call a duck a duck Shock.. I've been on many threads commenting on videos where in my opinion and based on the evidence available to me (the video), that an officer or officers screwed the pooch. I've no illusions that all cops are great.

I'll tell ya my opinion on your perception that the bad are starting to outweigh the good. I think it is the opposite. Today (speaking for my Department in my little world and trying to associate the observation to other places) that we have come a long way in 30 years. We have college requirement, extensive pre-screening, etc etc. What you and I see now is the result of video phone cameras, in car cameras and technology as a whole showing cops screwing up more than ever. For every 100,000 good contacts police have daily that are never seen, you see the couple dumb asses. So it appears it is getting worse.

I'd like to see the day every cop does the exact right thing every time, but I don't think that's  gonna happen as long as we use humans. But I am all for holding them accountable   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 04:01:45 PM
Your... It's Your.

Possessive.

awesome catch there..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 16, 2012, 07:19:17 PM
For every 100,000 good contacts police have daily that are never seen, you see the couple dumb asses.





It always makes me laugh when you regurgitate this repetitive tripe.

I always think about that Chris Rock video and people wanting credit for shit their supposed to do.

Your supposed to get it right you dumb motherfvcker.

Nobody cares if Walmart does a good job in 5000 stores on Good Friday.  It's the one where they fuck everything up that matters.

Why?

Because they're supposed to get it right you dumb motherfvcker.


















Don't worry, cops as a whole are generally pretty good - we can agree on that.

Laughfest over/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 16, 2012, 07:23:01 PM
Can I get some props from some of the posters here for obeying the law on a regular basis?



Every fucking day goes by and I obey 10 bazillion laws and never get credit for any of it.



ONE TIME I run a stop sign and some douchebag cop makes a thing of it.  ::)



How about some props for all the laws I fucking obeyed.  :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 16, 2012, 09:42:29 PM
Can I get some props from some of the posters here for obeying the law on a regular basis?



Every fucking day goes by and I obey 10 bazillion laws and never get credit for any of it.



ONE TIME I run a stop sign and some douchebag cop makes a thing of it.  ::)



How about some props for all the laws I fucking obeyed.  :(

Skip, I agree, cops are supposed to get it right.. It would be wonderful if they did. The point I was making is 2 fold. 1. Cops get it right the vast majority of the time. 2. Cops are recruited from humans and therefore anyone who has the expectation cops will always get it right are just silly twits or unrealistic morons, hard to tell which. Cops who don't get it right should be held accountable because the expectation is that they should have...    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 17, 2012, 09:26:12 AM
[ Invalid YouTube link ]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2012, 11:57:04 AM
http://www.nbc12.com/story/17191109/woman-ticketed

Police ticket woman for kid's chalk drawings

Courtesy: Susan Mortensen Courtesy: Susan Mortensen

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) - -

A woman claims Richmond Police gave her a ticket because her little girl was drawing with chalk on the rocks at Belle Isle.

Susan Mortensen says she was charged with destruction of property due to her child's doodles. She says she wasn't aware that chalk wasn't allowed and wants other parents to be aware, so they don't get ticketed as well.

The mother is speaking with Ben Garbarek, who will have more on the story coming up on First at 4:00.



Life on the line.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 19, 2012, 04:46:38 PM
"I agree with mkschu. I don't particularly care to see some kid's chalk markings on the rocks when I visit a park. I want to see nature, not human defacing of it. However minor the infraction is, they shouldn't be defacing the area, even if it IS temporary. Suppose someone soaped their windows? Hey, it's just temporary, and will wash off. But I bet no one would be complaining about the police being overzealous if someone were arrested for that. And I bet she'd be demanding police action and attending the perp's hearing. The law is the law. "

Comment from the link.. Not everyone thinks colored chalk on rocks is attractive and something they should be doing in the city parks.

Now before you go all looney on me I agree a ticket is probably too much, but I can see the need to discourage that in those settings..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2012, 08:47:02 PM
Why did the DHS just order 450 million rounds of .40 caliber ammunition?
Fellowship of the Minds ^ | Steve
Posted on March 19, 2012 9:39:45 PM EDT by angelcindy

DHS ALSO HAS A BID OUT FOR 175 MILLION ROUNDS OF . 223 OR M-16/

REQUIREMENT: The total requirement is to provide an estimated 33 million rounds of .223 Remington Caliber SD and 2 million rounds of .223 Remington Caliber EP ammunition in the base year and an estimated 33 million rounds of .223 Remington Caliber SD and 2 million rounds of .223 Remington Caliber EP ammunition in each of four option years in accordance with Attachment 2, Statement of Work for .223 Remington Caliber SD and .223 Remington Caliber EP Ammunition.

The Department of Homeland security has just executed an order for enough rounds of 40 caliber ammunition to kill every man, woman and child in the United States.

A shocking new defense contract entered by the Department of Homeland Security to secure a massive amount of ammunition, with the option for infinite supply and infinite delivery, raises the question of just what they are preparing for? Massive civil unrest? An invasion by a foreign power?

The order is to supply 450 million rounds of .40 caliber ammunition, which is more than one bullet for every single person in the United States.

The contract also comes with the additional caveat that the order is forward-looking, which means it can be revised upward or downward depending on a variety of factors, some of which also happen to contribute to civil unrest — including governmental spending, budgetary policies and economic conditions.

(Excerpt) Read more at fellowshipofminds.wordpr ess.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 21, 2012, 08:38:23 AM
IRS may share tax info with police to fight fraud
By Patrick Temple-West


WASHINGTON | Tue Mar 20, 2012 6:37pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A surge in tax refund fraud and identity theft has prompted the Internal Revenue Service to consider sharing more tax return information with police, a senior official told a congressional hearing on Tuesday.

In a move that could spark concerns over personal privacy, the IRS said it is considering a pilot program in Tampa, Florida, where identity theft and refund fraud are rife.

"We are limited in what we can supply to local law enforcement," said Steven Miller, deputy IRS commissioner for services and enforcement.

Tax return information is normally kept tightly secret by the IRS. Under the program, exceptions could be made, with the permission of victims of identity theft and tax refund fraud, so that bogus tax return documents could be shared with police.

Tampa has seen a rash of identity theft and tax refund fraud cases since last year, totaling $130 million in stolen funds. Suspected wrongdoers steal Social Security numbers and file returns seeking tax refunds, using an abandoned home or another phony address as a delivery point.

Democratic Senator Bill Nelson of Florida held the hearing to tout his legislation to allow more taxpayer information sharing between the IRS and local law enforcement.

No date has been set for the Tampa program to begin, according to IRS.

In 1976, Congress made it a crime for IRS workers to share taxpayer information.

"There was a reason why we are limited in providing to local law enforcement, in an unfettered matter, tax returns," Miller said. "Congress has treated tax return information as sacrosanct."

Nina Olson, the national taxpayer advocate at the IRS, supported some information sharing, but cautioned that once local law enforcement has access to taxpayers' returns, they could be shared with other people.

Congress should modify the IRS information-sharing prohibition but limit the disclosure of the information for any purpose other than law enforcement, she said.

(Reporting by Patrick Temple-West; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh; Desking by Lisa Shumaker)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 21, 2012, 09:25:46 AM
http://www.nbc12.com/story/17191109/woman-ticketed

Police ticket woman for kid's chalk drawings

Courtesy: Susan Mortensen Courtesy: Susan Mortensen

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) - -

A woman claims Richmond Police gave her a ticket because her little girl was drawing with chalk on the rocks at Belle Isle.

Susan Mortensen says she was charged with destruction of property due to her child's doodles. She says she wasn't aware that chalk wasn't allowed and wants other parents to be aware, so they don't get ticketed as well.

The mother is speaking with Ben Garbarek, who will have more on the story coming up on First at 4:00.





Clearly these cops did not care about the 10 bazillion laws this woman followed correctly.

They only want to cry about the one she didn't get right.

Wonder what happens to cops when they don't get it right............oh wait....








:D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 21, 2012, 09:28:10 AM
Can I get some props from some of the posters here for obeying the law on a regular basis?



Every fucking day goes by and I obey 10 bazillion laws and never get credit for any of it.



ONE TIME I run a stop sign and some douchebag cop makes a thing of it.  ::)



How about some props for all the laws I fucking obeyed.  :(





Damn...doesn't look like I'm going to get my pat on the back for doing what I SHOULD do.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 21, 2012, 09:34:01 AM
ON – The Supreme Court has unanimously sided with Idaho property owners whose plans to build a home were blocked by an Environmental Protection Agency order declaring the property contained wetlands.

In an opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia, the court says Wednesday that the EPA cannot threaten fines of more than $30,000 a day without giving property owners the ability to challenge its actions.

The decision is a victory for Mike and Chantell Sackett, whose property near a scenic lake has sat undisturbed since the EPA ordered a halt in work in 2007. The agency said part of the property was a wetlands that cannot be disturbed without a permit.

The couple complained there was no reasonable way to challenge the order.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03/21/supreme-court-sides-with-idaho-property-owners-over-epa/#ixzz1plUWfCxh

Thank you for the above information, Dr. Sivana (post #7)

Here's the SCOTUS opinion: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-1062.pdf





Good!   Screw the EPA  - another jack boot agency that needs to go.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 21, 2012, 10:21:36 AM

Documents Show Homeland Security Was Tracking Occupy Wall Street Even Before The First Protest
Grace Wyler | 15 minutes ago | 106 | 1



Julia La Roche for Business Insider
 
The Department of Homeland Security has been tracking the Occupy Wall Street movement since well before protesters first took Zuccotti Park last September, according to internal DHS memos obtained by Business Insider through a Freedom of Information Act Request. 

The documents show that DHS alerted its agents to the Wall Street protests — and specifically the involvement of the hacker group Anonymous in organizing the protests — sometime before the Sept. 17 kickoff of the protests in downtown Manhattan.

In an undated memo, titled "Details On 'Anonymous' Upcoming Operations: 17 September 2011: Occupy Wall Street; U.S. Day of Rage," the DHS Office of Intelligence notes that the hacker group had came out in support of the planned Sept. 17 Wall Street protests. The memo provides details of a YouTube video released by Anonymous that called on protesters "to adopt a non-violent 'Tahrir-acampadas model,'" and to "flood into lower Manhattan, set up tents, kitchens, peaceful barricades and occupy Wall Street for a few months."

The memo warns that AdBusters, the original organizers of the OWS protests, had also planned a demonstration on the National Mall to coincide with the 10th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq in October 2011.

Another DHS Intelligence memo provides further warnings about the impact and likelihood of upcoming Anonymous Operations.

According to that memo, DHS cybersecurity analysts considered it "likely" that that peaceful OWS protests would occur on Sept. 17, and that "those protests may be accompanied by malicious cyber activity conducted by Anonymous."

The memo says analysts considered it unlikely that Anonymous would follow through with threats to launch a coordinated attack against Facebook on Nov. 5 2011.

On Anonymous's "Project Mayhem," — a year-long effort that will end with an "unveiling of secrets" on Dec. 21 2012 — the DHS warns that "inconsequential physical mischief and potentially disruptive malicious cyber activities" are expected, but "specific tactics, techniques, and procedures are unknown."

The memo also mentions an "Operation Halliburton" but says that "little is known" about the potential operation, which presumably targets the U.S. oilfield services giant.

Two other memos obtained by BI warn about Anonymous' threats to take down the New York Stock Exchange and to hack Fox News' website over the network's coverage of the OWS movement.

The documents were released to Business Insider today in response to a FOIA request we filed when reports first started circulating that DHS helped coordinate the nationwide OWS crackdown last November.

Although we have only made it through some of the 408 documents, what we've seen so far indicates that while the agency reluctant to get involved in the Occupy protests (at least initially), Homeland Security was definitely keeping tabs on the movement from the outset.

Read the memos below.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/department-of-homeland-security-tracking-occupy-wall-street-from-beginning-2012-3#ixzz1plz5sbcW

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 21, 2012, 01:55:20 PM




Clearly these cops did not care about the 10 bazillion laws this woman followed correctly.

They only want to cry about the one she didn't get right.

Wonder what happens to cops when they don't get it right............oh wait....








:D

Typically get reprimmands, suspensions or termination depending on the seriousness.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 21, 2012, 05:42:25 PM
Typically get reprimmands, suspensions or termination depending on the seriousness.




Reprimand?

You mean like when an officer from a certain police department is caught watching a movie in his patrol car?

Kinda strange considering you claimed you all were soooooo busy that you didn't have time for breaks, lol.

This will go away, with most of you covering his/her a$$.  Like I said, biggest problem with public officials (ALL public officials) is the fact that they don't police themselves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2012, 07:45:29 PM
Free Republic
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Govt to keep info on Americans with no terror ties
Associated Press ^ | March 22, 2012 | EILEEN SULLIVAN
Posted on March 22, 2012 9:48:42 PM EDT by Free ThinkerNY

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. intelligence community will now be able to store information about Americans with no ties to terrorism for up to five years under new Obama administration guidelines.

Until now, the National Counterterrorism Center had to immediately destroy information about Americans that was already stored in other government databases when there were no clear ties to terrorism.

(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2012, 07:48:19 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/23/us/politics/us-moves-to-relax-some-restrictions-for-counterterrorism-analysis.html?_r=1&emc=na



What a fucking disaster. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 23, 2012, 06:46:16 AM
Govt to keep info on Americans with no terror ties
 

Mar 22, 9:36 PM (ET)

By EILEEN SULLIVAN

 

WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. intelligence community will now be able to store information about Americans with no ties to terrorism for up to five years under new Obama administration guidelines.

Until now, the National Counterterrorism Center had to immediately destroy information about Americans that was already stored in other government databases when there were no clear ties to terrorism.

Giving the NCTC expanded record-retention authority had been called for by members of Congress who said the intelligence community did not connect strands of intelligence held by multiple agencies leading up to the failed bombing attempt on a Detroit-bound airliner on Christmas 2009.

"Following the failed terrorist attack in December 2009, representatives of the counterterrorism community concluded it is vital for NCTC to be provided with a variety of datasets from various agencies that contain terrorism information," Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in a statement late Thursday. "The ability to search against these datasets for up to five years on a continuing basis as these updated guidelines permit will enable NCTC to accomplish its mission more practically and effectively."

The new rules replace guidelines issued in 2008 and have privacy advocates concerned about the potential for data-mining information on innocent Americans.

"It is a vast expansion of the government's surveillance authority," Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said of the five-year retention period.

The government put in strong safeguards at the NCTC for the data that would be collected on U.S. citizens for intelligence purposes, Rotenberg said. These new guidelines undercut the Federal Privacy Act, he said.

"The fact that this data can be retained for five years on U.S. citizens for whom there's no evidence of criminal conduct is very disturbing," Rotenberg said.

"Total Information Awareness appears to be reconstructing itself," Rotenberg said, referring to the Defense Department's post-9/11 data-mining research program that was killed in 2003 because of privacy concerns.

The Washington Post first reported the new rules Thursday.

The Obama administration said the new rules come with strong safeguards for privacy and civil liberties as well. Before the NCTC may obtain data held by another government agency, there is a high-level review to assure that the data "is likely to contain significant terrorism information," Alexander Joel, the civil liberties protection officer at national intelligence directorate, said in a news release Thursday.

The NCTC was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to be the central U.S. organization to analyze and integrate intelligence regarding terrorism.



http://apnews.myway.com/article/20120323/D9TLT6VG0.html




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 23, 2012, 11:53:01 AM
Creepy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 23, 2012, 12:57:07 PM



Reprimand?

You mean like when an officer from a certain police department is caught watching a movie in his patrol car?

Kinda strange considering you claimed you all were soooooo busy that you didn't have time for breaks, lol.

This will go away, with most of you covering his/her a$$.  Like I said, biggest problem with public officials (ALL public officials) is the fact that they don't police themselves.

Glad you brought it up. During SXSW an event that brings in thousands of people from around the country, officers were placed on 12 hr shifts  in various barricaded street locations on static posts. This officer violated policy by watching a DVD while on duty posted at a barricade. An unprofessional, stupid thing to do and he will likely be suspended for it when all is said and done. They pay us a lot, they expect a lot, and this officer did not meet the Departments expectations nor the publis. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 24, 2012, 12:56:49 PM
I'll bet dollars to donuts that he is not suspended at all.

I will also double your donut that if he is suspended that its for no more than 2 weeks with pay.




Agreed.

2 years from now, after the union lawyer has argued that the cop was never specifically trained on not watching movies in the patrol car (because he/she is theoretically "smart" but not that "smart"), or some other such nonsense...the result will probably be a verbal reprimand. 

Of course, the media will have long since lost any interest.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 25, 2012, 07:51:09 AM
Warrantless: Police raid wrong house (76 yr old stroke victim)
© Copyright 2012, AuburnPub.com, 25 Dill Street Auburn, NY ^ | Posted: Sunday, March 25, 2012 3:00 am | Justin Murphy
Posted on March 25, 2012 10:48:03 AM EDT by Behind Liberal Lines

There are few people less likely to sell drugs than Fred Skinner.

The 76-year-old lives alone on Mc Neeley Road in Victory, getting by with help from neighbors. Much of his home has been quietly abandoned because he can’t get up and down the stairs; his son, also named Fred Skinner, said his mind “goes in and out.”

Since suffering a stroke last July, he speaks haltingly, sleeps with an oxygen tank and has a pacemaker in his chest.

Skinner doesn’t hear as well as he used to, but there was no missing the pair of crashes he heard late in the morning on March 13.

The first was at the outside door to his front porch and the second was at the inner door from the porch to his living room. About eight uniformed police officers burst into his kitchen, finding him at the table with a plate of breakfast crumbs.

“I was just setting there at the table,” he said. “They busted in and said, ‘Don’t move,’ so I didn’t move. I didn’t know what to do — I didn’t know why the troopers were running through the house.”

The officers spread out into the basement and second floor then quickly returned. Someone was handcuffing Skinner’s arms behind his back when they looked through the mail on the table and saw his name.

“They said, ‘Is this your name?’” Skinner said. “I said, ‘Yes.’ Then they said, ‘Wrong house.’”

The officers left as quickly as they came, leaving his doorknob on the porch floor and the two doors broken open. The whole incident took five minutes.

Once they left, Skinner called Barbara Bailey, his neighbor across the street. Bailey saw five or six patrol cars at the house next door to Skinner’s and went out to them.

She asked who they were and what they were doing; they told her they were conducting a drug raid from Rochester, she said.

“I said, ‘What about Fred Skinner’s house?’” Bailey said. “And he shrugged like he wasn’t telling me a damn thing.”

No one was home at the other house, either -- Bailey said the man who lives there is often out of town. The officers left without an apology or information about how Skinner might get reimbursed for the damage.

The raid was conducted by the Rochester Police Department and the Finger Lakes Drug Task Force, which is led by the Auburn Police Department and, in this case, also involved the Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office.

No one involved would specify the purpose of the raid or say why the officers broke into the wrong house. No arrests have been made in the original drug case, which is still active.

The Rochester Police Department was the lead agency. Department spokesman Stephen Scott declined to comment but said there is an investigation into the incident.

“We haven’t determined there was a mistake yet; the investigation is still ongoing,” he said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 25, 2012, 11:58:42 AM
I'll bet dollars to donuts that he is not suspended at all.

I will also double your donut that if he is suspended that its for no more than 2 weeks with pay.

We don't have an option of suspended with pay. I'll keep you posted
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 25, 2012, 12:07:00 PM
Right to Resist now law in Indiana, cops show how evil they think we are
Posted on March 24, 2012.



Tuesday night Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels signed the Right to Resist bill into law and the policemen of the United States went completely apeshit. There’s really nowhere better to go to write this article than the hangout site for cops called PoliceOne.com. Alot of people I know have changed their opinions of police after reading what the officers say on that page.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels said Wednesday that he shares police groups’ concerns that some people might misinterpret a new law that lays out when residents could be legally justified in using force against police officers.

Daniels said he thought carefully before signing the bill Tuesday night. The legislation was passed by strong majorities in the House and Senate in response to public uproar after the state Supreme Court ruled last year that residents couldn”t resist officers even during an illegal entry.

Obviously Mitch wants to please both sides in this debate, but let’s just take a look at what the police are saying.


http://www.copblock.org/14397/right-to-resist-now-law-in-indiana-cops-show-how-evil-they-think-we-are






__________________


good law.    I am glad he signed this into law.   Hopefully more states will follow. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 25, 2012, 12:14:05 PM
Right to Resist now law in Indiana, cops show how evil they think we are
Posted on March 24, 2012.



Tuesday night Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels signed the Right to Resist bill into law and the policemen of the United States went completely apeshit. There’s really nowhere better to go to write this article than the hangout site for cops called PoliceOne.com. Alot of people I know have changed their opinions of police after reading what the officers say on that page.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels said Wednesday that he shares police groups’ concerns that some people might misinterpret a new law that lays out when residents could be legally justified in using force against police officers.

Daniels said he thought carefully before signing the bill Tuesday night. The legislation was passed by strong majorities in the House and Senate in response to public uproar after the state Supreme Court ruled last year that residents couldn”t resist officers even during an illegal entry.

Obviously Mitch wants to please both sides in this debate, but let’s just take a look at what the police are saying.


http://www.copblock.org/14397/right-to-resist-now-law-in-indiana-cops-show-how-evil-they-think-we-are






__________________


good law.    I am glad he signed this into law.   Hopefully more states will follow. 

Good law if the public is educated on what it means. Potentially dangerous if not..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 25, 2012, 12:21:52 PM
Good law if the public is educated on what it means. Potentially dangerous if not..
Agree here...
Some dumbass thinks the cops are doing something illegal may wind up getting himself shot misinterperting this law...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 26, 2012, 06:09:23 AM
Great law... Remember... You hold your power at the behest of the people... Not at your whim.

Police need to understand that they are there at the desire of citizens, they are not special.
I agree here, what Im concerned about is police entering lawfully and some punk deciding to shoot their ass because he thinks theyre there illegally. I think for this to work, theyre going to have to end Police's forced entry without knocking. (Which I think should happen anyway, way to many innocents get shot when they hear their door being broken down and they reach for a gun thinking theyre being invaded).

I really dont agree with the police being able to kick in your door. Way to many respond by grabbing their gun, in which case the police have to shoot him for being armed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 26, 2012, 06:15:44 AM
 :D. That poor bastard in utah w the golf club comes to mind who thought his house was being broken in to.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 26, 2012, 11:17:12 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/25/michael-morton-60-minutes_n_1378773.html


Wow - check this out !  !  !  !

Insane 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 29, 2012, 06:12:59 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/us-immigration-agents-are-loading-up-on-as-many-as-450-million-new-rounds-of-ammo-2012-3


Nice. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 29, 2012, 06:21:24 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/welcome-to-the-united-states-of-orwell-part-2-law-abiding-taxpayers-are-treated-as-criminals-while-the-real-criminals-go-free-2012-3



Wow.   Read this shit!!!!    and people wonder why I pray for the govt to collapse and all govt workers left penniless? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 29, 2012, 06:33:13 PM
This has happened to me before.

As I work in CA a lot, and my company is headquartered there, I am forced to pay CA and VA state taxes and the California Franchise Tax board HAS done this to me in the past even though I DO NOT LIVE THERE.

It's a ####... and it is NOT a lie.

I had my accounts frozen by those fuckers in 2008 for the EXACT same reason.


This is why I actually am praying for a total collapse so that all of these govt workers will get axed.   Sure it willbe messy and bunch of people will get hurt, but shit like this is so beyond anything acceptable it's not even debatable anymore.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on March 29, 2012, 08:32:34 PM
This has happened to me before.

As I work in CA a lot, and my company is headquartered there, I am forced to pay CA and VA state taxes and the California Franchise Tax board HAS done this to me in the past even though I DO NOT LIVE THERE.

It's a ####... and it is NOT a lie.

I had my accounts frozen by those fuckers in 2008 for the EXACT same reason.
You gotta be kidding me.
So they figure if you move away theyre still entitled to your money, if you dont file a return to a state you havent lived/worked in?
What horseshit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 29, 2012, 08:44:24 PM
Yep. It's a ####.

Hey - STFU!!!   Those brave valiant cops and firefighter ands clerks in the DMV need their sick days and accrued vacation payed for!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 30, 2012, 06:38:04 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/welcome-to-the-united-states-of-orwell-part-2-law-abiding-taxpayers-are-treated-as-criminals-while-the-real-criminals-go-free-2012-3



Wow.   Read this shit!!!!    and people wonder why I pray for the govt to collapse and all govt workers left penniless? 

No, I pretty much figure you have serious mental issues  ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 30, 2012, 06:40:27 AM
No, I pretty much figure you have serious mental issues  ;)

Yeah whatever - the public at large is coming more and more to my view that most government workers, not all are nothing but thieves, locusts, and criminals. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 30, 2012, 09:39:56 AM
Yeah whatever - the public at large is coming more and more to my view that most government workers, not all are nothing but thieves, locusts, and criminals. 

Yes, I'd say about 2% are... I'm being generous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 31, 2012, 07:09:12 AM
You may actually have a learning disability if you seriously believe that.

Govt workers live in an isolated bubble and only talk to each other by and large.   They convince each other how valuable they are and hoe they deserve to plunder the taxpayers. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 31, 2012, 07:39:01 AM
This has happened to me before.

As I work in CA a lot, and my company is headquartered there, I am forced to pay CA and VA state taxes and the California Franchise Tax board HAS done this to me in the past even though I DO NOT LIVE THERE.

It's a ####... and it is NOT a lie.

I had my accounts frozen by those fuckers in 2008 for the EXACT same reason.



::)

Fucking &^%^* in Cali
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2012, 12:53:41 PM
Another Trayvon Martin case? Black retired Marine is shot and killed by police in his own home
globalpost.com ^ | April 4, 2012




In November, Kenneth Chamberlain's heart device went off. Police officers responded to the medical emergency by shooting him to death.

The police officers originally were not charged with any crimes. But Chamberlain's family has tried to publicize his death, and the Westchester District Attorney's Office confirmed this week that the case will be presented to a grand jury within a month, the Daily White Plains reported today.

Chamberlain was a 68-year-old, black retired Marine living in a public housing project. On November 19, a medical alert device for his heart accidentally went off, triggering a response from public safety, the New York Daily News reported. When police officers came and knocked on his door, Chamberlain didn't open it, saying he was fine and didn't need help. Police officers then snapped the lock and entered Chamberlain's home. They Tasered him and then shot him. He died in the hospital two hours later.

The police officers had claimed that Chamberlain attacked them with a hatchet and a knife, and that they were acting in self-defense. They have not released the name of the officer who shot Chamberlain, the Daily White Plains reported Monday.


(Excerpt) Read more at globalpost.com ...






I live in Westchester on the border w the Bronx and will tell you this does not surprise me one bit.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on April 04, 2012, 02:07:53 PM
Epic. "Im fine"
Break the lock, taze, shoot. Makes perfect sense.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 04, 2012, 03:55:24 PM
This has happened to me before.

As I work in CA a lot, and my company is headquartered there, I am forced to pay CA and VA state taxes and the California Franchise Tax board HAS done this to me in the past even though I DO NOT LIVE THERE.

It's a ####... and it is NOT a lie.

I had my accounts frozen by those fuckers in 2008 for the EXACT same reason.




This one here from the other day is still bugging me.

Can one of you lawyers tell me how the fuck this isn't taxation without representation.  He's not living there, he's not being represented.  This is fucking insane.

Bunch of fucking morons running wild in California legislature.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2012, 06:31:44 PM
INVESTIGATORS: This Tennessee Judge Had Sex And Bought Drugs During Courtroom Breaks
News Desk, GlobalPost    | Apr. 4, 2012, 8:15 PM | 328 | 3


A Tennessee judge and alleged prescription drug addict stands accused of having had sex and buying pills during courtroom breaks, sometimes buying them from people he had previously sentenced himself, according to a new report cited by The Associated Press.

Judge Richard Baumgartner, 64, stepped down over a year ago, admitting to a single instance of misconduct, but the scope of the allegations has ballooned to the point that demands for retrials, releases and reviews could overwhelm the justice system in Knox County, Tennessee’s third largest, according to the news agency.
More from GlobalPost: Bengals cheerleader Sarah Jones pleads not guilty to sex with student (VIDEO)
The AP had reported last month that Baumgartner was under federal investigation. The Knoxville News Sentinel reported last week that Tennessee authorities were prevented from disclosing all of the results of the investigation into Judge Baumgartner.

The AP said the public portions of the file said Judge Baumgartner was an abuser of oxycodone, hydrocodone and generic Xanax and Valium and had sex in chambers with one of his suppliers, a woman named Deena Castleman who is not even half his age and has a history of arrests.

More from GlobalPost: Promises, pitfalls await investors in Burma’s frontier economy

Based on the investigation, Judge Jon Kerry Blackwood has overturned the convictions of four people held responsible for sexually torturing and murdering two University of Tennessee students and ordered retrials, according to the AP.

"We're getting pleadings almost daily now from people in the penitentiary filing habeas corpus saying, 'Let me out too.' It's raining over here," Knox County District Attorney General Randy Nichols was quoted as saying.

This post originally appeared at GlobalPost.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2012, 06:58:05 PM
http://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2012/04/04/was-12000-a-restaurant-tip-or-drug-money


Strange!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2012, 08:12:51 PM
Probably new assault rifles and incindiary ammo
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2012, 08:15:41 PM
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Florida woman offers sex for 2 cheeseburgers off dollar menu
In Forum ^ | April 3, 2012
Posted on April 4, 2012 11:06:35 PM EDT by Clintonfatigued

A woman was arrested in a prostitution sting but not before she got two double cheeseburgers off the dollar menu at a McDonald's restaurant.

Christine Faith Baker, 47, was walking on a street Friday when she was approached by a detective working in the Manatee County Sheriff Office's special investigations division, according to a sheriff's office report.

After the undercover detective invited Baker into his car and the talk turned to sex, she said her fee would be two double cheeseburgers from the dollar menu at McDonald's, the report states.

The detective bought the burgers for $2.75 and then Baker told him that he could also tip her $40 for her services, according to the report. After Baker gave the detective directions to a vacant lot, Baker was arrested by other agents and charged with prostitution, the report states.

The report does not indicate if Baker got to finish eating the food before she was taken to jail. Baker was released from jail Saturday, according to the sheriff's office website.

(Excerpt) Read more at inforum.com ...








Sad. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 07, 2012, 06:38:32 PM
Government Surveillance Crackdown On Internet Goes Into Overdrive
                    
Cyber bills legislate for mass surveillance; Former Cybersecurity Czar calls for Homeland Security data “customs inspections”
Steve Watson
Infowars.com
April 5, 2012

In a New York Times editorial, former government cybersecurity czar Richard A. Clarke has called for the creation of customs checks on all data leaving and entering US cyberspace.
Clarke makes the call in relation to Chinese hackers stealing information and intellectual property from US firms.
“If given the proper authorization, the United States government could stop files in the process of being stolen from getting to the Chinese hackers.” Clarke writes.
“If government agencies were authorized to create a major program to grab stolen data leaving the country, they could drastically reduce today’s wholesale theft of American corporate secrets.”
While Clarke may well be coming at this subject well intentioned, the fact that government has a long history of attempting to crackdown on internet freedom and control the web will mean his words are a cause of concern for many.
“Under Customs authority, the Department of Homeland Security could inspect what enters and exits the United States in cyberspace…” Clarke continues.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

“And under the Intelligence Act, the president could issue a finding that would authorize agencies to scan Internet traffic outside the United States and seize sensitive files stolen from within our borders.”
We have seen with the recent attempts to pass legislation such as SOPA, PIPA, and ACTA, that the federal government is hell bent on skirting around legal oversight in order to seize more control over web content and communications.
While those particular bills have more of a focus on copyright protection, there is a huge move afoot to use the issue of cybersecurity as a means to crack down on the free internet.
The Obama administration is going all out to muster support in Congress for a bipartisan cybersecurity bill co-sponsored by Republican Senator Susan Collins and Independent Senator Joseph Lieberman and Democratic Senators Jay Rockefeller and Dianne Feinstein.
Critics contend that the bill contains several provisions that represent a sweeping power grab on behalf of the federal government.
A measure recently added to the bill by Collins and Lieberman, and supported by Obama, would empower the Department of Homeland Security to conduct “risk assessments” of private companies in sectors deemed critical to U.S. national and economic security, forcing them to comply with expensive mandates to secure their systems.
ISPs AT&T and Comcast have denounced the provision, declaring that federal oversight will stifle innovation.
“Such requirements could have an unintended stifling effect on making real cybersecurity improvements,” Edward Amoroso, chief security officer for Dallas-based AT&T, said in testimony at a recent hearing. “Cyber adversaries are dynamic and increasingly sophisticated, and do not operate under a laboriously defined set of rules or processes.”
As we have previously reported, the bill originally legislated for an Internet ‘kill switch’ that would allow the President to shut down parts of the Internet in an emergency.
There are a whole host of other cybersecurity bills in the works including a GOP bill, co-sponsored by John McCain known as The Secure IT Act, and a newly introduced GOP bill known as The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), sponsored by Michigan Republican Mike Rogers.
All of the bills have the same vague wording and do not clearly define what a cybersecurity threat is. This has prompted groups such as The Electronic Freedom Foundation and The Center for Democracy and Technology to speak out about what they see as legislating for broad information sharing between private companies and the government for ill-defined purposes.
“The Rogers bill gives companies a free pass to monitor and collect communications and share that data with the government and other companies, so long as they do so for ‘cybersecurity purposes,’” the EFF said in a blog post. “Just invoking ‘cybersecurity threats’ is enough to grant companies immunity from nearly all civil and criminal liability, effectively creating an exemption from all existing law.”
Kendall Burman of the Center for Democracy and Technology spoke about CISPA in an interview with RT:
“We have a number of concerns with something like this bill that creates sort of a vast hole in the privacy law to allow government to receive these kinds of information.”
Burman added that the bill, as it stands, allows the U.S. government to involve itself in any online correspondence if it believes there is reason to suspect “cyber crime”, which it does not even clearly define.
Watch the interview:

Both the EFF and the CDT have noted that CISPA effectively legislates for monitoring and collecting online communications without the knowledge of the parties concerned and funneling them directly to the National Security Agency or the DOD’s

Essentially all of these bills legislate for moves by the federal government to access and monitor the online communications of all Americans, much like the more open agenda of the British government to snoop on citizens.

With the additional ongoing construction of a city sized secret NSA data collection center in the Utah desert, about which the agency will not even give details to Congress about, it is clear that the powers that be fully expect to go ahead with such plans, with or without the legislation to do so.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 16, 2012, 09:10:14 AM
DHS Introduces Green Police
The New American ^ | April 13, 2012 | Raven Clabough





The Department of Homeland Security has announced that it will be creating an “environmental justice” unit that will be overseeing environmental regulations, alongside local governments. The unit’s role of enforcing environmental regulations has prompted critics to refer to the new department as the “green police.”

The DHS defines environmental justice as “the commitment of the Federal Government … to avoid placing disproportionately high and adverse effects on the human health and environment of minority populations and low-income populations.”


(Excerpt) Read more at thenewamerican.com ...





Like Celente says:   liberals are a bunch of fucking cowards and liars for failing to reign in their messiah.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 16, 2012, 12:25:35 PM
http://washington.cbslocal.com/2012/04/16/video-captures-woman-sobbing-uncontrollably-during-tsa-pat-down



Absurd.   At some point one of these scumbags is going to be KTFO'ed on the spot. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 16, 2012, 02:42:36 PM
http://washington.cbslocal.com/2012/04/16/video-captures-woman-sobbing-uncontrollably-during-tsa-pat-down



Absurd.   At some point one of these scumbags is going to be KTFO'ed on the spot. 





Give me a fucking break.  ::)

That bitch has got more problems than a simple patdown like that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 16, 2012, 02:45:38 PM




Give me a fucking break.  ::)

That bitch has got more problems than a simple patdown like that.


LOL - maybe brought back memories of her childhood?    ddduuhhhoooo!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 16, 2012, 02:50:37 PM

LOL - maybe brought back memories of her childhood?    ddduuhhhoooo!!!!




She needs to grow the fuck up.

If it's that much of a problem, lobby, start a grass-roots movement, vote for Ron Paul, etc.

Blubbering like a little child over that what 5 seconds (if that) is absurd.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 16, 2012, 08:28:20 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/convicted-defendants-left-uninformed-of-forensic-flaws-found-by-justice-dept/2012/04/16/gIQAWTcgMT_print.html



Wow.   This is your govt! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 17, 2012, 07:25:30 AM
Why America is Devolving Towards Absolute Government Control

 - Kelly OConnell  Tuesday, April 17, 2012



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The relentless encroachment of socialism upon America’s economic, cultural and governmental landscape is like a bad dream to most red-blooded Americans. When society changes it can seem like the ineluctable drift of evolution or chance. But in the case of America’s ongoing continued expansion of government powers, spiking taxes, and shrinking military, it’s all part of a planned elitist push into socialism. And one need not believe in secret conspiracies when contemplating this shift. In fact, for those paying attention, it was all outlined long ago by the Fabian Socialist society, and other groups such as the Frankfurt School, as explained below.


I. Basic Socialism: History & Dogma

Socialism is a European phenomenon, beginning after the French Revolution with writers from Paris and London forming the core. The definition of socialism is: “a centrally planned economy in which the government controls all means of production.” While most believe Karl Marx (1818-1883) was the father of socialism, he wrote very few specifics on the topic. In fact, one of Marx’s most signal shortcoming was his failure to describe his own working economic system. Instead, it was Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924), first leader of the new USSR who developed the theory in situ, according to the Library of Economics & Liberty. Lenin’s attempts at creating a profit-free economy was a spectacular failure, only bettered by Joseph Stalin’s larger failure.

 

A. Vladimir Lenin’s ad hoc Socialism
The Library lists Vlad’s four critical factors he believed necessary for economic success:

Lenin began from the long-standing delusion that economic organization would become less complex once the profit drive and the market mechanism had been dispensed with—“as self-evident,” he wrote, as “the extraordinarily simple operations of watching, recording, and issuing receipts, within the reach of anybody who can read and write and knows the first four rules of arithmetic.”

The four laws were apparently insufficient to drive en economy towards productivity:

In fact, Soviet economic life under these first four rules was so disheveled within four years of the 1917 revolution, productivity fell to 14% of its pre-revolutionary level. By 1921 Lenin was forced to institute the New Economic Policy (NEP), a partial return to the market incentives of capitalism. This brief mixture of socialism and capitalism ended in 1927 after Stalin instituted forced collectivization meant to mobilize Russian resources for its leap into industrial power.

Suffice it to say that no version of socialism has ever provided longterm economic growth or security anywhere in the world, because it lacks a cohesive economic theory.

B. Karl Marx’s Vision: Revolution
Karl Marx claimed to have discovered a “science” of economics that proved his ideas true. In fact, according to author Paul Johnson in Intellectuals, Marx was a moralizing journalist, with the faculty of a poet, masquerading as a science-minded intellectual. Writes Johnson:

But in a deeper sense he was not really a scholar and not a scientist at all. He was not interested in finding the truth but in proclaiming it. There were three strands in Marx: the poet, the journalist and the moralist. Each was important. Together, and in combination with his enormous will, they made him a formidable writer and seer. But there was nothing scientific about him; indeed, in all that matters he was anti-scientific.

Further, according to Marx’s writing partner, lifelong benefactor and friend, Frederick Engels, Marx should be remembered as a revolutionary. He said grave-side at Marx’s burial:

For Marx was before all else a revolutionist. His real mission in life was to contribute, in one way or another, to the overthrow of capitalist society and of the state institutions which it had brought into being…

So Marx’s main interest in writing was to foment revolution, because without the collapse of capitalism, the promised paradise of total government control would never have room to occur. Knowing this, American leftists have long done whatever they could, in small and large ways to help birth the revolution upon American soil. The following is a partial history of that struggle.

II. Congressional Record January 10, 1963
On January 10, 1963, Florida US Representative Albert Sydney Herlong, Jr gave a speech outlining what he believed to be the 45 methods communists were using to take over America. Ponder the staggering number of these goals already achieved, much to our mortal damage.

11. Promote the U.N. as the only hope for mankind.

15. Capture one or both of the political parties in the United States.

16. Use technical decisions of the courts to weaken basic American institutions by claiming their activities violate civil rights.

17. Control schools. Use them to transmit socialist & Marxist propaganda. Soften the curriculum. Infiltrate teachers’ associations. Put the party line in textbooks.

20. Infiltrate the press. Get control of book-review assignments, editorial writing, policy-making positions.

21. Gain control of key positions in radio, TV, and motion pictures.

22. Discredit American culture by degrading all forms of artistic expression.

23. Control art critics and directors of art museums. Promote ugliness, repulsive, meaningless art.

24. Eliminate all laws governing obscenity by calling them “censorship” and a violation of free speech and free press.

25. Break down cultural standards of morality by promoting pornography and obscenity in books, magazines, motion pictures, radio, and TV.

26. Present homosexuality, degeneracy and promiscuity as “normal, natural, healthy.”

27. Infiltrate churches. Replace revealed religion with “social” religion. Discredit Bible & emphasize need for intellectual maturity, rejecting a “religious crutch.”

28. Eliminate prayer or any phase of religious expression in the schools on the ground that it violates the principle of “separation of church and state.”

29. Discredit US Constitution by calling it inadequate, old-fashioned, out of step with modern needs, a hindrance to cooperation between nations.

30. Discredit the American Founding Fathers. Present them as selfish aristocrats who had no concern for the “common man.”

31. Belittle American culture & discourage teaching of American history because it’s only part of the “big picture.”

32. Support any socialist movement to centralize control over any part of the culture: education, social agencies, welfare programs, mental health clinics, etc.

40. Discredit the family as an institution. Encourage promiscuity and easy divorce.

III. Frankfurt School
The Frankfurt School were a group of German intellectual Marxists who established the Institute of Social Research at Frankfurt University, modeled after the Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow. This became known as the “Frankfurt School.” After Hitler came to power, these Marxist professors fled to the West to preserve their lives. Setting up shop in Columbia University, they decided to launch a mission to convert America to Marxism via a soft war. According to one source they did certain things to aid this:

To further the advance of their ‘quiet’ cultural revolution - but giving us no ideas about their plans for the future - the Frankfurt School recommended (among other things):

1.The creation of racism offences.
2.Continual change to create confusion
3.The teaching of sex and homosexuality to children
4.The undermining of schools’ and teachers’ authority
5.Huge immigration to destroy identity.
6.The promotion of excessive drinking
7.Emptying of churches
8.An unreliable legal system with bias against victims of crime
9.Dependency on the state or state benefits
10.Control and dumbing down of media
11.Encouraging the breakdown of the family

A main idea of the Frankfurt School was exploiting Freud’s ‘pansexualism’ - the search for pleasure, the exploitation of the differences between the sexes, the overthrowing of traditional relationships between men and women. To further their aims they would:

•attack the authority of the father, deny the specific roles of father and mother, and wrest away from families their rights as primary educators of their children.
•abolish differences in the education of boys and girls
•abolish all forms of male dominance - hence the presence of women in the armed forces
•declare women to be an ‘oppressed class’ and men as ‘oppressors’
Munzenberg summed up the Frankfurt School’s long-term operation thus: ‘We will make the West so corrupt that it stinks.’

IV. Fabian Society: Slow Conquering Socialism

The Fabian Society of Britain was named after Roman general Fabius Maximus, famed for a warfare style that eked out victories via patience and attrition. Fabian socialists likewise seek to take over their host countries by slowly changing standards until the dumbed-down populace no longer has the wit to notice or care. A sociological analogy might be—how predators groom their victims, often waiting years for a chance to exploit their prey. An author sums up their strategy:

Like their namesake, today’s Fabians avoid open confrontation with the forces of freedom and, subsequently, tend to shield their true agenda from the light of day.

The creed of the Society, written in 1887, was as follows:

“It (The Fabian Society) therefore aims at the reorganization of society by the emancipation of land and industrial Capital from individual and class ownership…The Society accordingly works for the extinction of private property in land.”

The Fabian plan was to infiltrate America by targeting our legal system. Fabian convert Felix Cohen, a law professor at Yale, wrote the following:

“It is possible to attempt the overthrow of capitalism as an economic system without at the same time attacking the substance of capitalist law…Socialists can learn from their adversaries that it is always possible to attack existing law, in the name of democracy, justice, and liberty, in the name of the great ideals of the American Constitution, and in the name of law itself.”

Fabians sought to overthrow our system by changing the meaning of our stated legal concepts, and to codify those changes with cases brought by Fabian lawyers before Fabian Judges. The effect of this has been that while the technical wording of American law hasn’t changed much, the implementation has been transferred from the citizen and his elected representatives, to appointed bureaucrats. The Fabians have, diabolically, used our own laws to change the law. Freedom is the victim of these Socialist manipulations.

Conclusion
America is infiltrated by Marxists active so long in undermining our institutions and ideals that socialism is now in our collective DNA. They seek an end to private property, representative democracy and rule of law. But once America has turned over leadership to committed liberals, who will be left to protect the world from takeover by globalists intent on universal tyranny? Unfortunately, the question answers itself.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 17, 2012, 06:49:38 PM
http://www.infowars.com/tsa-to-search-bags-question-passengers-on-houston-buses



Ridiculous.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 17, 2012, 07:30:27 PM
Texas Man Claims Police Killed His Dog When Responding to Wrong Address (Video)
ABC News ^ | 4/16/2012 | ABC News
Posted on April 17, 2012 6:30:22 PM EDT by Dallas59

A Texas man claims that his beloved dog Cisco was shot point blank by a police officer who responded to a call at the wrong address.

Michael Paxton, 40, said he and his Australian cattle dog Cisco were relaxing and playing Frisbee in his Austin backyard on Saturday afternoon when he decided to go get something from his truck in the driveway.

As he approached his truck, he said he saw something from the corner of his eye and looked up to see a police officer who immediately drew his weapon and told Paxton to put his hands up.

(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...




Video at this link. 

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2873378/posts



Disgusting. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 17, 2012, 07:33:37 PM
Skip to comments.

Calif. SWAT Tear Gas Rounds Likely Caused House Fire
FIREHOUSE ^ | 17 April 2012 | Tony Burchyns
Posted on April 17, 2012 10:34:06 PM EDT by smokingfrog

Police tear gas launched into a Vallejo home in February played a role in starting a fire that caused $60,000 in damage and killed two dogs, a fire department report released Monday finds.

However, the Feb. 10, two-alarm blaze at 1041 Castlewood Drive was deemed "accidental in nature," according to the 13-page investigation report.

The exact cause was undetermined. But it likely involved one of the non-flammable rounds hitting or knocking over flammable household products, the report said.

The fire began shortly after police launched 12 tear gas rounds into various parts of the house. Police were trying to ferret out as many as six armed robbery suspects believed to be inside. However, it was later determined that the suspects had slipped away before police established a perimeter.

According to the report, the tear gas rounds were non-flammable. But one of the 37-mm projectiles fired through the back door could have penetrated or knocked over a household product containing flammable chemicals. At that point, vapors could have been released and ignited when reaching an ignition source, such as the flame from a nearby water heater.

** snip **

The report said that no person was responsible for setting the fire, because no one was inside when it started at about 5:30 p.m. Further, there were no incendiary devices found in the home, nor visible evidence of any electrical shortages in wall outlets or appliances.

Three dogs were trapped in the bedrooms. Two perished in the fire and the other ran away after being freed. Sharpe said its owner, a tenant displaced by the fire, who was at work when the Special Weapons and Tactics team arrived, later told him it had been hit and killed by a car.

(Excerpt) Read more at firehouse.com ...








Incredible. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2012, 07:29:40 PM
Free Republic
Browse · Search   Pings · Mail   News/Activism
Topics · Post Article
Skip to comments.

National Security Agency whistle blower (4 videos)
Zreo Hedge ^ | 20 APR 2012 | Democracy Now
Posted on April 20, 2012 7:42:44 PM EDT by BCW

Just a month ago we raised more than a proverbial eyebrow when we noted the creation of the NSA's Utah Data Center (codename Stellar Wind) and William Binney's formidable statement that "we are this far from a turnkey totalitarian state". Democracy Now has the former National Security Agency technical director whistleblower's first TV interview in which he discusses the NSA's massive power to spy on Americans and why the FBI raided his home. Since retiring from the NSA in 2001, he has warned that the NSA’s data-mining program has become so vast that it could "create an Orwellian state."

National Security Agency whistleblower

William Binney reveals he believes domestic surveillance has become more expansive under President Obama than President George W. Bush. He estimates the NSA has assembled 20 trillion "transactions" — phone calls, emails and other forms of data — from Americans. This likely includes copies of almost all of the emails sent and received from most people living in the United States. Binney talks about Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act and challenges NSA Director Keith Alexander’s assertion that the NSA is not intercepting information about U.S. Citizens.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2012, 08:52:07 PM
ADVERTISEMENT
While the president has been urging “insourcing,” the government has been sending money to the Philippines to train foreign workers for jobs in English-speaking call centers.

According to New York Democratic Rep. Tim Bishop and North Carolina Republican Rep. Walter Jones, this is unacceptable and “shocking.”

The pair are calling on the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to immediately suspend what is known as the Job Enabling English Proficiency (JEEP) program.

According to Jones’ office, in 2010, after the two men compelled USAID to end a similar training program in Sri Lanka, the agency assured the congressmen that they would “conduct a review to ensure the project will not take any jobs away from Americans.”

In a letter to the USAID administrator, Rajiv Shah, Bishop and Jones expressed their displeasure at learning of the effort they thought the agency had explicitly promised against.

“I believe it was reasonable to conclude from that statement that your agency’s outsourcing training program was terminated, particularly in light of President Obama’s ‘insourcing’ initiative announced earlier this year,” the pair wrote. “Therefore, I was shocked to learn that USAID has used taxpayer dollars to invest in outsourcing training programs in the Philippines at the expense of American workers.”.

According to Bishop, more than 4.5 million Americans currently work in call centers, but since 2007 more than 500,000 call center jobs have been outsourced to foreign countries.

Business Week broke the story about the JEEP program this week. According to Business Week, the program is part of the Growth and Equity in Mindanao (GEM) initiative, which costs $100 million annually.

“The JEEP program was developed to promote peace and stability in Mindanao by teaching English to youth in conflict-prone areas to help them pursue gainful employment in tourism, nursing and other locally-based industries and to break the cycle of violence which had gripped that region of the Philippines,” a USAID spokesperson told Business Week, adding that it is set to expire at the end of the year.

The congressmen want it gone yesterday.

“Using Americans’ hard-earned taxpayer dollars to fund the training of foreign nationals to take our jobs is absolutely crazy and totally unacceptable,” Jones said in a statement. “Uncle Sam is over $15 trillion in debt and unemployment is still elevated because of policies like this, and it’s got to stop.”

The pair pledged in their letter to “use every legislative option available to permanently prohibit USAID from engaging in such practices in the future.”

“I support the international development mission of USAID but my top priority is protecting American jobs and American taxpayers,” Bishop concluded. “I anticipate working closely with USAID in a bipartisan manner to ensure that none of its programs overseas will hurt workers here at home.”

Follow Caroline on Twitter

Article printed from The Daily Caller: http://dailycaller.com
URL to article: http://dailycaller.com/2012/04/20/usaid-training-foreign-workers-for-english-speaking-jobs/
Copyright © 2009 Daily Caller. All rights reserved.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 23, 2012, 12:21:47 PM
Federal agents raid Patapsco Flea Market
Counterfeit sports apparel and cosmetics, pirated music confiscated
  Comments 72
By Hanah Cho
 
The Baltimore Sun
 
1:12 p.m. EDT, April 23, 2012
Vendors at the Patapsco Flea Market have a history of allegedly selling counterfeit and pirated merchandise, according to an affidavit, which outlined the latest accusation that resulted in a raid Sunday by federal Homeland Security intellectual property agents.

Capping a 2 1/2-year-long investigation into counterfeit apparel and accessories as well as pirated DVDs and musical recordings, federal investigators confiscated numerous items being sold there.


Federal authorities released few details about the raid, but the affidavit details several undercover operations that found that many of the items sold at the flea market were fake. They included goods with high-end brand names such as Nike, Uggs, Polo, North Face, Louis Vuitton and Gucci.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Download The Baltimore Sun's new iPhone app.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


In one instance in which undercover agents bought goods from vendors there, 34 of 38 items were found to be counterfeit. During the same outings on March 31 and April 1, agents bought a set of novelty contact lenses found to be dangerous. The lenses could fuse to the eye causing permanent vision loss, according to the affidavit.

The flea market, located in the 1400 block of West Patapsco Avenue on the southwest side of Baltimore, is owned by Management Inc., whose principal is listed as Joseph Brzuchalski, state records and the affidavit show. A message left with Brzuchalski's residence was not immediately returned.

The market for counterfeit goods and pirated and unlicensed merchandise has become widespread, especially with the explosion of online marketplaces.

It is a practice that deprives companies of revenue as well as debases the quality of brand names, said Ned T. Himmelrich, who heads the intellectual property and technology practice group at Baltimore law firm Gordon Feinblatt LLC. Companies have been working with federal authorities to crack down on the illegal activity, he said.

"It's more than just the one sale or a thousand sales," he said. "It's the ripple effect on the quality of the brand."

In a statement Sunday, Under Armour said: "Individuals who produce and sell counterfeit goods harm the American economy. The reality of counterfeiting is that it's much greater than just buying a knock off item at a discounted price, it's a multibillion dollar a year problem that undermines corporations."

In 1996, Baltimore police charged 30 vendors at the Patapsco Flea Market with selling counterfeit clothing. Authorities confiscated more than $1 million worth of what police alleged was counterfeit Nike, Timberland and Tommy Hilfiger apparel.

Baltimore policy seized counterfeit professional sports league apparel and items with brand names like Nike and Lacoste at the flea market in 2004 and 2006, according to the affidavit.

Hanah.cho@baltsun.com
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on April 23, 2012, 05:19:06 PM
2 1/2 years baby!!! To stop some counterfeit Nike shit... BOOOM!!!!!!


Extremely solid use of taxpayer dollars.

In other news, Im stoked for MoH Warfighter to come out.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on April 23, 2012, 06:09:04 PM
Glad to hear that... We want it to be a big time hit.

I guarantee that the single player will not disappoint.
Awesome. BF3's single player was pretty good, but felt more like it was a rolling testbed for their new engine.
The Multiplayer is awesome for the most part.
Im more of a single player guy though, so Im really stoked for Warfighter. Especially being former military, I really have a soft spot for realistic combat games (which are very few and far between, the recent CoD's have been terrible yet still commands such a great rep for some reason!)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 29, 2012, 04:59:35 PM

April 28, 2012
Terrorist Plots, Hatched by the F.B.I.
By DAVID K. SHIPLER
THE United States has been narrowly saved from lethal terrorist plots in recent years — or so it has seemed. A would-be suicide bomber was intercepted on his way to the Capitol; a scheme to bomb synagogues and shoot Stinger missiles at military aircraft was developed by men in Newburgh, N.Y.; and a fanciful idea to fly explosive-laden model planes into the Pentagon and the Capitol was hatched in Massachusetts.

But all these dramas were facilitated by the F.B.I., whose undercover agents and informers posed as terrorists offering a dummy missile, fake C-4 explosives, a disarmed suicide vest and rudimentary training. Suspects naïvely played their parts until they were arrested.

When an Oregon college student, Mohamed Osman Mohamud, thought of using a car bomb to attack a festive Christmas-tree lighting ceremony in Portland, the F.B.I. provided a van loaded with six 55-gallon drums of “inert material,” harmless blasting caps, a detonator cord and a gallon of diesel fuel to make the van smell flammable. An undercover F.B.I. agent even did the driving, with Mr. Mohamud in the passenger seat. To trigger the bomb the student punched a number into a cellphone and got no boom, only a bust.

This is legal, but is it legitimate? Without the F.B.I., would the culprits commit violence on their own? Is cultivating potential terrorists the best use of the manpower designed to find the real ones? Judging by their official answers, the F.B.I. and the Justice Department are sure of themselves — too sure, perhaps.

Carefully orchestrated sting operations usually hold up in court. Defendants invariably claim entrapment and almost always lose, because the law requires that they show no predisposition to commit the crime, even when induced by government agents. To underscore their predisposition, many suspects are “warned about the seriousness of their plots and given opportunities to back out,” said Dean Boyd, a Justice Department spokesman. But not always, recorded conversations show. Sometimes they are coaxed to continue.

Undercover operations, long practiced by the F.B.I., have become a mainstay of counterterrorism, and they have changed in response to the post-9/11 focus on prevention. “Prior to 9/11 it would be very unusual for the F.B.I. to present a crime opportunity that wasn’t in the scope of the activities that a person was already involved in,” said Mike German of the American Civil Liberties Union, a lawyer and former F.B.I. agent who infiltrated white supremacist groups. An alleged drug dealer would be set up to sell drugs to an undercover agent, an arms trafficker to sell weapons. That still happens routinely, but less so in counterterrorism, and for good reason.

“There isn’t a business of terrorism in the United States, thank God,” a former federal prosecutor, David Raskin, explained.

“You’re not going to be able to go to a street corner and find somebody who’s already blown something up,” he said. Therefore, the usual goal is not “to find somebody who’s already engaged in terrorism but find somebody who would jump at the opportunity if a real terrorist showed up in town.”

And that’s the gray area. Who is susceptible? Anyone who plays along with the agents, apparently. Once the snare is set, law enforcement sees no choice. “Ignoring such threats is not an option,” Mr. Boyd argued, “given the possibility that the suspect could act alone at any time or find someone else willing to help him.”

Typically, the stings initially target suspects for pure speech — comments to an informer outside a mosque, angry postings on Web sites, e-mails with radicals overseas — then woo them into relationships with informers, who are often convicted felons working in exchange for leniency, or with F.B.I. agents posing as members of Al Qaeda or other groups.

Some targets have previous involvement in more than idle talk: for example, Waad Ramadan Alwan, an Iraqi in Kentucky, whose fingerprints were found on an unexploded roadside bomb near Bayji, Iraq, and Raja Khan of Chicago, who had sent funds to an Al Qaeda leader in Pakistan.

But others seem ambivalent, incompetent and adrift, like hapless wannabes looking for a cause that the informer or undercover agent skillfully helps them find. Take the Stinger missile defendant James Cromitie, a low-level drug dealer with a criminal record that included no violence or hate crime, despite his rants against Jews. “He was searching for answers within his Islamic faith,” said his lawyer, Clinton W. Calhoun III, who has appealed his conviction. “And this informant, I think, twisted that search in a really pretty awful way, sort of misdirected Cromitie in his search and turned him towards violence.”

THE informer, Shahed Hussain, had been charged with fraud, but avoided prison and deportation by working undercover in another investigation. He was being paid by the F.B.I. to pose as a wealthy Pakistani with ties to Jaish-e-Mohammed, a terrorist group that Mr. Cromitie apparently had never heard of before they met by chance in the parking lot of a mosque.

“Brother, did you ever try to do anything for the cause of Islam?” Mr. Hussain asked at one point.

“O.K., brother,” Mr. Cromitie replied warily, “where you going with this, brother?”

Two days later, the informer told him, “Allah has more work for you to do,” and added, “Revelation is going to come in your dreams that you have to do this thing, O.K.?” About 15 minutes later, Mr. Hussain proposed the idea of using missiles, saying he could get them in a container from China. Mr. Cromitie laughed.

Reading hundreds of pages of transcripts of the recorded conversations is like looking at the inkblots of a Rorschach test. Patterns of willingness and hesitation overlap and merge. “I don’t want anyone to get hurt,” Mr. Cromitie said, and then explained that he meant women and children. “I don’t care if it’s a whole synagogue of men.” It took 11 months of meandering discussion and a promise of $250,000 to lead him, with three co-conspirators he recruited, to plant fake bombs at two Riverdale synagogues.

“Only the government could have made a ‘terrorist’ out of Mr. Cromitie, whose buffoonery is positively Shakespearean in its scope,” said Judge Colleen McMahon, sentencing him to 25 years. She branded it a “fantasy terror operation” but called his attempt “beyond despicable” and rejected his claim of entrapment.

The judge’s statement was unusual, but Mr. Cromitie’s characteristics were not. His incompetence and ambivalence could be found among other aspiring terrorists whose grandiose plans were nurtured by law enforcement. They included men who wanted to attack fuel lines at Kennedy International Airport; destroy the Sears Tower (now Willis Tower) in Chicago; carry out a suicide bombing near Tampa Bay, Fla., and bomb subways in New York and Washington. Of the 22 most frightening plans for attacks since 9/11 on American soil, 14 were developed in sting operations.

Another New York City subway plot, which recently went to trial, needed no help from government. Nor did a bombing attempt in Times Square, the abortive underwear bombing in a jetliner over Detroit, a planned attack on Fort Dix, N.J., and several smaller efforts. Some threats are real, others less so. In terrorism, it’s not easy to tell the difference.

David K. Shipler is the author of “Rights at Risk: The Limits of Liberty in Modern America.”
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 03, 2012, 06:45:03 PM
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/05/uc-san-diego-student-dea-jail-outrage.html


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2012, 12:03:53 PM
'Help me,' homeless man begs as cops fatally beat him in videotaped incident

By the CNN Wire Staff
 
updated 7:21 AM EDT, Tue May 8, 2012


One tells Thomas: "You see my fists? They're getting ready to f--- you up."
 
(CNN) -- A graphic video played at a hearing Monday to determine whether two California police officers should stand trial in the beating death of a homeless man showed them kicking and punching the mentally ill man as he lay on the ground -- screaming in pain and begging for help.
 
The victim, Kelly Thomas, died five days after the beating on July 5.
 
Manuel Ramos, a 10-year veteran of the Fullerton, California, police department, is charged with second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter, while Cpl. Jay Patrick Cicinelli faces charges of involuntary manslaughter and felony use of excessive force in the same case.
 
Both have pleaded not guilty.
 
The black-and-white video was played during a preliminary hearing for the two officers.


Revealing details of Kelly Thomas' death

Head trauma caused Thomas' death

It begins with Thomas -- a 37-year-old homeless man with schizophrenia -- sitting and being told by Ramos to put his feet out and hands on his knees.
 
The officers were responding to a call about a homeless man looking into car windows and pulling on handles of parked cars.
 
In the video, Thomas is slow to cooperate.
 
Ramos then tells him: "You see my fists? They're getting ready to f--- you up."
 
Thomas, who is unarmed and shirtless, stands and another officer walks over. They hit him with their batons and hold him on the ground as he begs for help.
 
"Ok, I'm sorry, dude. I'm sorry!" he screams. At one point, Thomas says he can't breathe. The officers tell him to lie on his stomach, put his hands behind his back and relax.
 
"Ok, here, here, dude, please!" he says.
 
Other officers arrive.
 
At times, trees block the view of the camera and it's not always clear who is doing what as officers pile on top of Thomas.
 
One uses a Taser stun gun.
 
Thomas cries out for help and. toward the end of the beating, for his father: "Dad! Help me. Help me. Help me, dad."
 
His voice gets softer and trails off.
 
By the end of the video, he is lying in a pool of blood as the officers wonder out loud what to do next.
 
One can be heard saying: "We ran out of options so I got to the end of my Taser and I ... smashed his face to hell."
 
Thomas suffered brain injuries, facial fractures, rib fractures, and extensive bruising and abrasions, according to prosecutors.
 
The Orange County coroner listed his manner of death as a homicide and said he died after having his chest compressed, leaving him unable to breathe.
 
The FBI is investigating possible civil rights violations in his case.
 
Six Fullerton officers, including Ramos and Cicinelli, were put on paid leave after his death. The case drew widespread attention to the police department of Fullerton, located about 25 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 08, 2012, 12:25:22 PM
Horrible story.
Video and details here:

http://www.pixiq.com/article/shocking-video-of-kelly-thomas-released-watch-with-caution

(the pro police crowd will probably enjoy the sick video)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2012, 02:28:06 PM
The Way The Pentagon Is Predicting Your Potential To Become A National Threat Is Frightening
Eloise Lee|May 7, 2012, 2:40 PM|15,255|33


Screengrab
 
Tom Cruise made "pre-crime'" a futuresque and controversial method of law enforcement in the 2002 movie Minority Report.
 
Ten years later, the idea of preemptively identifying a criminal — particularly an inside threat — is taking shape within the U.S. Defense Department, reports Joe Gould at Army Times.
 
Whether it's a low-ranking soldier intent on dumping secret information to WikiLeaks, or a rogue Sergeant going on a shooting rampage, insider threats can seriously plague the military and the government as a whole.
 
Taking a novel approach, the Pentagon is spearheading research into studying the predictive behavior of personnel in the lead-up to a betrayal.
 
From Army Times:
 
The Army’s efforts dovetail with a broader federal government initiative. President Obama signed an executive order last October that established an Insider Threat Task Force to develop a government wide program to deter, detect and mitigate insider threats.
 
Among other responsibilities, it would create policies for safeguarding classified information and networks, and for auditing and monitoring users.
 
In January, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget issued a memo directing government agencies that deal with classified information to ensure they adhere to security rules enacted after the WikiLeaks debacle.
 
Beyond technical solutions, the document asks agencies to create their own “insider threat program” to monitor employees for “behavioral changes” suggesting they might leak sensitive information.
 
Gould points to a DARPA research solicitation for Suspected Malicious Insider Threat Elimination (SMITE) which would track employees' actions on their networked computers — in particular, seemingly insignificant "observational data of no immediate relevance" — to determine if the user's overall behavior is leading to something malicious.
 
"Forensic-like techniques can be used to find clues, gather and evaluate evidence and combine
them deductively. Many attacks are combinations of directly observable and inferred events," states the solicitation, emphasizing the word "inferred".
 
Behavioral studies try to "look beyond computers to spot the point when a good soldier turns" — whether the attack at hand is an information leak, or even a homicide.
 
A solicitation for another program — Anomaly Detection at Multiple Scales, or ADAMS — uses accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan to frame the problem. It asks how to sift for anomalies through millions of data points — the emails and text messages on Fort Hood, for instance — using a unique algorithm, to rank threats and learn based on user feedback.
 
The Software Engineering Institute of Carnegie Mellon sheds light on what kind of character profile a once trusted employee-turned-threat would display. There are two noteworthy profiles of someone who would steal and leak intellectual information from his/her workplace:
 The Entitled Independent: "disgruntled with his job who typically exfiltrates his work a month before leaving."

 The Ambitious Leader: "steals information on entire systems and product lines, sometimes to take to a foreign country, such as China."
 
All of the government's ongoing research and exploration into "computer forensics" will culminate in new standards of defense against internal attacks later this year. The Insider Threat Task Force is expected to be unveiled in October.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-number-of-ways-the-pentagon-is-working-on-to-predict-your-behavior-is-frightening-2012-5#ixzz1uJeGdJ29
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 20, 2012, 06:23:05 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/when-government-is-the-looter/2012/05/18/gIQAUIKVZU_story.html



Disgusting.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 22, 2012, 09:49:59 AM
Dad saves boy before car plunges down cliff -- and gets pair of traffic tickets
 

By Greg Wilson
 
Published May 21, 2012
 
FoxNews.com
 







Frank Roders' Jeep took a bath, but he saved his son.
 


A New Jersey dad got the scare of his life when his 5-year-old son almost ran off a steep embankment, and though the man saved the boy from falling, he couldn't stop his Jeep from going over the precipice and into a river below.
 
The reward for his ordeal? Two traffic tickets from local police.
 
Frank Roder, a construction worker from the town of Winfield Park, had taken his son, Aidan, down to the Rahway River to feed ducks Thursday. But when he stopped briefly before settling on a parking space, the impatient boy jumped out and took off -- straight toward a ledge 35 feet above the river, Roder recalled.
 
"He hopped out, and I thought that was OK, I was just going to park," Roder, 38, said, but "he just took off, made a beeline for the edge."
 



"Um, Daddy ..."
 
- Aidan, as he watched his dad's Jeep roll off an embankment.
 

The panic-stricken father jumped out of the cab of his 2006 Jeep Commander and raced after the errant boy, catching him just feet from the edge.
 
That's when Aidan, eyes as big as saucers, looked behind Roder and said, "Um, Daddy ..."
 
Roder turned in time to see the Jeep nosedive down the embankment and land in the muddy water.
 
Roder hugged the boy and waited as Union County police converged on the scene over the next few hours. A crane pulled the Jeep out, and amazingly, it started right up, though Roder is pretty sure his insurance company will count it as totaled.
 
He was counting his blessings when a young cop approached him and handed him two tickets. One was for failure to produce the insurance card, which was somewhere in the waterlogged cab. The other was for failing to use his emergency brake.
 
"I couldn't believe it," Roder said. "He said, 'If you would have taken the five seconds to apply the brake, this never would have happened!'
 
"I say, 'Really? And if I did and my boy stepped over the edge and fell instead of the Jeep, then were would I be?' He says, 'Jail, for child endangerment.'"
 
Too awful to contemplate is the fact the Roder almost took his six-week-old son Joel along for the ride.
 
"At the last minute, I told my wife to take him," Roder said. "I can't even think about that."
 
Union County Police Chief Daniel Vaniska told FoxNews.com that his officers have some discretion about when and when not to write a ticket. But he said he just didn't have enough information to second-guess what this officer did.
 
"It probably could have gone either way," Vaniska said. "I can't comment on the discretionary practices of an officer, but certainly, the fellow will have an opportunity to tell his story in court."
 
Municipal Court is where Roder might get some sympathy -- and maybe forbearance on those tickets, which are for $50 and $60. His date is May 30.
 
"I don't care, I'll pay it," Roder said. "It's just the principle. When something like that happens so fast, I could give a rat's a-- about the car."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/05/21/saves-his-kid-loses-his-car-and-gets-ticket/?test=latestnews#ixzz1vcNl4tFO




wtf!!!!!

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 22, 2012, 09:56:49 AM
"He said, 'If you would have taken the five seconds to apply the brake, this never would have happened!'
 
"I say, 'Really? And if I did and my boy stepped over the edge and fell instead of the Jeep, then were would I be?' He says, 'Jail, for child endangerment.'"

Crazy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 22, 2012, 10:09:52 AM
HIGHWAY ROBBERY: Civil Forfeiture Allows Police To Extort Thousands From Innocent Americans
Alex Biles|32 minutes ago|399|5

 
George Reby was driving along Route 40 in Putnam County, Tennessee when he was pulled over by a Monterey police officer for speeding.
 
"Do you mind if I search your vehicle," the officer asked.
 
Knowing that he had not been speeding, let alone carrying anything illegal, Reby let the officer search away.
 
It just so happened that Reby, a New Jersey native, was carrying $22,000 in his car at the time, not uncommon for a professional insurance adjuster like himself.
 
Larry Bates, the police officer, seized the cash on suspicion that it was drug money and fled.
 
An investigative report by NewsChannel 5, a Nashville CBS affiliate, broke the story — one of the latest of these law enforcement abuses deemed "policing for profit."
 
When asked why he never arrested Reby, Bates responded that, "he hadn't committed a criminal law."
 
The state of Tennessee returned Reby's money four months later, a result of the NewsChannel 5 investigation — forcing Reby to travel all the way from his New Jersey home back to Monterey. The only condition: Reby would have to sign a statement waiving his constitutional rights, promising not to sue.
 
And Reby was fortunate. In other cases in Tennessee, victims have had to wait until the police officers drop their case, usually extorting a cut of the seized cash. Some state lawmakers have attempted to investigate "policing for profit," says NewsChannel 5, but every attempt to introduce a bill has been shot down to this point.
 
How can the police get away with this, you ask?
 
Civil asset forfeiture laws allow police departments to seize your property on the suspicion that it was used for a crime. This can include your car, your guns or your money. The way that the law is written in many places it can seem as if you are guilty until proven innocent. In these cases, the US Government sues the item of property based on probably, not the person. And the onus is on the owner to show that there was no good reason for it.
 
The Volunteer State isn't alone. In The Huffington Post, Radley Balko writes of similar police corruption in Wisconsin:
 
When the Brown County, Wis., Drug Task Force arrested her son Joel last February, Beverly Greer started piecing together his bail.
 
She used part of her disability payment and her tax return. Joel Greer's wife also chipped in, as did his brother and two sisters. On Feb. 29, a judge set Greer's bail at $7,500, and his mother called the Brown County jail to see where and how she could get him out. "The police specifically told us to bring cash," Greer says. "Not a cashier's check or a credit card. They said cash."
 
...The Greers had been subjected to civil asset forfeiture, a policy that lets police confiscate money and property even if they can only loosely connect them to drug activity. The cash, or revenue from the property seized, often goes back to the coffers of the police department that confiscated it.
 
The practice of seizing property from citizens has grown into an epidemic in recent years. In 1986, the Department of Justice's civil forfeiture fund was $94 million. As of 2010, it exceeded $1 billion.
 

Please follow Politics on Twitter and Facebook.
 Follow Alex Biles on Twitter.

Tags: Police, Law Enforcement, Corruption | Get Alerts for these topics »


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/highway-robbery-civil-forfeiture-allows-police-to-extort-thousands-from-innocent-americans-2012-5#ixzz1vcSejHJd
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 22, 2012, 10:13:40 AM
Dad saves boy before car plunges down cliff -- and gets pair of traffic tickets

Hey, at least he wasn't threatened with having a cock jammed into his mouth from a cop who was "doing God's work" [http://reason.com/blog/2012/05/21/cop-doing-gods-work-threatens-to-face-ra (http://reason.com/blog/2012/05/21/cop-doing-gods-work-threatens-to-face-ra)]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 22, 2012, 10:19:33 AM

"Do you mind if I search your vehicle," the officer asked.

The standard reply to this question should be "I do not consent to any search."

I remember a similar case with civil forfeiture in Tenaha,TX.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 22, 2012, 10:24:12 AM
The standard reply to this question should be "I do not consent to any search."

Good advice. Never consent to a search, since there's nothing that you can gain from it.


I always say No... I have all the time in the world if they do.

To each their own, I guess.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 22, 2012, 10:26:31 AM
Good advice. Never consent to a search, since there's nothing that you can gain from it.


To each their own, I guess.

Not true - didnt himdenPedo say he enjoyed getting beaten or something like that? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 22, 2012, 10:29:12 AM
I don't understand your response to my negative on allowing them to search.

I interpreted your answer (when coupled with the "I have all the time in the world if they do.") to mean that you don't mind:

Office: "Do you mind if I search your vehicle?"
tu_homes: "No."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2012, 08:00:11 AM
Sanford judge rules in favor of motorist who flashed his headlights
By Rene Stutzman, Orlando Sentinel

6:33 p.m. EST, May 22, 2012



A judge in Sanford ruled Tuesday that a Lake Mary man was lawfully exercising his First Amendment rights when he flashed his headlights to warn neighbors that a deputy had set up a speed trap nearby.

That decision is another victory for Ryan Kintner, 25, who sued theSeminole County Sheriff's Office last year, accusing it of misconstruing a state law and violating his civil rights, principally his right to free speech.

He was ticketed Aug. 10 by a Seminole County deputy, but Kintner alleges the officer misapplied a state law designed to ban motorists from flashing after-market emergency lights.

Circuit Judge Alan Dickey earlier ruled that that state law does not apply to people who did what Kintner did, use his headlights to communicate.

On Tuesday the judge went a step further, saying people who flash their headlights to communicate are engaging in behavior protected by the U.S. Constitution.

"He felt the police specificially went out of their way to silence Mr. Kintner and that it was clearly a violation of his First Amendment free speech rights," said his attorney, J. Marcus Jones of Oviedo.

Jones has filed a similar but much broader suit in Tallahassee against the Florida Highway Patrol.

A hearing in that case is scheduled next month.

"This stuff is fun," Jones said after Tuesday's hearing.

Each suit asked that police agencies be ordered to halt writing those tickets. The highway patrol stopped voluntarily, awaiting the outcome of the suit. So have theSeminole County Sheriff's Officeand other agencies.

In addition to Kintner's civil suit against the sheriff's office, he also is fighting the ticket. It is still pending in county court in Sanford.

The officer also ticketed him for running a stop sign, saying Kintner had pulled beyond a stop bar before coming to a complete halt.

In an interview in August, shortly after filing suit, Kintner said, "I felt an injustice was being done. … I have nothing against officers … keeping speeding down, but when you cross a line and get into free speech, I feel it's gone too far."

According to his suit, Kintner was home Aug. 10 when he saw a deputy park along a street and pull out his radar gun. Kintner then got in his car, drove a couple of blocks away, parked and pointed his vehicle at oncoming traffic and began flashing his lights.

He was ticketed a short time later.

rstutzman@tribune.com or 407-650-6394.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 23, 2012, 06:45:33 PM
Sanford judge rules in favor of motorist who flashed his headlights
By Rene Stutzman, Orlando Sentinel

6:33 p.m. EST, May 22, 2012



A judge in Sanford ruled Tuesday that a Lake Mary man was lawfully exercising his First Amendment rights when he flashed his headlights to warn neighbors that a deputy had set up a speed trap nearby.

That decision is another victory for Ryan Kintner, 25, who sued theSeminole County Sheriff's Office last year, accusing it of misconstruing a state law and violating his civil rights, principally his right to free speech.

He was ticketed Aug. 10 by a Seminole County deputy, but Kintner alleges the officer misapplied a state law designed to ban motorists from flashing after-market emergency lights.

Circuit Judge Alan Dickey earlier ruled that that state law does not apply to people who did what Kintner did, use his headlights to communicate.

On Tuesday the judge went a step further, saying people who flash their headlights to communicate are engaging in behavior protected by the U.S. Constitution.

"He felt the police specificially went out of their way to silence Mr. Kintner and that it was clearly a violation of his First Amendment free speech rights," said his attorney, J. Marcus Jones of Oviedo.

Jones has filed a similar but much broader suit in Tallahassee against the Florida Highway Patrol.

A hearing in that case is scheduled next month.

"This stuff is fun," Jones said after Tuesday's hearing.

Each suit asked that police agencies be ordered to halt writing those tickets. The highway patrol stopped voluntarily, awaiting the outcome of the suit. So have theSeminole County Sheriff's Officeand other agencies.

In addition to Kintner's civil suit against the sheriff's office, he also is fighting the ticket. It is still pending in county court in Sanford.

The officer also ticketed him for running a stop sign, saying Kintner had pulled beyond a stop bar before coming to a complete halt.

In an interview in August, shortly after filing suit, Kintner said, "I felt an injustice was being done. … I have nothing against officers … keeping speeding down, but when you cross a line and get into free speech, I feel it's gone too far."

According to his suit, Kintner was home Aug. 10 when he saw a deputy park along a street and pull out his radar gun. Kintner then got in his car, drove a couple of blocks away, parked and pointed his vehicle at oncoming traffic and began flashing his lights.

He was ticketed a short time later.

rstutzman@tribune.com or 407-650-6394.




Nice...and what a great citizen to help people out like that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2012, 07:02:15 AM
MILLER: SWAT rampage destroys Iraq vet's home over guns


By Emily Miller
May 28, 2012, 07:55PM





While Army Sgt. Matthew Corrigan was sound asleep inside his Northwest D.C. home, the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) was preparing to launch a full-scale invasion of his home. SWAT and explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) teams spent four hours readying the assault on the English basement apartment in the middle of the snowstorm of the century.



(This is part two of a four part series on Sgt. Corrigan's case. Click here to read the first story.)

The police arrested the veteran of the Iraq war and searched his house without a warrant, not to protect the public from a terrorist or stop a crime in progress, but to rouse a sleeping man the police thought might have an unregistered gun in his home.

It all started a few hours earlier on Feb. 2, 2010, when Sgt. Corrigan called the National Veterans Crisis Hotline for advice on sleeping because of nightmares from his year training Iraqi soldiers to look for IEDs in Fallujah. Without his permission, the operator, Beth, called 911 and reported Sgt. Corrigan “has a gun and wants to kill himself.”

According to a transcript of the 911 recording, Beth told the cops that, “The gun’s actually on his lap.” The drill sergeant told me he said nothing of the kind, and his two pistols and rifle were hidden under clothes and in closets, to avoid theft.

So around midnight, the police arrived at the row house at 2408 N. Capitol Street. Over the next two hours, several emergency response team units were called to the scene, calling in many cops from home.



Police memos from that night describe the situation as involving a man who is, “threatening to shoot himself,” but “doesn’t want to hurt anybody.”

None of the cops’ documents indicate a threat that warranted a “barricade” and the closure of several streets to create “an outer perimeter that prohibited both traffic and pedestrian access.” With dozens of cops on the scene, they created a “staging area” two blocks away.

‘Rambo’

Around 1 a.m., the police knocked on the door of Tammie Sommons, the upstairs neighbor in the row house.  Ms. Sommons had lived there since 2008 with her three roommates and, in that time, had become a close friend of Sgt. Corrigan. She had a key to his apartment and often walked his dog Matrix.

“I opened the door to this scene with three cops with guns pointed at Matt’s door,” she recalled in an interview this week. “One officer told me that Matt called a suicide hotline and was about to kill himself. I said that was impossible, he wasn’t that kind of guy. I told the police I see him every day and would know if he was suicidal.”



Over the next hour, Ms. Sommons repeatedly told the police she was sure that Sgt. Corrigan was merely sleeping. She knew he took prescription sleeping pills because of repeated nightmares from his year in Iraq. The cops wouldn’t listen to her. 

“I said to the police, ‘You guys are making a big mistake. He’s not what you think,’” recalled Ms. Sommons. She offered to go downstairs and clear up the situation, but the police would not let her.

The officers asked her whether Sgt. Corrigan owned any guns. “I said, of course he has guns, he’s in the military,” she replied. Ms. Sommons had never seen the sergeant’s guns, but she is from a military family, in which gun ownership was the norm. She was truthful with the police because she was not aware the District requires registration of every gun.

This month, the U.S. House passed a nonbinding amendment, sponsored by Rep. Phil Gingrey, that said active military living in or stationed in D.C. should not be bound by the stringent firearm laws. Were such a law in place two years ago, Sgt. Corrigan would not have been targeted by the police.



MPD told Ms. Sommons that someone had reported that there was the smell of gas coming from Sgt. Corrigan’s apartment. “I told them that there was no gas in his apartment --  it was all electric,” she recalled. “I said if they smelled something, it’s just my roommate who was cooking chicken parmesan.”

Still, the police refused to accept the simpler explanation. “The cops said we needed to leave our house because Matt was going to shoot through the ceiling,” Ms. Sommons said. “They painted this picture like Rambo was downstairs and ready to blow up the place.”

At 3 a.m., the police called in an EOD unit -- the bomb squad.  They brought in negotiators. They had the gas company turn off the gas line to the house.  A few minutes before 4 a.m., they started calling Sgt. Corrigan’s cell phone, but they got no answer because he turned it off before going to bed. They woke him up by calling his name on a bullhorn. He then turned on the phone and was told to surrender outside.

Arrested Without Cause

When the police wouldn’t accept Sgt. Corrigan’s word that he was fine, he was forced to leave his home and surrender. When he stepped outside, he faced assault teams with rifles pointed at his chest. He immediately dropped to his knees, with his hands over his head.

Officers in full protective gear zip-tied Sgt. Corrigan's hands behind his back and pulled him up from his knees, forcing him into a large tactical command center called the “BEAR” which was parked at the staging area.



Although police did not read Sgt. Corrigan his Miranda rights, they questioned him inside the tactical truck.  They asked the Iraq veteran basic questions about his life from various angles to get him to admit to owning guns. He remained silent about his two handguns and one rifle, which he had not registered after moving into the city.

Suddenly a police commander jumped in the truck and demanded to know where Sgt. Corrigan put his house key. He refused.

“I’m not giving you the key. I’m not giving consent to enter my house,” Sgt. Corrigan recalled saying in an interview with me last week at D.C. Superior Court after the city dropped all 10 charges against him.

“Then the cop said to me, ‘I don’t have time to play this constitutional bullshit with you. We’re going to break your door in, and you’re going to have to pay for a new door.’”

“‘Looks like I’m buying a new door,’” Sgt. Corrigan responded. “He was riffed”

Realizing quickly that his house would get raided without his permission, he asked for one thing from the police. “I said, ‘Please don’t hurt my dog. He’s friendly. He’s a good dog. Please don’t hurt him.’ They said they wouldn’t.”

The police then took Sgt. Corrigan to the VA hospital, still with his hands restrained. He didn’t want to be put in the hospital against his will, so he was okay with being left there temporarily. He signed himself in for help.

“After having all those guns at me, I was broken,” he said, pointing again at his chest, where he’d seen the rifle red laser dots. “I hadn’t slept in days, I just wanted to sleep.”

The reservist spent three nights in the hospital. When he got out, the police were waiting to arrest him for the unregistered guns found when they raided his home, without a warrant.

Search, Seizure, but no Warrant

Since Since Sgt. Corrigan refused to permit a search of his house, the police had to break down his door. The cops, however, didn’t bother to wait for a search warrant before doing so. “They were all keyed up because they had been there and ready to go all night,” surmised Sgt. Corrgian’s attorney Richard Gardiner.

The first to enter the apartment with the supposedly dangerous apartment was the Emergency Response Team, which secured the dog Matrix and gave him over to animal control, according to police reports. Only then did the EOD personnel enter to search using portable x-ray equipment.

During the “explosive threat clearing efforts,” police reported finding the sergeant’s “hazardous materials,” which included two pistols and a rifle, binoculars and ammunition. The report also details how it took the combined efforts of the police, EOD and the D.C. Fire Department to seize the  “military ammunition can that contained numerous fireworks type devices.” These were fireworks left over from the Fourth of July.

Also taken into evidence was what the police described as a “military smoke grenade” and  “military whistler device.” This smoke-screen canister and trip wire were put in Sgt. Corrigan’s rucksack in 1996 by his squad leader and had long been forgotten over the years.  EOD took custody of the smoke grenade and whistle. The rest of the the materials were handed over to the crime scene search department at 7:30 a.m.



Police Lt. R.T. Glover was pleased with the seven hour operation that resulted in finding three unregistered guns in D.C. In his report to Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier, he concluded that, “as a result of this barricade incident, there are no recommendations for improvement with respect to overall tactical operations.”

Police Destruction

The dry after-action notes from the police following the operation give no clue to the property damage done to Sgt. Corrigan’s home. They tore apart the 900 square foot place.

Instead of unzipping luggage, the police used knives to cut through and destroy the bags. They dumped over the bookshelves, emptied closets, threw the clothes on the floor.

In the process, they knocked over the feeding mechanism for the tropical fish in the sergeant’s six-foot long aquarium. When he was finally released from jail two weeks later, all of his expensive pet fish were dead in the tank.



The guns were seized, along with the locked cases, leaving only broken latches behind. The ammunition, hidden under a sleeping bag in the utility closet, was taken. They broke Sgt. Corrigan’s eyeglasses and left them on the floor. The police turned on the electric stove and never turned it off and left without securing the broken door.

When Ms. Sommons came back to her home the next day, she looked into Sgt. Corrigan’s apartment. “I was really upset because it was ransacked. It made me lose respect for the police officers involved,” she said, the stepdaughter of a correctional officer.

“Here was Matt, who spent a year fighting for our country in Iraq -- where these police would never set foot in -- and they treat him like trash off the street.”



In February, Sgt. Corrigan filed a civil suit against the District asking for a minimum of $500,000 in damages for violating his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable  searches and seizures. His attorney, Mr. Gardiner, intends to add some of the individual officers to the suit when they are identified in discovery.

NEXT IN THE SERIES: Iraq vet is lost in DC jail

"Emily Gets Her Gun" is a series following senior editor Emily Miller as she tries to legally get her hands on a gun in the nation's capital. You can also follow her on Twitter and Facebook.









Disgusting. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2012, 08:14:54 AM

Man Loses $22,000 In New 'Policing For Profit' Case


 Posted: May 09, 2012 9:52 AM EDT

Affidavit from $22,000 seizure in Monterey

By Phil Williams
Chief Investigative Reporter



 
MONTEREY, Tenn. -- "If somebody told me this happened to them, I absolutely would not believe this could happen in America."
 
That was the reaction of a New Jersey man who found out just how risky it can be to carry cash through Tennessee.
 
For more than a year, NewsChannel 5 Investigates has been shining a light on a practice that some call "policing for profit."
See previous stories:
"NC5 Investigates: Policing For Profit"
 
In this latest case, a Monterey police officer took $22,000 off the driver -- even though he had committed no crime.
 
"You live in the United States, you think you have rights -- and apparently you don't," said George Reby.
 
As a professional insurance adjuster, Reby spends a lot of time traveling from state to state. But it was on a trip to a conference in Nashville last January that he got a real education in Tennessee justice.
 
"I never had any clue that they thought they could take my money legally," Reby added. "I didn't do anything wrong."
 
Reby was driving down Interstate 40, heading west through Putnam County, when he was stopped for speeding.

A Monterey police officer wanted to know if he was carrying any large amounts of cash.
 
"I said, 'Around $20,000,'" he recalled. "Then, at the point, he said, 'Do you mind if I search your vehicle?' I said, 'No, I don't mind.' I certainly didn't feel I was doing anything wrong. It was my money."
 
That's when Officer Larry Bates confiscated the cash based on his suspicion that it was drug money.
 
"Why didn't you arrest him?" we asked Bates.
 
"Because he hadn't committed a criminal law," the officer answered.
 
Bates said the amount of money and the way it was packed gave him reason to be suspicious.
 
"The safest place to put your money if it's legitimate is in a bank account," he explained. "He stated he had two. I would put it in a bank account. It draws interest and it's safer."
 
"But it's not illegal to carry cash," we noted.
 
"No, it's not illegal to carry cash," Bates said. "Again, it's what the cash is being used for to facilitate or what it is being utilized for."
 
NewsChannel 5 Investigates noted, "But you had no proof that money was being used for drug trafficking, correct? No proof?"
 
"And he couldn't prove it was legitimate," Bates insisted.
 
Bates is part of a system that, NewsChannel 5 Investigates has discovered, gives Tennessee police agencies the incentive to take cash off of out-of-state drivers. If they don't come back to fight for their money, the agency gets to keep it all.
 
"This is a taking without due process," said Union City attorney John Miles.
 
A former Texas prosecutor and chairman of the Obion County Tea Party, Miles has seen similar cases in his area.
 
He said that, while police are required to get a judge to sign off on a seizure within five days, state law says that hearing "shall be ex parte" -- meaning only the officer's side can be heard.
 
That's why George Reby was never told that there was a hearing on his case.
 
"It wouldn't have mattered because the judge would have said, 'This says it shall be ex parte. Sit down and shut up. I'm not to hear from you -- by statute," Miles added.
 
George Reby said that he told Monterey officers that "I had active bids on EBay, that I was trying to buy a vehicle. They just didn't want to hear it."
 
In fact, Reby had proof on his computer.
 
But the Monterey officer drew up a damning affidavit, citing his own training that "common people do not carry this much U.S. currency."
Read Officer Bates' affidavit
 
"On the street, a thousand-dollar bundle could approximately buy two ounces of cocaine," Bates told NewsChannel 5 Investigates.
 
"Or the money could have been used to buy a car," we observed.
 
"It's possible," he admitted.
 
NewsChannel 5 Investigates asked Bates if Reby had told him that he was trying to buy a car?
 
"He did," the officer acknowledged.
 
"But you did not include that in your report," we noted.
 
"If it's not in there, I didn't put it in there."
 
So why did he leave that out?
 
"I don't know," the officer said.
 
Bates also told the judge the money was hidden inside "a tool bag underneath trash to [deter] law enforcement from locating it."
 
"That's inaccurate," Reby said. "I pulled out the bag and gave it to him."
 
And even though there was no proof that Reby was involved in anything illegal, Bates' affidavit portrays him as a man with a criminal history that included an arrest for possession of cocaine.
 
That was 20-some years ago," the New Jersey man insisted.
 
"Were you convicted?" we wanted to know.
 
"No, I wasn't convicted," he answered.
 
But Officer Bates says that arrest -- which he acknowledged was old -- was still part of the calculation to take Reby's money.
 
"Am I going to use it? Yes, I'm going to use it because he's been charged with it in the past -- regardless of whether it's 10 or 15 years ago," he said.
 
Attorney John Miles said he's frustrated with attitudes toward Tennessee's civil forfeiture laws, which make such practices legal.
 
"We are entitled not to be deprived of our property without due process of law, both under the Tennessee Constitution and the federal Constitution -- and nobody cares," Miles said.
 
"Nobody cares."
 
This year, state lawmakers debated a bill to create a special committee to investigate these "policing for profit" issues. That bill died in the last days of the legislative session.
 
After Reby filed an appeal, and after NewsChannel 5 began investigating, the state agreed to return his money -- if he'd sign a statement waiving his constitutional rights and promising not to sue.
 
They also made him come all the way from New Jersey, back to Monterey to pick up a check.
 
He got the check, but no apology.
 
"If they lied about everything in the report, why would they apologize?" Reby said.
 
And, with that, he was ready to put Tennessee in his rearview mirror.
 
"I really don't want to come back here," he said.
 
As for the appeals process, Reby was able to provide us and the state with letters from his employers, showing that he had a legitimate source of income.
 
It took him four months to get his money back, but it usually takes a lot longer for most people.
 
And that, Miles said, works to the benefit of the police.
 
He had two clients where police agreed to drop the cases in exchange for a cut of the money -- $1,000 in one case, $2,000 in another. In both cases, that was less than what they might have paid in attorney fees.
 
Miles called that "extortion."
 
E-mail: pwilliams@newschannel5.com
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2012, 11:57:57 AM
"He had two clients where police agreed to drop the cases in exchange for a cut of the money -- $1,000 in one case, $2,000 in another. In both cases, that was less than what they might have paid in attorney fees.
 
Miles called that "extortion."


Sounds like it to me
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2012, 04:02:06 PM
http://www.wnd.com/2012/06/cops-gun-down-man-for-legally-carrying-firearm



Disgusting beyond words.   And people wonder I loathe most cops.   ::)  ::).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2012, 06:02:29 PM
http://www.wnd.com/2012/06/cops-gun-down-man-for-legally-carrying-firearm



Disgusting beyond words.   And people wonder I loathe most cops.   ::)  ::).

No, we just figure because you are insane  ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 04, 2012, 10:32:43 AM
LI cops demoted for being Republicans?!
 nypost.com ^ | 6/3/12 | KATHIANNE BONIELLO

Posted on Monday, June 04, 2012 1:14:19 PM by Justaham

Six Long Island cops claim their commissioner is putting politics before the badge.

The Long Beach crime fighters say they’ve been targeted by the seaside town’s Democratic machine for supporting GOP candidates in local elections last year.

Long Beach Police Commissioner Michael Tangney, a longtime Democrat, demoted the cops, cut their overtime, switched them to midnight tours and even filed false internal charges against them for “political payback,” the veteran officers claim in a $39 million lawsuit.

“It’s just the way politics work in this town,” Tangney allegedly told one of the officers while demoting him.


(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...





Same bs goes on where i live.   Cops have mostly become shills for the democrats due to them refusing to curtail the crazy pensions and benes that are causing millions to flee NYS
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2012, 06:16:58 PM
Armed EPA Agents Visit Asheville Man
by ALAN CARUBA
June 6, 2012

Sometimes a small incident says volumes about a large government agency. In this case, it's the Environmental Protection Agency.

Around 1:45 PM on May 23, Ashville, North Carolina resident Larry Keller was in the midst of an international call which he had to cut short in order to answer his front door. He found two armed agents of the EPA who were accompanied by an Ashville Police officer.

According to a May 24 news story in the Ashville Tribune, a weekly newspaper to which I am a contributing columnist, the agents had blocked his and his neighbor's driveways with their cars. They had driven all the way from Raleigh to confront him.

What had he done? The unannounced visit had been occasioned by news that Dr. Al Armendariz, a regional EPA administrator whose 2010 lecture had been videotaped and been released by the office of Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) on April 25th. In the lecture, Dr. Amendariz had said that the agency's "general philosophy" was to "crucify" oil and gas producers.

He compared the agency's "philosophy of enforcement" to the way, as a Wall Street Journal editorial reported, "Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean. "They'd go into a little Turkish town somewhere, they'd find the first five guys they saw and they would crucify them, And then you know that town was really easy to manage for the next few years. The point is to ‘make examples' of alleged lawbreakers."

The case in point had been Range Resources, a driller who had been exonerated of charges of water pollution as the result of fracking. As the Wall Street Journal noted, the reference to executions "raise(d) questions not only about" not only Dr. Arnendariz's comments "but the EPA's larger impartiality and judgment."

Keller, who describes himself as "a bit of a political activist" had emailed the EPA Director of External Affairs, Dr. David Gray, saying "Hello Mr. Gray. Do you have Mr. Armendariz's contact information so we can say hello?"

That was enough to dispatch two armed agents to his front door. He was told by one agent that ".my choice of words in the email could be interpreted in many ways." They did not identify themselves, but asked if he had ever been arrested. He responded swiftly that he had not. When he asked for a copy of his email, they refused to provide it because "the case was still under investigation."

His wife arrived home and the agents did not want a witness so "They left in a big hurry."

The Ashville Tribune by Catherine Hunter quoted Keller who described their attitude as "accusatory" reporting that he compared "their tactics to those of Nazi Germany SS methods."

Keller contacted the agent's supervisor, Michael Hill, and was told that the incident with Dr. Armendariz "had prompted so many emails and calls that authorities in Washington, DC ordered an investigation."

Keller's email inquiry to contact Dr. Armendariz was treated as a threat when it clearly was not. Since when is trying to contact an EPA administrator a crime?

"I want the world to know," said Keller, "the government is reaching into the privacy of our homes and computers. I've never been so offended by the power of government in my life."

Do we really want an EPA that uses such tactics against a citizen who has merely indicated an interest in contacting one of their administrators to comment on what he had said during a lecture?

Do we really want an EPA whose working "philosophy" regarding the oil and gas industry is to "crucify" it in order to regulate it and, as we know, is trying to thwart drilling, as well as to end the coal industry that provides an energy resource that produces one half of all the electricity in the nation?

It is, as noted, just one small incident, but it reflects the way the EPA functions in a presumably free society. Over the years I have read of many incidents in which the EPA has asserted powers to impede the most innocent actions of citizens and it is long past the time when this agency is reined in by Congress.

The only option at this point is to rid the nation of the Obama administration, crack down on the EPA, and rid us of the threat it poses in its efforts to deny entire industries from providing the energy the nation requires and attacks our agricultural and ranching communities for practices that reflect its normal operation.

As they used to advertise horror films, "Be afraid. Be very afraid." An EPA that operates on the basis of intimidating its chosen enemies and that seeks to intimidate citizens inquiring about it, is reason enough to be afraid.

© Alan Caruba, 2012



http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/armed-epa-agents-visit-asheville-man?f=must_reads







FUBO!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2012, 07:02:59 PM
Skip to comments.

Send In The Drones: Obama Spies On America
IBD Editorials ^ | June 6, 2012
Posted on June 6, 2012 9:46:59 PM EDT by raptor22

Privacy: News the EPA is conducting surveillance on farmers goes against our grain. Freedom means freedom of movement and the presumption of innocence. How can we have it if every move is monitored by government?

Nebraska's congressional delegation sent a justifiably angry letter to Administrator Lisa Jackson last week complaining that her Environmental Protection Agency had exceeded its legislative and constitutional authority by conducting drone surveillance flights over Nebraska and Iowa farms looking for violations of the Clean Water Act.

"They are just way on the outer limits of any authority they've been granted," said Nebraska GOP Sen. Mike Johanns, an opinion the bureaucrats rejected Friday in responding to the letter. The EPA argues that the courts, including the Supreme Court, have already authorized aerial surveillance, such as taking aerial photographs of a chemical manufacturing facility.

"Farmers and ranchers in Nebraska pride themselves in the stewardship of our state's natural resources," says the letter signed by Republican Reps. Adrian Smith, Jeff Fortenberry and Lee Terry, as well as Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson and Johanns.

"As you might imagine, this practice has resulted in privacy concerns among our constituents and raises several questions."

Smith, co-chairman of the Modern Agriculture Caucus and the Congressional Rural Caucus, said Tuesday the operations in many cases are near homes so "landowners deserve legitimate justification given the sensitivity of the information gathered by the flyovers."

(Excerpt) Read more at news.investors.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on June 06, 2012, 07:11:19 PM
120 post today,lets go you can break your record  :D :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 06, 2012, 07:26:14 PM
Send In The Drones: Obama Spies On America

If true, I wonder if they had FAA clearance to conduct such flights. I suspect they don't, because the FAA hasn't granted permission for drone flights over the continental United States in civilian airspace, as far as I can tell. So they would have had to fly pretty low, and even then it might be questionable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2012, 03:44:29 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/feds-plan-chop-down-idaho-man-14k-tree-201209155.html



Dude got permission and they screwed him anyway.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 11, 2012, 08:23:02 PM
Senator opens inquiry into EPA’s armed visit to NC man’s home
Daily Caller ^ | 6-11-12 | Caroline May
Posted on June 11, 2012 11:00:11 PM EDT by STARWISE

An Asheville, N.C. man has enlisted the aid of North Carolina Republican Sen. Richard Burr to investigate a visit he received from two armed Environmental Protection Agency officials and a local police officer.

Burr has been in touch with the man and started an inquiry into the incident with EPA.

According to the Ashville Citizen-Times, Larry Keller claims the EPA targeted him after he sent an email on April 27 to former EPA Region 6 Administrator Al Armendariz, who resigned on April 30 over comments he made comparing the administration’s enforcement policy to Roman crucifixions. (RELATED: Complete coverage of the Al Armendariz scandal)

The letter to an EPA external affairs director read simply, “Do you have Mr. Armendariz’s contact information so we can say hello? – Regards- Larry Keller.”

“I wanted to know why someone in his position would say what he did. I wanted to question his reasoning and principles. It’s all about freedom of speech,” Keller told The Carolina Journal.

The agents visited Keller on May 2, two days after Armendariz resigned.

Keller is not convinced the matter is over, and he wants a full explanation. But the Journal reported that Patrick Sullivan, the EPA’s assistant inspector general, does not believe there was “any unprofessional behavior” by Office of Inspector General personnel, and that Keller “answered the questions and the suspicious nature of the email was resolved.”

Fox News Channel reported that the EPA has invited Keller to come to Washington. The Asheville man, however, is unwilling until he has a full understanding of what the EPA wants to discuss.

“The charter of the EPA is to protect the environment and public, not to act as a quasi federal police department,” Keller told Fox News on Saturday.

In late April on the Senate floor, Oklahoma Republican Sen. James Inhofe highlighted video of Armendariz, then the Region 6 Administrator, explaining EPA’s heavy-handed approach to enforcement. That video brought about Armendariz’s resignation just days later.

“I was in a meeting once and I gave an analogy to my staff about my philosophy of enforcement, and I think it was probably a little crude and maybe not appropriate for the meeting but I’ll go ahead and tell you what I said,” Armendariz said in the video footage.

“It was kind of like how the Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean. They’d go into a little Turkish town somewhere, they’d find the first five guys they saw and they’d crucify them. And then you know that town was really easy to manage for the next few years
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 30, 2012, 12:38:26 PM
Police: 'Threat matrix' dictated SWAT team response at Powell Avenue home
 By John Martin, Mark Wilson

Posted June 22, 2012 at 8:30 a.m., updated June 22, 2012 at 7:44 p.m.




EVANSVILLE — Stephanie Milan, 18, was relaxing in her family’s living room Thursday watching the Food Network when a heavily armed squad of Evansville police officers arrived on the front porch.

Dressed in full protective gear, police broke the storm door of the home at 616 East Powell Ave. — the Milans’ front door was already open on the hot summer day. They also broke a front window. They tossed a flashbang stun grenade into the living room that made a deafening blast. A short distance away, a local television crew’s cameras were rolling. The police had invited the station to videotape the forced entry of the residence.Stephanie Milan said she managed to remain calm because she knew her family hadn’t done anything wrong. Still, she was stunned and confused.


After speaking to Milan and her grandmother, Louise, police determined those inside the house had nothing to do with their investigation.

Police were executing a search warrant for computer equipment, which they said was used to make anonymous and specific online threats against police and their families on the website topix.com.

“The front door was open. It’s not like anyone was in there hiding,” said Ira Milan, Stephanie's grandfather and owner of the property for many years. “To bring a whole SWAT team seems a little excessive.”

Ira Milan said the perpetrator of the threats likely used Stephanie’s Internet service connection from an outside location, which led police to the East Powell Avenue address.

But Police Chief Billy Bolin said, “We have no way of being able to tell that,” and the concerning Internet posts “definitely come back to that address.”

“I think it was a show of force that they are not going to tolerate this,” said Ira Milan, “But what about the residents and what they have to tolerate?”

After noting he has lived there for 30 years, Milan said, “No one has ever been arrested at my house.”

Bolin said Friday that department records indicated relatives associated with the address had criminal histories.

Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said Friday he spoke to Bolin about the incident and was satisfied that police were justified in forcibly entering the home.

“They had what they thought were very specific threats against police officers, their families and the communities,” Winnecke said.

He said police told him that the Milans’ storm door and window were being repaired at city expense.

Workers were at the Milan home on Friday repairing the storm door and broken window. Carpet inside the house was stained with black residue from the flashbang grenade.

Ira Milan said police offered to pay for the damage. Laptops and a cellphone belonging to Stephanie Milan — a May graduate of Signature School who will attend the University of Southern Indiana this fall and major in radiology — were seized in the raid and remained in police possession on Friday.

Bolin said the SWAT team used its standard “knock and announce” procedure of knocking on the wall and repeating the words “police search warrant” three times before entering.

The police chief said the procedure doesn’t require officers to wait for a response.

“It’s designed to distract,” he said.

The decision to use force

Police used what they called a law enforcement threat matrix to determine the proper response to information in the posts. One post mentioned explosives, and another specifically named Bolin and referenced the area where he lives. But no other officers’ names or addresses were identified.

Sgt. Jason Cullum, a police department spokesman, said one person had posted that he possessed explosives, and that “Evansville is going to feel the pain.” That threat, Cullum said, played a major role in dictating the police response.

Cullum said the conversation at topix.com which concerned officers began under a blog headline.

“It said, ‘EPD leak: Officers’ addresses given out,’ or something along those lines. There were some generalized comments about people not liking the police, and that didn’t really concern us,” Cullum said, but then the threats became more specific and suggested officers’ families could be at risk.

Time stamps on the postings indicated that they were made Wednesday evening. Cullum defended the department’s action.

“We brought them out and talked to them,” Cullum said of the Milans. “They were released at the scene. Investigators felt they were not involved in the posting.

“This is a little more difficult that a traditional crime scene, because we’re dealing with the Internet. They definitely weren’t expecting (a SWAT team at the door). The reason we did that is the threats were specific enough, and the potential for danger was there.

“This is a big deal to us,” Cullum said. “This may be just somebody who was online just talking stupid. What I would suggest to anybody who visits websites like that is that their comments can be taken literally.”

The search warrant

Police were executing a search warrant approved by a judge. Such warrants are routinely filed in the Vanderburgh County Clerks Office, but officials in the clerks office said Friday afternoon they had no record of a warrant served on that address.

When asked by the Courier & Press for access to the document that allowed them to force entry to the home, Bolin refused. He said it might contain information that would compromise their investigation. However, he said the document didn’t contain names of any suspects.

“We have an idea in our mind who it is, but we don’t have evidence yet,” Bolin said.

Vanderburgh County Prosecutor Nick Hermann also refused to release the warrant.

The Courier & Press filed Freedom of Information requests Friday afternoon seeking the document from the police department, clerk’s office and prosecutor’s office.

© 2012 Evansville Courier & Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 






Obama is going to have the IRS swat teams doing this to make sure people sign up for ThugCare
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 30, 2012, 01:38:37 PM
Dressed in full protective gear, police broke the storm door of the home at 616 East Powell Ave. — the Milans’ front door was already open on the hot summer day. They also broke a front window. They tossed a flashbang stun grenade into the living room that made a deafening blast. A short distance away, a local television crew’s cameras were rolling. The police had invited the station to videotape the forced entry of the residence.Stephanie Milan said she managed to remain calm because she knew her family hadn’t done anything wrong. Still, she was stunned and confused.

Wow... Also, the police took these threats so seriously that they invited a TV crew to record the forced entry? ::)


Police were executing a search warrant approved by a judge. Such warrants are routinely filed in the Vanderburgh County Clerks Office, but officials in the clerks office said Friday afternoon they had no record of a warrant served on that address.

When asked by the Courier & Press for access to the document that allowed them to force entry to the home, Bolin refused. He said it might contain information that would compromise their investigation. However, he said the document didn’t contain names of any suspects.

I'm sorry... aren't police required by law to serve the warrant and leave a copy of it with the person? Here's to hoping the family sues the department and the officers who participated in the raid.


Obama is going to have the IRS swat teams doing this to make sure people sign up for ThugCare

::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:17:38 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2232340/Homeowner-tasered-police-fought-spreading-house-door.html


Insane. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 07:26:37 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2232340/Homeowner-tasered-police-fought-spreading-house-door.html


Insane. 

Not that I would do it, but having been there done that .. as Chris Rock would say... I don't condone it.. but I understand it. If the cops do nothing, and Joe Citizen gets hurt, they get sued. If they stop him, they get sued. LIkely he had tunnel vision and didn't hear the cops instructions to stop. Can't really see any benefit in an officer sneaking up and tazing without trying to get him to stop voluntarily.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:27:39 AM
Not that I would do it, but having been there done that .. as Chris Rock would say... I don't condone it.. but I understand it. If the cops do nothing, and Joe Citizen gets hurt, they get sued. If they stop him, they get sued. LIkely he had tunnel vision and didn't hear the cops instructions to stop. Can't really see any benefit in an officer sneaking up and tazing without trying to get him to stop voluntarily.

Police have no affirmative duty to help a citizen and can't be sued for not stopping someone from hurting themselves.   You know that. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 07:29:32 AM
Police have no affirmative duty to help a citizen and can't be sued for not stopping someone from hurting themselves.   You know that. 

I don't agree with your statement at all.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:32:18 AM
I don't agree with your statement at all.

Really/  You didnt learn that in the Academy? 

Its well settled law that the police have no affirmative duty to help a citzen in need.   They have a public duty in general, but that does not apply to a citizen in distress. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 07:38:03 AM
Really/  You didnt learn that in the Academy? 

Its well settled law that the police have no affirmative duty to help a citzen in need.   They have a public duty in general, but that does not apply to a citizen in distress. 

No..apparently the instructors weren't aware of that. We were taught we have a duty to act. In fact, we have policies in place that discipline officers who fail to act in particular situations. YOU should know cops get sued for a variety to things. This guy sued because he was tased. He will likely lose if it goes to court, however the city will likely settle. He would probably sue if he got hurt, though he would likely lose if it went to court. Doesn't mean the officers would not be punished because they failed to control a scene. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:45:39 AM
No..apparently the instructors weren't aware of that. We were taught we have a duty to act. In fact, we have policies in place that discipline officers who fail to act in particular situations. YOU should know cops get sued for a variety to things. This guy sued because he was tased. He will likely lose if it goes to court, however the city will likely settle. He would probably sue if he got hurt, though he would likely lose if it went to court. Doesn't mean the officers would not be punished because they failed to control a scene. 

Here you go - its Supreme Court precedent.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/politics/28scotus.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:50:42 AM
;D

How he did not know this is pathetic.   Most cops I know are clueless when it comes to crim pro or just don't care.  Most learn a few things that are basic basic stuff you learn the first week in law school but rarely go beyond that. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 07:53:40 AM
No Duty to Protect: Two Exceptions
 
By L. Cary Unkelbach, Assistant County Attorney Representing the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office, Centennial, Colorado



Law enforcement generally does not have a federal constitutional duty to protect one private person from another. For example, if a drunk driver injures a pedestrian or a drug dealer beats up an informant, agencies and their officers usually would not be liable for those injuries because there was no duty to protect.

Nonetheless, agencies need to be aware of two exceptions, referred to as the special-relationship and the state-created danger theories, which, if pled and proven, may establish a constitutional duty to protect by police. While plaintiffs who are harmed by third parties often raise both theories when they sue police, the state-created danger exception appears to be litigated more frequently than the special relationship exception, which often is more easily analyzed and defined.

Since its 1989 holding that a duty to protect generally does not exist, the U.S. Supreme Court has not directly spoken on the two exception theories that have since evolved.1 Instead, many federal courts have analyzed, defined and applied these exceptions to a variety of fact patterns. Not all of these lower court decisions are consistent with one another. Agencies, in reviewing their policies, should be aware of the approaches taken by the federal courts in their circuit. This article gives a brief overview of the different judicial approaches to a federal due process claim but does not address whether a failure to protect action could be brought under state law.

Special Relationship
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment forbids the government to deprive individuals of life, liberty, or property without "due process of law."2 In 1989 the U.S. Supreme Court stated, "Nothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors."3 Generally, the Due Process Clause does not provide an affirmative right to government aid, "even where such aid may be necessary to secure life, liberty, or property interests of which the government itself may not deprive the individual."4

Those pronouncements came in a case where the Court held that there was no substantive due process violation by caseworkers when a child, formerly in department of social services custody, was returned to and later beaten by his father. Caseworkers had received complaints about the father and may have known that the child was in danger. In analyzing the facts, the Court noted that there was no special relationship between Social Services and the child, as the latter was not in its custody. The Court further noted that the state had not created the danger or done anything to place the child in more danger.5 The harm to the child was inflicted not by the state but by the child's father. "The most that can be said of the state functionaries in this case is that they stood by and did nothing when suspicious circumstances dictated a more active role for them."6

When considering whether law enforcement has a duty to protect, first ask if a special relationship exists. If a suspect is taken into custody by law enforcement, a duty to protect -be it at the scene, during transport, or at the jail-exists.7 The majority of courts require a person to be in physical custody of police before that person has a special relationship with police. However, the Sixth Circuit held that police had a duty to protect a woman where she was effectively in custody when she was threatened with arrest and placed involuntarily in her boyfriend's car.8 The Ninth Circuit held that the government created a special relationship with a noncitizen by paroling him into federal custody as a government witness.9 One federal district court has held a special relationship between the state and a confidential informant existed, and thus there was a duty to protect.10

Courts have rejected the existence of a special relationship in the following situations: between a county and an ex-wife when the sheriff failed to serve her ex-husband with an order of protection;11 between police and a girlfriend when police made a promise to her that her boyfriend would be kept in jail overnight;12 and between a man and police, who went to his home to place him on a mental health hold and then waited downstairs while the man (who was not in the officer's physical custody) went upstairs to get "something" and jumped out a window, thereby killing himself.13

State-Created Danger
Even if there is no special relationship between a person and police, a duty to protect may still exist if the person has been harmed by a third party and can prove the state-created danger theory. This theory has been litigated in a variety of contexts, including those involving motorists and passengers, government and citizen undercovers, rescues by third parties and prevention of rescues, failure to arrest, and failure to serve orders.

Most circuit courts analyze the issue of whether the state-created danger theory is applicable by examining if officers left the individual in a situation that was more dangerous than the one in which they found him, by creating a previously nonexisting danger or increasing the danger. For example, an intoxicated bar patron, who was ejected by police late at night into subfreezing temperatures wearing only jeans and a T-shirt, and was prevented from returning to the bar or driving his truck, made a failure-to-protect claim.14 As the Sixth Circuit said, "The question is not whether the victim was safe during the state action, but whether he was safer before the state action than he was after it."15

At least three circuits have set forth specific tests to determine if a state-created danger exception exists. The Third Circuit requires the plaintiff to show that (1) the harm ultimately caused was foreseeable and fairly direct, (2) the state actor willfully disregarded plaintiff's safety, (3) there existed some relationship between the state and the plaintiff, and (4) the state actors used their authority to create an opportunity that otherwise would not have existed for the third party's crime to occur.16

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 07:54:23 AM
How he did not know this is pathetic.   Most cops I know are clueless when it comes to crim pro or just don't care.  Most learn a few things that are basic basic stuff you learn the first week in law school but rarely go beyond that. 

apparently you weren't aware of the two exceptions.. pathetic
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 07:58:23 AM
apparently you weren't aware of the two exceptions.. pathetic

How does that apply to the story I posted.  It doesn't. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 08:07:10 AM
How does that apply to the story I posted.  It doesn't. 

They had told him to stop once. He will argue the special relationship exception because they limited his movement. He will argue when the police arrived they took control of the scene and should not have allowed him to get close enough to a raging fire to spray it with a garden hose. So while I've addressed your Supreme Court "No Duty" aspect, lets move on to the "right thing to do" aspect. Do you think the cops hated this guy? Were waiting for a chance to pop him and when he placed himself in danger (which in turn places the officers and firemen in danger when they have to go pull his ass out of the fire) they saw it as a chance to try out their fancy taser?  How about this possibility. This was likely this guys first fire experience. Probably not the officers first one. As you know, since you are the expert, the first thing of importance is the preservation of life. Property comes second. you can replace property. People have been killed fighting house fires with garden hoses. Turns out..garden hoses are woefully inadequate. Again, I doubt I would taser the guy, but.. me and my partner would have made sure he stayed a safe distance away from the fire. 1. Because we don't want anyone getting seriously hurt and 2. because if they DO get hurt, we will be held responsible. We'll likely survive the lawsuit, but administratively , it can be your job.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2012, 08:09:59 AM
They had told him to stop once. He will argue the special relationship exception because they limited his movement. He will argue when the police arrived they took control of the scene and should not have allowed him to get close enough to a raging fire to spray it with a garden hose. So while I've addressed your Supreme Court "No Duty" aspect, lets move on to the "right thing to do" aspect. Do you think the cops hated this guy? Were waiting for a chance to pop him and when he placed himself in danger (which in turn places the officers and firemen in danger when they have to go pull his ass out of the fire) they saw it as a chance to try out their fancy taser?  How about this possibility. This was likely this guys first fire experience. Probably not the officers first one. As you know, since you are the expert, the first thing of importance is the preservation of life. Property comes second. you can replace property. People have been killed fighting house fires with garden hoses. Turns out..garden hoses are woefully inadequate. Again, I doubt I would taser the guy, but.. me and my partner would have made sure he stayed a safe distance away from the fire. 1. Because we don't want anyone getting seriously hurt and 2. because if they DO get hurt, we will be held responsible. We'll likely survive the lawsuit, but administratively , it can be your job.     


The guy was on his own property trying to protect it since the fire department was not there.  The cops were doing nothing.  A citizen can't try to protect his own property any more just because some stupid cop tells him not to and then gets tazed?  

F the police.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 14, 2012, 08:11:54 AM

The guy was on his own property trying to protect it since the fire department was not there.  The cops were doing nothing.  A citizen can't try to protect his own property any more just because some stupid cop tells him not to and then gets tazed?  

F the police.  

yeah, you're right
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 11:37:35 AM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57552225-38/senate-bill-rewrite-lets-feds-read-your-e-mail-without-warrants/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=title


Ridiculous. 

F Harry reid! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 11:53:21 AM
Saw this earlier... It already passed in the house.

How about we F Boehner too!

It passed without the re-write - now it goes back to the house of reps right? 

Yes - F Boehner. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on November 20, 2012, 12:04:50 PM
WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT!

What in the holy fuck is going on around here?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on November 20, 2012, 12:06:51 PM
Not even a warrant?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 12:07:01 PM
WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT!

What in the holy fuck is going on around here?

Obama got reelected and gets whatever he wants for a year or two, just like 2008 when all sorts of nasty stuff happened.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on November 20, 2012, 12:10:14 PM
Nope.



Thats fucked up :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 12:13:11 PM
Thats fucked up :(

Bi-Partisan screw job.  Just like the NDAA 

Both parties are the same behind closed doors. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 02:12:42 PM
100 percent accurate.

Notice how NDAA was barely even discussed in the house of reps? 

How many demos ever said a word about it? 

This bullshit w the email will be the same way and obama will sign it and then his blind supporters will make an excuse and say i am making it up. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on November 20, 2012, 03:31:25 PM
Bi-Partisan screw job.  Just like the NDAA 

Both parties are the same behind closed doors. 

+1
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2012, 07:22:03 PM
Homeland Security Wants To Double Its Domestic Drone Fleet
 


Michael Kelley|Nov. 20, 2012, 5:56 PM|721|22



Since 2005, the federal government has awarded at least $12 billion in contracts for drones and drone supplies and maintenance.


 The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) wants to more than double its fleet of Predator drones for surveillance missions inside the United States, Trevor Timm of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) reports.
 
The DHS recently signed a contract with General Atomics —worth as much as $443 million — to purchase up to 14 Predator drones, which would add to its current fleet of 10 if Congress appropriates the funds.
 
Timm notes that the DHS Inspector General issued a report faulting the DHS for wasting time, money and resources on drones, and chastised the agency buying two drones last year despite knowing these problems.
 
The DHS uses the drones not only to patrol U.S. borders (through Customs and Border Protection), but also flies drone missions on behalf of local, state and federal law enforcement agencies with little oversight.  Last month EFF sued DHS under the Freedom of Information Act to obtain information about details of the secretive program.
 
Plus, the DHS has launched a $4 million program to "facilitate and accelerate the adoption" of small, unmanned drones by police through becoming the middleman between drone manufacturers and law enforcement. The agency is in a favorable position to make deals since the drone business is booming.
 
In September the Congressional Research Service released a report warning that domestic drones—which will soon have the capacity to see through walls and ceilings— may be able to bypass constitutional privacy safeguards because of their high level of sophistication.
 
Earlier this year the Federal Aviation Authority said it expects 30,000 of the unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to fill U.S. skies by the end of the decade.

SEE ALSO: Drone Propaganda Site Pops Up Just In Time For Obama's Second Term >


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/government-domestic-drone-fleet-2012-11#ixzz2Cp7urdIg

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 20, 2012, 07:45:16 PM
How does that apply to the story I posted.  It doesn't. 


HA...boom.

You know you've relegated his argument to utter nonsense when he has to resort to making up shit that he thinks the guy 'might' do, lol.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 21, 2012, 10:24:33 PM
UPDATED: Widower of woman shot by Culpeper officer found dead
Inside Nova ^ | November 13, 2012 | Rhonda Simmons
Posted on November 21, 2012 9:07:18 PM EST by Altariel

The widower of the woman shot and killed by a Culpeper police officer on North East Street in February was found dead in his Friendship Heights apartment Tuesday, seven months after his wife’s untimely death.

According to Virginia State Police, a maintenance crew who entered Gary D. Cook’s apartment to conduct routine service for the apartment complex discovered his body. He was 62.

Preliminary findings of an autopsy by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Manassas revealed Cook died of natural causes, according to VPS spokeswoman Corinne Geller.

Culpeper County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to Cook’s residence around 10:29 a.m. for a report of a deceased male. According to Geller, the CCSO contacted the VSP Bureau of Criminal Investigation Culpeper Field Office to handle the circumstances regarding the “unattended death.”

Yellow caution tape, Virginia State Police troopers, Culpeper County Sheriff’s deputies and detectives flanked the apartment building of 1000 Friendship Way, forbidding onlookers from getting too close to the scene while they waited for a search warrant to investigate this case.

Cook filed a $5.35 million wrongful death lawsuit in May against former town police officer Daniel Wayne Harmon-Wright who stands accused in the shooting death of Patricia Ann Cook, Gary Cook’s wife.

Harmon-Wright, 32, of Gainesville pleaded not guilty to the following charges: murder, malicious shooting into an occupied vehicle, malicious shooting into an occupied vehicle resulting in a death and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony in the shooting death of Patricia Ann Cook on Feb. 9 in downtown Culpeper. Meanwhile, Harmon-Wright, a U.S. Marine and Iraq War veteran, is free on $100,000 bond awaiting his jury trial in Culpeper County Circuit Court on Jan. 22 at 9:30 a.m.

Harmon-Wright, a five-year veteran with Culpeper town police, was terminated in June after formal charges were filed against him.

According to the Virginia State Police, Harmon-Wright responded to a report of a suspicious woman sitting in a Jeep Wrangler parked in the Epiphany Catholic School’s middle school parking lot in the 300 block of North East Street around 10 a.m.

Fauquier County Commonwealth’s Attorney Jim Fisher, special prosecutor in this case, described the encounter between Harmon-Wright and Cook as a “brief struggle at the window of this particular motor vehicle,” before she was shot several times.

According to testimony during Harmon-Wright’s bond hearing in June, Harmon-Wright fired his department-issued Glock seven times – two at the driver’s side window behind which Cook was sitting, inflicting non-fatal wounds.

Harmon-Wright shot Cook in the head and back with bullets lodging in her brain and another fatal shot severing her spine going into her heart and lungs.

In May, Cook’s widower, Gary Cook, filed a $5.35 million wrongful death lawsuit in Culpeper County Circuit Court against Harmon-Wright.

Two months later, Gary Cook’s lawyers expressed interest in possibly expanding the wrongful death lawsuit to include Culpeper Police Chief Chris Jenkins and former chief Dan Boring, now a Culpeper Town Councilman.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 28, 2012, 06:30:56 AM
November 26, 2012, 10:49 amComment

Justice Department Expands Hunt for Data on Cellphones
 
By SOMINI SENGUPTA


Associated Press The Justice Department building in Washington.


 Fans of “The Wire,” the HBO series, will recall what a gold mine cellphones turned out to be for police investigating a drug ring in Baltimore. Detectives in the show used them to construct a map of who called whom at what time and how often.

Indeed, a list of incoming and outgoing calls on an individual’s cellphone can provide a robust trail of evidence.

Cellphones seem to be increasingly attractive to the Department of Justice, documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union show. Agencies affiliated with the department used more than 37,600 court orders in 2011 to gather cellphone data, a sharp increase from previous years. They were almost equally divided between “pen register” data, which captures outgoing phone numbers, and “trap and trace” orders, which refer to incoming phone numbers, which means one phone could have two separate orders associated with it.

The total number has roughly doubled since 2007, when cellphone communications were more limited.

By law, the data can be obtained without a search warrant establishing probable cause, though the authorities do need to tell a court that it is relevant to an investigation. To get a wiretap that allows authorities to actually listen in on the contents of a call has higher legal barriers; law enforcement officials have to convince an impartial judge of probable cause.

The lower legal threshold allows law enforcement agencies to capture crucial information, including the time and date of calls and their length, helping law enforcement officials deduce important associations among callers. Each order, the A.C.L.U. pointed out, could affect one or more individuals.

Pen register orders can also allow law enforcement number to obtain data about e-mails, like the “to” and “from” fields, though not the content of those communications.

Among the total orders, the United States Marshals Service led the pack, with more than 16,000, followed by the Drug Enforcement Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Justice Department, unlike local police, is required to report how many such orders it seeks. Still, the A.C.L.U. said it had to file a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain the latest figures.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 28, 2012, 07:51:52 PM
TSA Blasted for Exposing Breasts of Texas Congressman's Teen Grandniece
 The New American ^ | 28 November 2012 | Alex Newman

Posted on Wednesday, November 28, 2012 10:53:42 PM by VitacoreVision





The Transportation Security Administration is under heavy fire after publicly exposing the breasts of a teenage girl during its controversial “screening” procedures.

TSA Blasted for Exposing Breasts of Congressman's Teen Grandniece


The New American
 28 November 2012


 The Transportation Security Administration is under heavy fire after publicly exposing the breasts of a teenage girl during its controversial “screening” procedures. Of course, passengers routinely complain of TSA abuse and molestation — some 17,000 formal complaints have been lodged against the widely ridiculed and despised unconstitutional Homeland Security agency just since 2009, documents show.

 The latest scandal, however, has turned into an international firestorm for the embattled bureaucracy, largely because the then-17-year-old victim was the grandniece of Rep. Ralph Hall (R-Texas). More than a few analysts noted that countless regular Americans suffer similar abuse and humiliation every single day; virtually nothing is ever done.

 Now, though, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are crying foul while demanding investigations. Rights activists from across the political spectrum, meanwhile, have jumped on the opportunity to rein in the federal abuses once and for all.

According to official documents obtained by reporter Scott MacFarlane with an Atlanta TV news station, the girl was traveling to Australia on a trip with her classmates at Southwest Christian School in Texas. An internal investigation by TSA noted that after being selected for “secondary screening” and a so-called “pat-down,” which critics regularly equate with sexual molestation and assault, the screener "removed minor passenger from the corral." Yes, the report uses the word corral, defined as an enclosure or pen for domesticated animals.

 The girl was not offered a “private screening,” the report noted, though passengers often prefer to be screened publicly anyway to ensure that there are witnesses to the controversial procedure in case of extraordinarily inappropriate fondling or other incidents. As the teen was enduring a “pat-down of the stomach area,” the top of her dress came loose and slipped down to her stomach, according to the internal investigation at least, revealing her breasts to everyone in the vicinity. Analysts suggested the dress had actually been pulled down, a far more plausible scenario.

 Surveillance cameras caught the humiliating event on film, but TSA claimed the footage was not good enough to determine whether its screener had “properly conducted” what commentators said sounded a lot like “sexual assault.” The girl’s chaperones, according to the report, became “visibly upset” about the event and notified her parents. On the following day, her father filed a formal complaint.

 The incident happened at the international airport in Los Angeles (LAX) some two years ago. However, it came to light only in recent days after journalist MacFarlane obtained the internal TSA report about the investigation using the Freedom of Information Act. When the findings were publicized, outrage quickly ensued.

 News of the scandal has since gone viral, attracting headlines across America and beyond. Major press outlets from the United Kingdom to Iran have also covered the resulting uproar. Meanwhile, countless victims of TSA abuses took the opportunity to vent their fury in online comment sections over the lawless but routine violations of the rights enshrined in the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment.

 Rep. Hall, describing the incident as “brutal” and saying his grandniece had been “badly mistreated,” called on the TSA to fire the screener responsible for exposing his relative’s body at the airport. The 17-term congressman from Texas is also seeking a proper federal investigation of the incident, according to news reports.

“We have no desire to revive a painful event of the past, one that we abandoned any effort for litigation for privacy reasons,” Hall said in a statement quoted in the press. “We did not want to hurt our niece any more than she had already been hurt.”

 Other lawmakers have also entered the fray. Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), for example, contacted the massive screening bureaucracy to ask for a review and to express concerns about “potentially invasive screenings.” Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters of California, whose district includes LAX, also complained to TSA about the suffering and humiliation endured by her colleague’s young relative.

 It is also not the first time lawmakers have had unpleasant experiences with the TSA. Earlier this year, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) missed a flight to Washington, D.C., after being detained by screeners for refusing a full-body pat-down. The incident happened at the Nashville, Tennessee, airport when a so-called “naked-body scanner” found some sort of alleged “anomaly” around the conservative senator’s knee.

 Sen. Paul’s father Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), a hero to millions of Americans for his devotion to liberty and the Constitution, has been a foe of the TSA and its lawless abuses from the start. “Why is the TSA permitted to abuse the rights of any American traveling by air?” the congressman wondered in his farewell address this month. “Victims of TSA excesses never consented to this abuse.”

 Last year, meanwhile, a congressional report determined that despite squandering close to $60 billion in taxpayer funds on the TSA, screening is based on “theatrics” and has failed to catch a single terrorist. Passengers and crew, the investigation found, are actually the most effective line of defense. Ironically, perhaps, the explosive report said air travel is no safer now than it was before September 11, 2001.

 The out-of-control agency has become “an enormous, inflexible and distracted bureaucracy, more concerned with human resource management and consolidating power,” according to the report, released in November of 2011. “Today, TSA's screening policies are based in theatrics. They are typical, bureaucratic responses to failed security policies meant to assuage the concerns of the traveling public.”

 This week, a stinging investigation by Charles Kenny, a fellow at the Center for Global Development and the New America Foundation, found that the TSA actually makes air travel less safe. Still, despite the facts and the growing surge of public revulsion, the Department of Homeland Security continues purporting to usurp new powers for itself, with the TSA still seeking to expand its “mission” far beyond the confines of “corrals” at airport terminals.

 In typical fashion, the widely loathed screening agency attempted to blame the teenage victim after the latest scandal exploded into the global press, claiming the girl’s dress being too loose was the problem — not the molestation. “We regret that the incident of more than two years ago was one that caused embarrassment to the young lady; however, an investigation concluded that the event was accidental,” TSA claimed in a statement cited in media reports.

 According to the official report about the internal investigation, the bureaucrat responsible for disrobing the girl was “counseled on the expectation of our agency for professionalism and customer service.” By “customers,” TSA was presumably referring to its hapless victims who are lawlessly forced to submit to the violation of their rights in order to board an airplane, and more recently, sometimes even a bus or train.

 Aside from the wanton violations of Americans’ constitutionally guaranteed, unalienable rights, the TSA has also refused to respect federal court decisions. In August, for instance, a U.S. appeals court demanded that the agency promptly explain its brazen failure to obey the law and a judicial order issued a year earlier.

With Americans across the political spectrum becoming increasingly outraged by TSA abuses, some state lawmakers are taking action. In Texas, for example, a bill to criminalize the “screening” procedures as sexual assault was passed overwhelmingly as Democrats and Republicans united to protect the rights of Texans.

 Now, the celebrated Texas Travel Freedoom Act, HB 80, recently pre-filed by state Rep. David Simpson, aims to put an end to TSA lawlessness in the Lone Star State once and for all. Activists, however, are hoping to end the abuses nationwide, and with a congressman’s grandniece becoming the latest high-profile victim, analysts say achieving that goal just got a big boost. Indeed, the entire unconstitutional Department of Homeland Security is increasingly in the crosshairs, too.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: magikusar on November 28, 2012, 08:16:00 PM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57552225-38/senate-bill-rewrite-lets-feds-read-your-e-mail-without-warrants/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=title


Ridiculous. 

F Harry reid! 

The senate is not able to rewrite a bill without it going back to the house for retification.

What the hell is reid trying to pull??
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 28, 2012, 08:22:12 PM
The senate is not able to rewrite a bill without it going back to the house for retification.

What the hell is reid trying to pull??

If the Senate and the House pass different versions of a bill, there is a joint Committee that tries to "iron things out" and which then submits the revised bill to both Houses of Congress for an up or down vote.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on November 29, 2012, 04:13:22 AM
If the Senate and the House pass different versions of a bill, there is a joint Committee that tries to "iron things out" and which then submits the revised bill to both Houses of Congress for an up or down vote.

Thanks
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 29, 2012, 02:52:04 PM
Trooper Accused of Stealing from Victim of Fatal Crash [CT]
 www.nbcconnecticut.com ^ | Thursday, Nov 29, 2012 | Updated 2:48 PM EST | Staff

 
Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2012 3:59:44 PM



A 43-year-old state trooper has been charged with larceny, accused of stealing jewelry and cash from the victim of a fatal crash on Route 15 in Fairfield on Sept. 22.

Trooper Aaron Huntsman, an 18-year veteran of the department, has been suspended from the department, according to state police.

Police began investigating when the victim’s family determined that jewelry, clothing and cash were missing, state police said.

The Connecticut Post is reporting that Huntsman is accused of stealing $3,000 in cash and a gold chain from the victim's body.

The family obtained the victim’s clothes from the hospital, but were not able to find jewelry.

As State Police investigated, they determined that no jewelry was logged into evidence and a large amount of cash was found in the trooper’s police cruiser.

Police obtained an arrest warrant on Wednesday charging Huntsman with two counts of third-degree larceny, interfering with police and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.

Police arrested Huntsman on Thursday.

He was released after posting a $5,000 bond and will be arraigned in Superior Court GA #2 Bridgeport on Dec. 10.

According to the state Web site, Huntsman's state police salary is $80,000 and he made almost $112,000 in 2011.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 29, 2012, 07:43:30 PM
Trooper Accused of Stealing from Victim of Fatal Crash [CT]
 www.nbcconnecticut.com ^ | Thursday, Nov 29, 2012 | Updated 2:48 PM EST | Staff

 
Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2012 3:59:44 PM



A 43-year-old state trooper has been charged with larceny, accused of stealing jewelry and cash from the victim of a fatal crash on Route 15 in Fairfield on Sept. 22.

Trooper Aaron Huntsman, an 18-year veteran of the department, has been suspended from the department, according to state police.

Police began investigating when the victim’s family determined that jewelry, clothing and cash were missing, state police said.

The Connecticut Post is reporting that Huntsman is accused of stealing $3,000 in cash and a gold chain from the victim's body.

The family obtained the victim’s clothes from the hospital, but were not able to find jewelry.

As State Police investigated, they determined that no jewelry was logged into evidence and a large amount of cash was found in the trooper’s police cruiser.

Police obtained an arrest warrant on Wednesday charging Huntsman with two counts of third-degree larceny, interfering with police and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.

Police arrested Huntsman on Thursday.

He was released after posting a $5,000 bond and will be arraigned in Superior Court GA #2 Bridgeport on Dec. 10.

According to the state Web site, Huntsman's state police salary is $80,000 and he made almost $112,000 in 2011.


Life in prison should about do it.. in gen pop
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tbombz on November 29, 2012, 07:47:43 PM
they can search emails without a warrant... BUT THEY STILL NEED A SUBPOENA



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 29, 2012, 09:08:36 PM
Video: Feds shut down 100-year-old oyster company, destroy some lives and dreams
 Hot air ^

Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2012 9:37:42 PM by TigerClaws

Hey, no bigs. It’s just a 100-year-old company and California’s only surviving cannery, a sustainable, family-owned operation employing 30 people. The Drakes Bay Oyster Company has been in a seven-year fight with the federal government and environmental groups over whether it’s 40-year lease would be renewed this week. The Lunny family, which owns the oyster farm, was among a group of families that sold their ranch lands to the National Parks Service in the 1970s to protect them from developers, with the understanding they would get 40-year-leases renewed in perpetuity. After buying and operating the oyster farm without incident— they were even featured as outstanding environmental stewards by the National Parks Service— the Lunnys learned in 2005 they were accused of bringing environmental damage to an area the NPS and environmentalists were anxious to designate as the nation’s first federally recognized marine wilderness.


(Excerpt) Read more at hotair.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 02, 2012, 05:34:46 PM
Check out this video on YouTube:






Fucked up!!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 03, 2012, 12:46:54 PM
Wow.  Been reading this thread, and it's enough to make a good person's blood boil. 

Really have to wonder about the toolbags on this thread that make such effort to barf out excuses.  These are the same people who allow the subversion of democracy to take place, without asking a single fucking question about the fucking signs that are slapping them in the fucking face, and the same people that will "follow orders" until the last free man is taken.

Disgusting, inferior excuses for citizens.  YOU are the problem.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on December 03, 2012, 02:33:49 PM
Check out this video on YouTube:






Fucked up!!!! 

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: OzmO on December 03, 2012, 02:47:10 PM
Video: Feds shut down 100-year-old oyster company, destroy some lives and dreams
 Hot air ^

Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2012 9:37:42 PM by TigerClaws

Hey, no bigs. It’s just a 100-year-old company and California’s only surviving cannery, a sustainable, family-owned operation employing 30 people. The Drakes Bay Oyster Company has been in a seven-year fight with the federal government and environmental groups over whether it’s 40-year lease would be renewed this week. The Lunny family, which owns the oyster farm, was among a group of families that sold their ranch lands to the National Parks Service in the 1970s to protect them from developers, with the understanding they would get 40-year-leases renewed in perpetuity. After buying and operating the oyster farm without incident— they were even featured as outstanding environmental stewards by the National Parks Service— the Lunnys learned in 2005 they were accused of bringing environmental damage to an area the NPS and environmentalists were anxious to designate as the nation’s first federally recognized marine wilderness.


(Excerpt) Read more at hotair.com ...


Fuck. Really?

got a link 33?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 03, 2012, 07:17:48 PM
Video: Feds shut down 100-year-old oyster company, destroy some lives and dreams
 Hot air ^

Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2012 9:37:42 PM by TigerClaws

Hey, no bigs. It’s just a 100-year-old company and California’s only surviving cannery, a sustainable, family-owned operation employing 30 people. The Drakes Bay Oyster Company has been in a seven-year fight with the federal government and environmental groups over whether it’s 40-year lease would be renewed this week. The Lunny family, which owns the oyster farm, was among a group of families that sold their ranch lands to the National Parks Service in the 1970s to protect them from developers, with the understanding they would get 40-year-leases renewed in perpetuity. After buying and operating the oyster farm without incident— they were even featured as outstanding environmental stewards by the National Parks Service— the Lunnys learned in 2005 they were accused of bringing environmental damage to an area the NPS and environmentalists were anxious to designate as the nation’s first federally recognized marine wilderness.


(Excerpt) Read more at hotair.com ...


People should know better than to rely on "understandings". Once you sign on the dotted line any understandings go out the door and the only thing that matters is what's on paper.

To be clear, I'm not saying that the behavior of the government is appropriate (or even reasonable). If the story is accurate then I don't think it is. What I am saying is different:

If you have an "understanding" or "verbal agreement" about how a contract you are about to sign is to be interpreted, or if you negotiate concessions then make sure that those things are put in writing, in the body of the contract before you sign. It's common sense.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 03, 2012, 07:20:13 PM
http://www.wnd.com/2012/11/feds-shut-down-100-year-old-oyster-company/?cat_orig=money

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 03, 2012, 07:52:11 PM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57556704-38/cops-to-congress-we-need-logs-of-americans-text-messages


And it gets worse!   

Wtf!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 04, 2012, 12:39:16 PM
Fuck. Really?

got a link 33?

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/12/04/family-owned-california-oyster-farm-to-fight-federal-government-over-lease


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 05, 2012, 03:42:23 AM
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2012/12/04/three-motorists-suing-new-york-city-over-red-light-cameras


It's all about the benjis. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 05, 2012, 03:48:41 PM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57556704-38/cops-to-congress-we-need-logs-of-americans-text-messages


And it gets worse!   

Wtf!!! 



That's fucked up!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 07, 2012, 11:51:37 AM

Black boxes in cars raise privacy concerns

 

 
Many motorists don't know it, but it's likely that every time they get behind the wheel, there's a snitch along for the ride.
 
In the next few days, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is expected to propose long-delayed regulations requiring auto manufacturers to include event data recorders - better known as "black boxes" - in all new cars and light trucks. But the agency is behind the curve. Automakers have been quietly tucking the devices, which automatically record the actions of drivers and the responses of their vehicles in a continuous information loop, into most new cars for years.
 
When a car is involved in a crash or when its airbags deploy, inputs from the vehicle's sensors during the 5 to 10 seconds before impact are automatically preserved. That's usually enough to record things like how fast the car was traveling and whether the driver applied the brake, was steering erratically or had a seat belt on.
 
The idea is to gather information that can help investigators determine the cause of accidents and lead to safer vehicles. But privacy advocates say government regulators and automakers are spreading an intrusive technology without first putting in place policies to prevent misuse of the information collected.
 
Data collected by the recorders is increasingly showing up in lawsuits, criminal cases and high-profile accidents. Massachusetts Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray initially said that he wasn't speeding and that he was wearing his seat belt when he crashed a government-owned car last year. But the Ford Crown Victoria's data recorder told a different story: It showed the car was traveling more than 100 mph and Murray wasn't belted in.
 
In 2007, then-New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine was seriously injured in the crash of an SUV driven by a state trooper. Corzine was a passenger. The SUV's recorder showed the vehicle was traveling 91 mph on a parkway where the speed limit was 65 mph, and Corzine didn't have his seat belt on.
 
There's no opt-out. It's extremely difficult for car owners to disable the recorders. Although some vehicle models have had recorders since the early 1990s, a federal requirement that automakers disclose their existence in owner's manuals didn't go into effect until three months ago. Automakers who voluntarily put recorders in vehicles are also now required to gather a minimum of 15 types of data.
 
Besides the upcoming proposal to put recorders in all new vehicles, the traffic safety administration is also considering expanding the data requirement to include as many as 30 additional types of data such as whether the vehicle's electronic stability control was engaged, the driver's seat position or whether the front-seat passenger was belted in. Some manufacturers already are collecting the information. Engineers have identified more than 80 data points that might be useful.
 
Despite privacy complaints, the traffic safety administration so far hasn't put any limits on how the information can be used. About a dozen states have some law regarding data recorders, but the rest do not.
 
"Right now we're in an environment where there are no rules, there are no limits, there are no consequences and there is no transparency," said Lillie Coney, associate director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy advocacy group. "Most people who are operating a motor vehicle have no idea this technology is integrated into their vehicle."
 
Part of the concern is that the increasing computerization of cars and the growing transmission of data to and from vehicles could lead to unintended uses of recorder data.
 
"Basically your car is a computer now, so it can record all kinds of information," said Gloria Bergquist, vice president of the Alliance of Automotive Manufacturers. "It's a lot of the same issues you have about your computer or your smartphone and whether Google or someone else has access to the data."
 
The alliance opposes the government requiring recorders in all vehicles.
 
Data recorders "help our engineers understand how cars perform in the real world, and we already have put them on over 90 percent of (new) vehicles without any mandate being necessary," Bergquist said.
 
Safety advocates, however, say requiring data recorders in all cars is the best way to gather a large enough body of reliable information to enable vehicle designers to make safer automobiles.
 
"The barn door is already open. It's a question of whether we use the information that's already out there," said Henry Jasny, vice president of Advocates for Highway and Automotive Safety.
 
The National Transportation Safety Board has been pushing for recorders in all passenger vehicles since the board's investigation of a 2003 accident in which an elderly driver plowed through an open-air market in Santa Monica, Calif. Ten people were killed and 63 were injured. The driver refused to be interviewed and his 1992 Buick LeSabre didn't have a recorder. After ruling out other possibilities, investigators ultimately guessed that he had either mistakenly stepped on the gas pedal or had stepped on the gas and the brake pedals at the same time.
 
When reports of sudden acceleration problems in Toyota vehicles cascaded in 2009 and 2010, recorder data from some of the vehicles contributed to the traffic safety administration's conclusion that the problem was probably sticky gas pedals and floor mats that could jam them, not defects in electronic throttle control systems.
 
"Black box" is a mechanic's term for a part that should only be opened by someone with authority to do so. The term is most widely used to refer to flight data recorders, which continually gather hundreds of data points about an aircraft's operation during flight. Aircraft recorders, by law, are actually bright orange.
 
Some automakers began installing the recorders at a time when there were complaints that air bags might be causing deaths and injuries, partly to protect themselves against liability and partly to improve air bag technology. Most recorders are black boxes about the size of a deck of card with circuit boards inside. After an accident, information is downloaded to a laptop computer using a tool unique to the vehicle's manufacturer. As electronics in cars have increased, the kinds of data that can be recorded have grown as well. Some more recent recorders are part of the vehicle's computers rather than a separate device.
 
Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass., has repeatedly, and unsuccessfully, introduced legislation to require that automakers design recorders so that they can be disabled by motorists
 
A transportation bill passed by the Senate earlier this year would have required that all new cars and light trucks have recorders and designated a vehicle's owner as the owner of the data. The provision was removed during House-Senate negotiations on the measure at the behest of House Republican lawmakers who said they were concerned about privacy.
 
"Many of us would see it as a slippery slope toward big government and Big Brother knowing what we're doing and where we are," Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa., who is slated to take over the chairmanship of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee in January, said at the time. "Privacy is a big concern for many across America."


Read more: http://www.myfoxdc.com/story/20286045/black-boxes-in-cars-raise-privacy-concerns#ixzz2EOhmyUx9

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 10, 2012, 07:02:57 AM
True Drone Lies
 Townhall.com ^ | December 10, 2012 | Katie Kieffer

Posted on Monday, December 10, 2012 7:48:51 AM



 Superheroes often live double lives. But so do super-villains. For four years, the Obama administration has been living a double-life regarding drones.



Publicly, the president and his leadership tell us they are using drones to protect our borders and promote national security. The administration dismisses challenges to its drone policies as falsehoods, but these “lies” are alarmingly close to the truth.



True Drone Lies at Home

Drone creep is happening. On Valentine’s Day, Obama signed the unconstitutional FAA Modernization and Reform Act, allocating $63.6 billion to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) between 2012 and 2015. Basically, he authorized the FAA to spend billions of taxpayer dollars to loosen and expand drone regulations for both military and private/commercial use. This law violates both the Fourth Amendment and the Constitution’s mandate that Congress—not the President—make all laws.



Since February, the administration has gone on a drone-buying binge—despite Inspector General audits indicating that agencies like the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) do not need and cannot afford the drones they already have access to.



The DHS will soon have a fleet of 24 domestic drones after reportedly signing a contract worth $443 with General Atomics for 14 more Predator drones. The drones are being purchased under the guise of “border security.” However, reports indicate the federal government is using these drones to violate our Fourth Amendment rights.



Obama must know his drone policy is unconstitutional and liable to congressional and/or judicial challenge. For, he is moving to codify it: “The attempt to write a formal rule book for targeted killing began last summer after news reports on the drone program… the president and top aides believe it should be institutionalized…” reports the New York Times.



Domestically, we must demand that Congress hold the president accountable for his incessant prowl for more control over our lives through the use of unconstitutional drones.



True Drone Lies in Iran

In Iran, we find many examples of the concerns that arise from the administration’s international drone policy. Using drones to spy on Iran is backfiring. We appear to be losing more than we are gaining because we are forfeiting our intelligence secrets and inciting blowback.



U.S.-Iran relations are complex, so I will provide a timeline with concrete examples:



December 4, 2011: Iranian forces brought down a U.S. RQ-170 Sentinel drone equipped with proprietary stealth technology. The U.S. was using the drone to monitor Iran’s military and nuclear facilities. The Pentagon played down the capture and President Obama asked Iran to return the drone.



February 1, 2012: Iran’s government contracted an Iranian toy company to produce a pink, $4 toy model of the Sentinel and sent it to the White House. "No one returns the symbol of aggression to the party that sought secret and vital intelligence related to the national security of a country," Iranian Islamic Revolution Guards Corps Lt. Commander Gen. Hossein Salami reportedly said.



April 22, 2012: Iran announced that it had successfully recovered sensitive data from the Sentinel—including information we had supposedly erased. Iran also said it was building a duplicate drone since the Sentinel was almost entirely intact at the time of capture.



November 1, 2012: Iran’s air and sea borders are highly disputed, yet the U.S. risked Iranian ire and flew a U.S. MQ-1 Predator drone over what Iran considers to be its territorial waters in the Persian Gulf. An Iranian SU-25 Frog-foot warplane shot at our drone in retaliation.



December 4, 2012: Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps naval forces captured a U.S. drone that reportedly violated Iran’s airspace. Since the drone did not belong to the U.S. Navy, it most likely belonged to the CIA or the Department of Defense’s National Security Agency and was conducting surveillance on Iran.



Going Forward

We must improve our stealth drone technology or our rivals will continue to intercept it. The Predator drones we use abroad put our national security at risk because their unencrypted GPS signal is easy for an enemy to spoof and they are susceptible to jamming (according to a September Government Accountability Office report). Why are we using such underdeveloped technology?



In addition to improving our stealth technology, but we must exercise more discretion in deciding whether to use it. Iran views U.S. drone surveillance as a direct act of aggression. If we seriously want to negotiate with Iran and avoid an unnecessary war, we must reevaluate our constant snooping with bug-prone drones.



Our drones are stirring up anti-American sentiment abroad. In just four years, the CIA’s drones have killed 2,500 people (plus numerous unreported civilians). Citizens in Iran, Pakistan, Yemen and Afghanistan progressively view our drones as violating their national sovereignty and are angered by the civilian deaths they cause.



The Obama administration may call them lies. But we know these “lies” are true: U.S. domestic drone policy ravages our constitutional freedoms while U.S. international drone policy incites blowback and threatens our national security.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 10, 2012, 03:05:27 PM
THIS IS REALLY fucked UP.

80 YEARS IN JAIL? 


FUCK OBAMA! 

[ Invalid YouTube link ]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 11, 2012, 09:06:13 AM
THIS IS REALLY fucked UP.

80 YEARS IN JAIL? 


FUCK OBAMA! 

Why, exactly is Obama to blame for Federal laws that have been on the books long before he was in the Senate? You wouldn't want him to not enforce those laws, would you? I mean, after all, isn't that what he's accused for vis-à-vis immigration?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 11, 2012, 09:09:50 AM
Why, exactly is Obama to blame for Federal laws that have been on the books long before he was in the Senate? You wouldn't want him to not enforce those laws, would you? I mean, after all, isn't that what he's accused for vis-à-vis immigration?

Prosecutorial discretion? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 11, 2012, 01:40:12 PM
Prosecutorial discretion?

He gets blasted when the DOJ exercises prosecutorial discretion, and he gets blasted when the DOJ doesn't exercise prosecutorial discretion? I guess we can argue that the issues in question are very different, but still... the fact is that to you Obama can do no right (just like Bush couldn't do no right to those on the opposite end of the spectrum from you).

As I said before, this insane polarization, fueled by the hyperpartisan dolts and the pundits will be our undoing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 11, 2012, 01:50:42 PM
He gets blasted when the DOJ exercises prosecutorial discretion, and he gets blasted when the DOJ doesn't exercise prosecutorial discretion? I guess we can argue that the issues in question are very different, but still... the fact is that to you Obama can do no right (just like Bush couldn't do no right to those on the opposite end of the spectrum from you).

As I said before, this insane polarization, fueled by the hyperpartisan dolts and the pundits will be our undoing.

You think its a good use of limited resources to go after legal pot growers vs violent cartels and massive white collar crime? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: War-Horse on December 11, 2012, 02:56:47 PM
You think its a good use of limited resources to go after legal pot growers vs violent cartels and massive white collar crime?  


OMG. Your almost at 100,000 posts.    BYE at 100k right?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 11, 2012, 03:10:50 PM
You think its a good use of limited resources to go after legal pot growers vs violent cartels and massive white collar crime?

What I think is irrelevant so stop dodging the question. Either the DOJ has prosecutorial discretion or they don't. Either Obama and his Administration should be condemned for not enforcing the laws currently on the books or they shouldn't. You cannot have your cake and eat it too. So, tell us: does the DOJ have prosecutorial discretion or not?

If you're really interested in my personal opinion on the subject (I know you aren't) then no, I don't think it's a good use of resources, but the simple fact is that they are no legal pot growers as far as the Government is concerned (except for one facility that makes Government-issued joints). A state may make growing pot legal, but being a lawyer, you know full well that Federal laws preempt State laws.

Personally, I think laws that are widely ignored and casually broken are simply bad laws and ought to be eliminated. I find the war on marijuana to be a waste of resources and think that if people want to smoke it, that's their business. I personally don't do any drugs, but my take on marijuana is simple: make it legal and impose reasonable restrictions (e.g. be 18+ to buy from licensed dealers and pay tax on the purchase).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 11, 2012, 04:05:45 PM
Either the DOJ has prosecutorial discretion or they don't. Either Obama and his Administration should be condemned for not enforcing the laws currently on the books or they shouldn't. You cannot have your cake and eat it too. 



Nonsense, there's no either or.  Circumstances always vary.

In fact the amount and range of prosecutorial discretion is completely debatable.

Hell, the whole reason we're stuck with mandatory minimums in due to perceived abuses in discretion.  But even now...some discretion still exists in sentencing.

Some laws I consider just and fully support them enforcing.

Some laws I think are unjust and should not be enforced.

To claim you can't do both is...  ::)


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 11, 2012, 07:47:09 PM
Nonsense, there's no either or.  Circumstances always vary.

Of course there is. Either there is such a thing as prosecutorial discretion of there isn't. Either the DOJ has it or they don't. Don't confuse that simple question with the much more complicated question of when it is appropriate for them to use that discretion and how to do so. That's where the "circumstances" you mention come into play.


In fact the amount and range of prosecutorial discretion is completely debatable.

Right. But whether it exists isn't debatable. Whether the DOJ has it isn't debatable. These are binary questions about facts.


Hell, the whole reason we're stuck with mandatory minimums in due to perceived abuses in discretion.  But even now...some discretion still exists in sentencing.

You are confusing sentencing discretion, which is something something that Judges and prosecutors have, and prosecutorial discretion, which is something prosecutors have. Nice try though.


Some laws I consider just and fully support them enforcing.

Some laws I think are unjust and should not be enforced.

If you think laws are unjust and should not be enforced then fight to repeal them. The laws that are on the books should be respected, even when we disagree with them. If we don't, the rule of law is a meaningless, vacuous term.


To claim you can't do both is...  ::)

You can't be for and against something at the same time. This is a simple fact of reality. Just how you can't have your cake and eat it too is a fact of reality. You can try to have your cake and eat it too, but the world in which you live in is rational, and after you're done eating your cake, no matter how hard you try, you can no longer have it.

If you think Obama's DOJ does have prosecutorial discretion, then you can't also think that they don't simply because you disagree with how they apply that discretion and vice-versa. If you have a beef with how they're applying that discretion, that's a whole 'nother perfectly valid topic.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 13, 2012, 06:29:34 AM

Government spying out of control
 

By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
 
Published December 13, 2012
 
FoxNews.com
 







In this April 7, 2011, file photo the U.S. Capitol in Washington is illuminated at night as Congress work late to avert a government shutdown.
 


After President Richard Nixon was forced from office in 1974, congressional investigators discovered what they believed was the full extent of his use of the FBI and the CIA to engage in domestic spying. In that pre-digital era, the spying consisted of listening to telephone calls, opening mail, and using undercover agents to infiltrate political organizations and, as we know, break into their offices. Nixon claimed he did this for the protection of national security. He also claimed he was entitled to break the law and violate the Constitution. “If the president does it, that means that it’s not illegal,” he once famously said.

Since no one was prosecuted on the basis of data stolen or retrieved by his spies, the courts rarely encountered this behavior and never had to rule on it, and thus it went largely unchecked. A few victims challenged the spying, but the Supreme Court ruled that without palpable harm, the challengers lacked the legal ability to complain in court -- what judges call “standing.”
 
But many Americans did complain to Congress, which in 1978 enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, commonly called FISA. FISA provided that all domestic surveillance be subject to the search warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment, except for spying on foreign agents operating in the U.S. For those cases, FISA established a secret federal court that has been authorized to issue search warrants to spy on foreign agents.
 



The right to privacy is a natural human right. Its enshrinement in the Constitution has largely kept America from becoming East Germany.
 
-


The constitutional standard for all search warrants is probable cause of crime. FISA, however, established a new, different and lesser standard -- thus unconstitutional on its face since Congress is bound by, and cannot change, the Constitution -- of probable cause of status. The status was that of an agent of a foreign power. So, under FISA, the feds needed to demonstrate to a secret court only that a non-American physically present in the U.S., perhaps under the guise of a student, diplomat or embassy janitor, was really an agent of a foreign power, and the demonstration of that agency alone was sufficient to authorize a search warrant to listen to the agent’s telephone calls or read his mail.
 
Over time, the requirement of status as a foreign agent was modified to status as a foreign person. This, of course, was an even lesser standard and one rarely rejected by the FISA court. In fact, that court has rarely rejected anything, having granted search warrants in well over 97 percent of applications. This is hardly harmless, as foreign persons in the U.S. are frequently talking to Americans in the U.S. Thus, not only did FISA violate the privacy rights of foreigners (the Fourth Amendment protects “people,” not just Americans); it violated the rights of those with whom they were communicating, American or non-American.
 
It gets worse. The Patriot Act, which was enacted in 2001 and permits federal agents to write their own search warrants in violation of the Fourth Amendment, actually amended FISA so as to do away with the FISA-issued search warrant requirement when the foreign person is outside the U.S. This means that if you email or call your cousin in Europe or a business colleague in Asia, the feds are reading or listening, without a warrant, without suspicion, without records and without evidence of anything unlawful.
 
The Patriot Act amendments to FISA also permit the feds to use anything they see or hear while spying in a federal court. The amended FISA statute permitting these warrantless searches of emails, telephone calls and postal mail expires at the end of this month. Last month, the House quietly voted to extend this dreadful authority for another five years, and in the next week, the Senate will consider doing the same.
 
What’s wrong with Congress?
 
FISA gives the government unchecked authority to snoop on all Americans who communicate with any foreign person, in direct contravention of the Fourth Amendment. The right to privacy is a natural human right. Its enshrinement in the Constitution has largely kept America from becoming East Germany. Moreover, everyone in Congress has taken an oath to uphold the Constitution, which could not be more clear: “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects…” shall not be violated, except via a warrant issued by a neutral judge upon the judge finding probable cause of crime. If we let Congress, which is a creature of the Constitution, change the Constitution, then no one’s liberty or property is safe, and freedom is dependent upon the political needs of those in power.
 
The president and the leadership of both political parties in both houses of Congress have abandoned their oaths to uphold the Constitution. They have claimed that foreigners and their American communicants are committed to destroying the country and only the invasion of everyone’s right to privacy will keep us safe. They are violating the privacy of us all to find the communications of a few. Who will keep us safe from them? Their behavior is committed to destroying the Constitution.
 


Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. His latest is “Theodore and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional Freedom.”


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/12/13/government-spying-out-control/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2EwU5bIvZ

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 13, 2012, 06:47:07 AM

U.S. NEWS
 December 12, 2012, 10:30 p.m. ET
 .
U.S. Terrorism Agency to Tap a Vast Database of Citizens .
By JULIA ANGWIN



Top U.S. intelligence officials gathered in the White House Situation Room in March to debate a controversial proposal. Counterterrorism officials wanted to create a government dragnet, sweeping up millions of records about U.S. citizens—even people suspected of no crime.
 
Not everyone was on board. "This is a sea change in the way that the government interacts with the general public," Mary Ellen Callahan, chief privacy officer of the Department of Homeland Security, argued in the meeting, according to people familiar with the discussions.

A week later, the attorney general signed the changes into effect.
 



Documents

NCTC Guidelines -- 2008






NCTC Guidelines – 2012

Homeland Security Department Email about the NCTC Guidelines

.
Through Freedom of Information Act requests and interviews with officials at numerous agencies, The Wall Street Journal has reconstructed the clash over the counterterrorism program within the administration of President Barack Obama. The debate was a confrontation between some who viewed it as a matter of efficiency—how long to keep data, for instance, or where it should be stored—and others who saw it as granting authority for unprecedented government surveillance of U.S. citizens.
 
The rules now allow the little-known National Counterterrorism Center to examine the government files of U.S. citizens for possible criminal behavior, even if there is no reason to suspect them. That is a departure from past practice, which barred the agency from storing information about ordinary Americans unless a person was a terror suspect or related to an investigation.
 
Now, NCTC can copy entire government databases—flight records, casino-employee lists, the names of Americans hosting foreign-exchange students and many others. The agency has new authority to keep data about innocent U.S. citizens for up to five years, and to analyze it for suspicious patterns of behavior. Previously, both were prohibited. Data about Americans "reasonably believed to constitute terrorism information" may be permanently retained.


Getty Images

National Counterterrorism Center Director Matthew Olsen testifies before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on Capitol Hill in January.
.
The changes also allow databases of U.S. civilian information to be given to foreign governments for analysis of their own. In effect, U.S. and foreign governments would be using the information to look for clues that people might commit future crimes.
 
"It's breathtaking" in its scope, said a former senior administration official familiar with the White House debate.
 
Counterterrorism officials say they will be circumspect with the data. "The guidelines provide rigorous oversight to protect the information that we have, for authorized and narrow purposes," said Alexander Joel, Civil Liberties Protection Officer for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the parent agency for the National Counterterrorism Center.
 
The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution says that searches of "persons, houses, papers and effects" shouldn't be conducted without "probable cause" that a crime has been committed. But that doesn't cover records the government creates in the normal course of business with citizens.
 
Congress specifically sought to prevent government agents from rifling through government files indiscriminately when it passed the Federal Privacy Act in 1974. The act prohibits government agencies from sharing data with each other for purposes that aren't "compatible" with the reason the data were originally collected.
 


Three Years of WSJ Privacy Insights

The Wall Street Journal is conducting a long-running investigation into the profound transformation of personal privacy in America.


See full privacy coverage
.
But the Federal Privacy Act allows agencies to exempt themselves from many requirements by placing notices in the Federal Register, the government's daily publication of proposed rules. In practice, these privacy-act notices are rarely contested by government watchdogs or members of the public. "All you have to do is publish a notice in the Federal Register and you can do whatever you want," says Robert Gellman, a privacy consultant who advises agencies on how to comply with the Privacy Act.

As a result, the National Counterterrorism Center program's opponents within the administration—led by Ms. Callahan of Homeland Security—couldn't argue that the program would violate the law. Instead, they were left to question whether the rules were good policy.
 
Under the new rules issued in March, the National Counterterrorism Center, known as NCTC, can obtain almost any database the government collects that it says is "reasonably believed" to contain "terrorism information." The list could potentially include almost any government database, from financial forms submitted by people seeking federally backed mortgages to the health records of people who sought treatment at Veterans Administration hospitals.

Previous government proposals to scrutinize massive amounts of data about innocent people have caused an uproar. In 2002, the Pentagon's research arm proposed a program called Total Information Awareness that sought to analyze both public and private databases for terror clues. It would have been far broader than the NCTC's current program, examining many nongovernmental pools of data as well.

"If terrorist organizations are going to plan and execute attacks against the United States, their people must engage in transactions and they will leave signatures," the program's promoter, Admiral John Poindexter, said at the time. "We must be able to pick this signal out of the noise."
 
Adm. Poindexter's plans drew fire from across the political spectrum over the privacy implications of sorting through every single document available about U.S. citizens. Conservative columnist William Safire called the plan a "supersnoop's dream." Liberal columnist Molly Ivins suggested it could be akin to fascism. Congress eventually defunded the program.
 
The National Counterterrorism Center's ideas faced no similar public resistance. For one thing, the debate happened behind closed doors. In addition, unlike the Pentagon, the NCTC was created in 2004 specifically to use data to connect the dots in the fight against terrorism.
 
Even after eight years in existence, the agency isn't well known. "We're still a bit of a startup and still having to prove ourselves," said director Matthew Olsen in a rare public appearance this summer at the Aspen Institute, a leadership think tank.
 
The agency's offices are tucked away in an unmarked building set back from the road in the woodsy suburban neighborhood of McLean, Va. Many employees are on loan from other agencies, and they don't conduct surveillance or gather clues directly. Instead, they analyze data provided by others.
 
The agency's best-known product is a database called TIDE, which stands for the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment. TIDE contains more than 500,000 identities suspected of terror links. Some names are known or suspected terrorists; others are terrorists' friends and families; still more are people with some loose affiliation to a terrorist.

Intelligence officials met at the White House in March to discuss the NCTC proposal with John Brennan, the president's chief counterterrorism adviser.
.
TIDE files are important because they are used by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to compile terrorist "watchlists." These are lists that can block a person from boarding an airplane or obtaining a visa.
 
The watchlist system failed spectacularly on Christmas Day 2009 when Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian man, boarded a flight to Detroit from Amsterdam wearing explosives sewn into his undergarments. He wasn't on the watchlist.

He eventually pleaded guilty to terror-related charges and is imprisoned. His bomb didn't properly detonate.
 
However, Mr. Abdulmutallab and his underwear did alter U.S. intelligence-gathering. A Senate investigation revealed that NCTC had received information about him but had failed to query other government databases about him. In a scathing finding, the Senate report said, "the NCTC was not organized adequately to fulfill its missions."
 
"This was not a failure to collect or share intelligence," said John Brennan, the president's chief counterterrorism adviser, at a White House press conference in January 2010. "It was a failure to connect and integrate and understand the intelligence we had."
 
As result, Mr. Obama demanded a watchlist overhaul. Agencies were ordered to send all their leads to NCTC, and NCTC was ordered to "pursue thoroughly and exhaustively terrorism threat threads."
 











Getty Images
Matthew Olsen, director of the National Counterterrorism Center: 'We're still a bit of a startup and still having to prove ourselves.'
.
Quickly, NCTC was flooded with terror tips—each of which it was obligated to "exhaustively" pursue. By May 2010 there was a huge backlog, according a report by the Government Accountability Office.
 
Legal obstacles emerged. NCTC analysts were permitted to query federal-agency databases only for "terrorism datapoints," say, one specific person's name, or the passengers on one particular flight. They couldn't look through the databases trolling for general "patterns." And, if they wanted to copy entire data sets, they were required to remove information about innocent U.S. people "upon discovery."
 
But they didn't always know who was innocent. A person might seem innocent today, until new details emerge tomorrow.

"What we learned from Christmas Day"—from the failed underwear bomb—was that some information "might seem more relevant later," says Mr. Joel, the national intelligence agency's civil liberties officer. "We realized we needed it to be retained longer."
 
Late last year, for instance, NCTC obtained an entire database from Homeland Security for analysis, according to a person familiar with the transaction. Homeland Security provided the disks on the condition that NCTC would remove all innocent U.S. person data after 30 days.
 
After 30 days, a Homeland Security team visited and found that the data hadn't yet been removed. In fact, NCTC hadn't even finished uploading the files to its own computers, that person said. It can take weeks simply to upload and organize the mammoth data sets.

Homeland Security granted a 30-day extension. That deadline was missed, too. So Homeland Security revoked NCTC's access to the data.
 
To fix problems like these that had cropped up since the Abdulmutallab incident, NCTC proposed the major expansion of its powers that would ultimately get debated at the March meeting in the White House. It moved to ditch the requirement that it discard the innocent-person data. And it asked for broader authority to troll for patterns in the data.

As early as February 2011, NCTC's proposal was raising concerns at the privacy offices of both Homeland Security and the Department of Justice, according to emails reviewed by the Journal.
 
Privacy offices are a relatively new phenomenon in the intelligence community. Most were created at the recommendation of the 9/11 Commission. Privacy officers are often in the uncomfortable position of identifying obstacles to plans proposed by their superiors.
 
At the Department of Justice, Chief Privacy Officer Nancy Libin raised concerns about whether the guidelines could unfairly target innocent people, these people said. Some research suggests that, statistically speaking, there are too few terror attacks for predictive patterns to emerge. The risk, then, is that innocent behavior gets misunderstood—say, a man buying chemicals (for a child's science fair) and a timer (for the sprinkler) sets off false alarms.

An August government report indicates that, as of last year, NCTC wasn't doing predictive pattern-matching.
 
The internal debate was more heated at Homeland Security. Ms. Callahan and colleague Margo Schlanger, who headed the 100-person Homeland Security office for civil rights and civil liberties, were concerned about the implications of turning over vast troves of data to the counterterrorism center, these people said.

They and Ms. Libin at the Justice Department argued that the failure to catch Mr. Abdulmutallab wasn't caused by the lack of a suspect—he had already been flagged—but by a failure to investigate him fully. So amassing more data about innocent people wasn't necessarily the right solution.
 
The most sensitive Homeland Security data trove at stake was the Advanced Passenger Information System. It contains the name, gender, birth date and travel information for every airline passenger entering the U.S.












House Oversight Committee
Mary Ellen Callahan, then-chief privacy officer of the Department of Homeland Security: 'This is a sea change in the way that the government interacts with the general public.'
.
Previously, Homeland Security had pledged to keep passenger data only for 12 months. But NCTC was proposing to copy and keep it for up to five years. Ms. Callahan argued this would break promises the agency had made to the public about its use of personal data, these people said.
 
Discussions sometimes got testy, according to emails reviewed by the Journal. In one case, Ms. Callahan sent an email complaining that "examples" provided to her by an unnamed intelligence official were "complete non-sequiturs" and "non-responsive."
 
In May 2011, Ms. Callahan and Ms. Schlanger raised their concerns with the chief of their agency, Janet Napolitano. They fired off a memo under the longwinded title, "How Best to Express the Department's Privacy and Civil Liberties Concerns over Draft Guidelines Proposed by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the National Counterterrorism Center," according to an email obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. The contents of the memo, which appears to run several pages, were redacted.
 
The two also kept pushing the NCTC officials to justify why they couldn't search for terrorism clues less invasively, these people said. "I'm not sure I'm totally prepared with the firestorm we're about to create," Ms. Schlanger emailed Ms. Callahan in November, referring to the fact that the two wanted more privacy protections. Ms. Schlanger returned to her faculty position at the University of Michigan Law School soon after but remains an adviser to Homeland Security.
 
To resolve the issue, Homeland Security's deputy secretary, Jane Holl Lute, requested the March meeting at the White House. The second in command from Homeland Security, the Justice Department, the FBI, NCTC and the office of the director of national intelligence sat at the small conference table. Normal protocol for such meeting is for staffers such as Ms. Callahan to sit against the walls of the room and keep silent.
 
By this point, Ms. Libin's concern that innocent people could be inadvertently targeted had been largely overruled at the Department of Justice, these people said. Colleagues there were more concerned about missing the next terrorist threat.

That left Ms. Callahan as the most prominent opponent of the proposed changes. In an unusual move, Ms. Lute asked Ms. Callahan to speak about Homeland Security's privacy concerns. Ms. Callahan argued that the rules would constitute a "sea change" because, whenever citizens interact with the government, the first question asked will be, are they a terrorist?
 
Mr. Brennan considered the arguments. And within a few days, the attorney general, Eric Holder, had signed the new guidelines. The Justice Department declined to comment about the debate over the guidelines.
 
Under the new rules, every federal agency must negotiate terms under which it would hand over databases to NCTC. This year, Ms. Callahan left Homeland Security for private practice, and Ms. Libin left the Justice Department to join a private firm.
 
Homeland Security is currently working out the details to give the NCTC three data sets—the airline-passenger database known as APIS; another airline-passenger database containing information about non-U.S. citizen visitors to the U.S.; and a database about people seeking refugee asylum. It previously agreed to share databases containing information about foreign-exchange students and visa applications.

Once the terms are set, Homeland Security is likely to post a notice in the Federal Register. The public can submit comments to the Federal Register about proposed changes, although Homeland Security isn't required to make changes based on the comments.

Write to Julia Angwin at julia.angwin@wsj.com
 
A version of this article appeared December 13, 2012, on page A1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: U.S. Terror Agency To Tap Citizen Files.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 16, 2012, 10:11:01 AM
When a former senior White House official describes a nationwide surveillance effort as “breathtaking,” you know civil liberties activists are preparing for a fight.

The Wall Street Journal reported today that the little-known National Counterterrorism Center, based in an unmarked building in McLean, Va., has been granted sweeping new authority to store and monitor massive datasets about innocent Americans.

After internal wrangling over privacy and civil liberties issues, the Justice Department reportedly signed off on controversial new guidelines earlier this year. The guidelines allow the NCTC, for the first time, to keep data about innocent U.S. citizens for up to five years, using “predictive pattern-matching,” to analyze it for suspicious patterns of behavior. The data the counterterrorism center has access to, according to the Journal, includes “entire government databases—flight records, casino-employee lists, the names of Americans hosting foreign-exchange students and many others.”

Notably, the Journal reports that these changes also allow databases about U.S. civilians to be handed over to foreign governments for analysis, presumably so that they too can attempt to determine future criminal actions. The Department of Homeland Security’s former chief privacy officer said that it represents a “sea change in the way that the government interacts with the general public.”

The snooping effort, which officials say is subject to “rigorous oversight,” is reminiscent of the so-called Total Information Awareness initiative, dreamt up in the aftermath of 9/11 by the Pentagon’s research unit DARPA. The aim of the TIA initiative was essentially to create a kind of ubiquitous pre-crime surveillance regime monitoring public and private databases. It was largely defunded in 2003, after civil liberties concerns. However, other similar efforts have continued, such as through the work of the Department of Homeland Security’s intelligence-gathering “Fusion Centers.” Most recently, Fusion Centers were subjected to scathing criticism from congressional investigators, who found that they were accumulating masses of data about “suspicious” activity that was not of any use. The intelligence being swept up, the investigators found, was “oftentimes shoddy, rarely timely, sometimes endangering citizens’ civil liberties and Privacy Act protections.”

Such sweeping surveillance efforts pose difficulties for the authorities because they can end up drowning in data, attempting to find a needle in a haystack, in the process deeming innocent people suspicious. As the Journal’s Julia Angwin notes, the risk is that “innocent behavior gets misunderstood—say, a man buying chemicals (for a child's science fair) and a timer (for the sprinkler) sets off false alarms.” The U.S. government clearly feels far-reaching surveillance initiatives are necessary to help detect potential future terror attacks. But ultimately, in a democracy, the decision should surely rest in the hands of the American public. It is a question of balance: How much liberty should be sacrificed in the name of security? The revelations about the NCTC’s activities may be about to rekindle that debate.


http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2012/12/13/national_counterterrorism_center_s_massive_new_surveillance_program_uncovered.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 17, 2012, 03:47:58 PM
Of course there is. Either there is such a thing as prosecutorial discretion of there isn't. Either the DOJ has it or they don't. Don't confuse that simple question with the much more complicated question of when it is appropriate for them to use that discretion and how to do so. That's where the "circumstances" you mention come into play.


Right. But whether it exists isn't debatable. Whether the DOJ has it isn't debatable. These are binary questions about facts.






Of course it exists.  Since you're not bright enough to figure it out, I dispensed with your childishness and went right to the real discussion.




Quote
You are confusing sentencing discretion, which is something something that Judges and prosecutors have, and prosecutorial discretion, which is something prosecutors have. Nice try though.




That's called an analagous situation.  You're a lot slower than I thought, lol.



Quote




If you think laws are unjust and should not be enforced then fight to repeal them. The laws that are on the books should be respected, even when we disagree with them. If we don't, the rule of law is a meaningless, vacuous term.




Hell no.  I can't imagine what things would be like if certain groups hadn't practiced civil disobedience.







Quote


You can't be for and against something at the same time. This is a simple fact of reality. Just how you can't have your cake and eat it too is a fact of reality. You can try to have your cake and eat it too, but the world in which you live in is rational, and after you're done eating your cake, no matter how hard you try, you can no longer have it.

If you think Obama's DOJ does have prosecutorial discretion, then you can't also think that they don't simply because you disagree with how they apply that discretion and vice-versa. If you have a beef with how they're applying that discretion, that's a whole 'nother perfectly valid topic.


No, not in the childish sense you're attempting to apply it.

You can  be for them having it in certain circumstances.
You can be against them having it in certain circumstances.


Are you capable of making a point without writing a goddamn book?

Now I know what you meant earlier, 33!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 17, 2012, 04:55:04 PM
Of course it exists.

I'm glad to see you agree with me! You've taken an important first step!


Since you're not bright enough to figure it out, I dispensed with your childishness and went right to the real discussion.

Ooh boy! You showed me! I guess I'll have to put on my "real discussion" pants! ::)


That's called an analagous situation.  You're a lot slower than I thought, lol.

I'm not sure what an analagous situation is. But on the off-chance you meant analogous I can tell you that it's not really analogous at all. Similes are metaphors in that they're both analogies. Your little example is... well... some sort of verbal slip-and-fall.


Hell no.  I can't imagine what things would be like if certain groups hadn't practiced civil disobedience.

Right. But you will notice that those who performed acts of civil disobedience wanted to be "judged" by the laws on the books at the time to demonstrate the profound injustice of those laws. They didn't just say "Don't apply the law. Fuck the law." They said "We believe this law to be flawed, unfair and unjust. We will challenge it and force you to use it, and in doing so, show just how unjust it is."



No, not in the childish sense you're attempting to apply it.



You can  be for them having it in certain circumstances.
You can be against them having it in certain circumstances.

Right. But the circumstances must be objective. You cannot be for and against granting the DOJ prosecutorial discretion and hinging the particular decision solely on whether you like the particular law in question. There's a word for one who does that sort of thing.

And Skip, out of curiosity: in what circumstances do you think the DOJ should have discretion and in what circumstances should it not have it?


Are you capable of making a point without writing a goddamn book?

I am capable of many things!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 17, 2012, 07:11:02 PM
Anything dealing with drugs.  Just legalize it already
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2012, 01:15:20 PM
The Police State Comes To Arkansas

Posted: 12/18/2012 7:56 am

 

Unfortunately, not an exaggeration:

"[Police are] going to be in SWAT gear and have AR-15s around their neck," Stovall said. "If you're out walking, we're going to stop you, ask why you're out walking, check for your ID."

 Stovall said while some people may be offended by the actions of his department, they should not be.

"We're going to do it to everybody," he said. "Criminals don't like being talked to."

Gaskill backed Stovall's proposed actions during Thursday's town hall.

"They may not be doing anything but walking their dog," he said. "But they're going to have to prove it." . . .

"This fear is what's given us the reason to do this. Once I have stats and people saying they're scared, we can do this," he said. "It allows us to do what we're fixing to do." . . .

"To ask you for your ID, I have to have a reason," he said. "Well, I've got statistical reasons that say I've got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask what you're doing out. Then when I add that people are scared...then that gives us even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this area." . . .

"Anyone that's out walking, because of the crime and the fear factor, [could be stopped]," he said . . .

Individuals who do not produce identification when asked could be charged with obstructing a governmental operation, according to Stovall.


Here's the least surprising line in the article:

Stovall said he did not consult an attorney before announcing his plans to combat crime.
Stovall added that he realized there was little difference between what he was proposing and martial law--and that he didn't much care.

 The mayor and city attorney have apparently walked the idea back, at least a little. But the police chief isn't wavering. And of course it's his cops who will be enforcing the law.

Using SWAT teams for routine patrols isn't uncommon. Fresno did this for several years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The city sent its Violent Crimes Suppression Unit into poorer neighborhoods and stopped, confronted, questioned, and searched nearly everyone they encountered. "It's a war," one SWAT officer told Christian Parenti in a a report for The Naiton (not available online). Another said, "If you're 21, male, living in one of these neighborhoods, and you're not in our computer, then there's something definitely wrong."

A 1999 report in the Boston Globe found similar units patrolling the streets of Indianapolis and San Francisco, which the reporter noted gave the communities under siege "all the ambiance of the West Bank."

In a 1997 survey, the criminologist Peter Kraska found that about one in five cities in his survey used their SWAT teams for routine patrols. It seems likely that number has fallen since then as the crime rate has dropped (the Fresno VCSU was disbanded in 2002), but it's hard to say for sure. The total number of SWAT teams has only increased since then, as has the number of situations in which they're utilized.

But Stovall's comments show that it isn't so much a rise in crime that allows these sorts of police actions to happen, it's the fear of crime. (Though there has been an actual increase in crime in Paragould.) Back in the early 1970s when Nixon was preparing to impose his new crime bill on Washington, D.C., he ran into a problem. According to FBI data, crime was actually starting to fall in D.C. Nixon's strategy was to make D.C. the "model city" to show off his tough anti-crime policies. The fact that crime was already falling presented two problems: 1) It could make the city less fearful, resulting in less pressure on Congress to push through his bill, and 2) it would make it more difficult for Nixon to claim credit for any crime drop in the city later. So Nixon's Justice Department sat on the figures. They refused to release them until after they had won on Capitol Hill.

The fear of crime is ever-present, even when crime isn't. For example, despite the fact that the crime rate has been dropping dramatically for nearly 20 years*--to historic lows--70 percent of Americans still think crime is getting worse.

I'm sure the cable news obsession with sensational crime stories and the emergence of tragedy vultures like Nancy Grace have a lot to do with it. Long-developing trends like the crime drop by definition aren't daily news. Crime is, even when it's down. I've seen it stated over and over in the Newtown coverage that mass shootings are on the rise. As I pointed out in the morning links, there is no evidence for that, and in fact the numbers suggest they're on the wane. They happen so infrequently that there simply aren't enough data points to say for certain.

Unfortunately, empirical data aren't nearly as compelling as images of victims and mug shots of scary-looking criminals. And like Nixon, today's politicians and law enforcement officials know that you don't pass new laws and give the police new powers by assuaging public fear. You get these things by stoking it.

(*There was a slight uptick in the crime figures in 2011, driven mostly by an increase in minor assaults.)





 


 Follow Radley Balko on Twitter: www.twitter.com/radleybalko
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 18, 2012, 01:37:22 PM
The Police State Comes To Arkansas

Posted: 12/18/2012 7:56 am

 

Unfortunately, not an exaggeration:

"[Police are] going to be in SWAT gear and have AR-15s around their neck," Stovall said. "If you're out walking, we're going to stop you, ask why you're out walking, check for your ID."

 Stovall said while some people may be offended by the actions of his department, they should not be.

"We're going to do it to everybody," he said. "Criminals don't like being talked to."

Gaskill backed Stovall's proposed actions during Thursday's town hall.

"They may not be doing anything but walking their dog," he said. "But they're going to have to prove it." . . .

"This fear is what's given us the reason to do this. Once I have stats and people saying they're scared, we can do this," he said. "It allows us to do what we're fixing to do." . . .

"To ask you for your ID, I have to have a reason," he said. "Well, I've got statistical reasons that say I've got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask what you're doing out. Then when I add that people are scared...then that gives us even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this area." . . .

"Anyone that's out walking, because of the crime and the fear factor, [could be stopped]," he said . . .

Individuals who do not produce identification when asked could be charged with obstructing a governmental operation, according to Stovall.


Here's the least surprising line in the article:

Stovall said he did not consult an attorney before announcing his plans to combat crime.
Stovall added that he realized there was little difference between what he was proposing and martial law--and that he didn't much care.

 The mayor and city attorney have apparently walked the idea back, at least a little. But the police chief isn't wavering. And of course it's his cops who will be enforcing the law.

Using SWAT teams for routine patrols isn't uncommon. Fresno did this for several years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The city sent its Violent Crimes Suppression Unit into poorer neighborhoods and stopped, confronted, questioned, and searched nearly everyone they encountered. "It's a war," one SWAT officer told Christian Parenti in a a report for The Naiton (not available online). Another said, "If you're 21, male, living in one of these neighborhoods, and you're not in our computer, then there's something definitely wrong."

A 1999 report in the Boston Globe found similar units patrolling the streets of Indianapolis and San Francisco, which the reporter noted gave the communities under siege "all the ambiance of the West Bank."

In a 1997 survey, the criminologist Peter Kraska found that about one in five cities in his survey used their SWAT teams for routine patrols. It seems likely that number has fallen since then as the crime rate has dropped (the Fresno VCSU was disbanded in 2002), but it's hard to say for sure. The total number of SWAT teams has only increased since then, as has the number of situations in which they're utilized.

But Stovall's comments show that it isn't so much a rise in crime that allows these sorts of police actions to happen, it's the fear of crime. (Though there has been an actual increase in crime in Paragould.) Back in the early 1970s when Nixon was preparing to impose his new crime bill on Washington, D.C., he ran into a problem. According to FBI data, crime was actually starting to fall in D.C. Nixon's strategy was to make D.C. the "model city" to show off his tough anti-crime policies. The fact that crime was already falling presented two problems: 1) It could make the city less fearful, resulting in less pressure on Congress to push through his bill, and 2) it would make it more difficult for Nixon to claim credit for any crime drop in the city later. So Nixon's Justice Department sat on the figures. They refused to release them until after they had won on Capitol Hill.

The fear of crime is ever-present, even when crime isn't. For example, despite the fact that the crime rate has been dropping dramatically for nearly 20 years*--to historic lows--70 percent of Americans still think crime is getting worse.

I'm sure the cable news obsession with sensational crime stories and the emergence of tragedy vultures like Nancy Grace have a lot to do with it. Long-developing trends like the crime drop by definition aren't daily news. Crime is, even when it's down. I've seen it stated over and over in the Newtown coverage that mass shootings are on the rise. As I pointed out in the morning links, there is no evidence for that, and in fact the numbers suggest they're on the wane. They happen so infrequently that there simply aren't enough data points to say for certain.

Unfortunately, empirical data aren't nearly as compelling as images of victims and mug shots of scary-looking criminals. And like Nixon, today's politicians and law enforcement officials know that you don't pass new laws and give the police new powers by assuaging public fear. You get these things by stoking it.

(*There was a slight uptick in the crime figures in 2011, driven mostly by an increase in minor assaults.)





 


 Follow Radley Balko on Twitter: www.twitter.com/radleybalko


Help us, God.  A serious and desperate Prayer.  Please save us from the shortsighted, ungodly fools that appear to have greatly outnumbered us.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on December 18, 2012, 01:42:11 PM
The Police State Comes To Arkansas

Posted: 12/18/2012 7:56 am

 

Unfortunately, not an exaggeration:

"[Police are] going to be in SWAT gear and have AR-15s around their neck," Stovall said. "If you're out walking, we're going to stop you, ask why you're out walking, check for your ID."

 Stovall said while some people may be offended by the actions of his department, they should not be.

"We're going to do it to everybody," he said. "Criminals don't like being talked to."

Gaskill backed Stovall's proposed actions during Thursday's town hall.

"They may not be doing anything but walking their dog," he said. "But they're going to have to prove it." . . .

"This fear is what's given us the reason to do this. Once I have stats and people saying they're scared, we can do this," he said. "It allows us to do what we're fixing to do." . . .

"To ask you for your ID, I have to have a reason," he said. "Well, I've got statistical reasons that say I've got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask what you're doing out. Then when I add that people are scared...then that gives us even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this area." . . .

"Anyone that's out walking, because of the crime and the fear factor, [could be stopped]," he said . . .

Individuals who do not produce identification when asked could be charged with obstructing a governmental operation, according to Stovall.


Here's the least surprising line in the article:

Stovall said he did not consult an attorney before announcing his plans to combat crime.
Stovall added that he realized there was little difference between what he was proposing and martial law--and that he didn't much care.

 The mayor and city attorney have apparently walked the idea back, at least a little. But the police chief isn't wavering. And of course it's his cops who will be enforcing the law.

Using SWAT teams for routine patrols isn't uncommon. Fresno did this for several years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The city sent its Violent Crimes Suppression Unit into poorer neighborhoods and stopped, confronted, questioned, and searched nearly everyone they encountered. "It's a war," one SWAT officer told Christian Parenti in a a report for The Naiton (not available online). Another said, "If you're 21, male, living in one of these neighborhoods, and you're not in our computer, then there's something definitely wrong."

A 1999 report in the Boston Globe found similar units patrolling the streets of Indianapolis and San Francisco, which the reporter noted gave the communities under siege "all the ambiance of the West Bank."

In a 1997 survey, the criminologist Peter Kraska found that about one in five cities in his survey used their SWAT teams for routine patrols. It seems likely that number has fallen since then as the crime rate has dropped (the Fresno VCSU was disbanded in 2002), but it's hard to say for sure. The total number of SWAT teams has only increased since then, as has the number of situations in which they're utilized.

But Stovall's comments show that it isn't so much a rise in crime that allows these sorts of police actions to happen, it's the fear of crime. (Though there has been an actual increase in crime in Paragould.) Back in the early 1970s when Nixon was preparing to impose his new crime bill on Washington, D.C., he ran into a problem. According to FBI data, crime was actually starting to fall in D.C. Nixon's strategy was to make D.C. the "model city" to show off his tough anti-crime policies. The fact that crime was already falling presented two problems: 1) It could make the city less fearful, resulting in less pressure on Congress to push through his bill, and 2) it would make it more difficult for Nixon to claim credit for any crime drop in the city later. So Nixon's Justice Department sat on the figures. They refused to release them until after they had won on Capitol Hill.

The fear of crime is ever-present, even when crime isn't. For example, despite the fact that the crime rate has been dropping dramatically for nearly 20 years*--to historic lows--70 percent of Americans still think crime is getting worse.

I'm sure the cable news obsession with sensational crime stories and the emergence of tragedy vultures like Nancy Grace have a lot to do with it. Long-developing trends like the crime drop by definition aren't daily news. Crime is, even when it's down. I've seen it stated over and over in the Newtown coverage that mass shootings are on the rise. As I pointed out in the morning links, there is no evidence for that, and in fact the numbers suggest they're on the wane. They happen so infrequently that there simply aren't enough data points to say for certain.

Unfortunately, empirical data aren't nearly as compelling as images of victims and mug shots of scary-looking criminals. And like Nixon, today's politicians and law enforcement officials know that you don't pass new laws and give the police new powers by assuaging public fear. You get these things by stoking it.

(*There was a slight uptick in the crime figures in 2011, driven mostly by an increase in minor assaults.)





 


 Follow Radley Balko on Twitter: www.twitter.com/radleybalko


This is fucking sick :-X
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2012, 01:59:33 PM
The Police State Comes To Arkansas

Posted: 12/18/2012 7:56 am

 

Unfortunately, not an exaggeration:

"[Police are] going to be in SWAT gear and have AR-15s around their neck," Stovall said. "If you're out walking, we're going to stop you, ask why you're out walking, check for your ID."

 Stovall said while some people may be offended by the actions of his department, they should not be.

"We're going to do it to everybody," he said. "Criminals don't like being talked to."

Gaskill backed Stovall's proposed actions during Thursday's town hall.

"They may not be doing anything but walking their dog," he said. "But they're going to have to prove it." . . .

"This fear is what's given us the reason to do this. Once I have stats and people saying they're scared, we can do this," he said. "It allows us to do what we're fixing to do." . . .

"To ask you for your ID, I have to have a reason," he said. "Well, I've got statistical reasons that say I've got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask what you're doing out. Then when I add that people are scared...then that gives us even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this area." . . .

"Anyone that's out walking, because of the crime and the fear factor, [could be stopped]," he said . . .

Individuals who do not produce identification when asked could be charged with obstructing a governmental operation, according to Stovall.


Here's the least surprising line in the article:

Stovall said he did not consult an attorney before announcing his plans to combat crime.
Stovall added that he realized there was little difference between what he was proposing and martial law--and that he didn't much care.

 The mayor and city attorney have apparently walked the idea back, at least a little. But the police chief isn't wavering. And of course it's his cops who will be enforcing the law.

Using SWAT teams for routine patrols isn't uncommon. Fresno did this for several years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The city sent its Violent Crimes Suppression Unit into poorer neighborhoods and stopped, confronted, questioned, and searched nearly everyone they encountered. "It's a war," one SWAT officer told Christian Parenti in a a report for The Naiton (not available online). Another said, "If you're 21, male, living in one of these neighborhoods, and you're not in our computer, then there's something definitely wrong."

A 1999 report in the Boston Globe found similar units patrolling the streets of Indianapolis and San Francisco, which the reporter noted gave the communities under siege "all the ambiance of the West Bank."

In a 1997 survey, the criminologist Peter Kraska found that about one in five cities in his survey used their SWAT teams for routine patrols. It seems likely that number has fallen since then as the crime rate has dropped (the Fresno VCSU was disbanded in 2002), but it's hard to say for sure. The total number of SWAT teams has only increased since then, as has the number of situations in which they're utilized.

But Stovall's comments show that it isn't so much a rise in crime that allows these sorts of police actions to happen, it's the fear of crime. (Though there has been an actual increase in crime in Paragould.) Back in the early 1970s when Nixon was preparing to impose his new crime bill on Washington, D.C., he ran into a problem. According to FBI data, crime was actually starting to fall in D.C. Nixon's strategy was to make D.C. the "model city" to show off his tough anti-crime policies. The fact that crime was already falling presented two problems: 1) It could make the city less fearful, resulting in less pressure on Congress to push through his bill, and 2) it would make it more difficult for Nixon to claim credit for any crime drop in the city later. So Nixon's Justice Department sat on the figures. They refused to release them until after they had won on Capitol Hill.

The fear of crime is ever-present, even when crime isn't. For example, despite the fact that the crime rate has been dropping dramatically for nearly 20 years*--to historic lows--70 percent of Americans still think crime is getting worse.

I'm sure the cable news obsession with sensational crime stories and the emergence of tragedy vultures like Nancy Grace have a lot to do with it. Long-developing trends like the crime drop by definition aren't daily news. Crime is, even when it's down. I've seen it stated over and over in the Newtown coverage that mass shootings are on the rise. As I pointed out in the morning links, there is no evidence for that, and in fact the numbers suggest they're on the wane. They happen so infrequently that there simply aren't enough data points to say for certain.

Unfortunately, empirical data aren't nearly as compelling as images of victims and mug shots of scary-looking criminals. And like Nixon, today's politicians and law enforcement officials know that you don't pass new laws and give the police new powers by assuaging public fear. You get these things by stoking it.

(*There was a slight uptick in the crime figures in 2011, driven mostly by an increase in minor assaults.)





 


 Follow Radley Balko on Twitter: www.twitter.com/radleybalko


WTF, this is worse than some dystopian future sci fi movies.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 18, 2012, 02:41:15 PM
Quote
"To ask you for your ID, I have to have a reason," he said. "Well, I've got statistical reasons that say I've got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask what you're doing out. Then when I add that people are scared...then that gives us even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this area."

Wow... Talk about not knowing what the law says. He needs a specific articulable suspicion. Not some "well, statistically speaking, a crime is committed every second, and a second has passed... so... hands up!"

The Courts ought to slap this police chief hard enough to make him think he's a Cadet again... Fucking idiots.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 18, 2012, 03:50:18 PM
The elitists will tell you that we need nationwide 'stop and frisk' laws, while the betas will ask if you've got something to hide.

Perfect tag-team, right there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on December 18, 2012, 03:53:18 PM
The elitists will tell you that we need nationwide 'stop and frisk' laws, while the betas will ask if you've got something to hide.

Perfect tag-team, right there.

I hate when they bring that.

Something to hide?
You shouldnt be looking and wtf do you care?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 18, 2012, 04:23:44 PM
I hate when they bring that.

Something to hide?
You shouldnt be looking and wtf do you care?

It seems we are devolving in so many ways, through deliberate manipulation of weak minds.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 19, 2012, 07:05:28 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2250218/Angel-Ashley-Dobbs-suing-Texas-troopers-shocking-BODY-CAVITY-search-caught-tape.html


Disgusting. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on December 19, 2012, 07:10:57 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2250218/Angel-Ashley-Dobbs-suing-Texas-troopers-shocking-BODY-CAVITY-search-caught-tape.html


Disgusting. 


 :-[

How can that trooper still hold a job ???

The entire police force is dirty as hell.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 19, 2012, 08:58:49 AM
It's not a body cavity search. She didn't stick her finger up an anus or a vagina. That part of the claim will likely fall off. But it is intrusive and it is beyond reasonable . When I worked the streets it was common knowledge crack dealers often times kept their stash in a baggie either stuffed in the crack of their butts or under their balls. I always figured if that's where they are keeping it, they win. It wasn't important enough for me to lower myself to the level of sticking my hands down someones pants to find the dope. If they got arrested then a cavity search would be done at the jail intake upon request    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 19, 2012, 09:08:35 AM
Dude... Do you even hear yourself?

Of course the chick stuck her finger down her pants like that not to stick it in her anus... I mean, who doesn't just want to get close.

::)

Dude, did you even read my post? Baggie are often times shoved down butt cracks and under testicles. females carry them in their panties. More likely than a cavity search on the side of the rode, it was verifying there were no drugs hidden in those areas. Regardless, the act was in poor judgment, likely violated their policy and should be stopped. It is intrusive and in my opinion, highly offensive. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 19, 2012, 09:48:05 AM
I did... it's a 1/2 agreement on your part.

You make it sound like it's "bad", but it's not what the people are saying it is... So it's not THAT bad.



Yes, exactly. It is bad, it is something that should be stopped, it's over the line.. but.. it's not that bad. Make sense?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 20, 2012, 01:59:30 PM
It's not a body cavity search. She didn't stick her finger up an anus or a vagina.

How do you know where she stuck her finger up into?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 20, 2012, 05:19:38 PM
That's why you are on THAT side of the blue line... See, regular people DO see it as THAT BAD.


How much of this shit is do the courts as well I wonder?  I mean, when a cop can just claim someone is 'acting weird' without having any clue what their normally like, and justify searching over something that flimsy.....

Nuckin Futz
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 21, 2012, 12:12:46 PM

How much of this shit is do the courts as well I wonder?  I mean, when a cop can just claim someone is 'acting weird' without having any clue what their normally like, and justify searching over something that flimsy.....

Nuckin Futz

acting weird is a sucky articulation of the circumstances. Not an acceptable standard for sure. To tell a partner who arrives on scene someone is acting weird is one thing, but if that ended up on a report or PC a judge would/should laugh it out of court. "Acting weird" might be short for "When I approached the drivers side I saw the driver was bent over, hands under the seat as if concealing something there. I smelled the odor of burned marijuana when the window rolled down and the drivers eyes were glassy and blooshot and she fumbled with her license and slurred her speach." when talking to your partner, but thats about it.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 24, 2012, 06:51:02 AM
Yeah and that's uncomfortable either way.

You automatically make it nefarious to start with reaching under the seat "as if to conceal something".

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 26, 2012, 07:17:37 AM
His paranoia does not equate to sound logic.

If you are so paranoid as to constantly think someone is hiding someone, can you imagine how trigger happy you can get?

Fortunatley you guys don't depend on common sense and good judgement to live. So you'll probably do fine. For those of us who do, you won't live long if you assume someone reaching under the seat as you approach the car is hiding a playboy. If you have a drivers license, and you haven't figured out all by your little lonesome that it is a bad idea to start reaching under things when a cop is walking up, then shame on you.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 26, 2012, 08:23:24 AM
Fortunatley you guys don't depend on common sense and good judgement to live. So you'll probably do fine. For those of us who do, you won't live long if you assume someone reaching under the seat as you approach the car is hiding a playboy. If you have a drivers license, and you haven't figured out all by your little lonesome that it is a bad idea to start reaching under things when a cop is walking up, then shame on you.



See...this is the type of general stupidity you bring to the discussion.

Considering that FAR more people will die in car accidents then cops getting killed on traffic stops...you can drop portraying yourself as some brave, heroic icon because a SMALL amount of traffic stops result in life threatening danger.


Since the issue I was referring to went well over your head...it's that any action can be made to sound as though a person is a dangerous criminal and a search is justified. 

So, presumably a court system which is supposed to protect me from people like you (dumb, dishonest, egotistical, power happy) seems to actually encourage your behavior. 

In other words, I'm forced to wonder if what constitutes reasonable suspicion and probable cause needs to be reevaluated or more stringtly applied, along with greater checks and balances, by the courts.

Simple enough?


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 26, 2012, 10:53:13 AM

Until cops and da are held personally responsible nothing will change.




[


quote author=Skip8282 link=topic=329944.msg6510260#msg6510260 date=1356539004]


See...this is the type of general stupidity you bring to the discussion.

Considering that FAR more people will die in car accidents then cops getting killed on traffic stops...you can drop portraying yourself as some brave, heroic icon because a SMALL amount of traffic stops result in life threatening danger.


Since the issue I was referring to went well over your head...it's that any action can be made to sound as though a person is a dangerous criminal and a search is justified. 

So, presumably a court system which is supposed to protect me from people like you (dumb, dishonest, egotistical, power happy) seems to actually encourage your behavior. 

In other words, I'm forced to wonder if what constitutes reasonable suspicion and probable cause needs to be reevaluated or more stringtly applied, along with greater checks and balances, by the courts.

Simple enough?



[/quote]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 26, 2012, 11:27:31 AM


See...this is the type of general stupidity you bring to the discussion.

Considering that FAR more people will die in car accidents then cops getting killed on traffic stops...you can drop portraying yourself as some brave, heroic icon because a SMALL amount of traffic stops result in life threatening danger.


Since the issue I was referring to went well over your head...it's that any action can be made to sound as though a person is a dangerous criminal and a search is justified. 

So, presumably a court system which is supposed to protect me from people like you (dumb, dishonest, egotistical, power happy) seems to actually encourage your behavior. 

In other words, I'm forced to wonder if what constitutes reasonable suspicion and probable cause needs to be reevaluated or more stringtly applied, along with greater checks and balances, by the courts.

Simple enough?




See this is the type of stupid responses you bring to the discussion...

The original response of mine addressed the paranoia allegation. It is NOT paranoia to be concerned when someone is reaching under a car seat. That you or anyone thinks being concerned about that just shows the utter lack of knowledge you have about the job.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 26, 2012, 11:40:59 AM
See this is the type of stupid responses you bring to the discussion...

The original response of mine addressed the paranoia allegation. It is NOT paranoia to be concerned when someone is reaching under a car seat. That you or anyone thinks being concerned about that just shows the utter lack of knowledge you have about the job.

You have to be aware of how a person is using his or her hands at all times, because you don't want a weapon to be used against you.  It begins and ends with that.

Let me ask if you've ever given much thought to why cops are so widely despised and distrusted.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 26, 2012, 03:55:53 PM
Until cops and da are held personally responsible nothing will change.




[


quote author=Skip8282 link=topic=329944.msg6510260#msg6510260 date=1356539004]


See...this is the type of general stupidity you bring to the discussion.

Considering that FAR more people will die in car accidents then cops getting killed on traffic stops...you can drop portraying yourself as some brave, heroic icon because a SMALL amount of traffic stops result in life threatening danger.


Since the issue I was referring to went well over your head...it's that any action can be made to sound as though a person is a dangerous criminal and a search is justified. 

So, presumably a court system which is supposed to protect me from people like you (dumb, dishonest, egotistical, power happy) seems to actually encourage your behavior. 

In other words, I'm forced to wonder if what constitutes reasonable suspicion and probable cause needs to be reevaluated or more stringtly applied, along with greater checks and balances, by the courts.

Simple enough?







Agreed but they should have a limited immunity so that everyone and anyone can't just keep tying them up with nonsense.

A good example is when the cop arrested the firefighter for not moving the truck.  Jury found for the firefighter and I think it was like 25k against the cop or so?

Cop should've had to pay that as he was way out of line.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 26, 2012, 04:01:34 PM
See this is the type of stupid responses you bring to the discussion...

The original response of mine addressed the paranoia allegation. It is NOT paranoia to be concerned when someone is reaching under a car seat. That you or anyone thinks being concerned about that just shows the utter lack of knowledge you have about the job.



Please, drop the pathetic backtracking spin.

This whole discussion has been focused on the court's interpretation of what cops are claiming so that they can search people.

I would doubt even Tu thinks you shouldn't be 'concerned' or act cautiously in those situations.  When you start embellishing, I think it definitely comes off as paranoid.



As for the danger you claim,

Let's see, 50 officers died in 2012 due to traffic fatalities, and I don't know if that's incidental to criminal activities...or some may be traffic accident related.  Let's assume all 127 cops who died in 2012 was due to traffic stops.  I'm using NLEO figures.

Out of how many millions of traffic stops each year?


So the probability of you getting hurt is .0000000 something?

Obviously it's dangerous (127 officers), but that doesn't change the fact that your words and your claims are not beyond reproach. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: freespirit on December 27, 2012, 12:18:58 AM
.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 27, 2012, 12:36:27 AM
Of course I'm not saying you should not be cautious... That's ridiculous.

But if you look at the numbers, his concern is paranoia... Don't we have more people killed in plane crashes?

Maybe we should all just stop flying? Or wait... How many people are killed walking down the street every year?

Stop walking?

It's not about caution... It's about the paranoia and the far reaching reasons that cops use to claim someone is "acting suspicious".

It's all sad really.

I will again point out that "acting suspicious" generally means jackshit.  Cops must have at least reasonable suspicion to do most anything, and they cannot have that without specific, articulable facts to rationally justify that suspicion. "Acting weird", "funny" or even "suspicious" don't meet that standard. Reaching under a seat certainly qualifies, at least according to the only authorities that matter: the Courts.

Generally speaking, I think it's stupid to make any sudden moves around cops; their work environment is stressful, and most are stretched to taut that even an accidental sneeze can escalate rapidly and end badly. Add to the mix that many of them tend to be people who enjoy being in positions of authority over others and yeah... Not a good combo.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 27, 2012, 03:37:42 AM
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/12/26/hazel-crest-cops-shoot-kill-dog-during-search-for-fugitive


Makes me sick. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2012, 08:03:50 AM


Please, drop the pathetic backtracking spin.

This whole discussion has been focused on the court's interpretation of what cops are claiming so that they can search people.

I would doubt even Tu thinks you shouldn't be 'concerned' or act cautiously in those situations.  When you start embellishing, I think it definitely comes off as paranoid.



As for the danger you claim,

Let's see, 50 officers died in 2012 due to traffic fatalities, and I don't know if that's incidental to criminal activities...or some may be traffic accident related.  Let's assume all 127 cops who died in 2012 was due to traffic stops.  I'm using NLEO figures.

Out of how many millions of traffic stops each year?


So the probability of you getting hurt is .0000000 something?

Obviously it's dangerous (127 officers), but that doesn't change the fact that your words and your claims are not beyond reproach. 



Just got this email this morning...

All,

Corporal Jimmie Norman, age 53, of the Bellaire Police Department was shot and killed by a suspect at the end of a vehicle pursuit on the morning of Christmas Eve.  Corporal Norman, a 24-year veteran of the Bellaire Police Department, was married with two children and remembered as an officer who “had a big heart.”
Arrangements are as follows:
Visitation
Friday, December 28, 2012
3:00 pm-7:00 pm

Bellaire Central Baptist Church
7115 Mapleridge Street
Bellaire, Texas 77401

Funeral
Saturday, December 29, 2012,
2:00 pm

Houston's First Baptist Church
7401 Katy Freeway
Houston, Texas (at IH610)
The family requests donations be made to the Peace Officers Memorial Foundation, 400 West 14th St. Austin, Texas 78701.
 All sworn personnel shall display their Tribute of Mourning Ribbon until sunset on the day of interment.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2012, 08:05:48 AM
acting weird is a sucky articulation of the circumstances. Not an acceptable standard for sure. To tell a partner who arrives on scene someone is acting weird is one thing, but if that ended up on a report or PC a judge would/should laugh it out of court. "Acting weird" might be short for "When I approached the drivers side I saw the driver was bent over, hands under the seat as if concealing something there. I smelled the odor of burned marijuana when the window rolled down and the drivers eyes were glassy and blooshot and she fumbled with her license and slurred her speach." when talking to your partner, but thats about it.     

Even when I agree with you Skip, you argue. Have you wondered why that is?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 27, 2012, 08:13:54 AM
When I get pulled over - two hands on the wheel , respectful, if I have to grab something I tell the officer first etc. 

Nothing to be gained by starting a confrontation and it makes it easier to get the item tossed later on.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2012, 08:15:40 AM
You have to be aware of how a person is using his or her hands at all times, because you don't want a weapon to be used against you.  It begins and ends with that.

Let me ask if you've ever given much thought to why cops are so widely despised and distrusted.

Jack, the question is loaded to a certain extent. I don't agree they are widely despised and distrusted. I've seen local polls that back me up. I'd be living in a dream world if I wasn't aware that there are people that despise and distrust the police. In my opinion, some of them have reason to feel that way because of personal experiences they have had. When I was 16 I had a horrible experience with a small town police department that disgusted me. Completely unprofessional and abusive. Then there are those who have grown up in a culture that distrusts and hates police, and while they have no personal experience one way or the other, they hate the police. Then there are people wired to dislike authority of any kind. Parents, police, teachers, government etc. Not a thing you can do to change their minds.

I don't think the police did themselves any favors over the last 50 yrs as far as building trust. It seems everytime we take a step foward, some moron with a badge sets up back 10 yrs.

What are your thoughts on it?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2012, 08:17:01 AM
When I get pulled over - two hands on the wheel , respectful, if I have to grab something I tell the officer first etc. 

Nothing to be gained by starting a confrontation and it makes it easier to get the item tossed later on.

I'm the same way.. I don't see a reason to make him or her any more nervous/cautious than they should already be.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 27, 2012, 08:21:27 AM
I'm the same way.. I don't see a reason to make him or her any more nervous/cautious than they should already be.


If someone is a rude arrogant prick and causes a confrontation te officer will remember and force the matter trial.  It is what it is and everyone sort of has a role to play.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on December 27, 2012, 08:49:38 AM
See this is the type of stupid responses you bring to the discussion...

The original response of mine addressed the paranoia allegation. It is NOT paranoia to be concerned when someone is reaching under a car seat. That you or anyone thinks being concerned about that just shows the utter lack of knowledge you have about the job.
STOP TRYING TO CAVITY SEARCH ME JUST BECAUSE I REACH INTO MY GLOVE BOX TO HAVE MY REGISTRATION AND PROOF OF INSURANCE READY FOR YOU!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2012, 09:09:07 AM
STOP TRYING TO CAVITY SEARCH ME JUST BECAUSE I REACH INTO MY GLOVE BOX TO HAVE MY REGISTRATION AND PROOF OF INSURANCE READY FOR YOU!

You say that now.... but at 1am, on a dark road after you've had a few drinks, I'm sure it's a different story  ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 27, 2012, 07:59:45 PM
Jack, the question is loaded to a certain extent. I don't agree they are widely despised and distrusted.

I'm glad you have faith in the idea that you, being a cop, could possibly have an accurate view of such things.

Quote
I've seen local polls that back me up.

Not so glad you have such faith in media.  I could cast a seemingly fair poll that would give a brutal reflection of the police.

Quote
I'd be living in a dream world if I wasn't aware that there are people that despise and distrust the police. In my opinion, some of them have reason to feel that way because of personal experiences they have had. When I was 16 I had a horrible experience with a small town police department that disgusted me. Completely unprofessional and abusive.  Then there are those who have grown up in a culture that distrusts and hates police, and while they have no personal experience one way or the other, they hate the police. Then there are people wired to dislike authority of any kind. Parents, police, teachers, government etc. Not a thing you can do to change their minds.

I absolutely disagree.  We can face the fact that we're talking about ghetto residents (to say poor, whatever the race), who will almost certainly become rightly conditioned to have distrust for the police.  A person growing up in the 'hood--no matter whether he is inclined to commit crimes, whether or not there is any valid evidence to suggest that he has committed a crime relative to a particular interaction with the police--will have his rights violated as a matter of routine.  It is cut, dry, and plain as day to those who are forced to experience it.  And if a person thinks that such things will not erode respect for the law, to witness the supposed enforcers of the law routinely and completely disregard the law, that person should be considered as delusional.

As a cop, if you can keep this fact close to your heart, you'll be ahead of the game. 

Quote
I don't think the police did themselves any favors over the last 50 yrs as far as building trust. It seems everytime we take a step foward, some moron with a badge sets up back 10 yrs.

What are your thoughts on it?

Respect, A007.  You're a communicator, which tells me you give a shit.  The world needs more of that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 28, 2012, 06:42:57 AM

I'm glad you have faith in the idea that you, being a cop, could possibly have an accurate view of such things.

Not so glad you have such faith in media.  I could cast a seemingly fair poll that would give a brutal reflection of the police.

I absolutely disagree.  We can face the fact that we're talking about ghetto residents (to say poor, whatever the race), who will almost certainly become rightly conditioned to have distrust for the police.  A person growing up in the 'hood--no matter whether he is inclined to commit crimes, whether or not there is any valid evidence to suggest that he has committed a crime relative to a particular interaction with the police--will have his rights violated as a matter of routine.  It is cut, dry, and plain as day to those who are forced to experience it.  And if a person thinks that such things will not erode respect for the law, to witness the supposed enforcers of the law routinely and completely disregard the law, that person should be considered as delusional.

As a cop, if you can keep this fact close to your heart, you'll be ahead of the game. 

Respect, A007.  You're a communicator, which tells me you give a shit.  The world needs more of that.

Thanks Jack, appreciate that. Perception is reality is a cliche' but in this business, it is closer to the truth than false. I'm looking at it from this side, and have observed first hand a vast majority of good officers, handling very volatile situations with very good outcomes for 30 yrs. 10 in the military and 20 in the civilian sector. I've watched this department evolve over the years from an us against them mentality to a more open, community oriented ideal. I'm glad it's moving in this direction and I believe I was always well ahead of the curve in fostering a "what can I do for you?" attitude verses "What do you want?" one. At 20 yrs here, part of my initial talk with any new subordinate or detail is about customer service and the reason we are here.
But you're right. I'm not in the hood 24/7 though most of my patrol career was spent there and I fostered a lot of good relationships, I'm sure I dropped the ball too. I recently read an interesting book called Corruption of the Noble Cause where the author says it's almost inevitable that police will cross the line, not because they are wanting to do bad, but because they want to get the bad guys off the street. So they rationalize inappropriate behavior or breaking rules or laws for the greater good. I gained a lot of insight into the motivation of new officers and we are aiming our focus on training them from the get go that it's not acceptable to blur the lines in order to catch the bad guy. (Not talking about outright criminal behavior, that's a seperate animal). I've always felt I would rather lose a case than win it by cheating. Not to make light of it, but it is kind of a game. The cops have their rules and the bad guys have theirs so to speak. If they win, there is always next time. It's not worth losing your credibility over.
I don't think we'll ever have police forces without any bad apples, or over zealous cops who don't understand the big picture, but it is certainly something the good cops should strive for and do their part to weed out the bad ones as soon as they sprout.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 28, 2012, 06:46:19 AM
You say that now.... but at 1am, on a dark road after you've had a few drinks, I'm sure it's a different story  ;)

I can't disagree w that. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 28, 2012, 07:30:50 AM
 :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 28, 2012, 10:48:19 AM
Thanks Jack, appreciate that. Perception is reality is a cliche' but in this business, it is closer to the truth than false. I'm looking at it from this side, and have observed first hand a vast majority of good officers, handling very volatile situations with very good outcomes for 30 yrs. 10 in the military and 20 in the civilian sector. I've watched this department evolve over the years from an us against them mentality to a more open, community oriented ideal. I'm glad it's moving in this direction and I believe I was always well ahead of the curve in fostering a "what can I do for you?" attitude verses "What do you want?" one. At 20 yrs here, part of my initial talk with any new subordinate or detail is about customer service and the reason we are here.
But you're right. I'm not in the hood 24/7 though most of my patrol career was spent there and I fostered a lot of good relationships, I'm sure I dropped the ball too. I recently read an interesting book called Corruption of the Noble Cause where the author says it's almost inevitable that police will cross the line, not because they are wanting to do bad, but because they want to get the bad guys off the street. So they rationalize inappropriate behavior or breaking rules or laws for the greater good. I gained a lot of insight into the motivation of new officers and we are aiming our focus on training them from the get go that it's not acceptable to blur the lines in order to catch the bad guy. (Not talking about outright criminal behavior, that's a seperate animal). I've always felt I would rather lose a case than win it by cheating. Not to make light of it, but it is kind of a game. The cops have their rules and the bad guys have theirs so to speak. If they win, there is always next time. It's not worth losing your credibility over.
I don't think we'll ever have police forces without any bad apples, or over zealous cops who don't understand the big picture, but it is certainly something the good cops should strive for and do their part to weed out the bad ones as soon as they sprout.       

Could this be merely providing a convenient excuse for allowing the existence of what could only be described as a Police State?  Because that's what it sounds like.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 28, 2012, 12:18:54 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/28/fisa-warrantless-wiretapping-senate_n_2376039.html


Nice - I'm sure O-Choom will sign off on this too. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 28, 2012, 12:49:54 PM
Could this be merely providing a convenient excuse for allowing the existence of what could only be described as a Police State?  Because that's what it sounds like.

Not sure. I enjoyed the book, but wasn't sold on 100% of his assumptions or conclusions. I read the book along with several other officers and some disagreed more than others based on their experience. I think it is more accurate to say it is a concern, and a possibility if left unchecked by supervisors, FTO's and Senior officers. I don't think we're at the point where we throw up our hands and say "Oh well, it is what it is". I believe that many departments that have extensive academy and training, that are evolving to the professional side of policing are reducing the perception of "police state" little by little. We have units designed to work soley with the community on short and long term problem solving within their neighborhoods. We are trying to foster an atmosphere of empowering the citizens to be part of the solution and assisting them rather than shoving our ideas for a solution down their throats. But I know there are a lot of departments that don't have the luxury and perhaps less desire to address things that way. We were that department 15 yrs ago. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 28, 2012, 01:38:08 PM
Not sure. I enjoyed the book, but wasn't sold on 100% of his assumptions or conclusions. I read the book along with several other officers and some disagreed more than others based on their experience. I think it is more accurate to say it is a concern, and a possibility if left unchecked by supervisors, FTO's and Senior officers. I don't think we're at the point where we throw up our hands and say "Oh well, it is what it is". I believe that many departments that have extensive academy and training, that are evolving to the professional side of policing are reducing the perception of "police state" little by little. We have units designed to work soley with the community on short and long term problem solving within their neighborhoods. We are trying to foster an atmosphere of empowering the citizens to be part of the solution and assisting them rather than shoving our ideas for a solution down their throats. But I know there are a lot of departments that don't have the luxury and perhaps less desire to address things that way. We were that department 15 yrs ago. 

If such officers held these ideas themselves, it could, and would, support a culture of this behavior.  Wouldn't you agree?


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: freespirit on December 28, 2012, 01:51:38 PM
.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 02, 2013, 01:48:17 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/us-banks-and-law-enforcement-together-ows-domestic-security-alliance-council2013-1


This is fucked up!!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 02, 2013, 08:34:32 AM
Plead Guilty or Go to Prison for Life: The Medical Marijuana Grower's Stark Choice
 Townhall.com ^ | January 2, 2013 | Jacob Sullum

Posted on Wednesday, January 02, 2013 10:47:05 AM by Kaslin

Chris Williams, a Montana medical marijuana grower, faces at least five years in federal prison when he is sentenced on Feb. 1. The penalty seems unduly severe, especially because his business openly supplied marijuana to patients who were allowed to use it under state law.

Yet five years is a cakewalk compared to the sentence Williams originally faced, which would have kept the 38-year-old father behind bars for the rest of his life. The difference is due to an extremely unusual post-conviction agreement that highlights the enormous power prosecutors wield as a result of mandatory minimum sentences so grotesquely unjust that in this case even they had to admit it.

Of more than two dozen Montana medical marijuana providers who were arrested following federal raids in March 2011, Williams is the only one who insisted on his right to a trial. For that, he paid a steep price.

Tom Daubert, one of Williams' partners in Montana Cannabis, which had dispensaries in four cities, pleaded guilty to maintaining drug-involved premises and got five years of probation. Another partner, Chris Lindsey, took a similar deal and is expected to receive similar treatment. Both testified against Williams at his trial last September.

Williams' third partner, Richard Flor, pleaded guilty to the same charge but did not testify against anyone. Flor, a sickly 68-year-old suffering from multiple ailments, died four months into a five-year prison term.

For a while, it seemed that Williams, who rejected a plea deal because he did not think he had done anything wrong and because he wanted to challenge federal interference with Montana's medical marijuana law, also was destined to die in prison. Since marijuana is prohibited for all purposes under federal law, he was not allowed even to discuss the nature of his business in front of the jury, so his conviction on the four drug charges he faced, two of which carried five-year mandatory minimums, was more or less inevitable.

Stretching Williams' sentence from mindlessly harsh to mind-bogglingly draconian, each of those marijuana counts was tied to a charge of possessing a firearm during a drug trafficking offense, based on guns at the Helena grow operation that Williams supervised and at Flor's home in Miles City, which doubled as a dispensary. Federal law prescribes a five-year mandatory minimum for the first such offense and 25 years for each subsequent offense, with the sentences to run consecutively.

Consequently, when Williams was convicted on all eight counts, he faced a mandatory minimum sentence of 80 years for the gun charges alone, even though he never handled the firearms cited in his indictment, let alone hurt anyone with them. This result, which federal prosecutors easily could have avoided by bringing different charges, was so absurdly disproportionate that U.S. Attorney Michael Cotter offered Williams a deal.

Drop your appeal, Cotter said, and we'll drop enough charges so that you might serve "as little as 10 years." No dice, said Williams, still determined to challenge the Obama administration's assault on medical marijuana providers. But when Cotter came back with a better offer, involving a five-year mandatory minimum, Williams took it, having recognized the toll his legal struggle was taking on his 16-year-old son, a freshman at Montana State University.

"I think everyone in the federal system realizes that these mandatory minimum sentences are unjust," Williams tells me during a call from the Missoula County Detention Facility. But for prosecutors, they serve an important function: "They were basically leveraging this really extreme sentence against something that was so light because they wanted to force me into taking a plea deal." Nine out of 10 federal criminal cases end in guilty pleas.

The efficient transformation of defendants into prisoners cannot be the standard by which we assess our criminal justice system. If the possibility of sending someone like Chris Williams to prison for the rest of his life is so obviously unfair, why does the law allow it, let alone mandate it?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 02, 2013, 03:23:41 PM
Plead Guilty or Go to Prison for Life: The Medical Marijuana Grower's Stark Choice
 Townhall.com ^ | January 2, 2013 | Jacob Sullum

Posted on Wednesday, January 02, 2013 10:47:05 AM by Kaslin

Chris Williams, a Montana medical marijuana grower, faces at least five years in federal prison when he is sentenced on Feb. 1. The penalty seems unduly severe, especially because his business openly supplied marijuana to patients who were allowed to use it under state law.

Yet five years is a cakewalk compared to the sentence Williams originally faced, which would have kept the 38-year-old father behind bars for the rest of his life. The difference is due to an extremely unusual post-conviction agreement that highlights the enormous power prosecutors wield as a result of mandatory minimum sentences so grotesquely unjust that in this case even they had to admit it.

Of more than two dozen Montana medical marijuana providers who were arrested following federal raids in March 2011, Williams is the only one who insisted on his right to a trial. For that, he paid a steep price.

Tom Daubert, one of Williams' partners in Montana Cannabis, which had dispensaries in four cities, pleaded guilty to maintaining drug-involved premises and got five years of probation. Another partner, Chris Lindsey, took a similar deal and is expected to receive similar treatment. Both testified against Williams at his trial last September.

Williams' third partner, Richard Flor, pleaded guilty to the same charge but did not testify against anyone. Flor, a sickly 68-year-old suffering from multiple ailments, died four months into a five-year prison term.

For a while, it seemed that Williams, who rejected a plea deal because he did not think he had done anything wrong and because he wanted to challenge federal interference with Montana's medical marijuana law, also was destined to die in prison. Since marijuana is prohibited for all purposes under federal law, he was not allowed even to discuss the nature of his business in front of the jury, so his conviction on the four drug charges he faced, two of which carried five-year mandatory minimums, was more or less inevitable.

Stretching Williams' sentence from mindlessly harsh to mind-bogglingly draconian, each of those marijuana counts was tied to a charge of possessing a firearm during a drug trafficking offense, based on guns at the Helena grow operation that Williams supervised and at Flor's home in Miles City, which doubled as a dispensary. Federal law prescribes a five-year mandatory minimum for the first such offense and 25 years for each subsequent offense, with the sentences to run consecutively.

Consequently, when Williams was convicted on all eight counts, he faced a mandatory minimum sentence of 80 years for the gun charges alone, even though he never handled the firearms cited in his indictment, let alone hurt anyone with them. This result, which federal prosecutors easily could have avoided by bringing different charges, was so absurdly disproportionate that U.S. Attorney Michael Cotter offered Williams a deal.

Drop your appeal, Cotter said, and we'll drop enough charges so that you might serve "as little as 10 years." No dice, said Williams, still determined to challenge the Obama administration's assault on medical marijuana providers. But when Cotter came back with a better offer, involving a five-year mandatory minimum, Williams took it, having recognized the toll his legal struggle was taking on his 16-year-old son, a freshman at Montana State University.

"I think everyone in the federal system realizes that these mandatory minimum sentences are unjust," Williams tells me during a call from the Missoula County Detention Facility. But for prosecutors, they serve an important function: "They were basically leveraging this really extreme sentence against something that was so light because they wanted to force me into taking a plea deal." Nine out of 10 federal criminal cases end in guilty pleas.

The efficient transformation of defendants into prisoners cannot be the standard by which we assess our criminal justice system. If the possibility of sending someone like Chris Williams to prison for the rest of his life is so obviously unfair, why does the law allow it, let alone mandate it?


Here's the thing.  These guys were running and supplying a four-location operation that was conceivably netting them in the mid-five figures, cash money, every single day.  They were enjoying the income, no doubt about it.  I notice the article didn't mention the number of plants or product, and probably for good reason. 

If an amount approaching 99+ plants can be traced to some person, that person is giving a green light to federal authorities to make a bust.  It couldn't be more simple.  If the person allows a gun to be linked to him on top of that, it will weaken his ability to legally defend himself worse than almost any other factor.

I'd love to find out what he was thinking.  Did he buy into the stream of lies from Obama on the issue, to the point he didn't seek guidance for his four-location operation, because, as he suggests, he didn't think he was "doing anything wrong"?  Did he think that state or local authorities would back him up, despite violating federal law?  Did he stop and think long enough to even understand that he was violating certain laws that may fuck him up?

It's all too bad.  I feel extremely sad for the ailing 68-year-old in the story, who was most likely killed by the stress.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 03, 2013, 12:33:39 PM
Even when I agree with you Skip, you argue. Have you wondered why that is?


You and I didn't agree on anything.  You're really struggling to keep up, eh?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 03, 2013, 12:37:33 PM
When I get pulled over - two hands on the wheel , respectful, if I have to grab something I tell the officer first etc. 

Nothing to be gained by starting a confrontation and it makes it easier to get the item tossed later on.



I'm polite, of course, but I don't concern myself with not making him nervous.

I don't care for that mind set.  They work for us.  They need to remind themselves of that fact more regularly.





And Agnostic,

Pity is a poor and pathetic argument.  Fact is...you have a LOW chance of getting hurt on a traffic stop.  Of course, you clowns still deal with lie detectors, so I guess factually based info isn't much of a concern for you, lol.





Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 03, 2013, 12:59:46 PM
NDAA Signed Into Law By Obama Despite Guantanamo Veto Threat, Indefinite Detention Provisions


Posted: 01/03/2013 11:33 am EST  |  Updated: 01/03/2013 11:55 am EST




President Barack Obama signed the National Defense Authorization Act of 2013 on Wednesday, despite his own threat to veto it over prohibitions on closing the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.

Civil liberties advocates had roundly criticized the bill over Guantanamo and a separate section that could allow the military to indefinitely detain American citizens on suspicions of supporting terrorism. Just as he did with last year's version of the bill, however, Obama decided that the need to pass the NDAA, which also sets the armed forces' $633 billion budget for the 2013 fiscal year, was simply "too great to ignore," according to a presidential signing statement released in the early morning hours Thursday.

Members of the human rights coalition that had urged Obama to follow through on his veto threat blasted his decision as a cave to congressional Republicans.

"President Obama has utterly failed the first test of his second term, even before inauguration day,” American Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Anthony Romero said in a statement. “His signature means indefinite detention without charge or trial, as well as the illegal military commissions, will be extended.”

"It's the second time that the president has promised to veto a piece of a very controversial national security legislation only to sign it," said Shahid Buttar, executive director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee. "He has a habit of promising resistance to national security initiatives that he ultimately ends up supporting and enabling."

After the president issued his veto threat in November, a House-Senate conference committee made one minor change: it shortened the length of the bill's prohibition on transferring Guantanamo detainees to the U.S. to one fiscal year, instead of the open-ended ban in the original Senate version.

Obama's signing statement did reiterate his opposition to restrictions on when he can move prisoners out of the Guantanamo camp. Such statements signal how a president plans to put a law into effect but do not have the force of law themselves, leaving future administrations to make their own interpretations.

As Politico's Josh Gerstein notes, however, Obama’s recent signing statement significantly toned down his promises to reverse parts of the bill he objected to. Last year, Obama’s signing statement said his administration had “worked tirelessly to reform or remove the provisions” he found objectionable. Obama’s latest statement made no such claim.

Obama also allowed provisions of the law that require his administration to place certain terrorism suspects into military custody to stand without comment, though the administration’s interpretation of that section of the law renders it nearly irrelevant. Under procedures released by the White House in February, the military custody requirement can be waived in a wide variety of cases, including if the suspect’s home country objects to military custody; if the suspect is arrested for conduct conducted in the U.S.; and if the suspect is originally charged with a non-terrorism offense. The administration also claimed the military custody requirement didn’t apply in cases where the suspect was originally arrested by state or local law enforcement, when a transfer to military custody could interfere with efforts to secure cooperation or confession or when a transfer would interfere with a joint trial.

Obama's signature caps an intense sequence of events for opponents of indefinite detention. In November, a bipartisan group of senators amended their chamber's NDAA bill to prohibit the military from detaining American citizens on American soil. But when the House and Senate met to reconcile their versions of the NDAA, that amendment was stripped out behind closed doors.

"The president seemed to have nothing to say about that," Buttar said. "The whole process, quite frankly, was a reflection of the worst parts of Washington -- the institutional dysfunction, the lack of historical memory, the unwillingness to consider relatively limited reforms that would make these powers responsible and limited."

Outside of Congress, civil liberties groups are pushing forward with a lawsuit against the indefinite detention provisions of the NDAA on the grounds that they are unconstitutional. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg denied their efforts to reinstate an injunction against indefinite detention on Dec. 14, but the case against the law is still proceeding in the Second Circuit Court.

Demonstrations and political pressure around Guantanamo, meanwhile, will also continue. Civil liberties groups argue that despite the provisions in the NDAA, the president may still be able to close the detention camp or at least free some of the inmates there. Still, they were disappointed by his signature.

"It's not encouraging that the President continues to be willing to tie his own hands when it comes to closing Guantanamo," Dixon Osburn, the director of Human Rights First's Law and Security Program, said in a statement. "The injustice of Guantanamo continues to serve as a stain on American global leadership on human rights."

Jan. 11 marks the 11th anniversary of the prison camp's opening there.

Michael McAuliff contributed reporting.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/03/ndaa-obama-indefinite-detention_n_2402601.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 05, 2013, 09:02:19 AM
FBI Surveillance Of Occupy Wall Street Detailed


Posted: 01/05/2013 7:42 am EST  |  Updated: 01/05/2013 10:33 am EST


VIA hp


WASHINGTON -- Was Tim Franzen stockpiling weapons? What was Tim Franzen's philosophy? What was his political affiliation? Did Tim Franzen ever talk about violent revolution?

The Federal Bureau of Investigation wanted to know. In late 2011, an agent or agents -- Franzen still isn't quite sure -- began trying to find out. It was during this time that Franzen became a well-known and central presence in Occupy Atlanta. He helped start the Occupy Wall Street offshoot, and had been arrested when police razed their encampment in a downtown Atlanta park.

After the first police sweep of the park, Franzen told The Huffington Post that the FBI began interviewing his fellow Occupy Atlanta activists about whether Franzen might have a cache of weapons for a future violent revolution. He said the feds interviewed three different activists at their homes about his activities and beliefs.

"It definitely rattled my cage to have these kids getting knocks on their door," Franzen said.

Here's what the feds would have found out in the course of a background check on the activist: Franzen had a criminal record related to teenage drug use and robberies that supported his habit. But he last spent time in prison when he was 19. Franzen, now 35, went on to found a chain of halfway houses to help people make the transition from addiction to recovery. He later became a community organizer with the Quaker social justice organization American Friends Service Committee, a position he continues to hold while working within Occupy Atlanta.

During one interview, an FBI agent gave one of Franzen's fellow activists a business card, which was handed over to Franzen, who decided to call the agent and have a little fun.

"I have an expert on all things Tim Franzen," Franzen remembers telling the agent over the phone. "I said, 'I'm Tim Franzen.' ... He was sort of dumbfounded. He didn't know what to say."




Franzen chastised the federal agent for scaring his younger activist friends. "At first he started denying it," he said. "He tried to write it off as not a big deal, as sort of protocol."

At the end of December, the FBI released internal documents that revealed a coordinated -- if quixotic -- surveillance of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Just about every law enforcement agency gets a cameo in the correspondence: Homeland Security, the Joint Terrorism Task Force, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, an entity known as the Domestic Security Alliance Council -- and even the Federal Reserve. But the extremely limited disclosure makes it difficult to assess exactly with whom the government agencies were coordinating, or why. Was the FBI attempting to infiltrate and undermine the Occupy movement, or simply trying to keep tabs on protesters who were hoping to spark political change?

Of the 110 pages released -- first obtained by the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund through a Freedom of Information Act request -- dozens are heavily redacted. The documents state that 287 additional pages on the FBI's Occupy activities were "deleted" from the release by the agency for various reasons, including nine labeled "outside the scope" and 14 tagged "duplicate."

At times, the documents are contradictory and show FBI agents spreading false information. The earliest memo erroneously describes Adbusters, the Canadian magazine that came up with the idea behind Occupy, as a "self-identified American revolutionary anarchist group." In another, OWS is lumped in with the "Aryan Nations (sic)" and hacker-activists Anonymous as "domestic terrorists."

In response to a request for comment, FBI spokesperson Christopher Allen replied via email, "The FBI cautions against drawing conclusions from redacted FOIA documents." He continued, "While the FBI is obligated to thoroughly investigate any serious allegations involving threats of violence, we do not open investigations based solely on 1st Amendment activity. In fact, DOJ and the FBI's own internal guidelines on domestic operations strictly forbid that."

If there was a unified mission behind the Occupy surveillance, it appears the purpose was to pass information about activists' plans to the finance industry. In one memo from August 2011, the FBI discusses informing officials at the New York Stock Exchange about "the planned Anarchist protest titled 'occupy Wall Street', scheduled for September 17, 2011.[sic] Numerous incidents have occurred in the past which show attempts by Anarchist groups to disrupt, influence, and or shut down normal business operations of financial districts."

The documents reveal that the FBI met with officials from four banks and one credit union, and spoke over the phone with a representative from a fifth bank. The FBI also talked with officials from the Richmond Federal Reserve, a branch of the central bank that covers much of the American South. If the FBI communicated with any of the trillion-dollar banks that were the primary subject of Occupy Wall Street's economic critique, however, those discussions have been redacted from the documents.

Citigroup, for example, is not mentioned anywhere the documents, while Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are each mentioned once in passing. No documents show coordination between the FBI and any of those banks -- although it would be conspicuous for the FBI to have communicated with smaller banks that were not a major focus of the Occupy movement while ignoring the much larger institutions that were recipients of the 2008-2009 bailouts.

The few direct communications with banks that are detailed in the documents reveal little evidence of improper behavior. On Oct. 6, 2011, the FBI called Zions Bank to inform the bankers that "Anonymous hactivists" had distributed the personal phone numbers of "the CEOs of Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase" online, implying that Zions executives might also be subject to such treatment per an impending Occupy rally in Salt Lake City, where Zions is headquartered. Zions declined to comment on the call for this article, but the bank -- which has about 2 percent of the total assets of JPMorgan -- has not been a target of Occupy rhetoric before or since the FBI call.

The only other banks named in the FBI documents are Hancock Bank, Peoples Bank, Bancorp South and Regions Bank -- all of which declined to comment for this article. The FBI attended a Nov. 16, 2011, meeting of officials from those banks in Biloxi, Miss., where someone from Hancock Bank warned attendees to expect an Occupy protest on Dec. 7 that could include a "sit-in" or efforts to "lock the bank doors."

None of the banks mentioned in the FBI file would comment on whether the FBI met regularly with bank officials. Bank robbery is a federal crime, which gives FBI jurisdiction.

All of these banks would have been small-ball for a protest movement that targeted massive income inequality and outrageous executive pay. But if the FBI was issuing warnings to and meeting on security issues with these smaller banks, they were almost certainly having talks with bigger New York banks -- meaning the portrait of the FBI's activities around Occupy, insofar as the internal documents are concerned, is likely incomplete in a significant dimension.

Recent FBI investigations have at times put big banks in a negative light, but have yet to result in major actions against financial institutions. In July 2012, an FBI probe found that Bank of America had allowed a Mexican drug cartel to launder money through the bank. While BofA has yet to face any fines for the episode, the head of the FBI in Charlotte, N.C., BofA's headquarters, recently left the law enforcement agency for a job at Bank of America.

While the FBI communicated with the financial sector about Occupy, it's unclear the degree to which they engaged with actual Occupy activists like Franzen.

Kevin Zeese was one of the founding organizers of Occupy Washington, D.C., which set up camp just blocks from FBI headquarters and the Department of Justice. Zeese told HuffPost that infiltration by law enforcement agents or informants was an issue, but whether much of it was just shadowy conspiracy or serious agitating remains a mystery.

In one exchange he had with a Homeland Security officer, Zeese said the agent knew a key detail about a scheduled protest at the Environmental Protection Agency. Zeese joked that the officer knew more than he did about what was going on.

Zeese did remember one FBI agent who would bike over to the camp. Some of the younger activists talked regularly with the agent. "He was open about it," Zeese said. "He would ride through on a bike with the FBI thing on his back." The agent ended up spending a weekend at the camp and even donating funds to help pay for security.

Whether law enforcement had a hand in breaking up camps, Zeese said, "I can't tell." To which he added, "Down the road, there may be proof."

Franzen suggests that federal agents conducted more clandestine activities than simple Internet searches and protest monitoring. Occupiers frequently complained that the more outspoken activists within their ranks appeared to be targeted by police for arrest. Franzen said there is a connection between the agent who inquired about him among his friends and his subsequent arrest at a protest. He chronicled the incident on his blog a year ago:

Before the police officers warned the crowd to disperse from the street I had already gotten onto the side walk. One of the police Lieutenants yelled to his officers, 'Get him' and pointed at me. The police had to worm their way through the crowd in order to grab me and drag me into the street.
 When I was dragged into the street, I asked the lieutenant what he was doing and he said, 'arresting you.'

'For what,' I asked.

'For being in the street,' he said.

'But I was on the sidewalk,' I replied.

'You're not now,' he said with a smile.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 07, 2013, 06:19:50 AM
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Police drug search intrudes on husband's final moments with deceased wife
Deseret News ^ | Jan. 3 2013 | Dennis Romboy
Posted on January 7, 2013, 4:48:37 AM EST by Slings and Arrows

VERNAL — A man says Vernal police disrupted an intimate moment of mourning with his deceased wife of 58 years when they searched his house for her prescription medication without a warrant within minutes of her death.

-snip-

Ben D. Mahaffey, 80, said he was distraught and trying to make sure his wife's body would be taken to the funeral home with dignity, when he says officers insisted he help them look for the drugs.

"I was holding her hand saying goodbye when all the intrusion happened," he told the Deseret News.

-snip-

Mahaffey said he was treated as if he were going to sell the painkillers, which included OxyContin, oxycodone and morphine, on the street.

"I had no interest in the drugs," he said. "I'm no addict."

Mahaffey filed a federal lawsuit Thursday, alleging police violated his Fourth and 14th amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure and for equal protection under the law, respectively.

The officers' actions "at the deeply intimate setting, and during a highly distressing time, added a great amount of pain and distress to any already difficult situation," the lawsuit states.

-snip-

Following the incident, Mahaffey asked Vernal city officials and police administrators why officers would search his home without a warrant. He said he was told the Utah Controlled Substances Act provides authority for the search.

According to the lawsuit, Mahaffey also said city manager Ken Bassett dismissed his concerns, saying he was "overly sensitive" and that police were just trying to protect the public from illegal use of prescription drugs.

-snip-

Fackrell said there's nothing in the controlled substances act that allows police to enter a home and search for prescription drugs without a warrant.

He said it's apparently common practice for Vernal police when someone dies, but that it's selectively applied.

(Excerpt) Read more at deseretnews.com ...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2013, 01:03:52 PM
Family Pet Shot in Lafayette Backyard by Police on House Alarm Call
 99.9 KTDY ^ | January 7, 2013 | Debbie Ray

Posted on Tuesday, January 08, 2013 3:25:48 PM by Altariel

A Lafayette family’s 15 year old pet dog was shot inside their fenced backyard today by Lafayette Police. Officers were dispatched when the Sonnier family’s house alarm was set off because a door was not properly closed when they left the house this morning. According to the Sonniers, when the alarm went off, the monitoring company called the contact list, including Michelle Sonnier, a nurse practitioner who was with a patient at the time. Her husband Matt was also unable to answer, so they called Michelle’s mother, next on the list. She then called Matt – he was able to answer this time – who called the alarm company and told them it was a false alarm- all of this happened within 9 minutes time. About thirty minutes later, Michelle arrived at home, coming in through the garage entrance in back, and saw the commotion outside. She went out to get the mail and that’s when police asked where she came from and told her that they had shot their dog inside their fenced backyard.

A statement from Lafayette Police reads:

On Monday, January 7, 2013, at approximately 12:20 pm, Lafayette Police responded to a residence in the 200 block of Montauban Drive regarding an alarm activation at a residence. Two Lafayette Police Officers arrived on the scene and began checking the perimeter of the residence. The two officers entered into the backyard that was surrounded by a fence. As officers moved in the direction of the back of the home, a large dog approached them in an aggressive manner. Both officers fired one shot, killing the dog. The officers were not injured during the incident. The incident is being investigated by the Lafayette Police Department’s Internal Affairs Section, which is standard procedure when an officer discharges a firearm.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2013, 01:08:08 PM

[Channel] 2 Investigates: Nearly 100 dogs shot by metro police since 2010 [Atlanta]
 WSBTV (Atlanta) ^ | October 30, 2012 | Erin Coleman

Posted on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 12:57:38 AM


ATLANTA —

A Channel 2 Action News investigation found nearly 100 cases of local officers shooting dogs within the past two years.

The investigation looked into the heartbreaking circumstances when a police officer kills a family pet -- probably one of the most difficult scenarios for a pet owner and for police.

Nearly two years after Basil was shot and killed in an empty lot by Fulton County Marshals, Elizabeth and Carey Cullifer said they still feel every bit of the pain.

"She was a really kind and gentle dog," said Elizabeth Cullifer.

She left their 45-pound dog outside alone for a moment. Marshals then came to their address with a civil lawsuit for someone who had not lived there in eight years.

Then Cullifer heard gunshots.

"I came out to see my dog in a pool of blood under the truck," said Carey Cullifer.

It is a story Channel 2 Action News has heard over and over from pet owners whose dogs had been shot and killed by police.

A Channel 2 Action News investigation uncovered dozens of cases all over the metro area. Individual department records show since 2010, dogs were shot 25 times in Atlanta, 32 times in DeKalb county, 19 times in Gwinnett County, 10 times in Clayton County and eight times in Cobb County, including the most recent shooting this past September.

"I had to watch him bleed to death and gasp for air and they just stood there looking at me like I was stupid," a Cobb County man said.

Cobb County officers responding to an alarm call shot and killed Luke, a chocolate lab when he ran out of the home barking. It was a false alarm.

The officer said he felt threatened by the dog and was cleared by the department of any wrongdoing.

In fact, every single case found in multiple departments, the officer was exonerated.

"There isn't an officer out there I know that wants to shoot a dog, any animal!" said Kliff Grimes a national representative for the International Brotherhood of Police Officers.

Grimes told Channel 2 that every day officers encounter dogs, some of them vicious.

"That officer unfortunately has to make a split-second decision to protect himself so that he can go home to his family," said Grimes.

When it comes to making that decision, Channel 2 only found one metro area department that requires officers to have training, specifically on how to respond to dogs. Cobb County started its training just this year.

"Even if the officer is trained to deal with the dog, the dog isn't trained to deal with the officer," said Grimes.

"I think it would be a help. It would be information that's certainly valuable," said Cyndy Dougan a dog trainer for 22 years.

Dougan is an expert on dog behavior and she says the issue is not black and white.

"I tell people even though you think you know how your dog is going to react in a situation where the police are called to the scene you may not be correct about that," said Dougan.

Elizabeth Cullifer said in her case she knows Basil was not aggressive and she believes officer training is key.

"With training there would be some accountability. There is no accountability in the situation with us. It was like he felt threatened, he shot your dog. That's it," she said.

Animal behavior experts tell Channel 2 knowing animal behavior is everything in these types of situations. A dog that appears to be aggressive may really just be nervous.

Dougan showed Channel 2's Erin Coleman how dogs at her kennel would respond to Coleman, a stranger. After letting several of the dogs go, one by one, unrestrained out into the yard.

"It's going to be a surprise to them that we're even here," said Dougan.

Some dogs did not pay attention to Coleman during the experiment, others started barking right away, running for her.

"Sometimes tail high and wagging isn't really a good sign. Didn't that scare you?" Dougan asked Coleman.

"A little bit," said Coleman.

"A little bit, I saw you jump. If you push this dog hard enough, this dog would be dangerous," said Dougan.

Another dog approached Coleman, "He's running away, he did not approach us, that is good," said Coleman.

Dougan said knowing animal behavior is key. For years the U.S. Postal Service has trained its mail carriers on dealing with dogs. Georgia Power meter readers also receive some training.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2013, 09:18:43 PM
http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_22333563/little-canada-man-videotaped-sheriffs-deputies-and-got


Insane. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tbombz on January 08, 2013, 11:48:27 PM
.
they also owned slaves and discriminated against everyone who wasnt a white, property owning male.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on January 09, 2013, 12:58:54 AM
they also owned slaves and discriminated against everyone who wasnt a white, property owning male.

And yet all of those people who they discriminated against are extremely happy that those men did what they did and can't even be pissed about it today.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 09, 2013, 03:34:02 AM
America Is Being Systematically Transformed Into A Totalitarian Society
Right Side News ^ | January 7, 2013 | American Cream
Posted on January 8, 2013 12:46:47 PM EST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

If someone were to ask you for an example of a “totalitarian society”, how would you respond?  Most Americans would probably think of horribly repressive regimes such as the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, Communist China, East Germany or North Korea, but the truth is that there is one society that has far more rules and regulations than any of those societies ever dreamed of having.

In the United States today, our lives are governed by literally millions of laws, rules and regulations that govern even the smallest details of our lives, and more laws, rules and regulations are constantly being added.  On January 1st, thousands of restrictive new laws went into effect all over America, but most Americans have become so accustomed to the matrix of control that has been constructed all around them that it does not even bother them when even more rules and regulations are put into place.  

In fact, a growing number of Americans have become totally convinced that “freedom” and “liberty” must be tightly restricted for the good of society and that “the free market” is inherently dangerous.  On the national, state and local levels, Americans continue to elect elitist control freaks that are very eager to tell all the rest of us how to run virtually every aspect of our lives. According to Merriam-Webster, the following is one of the ways that the word “totalitarian” is defined: “of or relating to a political regime based on subordination of the individual to the state and strict control of all aspects of the life and productive capacity of the nation especially by coercive measures”. 

And that is exactly what we are witnessing in America today – nearly all aspects of our lives and of the economy are very tightly controlled by a bunch of control freaks that just keep tightening that control with each passing year.  We still like to call ourselves “the land of the free”, but the truth is that we are being transformed into a totalitarian society unlike anything the world has ever seen before. 

Where will we end up eventually if we keep going down this road? If you still believe that America is “free”, just consider some of the things that are illegal in America today…

-Starting on January 1st, it is now illegal to make or import 75 watt incandescent light bulbs anywhere in the United States.

-In Oregon, it is illegal to collect rainwater that falls on your own property.

-In New Jersey, it is illegal to have an “unrestrained” cat or dog in your vehicle while you are driving.

-If you milk your cow and sell some of the milk to your neighbor, you could end up having your home raided by federal agents.

-In Miami Beach, Florida you must recycle your trash properly or face huge fines.

-All over the United States, cops are shutting down lemonade stands run by children because they don’t have the proper “permits”.

-Down in Tulsa, Oklahoma one unemployed woman had her survival garden brutally ripped out and carted away by government thugs because it did not conform to regulations.

-Over in Massachusetts, all children in daycare centers are mandated by state law to brush their teeth after lunch.  In fact, the state even provides the fluoride toothpaste for the children.

-At one public school down in Texas, a 12-year-old girl named Sarah Bustamantes was arrested for spraying herself with perfume.

-A 13-year-old student at a school in Albuquerque, New Mexico was arrested by police for burping in class.

-All over the United States cities have passed laws that actually make it illegal to feed the homeless.

With each passing year, the number of decisions that we are allowed to make for ourselves gets smaller and smaller.

This includes some really fundamental things such as basic health decisions.

For example, the CDC will soon be recommending that nearly every single American be vaccinated for the flu every single year.  The following is from a recent Natural News article…

An advisory panel to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recommended that every person be vaccinated for the seasonal flu yearly, except in a few cases where the vaccine is known to be unsafe.

“Now no one should say ‘Should I or shouldn’t I?’” said CDC flu specialist Anthony Fiore.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted 11-0 with one abstention to recommend yearly flu vaccination for everyone except for children under the age of six months, whose immune systems have not yet developed enough for vaccination to be safe, and people with egg allergies or other health conditions that are known to make flu vaccines hazardous.

These “recommendations” are often made into mandatory requirements by school districts and employers all over the country.  Will employers all over the nation soon require all of their employees to take these vaccines each year based on these CDC “recommendations”?  This is already happening in the healthcare field.  Hundreds of healthcare professionals all over the nation are being fired for refusing to take certain vaccines.  It doesn’t matter that there is a tremendous amount of evidence that many of these vaccines are dangerous.  Many health professionals today are being faced with the choice of either submitting to the “recommendations” of the “experts” or losing their jobs.

We see this kind of “creeping totalitarianism” in the business world as well.  As I have written about previously, small businesses all over the country are being absolutely suffocated by mountains of laws, rules and regulations.

One of the biggest changes that small businesses will be dealing with in the next couple of years is Obamacare.  Many small businesses have been cutting back hours in an attempt to get around the new requirements contained in Obamacare.  The following is one example from a news story that was published earlier this week…

Around 100 local Wendy’s workers have learned their hours are being cut. A spokesperson says a new health care law is to blame.

“Thirty-six to 37 hours a week.” That’s how many hours T.J. Growbeck works at the 84th and Giles Wendy’s restaurant. The money he earns helps him pay for the basics, but that’s not the case for all his co-workers. “There are some people doing it trying to get by.”

The company has announced that all non-management positions will have their hours reduced to 28 a week. Gary Burdette, Vice President of Operations for the local franchise, says the cuts are coming because the new Affordable Health Care Act requires employers to offer health insurance to employees working 32-38 hours a week. Under the current law they are not considered full time and that as a small business owner, he can’t afford to stay in operation and pay for everyone’s health insurance.

But the IRS has announced that it is going to make it very hard for employers to avoid these new Obamacare regulations.  According to new IRS rules, all firms that “have at least 50 full-time employees or an equivalent combination of full-time and part-time employees” will be required to provide healthcare for their employees and their dependents.  The following is from a recent New York Times article…

Under the rules, employers must offer coverage to employees in 2014 and must offer coverage to dependents as well, starting in 2015.

The new rules apply to employers that have at least 50 full-time employees or an equivalent combination of full-time and part-time employees. A full-time employee is a person employed on average at least 30 hours a week. And 100 half-time employees are considered equivalent to 50 full-time employees.

Thus, the government said, an employer will be subject to the new requirement if it has 40 full-time employees working 30 hours a week and 20 half-time employees working 15 hours a week.

So conceivably an employer could have only part-time employees and still be required to provide healthcare coverage under Obamacare.

Of course many small businesses will not be able to afford to do this, so expect to see a significant number of them shut down or to try to survive with skeleton crews in 2014 and 2015.

As the number of laws, rules and regulations that govern our lives continues to multiply, the control freaks that run things will continue to try to use technology to watch us all and make sure that we are obeying their rules.

One way that they are doing this is with automated traffic cameras.  Of course much of the time the performance of these cameras is terribly flawed.  Just consider the following example which recently appeared in the Baltimore Sun…

The Baltimore City speed camera ticket alleged that the four-door Mazda wagon was going 38 miles per hour in a 25-mph zone — and that owner Daniel Doty owed $40 for the infraction.

But the Mazda wasn’t speeding.

It wasn’t even moving.

The two photos printed on the citation as evidence of speeding show the car was idling at a red light with its brake lights illuminated. A three-second video clip also offered as evidence shows the car motionless, as traffic flows by on a cross street.

But even though technology sometimes fails, the control freaks that run things seem absolutely obsessed with using it to monitor us.  After all, there are so many of us and watching all of us is a very big job.

For example, did you know that listening devices are being installed on public buses all over the United States?  The following is from a recent Wired article…

Transit authorities in cities across the country are quietly installing microphone-enabled surveillance systems on public buses that would give them the ability to record and store private conversations, according to documents obtained by a news outlet.

The systems are being installed in San Francisco, Baltimore, and other cities with funding from the Department of Homeland Security in some cases, according to the Daily, which obtained copies of contracts, procurement requests, specs and other documents.

According to the article, some of these systems are incredibly advanced and pair the audio that is being recorded with video that is being taken at the same time…

In Eugene, Oregon, the Daily found, transit officials requested microphones that would be capable of “distilling clear conversations from the background noise of other voices, wind, traffic, windshields wipers and engines” and also wanted at least five audio channels spread across each bus that would be “paired with one or more camera images and recorded synchronously with the video for simultaneous playback.”

But that is just one example of how the surveillance of the American people is rapidly growing.  For many more examples, please see my previous article entitled “29 Signs That The Elite Are Transforming Society Into A Total Domination Control Grid“.

If America continues down the path that it is on right now, the United States will eventually be transformed into a “Big Brother society” that is far more restrictive than anything George Orwell ever dreamed of.

We need a fundamental cultural revolution in this nation.  We need a revival of the principals of liberty and freedom that were so important during the founding days of this country.  We need to teach people that even though liberty and freedom may be unpredictable at times, such an environment is greatly preferable to a society where all of our decisions are made for us by a tiny elite.

Please share this article with as many people as you can.  Time is running out, and we need to wake up as many as we can while there is still time.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 09, 2013, 11:17:27 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 10:41:49 AM
http://lessig.tumblr.com/post/40347463044/prosecutor-as-bully

Obama admn. Out of control.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Straw Man on January 13, 2013, 10:53:06 AM
http://lessig.tumblr.com/post/40347463044/prosecutor-as-bully

Obama admn. Out of control.   

do you EVER read the shit you post?

Quote
Please don’t pathologize this story.

No doubt it is a certain crazy that brings a person as loved as Aaron was loved (and he was surrounded in NY by people who loved him) to do what Aaron did. It angers me that he did what he did. But if we’re going to learn from this, we can’t let slide what brought him here.

First, of course, Aaron brought Aaron here. As I said when I wrote about the case (when obligations required I say something publicly), if what the government alleged was true — and I say “if” because I am not revealing what Aaron said to me then — then what he did was wrong. And if not legally wrong, then at least morally wrong. The causes that Aaron fought for are my causes too. But as much as I respect those who disagree with me about this, these means are not mine.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 11:00:56 AM
do you EVER read the shit you post?


They were going after this kid worse than corzine for fucks sake.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Straw Man on January 13, 2013, 11:08:54 AM
They were going after this kid worse than corzine for fucks sake.

since it was MIT and the the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office pursuing this (whether wrong or right) how do you justify (LOL - I know even you probably realize this is an absurd question to ask you) your claim of "Obama admn. Out of control." ?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 11:17:32 AM
since it was MIT and the the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office pursuing this (whether wrong or right) how do you justify (LOL - I know even you probably realize this is an absurd question to ask you) your claim of "Obama admn. Out of control." ?

This was an Obama appointee and the family said this crack pot DA drove the kid to this.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Straw Man on January 13, 2013, 11:23:28 AM
This was an Obama appointee and the family said this crack pot DA drove the kid to this.

so blame MIT who insisted on pressing charges

blame the DA

blame the kid  (who by the way is someone you would probably hate if he didn't provide a lame reason for you to direct your irrational hate at Obama)

blame depression (since this kid had a history of it)

you're supposed to be an attorney .....right ?

so why don't you show some actual proof of your claim of "Obama admn. Out of control."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 01:50:31 PM

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The Tyranny of Barack Obama's Department of Justice: Targeting Jews, Aaron Swartz, 26-year-old
Atlas Shrugs ^ | 1/13/13 | Pamela Geller
Posted on January 13, 2013, 4:06:32 PM EST by Nachum

Aaron Swartz, 26-year-old genius, computer prodigy, co-creator of RSS and Reddit, is dead.

Swartz committed suicide in the wake of relentless bullying and persecution/prosecution by Eric Holder's Department of Justice. Swartz was "driven to the edge" by the government's aggressive prosecution of a non-existent legal case. Swartz made public documents available to everyone -- this was his crime. “It’s like trying to put someone in jail for allegedly checking too many books out of the library.”

Put this in context. Obama's DoJ, headed by Eric Holder, refused to prosecute thr Black Panthers who violently threatened voters with billy clubs and night sticks at polling places on election day. The case was dropped, despite the fact that the case "was already won." This was so gross a violation of voters' rights and the proper function of the Department of Justice that one of its best and brightest senior lawyers resigned in protest: J. Christian Adams.

Obama's Department of Justice policy is that "no voter intimidation cases will brought against a black defendant where the victim is white."

Obama's pro-jihad Department of Justice refused to prosecute Muslim Brotherhood groups, including Hamas-CAIR, ISNA, MSA, MSU, et al, despite the "mountain of evidence" entered into evidence in the largest terrorist funding trial in our nation's history. Documents linked these groups to the funding of terror and murder of non-Muslims, and conspiring toward "eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within."

Obama's pro-sharia Department of Justice department is pursuing cases against cities and towns to enforce sharia in the schools, prisons, and workplace. Obama's Department of Sharia filed an unusual lawsuit against the school system in December 2010, not to ensure that the kids get a good education, mind you, but more importantly, to ensure that the Muslims get special rights and extraordinary accommodation.

The DOJ

(Excerpt) Read more at atlasshrugs2000.

so blame MIT who insisted on pressing charges

blame the DA

blame the kid  (who by the way is someone you would probably hate if he didn't provide a lame reason for you to direct your irrational hate at Obama)

blame depression (since this kid had a history of it)

you're supposed to be an attorney .....right ?

so why don't you show some actual proof of your claim of "Obama admn. Out of control."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 02:51:21 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/12/aaron-swartz_n_2463726.html

Obama is worse than W, incredible as that might be.  Total abuse of power

F Obama and everything related and connected to him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Straw Man on January 13, 2013, 03:05:34 PM
Free Republic
Browse · Search   Pings · Mail   Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article
Skip to comments.

The Tyranny of Barack Obama's Department of Justice: Targeting Jews, Aaron Swartz, 26-year-old
Atlas Shrugs ^ | 1/13/13 | Pamela Geller
Posted on January 13, 2013, 4:06:32 PM EST by Nachum

Aaron Swartz, 26-year-old genius, computer prodigy, co-creator of RSS and Reddit, is dead.

Swartz committed suicide in the wake of relentless bullying and persecution/prosecution by Eric Holder's Department of Justice. Swartz was "driven to the edge" by the government's aggressive prosecution of a non-existent legal case. Swartz made public documents available to everyone -- this was his crime. “It’s like trying to put someone in jail for allegedly checking too many books out of the library.”

Put this in context. Obama's DoJ, headed by Eric Holder, refused to prosecute thr Black Panthers who violently threatened voters with billy clubs and night sticks at polling places on election day. The case was dropped, despite the fact that the case "was already won." This was so gross a violation of voters' rights and the proper function of the Department of Justice that one of its best and brightest senior lawyers resigned in protest: J. Christian Adams.

Obama's Department of Justice policy is that "no voter intimidation cases will brought against a black defendant where the victim is white."

Obama's pro-jihad Department of Justice refused to prosecute Muslim Brotherhood groups, including Hamas-CAIR, ISNA, MSA, MSU, et al, despite the "mountain of evidence" entered into evidence in the largest terrorist funding trial in our nation's history. Documents linked these groups to the funding of terror and murder of non-Muslims, and conspiring toward "eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within."

Obama's pro-sharia Department of Justice department is pursuing cases against cities and towns to enforce sharia in the schools, prisons, and workplace. Obama's Department of Sharia filed an unusual lawsuit against the school system in December 2010, not to ensure that the kids get a good education, mind you, but more importantly, to ensure that the Muslims get special rights and extraordinary accommodation.

The DOJ


(Excerpt) Read more at atlasshrugs2000.


who the fuck is Pamela and what the fuck is atlasshrugs2000 and more importantly.... why should anyone give a shit ?

why do you keep posting blog posts

can't you think up your own shit instead of constantly have to use everyone else's opinion?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 03:15:37 PM
who the fuck is Pamela and what the fuck is atlasshrugs2000 and more importantly.... why should anyone give a shit ?

why do you keep posting blog posts

can't you think up your own shit instead of constantly have to use everyone else's opinion?

Pamela Geller has been very well known activist against the advancement of sharia and Islamic crazies
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Straw Man on January 13, 2013, 03:18:28 PM
Pamela Geller has been very well known activist against the advancement of sharia and Islamic crazies

never heard of her and don't give a shit what she thinks about anything

for all I know she is a complete moonbat which would make sense if she is one of your sources of info
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2013, 09:16:16 PM
Obama’s ‘kill list’ critic found dead in New York City
                    
Press TV
Jan 13, 2013
Prominent American blogger and computer prodigy Aaron Swartz, who spoke against US President Barack Obama’s “kill list” and cyber attacks against Iran, has been found dead in New York.
Police found the body of the 26-year-old in his apartment in New York City borough of Brooklyn on Friday, said a spokeswoman for the city’s chief medical examiner.
Brooklyn’s chief medical examiner ruled the death a suicide by hanging, but no further detail is available about the mysterious death.
Last year, Swartz openly criticized the US and the Israeli regime for launching joint cyber attacks against Iran.

The blogger was also vocal in criticizing Obama’s so-called kill list and other policies.
Obama has been reportedly approving the names put on the “kill lists” used in the targeted killing operations carried out by US assassination drones.

Every week or so, more than 100 members of the US national security team gather via secure video teleconference run by the Pentagon and go over the biographies of suspects in Yemen, Somalia, and Pakistan, and “nominate” those who should be targeted in the attacks.

Obama is then provided with the identities of those put on the “kill list” and signs off on every strike in Yemen and Somalia as well as the risky strikes in Pakistan.
Full story here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 15, 2013, 03:54:13 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/15/aaron-swartz-father-says-killed-by-government_n_2482646.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 19, 2013, 07:58:35 AM
Pregnant woman, hogtied by traffic cops, for talking on her cell phone wins $250,000 payout
 Daily Mail ^ | 1-18-13 | By Joshua Gardner

Posted on Friday, January 18, 2013 6:14:58 PM

The pregnant Los Angeles woman who was brutally hogtied by California Highway Patrolmen in August 2011 after being pulled over for chatting on her cell phone while driving has finally received retribution in the form of a $250,000 settlement.

According to the LA Times, Tamara Gaglione, 30, was hauled away and charged with misdemeanor evading and resisting arrest and driving on a suspended license.

Those charges were dropped, however, once Gaglione's terrible treatment was revealed in footage from the cruiser's video camera.

It is unclear in the grainy video exactly how aggressive, if at all, Gaglione was toward the cops. What is clear, though, is that Hernandez and Martinez drew their weapons on the unarmed Gaglione as they approached her and forced her onto the ground.

Hernandez later claimed Gaglione did not tell them of her pregnancy until after she was on the ground, but Gaglione said she told the officers as they approached her.

Hogtied, Gaglione was subsequently taken away in a patrol car.

Gaglione filed suit against the department and the officers involved, but the video evidence that eventually won Gaglione $250,000 this past November was not immediately forthcoming. Gaglione's attorney Howard Price claimed that Hernandez failed to check a box on the arrest report stating a video camera had, in fact, recorded the incident.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...

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Watch the sickening video at the below link that shows the cops thugs brutally abusing this innocent young woman.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2264685/Pregnant-LA-woman-hogtied-highway-patrolmen-receives-250-000-outrageous-treatment.html


 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 19, 2013, 08:18:08 AM
Pregnant woman, hogtied by traffic cops, for talking on her cell phone wins $250,000 payout
 Daily Mail ^ | 1-18-13 | By Joshua Gardner

Posted on Friday, January 18, 2013 6:14:58 PM

The pregnant Los Angeles woman who was brutally hogtied by California Highway Patrolmen in August 2011 after being pulled over for chatting on her cell phone while driving has finally received retribution in the form of a $250,000 settlement.

According to the LA Times, Tamara Gaglione, 30, was hauled away and charged with misdemeanor evading and resisting arrest and driving on a suspended license.

Those charges were dropped, however, once Gaglione's terrible treatment was revealed in footage from the cruiser's video camera.

It is unclear in the grainy video exactly how aggressive, if at all, Gaglione was toward the cops. What is clear, though, is that Hernandez and Martinez drew their weapons on the unarmed Gaglione as they approached her and forced her onto the ground.

Hernandez later claimed Gaglione did not tell them of her pregnancy until after she was on the ground, but Gaglione said she told the officers as they approached her.

Hogtied, Gaglione was subsequently taken away in a patrol car.

Gaglione filed suit against the department and the officers involved, but the video evidence that eventually won Gaglione $250,000 this past November was not immediately forthcoming. Gaglione's attorney Howard Price claimed that Hernandez failed to check a box on the arrest report stating a video camera had, in fact, recorded the incident.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...

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Watch the sickening video at the below link that shows the cops thugs brutally abusing this innocent young woman.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2264685/Pregnant-LA-woman-hogtied-highway-patrolmen-receives-250-000-outrageous-treatment.html


 





I just watched that video - that's disgusting.

And not a damn thing will probably happen to those shitbag cops.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 19, 2013, 08:38:29 AM




I just watched that video - that's disgusting.

And not a damn thing will probably happen to those shitbag cops.



They must have have had a valid reason to do it.  Im sure of it! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 19, 2013, 09:07:56 AM
Wrongly jailed guy set to sue
By DOUGLAS MONTERO and BILL SANDERSON
Last Updated: 9:42 AM, January 19, 2013
Posted: 1:00 AM, January 19, 2013


 
An NYPD detective’s “improper” relationship with a witness helped land two innocent people in prison for 17 years, one of the wrongly convicted suspects said in a $100 million notice of claim filed with the city yesterday.

Eric Glisson and Cathy Watkins were freed in October after being cleared in the 1995 slaying of Bronx cab driver Baithe Diop when investigators realized the killing was committed by others.

Glisson says in a notice of claim filed with the city that one of the cops on the case, retired Detective Michael Donnelly, had an “improper personal relationship” with Miriam Tavares, a key witness in the case.
 
ERIC GLISSON Spent 17 years in prison.

Tavares is deceased, and Donnelly, who is retired, could not be reached.

Glisson’s notice of claim seeks damages from the city. If it does not lead the city to settle the case, he can sue.

“I think the people who committed this atrocity towards me should be held liable,” Glisson said.

Watkins’ lawyer declined to comment. “It’s a wonderful feeling just to get up and see my life is not going to be dictated,” he said.

Since his release from Sing Sing Prison on Oct. 24, Glisson has moved to an apartment in Washington Heights and is finishing up his bachelors degree. He said he never expected to be freed from prison or its rigid daily routine.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 19, 2013, 10:00:38 PM
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/19/16598461-lapd-conduct-investigation-after-cop-gives-cyclist-ticket-for-arguing-with-me?lite


LAPD conduct investigation after cop gives cyclist ticket 'for arguing with me'

An LAPD officer's conduct is being investigated after a YouTube video of him ticketing a bicyclist who told him he was blocking the bike path went viral. The cyclist's ticket has since been canceled.
In the 10-minute clip, a cyclist turns on his helmet camera and records the interaction on the Venice Beach bike path, which drew a handful of onlookers who protested that the cyclist had done nothing wrong and that the officer needed to address serious crime in Venice.
The bicyclist, who identifies himself at 34-year-old Chris Jackson of Venice, posted the video after Thanksgiving weekend, when he was ticketed for speeding after telling a motorcycle officer he was blocking the popular bike-only path.

.....

The officer finally settles on giving Jackson a ticket under California Vehicle Code 22350, the Basic Speed Law.
"Listen to me, sir. The reason why I'm going to write you for unsafe speed is because you are arguing with me," Gracey says. "This is a catch-all, 22350. Because you're riding on the wrong side of the back path, you're looking at me, and you're complaining because my emergency vehicle is on the bike path. And that's unsafe speed. Looking in the wrong direction, traveling in the wrong way, that's unsafe."

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2013, 06:30:36 AM
Free Republic
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Supreme Court to consider if silence can be evidence of guilt
Al' Reuters ^ | Fri Jan 11, 2013 3:48pm EST
Posted on January 20, 2013 9:08:09 AM EST by


Supreme Court on Friday agreed to consider whether a suspect's refusal to answer police questions prior to being arrested and read his rights can be introduced as evidence of guilt at his subsequent murder trial. Without comment, the court agreed to hear the appeal of Genovevo Salinas, who was convicted of murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison for the December 1992 deaths of two brothers in Houston.

(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2013, 06:43:05 AM
http://www.reuters.com/assets/print?aid=USBRE90A13P20130111

Full article.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 20, 2013, 08:52:41 AM
Supreme Court to consider if silence can be evidence of guilt

Come on? Seriously?

Supreme Court on Friday agreed to consider whether a suspect's refusal to answer police questions prior to being arrested and read his rights can be introduced as evidence of guilt at his subsequent murder trial.

Amazing... just amazing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tonymctones on January 20, 2013, 08:54:12 AM
Come on? Seriously?

Amazing... just amazing.
no worries, the liberals tell me the govt has my best interest in mind and we should just trust them and go along with anything they say.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 21, 2013, 01:16:56 AM
no worries, the liberals tell me the govt has my best interest in mind and we should just trust them and go along with anything they say.



What does this have to do with liberals or conservatives? This may come as quite a shock to you but not everything is divided along party lines or demarcated by political philosophy, and not everybody sees things through partisan glasses.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 22, 2013, 04:14:56 AM
Cops Are Outraged That New York's New Magazine Limit Could Apply to Them
Reason ^ | Jan. 18, 2013 | Jacob Sullum
Posted on January 21, 2013 5:56:23 PM EST by neverdem

In my column this week, I asked why police officers should be allowed to have so-called high-capacity magazines if they have no defensive value. Since "no one needs" to fire more than X number of rounds before reloading (and assuming that "need" should define what people are allowed to possess), why not apply the same limit to everyone? It looks like the New York legislature, which this week reduced the state's magazine limit from 10 rounds to seven, did take an evenhanded approach—but only by accident. According to DNAinfo.com and WABC, the ABC station in New York, legislators were in such a rush to impose new gun restrictions that they forgot to exempt active-duty and retired law enforcement officers from the new magazine rule. Whoops.

Cops are complaining about the lack of a double standard:

"As a law enforcement officer for over 20 years, I understand the importance of instituting a new policy on mandating the limits of bullets that a regular citizen can possess, but as a matter of fact the bad guys are not going to follow this law," said Norman Seabrook, president of the correction officers union, the city's second largest.

"The way the current legislation is drafted, it actually handcuffs the law enforcement community from having the necessary ammunition needed to save lives," he said. "We must not allow this to happen."

Roy Richter, president of the Captains Endowment Association and a lawyer, said, "It puts retired officers in a position that the clip they were issued by the NYPD, carried for their careers and were fully trained on, is now considered contraband."

Michael J. Palladino, who is head of the NYPD's 6,000-member detectives union and president of the state's Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, which represents 50,000 members, joined in calling for Cuomo and the legislature to immediately amend the law.

"Gun reform must prevent criminals and the deranged from getting illegal weapons—not restrict law-abiding retired cops from protecting themselves and the public," Palladino said.

"I support the governor in gun reform, however the new legislation restricts law enforcement officers who retire, and that could jeopardize the safety of the public."

DNAinfo.com calls the absence of a law-enforcement exemption a "loophole in the law," but in fact it is the very opposite of a loophole: Cops are outraged at the possibility that they might be treated the same as "a regular citizen" under the law. One has to wonder: If, as Seabrook says, the new magazine limit will have no impact on criminals and if, as Seabrook and Palladino agree, more than seven rounds sometimes are necessary to "save lives," what justification can there be for imposing this arbitrary restriction not just on "law-abiding retired cops" but on law-abiding citizens in general?

A spokesman for Gov. Andrew Cuomo told WABC, "We are still working out some details of the law, and the exemption will be included. Currently no police officer is in violation." I'm not sure why he says that, since the part of the law that bans pre-existing magazines holding more than 10 rounds is "effective immediately." According to WABC, "Nearly every law enforcement agency in the state carries handguns that have a 15-round capacity." The provision covering magazines that hold eight, nine, or 10 rounds takes effect on April 15. Contrary to what Richter says, such magazines won't actually be "contraband" for people who already have them, but their owners will be expected to put no more than seven rounds in them at a time. I am serious: That is what the law says. A prohibited "large capacity ammunition feeding device" is, among other things, a magazine legally obtained before April 15 that "contains more than seven rounds of ammunition."

It is implausible enough to suggest that a criminal—who by definition has no compunction about breaking the law, who is not legally permitted to possess firearms to begin with (if he has a felony record), and who is highly motivated to obtain the tools of his trade—would be deterred from obtaining a 10-round magazine by the legislature's new dictate, especially since plenty of them will remain in circulation. It is beyond fanciful to suppose that, having obtained a 10-round magazine, a criminal would think twice about putting more than seven rounds in it because legislators said he shouldn't. But in New York state, that whiff of a pretext suffices to abridge people's Second Amendment rights and, according to the cops clamoring for an exemption to the new limit, put lives at risk.

The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association says it is "actively working to enact changes to this law that will provide the appropriate exemptions from the law for active and retired law enforcement officers." State Sen. Eric Adams (D-Brooklyn), who is a former NYPD captain but nevertheless does not know which constitutional amendment protects us against unreasonable searches and seizures, told WABC he will introduce legislation restoring the double standard to which cops have become accustomed. "You can't give more ammo to the criminals," he explains. I thought that was the whole point of this law.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on January 22, 2013, 05:29:39 AM
LAWL

Quote
"As a law enforcement officer for over 20 years, I understand the importance of instituting a new policy on mandating the limits of bullets that a regular citizen can possess, but as a matter of fact the bad guys are not going to follow this law," said Norman Seabrook, president of the correction officers union, the city's second largest.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 22, 2013, 08:14:20 AM
LAWL

It's pretty funny but it's a statement of fact - the bad guys aren't going to feel constrained by a law anyways, so the law will only constraint those who voluntarily stay within its bounds. It would be slightly different (ignore questions of legality for the sake of argument) if the law called for a total ban on something (e.g. "no hollow-point bullets at all") since you then suppress the supply completely.

On the issue of high capacity magazines, while I think that a ban on them isn't really going to really help address the issue, it ought to be debated anyways.

The more general question, I guess, could be: what shouldn't be generally (or casually) available to civilians? Automatic weapons? Hollow-point bullets? Suppressors/silencers? Please note, I'm not advocating for banning those things. I'm saying that examing what is out there, and then asking ourselves what should and shouldn't be allowed and making rational judgements based on facts and not FUD ought to be our starting point.

Personally, for example, I'm fine with hollow-point bullets being generally unavailable but not fine with limiting how many bullets someone can own (it's a logistic nightware if nothing else).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 22, 2013, 11:38:02 AM
Obama To Sign Bill Authorizing 30,000 SPY Drones To Fly Over AMERICA



 




The police state you always feared forming as you watch
 
Look! Up in the sky! Is it a bird? Is it a plane? It’s … a drone, and it’s watching you. That’s what privacy advocates fear from a bill Congress passed this week to make it easier for the government to fly unmanned spy planes in U.S. airspace.
 


The FAA Reauthorization Act, which President Obama is expected to sign, also orders the Federal Aviation Administration to develop regulations for the testing and licensing of commercial drones by 2015.
 
Privacy advocates say the measure will lead to widespread use of drones for electronic surveillance by police agencies across the country and eventually by private companies as well.
 
“There are serious policy questions on the horizon about privacy and surveillance, by both government agencies and commercial entities,” said Steven Aftergood, who heads the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists.
 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation also is “concerned about the implications for surveillance by government agencies,” said attorney Jennifer Lynch. The provision in the legislation is the fruit of “a huge push by lawmakers and the defense sector to expand the use of drones” in American airspace, she added.
 
According to some estimates, the commercial drone market in the United States could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars once the FAA clears their use.
 

The agency projects that 30,000 drones could be in the nation’s skies by 2020.
 
The highest-profile use of drones by the United States has been in the CIA’s armed Predator-drone program, which targets al Qaeda terrorist leaders. But the vast majority of U.S. drone missions, even in war zones, are flown for surveillance. Some drones are as small as model aircraft, while others have the wingspan of a full-size jet.
 
In Afghanistan, the U.S. use of drone surveillance has grown so rapidly that it has created a glut of video material to be analyzed.
 
The legislation would order the FAA, before the end of the year, to expedite the process through which it authorizes the use of drones by federal, state and local police and other agencies. The FAA currently issues certificates, which can cover multiple flights by more than one aircraft in a particular area, on a case-by-case basis.
 
The Department of Homeland Security is the only federal agency to discuss openly its use of drones in domestic airspace.
 
U.S. Customs and Border Protection, an agency within the department, operates nine drones, variants of the CIA’s feared Predator. The aircraft, which are flown remotely by a team of 80 fully qualified pilots, are used principally for border and counternarcotics surveillance under four long-term FAA certificates.
 
Officials say they can be used on a short-term basis for a variety of other public-safety and emergency-management missions if a separate certificate is issued for that mission.
 
“It’s not all about surveillance,” Mr. Aftergood said. source – Washington Times


http://www.nowtheendbegins.com/blog/?p=8504

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 22, 2013, 12:40:34 PM
Obama To Sign Bill Authorizing 30,000 SPY Drones To Fly Over AMERICA

Wow... what a sensational title...


The FAA Reauthorization Act, which President Obama is expected to sign, also orders the Federal Aviation Administration to develop regulations for the testing and licensing of commercial drones by 2015.

Oh... well, shit. That's not even remotely close to what the title was suggesting. But hey, you weren't really expecting a title that reflects the reality, were you?  

 
The agency projects that 30,000 drones could be in the nation’s skies by 2020.

The area of the United States is 3,794,000 miles2. So by 2020, if this prediction is accurate, and you assume an even distribution of drones across the entire United States, there will be one drone per 126 miles2. While that may sound scary, perhaps  you ought to consider that satellites currently provide 100% coverage of the continental United States, and by combining imagery from multiple commercial satellites and using advanced image processing techniques can achieve effective resolutions of about 5 inches... "spy drones" don't worry me too much.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 23, 2013, 09:33:01 AM
In graduate thesis, John Brennan argued for government censorship: ‘Too much freedom is possible’
 The Daily Caller ^ | 1/23/13 | Charles C. Johnson

Posted on Wednesday, January 23, 2013 12:17:11 PM by Nachum

In his 1980 graduate thesis at the University of Texas at Austin, John Brennan denied the existence of “absolute human rights” and argued in favor of censorship on the part of the Egyptian dictatorship.

“Since the press can play such an influential role in determining the perceptions of the masses, I am in favor of some degree of government censorship,” Brennan wrote. “Inflamatory [sic] articles can provoke mass opposition and possible violence, especially in developing political systems.”

Brennan serves as President Barack Obama’s national security advisor. Obama has nominated him to lead the Central Intelligence Agency.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...

http://dailycaller.com/2013/01/23/in-graduate-thesis-john-brennan-argued-for-government-censorship-too-much-freedom-is-possible

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 26, 2013, 10:50:08 AM
An Innocent Man Spent 37 Years In Jail Due To Galling Technicality
Abby Rogers|Jan. 26, 2013, 10:33 AM|1,697|18


ABCNews/YouTube
 
Bill Macumber


Barry Siegel's book "Manifest Injustice" chronicles the saga of Bill Macumber, who was falsely was imprisoned for 37 years for the murder of two people in Scottsdale, Ariz.
 
What's most galling about this tragedy is that it could have been avoided if not for a legal technicality.
 
A man named Ernest Valenzuela had confessed the crime to his attorney—before later dying in a prison fight. The attorney's testimony could have vindicated Macumber. Instead, a judge protected the attorney-client privilege of the dead man and let the innocent man go to jail.
 
When Macumber came to trial in 1975, Valenzuela's former public defender Thomas O'Toole wrote to the trial judge asking to testify about his now-dead client's confession.
 
However, Judge Charles Hardy wouldn't allow the confession to be heard.
 
"Let the record show the Court has ruled that the proffered evidence isn't admissible," Hardy said in his ruling, according to the book. "First because the communications to Mr. O'Toole and Mr. Petica [another of Valenzuela's defense attorneys] were privileged because of the attorney-client relationship. There's no waiver of the privilege."
 
After Macumber was sentenced to life behind bars, his defense team appealed the case all the way to the Arizona Supreme Court.
 
The state Supreme Court ultimately gave him a retrial because of issues with ballistics evidence.
 
But in its ruling granting him a retrial, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled the trial court could still "assert" the attorney-client privilege on behalf of the dead man and exclude his testimony if it wanted to.
 
But yet again, the court ruled against Macumber, with Judge Robert Corcoran saying attorney-client privilege prevented the testimony. Macumber was convicted a second time.
 
After reading the book, we were shocked that a dead man's rights would supersede those of a living man who was fighting for his life.But according to legal ethics expert Andrew Perlman, who teaches procedure and professional responsibility at Suffolk University Law School, the court made the right decision with respect to the law.
 
"It is not shocking to me that a court would uphold the privilege here, even though doing so might have produced an unjust outcome in this particular case," Perlman said in an email to Business Insider. "The problem is that if courts reject the privilege any time it might be perceived as necessary to uncover the truth, clients would become quite concerned about sharing any information with their lawyers. Although I believe that there should be an exception to the duty of confidentiality to permit lawyers to disclose information necessary to prevent the wrongful execution or incarceration of an innocent person, I am not convinced that such a disclosure should have the effect of waiving the attorney-client privilege."
 
Macumber was released from prison in November 2012 after the Arizona Justice Project got involved and filed motions that successfully questioned the judges' decisions to not allow Valenzuela's testimony, The Republic reported at the time.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/bill-macumber-case-legal-technicalities-2013-1#ixzz2J6opYvpE

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 26, 2013, 12:39:46 PM

Triumphant motel owner slams Carmen Ortiz .


January 25, 2013
.
Erin Smith / Boston Herald



A Tewksbury motel owner who just beat back U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz’s three-year bid to seize his business has become the latest critic to accuse the Hub’s top fed of prosecutorial bullying.

Related: Ex-Probation commissioner John O’Brien blasts feds for dusting off statutes used on mafia

“I don’t think she should have the power she has to pull this stuff on people,” Russ Caswell, owner of the Motel Caswell, told the Herald last night after a judge’s ruling in his favor.

The feds first tried to grab Caswell’s property in 2009 under drug seizure laws, citing numerous drug busts at the motel. Caswell’s defense team argued that he was not responsible for what guests did. And his lawyers found there was actually more drug activity at nearby businesses, and theorized the government was going after Caswell, who has no criminal record, because his mortgage-free property is worth more than $1 million.

“It’s bullying by the government. And it’s a huge waste of taxpayer money,” said Caswell, whose father built the motel in 1955. “This has been a huge financial and physical toll. It’s thrown our whole family into turmoil. You work for all your life to pay for something and these people come along and think it’s theirs. It’s just wrong. The average person can’t afford to fight this.”

In a written decision after a November trial, U.S. Magistrate Judge Judith Gail Dein dismissed the government’s forfeiture action, ruling yesterday that Caswell, “who was trying to eke out an income from a business located in a drug-infested area that posed great risks to the safety of him and his family,” took all reasonable steps to prevent crime.

“The Government’s resolution of the crime problem should not be to simply take his Property,” Dein said in her decision.

The innkeeper’s complaint follows the suicide of hacker Aaron Swartz, who faced up to 35 years in prison and $1 million in fines. Swartz’s family, lawyers and legal commentators have called for Ortiz’s ouster and new guidelines for federal attorneys, saying the Swartz case was a prosecutorial abuse.

Ortiz has defended her prosecution of Swartz’s effort to post paywall-protected academic papers freely on the Internet. Her spokeswoman declined comment on the Caswell case last night, saying prosecutors are reviewing the judge’s decision.

Caswell estimates the U.S. government will have to pay at least $600,000 toward his defense fees.

“It’s a case that should not have been filed in the first place,” said Scott Bullock of the Virginia-based Institute for Justice, who worked on Caswell’s case. “This is one of the most aggressive uses of civil forfeiture laws. It’s a power that’s too easily abused, and this case epitomizes what an aggressive U.S. attorney can do to a small-business owner with that law.”

Boston College Law Professor George Brown said the Caswell and Swartz cases may lend momentum to the effort to rein in aggressive prosecutions.

“That scrutiny is a good thing. After all, it is a public office,” Brown said. “What’s going on here is a lot of things are happening at the same time that I think are making the public and the bar feel that maybe accountability and transparency is called for at the U.S. Attorney’s 
Office.”






This is same commie bitch obama appointed on the schwartz case. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 26, 2013, 01:19:04 PM
LAWL


So the question is whether he's so fucking dumb that he can't see through himself, or whether he is a crypto-fascist who would ignore the inconsistency of his own statement in order to help achieve a goal. 

Does anyone need further proof of the true design of modern media?  He should have never been allowed to make that statement without further explanation.  Absolutely outrageous, and an insult to all good people.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 26, 2013, 08:52:04 PM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 27, 2013, 04:22:33 PM

The area of the United States is 3,794,000 miles2. So by 2020, if this prediction is accurate, and you assume an even distribution of drones across the entire United States, there will be one drone per 126 miles2. While that may sound scary, perhaps  you ought to consider that satellites currently provide 100% coverage of the continental United States, and by combining imagery from multiple commercial satellites and using advanced image processing techniques can achieve effective resolutions of about 5 inches... "spy drones" don't worry me too much.


If only drones were known to seek just visual information...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 28, 2013, 03:13:49 PM
San Diego Police Chief: We Can Disarm Americans Within a Generation
 Breitbart ^ | 1/28/13 | AWR Hawkins

Posted on Monday, January 28, 2013 6:08:57 PM by Nachum

San Diego Police Chief William Lansdowne is fully supportive of the Obama/Feinstein gun grab, and says if lawmakers play it right Americans can be completely disarmed within "a generation."

Lansdowne has gone on record saying: "I could not be more supportive of the president for taking the position he has. I think it's courageous with the politics involved in this process. [And] I think it's going to eventually make the country safer."

He made it clear that it may take "a generation," but new laws could eventually take all guns off the streets.

This is quite a departure from other law enforcement personnel we've seen around the country--particularly Sheriffs--who've come out firmly against any infringement on the 2nd Amendment. We've cheered those officials for standing with the people, and now Lansdowne has taken a position completely opposite them.


(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 28, 2013, 05:55:32 PM
If only drones were known to seek just visual information...

The type of information that particular drones seek is largely irrelevant in the sense that most sensors of interest for wide-scale, real-time surveillance (except infrared) can already be deployed from orbital and high-altitude platforms and don't really benefit from being deployed on drone platforms. That's not to say that drones don't have their uses - they do. But it's silly to assert that drones somehow revolutionize data collection capabilities. At best, they supplement existing platforms under specific scenarios.

Consider the ARGUS (http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/argus-drone-spots-you-20-000-feet-camera-phone-sensors-1C8149730) system for example, which can allegedly record high-resolution video of a roughly circular area up to six miles wide from 20,000 feet. The article notes that the system can track "every car and person in real time" but I think the author is confused (or an idiot). At best such a system can resolve each car and person in its field of vision, but resolving and tracking are two different things.

Even if all 30,000 of the drones authorized to fly over the United States were ARGUS drones, and were equally distributed througout the continental United States you'd only achieve about 5% coverage. Which is silly, since you already have 100% coverage from commercial satellite imagery providers at about the same resolution if you post-process collected data.

And I'll also point out the one thing that most people don't understand that makes drones impractical for wide-scale, real-time surveillance: the sheer amount of bandwidth necessary to transmit drone information exceeds what we can achieve with wired data connections. It can even exceed what can be sensibly stored. The ARGUS, shown above, generates about 6.6 petabytes of information per day. Assuming you buy only 4TB hard drives and don't worry about redundancy, just storage, you'd need almost 1700 hard drives to store the data from a single ARGUS drone. That is, if you could get it off the drone in real-time: you'd need to be able to transmit 80 gigabytes per second data streams...


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 28, 2013, 07:02:43 PM
The type of information that particular drones seek is largely irrelevant in the sense that most sensors of interest for wide-scale, real-time surveillance (except infrared) can already be deployed from orbital and high-altitude platforms and don't really benefit from being deployed on drone platforms. That's not to say that drones don't have their uses - they do. But it's silly to assert that drones somehow revolutionize data collection capabilities. At best, they supplement existing platforms under specific scenarios.

Consider the ARGUS (http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/argus-drone-spots-you-20-000-feet-camera-phone-sensors-1C8149730) system for example, which can allegedly record high-resolution video of a roughly circular area up to six miles wide from 20,000 feet. The article notes that the system can track "every car and person in real time" but I think the author is confused (or an idiot). At best such a system can resolve each car and person in its field of vision, but resolving and tracking are two different things.

Even if all 30,000 of the drones authorized to fly over the United States were ARGUS drones, and were equally distributed througout the continental United States you'd only achieve about 5% coverage. Which is silly, since you already have 100% coverage from commercial satellite imagery providers at about the same resolution if you post-process collected data.

And I'll also point out the one thing that most people don't understand that makes drones impractical for wide-scale, real-time surveillance: the sheer amount of bandwidth necessary to transmit drone information exceeds what we can achieve with wired data connections. It can even exceed what can be sensibly stored. The ARGUS, shown above, generates about 6.6 petabytes of information per day. Assuming you buy only 4TB hard drives and don't worry about redundancy, just storage, you'd need almost 1700 hard drives to store the data from a single ARGUS drone. That is, if you could get it off the drone in real-time: you'd need to be able to transmit 80 gigabytes per second data streams...

The idea is targeted gathering.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 29, 2013, 04:18:54 AM
The idea is targeted gathering.

Right. That's a situation where drones do make sense and it's how drones have been used for a while now.

But I just don't think that authorizing drones to fly over the continental United States and coming up with regulations for such flights is a bad thing or, as 333386 fears, part of Obama's secret plan to resurrect Stalin and make sweet sweet love to him.

It doesn't have much to do with imposing a massive surveillance society either; frankly if one is really concerned about that there are a lot more intrusive methods currently employed.

Although, I guess once drones become more affordable to own and operate those "Speed Enforced by Aircraft" signs on long stretches of deserted highways might actually give me pause. Not that I expect them to care much better than silly speed cameras.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 29, 2013, 07:42:41 AM

Two Houston police accused of helping smuggle cocaine

By Dane Schiller | January 28, 2013 | Updated: January 28, 2013 11:54pm


http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Two-Houston-police-accused-of-helping-smuggle-4230515.php


Two Houston police officers are facing life in prison without the possibility of parole after allegations they accepted $2,000 in bribes to protect a stash of cocaine being smuggled through the city.
 
Emerson Canizales, 26, of Kingwood, and Michael Miceli, 26, of Humble, who are accused of taking $1,000 each, were quietly arrested with the help of a Houston Police SWAT team over the weekend as they reported for duty.
 
The Houston Police Department officers, who graduated from the same police academy class in 2010, stood side by side before a federal magistrate Monday during a brief hearing in which they were read their rights and advised of the charges rooted in a drug distribution conspiracy.
 
In contrast to other prisoners who wore familiar orange jumpsuits, Canizales and Miceli appeared in court in matching dark blue pants and black T-shirts and kept their arms behind their backs.
 
Sources, who did not wish to be identified because they were not authorized to talk, said the officers used an HPD patrol car to escort the load as it was moved from one side of the city to the other. The thinking was that if the drug trafficker was pulled over by other police, they could intervene.
 
Authorities declined to say exactly what led to the officers' arrests or how they were caught. But a prepared statement from Houston Police Chief Charles McClelland indicated they were snared in a sting operation.
 
"We have been working cooperatively with federal authorities on this investigation," McClelland said. "And are proud that our internal proactive measures have proven effective in addressing these types of allegations."
 
Released on bond
 
U.S. Magistrate Judge Mary Milloy ordered the officers released on a $50,000 bond and told them they would face additional charges if they didn't obey the conditions for their release.
 
Among the rules: They can't have contact with each other or anyone else connected to the case, and they can't have any guns.
 
"You are to have no weapons, no firearms, no rifles, no pistols, no AR-15s," Milloy said.
 
She rejected the prosecution's request that the men wear electronic monitors and be confined to their homes.
 
One of Miceli's two attorneys, Guy Womack, said he hopes his client has been wrongfully accused. "All the officers we've talked to are shocked he got caught up in something like this," Womack said. "He's an outstanding human being. His wife is a schoolteacher and they have three kids and are two months shy of a fourth."
 
After the hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jim McAlister said he supported their release.
 
"We release most officers if they are not a threat (to the community) and these guys are not a threat," he said.
 
An indictment unsealed Monday alleges that during a conspiracy that lasted from October 2012 to December, the officers were paid to protect a vehicle they thought was carrying cocaine.
 
Their personnel files, including disciplinary history, were not available Monday.
 
Internal investigation
 
Canizales and Miceli have been relieved of duty but will remain on the city's payroll pending an outcome of an internal-affairs investigation, according to the HPD.
 
"We will never tolerate criminal misconduct from any of our employees," McClelland said.
 
Other recent cases of a local law enforcement officers being charged in a drug case include that of former Harris County sheriff's Deputy Richard Nutt Jr., who is scheduled to be sentenced next month after pleading guilty to charges of stealing loads from drug traffickers.
 
Earlier this month, Tomas Roque, a reserve Harris County deputy, was arrested and charged with aiding drug traffickers, and two other Houston police officers - German Ramos and Kendrick Ferguson - were charged late last year with stealing from drug traffickers.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 29, 2013, 07:50:10 AM
Two Houston police accused of helping smuggle cocaine

I continue to be amazed at just how far backwards our Courts will bend over in order to accomodate police officers accused of illegal activity... I'm all for some leeway depending on the circumstances, but sheesh.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 29, 2013, 08:21:28 AM

ABC News' Gio Benitez, Mosheh Gains and Emily Stanitz report:
 
Should an Indiana couple go to jail for saving Bambi?
 

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2983035/posts


That's the question surrounding the case of Jeff and Jennifer Counceller, who rescued an injured fawn and nursed it back to health at their Connersville, Ind., home. The couple now faces the possibility of jail time and fines after state officials charged them with a misdemeanor for harboring the animal.
 


Jeff Counceller, a police officer in Connersville, and his wife were charged with unlawful possession of a deer, a misdemeanor that punished to its fullest extent could put the Councellers in jail for up to 60 days and cost them up to $2,000 in fines.
 
(ABC News) The couple rescued the deer more than two years ago after finding it on their neighbor's porch. The Councellers said the deer had sustained injuries, and they wanted to nurse it back to health.
 
"I could feel all of the open wounds all along her back side and she wouldn't stand up," Jennifer Counceller told ABC News.
 
They brought the deer home and named her Little Orphan Dani.
 
The Councellers said an Indiana Conservation Officer stopped by their home and discovered the deer this past summer. The Indiana Department of Natural Resources wanted to euthanize Dani, saying she might be dangerous and a threat to people.
 
"I was devastated. I spent a year and several months nursing her into adulthood, getting to the point where she was able to go out on her own," Counceller said.
 
On the day Dani was to be put down, the Councellers said she inexplicably escaped from their backyard. Even though Dani disappeared back into the wild, the Councellers' legal problems didn't go with the fawn.
 
The Indiana Department of Natural Resources said it couldn't comment on pending litigation but that it did discourage people from taking in injured wildlife. This case could go to court next month, and if charges aren't dropped, it will be left for a jury to decide whether the Councellers broke the law.
 
"No matter what the law is, we did what was right for the animal," Counceller said.
 
Meanwhile, the story has caused uproar on the Internet. A Facebook support page has more than 6,400 "Likes" in support of the couple. An online petition to drop the charges already has more than 3,800 signatures.
 
Rick on Change.org wrote, "An act of humanity should not be rewarded with a sentence."
 
Michelle on Facebook wrote, "They are being punished for having compassion and showing kindness."
 
The Councellers' case could go to court next month.
 Also Read.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 29, 2013, 06:24:07 PM
Right. That's a situation where drones do make sense and it's how drones have been used for a while now.

But I just don't think that authorizing drones to fly over the continental United States and coming up with regulations for such flights is a bad thing or, as 333386 fears, part of Obama's secret plan to resurrect Stalin and make sweet sweet love to him.

It doesn't have much to do with imposing a massive surveillance society either; frankly if one is really concerned about that there are a lot more intrusive methods currently employed.

Although, I guess once drones become more affordable to own and operate those "Speed Enforced by Aircraft" signs on long stretches of deserted highways might actually give me pause. Not that I expect them to care much better than silly speed cameras.

So would you say that drones are unsuitable for, and consequently not intended for, surveillance beyond the function of a speed-monitoring plane?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 29, 2013, 06:47:42 PM
So would you say that drones are unsuitable for, and consequently not intended for, surveillance beyond the function of a speed-monitoring plane?

No. I say that drones are unsuitable for the sort of wide-scale, real-time surveillance that the article posted suggests is right around the corner if drones are deployed in our skies. Drones have many benefits - the ability to be quickly deployed and roam over a particular area for a long time, the ability to be configured with custom sensor payloads, etc. They are beneficial tools. And while their deployment raises questions that we need to consider carefully before we allow their usage, I am more worried about government surveillance on the Internet than I am about government surveillance using drones.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 29, 2013, 08:46:01 PM
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2013/01/29/hyannis-5-year-old-threatened-with-suspension-for-making-gun-out-of-legos


For fucks sakes
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 09:51:08 AM
No. I say that drones are unsuitable for the sort of wide-scale, real-time surveillance that the article posted suggests is right around the corner if drones are deployed in our skies. Drones have many benefits - the ability to be quickly deployed and roam over a particular area for a long time, the ability to be configured with custom sensor payloads, etc. They are beneficial tools. And while their deployment raises questions that we need to consider carefully before we allow their usage, I am more worried about government surveillance on the Internet than I am about government surveillance using drones.

You agree that drones are generally intended for targeted surveillance, that the capacity to perform such surveillance far exceeds the function of a speed-monitoring device, and that each new day effectively increases the capacity for a drone to perform surveillance.

In terms of yes or no, would that statement be true?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 10:18:09 AM
You agree that drones are generally intended for targeted surveillance, that the capacity to perform such surveillance far exceeds the function of a speed-monitoring device, and that each new day effectively increases the capacity for a drone to perform surveillance.

Correct.

In terms of yes or no, would that statement be true?

It's true.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 11:40:18 AM
Correct.

It's true.


Would you also agree that the number of drones will continue to increase, until some measure of saturation is reached?

If so, what do you think that measure will be?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 30, 2013, 12:05:48 PM
Skip to comments.
ATF's Milwaukee sting operation marred by mistakes, failures
 http://www.jsonline.com/watchdog/watchdogreports/atfs-milwaukee-sting-operation-marred-by-mistakes-failures-mu8akpj-188952581.html ^ | 30 jan 2013 | John Diedrich and Raquel Rutledge
 
Posted on Wednesday, January 30, 2013 2:47:13 PM by rellimpank

. A store calling itself Fearless Distributing opened early last year on an out-of-the-way street in Milwaukee's Riverwest neighborhood, offering designer clothes, athletic shoes, jewelry and drug paraphernalia.

Those working behind the counter, however, weren't interested in selling anything.

They were undercover agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives running a storefront sting aimed at busting criminal operations in the city by purchasing drugs and guns from felons.

But the effort to date has not snared any major dealers or taken down a gang. Instead, it resulted in a string of mistakes and failures, including an ATF military-style machine gun landing on the streets of Milwaukee and the agency having $35,000 in merchandise stolen from its store, a Journal Sentinel investigation has found.

When the 10-month operation was shut down after the burglary, agents and Milwaukee police officers who participated in the sting cleared out the store but left behind a sensitive document that listed names, vehicles and phone numbers of undercover agents.

And the agency remains locked in a battle with the building's owner, who says he is owed about $15,000 because of utility bills, holes in the walls, broken doors and damage from an overflowing toilet.

The sting resulted in charges being filed against about 30 people, most for low-level drug sales and gun possession counts. But agents had the wrong person in at least three cases. In one, they charged a man who was in prison - as a result of an earlier ATF case - at the time agents said he was selling drugs to them.


(Excerpt) Read more at jsonline.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 12:45:09 PM
Would you also agree that the number of drones will continue to increase, until some measure of saturation is reached?

Probably, provided that the drones continue to provide useful services in a more efficient manner than other modalities.

If so, what do you think that measure will be?

That's a hard question to answer - there's really just not enough information yet.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 01:50:16 PM
Probably, provided that the drones continue to provide useful services in a more efficient manner than other modalities.

That's a hard question to answer - there's really just not enough information yet.

Would you be inclined to say that the saturation measure will involve the technological potentialities of the device, rather than a consideration for privacy?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 03:01:04 PM
Would you be inclined to say that the saturation measure will involve the technological potentialities of the device, rather than a consideration for privacy?

I suspect that at some point privacy considerations will come into play. Of course, the American people have repeatedly shown that they care little about their privacy, willingly providing massive amounts of personal information to Facebook, Google and Apple and allowing the Federal Government to collect just about every bit of information in the name of security. So who knows, maybe I'm wrong.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 03:41:27 PM
I suspect that at some point privacy considerations will come into play. Of course, the American people have repeatedly shown that they care little about their privacy, willingly providing massive amounts of personal information to Facebook, Google and Apple and allowing the Federal Government to collect just about every bit of information in the name of security. So who knows, maybe I'm wrong.

Just so there's absolutely no confusion, you would agree, the fact that some individuals have chosen to share information doesn't in any way justify a state of routine surveillance, and the two are completely separate issues, right?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 04:24:39 PM
Just so there's absolutely no confusion, you would agree, the fact that some individuals have chosen to share information doesn't in any way justify a state of routine surveillance, and the two are completely separate issues, right?

Of course. I was making a separate point. I was saying that I'm sure at some point the capabilities of drones will reach a point where people will start to have concerns about their privacy. I made a sidebar that I had thought that privacy concerns would have kept things like Facebook and TSA virtual strip searches from ever taking off, but that it seems that Americans, generally speaking, don't really value privacy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 06:28:35 PM
Of course. I was making a separate point. I was saying that I'm sure at some point the capabilities of drones will reach a point where people will start to have concerns about their privacy. I made a sidebar that I had thought that privacy concerns would have kept things like Facebook and TSA virtual strip searches from ever taking off, but that it seems that Americans, generally speaking, don't really value privacy.

So when you say this:

"spy drones" don't worry me too much.

What part is it, of devices that could likely turn a society into a state of routine surveillance, that allows you to remain unconcerned?  Or is it that you're only unconcerned about them providing what would be redundant visual information, as you originally stated?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 07:11:04 PM
So when you say this:

What part is it, of devices that could likely turn a society into a state of routine surveillance, that allows you to remain unconcerned?  Or is it that you're only unconcerned about them providing what would be redundant visual information, as you originally stated?

Because, as I explained, I do not believe that drones, at this point in time, are likely to be used in a privacy-violating manner within the continental United States, even if they were to be relatively widely deployed. At this point in time (and with their current capabilities) they are ineffective tools for the creation of a surveillance society and not particularly better than other existing methods, such as orbital platforms and closed-circuit TV cameras. Much bigger and more realistic threats to privacy exist right now. For example, the Government has been demand increased access to and control of the Internet, including insisting that backdoors be incorporated into software and hardware communications products (e.g. CALEA) to allow for efficient interception of traffic by its representatives.

And since I am orders of magnitude more likely to have my personal and private information intercepted as it flows over the Internet and/or is stored on various online service providers, than to have it intercepted by drones flying overhead (at least as of this moment), I am sure that you will understand why drones aren't really high on my list of priorities when it comes to privacy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on January 30, 2013, 07:16:39 PM
Because, as I explained, I do not believe that drones, at this point in time, are likely to be used in a privacy-violating manner within the continental United States, even if they were to be relatively widely deployed. At this point in time (and with their current capabilities) they are ineffective tools for the creation of a surveillance society and not particularly better than other existing methods, such as orbital platforms and closed-circuit TV cameras. Much bigger and more realistic threats to privacy exist right now. For example, the Government has been demand increased access to and control of the Internet, including insisting that backdoors be incorporated into software and hardware communications products (e.g. CALEA) to allow for efficient interception of traffic by its representatives.

And since I am orders of magnitude more likely to have my personal and private information intercepted as it flows over the Internet and/or is stored on various online service providers, than to have it intercepted by drones flying overhead (at least as of this moment), I am sure that you will understand why drones aren't really high on my list of priorities when it comes to privacy.

I sure do think they will... Are they the top of the list on privacy concerns? Probably not, but they will most likely be used to circumvent your privacy quite quickly.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 07:27:34 PM
I sure do think they will... Are they the top of the list on privacy concerns? Probably not, but they will most likely be used to circumvent your privacy quite quickly.

I don't disagree - I just think we need to prioritize. And drones just aren't high on my list at this point.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 30, 2013, 07:31:38 PM
And that ATF story i posted?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 07:33:57 PM
And that ATF story i posted?

I must have missed that - what was it about?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 30, 2013, 07:39:55 PM
Skip to comments.
ATF's Milwaukee sting operation marred by mistakes, failures
 http://www.jsonline.com/watchdog/watchdogreports/atfs-milwaukee-sting-operation-marred-by-mistakes-failures-mu8akpj-188952581.html ^ | 30 jan 2013 | John Diedrich and Raquel Rutledge
 
Posted on Wednesday, January 30, 2013 2:47:13 PM by rellimpank

. A store calling itself Fearless Distributing opened early last year on an out-of-the-way street in Milwaukee's Riverwest neighborhood, offering designer clothes, athletic shoes, jewelry and drug paraphernalia.

Those working behind the counter, however, weren't interested in selling anything.

They were undercover agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives running a storefront sting aimed at busting criminal operations in the city by purchasing drugs and guns from felons.

But the effort to date has not snared any major dealers or taken down a gang. Instead, it resulted in a string of mistakes and failures, including an ATF military-style machine gun landing on the streets of Milwaukee and the agency having $35,000 in merchandise stolen from its store, a Journal Sentinel investigation has found.

When the 10-month operation was shut down after the burglary, agents and Milwaukee police officers who participated in the sting cleared out the store but left behind a sensitive document that listed names, vehicles and phone numbers of undercover agents.

And the agency remains locked in a battle with the building's owner, who says he is owed about $15,000 because of utility bills, holes in the walls, broken doors and damage from an overflowing toilet.

The sting resulted in charges being filed against about 30 people, most for low-level drug sales and gun possession counts. But agents had the wrong person in at least three cases. In one, they charged a man who was in prison - as a result of an earlier ATF case - at the time agents said he was selling drugs to them.


(Excerpt) Read more at jsonline.com ...


bmp
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 30, 2013, 07:42:12 PM
Fun...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on January 30, 2013, 10:07:05 PM
Because, as I explained, I do not believe that drones, at this point in time, are likely to be used in a privacy-violating manner within the continental United States, even if they were to be relatively widely deployed. At this point in time (and with their current capabilities) they are ineffective tools for the creation of a surveillance society and not particularly better than other existing methods, such as orbital platforms and closed-circuit TV cameras. Much bigger and more realistic threats to privacy exist right now. For example, the Government has been demand(ing) increased access to and control of the Internet, including insisting that backdoors be incorporated into software and hardware communications products (e.g. CALEA) to allow for efficient interception of traffic by its representatives.

To be exact, this involves third-party traces of surveillance, in comparison to something that would conceivably bypass such traces.

And since I am orders of magnitude more likely to have my personal and private information intercepted as it flows over the Internet and/or is stored on various online service providers, than to have it intercepted by drones flying overhead (at least as of this moment), I am sure that you will understand why drones aren't really high on my list of priorities when it comes to privacy.

So it only makes a statement about the present, to say that you're unconcerned about drones, and not the future.  Isn't that true?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 31, 2013, 11:51:09 AM
Lake Stevens pays couple $100,000 after police force way into home.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020235617_lakestevenssettlementxml.html

The article is quite a read... and those two idiots will remain police officers. Just amazing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 31, 2013, 02:39:59 PM

John P. Martin and Craig R. McCoy, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

 Posted: Thursday, January 31, 2013, 9:45 AM




Nine current or former Philadelphia Traffic Court judges were charged today with conspiracy and fraud after a three-year FBI probe into ticket-fixing in the beleaguered court.
 
A 77-count indictment, returned Tuesday but sealed until Thursday, said judges or their assistants routinely shredded documents, used code words and practiced "a well-understood conspiracy of silence" that turned the court into two systems: One where the average citizen paid for infractions, while connected offenders were found not guilty or saw their cases dismissed, costing the Commonwealth an untold amount.
 
"For years, even beyond the conspiracy charged, there existed a culture of ticket fixing at Traffic Court," the indictment said. "The ticket fixing was pervasive and frequent."
 
Charged were two of the court's three sitting judges, Michael Lowry and Michael Sullivan, as well as seven former judges.
 
Four - Fortunato Perri Sr., Robert Mulgrew, Willie Singletary and Thomasine Tynes - were elected by Philadelphia voters. The other three are former suburban district judges who were appointed for a stints in Philadelphia Traffic Court: Mark A. Bruno of a Chester County, H. Warren Hogeland of Bucks County, and Kenneth Miller of Delaware County.


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PhillyClout: Jimmy Tayoun made calls to top Traffic Court judge, federal indictment says 12 minutes ago


Unlike those who were indicted Thursday, Hogeland, Miller and Perri were charged separately by informations. The process is typically reserved for defendants who intend to plead guilty.
 
Also indicted were Traffic Court administrator William Hird; and two local businessmen, Henry P. Alfano and Robert Moy. Alfano owned a towing service that won a no-bid contract from traffic court.
 
U.S. Attorney Zane D. Memeger said the system cheated taxpayers of revenue and completely undermined public confidence in the institution.
 
"Those who seek to game the system by refusing to follow the rules need to be held accountable by the rule of law they swore to uphold," he said in a statement.
 
All but one of the defendants named in the indictment appeared before a magistrate judge and were expected to be released under $20,000 bail.
 
"I'm so upset," said Tynes, as she left Magistrate Judge L. Felipe Restrepo's courtroom. "I don't know nothing really."
 
The others mostly deferred to their lawyers, who denied any wrongdoing and looked forward to their day in court.
 
"Judge Sullivan never asked for nor did he receive any bribe, kickback or anything of value in exchange for performing his duties as an elected traffic court judge," defense attorney Henry E. Hockeimer Jr. said in a statement. "Judge Sullivan handled each case before him fairly and competently."
 
Singletary's lawyer, William J. Brennan, said he was pleased after such an exhaustive investigation to see that "the indictment does not allege that my client took one thin dime of graft or payola."
 
Still, the case in a single day decimated the bench and cast a cloud that stretched years. The Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts pledged support to keep the traffic court running.
 
"Philadelphia Traffic Court remains open and newly-assigned senior magisterial district judges from various counties have been appointed to hear cases," Justice J. Michael Eakin said in a statement.
 
As to suspending the judges, Jim Koval, a spokesman for the Supreme Court, said Thursday that he could not comment about the two Philadelphia judges' status. Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Gary S. Glazer, appointed to oversee and reform Traffic Court, said he has requested that Sullivan and Lowry be suspended, and has not scheduled them to hear cases.
 
In Chester County, the president judge issued an order barring Bruno from serving as a magistrate - or even entering his office.
 
The state Judicial Conduct Board, meanwhile, filed petitions to suspend without pay all the active judges until pending resolution of the federal case.
 
Kathleen D. Wilkinson, chairwoman of the 13,000-member Philadelphia Bar Association, called Thursday "a sad day for the justice system in Pennsylvania."
 
Wilkinson said the indictments "cast a shadow on the court that compromises the ability for justice to be dispensed fairly," and she called on the indicted justices to resign immediately.
 
"We respect the work done by Traffic Court Administrative Judge Gary S. Glazer to enact measures to restore integrity and public confidence in the operations of the court, and believe an overhaul of Traffic Court is needed so that justice is dispensed fairly and without favoritism," Wilkinson said.
 
For decades, traffic court has stirred controversy, seen as a scourge by drivers, a patronage mill by political observers, and ripe for corruption. Judges earn at least $85,000, win election only with the blessing of the local political parties and bosses. The court was twice before been the focus of federal probes.
 
The latest charges brought to light a probe that had been bubbling for at least three years, built on public raids and secret FBI wiretaps.
 
A preview emerged last fall, when a consultant commissioned by Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald D. Castille concluded there was a pervasive culture of corruption in the court.
 
That report, prepared by former city prosecutor William G. Chadwick, cited eight former or current judges, and described Hird as the central coordinator for ticket-fixing, or, as the judges called it "consideration."
 
The indictment went further, spelling out in detail how friends, associates and ward leaders arranged to get cases dismissed or fines dropped.
 
In return, the judges allegedly got more than good will. According to the indictment, Perri accepted free auto services, towing, landscaping, and even a load of shrimp and crab cakes from Alfano, whose company, Century Motors, ran a towing service.
 
"I see Century on it, it's gold," Perri once told Alfano, according to the indictment. "When you call, I move, brother, believe me."
 
In February 2010, the indictment said, Alfano called on behalf of a truck driver who faced $442 in fines and court costs after being ticketed along I-95 for not clearing the snow and ice off his tractor-trailer. Twice the drive got notices that his license would be suspended.
 
"It will be alright, don't worry about it," Perri allegedly assured Alfano.
 
Two months later, the case landed before Sullivan. The driver didn't even attend the hearing, and was deemed not guilty, the indictment said.
 
Hird declined to comment but his lawyer, Greg Pagano, told reporters: "My client is a taxpaying, hardworking citizen who goes to work every day and who is being indicted essentially for doing his job."
 
Alfano is a former police officer who had a long-standing friendship with Perri, according to one of his lawyers. The suggestions of payoffs for ticket fixing was "a reach," said the lawyer, Jeffrey Miller.
 
Hird and Singletary are accused of lying to FBI agents, while Mulgrew, Tynes and Lowry are charged with perjury before the Grand Jury.
 
"You don't give out special favors, is that right?" a prosecutor asked Lowry before the grand jury in fall 2011, according to the indictment.
 
"No, I treat everybody the same," he replied.
 
Singletary resigned last year in an unrelated scandal, after a court staffer accused him of showing her a picture of his genitals on his cellphone.
 
Mulgrew was indicted in a separate federal corruption case, charged with defrauding an neighborhood nonprofit.
 
The Republican floor leader of the state Senate, Dominic Pileggi of Delaware County, said the indictments boosted his resolve to pass legislation abolishing the court.
 
"They confirm my opinion that the Traffic Court is not an institution that has any reason to continue to exist," Pileggi told reporters in a conference call. "They accelerate the urgency of enacting the reforms that I proposed."


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on January 31, 2013, 04:11:26 PM
Lake Stevens pays couple $100,000 after police force way into home.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020235617_lakestevenssettlementxml.html

The article is quite a read... and those two idiots will remain police officers. Just amazing.
Holy shit... My great aunt lives in/on lake Stevens...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2013, 06:40:05 AM
Lake Stevens pays couple $100,000 after police force way into home.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020235617_lakestevenssettlementxml.html

The article is quite a read... and those two idiots will remain police officers. Just amazing.

They should not have settled.
And those cops should rot in jail.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 01, 2013, 07:03:01 AM

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2984171/posts





A bipartisan push intensified Thursday for answers from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives about a flawed storefront sting in Milwaukee.

A Journal Sentinel investigation this week exposed a 10-month federal operation marred by a series of mistakes and failures, including an agent's machine gun being stolen and burglars ripping off $35,000 in merchandise from the agency's phony store. Milwaukee police and ATF are still looking for that stolen machine gun, officials said Thursday.

"Suffice to say, ATF and the police department both have a keen interest in trying to get that firearm back," said Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn.

Mayor Tom Barrett joined the call for an investigation and two letters were sent to the ATF's acting director, one from a group of powerful lawmakers and another from U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.).

The seven-page letter by four leading members of Congress called the flawed sting "disturbing" and asked acting director B. Todd Jones for written answers to more than two dozen questions related to the operation, dubbed "Fearless Distributing."

As a result of the sting, about 30 people were charged in federal and state court, most with low-level drug and gun counts. In at least three cases, the newspaper found, agents recommended charges against the wrong person, including a man who was in prison on a previous ATF case at the time he was accused of selling them drugs. The operation seized 145 guns.

"ATF must have rigorous oversight plans to ensure that these operations are conducted carefully," the letter from the four congressmen said. "Such management controls and rigorous oversight plans appear to have been absent during the botched Fearless Distributing case. Although not surprising, it is unacceptable."

The letter was signed by U.S. Rep. James Sensenbrenner, (R-Wis.) chairman of the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations; U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, (R-Iowa), the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee; U.S. Rep. Darrell E. Issa, (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, the chamber's head investigative committee; and U.S. Rep. Robert Goodlatte (R-Va.), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.

The lawmakers were among those who led the congressional probe into ATF's Fast and Furious operation in Arizona, where agents encouraged the sale of more than 2,000 firearms to traffickers by gun stores but lost track of the weapons. Many ended up at crime scenes in Mexico.
 
Sensitive document found

Separately Thursday, Barrett joined the call for an investigation into the operation, which included agents leaving an ATF operational plan at the store when they shut it down late last year. The document listed undercover agents' real names, vehicle descriptions, cellphone numbers and secret signals used when busting a suspect.

"Clearly, there is a need for an examination of what went wrong with this operation," said Barrett, a Democrat. "In particular, I am concerned about sloppiness with documents being left behind that potentially put people's lives in danger."

Two Milwaukee police officers worked with ATF agents on the effort, which was under the control of the agency's Milwaukee office.

Flynn called ATF a valuable partner in his department's efforts to get illegal guns off the street. He acknowledged the operation had problems and needs to be investigated.

However, Flynn said Congress has spent years damaging the ATF's ability to do its job by cutting funding and putting special restrictions on it that other agencies do not get.

"When you look at an agency over time, it requires consistent leadership. I don't think it is a shock that things may go wrong at the street level when there has been a willful attempt to undermine senior leadership to set a consistent direction. There is inevitably a domino effect," he said. "It is an operation where some things went wrong. Some things went right. Clearly better supervision would have been helpful."

President Barack Obama has nominated Jones to be permanent director. The agency has been without a director since 2006, when Congress passed a provision in the Patriot Act requiring the director to be confirmed. Sensenbrenner said he inserted the provision to bring the ATF in line with other agencies.

"All the other major law enforcement agencies had Senate-confirmed heads except the ATF," Sensenbrenner said in a written statement Thursday. "The goal was to give ATF more stature and credibility, and it was an attempt to strengthen the agency after some high-profile failures."

Barrett said the case shows the need for a permanent director to be confirmed by Congress.

On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), called the effort a "failed operation" and also said the case shows the need to confirm Jones.

Barrett said politicians from both parties are going to use the blunders of this operation to make a point.

"There are critics of the ATF who are going to use this as an example of its failure, and there will be those who are concerned that ATF has been handcuffed and are going to use this to make the argument that you can't defund and take away powers from an agency, fail to confirm a permanent director and then complain that it's not doing its job," he said.

Johnson sent a separate letter to Jones expressing concern about the way the operation was handled and anger at how agents treated the owner of the building where they located their undercover storefront. Johnson said he contacted the agency more than two weeks ago after learning about the damage to property but never heard back.

"With the President calling on Congress to give BATF expansive new powers under a so-called assault weapons ban and other broad gun control measures, I believe it is incumbent on the BATF to fully explain why incidents of mismanagement, such as last year's events in Milwaukee, continue to occur," Johnson wrote.

ATF spokesman Special Agent Robert Schmidt did not return calls seeking comment Thursday. U.S. Attorney James Santelle, whose office was briefed on the Milwaukee sting before it was launched, could not be reached for comment.

Flynn said the operational goal was to seize illegal guns in Milwaukee from across the city, not necessarily in the Riverwest residential area where the store was located.

"This is an attempt by ATF to focus on the firearm," he said. "This effort is one tool of many."

Barrett said he was briefed about the operation last year. He was told the task force was targeting illegal guns, but not that it would be a storefront sting or where the operation would be located.
 
Residents angry

Several residents in the Riverwest neighborhood, where the store was set up in a former sign company building, are upset the agency brought drug dealers and gun-carrying felons to their neighborhood. They learned about the operation from the Journal Sentinel.

Barrett said he plans to meet with residents. He declined to comment on ATF's selection of a densely populated neighborhood for the storefront sting. The defendants in the criminal cases that were filed are all from outside the area of the store.

David Salkin, who unknowingly rented his building to the agency for its undercover operation, said the ATF owes him about $15,000 because of damage to his building, unpaid utility bills and lost rent. The agency contends the amount is much smaller.

An ATF attorney told Salkin to file a claim with the federal government and warned him to stop contacting the agency.

ATF attorney Patricia Cangemi wrote to Salkin, saying in part, "If you continue to contact the Agents after being so advised your contacts may be construed as harassment under the law. Threats or harassment of a Federal Agent is of grave concern."
 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 01, 2013, 07:11:13 AM
http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/decorated-combat-veteran-arrested-in-new-york-charged-with-5-felonies-for-possession-of-ar-magazines_01312013


Here we go. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on February 01, 2013, 10:19:09 AM
Lake Stevens pays couple $100,000 after police force way into home.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020235617_lakestevenssettlementxml.html

The article is quite a read... and those two idiots will remain police officers. Just amazing.

Wow.  That is one of strangest stories...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 04, 2013, 08:14:30 AM
Why Police Lie Under Oath
 
By MICHELLE ALEXANDER

 

THOUSANDS of people plead guilty to crimes every year in the United States because they know that the odds of a jury’s believing their word over a police officer’s are slim to none. As a juror, whom are you likely to believe: the alleged criminal in an orange jumpsuit or two well-groomed police officers in uniforms who just swore to God they’re telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but? As one of my colleagues recently put it, “Everyone knows you have to be crazy to accuse the police of lying.”

But are police officers necessarily more trustworthy than alleged criminals? I think not. Not just because the police have a special inclination toward confabulation, but because, disturbingly, they have an incentive to lie. In this era of mass incarceration, the police shouldn’t be trusted any more than any other witness, perhaps less so.

That may sound harsh, but numerous law enforcement officials have put the matter more bluntly.  Peter Keane, a former San Francisco Police commissioner, wrote an article in The San Francisco Chronicle decrying a police culture that treats lying as the norm: “Police officer perjury in court to justify illegal dope searches is commonplace. One of the dirty little not-so-secret secrets of the criminal justice system is undercover narcotics officers intentionally lying under oath. It is a perversion of the American justice system that strikes directly at the rule of law. Yet it is the routine way of doing business in courtrooms everywhere in America.”

The New York City Police Department is not exempt from this critique. In 2011, hundreds of drug cases were dismissed after several police officers were accused of mishandling evidence. That year, Justice Gustin L. Reichbach of the State Supreme Court in Brooklyn condemned a widespread culture of lying and corruption in the department’s drug enforcement units. “I thought I was not naïve,” he said when announcing a guilty verdict involving a police detective who had planted crack cocaine on a pair of suspects. “But even this court was shocked, not only by the seeming pervasive scope of misconduct but even more distressingly by the seeming casualness by which such conduct is employed.”

Remarkably, New York City officers have been found to engage in patterns of deceit in cases involving charges as minor as trespass. In September it was reported that the Bronx district attorney’s office was so alarmed by police lying that it decided to stop prosecuting people who were stopped and arrested for trespassing at public housing projects, unless prosecutors first interviewed the arresting officer to ensure the arrest was actually warranted. Jeannette Rucker, the chief of arraignments for the Bronx district attorney, explained in a letter that it had become apparent that the police were arresting people even when there was convincing evidence that they were innocent. To justify the arrests, Ms. Rucker claimed, police officers provided false written statements, and in depositions, the arresting officers gave false testimony.

Mr. Keane, in his Chronicle article, offered two major reasons the police lie so much. First, because they can. Police officers “know that in a swearing match between a drug defendant and a police officer, the judge always rules in favor of the officer.” At worst, the case will be dismissed, but the officer is free to continue business as usual. Second, criminal defendants are typically poor and uneducated, often belong to a racial minority, and often have a criminal record.  “Police know that no one cares about these people,” Mr. Keane explained.

All true, but there is more to the story than that.

Police departments have been rewarded in recent years for the sheer numbers of stops, searches and arrests. In the war on drugs, federal grant programs like the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program have encouraged state and local law enforcement agencies to boost drug arrests in order to compete for millions of dollars in funding. Agencies receive cash rewards for arresting high numbers of people for drug offenses, no matter how minor the offenses or how weak the evidence. Law enforcement has increasingly become a numbers game. And as it has, police officers’ tendency to regard procedural rules as optional and to lie and distort the facts has grown as well. Numerous scandals involving police officers lying or planting drugs — in Tulia, Tex. and Oakland, Calif., for example — have been linked to federally funded drug task forces eager to keep the cash rolling in.

THE pressure to boost arrest numbers is not limited to drug law enforcement. Even where no clear financial incentives exist, the “get tough” movement has warped police culture to such a degree that police chiefs and individual officers feel pressured to meet stop-and-frisk or arrest quotas in order to prove their “productivity.”

For the record, the New York City police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, denies that his department has arrest quotas. Such denials are mandatory, given that quotas are illegal under state law. But as the Urban Justice Center’s Police Reform Organizing Project has documented, numerous officers have contradicted Mr. Kelly. In 2010, a New York City police officer named Adil Polanco told a local ABC News reporter that “our primary job is not to help anybody, our primary job is not to assist anybody, our primary job is to get those numbers and come back with them.” He continued: “At the end of the night you have to come back with something.  You have to write somebody, you have to arrest somebody, even if the crime is not committed, the number’s there. So our choice is to come up with the number.”

Exposing police lying is difficult largely because it is rare for the police to admit their own lies or to acknowledge the lies of other officers. This reluctance derives partly from the code of silence that governs police practice and from the ways in which the system of mass incarceration is structured to reward dishonesty. But it’s also because police officers are human.

Research shows that ordinary human beings lie a lot — multiple times a day — even when there’s no clear benefit to lying. Generally, humans lie about relatively minor things like “I lost your phone number; that’s why I didn’t call” or “No, really, you don’t look fat.” But humans can also be persuaded to lie about far more important matters, especially if the lie will enhance or protect their reputation or standing in a group.

The natural tendency to lie makes quota systems and financial incentives that reward the police for the sheer numbers of people stopped, frisked or arrested especially dangerous. One lie can destroy a life, resulting in the loss of employment, a prison term and relegation to permanent second-class status. The fact that our legal system has become so tolerant of police lying indicates how corrupted our criminal justice system has become by declarations of war, “get tough” mantras, and a seemingly insatiable appetite for locking up and locking out the poorest and darkest among us.

And, no, I’m not crazy for thinking so.


Michelle Alexander is the author of “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.”
 

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/opinion/sunday/why-police-officers-lie-under-oath.html?_r=0&pagewanted=print

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 05, 2013, 06:23:14 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/04/doj-drones-paper_n_2619582.html


LOL - but but but but - nobel peace prize!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2013, 06:52:20 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/obamas-leaked-drone-memo-2013-2?op=1


Where are all the anti-war liberals now? 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2013, 06:56:29 AM
Ask yourself this question: If the US government is benign, why does it need to have the Patriot Act, secret rendition sites in 54 or more countries around the world; NDAA, SIPA, SOPA, FEMA camps; TSA VIPR teams on our highways and at our bus and train stations (more security theater); 7000 MORE M-4's for DHS (the REAL military kind, you know the full-auto kind that are the REAL "assault weapons" as opposed to the civilian semi-auto kind which the government is trying to ban); DHS purchasing 1.6 BILLION rounds of hollow point ammunition (ammunition that is not allowed on the battlefield per the Rules of Land Warfare so who are they going to use it against); to give heavily armored vehicles to local law enforcement around the country; to have security camera's and drones everywhere all tied together in fusion centers; a massive data center that has it's own power generating facility capable of capturing and storing all of the electronic (phone, internet, radio you name it) communications occuring every second on the entire planet for the next hundred years; to feel up travelers private parts (especially old people and children) in a effort to make everyone "feel safe"; to authorize in Obama Care (HR3590.AS, Section 5210 Establishing a Ready Reserve Corps) the formation of a federal civilian armed force of equal number, equipment and training to the U.S. Military; to hold "predeployment cross training and qualification" drills involving military and civilian paramilitary forces in heavily populated urban areas using military armored vehicles and helicopters firing their weapons indiscriminately (using blank ammunition); DHS's "See Something Say Something" program to turn our nation into a gaggle of government informants reminiscent of East Germany during the Cold War; to discredit right wing religious groups, prolife groups, pro Second Amendment groups and veterans returning from combat deployment as "future threats to America"?

Tell me AGAIN why DHS needs 7000 full auto M4's and 1.6 BILLION rounds of ammunition?

Instead of worrying about a law abiding citizen's semiautomatic AR15 that he uses to shoot cardboard targets a couple times a summer, why aren’t We The People wet-our-pants terrified of the sociopaths in DHS that are ordering banned for civilians full auto M4's with enough ammo to shoot every man woman and child in this country FIVE TIMES?

Ya, let's ban scary looking semi-automatic rifles. What a bunch of nitwits we are.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/obamas-leaked-drone-memo-2013-2?op=1#ixzz2K8BnVePB
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2013, 07:12:53 PM
Government prosecutors argued against granting bond to Deming, N.M., gun dealer Rick Reese and his son Ryin, painting them as dangerous risks for release, court documents received this evening by Gun Rights Examiner reveal. United States Attorney Kenneth J. Gonzales, nominated by President Obama last November to serve on the U.S. District Court in the District of New Mexico, filed a supplement to the defendant’s motion for release in that court last Tuesday, citing an affidavit he claimed contained “statements relevant to the motion.
 
“[T]hey highlight the Defendants release still pose a danger to the community,” Gonzales wrote in the electronically filed document. “The statement also show the Defendants are not likely to follow any Court imposed orders or conditions.”
 
Gonzales was referring to a January 29 sworn and notarized statement by Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Jose Ramon Martinez, in which the agent related monitored telephone conversations between the elder Reese and wife Terri, and also between son Ryin and his girlfriend.
 
Supposedly incriminating statements included Reese telling his wife “The truth will come out and these people will be exposed for what they truly are – a bunch of cons liars and cheats and thieves.
 
“They took a premise, they wanted our stuff, and they wanted to destroy out family so they reverse engineered,” the affidavit continued, quoting Reese.
 
“In reference to AUSA Maria Armijjo, Terri Reese stated ‘she is willing to get in bed with the devil to destroy a good Christian family,” the affidavit again alleged.
 
In a second intercepted call, the affidavit states Reese told his wife “He did say that they are attempting to hide and seal a whole bunch of stuff that they are trying to open you know, and that’s really encouraging because it shows the depth of the depravity of the justice department, it shows that they are just lying cheating stealing, it shows they are whores.”
 
“Rick Reese also stated to his wife, ‘You got ‘em by the [redacted]!” the affidavit further quotes.
 
In a third monitored telephone call, this one between son Ryin Reese and his unidentified girlfriend, the younger Reese is quoted telling her “The judge made it clear that he didn’t give a [redacted] about XXXX.”
 
Referring to the U.S. Marshal’s Service, the girlfriend remarked “They enjoy their power,” eliciting a response from Ryin that “[T]hey are the same people that back shoot 14-year-old boys and get medals, Ruby Ridge style.
 
In a subsequent call to Terri, Martinez wrote “Rick made comments to the effect of the following: ‘The marshals were both AH’s not at all like the marshals that we had during the trial … these two were full of testosterone. The more people like us that they hunt down and whack and murder, maybe not physically like Randy Weaver [or] the Branch Davidians, but they murdered my marriage.’”
 
So far, the conversations recorded and reported mirror sentiments shared by millions of peaceable Americans outraged by government operations in which citizens were killed when alternative peaceful outcomes were available. The clincher, at least as far as Gonzales is concerned, is in a final recorded conversation between Rick and Terri in which he reportedly stated “They’ll get the world they deserve pretty soon!”
 
Note there was no hint of this sentiment referring to anything illegal or violent, and again, such sentiments can be found on gun blogs and forums exposiing government corruption and excesses and calling for justice catching up to those who perpetrate injustice under color of authority. Indeed, that Judge Robert C. Brack ruled against Gonzales, who wanted to keep the new trial motion hearing selaed from the public, and then ruled against the prosecution’s fight to deny the Reese family both a new trial and bail, citing their suppression of evidence, point to the slow recognition that the defendants have been the victims.
 
This transparent attempt to portray the defendants as dangers to the community and as being too risky to grant bail, especially after almost 18 months behind bars with all major charges either dismissed or having been found not guilty of, and the further attempt to do so closed off from public scrutiny should raise serious doubts on the fitness of Gonzales to be elevated to a judgeship and more. A correspondence by a California attorney to N.M. Senator Martin Heinrich requesting an investigation for misconduct, to include the potential for disbarment and criminal prosecution, may point the way to similar efforts from both supporters of the Reese family and those simply interested in basic justice. American citizens are presumed innocent until proven guilty, and are not to be destroyed in the process of trying to defend themselves, with all their assets seized, against ambitious government careerists wielding essentially unlimited power and resources.

http://www.examiner.com/article/government-fought-bail-release-claiming-gun-dealers-a-danger-to-community

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on February 06, 2013, 07:17:01 PM
Government prosecutors argued against granting bond to Deming, N.M., gun dealer Rick Reese and his son Ryin, painting them as dangerous risks for release, court documents received this evening by Gun Rights Examiner reveal. United States Attorney Kenneth J. Gonzales, nominated by President Obama last November to serve on the U.S. District Court in the District of New Mexico, filed a supplement to the defendant’s motion for release in that court last Tuesday, citing an affidavit he claimed contained “statements relevant to the motion.
 
“[T]hey highlight the Defendants release still pose a danger to the community,” Gonzales wrote in the electronically filed document. “The statement also show the Defendants are not likely to follow any Court imposed orders or conditions.”
 
Gonzales was referring to a January 29 sworn and notarized statement by Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Jose Ramon Martinez, in which the agent related monitored telephone conversations between the elder Reese and wife Terri, and also between son Ryin and his girlfriend.
 
Supposedly incriminating statements included Reese telling his wife “The truth will come out and these people will be exposed for what they truly are – a bunch of cons liars and cheats and thieves.
 
“They took a premise, they wanted our stuff, and they wanted to destroy out family so they reverse engineered,” the affidavit continued, quoting Reese.
 
“In reference to AUSA Maria Armijjo, Terri Reese stated ‘she is willing to get in bed with the devil to destroy a good Christian family,” the affidavit again alleged.
 
In a second intercepted call, the affidavit states Reese told his wife “He did say that they are attempting to hide and seal a whole bunch of stuff that they are trying to open you know, and that’s really encouraging because it shows the depth of the depravity of the justice department, it shows that they are just lying cheating stealing, it shows they are whores.”
 
“Rick Reese also stated to his wife, ‘You got ‘em by the [redacted]!” the affidavit further quotes.
 
In a third monitored telephone call, this one between son Ryin Reese and his unidentified girlfriend, the younger Reese is quoted telling her “The judge made it clear that he didn’t give a [redacted] about XXXX.”
 
Referring to the U.S. Marshal’s Service, the girlfriend remarked “They enjoy their power,” eliciting a response from Ryin that “[T]hey are the same people that back shoot 14-year-old boys and get medals, Ruby Ridge style.
 
In a subsequent call to Terri, Martinez wrote “Rick made comments to the effect of the following: ‘The marshals were both AH’s not at all like the marshals that we had during the trial … these two were full of testosterone. The more people like us that they hunt down and whack and murder, maybe not physically like Randy Weaver [or] the Branch Davidians, but they murdered my marriage.’”
 
So far, the conversations recorded and reported mirror sentiments shared by millions of peaceable Americans outraged by government operations in which citizens were killed when alternative peaceful outcomes were available. The clincher, at least as far as Gonzales is concerned, is in a final recorded conversation between Rick and Terri in which he reportedly stated “They’ll get the world they deserve pretty soon!”
 
Note there was no hint of this sentiment referring to anything illegal or violent, and again, such sentiments can be found on gun blogs and forums exposiing government corruption and excesses and calling for justice catching up to those who perpetrate injustice under color of authority. Indeed, that Judge Robert C. Brack ruled against Gonzales, who wanted to keep the new trial motion hearing selaed from the public, and then ruled against the prosecution’s fight to deny the Reese family both a new trial and bail, citing their suppression of evidence, point to the slow recognition that the defendants have been the victims.
 
This transparent attempt to portray the defendants as dangers to the community and as being too risky to grant bail, especially after almost 18 months behind bars with all major charges either dismissed or having been found not guilty of, and the further attempt to do so closed off from public scrutiny should raise serious doubts on the fitness of Gonzales to be elevated to a judgeship and more. A correspondence by a California attorney to N.M. Senator Martin Heinrich requesting an investigation for misconduct, to include the potential for disbarment and criminal prosecution, may point the way to similar efforts from both supporters of the Reese family and those simply interested in basic justice. American citizens are presumed innocent until proven guilty, and are not to be destroyed in the process of trying to defend themselves, with all their assets seized, against ambitious government careerists wielding essentially unlimited power and resources.

http://www.examiner.com/article/government-fought-bail-release-claiming-gun-dealers-a-danger-to-community


What did they do wrong? What were they arrested for?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2013, 07:17:08 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/06/obama-drone-program-targeted-killing_n_2631425.html


LMFAO!!!!!

Now they are upset?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2013, 07:25:01 PM
WASHINGTON -- In October 2011, Scott Shane, a national security reporter for The New York Times, sent an email to a branch of the Department of Justice that deals with Freedom of Information Act requests, to check on one of his FOIA filings.

Sixteen months earlier, Shane had asked that DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel -- which advises the White House on the legality of government actions -- release any memoranda it had relating to the president's top-secret program of targeted killing of suspected terrorists, much of which was understood to be conducted by drones.

President Barack Obama's drone and targeted killing program, which has remained highly obscure despite expanding rapidly under his watch, burst into the public discourse again on Monday after a DOJ briefing paper, outlining the executive branch's interpretation of its powers to kill extrajudicially, was published by NBC News.

But back in late 2011, the program, and its possible reach, was just starting to receive attention. That September, an American citizen named Anwar al-Awlaki, who had become a significant figure in al Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula, was killed in a CIA drone strike in Yemen. President Obama hailed the killing in a public address (see the video below).

A week later, Charles Savage, another national security reporter at the Times, wrote that Awlaki's killing -- and the killing, more broadly, of any American with close ties to al Qaeda -- had been authorized by a secret memo from the Office of Legal Counsel.

Shane pushed the Justice Department about his aging FOIA request. In June 2010, his request had been immediately accepted and granted "expedited processing," but now Shane wanted, as the OLC's FOIA officer later wrote to a colleague, "an explanation of why it had taken a year and a half to respond."

"We are almost finished processing his request," the colleague, OLC lawyer Peter Finn, wrote back.




A few days later, a response finally arrived in Shane's mailbox: Not only was the OLC denying his request, but it refused to acknowledge if the documents he'd requested even existed. "The very fact of the existence or nonexistence of such documents," the letter said, "is itself classified."

For the past three years, delays and convoluted explanations of this sort have been the response of the Obama administration to any effort to learn anything about the targeted killing program. For years, the government described any such program, and particularly the CIA's role in it, as so sensitive that it couldn't even be discussed. But long after the practice of targeted killing became a matter of widespread discussion -- and the president himself addressed targeting decisions in an informal Google hangout -- the administration has continued to use elaborate legal rationales and the blanket assertion of national security needs, to prevent any releases.

"To say that there is little transparency about the CIA's role in this is a real understatement," said Jameel Jaffer, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, which has had several FOIA requests denied on similar grounds. "We really have nothing at all, from the CIA itself, about its role, about the standards, about the process used to add people to kill lists, about number killed, about anything."

On his first day in the Oval Office, Obama promised to deliver a new era of government openness and ordered that FOIA requests be met quickly and generously.

Instead, the administration has thrown up roadblocks at every effort to learn about the targeted killing program. Court filings have been greeted with assertions of executive privilege or national security exemptions. Human rights researchers have been ignored. And at least a dozen formal inquiries from Congress have been met with silence.

FOIA experts have explored every avenue to squeeze out information. Jason Leopold, an investigative reporter with Truthout, has even asked for the emails behind the government's decisions to deny other FOIA filings. (It was one of Leopold's requests, shared with The Huffington Post, that revealed the OLC exchange about Shane.)

The administration's effort not to answer has been so convoluted and shrouded in obfuscation that one federal judge recently decried its "Alice-in-Wonderland nature," even as she concluded there was no way around the administration's arguments.

The lack of information affects not just legal watchdogs and government oversight; it also limits outside attempts to measure the efficacy of the program.

James Cavallaro, a human rights researcher at Stanford, recently spent six months attempting to meet with members of Obama's national security team before publishing a study that revealed the deadly consequences of the U.S. drone program in Pakistan. He never received a reply.

"It's disconcerting that there's not greater transparency and really unacceptable," Cavallaro said.

In his research on human rights violations around the world, Cavallaro noted that it's not uncommon for host countries to rebuff his requests for access and interviews (although he's had luck in some unlikely places, like Panama and Cambodia).

"But here's the kicker," he said. "Is that the standard that should apply in the United States? The standards of the many abusive governments that commit rights violations? If that's the standard the U.S. should hold itself to, then they're doing a fine job."

The ACLU had no better luck when it brought a lawsuit in mid-2010 against the government to prevent the killing of Awlaki, with his father as the plaintiff. The government responded in part that the case should be dismissed on the grounds that defending itself would require acknowledging a classified program. The case died a few months later.

But with every new speech by an administration official discussing the program, the blanket claim that the government cannot respond to FOIA requests or defend itself in court "becomes substantially less plausible," said Micah Zenko, an expert on targeted killing at the Council on Foreign Relations who has closely followed the secrecy debate.

"Every administration wants maximum power and minimum oversight," Zenko said. "Nobody wants to have their homework graded. But the whole point of the Constitution is that the president has his homework graded."

The Awlaki killing was the first known time an American citizen was deliberately killed by a U.S.-controlled drone strike. Two weeks later, his 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, was killed in a separate attack in Yemen. As Zenko has noted, administration officials initially claimed the boy was "in his mid-twenties" and "of military age," before being confronted with his true date of birth. The State Department still refuses to address the killing, saying that it has yet to receive proof of his death from Yemeni authorities.

The DOJ briefing paper published on Monday offers yet another twist in the saga. It is not the OLC memo on which Savage had reported in 2011, but is instead an unclassified summary of the memo that was given to Congress last summer.

But when a handful of journalists, learning about the existence of the paper last year, sent a FOIA request for a copy, they were told that it was just an unfinished part of the government's internal deliberation process. In other words, they were told it was a draft -- and not subject to FOIA release.

This story has been updated to note Truthout reporter Jason Leopold's work on uncovering the targeted killing program, including information he obtained from FOIA filings and shared with HuffPost.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2013, 08:51:51 AM


Chilling legal memo from Obama DOJ justifies assassination of US citizens

The president's partisan lawyers purport to vest him with the most extreme power a political leader can seize



Glenn Greenwald

guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 5 February 2013 10.56 EST

Jump to comments (1547)




Barack Obama Photograph: Reuters


The most extremist power any political leader can assert is the power to target his own citizens for execution without any charges or due process, far from any battlefield. The Obama administration has not only asserted exactly that power in theory, but has exercised it in practice. In September 2011, it killed US citizen Anwar Awlaki in a drone strike in Yemen, along with US citizen Samir Khan, and then, in circumstances that are still unexplained, two weeks later killed Awlaki's 16-year-old American son Abdulrahman with a separate drone strike in Yemen.

Since then, senior Obama officials including Attorney General Eric Holder and John Brennan, Obama's top terrorism adviser and his current nominee to lead the CIA, have explicitly argued that the president is and should be vested with this power. Meanwhile, a Washington Post article from October reported that the administration is formally institutionalizing this president's power to decide who dies under the Orwellian title "disposition matrix".

When the New York Times back in April, 2010 first confirmed the existence of Obama's hit list, it made clear just what an extremist power this is, noting: "It is extremely rare, if not unprecedented, for an American to be approved for targeted killing." The NYT quoted a Bush intelligence official as saying "he did not know of any American who was approved for targeted killing under the former president". When the existence of Obama's hit list was first reported several months earlier by the Washington Post's Dana Priest, she wrote that the "list includes three Americans".

What has made these actions all the more radical is the absolute secrecy with which Obama has draped all of this. Not only is the entire process carried out solely within the Executive branch - with no checks or oversight of any kind - but there is zero transparency and zero accountability. The president's underlings compile their proposed lists of who should be executed, and the president - at a charming weekly event dubbed by White House aides as "Terror Tuesday" - then chooses from "baseball cards" and decrees in total secrecy who should die. The power of accuser, prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner are all consolidated in this one man, and those powers are exercised in the dark.

In fact, The Most Transparent Administration Ever™ has been so fixated on secrecy that they have refused even to disclose the legal memoranda prepared by Obama lawyers setting forth their legal rationale for why the president has this power. During the Bush years, when Bush refused to disclose the memoranda from his Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) that legally authorized torture, rendition, warrantless eavesdropping and the like, leading Democratic lawyers such as Dawn Johnsen (Obama's first choice to lead the OLC) vehemently denounced this practice as a grave threat, warning that "the Bush Administration's excessive reliance on 'secret law' threatens the effective functioning of American democracy" and "the withholding from Congress and the public of legal interpretations by the [OLC] upsets the system of checks and balances between the executive and legislative branches of government."

But when it comes to Obama's assassination power, this is exactly what his administration has done. It has repeatedly refused to disclose the principal legal memoranda prepared by Obama OLC lawyers that justified his kill list. It is, right now, vigorously resisting lawsuits from the New York Times and the ACLU to obtain that OLC memorandum. In sum, Obama not only claims he has the power to order US citizens killed with no transparency, but that even the documents explaining the legal rationale for this power are to be concealed. He's maintaining secret law on the most extremist power he can assert.

Last night, NBC News' Michael Isikoff released a 16-page "white paper" prepared by the Obama DOJ that purports to justify Obama's power to target even Americans for assassination without due process (the memo is embedded in full below). This is not the primary OLC memo justifying Obama's kill list - that is still concealed - but it appears to track the reasoning of that memo as anonymously described to the New York Times in October 2011.

This new memo is entitled: "Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed Against a US Citizen Who is a Senior Operational Leader of Al-Qa'ida or An Associated Force". It claims its conclusion is "reached with recognition of the extraordinary seriousness of a lethal operation by the United States against a US citizen". Yet it is every bit as chilling as the Bush OLC torture memos in how its clinical, legalistic tone completely sanitizes the radical and dangerous power it purports to authorize.

I've written many times at length about why the Obama assassination program is such an extreme and radical threat - see here for one of the most comprehensive discussions, with documentation of how completely all of this violates Obama and Holder's statements before obtaining power - and won't repeat those arguments here. Instead, there are numerous points that should be emphasized about the fundamentally misleading nature of this new memo:

1. Equating government accusations with guilt

The core distortion of the War on Terror under both Bush and Obama is the Orwellian practice of equating government accusations of terrorism with proof of guilt. One constantly hears US government defenders referring to "terrorists" when what they actually mean is: those accused by the government of terrorism. This entire memo is grounded in this deceit.

Time and again, it emphasizes that the authorized assassinations are carried out "against a senior operational leader of al-Qaida or its associated forces who poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States." Undoubtedly fearing that this document would one day be public, Obama lawyers made certain to incorporate this deceit into the title itself: "Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed Against a US Citizen Who is a Senior Operational Leader of al-Qaida or An Associated Force."

This ensures that huge numbers of citizens - those who spend little time thinking about such things and/or authoritarians who assume all government claims are true - will instinctively justify what is being done here on the ground that we must kill the Terrorists or joining al-Qaida means you should be killed. That's the "reasoning" process that has driven the War on Terror since it commenced: if the US government simply asserts without evidence or trial that someone is a terrorist, then they are assumed to be, and they can then be punished as such - with indefinite imprisonment or death.

But of course, when this memo refers to "a Senior Operational Leader of al-Qaida", what it actually means is this: someone whom the President - in total secrecy and with no due process - has accused of being that. Indeed, the memo itself makes this clear, as it baldly states that presidential assassinations are justified when "an informed, high-level official of the US government has determined that the targeted individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the US".

This is the crucial point: the memo isn't justifying the due-process-free execution of senior al-Qaida leaders who pose an imminent threat to the US. It is justifying the due-process-free execution of people secretly accused by the president and his underlings, with no due process, of being that. The distinction between (a) government accusations and (b) proof of guilt is central to every free society, by definition, yet this memo - and those who defend Obama's assassination power - willfully ignore it.

Those who justify all of this by arguing that Obama can and should kill al-Qaida leaders who are trying to kill Americans are engaged in supreme question-begging. Without any due process, transparency or oversight, there is no way to know who is a "senior al-Qaida leader" and who is posing an "imminent threat" to Americans. All that can be known is who Obama, in total secrecy, accuses of this.

(Indeed, membership in al-Qaida is not even required to be assassinated, as one can be a member of a group deemed to be an "associated force" of al-Qaida, whatever that might mean: a formulation so broad and ill-defined that, as Law Professor Kevin Jon Heller argues, it means the memo "authorizes the use of lethal force against individuals whose targeting is, without more, prohibited by international law".)

The definition of an extreme authoritarian is one who is willing blindly to assume that government accusations are true without any evidence presented or opportunity to contest those accusations. This memo - and the entire theory justifying Obama's kill list - centrally relies on this authoritarian conflation of government accusations and valid proof of guilt.

They are not the same and never have been. Political leaders who decree guilt in secret and with no oversight inevitably succumb to error and/or abuse of power. Such unchecked accusatory decrees are inherently untrustworthy (indeed, Yemen experts have vehemently contested the claim that Awlaki himself was a senior al-Qaida leader posing an imminent threat to the US). That's why due process is guaranteed in the Constitution and why judicial review of government accusations has been a staple of western justice since the Magna Carta: because leaders can't be trusted to decree guilt and punish citizens without evidence and an adversarial process. That is the age-old basic right on which this memo, and the Obama presidency, is waging war.

2. Creating a ceiling, not a floor

The most vital fact to note about this memorandum is that it is not purporting to impose requirements on the president's power to assassinate US citizens. When it concludes that the president has the authority to assassinate "a Senior Operational Leader of al-Qaida" who "poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the US" where capture is "infeasible", it is not concluding that assassinations are permissible only in those circumstances.
 
To the contrary, the memo expressly makes clear that presidential assassinations may be permitted even when none of those circumstances prevail: "This paper does not attempt to determine the minimum requirements necessary to render such an operation lawful." Instead, as the last line of the memo states: "it concludes only that the stated conditions would be sufficient to make lawful a lethal operation" - not that such conditions are necessary to find these assassinations legal. The memo explicitly leaves open the possibility that presidential assassinations of US citizens may be permissible even when the target is not a senior al-Qaida leader posing an imminent threat and/or when capture is feasible.

Critically, the rationale of the memo - that the US is engaged in a global war against al-Qaida and "associated forces" - can be easily used to justify presidential assassinations of US citizens in circumstances far beyond the ones described in this memo. If you believe the president has the power to execute US citizens based on the accusation that the citizen has joined al-Qaida, what possible limiting principle can you cite as to why that shouldn't apply to a low-level al-Qaida member, including ones found in places where capture may be feasible (including US soil)? The purported limitations on this power set forth in this memo, aside from being incredibly vague, can be easily discarded once the central theory of presidential power is embraced.

3. Relies on the core Bush/Cheney theory of a global battlefield

The primary theory embraced by the Bush administration to justify its War on Terror policies was that the "battlefield" is no longer confined to identifiable geographical areas, but instead, the entire globe is now one big, unlimited "battlefield". That theory is both radical and dangerous because a president's powers are basically omnipotent on a "battlefield". There, state power is shielded from law, from courts, from constitutional guarantees, from all forms of accountability: anyone on a battlefield can be killed or imprisoned without charges. Thus, to posit the world as a battlefield is, by definition, to create an imperial, omnipotent presidency. That is the radical theory that unleashed all the rest of the controversial and lawless Bush/Cheney policies.

This "world-is-a-battlefield" theory was once highly controversial among Democrats. John Kerry famously denounced it when running for president, arguing instead that the effort against terrorism is "primarily an intelligence and law enforcement operation that requires cooperation around the world".

But this global-war theory is exactly what lies at heart of the Obama approach to Terrorism generally and this memo specifically. It is impossible to defend Obama's assassination powers without embracing it (which is why key Obama officials have consistently done so). That's because these assassinations are taking place in countries far from any war zone, such as Yemen and Somalia. You can't defend the application of "war powers" in these countries without embracing the once-very-controversial Bush/Cheney view that the whole is now a "battlefield" and the president's war powers thus exist without geographic limits.

This new memo makes clear that this Bush/Cheney worldview is at the heart of the Obama presidency. The president, it claims, "retains authority to use force against al-Qaida and associated forces outside the area of active hostilities". In other words: there are, subject to the entirely optional "feasibility of capture" element, no geographic limits to the president's authority to kill anyone he wants. This power applies not only to war zones, but everywhere in the world that he claims a member of al-Qaida is found. This memo embraces and institutionalizes the core Bush/Cheney theory that justified the entire panoply of policies Democrats back then pretended to find so objectionable.

4. Expanding the concept of "imminence" beyond recognition

The memo claims that the president's assassination power applies to a senior al-Qaida member who "poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States". That is designed to convince citizens to accept this power by leading them to believe it's similar to common and familiar domestic uses of lethal force on US soil: if, for instance, an armed criminal is in the process of robbing a bank or is about to shoot hostages, then the "imminence" of the threat he poses justifies the use of lethal force against him by the police.

But this rhetorical tactic is totally misleading. The memo is authorizing assassinations against citizens in circumstances far beyond this understanding of "imminence". Indeed, the memo expressly states that it is inventing "a broader concept of imminence" than is typically used in domestic law. Specifically, the president's assassination power "does not require that the US have clear evidence that a specific attack . . . will take place in the immediate future". The US routinely assassinates its targets not when they are engaged in or plotting attacks but when they are at home, with family members, riding in a car, at work, at funerals, rescuing other drone victims, etc.

Many of the early objections to this new memo have focused on this warped and incredibly broad definition of "imminence". The ACLU's Jameel Jaffer told Isikoff that the memo "redefines the word imminence in a way that deprives the word of its ordinary meaning". Law Professor Kevin Jon Heller called Jaffer's objection "an understatement", noting that the memo's understanding of "imminence" is "wildly overbroad" under international law.

Crucially, Heller points out what I noted above: once you accept the memo's reasoning - that the US is engaged in a global war, that the world is a battlefield, and the president has the power to assassinate any member of al-Qaida or associated forces - then there is no way coherent way to limit this power to places where capture is infeasible or to persons posing an "imminent" threat. The legal framework adopted by the memo means the president can kill anyone he claims is a member of al-Qaida regardless of where they are found or what they are doing.

The only reason to add these limitations of "imminence" and "feasibility of capture" is, as Heller said, purely political: to make the theories more politically palatable. But the definitions for these terms are so vague and broad that they provide no real limits on the president's assassination power. As the ACLU's Jaffer says: "This is a chilling document" because "it argues that the government has the right to carry out the extrajudicial killing of an American citizen" and the purported limits "are elastic and vaguely defined, and it's easy to see how they could be manipulated."

5. Converting Obama underlings into objective courts

This memo is not a judicial opinion. It was not written by anyone independent of the president. To the contrary, it was written by life-long partisan lackeys: lawyers whose careerist interests depend upon staying in the good graces of Obama and the Democrats, almost certainly Marty Lederman and David Barron. Treating this document as though it confers any authority on Obama is like treating the statements of one's lawyer as a judicial finding or jury verdict.

Indeed, recall the primary excuse used to shield Bush officials from prosecution for their crimes of torture and illegal eavesdropping: namely, they got Bush-appointed lawyers in the DOJ to say that their conduct was legal, and therefore, it should be treated as such. This tactic - getting partisan lawyers and underlings of the president to say that the president's conduct is legal - was appropriately treated with scorn when invoked by Bush officials to justify their radical programs. As Digby wrote about Bush officials who pointed to the OLC memos it got its lawyers to issue about torture and eavesdropping, such a practice amounts to:


"validating the idea that obscure Justice Department officials can be granted the authority to essentially immunize officials at all levels of the government, from the president down to the lowest field officer, by issuing a secret memo. This is a very important new development in western jurisprudence and one that surely requires more study and consideration. If Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan had known about this, they could have saved themselves a lot of trouble."

Life-long Democratic Party lawyers are not going to oppose the terrorism policies of the president who appointed them. A president can always find underlings and political appointees to endorse whatever he wants to do. That's all this memo is: the by-product of obsequious lawyers telling their Party's leader that he is (of course) free to do exactly that which he wants to do, in exactly the same way that Bush got John Yoo to tell him that torture was not torture, and that even it if were, it was legal.

That's why courts, not the president's partisan lawyers, should be making these determinations. But when the ACLU tried to obtain a judicial determination as to whether Obama is actually authorized to assassinate US citizens, the Obama DOJ went to extreme lengths to block the court from ruling on that question. They didn't want independent judges to determine the law. They wanted their own lawyers to do so.

That's all this memo is: Obama-loyal appointees telling their leader that he has the authority to do what he wants. But in the warped world of US politics, this - secret memos from partisan lackeys - has replaced judicial review as the means to determine the legality of the president's conduct.

6. Making a mockery of "due process"

The core freedom most under attack by the War on Terror is the Fifth Amendment's guarantee of due process. It provides that "no person shall be . . . deprived of life . . . without due process of law". Like putting people in cages for life on island prisons with no trial, claiming that the president has the right to assassinate US citizens far from any battlefield without any charges or trial is the supreme evisceration of this right.

The memo pays lip service to the right it is destroying: "Under the traditional due process balancing analysis . . . . we recognize that there is no private interest more weighty than a person's interest in his life." But it nonetheless argues that a "balancing test" is necessary to determine the extent of the process that is due before the president can deprive someone of their life, and further argues that, as the New York Times put it when this theory was first unveiled: "while the Fifth Amendment's guarantee of due process applied, it could be satisfied by internal deliberations in the executive branch."

Stephen Colbert perfectly mocked this theory when Eric Holder first unveiled it to defend the president's assassination program. At the time, Holder actually said: "due process and judicial process are not one and the same." Colbert interpreted that claim as follows:


"Trial by jury, trial by fire, rock, paper scissors, who cares? Due process just means that there is a process that you do. The current process is apparently, first the president meets with his advisers and decides who he can kill. Then he kills them."

It is fitting indeed that the memo expressly embraces two core Bush/Cheney theories to justify this view of what "due process" requires. First, it cites the Bush DOJ's core view, as enunciated by John Yoo, that courts have no role to play in what the president does in the War on Terror because judicial review constitutes "judicial encroachment" on the "judgments by the President and his national security advisers as to when and how to use force". And then it cites the Bush DOJ's mostly successful arguments in the 2004 Hamdi case that the president has the authority even to imprison US citizens without trial provided that he accuses them of being a terrorist.

The reason this is so fitting is because, as I've detailed many times, it was these same early Bush/Cheney theories that made me want to begin writing about politics, all driven by my perception that the US government was becoming extremist and dangerous. During the early Bush years, the very idea that the US government asserted the power to imprison US citizens without charges and due process (or to eavesdrop on them) was so radical that, at the time, I could hardly believe they were being asserted out in the open.

Yet here we are almost a full decade later. And we have the current president asserting the power not merely to imprison or eavesdrop on US citizens without charges or trial, but to order them executed - and to do so in total secrecy, with no checks or oversight. If you believe the president has the power to order US citizens executed far from any battlefield with no charges or trial, then it's truly hard to conceive of any asserted power you would find objectionable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2013, 10:36:34 AM
Lawyer Sums Up The Enormous Stakes Of The NDAA Indefinite Detention Lawsuit
 


Michael Kelley|36 minutes ago|183|



Hedges v. Obama, the lawsuit challenging the indefinite detention provision of the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), continued Wednesday at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
 
A three-judge panel heard oral arguments regarding the indefinite detention clause of the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which allow the U.S. military to indefinitely detain anyone who provides "substantial support" to the Taliban, al-Qaeda or "associated forces," including "any person who has committed a belligerent act" in the aid of enemy forces.
 
A decision — whether to reinstate a permanent block of the provision or to overrule the injunction and affirm the clause — is expected in coming months. The clause is currently in effect (pending that decision), and the case is expected to go to the Supreme Court.

 
After the hearing, plaintiffs of the case held a panel in which attorney Carl Mayer gave a perfect summary of why this case is so important:
 
"In broad terms, the stakes are very high because what our case comes do to is: Are we going to have a civil justice system in the United States or a military justice system? The civil justice system is something that's ingrained in the Constitution and was always very important in com batting tyranny and building a democratic society. And what the NDAA is trying to impose is a system of military justice that allows the military to police the streets of America, to detain U.S. citizens, to detain residents in the United States in military prisons, and — probably the most frightening aspect of the NDAA — it allows detention 'until the end of hostilities.'
 
We're now, by my count, [on] day 4,163 of this war, which is an open-ended war against al-Qaeda, the Taliban and now it's defined as 'associated forces' in the NDAA."
 
Mayer then noted that this "type of militarization of our justice system has occurred before," citing the forced internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II.
 
"We're trying to prevent a repeat of episodes like that," Mayer said. "That's what the case is about — it's really about preserving our civil liberties and preserving our civil justice system, in broad terms."
 
Here's a video of the panel. Mayer's comments are at 7:20:
 


Section 1021 of the NDAA is being challenged in the case, and it reads (in part):
 
The President has the authority to detain persons that the President determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, and persons who harbored those responsible for those attacks. The President also has the authority to detain persons who were part of or substantially supported, Taliban or al-Qaida forces or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners, including any person who has committed a belligerent act, or has directly supported hostilities, in the aid of such enemy forces.
 
The government has argued that section 1021 is merely an "affirmation" of the 2001 Authorization of Military Force (AUMF), a joint resolution passed a week after 9/11 that authorizes the government to indefinitely detain “those who planned, authorized, committed, or aided in the actual 9/11 attacks” as well as those who harbored them.
 
The plaintiffs argue, and initial judge Judge Katherine Forrest agreed, that the extra language added to the NDAA (i.e. "The President also has the authority...") appeared to be a retroactive legislative fix "to provide the President (in 2012) with broader detention authority than was provided in the AUMF in 2001."
 
As the War on Terror has extended, so has its global scope. The plaintiffs in Hedges v. Obama are attempting to block the U.S. military's detainment powers on its own shores.
 
The bottom line, according to plaintiff lawyer Bruce Afran, is that the NDAA "is still unconstitutional because it allows citizens or persons in the U.S. to be held in military custody, a position that the Supreme Court has repeatedly held is unconstitutional."


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/stakes-of-indefinite-detention-lawsuit-2013-2#ixzz2KEvcuo87

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2013, 11:07:40 AM
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/02/06/cop-accused-of-seducing-women-involved-in-domestic-disputes


LMFAO!   Typical. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2013, 12:47:12 PM
Woman Allegedly Lied About Baby’s Abduction To Get Cops To Find Stolen Car

February 6, 2013 4:55 PM
 

Photo Gallery: Super Bowl XLVII
 

CHICAGO (CBS) – A young mother from Harvey was in trouble with police after lying about her baby being in her car when it was stolen Wednesday morning on Chicago’s South Side.
 
Jeanette Holt, 25, has been charged with one count of felony disorderly conduct, police said.

CBS 2’s Dana Kozlov reports police rushed to a Chatham neighborhood daycare center around 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, after Holt called 911 to report her 1997 Chevy Monte Carlo had been stolen with her 1-year-old son inside.



 
At least seven squad cars were put on alert to search the area.
 
Police conducted a massive search for the car, only to find out the child was not inside to begin with. He had been in daycare all along.
 
Police sources said the boy’s mother lied about the abduction because she wanted officers to look for her car.

 

“We arrested her as a result,” Police Supt. Garry McCarthy said. “And we need to do that when people make false claims like that, because … it’s very serious, it endangers the public at large, and definitely our police officers who may be responding in a different fashion than just to take a report for a stolen vehicle.”
 
Such false reports also consume police resources at a time when the city is only responding to 911 calls where an imminent threat is present, which was not the case here.

“The case was she dropped her baby off at daycare. Upon signing the child in, someone had jumped in her car, because she left her car running, and they drove off,” said Eltonjia Thompson, owner of 4 Ever Young Daycare.
 
To be safe, the toddler’s father was called to the daycare, and verified his son was safe.
 
Thompson said it was “very stressful.”
 
Holt was taken into custody outside the daycare as soon as police realized she was lying, about an hour after the search had begun.

She was due in court on Thursday.
 
Incidentally, it’s also illegal in the state of Illinois to leave your car running on a public street.
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2013, 01:58:47 PM
Entire Miami police squad fired after footage shows cops shopping, dining and kissing while ignoring 911 calls


 
  RT — An investigation into Miami police officers’ on-duty conduct found six officers were ignoring 911 calls while instead kissing their girlfriends, shopping, and drinking coffee.
 
One 911 call involved an unconscious five-month-old baby. Video footage shows Miami police officer Dario Socarras ignoring dispatch orders to save the child, while drinking coffee for nine minutes and lying to the dispatcher about being “en route”. Paramedics eventually reached the unconscious child, while Socarras never went – but still, the officer wrote in his daily report that he attended the scene.
 
And Socarras is only one of six officers caught neglecting their duties: after being followed and caught on surveillance video by Internal Affairs, two officers and a sergeant were fired and three were suspended without pay for dereliction of duty from the Miami Dade Police Department.
 
 The footage of the incidents documents the department’s worst case of delinquency in its history.
 
 Aside from ignoring the dispatch orders to save the unconscious baby, Socarras was also found to have ignored armed robbery and residential burglary calls. Instead, the officer was found kissing and cuddling with his girlfriend in the parking lot of a shopping mall on two different occasions.
 
 Socarras was also caught misleading a crime victim, promising to fill out a police report about items that were stolen form her, while telling dispatchers that no crime had occurred. The officer proceeded to give the victim a phony case number.
 
 “We’re talking about falsification of official records, stealing time that doesn’t belong to you, because they are supposed to be available for service or duty and they are not,” former Miami Police Chief Ken Harms told CBS4.
 
 And the officer’s supervisor was no better: Sgt. Jennifer Gonzalez was drinking coffee with Socorras while he ignored a dispatch order and was separately recorded shopping while on duty at stores including Target, Lowes and Kohl’s. In one incident, Gonzalez bought so many items at a department store that she even requested a store clerk to help her carry and load her goods into her police car.
 
 Investigators also found that Gonzalez would spend hours visiting her parents in an area that was outside of the district she was employed to be working in. The sergeant has been accused of letting her own neglectful work habits affect others in her department, since all of the officers accused of dereliction of duty were working for her.
 
 Officer Jose Huerta was found repeatedly lying about his availability, claiming he was stuck on a call involving a traffic incident when in fact he was free to respond to calls that the dispatcher had waiting for him. In one incident, he failed to immediately respond to a call about a five-year-old child being locked inside a vehicle – an incident that can quickly turn deadly in the heat under the Miami sun.
 
 Internal Affairs discovered many other incidents of neglectful duties among officers and sergeants in the Miami Dade Police Department. Even though the investigation was conducted in 2010, the delinquent sergeant and officers were not penalized until late 2012.
 
 While this is the Miami police department’s worst case of delinquency, its officers have repeatedly come under scrutiny for illegal and negligent actions. Last week, a Miami officer was fired for shooting an unarmed motorist. In September, police officer Fausto Lopez was fired for driving more than 120 miles per hour and was found to have driven more than 90 miles per hour more than 80 times.
 
 Cases of police neglecting their duties and violating the law are not unusual in Miami, and the video surveillance acquired by the Internal Affairs investigation shows just how dire the situation is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on February 07, 2013, 04:06:23 PM
Entire Miami police squad fired after footage shows cops shopping, dining and kissing while ignoring 911 calls

Wow...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2013, 07:17:03 PM
Entire Miami police squad fired after footage shows cops shopping, dining and kissing while ignoring 911 calls


They should be charged as accomplices to all those incidents they ignored.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on February 08, 2013, 04:49:28 AM
Entire Miami police squad fired after footage shows cops shopping, dining and kissing while ignoring 911 calls


 
  RT — An investigation into Miami police officers’ on-duty conduct found six officers were ignoring 911 calls while instead kissing their girlfriends, shopping, and drinking coffee.
 
One 911 call involved an unconscious five-month-old baby. Video footage shows Miami police officer Dario Socarras ignoring dispatch orders to save the child, while drinking coffee for nine minutes and lying to the dispatcher about being “en route”. Paramedics eventually reached the unconscious child, while Socarras never went – but still, the officer wrote in his daily report that he attended the scene.
 
And Socarras is only one of six officers caught neglecting their duties: after being followed and caught on surveillance video by Internal Affairs, two officers and a sergeant were fired and three were suspended without pay for dereliction of duty from the Miami Dade Police Department.
 
 The footage of the incidents documents the department’s worst case of delinquency in its history.
 
 Aside from ignoring the dispatch orders to save the unconscious baby, Socarras was also found to have ignored armed robbery and residential burglary calls. Instead, the officer was found kissing and cuddling with his girlfriend in the parking lot of a shopping mall on two different occasions.
 
 Socarras was also caught misleading a crime victim, promising to fill out a police report about items that were stolen form her, while telling dispatchers that no crime had occurred. The officer proceeded to give the victim a phony case number.
 
 “We’re talking about falsification of official records, stealing time that doesn’t belong to you, because they are supposed to be available for service or duty and they are not,” former Miami Police Chief Ken Harms told CBS4.
 
 And the officer’s supervisor was no better: Sgt. Jennifer Gonzalez was drinking coffee with Socorras while he ignored a dispatch order and was separately recorded shopping while on duty at stores including Target, Lowes and Kohl’s. In one incident, Gonzalez bought so many items at a department store that she even requested a store clerk to help her carry and load her goods into her police car.
 
 Investigators also found that Gonzalez would spend hours visiting her parents in an area that was outside of the district she was employed to be working in. The sergeant has been accused of letting her own neglectful work habits affect others in her department, since all of the officers accused of dereliction of duty were working for her.
 
 Officer Jose Huerta was found repeatedly lying about his availability, claiming he was stuck on a call involving a traffic incident when in fact he was free to respond to calls that the dispatcher had waiting for him. In one incident, he failed to immediately respond to a call about a five-year-old child being locked inside a vehicle – an incident that can quickly turn deadly in the heat under the Miami sun.
 
 Internal Affairs discovered many other incidents of neglectful duties among officers and sergeants in the Miami Dade Police Department. Even though the investigation was conducted in 2010, the delinquent sergeant and officers were not penalized until late 2012.
 
 While this is the Miami police department’s worst case of delinquency, its officers have repeatedly come under scrutiny for illegal and negligent actions. Last week, a Miami officer was fired for shooting an unarmed motorist. In September, police officer Fausto Lopez was fired for driving more than 120 miles per hour and was found to have driven more than 90 miles per hour more than 80 times.
 
 Cases of police neglecting their duties and violating the law are not unusual in Miami, and the video surveillance acquired by the Internal Affairs investigation shows just how dire the situation is.


 :o :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 08, 2013, 08:45:02 AM
REPORT: A Tiny 71-Year-Old Woman Was Shot Twice In The Back During The LAPD's Manhunt
 


Erin Fuchs|Feb. 8, 2013, 10:01 AM|1,747|8
 


Police who were hunting a former LAPD cop accidentally shot a 71-year-old woman and her daughter as they delivered the LA Times, that newspaper reports.
 
Sources told the LA Times cops were trying to protect an LAPD officer named in former cop Christopher Dorner's online manifesto when they shot the two women in Torrance, Calif.
 
Cops thought the royal blue Toyota Tacoma occupied by 71-year-old Emma Hernandez and her 47-year-old daughter Maggie Carranza matched descriptions for Dorner's Nissan pickup truck, CBS Los Angeles reported.
 
"Tragically, we believe this is a case of mistaken identity," LAPD Chief Charlie Beck told reporters.
 
But the women's lawyer, Glen Jonas, hinted that cops were being overzealous in trying to protect their own, according to the LA Times story.
 
"The problem with the situation is it looked like the cops were administering street justice and didn't take the time to notice that these two older, small Latina women don't look like a large black man," Jonas told the Times.
 
Hernandez was shot twice in the back and was stable as of late Thursday, Jonas told the Times. Her daughter just had stitches in her finger.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/lapd-officers-hunting-dorner-shot-women-2013-2#ixzz2KKK6c37o

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on February 08, 2013, 11:24:37 AM
REPORT: A Tiny 71-Year-Old Woman Was Shot Twice In The Back During The LAPD's Manhunt
 


Erin Fuchs|Feb. 8, 2013, 10:01 AM|1,747|8
 


Police who were hunting a former LAPD cop accidentally shot a 71-year-old woman and her daughter as they delivered the LA Times, that newspaper reports.
 
Sources told the LA Times cops were trying to protect an LAPD officer named in former cop Christopher Dorner's online manifesto when they shot the two women in Torrance, Calif.
 
Cops thought the royal blue Toyota Tacoma occupied by 71-year-old Emma Hernandez and her 47-year-old daughter Maggie Carranza matched descriptions for Dorner's Nissan pickup truck, CBS Los Angeles reported.
 
"Tragically, we believe this is a case of mistaken identity," LAPD Chief Charlie Beck told reporters.
 
But the women's lawyer, Glen Jonas, hinted that cops were being overzealous in trying to protect their own, according to the LA Times story.
 
"The problem with the situation is it looked like the cops were administering street justice and didn't take the time to notice that these two older, small Latina women don't look like a large black man," Jonas told the Times.
 
Hernandez was shot twice in the back and was stable as of late Thursday, Jonas told the Times. Her daughter just had stitches in her finger.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/lapd-officers-hunting-dorner-shot-women-2013-2#ixzz2KKK6c37o



Cops should be banned.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on February 08, 2013, 12:10:09 PM
The LAPD is gonna be so fucked when this is all done.

No matter how it plays out, they are gonna look like COMPLETE idiots.

It is nothing less than bizarre.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 09, 2013, 04:55:00 AM
http://www.infowars.com/video-cop-lands-helicopter-to-harass-woman


Unreal - but typical. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 10, 2013, 04:59:52 AM
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/02/07/chicago-police-want-12-percent-pay-raise
 ;D

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 10, 2013, 06:19:44 AM
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How the LAPD Lost my Trust
Gun Watch ^ | 10 February, 2013 | Dean Weingarten
Posted on February 9, 2013 8:19:56 PM EST by marktwain

I am a certified firearms instructor who has taught CCW classes in Arizona since the beginning of the CCW program there in 1994. As we are on the border with California, I watch the developments there with some interest. Unfortunately, nearly everything that I have read and heard about the LAPD and guns has lead me to distrust them.

I had numerous students who had dealings with the LAPD. I started hearing stories about how guns were seized, even if there were no crime involved. If an officer came across a gun, it was seized, and it would not be returned until the LAPD received a court order demanding that it be returned. As hiring a lawyer to obtain a court order could easily cost thousands of dollars, very few people even tried, as the cost was far more than the firearms were worth. This is legalized theft.

The practice has finally been challenged in court, and the Ninth Circuit has ruled that the under the fourth amendment, LAPD cannot simply steal firearms that are lawfully owned. The government is appealing the decision in Messerschmidt v. Millender.

I have also heard of California police who stop someone that has a firearm in their vehicle, who may have violated one of the many arcane firearms laws of the State. If the officer is being charitable, he may allow the individual to simply give the gun to him, rather than face felony charges.

The crowning moment came for me when I was describing the practice to a class of students, and one of them said "My brother is an LAPD police officer, and he has an amazing collection of firearms. Citizens just gave them to him to dispose of."

This is the stuff of third world dictatorships.

The other practice that made me distrust the LAPD has been their scofflaw attitude toward court orders to administer the California CCW program as the law requires. They have failed to do this for 17 years, even though ordered to do so by the court. The Court order was originally obtained by a legal action won by the Second Amendment Foundation. In the intervening years two more amended judgements of declaratory relief were signed. A current appeal to enforce the court order is in the works from the National Rifle Association and the California Rifle and Pistol Association.

When the LAPD engages in systematic legalized theft, and refuses to follow court orders to uphold the law, when they routinely fail to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, even though they have taken an oath to do so, they have lost my trust.

Dean Weingarten

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 12, 2013, 05:45:35 AM
[ Invalid YouTube link ]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2013, 11:30:34 AM
'Big Sis' Reasserts Unlimited Power to Seize and Inspect Laptops
 Townhall.com ^ | February 13, 2013 | Bob Barr

Posted on Thursday, February 14, 2013 1:07:55 PM by Kaslin

 President Obama did not mention it in his State of the Union address last night, and there hasn’t been much attention devoted to it in the Congress of late; but, the fundamental right to privacy Americans have a right to expect from their own government, has suffered yet another body blow.



On the surface, things seem to be in order. For example, at the beginning of February, the Federal Trade Commission released a staff report outlining consumer privacy recommendations for developers of mobile phone apps. FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz called the recommendations “best practices” intended to “safeguard consumer privacy,” that would “build trust in the mobile marketplace.”



Unfortunately, the rest of the Obama Administration hasn’t gotten the message.



The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), headed by Secretary Janet (“Big Sis”) Napolitano, just reaffirmed its policy that Americans returning home from travels abroad are subject to arbitrary searches and seizures of their computers and other electronic devices.



The controversy surrounding warrantless and suspicion-less searches at the U.S. border has been brewing for years. In 2009, for example, Napolitano asserted the government’s right to inspect and detain electronics from all persons traveling into the United States, and to copy any information stored on those devices. Continuing this view, the department’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties last week released its “Civil Liberties Impact Assessment” of the directives after originally setting a 120-day deadline back in August 2009.



As has become typical, the report contends the government can have its cake and eat it too. Confusingly, DHS concludes “current border search policies comply with the Fourth Amendment,” but that actually requiring federal agents to follow the Constitution would be “operationally harmful without concomitant civil rights/civil liberties benefits.” In other words, what government is doing is constitutional even though the cost of following the Constitution would outweigh the benefits to be realized by the citizens. Clear? As mud.



Courts have long recognized the federal government’s robust power to inspect people and goods entering the country. After all, the very foundation of national sovereignty is a nation’s ability to protect its borders. Until recently, however, this “border search” power was reasonably considered to be limited to physical searches necessary to discover illegal contraband attempted to be brought into the country; inspecting a traveler’s suitcases, for example.



The proliferation of electronic communications devices -- personal computers, iPads, Blackberries, and what not -- and the potential treasure trove of information contained in such devices, however, has pushed the government to assert the power and the right to inspect such devices and anything stored thereon, under the “border search” provision.



In Uncle Sam’s view, because evidence of potential criminal activity can be found in a laptop computer’s hard drive just as in the tourist’s suitcase following a visit to Mexico, the former enjoys no more protection against government snooping than the latter. This limitless perspective, and the vast power grab reflected in it -- based on nothing more than the fact that a person has travelled abroad and is returning to their home -- is preposterous. More important, this assertion seriously undermines the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures.



The average American returning from a trip abroad likely -- and understandably -- assumes the contents of his or her electronic device does not come close to meeting the threshold of “criminal” activity, such as would give a government agent the right to seize and peruse their iPad just because they are returning from a vacation. Government agents at our borders and ports of entry, however, are undeterred by such common sense and historically-sound notions of privacy.



In Napolitano’s view, just because an iPad is being carried by an American student returning from a semester studying in London, instead of returning to New York from Los Angeles, it becomes fair game for her agents to seize, inspect, download and retain data; all without any suspicion whatsoever the device’s owner has engaged in any illegal activity.



The “exhaustive,” three-year study conducted by the Department of Homeland is as flawed as most government “reports.” Unfortunately, unlike many other such projects, this one does more than just cost American taxpayers money; it comes at a heavy price to their fundamental, God-given right to privacy guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment to our Constitution.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 15, 2013, 06:15:34 AM
Obama DOJ again refuses to tell a court whether CIA drone program even exists

As the nation spent the week debating the CIA assassination program, Obama lawyers exploit secrecy to shield it from all review

Glenn Greenwald

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 14 February 2013 08.50 EST

Jump to comments (426)




The Obama DOJ again tells a court that it cannot safely confirm or deny the existence of the CIA drone program Photograph: Alamy


It is not news that the US government systematically abuses its secrecy powers to shield its actions from public scrutiny, democratic accountability, and judicial review. But sometimes that abuse is so extreme, so glaring, that it is worth taking note of, as it reveals its purported concern over national security to be a complete sham.

Such is the case with the Obama DOJ's behavior in the lawsuit brought by the ACLU against the CIA to compel a response to the ACLU's Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request about Obama's CIA assassination program. That FOIA request seeks nothing sensitive, but rather only the most basic and benign information about the "targeted killing" program: such as "the putative legal basis for carrying out targeted killings; any restrictions on those who may be targeted; any civilian casualties; any geographic limits on the program; the number of targeted killings that the agency has carried out."

Everyone in the world knows that the CIA has a targeted killing program whereby it uses drones to bomb and shoot missiles at those it wants dead, including US citizens. This is all openly discussed in every media outlet.

Key Obama officials, including the president himself, not only make selective disclosures about this program but openly boast about its alleged successes. Leon Panetta, then the CIA Director, publicly said all the way back in 2009 when asked about the CIA drone program: "I think it does suffice to say that these operations have been very effective because they have been very precise." In 2010, Panetta, speaking to the Washington Post, hailed the CIA drone program in Pakistan as "the most aggressive operation that CIA has been involved in in our history". This is just a partial sample of Obama official boasts about this very program (for more, see pages 15 to 28 here).

Despite all that, the Obama DOJ from the start has refused not only to provide the requested documents about the CIA drone program, but they refuse to say whether such documents even exist. They do so by insisting that whether there even exists such a thing as a "CIA drone program" is itself classified, and therefore, they can neither admit nor deny whether they possess any of the documents sought by the FOIA request: "the very fact of the existence or nonexistence of such documents is itself classified," repeats the Obama DOJ over and over like some hypnotic Kafkaesque mantra.
 
Even in the face of the endless stream of public statements from the president on down discussing and boasting about the drone program, the federal judge presiding over the lawsuit last September meekly deferred (as usual) to the DOJ's secrecy claims and dismissed the ACLU's lawsuit. The judge, Rosemary Collyer, ruled that all of the public statements cited by the ACLU whereby Obama officials boasted of the drone program do not constitute official acknowledgment that the CIA (as opposed to some other government generally) has a drone program. The ACLU has appealed this decision.

As ludicrous as the DOJ's secrecy claims were before, they have now reached Alice in Wonderland proportions. Just last week, Obama's nominee to lead the CIA, John Brennan, spent hours upon hours before the Senate Intelligence Committee praising the CIA targeted killing program and discussing the oversight he would make available for that program as CIA director. Then, GOP House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers went on Face the Nation and did the same; when asked if "the administration has been straight with Congress in sharing information on what the rules are about using" drones, Rep. Rogers replied: "Monthly, I have my committee go to the CIA to review them. I as chairman review every single air strike that we use in the war on terror, both from the civilian and the military side when it comes to terrorist strikes."

Clearer and more definitive acknowledgment by the US government that the CIA has a drone program is impossible to imagine. As a result, late last week, the ACLU wrote a letter to the appellate court where its case is now pending to notify the court of these new public acknowledgments. Specifically, as the ACLU put it, Brennan and the Committee members "extensively discussed various aspects of the CIA's targeted-killing program, including the 'role' of the 'CIA director in [the]
approval process' for targeted killings abroad". Moreover, Rogers openly "discusse[d] his committee's 'monthly' oversight of the CIA's targeted-killing program." Now, there is simply no way to deny in good faith that the US government has publicly and officially acknowledged the CIA drone program.

But good faith is no impediment to the Obama DOJ when it comes to its abuse of secrecy powers. This morning, the DOJ sent a letter to the court replying to the ACLU. Ever after the events of last week, they have the audacity to claim that even the question of whether there is a CIA drone program must still be concealed. The DOJ argues - completely falsely - that the ACLU "identif[ies] no statement in which Mr. Brennan allegedly confirms purported CIA involvement in the use of unmanned aerial vehicles for 'targeted killing'", but merely cite "general discussions of 'targeted killing' that do not address the involvement of any particular agency". They dismiss the admissions of Chairman Rogers on the ground that "statements made by members of Congress do not constitute official disclosure by an Executive Branch agency."

Just think about that: Obama and his aides routinely boast about the drone program to make the president look like daddy-protector tough guy. Someone in the administration just disclosed last week to NBC News a "white paper" sent by the Obama DOJ to Congress purporting to legally justify the CIA assassination program. Everyone knows and is now debating whether the CIA should be doing this.

But what is missing from the debate is the most basic information about what the CIA does and even their claimed legal justification for doing it. The Obama administration still refuses to publicly disclose the OLC memo that purported to authorize it (they agreed two weeks ago to make it available only to certain members of Congress without staff present, thus still maintaining "secret law"). They conceal all of this - and thus prevent basic democratic accountability - based on the indescribably cynical and inane pretense that they cannot even confirm or deny the existence of the CIA program without seriously jeopardizing national security.

This is a complete perversion of their secrecy powers. Even among the DC cliques that exist to defend US government behavior, one would be hard-pressed to find anyone willing to defend what is being done here. The Obama administration runs around telling journalists how great and precise and devastating the CIA's assassination program is, then tells courts that no disclosure is permissible because they cannot safely confirm in court that the program even exists.

Such flagrant abuse of secrecy power is at once Orwellian and tyrannical. It has the effect of blocking even the most minimal transparency on the most consequential question: the government's claimed authority to execute anyone it wants without charges, far from a battlefield, in total secrecy. It yet again demonstrates that excessive government secrecy is an infinitely greater threat than unauthorized disclosures. This is why we need radical transparency projects and aggressive whistle-blowers. And it's why nobody should respect the secrecy claims of the Obama administration or believe the assertions they make about national security. What else do they need to do to prove how untrustworthy those claims are?

Use on US soil

Last week, Esquire's Charles Pierce noted that Brennan, at his confirmation hearing, refused to say whether the US government has the power to target US citizens for execution without charges even on US soil. Yesterday, GOP Sen. Rand Paul - who used his State of the Union response to denounce "secret lists of American citizens who can be killed without trial" - said that he would block Brennan's confirmation "until Brennan declares whether he believes the United States has the authority to use unmanned drones to conduct targeting killings of Americans — in the United States."

To understand just how radical the Obama administration is when it comes to secrecy, just think about the fact that it refuses to answer even that question.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 18, 2013, 09:57:13 AM
DHS Advances Plan For “Public Safety” Drones



http://www.infowars.com/dhs-advances-plan-for-public-safety-drones



More incarnations of spy technology to undergo testing
 
Paul Joseph Watson
 Infowars.com
February 18, 2013
 
The Department of Homeland Security is advancing its plan to use surveillance drones for “public safety” applications, announcing last week that it had received a deluge of “excellent” responses from potential vendors and was set to carry out more tests of the technology.
 

New testing of spy drones for “public safety” applications has been rubber stamped by the DHS. Image: YouTube
 
As we first reported in July last year, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano told a House Committee on Homeland Security that the federal agency was “looking at drones that could be utilized to give us situational awareness in a large public safety [matter] or disaster,” despite the fact that the agency had previously indicated it was reticent to use spy drones to keep tabs on the public.
 
This was followed by a “market research” announcement in September that confirmed the DHS was exploring a “Robotic Aircraft for Public Safety” (RAPS) project, and was asking small unmanned aerial systems (SUAS) vendors to take part.
 
In an update posted on the FedBizOpps website last week (PDF), the federal agency announced that, “Vendor response to our Request for Information (RFI), Number: DHS 13-01, on small unmanned aircraft systems (SUAS) was excellent and included the submission of over 70 white papers.”
 
The announcement added that a small number of the submissions would now be participating in the “first phase of assessments” for the technology in 2013 and 2014. The DHS refuses to specify which proposals were accepted and for what reasons.
 
Initial testing of robotic spy drones for “public safety” applications was conducted by the DHS’ Science and Technology directorate at Fort Sill, Oklahoma last year.
 
As Wired Magazine reported, the DHS is pursuing lightweight spy drones that can fly for two hours at a time, but it is also interested in military-style drones fitted with cameras that can spy on up to four square miles at a time.
 
As we reported last week, the ARGUS-IS surveillance camera system, developed by BAE Systems in conjunction with DARPA, has the capability to track every moving object across an area of 15 square miles, or a medium-sized city – and could be fitted to unmanned drones that can stay airborne for years at a time.
 
The DHS is already using another type of airborne drone surveillance, also utilized to track insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq, for the purposes of “emergency and non-emergency incidents” within the United States.
 
Experts predict that there will be 30,000 surveillance drones in American skies by 2020 following a bill passed last year by Congress that permits the use of unmanned aerial spy vehicles on domestic soil.
 
Last week, a Federal Aviation Administration official told a conference in Northern Virginia that unmanned surveillance drones deployed in US airspace would not be armed with missiles.
 
*********************
 
Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 18, 2013, 11:19:43 AM
The death of a man with Down syndrome who was reportedly killed after laying face-down in police custody has been ruled a homicide.

Via HP

 

WJLA reports that Robert Saylor, 26, of New Market, Md., was asphyxiated on Jan. 12, according to a medical examiner's ruling late last week.

A "law enforcement source familiar with the case" told the station that Saylor "went into distress when he was put face down on the ground."

Police were reportedly called to a Frederick movie theater by employees who couldn't get Saylor to leave. He had come to the theater with a health aide, paid admission for "Zero Dark Thirty," but allegedly remained after it was over.

Dr. George Kirkham, a criminologist and former law enforcement officer, told the Frederick News Post that Saylor's death may have been caused by positional asphyxia.

From the Post:

Positional asphyxia is typically the result of an intense struggle and often involves a person who is handcuffed and lying on their stomach after the struggle. Kirkham said people often panic and can't catch their breath. People with larger stomachs are particularly vulnerable, he said, because their bellies will push into their sternums, making breathing even more difficult.
 
Baltimore County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Jennifer Bailey said the case is still under investigation and that the three officers involved in Saylor's death -- Lt. Scott Jewell, Sgt. Rich Rochford and Deputy First Class James Harris -- "continue to work their normal assignments," according to the Post.

Frederick County State's Attorney Charlie Smith said his office is reviewing the incident and has not decided whether to bring charges.

WJLA previously spoke with Saylor's mom after the incident.

"He just loved unconditionally everybody," Patti Saylor said. "He has never had anyone put their hands on him in his life. He would not have been doing anything threatening to anybody."

Police officers nationwide often lack appropriate training for dealing with suspects who are mentally ill, according to an investigation by the Portland Press Herald.

In Maine alone, the investigation found that "42 percent of people shot by police since 2000 -- and 58 percent of those who died from their injuries -- had mental health problems."

Even the well-funded New York Police Department has reportedly resisted implementing "the best practices for police interactions with the mentally ill," according to a Village Voice feature published last August
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 18, 2013, 11:52:31 AM
Originally published February 16, 2013 at 6:22 PM | Page modified February 17, 2013 at 3:42 PM


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Misstep in gun bill could defeat the effort

One of the major gun-control efforts in Olympia this session calls for the sheriff to inspect the homes of assault-weapon owners. The bill’s backers say that was a mistake.






By Danny Westneat

Seattle Times staff columnist



Forget police drones flying over your house. How about police coming inside, once a year, to have a look around?
 
As Orwellian as that sounds, it isn’t hypothetical. The notion of police home inspections was introduced in a bill last week in Olympia.
 
That it’s part of one of the major gun-control efforts pains me. It seemed in recent weeks lawmakers might be headed toward some common-sense regulation of gun sales. But then last week they went too far. By mistake, they claim. But still too far.

“They always say, we’ll never go house to house to take your guns away. But then you see this, and you have to wonder.”
 
That’s no gun-rights absolutist talking, but Lance Palmer, a Seattle trial lawyer and self-described liberal who brought the troubling Senate Bill 5737 to my attention. It’s the long-awaited assault-weapons ban, introduced last week by three Seattle Democrats.

Responding to the Newtown school massacre, the bill would ban the sale of semi-automatic weapons that use detachable ammunition magazines. Clips that contain more than 10 rounds would be illegal.
 
But then, with respect to the thousands of weapons like that already owned by Washington residents, the bill says this:
 
“In order to continue to possess an assault weapon that was legally possessed on the effective date of this section, the person possessing shall ... safely and securely store the assault weapon. The sheriff of the county may, no more than once per year, conduct an inspection to ensure compliance with this subsection.”
 
In other words, come into homes without a warrant to poke around. Failure to comply could get you up to a year in jail.

“I’m a liberal Democrat — I’ve voted for only one Republican in my life,” Palmer told me. “But now I understand why my right-wing opponents worry about having to fight a government takeover.”
 
He added: “It’s exactly this sort of thing that drives people into the arms of the NRA.”
 
I have been blasting the NRA for its paranoia in the gun-control debate. But Palmer is right — you can’t fully blame them, when cops going door-to-door shows up in legislation.

I spoke to two of the sponsors. One, Sen. Adam Kline, D-Seattle, a lawyer who typically is hyper-attuned to civil-liberties issues, said he did not know the bill authorized police searches because he had not read it closely before signing on.
 
“I made a mistake,” Kline said. “I frankly should have vetted this more closely.”

That lawmakers sponsor bills they haven’t read is common. Still, it’s disappointing on one of this political magnitude. Not counting a long table, it’s only an eight-page bill.
 
The prime sponsor, Sen. Ed Murray, D-Seattle, also condemned the search provision in his own bill, after I asked him about it. He said Palmer is right that it’s probably unconstitutional.

“I have to admit that shouldn’t be in there,” Murray said.
 
He said he came to realize that an assault-weapons ban has little chance of passing this year anyway. So he put in this bill more as “a general statement, as a guiding light of where we need to go.” Without sweating all the details.
 
Later, a Senate Democratic spokesman blamed unnamed staff and said a new bill will be introduced.

Murray had alluded at a gun-control rally in January that progress on guns could take years.
 
“We will only win if we reach out and continue to change the hearts and minds of Washingtonians,” Murray said. “We can attack them, or start a dialogue.”
 
Good plan, very bad start. What’s worse, the case for the perfectly reasonable gun-control bills in Olympia just got tougher.

Danny Westneat’s column appears Wednesday and Sunday. Reach him at 206-464-2086 or dwestneat@seattletimes.com

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on February 18, 2013, 12:08:52 PM
WJLA previously spoke with Saylor's mom after the incident.

"He just loved unconditionally everybody," Patti Saylor said. "He has never had anyone put their hands on him in his life. He would not have been doing anything threatening to anybody."


I believe her.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 18, 2013, 06:52:33 PM
http://www.wpxi.com/news/news/local/pittsburgh-leaders-seek-grant-buy-hovercraft/nWRRf

Unreal 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on February 19, 2013, 12:52:09 PM
http://www.wpxi.com/news/news/local/pittsburgh-leaders-seek-grant-buy-hovercraft/nWRRf

Unreal 

Emergency services (like police and fire departments) are a legitimate function of government. They frequently provide rescue services. If this hovercraft can help, why shouldn't they have it?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 19, 2013, 12:54:34 PM
Emergency services (like police and fire departments) are a legitimate function of government. They frequently provide rescue services. If this hovercraft can help, why shouldn't they have it?

In Pittsburgh they need hovercrafts? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on February 19, 2013, 01:48:37 PM
In Pittsburgh they need hovercrafts?  


First of all, let me repost my comment, and add a bit of emphasis: "Emergency services (like police and fire departments) are a legitimate function of government. They frequently provide rescue services. If this hovercraft can help, why shouldn't they have it?"

So the question is, can the hovercraft help? Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they have two rather large rivers basically running into the city, only to join and continue downstream? Now, I'm not a a search and rescue expert, but it seems to me that a hovercraft could be a valuable asset in search and rescue operations.

The matter should, obviously, be scrutinized but based on what I read I don't see anything outright inappropriate.

Tell us 333386, as a search and rescue expert who possesses a "Master's License" what's your take on this? Please explain things and substantiate your opinions, but please be sure to speak slowly and not use any crazy marine terms so the rest of us can understand ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 19, 2013, 01:51:51 PM

First of all, let me repost my comment, and add a bit of emphasis: "Emergency services (like police and fire departments) are a legitimate function of government. They frequently provide rescue services. If this hovercraft can help, why shouldn't they have it?"

So the question is, can the hovercraft help? Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they have two rather large rivers basically running into the city, only to join and continue downstream? Now, I'm not a a search and rescue expert, but it seems to me that a hovercraft could be a valuable asset in search and rescue operations.

The matter should, obviously, be scrutinized but based on what I read I don't see anything outright inappropriate.

Tell us 333386, as a search and rescue expert who possesses a "Master's License" what's your take on this? Please explain things and substantiate your opinions, but please be sure to speak slowly and not use any crazy marine terms so the rest of us can understand ::)

I'm sure many police would find it helpful to drive Humvees too, doesnt make it good policy.  And what exigent circumstances call for this?  Is there a rash of failed rescue attempts that regular watercraft can't handle?  Do that have amphibious drug craft delivering drugs from the rivers onto land they need to chase down or something?  This is overkill. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on February 19, 2013, 01:59:10 PM
I'm sure many police would find it helpful to drive Humvees too, doesnt make it good policy.  And what exigent circumstances call for this?  Is there a rash of failed rescue attempts that regular watercraft can't handle?  Do that have amphibious drug craft delivering drugs from the rivers onto land they need to chase down or something?  This is overkill. 

Is it? I don't know the facts. But clearly you do - apparently you not only are an expert in search and rescue operations, but also are intimitely familiar with the operational capacity and needs of the emergency services of the city of Pittsburgh. Oh 33386, you truly are a renaissance man.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 19, 2013, 02:00:48 PM
Is it? I don't know the facts. But clearly you do - apparently you not only are an expert in search and rescue operations, but also are intimitely familiar with the operational capacity and needs of the emergency services of the city of Pittsburgh. Oh 33386, you truly are a renaissance man.

These govt agencies all ask for everything imaginable.   After 9/11 a lot of these agencies in the name of terrorism got all sorts of toys to play around with they didnt need simply cause the $$$$ was flowing. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on February 19, 2013, 02:05:07 PM
(http://www.political-humor.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/you-dont-need-an-ar-15-to-hunt-but-we-need-this-to-direct-traffic.jpg)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on February 19, 2013, 02:23:01 PM
These govt agencies all ask for everything imaginable.   After 9/11 a lot of these agencies in the name of terrorism got all sorts of toys to play around with they didnt need simply cause the $$$$ was flowing. 

No doubt. But does this particular case fall into this category?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 19, 2013, 02:26:01 PM
No doubt. But does this particular case fall into this category?

Dont think so IMHO.   Again - if there is a documented need over a course of multiple events maybe - but a few here or there?  To me that does not justify the expenditure. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 20, 2013, 10:44:16 AM
'Bug-Sized' Drones Are The Most Frightening Type Of Killer Robot Yet
 Michael Kelley|50 minutes ago|166|1



New issue of National Geographic, John Horgan details the rise of drones after 9/11 and their creep into American airspace.
 
One thing that stands out is that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has challenged researchers to build micro aerial vehicles (MAVs) that “hide in plain sight" by mimicking the size and behavior of bugs and birds.
 
Consequently, the U.S. Air Force has constructed a 4,000 square foot “micro-aviary” for flight-testing small drones. Horgan wasn't able to witness the work — much of which is classified — but he was shown an animated video showing bug- and-bird-like micro-drones "swarm through alleys, crawl across windowsills, and perch on power lines."
 







U.S. Air Force
 


The potential for these “unobtrusive, pervasive, [and] lethal" mirco drones is very impressive as they would be able to work together while providing unprecedented surveillance access in cities and houses in addition to detecting aspects of the environment such as chemical presence.
 







U.S. Air Force
 


The potential is also terrifying since MAVs could be used in "direct attack missions" to covertly assassinate someone with a chemical or explosive payload (as the video shows).
 







Air Force
 
A micro drone "eliminating a target"
 

One comfort for those who may start distrusting mosquitoes and birds on the wires: ensuring that the MAVs can stay aloft for more than a few minutes will require advances in battery technology and may take years (if not more than a decade) to realize.
 
Here's the Air Force video:
 




Recommended For You


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/air-force-bug-sized-drones-are-scary-2013-2#ixzz2LSyUqkE0

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 21, 2013, 07:43:53 PM
Dont think so IMHO.   Again - if there is a documented need over a course of multiple events maybe - but a few here or there?  To me that does not justify the expenditure. 




Agreed, they want the Federal funds, the onus is on them to sell the program to the public at large......or should be, haha.

I can tell you from living around that area, people go into the drink for some incredibly stupid reasons.  Get mad at girlfriend, jump off boat.  Trying to retrieve kid's toy.  One went on a dare.  Then river rescue has to put their lives at risk to save some of these dipshits.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 22, 2013, 06:09:10 AM
The Department Of Homeland Security Seized Michael Arrington's Boat, And Boy Is He Enraged
Megan Rose Dickey|24 minutes ago|83|



 
Prominent Silicon Valley investor and TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington has a bone to pick with the Department of Homeland Security for seizing his boat.
 
After he sold TechCrunch in 2010, the one thing he splurged on was a boat, Arrington writes on his blog, Uncrunched.
 
But now he says buying the boat, which he has named "Buddy," was one of the worst decisions he's ever made, and that the nightmare is just beginning.
 
Since Buddy was built in Canada, it had to go through customs, as required by the DHS.
 
When Arrington arrived to fill out the necessary paperwork, he found an error on it. The DHS had changed the currency from Canadian to U.S. dollars.
 
"I pointed out the error and suggested that we simply change the currency from US $ to CAD $ so that is was correct," Arrington writes. "Or instead, amend the amount so that it was correct in U.S. dollars."
 
The DHS agent didn't care and insisted that he sign the form anyway, Arrington says. But Arrington wouldn't sign it, so the DHS ended up seizing his boat.
 
"A person with a gun and a government badge asked me to swear in writing that a lie was true today," Arrington writes. "And when I didn’t do what she wanted she simply took my boat and asked me to leave."
 

SEE ALSO: This Investor Spent ~$300,000 Hacking His Own Biology — And You Won't Believe What He Learned About Orgasms


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-department-of-homeland-security-seized-michael-arringtons-boat-and-boy-is-he-enraged-2013-2#ixzz2LdYF9yIN

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 22, 2013, 06:33:03 PM


 FBI Sexting: Reports Show Numerous Agents Disciplined For Inappropriate Messages (VIDEO)


Posted: 02/22/2013 3:00 pm EST







According to the Atlantic Wire, an internal FBI report obtained by CNN shows that the FBI had to fire "numerous employees for things like sexting, spying on their bosses, and getting 'happy endings' at a massage parlor."

HuffPost Justice reporter Ryan Reilly joined Alyona Minkovski Huffpost Live on Friday to discuss the unfolding story.

"Its coming from people who are both using their personal mobile devices and interrupting office culture as well as people who are suing their government issued blackberries to do this," Reilly said.

"There are thousands and thousands of employees within the FBI," Reilly said, and though we hold FBI agents to a higher moral standard, "it's not a massive, massive problem."

The FBI's disciplinary reports are quite detailed in outlining exactly what various employees are doing, perhaps in an effort to stymie such behavior in the future.

One report included details about an employee emailing nude photographs of herself to her ex-boyfriend's wife. The report goes so far as to note that the "employee failed to cease contact with ex-boyfriend and wife after twice being ordered to do so by supervisor and Chief Security Officer," and included that the employee was suspended for 10 days.

Watch the Full Segment on HuffPost Live.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 23, 2013, 09:54:56 PM
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US Navy Plans Drone Base Near Malibu
CBSLA.com) ^ | February 23, 2013 5:46 PM
Posted on February 24, 2013 12:16:41 AM EST by BenLurkin

MALIBU (CBSLA.com) — The US Navy plans to build a drone base at an airfield in Point Magu, about 15 miles from Malibu.

Navy Base Ventura County, Point Mugu will add about 700 jobs when the four drones — called Tritons Unmanned Weapons Systems — are stationed.

Additional drones from Navy bases around the world would also land and takeoff at the Southern California base.

The planes are 48 feet long and have 138-foot wingspans. They were unveiled at Palmdale last summer, and represent the military’s next generation of remote control intelligence gear.

An environmental impact report said about five takeoffs and landings a day would be added at the Navy field. The planes would primarily take off and depart over the ocean, the Navy document said.

An existing fire station would be remodeled to provide quarters to control the planes. In future years, a new taxiway and hangar would be erected.

Cameras and other remote-control sensors would be operated by military intelligence officers from flight levels altitudes of around 58,000 feet, the Navy said.

Between employees, support staff and families, the project is estimated to bring about 2,380 people to the region.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 02, 2013, 05:06:41 PM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57572207-38/dhs-built-domestic-surveillance-tech-into-predator-drones



This is some scary shit. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 02, 2013, 07:15:30 PM
DHS use DMV offices to build database with your photo,birth certificate & CCW info (MO)
Missouri Family Network ^ | 3/02/13 | Missouri Family Network
Posted on March 2, 2013 9:12:08 PM EST by listenhillary

In keeping with restrictions in State Statutes, and faced with federal encroachments of the 2005 Patriot Act, the Missouri Department of Revenue has been requiring Missouri citizens processing driver license applications and renewals to present what is commonly referred to as “source documents” to prove identity and residency. These required documents include birth certificates, Social Security numbers (in violation of original federal laws related to them), and any documents tracing legal name changes such as marriage and/or divorce documents. Alternative military documents are acceptable when applicable.

Despite assurances to the public that providing these source documents would be a “one time” imposition, last November DOR announced that those who had already been processed using these documents would have to do so again the next time they renewed their driver’s license. Why? Until recently your local licensing office has been directed to simply check off boxes on processing forms that a license or renewal applicant has produced and shown each of these source documents. However, we now understand that DOR has changed this process in direct violation of Missouri State Statues and is once again violating your personal privacy rights! Without seeking statutory approval, or even informing lawmakers or any legislative oversight – DOR has been retooling your local license office! They have been doing this without explaining themselves to the general public, and according to confidential sources they have been trying to avoid public scrutiny even to the point of refusing questions from local license office personnel!

One by one DOR has been removing the State’s driver’s license processing equipment from local offices and replacing it with equipment provided by National Homeland Security equipment. Local license office personnel are being instructed to use this equipment (in violation of State Statutes and citizen’s privacy). Once installed this equipment is used to take your picture for your driver’s license similar to the removed State equipment. But now your photo is being immediately sent into a national database. Then all of your source documents are being scanned with this equipment and sent into the federal governments central database also! This is contrary to Missouri Law! With DOR removing the state’s equipment, your local licensing office has no options but to comply.

Additionally we are hearing from some folks that any and all additional documents, brought in by individuals unsure of what is needed for processing, are being scanned and included. And, if you are one of the thousands of citizens who only use a post office box rather than a physical mailbox, you are automatically labeled with a fraud alert!

To make matters worse. You will no longer receive your driver’s license on the spot as has been with the state’s efficient equipment. Instead you will be provided a “temporary” license until your permanent one arrives in the mail from a third party vendor. What is unclear is who is paying the third party vendor, apparently in a seeming ruse to make it look like everything is being directed from within the State. We believe this is to distract attention from the involvement of the federal Homeland Security and their issuance and/or control of everyone’s new “Enhanced Driver’s License” (see Homeland Security website page enclosed below). Note the primary purpose of all this is to include a readable chip in your driver’s license which leads back to a federal government database containing a variety of details and information violating your privacy rights and the religious convictions and liberties of those who hold such beliefs.

On Wednesday, February 27, 2013, the Missouri Senate Transportation Committee held a public hearing on Senate Bill 252 (http://www.senate.mo.gov/13info/pdf-bill/intro/SB252.pdf) which seeks to strengthen current laws against what DOR is doing. SB 252 was introduced by Senator Will Kraus (republican, Dist. 8, Lee’s summit). During the hearing MFN was the only witness to provide public testimony on the bill. In that hearing MFN President Kerry Messer quoted one of the State Statutes prohibiting DOR from doing the things now being required of local licensing offices. MFN outlined some of the direct violations of law DOR is engaged in. MFN outlined the illegal changes in DOR procedures, testifying (in part):

“Missouri Revised Statutes, Chapter 32.091.7 clearly states two prohibitions on the Missouri Department of Revenue without “specific statutory authorization”. First is that the Department “shall not collect” individually identifying information on driver’s license applicants, which the Department is requiring of local license offices by requiring them to scan personal source documents without any other options for processing driver’s licenses. Secondly the Department is prohibited from including “any information by which an individual may be identified, unless the department has specific statutory authorization”, which is also being violated by the Department. In this second violation the Department is requiring local licensing offices to provide scanned documents to a federal database that can be cross-referenced through an embedded microchip containing a personalized reference number that may be used to access whatever prohibited information the federal agency chooses.”

Yes, that’s right, not only is the magnetic strip once again being used for improper purposes, but now DOR is authorizing an RFID chip to be implanted into your license card! While Homeland Security claims this is secure because only a reference number will be on the chip, this individualized number traces back to the federal government’s file containing all your source documents (and who know what else). Citizens’ confidence in this security is understandable questionable in light of the common news reports of computer hacking, including government databases. The fact that your new “Enhanced Driver’s License” comes in a protective slip cover to minimize illegal readings is of little comfort.

More at the link http://missourifamilynetwork.net/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 05, 2013, 10:24:15 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/05/dianne-feinstein-olc-memos_n_2811846.html

Amazing - look at what liberal commies are supporting now? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 05, 2013, 11:30:56 AM
http://washingtonexaminer.com/tsa-uniform-perks-more-expensive-than-marine-corps/article/2513111

Unreal.   The TSA getting more expensive uniforms than the USMC 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 07, 2013, 08:09:13 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/US/prisoner-left-solitary-years-receives-155m-settlement/t/story?id=18677197&ref=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.drudgereport.com%2F


So fucked up. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 11, 2013, 09:13:08 AM

1.6 Billion Rounds Of Ammo For Homeland Security? It's Time For A National Conversation

http://www.forbes.com/sites/ralphbenko/2013/03/11/1-6-billion-rounds-of-ammo-for-homeland-security-its-time-for-a-national-conversation



Armored Personnel Carriers in Baghdad. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Denver Post, on February 15th, ran an Associated Press article entitled Homeland Security aims to buy 1.6b rounds of ammo, so far to little notice.  It confirmed that the Department of Homeland Security has issued an open purchase order for 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition.  As reported elsewhere, much of this purchase order is for rounds forbidden by international law for use in war, along with a frightening amount specialized for snipers.  Also reported elsewhere, at the height of the Iraq War the Army was expending less than 6 million rounds a month.  1.6 billion rounds, therefore, would be enough to sustain a hot war for 20+ years.  In America.

Add to this perplexingly outré purchase of ammo, DHS now is showing off its acquisition of heavily armored personnel carriers, repatriated from the Iraqi and Afghani theaters of operation.  As observed by “paramilblogger” Ken Jorgustin last September:



 NRA Winning the Influence Battle Over Gun Control Bruce RogersForbes Staff

Obama's Gun-Control Laws Would Limit, Not Destroy $32B Firearm Industry Abram BrownForbes Staff

A Gun-Control Battle That Could Actually Damage The Industry Is Escaping Public Attention Abram BrownForbes Staff

How To Rescue The Republicans From The Grave Karl Rove Is Digging For Them Ralph BenkoContributor


“[T]he Department of Homeland Security is apparently taking delivery (apparently through the  Marine Corps Systems Command, Quantico VA, via the manufacturer – Navistar Defense LLC) of an undetermined number of the recently retrofitted 2,717 ‘Mine Resistant Protected’ MaxxPro MRAP vehicles for service on the streets of the United States.”  …

“These MRAP’s ARE BEING SEEN ON U.S. STREETS all across America by verified observers with photos, videos, and descriptions.

“Regardless of the exact number of MRAP’s being delivered to DHS (and evidently some to POLICE via DHS, as has been observed), why would they need such over-the-top vehicles on U.S. streets to withstand IEDs, mine blasts, and 50 caliber hits to bullet-proof glass? In a war zone… yes, definitely. Let’s protect our men and women. On the streets of America… ?



“They all have gun ports… Gun Ports? In the theater of war, yes. On the streets of America…?

“Seriously, why would DHS need such a vehicle on our streets?”
 
Why indeed?  It is utterly inconceivable that Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano is planning a coup d’etat against President Obama, and the Congress, to install herself as Supreme Ruler of the United States of America.  There, however, are real signs that the Department bureaucrats are running amok.  About 20 years ago this columnist worked, for two years, in the U.S. Department of Energy’s general counsel’s office in its procurement and finance division.  And is wise to the ways.   The answer to “why would DHS need such a vehicle?” almost certainly is this:  it’s a cool toy and these (reportedly) million dollar toys are being recycled, without much of a impact on the DHS budget.  So… why not?

Why, indeed, should the federal government not be deploying armored personnel carriers and stockpiling enough ammo for a 20-year war in the homeland?  Because it’s wrong in every way.  President Obama has an opportunity, now, to live up to some of his rhetoric by helping the federal government set a noble example in a matter very close to his heart (and that of his Progressive base), one not inimical to the Bill of Rights: gun control.  The federal government can (for a nice change) begin practicing what it preaches by controlling itself.

And … remember the … Sequester?  The president is claiming its budget cuts will inconvenience travelers by squeezing essential services provided by the (opulently armed and stylishly uniformed) DHS.  Quality ammunition is not cheap.  (Of course, news reports that DHS is about to spend $50 million on new uniforms suggests a certain cavalier attitude toward government frugality.)

Spending money this way is beyond absurd well into perverse.  According to the AP story a DHS spokesperson justifies this acquisition to “help the government get a low price for a big purchase.” Peggy Dixon, spokeswoman for the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center:  “The training center and others like it run by the Homeland Security Department use as many as 15 million rounds every year, mostly on shooting ranges and in training exercises.”

At 15 million rounds (which, in itself, is pretty extraordinary and sounds more like fun target-shooting-at-taxpayer-expense than a sensible training exercise) … that’s a stockpile that would last DHS over a century.  To claim that it’s to “get a low price” for a ridiculously wasteful amount is an argument that could only fool a career civil servant.

Meanwhile, Senator Diane Feinstein, with the support of President Obama, is attempting to ban 100 capacity magazine clips.  Doing a little apples-to-oranges comparison, here, 1.6 billion rounds is … 16 million times more objectionable.

Mr. Obama has a long history of disdain toward gun ownership.  According to Prof. John Lott, in Debacle, a book he co-authored with iconic conservative strategist Grover Norquist,


“When I was first introduced to Obama (when both worked at the University of Chicago Law School, where Lott was famous for his analysis of firearms possession), he said, ‘Oh, you’re the gun guy.’

“I responded: ‘Yes, I guess so.’

“’I don’t believe that people should own guns,’ Obama replied.

“I then replied that it might be fun to have lunch and talk about that statement some time.

“He simply grimaced and turned away. …

“Unlike other liberal academics who usually enjoyed discussing opposing ideas, Obama showed disdain.”
 
Mr. Obama?  Where’s the disdain now?  Cancelling, or at minimum, drastically scaling back — by 90% or even 99%, the DHS order for ammo, and its receipt and deployment of armored personnel carriers, would be a “fourfer.”
•The federal government would set an example of restraint in the matter of weaponry.
•It would reduce the deficit without squeezing essential services.
•It would do both in a way that was palatable to liberals and conservatives, slightly depolarizing America.
•It would somewhat defuse, by the government making itself less armed-to-the-teeth, the anxiety of those who mistrust the benevolence of the federales.

If Obama doesn’t show any leadership on this matter it’s an opportunity for. Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, to summon Secretary Napolitano over for a little … national conversation. Madame Secretary?  Buying 1.6 billion rounds of ammo and deploying armored personnel carriers runs contrary, in every way, to what  “homeland security” really means.  Discuss.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 11, 2013, 02:49:33 PM
The FBI Goes To Disturbing Lengths To Set Up Potential Terrorists
 
Paul Szoldra|16 minutes ago|4|

AP


 
James Cromitie, center, is led by police officers from a federal building in New York after being arrested for plotting to bomb New York synagogues and shoot down military aircraft.
 

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has busted an impressive number of homegrown terror plots over the past decade, but many people don't realize how these plots materialize. In some cases, they are hatched not from a cave-dwelling fanatic, but actually from the Bureau itself.
 
Ever since 9/11, the task of thwarting terrorist plots has consumed the majority of the FBI's budget — $3.3 billion compared to $2.6 billion for organized crime, according to Mother Jones.
 
The once exclusively investigative bureau has morphed into a counterterrorism agency, with field agents tapping into a nationwide network of informants that infiltrate mainly-Muslim communities.
 
The FBI targets the "disgruntled few" who would participate in a terrorist plot if given the opportunity, according to Mother Jones. In many cases, the FBI recruits potential terrorists and provides them with plans, equipment, and weapons — before finally shutting them down and getting credit for thwarting another attack.
 
***
 
One example surfaced in December 2005, when the FBI arrested Michael Curtis Reynolds after he tried to meet an FBI informant whom he believed to be an al Qaeda contact. Authorities said he expected to receive $40,000 to finance an alleged plot to blow up pipelines and refineries, according to Fox News.
 
The charges and his later conviction stemmed mostly from online conversations he was having with a Montana judge (and FBI informant) he believed was a terrorist leader.
 
But would Reynolds have gone that far on his own? An FBI official speaking to Fox News on condition of anonymity said "that the agency has since concluded that Reynolds might be mentally ill and not as serious a threat as originally believed."
 
***
 
Another case in May 2007 involved men who certainly weren't fans of the United States, but had scarce means of carrying out an attack.
 
Five foreign-born men, described by federal authorities as "radical Islamists," along with a sixth man who helped get them weapons, were charged in May 2007 in a plot to attack a U.S. Army base in Fort Dix, N.J.
 
Officials later admitted the men had no apparent connection to any terrorist organization. The Washington Post writes:
 
At the same time, a 26-page indictment unsealed Tuesday indicates that the group had no rigorous military training and did not appear close to being able to pull off an attack. The arrests in the case began Monday night after two defendants arrived at a local home to buy assault weapons, which had been supplied and disabled by the FBI, officials said.
 
"Obviously, these guys had some radical beliefs and the stuff they downloaded from the Web was very serious," said a law enforcement source close to the case, speaking to The Washington Post. "But it's not like they were going to be able to get rocket-propelled grenades and blow things up."
 
What's more, the case relied on the controversial use of paid informants, one of whom had a notable criminal past, and the other who undermined the case (to no avail) by admitting in court that at least two of the suspects later jailed for life had no knowledge of the supposed plot.
 
A federal jury found five of the six alleged plotters guilty of conspiracy to commit murder but cleared them of attempted murder.
 
***
 
Perhaps the most extreme case of the FBI setting up potential terrorists involved the "Newburgh Four."
 
On May 20, 2009, law enforcement arrested four black Muslim men in connection with a bombing plot in the Bronx, and an attack on military aircraft in Newburgh, N.Y.
 
The men had set explosives in cars outside of local synagogues, and obtained a missile launcher to take down planes, but their plan was disrupted before it happened.
 
Although all the weapons the men used were fakes obtained from FBI agents, it certainly seemed like a slam-dunk case.
 
But The Guardian reports a stark difference between this group and other terrorists:
 
... far from being active militants, the four men [the FBI informant] attracted were impoverished individuals struggling with Newburgh's grim epidemic of crack, drug crime and poverty. One had mental issues so severe his apartment contained bottles of his own urine. He also believed Florida was a foreign country.
 
At one point during the sting, James Cromitie, the leader of the four-man group, reportedly tried to thwart the plan himself.
 
For weeks, he pretended to leave Newburgh to avoid his terrorist contact Hussain (a paid FBI informant). He stopped going to the mosque, and ignored Hussain's phone calls and voice mails. He even went so far as to pretend not to be in when he showed up at his house.
 
The Guardian reports:
 
Only when Cromitie lost his job, and became desperate for money, did he contact Hussain again. "I told you, I can make you $250,000, but you don't want it, brother," Hussain told him.
 
Now Cromitie agreed and set about finding lookouts. "Ok, f--- it. I don't care. Ah, man. Maqsood, you got me," he said, using Hussain's fake name.
 
A quick $250,000 seemed rather enticing to the four men living in poverty. After their arrest and trial, they were given a minimum 25-year sentence, but even the judge lambasted the government's handling of the case, according to the New York Daily News:
 
"The essence of what occurred here is that a government understandably zealous to protect its citizens from terrorism came upon a man both bigoted and suggestible, one who was incapable of committing an act of terrorism on his own," McMahon said, referring to Cromitie.
 
And although Judge Colleen McMahan would reject Cromitie's claims of entrapment, she still called the FBI's handling of the case a "fantasy terror operation," as The New York Times reported:
 
“Only the government could have made a ‘terrorist’ out of Mr. Cromitie, whose buffoonery is positively Shakespearean in its scope."
 
***
 
The arrests and convictions of men who didn't have the means to conduct an attack without FBI help certainly raises ethical questions. While they have been able to stop actual threats — it seems that in some other cases, the line between real and contrived has often blurred.
 
Some defense attorneys agree, as CBS News later reported:
 
"When the government supplies a fake bomb and then thwarts the plot, this is insanity. This is grandstanding," said Susanne Brody, one of the defense attorneys for another terror case in Portland, Ore.
 
"The people they repeatedly come up with continue to be people who have no ability to do something on their own," said Samuel Braverman, a defense attorney in the Newburgh case.
 
In spending all of this time concocting terrorist plots, the FBI may be wasting resources and ignoring the real threats. As one terrorism analyst at Stanford University writes, the priority for Islamic fighters now is actually to expel Westerners from their lands, not attack them in their own:
 
Many assume that jihadists all want to attack the West, and that those who leave do so for training. I argue the opposite, namely, that most Western jihadists prefer foreign fighting, but a minority attacks at home after being radicalized, most often through foreign fighting or contact with a veteran.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-fbi-hatched-some-crazy-terror-plots-2013-3#ixzz2NGovVZJl
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 15, 2013, 07:20:54 PM
National Security Letter Gag Orders Struck Down As Unconstitutional


Posted: 03/15/2013 6:01 pm EDT  |  Updated: 03/15/2013 6:17 pm EDT


NEW YORK -- Concluding that they suffer from "significant constitutional infirmities," a federal district court judge in San Francisco on Thursday struck down sections of federal law that allow the FBI to warrantlessly obtain private information under a gag order in the name of national security.

But U.S. District Judge Susan Illston temporarily put her order on hold to allow the government to appeal her decision, recognizing that a higher court should first be able to "consider the weighty questions of national security and First Amendment rights" at issue in the case. The authority of national security letters, government orders to communications providers to reveal user information, was vastly expanded in the post-9/11 Patriot Act. The federal government has made wide use of them in the name of the fight against terrorism.

In May 2011, the non-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation brought a lawsuit against the national security letter statutes on behalf of an unnamed telephone service provider, arguing that placing the company under a gag order violated its First Amendment rights. EFF also argued that the 2005 renewal of the Patriot Act provided too little judicial review for the secret letters.

Illston's ruling vindicated EFF's arguments.

"Basically the court declared the national security letter statute unconstitutional on the grounds that it improperly gagged the recipients," said Cindy Cohn, the group's legal director. "Nothing changes in the short term, but it's a very strong ruling."

Because the government still has 90 days to appeal the ruling while it is on hold, Cohn is still not able to reveal her client's name. Reporting by The Wall Street Journal has suggested, however, that it may be the progressive phone provider Credo.

"The recipients of the national security letters, there's only been a couple that have been willing to challenge it," Cohn said. "It's sad for me that my client can't talk about this, because I think they're the heroes."

Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the national security division of the U.S. Department of Justice, said “we’re reviewing the judge’s order.”

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York had previously invalidated some aspects of the national security letters statutes, but the California court found that it should have struck down the relevant statutes wholesale.

National security letters have been under renewed scrutiny recently. Earlier this month, Google revealed that the federal government has asked for data on thousands of its users over the past four years.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on March 18, 2013, 11:04:12 AM
The FBI Goes To Disturbing Lengths To Set Up Potential Terrorists
 
Paul Szoldra|16 minutes ago|4|

AP


 
James Cromitie, center, is led by police officers from a federal building in New York after being arrested for plotting to bomb New York synagogues and shoot down military aircraft.
 

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has busted an impressive number of homegrown terror plots over the past decade, but many people don't realize how these plots materialize. In some cases, they are hatched not from a cave-dwelling fanatic, but actually from the Bureau itself.
 
Ever since 9/11, the task of thwarting terrorist plots has consumed the majority of the FBI's budget — $3.3 billion compared to $2.6 billion for organized crime, according to Mother Jones.
 
The once exclusively investigative bureau has morphed into a counterterrorism agency, with field agents tapping into a nationwide network of informants that infiltrate mainly-Muslim communities.
 
The FBI targets the "disgruntled few" who would participate in a terrorist plot if given the opportunity, according to Mother Jones. In many cases, the FBI recruits potential terrorists and provides them with plans, equipment, and weapons — before finally shutting them down and getting credit for thwarting another attack.
 
***
 
One example surfaced in December 2005, when the FBI arrested Michael Curtis Reynolds after he tried to meet an FBI informant whom he believed to be an al Qaeda contact. Authorities said he expected to receive $40,000 to finance an alleged plot to blow up pipelines and refineries, according to Fox News.
 
The charges and his later conviction stemmed mostly from online conversations he was having with a Montana judge (and FBI informant) he believed was a terrorist leader.
 
But would Reynolds have gone that far on his own? An FBI official speaking to Fox News on condition of anonymity said "that the agency has since concluded that Reynolds might be mentally ill and not as serious a threat as originally believed."
 
***
 
Another case in May 2007 involved men who certainly weren't fans of the United States, but had scarce means of carrying out an attack.
 
Five foreign-born men, described by federal authorities as "radical Islamists," along with a sixth man who helped get them weapons, were charged in May 2007 in a plot to attack a U.S. Army base in Fort Dix, N.J.
 
Officials later admitted the men had no apparent connection to any terrorist organization. The Washington Post writes:
 
At the same time, a 26-page indictment unsealed Tuesday indicates that the group had no rigorous military training and did not appear close to being able to pull off an attack. The arrests in the case began Monday night after two defendants arrived at a local home to buy assault weapons, which had been supplied and disabled by the FBI, officials said.
 
"Obviously, these guys had some radical beliefs and the stuff they downloaded from the Web was very serious," said a law enforcement source close to the case, speaking to The Washington Post. "But it's not like they were going to be able to get rocket-propelled grenades and blow things up."
 
What's more, the case relied on the controversial use of paid informants, one of whom had a notable criminal past, and the other who undermined the case (to no avail) by admitting in court that at least two of the suspects later jailed for life had no knowledge of the supposed plot.
 
A federal jury found five of the six alleged plotters guilty of conspiracy to commit murder but cleared them of attempted murder.
 
***
 
Perhaps the most extreme case of the FBI setting up potential terrorists involved the "Newburgh Four."
 
On May 20, 2009, law enforcement arrested four black Muslim men in connection with a bombing plot in the Bronx, and an attack on military aircraft in Newburgh, N.Y.
 
The men had set explosives in cars outside of local synagogues, and obtained a missile launcher to take down planes, but their plan was disrupted before it happened.
 
Although all the weapons the men used were fakes obtained from FBI agents, it certainly seemed like a slam-dunk case.
 
But The Guardian reports a stark difference between this group and other terrorists:
 
... far from being active militants, the four men [the FBI informant] attracted were impoverished individuals struggling with Newburgh's grim epidemic of crack, drug crime and poverty. One had mental issues so severe his apartment contained bottles of his own urine. He also believed Florida was a foreign country.
 
At one point during the sting, James Cromitie, the leader of the four-man group, reportedly tried to thwart the plan himself.
 
For weeks, he pretended to leave Newburgh to avoid his terrorist contact Hussain (a paid FBI informant). He stopped going to the mosque, and ignored Hussain's phone calls and voice mails. He even went so far as to pretend not to be in when he showed up at his house.
 
The Guardian reports:
 
Only when Cromitie lost his job, and became desperate for money, did he contact Hussain again. "I told you, I can make you $250,000, but you don't want it, brother," Hussain told him.
 
Now Cromitie agreed and set about finding lookouts. "Ok, f--- it. I don't care. Ah, man. Maqsood, you got me," he said, using Hussain's fake name.
 
A quick $250,000 seemed rather enticing to the four men living in poverty. After their arrest and trial, they were given a minimum 25-year sentence, but even the judge lambasted the government's handling of the case, according to the New York Daily News:
 
"The essence of what occurred here is that a government understandably zealous to protect its citizens from terrorism came upon a man both bigoted and suggestible, one who was incapable of committing an act of terrorism on his own," McMahon said, referring to Cromitie.
 
And although Judge Colleen McMahan would reject Cromitie's claims of entrapment, she still called the FBI's handling of the case a "fantasy terror operation," as The New York Times reported:
 
“Only the government could have made a ‘terrorist’ out of Mr. Cromitie, whose buffoonery is positively Shakespearean in its scope."
 
***
 
The arrests and convictions of men who didn't have the means to conduct an attack without FBI help certainly raises ethical questions. While they have been able to stop actual threats — it seems that in some other cases, the line between real and contrived has often blurred.
 
Some defense attorneys agree, as CBS News later reported:
 
"When the government supplies a fake bomb and then thwarts the plot, this is insanity. This is grandstanding," said Susanne Brody, one of the defense attorneys for another terror case in Portland, Ore.
 
"The people they repeatedly come up with continue to be people who have no ability to do something on their own," said Samuel Braverman, a defense attorney in the Newburgh case.
 
In spending all of this time concocting terrorist plots, the FBI may be wasting resources and ignoring the real threats. As one terrorism analyst at Stanford University writes, the priority for Islamic fighters now is actually to expel Westerners from their lands, not attack them in their own:
 
Many assume that jihadists all want to attack the West, and that those who leave do so for training. I argue the opposite, namely, that most Western jihadists prefer foreign fighting, but a minority attacks at home after being radicalized, most often through foreign fighting or contact with a veteran.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-fbi-hatched-some-crazy-terror-plots-2013-3#ixzz2NGovVZJl


This is quite a weak point in the scam.  The fact that "we" have to set things up for "the criminals" we "find", should tell everyone what's really happening.  It should raise a certain flag, very high.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on March 18, 2013, 11:07:17 AM
Yeah, this shit is absolutely mad.  Crazy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on March 18, 2013, 11:10:45 AM
The scam relies upon the manufacturing of crime.  Good people should be furious. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2013, 08:15:45 PM
http://www.wnd.com/2013/03/now-big-brother-targets-your-fedex-ups-packages


Unreal.   Fuck Obama.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2013, 08:16:39 PM
The Obama administration is demanding the nation’s two biggest shipping companies police the contents of Americans’ sealed packages, and a FedEx spokesman is warning that the move “has the potential to threaten the privacy of all customers that send or receive packages.”

FedEx and UPS are in the Justice Department’s cross-hairs for not flagging shipments of illegally prescribed drugs the companies say they had no way of knowing were in their possession.

Criminal charges could be coming against the carriers, even though the government has not alleged any deliberate wrongdoing by the companies.

FedEx spokesman Patrick Fitzgerald said his company has a 40-year history of actively assisting the government crackdown on any criminal conduct, but he told WND this probe was very different from the start.

“What is unusual and really disturbing is it became clear to us along the way that FedEx was being targeted for some level criminal activity as it relates to these medicines that are being shipped from pharmacies, and we find it to be completely absurd because it’s really not our role,” Fitzgerald said. “We have no way of knowing what is legal and not within the packages that we’re picking up and delivering in this situation.”

“At the heart of the investigation are sealed packages that are being sent by, as far as we can tell, licensed pharmacies. These are medicines with legal prescriptions written by licensed physicians. So it’s difficult for us to understand where we would have some role in this. We are a transportation company that picks up and delivers close to 10 million packages every day. They are sealed packages, so we have no way of knowing specifically what’s inside and we have no interest in violating the privacy rights of our customers,” Fitzgerald said.

In addition to the unrealistic expectation that the federal government seems to have for the companies to know what’s in every package, Fitzgerald said protecting the rights of customers is paramount and the issues go hand-in-hand.

“They clearly are attempting to put some responsibility for the legality of the contents of these packages. That’s why for us it goes far beyond even just the online pharmacy situation. This really has a chilling effect. It has the potential to threaten the privacy of all customers that send or receive packages via FedEx because the government is assigning a role on us as law enforcement or taking on their role in a way that is not appropriate,” Fitzgerald said.

FedEx sought to diffuse the standoff by offering to stop doing business with any pharmacies that the government suspected to be involved in illegal activities. The Justice Department declined, citing the potential for the pharmacies to sue over a lack of due process.

“If the government were to come to us and give us the name of a customer that’s engaged in some level of illegal activity, we can immediately stop shipping for that customer. We will not tolerate any illegal activity within our networks,” Fitzgerald said. “What we want here is a solution that will apply for the entire industry and serve the public’s interest. That’s why we find it completely absurd and, to a large degree, stunning that the government is not working with us on that solution as they have with other problems in the past. As long as they’re not doing that, there’s really no solution even if they were to pursue an investigation or criminal charges against a specific company. There needs to be an industry-wide solution that will put a stop to this problem.”

That leaves FedEx and UPS with the task of stopping illegal shipments from sources the government will not divulge.

“The comparison that we’ve made is a no-fly list. It’s as if the government were to go to major commercial airlines and accuse them of some level of criminal activity if they were to allow somebody on the no-fly list onto one of their planes without providing them a no-fly list,” Fitzgerald said. “What we want here is the no-fly list for online pharmacies. If they are aware of some level of illegal activity by some number of pharmacies, simply provide us that list and we will stop providing service. It’s a very simple solution.”

Fitzpatrick said no other private carriers are being targeted by the Justice Department, and he has no evidence to suggest this probe is designed to boost the financially strapped U.S. Postal Service at the expense of private competitors.

UPS is currently negotiating a settlement with the government, but FedEx is fighting this all the way.

“Settlement is not an option for us when there’s no illegal activity on our part,” Fitzpatrick said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 20, 2013, 06:24:30 AM
http://www.washingtontimes.com/blog/inside-politics/2013/mar/19/tsa-agents-humiliated-wounded-marine-aggressive-in


Disgusting   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 20, 2013, 06:40:22 AM
why keep on posting this,everyone gets checked those are the rules
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 20, 2013, 01:57:31 PM
Love hurts: Man arrested for releasing helium balloon with his girlfriend

By Erika Pesantes, Sun Sentinel
7:52 p.m. EST, February 22, 2013




Anthony Brasfield saw romance when he released a dozen heart-shaped balloons into the sky over Dania Beach with his sweetie. A Florida Highway Patrol trooper saw a felony.
 
Brasfield, 40, and his girlfriend, Shaquina Baxter, were in the parking lot of the Motel 6 on Dania Beach Boulevard when he released the shiny red and silver mylar balloons and watched them float away Sunday morning.
 
Also watching the romantic gesture: an FHP trooper, who instead noted probable cause for an environmental crime.

Brasfield was charged with polluting to harm humans, animals, plants, etc. under the Florida Air and Water Pollution Control Act.
 
Endangered marine turtle species and birds, such as wood storks and brown pelicans, seek refuge in John U. Lloyd State Park, about 1.5 miles east of the motel.



Between 2008 and 2012, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said there were 21 arrests statewide under the rarely used environmental crime statute. The third-degree felony is punishable by up to five years in prison.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/crime/fl-helium-balloon-environmental-crime-20130222,0,3220328.story

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2013, 04:06:32 AM
Free Republic
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Skip to comments.

Chicago Cops Shoot Wrong Man - 11 Times
Courthouse News ^ | March 13, 2013 | JACK BOUBOUSHIAN
Posted on March 21, 2013 11:58:50 PM EDT by Altariel

CHICAGO (CN) - Chicago police shot a store owner 11 times after armed gunmen robbed him, then handcuffed him to his hospital bed and harassed him to cover up their "gross misconduct," the businessman claims in court.

Bassil Abdelal sued Chicago and two Officer Does in Federal Court, for excessive force, false imprisonment, assault and battery, wanton conduct, conspiracy, civil rights violations and negligence.

"The City of Chicago followed its 'code of silence' to protect and cover up the gross misconduct of Officer Doe 1 and Officer Doe 2 who fired eleven bullets into plaintiff, who was unarmed, did not aim any gun at the police, did not fire at the police, and posed no threat to the police," Abdelal says in the complaint.

Abdelal owns B&B Beauty Supply, on the West Side of Chicago.

He was closing for the night at about 8:30 on March 14, 2012, when "a man knocked at the door and wanted to make a purchase," the complaint states.

It continues: "The plaintiff tried to hand him the merchandise he wanted without letting him inside, but the man ran away. Plaintiff believes that it was a set up for plaintiff just to unlock the door.

"Shortly thereafter, the man that ran away came back with a mask on his face along with two other masked men, who stormed in the store. Two of the three masked robbers pointed guns at plaintiff and then they put a gun to his head and his father-in-law's head to try to knock them down and coerce them into doing what the robbers wanted."

The robbers forced Abdelal to open the register, which contained only $160.

"The robbers were upset as they expected much more than that," the complaint states. "They started screaming 'give more money or you be dead.' Plaintiff told them that the money was at the back of the store in the washroom. Before the robbers went to get the money from the washroom one of the robber's cell phones rang. They answered and they were informed that the police were coming, based on belief, by a getaway driver, as apparently somebody called from the nearby Green line CTA station.

"The robbers got scared and panicked, running in the store with a lot of anger. The plaintiff was very afraid that the robbers would shoot plaintiff and Aruri [his father-in-law] at any time because the robbers were angry that their plan did not work as planned. The robbers ran away when they heard police arrive and plaintiff saw one of the robbers drop their guns inside the store. The plaintiff stepped out of the door to see where the robbers were going so he could report it to the police.

"The plaintiff saw a gun at the front of the door outside. The plaintiff picked it up for protection until the police arrived because he was terrified that the robbers would return and come back for him from the side or anywhere. The plaintiff was standing right by the front door with the door open, half of his body inside and the other half outside. The plaintiff saw the police arriving in the parking lot outside the store. Feel[ing] relieved that the police were present for protection, he immediately threw the gun down to the ground and did not point it at anyone.

"After the police saw plaintiff drop the gun to the floor, they opened fire at him and shot plaintiff in his leg. The plaintiff ran back in side and was screaming, 'Don't shoot; I am the store owner.' The police kept on shooting even when plaintiff was lying inside because plaintiff had been already been shot in the leg. At no time did the police ever warn the plaintiff to point his hands up and/or lie on the ground or else they would shoot. In the process of shooting the plaintiff repeatedly, the police also shot out the glass in the store windows and glass door, causing substantial property damage.

"Plaintiff was shot and seriously wounded with 11 bullets to his hands, shoulder, legs, and hips. One bullet almost his plaintiff's head but it passed by plaintiff's head and hit the cash register. Plaintiff was bleeding profusely. Aruri was very scared and thought that plaintiff would die. Aruri ran to get something to wrap plaintiff's leg because it was shooting blood everywhere. The police ran into the store and the plaintiff lying down in a pool of blood asked them, in an extremely weak state, why they shot the owner. The police did not answer, did [not] give any care, and they stopped Aruri from even touching Abdelal and providing care.

Abdelal claims that "the police also shot and wounded all three robbers who fled from the store but who were nowhere near and away from the store at a later time after shooting the plaintiff even though the robbers did not have any guns on their persons when shot and never pointed any guns at the police since they had been dropped in the store and right outside the store before the police arrived."

Abdelal says Chicago police would not allow his father-in-law to stanch his bleeding leg, but handcuffed and questioned him in the ambulance and at the hospital about the gun.

"At no time did the plaintiff ever point a gun at the police or robbers, ever shoot a bullet at the police or robbers, ever own a gun, ever chase the robbers, or ever try hurt anyone. The plaintiff saw that the robbers who fled also never aimed a gun or fired any guns at the police while fleeing from the store. In fact, he saw them drop their guns while fleeing. Plaintiff's only concern was to protect himself and survive until help arrived," the complaint states.

"The plaintiff sustained serious gunshot wound injuries that caused permanent harm to the plaintiff as they required screws and a metal rod to be inserted in his left leg.

"The City of Chicago, by and through its agents and officers, tried to cover up and hide the fact that they shot the wrong person and that they used excessive deadly force against plaintiff who did not pose any threat to them."

He adds: "The next morning at the hospital at 4:00 am, while plaintiff was resting and lying in bed while heavily medicated, Chicago police came and handcuffed the plaintiff to the bed arms who was trying to rest from the pain from all bullets lodged his body. [Sic.] The police knew or had reason to know that the plaintiff was a victim of a crime given he was the store owner and had been held at gunpoint by three robbers which the police had shot beforehand.

"Throughout the entire week, detectives came back and forth asking plaintiff and his family questions even though they knew plaintiff could not talk coherently or know what medications the plaintiff was taking at the hospital."

Abdelal claims that the Chicago Tribune falsely reported the next day that the officers responded to gunfire at his store. But he says, "there had been no gunfire that occurred other than the police gunfire."

The Tribune is not a party to the complaint.

Abdelal seeks punitive damages of more than $10 million.

He is represented by Justin London.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2013, 08:19:20 AM
http://cnsnews.com/blog/gregory-gwyn-williams-jr/police-departments-beg-and-barter-ammo-while-dhs-buys-16-billion


LMFAO!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 26, 2013, 11:12:11 AM
Supreme Court Says It's Illegal For A Police Drug Dog To Sniff Your Porch
 


Michael Kelley|Mar. 26, 2013, 10:28 AM|1,491|5
 



inShare.2




Email
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Flickr/West Midlands Police

 
See Also
 




The Supreme Court Is Deciding Whether Cops Can Force Open Your Mouth And Swab Your DNA
 



This Quote From John Roberts Captures The Creepiness Of Forced Blood Tests For Drunk Drivers
 



These 5 Supreme Court Cases Could Change Americans' Lives This Year
 
The Supreme Court has ruled that police use of a drug-sniffing dog on a homeowner's porch is a violation of the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures.
 
The case, Florida v. Jardines, involved police taking a drug-sniffing dog to Jardines’ front porch, where the dog gave a positive alert for narcotics.

The officers subsequently obtained a warrant for a search, which revealed marijuana plants, and Jardines was charged with trafficking in cannabis. The Supreme Court of Florida approved the trial court’s decision to suppress the evidence.
 
The government argued that the dog is "alerted" only by illegal contraband so it didn't count as a search. But Justice Scalia's majority opinion noted that a homeowner's rights extend to their porch, so the search was an intrusion unsupported by probable cause.
 
The vote was 5 to 4. Justice Alito wrote the dissenting opinion, which was joined Justices Roberts, Kennedy, and Breyer.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/supreme-court-ruling-on-drug-dogs-2013-3#ixzz2OfeJHa6h

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 28, 2013, 10:37:20 AM


Computer Fraud And Abuse Act 2013: New CFAA Draft Aims To Expand, Not Reform, The ‘Worst Law In Technology’

 







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By Dave Smith | March 28 2013 12:06 PM


The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act was originally introduced in 1984 to reduce the cracking of computer systems owned by financial institutions and the government; nearly 30 years and seven amendments later, the law is regarded by many lawyers and academics as overly “expansive” and “sweeping,” as it lets the government incarcerate “any Internet user they want,” according to former federal prosecutor Orin Kerr.









 Courtesy / Google.com

According to the new CFAA draft, Internet activist Aaron Swartz could have spent up to 80 instead of 20 years in prison for hacking and distributing JSTOR documents from MIT.



Related


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ADT® SMB Security






 
“The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is the most outrageous criminal law you’ve never heard of,” said Tim Wu, of the New Yorker. “It bans ‘unauthorized access’ of computers, but no one really knows what those words mean.”
 
Despite the dangerous reach of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act as it currently stands – it was the same law used by prosecutors to torment late Internet activist Aaron Swartz prior to his suicide on Jan. 11 -- the House Judiciary Committee has actually proposed a number of expansions to the law in a new draft, which Tech Dirt says will be “rushed” to Congress during its “cyber week” in the middle of April.







You can read the proposed Computer Fraud and Abuse Act draft in its entirety here.
 
Among the many additions, the new CFAA draft expands the number of ways a person could be found guilty by punishing anyone who “conspires to commit” violations in the same way as those that have already “completed” the offense. It also adds computer crimes as a form of “racketeering activity,” to allow the Department of Justice to hit computer criminals with further charges in court. But once you’re found guilty, the new CFAA endorses more severe punishments for any offenders by raising the maximum sentences available for certain violations.
 
Here’s an example of the extreme nature of these recommended punishments: Aaron Swartz, who illegally tapped into and downloaded millions of scholarly papers from digital journal archive JSTOR while visiting the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, faced four charges under section (a)(4) of the CFAA, with a maximum sentences of five years per charge, for a possible total of 20 years in jail. While many lawyers and experts have recommended reducing these penalties or removing them entirely, the new draft actually increases the maximum for each charge under (a)(4) to 20 years, which means Swartz could have been forced to serve a whopping 80 years in prison. NYU law professor James Grimmelman on Monday called this notion “simply obscene.”
 
But what’s perhaps most troubling is how the new CFAA bill actually expands the law to include accessing information for an “impermissible purpose,” which means even if you have the right to access the information in the first place, it’s still considered a crime if someone deems you are misusing your access in some way.
 
According to Kerr, a law expert, the language in the new CFAA would make it a felony to “lie about your age on an online dating profile if you intended to contact someone online and ask them personal questions,” or if you violate the Terms of Service on a government website.
 
“In short, this is a step backward, not a step forward,” Kerr said. “This is a proposal to give DOJ what it wants, not to amend the CFAA in a way that would narrow it.”
 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is tackling the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act with its own proposals to legislature, which include eliminating duplicative penalties and reducing computer crimes from felonies to misdemeanors, and the organization also offers ways to contact your congressman about fixing the CFAA.
 
Follow Dave Smith on Twitter
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 30, 2013, 04:03:01 AM
Can you hear me now? Feds admit FBI warrantless cellphone tracking ‘very common’
Washington Times ^ | 3/29/13 | Shaun Waterman
Posted on March 29, 2013 5:38:53 PM EDT by Nachum

FBI investigators for at least five years have routinely used a sophisticated cellphone tracking tool that can pinpoint callers’ locations and listen to their conversations — all without getting a warrant for it, a federal court was told this week.

The use of the “Stingray,” as the tool is called, “is a very common practice” by federal investigators, Justice Department attorneys told the U.S. District Court for Arizona Thursday, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Installed in an unmarked van, Stingray mimics a cellphone tower, so it can pinpoint the precise location of any mobile device in range and intercept conversations and data, said Linda Lye, staff attorney at the ACLU of Northern California in a blog post about the case.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2013, 09:25:56 AM
Father Of Three Gets 25 Years For Selling $1800 Worth Of Painkillers
Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic|18 minutes ago|2|

 



John Horner, a 46-year-old fast-food restaurant worker, lost his eye in a 2000 accident and was prescribed painkillers.
 
Years later, he met and befriended a guy who seemed to be in pain himself.
 
His new friend asked if he could buy some of Horner's pain pills. Naturally, the friend was a police informant.
 
Prosecutors in Central Florida say Horner was ultimately paid $1,800 for pills. "My public defender told me, 'They got you dead to rights,'" he said. "So I thought, 'OK, I guess there's no need taking this to trial.'"
 
His story is recounted in a BBC News Service story about the problematic use of informants by U.S. law-enforcement agencies.
 
It's an important subject and the article tackles it well.
 
But let's focus here on the anecdote about Horner, because it gets at the utter madness of the War on Drugs.
 
For the sake of argument, let's presume he's guilty of selling $1,800 of pain pills prescribed to him for an injury. Forget that he was arguably entrapped. Just look at the crime in isolation.
 
What sort of punishment should it carry?
 
You've got a 46-year-old employed father, with no criminal record, caught selling four bottles of prescription pain pills. "Under Florida law Horner now faced a minimum sentence of 25 years, if found guilty," the BBC reports.
 
Twenty-five years minimum!
 
It costs Florida roughly $19,000 to incarcerate an inmate for a year. So I ask you, dear reader, is keeping non-violent first-time drug offender John Horner locked behind bars in a jumpsuit really the best use of $475,000?
 
For the same price, you could pay a year's tuition for 75 students at Florida State University. You could pay the salaries of seven West Palm Beach police officers for a year. Is it accurate to call a system that demands the 25-year prison term mad?
 
Well. Prosecutors offered to shave years off his sentence if he became an informant himself and successfully helped send five others to prison on 25 year terms. He tried. But "Horner failed to make cases against drug traffickers," says the BBC. "As a result, he was sentenced to the full 25 years in October last year and is now serving his sentence in Liberty Correctional Institution."
 
Naturally.
 
"He will be 72 by the time he is released."
 
Meet his kids:


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/unjust-prison-sentence-war-on-drugs-2013-4#ixzz2PPzR4UMU





SICK!!!!

wtf!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2013, 09:31:21 AM
 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 03, 2013, 10:27:51 AM
Father Of Three Gets 25 Years For Selling $1800 Worth Of Painkillers
Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic|18 minutes ago|2|

 



John Horner, a 46-year-old fast-food restaurant worker, lost his eye in a 2000 accident and was prescribed painkillers.
 
Years later, he met and befriended a guy who seemed to be in pain himself.
 
His new friend asked if he could buy some of Horner's pain pills. Naturally, the friend was a police informant.
 
Prosecutors in Central Florida say Horner was ultimately paid $1,800 for pills. "My public defender told me, 'They got you dead to rights,'" he said. "So I thought, 'OK, I guess there's no need taking this to trial.'"
 
His story is recounted in a BBC News Service story about the problematic use of informants by U.S. law-enforcement agencies.
 
It's an important subject and the article tackles it well.
 
But let's focus here on the anecdote about Horner, because it gets at the utter madness of the War on Drugs.
 
For the sake of argument, let's presume he's guilty of selling $1,800 of pain pills prescribed to him for an injury. Forget that he was arguably entrapped. Just look at the crime in isolation.
 
What sort of punishment should it carry?
 
You've got a 46-year-old employed father, with no criminal record, caught selling four bottles of prescription pain pills. "Under Florida law Horner now faced a minimum sentence of 25 years, if found guilty," the BBC reports.
 
Twenty-five years minimum!
 
It costs Florida roughly $19,000 to incarcerate an inmate for a year. So I ask you, dear reader, is keeping non-violent first-time drug offender John Horner locked behind bars in a jumpsuit really the best use of $475,000?
 
For the same price, you could pay a year's tuition for 75 students at Florida State University. You could pay the salaries of seven West Palm Beach police officers for a year. Is it accurate to call a system that demands the 25-year prison term mad?
 
Well. Prosecutors offered to shave years off his sentence if he became an informant himself and successfully helped send five others to prison on 25 year terms. He tried. But "Horner failed to make cases against drug traffickers," says the BBC. "As a result, he was sentenced to the full 25 years in October last year and is now serving his sentence in Liberty Correctional Institution."
 
Naturally.
 
"He will be 72 by the time he is released."
 
Meet his kids:


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/unjust-prison-sentence-war-on-drugs-2013-4#ixzz2PPzR4UMU





SICK!!!!

wtf!!!!

The poor father of 3 who sold 3 or 4 bottles of pills for $1800 isn't a saint. Did the informant befriend him because he was directed to by the police because this wasn't his first time Horner sold pills or was it coincidence he befriended an informant and it was just bad luck? Did Horner sell his friend the pills at his cost because he was concerned for his friend or did he tack on a nice little processing and handling fee? I'm thinking he might have been making a nice little profit.

But even if all the above is true (the article doesn't really address those questions) it is absolutely inhumane to sentence someone like that to 25 yrs in prison. It's an outrage. I know personally cases where convicted armed robbers and convicted felons of aggravated assaults get as little as probation on the extreme and typically 2 to 3 yrs and have extensive records. Stupid Stupid mandatory sentencing at its worse. Damn this crap pisses me off
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2013, 10:41:01 AM
To me mandatory minimums are pure bullshit if the system is supposed to dispense so called "justice". 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2013, 11:37:29 AM
No one cares until it is them being sentenced.

Shameful.

I used to be one of those "get tough on crime" types w the mandatory mins etc - but have read too many cases like this. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 03, 2013, 01:47:14 PM
To me mandatory minimums are pure bullshit if the system is supposed to dispense so called "justice". 

Agreed
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 03, 2013, 05:11:59 PM
To me mandatory minimums are pure bullshit if the system is supposed to dispense so called "justice". 



Not so sure on this one.  People hate disparity in sentencing.  And the media loves to sensationalize those stories.

I'm thinking with mandatory mins...reform would be better so that bullshit like this doesn't occur....but I think most of the public would still want the same punishment across the board...maybe within a certain tolerance.

Related would be the 3 strikes rule which should be completely abolished.

That said, how 25 years isn't considered cruel and unusual is mind boggling.  Straight from the facists on the Supreme Court....and we just tolerate the nonsense as Tu noted.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2013, 11:16:54 AM

Under Senator Harry Reid’s (D-NV) gun control bill (S. 649), if somebody steals your firearm or you lose it, you can go to prison for up to five years if you have not reported the theft or loss to local police and to Attorney General Eric Holder within 24 hours.
 
The provision merits ridicule for treating as a felon someone who misplaces a firearm and does not report it to the police and the federal government fast enough.
 
Section 123 of the Reid bill adds a new provision to section 922 of title 18 of the U.S. Code:
 

It shall be unlawful for any person who lawfully possesses or owns a firearm that has been shipped or transported in, or has been possessed in or affecting, interstate or foreign commerce, to fail to report the theft or loss of the firearm, within 24 hours after the person discovers the theft or loss, to the Attorney General and to the appropriate local authorities.
 
It also amends section 924 of title 18 so that a violation of the 24-hour reporting requirement committed “knowingly” is punishable by up to five years in prison or a criminal fine, or both. To punish someone who “knowingly” violates the 24-hour rule might sound reasonable to some people—until you know what a lawyer means by the word “knowingly” when it comes to a criminal statute.
 
The Supreme Court said in Bryan v. U.S. in 1994 that when a federal statute punishes someone for a crime committed “willfully,” the federal government must prove at trial that the individual knew that his conduct was unlawful. However, the Court also said that, when the statute provides that the government must prove merely that the crime was committed “knowingly,” the government does not have to prove that the individual knew that his or her conduct was unlawful. Thus, an individual who knew his or her gun was missing and did not report it to local authorities and the Attorney General in 24 hours would potentially face five years in prison.
 
It is not reasonable to send an individual to prison for up to five years for failing to tell local authorities and the federal government, within 24 hours, that his or her firearm is lost or was stolen, given that a reasonable person would never know that failure to make such a report, let alone within 24 hours, is a crime. Even someone who has the presence of mind to report promptly to local police or the sheriff’s office that a firearm is missing would be highly unlikely to know that such a report to local authorities was not good enough and that he or she must tell the Attorney General of the United States, too.
 
It is one thing to assign a legal duty to a firearms owner to report missing firearms, but it is quite another thing to exercise the draconian power of the federal government to make failing in that duty a federal crime. It is doubly inappropriate to give someone prison time for failing to tell the Attorney General that his or her gun was missing, when no reasonable person would know that failing to make such a report within 24 hours was a federal crime.
 
Also, the drafters of the legislation failed to take sufficiently into account the nature of rural life and hunting in the United States. Some people who own firearms within the United States do not have the ability to communicate with anybody (let alone the Attorney General of the United States) within 24 hours—think, for example, of a hunter deep in the wilds of Alaska who loses a firearm in a river.
 
Under no circumstances should Congress make it a federal crime to fail to report a missing firearm within 24 hours to local authorities and the Attorney General. It is an unreasonable use of power to define as a federal crime conduct that no reasonable person would know was a federal crime.

Posted in Rule of Law

 Print This Post



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2013, 01:11:39 PM
Government
N.Y. Dad’s Pistol License Suspended Over Something His 10-Year-Old Son Said — and It Could Be 8 Years Before He Gets It Back

Apr. 4, 2013 3:20pmJason Howerton48
850
10
2


68



(shutterstock.com)
 
A New York father has had his firearms all but confiscated after the Suffolk County Pistol License Bureau suspended his pistol license indefinitely over a perceived threat made by his 10-year-old son and two of his classmates at school.
 
John Mayer, of Commack, N.Y., told TheBlaze that the incident occurred on March 1. It was like any other day, the father explained. He put his son on the bus and sent him off to school.
 
Later that day, Mayer got a call from school officials informing him that his 10-year-old son and two other students were talking about going to a boy’s house with a water gun, “paint gun” and a BB gun. There had reportedly been a school yard pushing incident the day before involving the boys, excluding Mayer’s son, and they were seemingly talking about getting even in some way.
 
Mayer told TheBlaze that a teacher overheard the students talking and immediately called police and filed a report. He said the teacher told police something to the effect of, there’s a “kid with a gun, ready to go.” Mayer maintains that no serious death threats were made by the students. The Hauppauge Public School District has not returned several messages left by TheBlaze, therefore, it is not clear what they are claiming was said.
 
School officials then “interrogated” the boys, Mayer explained. It was later determined that the 10-year-old boys did not have access to a BB gun, paintball gun or any actual firearms.



 .
 
The school’s principal later informed the father that his son would be suspended for two days for the incident. But the ordeal was far from over.
 
Mayer said police officers were then deployed to his home where he was advised by officers that they might have to confiscate his firearms, which he says were all properly stored and secured. “I just couldn’t believe what was happening,” he told TheBlaze.
 
The following Monday, Mayer got a call from the Suffolk County Pistol Licensing Bureau. He was reportedly told that his license would be suspended and police would arrive at his house the next morning to retrieve his handguns. Acting quickly on the advice of his attorney, Mayer transferred all 15 of his handguns to his friend to prevent them from being confiscated. He also transferred his long arms to a local gun store out of fear that police would attempt to confiscate them as well.
 

Suffolk County Police Department (www.suffolkcountyny.gov)
 
However, that hardly fixed the problem.
 
Mayer’s pistol license has been suspended until further notice and he says officials have informed him that the suspension could last until his son moves out of his home. His son is only 10-years-old, meaning it could be eight years or longer before his license is restored.
 
“All my handguns are gone,” Mayer said, letting out a sigh of exasperation.
 
“We’ve grown to such an absurd point now with firearms where kids can’t even be kids,” he added. He also brought up the fact that there are now students getting suspended for pointing their fingers like “firearms.”
 
A spokesperson with the Suffolk County Police Department told TheBlaze that the incident is still under investigation.
 
“The Suffolk County Police Department Pistol License Bureau is conducting a complete and thorough investigation into the matter. Based upon the investigation, his license has been suspended,” the spokesperson told TheBlaze in an email. SCPD declined to provide any additional information.
 
Mayer’s lawyer, New York firearms attorney James Murtha, told TheBlaze that Mayer does not have any history of mental illness or criminal behavior. He also noted that Mayer’s son does not have a history of violent behavior.
 
“We understand that in this day and age things can get perceived wrong,” Murtha said. “But we are talking about a child making silly comments. And now a man’s constitutional rights have been dramatically violated.”
 
Gun rights “mean nothing at all in New York,” Murtha lamented. “Firearms are thought to be some really evil thing here.”
 
In New York, he explained, a citizen can be a denied a pistol license if the pistol licensing department determines that person doesn’t have “good moral character,” an undefined term:
 

Eligibility requirements for the issuance of a pistol license in New York are set forth in Penal Law §400.00(1). Briefly, an applicant must (1) be twenty-one years of age; (2) of good moral character; (3) have not been convicted of a felony or serious offense; (4) state whether he has ever suffered from mental illness or been confined to an institution for mental illness; and (5) not had a pistol license revoked or who is not under a suspension or ineligibility order issued pursuant to CPL 530.14 or Fam. Ct. Act 894-a.
 
“A clear message has to be sent that the government can’t treat citizens this way,” he added. “Firearms are not frightening. Not a single one of my firearms has ever put on a pair of shoes, run down the street and killed somebody.”
 
Mayer is now pushing for New York to adopt legislation similar to Maryland’s S.B. 1058 or the “Reasonable School Discipline Act of 2013.” He says it would protect the rights of students and parents.
 
The legislation prohibits a principal from “suspending or expelling a student who brings to school or possesses on school property a picture of a gun, a computer image of a gun, a facsimile of a gun, or any other object that resembles a gun but serves another purpose.”
 
The bill also prohibits a principal from suspending or expelling a student for making a “hand shape or gesture resembling a gun.” The law does, however, reinforce a principal’s right to discipline students for performing “a direct act of violence against another student.”
 
Mayer first brought his story to the popular firearms website LongIslandFirearms.com, where he is a respected member, according to the site’s operator. The website is currently accepting donations to help cover Mayer’s legal fees.
 
Because we have not heard the police or school officials’ whole side of the story, this story may be updated. TheBlaze will continue monitoring and investigating this developing story.

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/04/04/n-y-dads-pistol-license-suspended-over-something-his-10-year-old-son-said-and-it-could-be-8-years-before-he-gets-it-back


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2013, 07:54:40 PM
http://www.aim.org/special-report/police-militarization-abuses-of-power-and-the-road-to-impeachment/#


Read and undeerstand 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on April 04, 2013, 10:26:02 PM
Anyone else notice the rash of incidents involving the police confiscating citizens firearms over ridiculous and stupid shit?

Im really beginning to wonder what is going on, it seems like the police can simply take away your firearms for any reason they want... Where do they get the right to do that? How do they have the right to take away your property?

I knew some people that went to NO during katrina to help some friends, and agents tried to stop then and take.away their sidearms as they entered the city..

Dude had a long argument with the officer, concluding with him telling the officer that he had no legal grounds to disarm him and that officer could go fuck himself. He drove into the city still armed. But someone else who wouldn't have been so stubborn, or someone more trusting of the law would have handed his firearms over

His friend told him the 1st thing they started doing was rounding people up and taking their weapons from them. Again, where do they get the legal right to do that shit?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 05, 2013, 02:34:15 PM
Anyone else notice the rash of incidents involving the police confiscating citizens firearms over ridiculous and stupid shit?

Im really beginning to wonder what is going on, it seems like the police can simply take away your firearms for any reason they want... Where do they get the right to do that? How do they have the right to take away your property?

I knew some people that went to NO during katrina to help some friends, and agents tried to stop then and take.away their sidearms as they entered the city..

Dude had a long argument with the officer, concluding with him telling the officer that he had no legal grounds to disarm him and that officer could go fuck himself. He drove into the city still armed. But someone else who wouldn't have been so stubborn, or someone more trusting of the law would have handed his firearms over

His friend told him the 1st thing they started doing was rounding people up and taking their weapons from them. Again, where do they get the legal right to do that shit?

It's kind of a broad question. I'll speak for local situations as laws may be different state to state. In Texas generally speaking, it's not all that easy to confiscate a weapon without a reason. The reason being that it's stolen, it's used in a crime, the person is a felon, or the person has demonstrated they are a danger to themselves or others. In the later, the officer must articulate a case for confiscation beyond "The person was a danger to himself or others". They would need to be specific as to why. The law for transporting a handgun has relaxed in recent years to allow anyone to transport a handgun as long as they are not documented gang members, felons, or involved in criminal activity. Prior to that, you had to fit that criteria, PLUS be traveling across more than 3 counties. When a gun is confiscated the person who owns the gun can request a property hearing to have it returned. This is outlined in the CCP. I've no interest, and don't know any officer personally that has any interest in confiscating guns from anyone but criminals. I got my first .22 and  shotgun when I was 12 and have owned guns since then. Could care less if any citizen who  isn't a criminal has them.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 06, 2013, 09:38:54 AM
http://beforeitsnews.com/blogging-citizen-journalism/2013/04/police-tie-up-tourist-and-kill-him-with-pepper-spray-2446616.html?utm_campaign=&utm_source=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fl.php%3Fu%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fb4in.info%252Fb0VX%26h%3DIAQE9y8gD%26s%3D1&utm_content=awesm-publisher&utm_term=http%3A%2F%2Fb4in.info%2Fb0VX&utm_medium=facebook-share



Police Tie Up Tourist And Kill Him With Pepper Spray
 
Friday, April 5, 2013 10:53

 


















0
 


(Before It's News)

No doubt you've heard the adage: a picture is worth a thousand words. A picture of 62-year-old Nick Christie could be worth thousands of dollars when a jury sees it.

 The photo shows the Ohio man restrained inside the Lee County Jail with his body covered in pepper spray.

 "This photo is a picture of a man who is strapped to a chair naked inside a jail for hours with a hood over his face. That evokes thoughts of being tortured," says Cleveland-based lawyer Nick DiCello who represents the Christie family.

The photo, which was obtained by FOX 13's investigative unit, was taken in the final hours of Christie's life.

 The District 21 Medical Examiner ruled his death was a homicide because he had been restrained and sprayed with pepper sprayed by law enforcement officers. But to this day, nobody has ever been charged with a crime, and the Lee County State Attorney cleared the sheriff's office of any wrong doing.

 It's been more than two and a half years and his wife still can't accept what happened.

 "I was shocked. This was something out of a horror movie," says Joyce Christie. She said her husband was depressed and was showing signs of erratic behavior a few days before leaving for Florida.

 She called authorities and pleaded with them to take her husband to a hospital and be given his medications. Instead, he was taken to jail for disorderly intoxication.

 Her lawsuit alleges he was pepper sprayed 10 times over a 48-hour period, at times while in a restraint chair.

 Tom DePolis spent more than 30 years in law enforcement at the Tampa Police Department and Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office. He's seen first-hand the effects of pepper spray and knows its limitations. He can see no reason for deputies to repeatedly pepper spray Nick Christie since he was already in custody.

 "The purpose is to temporarily incapacitate someone -- temporarily, that's the key word, so you can restrain them," says DePolis.

 Monshay Gibbs was a deputy trainee at the jail at the time. In a video deposition, she testified that she thought the way Nick Christie was treated was excessive.

"He had a spit mask on and was naked," she said on the video while under oath. Gibbs testified that Christie pleaded with guards to take off the spit mask because he couldn't breathe.

 He later died at the hospital. His heart failed from the shock of the pepper spray. The Lee County Sheriffs Office declined to comment on our story because of Joyce Christie's wrongful death lawsuit, which is scheduled for trial the middle of next year.

 ADG Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Alien-D...

 Follow ADG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ADG_UK

 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on April 06, 2013, 09:58:51 AM
http://beforeitsnews.com/blogging-citizen-journalism/2013/04/police-tie-up-tourist-and-kill-him-with-pepper-spray-2446616.html?utm_campaign=&utm_source=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fl.php%3Fu%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fb4in.info%252Fb0VX%26h%3DIAQE9y8gD%26s%3D1&utm_content=awesm-publisher&utm_term=http%3A%2F%2Fb4in.info%2Fb0VX&utm_medium=facebook-share



Police Tie Up Tourist And Kill Him With Pepper Spray
 
Friday, April 5, 2013 10:53

 


















0
 


(Before It's News)

No doubt you've heard the adage: a picture is worth a thousand words. A picture of 62-year-old Nick Christie could be worth thousands of dollars when a jury sees it.

 The photo shows the Ohio man restrained inside the Lee County Jail with his body covered in pepper spray.

 "This photo is a picture of a man who is strapped to a chair naked inside a jail for hours with a hood over his face. That evokes thoughts of being tortured," says Cleveland-based lawyer Nick DiCello who represents the Christie family.

The photo, which was obtained by FOX 13's investigative unit, was taken in the final hours of Christie's life.

 The District 21 Medical Examiner ruled his death was a homicide because he had been restrained and sprayed with pepper sprayed by law enforcement officers. But to this day, nobody has ever been charged with a crime, and the Lee County State Attorney cleared the sheriff's office of any wrong doing.

 It's been more than two and a half years and his wife still can't accept what happened.

 "I was shocked. This was something out of a horror movie," says Joyce Christie. She said her husband was depressed and was showing signs of erratic behavior a few days before leaving for Florida.

 She called authorities and pleaded with them to take her husband to a hospital and be given his medications. Instead, he was taken to jail for disorderly intoxication.

 Her lawsuit alleges he was pepper sprayed 10 times over a 48-hour period, at times while in a restraint chair.

 Tom DePolis spent more than 30 years in law enforcement at the Tampa Police Department and Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office. He's seen first-hand the effects of pepper spray and knows its limitations. He can see no reason for deputies to repeatedly pepper spray Nick Christie since he was already in custody.

 "The purpose is to temporarily incapacitate someone -- temporarily, that's the key word, so you can restrain them," says DePolis.

 Monshay Gibbs was a deputy trainee at the jail at the time. In a video deposition, she testified that she thought the way Nick Christie was treated was excessive.

"He had a spit mask on and was naked," she said on the video while under oath. Gibbs testified that Christie pleaded with guards to take off the spit mask because he couldn't breathe.

 He later died at the hospital. His heart failed from the shock of the pepper spray. The Lee County Sheriffs Office declined to comment on our story because of Joyce Christie's wrongful death lawsuit, which is scheduled for trial the middle of next year.

 ADG Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Alien-D...

 Follow ADG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ADG_UK

 



Its this cool too Agnostic?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 06, 2013, 12:23:43 PM
Its this cool too Agnostic?

Whork, why would you think I would think that was cool??
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on April 06, 2013, 12:28:01 PM
Whork, why would you think I would think that was cool??

You seemed pretty cool with 2 of your collegues shooting 2 unarmed women in a van, so i just assumed. Your are not cool with this?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 06, 2013, 12:34:33 PM
You seemed pretty cool with 2 of your collegues shooting 2 unarmed women in a van, so i just assumed. Your are not cool with this?

was it a van? was I cool?.. stop assuming whork..you know the old saying..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 06, 2013, 01:29:50 PM

 The District 21 Medical Examiner ruled his death was a homicide because he had been restrained and sprayed with pepper sprayed by law enforcement officers. But to this day, nobody has ever been charged with a crime, and the Lee County State Attorney cleared the sheriff's office of any wrong doing.


Any more info on this? Were the Medical Examiner's findings ignored?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 07, 2013, 06:44:38 AM
A recent solicitation from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) reveals that the agency is seeking a "massive" online database capable of pulling up individuals' personal information, connections and associates.

On March 28, ATF posted the notice on FedBizOpps.gov, entitled "Investigative System."  The solicitation was updated on April 5 with a few minor changes.

The document says that the system will be utilized by staff "to provide rapid searches on various entities for example; names, telephone numbers, utility data and reverse phone look-ups, as a means to assist with investigations, and background research on people, assets and businesses."

The system is described as a "massive online data repository system that contains a wide variety of data sources both historically and current that can be utilized in support of investigations and backgrounds."

The overview of the solicitation states:

Staff will utilize "a number of internal databases as well as external sources to provide timely and relevant information and intelligence products to law enforcement agencies at the federal, state and local levels."

The system "provides a means to rapidly check records across the country" and is "necessary in assisting investigators, agents and analyst to find people, their assets, relatives, associates and more."

The ATF says they will use this system to provide information to Intelligence Analysts, Special Agents, Inspectors, Financial Investigators and Law Enforcement.

The investigative system will allow ATF to "obtain exact matches from partial source data searches such as, incomplete social security numbers, address, VIN numbers, etc."

The system will also have the ability to "link structured and unstructured data to find connection points between two or more individuals."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 07, 2013, 03:51:17 PM
You seemed pretty cool with 2 of your collegues shooting 2 unarmed women in a van, so i just assumed. Your are not cool with this?


In fairness....these were not cops abusing and murdering this guy.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 07, 2013, 06:01:54 PM
Furor Over Colorado Bill to Give Secret Service Agents Police Powers
 The New American ^ | 6 APril 2013 | Bob Adelmann

Posted on Sunday, April 07, 2013 9:48:13 AM by CodeToad

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper is expected to sign into law a bill that would give the U.S. Secret Service "limited" police power while operating in the state of Colorado. The bill, SB 13-013, which has already been passed by both the Colorado House and Senate, has sparked a firestorm of controversy because of fears that the proposed power could be used by Secret Service agents, acting on behalf of the Obama administration, to arrest sheriffs in Colorado who refuse to enforce unconstitutional federal gun controls.


(Excerpt) Read more at thenewamerican.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 07, 2013, 09:26:26 PM
Furor Over Colorado Bill to Give Secret Service Agents Police Powers
 The New American ^ | 6 APril 2013 | Bob Adelmann

Posted on Sunday, April 07, 2013 9:48:13 AM by CodeToad

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper is expected to sign into law a bill that would give the U.S. Secret Service "limited" police power while operating in the state of Colorado. The bill, SB 13-013, which has already been passed by both the Colorado House and Senate, has sparked a firestorm of controversy because of fears that the proposed power could be used by Secret Service agents, acting on behalf of the Obama administration, to arrest sheriffs in Colorado who refuse to enforce unconstitutional federal gun controls.


(Excerpt) Read more at thenewamerican.com ...


If the "federal gun controls" in question are unconstitutional, then the Sheriffs should want to get arrested, so the matter could end up in Court and the controls in question struck down. I'm not clear on what these "federal gun controls" are, but you'll forgive me if I don't take Mr. Bob Adelmann at his (from the looks of it, biased) word that they are, actually, unconstitutional.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 08, 2013, 06:12:31 AM
So you do care?

Yes, I'm busting your balls for using the phrase wrong.



valid ball busting
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2013, 06:26:37 AM
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/brooklyn/biker_dent_do_it_uEA4ZUy6dv6KqwUV9F5bXK


Lol.  Fuvking hipster probably deserved it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 08, 2013, 01:09:26 PM
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/brooklyn/biker_dent_do_it_uEA4ZUy6dv6KqwUV9F5bXK


Lol.  Fuvking hipster probably deserved it.

Just reading the one sided article, it asks us to believe it was the fault of the cops because . The bike left the bike lane to make a left hand turn, looked and saw no cars coming..

"“I had left the bike lane to make a left turn, and I looked behind me and saw that it was clear, and the farthest car was a fair distance,” he said.

Johnsen said he signaled to make the turn onto North Elliott Place from Flushing Avenue, but before taking the turn, he said, he “was swiped by this car on my left side.”



Unless the Taurus appeared out of thin air, it is pretty likely he just didn't see the car and pulled out in front of it. Might explain why the cops were unapologetic  ;)  Being hit would be prima fascia  evidence the way wasn't clear to make the turn correct?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 08, 2013, 04:13:10 PM
Not necessarily... Car could have been traveling at a high rate of speed.

I remember sitting at a stop sign and the car in front of me was waiting to make a left turn... I looked both directions I would assume around the same time they would.

Coast was clear.

The person in the car went to make the left and got pummeled by another car.

No doubt the car that hit them was speeding... by a large amount I would wager, but of course, that's not what was normal.

Cops came and didn't even ask me what I saw... just told me to move on. I tried to talk to them, but they told me to keep it moving.

From the injury to the biker, it would likely not be speeding,.but I'm just guessing.

Sounds like a sorry job the cops did on that crash you witnessed. Independent witnesses are gold in things like that unless the situation is obvious, like someone rear ended another car in which case it's irrelevant why the car in front stopped, the person who hit them is always at fault. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 08, 2013, 05:56:59 PM
Here's a good example of the blue wall....which we're told doesn't exist...lol

At least the Chief is going above and beyond, IMO, and handling this objectively and professionally.  Props.



http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2013/03/report_battle_creek_police_chi.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2013, 06:00:40 PM
http://weaselzippers.us/2013/04/08/massachusetts-man-shoots-and-kill-bear-in-self-defense-police-charge-him-with-illegally-killing-bear


LOL!!!  WTF was the guy supposed to do?  Wrestle the bear to the ground? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2013, 06:01:55 PM
Here's a good example of the blue wall....which we're told doesn't exist...lol

At least the Chief is going above and beyond, IMO, and handling this objectively and professionally.  Props.



http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2013/03/report_battle_creek_police_chi.html




“I have watched police officers in my department commit acts of excessive force, evidence destruction and internal cover-ups in crime reporting,” the message said. “… While I have attempted to notify the leadership of both the police department and city officials responsible in employee oversight; I have been met with death threats and lack of backup during investigations …”
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 08, 2013, 06:04:11 PM

“I have watched police officers in my department commit acts of excessive force, evidence destruction and internal cover-ups in crime reporting,” the message said. “… While I have attempted to notify the leadership of both the police department and city officials responsible in employee oversight; I have been met with death threats and lack of backup during investigations …”




Yep.


Did someone say, 'Serpico' ?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 09, 2013, 04:59:53 AM
Here's a good example of the blue wall....which we're told doesn't exist...lol

At least the Chief is going above and beyond, IMO, and handling this objectively and professionally.  Props.



http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2013/03/report_battle_creek_police_chi.html



I'm not sure this is actually a good example. Other articles go into more detail about it. I agree that the Chief is doing exactly the right thing. In our departments history we have examples of police covering up for other police officers, we also have examples of disgruntled officers making exaggerated claims of corruption. At that department, the claims, whether true or not were affecting morale, and the Chief was smart to ask for an outside probe. The FBI doesn't do investigations just for the sake of doing them without there being evidence to support  the concerns.

You can read about 2 apd officers firing being upheld recently on the internet. Officer Gish was spit in the face by a combative female who was restrained on a gurney. The female officer lost her cool and struck the woman in the face. Another officer had to pull her off. The officer who pulled her off lied about why he pulled her off. She lied about why and how she reacted . Had they both been truthful, they would have survived. While striking someone in the face for spitting in your face is never acceptable from a police officer, it is understandable. There would have been discipline but likely not termination. The officer who pulled her off, had he said exactly what happened, would have actually come out looking very good. He felt compelled to minamize the situation and lost his job over it.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 09, 2013, 05:04:31 AM
http://weaselzippers.us/2013/04/08/massachusetts-man-shoots-and-kill-bear-in-self-defense-police-charge-him-with-illegally-killing-bear


LOL!!!  WTF was the guy supposed to do?  Wrestle the bear to the ground? 

I would just say, we've heard his side of the story. It wouldn't surprise me if it's later made public that he had made comments about killing the bear to nieghbors. Not saying he did, just that newspaper articles may not be the ultimate source for all the facts.

But I can top that story anyway...we may have talked about it before... a Texas man was charged with a crime by the game warden because a DOVE flew into his glass window and broke its neck. The man cleaned and BBQ's the dove and posted a picture on FaceBook. Someone notified the game warden who ticketed him because it was not Dove season.........true story....   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 09, 2013, 05:06:57 AM



Yep.


Did someone say, 'Serpico' ?

Yet the chief, who reached out to the FBI for a probe, says the officer never made a complaint. He has 2 detectives who investigate such allegations and according to another article I read, said there is no record of such allegations. Be interesting to see how this plays out.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 09, 2013, 07:44:19 PM
Yet the chief, who reached out to the FBI for a probe, says the officer never made a complaint. He has 2 detectives who investigate such allegations and according to another article I read, said there is no record of such allegations. Be interesting to see how this plays out.   


Really?  You mean he's received death threats and has to worry about his partner letting him get capped.

Yeah...I guess maybe when you're facing the blue wall you don't wanna file a complaint. 

Might just live longer.

In any event, I applaud the Chief.  And it wouldn't even have to be the FBI (maybe legally it does, I don't know), but from the stand point of trying to be honest and objective, letting an outside agency even at the State level goes a long way.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 09, 2013, 07:45:31 PM


But I can top that story anyway...we may have talked about it before... a Texas man was charged with a crime by the game warden because a DOVE flew into his glass window and broke its neck. The man cleaned and BBQ's the dove and posted a picture on FaceBook. Someone notified the game warden who ticketed him because it was not Dove season.........true story....   


I can't see a judge upholding that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2013, 05:01:29 AM
Sasquatch, Nessie, Area 51, Blue Wall, Ghosts,

While you and I both know there are ocassions where police covered up for police, and probably today there will be an ocassion like that, in my experience, that blue wall has gone from 10' tall from the early days of policing to about 2' tall today and it many places it's got huge holes in it. I posted stats earlier this year that showed the majority of complaints against police are generated BY police. I also spoke of a firing of an officer who tried to minimize another officers actions after being spit on. Yes, the officer tried to cover something up, and yes that officer was terminated. I think that has to say something about the changing enviornment. So if you are arguing the blue wall exists, I would argue that to an extent it does and the height varies department to department but it's coming down. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2013, 05:22:12 AM

I can't see a judge upholding that.



The very last of the dove insanity

Posted on October 30, 2012


Last post about the game bird, I promise.
 
First up is this interview I did with Elizabeth Trovall of NPR’s State Impact.  She put together a fantastic overview of exactly what happened and I appreciated getting all of the facts out there.
 
Next, I did an interview with a fellow Austin food blogger who goes by the name RL Reeves Jr over at Scrumptiouschef.com.  That man makes one hell of a gumbo, too.
 
Finally, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department asked me to be part of a PSA-like short that explains which law I unknowingly broke and why that law is in place.  It also has my friend Cecilia Nasti talking about the wonder of local, sustainable meat.  I’ve only sort of watched it—mostly because I don’t care much for how I look—but a lot of other people say it’s very well done.




So it seems from a couple blogs I read that the charge was dropped before it got to court.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 10, 2013, 05:00:11 PM
Sasquatch, Nessie, Area 51, Blue Wall, Ghosts,


Wow, you named things that don't exist so the Blue Wall must not exist either.  Everybody's been fooled.  ::)




Quote
While you and I both know there are ocassions where police covered up for police, and probably today there will be an ocassion like that, in my experience, that blue wall has gone from 10' tall from the early days of policing to about 2' tall today and it many places it's got huge holes in it. I posted stats earlier this year that showed the majority of complaints against police are generated BY police. I also spoke of a firing of an officer who tried to minimize another officers actions after being spit on. Yes, the officer tried to cover something up, and yes that officer was terminated. I think that has to say something about the changing enviornment. So if you are arguing the blue wall exists, I would argue that to an extent it does and the height varies department to department but it's coming down.  



Let me try again to help you see beyond your Blue Wall.

The incident you are using as an example that it doesn't exist is a prime example that it does.

Conveniently you left out the fact that 2 other cops were suspended over this.  ::)

You have an officer that did something bad.  You had THREE officers try to cover it up in various ways.

^^^ That's called a BLUE WALL.

Just because the wall isn't 100% effective all the time doesn't mean it's not there.


There is zero doubt that if it wasn't caught on tape and there were no EMS people involved...NOTHING would have happened to the cops.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 10, 2013, 06:02:44 PM

IRS: We can read emails without warrant
 
By Brendan Sasso - 04/10/13 12:56 PM ET





The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has claimed that agents do not need warrants to read people's emails, text messages and other private electronic communications, according to internal agency documents.
 
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which obtained the documents through a Freedom of Information Act request, released the information on Wednesday.
 








In a 2009 handbook, the IRS said the Fourth Amendment does not protect emails because Internet users "do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in such communications." A 2010 presentation by the IRS Office of General Counsel reiterated the policy.
 
Under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) of 1986, government officials only need a subpoena, issued without a judge's approval, to read emails that have been opened or that are more than 180 days old.
 
Privacy groups such as the ACLU argue that the Fourth Amendment provides greater privacy protections than the ECPA, and that officials should need a warrant to access all emails and other private messages.
 
Traditionally, the courts have ruled that people have limited privacy rights over information they share with third parties. Some law enforcement groups have argued that this means they only need a subpoena to compel email providers, Internet service companies and others to turn over their customers' sensitive content.
 
But in 2010, a federal appeals court ruled that police violated a man's constitutional rights when they read his emails without a warrant.
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

More from The Hill
 • House Judiciary threatens subpoena over DOJ kill memos
 • Manchin, Toomey reach gun deal including background checks
 • White House to begin furloughs in May
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Despite the court decision, U.S. v. Warshak, the IRS kept its email search policy unchanged in a March 2011 update to its employee manual, according to the ACLU.
 
In an October 2011 memo obtained by the ACLU, an IRS attorney explained that the Warshak decision only applies in the Sixth Circuit, which covers Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee.
 
But the attorney noted that if a service provider fought the search request, it would likely result in "protracted litigation," meaning that any leads from the emails would be "stale" if the IRS ever obtained them.
 
The IRS did not respond to a request to comment.
 
The ACLU also submitted requests for documents from the FBI and the Justice Department on their policies for emails searches, but has not received responses yet.
 
Lawmakers in both chambers are working on legislation that would update the ECPA to require a warrant for emails and other private online messages.
 
At a hearing last month, Elana Tyrangiel, the acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Office of Legal Policy, agreed that there is "no principled basis" for treating emails differently depending on how old they are.


Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/292989-irs-claims-it-can-read-emails-without-a-warrant#ixzz2Q71cUN00
 Follow us: @thehill on Twitter | TheHill on Facebook
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 10, 2013, 06:56:54 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/10/irs-email-warrant_n_3055988.html

Disgjusting 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2013, 06:54:14 AM
Wow, you named things that don't exist so the Blue Wall must not exist either.  Everybody's been fooled.  ::)






Let me try again to help you see beyond your Blue Wall.

The incident you are using as an example that it doesn't exist is a prime example that it does.

Conveniently you left out the fact that 2 other cops were suspended over this.  ::)

You have an officer that did something bad.  You had THREE officers try to cover it up in various ways.

^^^ That's called a BLUE WALL.

Just because the wall isn't 100% effective all the time doesn't mean it's not there.


There is zero doubt that if it wasn't caught on tape and there were no EMS people involved...NOTHING would have happened to the cops.





I think we're splitting hairs. The example I gave should indicate that kind of behavior isn't tolerated by the chain of command. That it happens from time to time even when the culture is changing is true, however I think you and I agree that the only way to change it is to send a clear message that it will not be tolerated. I know of many examples where cops reported bad behavior on other cops and the statistics of our I.A. bears that out. The LAST thing a department wants is cops violating peoples rights and breaking the law. The last thing most cops want is that very same thing. And I didn't conveniently leave  anything out, the fact 2 other cops were also suspended for it just supports my position. I was making a point that the department doesn't tolerate that behavior.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2013, 06:55:46 AM
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/ct-met-kass-0411-20130411,0,7328502,full.column

Watch this video - not about police abuse - but why people need to be armed. 

This is what the liberal communist pieces of shit would force us all into. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 14, 2013, 10:33:21 AM
I think we're splitting hairs. The example I gave should indicate that kind of behavior isn't tolerated by the chain of command. That it happens from time to time even when the culture is changing is true, however I think you and I agree that the only way to change it is to send a clear message that it will not be tolerated. I know of many examples where cops reported bad behavior on other cops and the statistics of our I.A. bears that out. The LAST thing a department wants is cops violating peoples rights and breaking the law. The last thing most cops want is that very same thing. And I didn't conveniently leave  anything out, the fact 2 other cops were also suspended for it just supports my position. I was making a point that the department doesn't tolerate that behavior.   





No it wasn't.  In fact you started off your post trying to group the Blue Wall in with things that don't exist.

3 cops covering for a bad 4th cop.  The Blue Wall is tall and strong.

Just because they caught this time, doesn't mean it's going away.

As for the leadership, in this case, yes I think they did a good job and we're open with the public.  They put the memos out for everyone and carefully explained what happened and why people were disciplined.  My only criticism would be that investigators outside the department should handle it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 14, 2013, 11:59:23 AM




No it wasn't.  In fact you started off your post trying to group the Blue Wall in with things that don't exist.

3 cops covering for a bad 4th cop.  The Blue Wall is tall and strong.

Just because they caught this time, doesn't mean it's going away.

As for the leadership, in this case, yes I think they did a good job and we're open with the public.  They put the memos out for everyone and carefully explained what happened and why people were disciplined.  My only criticism would be that investigators outside the department should handle it.

It must be the perception you have that the police lack the ability to investigate police. I've found it to be in cases I have  direct knowledge of  that the police investigators were harder on the police officers in the interviews. In some cases, to the point of badgering and leading questions in my opinion. Ultimately the determination is left to the chain of command to decide and the investigators are fact gatherers. I don't think, based on my direct knowledge that at my department police get an easier time with police investigators. We also have an Office of Police Monitor that sits in on the interviews and monitors the case to make sure the public gets a fair shake. Probably not that way everywhere.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 14, 2013, 12:01:48 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/14/trayvon-martin-shooting-target_n_3079566.html


LOL!!!! Stupid idiot.   LOL!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 14, 2013, 04:33:57 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/14/trayvon-martin-shooting-target_n_3079566.html


LOL!!!! Stupid idiot.   LOL!!!

I tell my subordinates never put your career in the hands of the brass. In other words, don't do things that will let your career hinge on the decision of the brass. This guy, whether he is telling the complete truth in his video or not, didn't follow that advice and he has paid the price.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 14, 2013, 05:30:22 PM
It must be the perception you have that the police lack the ability to investigate police. I've found it to be in cases I have  direct knowledge of  that the police investigators were harder on the police officers in the interviews. In some cases, to the point of badgering and leading questions in my opinion. Ultimately the determination is left to the chain of command to decide and the investigators are fact gatherers. I don't think, based on my direct knowledge that at my department police get an easier time with police investigators. We also have an Office of Police Monitor that sits in on the interviews and monitors the case to make sure the public gets a fair shake. Probably not that way everywhere.   





Hell, if true, that's even more of a reason.  The process should be as fair and objective as possible.  It should also avoid the 'appearance' of impropriety.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 15, 2013, 03:57:46 AM




Hell, if true, that's even more of a reason.  The process should be as fair and objective as possible.  It should also avoid the 'appearance' of impropriety.




 I agree, but simply having police officers assigned to a detail that investigates policy violations allegations of other police officers in and of itself doesn't rise to the level of "appearance" of impropriety in my opinion. But for those who do have the opinion that police officers cannot be impartial when investigating other police officers, we've added the Office of Police Monitor as oversight.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 15, 2013, 05:06:12 AM
Twenty-five miles due south of Salt Lake City, a massive construction project is nearing completion.  The heavily secured site belongs to the National Security Agency.
 
"The spy center" -- that's what some of the locals like Jasmine Widmer, who works at Bluffdale's sandwich shop, told our Fox News team as part of an eight month investigation into data collection and privacy rights that will be broadcast Sunday at 9 p.m. ET called "Fox News Reporting: Your Secrets Out.”
 
The NSA says the Utah Data Center is a facility for the intelligence community that will have a major focus on cyber security. The agency will neither confirm nor deny specifics. Some published reports suggest it could hold 5 zettabytes of data. (Just one zettabyte is the equivalent of about 62 billion stacked iPhones 5's-- that stretches past the moon.
 
One man we hoped would answer our questions, the current director of the NSA General Keith Alexander, declined Fox News's requests to sit down for an interview, so we stopped by the offices of a Washington think tank, where Alexander was speaking at a cyber security event last year.
 
Asked if the Utah Data Center would hold the data of American citizens,  Alexander said, "No...we don't hold data on U.S. citizens," adding that the NSA staff "take protecting your civil liberties and privacy as the most important thing that they do, and securing this nation."
 
But critics, including former NSA employees, say the data center is front and center in the debate over liberty, security and privacy.
 
"[It] raises the most serious questions about the vast amount of data that could be kept in one place for many, many different sources,"  Thomas Drake told Fox News. 
 
Drake -- who worked at the NSA from Aug. 2001 to Aug. 2008 and was unsuccessfully prosecuted on espionage charges -- says Americans should be concerned about letting the government go too far in the name of security.
 
"It's in secret so you don't really know," Drake explained. "It's benign, right. If I haven't -- and if I haven't done anything wrong it doesn't matter. The only way you can have perfect security is have a perfect surveillance state. That's George Orwell. That's 1984. That's what that would look like."
 
Fellow NSA whistleblower Bill Binney, who worked at the NSA for nearly four decades, says it's about the possibility that the government's stunning new capacity to collect, store and analyze data could be abused.
 
"It's really a-- turnkey situation, where it could be turned quickly and become a totalitarian state pretty quickly," he said. "The capacities to do that is being set up. Now it's a question of if we get the wrong person in office, or if certain people set up their network internally in government, they could make that happen quickly."
 
According to NSA's chief compliance officer John Delong, whose job is to make sure the laws and policies designed to protect the privacy of U.S. persons is being enforced, part of the frustration is that the rules are specific and secret.
 
"I think that's sort of the collision, is you have classified rules," DeLong explained during an hour long meeting with Fox News at the NSA. "You now have a somewhat more public data center," 
 
"These aren't just, like, general policy pronouncements of 'You shall protect privacy.'" he said. 
 
DeLong added that another misconception is that there is only internal oversight, when he says there is "a tremendous amount of external oversight" from the Justice Department, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and others.
 
In an email, Vanee' Vines, a public information officer for the NSA, said that the Utah Data Center will be "a state-of-the-art facility designed to support the Intelligence Community’s efforts to further strengthen and protect the nation. NSA is the executive agent for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and will be the lead agency at the center.”
 
Because the Utah Data Center is a "secure facility" and you cannot go inside without the needed security clearances, Fox News rented a helicopter and took to the skies, where the depth and breadth of the Utah Center were stunning.
 
The aerial video footage is exclusive to the Fox News investigation and posted here.  Two weeks after our filming, the helicopter pilot reported to our Fox News team that he had been visited by the FBI on a "national security matter."
 
The pilot said, according to the FBI agents, that the NSA had taken photos of the helicopter once it made several flyovers.  These photos allowed the NSA to identify the make and manufacturer of the helicopter in California who, in turn, told the NSA who operates it in the Salt Lake City area.
 
The FBI wanted to know if we had the proper air space clearances to flyover the site, which the Fox News team did.   Satisfied that the pilot was not flying "terrorists" over the site, the questioning concluded.  While the pilot passed along the Fox News contact information, there was no further inquiries.
 
Binney said the helicopter incident "showed the capability of the U.S. government to use information to trace people, their relationship to others and to raise suspicions about their activities and intentions."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/04/12/nsa-data-center-front-and-center-in-debate-over-liberty-security-and-privacy/#ixzz2QX655gwm
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 15, 2013, 11:27:08 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/15/cop-shoots-baby-and-husband-murder-suicide_n_3085099.html

Only cops should have guns.   ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 20, 2013, 05:00:42 AM
8th grade student suspended, arrested over gun t-shirt


Posted: Apr 18, 2013 11:17 PM EDT
Updated: Apr 19, 2013 4:27 PM EDT
By Charlo Greene - email
 
 

Most Popular Stories
Questions remain unanswered for 8th grade student arrested over shirt
POLICE: Man charged with beating incapacitated wife
State Police searching for two men involved in armed robbery in Fort Gay
Deputies: Institute volunteer firefighter arrested for seducing child online
Charleston Police investigating man found beaten in alleyway
  
When 8th grade Jared Marcum got dressed for school on Thursday he says he had no idea that his pro-Second Amendment shirt would initiate what he calls a fight over his First Amendment rights.

"I never thought it would go this far because honestly I don't see a problem with this, there shouldn't be a problem with this," Jared said.

It was the image of a gun printed on Jared's t-shirt that sparked a dispute between a Logan Middle School teacher and Jared, that ended with Jared suspended, arrested and facing two charges, obstruction and disturbing the education process, on his otherwise spotless record.
 
Jared's father Allen Lardieri says he's angry he had to rush from work to pick his son up from jail over something he says was blown way out of proportion.

"I don't' see how anybody would have an issue with a hunting rifle and NRA put on a t-shirt, especially when policy doesn't forbid it," Lardieri said.

The Logan County School District's dress code policy prohibits clothing that displays profanity, violence, discriminatory messages and more but nowhere in the document does it say anything about gun images.

"He did not violate any school policy," Lardieri reiterates.  "He did not become aggressive."

Now, Lardieri says he's ready to fight until the situation is made right.

"I will go to the ends of the earth, I will call people, I will write letters, I will do everything in the legal realm to make sure this does not happen again," Lardieri said.

Logan City Police did confirm that Jared had been arrested and charged today.

13 news tried contacting the Logan County School District but has not heard anything back.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 20, 2013, 02:32:36 PM
8th grade student suspended, arrested over gun t-shirt


Posted: Apr 18, 2013 11:17 PM EDT
Updated: Apr 19, 2013 4:27 PM EDT
By Charlo Greene - email
 
 

Most Popular Stories
Questions remain unanswered for 8th grade student arrested over shirt
POLICE: Man charged with beating incapacitated wife
State Police searching for two men involved in armed robbery in Fort Gay
Deputies: Institute volunteer firefighter arrested for seducing child online
Charleston Police investigating man found beaten in alleyway
  
When 8th grade Jared Marcum got dressed for school on Thursday he says he had no idea that his pro-Second Amendment shirt would initiate what he calls a fight over his First Amendment rights.

"I never thought it would go this far because honestly I don't see a problem with this, there shouldn't be a problem with this," Jared said.

It was the image of a gun printed on Jared's t-shirt that sparked a dispute between a Logan Middle School teacher and Jared, that ended with Jared suspended, arrested and facing two charges, obstruction and disturbing the education process, on his otherwise spotless record.
 
Jared's father Allen Lardieri says he's angry he had to rush from work to pick his son up from jail over something he says was blown way out of proportion.

"I don't' see how anybody would have an issue with a hunting rifle and NRA put on a t-shirt, especially when policy doesn't forbid it," Lardieri said.

The Logan County School District's dress code policy prohibits clothing that displays profanity, violence, discriminatory messages and more but nowhere in the document does it say anything about gun images.

"He did not violate any school policy," Lardieri reiterates.  "He did not become aggressive."

Now, Lardieri says he's ready to fight until the situation is made right.

"I will go to the ends of the earth, I will call people, I will write letters, I will do everything in the legal realm to make sure this does not happen again," Lardieri said.

Logan City Police did confirm that Jared had been arrested and charged today.

13 news tried contacting the Logan County School District but has not heard anything back.

and more... probably political content
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2013, 09:53:29 AM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/04/21/dianne-feinstein-prefers-massive-police-presence-to-individuals-with-assault-rifles


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2013, 09:10:25 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/images-of-swat-teams-in-boston-2013-4


Disturbng
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 23, 2013, 01:29:59 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=95475&page=1

A 61-year-old man was shot to death by

police while his wife was handcuffed in another room during a drug

raid on the wrong house.

Police admitted their mistake, saying faulty information from a drug informant contributed to the death of John Adams Wednesday night. They intended to raid the home next door.
 
The two officers, 25-year-old Kyle Shedran and 24-year-old Greg Day, were placed on administrative leave with pay.
 
“They need to get rid of those men, boys with toys,” said Adams’ 70-year-old widow, Loraine.
 
John Adams was watching television when his wife heard pounding on the door. Police claim they identified themselves and wore police jackets. Loraine Adams said she had no indication the men were police.
 
“I thought it was a home invasion. I said ‘Baby, get your gun!,” she said, sitting amid friends and relatives gathered at her home to cook and prepare for Sunday’s funeral.
 
Resident Fired First

Police say her husband fired first with a sawed-off shotgun and they responded. He was shot at least three times and died later at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville.
 
Loraine Adams said she was handcuffed and thrown to her knees in another room when the shooting began.
 
“I said, ‘Y’all have got the wrong person, you’ve got the wrong place. What are you looking for?“‘
 
“We did the best surveillance we could do, and a mistake was made,” Lebanon Police Chief Billy Weeks said. “It’s a very severe mistake, a costly mistake. It makes us look at our own policies and procedures to make sure this never occurs again.” He said, however, the two policemen were not at fault.
 
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is investigating. NAACP officials said they are monitoring the case. Adams was black. The two policemen are white.
 
Family members did not consider race a factor and Weeks agreed, but said the shooting will be “a major setback” for police relations with the black community.
 
“We know that, we hope to do everything we can to heal it,” Weeks said.

Johnny Crudup, a local NAACP official, said the organization wanted to make sure and would investigate on its own.
 
Weeks said he has turned the search warrant and all other evidence over to the bureau of investigation and District Attorney General Tommy Thompson. A command officer must now review all search warrants.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 23, 2013, 02:08:14 PM
An NYU psychology student turned his Manhattan dorm room into an air rifle factory and was arrested on illegal weapons possession raps Monday, law enforcement sources told the Post.

Bernard Goal, 20, was busted after a startled maintenance crew spotted a pair of realistic looking rifles on his bed while he was out and alerted campus security.

Public safety officers swept the Texas native's room and found four more Airsoft weapons that closely resembled AK-47s and a black Colt carbine rifles, sources said.

Goal allegedly assembled the weapons with parts he bought online and sold them for up to $500 each, sources said.
 


NYPD cops arrested Goal at 2:30 p.m. Monday and hit him with six misdemeanor violations of a local law that prohibits the possession or sale of air rifles and replica firearms, according to a law enforcement source.

The weapons fire pellets through compressed air and are routinely mistaken for actual firearms. They have a range of about 140 to 300 feet and can cause flesh wounds at a close range, sources said.

"It's very scary to know there were guns one floor below me. I had no idea," said one of Goal's co-workers, who described him as pleasant and a hard worker. "But knowing Bernard I'm not scared."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/nyu_student_busted_for_building_1lZqVHYj47McYLAtcHKAWP

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 23, 2013, 05:49:28 PM
"Virtually all voters -- 91 percent -- approve of law enforcement’s handling of the Boston bombings"

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/04/23/fox-news-poll-after-boston-most-approve-government-on-terrorism/#ixzz2RKyx66pW
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 24, 2013, 07:49:27 AM
Sure and for years after 9-11 you had people being all NYPD with their hats and shit... Everyone supports cops during immediate aftermath.

That doesn't make those people who do support it smart, it makes them sheep.

Remember, the Nazi party was supported by 90% of Germany before WWII as well.

Just kills you doesn't it... you can't plead "I don't hate all cops" when you take stands like this.. you are a cop hater Tu... that's ok, you must have your reasons, but please stop pretending you are an average citizen who thinks rationally and open minded.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 24, 2013, 11:21:01 AM
Federal Indictment: Gangsters Trade Sex For Favors From Guards In Baltimore Jail
 Friends of Ours ^ | 04/24/13 | Friends of Ours

Posted on Wednesday, April 24, 2013 8:16:26 AM



Apparently some female officers were unable to resist the animal magnetism of their imprisoned wards within a Baltimore city jail.

A "federal grand jury indicted 25 people -- including 13 state correctional officers -- on accusations that they conspired to run operations of the Black Guerilla Family gang inside correctional facilities," and U.S. Attorney Rod Rosenstein said "correctional officers were in bed with BGF inmates, in violation of the first principle of prison management" as reported by WBAL.

Reputed BGF leader Tavon White apparently admitted over a wiretapped cellphone that "I make every final call in this jail," and while awaiting trial for attempted murder "allegedly had a sexual relationship with four correctional officers -- Jennifer Owens, Katera Stevenson, Chania Brooks and Tiffany Linder -- impregnating all of them at least once," and according to the indictment Owens and Stevenson even "got 'Tavon' tattoos."  

The defendants variously are charged with racketeering and other crimes for their alleged roles in a scheme by which "BGF members and associates bribed correctional officers at the Baltimore City Detention Center to smuggle drugs, cellphones and other contraband."

Earlier this month an Orleans parish jail made headlines when videotapes were released which seemingly showed inmates chatting on cellphones, taking drugs and one even playing with a loaded gun as reported by The Times-Picayune.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 24, 2013, 11:56:28 AM
71-Year-Old And Her Daughter To Get $4.2 Million For Being Shot By LAPD
 


Rebecca Baird-Remba|Apr. 24, 2013, 11:40 AM|1,041|13

 

 The city of Los Angeles is paying out $4.2 million to two women who were accidentally shot by the LAPD during the citywide manhunt for fugitive ex-cop Christopher Dorner, the Los Angeles Times reports.
 
Margie Carranza, 47, and her mother, Emma Hernandez, 71, were delivering the L.A. Times at 5 a.m. on Feb. 7 when they unintentionally drove down the heavily guarded street in Torrance where one of Dorner's potential targets — an LAPD captain named in Dorner's online manifesto — lived.
 
Cops allegedly opened fire on the two women driving a blue Toyota pickup, mistaking it for a gray Nissan Titan that Dorner had reportedly been driving.
 
Carranza, who was driving, escaped with only cuts on her hands, while her mother, sitting in the backseat, was hit twice in the back, according to the L.A. Times. One of the bullets pierced Hernandez's upper back, exited her chest, and barely missed her heart.
 
"Margie is screaming 'we are being shot at, we are being shot at!'" Glen Jonas, their lawyer, told the Times. "Then she screamed out, 'I am just the newspaper woman, I am the newspaper woman!'"
 
Neither suffered life-threatening injuries, and both recovered.
 
LAPD chief Charlie Beck called the incident a "tragic misinterpretation" by officers working under a high level of stress. He personally apologized to the mother and daughter a few days after the shooting and launched an investigation into the officers' conduct, which is ongoing.
 

SEE ALSO: REPORT: A Tiny 71-Year-Old Woman Was Shot Twice In The Back During The LAPD's Manhunt


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/women-shot-dorner-manhunt-settlement-2013-4#ixzz2RPOToJd1

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 24, 2013, 05:54:18 PM
Did you see what the LA city attorney said?



Trutanich called the agreement a "no brainer because the costs were going to skyrocket."

"We got out of this thing pretty cheaply all things considered," he said.




Well, the cops probably faced far greater danger than those two did, lol.

4.2 million is peanuts.

Just guessing, but half to the lawyer and half to taxes?  Even if it's not taxed, that's just a piss poor settlement.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2013, 02:15:24 PM
Not really... I know a lot of cops... Was even going to be one at one time... Changed my mind when I saw how you don't really do anything.

Were you or were you not a cop? You have said you were
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2013, 02:23:15 PM
I was... I meant as a true career path. I decided against it.

I was a special police officer. I was a private employee of a company where we were given police powers by the county sheriff's office.

I was not an employee of the county itself, so I do not consider it the exact same thing.

Does that make sense?

Not really but I'll take you at your word.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2013, 02:26:47 PM
Sworn in by the county, but not paid by the county.

How is that confusing?

The "Special Police" working for a private company sounds like a Security Guard, who has a limited amount of authority, carries a security guard license. So that part is confusing. What exactly did you do as a Special Policeman?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2013, 02:31:25 PM
I policed a 2 mile radius at a entertainment area.

It is actually a sworn officer of the law and I had to go to an actual academy, so no... It's not a security  guard.

I had the power to take their liberty the same as any other police officer. My jurisdiction just happened to be a small area inside of a county.


Sounds interesting.. any website or link where I can get a better idea because it sounds an awful lot like a security officer. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2013, 03:47:09 PM
Do you consider university Police "security guards"?

It is similar. My company didn't advertise the positions externally. You had to be a member of their security staff, then you could apply to be a police officer.

There's even a description on wikipedia for you that describes it pretty well.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_police

My jurisdiction was the company property and a 2 mile radius.







Thanks for posting that. I read up on it and understand.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 27, 2013, 05:19:31 PM
An NYU psychology student turned his Manhattan dorm room into an air rifle factory and was arrested on illegal weapons possession raps Monday, law enforcement sources told the Post.

Bernard Goal, 20, was busted after a startled maintenance crew spotted a pair of realistic looking rifles on his bed while he was out and alerted campus security.

Public safety officers swept the Texas native's room and found four more Airsoft weapons that closely resembled AK-47s and a black Colt carbine rifles, sources said.

Goal allegedly assembled the weapons with parts he bought online and sold them for up to $500 each, sources said.
 


NYPD cops arrested Goal at 2:30 p.m. Monday and hit him with six misdemeanor violations of a local law that prohibits the possession or sale of air rifles and replica firearms, according to a law enforcement source.

The weapons fire pellets through compressed air and are routinely mistaken for actual firearms. They have a range of about 140 to 300 feet and can cause flesh wounds at a close range, sources said.

"It's very scary to know there were guns one floor below me. I had no idea," said one of Goal's co-workers, who described him as pleasant and a hard worker. "But knowing Bernard I'm not scared."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/nyu_student_busted_for_building_1lZqVHYj47McYLAtcHKAWP



Wow.  This is nuts.  I guess they don't post 24-hour notices to enter where he lives, so he should have kept the goods hidden at all times when he wasn't there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 27, 2013, 05:25:29 PM
...seriously, this guy should have known to keep that shit out of sight at all times.  He should have realized how things may get out of hand in such an environment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2013, 06:00:07 AM
...seriously, this guy should have known to keep that shit out of sight at all times.  He should have realized how things may get out of hand in such an environment.

"It's very scary to know there were guns one floor below me. I had no idea," said one of Goal's co-workers, who described him as pleasant and a hard worker. "But knowing Bernard I'm not scared."


Like reading a copy of The Onion
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 29, 2013, 06:42:24 AM
[ Invalid YouTube link ]

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 29, 2013, 07:15:52 AM
[ Invalid YouTube link ]



From one of the guests on the show "Let's be fair, we don't see that everyday...we don't see that everyday walking down main street, what we saw was a federal response after a horrific bombing"

The guy has a point. Everyday cops don't arm up like that. Even though they may suddenly be in a shoot out with the next call they are on, the odds are that they won't and so they are armed and protected minimally so they can function at all kinds of tasks.. but when SWAT is responding to a situation where it is highly likely to be dangerous, why wouldn't they dress for the occasion? When you see police dressed like that all the time, driving vehicles like that all the time, then there may be a need for crying "police state, police state"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 29, 2013, 05:05:52 PM
From one of the guests on the show "Let's be fair, we don't see that everyday...we don't see that everyday walking down main street, what we saw was a federal response after a horrific bombing"

The guy has a point. Everyday cops don't arm up like that. Even though they may suddenly be in a shoot out with the next call they are on, the odds are that they won't and so they are armed and protected minimally so they can function at all kinds of tasks.. but when SWAT is responding to a situation where it is highly likely to be dangerous, why wouldn't they dress for the occasion? When you see police dressed like that all the time, driving vehicles like that all the time, then there may be a need for crying "police state, police state"




No, you should never wait for a potential problem to mushroom.  Address it quickly and early.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 30, 2013, 07:34:58 AM



No, you should never wait for a potential problem to mushroom.  Address it quickly and early.

If it were a problem, I would agree with you. We differ on that aspect.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 02, 2013, 03:03:09 AM
http://reason.com/blog/2013/05/01/forgetful-skeet-shooting-honors-student


Unreal.   What a stupid nation we live in.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 02, 2013, 01:16:33 PM
16-Year-Old Florida Honor Student Charged With Two Felonies For Doing A Science Experiment

Jennifer Welsh|May 2, 2013, 2:29 PM|9,026|39



Kiera Wilmot was a typical 16-year-old honor student at Bartow Senior High School, in Bartow, Florida. She's never been in trouble. She has a reputation for being nice to everyone, getting straight As, and loving science.
 
But then a science experiment Wilmot conducted on school grounds went slightly wrong.
 
At 7 a.m. on Monday April 30, Wilmot and a yet-to-be-named friend mixed aluminum foil and toilet bowl cleaner in a small water bottle. After about 30 seconds, the reaction created pressure inside the bottle, blowing the cap off with a pop that according to witnesses sounded like firecrackers going off.
 
(Instructions to make this explosion, called a "works bomb," are freely available online. The aluminum in the foil reacts with sodium hydroxide in the cleaner. The reaction produces hydrogen gas, which quickly builds the pressure inside the closed bottle until the plastic can't take it any more and explodes outwards.)
 
The reaction created a small amount of smoke. Her friend walked away, and the Assistant Principal Dan Durham walked over.
 
No one was hurt by the "explosion," but later that day Wilmot was handcuffed, arrested, and expelled from school. According to the police report, she has been charged with two felonies: "possession/discharge of a weapon on school grounds" and "discharging a destructive device."
 
A call to the Polk County Attorney's office yielded no additional information. Because the case is still being investigated, they won't comment on it or even tell us the charges being brought against Wilmot.
 
Wilmot was also expelled for violating the school's conduct code, which requires immediate expulsion for any "student in possession of a bomb (or) explosive device ... while at a school (or) a school-sponsored activity... unless the material or device is being used as part of a legitimate school-related activity or science project conducted under the supervision of an instructor."
 
The school told Riptide blog that Wilmot can challenge her expulsion. There has been no comment from the Wilmot family. When I called the phone number of a Marie Wilmot, who lives at the address reported as the Wilmot home by The Ledger, there was no answer and the voice mailbox was full.
 
Reporters that have approached the Wilmot home have been told by the family that they have no comment.
 
The aluminum foil and drain cleaner reaction is a go-to science experiment. The problem seems to be that she wasn't doing the experiment under controlled safety conditions, as in class or with her teachers. In the police report, Wilmot claimed it was in preparation for the science fair, but supposedly the science teachers said there was no upcoming science fair, according to ABC Action News. And the experiment was also done on school grounds (it was outdoors).
 
If Wilmot had performed the reaction in her own backyard, there would never have been an issue. Sadly, The Ledger reports that Wilmot lives in an apartment, so she probably didn't have access to any private outdoor areas.
 
Scientists around the world are showing support for the high schooler by tweeting about the explosions, fires, and general disruption they've caused as kids (and adults in some cases).
 
There's also a petition to get the police to drop the charges.
 
Here's a video of a similar reaction:


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/kiera-wilmot-arrested-for-science-explosion-2013-5#ixzz2SAV1MYvo

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 03, 2013, 06:49:45 AM
‘Smoking’ gun nets 60G fine

60G fine for cig lighter
By JULIA MARSH
Last Updated: 3:42 AM, May 2, 2013
Posted: 3:16 AM, May 2, 2013

 

The owner of a Midtown tourist shop is firing back at Mayor Bloomberg’s crusade against toy guns, filing papers to block a $60,000 fine from the city for selling lighters shaped like small pistols.

 “We don’t have the money,” said Fred Shayes, 49, who owns US Camera & Computer Inc. near Penn Station. “I would have to take a loan out from the bank to pay that.”

Shayes filed a petition in Manhattan Supreme Court to vacate the fine. At issue is a bronze-and-silver colored 3-inch butane lighter shaped like a gun with a black handle and a red tip that was selling for $10 until investigators slapped the store with a fine and yanked it off their shelves.
 



‘GUN’ LIGHTER Shop owner fights fine.

Under city law, toy guns can’t be sold in the city unless they are bright green, blue, red or a neon color.

Toy guns are also supposed to have a legible stamp identifying the manufacturer or trade name.

Although the gun-shaped lighter can fit in the palm of a smoker’s hand, inspectors for the city’s Department of Consumer Affairs said in 2011 that the lighters could reasonably be confused with a real firearm, and hit Shayes with the fine.

“The day the inspector came, he said, ‘This is illegal,’ ” Shayes said. “I took it off the shelf right away. I sent it back, and I showed them the invoice that proved I returned it.”

He lost in a hearing at the Department of Consumer Affairs’ appeals board, and went to court.
 
Over the past seven years, city officials have seized more than 7,200 illegal toy guns from stores and levied $2.4 million in fines, officials said.

 Retailer Party City paid a record $500,000 in fines for 800 violations of the city’s toy-gun law.

“Imitation guns that are not easily distinguishable from real weapons pose a real and significant danger to public safety,” a spokeswoman for the city’s law department said.

“Merchants who trade in this illegal merchandise must be held accountable.”

Shayes said the fine could put him out of business. He was fined $5,000 for each of the 12 lighters.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 03, 2013, 09:33:49 AM
..

Miami cop fired 8 times could make it 9
By Claudine Zap | The Sideshow – 2 hrs 18 mins ago.. .
.

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/miami-cop-fired-8-times-141430862.html



For one police officer, will the ninth strike mean he's out?
 
This time around, Sgt. German Bosque—who has been fired eight times from three different police departments—has been charged with leaving his assault weapon with his girlfriend’s father, a trained security guard, while on an eight-day leave, according to CBS4 Miami.
 
That’s a no-no, says the Opa-locka Police Department, which presented its case to dismiss him in front of an arbitration officer on Wednesday.
 
The station, which covered Bosque's hearing, spoke with City Attorney Joe Geller, who said, "We’re here on a very simple matter. It’s going to be up to the arbitrator. We think what the officer did was wrong.”
 
Geller is arguing that Bosque violated the department’s policy that an officer’s weapon should be secured at all times.
 
But like the Terminator, Bosque has a history of coming back: He's the most fired, fined and disciplined officer in the state, according to CBS4.
 
The Miami cop has managed to return to his post despite his alleged vices. The Miami Herald reports Bosque has beaten back a long list of head-turning charges, including:
 

- busting the skull of a handcuffed suspect
 - beating juveniles
 - having dope and booze in his squad car
 - ripping off suspects
 - falsifying reports
 - participating in an unauthorized chase where four people were killed
 - calling in sick … from Cancun
 
“It’s allegations. Allegations are not convictions,” said Bosque’s union-provided attorney, Andrew Axelrad. “We have a system in place, and that system is a fair system.”
 
To hear Bosque tell it, he just loves his job. “I love serving the community. I love what I do for a living, and I’m very proud,” he said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 07, 2013, 04:20:41 PM
Man sues Portland police officer over drunken driving arrest


A man who claims he was pepper-sprayed and arrested on accusations of drunken driving by a Portland police officer after she spotted him vomiting in the doorway of his parked car is suing the officer for $20,275.

Ryan Sumpter claims that officer Kristin Watt didn't have probable cause to arrest him and used excessive force after she spotted him about 2 a.m. on May 2, 2011, sitting in the open driver's side doorway of his parents' car. Sumpter, a California resident, had been out at a bar with friends, felt sick and vomited on the street just as Watt drove by in her patrol car, according to the suit filed this week in Multnomah County Circuit Court.

The suit claims Sumpter had decided to sleep in his car until he felt better, and that Watt told him he needed to call a cab to go home. When it became clear that Sumpter wouldn't call a cab, Watt pepper-sprayed the interior of the car -- causing Sumpter to gag and cough and leave his car, according to the suit filed by Portland attorney Benjamin Haile.

Watt handcuffed Sumpter and he spent two nights in jail. The district attorney's office declined to charge him Sumpter with driving under the influence of intoxicants because of lack of evidence, the suit states. Sumpter was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm because the officer found a weapon in his glove box, but a judge later dismissed that charge. Sumpter also was charged with interfering with a police officer, but a jury later acquitted him.

The suit seeks $20,000 for pain, suffering, humiliation and upset. It also seeks $275 for the cost of an alcohol-detection bracelet he was required to wear after his release from jail.

The city attorney's office declined to comment because of the pending litigation.



http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2013/05/man_sues_portland_police_offic.html


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2013, 05:32:29 AM
U.S. Is Weighing Wide Overhaul of Wiretap Laws
 
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
 
Published: May 7, 2013 128 Comments
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/08/us/politics/obama-may-back-fbi-plan-to-wiretap-web-users.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&_r=1&



WASHINGTON — The Obama administration, resolving years of internal debate, is on the verge of backing a Federal Bureau of Investigation plan for a sweeping overhaul of surveillance laws that would make it easier to wiretap people who communicate using the Internet rather than by traditional phone services, according to officials familiar with the deliberations.




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Robert S. Mueller III, the F.B.I. director, second from left, during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in March.


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The F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III, has argued that the bureau’s ability to carry out court-approved eavesdropping on suspects is “going dark” as communications technology evolves, and since 2010 has pushed for a legal mandate requiring companies like Facebook and Google to build into their instant-messaging and other such systems a capacity to comply with wiretap orders. That proposal, however, bogged down amid concerns by other agencies, like the Commerce Department, about quashing Silicon Valley innovation.

While the F.B.I.’s original proposal would have required Internet communications services to each build in a wiretapping capacity, the revised one, which must now be reviewed by the White House, focuses on fining companies that do not comply with wiretap orders. The difference, officials say, means that start-ups with a small number of users would have fewer worries about wiretapping issues unless the companies became popular enough to come to the Justice Department’s attention.

Still, the plan is likely to set off a debate over the future of the Internet if the White House submits it to Congress, according to lawyers for technology companies and advocates of Internet privacy and freedom.

“I think the F.B.I.’s proposal would render Internet communications less secure and more vulnerable to hackers and identity thieves,” said Gregory T. Nojeim of the Center for Democracy and Technology. “It would also mean that innovators who want to avoid new and expensive mandates will take their innovations abroad and develop them there, where there aren’t the same mandates.”

Andrew Weissmann, the general counsel of the F.B.I., said in a statement that the proposal was aimed only at preserving law enforcement officials’ longstanding ability to investigate suspected criminals, spies and terrorists subject to a court’s permission.

“This doesn’t create any new legal surveillance authority,” he said. “This always requires a court order. None of the ‘going dark’ solutions would do anything except update the law given means of modern communications.”

A central element of the F.B.I.’s 2010 proposal was to expand the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act — a 1994 law that already requires phone and network carriers to build interception capabilities into their systems — so that it would also cover Internet-based services that allow people to converse. But the bureau has now largely moved away from that one-size-fits-all mandate.

Instead, the new proposal focuses on strengthening wiretap orders issued by judges. Currently, such orders instruct recipients to provide technical assistance to law enforcement agencies, leaving wiggle room for companies to say they tried but could not make the technology work. Under the new proposal, providers could be ordered to comply, and judges could impose fines if they did not. The shift in thinking toward the judicial fines was first reported by The Washington Post, and additional details were described to The New York Times by several officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Under the proposal, officials said, for a company to be eligible for the strictest deadlines and fines — starting at $25,000 a day — it must first have been put on notice that it needed surveillance capabilities, triggering a 30-day period to consult with the government on any technical problems.

Such notice could be the receipt of its first wiretap order or a warning from the attorney general that it might receive a surveillance request in the future, officials said, arguing that most small start-ups would never receive either.

Michael Sussman, a former Justice Department lawyer who advises communications providers, said that aspect of the plan appeared to be modeled on a British law, the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act of 2000.

Foreign-based communications services that do business in the United States would be subject to the same procedures, and would be required to have a point of contact on domestic soil who could be served with a wiretap order, officials said.

Albert Gidari Jr., who represents technology companies on law enforcement matters, criticized that proposed procedure. He argued that if the United States started imposing fines on foreign Internet firms, it would encourage other countries, some of which may be looking for political dissidents, to penalize American companies if they refused to turn over users’ information.

“We’ll look a lot more like China than America after this,” Mr. Gidari said.

The expanded fines would also apply to phone and network carriers, like Verizon and AT&T, which are separately subject to the 1994 wiretapping capacity law. The FBI has argued that such companies sometimes roll out system upgrades without making sure that their wiretap capabilities will keep working.

The 1994 law would be expanded to cover peer-to-peer voice-over-Internet protocol, or VoIP — calls between computers that do not connect to the regular phone network. Such services typically do not route data packets through any central hub, making them difficult to intercept.

The F.B.I. has abandoned a component of its original proposal that would have required companies that facilitate the encryption of users’ messages to always have a key to unscramble them if presented with a court order. Critics had charged that such a law would create back doors for hackers. The current proposal would allow services that fully encrypt messages between users to keep operating, officials said.

In November 2010, Mr. Mueller toured Silicon Valley and briefed executives on the proposal as it then existed, urging them not to lobby against it, but the firms have adopted a cautious stance. In February 2011, the F.B.I.’s top lawyer at the time testified about the “going dark” problem at a House hearing, emphasizing that there was no administration proposal yet. Still, several top lawmakers at the hearing expressed skepticism, raising fears about innovation and security.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 08, 2013, 06:58:17 AM
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/05/07/missing-women-cleveland-brothers-arrested/2140359



Nice - cops ignored complaints and warnings. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 10, 2013, 07:43:19 AM
http://www.bakersfieldcalifornian.com/local/x568091070/Dad-who-died-during-arrest-begged-for-his-life-cops-take-witness-video



Taxpayers going to screwed on this one. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 10, 2013, 08:02:45 AM
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/05/07/missing-women-cleveland-brothers-arrested/2140359



Nice - cops ignored complaints and warnings.  

Interesting conclusion you have drawn there..

From a recent news story;

Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight are believed to have only been allowed to leave the home briefly on two occasions, both times to go "into the garage in disguise," deputy police chief Ed Tomba told reporters.


I don't want to sound like a blubbering nutcase here but I would suggest we actually wait until we know all the facts before we conclude the police ignored anything... oh wait..forgot where I was for a moment...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 11, 2013, 01:02:24 PM
http://www.wlox.com/story/22145501/perry-county-police-dies-after-being-left-in-patrol-car-overnight


Someone needs to be fired for this
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2013, 01:08:32 PM
http://www.wlox.com/story/22145501/perry-county-police-dies-after-being-left-in-patrol-car-overnight


Someone needs to be fired for this

It would be interesting since in many cases police dogs are considered "officers".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 12, 2013, 11:38:18 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/2-bodies-found-nj-standoff-suspect-killed-142325525.html

F*ing pigs!
Title: Beating A Man To Death
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 14, 2013, 01:39:14 AM
Title: Re: Beating A Man To Death
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 14, 2013, 01:58:42 AM
IMO, the interesting part from the story happens when the cops go back later and try to confiscate the footage filmed by others.  Looks a lot like they were trying to cover their own asses on that.
Title: Re: Beating A Man To Death
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 14, 2013, 04:44:18 AM


Read about that.   

Disgusting. 

And who will pay - the sucker taxpayers not the criminal thug pigs who will make excuses and give the whole "life on the line" nonsense
Title: Re: Beating A Man To Death
Post by: 24KT on May 14, 2013, 04:47:38 AM
Read about that.   

Disgusting. 

And who will pay - the sucker taxpayers not the criminal thug pigs who will make excuses and give the whole "life on the line" nonsense

I would think dismissal and forfeiture of their pensions are in order, ...and just the beginning.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 14, 2013, 05:29:34 PM






Been reading up on this and it's fucking disgusting.

Can the deniers on this board at least admit that there are deep rooted systemic problems when it comes to cops using force these days?

Bullshit on the tiny minority crap.  For that to make any sense, you have to believe:

-8, maybe 9, brutal cops all came together on the exact same day, at the exact same point in time, at the exact same location and murdered this guy...then siezed the evidence.  ::)

-Or, you're in complete denial.

-Or, you're just retarded. 


I only wish they had uploaded that shit to the internet before it got seized.  Would anyone be surprised if it disappeared?

The only tiny glimmer of hope is that an outside agency is investigating.  But given the enormity of the blue wall (yeah, the one were told is similar to the Lochness monster ::)  ), I wouldn't hold my breath.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2013, 05:52:23 AM
Your Next IRS Political Audit
The tax agency is getting vast new power in health care..
Article Video Comments (120) more in Opinion | Find New $LINKTEXTFIND$ ».
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Even as the politicized tax enforcement scandal expands, the Internal Revenue Service continues to expand its political powers thanks to the Affordable Care Act. A larger government always creates more openings for abuse, as Americans will learn when the IRS starts auditing their health care in addition to their 1040 next year.

Over the last decade or so the tax agency has stretched its portfolio and become an enforcer and decision-maker for government benefits and programs. Three years ago, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson, who operates within the IRS, presciently noted that ObamaCare is "the most extensive social benefit program the IRS has been asked to implement in recent history."

Related Video
 
Editorial board member Steve Moore on the widening IRS harassment scandal, and emerging concerns over the agency's role in enforcing ObamaCare. Photo: Associated Press
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This March the IRS Inspector General reiterated that ObamaCare's 47 major changes to the revenue code "represent the largest set of tax law changes the IRS has had to implement in more than 20 years." Thus the IRS is playing Thelma to the Health and Human Service Department's Louise. The tax agency has requested funding for 1,954 full-time equivalent employees for its Affordable Care Act office in 2014.

Instead of going after tax cheats, these bureaucrats will write and enforce tax regulations for parts of the economy in which they have no core competence. For example, do ski instructors or public school teachers count as seasonal workers? How long is a "full time" work week? Is it 40 hours, or 30?

The IRS will also dispense ObamaCare's insurance subsidies since technically they're "advanceable" tax credits, i.e., transfer payments made prior to filing a tax return. The IRS will also police the individual mandate-tax to buy health insurance, as well as the business penalties for not offering Washington-approved coverage to employees.

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To monitor compliance with these rules, the IRS and HHS are now building the largest personal information database the government has ever attempted. Known as the Federal Data Services Hub, the project is taking the IRS's own records (for income and employment status) and centralizing them with information from Social Security (identity), Homeland Security (citizenship), Justice (criminal history), HHS (enrollment in entitlement programs and certain medical claims data) and state governments (residency).

The data hub will be used as the verification system for ObamaCare's complex subsidy formula. All insurers, self-insured businesses and government health programs must submit reports to the IRS about the individuals they cover, which the IRS will cross-check against tax returns.

Good luck in advance to anyone who gets caught in this system's gears, assuming it even works. Centralizing so much personal information in one place is another invitation for the IRS wigglers in some regional office—or maybe higher up—to make political decisions about enforcement.

A small harbinger: The original 61-page application for ObamaCare subsidies (since junked) asked about voter registration and invited beneficiaries to sign up then and there. What does that have to do with affordable health care?

Or take the recent HHS disclosure that Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has been beseeching the industries she regulates like insurers, hospitals and drug makers for "independent" donations. Ms. Sebelius will then take this money and give it to third-party groups—many affiliated with the Obama Administration—that will encourage people to sign up for ObamaCare.

The distinction between soliciting and demanding is especially vague when the IRS is the bad cop, with millions of dollars on corporate balance sheets potentially at risk. For instance, the IRS is supposed to apportion the annual $8 billion tax on health insurers according to market share—but that depends on how the IRS defines market share. Giving in advance to Ms. Sebelius can quickly begin to look like protection money to avoid corporate tax retribution.

Putting the IRS in charge of a political program inevitably makes the IRS more political. Since the Affordable Care Act converts every health question into a political question, maybe there's a better candidate?

A version of this article appeared May 15, 2013, on page A14 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Your Next IRS Political Audit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2013, 06:39:10 AM
Police shoot support dog; neighbors say they didn’t need to do it
 KDVR.com ^ | May 6, 2013 | Boris Sanchez

Posted on Thursday, May 16, 2013 9:02:08 AM by Altariel

DACONO, Colo. — A Dacono family is demanding answers from police, after their support dog was shot when he got loose and ran toward a neighbor’s yard Sunday night.

Mongo, a 3-year-old pit bull puppy, is recovering from a gunshot wound to the chest, as his owner, James Vester, is hoping for an apology from Dacono Police.

“I didn’t think I would see that again. You see it in Iraq — and then you see your best friend here get shot,” said Vester, a Marine Corp. sniper, who says he got Mongo, a certified emotional support dog, to alleviate stress after returning from combat.

Vester said he was doing yard work, when Mongo got loose. Minutes later, a neighbor called police because Mongo began barking at her dogs from across a fence. Because Dacono’s animal control officer is off on Sunday’s, two police officers responded to the scene.

According to police reports, when the officers arrived, Mongo became aggressive, allegedly barking, growling and then lunging at an officer. That’s why when the officer opened fired, police said.

Despite the reports, several neighbors had a different take on what happened.

“There was no noise at first, I just heard the gunshot — then the dog started crying,” said Heather Viera, who said she opened her door, but was told to go back inside her home. “I had thought maybe it got hit by a car.”

Another neighbor, Jenny Stevens, was just a few hundred feet down the street, walking her two dogs, when she heard the shot fired.

“There was no barking. It was dead silent — There was not a bark, there wasn’t a growl,” said Stevens. “The cop did not say stop to the dog, the cop didn’t yell anything.”

We brought the neighbor’s accounts to the Dacono Police Chief Matthew B. Skaggs, who told us that an internal investigation was being conducted, but that according to the testimony of critical witnesses, the officers did folllow protocol.

“I think it is important to remember these things develop very quickly,” said Skaggs. “If you look in the report, the officer did say specifically that the dog got within six feet of him and at that point he felt like it was his only option.”

Though, Mongo’s owner finds that hard to believe.

“Now I don’t even know what to do, what to think, or how to react,” said Vester. “I just feel dead inside right now.”

The results of the internal investigation are still two weeks away. We’re told the officer who shot Mongo will not be placed on leave.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2013, 06:52:02 PM
AMATEUR VIDEO MAY SHOW BOSTON BOMBING SUSPECTS ATTEMPTING TO SURRENDER TO COPS [BOSTON SCANDAL]
 Cleveland Connection ^ | 5/17/13 | ERIC JONATHAN BREWER

Posted on Friday, May 17, 2013 8:03:30 PM by Kimberly GG

....."The video – if the audio is confirmed by Tsarnaev’s public defender – offers an explosive piece of evidence that rips to shreds the false stories Boston cops under Commissioner Ed Davis’ supervision have been spinning to the world about the Tsarnaev brothers.

No evidence exists that they were armed. The men were not tossing bombs out of a car they drove. They didn’t rob the 7-Eleven. The Boston Globe has a signed statement from Jane Dyson that they didn’t shoot transit cop Richard Dononhue, Jr. Donohue was shot and nearly killed by fellow cops in a black SUV whose public employee occupants fired wildly at the vehicle Dzhokhar was driving.

Claims that the brothers shot MIT campus cop Sean Collier for his gun have been discredited since no weapons were found on either of the men or along the route they drove. The bullet wound in Tsarnaev’s neck was not caused by a suicide attempt before the seriously injured 19-year-old was finally allowed to surrender.

Tsarnaev was so heavily-medicated with opioids that claims of his “talking” and “writing out” a confession have been discredited, even by Davis who told the media the surviving brother was in “no condition” to talk. What has also been discredited is the claim that the younger Tsarnaev drove the vehicle he fled in over the body of his older brother.

An unidentified woman who allegedly witnessed the encounter between the cops and the brothers as they attempted to surrender claims it was Boston police who drove over Tamerlan’s body. The woman called into a radio station and said he was hit by a “police SUV” and then shot multiple times by Boston cops."....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 18, 2013, 05:36:49 AM
AMATEUR VIDEO MAY SHOW BOSTON BOMBING SUSPECTS ATTEMPTING TO SURRENDER TO COPS [BOSTON SCANDAL]
 Cleveland Connection ^ | 5/17/13 | ERIC JONATHAN BREWER

Posted on Friday, May 17, 2013 8:03:30 PM by Kimberly GG

....."The video – if the audio is confirmed by Tsarnaev’s public defender – offers an explosive piece of evidence that rips to shreds the false stories Boston cops under Commissioner Ed Davis’ supervision have been spinning to the world about the Tsarnaev brothers.

No evidence exists that they were armed. The men were not tossing bombs out of a car they drove. They didn’t rob the 7-Eleven. The Boston Globe has a signed statement from Jane Dyson that they didn’t shoot transit cop Richard Dononhue, Jr. Donohue was shot and nearly killed by fellow cops in a black SUV whose public employee occupants fired wildly at the vehicle Dzhokhar was driving.

Claims that the brothers shot MIT campus cop Sean Collier for his gun have been discredited since no weapons were found on either of the men or along the route they drove. The bullet wound in Tsarnaev’s neck was not caused by a suicide attempt before the seriously injured 19-year-old was finally allowed to surrender.

Tsarnaev was so heavily-medicated with opioids that claims of his “talking” and “writing out” a confession have been discredited, even by Davis who told the media the surviving brother was in “no condition” to talk. What has also been discredited is the claim that the younger Tsarnaev drove the vehicle he fled in over the body of his older brother.

An unidentified woman who allegedly witnessed the encounter between the cops and the brothers as they attempted to surrender claims it was Boston police who drove over Tamerlan’s body. The woman called into a radio station and said he was hit by a “police SUV” and then shot multiple times by Boston cops."....


I think the cops planted the bombs, framed the brothers, and may have actually orchestrated the 9/11 attacks...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2013, 06:08:31 AM
I think the cops planted the bombs, framed the brothers, and may have actually orchestrated the 9/11 attacks...

I never claimed that.   I only claimed that they sucked at their job and but for the guy going for a smoke those 9000 cops were uttely usless.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 18, 2013, 06:13:14 AM
I never claimed that.   I only claimed that they sucked at their job and but for the guy going for a smoke those 9000 cops were uttely usless.
  being as smart as you are you should sell your services instead of spending 24/7 on getbig  :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D priceless
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 19, 2013, 06:45:22 PM
Retired Cop Richard DeCoatsworth Honored by Obama, sat with FLOTUS – Arrested For Raping 2 Women

By Dan
 
May 18, 2013
 



http://riehlworldview.com/2013/05/richard-decoatsworth-honored-by-obama-sat-with-flotus-arrested-for-raping-2-women.html#comment-334596


Yes, dammit! I blame Obama, I don’t care what anyone says! What did they do to this poor guy!!!!
 

As a rookie cop, he performed a deed which earned him an invitation to attend President Obama’s first congressional address, and sat next to the First Lady Michelle Obama during the president’s address. After being shot in the face by a suspect, he managed to chase him down for several blocks before collapsing. However, DeCoatsworth called in enough information by radio that police were able to track down and arrest the suspect later the same day.
 


See, it all went wrong from there.
 

However, since 2009, various incidents demonstrated a slide in DeCoatsworth’s behavior as a cop. For instance, in 2009, local witnesses said that DeCoatsworth acted recklessly, along with another cop when bystanders said that a suspect they were tailing did nothing wrong, which ended when he and another fired while children were nearby.
 
In November, 2011, Internal Affairs investigated an alleged scuffle between him and another officer. DeCoatsworth also reportedly amassed nine citizen complaint, accusing him of assault, abuse and misconduct, before retiring from the police force on disability in December, 2011.
 
 
 





In February, 2012, an arrest warrant was issued for DeCoatsworth after he allegedly threatened a woman in Port Richmond, NBC10 Philadelphia also reported.
 
via Home : Lawyer Herald.
 
More via Fox:
 

A former Philadelphia police officer once hailed as a hero and given a seat next to the first lady at a speech by President Obama has been arrested and charged with rape and other crimes.

 Authorities allege that former officer Richard DeCoatsworth left a party with two females early Thursday and took them to another location, where they allege he produced a handgun and forced them to use narcotics and engage in sexual acts.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 19, 2013, 07:50:41 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/19/andrea-rebello-killed_n_3302043.html?ref=topbar&utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false


This story is huge locally.  Is the cop negligent in shooting this guy and killing the hostage? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 20, 2013, 06:43:35 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/19/andrea-rebello-killed_n_3302043.html?ref=topbar&utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false


This story is huge locally.  Is the cop negligent in shooting this guy and killing the hostage? 

tragic story..tragic ending. Without all the facts, couldn't make the call on negligent or not. I'm sure it will be scrutinized from top to bottom to determine if there was lost opportunities to back off and isolate the bad guy until SWAT and negotiators arrived. Why 8 shots..etc etc. Too soon to determine negligence in my opinion
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 20, 2013, 06:45:51 AM
tragic story..tragic ending. Without all the facts, couldn't make the call on negligent or not. I'm sure it will be scrutinized from top to bottom to determine if there was lost opportunities to back off and isolate the bad guy until SWAT and negotiators arrived. Why 8 shots..etc etc. Too soon to determine negligence in my opinion

to me - the larger issue is why some violent predator like that is out on the streets and on parole.  Same w the animal who killed the gay in NYC the other night who had a long history of violent arrests and attempted murder charges. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 20, 2013, 04:28:37 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/19/andrea-rebello-killed_n_3302043.html?ref=topbar&utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false


This story is huge locally.  Is the cop negligent in shooting this guy and killing the hostage? 




This one for certain doesn't belong in the police state thread, IMO.  1000 different ways this could go and not one of them a good option.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 20, 2013, 07:12:01 PM
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Journalism/2013/05/20/Google-And-Verizon-Gave-Government-Reporters-Records

Nice
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 21, 2013, 07:19:31 AM



This one for certain doesn't belong in the police state thread, IMO.  1000 different ways this could go and not one of them a good option.



wow..we agree
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2013, 07:24:28 PM
http://gunssavelives.net/blog/reason-number-7452-to-stay-out-of-nj-tx-man-transporting-unloaded-firearms-through-nj-doing-3-5-years-in-prison

While he spends time in jail - violent rapists are out thugging up the streets
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2013, 07:03:25 PM
http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2013/05/23/ex-judge-charged-with-stealing-cocaine-from-cases


ha ha ha ha ha!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2013, 11:48:49 AM
http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2013/05/24/sacramento-police-investigating-death-in-custody


Oh boy 


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on May 25, 2013, 03:14:55 PM
http://gunssavelives.net/blog/reason-number-7452-to-stay-out-of-nj-tx-man-transporting-unloaded-firearms-through-nj-doing-3-5-years-in-prison

While he spends time in jail - violent rapists are out thugging up the streets
This is so corrupt and disturbing.  NJ is definitely on my "never go to" list.    
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2013, 06:32:24 AM
This is so corrupt and disturbing.  NJ is definitely on my "never go to" list.    

If I read the story right, dude travels with a car load of guns, sleeps in a bank parking lot with gun cases visible in the car... This is an example of stupidity and why banning the sale of assault rifles  might be in order. This is a prime example of how guns get into criminals hands.. Mr. "I wanna own an arsenal" buys guns legally, then is careless with them and they end up in the streets. Who thinks it's okay to sleep in a car with a friggin arsenal? Having said that, prison for stupidity isn't the answer.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2013, 07:57:22 AM
Autopsy: Man beaten by deputies died of heart disease, not blows
LA Times ^  | May 23, 2013 | Richard Winton

Posted on Sunday, May 26, 2013 1:22:02 AM by Altariel

Silva, 33, a father of four, was pronounced dead early May 8, within an hour of the altercation. Witnesses reported seeing several deputies repeatedly strike the man in the head with batons as he lay on the pavement. Youngblood said Thursday that there was no evidence Silva had head wounds.

Youngblood announced last week that he asked the FBI to analyze two cellphones taken from witnesses who say they recorded the incident. The cellphones were taken after the witnesses were detained at a home. A search warrant was obtained to access the phones. The phones were turned over to Bakersfield police for analysis, Youngblood said.

"The analysis by the Bakersfield Police Department confirmed the existence of video footage related to this incident on one phone and no video footage on the second phone. This prompted the subsequent request for further analysis by the FBI," the Sheriff's Office said in a statement last week.

Witnesses have said deputies beat Silva without cause.


(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...




 ::)  ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 26, 2013, 05:55:09 PM
This is so corrupt and disturbing.  NJ is definitely on my "never go to" list.     



Yeah, I don't care for the NJ laws either, but the onus was certainly on this guy to find out all the relevant laws when transporting across state lines.

Literally, a couple of 5 minute calls to State Police departments would have prevented him from doing 3-5 (which is absurdly long given the crime).

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 26, 2013, 06:00:09 PM


This is an example of stupidity and why banning the sale of assault rifles  might be in order.
   
 


Amazing how the same tool who is always crying that people shouldn't judge cops based on a handful of bad apples, now points to some idiot to justify banning assault weapons from millions of people.

Did I hear someone say hypocritical, crying, douchebag?

::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 26, 2013, 06:01:53 PM
Autopsy: Man beaten by deputies died of heart disease, not blows
LA Times ^  | May 23, 2013 | Richard Winton

Posted on Sunday, May 26, 2013 1:22:02 AM by Altariel

Silva, 33, a father of four, was pronounced dead early May 8, within an hour of the altercation. Witnesses reported seeing several deputies repeatedly strike the man in the head with batons as he lay on the pavement. Youngblood said Thursday that there was no evidence Silva had head wounds.

Youngblood announced last week that he asked the FBI to analyze two cellphones taken from witnesses who say they recorded the incident. The cellphones were taken after the witnesses were detained at a home. A search warrant was obtained to access the phones. The phones were turned over to Bakersfield police for analysis, Youngblood said.

"The analysis by the Bakersfield Police Department confirmed the existence of video footage related to this incident on one phone and no video footage on the second phone. This prompted the subsequent request for further analysis by the FBI," the Sheriff's Office said in a statement last week.

Witnesses have said deputies beat Silva without cause.


(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...




 ::)  ::)  ::)



I asked on the last page if anybody would be surprised if video disappeared.  Lo and behold, one of the videos disappeared.  ::)

+1 for the Blue Fucking Wall.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on May 26, 2013, 10:00:41 PM

Amazing how the same tool who is always crying that people shouldn't judge cops based on a handful of bad apples, now points to some idiot to justify banning assault weapons from millions of people.

Did I hear someone say hypocritical, crying, douchebag?

::)
Exactly the 1st thought I had reading that post.

Well, some dumbass fell asleep with assault rifles in his car, clearly they need to be banned!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2013, 08:22:04 AM

Amazing how the same tool who is always crying that people shouldn't judge cops based on a handful of bad apples, now points to some idiot to justify banning assault weapons from millions of people.

Did I hear someone say hypocritical, crying, douchebag?

::)

Friggin drama queen..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2013, 08:24:57 AM
Exactly the 1st thought I had reading that post.

Well, some dumbass fell asleep with assault rifles in his car, clearly they need to be banned!

It's a concern I've mentioned before. People want to own assault rifles because for whatever reason, owning an assault rifle is important to them then fine... but be responsible with them so they don't end up in the wrong hands. This guy clearly was not being very responsible
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 27, 2013, 05:35:03 PM
Exactly the 1st thought I had reading that post.

Well, some dumbass fell asleep with assault rifles in his car, clearly they need to be banned!




Exactly...and coming from one of the bigger board cry babies - endlessly whining that a handful of bad cops should not reflect upon the majority of good cops.



*Edit - And you better make sure to give him a pat on the back for doing what they are paid to do and should be doing to begin with....or let the crying begin....



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2013, 08:59:06 AM
New Jersey: Court Upholds Man Arrested For Visible Gun Case In Car
 www.thenewspaper.com ^ | 5/27/2013 | http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/41/4110.asp

 
Posted on Tuesday, May 28, 2013 9:19:11 PM by KOZ.

New Jersey: Court Upholds Man Arrested For Visible Gun Case In Car New Jersey appellate court upholds five-year sentence for ex-cop who was driving with his legally owned guns.  

Readington TownshipMotorists driving through New Jersey can be subjected to a warrantless search if their luggage is similar in appearance to a gun case, an appellate court ruled last week. The Superior Court's Appellate Division upheld a five year prison sentence against Dustin S. Reininger, a former police officer who was in the process of moving from Maine to Texas when a Readington Township police officer recognized the cases in the back of Reininger's vehicle as the sort that usually carries a rifle.

During the long trip on March 20, 2009, Reininger became tired and decided to pull off the road in an empty, well-lit parking lot. He stopped his green Toyota SUV, turned off his lights, and went to sleep in the driver's seat under a blanket. At 3:25am, Officer Gregory Wester knocked on his window and woke him up, shining a flashlight in his eyes. Officer Wester testified that Reininger appeared "nervous and tired." The policeman asked Reininger whether he was carrying anything illegal.

"No, no, all good," Reininger replied.

Reininger believes he was targeted because of his Texas license plates. Officer Wester then looked inside the SUV with his flashlight noticed two nylon cases in the back seat. Once backup arrived, Officer Wester asked for consent to search the vehicle, but Reininger said no. Officer Wester then opened up the vehicle to search the cases "for safety reasons" any way. Reininger was arrested.

After obtaining a warrant, police recovered fourteen rifles, four shotguns and three handguns, including a loaded Glock. A grand juror had asked the prosecutor whether this man would have been charged if he had used a different case.

"Basically, if someone is moving... from Residence A to Residence B, or transporting, say, for example, they just purchased it, so they can transport it to their home, if they are properly secured, locked in a trunk, locked in a special lockbox and unloaded, then that would most likely provide an exception to these requirements, and therefore a defense to being charged," prosecutor Bennett Barlyn explained.

Reininger's SUV did not have a trunk, and state law only requires the firearm be in a "closed and fastened case" or "securely tied package" while transported. His attorney argued the zippered cases satisfied this requirement.

A jury acquitted him of the charges for possession of the "assault firearms" and handgun possession but convicted him in absentia of illegal possession of hollow-point bullets, shotguns, rifles and a high-capacity magazine. He was apprehended in Texas and extradited to New Jersey.

"What I don't understand is I am a citizen without a criminal history who has served this country not only in the military but as a volunteer to my community and as a police officer, not even making hardly any income at all, and I would have given my life to protect another person and for this country," Reininger said in a statement. "How can I be convicted for exercising my right? When does it become a crime for exercising one's right?"

The three-judge appellate panel insisted New Jersey's gun control laws do not violate the constitutional right to keep and bear arms, citing the Supreme Court's recent Heller decision.

"The Second Amendment does not create 'a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever purpose,'" Judge Ronald B. Graves wrote for the panel. "Furthermore, the Second Amendment does not preclude the state from regulating the manner in which accessories must be transported."

The court also upheld the warrantless search of Reininger's vehicle.

"Based on the outward appearance of the nylon cases, Wester reasonably believed they contained rifles or shotguns that were easily accessible to defendant," Judge Graves wrote. "In our view, however, the warrantless seizure was not necessary for the officers' safety, because defendant had been removed from the vehicle and there were multiple backup officers at the scene. Nevertheless, we conclude the limited seizure was valid under the plain view exception to the search warrant requirement."

A copy of the decision is available in a 170k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: PDF File New Jersey v. Reininger (New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, 5/20/2013)






This is patently absurd.   This is why most people detest the Police State 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2013, 10:02:33 AM
http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2013/05/28/police-shoot-kill-grandfather-while-responding-to-burglary-call


They didnt give the guy a chance to put down the weapon?   hhhmmmmmmm

This one seems more like incompetence
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2013, 10:49:04 AM
Man Dies After Police Tase Him; Family Puzzled
 http://dfw.cbslocal.com ^ | 05/29/2013 | Reporting Joel Thomas

Posted on Wednesday, May 29, 2013 1:25:51 PM by redreno

FORT WORTH (CBSDFW.COM) - Relatives of a man who was killed after police entered his home and tased him are struggling to come to terms with how he died.

“They physically pulled him off the couch because, like I said, he was asleep. They pulled him off the couch and they tried to put him on his stomach. He can’t breathe on his stomach. He don’t even lie on the bed on his stomach,” said Donna Randle, the mother of victim Jarmaine Darden, 34.

Zero tolerance officers were executing a search warrant at his southeast Fort Worth house on May 16, searching for cocaine, when according to police reports the incident happened. The same report states that Darden resisted arrest.


(Excerpt) Read more at dfw.cbslocal.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 30, 2013, 10:05:46 AM
Why Did the FBI Kill an Unarmed Man and Clam Up?

 Law enforcement can't get its story straight in the worrisome case of Ibragim Todashev.

Conor FriedersdorfMay 30 2013, 10:44 AM ET


 








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What led an FBI agent, or some other law enforcement official, to shoot and kill an unarmed man in Orlando, Florida? The man, Ibragim Todashev, was being questioned about the Boston bombing, as well as an unsolved 2011 triple murder that he may or may not have confessed to committing. Does that sound sketchy? Don't blame me. Once he died, law enforcement started releasing anonymous, conflicting explanations so dubious that they warrant an inquiry all by themselves.

Did the dead man have a knife? A gun? A sword? None of those? Let's run through a timeline of what we've been told, and then assess all the information that the FBI hasn't released about the killing.

May 22, 2013

Ibragim Todashev is shot in the early morning hours. At least three law enforcement personnel, including at least one FBI agent, were reportedly present. Later that day, The New York Times quotes "officials" from either the Massachusetts State Police or the FBI. They say that after two hours of questioning in his apartment, Todashev "exploded and leapt at" an FBI agent. A second "law enforcement official" told the Times that "the shooting occurred after Mr. Todashev had admitted his role in the killings" -- the 2011 triple murder -- "and had also implicated Mr. Tsarnaev. The official said he had begun writing out a statement when he asked to take a break."

The quote from the second official:

They got him to confess to the homicides, and they say, 'Let's write it down,' and he starts writing it down. He goes to get a cigarette or something and then he goes off the deep end. I don't know what triggered him, and he goes after the agent.


The same day, the Orlando Sentinel reports, "Federal officials said he lunged at the agent with a knife during questioning, and the agent opened fire."

The Associated Press also reported that "law enforcement officials say a man was shot while he was being questioned in the Boston Marathon bombing case after he lunged at an FBI agent with a knife," adding, "The FBI initially said the agent fired the fatal shot, but later in the day the bureau left open the question of who was responsible." And Dave Couvertier, "a special agent and spokesman for the FBI's Tampa field office," told Yahoo News that an FBI team would be dispatched from D.C. to investigate the shooting, and that the FBI agent "sustained non-life-threatening injuries."

The FBI also put out a statement on May 22:



The FBI is currently reviewing a shooting incident involving an FBI special agent. Based on preliminary information, the incident occurred in Orlando, Florida during the early morning hours of May 22, 2013. The agent, two Massachusetts State Police troopers, and other law enforcement personnel were interviewing an individual in connection with the Boston Marathon bombing investigation when a violent confrontation was initiated by the individual. During the confrontation, the individual was killed and the agent sustained non-life threatening injuries. As this incident is under review, we have no further details at this time.

A friend of the dead man, Khusen Taramov, told a TV station, "They were talking to us, both of us, right? And they said they need him for a little more, for a couple more hours, and I left, and they told me they're going to bring him back. They never brought him back."

That brings us to the last story of that day, time-stamped after 8pm by the Associated Press, which reported: "Three law enforcement officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Todashev had lunged at the FBI agent with a knife. However, two of those officials said later in the day it was no longer clear what had happened. The third official had not received any new information."

May 23

The Orlando Sentinel reports that "an FBI review team from Washington was in Orlando on Thursday investigating the death of Ibragim Todashev," and that they'd be questioning "witnesses who were at the Orlando condo when the shooting occurred early Wednesday morning, including two Massachusetts State Police troopers and other law-enforcement officials."

The story ads that "the FBI agent who fired the lethal shot, who has not been publicly identified, is from the agency's Boston division," and "an autopsy was expected to be completed Thursday, but the report will not be made public for several weeks -- if not months -- because the case is under criminal investigation." The FBI team investigating the killing is reported to be 13 agents strong. 

May 24

The dead man's father, Abdul-Baki Todashev, speaks from Chechnya:
 


My son was in full cooperation with the F.B.I. but they just murdered him after an almost 8-hour-long questioning. Before this trouble I thought America was a free democratic country, where unlike in Russia, laws worked. I was deeply mistaken--now I think Russia is a golden place compared to the United States. My attitude for America flipped 180 degrees in one minute.


May 25

Citing "officials briefed on the investigation," The Boston Globe reports that the dead man "was shot in the kitchen of his apartment after overturning a table and attacking the agent with a blade," adding, "two law enforcement officials said that the Boston FBI agent felt he was in grave danger when Todashev attacked him and that he fired in self-defense." The "regional medical examiner" who had the body wouldn't reveal how many times Todashev was shot, saying "we can't release any information on that case." That same friend, Khusen Taramov, is quoted saying that the dead man had a serious knee injury and that "agents had kept tight control over him at prior interviews."

May 29

Remember that knife? Forget about it. "FBI sources say Ibragim Todashev, a friend of accused Boston Marathon bomber Tamarlen Tsarnaev, was unarmed when he was shot and killed by an FBI agent during questioning at an Orlando apartment last week," says an Orlando television station.



The story goes on:


Officials said Todashev pushed a table and possibly threw a chair.

Sources said a sword was inside the apartment, but the weapon was moved to the corner of the room before questioning began. Law enforcement said when Todashev lunged, the FBI agent believed he could have possibly been going for his gun or the sword in the room, and that's when the agent opened fire.

ABC News has a similar account:



 Ibragim Todashev, an Orlando, Fla., associate of one of the Boston bombing suspects, was not armed when he was involved an alleged violent confrontation with an FBI agent that resulted in Todashev being shot to death in his apartment, law enforcement sources told ABC News...Officials initially told ABC News and other news outlets that a knife was involved in the confrontation... A samurai sword was in the room, which may have accounted for some of the initial confusion over whether a weapon was involved, sources added.
 


The Washington Post added a detail:



One law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, said Wednesday that Todashev lunged at the agent and overturned a table. But the official said Todashev did not have a gun or a knife. A second official also said Todashev was unarmed.

An official said that according to one account of the shooting, the other law enforcement officials had just stepped out of the room, leaving the FBI agent alone with Todashev, when the confrontation occurred.The shooting followed hours of questioning by the law enforcement officials that had begun the night before.
May 30

The Orlando Sentinel is one of several outlets to note that a Florida chapter of CAIR is calling for the Civil Rights division of the Justice Department to investigate the shooting. CAIR-Tampa Executive Director Hassan Shibly says the dead man was hit by bullets seven times, including once in the head.

The article continues:



Though early accounts from unnamed federal law-enforcement sources claimed Todashev might have been armed with a knife, the latest version, released by a Fox affiliate in Boston, reported that Todashev lunged with a sword at the agent.
 
Shibly said there was a sword at the apartment, but it was mounted on the wall, ornamental and had a dull blade and a broken handle.
Tentative Conclusions

It is difficult to understand how, having shot the man dead, the multiple law enforcement personnel on scene could've gotten the details wrong. Discrepancies can creep into an account of a stressful situation. But how can there possibly be confusion about whether the suspect was a) wielding a knife, per the original story; b) unarmed, per subsequent versions; c) or lunging with or toward a samurai sword? We're supposed to believe that multiple law enforcement personnel went to a man's apartment, confirmed via his own confession that he participated in a triple murder with an alleged terrorist, and still left him within reach of a samurai sword? And that, after he lunged toward one agent with the sword, or else lunged toward the sword, or an officer's gun, or something, there was so much confusion that it was reported for days that the suspect attacked with a knife? Come on. Law enforcement couldn't get its story straight.     

At best, an incompetently handled suspect was given access to a weapon so dangerous it justified using deadly force in response. Perhaps that's all this is. Or perhaps it will turn out that Todashev was wrongfully killed. The facts known to the public are worrisome enough that an independent inquiry is justified. In addition, this case illustrates why the FBI ought to be required to record all of its interrogations, using video when possible and at least audio in all circumstances.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 30, 2013, 07:42:07 PM
http://www.breitbart.com/InstaBlog/2013/05/30/FBI-Ran-Pedophile-Ring-to-Nab-Pedophiles


Unreal.  WTF! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 31, 2013, 08:11:46 AM
http://www.keyetv.com/news/features/top-stories/stories/free-movie-gets-austin-cop-fired-8946.shtml

Yesterday a local cop was fired for lying. It involved getting free tickets for him and his family at a theater.. You have to be on the security contract to get the free tickets and he indicated he was. The contract holder found out about it and reported him to I.A. It was his word against two theater employees. The department took the word of the two employees because it made more sense. An example of holding officers accountable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2013, 08:14:03 AM
http://www.keyetv.com/news/features/top-stories/stories/free-movie-gets-austin-cop-fired-8946.shtml

Yesterday a local cop was fired for lying. It involved getting free tickets for him and his family at a theater.. You have to be on the security contract to get the free tickets and he indicated he was. The contract holder found out about it and reported him to I.A. It was his word against two theater employees. The department took the word of the two employees because it made more sense. An example of holding officers accountable.

Damn - I hope those movies were worth it!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 31, 2013, 08:36:03 AM
Damn - I hope those movies were worth it!

Yeah... stupid thing to lose a job over.. if at any time he had come clean he would have gotten suspended.. but not fired.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2013, 09:07:24 AM
http://seattle.cbslocal.com/2013/05/30/military-vet-faces-charges-for-firing-warning-shot-at-suspect-trying-to-break-into-home



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2013, 10:26:30 AM
US Attorney: Anti-Muslim Postings on Social Media May Be a Federal Crime
Ace Of Spades ^  | May 31, 2013 | Ace Of Spades

Posted on Friday, May 31, 2013 12:15:06 PM by Smokeyblue

Via Judicial Watch, Bill Killian, the US Attorney for the Eastern district of Tennessee, just wants Americans to know what the consequences for free speech might be.

Special speakers for the event will be Bill Killian, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, and Kenneth Moore, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Knoxville Division.

Sponsor of the event is the American Muslim Advisory Council of Tennessee — a 15-member board formed two years ago when the General Assembly was considering passing legislation that would restrict those who worship Sharia Law, which is followed by Muslims.

Killian and Moore will provide input on how civil rights can be violated by those who post inflammatory documents targeted at Muslims on social media.

“This is an educational effort with civil rights laws as they play into freedom of religion and exercising freedom of religion,” Killian told The News Monday. “This is also to inform the public what federal laws are in effect and what the consequences are.”

Killian said the presentation will also focus on Muslim culture and how, that although terrorist acts have been committed by some in the faith, they are no different from those in other religions.

...

He then cited the three non-Muslim terrorists acts they can never stop talking about.

Apparently he also babbled about how the US Government, law enforcement, and non-Muslim Americans are fostering an "us versus them" attitude.

See, we're doing that.

I might say that the "us versus them" attitude certainly seems to be fostered within the Muslim community itself, but I can't, because, as you'll see, US Attorney Bill Killian wants me to know he might put me in jail for saying that.

Killian said Internet postings that violate civil rights are subject to federal jurisdiction.

“That’s what everybody needs to understand,” he said.

The specific posting he mentioned was pretty egregious -- a picture of a guy holding a shotgun with the caption "How to Wink at a Muslim."

Nevertheless, what we have here is a US Attorney telling Americans that they can be arrested and imprisoned for the exercise of their First Amendment rights.

In the aftermath of the Woolrich slaughter in England, the British police immediately arrested... a man for making anti-Muslim comments on Twitter.

And I thought, "Ah well, that's Britain. They're doomed, but we already knew that."

But here we are in America, with one of the 100 or so US federal appointed Attorneys telling Americans that the federal government may lock them up for their internet postings.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: The Enigma on May 31, 2013, 10:33:55 AM
US Attorney: Anti-Muslim Postings on Social Media May Be a Federal Crime
Ace Of Spades ^  | May 31, 2013 | Ace Of Spades

Posted on Friday, May 31, 2013 12:15:06 PM by Smokeyblue

Via Judicial Watch, Bill Killian, the US Attorney for the Eastern district of Tennessee, just wants Americans to know what the consequences for free speech might be.

Special speakers for the event will be Bill Killian, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, and Kenneth Moore, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Knoxville Division.

Sponsor of the event is the American Muslim Advisory Council of Tennessee — a 15-member board formed two years ago when the General Assembly was considering passing legislation that would restrict those who worship Sharia Law, which is followed by Muslims.

Killian and Moore will provide input on how civil rights can be violated by those who post inflammatory documents targeted at Muslims on social media.

“This is an educational effort with civil rights laws as they play into freedom of religion and exercising freedom of religion,” Killian told The News Monday. “This is also to inform the public what federal laws are in effect and what the consequences are.”

Killian said the presentation will also focus on Muslim culture and how, that although terrorist acts have been committed by some in the faith, they are no different from those in other religions.

...

He then cited the three non-Muslim terrorists acts they can never stop talking about.

Apparently he also babbled about how the US Government, law enforcement, and non-Muslim Americans are fostering an "us versus them" attitude.

See, we're doing that.

I might say that the "us versus them" attitude certainly seems to be fostered within the Muslim community itself, but I can't, because, as you'll see, US Attorney Bill Killian wants me to know he might put me in jail for saying that.

Killian said Internet postings that violate civil rights are subject to federal jurisdiction.

“That’s what everybody needs to understand,” he said.

The specific posting he mentioned was pretty egregious -- a picture of a guy holding a shotgun with the caption "How to Wink at a Muslim."

Nevertheless, what we have here is a US Attorney telling Americans that they can be arrested and imprisoned for the exercise of their First Amendment rights.

In the aftermath of the Woolrich slaughter in England, the British police immediately arrested... a man for making anti-Muslim comments on Twitter.

And I thought, "Ah well, that's Britain. They're doomed, but we already knew that."

But here we are in America, with one of the 100 or so US federal appointed Attorneys telling Americans that the federal government may lock them up for their internet postings.


still following alex jones ?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on May 31, 2013, 11:14:30 AM
http://seattle.cbslocal.com/2013/05/30/military-vet-faces-charges-for-firing-warning-shot-at-suspect-trying-to-break-into-home



 >:(
Dude. Wtf. Well, he wasn't trying to break into your house hard enough to justify defending your property, aorry, time to make you a criminal.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2013, 11:15:14 AM
http://www.humanevents.com/2013/05/30/empire-state-da-i-will-not-prosecute-cuomos-new-gun-law


Nice - the DA is telling Cuomo to fuck off w his new SAFE Act. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 31, 2013, 06:31:33 PM
http://www.keyetv.com/news/features/top-stories/stories/free-movie-gets-austin-cop-fired-8946.shtml

Yesterday a local cop was fired for lying. It involved getting free tickets for him and his family at a theater.. You have to be on the security contract to get the free tickets and he indicated he was. The contract holder found out about it and reported him to I.A. It was his word against two theater employees. The department took the word of the two employees because it made more sense. An example of holding officers accountable.



It seems to say both Fired and indefinitely suspended.  Me thinks he may not have completely lost the job yet.  Let me take a guess, appeals?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 01, 2013, 08:25:27 AM


It seems to say both Fired and indefinitely suspended.  Me thinks he may not have completely lost the job yet.  Let me take a guess, appeals?



Every officer that is "fired" has the right to appeal under civil service law. It is then up to an arbitrator to decide. In this case, I would be surprised if the officer overturns the ruling, but I understand the reason for the process.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 01, 2013, 05:04:48 PM
http://www.keyetv.com/news/features/top-stories/stories/free-movie-gets-austin-cop-fired-8946.shtml

Yesterday a local cop was fired for lying. It involved getting free tickets for him and his family at a theater.. You have to be on the security contract to get the free tickets and he indicated he was. The contract holder found out about it and reported him to I.A. It was his word against two theater employees. The department took the word of the two employees because it made more sense. An example of holding officers accountable.

The problem is that is the rare example - the exception to the rule.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2013, 05:34:18 AM
The problem is that is the rare example - the exception to the rule.

I can only speak for the place I work at but we try to get rid of them when we find them. That same day an officer was fired for being caught with a prostitute and lying about it.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 02, 2013, 10:52:34 AM
I can only speak for the place I work at but we try to get rid of them when we find them. That same day an officer was fired for being caught with a prostitute and lying about it.   



I hate that.  I think these prostitution laws are completely unconstitutional.  Actually feel bad for that dude.

As for the other guy, I'll believe he's not going to be reinstated when it actually happens.  Until then, I think it's fair to be skeptical.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2013, 11:37:58 AM


I hate that.  I think these prostitution laws are completely unconstitutional.  Actually feel bad for that dude.

As for the other guy, I'll believe he's not going to be reinstated when it actually happens.  Until then, I think it's fair to be skeptical.



True, the officer was fired for not being truthful about saying he was on the contract.. he shook his head in the affirmative indicating that was his answer to the question "Do you work here".. He says he stated "Yes I work at the Austin Police Department". His answer doesn't make sense when taken in context so the 2 workers were believed over the officer. An arbitrator could rule that terminating the officer for such a thing is excessive but that is the arbitrators call. Our stance is honesty is paramount to being an officer.

The prostitute thing.. I agree that it is an outdated law. However it is a law and he was also fired because he lied. He lied about the situation, he later lied saying the officers planted the $10 bill he had stuck in the A/C vent to pay her with...The prostitute on the other hand said they have ""dated" before and he pays $10 for a BJ.  I don't feel sorry for the officer at all.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 02, 2013, 12:19:21 PM
True, the officer was fired for not being truthful about saying he was on the contract.. he shook his head in the affirmative indicating that was his answer to the question "Do you work here".. He says he stated "Yes I work at the Austin Police Department". His answer doesn't make sense when taken in context so the 2 workers were believed over the officer. An arbitrator could rule that terminating the officer for such a thing is excessive but that is the arbitrators call. Our stance is honesty is paramount to being an officer.

The prostitute thing.. I agree that it is an outdated law. However it is a law and he was also fired because he lied. He lied about the situation, he later lied saying the officers planted the $10 bill he had stuck in the A/C vent to pay her with...The prostitute on the other hand said they have ""dated" before and he pays $10 for a BJ.  I don't feel sorry for the officer at all.     



That's all a blowjob costs?

Wait though...what did the skank look like?

lol

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 03, 2013, 05:34:17 AM


That's all a blowjob costs?

Wait though...what did the skank look like?

lol



Think of the most run down, meth addicted, 88 lb female, with missing teeth, long stringly unwashed hair and sores over her body and you pretty much just described her prettier sister. I haven't seen a pic of her but based on the location and the price, that's pretty much what you get her in Austin.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 03, 2013, 09:20:07 PM
I can only speak for the place I work at but we try to get rid of them when we find them.

Of course. I understand that. But let me ask you think about the following three questions:

1. If you pulled a fellow officer (or his/her spouse) over, would you be more or less likely to let them get off without a ticket?
2. If you were called for a disturbance at a bar or other fine establishment, and upon arriving saw a friend from the force was involved in the incident, would you be more inclined to believe that he was in the right and view the other party with suspicion?
3. Do you view other officers as proverbial "brothers in arms"?

Without answering those questions, but considering your answers, do you consider yourself completely objective?

Saying "no" isn't necessarily bad; we are all more likely to side with or help people we know. But it should give you pause for a second. If you, who are a decent officer, are biased even slightly what about others who aren't as decent as you?


That same day an officer was fired for being caught with a prostitute and lying about it.   

Prostitution laws are silly...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 04, 2013, 01:07:58 PM
Of course. I understand that. But let me ask you think about the following three questions:

1. If you pulled a fellow officer (or his/her spouse) over, would you be more or less likely to let them get off without a ticket?
2. If you were called for a disturbance at a bar or other fine establishment, and upon arriving saw a friend from the force was involved in the incident, would you be more inclined to believe that he was in the right and view the other party with suspicion?
3. Do you view other officers as proverbial "brothers in arms"?

Without answering those questions, but considering your answers, do you consider yourself completely objective?








2.   
Saying "no" isn't necessarily bad; we are all more likely to side with or help people we know. But it should give you pause for a second. If you, who are a decent officer, are biased even slightly what about others who aren't as decent as you?


Prostitution laws are silly...

1. Equal. From years of working traffic I have a standard that is department policy. When I stop someone, I've made up my mind prior to approaching the vehicle that they will get a warning or a ticket. I rarely give warnings as if I need to stop someone it is likely they have done an unsafe violation. I cannot be fair if I write X a ticket for 80 in a 50 and let Y go moments later. I've written fellow officers tickets in the past. Can't say they were happy, but that's irrelevant. They can't say I wasn't fair. My wife got a ticket and I didn't say anything other than "You probably need to slow down next time" to her.

Having said that, no doubt there are officers everywhere that give officers all kinds of breaks. It was the culture here for a long time.. those days went the way of the 8 track around here.

2. Just an officer, I would listen to both sides, as officers screw up. A friend officer, who had a history with me of being honest and forthright, would likely get more weight than a stranger if the stories didn't match and the evidence didn't point either way. Just fired an officer who said something happened one way, and the civilian said it happened another. Their story made more sense, they were believed. He was fired.

3. I don't have an us against them attitude, and I know cops screw up. But yes, I feel we are "brothers in Arms" depending on how you define that..     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 04, 2013, 02:29:30 PM
1. Equal. From years of working traffic I have a standard that is department policy. When I stop someone, I've made up my mind prior to approaching the vehicle that they will get a warning or a ticket. I rarely give warnings as if I need to stop someone it is likely they have done an unsafe violation. I cannot be fair if I write X a ticket for 80 in a 50 and let Y go moments later. I've written fellow officers tickets in the past. Can't say they were happy, but that's irrelevant. They can't say I wasn't fair. My wife got a ticket and I didn't say anything other than "You probably need to slow down next time" to her.

Having said that, no doubt there are officers everywhere that give officers all kinds of breaks. It was the culture here for a long time.. those days went the way of the 8 track around here.

2. Just an officer, I would listen to both sides, as officers screw up. A friend officer, who had a history with me of being honest and forthright, would likely get more weight than a stranger if the stories didn't match and the evidence didn't point either way. Just fired an officer who said something happened one way, and the civilian said it happened another. Their story made more sense, they were believed. He was fired.

3. I don't have an us against them attitude, and I know cops screw up. But yes, I feel we are "brothers in Arms" depending on how you define that..     

Fair answer. I have no reason to doubt you, and will take you at your word. You are, I hope you realize, very likely to be in the minority - or at least that's how you are likely to be perceived by most people.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 05, 2013, 05:24:39 PM
Fair answer. I have no reason to doubt you, and will take you at your word. You are, I hope you realize, very likely to be in the minority - or at least that's how you are likely to be perceived by most people.

That would be a shame..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2013, 06:19:49 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/obama-administration-defends-phone-records-113329195.html

In its first semi-official comment from the White House about The Guardian's Verizon/NSA phone-snooping scoop, the administration didn't admit to collecting the telephone records of millions of Americans. But they didn't say they wouldn't do that either. An anonymous "senior administration official" would not confirm that the newspaper story was true or that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court order was legitimate  but they did tell media outlets on Thursday that the requests are "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats."

RELATED: The NSA Is Collecting Phone Records in Bulk

The order in question, which was issued in April, compelled Verizon to give the National Secuirty Agency information on all phone calls that were routed through its network over a period of three months. The classified order was published in The Guardian on Wednesday, and though it doesn't mention any other telephone companies, it's possible that similar orders were issued to them as well.

RELATED: Raytheon's 'Google for Spies' Tracks You from Social-Media Sharing — and Fast

The same administration official also reiterated to the AP that while the information collected includes phone numbers, location data, and call times, it doesn't include the contents of any phone conversation. 


After overnight silence, Obama admin finally responds to Guardian report. Won't confirm specifics but defends the practice.
— Chuck Todd (@chucktodd) June 6, 2013

NBC News's Chuck Todd also reported that administration official (presumably the same person) told him that "all branches of government are aware" when orders like this are issued, implying that members of Congress, as well as the President, were likely briefed on the matter when it happened. We'll have to see if President Obama comes forward to discuss this soon, but it looks the government's defense is going to take the usual path when it comes to Patriot Act-style suveillance: This is normal behavior, it's for our own safety, and there's nothing to see here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on June 06, 2013, 08:01:24 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/obama-administration-defends-phone-records-113329195.html

In its first semi-official comment from the White House about The Guardian's Verizon/NSA phone-snooping scoop, the administration didn't admit to collecting the telephone records of millions of Americans. But they didn't say they wouldn't do that either. An anonymous "senior administration official" would not confirm that the newspaper story was true or that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court order was legitimate  but they did tell media outlets on Thursday that the requests are "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats."

RELATED: The NSA Is Collecting Phone Records in Bulk

The order in question, which was issued in April, compelled Verizon to give the National Secuirty Agency information on all phone calls that were routed through its network over a period of three months. The classified order was published in The Guardian on Wednesday, and though it doesn't mention any other telephone companies, it's possible that similar orders were issued to them as well.

RELATED: Raytheon's 'Google for Spies' Tracks You from Social-Media Sharing — and Fast

The same administration official also reiterated to the AP that while the information collected includes phone numbers, location data, and call times, it doesn't include the contents of any phone conversation. 


After overnight silence, Obama admin finally responds to Guardian report. Won't confirm specifics but defends the practice.
— Chuck Todd (@chucktodd) June 6, 2013

NBC News's Chuck Todd also reported that administration official (presumably the same person) told him that "all branches of government are aware" when orders like this are issued, implying that members of Congress, as well as the President, were likely briefed on the matter when it happened. We'll have to see if President Obama comes forward to discuss this soon, but it looks the government's defense is going to take the usual path when it comes to Patriot Act-style suveillance: This is normal behavior, it's for our own safety, and there's nothing to see here.

People need to start waking up to the reality that big brother does not have their beat interests at heart, and that they could, and WOULD, turn on their citizens in a heartbeat if they thought tjeu could get away with it. (And by they, I mean most politicians and high ranking government officials, and by turn on, I mean turn this country into a totalitarian state because they believe they know whats best for us, and they have next to no respect for their citizens)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2013, 02:17:30 PM
Welcome to the Bush-Obama White House: They're Spying on Us

The "Bush-Obama era" will be long remembered for curbing the Constitution.

By Ron Fournier


Updated: June 6, 2013 | 9:27 a.m.
 June 6, 2013 | 8:33 a.m.

 (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)


Welcome to the era of Bush-Obama, a 16-year span of U.S. history that will be remembered for an unprecedented erosion of civil liberties and a disregard for transparency. On the war against a tactic—terrorism—and its insidious fallout, the United States could have skipped the 2008 election.

It made little difference.

Despite his clear and popular promises to the contrary, President Obama has not shifted the balance between security and freedom to a more
natural state—one not blinded by worst fears and tarred by power grabs. If anything, things have gotten worse.

Killing civilians and U.S. citizens via drone.

Seizing telephone records at the Associated Press in violation of Justice Department guidelines.

Accusing a respected Fox News reporter of engaging in a conspiracy to commit treason for doing his job.
Detaining terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, despite promises to end the ill-considered Bush policy.

Even the IRS scandal, while not a matter of foreign policy, strikes at the heart of growing concerns among Americans that their privacy is government's playpen.

And now this: The Guardian newspaper reports that the National Security Agency is collecting telephone records of tens of millions of customers of one of the nation's largest phone companies, Verizon.

If the story is accurate, the action appears to be legal. The order was signed by a judge from a secret court that oversees domestic surveillance. It may also be necessary; U.S. intelligence needs every advantage it can get over the nation's enemies.

But for several reasons the news is chilling.
1.Verizon probably isn't the only company coughing up its documents. Odds are incredibly strong that the government is prying into your telephone records today.
2.Issued in April, the NSA order "could represent the broadest surveillance order known to have been issued," according to The Washington Post. "It also would confirm long-standing suspicions of civil liberties advocates about the sweeping nature of U.S. surveillance through commercial carries under laws passed after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks."
3.This appears to be a "rubber stamp," order, reissued every few months since 2001. As is the case with all government programs, the systematic snooping into your telephone records is unlikely to ever expire without public outcry.
4.Congress is full of hypocrites. Liberals who criticized Bush are less incensed with Obama. Republicans who bowed to Bush are now blasting Obama. The next time your congressional representative criticizes Obama for curbing civil liberties, ask if he or she would vote to repeal the Patriot Act, the post-911 law that handed unfettered power to the intelligence and military bureaucracies. Most won't.
5.The Bush-Obama White House hates transparency. President George W. Bush and his vice president, Dick Cheney, were justifiably criticized by Democrats (none more successfully so than Obama himself) for their penchant for secrecy. Obama promised that he would run history's most transparent administration. By almost any measure, on domestic and well as foreign policies, Obama has broken that promise.

It is the lack of transparency that is most galling about the security versus civil liberties debate under Obama, because it shows his lack of faith in the public. Americans know a high level of secrecy and dirty work is needed to keep them safe. Most trust their president. Many approve of his job performance.

Still, they expect and deserve an open discussion about how to fight terrorism without undermining the Constitution.

Obama started that conversation with a recent address on the drone program, media leaks and the need to move American off a constant war footing. It was a compelling and well-considered argument for the balance he is claiming to strike.

But he made the speech under pressure, and reluctantly. It only came amid new revelations about the drone program and the disclosure of newsroom spying (the Guardian may well be in Obama's sights next). Under Bush, the warrantless-wiretap program only stopped after it was publicly disclosed. In that way, the Guardian story is not a surprise, so why didn't Obama long ago acknowledge, explain, and justify such an intrusion into privacy?

Obama has promised to adjust the drone and leaks investigation policies, essentially acknowledging that his administration had gone too far in the name of security. Do you believe him?

One thing we've learned about the Bush-Obama White House is that words don't matter. Watch what they do.

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Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2013, 03:40:35 PM
U.S. intelligence mining data from nine U.S. Internet companies in broad secret program

By Barton Gellman and Laura Poitras, Thursday, June 6, 5:43 PM


http://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/us-intelligence-mining-data-from-nine-us-internet-companies-in-broad-secret-program/2013/06/06/3a0c0da8-cebf-11e2-8845-d970ccb04497_print.html


The National Security Agency and the FBI are tapping directly into the central servers of nine leading U.S. Internet companies, extracting audio, video, photographs, e-mails, documents and connection logs that enable analysts to track a person’s movements and contacts over time.

The highly classified program, code-named PRISM, has not been disclosed publicly before. Its establishment in 2007 and six years of exponential growth took place beneath the surface of a roiling debate over the boundaries of surveillance and privacy. Even late last year, when critics of the foreign intelligence statute argued for changes, the only members of Congress who know about PRISM were bound by oaths of office to hold their tongues.

An internal presentation on the Silicon Valley operation, intended for senior analysts in the NSA’s Signals Intelligence Directorate, described the new tool as the most prolific contributor to the President’s Daily Brief, which cited PRISM data in 1,477 articles last year. According to the briefing slides, obtained by The Washington Post, “NSA reporting increasingly relies on PRISM” as its leading source of raw material, accounting for nearly 1 in 7 intelligence reports.

That is a remarkable figure in an agency that measures annual intake in the trillions of communications. It is all the more striking because the NSA, whose lawful mission is foreign intelligence, is reaching deep inside the machinery of American companies that host hundreds of millions of American-held accounts on American soil.

The technology companies, which participate knowingly in PRISM operations, include most of the dominant global players of Silicon Valley. They are listed on a roster that bears their logos in order of entry into the program: “Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube, Apple.” PalTalk, although much smaller, has hosted significant traffic during the Arab Spring and in the ongoing Syrian civil war.

Dropbox , the cloud storage and synchronization service, is described as “coming soon.”

Government officials declined to comment for this story.

Roots in the ’70s

PRISM is an heir, in one sense, to a history of intelligence alliances with as many as 100 trusted U.S. companies since the 1970s. The NSA calls these Special Source Operations, and PRISM falls under that rubric.

The Silicon Valley operation works alongside a parallel program, code-named BLARNEY, that gathers up “metadata” — address packets, device signatures and the like — as it streams past choke points along the backbone of the Internet. BLARNEY’s top-secret program summary, set down alongside a cartoon insignia of a shamrock and a leprechaun hat, describes it as “an ongoing collection program that leverages IC [intelligence community] and commercial partnerships to gain access and exploit foreign intelligence obtained from global networks.”

But the PRISM program appears more nearly to resemble the most controversial of the warrantless surveillance orders issued by President George W. Bush after the al-Qaeda attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Its history, in which President Obama presided over “exponential growth” in a program that candidate Obama criticized, shows how fundamentally surveillance law and practice have shifted away from individual suspicion in favor of systematic, mass collection techniques.

The PRISM program is not a dragnet, exactly. From inside a company’s data stream the NSA is capable of pulling out anything it likes, but under current rules the agency does not try to collect it all.

Analysts who use the system from a Web portal at Fort Meade key in “selectors,” or search terms, that are designed to produce at least 51 percent confidence in a target’s “foreignness.” That is not a very stringent test. Training materials obtained by the Post instruct new analysts to submit accidentally collected U.S. content for a quarterly report, “but it’s nothing to worry about.”

Even when the system works just as advertised, with no American singled out for targeting, the NSA routinely collects a great deal of American content. That is described as “incidental,” and it is inherent in contact chaining, one of the basic tools of the trade. To collect on a suspected spy or foreign terrorist means, at minimum, that everyone in the suspect’s inbox or outbox is swept in. Intelligence analysts are typically taught to chain through contacts two “hops” out from their target, which increases “incidental collection” exponentially. The same math explains the aphorism, from the John Guare play, that no one is more than “six degrees of separation” from Kevin Bacon.

A ‘directive’

Formally, in exchange for immunity from lawsuits, companies like Yahoo and AOL are obliged to accept a “directive” from the attorney general and the director of national intelligence to open their servers to the FBI’s Data Intercept Technology Unit, which handles liaison to U.S. companies from the NSA. In 2008, Congress gave the Justice Department authority to for a secret order from the Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Court to compel a reluctant company “to comply.”

In practice, there is room for a company to maneuver, delay or resist. When a clandestine intelligence program meets a highly regulated industry, said a lawyer with experience in bridging the gaps, neither side wants to risk a public fight. The engineering problems are so immense, in systems of such complexity and frequent change, that the FBI and NSA would be hard pressed to build in back doors without active help from each company.

Apple demonstrated that resistance is possible, for reasons unknown, when it held out for more than five years after Microsoft became PRISM’s first corporate partner in May 2007. Twitter, which has cultivated a reputation for aggressive defense of its users’ privacy, is still conspicuous by its absence from the list of “private sector partners.”

“Google cares deeply about the security of our users’ data,” a company spokesman said. “We disclose user data to government in accordance with the law, and we review all such requests carefully. From time to time, people allege that we have created a government ‘back door’ into our systems, but Google does not have a ‘back door’ for the government to access private user data.”

Like market researchers, but with far more privileged access, collection managers in the NSA’s Special Source Operations group, which oversees the PRISM program, are drawn to the wealth of information about their subjects in online accounts. For much the same reason, civil libertarians and some ordinary users may be troubled by the menu available to analysts who hold the required clearances to “task” the PRISM system.

There has been “continued exponential growth in tasking to Facebook and Skype,” according to the 41 PRISM slides. With a few clicks and an affirmation that the subject is believed to be engaged in terrorism, espionage or nuclear proliferation, an analyst obtains full access to Facebook’s “extensive search and surveillance capabilities against the variety of online social networking services.”

According to a separate “User’s Guide for PRISM Skype Collection,” that service can be monitored for audio when one end of the call is a conventional telephone and for any combination of “audio, video, chat, and file transfers” when Skype users connect by computer alone. Google’s offerings include Gmail, voice and video chat, Google Drive files, photo libraries, and live surveillance of search terms.

Firsthand experience with these systems, and horror at their capabilities, is what drove a career intelligence officer to provide PowerPoint slides about PRISM and supporting materials to The Washington Post in order to expose what he believes to be a gross intrusion on privacy. “They quite literally can watch your ideas form as you type,” the officer said.

 

Julie Tate and Robert O’Harrow Jr. contributed to this report.

Graphic: NSA slides explain the PRISM data-collection program
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 09, 2013, 08:37:31 PM
Sober driver charged with DUI in Arizona after police said they could tell ‘by looking at him’

An Ohio man was charged with DUI after her was pulled over by the police, despite the fact that a breathalyzer test showed he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.000.

64-year-old Jessie Thornton who now lives in Surprise, Arizona said cops told him that they could tell he was drunk simply by looking at him.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2338471/Sober-driver-charged-DUI-Arizona-police-said-tell-looking-him.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 09, 2013, 08:41:16 PM
Sober driver charged with DUI in Arizona after police said they could tell ‘by looking at him’

An Ohio man was charged with DUI after her was pulled over by the police, despite the fact that a breathalyzer test showed he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.000.

64-year-old Jessie Thornton who now lives in Surprise, Arizona said cops told him that they could tell he was drunk simply by looking at him.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2338471/Sober-driver-charged-DUI-Arizona-police-said-tell-looking-him.html


Always foreign papers reporting the truth lately.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on June 09, 2013, 08:42:06 PM
Sober driver charged with DUI in Arizona after police said they could tell ‘by looking at him’

An Ohio man was charged with DUI after her was pulled over by the police, despite the fact that a breathalyzer test showed he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.000.

64-year-old Jessie Thornton who now lives in Surprise, Arizona said cops told him that they could tell he was drunk simply by looking at him.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2338471/Sober-driver-charged-DUI-Arizona-police-said-tell-looking-him.html
Huh? How can they charge you if they have no way of proving that you are drunk?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 09, 2013, 10:30:59 PM
Sober driver charged with DUI in Arizona after police said they could tell ‘by looking at him’

An Ohio man was charged with DUI after her was pulled over by the police, despite the fact that a breathalyzer test showed he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.000.

64-year-old Jessie Thornton who now lives in Surprise, Arizona said cops told him that they could tell he was drunk simply by looking at him.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2338471/Sober-driver-charged-DUI-Arizona-police-said-tell-looking-him.html

Crazy... Those cops need to be sued in their individual capacities in addition to their official capacity for abuse under color of authority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 10, 2013, 06:26:16 AM
I read the article and could only see a glimpse of the actual report so it's all speculation at this point. Couple things could have happened.

1. Officer arrested the person without any cause, disregarding need for probable cause and knowing his case is jacked and he will get hammered in court

2. Officer observed poor driving and suspected the driver of DUI. BAC test showed he was not impared by alcohol. DRE officer arrived as the article indicated and he was tested to see if he was under the influence of another drug and there was evidence he was and was charged with it. He says the officer made that statement but I haven't read the officers side of it at this point. That he was having medical issues may indicate he was taking a prescription drug that may have impaired his driving ability.

We'll find out which is true soon enough I would imagine. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 10, 2013, 02:59:04 PM
I read the article and could only see a glimpse of the actual report so it's all speculation at this point. Couple things could have happened.

1. Officer arrested the person without any cause, disregarding need for probable cause and knowing his case is jacked and he will get hammered in court

2. Officer observed poor driving and suspected the driver of DUI. BAC test showed he was not impared by alcohol. DRE officer arrived as the article indicated and he was tested to see if he was under the influence of another drug and there was evidence he was and was charged with it. He says the officer made that statement but I haven't read the officers side of it at this point. That he was having medical issues may indicate he was taking a prescription drug that may have impaired his driving ability.

We'll find out which is true soon enough I would imagine. 

The problem is that "I observed poor driving" is something that cannot be disproven; it's the sort of ridiculous excuse that Officers routinely use exactly because it's a lie that will (almost) never come back to bite him.

Even if the person here is never charged (or he is found not liable/not guilty) the Officer is unlikely to face any consequences at all.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 10, 2013, 05:44:33 PM
I read the article and could only see a glimpse of the actual report so it's all speculation at this point. Couple things could have happened.

1. Officer arrested the person without any cause, disregarding need for probable cause and knowing his case is jacked and he will get hammered in court

2. Officer observed poor driving and suspected the driver of DUI. BAC test showed he was not impared by alcohol. DRE officer arrived as the article indicated and he was tested to see if he was under the influence of another drug and there was evidence he was and was charged with it. He says the officer made that statement but I haven't read the officers side of it at this point. That he was having medical issues may indicate he was taking a prescription drug that may have impaired his driving ability.

We'll find out which is true soon enough I would imagine. 





With regards to the first, just getting hammered in court is not acceptable.

If people are arrested without cause, the officer needs to be terminated, charged with civil rights violations, fined, and spend some time in jail.


 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on June 10, 2013, 06:37:25 PM
The problem is that "I observed poor driving" is something that cannot be disproven; it's the sort of ridiculous excuse that Officers routinely use exactly because it's a lie that will (almost) never come back to bite him.

Even if the person here is never charged (or he is found not liable/not guilty) the Officer is unlikely to face any consequences at all.
Not to mention the cost involved to take this to court, lawyer fees, time off work, etc... basically he's innocent and going to have to shell out several thousand dollars for no fucking reason except some dickhead cops decided to abuse their authority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 10, 2013, 06:47:17 PM
most "life on the line" testilies
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 10, 2013, 07:51:21 PM


With regards to the first, just getting hammered in court is not acceptable.

If people are arrested without cause, the officer needs to be terminated, charged with civil rights violations, fined, and spend some time in jail.


 

Agreed, if that is the case
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 14, 2013, 05:51:44 AM
Dozens of convictions in question as NYPD detective said to have falsified murder confessions



Get short URL
  Published time: June 14, 2013 03:41   

AFP Photo / Spencer Platt/
AFP Photo / Spencer Platt/


 


   
 
 

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Corruption, Court, Crime, Law, Police, USA
Brooklyn prosecutors are examining 50 homicide convictions involving a retired police detective who may have intimidated suspects into confessing to crimes they never committed – with words he chose.

Louis Scarcella was a celebrated member of the Brooklyn North Homicide squad through the crack-cocaine epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s, when he gained a reputation for his unusual ability to draw out confessions. He investigated about 175 murders alone and helped with almost 200 more, but questions have been raised on whether Scarcella coerced, or even entirely fabricated, the admissions of guilt. 

The inquiries began after David Ranta was released from prison earlier this year. Ranta, once a drug addict and petty criminal, spent nearly 23 years in prison for the 1990 murder of a Brooklyn rabbi, despite no physical evidence linking him to the crime other than a confession statement he maintains he didn't write. The investigating detective was Louis Scarcella. 

Upon reviewing the cases Scarcella was involved in throughout his 29-year career with the NYPD, The New York Times discovered some alarming coincidences among the confessions. In at least five, the suspects begin their statement with the phrases “You got it right” or “I was there.” Ranta’s statement, which he has always denied delivering, begins, “I was there.” 

Scarcella relied on a drug addicted prostitute to act as a witness in at least six different, unconnected murder trials. Teresa Gomez has since died, but lawyers said she was “Louie’s go-to witness,” despite major credibility issues. One prosecutor wrote, according to New York news and culture blog Gothamist, that “It was a near folly to even think that anyone would believe Gomez about anything.” 

The Conviction Integrity Unit, a section of the Brooklyn district attorney’s office, refused to identify the 50 cases under inspection, though observers to the investigation fear dozens of innocent men may have been imprisoned only because they were investigated by a corrupt NYPD detective. 

Lawyers for other defendants, almost all of whom are still behind bars, said the confessions' similarities prove the trend was deliberate.   

“It’s sort of beyond belief that it would be coincidental,” Stephen Banks, the chief lawyer for the Legal Aid Society, which is reviewing 20 of Scarcella’s cases, told the Times.

Law experts admitted that a detective’s speech is often incorporated into the phraseology of a confession, although the likelihood that so many suspects would use the same pattern remains minimal. 

“It’s hard to imagine all five people used the same exact words,” said University of San Francisco law professor Richard Leo, a confessions specialist, as quoted by the Times. “It almost sounds like a template.” 

Jabbar Washington is among those who claim Scarcella put them in prison without sufficient proof. Washington was implicated in a 1995 home invasion that left one man dead and two other people in comas. 

“You got it right,” Washington supposedly wrote just minutes after he was brought in for questioning. “I was there.” 

Washington testified at his own trial that Scarcella grabbed him by the neck and testicles before giving Washington a script for the confession, according to the Times. 

“He always said the cop fed him what to say,” said Mark Pollard, Washington’s lawyer at the time. 

Scarcella, for his part, has denied any wrongdoing, at one point appearing on the Dr. Phil show to discuss falsified confessions. The former detective was approached by the New York Post after the Brooklyn DA asked a judge to vacate Ranta’s conviction. 

“They threw me under the bus,” he said. “I was appalled when I got the news. I stand by the confession 100 per cent. I never framed anyone in my life. You have to be a low devil to frame someone. I sleep well at night.”


http://rt.com/usa/nypd-detective-falsified-murder-confessions-680

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 17, 2013, 02:36:46 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2342786/Man-charged-counts-endangering-children-locking-boys-closet-vandalizing-home.html


Really screwed up.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 18, 2013, 08:16:30 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/19/us/in-150-shootings-the-fbi-deemed-agents-faultless.html?_r=1&



Unreal.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 19, 2013, 04:45:50 AM
http://www.krmg.com/news/news/local/man-found-decapitated-police-suspect-suicide/nYNZh


 ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 19, 2013, 05:31:26 AM
http://www.krmg.com/news/news/local/man-found-decapitated-police-suspect-suicide/nYNZh


 ::)  ::)


The incident happened near 46th and Sheridan.

Police say a woman who lives in the home found her husband dead in the garage.

His hands and feet were tied and the body had been decapitated.

Tulsa police told KRMG news the death was due to suicide.

Cops gave no other details at the time but continue to investigate the matter


Couple thoughts here...

1. Just no way officers would determine suicide so soon with the way the body was found. Even if they suspected it, they would not announce their suspicion to the press because the chance of looking stupid if they are wrong is just too great. Typically officers seal off the crime scene and homicide detectives and crime scene specialists arrive. Eventually the coroner or M.E. shows up and will also conduct an investigation into the cause of death. This can take days before a cause of death is ruled on. So just the fact a statement is made of suicide so soon after the crime just screams a problem with the reporting.

2. Article says "a woman who lives at the house found her husband dead in the garage". Well, that would be THE WIFE. If that is an example of the reporters ability, then likely he or she screwed the pooch on writing the rest of it.

3. For such an event, the article is lacking any real detail a normal article would have like what the neighbors had to say about the couple, etc etc. Just seems odd to me.   

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 19, 2013, 05:33:09 AM
Maybe the guy had a makeshift guilitine in the garage?   ;D  ;D


The incident happened near 46th and Sheridan.

Police say a woman who lives in the home found her husband dead in the garage.

His hands and feet were tied and the body had been decapitated.

Tulsa police told KRMG news the death was due to suicide.

Cops gave no other details at the time but continue to investigate the matter


Couple thoughts here...

1. Just no way officers would determine suicide so soon with the way the body was found. Even if they suspected it, they would not announce their suspicion to the press because the chance of looking stupid if they are wrong is just too great. Typically officers seal off the crime scene and homicide detectives and crime scene specialists arrive. Eventually the coroner or M.E. shows up and will also conduct an investigation into the cause of death. This can take days before a cause of death is ruled on. So just the fact a statement is made of suicide so soon after the crime just screams a problem with the reporting.

2. Article says "a woman who lives at the house found her husband dead in the garage". Well, that would be THE WIFE. If that is an example of the reporters ability, then likely he or she screwed the pooch on writing the rest of it.

3. For such an event, the article is lacking any real detail a normal article would have like what the neighbors had to say about the couple, etc etc. Just seems odd to me.   


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 19, 2013, 05:37:52 AM
Maybe the guy had a makeshift guilitine in the garage?   ;D  ;D


Possible, maybe he was murdered and the reporter got it wrong. I find it very hard to believe cops told a reporter it was suicide when we even look at the obvious suicides was possible homicides initially until the facts bear out the conclusion...just sayin..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 19, 2013, 11:06:58 AM
http://rt.com/usa/fbi-director-mueller-drones-947

Move on sheep - FBI admits today using drones for domestic surveillance
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 21, 2013, 11:29:21 AM
http://jalopnik.com/florida-cop-makes-young-mom-shake-her-bra-during-stop-t-531557395

"four days of paid leave as punishment"










"punishment"...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 21, 2013, 02:32:43 PM
http://jalopnik.com/florida-cop-makes-young-mom-shake-her-bra-during-stop-t-531557395

"four days of paid leave as punishment"










"punishment"...

Agnostic007, this is the sort of thing I was talking about before. Cops not only being allowed to violate citizens right, but to flat-out abuse them with little or no consequence. And let's be realistic: four days of paid vacation isn't a consequence.

What message does this send to other officers? What about to the public? It's that cops are bullies; that they can bully you under the color of authority, they can abide you, and they can walk away scot free. Their friends won't "turn" on them and the union will fight for them. So it's all good.

Abuse the public, then go on a short paid vacation.

This cop should have been fired on the spot. And anyone involved with the decision of giving him four days of paid leave should be fired on the spot.

[Sidenote: And you know just as well as I do that if there wasn't video ("the camera malfunctioned!") there's no way anything at all would have happened and this poor woman would not even be believed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 23, 2013, 07:36:36 PM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/06/21/family-furious-after-police-shoot-german-shepherd-in-front-yard-plus-does-security-vid-contradict-cops-story/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=Share%20Buttons



So sick f this shit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 24, 2013, 03:14:18 AM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/06/21/family-furious-after-police-shoot-german-shepherd-in-front-yard-plus-does-security-vid-contradict-cops-story/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=Share%20Buttons



So sick f this shit.

Good thing there's security footage. Although, it will at most result in a suspension without pay (a.k.a. a paid vacation) when all is said and done. The usual "feared for his life" bullshit will be uttered, additional and/or refresher training will be mentioned and that's that.

Frankly, any time a police officer files a report it should be, automatically, under sworn penalty of perjury, and if evidence contradicting his sword statement appears, he should be instantly removed from duty without pay and either investigated or, depending on the evidence, brought before a Court of Law to face perjury charges.

Bah.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2013, 03:49:41 AM
It's a good thing they had the camera. I hope the family will go after these lying thugs.

Wonder what would happen if a police dog attacked a citizen and the citizen shot at it?
 Ah yes, the police dog is often a "sworn officer" (because the dog obviously understands and upholds the Constitution) and in such case attacking it would be like attacking a human officer.
But in such a case a citizen can't dismiss everything and claim he was "following policy" and get "leave with pay".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 24, 2013, 05:04:48 PM
It's a good thing they had the camera. I hope the family will go after these lying thugs.

Wonder what would happen if a police dog attacked a citizen and the citizen shot at it?
 Ah yes, the police dog is often a "sworn officer" (because the dog obviously understands and upholds the Constitution) and in such case attacking it would be like attacking a human officer.
But in such a case a citizen can't dismiss everything and claim he was "following policy" and get "leave with pay".



Yeah...so much for the shaking the fence claim.  My brother once told me, it's all in how they write it up.  And they'll lie through their fucking teeth...as clearly demonstrated here.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2013, 06:04:55 PM
Agnostic007, this is the sort of thing I was talking about before. Cops not only being allowed to violate citizens right, but to flat-out abuse them with little or no consequence. And let's be realistic: four days of paid vacation isn't a consequence.

What message does this send to other officers? What about to the public? It's that cops are bullies; that they can bully you under the color of authority, they can abide you, and they can walk away scot free. Their friends won't "turn" on them and the union will fight for them. So it's all good.

Abuse the public, then go on a short paid vacation.

This cop should have been fired on the spot. And anyone involved with the decision of giving him four days of paid leave should be fired on the spot.

[Sidenote: And you know just as well as I do that if there wasn't video ("the camera malfunctioned!") there's no way anything at all would have happened and this poor woman would not even be believed.

First, I'll start off by saying that was inappropriate on the cops part. Definately crossed the line. I read a news report that I will include parts of that is more recent...

Lakeland police have responded to the bra shake search controversy by suspending Fetz with pay and releasing a statement about the incident, reading:
 
“After the Lakeland Police Department became aware of the allegations against Officer Fetz, and prior to receiving a complaint from the victim, an internal investigation was initiated. Chief [Lisa] Womack takes these matters very seriously and the department will conduct a thorough investigation into the allegation.”

.. It sounds like he is taken off the road until the investigation is complete. A suspension is part of a disciplinary process governed by Civil Service in many cases and would sometimes take months before the conclusion of the investigation. Sometimes it is a lot quicker but rarely within a month. So it may be that additional or the real discipline will be forthcoming upon conclusion of the investigation. That's how it works here.

Police officer are rarely fired on the spot. There is again a due process governed by civil service to keep the Mayor from having the Chief fire an officer for writing his daughter a ticket. If it turns out 4 days paid "suspension" is all he ever gets, I'm right there with you yelling for heads to roll     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2013, 06:29:39 PM
Fla. mom gets 20 years for firing warning shots
     

Marissa Alexander of Jacksonville, Fla., received a 20-years prison sentence, Friday, May 11, 2012, for firing warning shots against her allegedly abusive husband. The judge rejected a defense under Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law.

Marissa Alexander of Jacksonville, Fla., received a 20-years prison sentence, Friday, May 11, 2012, for firing warning shots against her allegedly abusive husband. The judge rejected a defense under Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law. / WETV



(CBS News) JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - A Florida woman who fired warning shots against her allegedly abusive husband has been sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Marissa Alexander of Jacksonville had said the state's "Stand Your Ground" law should apply to her because she was defending herself against her allegedly abusive husband when she fired warning shots inside her home in August 2010. She told police it was to escape a brutal beating by her husband, against whom she had already taken out a protective order.

CBS Affiliate WETV reports that Circuit Court Judge James Daniel handed down the sentence Friday.


Under Florida's mandatory minimum sentencing requirements Alexander could receive a lesser sentence, even though she has never been in trouble with the law before. Judge Daniel said the law did not allow for extenuating or mitigating circumstances to reduce the sentence below the 20-year minimum.

"I really was crying in there," Marissa's 11-year-old daughter told WETV. "I didn't want to cry in court, but I just really feel hurt. I don't think this should have been happening."

Alexander was convicted of attempted murder after she rejected a plea deal for a three-year prison sentence. She said she did not believe she did anything wrong.

She was recently denied a new trial after appealing to the judge to reconsider her case based on Florida's controversial "Stand Your Ground" law. The law states that the victim of a crime does not have to attempt to run for safety and can immediately retaliate in self-defense.

Alexander's attorney said she was clearly defending herself and should not have to spend the next two decades behind bars.

Alexander's case has drawn support from domestic abuse advocates - and comparison to the case of neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who has claimed a "Stand Your Ground" defense in his fatal shooting of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin.
 © 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on July 07, 2013, 07:18:58 PM
Wow.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 07, 2013, 07:20:27 PM
Wow.

So FD up.   20 years?   GAFB!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 07, 2013, 07:25:42 PM
For trying to defend herself.

Fucked up man... fucked up. She shoulda killed him.



I think StrawMan posted a lot of additional info about this case.  It's not as cut and dry as the article is making it out to be (if this is the same one).

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 08, 2013, 09:37:56 AM
When A Teen's 'Sarcastic' Facebook Message Goes Terribly Wrong

Alyson Shontell      59 minutes ago       9,212    24 


19-year-old Justin Carter could face 10 years in jail for a Facebook comment his family says was sarcastic.


On February 14, just two months after the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting, an 18-year-old in Texas named Justin Carter was arrested.

Carter, an avid gamer, got into a spat with a fellow League of Legends player on Facebook. After being provoked and told he was "messed up in the head," Carter fired back with a startling comment:

I think Ima shoot up a kindergarten / And watch the blood of the innocent rain down/ And eat the beating heart of one of them.

Carter's father says the next messages Carter wrote included "lol" and "jk" to imply he was kidding.

"It's incredibly inappropriate when you take it out of context for sure," Jack Carter, Justin's father, tells NPR. "It was a sarcastic remark in response to an insult."

A woman in Canada was alarmed by Carter's questionable comment and notified authorities. Carter's home was then searched (although no weapons were found) and his computer was taken. The teen spent his 19th birthday in jail; this is the first time he's been incarcerated.

A jury in Texas' Comal County charged the teenager with making a terroristic threat in April, which is considered a third-degree felony. That means Carter could spend ten years in jail for the Facebook comment. The judge also gave him an unusually high bond, $500,000, which his family can't afford to pay.

Carter's trial is beginning this month but in the meantime, the teen's father says his son has fallen into a deep depression.

"He's very depressed, he's very scared," Jack Carter said, telling CNN that his son feels like he'll never leave prison. "He's pretty much lost all hope."

And in an interview with NPR, Jack Carter painted a more gruesome picture of his son's experience in jail. He says his son has had "concussions, black eyes" and "moved four times for his own protection." He also says his son is nude in solitary confinement because of his depression.

Carter's mother Jennifer posted the situation on Change.org and acquired nearly 100,000 signatures in support of her son's release. In addition, the Carter family has found a pro-bono lawyer to take on the case.

The trial will come down to this:

In a social media world where younger generations are learning to speak now and think later, how far does freedom of speech really go?

While Carter's father understands why authorities had to investigate his son, he doesn't feel an impulsive comment on Facebook should be this detrimental.

"He says he's really sorry. He just totally got caught up in the moment of the argument and didn't really think about the implications," Jack Carter tells NPR. "I miss my son. He's my friend. And I just want him out. Nobody's life should be ruined because of a sarcastic comment."


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/teen-justin-carter-faces-trial-and-jail-for-facebook-comment-2013-7#ixzz2YTN5CvCF

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 09, 2013, 07:05:02 AM
http://www.salon.com/2013/07/07/%E2%80%9Cwhy_did_you_shoot_me_i_was_reading_a_book_the_new_warrior_cop_is_out_of_control/singleton



FUCKED UP!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 09, 2013, 07:13:18 AM
When A Teen's 'Sarcastic' Facebook Message Goes Terribly Wrong

[...] Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/teen-justin-carter-faces-trial-and-jail-for-facebook-comment-2013-7#ixzz2YTN5CvCF

I read about this case before you posted. While the original statement by this kid was (undeiniably) stupid. But kids often say stupid things, and doing so is almost never against the law. This ridiculous overreaction by adults who should know better has not only a chilling effect but shows how fucked up our society is fast becoming and how completely out of whack our justice system is.

Frankly the cops, prosecutors and Judges involved in this case need to be tarred and feathered. And they should certainly be removed from their positions. We give you fucking idiots discretion for a reason...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 09, 2013, 07:14:45 AM
I read about this case before you posted. While the original statement by this kid was stupid, saying stupid things is simply not against the law. This ridiculous overreaction by adults who should know better has a ridiculous chilling effect.

Frankly the cops, prosecutors and Judges involved in this case need to be tarred and feathered. And they should certainly be removed from their positions. We give you fucking idiots discretion for a reason...

I AM DISGUSTED AT ALL OF THIS
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 09, 2013, 07:20:27 AM
http://www.salon.com/2013/07/07/%E2%80%9Cwhy_did_you_shoot_me_i_was_reading_a_book_the_new_warrior_cop_is_out_of_control/singleton



FUCKED UP!!!!

Wow... I don't think "fucked up" quite describes this. This article is worth a read. What has our society devolved to?!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 09, 2013, 07:36:28 AM
http://abcnews.go.com/US/court-oks-barring-high-iqs-cops/story?id=95836#.UdwfkT7D_IU



LOL!!!!   What else needs to be said. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 09, 2013, 09:08:43 AM
Fugitive caught after sending taunting tweet, authorities say

Published July 09, 2013
Associated Press





tweetingfugitiveap.jpg


UNDATED: Wanda Lee Ann Podgurski, 60, is shown in this law enforcement handout photo from the San Diego County, Calif., District Attorney's office. (AP)



SAN DIEGO –  "Catch me if you can."

San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said Wanda Podgurski sent that taunting tweet after skipping trial in January while facing charges of insurance of fraud.

But then authorities did catch her.

Podgurski, 60, was captured on the Fourth of July in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, a popular retirement spot for American expatriates only 15 miles south of San Diego. She pleaded not guilty Monday to failure to appear while free on bail.

Podgurski was sentenced in absentia last month to more than 20 years in prison and ordered to pay more than $1 million in fines and restitution.

Three weeks after her initial tweet on June 5, Podgurski's feed read, "'Help find me before I con anyone else." Two other posts were links to stories about her vanishing act.

Podgurski's Twitter profile reads, "On the run possibly in Iran."

Her account follows 32 people and agencies, many of them FBI branches and other law enforcement authorities. Dumanis' office said the district attorney was the only one Podgurski followed while on the run.

The district attorney's office declined to say how authorities tracked down Podgurski, saying only that information from the Twitter account was turned over to its Computer and Technology Crime High-Tech Response Team, known by the acronym Catch.

Podgurski's attorney, Philip Kent Cohen, declined to comment.

The district attorney's office said Podgurski received $664,555 in disability payments when she was charged. While earning $44,000 a year as a clerk for Amtrak, she allegedly held six insurance policies with premiums that topped $60,000.

She made claims with all six insurance companies after reporting that she fell at her home in August 2006, prosecutors said. Private investigators working for the insurers reported seeing her walk stairs without assistance and drive to the store.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/07/09/fugitive-caught-after-taunting-tweet-authorities-say/?test=latestnews&cmpid=cmty_twitter_fn#ixzz2YZ6Mlgj0



LOL!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on July 09, 2013, 09:11:14 AM
Wow... I don't think "fucked up" quite describes this. This article is worth a read. What has our society devolved to?!
Holy fucking shit... a cop befriends a guy making bets with his frienss, convindes him to raise the stakes until its illegal, and then callsbthe SWAT teakvon him. Wtf?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 09, 2013, 10:17:02 AM
And then he's DEAD... they settled for 2 Million bucks... 2 Million over a life?

Fucking disgusting.

I'm no lawyer but this doesn't just scream "entrapment". It reeks of it. I don't know what, if anything, happened to the cop, but hopefully he wasn't only fired but not allowed within a mile of a police station for any purpose whatsoever.

333386, generally speaking (since jurisdictions differ) wouldn't this sort of thing qualify as entrapment? The police can't egg you on to do something illegal and then arrest you when you try. What are the "important" elements in determining if something is entrapment or not.

This overuse of force pattern is disturbing and the ridiculously poor judgement almost seems like it's endemic...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2013, 06:31:22 AM
How A Crazy Sex Drug Inspired Mass Police Raids Across America


 

Radley Balko, Rise Of The Warrior Cop      Jul. 9, 2013, 6:07 PM       7,369    17 
 


Swat team drugs
AP Photo/Karie Hamilton

SWAT team members patrol a Washington state neighborhood looking for a meth suspect.
On November 2, 2002, a large group of police officers in tactical gear descended on a rave party in Racine, Wisconsin. The cops kicked in doors, dragged young people from bathroom stalls, threw others to the floor, and held dozens more at gunpoint.

The police issued more than 450 citations of $968 each to partygoers merely for attending an event where some attendees were breaking the state’s drug laws. Only three people were arrested on actual drug charges. With help from the ACLU, the city of Racine eventually dismissed the charges against all attendees who hadn’t yet pleaded guilty.

The trendy new drug throwing the media and politicians into hysterics was Ecstasy. Raves were the new, weird, and different dance parties where teenagers were allegedly taking this crazy sex drug. Cue the moral panic, political grandstanding, and ensuing aggressive crackdown. Prior to the raid in Racine, Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware seemed particularly obsessed with rave parties. Politicians seemed to think that any party with techno music, pulsing lights, and neon inevitably degenerated into underage kids getting high on Ecstasy and engaging in mass orgies.

In the summer of 2002, Biden was pushing his RAVE Act, an absurdly broad law that would have made venue and club owners liable for running a drug operation if they merely sold the “paraphernalia” common to parties where people took Ecstasy — accessories like bottled water and glow sticks. After attempting to sneak the bill through Congress with various parliamentary maneuvers, Biden was finally able to get a slightly modified version folded into the bill that created the Amber Alert for missing children.

Once again a politician had demagogued worries over a mostly harmless drug into a climate of fear. And once again that fear led to aggressive, wholly disproportionate crackdowns across the country.

A few years later, a rave raid was captured on video. In August 2005, more than 90 police officers from several state and local SWAT teams raided 1,500 people at a peaceful, outdoor dance party in Spanish Fork Canyon, Utah. The police were armed with assault weapons, full SWAT attire, police dogs, and tear gas. Many in attendance say that police beat, abused, and swore at partygoers.

Police denied the allegations, though amateur video/audio clearly showed the police barking out orders punctuated with profanity. In truth, the party appeared to have been pretty well run. Private security guards had been stationed outside the event, and confiscated any illegal drugs they found on attendees. The raiding SWAT cops then arrested the private security guards for the drugs they had confiscated, and charged them with possession.

The other new concept at work in Racine and Spanish Fork was the willingness to subject large groups of people to commando tactics in hopes of catching even a few offenders. By the late 2000s, SWAT teams were increasingly called out to raid entire bars and nightclubs for drug activity. A search warrant for a bar’s owner or a description of the place as a drug market could allow police to go in and give the SWAT treatment to everyone inside.

And it wasn’t just bars and nightclubs that were treated this way. In November 2003, police in Goose Creek, South Carolina, raided an entire high school, conducting a blanket commando-style raid on Stratford High School. Students were ordered at gunpoint to lie face-down on the floor while police searched their lockers and persons for drugs. Some were handcuffed, while K-9 units deployed dogs to search their lockers, backpacks, and bodies. Oddly, media reports indicated that the school had a stellar academic reputation.

Le’Quan Simpson, a fourteen-year-old, was forced to kneel at gunpoint. His father had once served on a SWAT team. “They hit that school like it was a crack house,” he said. “Like they knew that there were crack dealers in there armed with guns.” The raid was based on a tip from the school’s principal that a single student might have been selling pot. The raid turned up no illicit drugs, and the police made no arrests.

Still, though these raids of schools and parties were somewhat new, drug cops had been conducting massive drug sweeps of entire neighborhoods for years, subjecting innocent people to violent tactics simply because of where they happened to live. There were more of those police actions too.

In February 2002, for example, one hundred Durham police officers, two National Guard helicopters, and ten North Carolina Bureau of Investigation agents seized an entire neighborhood on Cheek Road, then engaged in a series of forced-entry drug raids. They called the whole episode Operation TAPS, short for The Aggressive Police Strategy. The police arrested thirty-five people and confiscated an “undisclosed” amount of drugs, plus two pistols. Superior Court judge Orlando Hudson later threw out all the arrests and evidence, ruling that the entire operation was unconstitutional and “partially illegal” and that some of the officers’ behavior amounted to “criminal conduct."

One particularly aggressive action peppered with war rhetoric oc- curred in April 2006, when police in Buffalo, New York, staged a series of drug raids throughout the city under the moniker Operation Shock and Awe. They borrowed the phrase from the US military, which had used it to describe its strategy in the early days of the Iraq War. Shock and Awe in Buffalo meant thirty-eight SWAT raids over three days. The cops even invited along a couple of reporters from the Buffalo News to cover the invasion.

A month later, the Buffalo News ran a follow-up report. The original six pounds of marijuana police claimed to have found was actually four pounds, thirteen ounces. Three and a half pounds of that came by way of an unrelated traffic stop on the same day that had nothing to do with the raids. They found all of five guns. Not surprisingly, the revised haul wasn’t enough contraband to keep the seventy-eight people in jail. Sixteen were immediately released with no criminal charges. Another thirty-two were out of jail within twenty-four hours due to insufficient evidence.

City leaders were furious, not because city police had just terrorized innocent people with fruitless SWAT raids, but because so many petty offenders were let off. City officials demanded tougher drug laws, and discussed the possibility of sending drug cops and SWAT teams out with housing code inspectors to clean up suspected crack houses without those pesky Fourth Amendment warrant requirements.

Buffalo’s chief of detectives, Dennis Richards, told the newspaper that Operation Shock and Awe was “just the beginning.” “There will certainly be more raids in the future,” he said. “You can count on that. . . . We’re looking at small-scale, large-scale, street-level. . . . We’re looking at top to bottom."

From RISE OF THE WARRIOR COP: The Militarization of America's Police Forces by Radley Balko. Reprinted with permission from PublicAffairs Books.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-a-crazy-sex-drug-inspired-mass-police-raids-across-america-2013-7#ixzz2YeJIZiTM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2013, 10:11:54 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/florida-police-officers-entangled-in-horrifying-sex-scandal-2013-7

"Life on the line"   ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: missile on July 10, 2013, 10:14:16 AM
Have any of you bros ever been cavity searched?  Do the police stick their fingers in your ass?  Any of your girlfriends had their pussies poked by cops? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: theredeemer on July 10, 2013, 10:42:07 AM
Have any of you bros ever been cavity searched?  Do the police stick their fingers in your ass?  Any of your girlfriends had their pussies poked by cops? 

I try to avoid criminal thugs police.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: theredeemer on July 10, 2013, 10:45:53 AM
Wow... I don't think "fucked up" quite describes this. This article is worth a read. What has our society devolved to?!

Fuckin vermin, I'd like to see them all drawn and quartered.  They would all be following Hitler if he was to return.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2013, 01:38:49 PM
7 Ways The Obama Administration Has Accelerated Police Militarization
Posted: 07/10/2013 3:57 pm EDT 


There were signs that President Barack Obama might rein in the mass militarization of America's police forces after he won the White House. Policing is primarily a local issue, overseen by local authorities. But beginning in the late 1960s with President Richard Nixon, the federal government began instituting policies that gave federal authorities more power to fight the drug trade, and to lure state and local policymakers into the anti-crime agenda of the administration in charge. These policies got a boost during Ronald Reagan's presidency, and then another during President Bill Clinton's years. Under President George W. Bush, all of those anti-drug policies continued, but were supplemented by new war on terrorism endeavors -- yet more efforts to make America's cops look, act and fight like soldiers.

But Obama might have been different. This, after all, was the man who, as a candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2004, declared the war on drugs an utter failure. As Reason magazine's Jacob Sullum wrote in a 2011 critique of Obama's drug policy:

Obama stood apart from hard-line prohibitionists even when he began running for president. In 2007 and 2008, he bemoaned America’s high incarceration rate, warned that the racially disproportionate impact of drug prohibition undermines legal equality, advocated a “public health” approach to drugs emphasizing treatment and training instead of prison, repeatedly indicated that he would take a more tolerant position regarding medical marijuana than George W. Bush, and criticized the Bush administration for twisting science to support policy -- a tendency that is nowhere more blatant than in the government’s arbitrary distinctions among psychoactive substances.

Indeed, in his first interview after taking office, Obama's drug czar, Gil Kerlikowske, said that the administration would be toning down the martial rhetoric that had dominated federal drug policy since the Nixon years. "Regardless of how you try to explain to people it's a 'war on drugs' or a 'war on a product,' people see a war as a war on them," Kerlikowske told The Wall Street Journal. "We're not at war with people in this country."

This was an notable break from previous administrations. Rhetoric does matter, and for a generation in the U.S., cops had incessantly been told that they were in a war with drug offenders -- this, in a country where about half the adult population admits to having smoked marijuana.

Unfortunately, while not insignificant, the change in rhetoric has largely been only that. The Obama administration may no longer call it a "war," but there's no question that the White House is continuing to fight one. Here's a quick rundown of where and how Obama's policies have perpetuated the garrison state:

1. Pentagon Giveaways

In 1997, Congress added a section to a defense appropriations bill creating an agency to transfer surplus military gear to state and local police departments. Since then, millions of pieces of equipment designed for use on a battlefield -- such as tanks, bayonets, M-16s, and armored personnel carriers -- have been given to domestic police agencies for use on American streets, against American citizens.




Under Obama, this program has continued to flourish. In its October 2011 newsletter (motto: “From Warfighter to Crimefighter”), the agency that oversees the Pentagon giveaways boasted that fiscal 2011 was the most productive in the program's history. And by a large margin. “FY 11 has been a historic year for the program,” wrote program manager Craig Barrett. “We reutilized more than $500M, that is million with an M, worth of property in FY 11. This passes the previous mark by several hundred million dollars. ... Half a billion dollars in reutilization was a monumental achievement in FY 11.”

2. Byrne Grants

In 1988, Congress created a new federal crime-fighting program called the Byrne grant, named for Edward Byrne, a New York City narcotics officer killed by a drug dealer. Over the years, these grants have created multi-jurisdictional anti-drug and anti-gang task forces all over the country. Because these task forces usually cover more than one jurisdiction, they often aren't fully accountable to, say, a police chief or an elected sheriff. Moreover, they're often funded either with additional Byrne grants, or with money seized in asset forfeiture proceedings. They can operate with little or no funding from the polities they police.

The results have been unsettling. These task forces have caused numerous deaths, been responsible for botched drug raids on the wrong houses, and have been implicated in corruption scandals. It was Byrne-funded task forces that were responsible for the debacles in Tulia and Hearne, Texas, about a decade ago, in which dozens of people -- nearly all poor and black -- were wrongly raided, arrested and charged with drug crimes. One woman falsely charged in Hearne was Regina Kelly, subject of the movie "American Violet." In a 2007 interview, Kelly told me that the violent raids had been going on for years in Hearne before the task force was finally caught.

"They come on helicopters, military-style, SWAT style,” Kelly said. “In the apartments I was living in, in the projects, there were a lot of children outside playing. They don’t care. They throw kids on the ground, put guns to their heads. They’re kicking in doors. They just don’t care.”

The George W. Bush administration had actually begun phasing out the Byrne program. It had been funded at a half-billion dollars per year through most of the Clinton presidency. By the time he left office in 2008, Bush had pared it to $170 million a year. But the grants have long been a favorite of Vice President Joe Biden. And so Obama campaigned on fully restoring their funding, declaring that the Byrne grant program “has been critical to creating the anti-gang and anti-drug task forces our communities need.” On that promise at least, he has delivered. As part of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Obama infused the program with $2 billion, by the far the largest budget in its history.

3. COPS Grants

The Community Oriented Policing Services, or COPS, program has followed a similar trajectory. Its aim is noble, at least in theory. Community policing is the idea that cops should be proactive, and consider themselves part of the communities they serve. They should know the names of school principals, be friendly with business owners, attend neighborhood meetings.

This isn't the definition of community policing held by many police officials. In the late 1990s, criminologist Peter Kraska found, for example, that many police chiefs consider frequent SWAT raids and similarly aggressive policing to be a core part of a community policing strategy. In fact, some said they considered sending SWAT teams to patrol entire neighborhoods to be sound community policing.

Moreover, police department budgets are fungible -- there's really no way to control how these grants are spent once they arrive at the police station. A 2001 report by the Madison Capital Times found that many Wisconsin police agencies that received COPS grants in the 1990s had in fact used them to start SWAT teams. When presented with these findings, one criminologist was aghast, telling the paper, "Community policing initiatives and stockpiling weapons and grenade launchers are totally incompatible.”

Just as it had with Byrne grants, the Bush administration was phasing out the COPS program in the 2000s. But like the Byrne grants, COPS grants have long been a favorite of Biden. In fact, Biden often takes credit for creating the program, and claims it's responsible for the sharp drop in violent crime in America that began in the mid-1990s. (There's no evidence to support that contention, and a 2007 analysis in the peer-reviewed journal Criminology concluded “COPS spending had little to no effect on crime.”)

And so Obama resurrected COPS, too. During his first year in office, he increased the program's budget by 250 percent.

4. DHS Anti-Terror Grants

The Department of Homeland Security has been giving its own grants to police agencies. These grants have been used to purchase military-grade equipment in the name of fighting terrorism. The grants are going to cities and towns all over America, including to unlikely terrorist targets like Fargo, N.D.; Fond du Lac, Wis.; and Canyon County, Idaho. Once they have a new armored personnel carrier, or new high-powered weapons, most of these police agencies then put them to use in more routine police work -- usually drug raids.

According to a 2011 report by the Center for Investigative Reporting, the federal government has handed out $34 billion in grants since Sept. 11, 2001. The grants have also given rise to contractors that now cater to police agencies looking to cash DHS checks in exchange for battle-grade gear. All of which means there's now an industry -- and inevitably a lobbying interest -- dedicated to perpetuating police militarization.

5. Medical Marijuana Raids

Despite campaign promises to the contrary, Obama has not only continued the Bush and Clinton administration policy of sending SWAT teams to raid medical marijuana growers, shops, and dispensaries in states that have legalized the drug, he appears to have significantly increased enforcement. Just two years into his presidency, Obama's administration had conducted about 150 such raids. The Bush administration conducted around 200 medical marijuana raids over eight years.

Obama has also stepped up the heavy-handed raids often used to enforce immigration laws. In 2012, his administration deported more people than in any prior year in American history. He's on pace to deport 2 million people by 2014, a figure equal to the total number of people ever deported from American until 1997.

6. Heavy-Handed Police Tactics

In 2011, an armed team of federal agents raided the floor of the Gibson guitar factory in Nashville, Tenn. The raid made national headlines and picked up traction in the the tea party movement, largely because it had been conducted to enforce the Lacey Act, a fairly obscure environmental law -- not the sort of policy most people would think would be enforced by armed federal agents. The same year, a SWAT team from the Department of Education conducted a morning raid of what they thought was the home of a woman who was suspected of defrauding federal student loan programs -- again, not the sort of crime usually associated with a SWAT action. (They also got the wrong house -- the suspect had moved out months earlier.)

The Obama administration has defended the use of aggressive, militaristic police actions in court. In the case Avina v. U.S., DEA agents pointed their guns at an 11-year-old and a 14-year-old during a drug raid on the wrong house. The agents had apparently mistaken the license plate of a suspected drug trafficker for the plate on a car owned by Thomas Avina. Obama's Justice Department argued in federal court that the lawsuit should be dismissed before being heard by a jury because the agents’ actions were not unreasonable.

To be fair, the Justice Department almost always defends federal employees from lawsuits. And it seems likely that any other modern administration would do the same thing. But it wasn't always this way. In 1973, even the drug-warring Nixon administration fired, and then criminally indicted, 12 narcotics cops for raiding the wrong homes and terrorizing innocent families. Obama may be no different than Bush, Clinton, or his rivals for the presidency in defending drug cops who point guns at children during botched raids. But there was a time in America when even the original tough-on-crime administration was appalled enough at the idea to hold such overly zealous drug cops accountable.

7. Asset Forfeiture

Under the policy of civil asset forfeiture, the government can seize any cash, cars, houses, or other property that law enforcement can reasonably connect to a crime -- usually a drug crime. The owner of the property must then go to court to show that he legitimately earned or owns it. Often the owner is never actually charged with a crime. And often, these seizures are made against people suspected of low-level crimes, so the value of the property seized can be less than the costs and hassle of hiring an attorney and going to court to win it back.

If the owner doesn't try to get his assets back, or if the court rules against him, asset forfeiture proceeds go to the police department that made the seizure. Critics say the policy creates perverse incentives for police to find drug connections that may not exist. But the policy has been lucrative for police agencies, and has been a huge contributor to the growth and use of SWAT teams to serve drug warrants. SWAT teams can be expensive to maintain. Instead of reserving them only for genuinely dangerous situations, asset forfeiture (along with Byrne grants) creates a strong incentive to send them on drug raids. A number of states have tried to curb forfeiture abuses by requiring that proceeds from seizures go to schools, or to a general fund. But under the Justice Department's equitable sharing program, a local police agency simply needs to ask the DEA for assistance with a raid. The operation then becomes federal, and is governed by federal law. The DOJ takes a cut of the assets, then sends a large percentage back to the local police agency, effectively getting around those state laws.

Under Obama, forfeiture has flourished. According to a 2012 report from the General Accounting Office, the Justice Department's forfeiture fund swelled to $1.8 billion in 2011, the largest ever. That same year, equitable sharing payouts to local police agencies topped $445 million, also a record.

Obama has fought for broad asset forfeiture powers in court, even for local governments. In the 2009 case Alvarez v. Smith, the Obama administration defended a provision of Illinois' asset forfeiture law that allows police to seize property they believe is connected to drug activity with little evidence, then hold it for up to six months before the owner gets an opportunity to win it back in court. It's one of the harshest such laws in the country.

The argument could be made here that the Justice Department has a responsibility to defend law enforcement in court. But Obama has shown a willingness to back down from laws he opposes -- notably by instructing government attorneys to stop defending the Defense of Marriage Act from court challenges.

But even if one believes that the solicitor general has an obligation to defend federal law, this is a state law. Moreover, it's a state law that's actually harsher on property owners than corresponding federal laws. The Illinois law also applies only to property valued at less than $20,000, meaning it disproportionately affects the poor. The Obama administration could have plausibly argued against the law, or simply not taken a position. Instead, Justice Department attorneys argued for it to be upheld. The Supreme Court ultimately dismissed the case without ruling on the law.

In many of these examples, Obama is merely continuing policies that began in previous administrations. And there are some areas where he has made progress, notably by apportioning a greater portion his anti-drug budget to treatment instead of enforcement. But in several of the examples above, he has actually stepped up the policies he inherited.

Obama the candidate made some unusually frank and critical statements about the drug war, incarceration, and the criminal justice system. His drug czar then showed some rare insight into the dangers of war rhetoric when discussing domestic policing. Obama the president has been more of the same, and in some cases worse.

HuffPost investigative reporter Radley Balko is author of the new book, Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces, from which this article was adapted.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/10/obama-police-militarization_n_3566478.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 17, 2013, 09:39:17 AM
http://cnsnews.com/mrctv-blog/craig-bannister/govt-bureau-creating-google-earth-every-financial-transaction-senator


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 17, 2013, 09:46:21 AM

Driving somewhere? There's a government record of that




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Posted:  Jul 17, 2013 10:33 AM EDT Updated:  Jul 17, 2013 10:36 AM EDT 
 



 
 

By ANNE FLAHERTY

WASHINGTON (AP) — Chances are, your local or state police departments have photographs of your car in their files, noting where you were driving on a particular day, even if you never did anything wrong.

Using automated scanners, law enforcement agencies across the country have amassed millions of digital records on the location and movement of every vehicle with a license plate, according to a study published Wednesday by the American Civil Liberties Union. Affixed to police cars, bridges or buildings, the scanners capture images of passing or parked vehicles and note their location, uploading that information into police databases. Departments keep the records for weeks or years, sometimes indefinitely.

As the technology becomes cheaper and more ubiquitous, and federal grants focus on aiding local terrorist detection, even small police agencies are able to deploy more sophisticated surveillance systems. While the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that a judge's approval is needed to track a car with GPS, networks of plate scanners allow police effectively to track a driver's location, sometimes several times every day, with few legal restrictions. The ACLU says the scanners assemble what it calls a "single, high-resolution image of our lives."

"There's just a fundamental question of whether we're going to live in a society where these dragnet surveillance systems become routine," said Catherine Crump, a staff attorney with the ACLU. The civil rights group is proposing that police departments immediately delete any records of cars not linked to a crime.

Law enforcement officials said the scanners can be crucial to tracking suspicious cars, aiding drug busts and finding abducted children. License plate scanners also can be efficient. The state of Maryland told the ACLU that troopers could "maintain a normal patrol stance" while capturing up to 7,000 license plate images in a single eight hour shift.

"At a time of fiscal and budget constraints, we need better assistance for law enforcement," said Harvey Eisenberg, chief of the national security section and assistant U.S. attorney in Maryland.

Law enforcement officials also point out that the technology is legal in most cases, automating a practice that's been done for years. The ACLU found that only five states have laws governing license plate readers. New Hampshire, for example, bans the technology except in narrow circumstances, while Maine and Arkansas limit how long plate information can be stored.

"There's no expectation of privacy" for a vehicle driving on a public road or parked in a public place, said Lt. Bill Hedgpeth, a spokesman for the Mesquite Police Department in Texas, which has records stretching back to 2008, although the city plans next month to begin deleting files older than two years. "It's just a vehicle. It's just a license plate."

In Yonkers, N.Y., just north of the Bronx, police said retaining the information indefinitely helps detectives solve future crimes. In a statement, the department said it uses license plate readers as a "reactive investigative tool" that is only accessed if detectives are looking for a particular vehicle in connection to a crime.

"These plate readers are not intended nor used to follow the movements of members of the public," the department's statement said.

But even if law enforcement officials say they don't want a public location tracking system, the records add up quickly. In Jersey City, N.J., for example, the population is only 250,000 but the city collected more than 2 million plate images on file. Because the city keeps records for five years, the ACLU estimates that it has some 10 million on file, making it possible for police to plot the movements of most residents depending upon the number and location of the scanners, according to the ACLU.

The ACLU study, based on 26,000 pages of responses from 293 police departments and state agencies across the country, also found that license plate scanners produced a small fraction of "hits," or alerts to police that a suspicious vehicle has been found. In Maryland, for example, the state reported reading about 29 million plates between January and May of last year. Of that amount, about 60,000 — or roughly 1 in every 500 license plates — were suspicious. The No. 1 crime? A suspended or revoked registration, or a violation of the state's emissions inspection program accounted for 97 percent of all alerts.

Eisenberg, the assistant U.S. attorney, said the numbers "fail to show the real qualitative assistance to public safety and law enforcement." He points to the 132 wanted suspects the program helped track. They were a small fraction of the 29 million plates read, but he said tracking those suspects can be critical to keeping an area safe.

Also, he said, Maryland has rules in place restricting access for criminal investigations only. Most records are retained for one year in Maryland, and the state's privacy policies are reviewed by an independent board, Eisenberg noted.

At least in Maryland, "there are checks, and there are balances," he said.

___

Follow Anne Flaherty on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AnneKFlaherty

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.


Read more: http://www.myfoxny.com/Story/22863801/driving-somewhere-theres-a-government-record-of-that#ixzz2ZK262bGA
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 17, 2013, 01:48:56 PM
http://cnsnews.com/mrctv-blog/craig-bannister/govt-bureau-creating-google-earth-every-financial-transaction-senator


 >:(

This is pretty fucked up. But Mike "The Hypocrite" Enzi... here's a man who voted for the Patriot Act, the reauthorization of FISA/FISC, a number of privacy-destroying bills. And he has the balls to stand up and say:

“You can't tell 'em to stay out of your records. It's not possible. If your data is being collected, you do not have the option to opt out. Nor, does the CFPD need any kind of permission from you to gather your personal information.”

Fucking hypocrite. The legislation you voted for in the past doesn't let me opt out and let's the government peruse my records and my information without any kind of permission. Where was your outrage then scumbag?

People like Mike Enzi should be tarred and feathered; not elected to public office.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 18, 2013, 06:17:51 AM
TSA searches valet parked car

Posted at: 07/17/2013 6:46 PM | Updated at: 07/18/2013 7:25 AM
By: Berkeley Brean | WHEC.com

 
 
 

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Rochester, N.Y. -- She says she had no warning that someone was going to search her car after she left to catch her flight. So the woman contacted News10NBC.

 We found out it happened to her because she valet parked her car. Those are the only cars that get inspected.

 So if security feels it is necessary to search some cars in the name of safety, why not search all of them?

 Laurie Iacuzza walked to her waiting car at the Greater Rochester International Airport after returning from a trip and that's when she found it -- a notice saying her car was inspected after she left for her flight. She said, “I was furious. They never mentioned it to me when I booked the valet or when I picked up the car or when I dropped it off.”

Iacuzza's car was inspected by valet attendants on orders from the TSA. But why only valet parked cars? That's what News10NBC wanted to ask the TSA director about.  We reached him by phone.

 Berkeley Brean asked, “Are the cars in the short term lots and long term lots getting searched as well?”

John McCaffery, TSA, said, “No, those vehicles that are in the garage, short term long term parking, even if they carry pretty large amounts of explosives, they would not cause damage to the front of the airport. But for those who use the valet, the car could be there for a half hour or an hour so there is a vulnerability.”

News10NBC went to the valet parking and one of the attendants showed us the notice they put in the cars.

 We asked, “You're required, they tell you, you have to search the car?” Valet Parking Attendant Frank Dettorre said, “I have to do it.”

We also noticed a large sign that alerts customers that their vehicle will be inspected. The sign is on the kiosk window. Iacuzza says it was not there when she dropped off her car. “I think the public should be aware of the fact that if their car is going to be searched, they should be informed of it.”

Iacuzza said she doesn't mind the security measure. She just wants to be told if her car is getting searched.

 News10NBC asked the owner of the company that runs the valet parking when they put up the sign but he wouldn't answer.

 TSA says this is part of its overall security plan and that it's a proactive move. The attendants said they've only been doing it for about a month.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 18, 2013, 02:31:59 PM
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2013/07/nsa-admits-it-analyzes-more-peoples-data-previously-revealed/67287

 :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2013, 04:59:09 AM
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20130718/columnist/130719612?fb_comment_id=fbc_178308392343442_396540_179192052255076

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 22, 2013, 07:11:09 PM

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/blonde-beauty-set-sue-nypd-sexy-iphone-photos-article-1.1403098

 A Long Island beauty says NYPD cops seized her iPhone and that one of them stole sexually explicit photos and videos meant for her boyfriend’s eyes only.

Pamela Held, 27, of Deer Park, is poised to sue the city and the Police Department, accusing a cop of invading her privacy by forwarding the provocative images from her iPhone. The steamy images of Held were sent to a personal cell phone that her lawyer said belongs to Officer Sean Christian.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2013, 07:45:10 PM
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/blonde-beauty-set-sue-nypd-sexy-iphone-photos-article-1.1403098

 A Long Island beauty says NYPD cops seized her iPhone and that one of them stole sexually explicit photos and videos meant for her boyfriend’s eyes only.

Pamela Held, 27, of Deer Park, is poised to sue the city and the Police Department, accusing a cop of invading her privacy by forwarding the provocative images from her iPhone. The steamy images of Held were sent to a personal cell phone that her lawyer said belongs to Officer Sean Christian.



 :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2013, 12:51:06 PM
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-autopsy-bean-bag-rounds-fired-by-police-killed-park-forest-man-95-20130728,0,5356856.story

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 29, 2013, 12:58:06 PM
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-autopsy-bean-bag-rounds-fired-by-police-killed-park-forest-man-95-20130728,0,5356856.story

 >:(

If the description of events is accurate, then this may be tragic but justifiable. But that's a big if.

Are we to believe that trained police officers failed horribly in their duties by being unable to subdue a 95-year old man and lost control of the situation so much that they had to resort to a taser, which failed to subdue this nonagenarian, who remained a threat big enough that he had to be shot?

Really!?!

Something just doesn't add up here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2013, 01:03:17 PM
If the description of events is accurate, then this may be tragic but justifiable. But that's a big if.

Are we to believe that trained police officers failed horribly in their duties by being unable to subdue a 95-year old man and lost control of the situation so much that they had to resort to a taser, which failed to subdue this nonagenarian, who remained a threat big enough that he had to be shot?

Really!?!

Something just doesn't add up here.

I believe he picked up a knife  . . . . . really . . . . I do . . . . . .
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 29, 2013, 01:13:27 PM
I believe he picked up a knife  . . . . . really . . . . I do . . . . . .

I can believe he might have - people do stupid things all the time, I'm not willing to exempt him. But even if he did, could this not have been resolved differently?

Can't these policemen - who are likely to be in decent shape and near their physical prime, have received hand-to-hand combat and practiced scenarios involving knife-wielding attackers - defend themselves and disarm a ninety-five year old?

That's just too much.

Frankly, by this admission alone they should be dismissed; clearly they're not physically fit to discharge their duties and can only rely on firepower.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2013, 02:28:49 PM
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130729/METRO01/307290052/Craig-explain-arrests-Detroit-St-Clair-Shores-cops-today

 ;D  ;D  ;D

If Obama had a relative who was a cop he would look like . . . . . .
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2013, 07:33:13 PM
http://washingtonexaminer.com/fbi-to-rand-paul-domestic-drone-surveillance-doesnt-require-a-warrant/article/2533627

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 30, 2013, 12:07:01 AM
Police blame 'poor lighting' after they shoot dead innocent grandfather, 72, while searching the WRONG home for burglar

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2379252/Fort-Worth-police-shot-dead-beloved-72-year-old-husband-father-searching-wrong-home-responding-burglar-alarm.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 30, 2013, 07:32:20 PM
Police blame 'poor lighting' after they shoot dead innocent grandfather, 72, while searching the WRONG home for burglar

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2379252/Fort-Worth-police-shot-dead-beloved-72-year-old-husband-father-searching-wrong-home-responding-burglar-alarm.html



Sick. 

And another day

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-dea-daniel-chong-forgotten-20130730,0,339260.story

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 31, 2013, 06:35:04 AM
http://dailycaller.com/2013/06/06/mark-levin-we-have-the-elements-of-a-police-state-video


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 31, 2013, 07:20:46 AM
Report: TSA employee misconduct up 26% in 3 years
CNN ^  | July 31, 2013 | Ed Payne and Rene Marsh

Posted on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 9:44:31 AM by george76

Some of the most serious violations include: Employees sleeping on the job, letting family and friends go without being screened, leaving work without permission, and stealing.

The Government Accountability Office report released this week says more than 9,000 cases of misconduct were documented over a three-year span.

More than 1,900 of the incidents were deemed significant enough to be possible security threats.

"There's not even a way to properly report some of the offenses, so this may be just the tip of the iceberg of some of the offenses," said Rep. John Mica, a longtime critic of the TSA who ordered the audit.

Theft by screeners

The report also details thefts by 56 screeners.

Former TSA employees Persad Coumar and Davon Webb pleaded guilty last year to stealing $40,000 from a checked bag at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport.

In 2011, Officer Al Raimi, 29, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Newark. He admitted that for nearly a year, he stole between $10,000 and $30,000 in cash from travelers as they passed through a security checkpoint at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey.

Raimi admitted that he would "kick up" some of that money to a supervisor, who in turn allowed him to keep stealing. The supervisor, Michael Arato, also pleaded guilty to accepting kickbacks and bribes.


(Excerpt) Read more at kjct8.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 31, 2013, 08:12:49 AM
http://dailycaller.com/2013/06/06/mark-levin-we-have-the-elements-of-a-police-state-video


 >:(

I didn't watch the video (his voice drives me *crazy*) but at least he doesn't read as obnoxious as he sounds. And, at least, from the article he doesn't just slam Obama which is his usual modus operandi. And rightly so - this bullshit has been going on for a long time, and both sides of the aisle are just as responsible with very people having stood up to warn us.

Our society has devolved so fast, it's fucking scary... In addition to the crazy shit already posted here:


I could go on...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 31, 2013, 08:17:23 AM
Report: TSA employee misconduct up 26% in 3 years
CNN ^  | July 31, 2013 | Ed Payne and Rene Marsh

The money shot from that article (at http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/31/travel/tsa-misconduct/index.html (http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/31/travel/tsa-misconduct/index.html), btw) is the quote from the union representing TSA screeners, attempting to argue that the numbers show a majority of their members are doing a swell job!

These are the people that stole tens - perhaps hundreds - of thousands of dollars. Who slept on the job. Who let their friends go unscreened while groping your kid.

Great fucking job indeed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on July 31, 2013, 06:20:59 PM
I didn't watch the video (his voice drives me *crazy*) but at least he doesn't read as obnoxious as he sounds. And, at least, from the article he doesn't just slam Obama which is his usual modus operandi. And rightly so - this bullshit has been going on for a long time, and both sides of the aisle are just as responsible with very people having stood up to warn us.

Our society has devolved so fast, it's fucking scary... In addition to the crazy shit already posted here:

  • You have an incoming FBI director who basically refuses to answer questions posed by members of the committee tasked with overseeing the organization he's in charge of. Ref: Wyden Press Release (http://www.wyden.senate.gov/news/press-releases/wyden-statement-on-voting-present-on-the-nomination-of-james-comey-to-be-fbi-director).
  • You have Mike Rogers' Congressional staffers threatening journalists and bloggers with defamation suits - a move that has a dramatic chilling effect on free speech in general. Ref: TechDirt article (http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130730/13342024004/staffers-rep-mike-rogers-apparently-claim-they-could-sue-me-defamation.shtml).
  • You have Chris Christie, a man with Presidential aspirations, publicly proclaim that libertarianism and opposition to NSA surveillance are "dangerous." Ref: Washington Post Article (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2013/07/25/christie-goes-after-libertarians-hard/).
  • You have idiots like Stewart Baker - who served in legal roles at NSA and DHS - that believes that the NSA has "respect for the rights of Americans" and that what we need is more surveillance and less privacy, and that civil liberties are an outdated notion that will cost us the war on terror. Ref: Insane ramblings at Skating on Stilts (http://www.skatingonstilts.com/).

I could go on...
Its absolutely insane isnt it? The stuff coming out of these peoples mouths is absolutely mind boggling, its like something straight out of an orwellian sci fi novel. How the hell are the people in this countryngrowing up with no knowledge or respect for our constitution or the rights the founders worked so hard to achieve for future generations? I feel like someone along the line people are being indoctrinated that rifhts are bad, the constitution is bad, and that the state and security are the only things that matter.... and this isnt a left/right thing....

I guess ots not suprising that its politicians amd federal government heads that are telling us to give up on outdated notions like rights and freedoms, lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 01, 2013, 07:54:27 AM
http://www.wisn.com/news/armed-agents-raid-animal-shelter-for-baby-deer/-/9373668/21272108/-/wvh1n7z/-/index.html

 :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2013, 05:33:59 AM
http://jobs.aol.com/articles/2013/08/01/detroit-cops-allegedly-use-off-hours-to-rob-beat-up-citizens/?ncid=webmail18

 ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2013, 06:09:53 PM
http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/i_team_8/video-of-arrest-prompts-investigation

From a cop receiving the "Community Police Support Officer of the Year" award. Imagine how the bad ones would be then...
Lying on the report, excessive force, using lies to justify an arrest...

Maybe he'll get leave with pay..


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2013, 06:11:36 PM
http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/i_team_8/video-of-arrest-prompts-investigation

From a cop receiving the "Community Police Support Officer of the Year" award. Imagine how the bad ones would be then...
Lying on the report, excessive force, using lies to justify an arrest...

Maybe he'll get leave with pay..




Testalie
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2013, 07:31:01 PM
Cleveland Police Disciplining 75 Cops After An Unarmed Couple Was Shot 137 Times


 

Pamela Engel      Aug. 2, 2013, 5:40 PM       4,219  23 
 


   
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Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath
AP

Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath
Cleveland police officials said Friday they're disciplining 75 of officers for their involvement in a police chase that ended in the shooting deaths of an unarmed man and woman, The Plain Dealer reports.

The pair were shot 137 times while in their car, parked in a middle school parking lot. No officers were injured in what police called a "full blown-out" firefight.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine told reporters in February that "there is nothing normal about this case. ... This is a tragedy."

In November, about 60 police vehicles pursued the two suspects in a 25-minute chase spanning three cities. One suspect, 30-year-old Malissa Williams, was shot 24 times, and the other, 43-year-old Timothy Russell, was shot 23 times.

At the time, police said the suspects fired shots at them near Cleveland's downtown Justice Center, according to The Plain Dealer. And a police dispatcher said that shots were fired at officers during the chase.

But after the chase ended in a gunfight near Heritage Middle School, police checked the car and realized neither Williams nor Russell was armed.

It isn't clear whether a shot was actually fired at the officer who initiated the chase. Some speculate the Malibu driven by Russell may have backfired.

A report from the state's attorney general shows the officers likely believe the suspects were armed based on erroneous information broadcast over the police radio. Officers told investigators they saw the suspects in the car with what looked like a gun.

Russell might have fled from police initially, fueling the massive chase, because he was high and driving on a suspended license. Toxicology results show that Russell was under the influence of cocaine and alcohol at the time of his death. Williams was also high on cocaine and had marijuana in her system.

The officers being disciplined for violating police protocol won't lose their jobs and did not partake in the gunfight at the end of the chase, but they did have a role in the pursuit. More than 100 police officers were involved in the chase in some way.

Nineteen of the 75 officers facing discipline for offenses ranging from engaging in a chase without permission to providing false information on police reports will have disciplinary hearings and might be suspended temporarily, according to The Plain Dealer.

In 2011, the newspaper published an investigation of reports of excessive use of nondeadly force by Cleveland police officers. The newspaper found that the police chief often overlooked inconsistencies with police officers' stories when investigating use of force incidents.

Many of the officers faced accusations of brutality on the force.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/cleveland-police-disciplined-in-deadly-chase-2013-8#ixzz2arxiczbm
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2013, 08:01:02 PM
Cleveland Police Disciplining 75 Cops After An Unarmed Couple Was Shot 137 Times

Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath
AP

Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath
Cleveland police officials said Friday they're disciplining 75 of officers for their involvement in a police chase that ended in the shooting deaths of an unarmed man and woman, The Plain Dealer reports.

The pair were shot 137 times while in their car, parked in a middle school parking lot. No officers were injured in what police called a "full blown-out" firefight.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine told reporters in February that "there is nothing normal about this case. ... This is a tragedy."

In November, about 60 police vehicles pursued the two suspects in a 25-minute chase spanning three cities. One suspect, 30-year-old Malissa Williams, was shot 24 times, and the other, 43-year-old Timothy Russell, was shot 23 times.

At the time, police said the suspects fired shots at them near Cleveland's downtown Justice Center, according to The Plain Dealer. And a police dispatcher said that shots were fired at officers during the chase.

But after the chase ended in a gunfight near Heritage Middle School, police checked the car and realized neither Williams nor Russell was armed.

It isn't clear whether a shot was actually fired at the officer who initiated the chase. Some speculate the Malibu driven by Russell may have backfired.

A report from the state's attorney general shows the officers likely believe the suspects were armed based on erroneous information broadcast over the police radio. Officers told investigators they saw the suspects in the car with what looked like a gun.

Russell might have fled from police initially, fueling the massive chase, because he was high and driving on a suspended license. Toxicology results show that Russell was under the influence of cocaine and alcohol at the time of his death. Williams was also high on cocaine and had marijuana in her system.

The officers being disciplined for violating police protocol won't lose their jobs and did not partake in the gunfight at the end of the chase, but they did have a role in the pursuit. More than 100 police officers were involved in the chase in some way.

Nineteen of the 75 officers facing discipline for offenses ranging from engaging in a chase without permission to providing false information on police reports will have disciplinary hearings and might be suspended temporarily, according to The Plain Dealer.

In 2011, the newspaper published an investigation of reports of excessive use of nondeadly force by Cleveland police officers. The newspaper found that the police chief often overlooked inconsistencies with police officers' stories when investigating use of force incidents.

Many of the officers faced accusations of brutality on the force.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/cleveland-police-disciplined-in-deadly-chase-2013-8#ixzz2arxiczbm

Only 60 police cars and 100 officers chasing a whole car with 2 passengers? They should have called for backup.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 02, 2013, 11:11:38 PM
Only 60 police cars and 100 officers chasing a whole car with 2 passengers? They should have called for backup.

The other 60 cars were dispatched to an emergency; it was a vicious fight between a kitten and a toddler. Several Officers were decorated for gallantry and bravery for their conduct during that incident. The kitten and the toddler did not survive.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 03, 2013, 06:36:48 AM
Only 60 police cars and 100 officers chasing a whole car with 2 passengers? They should have called for backup.



lol...these cops are unfuckingreal.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2013, 07:01:40 AM
Nineteen of the 75 officers facing discipline for offenses ranging from engaging in a chase without permission to providing false information on police reports will have disciplinary hearings and might be suspended temporarily, according to The Plain Dealer.




Lol
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2013, 07:04:16 AM
Subway Stabbing Victim Can't Sue NYPD For Failing To Save Him(feet away, no duty to protect0
gothamist.com ^ | 26 July, 2013 | Rebecca Fishbein
Posted on August 3, 2013 9:54:14 AM EDT by marktwain

A man who was brutally stabbed by Brooklyn subway slasher Maksim Gelman two years ago had his negligence case against the city dismissed in court yesterday, despite the fact that two transit officers had locked themselves in a motorman's car only a few feet from him at the time of the attack.

Gelman stabbed Joseph Lozito in the face, neck, hands and head on an uptown 3 train in February 2011, after fatally stabbing four people and injuring three others in a 28-hour period. Lozito, a father of two and an avid martial arts fan, was able to tackle Gelman and hold him down, and Gelman was eventually arrested by the transit officers. Lozito sued the city, arguing that the police officers had locked themselves in the conductor's car and failed to come to his aid in time.

The city, meanwhile, claimed that the NYPD had no "special duty" to intervene at the time, and that they were in the motorman's car because they believed Gelman had a gun. And Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Margaret Chan has sided with the city, noting that there was no evidence the cops were aware Lozito was in danger at the time.

(Excerpt) Read more at gothamist.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 03, 2013, 07:37:35 AM
Subway Stabbing Victim Can't Sue NYPD For Failing To Save Him(feet away, no duty to protect0
gothamist.com ^ | 26 July, 2013 | Rebecca Fishbein
Posted on August 3, 2013 9:54:14 AM EDT by marktwain

A man who was brutally stabbed by Brooklyn subway slasher Maksim Gelman two years ago had his negligence case against the city dismissed in court yesterday, despite the fact that two transit officers had locked themselves in a motorman's car only a few feet from him at the time of the attack.

Gelman stabbed Joseph Lozito in the face, neck, hands and head on an uptown 3 train in February 2011, after fatally stabbing four people and injuring three others in a 28-hour period. Lozito, a father of two and an avid martial arts fan, was able to tackle Gelman and hold him down, and Gelman was eventually arrested by the transit officers. Lozito sued the city, arguing that the police officers had locked themselves in the conductor's car and failed to come to his aid in time.

The city, meanwhile, claimed that the NYPD had no "special duty" to intervene at the time, and that they were in the motorman's car because they believed Gelman had a gun. And Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Margaret Chan has sided with the city, noting that there was no evidence the cops were aware Lozito was in danger at the time.

(Excerpt) Read more at gothamist.com ...




but..but...Agnostic claims they get rid of the cowards early on... lol

Just fucking disgusting.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 03, 2013, 01:03:05 PM
Wait... They locked themselves in a car, but had no idea the guy was in danger?

Then why the fuck did you lock yourselves away?!

Epic pussies.

Well, we all know which side of the blue line he falls on.
Seriously, clearly those dudes missed the whole "to protect and serve" thing.

What a couple of fgts.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Irongrip400 on August 03, 2013, 03:51:33 PM
Seriously, clearly those dudes missed the whole "to protect and serve" thing.

What a couple of fgts.

Yes. Some are okay, the rest are just looking for a paycheck or are on a power trip.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2013, 05:23:35 AM
By John Shiffman and Kristina Cooke

WASHINGTON, Aug 5 (Reuters) - A secretive U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration unit is funneling information from intelligence intercepts, wiretaps, informants and a massive database of telephone records to authorities across the nation to help them launch criminal investigations of Americans.

Although these cases rarely involve national security issues, documents reviewed by Reuters show that law enforcement agents have been directed to conceal how such investigations truly begin - not only from defense lawyers but also sometimes from prosecutors and judges.

The undated documents show that federal agents are trained to "recreate" the investigative trail to effectively cover up where the information originated, a practice that some experts say violates a defendant's Constitutional right to a fair trial. If defendants don't know how an investigation began, they cannot know to ask to review potential sources of exculpatory evidence - information that could reveal entrapment, mistakes or biased witnesses.

"I have never heard of anything like this at all," said Nancy Gertner, a Harvard Law School professor who served as a federal judge from 1994 to 2011. Gertner and other legal experts said the program sounds more troubling than recent disclosures that the National Security Agency has been collecting domestic phone records. The NSA effort is geared toward stopping terrorists; the DEA program targets common criminals, primarily drug dealers.

"It is one thing to create special rules for national security," Gertner said. "Ordinary crime is entirely different. It sounds like they are phonying up investigations."

THE SPECIAL OPERATIONS DIVISION




The unit of the DEA that distributes the information is called the Special Operations Division, or SOD. Two dozen partner agencies comprise the unit, including the FBI, CIA, NSA, Internal Revenue Service and the Department of Homeland Security. It was created in 1994 to combat Latin American drug cartels and has grown from several dozen employees to several hundred.

Today, much of the SOD's work is classified, and officials asked that its precise location in Virginia not be revealed. The documents reviewed by Reuters are marked "Law Enforcement Sensitive," a government categorization that is meant to keep them confidential.

"Remember that the utilization of SOD cannot be revealed or discussed in any investigative function," a document presented to agents reads. The document specifically directs agents to omit the SOD's involvement from investigative reports, affidavits, discussions with prosecutors and courtroom testimony. Agents are instructed to then use "normal investigative techniques to recreate the information provided by SOD."

A spokesman with the Department of Justice, which oversees the DEA, declined to comment.

But two senior DEA officials defended the program, and said trying to "recreate" an investigative trail is not only legal but a technique that is used almost daily.

A former federal agent in the northeastern United States who received such tips from SOD described the process. "You'd be told only, 'Be at a certain truck stop at a certain time and look for a certain vehicle.' And so we'd alert the state police to find an excuse to stop that vehicle, and then have a drug dog search it," the agent said.

"PARALLEL CONSTRUCTION"

After an arrest was made, agents then pretended that their investigation began with the traffic stop, not with the SOD tip, the former agent said. The training document reviewed by Reuters refers to this process as "parallel construction."

The two senior DEA officials, who spoke on behalf of the agency but only on condition of anonymity, said the process is kept secret to protect sources and investigative methods. "Parallel construction is a law enforcement technique we use every day," one official said. "It's decades old, a bedrock concept."

A dozen current or former federal agents interviewed by Reuters confirmed they had used parallel construction during their careers. Most defended the practice; some said they understood why those outside law enforcement might be concerned.

"It's just like laundering money - you work it backwards to make it clean," said Finn Selander, a DEA agent from 1991 to 2008 and now a member of a group called Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, which advocates legalizing and regulating narcotics.

Some defense lawyers and former prosecutors said that using "parallel construction" may be legal to establish probable cause for an arrest. But they said employing the practice as a means of disguising how an investigation began may violate pretrial discovery rules by burying evidence that could prove useful to criminal defendants.

A QUESTION OF CONSTITUTIONALITY

"That's outrageous," said Tampa attorney James Felman, a vice chairman of the criminal justice section of the American Bar Association. "It strikes me as indefensible."

Lawrence Lustberg, a New Jersey defense lawyer, said any systematic government effort to conceal the circumstances under which cases begin "would not only be alarming but pretty blatantly unconstitutional."

Lustberg and others said the government's use of the SOD program skirts established court procedures by which judges privately examine sensitive information, such as an informant's identity or classified evidence, to determine whether the information is relevant to the defense.

"You can't game the system," said former federal prosecutor Henry E. Hockeimer Jr. "You can't create this subterfuge. These are drug crimes, not national security cases. If you don't draw the line here, where do you draw it?"

Some lawyers say there can be legitimate reasons for not revealing sources. Robert Spelke, a former prosecutor who spent seven years as a senior DEA lawyer, said some sources are classified. But he also said there are few reasons why unclassified evidence should be concealed at trial.

"It's a balancing act, and they've doing it this way for years," Spelke said. "Do I think it's a good way to do it? No, because now that I'm a defense lawyer, I see how difficult it is to challenge."

CONCEALING A TIP

One current federal prosecutor learned how agents were using SOD tips after a drug agent misled him, the prosecutor told Reuters. In a Florida drug case he was handling, the prosecutor said, a DEA agent told him the investigation of a U.S. citizen began with a tip from an informant. When the prosecutor pressed for more information, he said, a DEA supervisor intervened and revealed that the tip had actually come through the SOD and from an NSA intercept.

"I was pissed," the prosecutor said. "Lying about where the information came from is a bad start if you're trying to comply with the law because it can lead to all kinds of problems with discovery and candor to the court." The prosecutor never filed charges in the case because he lost confidence in the investigation, he said.

A senior DEA official said he was not aware of the case but said the agent should not have misled the prosecutor. How often such misdirection occurs is unknown, even to the government; the DEA official said the agency does not track what happens with tips after the SOD sends them to agents in the field.

The SOD's role providing information to agents isn't itself a secret. It is briefly mentioned by the DEA in budget documents, albeit without any reference to how that information is used or represented when cases go to court.

The DEA has long publicly touted the SOD's role in multi-jurisdictional and international investigations, connecting agents in separate cities who may be unwittingly investigating the same target and making sure undercover agents don't accidentally try to arrest each other.

SOD'S BIG SUCCESSES

The unit also played a major role in a 2008 DEA sting in Thailand against Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout; he was sentenced in 2011 to 25 years in prison on charges of conspiring to sell weapons to the Colombian rebel group FARC. The SOD also recently coordinated Project Synergy, a crackdown against manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers of synthetic designer drugs that spanned 35 states and resulted in 227 arrests.

Since its inception, the SOD's mandate has expanded to include narco-terrorism, organized crime and gangs. A DEA spokesman declined to comment on the unit's annual budget. A recent LinkedIn posting on the personal page of a senior SOD official estimated it to be $125 million.

Today, the SOD offers at least three services to federal, state and local law enforcement agents: coordinating international investigations such as the Bout case; distributing tips from overseas NSA intercepts, informants, foreign law enforcement partners and domestic wiretaps; and circulating tips from a massive database known as DICE.

The DICE database contains about 1 billion records, the senior DEA officials said. The majority of the records consist of phone log and Internet data gathered legally by the DEA through subpoenas, arrests and search warrants nationwide. Records are kept for about a year and then purged, the DEA officials said.

About 10,000 federal, state and local law enforcement agents have access to the DICE database, records show. They can query it to try to link otherwise disparate clues. Recently, one of the DEA officials said, DICE linked a man who tried to smuggle $100,000 over the U.S. southwest border to a major drug case on the East Coast.

"We use it to connect the dots," the official said.

"AN AMAZING TOOL"

Wiretap tips forwarded by the SOD usually come from foreign governments, U.S. intelligence agencies or court-authorized domestic phone recordings. Because warrantless eavesdropping on Americans is illegal, tips from intelligence agencies are generally not forwarded to the SOD until a caller's citizenship can be verified, according to one senior law enforcement official and one former U.S. military intelligence analyst.

"They do a pretty good job of screening, but it can be a struggle to know for sure whether the person on a wiretap is American," the senior law enforcement official said.

Tips from domestic wiretaps typically occur when agents use information gleaned from a court-ordered wiretap in one case to start a second investigation.

As a practical matter, law enforcement agents said they usually don't worry that SOD's involvement will be exposed in court. That's because most drug-trafficking defendants plead guilty before trial and therefore never request to see the evidence against them. If cases did go to trial, current and former agents said, charges were sometimes dropped to avoid the risk of exposing SOD involvement.

Current and former federal agents said SOD tips aren't always helpful - one estimated their accuracy at 60 percent. But current and former agents said tips have enabled them to catch drug smugglers who might have gotten away.

"It was an amazing tool," said one recently retired federal agent. "Our big fear was that it wouldn't stay secret."

DEA officials said that the SOD process has been reviewed internally. They declined to provide Reuters with a copy of their most recent review. (Edited by Blake Morrison)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2013, 11:17:45 AM
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/08/12/130812fa_fact_stillman


Great article.  Civil Forfeiture laws are so absued its not even funny. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 05, 2013, 08:06:10 PM
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/08/12/130812fa_fact_stillman


Great article.  Civil Forfeiture laws are so absued its not even funny. 



ughh...just fucking obscene


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 06, 2013, 12:18:11 AM
ughh...just fucking obscene

If you're ever faced with such a situation, do yourself a favor: do not consent to a search. If arrested, do not answer any questions (except your name, date of birth and address) or sign anything. Ask to speak to a lawyer and patiently wait quietly.

Remember, the police are not your friends.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 08, 2013, 07:50:33 PM
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/watch_out_infant_control_cop_pummels_vKIKf19unEH4U2TTzOwgPO

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 14, 2013, 11:18:36 PM
http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Arlington-Farm-Owners-Demand-Apology-From-Police-After-Drug-Raid-Comes-Up-Empty-219520531.html

"police officers say they stand by their actions"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 16, 2013, 05:29:51 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/15/texas-swat-team-conducts-_n_3764951.html

Unbelievable. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2013, 05:43:25 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/15/texas-swat-team-conducts-_n_3764951.html

Unbelievable. 

Check above ;)

The cops "stand by their actions". They can't tell tomatoes from weed...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 16, 2013, 10:41:24 AM
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/porn-seach-using-police-car-computer-785323



LMFAO!!!!!   HA HA HA HA HA!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 16, 2013, 05:57:10 PM
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/porn-seach-using-police-car-computer-785323



LMFAO!!!!!   HA HA HA HA HA!!!!

No doubt his union lawyer will argue that using evidence from his squad car computer is not appropriate and that all cops need to know about "young puffy nipple" to do their jobs...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 16, 2013, 06:04:29 PM
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/porn-seach-using-police-car-computer-785323



LMFAO!!!!!   HA HA HA HA HA!!!!
Lol.

The machine shop foreman at my job was recently busted for sitting in his office watching porn.

He promptly got a raise and makes an 1/8th million a year to do jack shit.

He is not well liked. The owner of our company is kind of a retard, and will pay someone that has an education a shit ton more and give them a ton more leeway, even if they are complete invalids incapable of doing their job. He will also completely ignore the people with the experience, unless they have some sort of higher education.

It's quite hilarious to watch him listen to these fucks fresh out of college that have no clue what theyre talking about, and then wonder why nothing works.

(Not discounting education at all, but the owner hasn't figured out which educated people to listen to and which experienced people to listen to... to him, education automatically means right, and experience = worthless)

The owner is the 3rd generation to have the company, and he's pretty well disliked by the people that worked for his dad/grandfather.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 16, 2013, 06:12:44 PM
Lol.

The machine shop foreman at my job was recently busted for sitting in his office watching porn.

He promptly got a raise and makes an 1/8th million a year to do jack shit.

He is not well liked. The owner of our company is kind of a retard, and will pay someone that has an education a shit ton more and give them a ton more leeway, even if they are complete invalids incapable of doing their job. He will also completely ignore the people with the experience, unless they have some sort of higher education.

It's quite hilarious to watch him listen to these fucks fresh out of college that have no clue what theyre talking about, and then wonder why nothing works.

(Not discounting education at all, but the owner hasn't figured out which educated people to listen to and which experienced people to listen to... to him, education automatically means right, and experience = worthless)

The owner is the 3rd generation to have the company, and he's pretty well disliked by the people that worked for his dad/grandfather.

The solution is simple: either quit your job and find another place, or if this isn't an option, simply refuse to share your expertise and just let the poorly qualified people take the lead into the inevitable disaster. Don't use your brain if your brain isn't wanted.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 16, 2013, 06:26:32 PM
The solution is simple: either quit your job and find another place, or if this isn't an option, simply refuse to share your expertise and just let the poorly qualified people take the lead into the inevitable disaster. Don't use your brain if your brain isn't wanted.
I'm not particularly affected, as I'm not in a position where my decisions need to be approved by the boss. I'm at a lower level (as I just started with this company), and not in the machine shop. It's just amusing to me watching all the mid level guys cry like bitches.

 (Although to be fair, they have legitimate beefs, and im already starting to get annoyed that good ideas are tossed to the wayside because they didnt come from one of the guys with a couple years of community college for liberal arts)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 20, 2013, 05:33:11 AM


Obama administration asks Supreme Court to allow warrantless cellphone searches

By Timothy B. Lee, Updated: August 19, 2013


(Photo by Ninja M.)


If the police arrest you, do they need a warrant to rifle through your cellphone? Courts have been split on the question. Last week the Obama administration asked the Supreme Court to resolve the issue and rule that the Fourth Amendment allows warrantless cellphone searches.

In 2007, the police arrested a Massachusetts man who appeared to be selling crack cocaine from his car. The cops seized his cellphone and noticed that it was receiving calls from “My House.” They opened the phone to determine the number for “My House.” That led them to the man’s home, where the police found drugs, cash and guns.

The defendant was convicted, but on appeal he argued that accessing the information on his cellphone without a warrant violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Earlier this year, the First Circuit Court of Appeals accepted the man’s argument, ruling that the police should have gotten a warrant before accessing any information on the man’s phone.

The Obama Administration disagrees. In a petition filed earlier this month asking the Supreme Court to hear the case, the government argues that the First Circuit’s ruling conflicts with the rulings of several other appeals courts, as well as with earlier Supreme Court cases. Those earlier cases have given the police broad discretion to search possessions on the person of an arrested suspect, including notebooks, calendars and pagers. The government contends that a cellphone is no different than any other object a suspect might be carrying.

But as the storage capacity of cellphones rises, that position could become harder to defend. Our smart phones increasingly contain everything about our digital lives: our e-mails, text messages, photographs, browser histories and more. It would be troubling if the police had the power to get all that information with no warrant merely by arresting a suspect.

On the other hand, the Massachusetts case involves a primitive flip-phone, which could make this a bad test case. The specific phone involved in this 2007 incident likely didn’t have the wealth of information we store on more modern cellphones. It’s arguably more analogous to the address books and pagers the courts have already said the police can search. So, as Orin Kerr points out, if the Supreme Court ruled on the case, it would be making a decision based on “facts that are atypical now and are getting more outdated every passing month.”

© The Washington Post Company
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 20, 2013, 12:22:18 PM

Obama administration asks Supreme Court to allow warrantless cellphone searches

By Timothy B. Lee, Updated: August 19, 2013


(Photo by Ninja M.)


If the police arrest you, do they need a warrant to rifle through your cellphone? Courts have been split on the question. Last week the Obama administration asked the Supreme Court to resolve the issue and rule that the Fourth Amendment allows warrantless cellphone searches.

In 2007, the police arrested a Massachusetts man who appeared to be selling crack cocaine from his car. The cops seized his cellphone and noticed that it was receiving calls from “My House.” They opened the phone to determine the number for “My House.” That led them to the man’s home, where the police found drugs, cash and guns.

The defendant was convicted, but on appeal he argued that accessing the information on his cellphone without a warrant violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Earlier this year, the First Circuit Court of Appeals accepted the man’s argument, ruling that the police should have gotten a warrant before accessing any information on the man’s phone.

The Obama Administration disagrees. In a petition filed earlier this month asking the Supreme Court to hear the case, the government argues that the First Circuit’s ruling conflicts with the rulings of several other appeals courts, as well as with earlier Supreme Court cases. Those earlier cases have given the police broad discretion to search possessions on the person of an arrested suspect, including notebooks, calendars and pagers. The government contends that a cellphone is no different than any other object a suspect might be carrying.

But as the storage capacity of cellphones rises, that position could become harder to defend. Our smart phones increasingly contain everything about our digital lives: our e-mails, text messages, photographs, browser histories and more. It would be troubling if the police had the power to get all that information with no warrant merely by arresting a suspect.

On the other hand, the Massachusetts case involves a primitive flip-phone, which could make this a bad test case. The specific phone involved in this 2007 incident likely didn’t have the wealth of information we store on more modern cellphones. It’s arguably more analogous to the address books and pagers the courts have already said the police can search. So, as Orin Kerr points out, if the Supreme Court ruled on the case, it would be making a decision based on “facts that are atypical now and are getting more outdated every passing month.”

© The Washington Post Company


There are actually two cases – the one described in this article is U.S. v. Wurie (http://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/13-212.htm), but Riley v. California (http://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/13-132.htm) is a lot more interesting in my opinion.

Either way, I do hope for a sensible decision by the Supremes. The ability of police to search "containers" incident to arrest was, originally, framed as a safety measure and was limited to containers large enough to hold things like weapons, although it eventually became a tool for searching for drugs as well.

Frankly, allowing the searches of cell phones is a horrible invasion of privacy. Hopefully the Supremes will stand against that†.

† Yes, this sentence is drenched in irony. After all, it's not like they haven't already destroyed every notion of privacy...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 28, 2013, 06:11:47 AM
What has been adopted by our department since the rulings is that an officer must have articulable clear probable cause to believe the phone contains evidence of the crime they are investigating. A random search of a phone during a traffic stop for example where there is no indication of a crime other than the traffic violation would be prohibited. That's in line with how we operated for the most part already but the recent rulings gave better guidance than was available before.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 28, 2013, 12:03:25 PM
The following excerpt is from http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/when-cops-lie/Content?oid=3693931 (http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/when-cops-lie/Content?oid=3693931):

Quote
In the summer of 2008, the Oakland Police Department's Internal Affairs Division discovered that more than half of all drug-related search warrants involving confidential informants had been falsified. Internal affairs investigated eighteen officers for lying under oath, falsifying police reports, and conducting illegal searches and seizures. [...]

Karla Rush, an officer based in East Oakland, faced especially severe charges. Of the 40 search warrants she had filed between March of 2007 and August 2008, 39 were fraudulent. Rush claimed that her misconduct was the result of poor training, but an arbitrator rejected her assertion, saying, "telling the truth is not a matter of training," according to court documents.

Although internal affairs recommended firing twelve officers, only four ended up losing their jobs: Rush, Francisco Martinez, John Kelly, and William Burke. Of those four, three have since been rehired by Alameda County police agencies: Burke was reinstated by OPD through arbitration in 2010, and both Rush and Kelly are now UC Berkeley police officers.

Which police department would hire anyone who provably falsified 97.5% of all search warrants applications she filed? Which police department would rehire someone that another department had fired for misconduct?

And, to be blunt, why was she not prosecuted for perjury and lying under oath for submitting those bogus, false affidavits to a Judge?

Damn... the Oakland PD is a cesspool.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 28, 2013, 12:29:52 PM
What has been adopted by our department since the rulings is that an officer must have articulable clear probable cause to believe the phone contains evidence of the crime they are investigating. A random search of a phone during a traffic stop for example where there is no indication of a crime other than the traffic violation would be prohibited. That's in line with how we operated for the most part already but the recent rulings gave better guidance than was available before.

Could you offer a short list of examples, 007?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 28, 2013, 01:10:57 PM
The following excerpt is from http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/when-cops-lie/Content?oid=3693931 (http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/when-cops-lie/Content?oid=3693931):

Which police department would hire anyone who provably falsified 97.5% of all search warrants applications she filed? Which police department would rehire someone that another department had fired for misconduct?

And, to be blunt, why was she not prosecuted for perjury and lying under oath for submitting those bogus, false affidavits to a Judge?

Damn... the Oakland PD is a cesspool.

Yeah, this thread is like a trip through the Twilight Zone. It can be very painful to look, no shit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 30, 2013, 06:27:36 AM
Could you offer a short list of examples, 007?

Real World example- Officers were working a disturbance call at a particular apartment complex. As the call was wrapping up the supervisor was leaving and noticed a vehicle pulling into the complex that had pulled out a few minutes before. The Sgt recognizes the driver as he passes him as a career drug dealer who he has arrested on many ocassions. He runs his name throught he MDC and he comes back with warrants. He advises the officers still on scene of this and they make contact with the subject. After speaking with the subject, the story doesn't add up. He says at first he wasn't there before, then he said he was but he came back because he forgot his phone. He had his phone in his hand and had never gone back in his apartment. He was arrested for the warrants and subsequent search of his vehicle revealed several dime bags of pot and a pill bottle of crack rocks. With the history of his drug dealing, going and coming from his residence in a short amount of time, story not adding up and the officers knowledge that cell phones are often used to set up deals the phone was checked which revealed txt messages indicating a drug deal. Subject complained that the phone search was illegal but lost the argument in court.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 30, 2013, 10:41:27 AM
Real World example- Officers were working a disturbance call at a particular apartment complex. As the call was wrapping up the supervisor was leaving and noticed a vehicle pulling into the complex that had pulled out a few minutes before. The Sgt recognizes the driver as he passes him as a career drug dealer who he has arrested on many ocassions. He runs his name throught he MDC and he comes back with warrants. He advises the officers still on scene of this and they make contact with the subject. After speaking with the subject, the story doesn't add up. He says at first he wasn't there before, then he said he was but he came back because he forgot his phone. He had his phone in his hand and had never gone back in his apartment. He was arrested for the warrants and subsequent search of his vehicle revealed several dime bags of pot and a pill bottle of crack rocks. With the history of his drug dealing, going and coming from his residence in a short amount of time, story not adding up and the officers knowledge that cell phones are often used to set up deals the phone was checked which revealed txt messages indicating a drug deal. Subject complained that the phone search was illegal but lost the argument in court.    

So a person appears somewhere, the cop already knows his name and presumably some other identifiers, and through such memorized information is able to discover the person has warrants, which leads to a discovery of several dime bags of dope, causing the cop to choose to examine the subject's phone in order to reveal that the individual may have been at that location to sell drugs. Have I missed anything?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 30, 2013, 03:14:59 PM
So a person appears somewhere, the cop already knows his name and presumably some other identifiers, and through such memorized information is able to discover the person has warrants, which leads to a discovery of several dime bags of dope, causing the cop to choose to examine the subject's phone in order to reveal that the individual may have been at that location to sell drugs. Have I missed anything?

If you are being arrested then all bets are off. The Police can use the "search incident to arrest" exception to search you. Whether that means they can search your digital devices is somewhat nebulous, but they can, in the current environment, do it until the Courts rule on it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 30, 2013, 03:59:36 PM
If you are being arrested then all bets are off. The Police can use the "search incident to arrest" exception to search you. Whether that means they can search your digital devices is somewhat nebulous, but they can, in the current environment, do it until the Courts rule on it.

We can figure the person will be arrested for the warrants, and we can figure the person will be charged with an equivalent of drugs-possession with intent to sell, even if he'd never touched a cellphone in his life.

My question for 007 (or anyone that would defend it), regards the benefit of allowing a cop his own authority to search the cellphone. I can understand a very compelling argument against allowing a cop to do so, so I want to hear an argument for allowing the cop to do so.

*This is a question of the cop, and a self-authorized decision to search the device. Not about any other decision by any other person to allow a search.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 30, 2013, 07:51:38 PM
Where did this happen, 007? (or please link me to a story about it)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on August 30, 2013, 08:47:18 PM
So the cops used a search of his phone, to justify a subsequent search of his vehicle (where the drugs were found).

This wasn't a matter of trying to secure additional evidence in relation to a search that had already taken place.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 02, 2013, 07:09:13 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/02/us/drug-agents-use-vast-phone-trove-eclipsing-nsas.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&smid=tw-nytimes&partner=rss&emc=rss&


 >:(  >:(  >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 02, 2013, 07:57:31 AM
http://www.wusa9.com/news/article/273242/373/Caught-on-cam-DC-Police-boat-smashes-into-two-vessels-in-Georgetown


FNG morons
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 02, 2013, 05:37:11 PM
If you are being arrested then all bets are off. The Police can use the "search incident to arrest" exception to search you. Whether that means they can search your digital devices is somewhat nebulous, but they can, in the current environment, do it until the Courts rule on it.



I'm gonna go with more of where somebody is arrested as I was reading an article where a court in CA toss out the phone search because the police were in no danger and had plenty of time to secure a warrant.  I'm not sure what's up where I'm at in MD/VA.

Agnostic's example is on that line though...as in where to draw it.  The exact same principle could be applicable to a home as I'm sure they've got tons of experience of people dealing drugs from their house.  And I think many of us have a hard time being sympathetic to douchebag with multiple warrants dumb enough to keep passing by a group of cops, lol.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 02, 2013, 07:11:28 PM
 >:(

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=3b7_1377998225



Disgusting
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 02, 2013, 07:34:37 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/02/annie-dookhan_n_3855803.html

BOSTON -- The state is still reeling a year after a scandal at a drug lab threw the legal system into turmoil: More than 330 prison inmates have been released from custody and at least 1,100 cases have been dismissed or not prosecuted because of tainted evidence and other fallout from the facility's closure.

Annie Dookhan stands accused of faking test results, tampering with evidence and routinely ignoring testing protocols.

With thousands of challenges still making their way through the court system, many in the legal community believe it will be years before the cases handled by Dookhan are cleared.

Just two weeks ago, a lawyer appointed by Gov. Deval Patrick to help create a database of Dookhan's cases said more than 40,000 defendants may have been affected, about 6,000 more than officials first estimated.

"Forget having your day in court, forget having a lawyer – it's taken us this long just to get a number on the number of cases that she tested," said Matthew Segal, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts.

"It's been very damaging to the integrity of the justice system," he said.

Dookhan, 35, treasured her reputation as the most productive chemist in the lab and became the go-to person for prosecutors in drug cases.

But now prosecutors believe Dookhan's reputation was based on fraud. She told state police that instead of testing all the substances turned over to the Department of Public Health lab, she sometimes would test only a fraction of them but certify them all as drugs, authorities said. She has pleaded not guilty and her lawyer hasn't responded to repeated requests for comment.

The scandal led to the resignation of the state's public health commissioner, the resignation of a manager at the lab and the firing of another manager.




The effects have reverberated throughout the state.

The state's public defender says the number of affected cases could be even higher because management and protocol lapses at the lab may have allowed other chemists to cut corners or falsify results. Defense attorneys say all test results at the lab over the last decade should be questioned.

In Suffolk County, which includes Boston, 240 defendants have been released by judges who agreed to put their sentences on hold or reduce their bail for pending cases. About 60 of those released have since been arrested on new charges.

In one case, a career criminal and convicted rapist failed to show up for court after his bail was reduced. Marcus Pixley was rearrested two days later, but his case was cited by prosecutors who feared that dangerous criminals would end up back on the streets. Pixley eventually pleaded guilty to a drug distribution charge and was sentenced to a year in county jail.

In Brockton, the dire consequences predicted by prosecutors came true, authorities said, when a man released from prison early killed another man in a fight over drugs and a gun.

Donta Hood, 22, has since pleaded not guilty in the shooting death of Charles Evans, 45. Hood's lawyer said all defendants are entitled to a review of their cases when improprieties or tainted evidence is discovered.

Hood had served about three years of a five-year sentence on a cocaine distribution charge when prosecutors learned that Dookhan testified about drug evidence at his trial. His case was dismissed and he was released. The remaining evidence had been destroyed because Hood had lost all his appeals, said Plymouth District Attorney Tim Cruz.

Evans' mother, Lucille, said her son had been trying to get his life on track after being released from prison in 2010.

"I'm a little disappointed in what happened at the lab and I'm disappointed with the court that let (Hood) walk out," she said. "Maybe he wouldn't be part of killing my son if he had been kept in jail to do his time."

Two other men who were released ended up getting killed in Brockton. Another man whose drug possession case was dismissed was rearrested after authorities say he shot at state police troopers in a gang unit.

"These individuals deal drugs; they protect their turf with weapons. Once they were released, they went right back to what they know best – dealing drugs – and as a result, we're seeing our violence going up in the city of Brockton," Cruz said.

Some defendants have tried to use their release as a second chance.

Yohan Marquez had served about eight months of a three-year sentence for selling heroin when a judge put his sentence on hold.

Marquez, 36, of Boston, has been out almost a year now but has had trouble finding work. Three weeks ago, he finally landed a job as a prep cook at a Boston restaurant. Less than two weeks later, he was fired.

Marquez said he got a vague response when he asked why, but he believes it's because of the GPS ankle bracelet he wears as a condition of his release, a constant reminder of his criminal record.

Marquez, who had an earlier drug conviction, said he's grateful to be released but disappointed that prosecutors haven't dropped the charges against him because of the accusations against Dookhan.

"I made a mistake. I was paying for my mistake, but you had somebody in the system doing what she was not supposed to do," he said. "That's not my fault."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
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Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 03, 2013, 06:20:16 AM
So the cops used a search of his phone, to justify a subsequent search of his vehicle (where the drugs were found).

This wasn't a matter of trying to secure additional evidence in relation to a search that had already taken place.

No link, Austin Texas.

No, the cop already had the vehicle, didn't use the phone to search it. The cop used the subjects history, vehicle content and current information to link to the phone. Because phones can be wiped remotely, it is a different situation than a house search in that sense. Although exigent circumstances can allow the search of a house if there is reason to believe evidence is being destroyed, for example, a person runs to a bathroom and starts flushing the toilet.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 03, 2013, 12:26:33 PM
No link, Austin Texas.

No, the cop already had the vehicle, didn't use the phone to search it. The cop used the subjects history, vehicle content and current information to link to the phone. Because phones can be wiped remotely, it is a different situation than a house search in that sense. Although exigent circumstances can allow the search of a house if there is reason to believe evidence is being destroyed, for example, a person runs to a bathroom and starts flushing the toilet.   

A007, are you aware of any news articles on it, at all?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 03, 2013, 12:31:16 PM


I'm gonna go with more of where somebody is arrested as I was reading an article where a court in CA toss out the phone search because the police were in no danger and had plenty of time to secure a warrant.  I'm not sure what's up where I'm at in MD/VA.

Agnostic's example is on that line though...as in where to draw it.  The exact same principle could be applicable to a home as I'm sure they've got tons of experience of people dealing drugs from their house.  And I think many of us have a hard time being sympathetic to douchebag with multiple warrants dumb enough to keep passing by a group of cops, lol.



Skip, do you recall any further detail about the story?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 03, 2013, 01:52:01 PM
A007, are you aware of any news articles on it, at all?

Nope, not newsworthy here..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 03, 2013, 02:03:30 PM
Just saw a thing in the paper today that ATT is getting paid a bunch of money to give 26 years of phone calls to various government agencies. ..

Pretty incredible.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 03, 2013, 02:30:47 PM
Nope, not newsworthy here..

So help me out, here, 007. Please give a step-by-step explanation behind the idea that time didn't allow for anything but the cop to self-authorize action.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 03, 2013, 07:32:34 PM
Skip, do you recall any further detail about the story?


Not that one in particular.  Here's the 1st circuit holding the search unconstitutional barring exigent circumstances.

http://www.cybercrimereview.com/2013/05/1st-circuit-holds-that-cell-phone.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 05, 2013, 06:07:53 AM
So help me out, here, 007. Please give a step-by-step explanation behind the idea that time didn't allow for anything but the cop to self-authorize action.

Jack, courts have recognized that phones are easlily wiped of information remotely these days so with that knowledge, it creates exigent circumstances. If there was no chance the information could be tampered with or destroyed, then there would be no exception to the warrant rule.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 05, 2013, 10:33:07 AM
Jack, courts have recognized that phones are easlily wiped of information remotely these days so with that knowledge, it creates exigent circumstances. If there was no chance the information could be tampered with or destroyed, then there would be no exception to the warrant rule.   

Please give a step-by-step, 007, at your convenience.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 05, 2013, 10:37:53 AM

BTW, 007, please give your honest impression of this story, as a cop:

-----------------

Police were selling pot at time of fatal drug bust

Chandler police detectives were selling 500 pounds of marijuana in an operation called a "reversal" when they became the victims of a botched drug rip-off in south Phoenix, according to court records released Friday.

Two defendants in the fatal shooting of Detective Carlos Ledesma, 34, who were identified in the documents as Thadika Singleton and John Howard Webber III, showed police $250,000, demonstrating they had the cash to buy the pot.  They showed the money during a meeting with undercover agents at a fast-food restaurant at 19th Avenue and Broadway Road in Phoenix.

Later, in a parking lot at 19th Avenue and Baseline Road, police showed the suspects a sample of the marijuana as part of arrangements to make the sale later Wednesday afternoon at a house in south Phoenix, according to documents prepared by Phoenix police.

As four undercover detectives and an informant arrived at the house, two officers drove an unmarked vehicle loaded with marijuana into a garage of a house in the 2300 block of West Maldonado Avenue.  Soon, shots rang out inside the house, killing Ledesma and injuring two other detectives.

Chandler and Phoenix police confirmed the scenario as efforts were under way to firm up plans for Ledesma's funeral.

Sgt.  Joe Favazzo, a Chandler police spokesman, said the operation did not involve a traditional exchange where dealers sell drugs to undercover agents.  In this case, the undercover officers had the drugs and the suspects had the cash.

"This is a reversal," he said.  "This is seized evidentiary marijuana."

Neither Favazzo nor his Phoenix police counterpart, Sgt.  Steve Martos, could say why the Chandler detectives were attempting to sell the marijuana to buyers in south Phoenix.

Charles Fulton, 34, owner of the house where the shooting took place, said he knows Singleton, 38, and Webber, 37, from DJ's Gentleman's Club, a strip club Fulton runs on University Drive in Phoenix.

Fulton described Singleton and Webber as "big teddy bears" and doubted either was experienced in drug deals.

"They're not thugs, they're not drug dealers," Fulton said.  "I've never seen them smoke weed or ever get upset."

An Arizona Department of Corrections spokesman said Webber was on parole from a conviction in Kentucky.

Quincy Manning, a manager at the strip club, said Webber was known as "Fat Cat" and also said that he had been released from prison in Kentucky.

A John Webber who was born the same month and year as John Howard Webber had been serving a 15-year sentence at the Eastein Kentucky Correctional Complex for trafficking in marijuana, Kentucky Department of Corrections show.

Manning said he knew Singleton as a master of ceremonies at various hip-hop shows and nightclubs and at such venues as US Airways Center and Celebrity Theatre, in addition to interviewing national hip-hop artists on local radio programs.

"They're good people, or so I thought," Manning said.

The botched drug rip-off on Wednesday evening also left two suspects dead and another hospitalized, while five others were arrested on charges ranging from first-degree murder to possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.

One of the dead was identified Friday as Markiese Royalty.  The second suspect killed in the shootout has not been identified by Phoenix police.

In addition to Singleton and Webber, the suspects in custody were identified as Jerry Cockhearn III, 34; Doarnell Jackson, 35; and Eldridge Gittens, 34.  Royalty was believed to be 26 and Cockhearn's cousin.  Bond was set at $3 million for each suspect.

Jackson, Webber and Cockhearn all have criminal records.

Jackson was accused in December 2001 of forcing his way into his ex-girlfriend's apartment, pointing a handgun at her, and punching and choking her, according to Maricopa County Superior Court records.  He eventually was placed on probation for disorderly conduct after the victim did not cooperate with prosecutors.

When Jackson violated his probation, he served a year in the Arizona Department of Corrections and was released in January 2006.

Cockhearn was placed on probation for four years in 2005 for armed robbery after he and another defendant were accused of pointing at gun at two men in Scottsdale and demanding that they hand over their belongings, according to Superior Court records.
-

From NORML archives.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 05, 2013, 10:46:30 AM
As a cop, reversals are pretty common though in my experience it is not done at the $250K level all that much around here. Tragic turn of events. Possibly poor planning and certainly underestimating the threat level.

As a citizen, I'd like to see drugs decriminalized   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 05, 2013, 10:51:56 AM
As a cop, reversals are pretty common though in my experience it is not done at the $250K level all that much around here. Tragic turn of events. Possibly poor planning and certainly underestimating the threat level.

As a citizen, I'd like to see drugs decriminalized   

In your judgment, would a transaction that involved a half-million dollars in value take place without an extensive previous history?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 05, 2013, 05:13:26 PM
In your judgment, would a transaction that involved a half-million dollars in value take place without an extensive previous history?

$250K is a quarter of a million :P
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 05, 2013, 05:35:29 PM
$250K is a quarter of a million :P

Yes, bro, and each entity had that value at stake.

Seems pretty likely that one or more of the guys in the buyers' party had plans to take it all and split, and a cop found his final stand in life.

Myself, I'd be strongly inclined to believe this was an illegal money-funnel to beat all hell, and the deaths made it effectively impossible to deal with the event in any other way but to declare that it was some legitimate operation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2013, 06:05:18 AM
Yes, bro, and each entity had that value at stake.

Seems pretty likely that one or more of the guys in the buyers' party had plans to take it all and split, and a cop found his final stand in life.

Myself, I'd be strongly inclined to believe this was an illegal money-funnel to beat all hell, and the deaths made it effectively impossible to deal with the event in any other way but to declare that it was some legitimate operation.

Really?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 07, 2013, 10:56:37 AM
Really?

Let's put it this way: I would like to know what entity monitors the ultimate destruction of seized marijuana in this location, and the methods by which it, and by which the activities of the undercovers in this location, are monitored.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 13, 2013, 10:22:10 AM
http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2013/09/12/merced-police-policy-of-taking-injured-animals-to-shooting-range-comes-under-fire/#.UjKLgmTQ_v4.facebook


Ridiculous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on September 13, 2013, 11:22:49 AM
http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2013/09/12/merced-police-policy-of-taking-injured-animals-to-shooting-range-comes-under-fire/#.UjKLgmTQ_v4.facebook


Ridiculous

We're to accept that an animal is suffering and "inconvenient" to move, at the same time we're to accept that the animal is to be transferred to a shooting range to be shot.

That's cop logic, for you.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 15, 2013, 05:18:15 AM
Two bystanders shot and wounded by NYPD officers who opened fire on mentally disturbed suspect in crowded Times Square

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2420991/Times-Square-shooting-wounds-person-Saturday-night.html


http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/15/justice/times-square-police-shooting/index.html

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Two officers fire three shots in an attempt to subdue an agitated man
They hit two women instead, who are hospitalized with injuries
The man is later taken to a hospital as "an emotionally disturbed person"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 15, 2013, 03:02:13 PM
Two bystanders shot and wounded by NYPD officers who opened fire on mentally disturbed suspect in crowded Times Square

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2420991/Times-Square-shooting-wounds-person-Saturday-night.html


http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/15/justice/times-square-police-shooting/index.html

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Two officers fire three shots in an attempt to subdue an agitated man
They hit two women instead, who are hospitalized with injuries
The man is later taken to a hospital as "an emotionally disturbed person"




A fellow cop will assess the situation as an 'impartial expert' on the 'use of force'.

They will all be cleared of any wrong doing.

The message will be sent out that it's cool to open fire on people with Metro cards in crowded areas.

So predictith the Skip....09-15-2013
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 18, 2013, 02:40:28 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/18/dea-agents-raid_n_3942731.html


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 18, 2013, 07:49:20 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/18/dea-agents-raid_n_3942731.html

Pretty fucked up. And not just the cops, but the Judge too... what a travesty.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 19, 2013, 09:32:48 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2385926/War-veteran-John-Wrana-95-dies-police-shoot-Taser-bean-bag-rounds.html (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2385926/War-veteran-John-Wrana-95-dies-police-shoot-Taser-bean-bag-rounds.html)

From the article:

A 95-year-old world War II veteran died after being Tasered and hit with bean bag rounds by police for threatening care home staff - but his family insist he was killed unnecessarily.

Police say that John Wrana, who lived in a Chicago assisting living home, was brandishing his cane, a metal shoehorn and a knife before officers shocked him and hit him with bean bag rounds.



What a fucking joke... a 95-year old agitated at the prospect of being forced to undergo an operation gets upset and police are so afraid, they taser him and shoot him with beanbags?!?

What goes through those idiots' heads?!?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2013, 05:00:34 AM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/23/fed-up-ny-man-sets-up-hidden-camera-to-find-out-who-was-repeatedly-stealing-his-pro-gun-sign-what-he-discovered-blew-him-away


BUSTED!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2013, 05:22:15 AM
http://www.ajc.com/news/news/crime-law/sheriffs-deputy-charged-with-selling-drugs-from-sq/nZ38R

Unfucking real!!! 

LMFAO!!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2013, 07:04:09 AM
http://video.foxnews.com/v/2685985071001/traffic-stop-spirals-out-of-control-in-ohio/?intcmp=obnetwork

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 26, 2013, 01:32:21 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/26/keith-alexander-nsa_n_3998071.html


Sick 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 26, 2013, 01:52:28 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/26/keith-alexander-nsa_n_3998071.html


Sick  

Did you read what Dan Coats said? He's so frustrated that these programs which "have saved American lives" are getting a bum rap and so angry at us, who are not only "non-trusting" but aren't even open to being "convinced" as to those programs' integrity and worth. He is so exasperated with "a public that apparently doesn't want to be convinced" that all is well.

He also doesn't seem to think that hearings are needed, asking "what are we losing by having to go through this torturous exercise of having to get continuous feedback?" Yes... Congressional oversight is a torturous exercise! This is a Senator people!

And of course, let's not even talk about the irony of Diane Feinstein - one of the most fervent NSA loyalists - chairing the committee that oversees this. What a fucking joke.

The only two Senators with any credibility on the issue of surveillance in the post-Snowden era are Ron Wyden and Mark Udall.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 27, 2013, 07:00:38 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/27/politics/nsa-snooping/index.html?sr=fb092713nsalovers930a


And these pieces of shit in the Obama admn said it was all hypothetical remember? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 29, 2013, 10:59:52 AM
http://amarillo.com/news/2013-09-19/woman-sues-estelline-former-officers-over-cash-seizure


Another wrongful taking...but she's fighting back.  More power to her!

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 29, 2013, 03:35:37 PM
http://amarillo.com/news/2013-09-19/woman-sues-estelline-former-officers-over-cash-seizure


Another wrongful taking...but she's fighting back.  More power to her!



To his credit, the DA isn't pursuing bullshit charges. These practices ought to be banned, especially when it comes to seizing cash, a fact which Courts have taken judicial notice of multiple times, almost always contain trace amounts of drugs.

Also, the bullshit "I think I smell marijuana" nonsense needs to end.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 29, 2013, 04:25:44 PM
To his credit, the DA isn't pursuing bullshit charges. These practices ought to be banned, especially when it comes to seizing cash, a fact which Courts have taken judicial notice of multiple times, almost always contain trace amounts of drugs.

Also, the bullshit "I think I smell marijuana" nonsense needs to end.


I posted one time about holding cops personally liable.  I think it would end a lot of this bullshit.  Needless to say...my idea didn't get much traction, lol.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 29, 2013, 06:38:04 PM

I posted one time about holding cops personally liable.  I think it would end a lot of this bullshit.  Needless to say...my idea didn't get much traction, lol.



I agree they should be held liable, but it's not an easy problem to solve for a number of reasons.

First of all, even with clearly established penalties, the bad cops won't change. The good cops will simply avoid doing anything to avoid being penalized.

Secondly, it's can be hard to apply a clean standard to encounters that are, very often unclean.

Thirdly, even if that standard is worked out, you need a new agency to investigate and charge those cops who break the rules - an agency that isn't made of in touchable and incorruptible super-officers.

Lastly, we need people who will put their oath of office above camaraderie and friendship.


But I agree that we need change. We need DAs who will stand up to officers and police unions and investigate and charge officers who violate the rules. We need robust oversight from civilian boards. We need informed citizens who will vote out police chiefs that harbor corruption or don't deal with trouble officers. We need judges who will hold officers accountable for their behavior - inside and outside the Court.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 30, 2013, 09:45:45 AM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2013/gang-atlantic-city-officers-brutally-beat-man-release-an-attack-dog-to-gnaw-on-his-neck


Life on the line!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 30, 2013, 08:03:15 PM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2013/gang-atlantic-city-officers-brutally-beat-man-release-an-attack-dog-to-gnaw-on-his-neck

Wow... the brutality of that beating is shocking but the response from Chief Ernest Jubilee is even more shocking. He claims that he reviewed the video and "saw no reason to suspend or remove the officers from their regular duties."

That joke of a police chief ought to be kicked out of the office which he now holds, along with all those officers. They should lose their pensions and benefits and they should face criminal charges.

I'm curious what our resident officer will have to say about this video and the response from this incompetent piece of shit Chief.

Frankly, if their internal investigation clears them or gives them silly "slap on the wrist" penalties, they should be investigated by the FBI and prosecuted for violating the civil rights of this kid under the dual sovereign exception to double jeopardy for the actual beating.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 01, 2013, 06:19:20 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/police-dont-need-combat-vehicles-2013-10

Police do not need MRAPS
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 02, 2013, 05:45:54 PM
I agree they should be held liable, but it's not an easy problem to solve for a number of reasons.

First of all, even with clearly established penalties, the bad cops won't change. The good cops will simply avoid doing anything to avoid being penalized.

Secondly, it's can be hard to apply a clean standard to encounters that are, very often unclean.

Thirdly, even if that standard is worked out, you need a new agency to investigate and charge those cops who break the rules - an agency that isn't made of in touchable and incorruptible super-officers.

Lastly, we need people who will put their oath of office above camaraderie and friendship.


But I agree that we need change. We need DAs who will stand up to officers and police unions and investigate and charge officers who violate the rules. We need robust oversight from civilian boards. We need informed citizens who will vote out police chiefs that harbor corruption or don't deal with trouble officers. We need judges who will hold officers accountable for their behavior - inside and outside the Court.



Yeah, since the thread never went anywhere, I didn't get much into depth, but I agree that it must be a multi-pronged approach.  And we need to get more people involved in the political process.  Underlying everything is my staunch belief that an apathetic public is the biggest cause for this bullshit.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 02, 2013, 07:48:19 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-had-test-project-to-collect-data-on-americans-cellphone-locations-director-says/2013/10/02/65076278-2b71-11e3-8ade-a1f23cda135e_story.html?tid=sm_fb


Nice  ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 04, 2013, 10:47:24 AM
Wow... the brutality of that beating is shocking but the response from Chief Ernest Jubilee is even more shocking. He claims that he reviewed the video and "saw no reason to suspend or remove the officers from their regular duties."

That joke of a police chief ought to be kicked out of the office which he now holds, along with all those officers. They should lose their pensions and benefits and they should face criminal charges.

I'm curious what our resident officer will have to say about this video and the response from this incompetent piece of shit Chief.

Frankly, if their internal investigation clears them or gives them silly "slap on the wrist" penalties, they should be investigated by the FBI and prosecuted for violating the civil rights of this kid under the dual sovereign exception to double jeopardy for the actual beating.

Up until the dog, I was thinking I understand the cops are wanting to get his arms behind his back and he is not letting them. the concern is when hands are in front of a resisting subject on the ground it can access a gun in the wastband if one is there so it is a concern. The tactics the officers used to do this were not all that impressive but a police chief can't nickel and dime a force response if the force is not unreasonable given the totality of the circumstances. However when the dog is released on the guy all bets are off. It was clearly unnecessary and the potential for severe permenant damage and disfigurement is high and there were enough officers there to gain compliance without the dog. Definately worth a different response from the administration   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 04, 2013, 11:26:17 AM
Up until the dog, I was thinking I understand the cops are wanting to get his arms behind his back and he is not letting them. the concern is when hands are in front of a resisting subject on the ground it can access a gun in the wastband if one is there so it is a concern. The tactics the officers used to do this were not all that impressive but a police chief can't nickel and dime a force response if the force is not unreasonable given the totality of the circumstances. However when the dog is released on the guy all bets are off. It was clearly unnecessary and the potential for severe permenant damage and disfigurement is high and there were enough officers there to gain compliance without the dog. Definately worth a different response from the administration  

I'm sorry but I disagree. The amount of force used even before the dog was brought in seems to me to clearly be excessive - you can see five guys kneeing him, kicking him and stomping on his head. You say they were trying to get his hands behind his back; perhaps they were, but this guy was clearly in "survival" mode, completely overwhelmed and curled up on the ground in the fetal position in under 15 seconds; at that point, he was likely acting on pure instinct and adrenaline, and sought to protect his head against a continuing brutal beating he could not escape instead of hearing and understanding spoken orders (if any were given).

So if you were in that situation, even if you could hear and understand what you're told to do, would you simply comply and let your hands go and hope that the multiple people brutally beating you stop instead of killing you? I'm betting the answer is "no" - and video like this is a good reason why you wouldn't and shouldn't.

What makes this even worse is that these thugs started this; this guy never laid a finger on them despite assertions to the contrary by them (remember, there is video of the whole encounter, including video of these cops laughing and snapping pics with their cellphones while the guy is getting mauled by the dog while laying on the ground severely injured and bleeding profusely).

He got beaten up because he talked back and cops feel that when they put on their pants every morning they are entitled to respect. But respect is earned, not worn, and talking back to or insulting a cop is a protected activity under the Constitution (see, inter alia, Swartz v. Insogna (http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/8ea5193d-9b87-4e23-9840-a803659cf798/1/doc/11-2846_opn.pdf#xml=http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/8ea5193d-9b87-4e23-9840-a803659cf798/1/hilite/)) and not cause for an arrest, a beating or anything else.

This is a case of cops who lost their cool, and became the thing they are supposed to protect us against. It happens - cops are human beings and make mistakes. That's not the problem. The problem is that they won't face the consequences for their action as someone without a badge would. They are still walking around, policing...

And it is that fact, coupled with the reaction by the higher-ups, including the comment for this idiot of a chief that is outrageous and shocking. I don't doubt others cops will have a similar reaction and stand on "their" side of the blue line. It's this "us. vs. them" mentality, the sort of behavior shown in this video, and the reactions by the chief, police unions and officers, that makes people feel that, individually, cops are nothing more than thugs with fancy badges that let them operate with impunity and that, collectively, they are nothing but another gang.

And this is a view that, unfortunately, is justified.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on October 05, 2013, 09:45:16 AM
No one can tell me that these assholes don't understand what the person is experiencing, as he is getting the living shit beat out of him for "failing to comply". It is deliberate, and it is a crime.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on October 05, 2013, 09:48:51 AM
...happens time and again, too. It's becoming as closely linked with the cops as blue and red lights.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 07, 2013, 02:17:45 PM
http://reason.com/blog/2013/10/07/woman-says-she-called-911-for-an-ambulan


fucked up
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 07, 2013, 05:33:16 PM
No one can tell me that these assholes don't understand what the person is experiencing, as he is getting the living shit beat out of him for "failing to comply". It is deliberate, and it is a crime.



Exactly, there's nothing natural about moving your hands behind your back when hit hard elsewhere.  Curling up and covering are natural, and that's what's kicking in when these people get beaten.

But, the Blue Wall (which Agnostic denies, lol) ENDURES!

And cops continue to make up nonsense to justify, cover for, and protect other cops from repercussions.

Notice that the beating...necessary to make sure the guy didn't have a gun from what we're told...was conducted AFTER the guy had already been searched.  Yep, it was really necessary.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2013, 05:18:55 AM
http://nypost.com/2013/10/07/bike-cop-joined-in-on-suv-beatdown-video-reveals


 :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on October 08, 2013, 09:22:25 AM


Exactly, there's nothing natural about moving your hands behind your back when hit hard elsewhere.  Curling up and covering are natural, and that's what's kicking in when these people get beaten.

But, the Blue Wall (which Agnostic denies, lol) ENDURES!

And cops continue to make up nonsense to justify, cover for, and protect other cops from repercussions.

Notice that the beating...necessary to make sure the guy didn't have a gun from what we're told...was conducted AFTER the guy had already been searched.  Yep, it was really necessary.  ::)



Yes, bro. These guys know this, so they MUST be doing it on purpose. It really is that simple.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2013, 11:52:30 AM
http://www.newburyportnews.com/local/x1442580373/Gestapo-tactics-meet-senior-citizens-at-Yellowstone


  >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2013, 01:43:11 PM
http://gunsnfreedom.com/police-officers-are-3-times-more-likely-to-commit-murder-than-ccw-permit-holders


LMFAO!!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2013, 05:48:36 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/nyregion/detective-seen-in-bikers-attack-on-suv-is-arrested.html?_r=0


Typical
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2013, 06:28:38 PM
http://www.defenseone.com/technology/2013/10/ready-lethal-autonomous-robot-drones/71492


sick
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 09, 2013, 05:58:41 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/nyregion/detective-seen-in-bikers-attack-on-suv-is-arrested.html?_r=0


Typical



So now we've got 2 cops from what I understand.

One didn't lift a finger to help the guy.

The other breaking the guys back window and maybe helping to beat him.

::)  Fucking Insane.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 10, 2013, 08:12:36 AM
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Video-Captures-Cops-Alleged-Excessive-Force-227153991.html?fullSite=y

Damn - that sucked.  You can see the blood start dripping. 

Typical worthless pig beating up on a woman
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 11, 2013, 04:46:12 AM
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Video-Captures-Cops-Alleged-Excessive-Force-227153991.html?fullSite=y

Damn - that sucked.  You can see the blood start dripping. 

Typical worthless pig beating up on a woman

Hope he gets fired, charges brought against him and he is convicted. What a dirtbag
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on October 11, 2013, 05:21:37 AM
Hope he gets fired, charges brought against him and he is convicted. What a dirtbag
You know as well as the rest of us that he will most likely get his job back no matter what he fucking did.  Nice... ::) 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 11, 2013, 07:13:14 AM
You know as well as the rest of us that he will most likely get his job back no matter what he fucking did.  Nice... ::) 

No, can't say that I know that..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2013, 07:46:49 AM
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Video-Captures-Cops-Alleged-Excessive-Force-227153991.html?fullSite=y

Damn - that sucked.  You can see the blood start dripping. 

Typical worthless pig beating up on a woman

I hope that aside from serious prison time he gets thrown in and out of his cell every day exactly the same way like he did to that woman.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on October 11, 2013, 08:01:42 AM
No, can't say that I know that..
I wouldn't bet against it lol...  

I respect what you do.  I respect people like you.  I respect the good guys like you...  But I don't respect the asses in law enforcement who do shit like this and then get their jobs back after being let go and we see that kind of thing happening again and again, over and over....  This shit is broken and it is in need of some serious fixing imo...  There is no reason whatsoever that we need the level of law enforcement going on today.  There is absolutely no reason that there should be daily videos posted showing police misconduct but that's what we see.  It is and should be an outrage.  There should be a self check by law enforcement on this shit before it becomes a real reckoning by the people.  When you have people rooting for the other, it's a good indication that you've all gone a little overkill.

All we want is for violent criminals to be kept in check....  That's all the people want but you all have gone so beyond that to the point that we have so many people behind bars that have no business being there.  I mean really?  The most free country in the world actually now has the highest incarceration rate?

FUCKING NUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Hugo Chavez on October 11, 2013, 08:11:17 AM
And now crap like this?

Fucking Sheriff Rex Kwon Do.... ::)

Preston, Idaho is a town of roughly 5,000 people that earned brief notoriety a decade ago as the setting for the whimsical film “Napoleon Dynamite.” It is blessedly devoid of violent crime, and has no need for its six-officer police department.

Yet Chief Ken Geddes believes that Preston’s superficial placidity disguises the potential for apocalyptic violence. At least that’s what he’s saying to pre-empt potential criticism of his decision to acquire a combat-grade armored vehicle from the Department of Homeland Security.

The Preston Police Department is one of two in Idaho to receive a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle (MRAP) through the Pentagon’s Law Enforcement Support Office (LESO).

 ::)
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2013/10/pedro-offers-you-his-protection-preston.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on October 11, 2013, 10:07:51 AM
And now crap like this?

Fucking Sheriff Rex Kwon Do.... ::)

Preston, Idaho is a town of roughly 5,000 people that earned brief notoriety a decade ago as the setting for the whimsical film “Napoleon Dynamite.” It is blessedly devoid of violent crime, and has no need for its six-officer police department.

Yet Chief Ken Geddes believes that Preston’s superficial placidity disguises the potential for apocalyptic violence. At least that’s what he’s saying to pre-empt potential criticism of his decision to acquire a combat-grade armored vehicle from the Department of Homeland Security.

The Preston Police Department is one of two in Idaho to receive a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle (MRAP) through the Pentagon’s Law Enforcement Support Office (LESO).

 ::)
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2013/10/pedro-offers-you-his-protection-preston.html


fucking derp.

well it is Idaho, so you never know when fucking walter white may show up popping of rounds with his 60.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 11, 2013, 02:27:05 PM
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Video-Captures-Cops-Alleged-Excessive-Force-227153991.html?fullSite=y

Damn - that sucked.  You can see the blood start dripping. 

Typical worthless pig beating up on a woman

That is just painful to watch and impossible to describe adequately. There really ought to be a mandatory sentence enhancement for this sort of behavior.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 14, 2013, 04:48:05 AM
I wouldn't bet against it lol...  

I respect what you do.  I respect people like you.  I respect the good guys like you...  But I don't respect the asses in law enforcement who do shit like this and then get their jobs back after being let go and we see that kind of thing happening again and again, over and over....  This shit is broken and it is in need of some serious fixing imo...  There is no reason whatsoever that we need the level of law enforcement going on today.  There is absolutely no reason that there should be daily videos posted showing police misconduct but that's what we see.  It is and should be an outrage.  There should be a self check by law enforcement on this shit before it becomes a real reckoning by the people.  When you have people rooting for the other, it's a good indication that you've all gone a little overkill.

All we want is for violent criminals to be kept in check....  That's all the people want but you all have gone so beyond that to the point that we have so many people behind bars that have no business being there.  I mean really?  The most free country in the world actually now has the highest incarceration rate?

FUCKING NUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I don't respect the asses in Law Enforcement either. I think we share a common position there. I am disheartened and often times pissed off when I see videos of Law Enforcement abusing the people they are supposed to be protecting. There needs to be house cleaning throughout the nation and it is my hope that in the near future those videos get rarer to find. I find some solice in knowing that every day there are 10's of thousands of police contacts with citizens that go exactly as they should. That doesn't excuse even one case where a cop abuses a citizen and they should be held accountable.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 14, 2013, 08:46:55 PM
NSA collects millions of e-mail address books globally

By Barton Gellman and Ashkan Soltani, Monday, October 14, 6:53 PM

The National Security Agency is harvesting hundreds of millions of contact lists from personal e-mail and instant messaging accounts around the world, many of them belonging to Americans, according to senior intelligence officials and top-secret documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

The collection program, which has not been disclosed before, intercepts e-mail address books and “buddy lists” from instant messaging services as they move across global data links. Online services often transmit those contacts when a user logs on, composes a message, or synchronizes a computer or mobile device with information stored on remote servers.

Rather than targeting individual users, the NSA is gathering contact lists in large numbers that amount to a sizable fraction of the world’s e-mail and instant messaging accounts. Analysis of that data enables the agency to search for hidden connections and to map relationships within a much smaller universe of foreign intelligence targets.

During a single day last year, the NSA’s Special Source Operations branch collected 444,743 e-mail address books from Yahoo, 105,068 from Hotmail, 82,857 from Facebook, 33,697 from Gmail and 22,881 from unspecified other providers, according to an internal NSA PowerPoint presentation. Those figures, described as a typical daily intake in the document, correspond to a rate of more than 250 million a year.

Each day, the presentation said, the NSA collects contacts from an estimated 500,000 buddy lists on live-chat services as well as from the inbox displays of Web-based e-mail accounts.

The collection depends on secret arrangements with foreign telecommunications companies or allied intelligence services in control of facilities that direct traffic along the Internet’s main data routes.

Although the collection takes place overseas, two senior U.S. intelligence officials acknowledged that it sweeps in the contacts of many Americans. They declined to offer an estimate but did not dispute that the number is likely to be in the millions or tens of millions.

A spokesman for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which oversees the NSA, said the agency “is focused on discovering and developing intelligence about valid foreign intelligence targets like terrorists, human traffickers and drug smugglers. We are not interested in personal information about ordinary Americans.”

The spokesman, Shawn Turner, added that rules approved by the attorney general require the NSA to “minimize the acquisition, use and dissemination” of information that identifies a U.S. citizen or permanent resident.

The NSA’s collection of nearly all U.S. call records, under a separate program, has generated significant controversy since it was revealed in June. The NSA’s director, Gen. Keith B. Alexander, has defended “bulk” collection as an essential counterterrorism and foreign intelligence tool, saying, “You need the haystack to find the needle.”

Contact lists stored online provide the NSA with far richer sources of data than call records alone. Address books commonly include not only names and e-mail addresses, but also telephone numbers, street addresses, and business and family information. Inbox listings of e-mail accounts stored in the “cloud” sometimes contain content, such as the first few lines of a message.

Taken together, the data would enable the NSA, if permitted, to draw detailed maps of a person’s life, as told by personal, professional, political and religious connections. The picture can also be misleading, creating false “associations” with ex-spouses or people with whom an account holder has had no contact in many years.

The NSA has not been authorized by Congress or the special intelligence court that oversees foreign surveillance to collect contact lists in bulk, and senior intelligence officials said it would be illegal to do so from facilities in the United States. The agency avoids the restrictions in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by intercepting contact lists from access points “all over the world,” one official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the classified program. “None of those are on U.S. territory.”

Because of the method employed, the agency is not legally required or technically able to restrict its intake to contact lists belonging to specified foreign intelligence targets, he said.

When information passes through “the overseas collection apparatus,” the official added, “the assumption is you’re not a U.S. person.”

In practice, data from Americans is collected in large volumes — in part because they live and work overseas, but also because data crosses international boundaries even when its American owners stay at home. Large technology companies, including Google and Facebook, maintain data centers around the world to balance loads on their servers and work around outages.

A senior U.S. intelligence official said the privacy of Americans is protected, despite mass collection, because “we have checks and balances built into our tools.”

NSA analysts, he said, may not search within the contacts database or distribute information from it unless they can “make the case that something in there is a valid foreign intelligence target in and of itself.”

In this program, the NSA is obliged to make that case only to itself or others in the executive branch. With few exceptions, intelligence operations overseas fall solely within the president’s legal purview. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, enacted in 1978, imposes restrictions only on electronic surveillance that targets Americans or takes place on U.S. territory.

By contrast, the NSA draws on authority in the Patriot Act for its bulk collection of domestic phone records, and it gathers online records from U.S. Internet companies, in a program known as PRISM, under powers granted by Congress in the FISA Amendments Act. Those operations are overseen by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the California Democrat who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in August that the committee has less information about, and conducts less oversight of, intelligence gathering that relies solely on presidential authority. She said she planned to ask for more briefings on those programs.

“In general, the committee is far less aware of operations conducted under 12333,” said a senior committee staff member, referring to Executive Order 12333, which defines the basic powers and responsibilities of the intelligence agencies. “I believe the NSA would answer questions if we asked them, and if we knew to ask them, but it would not routinely report these things, and, in general, they would not fall within the focus of the committee.”

Because the agency captures contact lists “on the fly” as they cross major Internet switches, rather than “at rest” on computer servers, the NSA has no need to notify the U.S. companies that host the information or to ask for help from them.

“We have neither knowledge of nor participation in this mass collection of web-mail addresses or chat lists by the government,” said Google spokeswoman Niki Fenwick.

At Microsoft, spokeswoman Nicole Miller said the company “does not provide any government with direct or unfettered access to our customers’ data,” adding that “we would have significant concerns if these allegations about government actions are true.”

Facebook spokeswoman Jodi Seth said that “we did not know and did not assist” in the NSA’s interception of contact lists.

It is unclear why the NSA collects more than twice as many address books from Yahoo than the other big services combined. One possibility is that Yahoo, unlike other service providers, has left connections to its users unencrypted by default.

Suzanne Philion, a Yahoo spokeswoman, said Monday in response to an inquiry from The Washington Post that, beginning in January, Yahoo would begin encrypting all its e-mail connections.

Google was the first to secure all its e-mail connections, turning on “SSL encryption” globally in 2010. People with inside knowledge said the move was intended in part to thwart large-scale collection of its users’ information by the NSA and other intelligence agencies.

The volume of NSA contacts collection is so high that it has occasionally threatened to overwhelm storage repositories, forcing the agency to halt its intake with “emergency detasking” orders. Three NSA documents describe short-term efforts to build an “across-the-board technology throttle for truly heinous data” and longer-term efforts to filter out information that the NSA does not need.

Spam has proven to be a significant problem for the NSA — clogging databases with information that holds no foreign intelligence value. The majority of all e-mails, one NSA document says, “are SPAM from ‘fake’ addresses and never ‘delivered’ to targets.”

In fall 2011, according to an NSA presentation, the Yahoo account of an Iranian target was “hacked by an unknown actor,” who used it to send spam. The Iranian had “a number of Yahoo groups in his/her contact list, some with many hundreds or thousands of members.”

The cascading effects of repeated spam messages, compounded by the automatic addition of the Iranian’s contacts to other people’s address books, led to a massive spike in the volume of traffic collected by the Australian intelligence service on the NSA’s behalf.

After nine days of data-
bombing, the Iranian’s contact book and contact books for several people within it were “emergency detasked.”

In a briefing from the NSA’s Large Access Exploitation working group, that example was used to illustrate the need to narrow the criteria for data interception. It called for a “shifting collection philosophy”: “Memorialize what you need” vs. “Order one of everything off the menu and eat what you want.”

 

Julie Tate contributed to this report. Soltani is an independent security researcher and consultant.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 14, 2013, 09:16:32 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/14/nsa-contact-lists_n_4099147.html
 >:(

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 15, 2013, 09:02:21 AM
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2013/10/14/Man-Imprisoned-For-Legally-Purchased-Guns-Laments-A-Life-Destroyed


Ridiculous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 15, 2013, 11:17:17 AM
http://www.myfoxny.com/Story/23695543/cleveland-police-suspend-63-officers-over-deadly-chase


Booom
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 16, 2013, 11:32:13 PM
http://www.wistv.com/story/23686918/cell-phone-video-shows-off-duty-deputy-attempt-to-arrest-soldier-at-bar

http://www.wistv.com/story/23698228/deputy-fired-after-trying-to-arrest-soldier-at-bar

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Wolfox on October 16, 2013, 11:47:13 PM
http://www.wistv.com/story/23686918/cell-phone-video-shows-off-duty-deputy-attempt-to-arrest-soldier-at-bar

http://www.wistv.com/story/23698228/deputy-fired-after-trying-to-arrest-soldier-at-bar



What an asshole.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 17, 2013, 12:17:56 PM
http://www.examiner.com/article/police-kill-80-year-old-man-his-bed-during-meth-raid-no-meth-was-found

 :( :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 18, 2013, 12:06:15 PM
http://www.examiner.com/article/police-kill-80-year-old-man-his-bed-during-meth-raid-no-meth-was-found

 :( :(


Yeah, they come barging in for no reason and you're not supposed to point a gun at them (assuming he even did).  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 18, 2013, 08:57:23 PM
Check out http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/18/21029748-man-you-ought-to-be-ashamed-irate-grandpa-stops-upskirt-photos-at-nashville-airport?lite

A man grabbed the cell phone of a U.S. Federal Air Marshal who took pictures up female passengers' skirts at Nashville International Airport. I'm surprised that instead of getting tackled, arrested and harassed (perhaps at gunpoint) he got to witness the arrest of the Marshal!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 18, 2013, 09:02:51 PM
Check out http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/18/21029748-man-you-ought-to-be-ashamed-irate-grandpa-stops-upskirt-photos-at-nashville-airport?lite

A man grabbed the cell phone of a U.S. Federal Air Marshal who took pictures up female passengers' skirts at Nashville International Airport. I'm surprised that instead of getting tackled, arrested and harassed (perhaps at gunpoint) he got to witness the arrest of the Marshal!

Saw that earlier.   PERVs
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 23, 2013, 06:45:47 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/23/pepper-spray-cop-settlement_n_4152147.html


Oh for fucks sake! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 23, 2013, 07:01:00 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/23/pepper-spray-cop-settlement_n_4152147.html


Oh for fucks sake!  

I was just about to post a link to another article about this story... what a fucking joke. And for the cherry on top: each of the people he pepper-sprayed got $28,000 from UC Davis - they suffered $10,000 less than their attacker did.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on October 30, 2013, 02:00:35 PM
Florida Cop Tasers Cuffed Girl Who Became Braindead As A Result

A Florida police officer, 267-pound Trooper Daniel Cole, was recently cleared of any wrongdoing by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Questions were raised when he tasered a 20 year old handcuffed girl in the back as she fled. The tasering was caught on video showing officer Cole firing the taser at the handcuffed Danielle Maudsley. Maudsley was a mere 100 pound, while Cole outweighed her at two and a half times her weight. She was clearly no threat to him, unless he expected to die from exhaustion chasing her a few yards.

(http://politicalblindspot.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/coma.jpg)

http://politicalblindspot.com/florida-cop-tasers-cuffed-girl-now-shes-braindead/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 30, 2013, 03:06:49 PM
Florida Cop Tasers Cuffed Girl Who Became Braindead As A Result

A Florida police officer, 267-pound Trooper Daniel Cole, was recently cleared of any wrongdoing by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Questions were raised when he tasered a 20 year old handcuffed girl in the back as she fled. The tasering was caught on video showing officer Cole firing the taser at the handcuffed Danielle Maudsley. Maudsley was a mere 100 pound, while Cole outweighed her at two and a half times her weight. She was clearly no threat to him, unless he expected to die from exhaustion chasing her a few yards.

(http://politicalblindspot.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/coma.jpg)

http://politicalblindspot.com/florida-cop-tasers-cuffed-girl-now-shes-braindead/

Fuck me... that's horrible. And this guy is cleared? Agnostic007 this is why people like me don't feel that cops are essentially running wild and are beyond the reach of the law. This guy deployed his taser (likely against department policy) to shoot a girl that was running away and was no threat to him or anyone else. Despite video, it's all cool...

This THUG, whose real name is Daniel Cole, (I'm using his name on purpose, because this piece of shit deserves to be shamed, his name should be infamous and he should be unemployable; and just to cover my bases: hey asshole, if you're out there, sue me!) is still out there, with a gun. He also shot not one but two innocent men per this story (http://www.wtsp.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=273471).

THIS IS THE TYPE OF BOTTOM-FEEDING, POWER-TRIPPING, THUG THAT IS ALLOWED TO BE A COP IN FLORIDA. THIS IS THUG THAT OTHER COPS HUDDLE TOGETHER AND CONSPIRE TO PROTECT IN INTERNAL INVESTIGATIONS BY CLEARING HIM IN CASE AFTER CASE AFTER CASE.

I'd say that I hope this piece of shit gets sued. But that won't help. Even if he is sued and loses, he won't learn anything or suffer any consequences, and his buddies that voted to clear him (http://www.wtsp.com/news/article/318189/250/FHP-clears-trooper-who-shot-cemetery-owner) over burgers and beers won't suffer any consequences. Money will simply be taken from the taxpayers and paid out and it's back to business as usual for Trooper Cole, shooting as he goes, since according to FHP Spokesman Steve Gaskins, Trooper Cole is not considered a risk, and is welcome to return to his duties.

Yeah... welcome to return to his duties. People should be fucking terrified.

FUCK ME! THIS IS FUCKING INFURIATING.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on October 30, 2013, 03:14:29 PM
Fuck me... that's horrible. And this guy is cleared? I hope he gets sued (in both his personal and his professional capacities). This shit is starting to get out of control.
The fact that Police are cleared more often than not is extremely disheartening.

Being a former Marine... I understand wanting to back up your men... but this isn't fucking Iraq... these guys seem to forget they're here to serve and protect us, not to dominate us....

Although I've heard that most Police precincts have removed "to serve and protect" from their vehicles... and I personally have not seen it on any Police vehicles in a long time....

Im sure it's not intentional, but it makes me scratch my head.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 30, 2013, 03:24:22 PM
The fact that Police are cleared more often than not is extremely disheartening.

Being a former Marine... I understand wanting to back up your men... but this isn't fucking Iraq... these guys seem to forget they're here to serve and protect us, not to dominate us....

Although I've heard that most Police precincts have removed "to serve and protect" from their vehicles... and I personally have not seen it on any Police vehicles in a long time....

Im sure it's not intentional, but it makes me scratch my head.

Read my updated post. It's even fucking worst that the original article made it seem. This fucker shot another two people. And I don't mean with a Taser.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 31, 2013, 02:01:17 PM
http://www.breitbart.com/InstaBlog/2013/10/31/Man-Jailed-For-Overdue-Library-Book


 :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 31, 2013, 02:50:47 PM
The fact that Police are cleared more often than not is extremely disheartening.

Being a former Marine... I understand wanting to back up your men... but this isn't fucking Iraq... these guys seem to forget they're here to serve and protect us, not to dominate us....

Although I've heard that most Police precincts have removed "to serve and protect" from their vehicles... and I personally have not seen it on any Police vehicles in a long time....

Im sure it's not intentional, but it makes me scratch my head.

To Protect and To Serve has always been an LAPD motto, since around the 50's. It's still on their vehicles. It's not a national police motto 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 31, 2013, 03:03:56 PM
To Protect and To Serve has always been an LAPD motto, since around the 50's. It's still on their vehicles. It's not a national police motto 


More like to collect pension and issue bogus tickets  . ..  ..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Kazan on October 31, 2013, 03:54:13 PM
To Protect and To Serve has always been an LAPD motto, since around the 50's. It's still on their vehicles. It's not a national police motto 

So what? You forget who pays your fucking salary?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 31, 2013, 04:01:48 PM
So what? You forget who pays your fucking salary?

Are we playing the non sequitor game because your sentence made no sense. I merely pointed out that 1. It can still be found on LAPD cars and 2. It's not disappearing off of cars as it was not on many outside of LAPD. It was not a comment geared towards anything about salary or who pays it. Calm down dude  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 31, 2013, 04:17:46 PM
So what? You forget who pays your fucking salary?

Who shat in your wheeties this morning?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on October 31, 2013, 05:42:12 PM
Are we playing the non sequitor game because your sentence made no sense. I merely pointed out that 1. It can still be found on LAPD cars and 2. It's not disappearing off of cars as it was not on many outside of LAPD. It was not a comment geared towards anything about salary or who pays it. Calm down dude  

Actually it is disapoearing. I used to see it all the time in washington cruisers.... local and sherriff. Not sure about state.  None now. This has happened in the last ten years.

thanks for clearing up that it was primarily an lA motto though
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 31, 2013, 08:18:42 PM
Florida Cop Tasers Cuffed Girl Who Became Braindead As A Result

A Florida police officer, 267-pound Trooper Daniel Cole, was recently cleared of any wrongdoing by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Questions were raised when he tasered a 20 year old handcuffed girl in the back as she fled. The tasering was caught on video showing officer Cole firing the taser at the handcuffed Danielle Maudsley. Maudsley was a mere 100 pound, while Cole outweighed her at two and a half times her weight. She was clearly no threat to him, unless he expected to die from exhaustion chasing her a few yards.

(http://politicalblindspot.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/coma.jpg)

http://politicalblindspot.com/florida-cop-tasers-cuffed-girl-now-shes-braindead/




What a piece of shit.  Along with everyone who cleared him.

This bullshit will persist as long as people sit on their asses and don't get involved in politics.  It's inexcusable not to be forcing mayors and councils to put an end to this shit.  I've gone after them a couple of times and it's usually only a couple of us willing to stand up and meet at the board.  Unreal.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2013, 02:17:51 PM
Columbia, SC Police Chief: DrugWar WrongThink Creates Reasonable Suspicion To "Find You"

http://www.popehat.com/2013/11/01/columbia-sc-police-chief-drugwar-wrongthink-creates-reasonable-suspicion-to-find-you/

(http://www.popehat.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/DissentisSuspicious.png)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 01, 2013, 02:19:21 PM
Columbia, SC Police Chief: DrugWar WrongThink Creates Reasonable Suspicion To "Find You"

http://www.popehat.com/2013/11/01/columbia-sc-police-chief-drugwar-wrongthink-creates-reasonable-suspicion-to-find-you/

(http://www.popehat.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/DissentisSuspicious.png)



He looks black so he probably committed a few felonies in the past anyway.   :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on November 01, 2013, 03:16:01 PM
He looks black so he probably committed a few felonies in the past anyway.   :D

You're not helping, SC.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on November 01, 2013, 03:17:42 PM
Columbia, SC Police Chief: DrugWar WrongThink Creates Reasonable Suspicion To "Find You"

http://www.popehat.com/2013/11/01/columbia-sc-police-chief-drugwar-wrongthink-creates-reasonable-suspicion-to-find-you/

(http://www.popehat.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/DissentisSuspicious.png)


what a fucking asshat. Lawl.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on November 01, 2013, 03:34:47 PM



What a piece of shit.  Along with everyone who cleared him.

This bullshit will persist as long as people sit on their asses and don't get involved in politics.  It's inexcusable not to be forcing mayors and councils to put an end to this shit.  I've gone after them a couple of times and it's usually only a couple of us willing to stand up and meet at the board.  Unreal.



Yeah, I'd agree. Most people don't have the balls to challenge the cops. Having such a fractured excuse for a culture just makes it worse.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 02, 2013, 02:58:51 PM
For the record, this is the one thread on the Politics sub-forum where it seems like all of us agree.  Kinda nice, really.

Personally, I can't read too much of this stuff because it makes me want to swing on someone.

Not sure where most of you get material for this thread, but I go here:
http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut (http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 03, 2013, 07:01:14 AM
For the record, this is the one thread on the Politics sub-forum where it seems like all of us agree.  Kinda nice, really.

Personally, I can't read too much of this stuff because it makes me want to swing on someone.

Not sure where most of you get material for this thread, but I go here:
http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut (http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut)



The CATO institute's police misconduct page is great.  I read it just about everyday.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 03, 2013, 01:31:12 PM


The CATO institute's police misconduct page is great.  I read it just about everyday.



Cool. I'll check it out. 

I'm way more disturbed about the erosion of civil rights in this country than I am about whichever party has power at a national level.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2013, 10:05:47 PM
Family: Louisiana Police stun father as son died in house fire


The Millers ran around to the front of the building and Ryan Miller kicked in the front door as police and firefighters arrived.

Ryan Miller tried to enter the home to get his stepson. Police restrained him and the officer stunned him with a Taser, according to Jenne.

http://www.connecttristates.com/news/story.aspx?id=966109
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 05, 2013, 09:58:05 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11 (http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11)

For more details, check this: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml (http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml?cat=500#.Unk4H2u9K0f)

What the fuck? Wow!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 05, 2013, 02:15:28 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11 (http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11)

For more details, check this: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml (http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml?cat=500#.Unk4H2u9K0f)

What the fuck? Wow!

Jesus fucking Christ.  For me, this is the money quote from the 2nd article: 
"This is like something out of a science fiction film, anal probing by government officials and public employees," Kennedy said.

If that guys doesn't majorly get paid, he should be allowed to hunt down all the responsible parties, Dorner-style.
Realistically, some law enforcement folks and some medical care folks need to lose their jobs over this.  The tax-payers of that town should be pissed as hell that they're gonna have to pay for the rectal shenanigans described in those links.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 05, 2013, 02:29:36 PM
Jesus fucking Christ.  For me, this is the money quote from the 2nd article:  
"This is like something out of a science fiction film, anal probing by government officials and public employees," Kennedy said.

If that guys doesn't majorly get paid, he should be allowed to hunt down all the responsible parties, Dorner-style.
Realistically, some law enforcement folks and some medical care folks need to lose their jobs over this.  The tax-payers of that town should be pissed as hell that they're gonna have to pay for the rectal shenanigans described in those links.

If you watch the video, the icing on the cake is that the idiots at Gila Regional Medical Center are BILLING him for the procedures and threatening to send him to collections if he doesn't pay. Yes, you read that right. They are asking him to pay them for violating him as they did.

No doubt people need to lose jobs over this: certainly the cops involves, and certainly the doctors (who should also be investigated by the Board and, perhaps, lose their licenses). Even the Judge ought to be investigated; I mean to issue a warrant that authorizes this sort of a search because a man was standing upright and "clenched his buttocks" (not sure how this was established) seems like a gross overreach.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 05, 2013, 03:03:46 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11 (http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11)

For more details, check this: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml (http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml?cat=500#.Unk4H2u9K0f)

What the fuck? Wow!

Outrageous. All those involved should be jailed and subjected to the same treatment, every day.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 05, 2013, 03:09:47 PM
Outrageous. All those involved should be jailed and subjected to the same treatment, every day.

The doctor(s) who refused to perform the procedure on ethical grounds ought to be commended.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on November 05, 2013, 03:59:31 PM
If you watch the video, the icing on the cake is that the idiots at Gila Regional Medical Center are BILLING him for the procedures and threatening to send him to collections if he doesn't pay. Yes, you read that right. They are asking him to pay them for violating him as they did.

No doubt people need to lose jobs over this: certainly the cops involves, and certainly the doctors (who should also be investigated by the Board and, perhaps, lose their licenses). Even the Judge ought to be investigated; I mean to issue a warrant that authorizes this sort of a search because a man was standing upright and "clenched his buttocks" (not sure how this was established) seems like a gross overreach.
my wife went to an ER for lower stomach pain.... they wanted to test for rec drugs, I kept telling them she wasnt on anything and she wasnt after pills tja t she needed a ct scan or some shit and we werent paying for a drug test.... anyway they took some blood for "tests" and then billed me a grand for blood testing for EACH DRUG (8 grand total), and then threatened legal action when I refused to pay
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 05, 2013, 04:14:40 PM
my wife went to an ER for lower stomach pain.... they wanted to test for rec drugs, I kept telling them she wasnt on anything and she wasnt after pills tja t she needed a ct scan or some shit and we werent paying for a drug test.... anyway they took some blood for "tests" and then billed me a grand for blood testing for EACH DRUG (8 grand total), and then threatened legal action when I refused to pay

Pretty fucked up, but a very different situation. I hope you challenged this in court.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 05, 2013, 04:23:22 PM
my wife went to an ER for lower stomach pain.... they wanted to test for rec drugs, I kept telling them she wasnt on anything and she wasnt after pills tja t she needed a ct scan or some shit and we werent paying for a drug test.... anyway they took some blood for "tests" and then billed me a grand for blood testing for EACH DRUG (8 grand total), and then threatened legal action when I refused to pay

That is brutal. 

My story's not nearly that bad but it reminds me of when I was poor-ass waiter with no healthcare insurance and had just injured the tips of both forefingers when I was putting the 110-lb DB's back in the rack after a set of shrugs.  The plates on the DB's were a little bit askew from people dropping them so when I put them in place, neither was exactly locked in and, like an idiot, I kept both hands on both DB's while I rotated the right one to get it to fall into place and it, of course, promptly fell off squashing my right finget and, because I spazzed as this was happening, the same thing then happened to the left.  (Not my finest hour.) 

There was a lot of blood and I was worried about bone damage so I went to emergency where, after an x-ray showed no bone damage and I didn't even lose my left fingernail (the right was a goner and hanging by a thread right away), the hospital cleaned me up (I'm a chalk user), and then stitched me up.  After, I was that I'd need to change my bandages frequently so they wanted to give me some supplies.  I knew that was a bad move so I told them "No, Walgreen's is around the corner" but they insisted.  And my dumbass gf agreed with them.  Sure enough, though, those motherfuckers, they'd charged me about $150- for what I could get at Walgreen's for maybe $20.00.  THIS is the real story of what's wrong with healthcare, if you ask me.  And don't get me started about Ambulance charges these days  --  Personally, no matter what my injury, if I'm conscious I'll fight with ambulance guys to avoid one of those way-too-costly rides.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 05, 2013, 04:43:30 PM
http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11 (http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11)

For more details, check this: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml (http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml?cat=500#.Unk4H2u9K0f)

What the fuck? Wow!




Holy Shit Avxo.  That has got to be the most heinous abuse ever posted on here aside from maybe the flat out murder in Oakland.

I cannot believe that didn't make national news. 

Unfuckingreal.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 06, 2013, 07:11:01 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/05/army-veteran-banned-from-daughters-school-after-posting-picture-concealed


ridiculous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on November 06, 2013, 07:53:02 PM
Pretty fucked up, but a very different situation. I hope you challenged this in court.
I know it's totally different.. just the terrible way the hospital dealt with it jogged my memory.

I didn't wind up paying it. I threatened legal action and they "made it go away".

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 07, 2013, 12:05:55 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/05/army-veteran-banned-from-daughters-school-after-posting-picture-concealed


ridiculous

Pretty fucked up. If this were any other day, I would actually be incensed. But I'm still in disbelief over the cavity search bullshit in New Mexico and wondering WHY THE FUCK this isn't national news?!?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 07, 2013, 11:38:39 AM
http://www.myfoxny.com/Story/23906473/police-stun-stepdad-trying-to-save-son-from-fire


 :-\
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 08, 2013, 07:23:49 PM
http://www.myfoxny.com/Story/23906473/police-stun-stepdad-trying-to-save-son-from-fire


 :-\

Unlike most of the other posts on this thread, I don't think this one belongs here. 

Heard about this over on Reddit BCND and what the story supposedly doesn't mention is that firemen reached the scene at the same time as the cops and the firemen, even with all their gear, would not enter the house because it was too hot at that point.  The cops saved the stepdad from certain death.  The guy's wife was there, too, and it was pointed out that, had the cops not acted, her tragedy would have been made all the worse by losing her husband as well as her young son. 

Maybe the cops didn't need to tase him to stop him from entering the burning house but they apparently did need to stop him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 08, 2013, 07:27:38 PM
Unlike most of the other posts on this thread, I don't think this one belongs here. 

Heard about this over on Reddit BCND and what the story supposedly doesn't mention is that firemen reached the scene at the same time as the cops and the firemen, even with all their gear, would not enter the house because it was too hot at that point.  The cops saved the stepdad from certain death.  The guy's wife was there, too, and it was pointed out that, had the cops not acted, her tragedy would have been made all the worse by losing her husband as well as her young son. 

Maybe the cops didn't need to tase him to stop him from entering the burning house but they apparently did need to stop him.

Yeah... I struggle with this one too. I get the Dad's position (and I'm thinking "what if, somehow he managed to save the kid?" because adrenaline is a hell of a drug), but I get the cop's position too. Maybe the taze seems cruel and even unnecessary. But I don't think this case fits the mold of the cases we've been posting here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on November 09, 2013, 07:05:19 AM
Unlike most of the other posts on this thread, I don't think this one belongs here. 

Heard about this over on Reddit BCND and what the story supposedly doesn't mention is that firemen reached the scene at the same time as the cops and the firemen, even with all their gear, would not enter the house because it was too hot at that point.  The cops saved the stepdad from certain death.  The guy's wife was there, too, and it was pointed out that, had the cops not acted, her tragedy would have been made all the worse by losing her husband as well as her young son. 

Maybe the cops didn't need to tase him to stop him from entering the burning house but they apparently did need to stop him.



Not on par with the egregious abuses, but I'm still not big on this one.

The government is effectively removing the dad's choice even though the dad did absolutely nothing wrong or criminal.  If he wants to voluntarily try, even though we can all agree it probably would have killed him, I think the government should allow him that choice - not make it for him.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 09, 2013, 10:14:43 AM
4 butthole-surfing cops charged in Milwaukee

http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/criminal-charges-against-police-in-strip-search-case-expected-today-gf5cb94-173312411.html (http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/criminal-charges-against-police-in-strip-search-case-expected-today-gf5cb94-173312411.html)

Four Milwaukee police officers were charged Tuesday with felonies related to illegal rectal searches of suspects on the street and in police district stations over the past two years.

In one case, an officer held a gun to a man's head as two others held his arms and a third put him in a choke hold while jamming a hand into his anus, purportedly searching for evidence, according to the criminal complaint. Another man bled from his rectum for several days after his encounter with police, the complaint says.

The complaint lays out in graphic detail how the primary suspect, Officer Michael Vagnini, conducted searches of men's anal and scrotal areas, often inserting his fingers into their rectums. Vagnini acknowledged performing one of the searches. At least one suspect said Vagnini planted drugs on him.

State law and police procedures prohibit officers from conducting cavity searches. Only medical personnel are allowed to perform them, and police must first obtain a search warrant.


Read more at link
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 10, 2013, 09:36:11 AM
http://www.examiner.com/article/police-abuse-cops-repeatedly-probe-suspect-s-anus-for-drugs


Apparently this is nothing new.  >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 10, 2013, 10:04:19 AM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/citizens-29-times-killed-police-terrorists


Not surprising
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 10, 2013, 11:04:33 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-godsey/for-the-first-time-ever-a_b_4221000.html\\ ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on November 11, 2013, 09:24:56 PM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on November 19, 2013, 08:23:55 AM
Permabulking Getbigger arrested for trying to pick up his kids at school.  (No, really, that's the whole story.)

http://www.wate.com/story/24005228/cumberland-county-parent-releases-video-of-his-arrest-by-a-school-resource-officer (http://www.wate.com/story/24005228/cumberland-county-parent-releases-video-of-his-arrest-by-a-school-resource-officer)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 19, 2013, 06:11:43 PM
Permabulking Getbigger arrested for trying to pick up his kids at school.  (No, really, that's the whole story.)

http://www.wate.com/story/24005228/cumberland-county-parent-releases-video-of-his-arrest-by-a-school-resource-officer (http://www.wate.com/story/24005228/cumberland-county-parent-releases-video-of-his-arrest-by-a-school-resource-officer)


Fucking insane! I like how the Police chief (who, otherwise, seems like a reasonable guy) says that he hasn't watched and won't watch the video as "it won't tell the whole story." Uhm... it's a video recording that can offer you an objective look of an incident. And you won't look?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 19, 2013, 08:18:13 PM
Fucking insane...

http://uptownalmanac.com/2013/11/sfpd-assaults-black-cyclist-discover-he-was-only-packing-cupcake-and-juice
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on November 19, 2013, 08:58:35 PM
^From the above story...

"As he was questioned by plainclothes officers from the Violence Reduction Team, the officer in the black baseball hat grabbed DJ and shoved his head into his front door."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 19, 2013, 10:00:04 PM
^From the above story...

"As he was questioned by plainclothes officers from the Violence Reduction Team, the officer in the black baseball hat grabbed DJ and shoved his head into his front door."

How can you reduce violence if you don't use violence? Oh the irony!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2013, 07:11:19 PM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2013/gang-atlantic-city-officers-brutally-beat-man-release-an-attack-dog-to-gnaw-on-his-neck

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 20, 2013, 08:28:12 PM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2013/gang-atlantic-city-officers-brutally-beat-man-release-an-attack-dog-to-gnaw-on-his-neck

 >:(

This was posted here a while ago. Still infuriating to read about.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 25, 2013, 06:55:51 PM
Check out http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/25/san-antonio-cop-charged-with-handcuffing (http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/25/san-antonio-cop-charged-with-handcuffing). Just in time for Thanksgiving!

The executive summary is that Jackie Len Neal, of the San Antonio Police Department, was arrested for allegedly raping a 19-year-old woman he pulled over at 2 in the morning. This is not the first accusation of rape against Jackie Len Neal. He was released on a $20,000 bond and will continue to be paid until he is indicted.

Wonderful. Just wonderful.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 19, 2013, 03:10:28 PM
Wow! From http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/drug-warriors-kidnap-and-sexually-assaul

After being given laxatives, having her vagina and anus search, being x-rayed and undergoing a CT scan, all at the direction of Custom and Border Patrol Agents [...], "a CBP agent presented Ms. Doe with a choice: she could either sign a medical consent form, despite the fact that she had not consented, in which case CBP would pay for the cost of the searches; or if she refused to sign the consent form, she would be billed for the cost of the searches"

I guess the term "searches" should be interpreted loosely.

What the fuck is wrong with this country?!?!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 19, 2013, 08:45:11 PM
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/drunk-driving-at-motor-vehicle-test-687543



Lmfao!!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: temple_of_dis on December 20, 2013, 09:15:45 AM
Wow! From http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/drug-warriors-kidnap-and-sexually-assaul

After being given laxatives, having her vagina and anus search, being x-rayed and undergoing a CT scan, all at the direction of Custom and Border Patrol Agents [...], "a CBP agent presented Ms. Doe with a choice: she could either sign a medical consent form, despite the fact that she had not consented, in which case CBP would pay for the cost of the searches; or if she refused to sign the consent form, she would be billed for the cost of the searches"

I guess the term "searches" should be interpreted loosely.

What the fuck is wrong with this country?!?!

too many outa contrl government burocratz like cops

no penalty for stealing tax money

nazi fascist overload obama

not enuf passing in nba
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 22, 2013, 11:27:57 AM
Wow! From http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/drug-warriors-kidnap-and-sexually-assaul

After being given laxatives, having her vagina and anus search, being x-rayed and undergoing a CT scan, all at the direction of Custom and Border Patrol Agents [...], "a CBP agent presented Ms. Doe with a choice: she could either sign a medical consent form, despite the fact that she had not consented, in which case CBP would pay for the cost of the searches; or if she refused to sign the consent form, she would be billed for the cost of the searches"

I guess the term "searches" should be interpreted loosely.

What the fuck is wrong with this country?!?!


Disgusting and outta fucking control.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2013, 01:00:37 PM
Arpaio seems to have many fans here but this seems like outrageous abuse of power and censorship. A shame that all this will come from taxpayers' money instead of his own pocket.

http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/valleyfever/2013/12/joe_arpaio_loses_new_times_co-.php
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 22, 2013, 06:35:30 PM
Arpaio seems to have many fans here but this seems like outrageous abuse of power and censorship. A shame that all this will come from taxpayers' money instead of his own pocket.

http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/valleyfever/2013/12/joe_arpaio_loses_new_times_co-.php


I read the reporters account and it's just amazing that the Feds didn't step in and put Arpaio in jail.  We're fucked..no protection from the locals, no protection from the feds.  In this case, the judicial seems to have caught on, but all too often they are just as complicit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2013, 03:27:38 PM

I read the reporters account and it's just amazing that the Feds didn't step in and put Arpaio in jail.  We're fucked..no protection from the locals, no protection from the feds.  In this case, the judicial seems to have caught on, but all too often they are just as complicit.

Arpaio seems to consider the lawsuits against him a metric of his "success". And why wouldn't he since all that money will not come out of his pocket. This incident alone, which I think is outrageous abuse of power and censorship, should be enough to put him in jail, why he is not there is beyond me.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2013, 03:30:09 PM


http://oppositelock.jalopnik.com/it-is-illegal-to-wash-your-car-in-your-driveway-in-new-1485274492/@orlove

It Is Illegal to Wash Your Car In Your Driveway In New York

Picture this: you are washing a car that you just bought on your own driveway, in front of your own home, on a nice Saturday morning. Then the cops write you a ticket for it.

Impossible? Not in beautiful Garden City, New York, where the police apparently consider anywhere that can be seen by the public as a "public place". No big deal, right? Wrong. Apparently, there is a city ordinance stating that no one can clean furniture (beating out a dirty rug, hosing off your crusty couch) OR VEHICLES in a public place. And yes, they will give you a citation for it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 23, 2013, 03:35:54 PM

http://oppositelock.jalopnik.com/it-is-illegal-to-wash-your-car-in-your-driveway-in-new-1485274492/@orlove

It Is Illegal to Wash Your Car In Your Driveway In New York

Picture this: you are washing a car that you just bought on your own driveway, in front of your own home, on a nice Saturday morning. Then the cops write you a ticket for it.

Impossible? Not in beautiful Garden City, New York, where the police apparently consider anywhere that can be seen by the public as a "public place". No big deal, right? Wrong. Apparently, there is a city ordinance stating that no one can clean furniture (beating out a dirty rug, hosing off your crusty couch) OR VEHICLES in a public place. And yes, they will give you a citation for it.


He should have asked for a citation, and if the Cop didn't give him one, he should have started to wash the car, gotten the citation and then challenged it in Court. The facts are simple: the curtilage of a home - which the driveway seems to be a part of in this case - is not defined as a public place.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on December 31, 2013, 12:27:36 PM
Some of you may already know about Michael Vagnini, the piece-of-shit Milwaukee cop that performed illegal cavity searches, usually without gloves and at least once at gunpoint. He left at least one of his victims bleeding. He was allowed to continue violating the public and raping citizens with impunity, even though his superiors - all the way to Milwaukee Police Chief Ed Flynn - knew what he was doing. Chief Flynn said that he had to wait “a couple of years” for a proper investigation to take place.

Well, the proper investigation took place, and Vagnini was charged with 25 counts of assault and sexual assault against at least a dozen victims. He was finally been sentenced... to two years and two months. How is that possible? He negotiated a deal, where he pled guilty on four felony and four misdemeanor charges. He will not have to be registered as a sex offended, as the sexual assault charges were dropped.

Wonderful way to close 2013... 2014 is almost upon us. Be sure to:

(http://i3.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/077/076/a1.jpg)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on January 01, 2014, 05:46:58 AM
No drugs necessary: Driver arrested for having empty compartment

Civil libertarians are criticizing Ohio police for arresting a driver because his car contained a compartment that could theoretically store illegal drugs, though no drugs were found at that time.

The driver, 30-year-old Norman Gurley of Michigan, was pulled over for speeding. A highway patrolman noticed wires running to a secret compartment in the car and arrested Gurley, even though there were no drugs in the compartment. The officer also claimed he smelled marijuana in the compartment — giving him probable cause to search it — though none was ultimately discovered.

It makes no difference whether police find drugs or not, according to a new Ohio law that prohibits secret compartments.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2013/12/30/driver-arrested-for-having-empty-compartment-that-could-store-drugs/#ixzz2p9dV9PQF

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 02, 2014, 06:19:54 PM
No drugs necessary: Driver arrested for having empty compartment

Civil libertarians are criticizing Ohio police for arresting a driver because his car contained a compartment that could theoretically store illegal drugs, though no drugs were found at that time.

The driver, 30-year-old Norman Gurley of Michigan, was pulled over for speeding. A highway patrolman noticed wires running to a secret compartment in the car and arrested Gurley, even though there were no drugs in the compartment. The officer also claimed he smelled marijuana in the compartment — giving him probable cause to search it — though none was ultimately discovered.

It makes no difference whether police find drugs or not, according to a new Ohio law that prohibits secret compartments.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2013/12/30/driver-arrested-for-having-empty-compartment-that-could-store-drugs/#ixzz2p9dV9PQF





Absurd.  And, of course, the cop will never be held accountable for a bullshit 'smell'.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 03, 2014, 07:00:18 PM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/01/03/88-year-old-wwii-vet-who-cant-afford-manditory-repairs-to-his-business-gets-penalty-that-may-make-your-blood-boil



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 07, 2014, 11:37:26 AM
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303933104579306270271026090


Sickening beyond words knowing my taxes in this state pay for this shit. 

Federal and local investigators plan to arrest 106 people Tuesday as part of one of the largest Social Security disability fraud busts in U.S. history, a person familiar with the arrests said, alleging that a number of former New York fire department and police officials improperly obtained benefits by cheating the application process.

Several dozen arrests had been made early Tuesday and more were expected before a 1 p.m. press conference in New York. The arrests are being carried out in about 10 states.



 
More
Disability Fraud Bust Comes as Social Security Agency Is in Flux

In addition to 102 Social Security disability beneficiaries, authorities are expected to arrest four people who helped them navigate the disability application process and coach them on how to get benefits, the person said. This includes one lawyer, one disability consultant, and two "recruiters," the person said.

Federal and local prosecutors are expected to allege that scheme led to $24 million in fraudulent disability payments, the person said. A second person familiar with the arrests said the defendants claimed they were "unable to work at any job or leave their homes but had very active lives."

The arrests come less than six months after federal and local authorities arrested more than 70 people in Puerto Rico on disability fraud charges. A former Social Security employee allegedly helped former employees at a pharmaceutical plant there obtain benefits.

The Social Security Administration is under pressure from Congress to explain what it is doing to tighten up the disability application process following a number of recent scandals. The Social Security Disability Insurance program has close to 11 million beneficiaries, and workers must prove they have physical or mental health problems that prevent them from working. The program has grown so quickly that it could have to begin cutting benefits for all recipients in 2016 unless Congress intervenes.

—Pervaiz Shallwani contributed to this article.

Write to  Damian Paletta at damian.paletta@wsj.com
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2014, 05:54:18 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/07/police-brutality-new-jersey-report_n_4555166.html?utm_hp_ref=politics


99% of complaints go uninvestigated
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 08, 2014, 09:44:18 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/07/police-brutality-new-jersey-report_n_4555166.html?utm_hp_ref=politics


99% of complaints go uninvestigated

Correct me if I am wrong.... I read the article and it appears to be inaccurate.

"A whopping 99 percent of all complaints regarding police brutality are left uninvestigated in central New Jersey, according to a Courier News and Home News Tribune report published this week.

Between 2008 and 2012, citizens "filed hundreds of complaints alleging brutality, bias and civil rights violations by officers in more than seven dozen police departments in Central Jersey," the report reads. However, it adds that only 1 percent of these complaints -- seven percentage points below the national average of 8 percent -- were "upheld by the internal units tasked with investigating complaints against their colleagues."

In the majority of cases, the police agencies reportedly "either 'exonerated' the officers, dismissed the complaints as frivolous, determined that they did not have sufficient evidence or simply never closed the investigation
"

Reading the article from a person with insight into the process, the article wants to say 99% are never investigated, but what it actually says is out of the complaints investigated, 1% are confirmed, or what would be called "Founded" it doesnt mean they were not investigated. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2014, 09:47:12 AM
Foxes guarding the hen house maybe? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on January 08, 2014, 11:10:30 AM
Correct me if I am wrong.... I read the article and it appears to be inaccurate.

"A whopping 99 percent of all complaints regarding police brutality are left uninvestigated in central New Jersey, according to a Courier News and Home News Tribune report published this week.

Between 2008 and 2012, citizens "filed hundreds of complaints alleging brutality, bias and civil rights violations by officers in more than seven dozen police departments in Central Jersey," the report reads. However, it adds that only 1 percent of these complaints -- seven percentage points below the national average of 8 percent -- were "upheld by the internal units tasked with investigating complaints against their colleagues."

In the majority of cases, the police agencies reportedly "either 'exonerated' the officers, dismissed the complaints as frivolous, determined that they did not have sufficient evidence or simply never closed the investigation
"

Reading the article from a person with insight into the process, the article wants to say 99% are never investigated, but what it actually says is out of the complaints investigated, 1% are confirmed, or what would be called "Founded" it doesnt mean they were not investigated. 

The next time i visit Jersey remind me to drive like an old lady. I dont want to give these people any excuse.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 08, 2014, 11:33:20 AM
Foxes guarding the hen house maybe? 

Maybe, or many complaints are bogus or unfounded when the evidence is reviewed. Could be a combination
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on January 08, 2014, 11:41:56 AM
Maybe, or many complaints are bogus or unfounded when the evidence is reviewed. Could be a combination


How can they come to this conclusion if they are left uninvestigated ?

And how do you gather evidence if you dont investigate?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 08, 2014, 11:56:53 AM

How can they come to this conclusion if they are left uninvestigated ?

And how do you gather evidence if you dont investigate?

You couldn't. I think the article is either slanted or poorly written. Here is how it typically works

A complaint comes in. Each complaint is initially reviewed by an investigator. In our dept they are also reviewed by a Civilian Police Monitor and our investigators are the rank of Sergeant. Those that are obviously bogus, for example, Officer J. Smith shot me in the leg and you find 1. The complainant has no injury and Officer Smith was on vacation in Hawaii, you don't continue with the investigation, but that isn't to say it wasn't reviewed.

If there is a possibility the complaint is true, then it is cataloged and placed in the system. If it is of a nature where the officer, if found to have committed the allegation would be fired, then it is investigated as a Class A, and done by Internal Affairs in conjuction with the police monitor designee. If it is of a lesser nature, then the supervisor of the officer is assigned and works along with an I.A. Laison Sergeant. The results are reviewed up the chain of command to the Asst Chief

The results can be ..No, the alleged action did not take place which is unfounded. Or the alleged conduct did take place but was within policy and state lawwhich is exhonerated or there is not enough evidence either way to either determine it did or didnt happen which is inconclusive. Or it did happen and it would be sustained.   

All complaints are reveiwed at this department and taken seriously. To say 99% of all abuse complaints are not investigated is just poor journalism to say the least.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 08, 2014, 11:58:21 AM
Maybe New Jersey is really messed up.... but I doubt that is the norm, and I doubt the articles content based on how it was written.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on January 08, 2014, 12:09:01 PM
You couldn't. I think the article is either slanted or poorly written. Here is how it typically works

A complaint comes in. Each complaint is initially reviewed by an investigator. In our dept they are also reviewed by a Civilian Police Monitor and our investigators are the rank of Sergeant. Those that are obviously bogus, for example, Officer J. Smith shot me in the leg and you find 1. The complainant has no injury and Officer Smith was on vacation in Hawaii, you don't continue with the investigation, but that isn't to say it wasn't reviewed.

If there is a possibility the complaint is true, then it is cataloged and placed in the system. If it is of a nature where the officer, if found to have committed the allegation would be fired, then it is investigated as a Class A, and done by Internal Affairs in conjuction with the police monitor designee. If it is of a lesser nature, then the supervisor of the officer is assigned and works along with an I.A. Laison Sergeant. The results are reviewed up the chain of command to the Asst Chief

The results can be ..No, the alleged action did not take place which is unfounded. Or the alleged conduct did take place but was within policy and state lawwhich is exhonerated or there is not enough evidence either way to either determine it did or didnt happen which is inconclusive. Or it did happen and it would be sustained.   

All complaints are reveiwed at this department and taken seriously. To say 99% of all abuse complaints are not investigated is just poor journalism to say the least.


Thanks.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2014, 12:14:06 PM
To say 99% of complaints don't merit outside investigation sounds ludicrous no? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 08, 2014, 01:26:30 PM
To say 99% of complaints don't merit outside investigation sounds ludicrous no? 

Yes.. it is ludicrous and really not even what the article said. Well, it said to conflicting things. the first paragraph says 99 percent go uninvestigated. The next one says of all the cases investigated, only 1% are upheld (Founded) so the writer has his head up his ass. At this point I would  have to shitcan the article and start from scratch to find out the real story. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 08, 2014, 03:19:17 PM
Yes.. it is ludicrous and really not even what the article said. Well, it said to conflicting things. the first paragraph says 99 percent go uninvestigated. The next one says of all the cases investigated, only 1% are upheld (Founded) so the writer has his head up his ass. At this point I would  have to shitcan the article and start from scratch to find out the real story. 

I haven't read the article, but based on your description it sounds as if the author claims that:

Out of 100 complaints, 99% are not investigated. Of the 1% that are investigated, only 1% are actually upheld. As sad as those numbers may sound, I don't doubt that they could be accurate.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 09, 2014, 08:08:15 AM
I haven't read the article, but based on your description it sounds as if the author claims that:

Out of 100 complaints, 99% are not investigated. Of the 1% that are investigated, only 1% are actually upheld. As sad as those numbers may sound, I don't doubt that they could be accurate.

Well, that's what the author wants the average reader to think.. but what the article really says is that all are reviewed/screened, most are investigated, and of those that are investigated 1% are actually upheld.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 09, 2014, 08:09:54 AM
http://nypost.com/2014/01/09/siblings-and-spouses-allegedly-part-of-nypd-fdny-disability-scam


No wonder we pay the highest frigging taxes in the country
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 09, 2014, 05:22:35 PM
To say 99% of complaints don't merit outside investigation sounds ludicrous no? 


I was reading through the full report, but this was mentioned.

"Police enjoy a level of workplace confidentiality not granted to private-sector professionals in the state, where complaints and disciplinary rulings against attorneys, plumbers, accountants and hairstylists, all identified by name, are posted on state websites"


No real surprise with cops expecting special treatment.


At least one political official is starting to wake up.

"“It’s long since past the day where you can say with a straight face that it’s OK to have officers investigate their own. It just isn’t a good system,” Barnes said."




Notice how we haven't hear shit about the cops who tried to murder those 2 ladies in CA thinking they were a large black man?  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 09, 2014, 07:35:59 PM
Cops detain a drunk driver. They leave him, handcuffed, at a Taco Bell as a joke cause the man was Mexican. He is run over by cars and killed after, in a drunken stupor, he runs into traffic.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/01/09/64369.htm

The three cops involved are fired and convicted. With support from their Union, at least one has been hired back with back pay, after arguing that the officer fired was fired for action he did not take at a crash scene when there was no crash scene.

Fucking ridiculous... those are cops - and cop unions - for you.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on January 10, 2014, 05:16:24 PM

I was reading through the full report, but this was mentioned.

"Police enjoy a level of workplace confidentiality not granted to private-sector professionals in the state, where complaints and disciplinary rulings against attorneys, plumbers, accountants and hairstylists, all identified by name, are posted on state websites"


No real surprise with cops expecting special treatment.


At least one political official is starting to wake up.

"“It’s long since past the day where you can say with a straight face that it’s OK to have officers investigate their own. It just isn’t a good system,” Barnes said."




Notice how we haven't hear shit about the cops who tried to murder those 2 ladies in CA thinking they were a large black man?  ::)



Yeah what happened with that one?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 13, 2014, 02:26:39 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2538479/Prison-guard-impregnated-cop-killer-attempt-save-Death-Row-faces-year-prison.html



unbelievable. 

THUGS!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 13, 2014, 02:47:35 PM


Yeah what happened with that one?


And the press has completely let it go...imagine.  I'm shocked.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 15, 2014, 04:21:22 AM
http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/14/victim-of-dog-authorized-anal-assault-re



 >:(  >:(  >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 17, 2014, 05:31:58 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/01/17/over-criminalized-scientist-settles-7-year-legal-nightmare-with-feds-over


Insane 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on January 17, 2014, 08:42:05 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/01/17/over-criminalized-scientist-settles-7-year-legal-nightmare-with-feds-over


Insane 

Penalties seemed a little harsh but otherwise I think I agree with the gubmint on this one.  (Not that y'all know what "this one" is since Soul Crusher, that lazy beeyotch, is back to posting links with no description whatsoever.)

Lady scientist got in trouble for feeding killer whales without authorization which doesn't seem so bad...until you realize that it's pretty much like feeding bears around a campground. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 17, 2014, 08:44:16 AM
Penalties seemed a little harsh but otherwise I think I agree with the gubmint on this one.  (Not that y'all know what "this one" is since Soul Crusher, that lazy beeyotch, is back to posting links with no description whatsoever.)

Lady scientist got in trouble for feeding killer whales without authorization which doesn't seem so bad...until you realize that it's pretty much like feeding bears around a campground. 

The whales were feeding off a dead carcass and she was studying it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2014, 06:02:46 AM
http://nypost.com/2014/01/19/cops-beat-elderly-man-after-he-jaywalked



NYC Finest
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 20, 2014, 02:31:03 PM
http://nypost.com/2014/01/19/cops-beat-elderly-man-after-he-jaywalked



NYC Finest

Insane. The runaround his son allegedly got - from the police and the hospital - is also quite fucked up. I predict a large settlement but, sadly, not much in the way of sanctions for the police department or the cops involved.

On a more personal note, I never thought that I would say this but may "an eye for an eye" should be codified.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2014, 04:48:35 PM
An Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper with a history of domestic violence won't face charges related to alleged sexual encounters involving a boy, Sandusky County Sheriff's Deputy Sean O'Connell said.

http://www.sanduskyregister.com/article/5202236

Disturbing pun with the county name (Sandusky)... And this guy with all this record of domestic violence and abuse is still a cop (and doesn't face charges)...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on January 23, 2014, 02:24:53 AM
An Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper with a history of domestic violence won't face charges related to alleged sexual encounters involving a boy, Sandusky County Sheriff's Deputy Sean O'Connell said.

http://www.sanduskyregister.com/article/5202236

Disturbing pun with the county name (Sandusky)... And this guy with all this record of domestic violence and abuse is still a cop (and doesn't face charges)...

Pure insanity... The DA who refused to bring this in front a grand jury ought to face charges, but is almost certainly covered under the almost absolute prosecutorial immunity his position bestows on him. Bleh...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 23, 2014, 11:43:34 AM
http://www.lohud.com/article/20140123/NEWS02/301230058/Mount-Pleasant-police-chief-arrested-by-feds-child-porn-charges?odyssey=mod|breaking|text|Frontpage



Wow - this is only a few minutes from me
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2014, 06:22:29 AM
http://clashdaily.com/2014/02/caught-video-controversy-video-az-man-killed-cops-hands/#25hyU3szswiOdqxo.01



Yikes. 


I hope the family sues and gets millions of dollars. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 10, 2014, 05:28:43 PM
http://clashdaily.com/2014/02/caught-video-controversy-video-az-man-killed-cops-hands/#25hyU3szswiOdqxo.01



Yikes. 


I hope the family sues and gets millions of dollars. 


What a white wash.  The cop was cleared and back on the streets in a week.  Oh brother.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 11, 2014, 11:32:52 AM
http://foxnewsinsider.com/2014/02/11/dc-man-set-hearing-after-cops-raid-turned-one-shotgun-shell



unreal 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 11, 2014, 03:37:50 PM
Florida trooper who pulled over 120mph police officer sues for $500,000 after 'his colleagues harassed her' when he lost his job

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2556660/Trooper-pulled-120mph-police-officer-sues-500-000-colleagues-harassed-lost-job.html

"According to her lawyer, she suspected her private driver's license information was being accessed by fellow officers, so she made a public records request with the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

It allegedly showed at least 88 law enforcement officers from 25 different agencies accessed Watts' driver's license information more than 200 times - in just three months.



Thugs in uniform going after the honest cop who did her job. If this is done to her, what chance does an ordinary citizen have?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2014, 01:05:29 PM
http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/05/cops-if-we-have-to-get-a-warrantwere-gon



Sick 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 16, 2014, 01:28:48 PM
NYPD cop dubbed 'PistolPete' claims dubious record for 'most sued officer' in the city as it is revealed more than $1 billion in taxpayers money paid out in lawsuits over a decade

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2560730/NYPD-cop-dubbed-PistolPete-claims-dubious-record-sued-officer-city-revealed-1-billion-taxpayers-money-paid-lawsuits-decade.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 16, 2014, 04:30:52 PM
NYPD cop dubbed 'PistolPete' claims dubious record for 'most sued officer' in the city as it is revealed more than $1 billion in taxpayers money paid out in lawsuits over a decade

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2560730/NYPD-cop-dubbed-PistolPete-claims-dubious-record-sued-officer-city-revealed-1-billion-taxpayers-money-paid-lawsuits-decade.html




Protect and Serve
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 16, 2014, 05:33:13 PM
Southern California Police Beat and Taser an Innocent Deaf Man

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/02/14/65377.htm
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 16, 2014, 06:11:21 PM
Southern California Police Beat and Taser an Innocent Deaf Man

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/02/14/65377.htm

And collect commendations and OT in the process
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 17, 2014, 06:04:06 AM

A western wrinkle on eminent domain







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Posted: Feb 17, 2014 1:19 AM EST


Updated: Feb 17, 2014 1:21 AM EST
 

 




 
(AP Photo/Nicholas Riccardi). In this Jan. 24, 2014 photo, Andy and Ceil Barrie stand for a photo next to their mining cabin near Breckenridge, Colo.
(AP Photo/Nicholas Riccardi). In this Jan. 24, 2014 photo, Andy and Ceil Barrie stand for a photo next to their mining cabin near Breckenridge, Colo.




 
(AP Photo/Nicholas Riccardi). In this Jan. 24, 2014 photo, Andy and Ceil Barrie walk to their mining cabin near Breckenridge, Colo.
(AP Photo/Nicholas Riccardi). In this Jan. 24, 2014 photo, Andy and Ceil Barrie walk to their mining cabin near Breckenridge, Colo.
 By NICHOLAS RICCARDI
Associated Press
BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. (AP) - The view from the deck of the small, century-old cabin was a dream come true for Andy and Ceil Barrie -- a sweeping panorama of 13,000 and 14,000-foot peaks towering above the forest of centuries-old bristlecone pines.

It convinced the couple to buy a 3-bedroom home in a subdivision below, where they could live year-round, and the 10-acre parcel surrounding the cabin in the midst the White River National Forest.

Now the county government, alarmed that the couple drives their ATV up a 1.2-mile old mining road to the cabin, wants to take the Barrie's land - and it's doing so by claiming eminent domain. Rather than using the practice of government seizure of private property to promote economic development, the county is using it to preserve open space.

The move shocked the Barries. They have allowed hikers to travel through their property, had no plans to develop the land and were negotiating with the county at the time it moved to condemn the property.

Open space "is all it's ever been," said Andy Barrie. "I feel like I can't trust my government."

Summit County Attorney Jeff Huntley said the county had to act after the Barries insisted on being able to use motorized transport to get to the cabin. "People in this community are very intent on preserving the back country," he said.

Experts in eminent domain say it's rare for governments to use that power to create parks or open space.

"It's not that you can't do it, but they don't do it much," said Dana Berliner, who was co-counsel in the 2005 U.S. Supreme Court case upholding the constitutionality of eminent domain. "There's typically other ways of doing open space than just taking land."

But in Colorado, where picturesque mountain towns are bursting with tourists and second-home-owners, and outdoor recreation is the state religion, there have been a few instances of cities deciding to confiscate land to preserve it.

The most significant was when Telluride in 2004 seized 572 acres that the owner wanted to develop along the San Miguel River and left it as open space. The state Supreme Court upheld the confiscation, saying that especially overcrowded mountain towns need to preserve their recreational and natural assets.

Breckenridge is the prototypical Colorado ski town that attracts hordes of ski bums, tourists and residents because of its position at the foot of the sweeping Tenmile range, swaddled in preserved land.

Among those it lured are the Barries, who run a firm that provides Christmas wreaths to nonprofits and have a residence in the Chicago suburbs.

The couple came to Colorado annually on golf trips with some of Andy's old high school pals.

On a 2011 journey, Ceil met friends in Breckenridge and found a restored cabin nestled in a woodsy subdivision just outside the town boundaries. It was a century-old property built on top of a creek that one could watch burble below through a transparent floor in the master bedroom. And it was for sale along with 10 acres just up the ridgeline.

The Barries stayed there that summer and hiked up the county open space trail on the old mining road behind the lower house, through the national forest, to the old cabin at tree line.

The view won them over. They decided to sell their second home on a Wisconsin lake and buy the lower and upper property in a package deal for $550,000. The transaction closed in late 2011 and came with a converted All-Terrain vehicle they could use to drive up the road in the winter.

That's when the trouble began.

The U S. Forest Service told the Barries they couldn't use a motorized vehicle on the road to access their 10 acres, which float like an island in the 2.1 million acres of the White River National Forest.

The Barries countered that they had a legal right to traverse the old road and prepared a court challenge. Summit County contacted the Barries and asked to buy the land. The Barries said it wasn't for sale.

The county commissioners voted to condemn the property on Oct. 25, endorsing a staff report that found that "public motorized access" to the property could damage the alpine tundra and streams, as well as habitat for the endangered lynx.

The county also discovered that the prior owner had illegally expanded the upper mining cabin by building its second story and deck. The Barries say they are pursuing legal action against the seller.

On a recent day, the Barries drove up the winding mining road to the cabin. Inside the compact, unheated structure was a set of bunk beds and a coffee table garnished with a copy of Cabin Life magazine, as well as a single light powered by a solar panel outside.

The Barries said they were frustrated. They would have happily demolished the cabin if needed -- they say they'd be happy to spend warm evenings up there in a yurt or tent -- and had been trying to give some of the land to conservation groups.

They spoke about how their children are now all in college and they hoped to relocate to Colorado as empty nesters.

"We just want the land," Ceil Barrie said forlornly.

___

Follow Nicholas Riccardi on Twitter at https://twitter.com/NickRiccardi .

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Read more: http://www.myfoxny.com/story/24740672/a-western-wrinkle-on-eminent-domain#ixzz2taWBwLzf
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Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: dario73 on February 17, 2014, 06:41:48 AM
So much for the American dream.

With this government, you never really own your home or land.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 17, 2014, 01:51:48 PM
http://thelibertarianrepublic.com/cops-beat-unarmed-man-death-front-family-take-camera-recorded-video/#axzz2tWwGkINy



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 17, 2014, 02:03:00 PM
http://thelibertarianrepublic.com/cops-beat-unarmed-man-death-front-family-take-camera-recorded-video/#axzz2tWwGkINy



 >:(

Scum... As always the cops are on paid leave...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on February 17, 2014, 02:14:36 PM
I,d have to hear both sides of the story,sounds fishy to me
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 17, 2014, 05:57:01 PM
I,d have to hear both sides of the story,sounds fishy to me


He's a minority, so you libtards pretty much approve of the cops beating him to death while he's unarmed.

You'll lap up the standard excuses (he curled up instead of straightening when they bludgeoned him ::) , or his arms were stiff, insert stupid excuse here) for beating an unarmed dude to death and they'll be found guilty of violating "policy" and you and the murderers will all be happy little pups.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 17, 2014, 06:09:09 PM

He's a minority, so you libtards pretty much approve of the cops beating him to death while he's unarmed.

You'll lap up the standard excuses (he curled up instead of straightening when they bludgeoned him ::) , or his arms were stiff, insert stupid excuse here) for beating an unarmed dude to death and they'll be found guilty of violating "policy" and you and the murderers will all be happy little pups.


Liberals typicall love the police state since they view it as the means to enforce their world view on all sorts of garbage against the rest of us
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on February 17, 2014, 06:20:41 PM
All i've seen so far is the daughter's story.the same girl that fist fights with her mother then when yhe police show up the mother runs off.call me crazy but the family sounds fucked up,like to hear from someone else.don't know why you would bring up politics in this
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on February 17, 2014, 07:21:26 PM

Liberals typicall love the police state since they view it as the means to enforce their world view on all sorts of garbage against the rest of us

SC, this is so far off-base.  How can you possibly think this? 

I'm not sure if hate for the police state is much of a left/right thing but if I had to rank the basic political types in order of hatred for the police state, I think it'd go: 
1) Libertarians, 2) Liberals, 3) Conservatives. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 18, 2014, 08:12:39 AM
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2014/02/17/police-beat-stun-deaf-man-after-confusing-sign-language-with-threatening-gestures



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 19, 2014, 01:39:23 PM
Euharlee (GA) Female Cop Summarily Executes Christopher Roupe; “Armed” With Nintendo Controller

http://opnateye.com/?p=1001



Attorney: Teen was shot for having Wii controller in hand

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/attorney-teen-was-shot-having-wii-controller-hand/ndSrL/

A female police officer told GBI investigators that Roupe pointed a gun at her when he opened the door.

“It just doesn't add up,” said Cole Law who is representing the Roupe family.

Law said Roupe was about to watch a movie.

“We don't know where that statement came from. The eyewitnesses on the scene clearly state that he had a Wii controller in his hand. He heard a knock at the door. He asked who it was, there was no response so he opened the door and upon opening the door he was immediately shot in the chest,” Law said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on February 20, 2014, 09:04:24 AM
Euharlee (GA) Female Cop Summarily Executes Christopher Roupe; “Armed” With Nintendo Controller

http://opnateye.com/?p=1001



Attorney: Teen was shot for having Wii controller in hand

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/attorney-teen-was-shot-having-wii-controller-hand/ndSrL/

A female police officer told GBI investigators that Roupe pointed a gun at her when he opened the door.

“It just doesn't add up,” said Cole Law who is representing the Roupe family.

Law said Roupe was about to watch a movie.

“We don't know where that statement came from. The eyewitnesses on the scene clearly state that he had a Wii controller in his hand. He heard a knock at the door. He asked who it was, there was no response so he opened the door and upon opening the door he was immediately shot in the chest,” Law said.


This shit is outrageous and scary.  (I could see my self holding my controller while answering the door...but not anymore!)

WTF is wrong with this cop?  According to the story I read at the link below, she was making a probation-related visit to the home but, after the victim asked through the door, "Who's there?", the cop did not reply.  And then shot dude who was holding a Wii controller.   (And WTF?  A Wii controller?!?  Aren't those things usually white?  Cuz I don't think I've ever seen a white handgun.)

If the facts of this case are what they seem to be now then the cop needs to be re-assigned to a no-contact-with-the-public job AT BEST.

http://dailycaller.com/2014/02/19/horror-cop-instantly-shoots-kills-teen-who-answered-door-holding-video-game-controller/ (http://dailycaller.com/2014/02/19/horror-cop-instantly-shoots-kills-teen-who-answered-door-holding-video-game-controller/)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 20, 2014, 11:24:24 AM

If the facts of this case are what they seem to be now then the cop needs to be re-assigned to a no-contact-with-the-public job AT BEST.

If the facts as stated above are true, I'd say she needs to get life in prison without parole, at best.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 20, 2014, 11:26:59 AM
If the facts as stated above are true, I'd say she needs to get life in prison without parole, at best.


exactly 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 20, 2014, 02:05:33 PM
New York City Settles Suit With Wrongly Jailed Man for $6.4 Million

A man who was framed by the rogue detective Louis Scarcella and served 23 years in prison for a murder he did not commit will receive $6.4 million from the City of New York in a settlement that came before a civil rights lawsuit was even filed, lawyers involved in the case said on Thursday.

A $150 million claim filed last year by the man, David Ranta, was settled by the city comptroller’s office without ever involving the city’s legal department – which the lawyers involved in the negotiations described as a “groundbreaking” decision that acknowledged the overwhelming evidence the city faced.

READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/21/nyregion/man-framed-by-new-york-detective-to-get-6-4-million-without-filing-suit.html?emc=edit_na_20140220
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 20, 2014, 02:24:53 PM
New York City Settles Suit With Wrongly Jailed Man for $6.4 Million

A man who was framed by the rogue detective Louis Scarcella and served 23 years in prison for a murder he did not commit will receive $6.4 million from the City of New York in a settlement that came before a civil rights lawsuit was even filed, lawyers involved in the case said on Thursday.

A $150 million claim filed last year by the man, David Ranta, was settled by the city comptroller’s office without ever involving the city’s legal department – which the lawyers involved in the negotiations described as a “groundbreaking” decision that acknowledged the overwhelming evidence the city faced.

READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/21/nyregion/man-framed-by-new-york-detective-to-get-6-4-million-without-filing-suit.html?emc=edit_na_20140220


Scarcella should receive the same charges, sentence and consequences as the man he framed, along with any other charges related to framing this man. And it seems like he might have framed many others..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 20, 2014, 02:31:59 PM
Scarcella should receive the same charges, sentence and consequences as the man he framed, along with any other charges related to framing this man. And it seems like he might have framed many others..

This is why I have zero trust in the police department - to me they are no different than the IRS, DHS, DMV, etc.   


F all that garbage about the bravest, finest etc - most are no different than the asshole you deal w at the local parking violations ticket window,. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 20, 2014, 03:19:00 PM

Liberals typicall love the police state since they view it as the means to enforce their world view on all sorts of garbage against the rest of us


Good point, probably a good deal of truth to that.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 23, 2014, 05:12:56 PM
Newark police to be monitored by federal watchdog, sources say

NEWARK — The Justice Department will place the Newark Police Department under a monitor later this year, the first time in state history that a municipal police agency will operate under a federal watchdog, according to four sources familiar with the situation.

The decision follows a federal review of the way the state’s largest police force swept aside accusations of misconduct against hundreds of officers and its almost-total failure to address complaints of brutality and abuse lodged by Newark residents over the years.
 The investigation began in 2011, a year after the American Civil Liberties Union filed a scathing 96-page petition with the Department of Justice, accusing Newark’s police of rampant misconduct.

The ACLU investigation found citizens filed 261 complaints with the department accusing officers of using excessive force, biased actions, improper searches or false arrests in 2008 and 2009. Only one complaint was sustained by the department.

One officer faced 62 internal affairs investigations during a 14-year career, according to the petition, while Newark shelled out nearly $5 million in response to civil lawsuits from 2007 to 2009.

Federal monitors are appointed by the Justice Department and are usually someone with legal and/or law enforcement experience but with no ties to the agency being scrutinized.

The monitor’s term could run as a long as five years, said the sources who declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak about the situation publicly. No one has been selected for the position, but an announcement could be made later this month, according to three of the sources.

The exact terms of the agreement between the city and the federal government will be ironed out in a “consent decree,” a legally binding document in which the city will promise to adhere to and maintain whatever reforms the Justice Department orders.
 A City Hall spokeswoman said the appointment of a monitor “is likely,” but added that the agreement has not been finalized.

“The City of Newark has been working cooperatively with the Department of Justice in connection with its review of NPD procedures,” said Esmeralda Diaz Cameron, Newark’s chief spokeswoman. “The City and the Department of Justice are working to ensure that best practices are followed within the Newark Police Department.”

When the 2011 investigation was launched, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said the ACLU complaint was not the impetus for the probe.

The ACLU cited a culture of brutality fostered in Newark’s ranks over decades. A subsequent Star-Ledger examination found significant flaws in Newark’s internal affairs procedures under the watch of Police Director Garry McCarthy, who held the position from 2006 to 2011.

From 2006 to 2009, the department received more than 500 complaints accusing officers of excessive force, illegal searches, false arrests or differential treatment, according to records obtained by The Star-Ledger. Disciplinary charges were brought in just six of those cases, according to the records.

A 2010 Star-Ledger analysis of internal affairs records also showed the department failed to report the outcome of one out of every 10 complaints against its officers to the state Attorney General’s Office from 2000 to 2008. All told, the results of 1,315 investigations were not reported properly.

McCarthy, who now runs the Chicago Police Department, could not be reached for comment. Outgoing Police Director Samuel DeMaio and Mayor Luis Quintana did not respond to requests for comment.

While he had no direct knowledge concerning the monitor, the ACLU’s executive director, Udi Ofer, said the department has needed outside intervention for decades.

“This is needed in order to protect Newarkers against future civil rights and civil liberties abuses,” Ofer said. “The Department of Justice findings affirm the findings of our petition, which we filed more than three years ago. It affirms that the problems in the Newark Police Department had been so widespread and grave that they warrant outside federal intervention.”

A last resort

While records show the federal government has launched more than 50 similar investigations into U.S. police departments since 1994, at least 10 have resulted in the appointment of a monitor, which is considered the most extreme result.

The most recent to receive a federal monitor was the New Orleans Police Department, in March 2013. That department’s agreement with the Justice Department called for major revisions to the city’s use-of-force policy and increased training. It also forced the department to publish statistics on arrests and police misconduct.

While it’s unclear what changes will be made in Newark, the department contends it has already made several reforms that have been met with praise from civil liberties advocates.

In August 2013, the Newark Police Department became one of the first in the nation to publish monthly data regarding the result of stop-and-frisk-style inquiries and internal affairs investigations.

DeMaio has also instituted policies that protect the rights of citizens who film police officers while they are on duty and has ordered his officers to refuse federal requests to detain people who are suspected of minor crimes and are in the country illegally.
 The 2010 ACLU petition and 2011 federal probe drew mixed reactions from then-Mayor Cory Booker’s administration.

Questioned about the sheer number of complaints dismissed by his internal affairs unit, McCarthy shrugged at the data.

“So the cop always has to be wrong?” McCarthy told The Star-Ledger in 2010. “Drug dealers make allegations against police officers every day to stop them from doing their job.”

Booker, who left the city office to become a U.S. senator last year, also dismissed the ACLU allegations when they were first lobbed. He softened his tone when the Justice Department launched its 2011 investigation, referring to the probe as “free consulting.”

But even then, Booker said he remained opposed to the idea of a federal monitor.
 When asked about the pending decision, Booker’s office said while he was mayor the police department began to institute reforms.

“The then-mayor and Newark’s police director partnered with Justice in its inquiry of long-standing complaints against the department and didn’t wait to take action,” said Booker spokesman Kevin Griffis. “They revamped Internal Affairs processes, worked with the ACLU to better inform residents of their rights and improved transparency by installing cameras in police vehicles, among other changes.”

Uncertain future

When the agreement is finalized, Newark police will become the third New Jersey agency to require a federal monitor in the past 15 years.

The New Jersey State Police spent 10 years under a federal watchdog starting in 1999 after a racial-profiling scandal, and the state Department of Children and Families has been under federal supervision for 7½ years after a lawsuit accused the agency of mismanaging its foster care system.

Former Newark Police Director Joseph Santiago, who led the State Police through part of the monitoring process and now serves as Irvington’s police director, said his experience under federal oversight was positive. “As the administrator, you can use that to leverage a lot of improvements within the department, things that need to be done,” he said.

“The only practices it should change or affect are the practices that you need to get rid of anyway.”

Newark’s leadership situation, however, remains murky. With Friday's revelation that DeMaio is retiring and a mayoral election in full swing, there is no way to tell who will be running the department once a monitor arrives.

Santiago said that could be troubling to federal investigators and urged whoever wins Newark’s mayoral race to choose a director as open to reform as DeMaio was.

“There might be a concern at the federal level that subsequent leadership might not be as committed as he is,” Santiago said. “You want to re-establish public confidence in the department.”

http://www.nj.com/essex/index.ssf/2014/02/justice_department_will_place_federal_monitor_over_newark_police_sources_say.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 23, 2014, 06:08:07 PM
One officer faced 62 internal affairs investigations during a 14-year career, according to the petition, while Newark shelled out nearly $5 million in response to civil lawsuits from 2007 to 2009.




Unfreaking real
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 24, 2014, 07:01:27 AM


Evidence from a dashboard camera on a police cruiser ended a nightmare for a New Jersey man facing false charges of eluding police, resisting arrest and assault.

Prosecutors dismissed all the criminal charges against Marcus Jeter, 30, of Bloomfield, N.J. and instead indicted two Bloomfield police officers for falsifying reports and one of them for assault after the recording surfaced showing police officers beating Jeter during a traffic stop, according to WABC of New York. A third has pleaded guilty to tampering.

New Jersey Man Escapes 5 Year Sentence After Dash Cam Footage Clears Him, Indicts Cops [continued]

http://libertycrier.com/new-jersey-man-escapes-5-year-sentence-dash-cam-footage-clears-indicts-cops/?utm_source=The+Liberty+Crier&utm_campaign=3a65cfcc8d-The_Liberty_Crier_Daily_News_2_24_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_600843dec4-3a65cfcc8d-284835313


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 24, 2014, 03:48:41 PM

Evidence from a dashboard camera on a police cruiser ended a nightmare for a New Jersey man facing false charges of eluding police, resisting arrest and assault.

Prosecutors dismissed all the criminal charges against Marcus Jeter, 30, of Bloomfield, N.J. and instead indicted two Bloomfield police officers for falsifying reports and one of them for assault after the recording surfaced showing police officers beating Jeter during a traffic stop, according to WABC of New York. A third has pleaded guilty to tampering.

New Jersey Man Escapes 5 Year Sentence After Dash Cam Footage Clears Him, Indicts Cops [continued]

http://libertycrier.com/new-jersey-man-escapes-5-year-sentence-dash-cam-footage-clears-indicts-cops/?utm_source=The+Liberty+Crier&utm_campaign=3a65cfcc8d-The_Liberty_Crier_Daily_News_2_24_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_600843dec4-3a65cfcc8d-284835313







Some gratitude in the fact that the prosecutors are actually going after the cops.  The one that went out quick on retirement, might just lose the cushy benes!

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 26, 2014, 03:46:18 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/more-retired-ny-firefighters-cops-arrested-pension-fraud-150615014--sector.html;_ylt=AwrTWf1RyAxTxVwAJuvQtDMD
 >:(


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 26, 2014, 03:50:38 AM
Sept 2011: Five ft tall man with Down Syndrome beaten by Police-bulge in pants:Colostomy Bag
Live leak.com ^
Posted on February 26, 2014 12:32:06 AM EST by Altariel

SOUTHWEST MIAMI-DADE, FLORIDA - All Gilberto Powell, 22, a five foot tall man with Down Syndrome, wanted to do was walk a half block home from a friend's house, but this was enough time and distance for the police to intervene.

Police "followed" Powell because they noticed a "bulge in his pants." He was not happy to see the cops; this was only his colostomy bag (which police ripped from his body). Powell was then beaten down in the street by police, leaving him bruised and battered from blows to the face.

The beating officer insisted Powell ran, but Powell disputes this and said he did everything he could to comply. When Powell's mother asked the cop if he could tell her son had Down's Syndrome, the cop said he wasn't a doctor.

Powell said he felt "helpless" and wants an apology from the police. He also wants to community to be aware that this could happen to YOU
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 26, 2014, 06:33:30 PM
California city police 'sold impounded vehicles'

The acting police chief and two officers in a rural California town have been removed from duty after being arrested and accused of selling vehicles seized from poor residents.

Those arrested were bailed out of jail within hours, local broadcaster KSBW reported. 

The arrested officers are now on paid leave.


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26362590
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 26, 2014, 06:53:38 PM
California city police 'sold impounded vehicles'

The acting police chief and two officers in a rural California town have been removed from duty after being arrested and accused of selling vehicles seized from poor residents.

Those arrested were bailed out of jail within hours, local broadcaster KSBW reported. 

The arrested officers are now on paid leave.


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26362590


paid leave - unreal
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 27, 2014, 10:21:23 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/02/27/astonishingly-awful-supreme-court-decision-lets-the-government-seize-all-your-assets-before-trial



Unreal. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 27, 2014, 12:04:41 PM
http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/02/weird-california-city-of-150000-rolls-out-death-machine-complete-with-machine-gun-turret



Sick - WTF are these assholes planning?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on February 27, 2014, 03:11:46 PM
http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2014/02/strip_search_lawsuit_involving_1.html



$14,000?   That's it? 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on February 27, 2014, 08:14:11 PM
http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2014/02/strip_search_lawsuit_involving_1.html

$14,000?   That's it? 


Whoa, whoa, whoa!  SC, what are you doing by not pasting an excerpt of this story?

Crazy looking lesbian cop (pictured below) in her late 30's did a roadside public strip search of two younger women that included "...probing their breasts, buttocks and genitals without wearing a glove" in 2009.

Same lesbian cop who was a suspect in the murder of another lesbian in 2010.

And this lesbian cop recently got in trouble for not securing her service weapon properly after her domestic partner used it to commit suicide in Jan 2013?

Pretty drama filled life, if you ask me.  I thought women like that just played a lot of softball.  Shows how much I know.

(http://imgick.masslive.com/home/mass-media/width620/img/republican/photo/2014/01/14164596-mmmain.jpg)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 03, 2014, 05:33:11 AM
http://weaselzippers.us/177952-13000-mine-resistant-armored-vehicles-to-be-distributed-to-police-around-country


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 03, 2014, 05:48:41 AM
big deal,isn't that something they need to get around your neighborhood
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 13, 2014, 06:46:25 AM
http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2014/03/12/landmark-settlement-reached-in-preakness-arrest-case



 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 13, 2014, 06:41:13 PM
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/horror-five-cops-beat-innocent-unarmed-father-death-outside-cinemas?akid=11594.142394.dGtbSI&rd=1&src=newsletter969957&t=8




 :(  >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 13, 2014, 07:42:14 PM
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/horror-five-cops-beat-innocent-unarmed-father-death-outside-cinemas?akid=11594.142394.dGtbSI&rd=1&src=newsletter969957&t=8


 :(  >:(



"Rodriguez can be heard demanding to know why they pinned down her husband to which officers replied, “He refused to give his ID.”

"Police say their actions were protocol though three have been suspended with pay"

"The two game wardens working security that day at the theater are continuing in their normal roles"



This has the classic hallmarks: brutality, "He refused to give his ID", "our actions are protocol", leave with pay...

What's interesting is that out of the five, there were three private security officers, one of whom is a Moore police officer, and two on-duty Moore Police officers.

Soon they'll probably add the classic "he was uncooperative", "the officers feared for their lives", "he assumed a combative stance" along with "we're following protocol".

Maybe they should all be beaten to death in front of their families like they did to that poor guy. A shame too that the man didn't appear to be involved in the fight but rather it seems like a mother-daughter fight.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 15, 2014, 07:46:19 AM
Charges unlikely for Houston dad accused of shooting daughter’s boyfriend, prosecutor says

Published March 14, 2014/
FoxNews.com











The Houston father who police say fatally shot a 17-year-old boy who was inside his daughter’s bedroom early Thursday morning will likely not be charged, an area prosecutor told MyFoxHouston.com.

Although a grand jury will review the case, prosecutor Warren Diepraam said it is unlikely that the father will be charged.

"What was going on in the person's mind at the time of the shooting, [not] what they found out after the fact" is key, Diepraam said. "They're looking at what he was thinking when he made the decision to shoot."

The investigation into the shooting is ongoing, and a grand jury will ultimately decide if charges are appropriate. But so far it appears the father, who was only identified as a 55-year-old in reports, was awaken by one of his other children at about 2:20 a.m. He was told someone was in his 16-year-old daughter's bedroom and he grabbed his gun.

He reportedly found the teen in bed with his daughter and confronted him. His daughter apparently told him she did not know the boy.

The father said he told the teen not to move, but reportedly saw the teen reach for something, at which point police say the father opened fire. The teen did not have a gun. His daughter later confessed that she snuck her boyfriend, 17, into the house, the report said.

"We don't know if the father knew him or not,” Sgt. Ben Bell with the Harris County Sheriff's Department, told the station. The family had just moved into the neighborhood.

In 2008, a Harris County grand jury did not indict a homeowner after he fatally shot two burglars in the back, The Houston Chronicle reported. In that case, lawyers told jury members that the shooter feared for his life, hence the act was justifiable under Texas law.







not police abuse - but thoughts?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on March 16, 2014, 02:11:18 PM
^Wow, that's something crazy. She told her dad she didn't know the guy, as the story goes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2014, 05:53:21 PM
Dashcam video shows deputy weeping after shooting 70-year-old man during traffic stop because he thought cane was a gun

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/deputy-weeps-shooting-70-year-old-traffic-stop-thought-cane-gun-video-article-1.1721404


As usual, paid leave and full backup from his fellow thugs.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on March 17, 2014, 02:57:36 AM
Great Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) here:

www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/20kgvf/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/ (http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/20kgvf/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/)

IAma former employee of a jail where I watched inmates be beat for fun. I was fired for reporting it, and have spent the last decade of my life testifying for those inmates. I did an AMA before, but couldn't say what really needed to be said. I'm done testifying, so I can REALLY talk now. AMA (self.IAmA)

Original text from the 1st AMA:

I saw horrific beatings happen almost every day. I saw inmates being beat senseless for not moving fast enough. I saw inmates urinate on themselves because they had been chained up for hours and officers refused to let them use the bathroom. This didn't happen because they were busy, this happened because it was fun. I saw an old man be beat bad enough to be taken to the hospital because he didn't respond to a verbal order RIGHT AFTER he took out his hearing aids (which he was ordered to do.)

I was fired after I caught the beating of a triple amputee (you read that right!) on video, and I got 7 officers fired for brutality. Don't believe me? here's a still from the video. This is one second of over 14 minutes of this poor man being beaten with a mop handle, kicked, punched and thrown around. As you can see in the video, he is down in the left hand corner, naked and cowering while being sprayed with pepper spray.http://imgur.com/I8eeq

After I was fired, I sued the Sheriff's Office and the Board of County Commissioners and I settled the night before trial. I consider every penny that I got blood money, but I did get a letter of recommendation hand signed by the sheriff himself, and I FLAT OUT REFUSED to sign a non disclosure agreement. One of my biggest regrets in life is not taking that case to trial, but I just emotionally couldn't do it. I also regret not going to the press immediately with what I had as it happened. I want someone to finally listen about what goes on in that jail. Instead of going to the press, I decided to speak with attorneys and help inmates who were beaten and murdered by detention officers in the jail. In the last 5 years I have been deposed twice and I have been flown across the planet 3 times to be deposed or to testify in cases against the Sheriff. I have also been consulted by 4 or 5 other attorneys with cases against the Sheriff. Every single time my name has been brought up (with 1 exception) the case has settled within a few months at the most. The record is 2 weeks. Some of those have gag orders on them or are sealed, so I can't discuss the ones that are under an order like that, but not all of them are like that. Let's talk about the two most recent cases I have been involved in: Christopher Beckman was an inmate. He was brought in on a DUI or something like that, he wasn't a career criminal, he was a guy like you, or your buddy, or your dad who fucked up and did something stupid while drunk. He had a seizure in the jail because he was epileptic and didn't get his medications. During this seizure he was hog tied, and ran HEAD FIRST into a 2" thick steel door, concrete walls and elevator doors. His skull was crushed and he died a few days later. I was deposed in his case and very soon afterward the family settled for an "undisclosed" amount of money other than the 1mil, and I promise you this..... they didn't get enough. The officers that did that to them? One of them pled out for a year in jail, the other got nothing. http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=14&articleid=20110606_12_0_OLHMIY608751 Dionne McKinney: She is the toughest woman on this planet. She fought for 9 and 1/2 years to take the sheriff to trial and she did it. NO ONE takes the Sheriff to trial in OK county and wins. It hasn't happened in a civil case since the 1970's (from what I understand) She was brutally beaten in the Jail in May of 2003. I testified in this case earlier this month.http://newsok.com/jury-finds-in-favor-of-woman-who-says-oklahoma-county-jail-detention-officers-assaulted-her-nearly-10-years-ago/article/3738355 Why do I live so far away? I fear for my life. I left oklahoma in march of 2010 after I turned over every piece of evidence that I had to the feds. When I have been flown in, I have been in and out in 2 days for depositions, but for the trial, I had to be there for almost a week. I spent 4 days barricaded in my best friends' house. When I left my family in OK after testifying a few weeks ago, I knew that I'd never be able to see them in Oklahoma again and flights to me are not cheap. Here is an absolutely scathing report from the department of justice about the Oklahoma County Jail in 2008. http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/spl/documents/OKCounty_Jail_findlet_073108.pdf

I did an great interview with the Moral Courage Project, and the last case I agreed to be involved with, won at jury trial! I'm ecstatic!

Now I can talk about the REAL problems going on, the thin blue line, or any other questions you may have.

Link to original AMA: http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/16ktvd/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/

Link to the interview:


I was directly involved in 5 cases, and in all 5 of those cases, the case ended in favor of the plaintiff. I think it may be safe to say that the courts may agree with me at this point, and now all I need is for someone to listen to what goes on in jail.

EDIT::

PROOF http://imgur.com/juqB7i2

EDIT 2:

Here's a link to sign the petition to force ALL Law enforcement officers to wear cameras. This would be a great step in the right direction. Please sign and share.

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/create-federal-mandate-forcing-all-law-enforcement-officers-wear-video-recording-device-while-duty/qVhH09tw

EDIT 3: Thank you to everyone who has responded! I've been given some great advice and encouragement!

I am being bombarded with messages telling me that vice.com is the place to go to get this out to the right people, so all that I ask of you guys is to send them a quick email asking them to cover this, I want the abuse of inmates to stop, and the only way to do that is to get the right people's attention, so please help out, should you feel so inclined!

editor@vice.com

Thanks for all of the support again! I have faith in humanity tonight!


Lots of interesting answers to Reddit user-submitted questions follows at link.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 17, 2014, 04:17:49 AM


Not surprisng

Great Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) here:

www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/20kgvf/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/ (http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/20kgvf/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/)

IAma former employee of a jail where I watched inmates be beat for fun. I was fired for reporting it, and have spent the last decade of my life testifying for those inmates. I did an AMA before, but couldn't say what really needed to be said. I'm done testifying, so I can REALLY talk now. AMA (self.IAmA)

Original text from the 1st AMA:

I saw horrific beatings happen almost every day. I saw inmates being beat senseless for not moving fast enough. I saw inmates urinate on themselves because they had been chained up for hours and officers refused to let them use the bathroom. This didn't happen because they were busy, this happened because it was fun. I saw an old man be beat bad enough to be taken to the hospital because he didn't respond to a verbal order RIGHT AFTER he took out his hearing aids (which he was ordered to do.)

I was fired after I caught the beating of a triple amputee (you read that right!) on video, and I got 7 officers fired for brutality. Don't believe me? here's a still from the video. This is one second of over 14 minutes of this poor man being beaten with a mop handle, kicked, punched and thrown around. As you can see in the video, he is down in the left hand corner, naked and cowering while being sprayed with pepper spray.http://imgur.com/I8eeq

After I was fired, I sued the Sheriff's Office and the Board of County Commissioners and I settled the night before trial. I consider every penny that I got blood money, but I did get a letter of recommendation hand signed by the sheriff himself, and I FLAT OUT REFUSED to sign a non disclosure agreement. One of my biggest regrets in life is not taking that case to trial, but I just emotionally couldn't do it. I also regret not going to the press immediately with what I had as it happened. I want someone to finally listen about what goes on in that jail. Instead of going to the press, I decided to speak with attorneys and help inmates who were beaten and murdered by detention officers in the jail. In the last 5 years I have been deposed twice and I have been flown across the planet 3 times to be deposed or to testify in cases against the Sheriff. I have also been consulted by 4 or 5 other attorneys with cases against the Sheriff. Every single time my name has been brought up (with 1 exception) the case has settled within a few months at the most. The record is 2 weeks. Some of those have gag orders on them or are sealed, so I can't discuss the ones that are under an order like that, but not all of them are like that. Let's talk about the two most recent cases I have been involved in: Christopher Beckman was an inmate. He was brought in on a DUI or something like that, he wasn't a career criminal, he was a guy like you, or your buddy, or your dad who fucked up and did something stupid while drunk. He had a seizure in the jail because he was epileptic and didn't get his medications. During this seizure he was hog tied, and ran HEAD FIRST into a 2" thick steel door, concrete walls and elevator doors. His skull was crushed and he died a few days later. I was deposed in his case and very soon afterward the family settled for an "undisclosed" amount of money other than the 1mil, and I promise you this..... they didn't get enough. The officers that did that to them? One of them pled out for a year in jail, the other got nothing. http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=14&articleid=20110606_12_0_OLHMIY608751 Dionne McKinney: She is the toughest woman on this planet. She fought for 9 and 1/2 years to take the sheriff to trial and she did it. NO ONE takes the Sheriff to trial in OK county and wins. It hasn't happened in a civil case since the 1970's (from what I understand) She was brutally beaten in the Jail in May of 2003. I testified in this case earlier this month.http://newsok.com/jury-finds-in-favor-of-woman-who-says-oklahoma-county-jail-detention-officers-assaulted-her-nearly-10-years-ago/article/3738355 Why do I live so far away? I fear for my life. I left oklahoma in march of 2010 after I turned over every piece of evidence that I had to the feds. When I have been flown in, I have been in and out in 2 days for depositions, but for the trial, I had to be there for almost a week. I spent 4 days barricaded in my best friends' house. When I left my family in OK after testifying a few weeks ago, I knew that I'd never be able to see them in Oklahoma again and flights to me are not cheap. Here is an absolutely scathing report from the department of justice about the Oklahoma County Jail in 2008. http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/spl/documents/OKCounty_Jail_findlet_073108.pdf

I did an great interview with the Moral Courage Project, and the last case I agreed to be involved with, won at jury trial! I'm ecstatic!

Now I can talk about the REAL problems going on, the thin blue line, or any other questions you may have.

Link to original AMA: http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/16ktvd/iama_former_employee_of_a_jail_where_i_watched/

Link to the interview:


I was directly involved in 5 cases, and in all 5 of those cases, the case ended in favor of the plaintiff. I think it may be safe to say that the courts may agree with me at this point, and now all I need is for someone to listen to what goes on in jail.

EDIT::

PROOF http://imgur.com/juqB7i2

EDIT 2:

Here's a link to sign the petition to force ALL Law enforcement officers to wear cameras. This would be a great step in the right direction. Please sign and share.

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/create-federal-mandate-forcing-all-law-enforcement-officers-wear-video-recording-device-while-duty/qVhH09tw

EDIT 3: Thank you to everyone who has responded! I've been given some great advice and encouragement!

I am being bombarded with messages telling me that vice.com is the place to go to get this out to the right people, so all that I ask of you guys is to send them a quick email asking them to cover this, I want the abuse of inmates to stop, and the only way to do that is to get the right people's attention, so please help out, should you feel so inclined!

editor@vice.com

Thanks for all of the support again! I have faith in humanity tonight!


Lots of interesting answers to Reddit user-submitted questions follows at link.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2014, 12:07:10 PM
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/03/12/teen-jailed-for-13-days-after-emt-kit-pocketknife-and-found-in-his-car-and-thats-just-scratching-the-surface-of-jordan-wisers-nightmare/#



Crazy - they are treating this kid worse than they do terrorists
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2014, 07:12:08 AM
http://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw/index.ssf/2014/03/felony_charge_for_bridgeport_m.html


 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2014, 07:40:39 AM
http://connecticut.cbslocal.com/2014/03/19/gun-tattoo-mistakenly-brings-heavily-armed-police-to-maine-mans-home


 :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 19, 2014, 08:07:09 AM
http://connecticut.cbslocal.com/2014/03/19/gun-tattoo-mistakenly-brings-heavily-armed-police-to-maine-mans-home


 :D

your point
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2014, 08:09:34 AM
your point

None need to be said - story speaks for itself 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 19, 2014, 08:12:25 AM
None need to be said - story speaks for itself 
no, what's your point
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 19, 2014, 09:43:15 AM
no, what's your point
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2014, 09:31:29 PM
Kansas Bill Seeks to Legalize Police Retaliation


The Kansas House Standing Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice has introduced a bill that will require private citizens who file complaints against police officers to sign an affidavit, acknowledging that if their allegations are proven false, they can be charged with perjury, which is a felony charge.

http://kansasexposed.org/2014/03/17/kansas-bill-seeks-legalize-police-retaliation/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 21, 2014, 05:44:25 AM
http://washingtonexaminer.com/navy-database-tracks-civilians-parking-tickets-fender-benders-raising-fears-of-domestic-spying/article/2546038



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2014, 09:46:05 AM
http://www.infowars.com/homeland-security-exercise-targets-free-americans-against-socialist-tyranny


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2014, 10:21:24 AM
http://dailycaller.com/2014/03/24/you-going-to-shoot-me-asked-student-before-he-was-shot-five-times-once-in-the-back


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2014, 10:33:53 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/03/24/james-boyd-killed-by-cops_n_5021117.html



 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2014, 12:57:51 PM
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/01/31/veteran-suffolk-police-sergeant-accused-of-stealing-from-drivers-during-traffic-stops/

"Greene, a 25-year veteran of the force, makes $170,000 a year"

Cops make a lot of money in NY it seems but that doesn't stop them from stealing and abusing their authority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2014, 12:59:39 PM
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/01/31/veteran-suffolk-police-sergeant-accused-of-stealing-from-drivers-during-traffic-stops/

"Greene, a 25-year veteran of the force, makes $170,000 a year"

Cops make a lot of money in NY it seems but that doesn't stop them from stealing and abusing their authority.

Cops make a freaking killing in this idiot state
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on March 24, 2014, 01:09:28 PM
“If there is any good that comes from this, it is that the department wants the latino community to know that when we receive a complaint, we treat it seriously,” Suffolk County Police Commissioner Edward Webber said.

1. The 25 year veteran cop should spend 20 yrs in prison
2. Police responded to the complaints and caught him in the act. Good for them
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2014, 10:35:15 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/03/24/okla-pawn-shop-owner-sues-police-after-speed-trap-warning-brings-down-heat/

Outrageous.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on March 24, 2014, 11:01:31 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/03/24/okla-pawn-shop-owner-sues-police-after-speed-trap-warning-brings-down-heat/

Outrageous.

Wow... you know what else is likely to "have some negative effects"? Accessing the FBI database without a legal reason. Abusing people under the color of authority. And, lest we forget, being an arrogant and pompous asshole.

Kudos to the Chief for his unequivocal statement in support of the First Amendment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 26, 2014, 05:08:40 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/03/26/kansas-family-reportedly-spends-thousands-to-find-out-why-their-home-was-raided/?intcmp=latestnews


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2014, 10:43:17 PM
Maybe if the crooks abusing their badge and office were held personally accountable and paid out of their pockets (and not just send the taxpayers the bill) things could be different.


http://www.roanoke.com/news/virginia/u-va-student-sues-state-abc-agents-for-million/article_a5e91ce8-b508-11e3-ac72-0017a43b2370.html

UVa student sues state, ABC agents for $40 million
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 29, 2014, 03:40:31 AM
Until they are held personally liable noting will change
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on March 29, 2014, 05:30:41 AM
Until they are held personally liable noting will change


YES!  That's what I've been saying.  That's exactly what needs to start happening.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on March 30, 2014, 10:52:39 AM
Textbook cop douchebaggery and abuse under the color of authority:

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/03/28/66554.htm
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on March 31, 2014, 06:09:26 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/03/30/robert-richards-rape_n_5060386.html


this is pretty fd up
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2014, 07:59:58 AM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/drunken-cop-caught-camera-pulling-gun-gas-station-clerk



 :D


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 04, 2014, 08:28:59 AM
http://www.wnd.com/2014/04/new-revelations-about-mom-killed-by-capitol-cops/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 08, 2014, 08:49:47 PM
Outrageous; this man's life is ruined. No amount of money can pay for his 24 year imprisonment and of course any compensation will not come out of the pockets of the investigators, prosecutors and the lying witness (who should all receive the prison sentence Fleming got), but unfortunately the taxpayers.


New York man exonerated after 25 years in prison for murder

A New York man has been exonerated over a 1989 murder as part of larger review of questionable convictions.

Jonathan Fleming, now 51, had been on holiday in Disney World at the time of the murder and had documents supporting his alibi, but he was still convicted.

Since then, a key eyewitness has recanted and prosecutors turned up a hotel receipt proving he was in Florida hours before the killing.

"I feel wonderful," Mr Fleming said after a judge dismissed his case.

"I've always had faith," he said. "I knew that this day would come some day."

He had told officials from the start he had been in Florida when Darryl Rush was killed in Brooklyn in 1989. Prosecutors argued the shooting was motivated by a dispute over money.

He had plane tickets, videos and postcards from his trip, but prosecutors at the time suggested he could have made a quick round-trip plane trip to return to New York.

Despite a key witness saying she had lied soon after his 1990 conviction, he had lost his previous appeals.

A review of the case files produced a hotel receipt Mr Fleming paid in Florida five hours before the shooting and a letter from Orlando police saying employees at the hotel remembered him.

Neither the receipt nor the police letter had been provided to Mr Fleming's first defence lawyer, despite rules that generally require investigators to turn over such material.


Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson said in a statement he had dropped the case against Mr Fleming because of "key alibi facts that place Fleming in Florida at the time of the murder".

The move comes amid scrutiny of Brooklyn prosecutors' process for reviewing questionable convictions, led in part by Mr Thompson, who was elected last year.

When Mr Fleming was asked about his plans, he said: "I'm going to go eat dinner with my mother and my family, and I'm going to live the rest of my life."



http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26949733
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 09, 2014, 02:07:26 AM

Wtf. 

Outrageous; this man's life is ruined. No amount of money can pay for his 24 year imprisonment and of course any compensation will not come out of the pockets of the investigators, prosecutors and the lying witness (who should all receive the prison sentence Fleming got), but unfortunately the taxpayers.


New York man exonerated after 25 years in prison for murder

A New York man has been exonerated over a 1989 murder as part of larger review of questionable convictions.

Jonathan Fleming, now 51, had been on holiday in Disney World at the time of the murder and had documents supporting his alibi, but he was still convicted.

Since then, a key eyewitness has recanted and prosecutors turned up a hotel receipt proving he was in Florida hours before the killing.

"I feel wonderful," Mr Fleming said after a judge dismissed his case.

"I've always had faith," he said. "I knew that this day would come some day."

He had told officials from the start he had been in Florida when Darryl Rush was killed in Brooklyn in 1989. Prosecutors argued the shooting was motivated by a dispute over money.

He had plane tickets, videos and postcards from his trip, but prosecutors at the time suggested he could have made a quick round-trip plane trip to return to New York.

Despite a key witness saying she had lied soon after his 1990 conviction, he had lost his previous appeals.

A review of the case files produced a hotel receipt Mr Fleming paid in Florida five hours before the shooting and a letter from Orlando police saying employees at the hotel remembered him.

Neither the receipt nor the police letter had been provided to Mr Fleming's first defence lawyer, despite rules that generally require investigators to turn over such material.


Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson said in a statement he had dropped the case against Mr Fleming because of "key alibi facts that place Fleming in Florida at the time of the murder".

The move comes amid scrutiny of Brooklyn prosecutors' process for reviewing questionable convictions, led in part by Mr Thompson, who was elected last year.

When Mr Fleming was asked about his plans, he said: "I'm going to go eat dinner with my mother and my family, and I'm going to live the rest of my life."



http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26949733
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 09, 2014, 06:58:39 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/08/jonathan-fleming-freed_n_5112943.html


terrible
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 10, 2014, 12:48:32 AM
The Fleming case is pure insanity. I need to do a search on Lexis to read the decision of the Judge who "brushed aside" the allegations of perjury and let the conviction stand.

It's a pity that ADAs enjoy what is, in essence, absolute immunity even if their actions are blatant misconduct because a whoever prosecuted this case ought to be disbarred and prosecuted, along with the detectives involved in this investigation.

Damn...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: muscleman-2013 on April 10, 2014, 03:33:28 AM
Will the cops who locked a man in a cage for 25 years be prosecuted?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2014, 12:30:56 PM
Feds: 'Excessive force' found in Albuquerque police

The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday released a scathing report in response to a series of deadly police shootings that pointed to patterns of excessive force by the Albuquerque Police Department, serious constitutional violations and a lack of training and oversight of its officers.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/10/feds-excessive-force-found-in-albuquerque-police/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 10, 2014, 12:32:54 PM
Feds: 'Excessive force' found in Albuquerque police

The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday released a scathing report in response to a series of deadly police shootings that pointed to patterns of excessive force by the Albuquerque Police Department, serious constitutional violations and a lack of training and oversight of its officers.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/10/feds-excessive-force-found-in-albuquerque-police/

I read about that - the citizens were up in arms over this.

Typical
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 10, 2014, 04:24:30 PM
Feds: 'Excessive force' found in Albuquerque police

The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday released a scathing report in response to a series of deadly police shootings that pointed to patterns of excessive force by the Albuquerque Police Department, serious constitutional violations and a lack of training and oversight of its officers.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/10/feds-excessive-force-found-in-albuquerque-police/


Notice how absolutely NOTHING in that report indicates holding the officers responsible.  ZIP.  Another free fucking ride.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 10, 2014, 07:26:00 PM
http://laist.com/2014/04/10/deputies_mistakenly_killed.php



 >:(


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2014, 05:44:00 AM
http://www.vocativ.com/culture/society/special-ed-student-recorded-bullies-accused-felony-wiretapping



unfucking real 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2014, 06:03:15 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/10/jonathan-fleming-wrongfully-convicted_n_5128011.html


Just sickening beyond words
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2014, 08:55:10 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/11/police-mistakenly-shoot-unarmed-man_n_5130549.html


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2014, 02:01:05 PM
http://jalopnik.com/border-patrol-accuse-man-of-running-red-in-crash-dashc-1562276258

A NYC driver was heading through an intersection when he collided with a US Border Patrol van, wrecking both cars and flipping the van onto its side. Border patrol agents immediately rushed him, accusing him of running the light. The dazed man wasn't sure what to think, but he didn't really have to — he had a dashcam.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2014, 02:22:01 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/10/air-marshal-director-probe-over-gun-scheme



UNFNG Real 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2014, 06:38:37 PM
http://www.10news.com/news/investigations/team-10-obtains-court-records-suggesting-san-diego-police-department-cover-up-041014

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 11, 2014, 07:10:43 PM
http://www.10news.com/news/investigations/team-10-obtains-court-records-suggesting-san-diego-police-department-cover-up-041014



Seems like a pattern no?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2014, 07:48:10 PM
Seems like a pattern no?

This cur assaulted 13 women, another was charged with two felony counts of false imprisonment with violence and three misdemeanor counts of sexual battery involving four women. Those that turned a blind eye or tried to cover up should be tried as accomplices.

We'll probably see the usual pledge from the department to "train the officers".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on April 12, 2014, 11:26:33 AM
This cur assaulted 13 women, another was charged with two felony counts of false imprisonment with violence and three misdemeanor counts of sexual battery involving four women. Those that turned a blind eye or tried to cover up should be tried as accomplices.

We'll probably see the usual pledge from the department to "train the officers".

voted up for "cur" alone
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 14, 2014, 11:41:43 AM
MIAMI (AP) — In 22 years at the Miami-Dade Police Department, Lt. Ralph Mata broke up major gangs, supervised an airport canine unit that sniffed out drug smugglers and investigated police wrongdoing. He was also, according to the FBI, known as "The Milk Man" for helping New Jersey cocaine dealers move hundreds of thousands of dollars around.

The FBI says Mata escorted traffickers carrying the cash so they could bypass security at airports in New York and Miami. He also smuggled weapons to them and even cooked up a potential hit on a rival gang, authorities say.

Mata will likely travel to New Jersey next week to make his first appearance on drug trafficking and illegal money transaction charges, said his attorney Bruce Fleisher. Mata will be released on $500,000 bail in an agreement with prosecutors, Fleisher said Monday.

"They took into consideration his 22 years and commendations as a police officer and his good family," Fleisher said of the bail.

Mata has been relieved of his police duties. He had been assigned to the department's internal affairs office since 2010 and before that to the canine unit at Miami International Airport.

About two years ago, he came under the FBI's radar during an investigation into a New Jersey-based drug gang that has been smuggling cocaine from the Dominican Republic and Ecuador in shipments of bananas and other produce. Investigators have intercepted at least 350 pounds of cocaine in the probe.

Three men have pleaded guilty in New Jersey and are awaiting sentencing, facing between 10 years and life behind bars. Their cooperation with prosecutors, which would likely include testimony against Mata, could net them lighter prison terms. It's not clear how Mata and the traffickers were introduced.

Much of Mata's alleged assistance involved moving the drug money undetected by using his contacts at the airports, according to an FBI affidavit. In one case, Mata was paid $5,000 for accompanying a drug gang member carrying $150,000 on a flight from New York to the Dominican Republic, authorities say. He later received a $10,000 Rolex watch.

Mata, the FBI says, contacted an unnamed person at John F. Kennedy International Airport to make certain the gang member with the cash "passed through security without being stopped by law enforcement."

But it wasn't just money. Mata also used contacts at Miami International Airport to transport at least six guns to drug traffickers in carry-on luggage and even plotted to have members of a rival gang killed, the FBI affidavit says.

The killers, according to the FBI, "would wear uniforms and badges to make it appear as though the targets of the murder plot were lawfully being pulled over by law enforcement, after which the targets would be shot and killed."

The price was supposedly $150,000 for each killing, the FBI says, and Mata had given the assassins a box of cigars and a $5,000 down payment. Ultimately, the New Jersey gang decided not to follow through on the plot.

On another occasion, about $419,000 in drug profits was seized by the Drug Enforcement Administration from a home used by the traffickers in Bergen County, N.J. Even though the DEA left a receipt, the gang thought the money may have been stolen by rivals. Mata was able to confirm it was the DEA because he recognized an agent's name on the receipt, according to the FBI.

Mata has not yet entered a plea to the New Jersey charges. Fleisher said he will vigorously defend Mata, who faces a minimum of 10 years in prison and a maximum of life on each of two drug charges. The illegal money transaction charge carries a potential 10-year prison term.

No other Miami-Dade police officers have been implicated so far in the case.

___

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 14, 2014, 12:29:52 PM
http://politicalblindspot.com/cop-burned-man-for-littering


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 14, 2014, 07:09:59 PM
http://politicalblindspot.com/cop-burned-man-for-littering

The best officer in the department. I don't doubt that. Not for a minute.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 17, 2014, 08:11:08 AM
http://dailycaller.com/2014/04/17/cop-beats-up-model-air-force-captain-in-his-own-home-issues-arrest-weeks-later/?advD=1248,209


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 22, 2014, 08:48:29 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/22/well-the-mynypd-hashtag-sure-backfired-quickly


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Roger Bacon on April 23, 2014, 02:10:34 PM
lololololol

#myNYPD Twitter campaign backfires, promotes photos of police brutality instead of positive encounters with public


On Tuesday the NYPD's Twitter page, @NYPDnews, asked users to tweet pictures of positive interactions between the public and city cops, and to use the hashtag #myNYPD. Instead, people posted pictures of police brutality that took place during the Occupy Wall Street movement.


 BY Thomas Tracy , Timothy O’connor , Dareh Gregorian
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Tuesday, April 22, 2014, 4:44 PM
Updated: Wednesday, April 23, 2014, 4:48 PM

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nypd-twitter-campaign-mynypd-backfires-article-1.1765159#ixzz2zkJtYeoP

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2014, 11:18:59 PM
Ex-deputies allegedly cut power, cameras to plant guns in pot clinic

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-ex-deputies-cameras-20140423,0,2461684.story
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 24, 2014, 06:03:51 AM
Ex-deputies allegedly cut power, cameras to plant guns in pot clinic

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-ex-deputies-cameras-20140423,0,2461684.story



Not surprising whatsoever. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 24, 2014, 04:31:21 PM
Ex-deputies allegedly cut power, cameras to plant guns in pot clinic

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-ex-deputies-cameras-20140423,0,2461684.story

At least they were arrested and charges were filed – but it's a pity that the inevitable result will be a slap wrist along with a "now Timmy... we don't make faces like that. I want you to go apologize to grandma!"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2014, 03:38:57 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 27, 2014, 06:58:36 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html



just another day at the office
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 27, 2014, 10:12:01 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html



His body said "I'm not not resisting" but his eyes said "I am!"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 28, 2014, 07:58:55 AM
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20140427/METRO01/304270028/Nearly-2-dozen-Detroit-police-officers-suspended-outstanding-warrants


 :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 29, 2014, 09:15:17 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 29, 2014, 11:34:10 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html


 >:(

Uhm, was this very same link posted? In fact, isn't it a couple of posts above your post? You're slipping 333386...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 30, 2014, 05:20:16 AM
http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/NYPD-Officer-Arrested-Child-Porn-Queens-257252131.html?_osource=SocialFlowFB_NYBrand


Isolated incident . . . . . ..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on April 30, 2014, 01:52:39 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/30/doj-prosecutorial-misconduct_n_5235876.html


Holder really sucks
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2014, 12:56:32 PM
Two NYPD cops shoot guns while drunk & off-duty, police sources say

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-allegedly-shoots-gun-drunk-chief-article-1.1774643
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 01, 2014, 05:02:44 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2614386/Tennessee-police-photographed-choking-unresisting-college-student-passes-out.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/04/28/knoxville-cop-fired-immediately-after-photos-show-brutal-choking-of-student/?tid=pm_pop

The cop who choked the guy has been fired - surprisingly swiftly and very unexpected even for such a well-documented incident, and a referral has been made to the D.A. who may pursue more charges.

The question is why did nothing happen to the two cops that were right there? They ought to have told the fatso to stop what he's doing, especially since they were taking the guy into custody and he was now their responsibility.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 01, 2014, 08:15:34 PM
http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2014/04/30/roseville-business-owner-sues-city-after-arrest-for-allowing-customers-to-dance

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 02, 2014, 08:08:02 AM
http://miami.cbslocal.com/2014/04/30/two-broward-deputies-accused-of-using-excessive-force

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 02, 2014, 01:37:40 PM

New Jersey Cop Videotaped Himself Abusing Girls and Having Sex with Cows

 




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May 1, 2014

Robert Melia Jr. was sworn to protect and serve, but a Burlington County jury found he abandoned that oath when he and his former girlfriend repeatedly molested teenagers in the home they shared in Moorestown.

The attacks, including a violent sexual assault on an incapacitated, bound and blindfolded teenager captured on video, took place just feet from where his Moorestown police uniform hung on his bedroom door.

The patrolman and his former girlfriend, Heather Lewis, a nursing assistant, preyed upon vulnerable teenage girls whom the couple brought to their residence to escape their difficult home lives, according to trial testimony.

robert_malia_heather_lew is

The jury found Melia, 42, and Lewis, 36, of Pemberton Township, guilty of six counts of first-degree aggravated sexual assault as well as multiple counts of sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual contact, sexual contact and endangering the welfare of a child. They were also found guilty of invasion of privacy.

Their arrest in 2008 drew international headlines, and for good reason: He was a police officer indicted on charges of sexually assaulting three young girls, and engaging in a sex act with several cows.

But when the Moorestown cop renewed his certification as an emergency medical technician that fall, he checked “no” in the box asking whether he had ever been charged with a crime, and nobody questioned it. Despite being convicted of sexual abuse 4 months prior, Melia worked as a public servant again! This time, as a New Jersey EMT.

The atrocious unaccountability is common within the law enforcement arena. Senator Mark Warner just purported that the fast food industry conducts better background checks than the the TSA.

Just this week, The Free Thought Project covered the story of a Las Cruces Police Detective Michael Garcia, who had a history of secual misconduct, while on duty, and was still allowed to be alone with a teenage intern, who he then raped.

 



This type of irresponsible hiring by the public sector is completely unacceptable. How many more crazed psychopaths are in positions of authority or public security that we do not know about?

 


Sources for this article:

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/judge-dismisses-animal-cruelty-charges-police-officer-robert-melia-sex-cows-article-1.380819

http://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/08/no_background_checks_allows_so.html

http://behindthebluewall.blogspot.com/2012/04/nj-convicted-moorestown-officer-melia.html

Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/jersey-cop-videotaped-abusing-girls-sex-cows/#ZwJrhswQeEgx4JSu.99
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2014, 02:25:15 PM
Sober driver arrested for OWI when deputy crashes into her car

http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 03, 2014, 02:54:06 PM
Sober driver arrested for OWI when deputy crashes into her car

http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/

How fucking ridiculous... but this should serve as a reminder: when cops as you a question, don't answer. It's true that this piece-of-shit deputy's statements at the time of the crime likely would have given them probable cause to arrest her at the time, her statements re: Vicodin and "few sips" are likely to have played a role there to. Remember, you don't have to answer my questions (except provide your name, address and date of birth) and the cops are not your friends - they will use anything you say against you. Stay silent.

Also, I predict that not only will the State's insurance pay her medical bills, but that if they don't and the State tries to use the the law capping damages at $250,000 the law will be thrown aside by a very angry Federal Judge who will bring down such a big hammer on the State, that they'll be lucky if all they have to do is cover her medical bills. And that's before the inevitable and well-deserved civil lawsuit.

Also it's a travesty that the officer has the balls to file for disability. He should be facing charges, both for the original incident of running the stop sign, abuse under color of authority, filing a false police report, lying to investigators and insurance fraud.

This guy should never again work in any position that doesn't require him to say "would you like fries with that" and "don't worry sir, I will clean the bathroom from your explosive diarrhea", his paycheck should go straight to the girl whose life he fucked and he should be paid a small stipend.

Fucking filthy piece of lying shit...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2014, 05:58:04 PM
Suit alleges deputy beat mentally disabled man

http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/may/02/martinez-vista-down-syndrome-deputy-beat-lawsuit/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on May 03, 2014, 07:01:57 PM
Myself, I'd recommend that a person never admit to consuming anything questionable, when interacting with the cops. If you're pulled into a so-called sobriety checkpoint, for instance, don't mention the beer you may have had with supper, even when directly asked. Don't mention that you're a medical pot user, if that's the case. Don't talk about prescriptions (again, even when directly asked). Don't give anything like that, period. There is absolutely no benefit to doing that, versus the hassle you're asking for. You certainly don't owe it to some asshole that's waylaying you without reason (that's exactly what a cop reduces himself to under such circumstances).

Be extremely polite but firm. Your goal is to carry on undisturbed, without the system riding your ass every time you round a corner.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on May 03, 2014, 07:14:44 PM
...btw, refusing to answer something such as whether you've consumed anything questionable can be viewed as suspicious, obviously, so you need to provide answers for things like that. Do what you need to do to carry on with your business.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 03, 2014, 09:41:48 PM
...btw, refusing to answer something such as whether you've consumed anything questionable can be viewed as suspicious, obviously, so you need to provide answers for things like that. Do what you need to do to carry on with your business.

I agree with your previous post but not this: you don't "obviously" need to provide anything - except your name, address and date of birth in a subset of states. If the Officer says that your refusal to answer is suspicious, then let him think that and remain quiet. His "thoughts" don't rise to probable cause and almost certainly won't even rise to reasonable suspicion.

The best strategy when dealing with cops is remain calm and courteous and not volunteer any information you are not legally obligated to provide. Refuse to be manipulated into giving up your Constitutional rights because a thug with a badge says "well, that's mighty suspicious... why wouldn't you want to tell me where you're coming from and where you're going? You ain't got nothing to hide, do you boy?"

I've been stopped by cops who repeatedly asked me to open the trunk for "routine inspection" and when I refused to do so, suggested that my refusal to allow my vehicle to be searched could get me arrested or indicted, threatened that they'd bring a K-9, or that they got on the horn and asked for a warrant and that if I cooperated I wouldn't get in trouble. It was all bullshit.

Stand up for yourself: refuse to be bullied. Be polite and courteous but don't surrender your rights or let the police walk all over you.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on May 03, 2014, 11:25:07 PM
I agree with your previous post but not this: you don't "obviously" need to provide anything - except your name, address and date of birth in a subset of states. If the Officer says that your refusal to answer is suspicious, then let him think that and remain quiet. His "thoughts" don't rise to probable cause and almost certainly won't even rise to reasonable suspicion.

The best strategy when dealing with cops is remain calm and courteous and not volunteer any information you are not legally obligated to provide. Refuse to be manipulated into giving up your Constitutional rights because a thug with a badge says "well, that's mighty suspicious... why wouldn't you want to tell me where you're coming from and where you're going? You ain't got nothing to hide, do you boy?"

I've been stopped by cops who repeatedly asked me to open the trunk for "routine inspection" and when I refused to do so, suggested that my refusal to allow my vehicle to be searched could get me arrested or indicted, threatened that they'd bring a K-9, or that they got on the horn and asked for a warrant and that if I cooperated I wouldn't get in trouble. It was all bullshit.

Stand up for yourself: refuse to be bullied. Be polite and courteous but don't surrender your rights or let the police walk all over you.

If you're willing to do as you say in this post. why not? As long as you understand that you're effectively issuing a challenge to the cop or cops to make a move, which may include manufacturing evidence against you. If you want to go that route, you'd better cover your ass with something greater than your word, that's for sure.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 04, 2014, 05:07:40 PM
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/local/new_york&id=9526393


Figures. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 06, 2014, 04:47:59 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/02/family-of-medical-marijua_n_5228182.html#comments


Outrageous
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 06, 2014, 05:36:51 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/05/dea-michele-leonhart-mandatory-minimums_n_5269074.html?utm_hp_ref=politics#comments

DEA supports harsh mandatory minimum sentences - NO FNG WAY!!! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on May 06, 2014, 08:08:10 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/05/dea-michele-leonhart-mandatory-minimums_n_5269074.html?utm_hp_ref=politics#comments

DEA supports harsh mandatory minimum sentences - NO FNG WAY!!!  

Playing the game of saying one thing while doing another. That's what this POS administration is all about.

So where are the mandatory minimums for bad cops, and others with power?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2014, 09:03:58 AM
New York woman sues police over raids seeking long-dead husband

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/06/us-usa-new-york-deadraid-idUSBREA450LR20140506


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2014, 11:36:39 AM
SWAT raid in Kalamazoo turns up empty-handed, frightens family

http://www.wwmt.com/shared/news/features/top-stories/stories/wwmt_swat-raid-kalamazoo-turns-up-emptyhanded-frightens-family-20656.shtml

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 06, 2014, 11:38:34 AM
New York woman sues police over raids seeking long-dead husband

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/06/us-usa-new-york-deadraid-idUSBREA450LR20140506




This is big today locally
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 08, 2014, 07:05:47 PM
Texas police shoot woman, 93

http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/07/us/texas-police-shoot-elderly-woman-93/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 10, 2014, 02:37:34 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/05/09/policing-for-profit-lawmakers-advocates-raise-alarm-at-growing-govt-power-to
 :(

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2014, 02:38:44 AM
Police Shooting Frenzy Raises Concerns

http://miami.cbslocal.com/2014/05/06/police-shooting-frenzy-raises-concerns/

23 cops fired at least 377 shots:
1 dead unarmed perp
1 dead innocent victim
6 cops wounded (2 of them shot and 2 with ruptured eardrums)
12 year old boy and infant nearly hit
thousands of dollars in random bullet damage to nearby property
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2014, 02:44:51 PM
Sheriff's deputy who was late responding to 911 calls because she was having sex in her patrol car resigns

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2626176/Female-deputy-finished-having-sex-duty-responding-call.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 12, 2014, 04:20:52 PM
Sheriff's deputy who was late responding to 911 calls because she was having sex in her patrol car resigns

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2626176/Female-deputy-finished-having-sex-duty-responding-call.html

Lol
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 13, 2014, 01:08:55 PM
SALEM, Ore. -- Neighbors heard the gunshots and now they're waiting for the police to explain what happened. How did a 25-year-old woman end up dead after a traffic stop on Friday night?

Salem Police say an officer stopped Jacklynn Ford, 25, a few minutes after 10 p.m. on Friday near Eastgate Basin Park.

Police say Ford ran away from the officer but would not discuss what happened next or how the officer ended up shooting her.

 
I heard three gunshots and a scream," said a neighbor who lived near the park but did not want to use his name.
 

Another neighbor also heard gunshots, sirens, and a police dog barking.


Salem Police said they found a gun that appeared to belong to Ford.

 

The Oregon State Police are now investigating.


Ford's family is not waiting for the official results.

 

"I'm not laying down on this," wrote her aunt, Marci, on Facebook. "My neice is going to get her justice."

 

Ford's mom also posted on Facebook, "My heart feels like its broke (sic). I miss my daughter and just want to hold her."

 

A spokesman for Salem Police declined to elaborate on the shooting while the state investigates what happened, which is routine.

http://www.katu.com/news/local/Woman-25-dies-after-traffic-stop-in-Salem-What-happened-258794511.html



Oh please -  ::)  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2014, 01:20:36 PM
SALEM, Ore. -- Neighbors heard the gunshots and now they're waiting for the police to explain what happened. How did a 25-year-old woman end up dead after a traffic stop on Friday night?

Salem Police say an officer stopped Jacklynn Ford, 25, a few minutes after 10 p.m. on Friday near Eastgate Basin Park.

Police say Ford ran away from the officer but would not discuss what happened next or how the officer ended up shooting her.

 
I heard three gunshots and a scream," said a neighbor who lived near the park but did not want to use his name.
 

Another neighbor also heard gunshots, sirens, and a police dog barking.


Salem Police said they found a gun that appeared to belong to Ford.

 

The Oregon State Police are now investigating.


Ford's family is not waiting for the official results.

 

"I'm not laying down on this," wrote her aunt, Marci, on Facebook. "My neice is going to get her justice."

 

Ford's mom also posted on Facebook, "My heart feels like its broke (sic). I miss my daughter and just want to hold her."

 

A spokesman for Salem Police declined to elaborate on the shooting while the state investigates what happened, which is routine.

http://www.katu.com/news/local/Woman-25-dies-after-traffic-stop-in-Salem-What-happened-258794511.html



Oh please -  ::)  ::)

Isn't it funny how police always release facts to make it seem like they performed the most heroic task but when asked to elaborate on sketchy details all of a sudden "there is an investigation" and decline to comment?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2014, 05:53:08 PM
C.P. man seeking $11M in catheterization lawsuit

http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/lake/schererville/c-p-man-seeking-m-in-catheterization-lawsuit/article_8331836f-3cc4-54ff-9d71-3c33fc42946f.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 13, 2014, 06:12:16 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-forced-dozens-anal-cavity-searches-fun-2-years-prison


That's it?   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2014, 06:18:46 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-forced-dozens-anal-cavity-searches-fun-2-years-prison


That's it?  


And of course a full year of paid vacation... These molesters should be thrown in a cell for many years and have their victims as wardens.


"Yet as part of a plea deal, prosecutors agreed to drop the sexual assault charges since Vagnini agreed to plead no contest to four felony charges and four misdemeanors.  Vagnini will no longer have to register as a sex offender.

In fact, all of the perpetrators were given plea deals and given light sentences.

Officer Jeffrey Dollhopf, 42, will face a $300 fine and and was ordered to 100 hours of community service for his involvement in the assaults.  Since he pleaded no contest to disorderly conduct as a party to the crime, most of his charges were wiped out. As part of his deal, he agreed to resign from the department.  He spent one full year on paid leave from the department.

Officer Brian Kozelek, 34, was given a similar deal.  After a full year of paid vacation, he now faces a $300 fine and a mere 20 hours community service.   He also agreed to voluntarily resign his position at the department.

Officer Jacob Knight, 32, will actually face a small amount of jail time.  He was sentenced to 20 days in the House of Correction, a $300 fine and 60 hours of community service after an extended amount of paid time off.

As for Officer Michael Vagnini, his record of molesting innocent people, illegal detainment, illegal searches, penetrating orifices for fun, framing people with false evidence and ruining their lives has come to a close.  After terrorizing his community for years in a most disgusting and egregious way, he will face just over 2 years behind bars — 26 months."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: TheGrinch on May 13, 2014, 06:45:18 PM

Police Officer Shoots Puppy After ‘Fearing For His Safety’

Officer claims puppy would not stop “advancing” towards him

Mikael Thalen
Infowars.com
May 13, 2014

A Michigan police officer shot and killed a 10-month-old puppy this week as he pursued a suspect through several yards in a Redford Township neighborhood.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

According to the dog’s owner, Bianca Alakson, police ignored the “beware of dog” sign on her backyard fence early Sunday morning as they entered onto the property. After reaching her backyard, one officer claims to have been “charged” by the puppy.

“I didn’t know what had happened at first, I just heard ‘pop, pop’,” said Alakson’s boyfriend, Ryan Showalter.

Police claim the officer “feared for his safety” and had no choice but to shoot the puppy twice after it would not stop “advancing.”

“Everyone here loves animals, it’s the last thing we want to do but we have to protect ourselves,” a police spokesperson said.

Showalter refuted the officer’s claim that his puppy was dangerous, saying the dog had no history of violence whatsoever.

“He wasn’t the protector of the house type dog either, he was just the great everybody and love them to death type dog,” Showalter said.

Although police say the shooting was strictly based on officer safety, Showalter says the officer had a different explanation on scene.

“I asked him why and he said, ‘because he was in our way’,” Showalter explained.

Incredibly, officers then arrested Showalter, accusing him of interfering with police on his own property.

“They tried to tell me that I was resisting arrest,” Showalter said. “I was breaking down hysterically in the back seat of the cop car, crying, I didn’t know what to do.”

Showalter was later bailed out of jail by Alakson and is still awaiting charges from police.

Although instances of police helping dogs do appear, such as the recent case of a California officer rescuing a Chihuahua from a busy highway, they are greatly outnumbered by situations where officers use deadly force.

Earlier this month, A Pennsylvania state trooper wildly fired at a family’s dog only feet from a 5-year-old’s bedroom window. Although officer’s claimed the dog was charging as well, the dog’s owner argued that the bullet wounds, which were all in the dog’s side, proved that the dog was not running towards them.

An Oklahoma police officer shot and killed a family’s dog last March and reportedly bragged to animal control how the event was “awesome.” According to reports, the offending officer has received numerous complaints from fellow cops as well as citizens.

Last February, an officer in Idaho was cleared of wrongdoing after killing a man’s service dog outside a 9-year-old’s birthday party. The incident, captured by the police vehicle’s dash cam, show the officer kicking at the dog several times before he opened fire.

In 2012, a police officer in Austin, Texas shot and killed a dog as it played Frisbee with its owner. The officer would later learn that he had responded to the wrong home on a domestic disturbance call.

Also in 2012, a Texas cop fatally shot a dog as it sat on the porch outside its home, causing several bullets to go through the home’s walls. The officer proceeded by killing a second dog that was tied up in the backyard.

Even though some statistics point to American police killing a dog every 98 minutes, officers are not always successful. Just last month, a California sheriff’s deputy shot himself while attempting to kill a fenced-in dog. Although the deputy claimed that the dog had tried to attack him, the dog was later seen playing with small children in the neighborhood.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 13, 2014, 06:51:38 PM
Incredibly, officers then arrested Showalter, accusing him of interfering with police on his own property.

“They tried to tell me that I was resisting arrest,” Showalter said. “I was breaking down hysterically in the back seat of the cop car, crying, I didn’t know what to do.”





 :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: TheGrinch on May 16, 2014, 10:04:44 PM
enjoy

http://www.policestateusa.com/
 :o :o :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2014, 11:04:32 AM
http://7online.com/70996


major child porn bust involving some cops and emts
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 21, 2014, 11:21:11 AM
Police Officer Shoots Puppy After ‘Fearing For His Safety’

Officer claims puppy would not stop “advancing” towards him

Mikael Thalen
Infowars.com
May 13, 2014

A Michigan police officer shot and killed a 10-month-old puppy this week as he pursued a suspect through several yards in a Redford Township neighborhood.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

According to the dog’s owner, Bianca Alakson, police ignored the “beware of dog” sign on her backyard fence early Sunday morning as they entered onto the property. After reaching her backyard, one officer claims to have been “charged” by the puppy.

“I didn’t know what had happened at first, I just heard ‘pop, pop’,” said Alakson’s boyfriend, Ryan Showalter.

Police claim the officer “feared for his safety” and had no choice but to shoot the puppy twice after it would not stop “advancing.”

“Everyone here loves animals, it’s the last thing we want to do but we have to protect ourselves,” a police spokesperson said.

Showalter refuted the officer’s claim that his puppy was dangerous, saying the dog had no history of violence whatsoever.

“He wasn’t the protector of the house type dog either, he was just the great everybody and love them to death type dog,” Showalter said.

Although police say the shooting was strictly based on officer safety, Showalter says the officer had a different explanation on scene.

“I asked him why and he said, ‘because he was in our way’,” Showalter explained.

Incredibly, officers then arrested Showalter, accusing him of interfering with police on his own property.

“They tried to tell me that I was resisting arrest,” Showalter said. “I was breaking down hysterically in the back seat of the cop car, crying, I didn’t know what to do.”

Showalter was later bailed out of jail by Alakson and is still awaiting charges from police.

Although instances of police helping dogs do appear, such as the recent case of a California officer rescuing a Chihuahua from a busy highway, they are greatly outnumbered by situations where officers use deadly force.

Earlier this month, A Pennsylvania state trooper wildly fired at a family’s dog only feet from a 5-year-old’s bedroom window. Although officer’s claimed the dog was charging as well, the dog’s owner argued that the bullet wounds, which were all in the dog’s side, proved that the dog was not running towards them.

An Oklahoma police officer shot and killed a family’s dog last March and reportedly bragged to animal control how the event was “awesome.” According to reports, the offending officer has received numerous complaints from fellow cops as well as citizens.

Last February, an officer in Idaho was cleared of wrongdoing after killing a man’s service dog outside a 9-year-old’s birthday party. The incident, captured by the police vehicle’s dash cam, show the officer kicking at the dog several times before he opened fire.

In 2012, a police officer in Austin, Texas shot and killed a dog as it played Frisbee with its owner. The officer would later learn that he had responded to the wrong home on a domestic disturbance call.

Also in 2012, a Texas cop fatally shot a dog as it sat on the porch outside its home, causing several bullets to go through the home’s walls. The officer proceeded by killing a second dog that was tied up in the backyard.

Even though some statistics point to American police killing a dog every 98 minutes, officers are not always successful. Just last month, a California sheriff’s deputy shot himself while attempting to kill a fenced-in dog. Although the deputy claimed that the dog had tried to attack him, the dog was later seen playing with small children in the neighborhood.

How do you write a whole article and never mention the type of dog? At 10 mos it could be 70-80 lbs. And the dog in Austin..wasn't playing frisbee with the owner when it was shot. Damn....doesn't anyone know how to write a factual article these days?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 28, 2014, 09:40:33 AM
Prosecutor: Fire trooper who pulled gun on speeder

http://www.wzzm13.com/story/news/local/2014/05/20/prosecutor-fire-trooper-who-pulled-gun-on-speeder/9323443/

In a written statement to a supervisor, the trooper said he was thinking about the 2013 fatal shooting of Michigan state Trooper Paul Butterfield II during a traffic stop.

"With the recent incident … at the forefront of my mind, I elected to 'clear' the vehicle for my safety as I feel the vehicle could have suddenly pulled to the side in an effort to lure me into a vulnerable position where I could easily be shot," the trooper said in the statement, which the newspaper obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request.

The trooper is on paid leave during the investigation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2014, 10:43:11 AM
paid leave is nothing more than a vacation

Prosecutor: Fire trooper who pulled gun on speeder

http://www.wzzm13.com/story/news/local/2014/05/20/prosecutor-fire-trooper-who-pulled-gun-on-speeder/9323443/

In a written statement to a supervisor, the trooper said he was thinking about the 2013 fatal shooting of Michigan state Trooper Paul Butterfield II during a traffic stop.

"With the recent incident … at the forefront of my mind, I elected to 'clear' the vehicle for my safety as I feel the vehicle could have suddenly pulled to the side in an effort to lure me into a vulnerable position where I could easily be shot," the trooper said in the statement, which the newspaper obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request.

The trooper is on paid leave during the investigation.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 29, 2014, 08:08:18 AM
paid leave is nothing more than a vacation


Except on a vacation you can go where you want when you want. On Administrative leave you are required to be available for any and all internal investigation interviews and meetings and notify your supervisor of your whereabouts during business hours, and you must remain within the local area. The whole purpose of admin leave is so they are obligated to be available for the investigation and while it is being conducted, they are not financially damaged. Often times the investigation will reveal there was no crime committed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2014, 08:09:00 AM
Except on a vacation you can go where you want when you want. On Administrative leave you are required to be available for any and all internal investigation interviews and meetings and notify your supervisor of your whereabouts during business hours, and you must remain within the local area. The whole purpose of admin leave is so they are obligated to be available for the investigation and while it is being conducted, they are not financially damaged. Often times the investigation will reveal there was no crime committed.


GMAFB - what excuses
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2014, 09:33:16 AM
No matter how many times the courts decide in favor of the citizens, the cops continue to arrest and harass citizens for bogus reasons. To use some of their logic, if they have nothing to hide and they're lawful, why are they afraid of being filmed?

Court upholds “First Amendment” right to film police
Ruling is one of many nationwide supporting right to record police


The woman was following a friend to his house when an officer pulled him over. From about 30 feet away, after getting out of her car, she announced she was going to audio-record the stop, according to the record. Ironically, her video camera malfunctioned, and she was unable to capture anything. She returned to her car, according to the opinion.

In a footnote, the court noted Friday that the malfunction was irrelevant: "We agree that Gericke's First Amendment right does not depend on whether her attempt to videotape was frustrated by a technical malfunction. There is no dispute that she took out the camera in order to record the traffic stop."

Another officer arrived at the scene and demanded to know where her camera was, and the woman refused to say. She also declined to provide her license and registration. She was arrested for disobeying a police officer, obstructing a government official, and "unlawful interception of oral communications," the court said.

Local prosecutors declined to charge her on any of the counts. She sued, and a lower-court judge sided against the police, who argued they should be immune from a lawsuit. The police appealed.


http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2014/05/court-upholds-first-amendment-right-to-film-police/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 29, 2014, 12:00:22 PM
Except on a vacation you can go where you want when you want. On Administrative leave you are required to be available for any and all internal investigation interviews and meetings and notify your supervisor of your whereabouts during business hours, and you must remain within the local area. The whole purpose of admin leave is so they are obligated to be available for the investigation and while it is being conducted, they are not financially damaged. Often times the investigation will reveal there was no crime committed.

Why do cops need this extra layer of protection not available to citizens? You have police unions objecting to having cops recorded. You have police unions demanding that cops be given a "cooling off" period prior to being interviewed about shootings. You have police unions demanding that cops see alll available video and evidence prior to making a statement about such incidents.

Why? You are public servants. You don't deserve any more protections than the public you protect - and often times abuse.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2014, 02:20:05 PM

A 2010 Pentagon directive on military support to civilian authorities details what critics say is a troubling policy that envisions the Obama administration’s potential use of military force against Americans.

The directive contains noncontroversial provisions on support to civilian fire and emergency services, special events and the domestic use of the Army Corps of Engineers.


PHOTOS: Top 10 U.S. fighter jets


The troubling aspect of the directive outlines presidential authority for the use of military arms and forces, including unarmed drones, in operations against domestic unrest.

“This appears to be the latest step in the administration’s decision to use force within the United States against its citizens,” said a defense official opposed to the directive.

Directive No. 3025.18, “Defense Support of Civil Authorities,” was issued Dec. 29, 2010, and states that U.S. commanders “are provided emergency authority under this directive.”

“Federal military forces shall not be used to quell civil disturbances unless specifically authorized by the president in accordance with applicable law or permitted under emergency authority,” the directive states.

“In these circumstances, those federal military commanders have the authority, in extraordinary emergency circumstances where prior authorization by the president is impossible and duly constituted local authorities are unable to control the situation, to engage temporarily in activities that are necessary to quell large-scale, unexpected civil disturbances” under two conditions.

The conditions include military support needed “to prevent significant loss of life or wanton destruction of property and are necessary to restore governmental function and public order.” A second use is when federal, state and local authorities “are unable or decline to provide adequate protection for federal property or federal governmental functions.”

“Federal action, including the use of federal military forces, is authorized when necessary to protect the federal property or functions,” the directive states.

Military assistance can include loans of arms, ammunition, vessels and aircraft. The directive states clearly that it is for engaging civilians during times of unrest.

A U.S. official said the Obama administration considered but rejected deploying military force under the directive during the recent standoff with Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his armed supporters.

Mr. Bundy is engaged in a legal battle with the federal Bureau of Land Management over unpaid grazing fees. Along with a group of protesters, Mr. Bundy in April confronted federal and local authorities in a standoff that ended when the authorities backed down.

The Pentagon directive authorizes the secretary of defense to approve the use of unarmed drones in domestic unrest. But it bans the use of missile-firing unmanned aircraft.

“Use of armed [unmanned aircraft systems] is not authorized,” the directive says.

The directive was signed by then-Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn. A copy can be found on the Pentagon website: http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/302518p.pdf.

Story Continues →
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Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on May 30, 2014, 06:02:23 AM
http://atlanta.cbslocal.com/2014/05/30/toddler-critically-injured-during-police-raid



Just wow.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2014, 06:51:37 AM
Why do cops need this extra layer of protection not available to citizens? You have police unions objecting to having cops recorded. You have police unions demanding that cops be given a "cooling off" period prior to being interviewed about shootings. You have police unions demanding that cops see alll available video and evidence prior to making a statement about such incidents.

Why? You are public servants. You don't deserve any more protections than the public you protect - and often times abuse.

Some people, obviously not all, but some understand the nature of the profession. There was a time when cops were like the average citizen. They were fired at will for any reason. You wrote the mayors daughter a ticket, you're fired. You arrested a large contributer to the Sheriffs campaign? you're fired. So over the course of the last 150 yrs some protections were built in because having a more professional police organization was important to the citizens. As far as the cooling off period I believe that evolved because studies have shown that right after a high adrenaline incident memory/recall isn't very complete. Officers were getting hemmed up because they would immediatly give a statement, then a few days later after thinking about it, add, or detract from the original statement as details became more clear and it would be construed that they lied about the original statement. Turns out they didn't lie, it's just a process the brain goes through. So in the interest of getting the most accurate statement the first time, they are given 72 hrs. During this time they should be making notes from shortly after the time of the incident till the interview. Your second part of that is for the same reason. I personally have gone through an incident and I could have sworn I was the one who placed the suspect in the back seat. But when I review the video, as I'm approaching the back of the car, another officer takes the subject from me and placed them in the car. I would have lost a bet on it that I did it. That's one example of why it is good to review the information. We are not looking to catch the officer in a "lie", we are wanting the most accurate information.
I don't agree with everything my police association does and says and often times they are a fringe part of the officers rather than what the entire department feels. I've personally sent at least a dozen emails to our Association President over the last 2 yrs voicing my opposition to his statements/position but to no avail. If he were not retiring this year, I would vote against him for the next term.   But even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in awhile and there are things like the "cool off" period you mentioned that I totally agree with.
I can't go a day without reading about some knucklehead in a police uniform doing something stupid, arrogant or down right illegal. But having been in the profession for 31 yrs I believe overall policing has improved. If we would have had cameras back 50 yrs ago like we do today.... but even then, and especially now, there are a vast majority of good officers trying to do the right thing in a difficult job. Those videos would outnumber the bad ones 100,000 to 1 if people bothered to film cops doing good things and posting it on you tube. Should be expect all officers to be excellent cops? Absolutley and I hope the profession continues to strive to reach that. But as long as we have to hire humans to do the job, we'll continue to see abuses and you tube videos showing cops doing stupid or down right illegal things. Like you, I don't believe that is acceptable. Our difference is that  I believe it is not the norm, nor close to the norm considering the millions of police/citizen contacts a year.        
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 30, 2014, 09:47:44 AM
Some people, obviously not all, but some understand the nature of the profession. There was a time when cops were like the average citizen. They were fired at will for any reason. You wrote the mayors daughter a ticket, you're fired. You arrested a large contributer to the Sheriffs campaign? you're fired. So over the course of the last 150 yrs some protections were built in because having a more professional police organization was important to the citizens. As far as the cooling off period I believe that evolved because studies have shown that right after a high adrenaline incident memory/recall isn't very complete. Officers were getting hemmed up because they would immediatly give a statement, then a few days later after thinking about it, add, or detract from the original statement as details became more clear and it would be construed that they lied about the original statement. Turns out they didn't lie, it's just a process the brain goes through. So in the interest of getting the most accurate statement the first time, they are given 72 hrs. During this time they should be making notes from shortly after the time of the incident till the interview. Your second part of that is for the same reason. I personally have gone through an incident and I could have sworn I was the one who placed the suspect in the back seat. But when I review the video, as I'm approaching the back of the car, another officer takes the subject from me and placed them in the car. I would have lost a bet on it that I did it. That's one example of why it is good to review the information. We are not looking to catch the officer in a "lie", we are wanting the most accurate information.
I don't agree with everything my police association does and says and often times they are a fringe part of the officers rather than what the entire department feels. I've personally sent at least a dozen emails to our Association President over the last 2 yrs voicing my opposition to his statements/position but to no avail. If he were not retiring this year, I would vote against him for the next term.   But even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in awhile and there are things like the "cool off" period you mentioned that I totally agree with.
I can't go a day without reading about some knucklehead in a police uniform doing something stupid, arrogant or down right illegal. But having been in the profession for 31 yrs I believe overall policing has improved. If we would have had cameras back 50 yrs ago like we do today.... but even then, and especially now, there are a vast majority of good officers trying to do the right thing in a difficult job. Those videos would outnumber the bad ones 100,000 to 1 if people bothered to film cops doing good things and posting it on you tube. Should be expect all officers to be excellent cops? Absolutley and I hope the profession continues to strive to reach that. But as long as we have to hire humans to do the job, we'll continue to see abuses and you tube videos showing cops doing stupid or down right illegal things. Like you, I don't believe that is acceptable. Our difference is that  I believe it is not the norm, nor close to the norm considering the millions of police/citizen contacts a year.        

I don't necessarily disagree with what you write. I agree that many (even most) police officers are decent people who want to do a good job, and I understand that even well-meaning people make honest mistakes. I don't want to throw a cop who makes a mistake in jail and throw away the key.

What I do want is twofold: first to ensure that we have zero tolerance for bad cops and actively weed out and punish bad apples and second to ensure that we don't create a caste of people with special privileges (which is what we have, in essence, done with cops).

Let's talk about the 72 hour rule... do citizens have the same "timeout" for their brain to go through the process? Can they see all the evidence available before making a statement? If not, why not? Why afford police officers special rights in this instance?

I'm all for reasonable rules to support police in their, oftentimes, difficult work. But that doesn't mean turning a beat into a fiefdom and police officer into a feudal Lord.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 30, 2014, 09:52:01 AM
http://atlanta.cbslocal.com/2014/05/30/toddler-critically-injured-during-police-raid



Just wow.   

Wow... That Police Chief ought to get fired, as well as everyone else involved with the raid and the decision to not investigate.

Poor kid.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on May 30, 2014, 09:59:56 AM
http://atlanta.cbslocal.com/2014/05/30/toddler-critically-injured-during-police-raid

Just wow.   

Georgia. 

Don't go there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on May 30, 2014, 10:12:54 AM
Some people, obviously not all, but some understand the nature of the profession. There was a time when cops were like the average citizen. They were fired at will for any reason. You wrote the mayors daughter a ticket, you're fired. You arrested a large contributer to the Sheriffs campaign? you're fired. So over the course of the last 150 yrs some protections were built in because having a more professional police organization was important to the citizens. As far as the cooling off period I believe that evolved because studies have shown that right after a high adrenaline incident memory/recall isn't very complete. Officers were getting hemmed up because they would immediatly give a statement, then a few days later after thinking about it, add, or detract from the original statement as details became more clear and it would be construed that they lied about the original statement. Turns out they didn't lie, it's just a process the brain goes through. So in the interest of getting the most accurate statement the first time, they are given 72 hrs. During this time they should be making notes from shortly after the time of the incident till the interview. Your second part of that is for the same reason. I personally have gone through an incident and I could have sworn I was the one who placed the suspect in the back seat. But when I review the video, as I'm approaching the back of the car, another officer takes the subject from me and placed them in the car. I would have lost a bet on it that I did it. That's one example of why it is good to review the information. We are not looking to catch the officer in a "lie", we are wanting the most accurate information.
I don't agree with everything my police association does and says and often times they are a fringe part of the officers rather than what the entire department feels. I've personally sent at least a dozen emails to our Association President over the last 2 yrs voicing my opposition to his statements/position but to no avail. If he were not retiring this year, I would vote against him for the next term.   But even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in awhile and there are things like the "cool off" period you mentioned that I totally agree with.
I can't go a day without reading about some knucklehead in a police uniform doing something stupid, arrogant or down right illegal. But having been in the profession for 31 yrs I believe overall policing has improved. If we would have had cameras back 50 yrs ago like we do today.... but even then, and especially now, there are a vast majority of good officers trying to do the right thing in a difficult job. Those videos would outnumber the bad ones 100,000 to 1 if people bothered to film cops doing good things and posting it on you tube. Should be expect all officers to be excellent cops? Absolutley and I hope the profession continues to strive to reach that. But as long as we have to hire humans to do the job, we'll continue to see abuses and you tube videos showing cops doing stupid or down right illegal things. Like you, I don't believe that is acceptable. Our difference is that  I believe it is not the norm, nor close to the norm considering the millions of police/citizen contacts a year.        

What's more worrisome to me than the occasional total fuckhead you'll find among mostly good police forces everywhere are the small departments you hear about where it seems like rights abuses are accepted by almost everyone on the force. 

Brings to mind this clip from my favorite tv show:

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2014, 11:26:54 AM
I don't necessarily disagree with what you write. I agree that many (even most) police officers are decent people who want to do a good job, and I understand that even well-meaning people make honest mistakes. I don't want to throw a cop who makes a mistake in jail and throw away the key.

What I do want is twofold: first to ensure that we have zero tolerance for bad cops and actively weed out and punish bad apples and second to ensure that we don't create a caste of people with special privileges (which is what we have, in essence, done with cops).

Let's talk about the 72 hour rule... do citizens have the same "timeout" for their brain to go through the process? Can they see all the evidence available before making a statement? If not, why not? Why afford police officers special rights in this instance?

I'm all for reasonable rules to support police in their, oftentimes, difficult work. But that doesn't mean turning a beat into a fiefdom and police officer into a feudal Lord.

Yes, citizens have even more rights in many cases. They can refuse to talk to the cops period.  The officer is obligated to talk to Internal Affairs, they have no choice.  Citizens can refuse to speak to the police, and discovery rules mandate they and their attorney have access to the evidence before trial.

Maybe we aren't all that far apart. The officers in general are afforded "special" privilges(protections) due to the very nature of the job, which is generally being placed in less than ideal circumstances expected to get particular outcomes. While I agree there are instances when a cop gets over on the system, I've seen many more cases where without protections in place, the good cop, trying to do the best thing under the circumstances, would have been hosed.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 30, 2014, 01:21:17 PM
Yes, citizens have even more rights in many cases. They can refuse to talk to the cops period.  The officer is obligated to talk to Internal Affairs, they have no choice.

The Officer is obligated to appear, but he doesn't have to make any statements, especially any incriminating ones.


Citizens can refuse to speak to the police, and discovery rules mandate they and their attorney have access to the evidence before trial.

Officers who are indicted (and their lawyers) will have access to the evidence before trial as well. They don't lose their Constitutional rights by virtue of being cops.


Maybe we aren't all that far apart. The officers in general are afforded "special" privilges(protections) due to the very nature of the job, which is generally being placed in less than ideal circumstances expected to get particular outcomes. While I agree there are instances when a cop gets over on the system, I've seen many more cases where without protections in place, the good cop, trying to do the best thing under the circumstances, would have been hosed.

No doubt - and I have no issue with affording Officers reasonable privileges. But what they have now is not only beyond reasonable, but all too often results in egregious abuses by Officers being whitewashed with offenders given some administrative suspension and not much else. Look at the examples in this thread.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2014, 01:58:19 PM
The Officer is obligated to appear, but he doesn't have to make any statements, especially any incriminating ones.

[


Officers who are indicted (and their lawyers) will have access to the evidence before trial as well. They don't lose their Constitutional rights by virtue of being cops.


No doubt - and I have no issue with affording Officers reasonable privileges. But what they have now is not only beyond reasonable, but all too often results in egregious abuses by Officers being whitewashed with offenders given some administrative suspension and not much else. Look at the examples in this thread.

That isn't true with IA cases. The officer is compelled to cooperate and give a statement. If not he is terminated. With criminal cases, he is afforded the same rights as a citizen.

I think we disagree to a degree on what is beyond reasonable.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 31, 2014, 12:22:54 AM
That isn't true with IA cases. The officer is compelled to cooperate and give a statement. If not he is terminated.

How is that different from any other employer who calls an employee in and says: "Jenkins, there's been an increased consumption of toilet paper since you came on board. Are you responsible? If you will not answer you will lose your job!" They can't compel you to answer, and if they do, it's (at best) unclear that the statement could then be used against the person who made it vis–à–vis Garrity.


I think we disagree to a degree on what is beyond reasonable.

That much is clear.

You will forgive me if I find unreasonable having superiors stand by officers who shoot 70 year olds who try to reach for a cane because they were in fear of their life, or superiors who stand by cops that shoot and kill a 12 lbs dog on the grounds that the dog "refused to follow verbal commands" making the cops feel threatened, or any number of others cases I could cite.

The thing is, I'm sure you not one of the rotten apples that we read so much about in this thread. In fact I'm sure that you are as disgusted and outraged as the rest of us. Yet you insist that all is good, and that the internal process of discipline works.

But the facts don't match up: police have basically setup an internal system where all but the most egregious offenses are handled internally, usually on the down-low. Cases which can't be handled quietly "in the family" usually end up with slap-on-the-wrist penalties such as 'retraining' or with cops quitting before they can be fired, and they only rarely result in prosecutions. As a result, plenty of cops act with impunity, confident in the fact that should someone brave enough to stand up and complain nothing will come of it.

Perhaps your department is different. Perhaps you guys do it right. But if you do, then you are the exception and not the rule. And therein lies the problem.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2014, 02:17:32 PM
6 Cleveland officers indicted in deadly car chase

http://www.wsls.com/story/25657762/6-cleveland-officers-indicted-in-deadly-car-chase

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 31, 2014, 02:46:34 PM
Reposting agenda21nwo's post from Gossip & Opinions:

Monique Hernandez was pulled over in February of 2012 by Beaumont police officer, Enoch Clark. When Clark attempted to subdue Hernandez, he said she ‘resisted.’

Although the dashcam footage tells a different tale, Clark said that in order to get her in handcuffs, he had to use his department-issued JPX gunpowder-propelled pepper spray weapon and fire it less than a foot away from her face.

The gunpowder powered JPX Pepper Gun launches OC (pepper spray) at 405 mph.

The results from firing the gun at such a close proximity were catastrophic.

The blast of pepper gel sliced her right eye in half, fractured her right orbital bone and severed the optic nerve in her left eye.

Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/womans-eyes-blown-pieces-cop-gunpowder-powered-pepper-gun/#2bFKzJplDhUHhM28.99

I'm at a loss for words. I hope the jury realizes that 20 years is nothing.


And now, for the update:

I guess they didn't - hung jury, with two holdouts results in mistrial. Out of this world... out of this fucking world.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 01, 2014, 02:27:22 PM
That isn't true with IA cases. The officer is compelled to cooperate and give a statement. If not he is terminated. With criminal cases, he is afforded the same rights as a citizen.

I think we disagree to a degree on what is beyond reasonable.   


How is that different with anybody else?  If I witness somebody shooting somebody else, I can't claim 5th amendment rights and not talk.

If I'm accused of a crime I can plead the 5th, but so can you.

If you're forced to choose between self-incrimination and losing your job, the Garrity rule prevents any of your statements from being used against you.

Me thinks, you're trying to be dishonest once again.


Nice of you to ignore the question as to why cops should have a cool down period but nobody else should.  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 01, 2014, 02:46:51 PM
Some comfort.

This was the guy avxo put up...one of the most egregious police abuses we've had on this board.  He won the suit, but there's no justice because nothing will happen to these shitbag cops.

http://rt.com/usa/new-mexico-anal-probes-737/

1.6 million...still suing the doctors that went along with it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 01, 2014, 05:23:36 PM
Some comfort.

This was the guy avxo put up...one of the most egregious police abuses we've had on this board.  He won the suit, but there's no justice because nothing will happen to these shitbag cops.

http://rt.com/usa/new-mexico-anal-probes-737/

1.6 million...still suing the doctors that went along with it.

If I was the guy who was so horribly violated I would not settle; no matter what the circumstances, no matter what the amount. I would insist on going before a jury and having my case heard. Because this isn't about money. It's about holding these assholes accountable for their actions.

I'm going to name them, so that their names will remain forever associated with their heinous acts:

Deming Police Officers Bobby Orosco, Robert Chavez and Hernandez.
Hidalgo County Deputies David Arredondo, Robert Rodriguez and Patrick Green.
Gila Regional Medical Center and Dr. Robert Wilcox and Okay Odocha.

These people ought to lose their jobs (and in the case of the Doctors, their licenses) and be held accountable, in front of a Court, for what they did.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 03, 2014, 04:03:44 PM

How is that different with anybody else?  If I witness somebody shooting somebody else, I can't claim 5th amendment rights and not talk.

If I'm accused of a crime I can plead the 5th, but so can you.

If you're forced to choose between self-incrimination and losing your job, the Garrity rule prevents any of your statements from being used against you.

Me thinks, you're trying to be dishonest once again.


Nice of you to ignore the question as to why cops should have a cool down period but nobody else should.  ::)


Bump for some honesty....yeah, I know - wishful thinking, lol.


I agree avxo, take the license away from those doctors.  But, I'm not sure he should have to make the point via lawsuit.  To me anyway, it's inexcusable that federal and state prosecutors are not bringing down these shitbag cops.

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 03, 2014, 06:51:07 PM
I agree avxo, take the license away from those doctors.  But, I'm not sure he should have to make the point via lawsuit.  To me anyway, it's inexcusable that federal and state prosecutors are not bringing down these shitbag cops.

Absolutely. It's insane that State and Federal authorities haven't already gotten involved in this case. Even if it turns out that everything was kosher, the facts of the case (as we know them) warrant at least a serious investigation and a public announcement of the results.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 09, 2014, 02:02:03 PM
How is that different from any other employer who calls an employee in and says: "Jenkins, there's been an increased consumption of toilet paper since you came on board. Are you responsible? If you will not answer you will lose your job!" They can't compel you to answer, and if they do, it's (at best) unclear that the statement could then be used against the person who made it vis–à–vis Garrity.


That much is clear.

You will forgive me if I find unreasonable having superiors stand by officers who shoot 70 year olds who try to reach for a cane because they were in fear of their life, or superiors who stand by cops that shoot and kill a 12 lbs dog on the grounds that the dog "refused to follow verbal commands" making the cops feel threatened, or any number of others cases I could cite.

The thing is, I'm sure you not one of the rotten apples that we read so much about in this thread. In fact I'm sure that you are as disgusted and outraged as the rest of us. Yet you insist that all is good, and that the internal process of discipline works.

But the facts don't match up: police have basically setup an internal system where all but the most egregious offenses are handled internally, usually on the down-low. Cases which can't be handled quietly "in the family" usually end up with slap-on-the-wrist penalties such as 'retraining' or with cops quitting before they can be fired, and they only rarely result in prosecutions. As a result, plenty of cops act with impunity, confident in the fact that should someone brave enough to stand up and complain nothing will come of it.

Perhaps your department is different. Perhaps you guys do it right. But if you do, then you are the exception and not the rule. And therein lies the problem.

1.Garrity as I understand it seperates administrative investigations from criminal. It does nothing to keep you from losing your job if you refuse to answer an IA question. You will lose your job.

2. I am not thrilled with supervisors standing by officers for doing stupid or illegal things. I am repulsed by it. Having said that, having been on both sides I will tend to not agree as often with many citizens that a certain action was stupid or illegal given all the available facts. Astonishingly I will tend to not agree with many of the public when they want to give a pass to an officer because they believe officers should be given free passes because their job is tough or they believe them all heros and good guys.

3. I can't recall saying all is good and that the internal process of discipline always works. I don't believe all is good so I can't imagine saying that.

4. I can only speak for my departments system and I have to strongly disagree with your assessment based on my experience with our system. However I don't believe the majority of departments have the same checks and balances we have and therefore are more prone to some of the allegations you put forth. I think that sometimes things are down played. I think there are some corrupt cops. I think we disagree on the "many". Based on my experience, 99% of the cops are good people trying to do a good job with a thousand rules and laws, with a criminal system that makes it very difficult to catch the bad guys. What we both seem to agree on is there is NO place in law enforcement for bullies, criminals and arrogant assholes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 09, 2014, 02:09:04 PM

How is that different with anybody else?  If I witness somebody shooting somebody else, I can't claim 5th amendment rights and not talk.

If I'm accused of a crime I can plead the 5th, but so can you.

If you're forced to choose between self-incrimination and losing your job, the Garrity rule prevents any of your statements from being used against you.

Me thinks, you're trying to be dishonest once again.


Nice of you to ignore the question as to why cops should have a cool down period but nobody else should.  ::)

Again, Garrity protects what you say to IA from being used against you criminally.. not administratively. If you do not answer every question IA asks you, you will be fired. No ifs, ands or butts.. This is more you not understanding the concept than me being dishonest..

As far as why cops should have a cool down period and nobody else should, I thougt I answered it but here goes.

Everyone else in the world can refuse to talk to the cops. They have a built in 72 hrs. They have a built in "never"... So it is not a "nobody else should" issue

The cop cannot refuse to talk to the investigators (cops). They are required to on condition of employment. So they are given a 72 hr period to collect their thoughts, calm down, review their evidence before they give a statement so that the investigators get the best accurate statement possible. Because that officer will be held to that statement via fine tooth comb   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 12, 2014, 11:43:55 AM
 :o


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 12, 2014, 01:38:32 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Obama administration has been quietly advising local police not to disclose details about surveillance technology they are using to sweep up basic cellphone data from entire neighborhoods, The Associated Press has learned.

Citing security reasons, the U.S. has intervened in routine state public records cases and criminal trials regarding use of the technology. This has resulted in police departments withholding materials or heavily censoring documents in rare instances when they disclose any about the purchase and use of such powerful surveillance equipment.

Federal involvement in local open records proceedings is unusual. It comes at a time when President Barack Obama has said he welcomes a debate on government surveillance and called for more transparency about spying in the wake of disclosures about classified federal surveillance programs.

One well-known type of this surveillance equipment is known as a Stingray, an innovative way for law enforcement to track cellphones used by suspects and gather evidence. The equipment tricks cellphones into identifying their owners' account information and transmitting data to police as if it were a phone company's tower. That allows police to obtain cellphone information without having to ask for help from service providers, such as Verizon or AT&T, and can locate a phone without the user even making a call or sending a text message.

But without more details about how the technology works and under what circumstances it's used, it's unclear whether the technology might violate a person's constitutional rights or whether it's a good investment of taxpayer dollars.

Interviews, court records and public-records requests show the Obama administration is asking agencies to withhold common information about the equipment, such as how the technology is used and how to turn it on. That pushback has come in the form of FBI affidavits and consultation in local criminal cases.

"These extreme secrecy efforts are in relation to very controversial, local government surveillance practices using highly invasive technology," said Nathan Freed Wessler, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which has fought for the release of these types of records. "If public participation means anything, people should have the facts about what the government is doing to them."

Harris Corp., a key manufacturer of this equipment, built a secrecy element into its authorization agreement with the Federal Communications Commission in 2011. That authorization has an unusual requirement: that local law enforcement "coordinate with the FBI the acquisition and use of the equipment." Companies like Harris need FCC authorization in order to sell wireless equipment that could interfere with radio frequencies.

A spokesman from Harris Corp. said the company will not discuss its products for the Defense Department and law enforcement agencies, although public filings showed government sales of communications systems such as the Stingray accounted for nearly one-third of its $5 billion in revenue. "As a government contractor, our solutions are regulated and their use is restricted," spokesman Jim Burke said.

Local police agencies have been denying access to records about this surveillance equipment under state public records laws. Agencies in San Diego, Chicago and Oakland County, Michigan, for instance, declined to tell the AP what devices they purchased, how much they cost and with whom they shared information. San Diego police released a heavily censored purchasing document. Oakland officials said police-secrecy exemptions and attorney-client privilege keep their hands tied. It was unclear whether the Obama administration interfered in the AP requests.

"It's troubling to think the FBI can just trump the state's open records law," said Ginger McCall, director of the open government project at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. McCall suspects the surveillance would not pass constitutional muster.

"The vast amount of information it sweeps in is totally irrelevant to the investigation," she said.

A court case challenging the public release of information from the Tucson Police Department includes an affidavit from an FBI special agent, Bradley Morrison, who said the disclosure would "result in the FBI's inability to protect the public from terrorism and other criminal activity because through public disclosures, this technology has been rendered essentially useless for future investigations."

Morrison said revealing any information about the technology would violate a federal homeland security law about information-sharing and arms-control laws — legal arguments that that outside lawyers and transparency experts said are specious and don't comport with court cases on the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.

The FBI did not answer questions about its role in states' open records proceedings.

But a former Justice Department official said the federal government should be making this argument in federal court, not a state level where different public records laws apply.

"The federal government appears to be attempting to assert a federal interest in the information being sought, but it's going about it the wrong way," said Dan Metcalfe, the former director of the Justice Department's office of information and privacy. Currently Metcalfe is the executive director of American University's law school Collaboration on Government Secrecy project.

A criminal case in Tallahassee cites the same homeland security laws in Morrison's affidavit, court records show, and prosecutors told the court they consulted with the FBI to keep portions of a transcript sealed. That transcript, released earlier this month, revealed that Stingrays "force" cellphones to register their location and identifying information with the police device and enables officers to track calls whenever the phone is on.

One law enforcement official familiar with the Tucson lawsuit, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak about internal discussions, said federal lawyers told Tucson police they couldn't hand over a PowerPoint presentation made by local officers about how to operate the Stingray device. Federal officials forwarded Morrison's affidavit for use in the Tucson police department's reply to the lawsuit, rather than requesting the case be moved to federal court.

In Sarasota, Florida, the U.S. Marshals Service confiscated local records on the use of the surveillance equipment, removing the documents from the reach of Florida's expansive open-records law after the ACLU asked under Florida law to see the documents. The ACLU has asked a judge to intervene. The Marshals Service said it deputized the officer as a federal agent and therefore the records weren't accessible under Florida law.

___

Associated Press writer Brendan Farrington in Tallahassee, Florida, contributed to this report.

___

On Twitter, follow Gillum at https://twitter.com/jackgillum and Sullivan at https://twitter.com/esullivanap
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 19, 2014, 11:10:24 AM
Shock Claim: Police Officer Slit Dog’s Throat
The Daily Caller ^  | 19 Jun 2014 | Chuck Ross

Posted on ‎6‎/‎19‎/‎2014‎ ‎9‎:‎52‎:‎35‎ ‎AM by mandaladon

A Baltimore police officer is facing felony animal cruelty charges after he allegedly slit the throat of a 7 year-old dog that had already been placed under control.

The incident happened Saturday, and Baltimore police officials announced charges against the unnamed officer on Wednesday.

Sarah Gossard’s Shar Pei, Nala, was loose over the weekend when police were called to catch her.

But after using a dog pole to round up Nala, one officer made a shocking move.

“Unfortunately, at some point after the dog was contained, one of our officers used a knife and cut the dog’s throat,” said Baltimore police deputy commissioner Dean Palmere, according to WBAL.

“This is outrageous and unacceptable breach of our protocol,” he said.

Nala’s owner, Sarah Gossard, said that she believes that Nala bit someone but that the officer’s actions were out of line.

“She was just the sweetest dog and would never hurt anyone. She was just scared that day and through all of those events – scared and lost, thirsty, hungry,” Gossard told WBAL.


(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 23, 2014, 12:54:30 PM
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-big-data-chicago-20140621,0,2219153,full.story


 ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2014, 03:48:00 PM
Chicago police shot a 95-year-old WWII veteran to death with bean bag rounds at short range because he refused to go to the hospital, stepdaughter claims

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/06/23/68943.htm


Let's see how they'll say the usual "the officers feared for their lives", "the suspect assumed a combative stance" etc.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 23, 2014, 05:49:01 PM
Chicago police shot a 95-year-old WWII veteran to death with bean bag rounds at short range because he refused to go to the hospital, stepdaughter claims

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/06/23/68943.htm


Let's see how they'll say the usual "the officers feared for their lives", "the suspect assumed a combative stance" etc.

Check out near the end of the article:

Quote
Park Forest officials told the Chicago Tribune claim that Wrana brandished a knife or cane, which justified the officers' response.

Fuck... what a disgrace and how infuriating. These cops deserve to land in prison for the rest of their lives and without the special perks afforded cops in the slammer.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2014, 08:53:52 AM
Skip to comments.

Police Overkill (killed 95-year-old WWII vet)
http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/06/23/68943.htm ^
Posted on June 24, 2014 12:30:04 AM EDT by chessplayer

CHICAGO (CN) - Suburban Chicago police shot a 95-year-old WWII veteran to death with bean bag rounds at short range because he refused to go to the hospital, his stepdaughter claims in court.

"On July 26, 2014 [sic], John Wrana, Jr., was twelve days shy of his 96th birthday and a resident at the Victory Centre of Park Forest Assisted Living Center located in Park Forest, Illinois. On that date, Mr. Wrana was alone in his room, suffering from what the facility's staff believed were symptoms indicative of a urinary tract infection in an elderly person," the complaint begins. Victory Center employees tried to get Wrana into an ambulance to go to the hospital for treatment, but he allegedly refused to leave his room. The defendant officers responded to employees' 911 call, and also were unable to persuade Wrana to leave his room and go to the hospital. The officers conferred and decided to seize Wrana by force, according to the complaint.

Upon entering the room, defendant Taylor fired "five rounds of bean bag cartridges from a 12 gauge shotgun within a distance of approximately only six to eight feet from Mr. Wrana, far less than the distance allowed for discharging that shotgun, and, consequently, savagely wounding and killing Mr. Wrana," the lawsuit states. "Mr. Wrana bled to death as a result of the shotgun wounds inflicted upon him by defendants. The Cook County Medical Examiner ruled that Mr. Wrana's death was a homicide caused by blunt force trauma to his abdomen as a result of shots fired from a bean bag shotgun."

After shooting Wrana, the officers handcuffed him, took photos of his injuries, and put him in a four-point restraint before transporting him to the hospital, the complaint states.

(Excerpt) Read more at courthousenews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 24, 2014, 10:27:10 AM
From http://www.salon.com/2014/06/24/a_swat_team_blew_a_hole_in_my_2_year_old_son/ (http://www.salon.com/2014/06/24/a_swat_team_blew_a_hole_in_my_2_year_old_son/):

Quote
After the SWAT team broke down the door, they threw a flashbang grenade inside. It landed in my son’s crib.

[...]

I heard my baby wailing and asked one of the officers to let me hold him. He screamed at me to sit down and shut up and blocked my view, so I couldn’t see my son. I could see a singed crib. And I could see a pool of blood. The officers yelled at me to calm down and told me my son was fine, that he’d just lost a tooth. It was only hours later when they finally let us drive to the hospital that we found out Bou Bou was in the intensive burn unit and that he’d been placed into a medically induced coma.

This is just insane.

For more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/parents-toddler-injured-flash-bang-botched-raid-call-justice-article-1.1825366 (http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/parents-toddler-injured-flash-bang-botched-raid-call-justice-article-1.1825366)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 26, 2014, 10:21:45 AM


The Watch

Massachusetts SWAT teams claim they’re private corporations, immune from open records laws



http://m.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/06/26/massachusetts-swat-teams-claim-theyre-private-corporations-immune-from-open-records-laws/


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By Radley Balko June 26 at 10:27 AM    


As part of the American Civil Liberties Union’s recent report on police militarization, the Massachusetts chapter of the organization sent open records requests to SWAT teams across that state. It received an interesting response.

As it turns out, a number of SWAT teams in the Bay State are operated by what are called law enforcement councils, or LECs. These LECs are funded by several police agencies in a given geographic area and overseen by an executive board, which is usually made up of police chiefs from member police departments. In 2012, for example, the Tewksbury Police Department paid about $4,600 in annual membership dues to the North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, or NEMLEC. (See page 36 of linked PDF.) That LEC has about 50 member agencies. In addition to operating a regional SWAT team, the LECs also facilitate technology and information sharing and oversee other specialized units, such as crime scene investigators and computer crime specialists.

Some of these LECs have also apparently incorporated as 501(c)(3) organizations. And it’s here that we run into problems. According to the ACLU, the LECs are claiming that the 501(c)(3) status means that they’re private corporations, not government agencies. And therefore, they say they’re immune from open records requests. Let’s be clear. These agencies oversee police activities. They employ cops who carry guns, wear badges, collect paychecks provided by taxpayers and have the power to detain, arrest, injure and kill. They operate SWAT teams, which conduct raids on private residences. And yet they say that because they’ve incorporated, they’re immune to Massachusetts open records laws. The state’s residents aren’t permitted to know how often the SWAT teams are used, what they’re used for, what sort of training they get or who they’re primarily used against.

From the ACLU of Massachusetts’s report on police militarization in that state:





Approximately 240 of the 351 police departments in Massachusetts belong to an LEC. While set up as “corporations,” LECs are funded by local and federal taxpayer money, are composed exclusively of public police officers and sheriffs, and carry out traditional law enforcement functions through specialized units such as SWAT teams . . .

Due to the weakness of Massachusetts public records law and the culture of secrecy that has infected local police departments and Law Enforcement Councils, procuring empirical records from police departments and regional SWAT teams in Massachusetts about police militarization was universally difficult and, in most instances, impossible . . .

Police departments and regional SWAT teams are public institutions, working with public money, meant to protect and serve the public’s interest. If these institutions do not maintain and make public comprehensive and comprehensible documents pertaining to their operations and tactics, the people cannot judge whether officials are acting appropriately or make needed policy changes when problems arise . . .

Hiding behind the argument that they are private corporations not subject to the public records laws, the LECs have refused to provide documents regarding their SWAT team policies and procedures. They have also failed to disclose anything about their operations, including how many raids they have executed or for what purpose . . .



METROLEC, one of the largest of the law enforcement councils covering the metropolitan Boston area, operates a range of specialized resources, including a Canine Unit, Computer Crimes Unit, Crisis Negotiation Team, Mobile Operations Motorcycle Unit, and Regional Response Team, in addition to its SWAT force. The organization maintains its own BearCat armored vehicle, as well as a $700,000 state of the art command and control post. In 2012, METROLEC reportedly used its BearCat 26 times, mostly for drug busts, and applied to the Federal Aviation Administration to obtain a drone license.

The North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council (NEMLEC) similarly operates a SWAT team, as well as a Computer Crime Unit, Motorcycle Unit, School Threat Assessment & Response System, and Regional Communications and Incident Management Assistance Team. Its SWAT team members are trained and equipped to “deal with active shooters, armed barricaded subjects, hostage takers and terrorists,” and they dress in military-style gear with the words “NEMLEC SWAT” emblazoned on their uniforms. Given this training, it is not surprising that the NEMLEC SWAT team has over the past decade led numerous operations that involved armored vehicles, flash-bang devices, and automatic weapons.

(Note: In addition to the LEC SWAT teams, the ACLU notes that at least 25 other Massachusetts cities and towns have their own SWAT-like units, along with the state police and the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority.)

Massachusetts also has a long history of accountability and excessive force problems with SWAT teams. A few examples:
•In 1988, Boston Det. Sherman Griffiths was killed in a botched drug raid later revealed to have been conducted based on information from an informant a subsequent investigation revealed that the police had simply made up.
•Six years later, the Rev. Accelyne Williams died of a heart attack during a mistaken drug raid on his home. The Boston Globe found that three of the officers involved in that raid had been accused in a 1989 civil rights suit of using fictional informants to obtain warrants for drug raids. In testimony for that suit, one witness testified that after realizing they’d just raided the wrong home, a Boston police officer shrugged, apologized and said, “This happens all the time.” The city settled with the plaintiffs.
•In 1996, the Fitchburg SWAT team was already facing a lawsuit for harassing a group of loiterers when it burned down an apartment complex during a botched drug raid. The SWAT team subsequently faced a number of other allegations of recklessness and misconduct.
•In January 2011, a SWAT team raided the Framingham, Mass., home of 68-year-old Eurie Stamps at around midnight on a drug warrant. Oddly, it had already arrested the subject of the warrant — Stamps’s 20-year-old stepson — outside the house. But because he lived in Stamps’s home, the team went ahead with the raid anyway. When the team encountered Stamps, it instructed him to lie on the floor. He complied. According to the police account, as one officer then moved toward Stamps to check for weapons, he lost his balance and fell. As he fell, his weapon discharged, sending a bullet directly into Stamps’s chest, killing him.

“You can’t have it both ways,” Jessie Rossman, a staff attorney for the Massachusetts ACLU, told me in a phone interview. “The same government authority that allows them to carry weapons, make arrests, and break down the doors of Massachusetts residents during dangerous raids also makes them a government agency that is subject to the open records law.”

In some states, police agencies can claim exemptions from open records legislation for certain types of requests, such as for internal personnel files, or investigation documents that could reveal the identities of witnesses or informants. In some parts of the country, like the Virginia suburbs of Washington, police agencies have broadly interpreted open records laws to allow them to turn down just about every request. But this claim in Massachusetts is on a whole different scale.

“They didn’t even attempt to claim an exception,” Rossman says. “They’re simply asserting that they’re private corporations.”

The ACLU is suing five Massachusetts LECS. The press release announcing the suit specifically names NEMLEC. It’s worth noting that in addition to receiving taxpayer funding from its 51 member police agencies, NEMLEC has also received significant federal funding over the years, particularly from the Byrne Grant program. In fact, just last April, NEMLEC made a series of drug busts across the state in an investigation funded at least in part with Byrne Grants. (NEMLEC seems to be involved in a lot of drug raids.) In 2010, NEMLEC received an $800,000 Byrne Grant earmarked by then-Sen. John F. Kerry.




Interestingly, in 2009, NEMLEC had to pay out $200,000 “to settle allegations that it made false claims related to the use of Justice Department grant funds” — specifically, funds obtained through the Byrne Grant program. That sounds like an agency that could use a little oversight.

The argument that the LECs in Massachusetts are private corporations and therefore immune to the state open records law was made by Jack Collins, the general counsel for the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association. I have contacted his office to request an interview but haven’t yet heard back.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on June 26, 2014, 11:09:13 AM
From http://www.salon.com/2014/06/24/a_swat_team_blew_a_hole_in_my_2_year_old_son/ (http://www.salon.com/2014/06/24/a_swat_team_blew_a_hole_in_my_2_year_old_son/):

This is just insane.

For more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/parents-toddler-injured-flash-bang-botched-raid-call-justice-article-1.1825366 (http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/parents-toddler-injured-flash-bang-botched-raid-call-justice-article-1.1825366)

Someone should rot in jail for that shit,  if not publicly flogged.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 26, 2014, 05:44:05 PM
A SWAT team blew a hole in my 2-year-old son
Salon ^ | June 24, 2014 | Alecia Phonesavanh
Posted on June 25, 2014 at 6:23:38 PM EDT by Clintonfatigued

After our house burned down in Wisconsin a few months ago, my husband and I packed our four young kids and all our belongings into a gold minivan and drove to my sister-in-law’s place, just outside of Atlanta. On the back windshield, we pasted six stick figures: a dad, a mom, three young girls, and one baby boy.

That minivan was sitting in the front driveway of my sister-in-law’s place the night a SWAT team broke in, looking for a small amount of drugs they thought my husband’s nephew had. Some of my kids’ toys were in the front yard, but the officers claimed they had no way of knowing children might be present. Our whole family was sleeping in the same room, one bed for us, one for the girls, and a crib.

After the SWAT team broke down the door, they threw a flashbang grenade inside. It landed in my son’s crib.

Flashbang grenades were created for soldiers to use during battle. When they explode, the noise is so loud and the flash is so bright that anyone close by is temporarily blinded and deafened. It’s been three weeks since the flashbang exploded next to my sleeping baby, and he’s still covered in burns.

There’s still a hole in his chest that exposes his ribs.

(Excerpt) Read more at salon.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 26, 2014, 07:09:24 PM
DHS Ransacks couple's home without explanation, strips woman naked
Police State UsA ^ | June 20, 2014 | Site Staff
Posted on June 26, 2014 12:43:47 PM EDT by Altariel

HOMESTEAD, FL — EXCLUSIVE — A Florida couple was traumatized after a dozen heavily armed SWAT agents crashed through their front door, flash-banged their cat, aimed rifles at them and searched their home without explanation.

* * * * *

The raid took place in the pre-dawn hours of June 10th, 2014. At approximately 6:16 a.m., Kari Edwards and her live-in boyfriend were intruded upon by men dressed in full SWAT gear and wielding rifles. After smashing down the couple’s front door, agents tossed concussion grenades and proceeded into the home.

“They busted in like I was a terrorist or something,” said Ms. Edwards.

SWAT enters Kari Edwards’ residence with rifles drawn. HOMESTEAD, FL — EXCLUSIVE — A Florida couple was traumatized after a dozen heavily armed SWAT agents crashed through their front door, flash-banged their cat, aimed rifles at them and searched their home without explanation.

* * * * *

The raid took place in the pre-dawn hours of June 10th, 2014. At approximately 6:16 a.m., Kari Edwards and her live-in boyfriend were intruded upon by men dressed in full SWAT gear and wielding rifles. After smashing down the couple’s front door, agents tossed concussion grenades and proceeded into the home.

“They busted in like I was a terrorist or something,” said Ms. Edwards.

Broken door. (Source: Kari Edwards) Personal belongings tossed everywhere. (Source: Kari Edwards) “[An officer] demanded that I drop the towel I was covering my naked body with,” Ms. Edwards said, “before snatching it off me physically and throwing me to the ground.”

“While I lay naked, I was cuffed so tightly I could not feel my hands. For no reason, at gunpoint,” Edwards said. “[Agents] refused to cover me, no matter how many times I asked.”

Ms. Edwards said her boyfriend told her that an agent holding an assault rifle to her back was gawking at her exposed body. “Eying me up and down like I was eye candy,” she said.

The house was equipped with a surveillance system, which captured video of the agents from a couple different angles. Here is the first angle of the exterior of the property:

“I have never been in any trouble before,” Ms. Edwards told Police State USA. “Haven’t even had a traffic ticket in over ten years.”

In fact, she said she used to work for the Department of Homeland Security, but became disabled from an on-the-job injury in 2006. She identified the raid as a DHS operation.

“I know I saw ‘ICE’ on one shirt and my boyfriend saw ‘Gang Task Force’ on another,” she told Police State USA. “Someone’s just said, ‘Special Agent.’”

Edwards requested to see the agents’ identification but was not obliged. One officer pointed to his uniform that read ‘POLICE’ and allegedly said, “Isn’t this enough ID for you?”

“When I told him that I could buy that [uniform] up in Miami, he called me ‘retarded’ and ‘f***ing stupid,’” Edwards recalled.

Shattered shower door. (Source: Kari Edwards) A scorch-mark from the flashbang. (Source: Kari Edwards) Edwards said that the SWAT team threw a flashbang at her cat, Dusty. She says that Dusty normally had a friendly personality and greets everyone, but now is “fearful and hard of hearing.”

When agents discovered that they were being recorded by home surveillance cameras, they forcefully twisted the cameras, saying that they “can’t be recorded.”

In the below clip, a flashbang was detected and an agent is seen spotting the camera and jarring it so it faced a wall.

“My boyfriend, who is asthmatic, started having trouble breathing from the lingering smoke created by the flashbang grenade, and asked for his inhaler. The agent said, ‘Do I need to call paramedics?’ My boyfriend said, ‘No, I just need my inhaler, can someone to get it for me?’ Again he was answered with the paramedic offer,” Edwards said. Finally another officer gave him his inhaler.

The agents “trashed the house,” and reportedly smashed some clear glass shower doors and broke a vintage statue.

Broken door jam. (Source: Kari Edwards) Broken door jam. (Source: Kari Edwards) A broken statue. (Source: Kari Edwards) Ms. Edwards said a warrant was finally given to them after 2 hours. She said it lists her address and was signed by Jonathan Goodman, a federal magistrate judge for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The warrant says the agents were authorized to look for computers & electronic media.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 27, 2014, 12:53:58 AM
A SWAT team blew a hole in my 2-year-old son
Salon ^ | June 24, 2014 | Alecia Phonesavanh
Posted on June 25, 2014 at 6:23:38 PM EDT by Clintonfatigued

After our house burned down in Wisconsin a few months ago, my husband and I packed our four young kids and all our belongings into a gold minivan and drove to my sister-in-law’s place, just outside of Atlanta. On the back windshield, we pasted six stick figures: a dad, a mom, three young girls, and one baby boy.

That minivan was sitting in the front driveway of my sister-in-law’s place the night a SWAT team broke in, looking for a small amount of drugs they thought my husband’s nephew had. Some of my kids’ toys were in the front yard, but the officers claimed they had no way of knowing children might be present. Our whole family was sleeping in the same room, one bed for us, one for the girls, and a crib.

After the SWAT team broke down the door, they threw a flashbang grenade inside. It landed in my son’s crib.

Flashbang grenades were created for soldiers to use during battle. When they explode, the noise is so loud and the flash is so bright that anyone close by is temporarily blinded and deafened. It’s been three weeks since the flashbang exploded next to my sleeping baby, and he’s still covered in burns.

There’s still a hole in his chest that exposes his ribs.

(Excerpt) Read more at salon.com ...


Didn't I post this two posts up?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on June 27, 2014, 07:15:09 AM
http://www.ijreview.com/2014/06/151451-watch-man-confront-police-officer-shot-dog


Fng thugs
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on June 27, 2014, 07:33:00 AM
Alright, I think the band Nickelback sucks, too, but detaining some guys for talking about them seems a little excessive, lol.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 28, 2014, 11:52:02 AM
Again, Garrity protects what you say to IA from being used against you criminally.. not administratively. If you do not answer every question IA asks you, you will be fired. No ifs, ands or butts.. This is more you not understanding the concept than me being dishonest..

As far as why cops should have a cool down period and nobody else should, I thougt I answered it but here goes.

Everyone else in the world can refuse to talk to the cops. They have a built in 72 hrs. They have a built in "never"... So it is not a "nobody else should" issue

The cop cannot refuse to talk to the investigators (cops). They are required to on condition of employment. So they are given a 72 hr period to collect their thoughts, calm down, review their evidence before they give a statement so that the investigators get the best accurate statement possible. Because that officer will be held to that statement via fine tooth comb   



No, there's no misunderstanding, for some reason you keep dodging the issue.

If I witness a murder, I cannot refuse to talk to the cops.  If I'm suspected of murder, I can refuse.

The exact same thing applies to you.

So, if I can't have 72 hours, why should you?

If anybody at their job refuses to answer questions for administrative shit, they can get canned.  They don't get a waiting period.

You want special treatment...again.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 29, 2014, 12:29:50 PM
'And that's what happens when they know you're recording': Cop caught by trucker for speeding and talking on his cell phone changes his tune when he sees camera


Trucker Brian Miner pulled over a police officer in Illinois because he says he was speeding and talking on his cell phone
The officer tells Miner he's going to write him a ticket for 'unlawful use of horn'
He also says police are allowed to use technology while driving
He changes his tune when Miner  informs him that he's recording the exchange
The officer then says he won't write a ticket and give Miner a violation-free MCA inspection



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2673770/And-thats-happens-know-youre-recording-Cop-pulled-trucker-speeding-talking-cell-phone-changes-tune-sees-camera.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2014, 11:09:56 AM
30-day suspension and supervisory probation for a year...

LPD releases video of wheelchair-shoving incident


http://www.jconline.com/story/news/2014/07/01/lpdofficer-shoves-man-wheelchair/11924485/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on July 05, 2014, 02:51:46 AM

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 07, 2014, 07:04:30 AM


No, there's no misunderstanding, for some reason you keep dodging the issue.

If I witness a murder, I cannot refuse to talk to the cops.  If I'm suspected of murder, I can refuse.

The exact same thing applies to you.

So, if I can't have 72 hours, why should you?

If anybody at their job refuses to answer questions for administrative shit, they can get canned.  They don't get a waiting period.

You want special treatment...again.



Help me out here, I'm trying to figure out if you are playing stupid or your hatred really doesn't allow you to have a civil conversation
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 13, 2014, 07:34:51 AM
Help me out here, I'm trying to figure out if you are playing stupid or your hatred really doesn't allow you to have a civil conversation


Yeah...you're calling me stupid and hateful cause you're trying to have a 'civil conversation'.  ::)

Typical cop mentality. 

But, we'll cut you some slack since the SCOTUS ripped you a new asshole with your bullshit cell phone argument.

You're asking for a special treatment...one you typically don't afford to others or even victims for that matter (could be good or bad depending).  I'm advocating you be treated with equal footing.  Make sense?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 14, 2014, 07:44:23 AM

Yeah...you're calling me stupid and hateful cause you're trying to have a 'civil conversation'.  ::)

Typical cop mentality. 

But, we'll cut you some slack since the SCOTUS ripped you a new asshole with your bullshit cell phone argument.

You're asking for a special treatment...one you typically don't afford to others or even victims for that matter (could be good or bad depending).  I'm advocating you be treated with equal footing.  Make sense?



typical of you, you seem to always throw the first punch then when you get smacked upside the head you whine about "typical cop mentality" 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 14, 2014, 04:20:35 PM
typical of you, you seem to always throw the first punch then when you get smacked upside the head you whine about "typical cop mentality" 


It should not 'seem' that way.  I'm seriously not getting your reasoning for the special treatment.  Some things we can agree with...you need to violate traffic laws to catch crooks or no trespassing signs, etc.

But this makes no sense.  In fact, it was me who pointed out Garrity as it applies to all in the public sector, and you're protected from having to incriminate yourself, when you were conflating the two.  And if we agree that we are talking administratively only, then I would think most people would expect you to be held to the same or more stringent standards as anybody else involved in an incident.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 15, 2014, 07:03:44 PM
Connecticut Man Arrested for Stabbing Watermelon in ‘Passive-Aggressive Manner’

http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/2014/07/15/connecticut-man-arrested-for-stabbing-watermelon-passive-aggressive-manner/Z0pJMIDSLgK2YWyecYyRCO/story.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on July 18, 2014, 05:50:29 PM
Stolen car found but police can't give it back to its rightful owners. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2014, 08:56:44 AM
New Report Says FBI Entrapped Americans And Charged Them As Terrorists


 

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FBI agents federal bureau of investigation
AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano

Human Rights Watch and the Human Rights Institute at Columbia Law School have just released a damning report in which they accuse the US government of repeated abuses in the investigation and prosecution of terrorism cases.

Duh, right?

Well, you might still be surprised by the report's most troubling allegation: that US government agents, by employing methods of investigation that border on entrapment, have actively encouraged ordinary Americans to become terrorists.

The HRW and HRI focused their investigation on 27 post-9/11 terrorism cases involving 77 defendants. They based their report on information from court documents, publicly available documents, Freedom of Information Act requests, and more than 215 interviews with people involved in terrorism cases, including defendants, lawyers, family members, academics, and government officials.

They found a pattern of encouragement, facilitation, and grooming of targets that's worrying if not illegal.

“Indeed, in some cases,” the report claims, “the Federal Bureau of Investigation may have created terrorists out of law-abiding individuals by conducting sting operations that facilitated or invented the target’s willingness to act... All the high-profile domestic terrorism plots of the last decade, with four exceptions, were actually sting operations, splots conducted with the direct involvement of law enforcement informants or agents, including plots that were proposed or led by informants.”

A former FBI agent, Michael German, explained it to HRW and the HRI this way:


"Today’s terrorism sting operations reflect a significant departure from past practice. When the FBI undercover agent or informant is the only purported link to a real terrorist group, supplies the motive, designs the plot and provides all the weapons, one has to question whether they are combatting terrorism or creating it. Aggrandizing the terrorist threat with these theatrical productions only spreads public fear and divides communities, which doesn’t make anyone safer."

Take the case of Hosam Smadi. The FBI began investigating Smadi in Jan. 2009 because he'd been posting to jihadist discussion boards. FBI agents initiated contact with him online, and during these early conversations, Smadi insisted that he didn’t want to hurt innocent people and was unsure about violent jihad.

The FBI placed him in the “first stage of the radicalization process known as pre-radicalization,” but rather than discourage further radicalization, the agents actively pushed him toward violence.

After months of encouragement and conversation, Smadi agreed to participate in a terrorist act. He'd plant a bomb in the parking garage below a large Dallas building. When the day arrived, he deposited the explosive, which the FBI agents had made, and then met an undercover agent in a car. There he dialed a number into his cell phone, believing that it would detonate the device. He was charged with attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and sentences to 24 years in prison.

What would have happened to Smadi if the FBI had just left him alone?

The HRW and HRI report finds lots of other reasons to be concerned about the handling of terrorism investigations and prosecutions. Check out the report and you'll find plenty of information about the use of "material support" charges, the admission of various types of inappropriate evidence, and the reliance on pre-trial solitary confinement.

This article originally appeared at GlobalPost. Copyright 2014. Follow GlobalPost on Twitter.


Read more: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/united-states/140721/the-fbi-entraps-americans-and-charges-them-terro#ixzz38DI5g29G
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 22, 2014, 12:14:01 PM
The blue code of silence...

Internal NYPD report on incident with Staten Island dad Eric Garner does not mention chokehold, states he was not 'in great distress'

Supervising officers who were interviewed after Eric Garner's death failed to mention the chokehold and told investigators that 'the perpetrator's condition did not seem serious,' a preliminary report obtained by the Daily News shows. A recording captures officers violently taking down Garner on Thursday as he cries that he can't breathe.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/exclusive-internal-nypd-report-staten-island-dad-mention-chokehold-article-1.1875221
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on July 25, 2014, 03:52:49 PM
 July 21, 2014 6:10 PM
It’s Time for Conservatives to Stop Defending Police
There is nothing conservative about government violating the rights of citizens.

By A. J. Delgado

Imagine if I were to tell you there is a large group of government employees, with generous salaries and ridiculously cushy retirement pensions covered by the taxpayer, who enjoy incredible job security and are rarely held accountable even for activities that would almost certainly earn the rest of us prison time. When there is proven misconduct, these government employees are merely reassigned and are rarely dismissed. The bill for any legal settlements concerning their errors? It, too, is covered by the taxpayers. Their unions are among the strongest in the country.

No, I’m not talking about public-school teachers.

I’m talking about the police.

We conservatives recoil at the former; yet routinely defend the latter — even though, unlike teachers, police officers enjoy an utter monopoly on force and can ruin — or end — one’s life in a millisecond.

For decades, conservatives have served as stalwart defenders of police forces. There have been many good reasons for this, including long memories of the post-countercultural crime wave that devastated, and in some cases destroyed, many American cities; conservatives’ penchant for law and order; and Americans’ widely shared disdain for the cops’ usual opponents. (“Dirty hippies being arrested? Good!” is not an uncommon sentiment.) Although tough-on-crime appeals have never been limited to conservative politicians or voters, conservatives instinctively (and, it turned out, correctly) understood that the way to reduce crime is to have more cops making more arrests, not more sociologists identifying more root causes. Conservatives are rightly proud to have supported police officers doing their jobs at times when progressives were on the other side.

But it’s time for conservatives’ unconditional love affair with the police to end.

Let’s get the obligatory disclaimer out of the way: Yes, many police officers do heroic works and, yes, many are upstanding individuals who serve the community bravely and capably.

But respecting good police work means being willing to speak out against civil-liberties-breaking thugs who shrug their shoulders after brutalizing citizens.


More of this great read here: 
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/383312/its-time-conservatives-stop-defending-police-j-delgado (http://www.nationalreview.com/article/383312/its-time-conservatives-stop-defending-police-j-delgado)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 28, 2014, 04:52:04 PM
July 21, 2014 6:10 PM
It’s Time for Conservatives to Stop Defending Police
There is nothing conservative about government violating the rights of citizens.

By A. J. Delgado

Imagine if I were to tell you there is a large group of government employees, with generous salaries and ridiculously cushy retirement pensions covered by the taxpayer, who enjoy incredible job security and are rarely held accountable even for activities that would almost certainly earn the rest of us prison time. When there is proven misconduct, these government employees are merely reassigned and are rarely dismissed. The bill for any legal settlements concerning their errors? It, too, is covered by the taxpayers. Their unions are among the strongest in the country.

No, I’m not talking about public-school teachers.

I’m talking about the police.

We conservatives recoil at the former; yet routinely defend the latter — even though, unlike teachers, police officers enjoy an utter monopoly on force and can ruin — or end — one’s life in a millisecond.

For decades, conservatives have served as stalwart defenders of police forces. There have been many good reasons for this, including long memories of the post-countercultural crime wave that devastated, and in some cases destroyed, many American cities; conservatives’ penchant for law and order; and Americans’ widely shared disdain for the cops’ usual opponents. (“Dirty hippies being arrested? Good!” is not an uncommon sentiment.) Although tough-on-crime appeals have never been limited to conservative politicians or voters, conservatives instinctively (and, it turned out, correctly) understood that the way to reduce crime is to have more cops making more arrests, not more sociologists identifying more root causes. Conservatives are rightly proud to have supported police officers doing their jobs at times when progressives were on the other side.

But it’s time for conservatives’ unconditional love affair with the police to end.

Let’s get the obligatory disclaimer out of the way: Yes, many police officers do heroic works and, yes, many are upstanding individuals who serve the community bravely and capably.

But respecting good police work means being willing to speak out against civil-liberties-breaking thugs who shrug their shoulders after brutalizing citizens.


More of this great read here: 
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/383312/its-time-conservatives-stop-defending-police-j-delgado (http://www.nationalreview.com/article/383312/its-time-conservatives-stop-defending-police-j-delgado)



Times may be a changing.  Hell, on this thread it's almost exclusively people on the right, right leaning, or libertarian leaning against the creeping police state.

My currently unproven, untested, but probably accurate theory is the libs love the police state....especially when they can use it to enforce compliance.  But, to listen to Peter King talk is basically an endorsement for an even greater police state (his interview with Stossel is sickening).  We're fucked all around.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 28, 2014, 04:55:22 PM


Times may be a changing.  Hell, on this thread it's almost exclusively people on the right, right leaning, or libertarian leaning against the creeping police state.

My currently unproven, untested, but probably accurate theory is the libs love the police state....especially when they can use it to enforce compliance.  But, to listen to Peter King talk is basically an endorsement for an even greater police state (his interview with Stossel is sickening).  We're fucked all around.



Peter King is a disgrace and it's disgusting that that piece of shit gets elected instead of being spat on and publicly ridiculed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 28, 2014, 05:22:31 PM
Lawsuit: CHP officer falsified reports after being filmed pummelling 51-year-old woman

California Highway Patrol Officer Daniel L. Andrew straddled 51-year-old Marlene Pinnock and punched her for 10 to 15 seconds on July 1 before arresting the homeless woman, the lawsuit stated.

Andrew falsified reports of the incident, omitting his repeated punching, and saying Pinnock was combative and called him the devil, according to the lawsuit, which was filed July 17.

CHP officials are also accused of using a felony search warrant to obtain Pinnock’s medical records, which include private conversations between herself, her doctors and her lawyers.

http://ktla.com/2014/07/27/lawsuit-ids-chp-officer-caught-beating-woman-on-video-calls-him-the-devil/

http://www.fresnobee.com/2014/07/17/4028056/chp-seizes-medical-records-of.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 28, 2014, 05:40:23 PM
Lawsuit: CHP officer falsified reports after being filmed pummelling 51-year-old woman

California Highway Patrol Officer Daniel L. Andrew straddled 51-year-old Marlene Pinnock and punched her for 10 to 15 seconds on July 1 before arresting the homeless woman, the lawsuit stated.

Andrew falsified reports of the incident, omitting his repeated punching, and saying Pinnock was combative and called him the devil, according to the lawsuit, which was filed July 17.

CHP officials are also accused of using a felony search warrant to obtain Pinnock’s medical records, which include private conversations between herself, her doctors and her lawyers.

http://ktla.com/2014/07/27/lawsuit-ids-chp-officer-caught-beating-woman-on-video-calls-him-the-devil/

http://www.fresnobee.com/2014/07/17/4028056/chp-seizes-medical-records-of.html



She called him the devil.  She clearly contributed to her own beating.  She should've been 100% subservient...that would've stopped the abuse.

Oh boy...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on July 28, 2014, 06:07:01 PM

...

My currently unproven, untested, but probably accurate theory is the libs love the police state....especially when they can use it to enforce compliance. 

...


Maybe on this board but definitely not in some other places like:  http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut (http://www.reddit.com/r/bad_cop_no_donut)

Pretty much just libs there.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 28, 2014, 06:12:58 PM


She called him the devil.  She clearly contributed to her own beating.  She should've been 100% subservient...that would've stopped the abuse.

Oh boy...

Of course she should have been 100% subservient. Anything less is undemocratic according to NYPD Commissioner Bratton who said: "It's important that when an officer does approach you to correct your behavior, that you respect them. That's what democracy's all about." (source (http://gothamist.com/2014/07/28/de_blasio_broken_windows_policing_i.php))

Yeah, you read that right. I have just one question: WHAT THE FUCK HAPPENED TO THIS COUNTRY AND ITS PEOPLE?!?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 28, 2014, 06:15:30 PM


She called him the devil.  She clearly contributed to her own beating.  She should've been 100% subservient...that would've stopped the abuse.

Oh boy...

"Let's all be intellectually honest here and admit the she played a role in her own beating. She helped create the enviroment where a physical altercation was needed." ::)

Also, notice:

"The CHP has not identified the officer involved nor confirmed if it was the person identified by Pinnock's attorneys, citing concerns over the officer’s safety."

but the police don't have an issue with releasing names and mug shots of citizens (which are then acquired by mugshsots websites-stationed overseas of course and require payment to remove them) even when the charges are dropped or the arrest was altogether illegal.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 28, 2014, 06:32:40 PM
Of course she should have been 100% subservient. Anything less is undemocratic according to NYPD Commissioner Bratton who said: "It's important that when an officer does approach you to correct your behavior, that you respect them. That's what democracy's all about." (source (http://gothamist.com/2014/07/28/de_blasio_broken_windows_policing_i.php))

Yeah, you read that right. I have just one question: WHAT THE FUCK HAPPENED TO THIS COUNTRY AND ITS PEOPLE?!?


I was not aware...thank you and unfuckingreal!

Poldaktalos - yes, enormous bullshit and complete hypocrisy.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on July 29, 2014, 12:52:42 AM


She called him the devil.  She clearly contributed to her own beating.  She should've been 100% subservient...that would've stopped the abuse.

Oh boy...

Also, bitch had the nerve to try to hold her arms up to protect her face from the righteousness of the officer's corrective strikes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2014, 06:12:45 AM
The beatings shall continue until morale improves
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on July 29, 2014, 01:33:19 PM
There are numerous groups that are railing against the police state now... It's one of the great things that social media has presented to us.

If the police were actually held individually accountable, then it would stop.

Instead of people being given sums of cash and it being dropped, the individual police officers should be held accountable and if they commit something criminal, then they should be punished according to the crime.

This shit would stop immediately.

I believe I read somewhere that a current jurisdiction somewhere (I'd have to look it up) has made that a law now... Apparently the amount of incidents has gone WAY down since this announcement was made.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 29, 2014, 02:07:07 PM
san Antonio police mistake photographer for fleeing drug suspect, beat him silly.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/07/29/san-antonio-police-mistake-photographer-for-fleeing-drug-suspect-beat-him-silly/

He probably deserved it... right? ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2014, 02:08:21 PM
san Antonio police mistake photographer for fleeing drug suspect, beat him silly.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/07/29/san-antonio-police-mistake-photographer-for-fleeing-drug-suspect-beat-him-silly/

He probably deserved it... right? ::)



Well - he is probably a lib and usually votes and writes in favor of the police state apparatus - so maybe this will be a massive wake up call to im and his fellow traveler hipster types.   ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2014, 02:37:24 PM
san Antonio police mistake photographer for fleeing drug suspect, beat him silly.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/07/29/san-antonio-police-mistake-photographer-for-fleeing-drug-suspect-beat-him-silly/

He probably deserved it... right? ::)



"San Antonio Police Chief William McManus told KENS TV:
"From the report that I’ve read, from the photo that I saw and from your description, I’ve not seen anything at this point that would indicate to me that anything out of order happened."

McManus also said: the blows were necessary because upon being tackled, Carlos laid on his hands, which made the officers unable to determine if he was clutching a weapon."

Insane...


Should we expect the usual?

"The officers feared for their lives"

Paid leave.

If victim gets a settlement, taxpayers foot the bill.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2014, 04:18:40 PM
http://www.xrepublic.tv/node/9981


Sick
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 30, 2014, 02:53:28 PM
Dog Dies After Cop Forces Owner To Abandon It At Traffic Stop

Police in Houston are facing considerable ire from the public and from the mayor amid allegations that an officer ordered a man to abandon his elderly, blind dog during a traffic stop, leading to that dog getting hit and killed by a car.


http://abc13.com/pets/family-traffic-stop-ended-with-family-pet-dead/213313/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 01, 2014, 01:32:41 PM
Medical Examiner Rules Eric Garner's Death a Homicide, Says He Was Killed By Chokehold

The city medical examiner has ruled the death of Eric Garner, the 43-year-old father whose death in police custody sparked national outrage, a homicide, saying a chokehold killed him.

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Eric-Garner-Chokehold-Police-Custody-Cause-of-Death-Staten-Island-Medical-Examiner-269396151.html?_osource=SocialFlowTwt_NYBrand


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 04, 2014, 10:02:05 AM
Mesa officer indicted on sexual assault, molestation charges

A Mesa police officer has been indicted on charges of sexual assault and child molestation for acts that allegedly occurred on the job, authorities said.

Cherry is accused of engaging in sexual contact with two women without their consent and molesting a child under the age of 15 while conducting investigations, the statement said. Mesa police say the accusers allege that Cherry touched them during searches while they were detained.

http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2014/08/01/mesa-officer-indicted-sexual-assault-molestation-charges/13501041/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 04, 2014, 12:30:20 PM
Mesa officer indicted on sexual assault, molestation charges

A Mesa police officer has been indicted on charges of sexual assault and child molestation for acts that allegedly occurred on the job, authorities said.

Cherry is accused of engaging in sexual contact with two women without their consent and molesting a child under the age of 15 while conducting investigations, the statement said. Mesa police say the accusers allege that Cherry touched them during searches while they were detained.

http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2014/08/01/mesa-officer-indicted-sexual-assault-molestation-charges/13501041/

Cue the Union rep in... 3... 2... 1... "Don't prejudge this good officer! HE'S OUT THERE FIGHTING FOR YOU MOTHERFUCKERS EVERY SINGLE DAY! RESPECT THE BADGE OR ELSE MOTHEFUCKERS!"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2014, 04:30:58 AM
Skip to comments.

Police Chief Signed Tea Party Leader Up for Gay Dating Site as Political Payback
Breitbart's Big Government ^ | August 4, 2014 | Mark Meckler
Posted on August 5, 2014 at 7:13:03 AM EDT by 2ndDivisionVet

In Campbell, Wisconsin, political retaliation has sunk to a new low.

Police Chief Tim Kelemen just closed a plea deal for using local Tea Party leader Greg Luce’s personal information to sign him up for gay dating websites, pornography websites, and – the icing on the cake – HealthCare.gov.

These actions could fall under the definition of identity theft, which carries serious penalties. Depending on the severity, the fraudulent use of another’s identifying information could earn up to 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Why did the police chief flagrantly break the public’s trust? Over a political disagreement.

Kelemen and Luce had ongoing conflict about the Tea Party’s rights to hold signs on an interstate overpass bridge. The police department ordered members to stop, citing safety concerns, but the activists held the signs to be an exercise of free speech. Kelemen was disturbed by a flood of calls and emails to the police department by Tea Party supporters, so he attacked Kelemen where it would hurt – his reputation.

As punishment for his “bizarre act of vengeance,” Kelemen received one misdemeanor count of unlawful use of a computerized communication system. If he serves 40 hours of community service and sees a mental-health counselor, the charges will be dismissed in two years....

(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2014, 06:20:59 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/05/nyregion/us-attorneys-office-reveals-civil-rights-investigation-at-rikers-island.html?emc=eta1&_r=0


 :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2014, 07:53:25 AM

EXCLUSIVE: EMTs who stopped NYPD cops from beating handcuffed, emotionally disturbed patient turn officers in

Two FDNY EMTs say they had to bodily intervene to stop four cops from hitting a handcuffed patient, documents obtained by the Daily News show. The violence broke out when the patient spit at the Emergency Service Unit officers and swore at them.

BY  Tina Moore  ,  Ginger Adams Otis   /
 
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS /
 
Monday, August 4, 2014, 7:30 PM
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Tracy, John, Freelance/Tracy, John, FreelanceTracy, John, Freelance/Tracy, John, Freelance
John Tracy for New York Daily News

Two EMTs say they were called to Brooklyn's 67th Precinct stationhouse in East Flatbush on July 20 when they witnessed four officers beating the handcuffed patient.


Two FDNY EMTs who had to intervene to stop four police officers beating a handcuffed patient on a stretcher have turned the cops in to authorities, the Daily News has learned.

The emotionally disturbed patient was punched multiple times in the face by the cops on July 20, according to FDNY documents obtained by The News. The cops only stopped when the EMTs bodily intervened, the report said.

The violence broke out when the patient spit at the Emergency Service Unit officers and swore at them. The officers responded by hitting him in the face, hauling him off the stretcher to the ground and then tossing him back on the stretcher, the EMTs said in written statements submitted to the FDNY.

The two FDNY emergency medical technicians were called to Brooklyn's 67th Precinct stationhouse between Rogers and Nostrand Aves. in East Flatbush around 7:30 p.m. to bring the patient to a nearby hospital.

ESU arrived to restrain the man for transport. He was combative and banging his head against the wall, reports said.

"Pt. came out of the cell in cuffs. Pt. became combative with PD and (was) put on our stretcher," wrote one EMT in the Unusual Occurrence Report filed with FDNY brass.

"Pt. was struck in the face by an officer ... pt. spit in the face of an officer, whereupon the officer punched the pt. in the face multiple times," the report said.

When the patient spit at the cop again, more cops started beating him, the EMT said.

"Three cops began to punch the patient in the face, EMS (had) to get in the middle of it to intervene. Pt's. wounds and injuries cleaned in the (ambulance)," the report said.

The account was backed up by the second EMT, who noted that the patient was brought out by ESU in "handcuffs and foot shackles."

After the first round of punches, the patient was "taken off the stretcher to the ground and restrained again, pt. was thrown by ESU again on to my stretcher," the EMT wrote. "Pt. sustained injuries to face and head," the report said.

An FDNY spokesman confirmed there was a notification from the agency to the NYPD. The NYPD said the 67th Precinct incident is being investigated by the Internal Affairs Bureau.

gotis@nydailynews.com


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/exclusive-emts-turn-officers-beat-handcuffed-patient-article-1.1891706#ixzz39WtaXImq
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2014, 12:57:25 PM
News
Barack Obama’s Secret Terrorist-Tracking System, by the Numbers
 
By Jeremy Scahill and Ryan Devereaux 5 Aug 2014, 12:45 PM EDT 58 






















Nearly half of the people on the U.S. government’s widely shared database of terrorist suspects are not connected to any known terrorist group, according to classified government documents obtained by The Intercept.

Of the 680,000 people caught up in the government’s Terrorist Screening Database—a watchlist of “known or suspected terrorists” that is shared with local law enforcement agencies, private contractors, and foreign governments—more than 40 percent are described by the government as having “no recognized terrorist group affiliation.” That category—280,000 people—dwarfs the number of watchlisted people suspected of ties to al Qaeda, Hamas, and Hezbollah combined.

The documents, obtained from a source in the intelligence community, also reveal that the Obama Administration has presided over an unprecedented expansion of the terrorist screening system. Since taking office, Obama has boosted the number of people on the no fly list more than ten-fold, to an all-time high of 47,000—surpassing the number of people barred from flying under George W. Bush.

“If everything is terrorism, then nothing is terrorism,” says David Gomez, a former senior FBI special agent. The watchlisting system, he adds, is “revving out of control.”

Shrug Chart - Josh Begley

The classified documents were prepared by the National Counterterrorism Center, the lead agency for tracking individuals with suspected links to international terrorism. Stamped “SECRET” and “NOFORN” (indicating they are not to be shared with foreign governments), they offer the most complete numerical picture of the watchlisting system to date. Among the revelations:

• The second-highest concentration of people designated as “known or suspected terrorists” by the government is in Dearborn, Mich.—a city of 96,000 that has the largest percentage of Arab-American residents in the country.

• The government adds names to its databases, or adds information on existing subjects, at a rate of 900 records each day.

• The CIA uses a previously unknown program, code-named Hydra, to secretly access databases maintained by foreign countries and extract  data to add to the watchlists.

A U.S. counterterrorism official familiar with watchlisting data told The Intercept that as of November 2013, there were approximately 700,000 people in the Terrorist Screening Database, or TSDB, but declined to provide the current numbers. Last month, the Associated Press, citing federal court filings by government lawyers, reported that there have been 1.5 million names added to the watchlist over the past five years. The government official told The Intercept that was a misinterpretation of the data. “The list has grown somewhat since that time, but is nowhere near the 1.5 million figure cited in recent news reports,” he said. He added that the statistics cited by the Associated Press do not just include nominations of individuals, but also bits of intelligence or biographical information obtained on watchlisted persons.

When U.S. officials refer to “the watchlist,” they typically mean the TSDB, an unclassified pool of information shared across the intelligence community and the military, as well as local law enforcement, foreign governments, and private contractors. According to the government’s watchlisting guidelines, published by The Intercept last month, officials don’t need “concrete facts” or “irrefutable evidence” to secretly place someone on the list—only a vague and elastic standard of “reasonable suspicion.”

“You need some fact-basis to say a guy is a terrorist, that you know to a probable-cause standard that he is a terrorist,” says Gomez, the former FBI agent. “Then I say, ‘Build as big a file as you can on him.’ But if you just suspect that somebody is a terrorist? Not so much.”

The National Counterterrorism Center did not respond to questions about its terrorist screening system. Instead, in a statement, it praised the watchlisting system as a “critical layer in our counterrorism defenses” and described it as superior to the pre-9/11 process for tracking threats, which relied on lists that were “typed or hand-written in card catalogues and ledgers.” The White House declined to comment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2014, 01:09:36 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/ex-police-sergent-tells-fight-speeding-fines



 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2014, 01:23:20 PM
Cupcake fights, shopping, lost guns mean trouble for Denver sheriff's deputies

In the past 18 months, Denver sheriff's deputies have found themselves in trouble for all sorts of violations, ranging from the serious to the absurd, a Denver Post review of disciplinary letters issued since Jan. 1, 2013, shows.

Cases include a deputy who watched YouTube videos on her computer with jail inmates, one who abandoned her post because she wanted to leave early and two deputies who accidentally fired a bullet into the floor of an office at Denver Health Medical Center. There was a deputy who kicked a basketball into an inmate's head, a deputy who lost a gun in a McDonald's bathroom and two employees who got mad during a cupcake fight at the office.


http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_26281660/cupcake-fights-shopping-lost-guns-mean-trouble-denver
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2014, 03:21:56 AM
More outstanding examples.... (of course they're on paid leave)


'I hope they rot in prison for a very long time': Teenager turns in her cop parents for MURDER after her boyfriend is shot dead

The police officer parents of a 19-year-old woman are in custody in Oklahoma after she accused them of killing her boyfriend and also attempting to shoot her.

Jeremy Lake was found shot to death on Tuesday night on a street near downtown, Tulsa police department spokeswoman Jillian Roberson said.

Shannon Kepler, 54, has been arrested on a complaint of first-degree murder and Gina Kepler, 48, arrested on a complaint of accessory to murder after the fact.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2718523
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2014, 04:33:09 AM
Insane Case of Mistaken Identity: Woman Arrested, Told She Is Actually Dead, Held Anyway

St. Louis police falsely arrested a woman, claiming she was someone who was already dead, and continued to hold her in jail and give her the runaround after acknowledging that the warrant was for a dead person, the woman claims in court.


http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/insane-case-mistaken-identity-woman-arrested-told-she-actually-dead-held-anyway



It seems that St. Louis police has a habit of abusing and violating citizens, look at this earlier case:


Another former inmate of the city's workhouse has sued the St. Louis Police Department, claiming he was jailed in a case of mistaken identity - and that the city should have known it, as the real guy was in jail too.
In his federal complaint, Travis Jones claims he was booked under the name Mark Crumble, for an alleged outstanding warrant, and was jailed in the city's workhouse from early November 2009 to late January 2010.
"Despite repeated requests by plaintiff, neither the police department, sheriff's department, nor Division of Corrections made any attempt to verify plaintiff's identity as either Jones or Crumble, until ordered to do so by the circuit court for St. Louis City on January 6, 2010," the complaint states.
"More than two weeks later, the police department finally ran Jones' fingerprints, and verified that he was not, in fact, Mark Crumble.
"Shockingly however, while Jones was confined as Crumble, the real Mark Crumble was also under confinement by Corrections. In fact, at the time of Jones' arrest, Crumble was already under confinement by Corrections, but the Crumble warrant was still active."

http://www.courthousenews.com/2012/07/09/48164.htm


and this:


St. Louis police ignored a judge's order to release a victim of misidentification and held him for another 60 days in jail, the man claims in Federal Court.
Cedric Wright says police officers stopped him on Aug. 20, 2011 on suspicion of petty larceny. Wright says he gave the officers valid identification, but they claimed he was actually Corey Darmel Leonard, who was wanted on a felony warrant. Wright claims the officers arrested him as Leonard and injured him by violently shoving him into a patrol car.

"Once at the Justice Center, despite plaintiff's repeated protests that he was not Corey Darmel Leonard and despite the fact that plaintiff was given an inmate identification bracelet identifying him as Cedric Maurice Wright (his true name), defendant Joseph Doe, booking police officer two, wrongfully confined plaintiff in a holding pen, to await a scheduled court appearance for Corey Darmel Leonard.
 "From the holding pen, despite plaintiff's repeated protests that he was not Corey Darmel Leonard and despite the fact that plaintiff was given an inmate identification bracelet identifying him as Cedric Maurice Wright, defendant Jerald Doe, deputy sheriff one took plaintiff into the custody of the St. Louis Sheriff's Department (hereinafter 'Sheriff's Department') and transported plaintiff to a holding cell, to await a scheduled court appearance for Corey Darmel Leonard.
   
 "From the holding cell, despite plaintiff's repeated protests that he was not Corey Darmel Leonard and despite the fact that plaintiff was given an inmate identification bracelet identifying him as Cedric Maurice Wright, while in the custody of the Sheriff's Department, defendant Jackson Doe, deputy sheriff two, transported plaintiff to Division 26 in the Twenty Second Judicial Circuit Court in the City of St. Louis before Judge Elizabeth Bryne Hogan (hereinafter 'Judge Hogan').

"Upon information and belief, Judge Hogan and Assistant Circuit Attorney Patrick Carmody realized plaintiff was being wrongfully detained as Corey Darmel Leonard.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2012/01/23/43237.htm
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 13, 2014, 05:20:58 AM
Why America's Police Are Becoming So Militarized


 

 


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See Also


 

Man Holding Toy Rifle In Ohio Walmart Shot Down By Police

 

New Jersey Police Officer: Obama Doesn’t Follow The Constitution So I Don’t Have To Either

 

New Technology Is Shaking Up The World's Oldest Profession

From the way police entered the house--helmeted and masked, guns drawn and shields in front, knocking down the door with a battering ram and rushing inside--you might think they were raiding a den of armed criminals.

In fact they were looking for $1,000-worth of clothes and electronics allegedly bought with a stolen credit card. They found none of these things, but arrested two people in the house on unrelated charges.

They narrowly avoided tragedy. On hearing intruders break in, the homeowner's son, a disabled ex-serviceman, reached for his (legal) gun. Luckily, he heard the police announce themselves and holstered it; otherwise, "they probably would have shot me," he says. His mother, Sally Prince, says she is now traumatised.

Gary Mikulec, chief of the Ankeny, Iowa police force, which raided Ms Prince's home in January, said that the suspects arrested "were not very good people". One had a criminal history that included three assault charges, albeit more than a decade old, and on his arrest was found to have a knife and a meth pipe.

It is easy to see why the police like to be better armed than the people they have to arrest. They risk their lives every day, and are understandably keen to get home in one piece. A big display of force can make a suspect think twice about pulling a gun. "An awful lot of SWAT tactics are focused on forcing the suspect to surrender," says Bill Bratton, New York's police chief.

But civil libertarians such as Radley Balko, the author of "Rise of the Warrior Cop", fret that the American police are becoming too much like soldiers. Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams (ie, paramilitary police units) were first formed to deal with violent civil unrest and life-threatening situations: shoot-outs, rescuing hostages, serving high-risk warrants and entering barricaded buildings, for instance. Their mission has crept.

Boozers, barbers and cockfighters



SWAT team
Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images for Texas Motor Speedway

Police practice shooting.



Peter Kraska, a professor at Eastern Kentucky University's School of Justice Studies, estimates that SWAT teams were deployed about 3,000 times in 1980 but are now used around 50,000 times a year. Some cities use them for routine patrols in high-crime areas. Baltimore and Dallas have used them to break up poker games. In 2010 New Haven, Connecticut sent a SWAT team to a bar suspected of serving under-age drinkers.

That same year heavily-armed police raided barber shops around Orlando, Florida; they said they were hunting for guns and drugs but ended up arresting 34 people for "barbering without a licence". Maricopa County, Arizona sent a SWAT team into the living room of Jesus Llovera, who was suspected of organising cockfights. Police rolled a tank into Mr Llovera's yard and killed more than 100 of his birds, as well as his dog. According to Mr Kraska, most SWAT deployments are not in response to violent, life-threatening crimes, but to serve drug-related warrants in private homes.

He estimates that 89% of police departments serving American cities with more than 50,000 people had SWAT teams in the late 1990s--almost double the level in the mid-1980s. By 2007 more than 80% of police departments in cities with between 25,000 and 50,000 people had them, up from 20% in the mid-1980s (there are around 18,000 state and local police agencies in America, compared with fewer than 100 in Britain).

The number of SWAT deployments soared even as violent crime fell. And although in recent years crime rates have risen in smaller American cities, Mr Kraska writes that the rise in small-town SWAT teams was driven not by need, but by fear of being left behind. Fred Leland, a police lieutenant in the small town of Walpole, Massachusetts, says that police departments in towns like his often invest in military-style kit because they "want to keep up" with larger forces.

The courts have smiled on SWAT raids. They often rely on "no-knock" warrants, which authorise police to force their way into a home without announcing themselves. This was once considered constitutionally dubious. But the Supreme Court has ruled that police may enter a house without knocking if they have "a reasonable suspicion" that announcing their presence would be dangerous or allow the suspect to destroy evidence (for example, by flushing drugs down the toilet).

Often these no-knock raids take place at night, accompanied by "flash-bang" grenades designed temporarily to blind, deafen and confuse their targets. They can go horribly wrong: Mr Balko has found more than 50 examples of innocent people who have died as a result of botched SWAT raids.

Officers can get jumpy and shoot unnecessarily, or accidentally. In 2011 Eurie Stamps, the stepfather of a suspected drug-dealer but himself suspected of no crimes, was killed while lying face-down on the floor when a SWAT-team officer reportedly tripped, causing his gun to discharge.

Householders, on hearing the door being smashed down, sometimes reach for their own guns. In 2006 Kathryn Johnston, a 92-year-old woman in Atlanta, mistook the police for robbers and fired a shot from an old pistol. Police shot her five times, killing her. After the shooting they planted marijuana in her home. It later emerged that they had falsified the information used to obtain their no-knock warrant.

Big grants for big guns



swat team police
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

Members of the Connecticut State Police SWAT team.

Federal cash--first to wage war on drugs, then on terror--has paid for much of the heavy weaponry used by SWAT teams. Between 2002 and 2011 the Department of Homeland Security disbursed $35 billion in grants to state and local police.

Also, the Pentagon offers surplus military kit to police departments. According to Mr Balko, by 2005 it had provided such gear to more than 17,000 law-enforcement agencies.

These programmes provide useful defensive equipment, such as body armour and helmets. But it is hard to see why Fargo, North Dakota--a city that averages fewer than two murders a year--needs an armoured personnel-carrier with a rotating turret.

Keene, a small town in New Hampshire which had three homicides between 1999 and 2012, spent nearly $286,000 on an armoured personnel-carrier known as a BearCat. The local police chief said it would be used to patrol Keene's "Pumpkin Festival and other dangerous situations". A Reason-Rupe poll found that 58% of Americans think the use of drones, military weapons and armoured vehicles by the police has gone "too far".

Because of a legal quirk, SWAT raids can be profitable. Rules on civil asset-forfeiture allow the police to seize anything which they can plausibly claim was the proceeds of a crime. Crucially, the property-owner need not be convicted of that crime. If the police find drugs in his house, they can take his cash and possibly the house, too. He must sue to get them back.

Many police departments now depend on forfeiture for a fat chunk of their budgets. In 1986, its first year of operation, the federal Asset Forfeiture Fund held $93.7m. By 2012, that and the related Seized Asset Deposit Fund held nearly $6 billion.

Mr Balko contends that these forfeiture laws are "unfair on a very basic level". They "disproportionately affect low-income people" and provide a perverse incentive for police to focus on drug-related crimes, which "come with a potential kickback to the police department", rather than rape and murder investigations, which do not. They also provide an incentive to arrest suspected drug-dealers inside their houses, which can be seized, and to bust stash houses after most of their drugs have been sold, when police can seize the cash.

Kara Dansky of the American Civil Liberties Union, who is overseeing a study into police militarisation, notices a more martial tone in recent years in the materials used to recruit and train new police officers. A recruiting video in Newport Beach, California, for instance, shows officers loading assault rifles, firing weapons, chasing suspects, putting people in headlocks and releasing snarling dogs.

This is no doubt sexier than showing them poring over paperwork or attending a neighbourhood-watch meeting. But does it attract the right sort of recruit, or foster the right attitude among serving officers? Mr Balko cites the T-shirts that some off-duty cops wear as evidence of a culture that celebrates violence ("We get up early to beat the crowds"; "You huff and you puff and we'll blow your door down").

Others retort that Mr Balko and his allies rely too much on cherry-picked examples of raids gone wrong. Tragic accidents happen and some police departments use their SWAT teams badly, but most use them well, says Lance Eldridge, a former army officer and ex-sheriff's deputy in Colorado.

It would be easier to determine who is right if police departments released more information about how and how often they deploy SWAT teams. But most are extremely cagey. In 2009 Maryland's governor, Martin O'Malley, signed a law requiring the police in his state to report such information every six months.

Three published reports showed that SWAT teams were most often deployed to serve search warrants on people suspected of crimes involving drugs and other contraband, but the law is set to expire this year. Utah's legislature has passed a similar measure; it awaits the governor's signature.

No one wants to eliminate SWAT teams. Imminent threats to human life require a swift, forceful response. That, say critics, is what SWAT teams should be used for: not for serving warrants on people suspected of nonviolent crimes, breaking up poker games or seeing that the Pumpkin Festival doesn't get out of hand.

Click here to subscribe to The Economist.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/why-americas-police-are-becoming-so-militarized-2014-3#ixzz3AH3NLELK
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: falco on August 13, 2014, 06:09:04 AM
If i lived in America i would hold to my guns very thight or even buy more.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 14, 2014, 01:06:40 PM
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2014/08/13/ferguson-police-michael-brown-militarization-column/14006383


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 17, 2014, 01:05:38 PM
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2014/08/13/ferguson-police-michael-brown-militarization-column/14006383


 >:(



Nah man, all these IED's and AK-47's going off every day in the country.  Cops gotta have MRAPS, tanks, f_ck...give 'em some nukes too, lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 17, 2014, 04:00:33 PM


Nah man, all these IED's and AK-47's going off every day in the country.  Cops gotta have MRAPS, tanks, f_ck...give 'em some nukes too, lol.
I just starting working with a guy whos done tons of tactical and competitive shooting courses with lots of LE and military..... he said the police and SWAT were the worse trained, worst shooting, and most arrogant of any of the shooters.

He told me during a quick meeting before an advanced tactics course where everyone was supposed to introduce themselves,  an officer introduced himself saying

"im so and so from the **** **** PD, and if you fuck with any of my 50k brothers and sisters in blue, ill fucking shoot you in the face"

Apparently that illicited some weird looks and snickers from the gathered senior Special Forces operators and military contractors, and when they started the course the guy couldnt hit the broad side of a barn.

he said most of the ones hes met have been like that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 18, 2014, 08:04:15 AM
I just starting working with a guy whos done tons of tactical and competitive shooting courses with lots of LE and military..... he said the police and SWAT were the worse trained, worst shooting, and most arrogant of any of the shooters.

He told me during a quick meeting before an advanced tactics course where everyone was supposed to introduce themselves,  an officer introduced himself saying

"im so and so from the **** **** PD, and if you fuck with any of my 50k brothers and sisters in blue, ill fucking shoot you in the face"

Apparently that illicited some weird looks and snickers from the gathered senior Special Forces operators and military contractors, and when they started the course the guy couldnt hit the broad side of a barn.

he said most of the ones hes met have been like that.


Well there ya go... solid ancedotal proof  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 18, 2014, 08:17:44 AM
Well there ya go... solid ancedotal proof  ::)
Don't take it so personally man. It was meant to be a funny and insightful story into the mindset and attitudes of the men that volunteer to serve and protect the public.

Doesn't mean you're all like that.

But from my experience, and most people I know, LE like yourselves are an ever increasing minority. I know you dont want to believe it but the evidence is all around you. Im sure most of you guys just do your jobs, but the number of absolutley corrupt PDs are increasing exponentially.
Another dude I knew quit the Chicago PD and moved because it was like being in a tax payer funded gang, they were so corrupt and atrocious.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 18, 2014, 08:51:48 AM
Don't take it so personally man. It was meant to be a funny and insightful story into the mindset and attitudes of the men that volunteer to serve and protect the public.

Doesn't mean you're all like that.

But from my experience, and most people I know, LE like yourselves are an ever increasing minority. I know you dont want to believe it but the evidence is all around you. Im sure most of you guys just do your jobs, but the number of absolutley corrupt PDs are increasing exponentially.
Another dude I knew quit the Chicago PD and moved because it was like being in a tax payer funded gang, they were so corrupt and atrocious.

Cool. I don't work for a corrupt department so I'm limited to my 10 yrs military LE and 22 yrs LE at this one Department. I have friends on others but not all that many so I can't say for certain about the integrity or lack of integrity of other departments. But being in the profession, and seeing the trends that have happened here as well as the information from those friends in other departments I would say the trend is going in the direction of more professional departments with less corruption than in the past. The perception due to cell phone cameras and 24/7 news is that it is increasing. We can disagree on that point, because it's just my opinion based on my limited base of knowledge.

As far as SWAT I would guess the caliber of members and training varies widely among departments, depending on size and budget. We usually have no less than 4 or 5 former SEALS or Special Forces on our teams so for us, I don't think the poorly trained or bad shot claim would apply. Now compare that to Lubbock Texas, you may have a valid point. Chicago may be so corrupt it caused your friend to quit rather than stay and try and make a change in his own little world or he just wasn't cut out to be a cop. We have people resign all the time in their first couple months or years for a variety of reasons and I wouldn't imagine they would share with their friends a reason for leaving that might give the perception they weren't cut out for it.  But again, maybe Chicago IS so corrupt he wanted no part of it.       
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 18, 2014, 08:55:12 AM
http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/yonkers/2014/08/15/two-yonkers-cops-earned-thousands-ot-probe/14132001


http://www.lohud.com/story/news/2014/08/01/yonkers-detective-investigation-false-search-warrant-drug-cases-dismissed/13489817




I know one of these guys from childhood.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on August 18, 2014, 09:03:00 AM
Cool. I don't work for a corrupt department so I'm limited to my 10 yrs military LE and 22 yrs LE at this one Department. I have friends on others but not all that many so I can't say for certain about the integrity or lack of integrity of other departments. But being in the profession, and seeing the trends that have happened here as well as the information from those friends in other departments I would say the trend is going in the direction of more professional departments with less corruption than in the past. The perception due to cell phone cameras and 24/7 news is that it is increasing. We can disagree on that point, because it's just my opinion based on my limited base of knowledge.

As far as SWAT I would guess the caliber of members and training varies widely among departments, depending on size and budget. We usually have no less than 4 or 5 former SEALS or Special Forces on our teams so for us, I don't think the poorly trained or bad shot claim would apply. Now compare that to Lubbock Texas, you may have a valid point. Chicago may be so corrupt it caused your friend to quit rather than stay and try and make a change in his own little world or he just wasn't cut out to be a cop. We have people resign all the time in their first couple months or years for a variety of reasons and I wouldn't imagine they would share with their friends a reason for leaving that might give the perception they weren't cut out for it.  But again, maybe Chicago IS so corrupt he wanted no part of it.       
No, he resigned because the cops were taking bribes from pimps/dealers, busting and then fucking hookers and letting them go, confiscating drugs only to turn around and resell them or use them, and sitting around laughing about it with their superiors. All the way up to the highest level he was around, those guys treated the PD like an untouchable mob, and they all backed each other. He moved out of state and is a trooper here in Washington now.

He said it was like a bad movie.

The SWAT and e guys he shot with were not former military. I figured i didnt have to make that point. Military turned cops are obviously different, theyre military trained.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 18, 2014, 09:12:58 AM
No, he resigned because the cops were taking bribes from pimps/dealers, busting and then fucking hookers and letting them go, confiscating drugs only to turn around and resell them or use them, and sitting around laughing about it with their superiors. All the way up to the highest level he was around, those guys treated the PD like an untouchable mob, and they all backed each other. He moved out of state and is a trooper here in Washington now.

He said it was like a bad movie.

The SWAT and e guys he shot with were not former military. I figured i didnt have to make that point. Military turned cops are obviously different, theyre military trained.



The former military SF usually impart their wisdom and experiences to the other members of the team is the additional point.

"No, he resigned because the cops were taking bribes from pimps/dealers, busting and then fucking hookers and letting them go, confiscating drugs only to turn around and resell them or use them, and sitting around laughing about it with their superiors. All the way up to the highest level he was around, those guys treated the PD like an untouchable mob, and they all backed each other. He moved out of state and is a trooper here in Washington now."

That's sad to hear and yes, it sounds an awful lot like a bad movie...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 18, 2014, 04:41:13 PM
No, he resigned because the cops were taking bribes from pimps/dealers, busting and then fucking hookers and letting them go, confiscating drugs only to turn around and resell them or use them, and sitting around laughing about it with their superiors. All the way up to the highest level he was around, those guys treated the PD like an untouchable mob, and they all backed each other. He moved out of state and is a trooper here in Washington now.

He said it was like a bad movie.

The SWAT and e guys he shot with were not former military. I figured i didnt have to make that point. Military turned cops are obviously different, theyre military trained.





Damn...on one hand you know they will probably go Serpico on his ass.

On the other, you hope that he will be the one to bring down all the corruption!

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 19, 2014, 07:06:53 AM
Village to give retiring millionaire cop a huge, ‘criminal’ payout


By Isabel Vincent and Melissa Klein






























.
August 16, 2014 | 10:28pm

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Modal Trigger



Village to give retiring millionaire cop a huge, ‘criminal’ payout
Westhampton Beach Police Chief Raymond Dean
Photo: Gordon M. Grant





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Charge this cop with robbery.

Ray Dean, police chief of the 2.9-square-mile village of Westhampton Beach, is retiring with a bag of cash.

He is getting $403,714 for 15 years’ worth — or 531 days — of unused sick, vacation and personal time. The payment amounts to 4 percent of the village’s entire $9.7 million budget.

Dean resigned on June 30, a day before a new mayor with a reform platform, Maria Moore, took office.

When village trustees authorized the golden parachute, those at the meeting gasped, The Southampton Press newspaper reported.

“It’s criminal. It’s outrageous. It’s outlandish. It should never happen in a small village like this,” said Jim Kametler, a former Westhampton Beach cop who served on the Village Board from 2004 to 2010.

In addition, Dean, who is only 53, will collect an estimated pension of $142,000 a year.

Dean was already a millionaire. He bought a house in Quogue for $1.3 million in 2005, owns a 32-foot boat, and his pay last year came to $226,236 — more than NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton makes.


Modal Trigger

Chief Ray Dean in 2009
Photo: Gordon M. Grant
 
But while Bratton oversees a force of 34,500 uniformed officers, Dean presided over 11.

And while the NYPD saw 111,335 major felonies last year, crime takes a holiday in the resort town of 1,700 permanent residents.

Murder is unheard of, the last rape was reported in 2010, and the department tallied only 46 serious crimes in 2013, including 37 larcenies and three stolen cars.

One shocking incident involved reported vandalism: An oceanfront resident claimed someone spray-painted her back porch white.

But the Westhampton Beach force soon cracked the case.

“Officers said the deck was not covered in paint but rather bird droppings,” the Press reported.

Dean spent 15 years in Southampton Town as an officer and sergeant before joining the Westhampton force in 1999, scoring a 10-year contract as its chief.

In contract renewal talks in 2009, Dean threatened to sue the village, demanding pay for hundreds of hours of accumulated sick and comp time. This sum was folded into his final payment in June.

He was awarded a five-year contract in 2011 that called for yearly raises of 2 percent on average. It gave him 30 vacation days, 22 sick days and five personal days a year.

Dean got extra pay for longevity and for working at night and on holidays. His $165,032 salary last year was bumped up by $61,204 with the extras factored in.

By the time Dean packed it in, he claimed he had amassed 300 unused sick days, 10 personal days, 208 vacation days and 13 holidays.

He retires with full benefits based on nearly 30 years of police service, the state Comptroller’s Office says.

Dean did not return a message seeking comment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 19, 2014, 02:03:29 PM
Village to give retiring millionaire cop a huge, ‘criminal’ payout







The vacation and the personal they have to cough up.  I think any private employer would be the same.  So, I think the sick is the real issue, but speaking from knowledge of other gov't agencies, when they don't pay out the sick, people start taking tons of sick leave prior to retirement.  So, they're paying it one way or another.  Not sure what, if anything, should be done about that.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on August 19, 2014, 05:53:48 PM
I have not read or posted in this thread, but I thought I would try and make a meaningful contribution anyway.   :D

(https://scontent-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/10628158_10152639667800513_5247793400157935433_n.jpg?oh=bbde400d8fd01471a7ce5df8199797b0&oe=54689C0D)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 20, 2014, 10:32:32 AM
I have not read or posted in this thread, but I thought I would try and make a meaningful contribution anyway.   :D

(https://scontent-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/10628158_10152639667800513_5247793400157935433_n.jpg?oh=bbde400d8fd01471a7ce5df8199797b0&oe=54689C0D)

Why's it always gotta be a brown dog? Why don't they ever post pics of police searching white dogs??
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on August 20, 2014, 12:10:54 PM
Why's it always gotta be a brown dog? Why don't they ever post pics of police searching white dogs??

 :D

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 20, 2014, 12:14:56 PM
:D



I just heard "That's reggae" ;-)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 20, 2014, 02:36:34 PM
Check this video on the National Review (http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/385870/i-have-feeling-officer-about-become-very-famous-rich-lowry) out. And do note: this is how this asshole cop acts when he knows he's on camera: holding a gun raised, pointing it to the crowd and threatening to kill people.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 20, 2014, 02:38:56 PM
Check this video on the National Review (http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/385870/i-have-feeling-officer-about-become-very-famous-rich-lowry) out. And do note: this is how this asshole cop acts when he knows he's on camera: holding a gun raised, pointing it to the crowd and threatening to kill people.

I think he was already suspended
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 20, 2014, 03:34:46 PM
I think he was already suspended


That's what I read.  Supposedly 'indefinitely', be we all know that really means a minor slap on the wrist and back to work.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 20, 2014, 07:48:37 PM
After all this time, he may face charges... And of course he's on paid leave.


Criminal charges may be brought against the California Highway Patrol officer who beat a woman on a freeway on-ramp in Los Angeles.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014
LOS ANGELES (KABC) --
Criminal charges may be brought against the California Highway Patrol officer who beat a woman on a freeway on-ramp in Los Angeles.

The California Highway Patrol forwarded Wednesday an investigation to the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office outlining "potentially serious charges" against Daniel Andrew, according to a news release. The district attorney is expected to review the investigation and decide whether or not to file charges.


http://abc7.com/news/chp-officer-who-beat-woman-may-face-charges/273554/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 21, 2014, 12:45:14 PM
From what I read, the officer was from a small department. First I will say I'm glad he was suspended. As Chris Rock would say... I don't condone what he did...but I understand it.  I've been in a couple crowd control situations where bottles and rocks were being thrown and the crowd was agitated and somewhat uncontrollable. It's truly an "oh shit" situation. Adrenaline is dumping, you're way out numbered and kinda wishing you were off duty that night. But, the training and experience we have allows us to focus, remain professional and we don't over react. When we first started the training, and would have mock crowds taunt and toss bottles, the newer members would sometimes break rank to try and grab someone. The Sgts would grab them by their collars and pull them back and remind them to never do anything alone, stay in a group. Eventually it becomes second nature and you don't sweat the small stuff. This officer probably never faced anything even remotely similar until that night. Probably scared to death and that's how he reacted. Unfortunately he isn't allowed to project his fear in that way, and likely Law Enforcement isn't for him. If I were his Chief I would have a concern about his ability to deal with stressful situation which will come up in that profession and I would terminate him. He is a risk in my opinion. He got in way over his head and couldn't handle the stress.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 21, 2014, 05:56:40 PM
Ah well, if we're going to speculate, maybe we should consider other alternatives.

I'm thinking the cop is typically overly aggressive by nature.  He's not accustomed to people ignoring him or not bowing to his every command.  He's probably accustomed to immediate compliance and his temper rages whenever he perceives somebody is not obedient.

He's probably undergone extensive training at taxpayer expense and the union will probably claim that's still not enough training.  He was probably never specifically taught that he shouldn't say 'go fuck yourself', so how could he possibly see anything wrong with that.

But nah, let's always try and put that rosey spin on it.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 21, 2014, 10:40:07 PM
FBI arrests embattled Rio Arriba County sheriff, son

By Journal and wire reports
UPDATED: Friday, August 15, 2014 at 3:31 pm
PUBLISHED: Friday, August 15, 2014 at 8:31 am


The FBI says a New Mexico sheriff and his son have been arrested in an ongoing investigation.

Rio Arriba Sheriff Thomas R. “Tommy” Rodella and his son Thomas R. Rodella Jr. were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy to violate the civil rights of man they chased down in a high speed chase last march.

Both men appeared before a federal magistrate Friday morning and pleaded not guilty to the charges. A judge on Friday afternoon released them on their own recognizance. As a term of his release, Sheriff Rodella will not be allowed to carry a firearm.

According to a federal indictment returned earlier this week, Rodella’s son drove the sheriff’s personal car in the high speed chase, eventually stopping the man identified only as M.T. and challenging him to a fight.

M.T. then drove away and the chase began again, the indictment charges. The second time the Rodellas stopped the man, Sheriff Rodella, in uniform, jumped into M.T.’s car brandishing a silver revolver and assaulted the man.

The indictment charges the younger Rodella dragged the man out of his car.

Sheriff Rodella had other deputies comes to the scene and book him into the Rio Arriba Detention Center. The indictment charges that both Rodellas made false representations that the man had attempted to injure Sheriff Rodella.

The indictment also charges both men with falsifying records to charge M.T. and cover up what occurred.

They are charged with conspiracy against the free exercise of civil rights, deprivation of rights, brandishing a firearm and two counts of falsification of documents.

Rodella was arrested at his office Friday morning. His son, Thomas, Jr., was arrested at the family’s Española home.

U.S. Attorney Damon Martinez said the federal charges filed against Rodella do not mandate his removal from office. Rodella’s role as sheriff will need to be decided on a local level, Martinez said.

In June, FBI agents raided Rodella’s home in connection with an aggravated assault case. The raid occurred just hours after Rodella lost re-election.

Rodella’s home was search earlier this year by FBI agents.

Albuquerque attorney Robert Gorence is representing Rodella. Jason Bowles is representing Rodella Jr.

This is a developing story. Check back later for more information.



http://www.abqjournal.com/446522/abqnewsseeker/fbi-arrests-rio-arriba-sheriff.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 21, 2014, 11:18:52 PM
Oklahoma City police officer arrested, accused of rape

Posted: Thursday, August 21, 2014 5:17 PM EDT Updated: Thursday, August 21, 2014 10:10 PM EDT
By: Kristen Ventura, Producer


OKLAHOMA CITY - An Oklahoma City police officer has been arrested following accusations of rape and other misconduct.

Daniel Holtzclaw was arrested around 3 p.m. on Thursday in the parking lot of Gold's Gym in northwest Oklahoma City.

Holtzclaw allegedly stopped women, threatened them and made them expose themselves and perform sexual acts.

Authorities say the complaints started in June, but the alleged crimes date back to February.

http://www.okcfox.com/story/26340865/oklahoma-city-police-officer-arrested-for-rape-and-other-sexual-misconduct
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 22, 2014, 11:11:45 AM
Ah well, if we're going to speculate, maybe we should consider other alternatives.

I'm thinking the cop is typically overly aggressive by nature.  He's not accustomed to people ignoring him or not bowing to his every command.  He's probably accustomed to immediate compliance and his temper rages whenever he perceives somebody is not obedient.

He's probably undergone extensive training at taxpayer expense and the union will probably claim that's still not enough training.  He was probably never specifically taught that he shouldn't say 'go fuck yourself', so how could he possibly see anything wrong with that.

But nah, let's always try and put that rosey spin on it.  ::)



You could be right, I'm just giving my perspective.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 22, 2014, 05:41:22 PM
NY Daily News ^ | Thursday, July 17, 2014, 10:30 AM | Philip Caulfield
Posted on August 22, 2014 at 8:18:04 PM EDT by Half Vast Conspiracy

State trooper AJ Huntsman was accused of lifting more than $8,000 in cash and jewelry from a dying man at a motorcycle crash site in 2012. He later lied to supervisors and the dead man's family about it, authorities said.



A crooked Connecticut cop caught by his dash cam stealing more than $8,000 in cash and jewelry off a mangled motorcycle crash victim is facing prison after pleading guilty Wednesday.

State trooper AJ Huntsman, 45, was facing 10 years for the theft, but was likely to get just 16 months in jail and five years' probation when he's sentenced on Oct. 3, the Connecticut Post reported.

(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 23, 2014, 11:31:23 AM
Trooper who arrested NFL's Sam Montgomery fired

The South Carolina state trooper who arrested NFL defensive lineman Sam Montgomery at a traffic stop last June has been fired, state officials said Friday.

The Department of Public Safety said in a news release that Lance Cpl. R.S. Salter was terminated for violating agency policies including conduct unbecoming a state employee. Salter stopped Montgomery in June when the Cincinnati Bengals defensive lineman was returning to his home in Greenwood.

http://bostonherald.com/sports/patriots_nfl/nfl_coverage/2014/08/trooper_who_arrested_nfls_sam_montgomery_fired
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2014, 11:34:45 PM
Florida Man Records Himself Getting Attacked by Cop for not Rolling Down Window all the way

A horrifying video has emerged showing St. Petersburg police forcing a man out of his car before pouncing on him, leaving him hospitalized with several injuries, all because the cop claimed he was in fear for his life.

At least that what he says in his report, where he wrote the following:

    I exited my marked patrol cruiser and walked towards the vehicle and I noticed the driver staring at me with a blank stare as he continued revving the engine louder and louder. I thought by his actions the subject was going to attempt to hit me with his car.

The video, however, shows it was Curtis Shannon, a young man from Florida who was probably fearing for his life during the arrest.

It also shows that he remained professional as he tried to hand the cop his license and registration through a small opening after the cop pulled him over for what he claimed was erratic driving.



http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/26/florida-man-records-getting-attacked-cop-rolling-window-way/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2014, 11:44:08 PM
This is infuriating:

South Florida Man Fights Back After Felony Arrest for Asking Cop to Drive Safer

All Eric McDonough wanted was for Homestead Police officer Alejandro Murguido to obey the same traffic laws he enforced in their neighborhood.

Instead, the 36-year-old scientist ended up in jail on charges of aggravated stalking and threatening a public servant because he confronted Murguido with his cellphone’s voice recorder outside the cop’s home  two years ago. Since then, McDonough says Homestead Police Department brass have refused to investigate Murguido for falsely accusing him even though he has an audio recording that contradicts the cop’s version of events.

http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/19/cops-retaliate-miami-man/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on August 27, 2014, 05:38:04 AM
http://blog.blacknews.com/2013/05/judge-mark-ciavarella-sentenced-selling-kids-prison-system101.html



wow
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 27, 2014, 09:54:16 AM
http://blog.blacknews.com/2013/05/judge-mark-ciavarella-sentenced-selling-kids-prison-system101.html



wow

Too lenient... but at least it's not a travesty like "one year suspended and the permanent stain to his reputation" bullshit that often passes for punishment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 27, 2014, 01:40:08 PM
Florida Man Records Himself Getting Attacked by Cop for not Rolling Down Window all the way

A horrifying video has emerged showing St. Petersburg police forcing a man out of his car before pouncing on him, leaving him hospitalized with several injuries, all because the cop claimed he was in fear for his life.

At least that what he says in his report, where he wrote the following:

    I exited my marked patrol cruiser and walked towards the vehicle and I noticed the driver staring at me with a blank stare as he continued revving the engine louder and louder. I thought by his actions the subject was going to attempt to hit me with his car.

The video, however, shows it was Curtis Shannon, a young man from Florida who was probably fearing for his life during the arrest.

It also shows that he remained professional as he tried to hand the cop his license and registration through a small opening after the cop pulled him over for what he claimed was erratic driving.



http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/26/florida-man-records-getting-attacked-cop-rolling-window-way/

If he'd only seen the Chris Rock video...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 27, 2014, 06:13:13 PM
Too lenient... but at least it's not a travesty like "one year suspended and the permanent stain to his reputation" bullshit that often passes for punishment.


Agree.  Though I think a lot more people should be in jail over this.  He was treating people like this in his courtroom for 5 fucking years or so and nobody did shit to stop it.  Just unreal.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 27, 2014, 10:18:09 PM
http://blog.blacknews.com/2013/05/judge-mark-ciavarella-sentenced-selling-kids-prison-system101.html



wow

Though this is an old case it is still outrageous. Only 12 counts and 30 years? Every wrong conviction he made in this way should be a separate case. The time all those kids spent in prison wrongfully should add up to a lot more than 30 years (which those kids will never get back).

The co-owner of that damn prison got a mere 18 months (not years) in federal prison.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 28, 2014, 07:58:28 AM
http://www.wbtv.com/story/26364569/video-obtained-after-pastor-naacp-claim-police-mistreatment?clienttype=generic&mobilecgbypass

Pastor lied about police behavior. Video shows what actually happened.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 28, 2014, 04:27:43 PM
Family mourns innocent woman killed by OPD officer's stray bullet at Vixen Bar


http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-maria-godinez-castillo-vixen-shooting-20140820,0,6933988.story
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 29, 2014, 11:20:02 AM
Family mourns innocent woman killed by OPD officer's stray bullet at Vixen Bar


http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-maria-godinez-castillo-vixen-shooting-20140820,0,6933988.story

Gives no details other than a struggle with a gun weilding person...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2014, 12:00:58 PM
Gives no details other than a struggle with a gun weilding person...

Suspect charged with murder after stray police bullet kills innocent woman

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-kody-roach-murder-charge-vixen-20140826,0,4849648.story
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 29, 2014, 12:19:08 PM
Suspect charged with murder after stray police bullet kills innocent woman

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-kody-roach-murder-charge-vixen-20140826,0,4849648.story

Thanks

That sucks.. the cop was in a bad situation no doubt. I would have shot the guy as well. That an innocent bystander died kinda defeats the purpose of shooting the bad guy in the first place but its probably night, poorly lit, adrenaline flowing, guys not standing still.. I mighta missed one as well.. tough call and tragic ending
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 29, 2014, 12:22:58 PM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henry-davis/ (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henry-davis/)

Police beat a man, then accuse him of four counts of damaging government property... by bleeding on their uniforms.

Although two of the cops later recanted their sworn statements, they were not charged with or prosecuted for perjury because their perjury was not deemed important enough to warrant prosecution. The beaten man was tried and convicted of the remaining two counts and fined $3,000.00.

A Magistrate Judge dismissed claims of excessive force by claiming that “a reasonable officer could have believed that beating a subdued and compliant Mr. Davis while causing only a concussion, scalp laceration, and bruising with almost no permanent damage did not violate the Constitution.”

What a fucking joke. The cops, the prosecutor and the Judge (Nannette Baker) involved in this travesty ought to be the ones facing justice.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2014, 12:44:31 PM
Thanks

That sucks.. the cop was in a bad situation no doubt. I would have shot the guy as well. That an innocent bystander died kinda defeats the purpose of shooting the bad guy in the first place but its probably night, poorly lit, adrenaline flowing, guys not standing still.. I mighta missed one as well.. tough call and tragic ending

There might have been (or not) circumstances that the cops might not have had perfect visibility or time to react but why charge that person with murder when it wasn't him that shot the innocent bystander?
The argument "As a result of Roach's actions, an individual was killed therefore probable cause exist to further charge Roach with first degree felony murder" is just ridiculous.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on August 29, 2014, 12:52:37 PM
There might have been (or not) circumstances that the cops might not have had perfect visibility or time to react but why charge that person with murder when it wasn't him that shot the innocent bystander?
The argument "As a result of Roach's actions, an individual was killed therefore probable cause exist to further charge Roach with first degree felony murder" is just ridiculous.

There is precedent for this and it's not unreasonable. If you engage in an activity that you reasonably should have known would or could result in someone else being injured, you can be charged even if you are not the direct cause of injury.

Consider, for example the following scenario:

I invite you over to my ranch to do some practice shooting against an old outhouse that I have on my property. At the same time, I ask my wife to go retrieve something from said outhouse.

You come and begin shooting, unaware that there's anyone in the outhouse. As a result, my wife dies from multiple gunshot wounds.

Should I not be charged?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2014, 01:58:22 PM
There is precedent for this and it's not unreasonable. If you engage in an activity that you reasonably should have known would or could result in someone else being injured, you can be charged even if you are not the direct cause of injury.

Consider, for example the following scenario:

I invite you over to my ranch to do some practice shooting against an old outhouse that I have on my property. At the same time, I ask my wife to go retrieve something from said outhouse.

You come and begin shooting, unaware that there's anyone in the outhouse. As a result, my wife dies from multiple gunshot wounds.

Should I not be charged?


Not quite. The logic that if the police shows up and no matter what they do they charge the suspect with it is crazy. What if the cop had shot himself in the foot as he was trying to pull out his weapon? Would the suspect be charged with that too? What if the cop shot at something explosive like maybe a gas tank and the explosion killed 5 innocent people? This could be used as a blanket excuse for brutal abuse.

Even though from the facts it appears the cops had reason to believe the suspect was armed and quite possibly danger and might (or not) have had reason to discharge their firearm, they nevertheless shot an innocent bystander.

They should be investigated for that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2014, 01:04:25 PM
Walnut Creek officer accused of beating woman with bat

A man who’d been in charge of upholding the law for three decades is now accused of breaking it. Richmond police arrested an off-duty Walnut Creek Police Officer for allegedly donning a mask and beating a woman with a baseball bat on August 16. The attack happened around 2 a.m., in a residential neighborhood on Clinton and San Pablo avenues in Richmond.

http://www.ktvu.com/news/news/crime-law/walnut-creek-officer-arrested-allegedly-beating-wo/nhCCr/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 31, 2014, 09:09:57 AM
http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henry-davis/ (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henry-davis/)

Police beat a man, then accuse him of four counts of damaging government property... by bleeding on their uniforms.

Although two of the cops later recanted their sworn statements, they were not charged with or prosecuted for perjury because their perjury was not deemed important enough to warrant prosecution. The beaten man was tried and convicted of the remaining two counts and fined $3,000.00.

A Magistrate Judge dismissed claims of excessive force by claiming that “a reasonable officer could have believed that beating a subdued and compliant Mr. Davis while causing only a concussion, scalp laceration, and bruising with almost no permanent damage did not violate the Constitution.”

What a fucking joke. The cops, the prosecutor and the Judge (Nannette Baker) involved in this travesty ought to be the ones facing justice.



You have a knack for posting some of the most egregious abuses.  Unfuckingreal.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 31, 2014, 09:16:41 AM

Not quite. The logic that if the police shows up and no matter what they do they charge the suspect with it is crazy. What if the cop had shot himself in the foot as he was trying to pull out his weapon? Would the suspect be charged with that too? What if the cop shot at something explosive like maybe a gas tank and the explosion killed 5 innocent people? This could be used as a blanket excuse for brutal abuse.

Even though from the facts it appears the cops had reason to believe the suspect was armed and quite possibly danger and might (or not) have had reason to discharge their firearm, they nevertheless shot an innocent bystander.

They should be investigated for that.



I don't think it would.  It's kinda like telling our military that there can't be civilian casualties - it's absurd.

You feel for the victim to be sure, but I don't think it reasonable or fair to blame the cops for something like this - unless it was unreasonable for them to pull their guns and shoot to begin with (as was the case with 2 ladies in CA - but naturally they all covered for each other so shit won't be done).

I think the most any cop can reasonably do is try to minimize such incidents via other means...but they will happen and we've to hope we're not the victims.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on August 31, 2014, 10:35:22 AM
Suspect charged with murder after stray police bullet kills innocent woman

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-kody-roach-murder-charge-vixen-20140826,0,4849648.story

I think in this instance, the charge is accurate... Had their not been a gun involved by the suspect, the shooting would not have occurred (at least that is the likely scenario)

In this instance, I am in agreement with the charge that the fault is on the person wielding the first weapon.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 31, 2014, 10:41:39 AM
Nebraska Cops Receive no Jail Time for Stealing Memory Card, Despite Big Talk from County Attorney

A Nebraska cop who chased a man into his home after he had video recorded cops arresting his brother, confiscating his camera and later admitting to throwing the memory card away, received a year of probation this week after his charge was reduced from a felony to misdemeanors.

James Kinsella was part of a mob of cops from the Omaha Police Department who chased a man inside his home without a warrant last year after the man attempted to video record them abusing his brother, a scene that was captured on a camera by a neighbor from an upstairs window in a shocking video that went viral.

But what took place inside the home was even more egregious, according to Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine, who called a press conference last year to announce he was charging Kinsella with felony tampering with evidence – a rare move by any prosecutor when it comes to cop deleting footage.

However, Klein later reduced the charge to two misdemeanor counts of obstruction of government operations because the cop claimed there was no video on the memory card.

Klein also dropped charges against another cop he had charged last year, Aaron Von Behren, a sergeant who was facing two misdemeanors, accessory to a felony and obstruction of government operations, for orchestrating the coverup by ordering his officers to keep hush about the disposal of the memory card – which they claim contained no video evidence anyway.

Kleine said, prosecutors had a few obstacles in prosecuting Von Behren. Much of the information gleaned about Von Behren’s instructions came from an Omaha police internal affairs investigation, Kleine said.

By law, authorities cannot use any admissions or statements made in such internal investigations because officers don’t have the right to refuse interviews with their supervisors. That prevented prosecutors from using officers’ statements to internal affairs about Von Behren’s purported instructions.

And because Kinsella no longer faced a felony, Von Behren could no longer be considered an accessory to a felony.

Kinsella and Von Behren were fired for the incident along with two other officers, one who was rehired earlier this year.

Meanwhile, a civil lawsuit against the department and the officers is still pending.


http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/30/nebraska-cops-receive-jail-time-stealing-memory-card/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2014, 09:33:19 PM
5 officers from 3 different police agencies caught on camera misusing emergency lights

Several police officers are under investigation after cellphone video caught them heading to a bakery on Coral Way with their emergency overhead lights flashing.


http://www.local10.com/news/officers-use-emergency-lights-for-breakfast-trip-to-bakery/27771700
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 03, 2014, 10:37:20 AM
There might have been (or not) circumstances that the cops might not have had perfect visibility or time to react but why charge that person with murder when it wasn't him that shot the innocent bystander?
The argument "As a result of Roach's actions, an individual was killed therefore probable cause exist to further charge Roach with first degree felony murder" is just ridiculous.

I understand the basis for the law. If during a felony crime you are committing, someone dies due to your direct, or indirect actions, you should be held accountable. Had you not been committing the crime it would never have happened. However, it doesn't and shouldn't mean the cop won't be held accountable at some level. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 03, 2014, 04:21:01 PM
Nebraska Cops Receive no Jail Time for Stealing Memory Card, Despite Big Talk from County Attorney

A Nebraska cop who chased a man into his home after he had video recorded cops arresting his brother, confiscating his camera and later admitting to throwing the memory card away, received a year of probation this week after his charge was reduced from a felony to misdemeanors.

James Kinsella was part of a mob of cops from the Omaha Police Department who chased a man inside his home without a warrant last year after the man attempted to video record them abusing his brother, a scene that was captured on a camera by a neighbor from an upstairs window in a shocking video that went viral.

But what took place inside the home was even more egregious, according to Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine, who called a press conference last year to announce he was charging Kinsella with felony tampering with evidence – a rare move by any prosecutor when it comes to cop deleting footage.

However, Klein later reduced the charge to two misdemeanor counts of obstruction of government operations because the cop claimed there was no video on the memory card.

Klein also dropped charges against another cop he had charged last year, Aaron Von Behren, a sergeant who was facing two misdemeanors, accessory to a felony and obstruction of government operations, for orchestrating the coverup by ordering his officers to keep hush about the disposal of the memory card – which they claim contained no video evidence anyway.

Kleine said, prosecutors had a few obstacles in prosecuting Von Behren. Much of the information gleaned about Von Behren’s instructions came from an Omaha police internal affairs investigation, Kleine said.

By law, authorities cannot use any admissions or statements made in such internal investigations because officers don’t have the right to refuse interviews with their supervisors. That prevented prosecutors from using officers’ statements to internal affairs about Von Behren’s purported instructions.

And because Kinsella no longer faced a felony, Von Behren could no longer be considered an accessory to a felony.

Kinsella and Von Behren were fired for the incident along with two other officers, one who was rehired earlier this year.

Meanwhile, a civil lawsuit against the department and the officers is still pending.


http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/30/nebraska-cops-receive-jail-time-stealing-memory-card/





This is another good example of why I find Agnostic to be typically deceptive and misleading.

They can't use the guy's statements against him cause he's compelled to answer their questions - just as I pointed out earlier in this thread.

So, why should cops receive special treatment?

It is truly disgusting.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 04, 2014, 08:57:34 AM



This is another good example of why I find Agnostic to be typically deceptive and misleading.

They can't use the guy's statements against him cause he's compelled to answer their questions - just as I pointed out earlier in this thread.

So, why should cops receive special treatment?

It is truly disgusting.



I'm an open book dude. Cops don't recieve special treatment. What you have a problem with seems to be that cops are afforded the same treatment as citizens. There are criminal investigations, and there are administrative investigations. Citizens and Cops both are subject to the criminal investigations. Both have rights. Both can refuse to cooperate. Where the difference is, is citizens don't have administrative investigations where they are compelled to talk without any rights other than the promise that what they say in the administrative investigation won't be used in the criminal portion, as that would violate their rights. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 04, 2014, 11:30:35 AM
I'm an open book dude. Cops don't recieve special treatment. What you have a problem with seems to be that cops are afforded the same treatment as citizens. There are criminal investigations, and there are administrative investigations. Citizens and Cops both are subject to the criminal investigations. Both have rights. Both can refuse to cooperate. Where the difference is, is citizens don't have administrative investigations where they are compelled to talk without any rights other than the promise that what they say in the administrative investigation won't be used in the criminal portion, as that would violate their rights. 
I think hes referring to when the police back each other up guys essentially guilty of murder are put on paid leave and then go back to work, and may have done it 2-3x with nothing to show.

It does happen a lot in papers......the system doest always work like its supposed to and it seems to be working improperly more and more. It seems to be a bigger problem in areas kike Chicago, NY city, DC... major liberal cities rife with corruption..

Seeing it a lot in smaller towns too, anywhere where a good old boys mentality can foster
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 04, 2014, 11:36:32 AM
I think hes referring to when the police back each other up guys essentially guilty of murder are put on paid leave and then go back to work, and may have done it 2-3x with nothing to show.

It does happen a lot in papers......the system doest always work like its supposed to and it seems to be working improperly more and more. It seems to be a bigger problem in areas kike Chicago, NY city, DC... major liberal cities rife with corruption..

Seeing it a lot in smaller towns too, anywhere where a good old boys mentality can foster

If that's what he means then cool. To be honest, I really don't know what he means. I thought it was that he thinks cops get special treatment in criminal cases but again.. not sure 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 04, 2014, 11:46:28 AM
If that's what he means then cool. To be honest, I really don't know what he means. I thought it was that he thinks cops get special treatment in criminal cases but again.. not sure 
I was speakinf more on his general attitutde.... not much on this specific situation.

It appears hes saying that the way the law works for officers, doesnt work for civilians...

Theh xant use his statement because hes compelled to answer... but they should would use a civilians.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 04, 2014, 04:52:38 PM
I'm an open book dude. Cops don't recieve special treatment. What you have a problem with seems to be that cops are afforded the same treatment as citizens. There are criminal investigations, and there are administrative investigations. Citizens and Cops both are subject to the criminal investigations. Both have rights. Both can refuse to cooperate. Where the difference is, is citizens don't have administrative investigations where they are compelled to talk without any rights other than the promise that what they say in the administrative investigation won't be used in the criminal portion, as that would violate their rights.  

Hide behind your finger if you must, but don't think that we can't see you. The facts are simple: cops do get special rights: acts that would, when performed by non-cops, result in arrests or criminal investigations magically become acts that are "handled internally" which is reverse-pidgin for "ain't no big deal!"

If I run a stop sign and lie to police about it and perjure myself, I'd get charged - and almost certainly arrested and dragged before a Judge. A cop, on the other hand? Nothing happens at first - not until the evidence - in the form of a video recording - becomes overwhelming and irrefutable. So he goes in for a nice chat with the IA boys, oops, forgive me, I meant to say he goes in to give a statement in an IA investigation. During the course of this get-together, err, interview, he eventually admits to running a stop sign, hitting and severely injuring another motorist as a result, lying about it to other officers on the scene, causing the victim to get arrested and charged on suspicion of driving under the influence, perjuring himself by lying in his official police report.

And what happens to this piece-of-shit who kickstarted a legal and health nightmare for this poor woman that he rammed with his car? NOTHING. It's not a big deal apparently and he's still listed on active duty. So yeah, no special rights my ass. I'm asking you point blank: what would happen to me if I ran a stop sign, hit someone, then lied about at the scene, filed a false police report and perjured myself? Once you can answer that question, then tell me again how cops don't get special rights.

I can give you a hundred other cases, some of which are even more egregious than this. Cases where a cop gets away with the proverbial murder because his fellow officers wrap everything up in a nice, IA-decorated blue bow.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 04, 2014, 05:08:22 PM
Florida town hailed as king of the speed traps under investigation

The small town of Waldo, Florida only has seven police officers, but they are evidently very busy. Last year they collected nearly 12,000 speeding citations worth almost $400,000 in court fines, about a third of the town's revenue. Now, in the midst of a scandal, state officials are investigating whether the town broke the law.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/florida-towns-notorious-speed-traps-under-investigation/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2014, 01:40:24 PM
Former Atlanta officer indicted for alleged brutal assault


http://www.ajc.com/news/news/former-atlanta-officer-indicted-for-alleged-brutal/nhFg7/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 11, 2014, 05:36:55 PM
I'm an open book dude. Cops don't recieve special treatment. What you have a problem with seems to be that cops are afforded the same treatment as citizens. There are criminal investigations, and there are administrative investigations. Citizens and Cops both are subject to the criminal investigations. Both have rights. Both can refuse to cooperate. Where the difference is, is citizens don't have administrative investigations where they are compelled to talk without any rights other than the promise that what they say in the administrative investigation won't be used in the criminal portion, as that would violate their rights. 



No, you're dishonest and misleading as always.

Hop off your soapbox and lose the mentality that you cops are persecuted worse than jews.  ::)

Lots of people deal with administrative hearings.  You claim to be a vet, then you should know the DoD has them all the time.

And, anybody employeed in the private sector has an equivalent, regardless of any terminology game you want to play.


EVERYBODY has to explain their actions to their employer.  They don't get to do whatever they want at work and claim they are not going to talk about it, without facing the loss of their job.  And last I checked, they DON'T get Garrity protection or 72 hours to develop their lie story.

Simple enough for you to understand?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 11, 2014, 05:43:00 PM
I was speakinf more on his general attitutde.... not much on this specific situation.

It appears hes saying that the way the law works for officers, doesnt work for civilians...

Theh xant use his statement because hes compelled to answer... but they should would use a civilians.


Of course.  It's basic...but he's in denial about the blue wall's existence, so...lol

Consider this - you're a network administrator and you drop the company fire wall.

Tons of hackers hit, millions are lost.

Your employer tells you to explain your actions.

You refuse.  They threaten to fire you - And probably do no matter what your excuse.

You don't get 72 hours and your statements sure as hell aren't protected.  So, if you did something criminal, you better know to shut the fuck up, cause you're not covered.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: FitnessFrenzy on September 13, 2014, 01:11:21 AM
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 13, 2014, 10:56:11 AM
Eleven prison guards were arrested and fired this week for allegedly abusing inmates - including five guards and a captain accused of pummeling a handcuffed and shackled prisoner - in separate incidents at two Florida prisons.
More details: http://bit.ly/1m3zYtL
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 14, 2014, 04:41:14 PM
Officers investigated for hampering strip search inquiry not charged

At least six Milwaukee police officers were investigated for impeding the inquiry into a series of illegal strip and cavity searches by their fellow officers, according to records recently made public in court.

One officer told authorities she had not witnessed an improper search even though a video showed she was standing just a few feet away. Five others were suspected of violating a court order by discussing the strip search investigation soon after they were subpoenaed to testify at a secret fact-finding hearing in 2012.

The six officers may have broken the law or violated department rules, the video and documents show, but none of them faced criminal charges or discipline by the Police Department.

http://www.jsonline.com/watchdog/watchdogreports/officers-investigated-for-hampering-strip-search-inquiry-not-charged-b99345460z1-275030441.html


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 14, 2014, 05:37:19 PM




EVERYBODY has to explain their actions to their employer.  They don't get to do whatever they want at work and claim they are not going to talk about it, without facing the loss of their job.  And last I checked, they DON'T get Garrity protection or 72 hours to develop their lie story.

Simple enough for you to understand?



Why, why yes Skip.  Even a child could understand that.  How is it over the head of an adult....?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 17, 2014, 10:29:58 AM


Why, why yes Skip.  Even a child could understand that.  How is it over the head of an adult....?



Talking to yourself now... nice..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 17, 2014, 02:56:55 PM
Talking to yourself now... nice..



Not feeling any luv from you.

My heart does go out to the state cops in PA that got ambushed.  The one who died had little children.  :(

Unfortunately, it will have the effect of making police more militant.  Change has to be through education and politics.

At least they are not behaving like the LAPD did - that was just despicable.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2014, 11:07:03 AM


Not feeling any luv from you.

My heart does go out to the state cops in PA that got ambushed.  The one who died had little children.  :(

Unfortunately, it will have the effect of making police more militant.  Change has to be through education and politics.

At least they are not behaving like the LAPD did - that was just despicable.



Ironically, I woke up this morning a tad bit more militant than yesterday.. never noticed it until you just mentioned it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2014, 03:55:06 PM
Excessive force used in 2010 barbershop raid, appeal court says

Deputies violated the rights of barbers at Strictly Skillz barbershop during a 2010 raid in the guise of a license inspection, a federal appeal court said this week, in a strongly-worded rebuke of the Orange County Sheriff's Office.

"It was a scene right out of a Hollywood movie," the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals said in an opinion issued Tuesday, which puts the Pine Hills barbers' lawsuit against the Orange County Sheriff's Office back on track for trial.

"Unlike previous inspections of Strictly Skillz... the August 21 [2010] search was executed with a tremendous and disproportionate show of force, and no evidence exists that such force was justified," the appellate opinion stated.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/florida/os-barber-shop-raids-lawsuit-ruling-20140917,0,5148464.story
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2014, 10:49:48 AM
More than 6000 speeding violations to be dismissed amid ticket-rigging scandal

HPD Officers Rudolph Farias, John Garcia, Robert Manzanales and Gregory Rosa have issued a combined 6,150 outstanding tickets

More than 6,000 speeding tickets will be dismissed "in the interest of justice," according to City of Houston prosecutors. Those tickets were written by four officers allegedly involved in a ticket-rigging scheme to collect more overtime.


http://www.khou.com/story/news/investigations/2014/09/18/more-than-6k-speeding-violations-to-be-dismissed-amid-ticket-rigging-scandal/15853253/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 19, 2014, 10:58:35 AM
More than 6000 speeding violations to be dismissed amid ticket-rigging scandal

HPD Officers Rudolph Farias, John Garcia, Robert Manzanales and Gregory Rosa have issued a combined 6,150 outstanding tickets

More than 6,000 speeding tickets will be dismissed "in the interest of justice," according to City of Houston prosecutors. Those tickets were written by four officers allegedly involved in a ticket-rigging scheme to collect more overtime.


http://www.khou.com/story/news/investigations/2014/09/18/more-than-6k-speeding-violations-to-be-dismissed-amid-ticket-rigging-scandal/15853253/

One of them killed himself so that problem is solved. They are crooks. Worse, they are crooks posing as cops and I hope they get the maximum sentence available and their wives leave them while they are in jail.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2014, 01:16:00 PM
Florida prison boss fires 32 over inmate deaths

Thirty-two guards with the Florida Department of Corrections were fired Friday afternoon in what union officials were calling a “Friday night massacre.” All were accused of criminal wrongdoing or misconduct in connection with the deaths of inmates at four state prisons.


http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article2176191.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2014, 11:46:28 PM
Another example of how the scum promote the worst:

Las Vegas cop behind controversial killing now influential union leader

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/las-vegas-cop-behind-controversial-killing-now-influential-union-leader
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 22, 2014, 01:17:48 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/prosecutor-seeking-death-penalty-officer-killed-knock-raid


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 22, 2014, 01:30:40 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/prosecutor-seeking-death-penalty-officer-killed-knock-raid


 >:(
Guess youre only allowed to defend yourself against other civilians. Seems alparent thatyoure not allowed to defend yourself if it turns out that police who didnt identify themselves are forcing their way into your home in the middle of the night with zero ID, zero warning, and zero evidence.

This shit needs to change.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on September 22, 2014, 03:56:41 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/prosecutor-seeking-death-penalty-officer-killed-knock-raid


 >:(


Disgusting.

At least he killed one of the cops. A shame he didnt kill them all. They are worse than criminals.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 22, 2014, 04:05:57 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/prosecutor-seeking-death-penalty-officer-killed-knock-raid


 >:(

I think Texas is a "no duty to retreat" state.
Hopefully the jury will give the prosecutor a hard slap and find the man not guilty.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2014, 07:50:03 AM
http://nypost.com/2014/09/24/pregnant-woman-slammed-to-the-ground-by-police-caught-on-video/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Option D on September 24, 2014, 07:57:14 AM
Guess youre only allowed to defend yourself against other civilians. Seems alparent thatyoure not allowed to defend yourself if it turns out that police who didnt identify themselves are forcing their way into your home in the middle of the night with zero ID, zero warning, and zero evidence.

This shit needs to change.

Im usually on the cops side but its kind of hard to defend this.
Gotta be better training on the cops end for entering someones home
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 24, 2014, 09:34:58 AM
Im usually on the cops side but its kind of hard to defend this.
Gotta be better training on the cops end for entering someones home
At
Least ID themselves before they start kicking the doors in, i thought it was mandatory to announce that they were police at the commencement of the raid for this exact reason?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on September 24, 2014, 10:19:35 AM
At
Least ID themselves before they start kicking the doors in, i thought it was mandatory to announce that they were police at the commencement of the raid for this exact reason?

I would like to know this as well.

Where is our resident cop?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on September 24, 2014, 01:16:44 PM
I would like to know this as well.

Where is our resident cop?

No knock warrants do not require this I do not believe.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 24, 2014, 05:51:01 PM
Im usually on the cops side but its kind of hard to defend this.
Gotta be better training on the cops end for entering someones home



Methinks the cops are probably claiming that they clearly identified themselves, he had time to digest the information, and he shot anyway.  If I were a betting man, that is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2014, 06:08:36 PM
U.S. Forest Service wants to charge $1,500 to take photos on federal wild lands
The Washington Post ^ | September 24, 2014 | Hunter Schwarz
Posted on September 24, 2014 8:45:30 PM EDT by Timber Rattler

The U.S. Forest Service is finalizing plans to fine photographers who shoot on federal wild lands without a permit.

Under the measure, still photography and commercial filming in Congress-designated wilderness areas would require a permit, and shoots would also have to be approved and meet certain criteria like not advertising any product or service and being educational.

Permits would cost up to $1,500, even if someone was taking photos or video with their phone, and fines for shooting without a permit could be as high as $1,000, according to the Oregonian. A spokesman for the Forest Service did not immediately return a request for comment.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2014, 06:50:29 PM
Forest Service says media needs photography permit in wilderness areas, alarming 1st advocates
oregonlive.com ^
Posted on September 24, 2014 8:48:13 PM EDT by Red in Blue PA

The U.S. Forest Service has tightened restrictions on media coverage in vast swaths of the country's wild lands, requiring reporters to pay for a permit and get permission before shooting a photo or video in federally designated wilderness areas.

Under rules being finalized in November, a reporter who met a biologist, wildlife advocate or whistleblower alleging neglect in any of the nation's 100 million acres of wilderness would first need special approval to shoot photos or videos even on an iPhone.

Permits cost up to $1,500, says Forest Service spokesman Larry Chambers, and reporters who don't get a permit could face fines up to $1,000.

(Excerpt) Read more at oregonlive.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 25, 2014, 09:04:21 AM
South Carolina State Trooper conducts a traffic stop, asks the person to retrieve his ID from the vehicle and then shoots him for reaching into the car...

http://abcnews.go.com/US/dashcam-captures-south-carolina-trooper-shooting-unarmed-man/story?id=25749239 (http://abcnews.go.com/US/dashcam-captures-south-carolina-trooper-shooting-unarmed-man/story?id=25749239)

Per the article, the trooper, Sean Groubert, was fired and is facing charges that would, if convicted, land him behind bars for up to 20 years. So I'm guessing probation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 25, 2014, 09:06:52 AM
South Carolina State Trooper conducts a traffic stop, asks the person to retrieve his ID from the vehicle and then shoots him for reaching into the car...

http://abcnews.go.com/US/dashcam-captures-south-carolina-trooper-shooting-unarmed-man/story?id=25749239 (http://abcnews.go.com/US/dashcam-captures-south-carolina-trooper-shooting-unarmed-man/story?id=25749239)

Per the article, the trooper, Sean Groubert, was fired and is facing charges that would, if convicted, land him behind bars for up to 20 years. So I'm guessing probation.
Death penalty for pre-meditated murder.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 25, 2014, 10:14:05 AM
Death penalty for pre-meditated murder.

Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on September 25, 2014, 10:29:10 AM
Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him 

It would have been awesome if the cop had not been there in the first place.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on September 25, 2014, 11:11:28 AM
Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him 
I was, you know, going off the statement that he was ASKED to get his ID and then shot for doing so.

Generally you dont ask someone to do something and th shoot them.

Also, generally when told to do something, you dont have to repeat the order to the person commanding you.... if a cop asks me to get my ID im going to grab my ID, im not going to ask permission to grab my ID from the same guy who just requested me to get it, thats asinine.

Why should a law abiding civilian feel that he has to telegraph every move he makes, otherwise the officer may shoot him, even when doing as requested? Thats lidicrous and the absolute definition of police state.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: tu_holmes on September 25, 2014, 12:31:00 PM
Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him 

You shoot someone and you only get fired?

Does that happen to most citizens?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2014, 12:49:00 PM
You shoot someone and you only get fired?

Does that happen to most citizens?

Of course, citizens also get paid leave while they are being investigated.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on September 25, 2014, 01:48:51 PM
I was, you know, going off the statement that he was ASKED to get his ID and then shot for doing so.

Generally you dont ask someone to do something and th shoot them.

Also, generally when told to do something, you dont have to repeat the order to the person commanding you.... if a cop asks me to get my ID im going to grab my ID, im not going to ask permission to grab my ID from the same guy who just requested me to get it, thats asinine.

Why should a law abiding civilian feel that he has to telegraph every move he makes, otherwise the officer may shoot him, even when doing as requested? Thats lidicrous and the absolute definition of police state.


Especially ridiculous for the stopped motorist to have to play "Simon Sez" to avoid being shot when he's only been stopped for a seatbelt violation.  

IMO, this cop should have been drug tested after doing all the weird shit we see in the video:
- Makes motorist exit his car after stopping him for a seatbelt violation.
- Shoots at motorist about 5 times for complying with his orders too quickly.
- Hits motorist with only 1 shot (in the hip, no less) out of 5 despite being only about 10 feet away.
- Fires 2 times after the motorist had turned around with both his hands up.
- Seemingly risks the safe of others by going Rambo with people and gas pumps nearby.

Just losing his job for fucking up this bad doesn't seem like enough to me.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 25, 2014, 02:26:52 PM
Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him  



Ah yes...more blame the victim.  Clearly this guy 'contributed' to his own shooting.

Afterall, he should've been able to read the cops mind to know the exact speed and motions he should've taken to avoid being shot.

Of course, failing to immediately comply with the cops order would have been justification for force too.

::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on September 25, 2014, 02:32:35 PM
I was, you know, going off the statement that he was ASKED to get his ID and then shot for doing so.

Generally you dont ask someone to do something and th shoot them.

Also, generally when told to do something, you dont have to repeat the order to the person commanding you.... if a cop asks me to get my ID im going to grab my ID, im not going to ask permission to grab my ID from the same guy who just requested me to get it, thats asinine.

Why should a law abiding civilian feel that he has to telegraph every move he makes, otherwise the officer may shoot him, even when doing as requested? Thats lidicrous and the absolute definition of police state.




Exactly.

What would have been awesome is some honesty.

Cop should've said, "Hey, I stopped you for not wearing a seatbelt, but you're black and I'm a coward, so I'm really scared right now.  I need you to get some paperwork but you will have to move at a speed that I specifically approve of and in a direction that I am totally in agreement with.  Anything else will cause me to panic and shoot you and it will be your fault."

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on September 25, 2014, 02:43:16 PM
Especially ridiculous for the stopped motorist to have to play "Simon Sez" to avoid being shot when he's only been stopped for a seatbelt violation.  

IMO, this cop should have been drug tested after doing all the weird shit we see in the video:
- Makes motorist exit his car after stopping him for a seatbelt violation.
- Shoots at motorist about 5 times for complying with his orders too quickly.
- Hits motorist with only 1 shot (in the hip, no less) out of 5 despite being only about 10 feet away.
- Fires 2 times after the motorist had turned around with both his hands up.
- Seemingly risks the safe of others by going Rambo with people and gas pumps nearby.

Just losing his job for fucking up this bad doesn't seem like enough to me.


Sadly this IS your average cop.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 25, 2014, 03:09:45 PM
Would have been awesome if the driver would have said "My license is in my vehicle is it ok to reach in and get it?" before doing so because it is impossible to tell if he is reaching for a license or a weapon from the angle of the camera. We know now it was a license and fortunately he wasn't killed. Cop shoulda been fired, not the right line of work for him

You know... I'm somewhat agreeing with you here. He should have done it because many (most?) cops are way too quick to draw and their fingers are much too itchy. But at the same time, how fucked up is it that we are at the point that when interacting with police, we need to ask for permission to do anything - even follow orders. And even if he did, I doubt it'd change anything.

- "Sir, I need to see your ID."
- "Yes Sir! Immediately Sir! Might a poor peasant reach into his humble vehicle to retrieve his ID your Majesty?"
- "You may."
- "Thank you Excellence! I am slowly reaching into my vehicle. May I now remove it from my wallet?"
- "I grow tired of your delays peasant. Produce your ID now!"
- "Yes your Imperial Highness. Immediately."
Opens wallet to remove ID

- "HANDS UP! HANDS UP guy! HELP! DISPATCH, I'M BEING ATTACKED."
BANG! BANG!

- "DISPATCH, SHOTS FIRED, SHOTS FIRED!"
BANG! BANG! BANG!

- "Your Majesty... I was only doing as you commanded!"
- "SHUT UP, HANDS UP! BEHIND YOUR BACK."
Officer hits suspect

- "STOP RESISTING AND DON'T FUCKING BLEED ON MY UNIFORM! (http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/08/ferguson-cop-who-charged-suspect-bleeding-her-uniform-now-city-councilwoman)"
- "My apologies majesty. I will stop bleeding profusely from the wounds you inflicted to avoid staining your Royal vestments."
- "See what happens when you disobey the cops?"
- "I am sorry your majesty! Might I take leave to attend to my wounds at a local hospital."
- "You stay right the fuck down there and do as you're told."
- "Yes Majesty."


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on September 26, 2014, 06:40:26 AM
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/k-12-schools-recieved-weapons-from-pentagon



 :( >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 29, 2014, 08:13:43 AM
http://www.naplesnews.com/happening-now/ave-maria-students-allege-misconduct-against-deputies-outside-bar?autoplay=true

Naples, Florida. 

Police dragging a drunk girl around, dropping her on concrete.  Okay, fair enough. 

Kid tries crossing street.  Cop yells at him.  Then cop points and says go.  Kid turns around and the cop gives him a nice shove just to get him moving faster lol.    Kid puts his hands up in the universal surrender position and doesn't move, at which point the cop shoves him and attempts a takedown.

The kid, who hasn't broken any law, puts his hands up near cop's chest to maintain his balance so as not to fall.  He doesn't want to go down, and he didn't do anything wrong.  So within 5 seconds, he's getting his ass kicked by 6 cops lol. 

Video of this part is right at the end.  Cop clearly shoves the kid for no reason. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 01, 2014, 10:37:30 AM

Former NYPD cop from Yorktown charged in disability fraud


 Jonathan Bandler, jbandler@lohud.com 1:01 p.m. EDT October 1, 2014






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A retired New York City police officer from Yorktown was arrested Wednesday on federal charges that he bilked Social Security out of more than $300,000 in disability benefits while working over the past decade as director of security for Tourneau, the luxury watchmaker.

James Carson, 50, was not supposed to be working while collecting disability after claiming a debilitating back injury that forced him to retire in 1991. But investigators found he was employed at Tourneau since at least 2004. He even won a prestigious award from the National Retail Federation four years ago for his work investigating credit card schemes targeting the company.

Carson was taken into custody at his home and is expected to appear in federal court in Manhattan in the afternoon.

"Not only did James Carson allegedly tell a series of lies to pocket disability benefits to which he was not entitled, but he then took sophisticated steps to conceal his fradulently obtained income from the Social Security Administration," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement.

Since 1990, he collected more than $650,000 in Social Security benefits – including at least $306,431 while working as Tourneau's director of security, officials charge.

In April, Carson was interviewed at the Social Security Administration regarding his continued receipt of benefits. He showed up limping with a cane and claimed that he had not worked since 1995 because of his back pain. On various forms he indicated that he had no other income since his disability began; relies on his wife to drive him places because he can't drive due to the pain; and uses a cane at all times.

Asked about places he goes on a regular basis, Carson replied "I don't really go anywhere on a regular basis."

But a month earlier, Special Agent Peter Dowd, an investigator with the SSA's Office of the Inspector General, had observed Carson drive away from the parking garage at Tourneau's Long Island City office. Later in the spring, Dowd regularly tracked Carson driving between his home and the office, and on one occasion saw him enter the garage from a stairway, "walking without apparent difficulty and without a cane," get into his car and drive away.

Authorities said Carson tried to hide his income from the company by having Tourneau pay his salary to a corporation that was associated with a relative. The corporation then gave the money to the relative as wages.

Edward Ryan, Special Agent in Charge of the Office of the Inspector General, said the Social Security Disability Insurance Trust Fund was meant to provide "a safety net for the truly disabled, not (line) the pockets of scammers and thieves." He said it was "particularly troubling" that an ex-law enforcement officer would commit such a crime, especially when he was "already receiving (a) generous tax-payer financed pension."

Carson was charged with theft of government property, making false statements and failing to report income and faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

His lawyer, Kevin Kearon, declined comment.

Twitter: @jonbandler
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 01, 2014, 07:41:12 PM
Iowa Troopers Steal $100,000 in Poker Winnings From Two Players Driving Through the State:

"The Des Moines Register highlights an Iowa forfeiture case, the subject of a federal lawsuit filed this week, in which state troopers took $100,000 in winnings from two California poker players traveling through the state on their way back from a World Series of Poker event in Joliet, Illinois."

http://reason.com/blog/2014/10/01/iowa-troopers-steal-100000-in-poker-winn?n_play=542ca353e4b0feab13854f06
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2014, 11:48:19 AM
Iowa Troopers Steal $100,000 in Poker Winnings From Two Players Driving Through the State:

"The Des Moines Register highlights an Iowa forfeiture case, the subject of a federal lawsuit filed this week, in which state troopers took $100,000 in winnings from two California poker players traveling through the state on their way back from a World Series of Poker event in Joliet, Illinois."

http://reason.com/blog/2014/10/01/iowa-troopers-steal-100000-in-poker-winn?n_play=542ca353e4b0feab13854f06

All these civil asset forfeiture cases are infuriating. Quite often these forfeitures are purely to fund the expenses and the bonuses of some corrupt officials in small town USA.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2014, 11:50:35 AM
Involuntary manslaughter charge dismissed in cop shooting of 7 year old Aiyana Stanley-Jones


http://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/wayne/2014/10/03/weekley-trial-aiyana-stanley-jones/16636179/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2014, 11:54:23 AM
Cops kill 59 year old grandfather in no-knock raid triggered by burglary suspect’s tip


http://www.13wmaz.com/story/news/local/dublin/2014/10/01/warrant-meth-raid-led-to-fatal-laurens-shooting/16538903/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on October 03, 2014, 08:44:36 PM
Involuntary manslaughter charge dismissed in cop shooting of 7 year old Aiyana Stanley-Jones


http://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/wayne/2014/10/03/weekley-trial-aiyana-stanley-jones/16636179/


 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2014, 08:57:03 PM
Man files lawsuit for being wrongly jailed and forcibly injected with psychotropic medications for a year


http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/man-files-lawsuit-being-wrongly-jailed-year/nhbpz/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2014, 09:00:10 PM
The cops did not submit the video as evidence (they did not even mention it in their reports)... Wonder why?

State Attorney investigates OPD officer after bodycam video of alleged beating surfaces

http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/state-attorney-investigates-opd-officer-after-body/nhbmQ/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 06, 2014, 09:50:36 AM
At
Least ID themselves before they start kicking the doors in, i thought it was mandatory to announce that they were police at the commencement of the raid for this exact reason?

No knock entry means that up to the point of the door being breached there is no announcement of police presence. But usually as the door is being breached the officers begin yelling Police Department or some variation as they begin entering.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2014, 11:40:06 AM
This is outrageous. It's a long read but to sum it up:

teen and a friend are accused by someone that they stole a backpack that night
police question them
accuser changes story, says the attack happened 2 weeks before
teen and friend get taken to holding cell, then court
friend is freed, teen in jail due to probation
trial continuously postponed by prosecutors
after 3 years in jail and a judge trying to get him to admit guilt as part of plea, teen goes on trial
prosecutors say they have no case because the accuser has gone back to Mexico

Three years on Rikers without trial

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/06/law-3
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 06, 2014, 12:13:29 PM
This is outrageous. It's a long read but to sum it up:

teen and a friend are accused by someone that they stole a backpack that night
police question them
accuser changes story, says the attack happened 2 weeks before
teen and friend get taken to holding cell, then court
friend is freed, teen in jail due to probation
trial continuously postponed by prosecutors
after 3 years in jail and a judge trying to get him to admit guilt as part of plea, teen goes on trial
prosecutors say they have no case because the accuser has gone back to Mexico

Three years on Rikers without trial

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/06/law-3

it is outrageous. When people cease to be real people to prosecutors, the police, the judges, then it's time to find a new career.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2014, 06:46:28 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/07/david-hooks-shooting-swat_n_5949318.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 08, 2014, 07:15:20 AM
http://fox17online.com/2014/10/02/judge-gives-kalamazoo-county-green-light-to-sell-womans-home-after-property-tax-mistake/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on October 08, 2014, 03:50:29 PM
Secret Service agents used against a neighbor.  Oh boy...

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/secret-service-agents-protected-director-aide-neighbor-dispute-report-article-1.1787982
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2014, 04:00:12 PM
Until they start holding the cops personally accountable and not just sending the taxpayers the bill, nothing will change.



The NYPD paid over $428 million in settlements over the last five years

An average of $33,875 per closed lawsuit, with a high of $11 million


https://www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2014/oct/10/nypd-paid-over-428-million-settlements-over-last-f/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2014, 05:17:18 PM
Good thing the driver remained firm in his replies and declined to have the car searched.


Iowa Cop Demands To Search Car Because ‘Everybody That Plays Frisbee Golf Smokes Weed’

http://www.inquisitr.com/1533220/iowa-cop-demands-to-search-car-because-everybody-that-plays-frisbee-golf-smokes-weed/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 11, 2014, 05:55:59 PM
Good thing the driver remained firm in his replies and declined to have the car searched.


Iowa Cop Demands To Search Car Because ‘Everybody That Plays Frisbee Golf Smokes Weed’

http://www.inquisitr.com/1533220/iowa-cop-demands-to-search-car-because-everybody-that-plays-frisbee-golf-smokes-weed/

That's a pretty fucking egregious conversation, especially when the cop turns a "I'm not going to answer that" into a "You already admitted you smoke weed."

Props to the driver for holding firm, but he answered way more than he should have. How this should have gone down:

“OK. I need you to answer me a question. Why is it that everybody that plays Frisbee golf smokes weed?”
“Am I being detained or am I free to go?”
“You wouldn't have a problem with me looking through your car?”
“I do not consent to any searches. Am I being detained or am I free to go?”

If the cop says that he's being detained, he shuts up.
If the cop says that he's not being detained, then he leaves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2014, 01:32:33 AM
Of course the ranger is still employed as she “acted within agency policy and her training.”

This part from the Court's opinion is particularly interesting when referring to Hunter Bailey, National Park Service deputy chief of law enforcement:

The Court fails to see how Bailey could competently opine on whether an NPS officer’s use of a taser was “legally justified” when he is unaware of what the law justifies.
Nor could he competently say whether an individual was “actively resisting” since he has no knowledge of what that term means in the Ninth Circuit.
Thus, contrary to Bailey’s belief, he has no basis to assert whether any NPS officer’s use of a taser in the Ninth Circuit (Cavallaro’s included) complied with DOI and NPS policy.



Judge: Park Ranger’s Tasering of Dog Walker Was Unlawful

http://ww2.kqed.org/news/2014/10/12/federal-judge-rules-park-rangers-taser-use-on-dog-walker-was-unlawful/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on October 14, 2014, 04:59:10 AM
Lee County sheriffs beat up a guy who was resisting arrest, drunk.  I'm totally cool with that.  Whoop his ass... drunk driver that's resisting, I get it. 

What I dislike greatly - is that they claimed he was grabbing the cop's gun.  They dislocated his jaw, hit him exactly7 times in the face.  After he was on the ground.  7 punches.  

Well, video comes out, as they had home surveillance the cops didn't know about... and suddenly we see he's on the ground the whole time, never went near their gun.  Was he resisting?  YES.  Does that warrant an ass whooping?  Sure.  But why fudge that one detail?  Why add "oh, he was planning gun theft, police murder" onto the charges?

Cops completely shred their credibility when they add details like that.  Exaggeration.  It takes away all of their credibility. And guess what?  The state saw the video and decided NOT to charge the guy.  Weird that "trying to steal a cop's gun" doesn't land a dude in prison lol... but the video showed that was an obvious lie.

Now the sheriff is defending his cops, after public outrage.   Family isn't just shutting up, they're demanding the cop leave the force.  Seems the one cop did all of the punching... 7 punches to the face of a man on the ground, after being tazed twice... maybe overboard, hey, it's the heat of the moment.  But that ONE LIE - "he went for my gun"... that's the big problem here.   And the violent drunk WILL NOT be charged.  

http://www.winknews.com/Local-Florida/2014-10-13/Sheriff-Scott-responds-to-allegations-of-excessive-force
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 14, 2014, 01:06:39 PM
Lee County sheriffs beat up a guy who was resisting arrest, drunk.  I'm totally cool with that.  Whoop his ass... drunk driver that's resisting, I get it. 

What I dislike greatly - is that they claimed he was grabbing the cop's gun.  They dislocated his jaw, hit him exactly7 times in the face.  After he was on the ground.  7 punches.  

Well, video comes out, as they had home surveillance the cops didn't know about... and suddenly we see he's on the ground the whole time, never went near their gun.  Was he resisting?  YES.  Does that warrant an ass whooping?  Sure.  But why fudge that one detail?  Why add "oh, he was planning gun theft, police murder" onto the charges?

Cops completely shred their credibility when they add details like that.  Exaggeration.  It takes away all of their credibility. And guess what?  The state saw the video and decided NOT to charge the guy.  Weird that "trying to steal a cop's gun" doesn't land a dude in prison lol... but the video showed that was an obvious lie.

Now the sheriff is defending his cops, after public outrage.   Family isn't just shutting up, they're demanding the cop leave the force.  Seems the one cop did all of the punching... 7 punches to the face of a man on the ground, after being tazed twice... maybe overboard, hey, it's the heat of the moment.  But that ONE LIE - "he went for my gun"... that's the big problem here.   And the violent drunk WILL NOT be charged.  

http://www.winknews.com/Local-Florida/2014-10-13/Sheriff-Scott-responds-to-allegations-of-excessive-force

I can hardly see anything with the video. I certainly couldn't say there was not a grab for a gun.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 14, 2014, 01:57:36 PM
I can hardly see anything with the video. I certainly couldn't say there was not a grab for a gun.

We both know that "reaching for my gun" is the same as "kept resisting". It's what cops say to justify anything and if someone challenges them, they say things like "heat of the moment" and "you weren't there" and mention Monday-morning quarterbacking while crying about officer safety.

Cops are aggressive and contemptuous of the public, especially if they perceive the public as challenging their authority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 16, 2014, 08:26:21 AM
We both know that "reaching for my gun" is the same as "kept resisting". It's what cops say to justify anything and if someone challenges them, they say things like "heat of the moment" and "you weren't there" and mention Monday-morning quarterbacking while crying about officer safety.

Cops are aggressive and contemptuous of the public, especially if they perceive the public as challenging their authority.

I think we both should also know that people do reach for cops guns. Had mine grabbed at a few times. So it isn't so off the wall unlikely to discount "just because". Maybe there is better video versions out there.. I'm just saying the video that I saw, I couldn't say it did or didn't happen. I couldn't see much of anything     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Shockwave on October 16, 2014, 09:52:56 AM
I think we both should also know that people do reach for cops guns. Had mine grabbed at a few times. So it isn't so off the wall unlikely to discount "just because". Maybe there is better video versions out there.. I'm just saying the video that I saw, I couldn't say it did or didn't happen. I couldn't see much of anything     
therein lies the problem.... they can just say 'he was reaching for my gun', and any behavior is suddenly OK as long as there isnt clear proof to the contrary. Thats a dangerous thing
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 16, 2014, 01:27:17 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/16/david-mccallum-wrongfully-imprisoned_n_5996810.html



UNREAL  - 25 YEARS BEHIND BARS DIDNT DO SHIT
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 16, 2014, 02:58:46 PM
therein lies the problem.... they can just say 'he was reaching for my gun', and any behavior is suddenly OK as long as there isnt clear proof to the contrary. Thats a dangerous thing

but what if he was? Should the cop pretend it didn't happen because someone might not believe them? I agree cops shouldn't make shit up. If a cop is caught making shit up they need to be fired. On the other hand, if a cop is trying to take someone into custody and they resist, they could get hurt, the cop could get hurt and sometimes people make a grab for the gun. When that happens, you tend to get shot or hit until the behavor stops. All I'm saying here is that it's impossible for me to conclude with the video, that the cop is lying about it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 16, 2014, 03:05:20 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/16/david-mccallum-wrongfully-imprisoned_n_5996810.html



UNREAL  - 25 YEARS BEHIND BARS DIDNT DO SHIT

Another innocent man exonerated. His friend wasn't so lucky and died in prison... It's outrageous how many people have been wrongfully convicted due to coerced confessions or false testimony of unreliable witnesses only for some DAs, judges and cops to get credit for being "tough on crime". There should be consequences for scum like that. At minimum they should receive whatever sentence the innocent man got (in addition to other charges) and pay out of their pockets, not send taxpayers the bill.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2014, 09:51:10 AM
Another innocent man exonerated. His friend wasn't so lucky and died in prison... It's outrageous how many people have been wrongfully convicted due to coerced confessions or false testimony of unreliable witnesses only for some DAs, judges and cops to get credit for being "tough on crime". There should be consequences for scum like that. At minimum they should receive whatever sentence the innocent man got (in addition to other charges) and pay out of their pockets, not send taxpayers the bill.

agreed
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2014, 11:33:42 AM
Props to that citizen. The outcome would probably be very different had this happened in the US.


Motorist Arrests Policeman for Driving Drunk

A South African driver is being praised for taking charge after spotting a cop allegedly driving under the influence through the streets of Pietermaritzburg.

http://www.neatorama.com/2013/01/18/Motorist-Arrests-Policeman-for-Driving-Drunk/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2014, 12:01:41 PM
Props to that citizen. The outcome would probably be very different had this happened in the US.


Motorist Arrests Policeman for Driving Drunk

A South African driver is being praised for taking charge after spotting a cop allegedly driving under the influence through the streets of Pietermaritzburg.

http://www.neatorama.com/2013/01/18/Motorist-Arrests-Policeman-for-Driving-Drunk/

Awesome job by the citizen. Depending on where it happened in the US, the results could be similar.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 20, 2014, 12:42:54 PM
Awesome job by the citizen. Depending on where it happened in the US, the results could be similar.

LOL.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2014, 01:13:41 PM
LOL.

I'm not about to speak for every police dept in the country... ;-)   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on October 20, 2014, 02:01:58 PM
Awesome job by the citizen. Depending on where it happened in the US, the results could be similar.

By similar do you mean completely different?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2014, 02:08:34 PM
By similar do you mean completely different?

 :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 21, 2014, 07:25:08 AM


The Government Created a Facebook Profile for This Woman (Without Telling Her)

 Jordan Richardson  / @RobertJordanWV / October 20, 2014 / 0 comments
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Commentary By




Jordan Richardson
 
@RobertJordanWV


Jordan Richardson is a visiting legal fellow in the Meese Center at The Heritage Foundation.

A woman is suing the Drug Enforcement Administration after an agent copied pictures from her cellphone in order to create a fake Facebook profile in her name–all without her knowledge or consent.

Sondra Arquiett, the plaintiff in the suit, was arrested in 2010 on charges of possession with intent to distribute cocaine. Law enforcement officials alleged she was part of a drug ring that included her then-boyfriend. The single mother eventually pled guilty and was sentenced to time served plus a period of home confinement. As part of her cooperation with officials, she allowed them to search her phone for evidence relating to the original offense for which she was charged.

What she did not expect, however, was that Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Timothy Sinnigen would copy the pictures on her cell phone and use them to create a phony social media account. The profile was set up in the name of Sondra Prince—Arquiett’s former surname—and Sinnigen regularly used the phony account to post status updates, pictures and add friends—all in the hope of luring in other members of the drug ring.

One picture the fake profile displayed was an image of Arquiett holding her two young children. Another showed her posing in a suggestive manner on the hood of a vehicle with the caption, “At least I still have this car!”


Subscribe to updates and alerts             

In a court filing, the government defended Sinnigen’s decision to create a fake profile without Arquiett’s knowledge, stating:


Defendants admit that Plaintiff did not give express permission for the use of photographs contained on her phone on an undercover Facebook page, but state the Plaintiff implicitly consented by granting access to the information stored in her cell phone and by consenting to the use of that information to aid in an ongoing criminal investigations [sic].

While the decision to create a phony Facebook account may seem strange, it is not uncommon for police.

Just as police officers often pretend to be someone they are not when acting in an undercover capacity, many police department nationwide have used the tactic of creating accounts of fictional people to interact with others or observe criminal behavior. Indeed, the Justice Department released a social media guide for law enforcement officials that encourages this practice, although there is no indication that taking photos of real person without their consent is allowed.

In 2013, the New York Times reported the extent of police using social media accounts:


Officers follow crew members on Twitter and Instagram, or friend them on Facebook, pretending to be young women to get around privacy settings that limit what can be seen. They listen to the lyrical taunts of local rap artists, some affiliated with crews, and watch YouTube for clues to past trouble and future conflicts.

But this most recent case raises new questions about the legality of impersonating an identity–even if it aids in law enforcement investigations. How many other accounts exist without the person’s knowledge or consent to support “ongoing criminal investigations”?

At the very least, this practice violates Facebook’s terms of service. According to Facebook, users must agree not to “provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.” The Drug Enforcement Administration clearly violated the terms of service by setting up an account without the permission from Arquiett. Facebook has since deleted the profile, telling BuzzFeed, “We removed the profile because it violates our community standards.”

Perhaps more troubling is the government’s rationale for why they believe Arquiett consented to this behavior. The Justice Department claimed that by simply granting access to her phone, she also gave them permission to use the information obtained in any manner possible to support “ongoing criminal investigations.”

If this rationale were extended in others areas, could agents who search a house with the homeowner’s consent then steal items inside for whatever purpose they saw fit? Or could a driver’s permission to search an automobile also grant “permission” for officers to siphon the gasoline to power police cars? The Fourth Amendment protects “against unreasonable searches and seizures,” and would equally prevent the government from impersonating you on social media without your consent.

Then there is the double standard being used in favor of the government and against the average person. If a private citizen engaged in this behavior, he or she would be arrested and sent to jail, as has happened on several occasions.
•In 2013, Cheryl Nelson created a fake Facebook account with her ex-boyfriend’s personal information to make it look like his new girlfriend was threatening her. Nelson was subsequently charged with false report of a felony and unlawful posting of a message.
•In 2012, two middle school students set up a fake Facebook account to bully a fellow student and demean her character. The students were arrested on a third-degree felony charge of online impersonation.
•In 2007, Hillary Transue was arrested and sentenced her to three months at a juvenile detention center on a charge of harassment after she made a spoof MySpace account that poked fun at her school principal.

These private citizens were all arrested for engaging in virtually the same behavior as the Drug Enforcement Administration. Shouldn’t the government be held to the same standard?

To be sure, police routinely use covert measures in order to apprehend criminals. Undercover operators work with criminals, break the speed limit to catch a fleeing suspect, or buy, transport or possess illegal drugs. Society allows these actions in recognition of their necessity to aid the police in their duties. It is quite a different matter, however, when law enforcement exceeds these boundaries and stretches the notion of implied consent into an absurd result.

No one impliedly consents that items found during a search of a car, home or person will be used in any manner the government wishes. Nor does one impliedly consent to be put in danger or to have his reputation besmirched by whatever the police choose to do with one’s property.

Stealing the identity of a woman without her consent or knowledge goes far beyond the standard of acceptable behavior for law enforcement.

The Drug Enforcement Administration’s conduct here takes an inch and makes it a mile.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 21, 2014, 07:41:51 AM

The Government Created a Facebook Profile for This Woman (Without Telling Her)

 Jordan Richardson  / @RobertJordanWV / October 20, 2014 / 0 comments
   122 
   0 
   
   
   

   



 




Commentary By




Jordan Richardson
 
@RobertJordanWV


Jordan Richardson is a visiting legal fellow in the Meese Center at The Heritage Foundation.

A woman is suing the Drug Enforcement Administration after an agent copied pictures from her cellphone in order to create a fake Facebook profile in her name–all without her knowledge or consent.

Sondra Arquiett, the plaintiff in the suit, was arrested in 2010 on charges of possession with intent to distribute cocaine. Law enforcement officials alleged she was part of a drug ring that included her then-boyfriend. The single mother eventually pled guilty and was sentenced to time served plus a period of home confinement. As part of her cooperation with officials, she allowed them to search her phone for evidence relating to the original offense for which she was charged.

What she did not expect, however, was that Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Timothy Sinnigen would copy the pictures on her cell phone and use them to create a phony social media account. The profile was set up in the name of Sondra Prince—Arquiett’s former surname—and Sinnigen regularly used the phony account to post status updates, pictures and add friends—all in the hope of luring in other members of the drug ring.

One picture the fake profile displayed was an image of Arquiett holding her two young children. Another showed her posing in a suggestive manner on the hood of a vehicle with the caption, “At least I still have this car!”


Subscribe to updates and alerts             

In a court filing, the government defended Sinnigen’s decision to create a fake profile without Arquiett’s knowledge, stating:


Defendants admit that Plaintiff did not give express permission for the use of photographs contained on her phone on an undercover Facebook page, but state the Plaintiff implicitly consented by granting access to the information stored in her cell phone and by consenting to the use of that information to aid in an ongoing criminal investigations [sic].

While the decision to create a phony Facebook account may seem strange, it is not uncommon for police.

Just as police officers often pretend to be someone they are not when acting in an undercover capacity, many police department nationwide have used the tactic of creating accounts of fictional people to interact with others or observe criminal behavior. Indeed, the Justice Department released a social media guide for law enforcement officials that encourages this practice, although there is no indication that taking photos of real person without their consent is allowed.

In 2013, the New York Times reported the extent of police using social media accounts:


Officers follow crew members on Twitter and Instagram, or friend them on Facebook, pretending to be young women to get around privacy settings that limit what can be seen. They listen to the lyrical taunts of local rap artists, some affiliated with crews, and watch YouTube for clues to past trouble and future conflicts.

But this most recent case raises new questions about the legality of impersonating an identity–even if it aids in law enforcement investigations. How many other accounts exist without the person’s knowledge or consent to support “ongoing criminal investigations”?

At the very least, this practice violates Facebook’s terms of service. According to Facebook, users must agree not to “provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.” The Drug Enforcement Administration clearly violated the terms of service by setting up an account without the permission from Arquiett. Facebook has since deleted the profile, telling BuzzFeed, “We removed the profile because it violates our community standards.”

Perhaps more troubling is the government’s rationale for why they believe Arquiett consented to this behavior. The Justice Department claimed that by simply granting access to her phone, she also gave them permission to use the information obtained in any manner possible to support “ongoing criminal investigations.”

If this rationale were extended in others areas, could agents who search a house with the homeowner’s consent then steal items inside for whatever purpose they saw fit? Or could a driver’s permission to search an automobile also grant “permission” for officers to siphon the gasoline to power police cars? The Fourth Amendment protects “against unreasonable searches and seizures,” and would equally prevent the government from impersonating you on social media without your consent.

Then there is the double standard being used in favor of the government and against the average person. If a private citizen engaged in this behavior, he or she would be arrested and sent to jail, as has happened on several occasions.
•In 2013, Cheryl Nelson created a fake Facebook account with her ex-boyfriend’s personal information to make it look like his new girlfriend was threatening her. Nelson was subsequently charged with false report of a felony and unlawful posting of a message.
•In 2012, two middle school students set up a fake Facebook account to bully a fellow student and demean her character. The students were arrested on a third-degree felony charge of online impersonation.
•In 2007, Hillary Transue was arrested and sentenced her to three months at a juvenile detention center on a charge of harassment after she made a spoof MySpace account that poked fun at her school principal.

These private citizens were all arrested for engaging in virtually the same behavior as the Drug Enforcement Administration. Shouldn’t the government be held to the same standard?

To be sure, police routinely use covert measures in order to apprehend criminals. Undercover operators work with criminals, break the speed limit to catch a fleeing suspect, or buy, transport or possess illegal drugs. Society allows these actions in recognition of their necessity to aid the police in their duties. It is quite a different matter, however, when law enforcement exceeds these boundaries and stretches the notion of implied consent into an absurd result.

No one impliedly consents that items found during a search of a car, home or person will be used in any manner the government wishes. Nor does one impliedly consent to be put in danger or to have his reputation besmirched by whatever the police choose to do with one’s property.

Stealing the identity of a woman without her consent or knowledge goes far beyond the standard of acceptable behavior for law enforcement.

The Drug Enforcement Administration’s conduct here takes an inch and makes it a mile.


Yeah...they overstepped their bounds in creating the FB page without the consent of the person.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 21, 2014, 03:55:02 PM
Former prison guard to serve no time for sexually assaulting inmates

http://www.wlky.com/news/former-prison-guard-to-serve-no-time-for-sexually-assaulting-inmates/29233026
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 22, 2014, 11:06:27 AM
Former prison guard to serve no time for sexually assaulting inmates

http://www.wlky.com/news/former-prison-guard-to-serve-no-time-for-sexually-assaulting-inmates/29233026


that's messed up
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on October 22, 2014, 02:49:12 PM
Yeah...they overstepped their bounds in creating the FB page without the consent of the person.

Agent who did it goes by ENZO on getbig, I hear.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 23, 2014, 07:18:21 AM
A lieutenant with my department was just fired yesterday. Apparently he was having an affair with a married woman for the last eight years and got her husband arrested with false claims of harassment.  POS . Through away a career and his integrity over and married woman. I hope he enjoys his new career a McDonald's while he pays off whatever settlement that guy gets
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on October 23, 2014, 10:00:51 AM
A lieutenant with my department was just fired yesterday. Apparently he was having an affair with a married woman for the last eight years and got her husband arrested with false claims of harassment.  POS . Through away a career and his integrity over and married woman. I hope he enjoys his new career a McDonald's while he pays off whatever settlement that guy gets


He should do hard time not just get fired.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 23, 2014, 11:03:40 AM
Video: NYPD Officer Kicks Colleague in the Head During Arrest

http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141023/coney-island/video-nypd-officer-kicks-colleague-head-during-arrest
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on October 23, 2014, 12:55:39 PM
Video: NYPD Officer Kicks Colleague in the Head During Arrest

http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141023/coney-island/video-nypd-officer-kicks-colleague-head-during-arrest

Lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 23, 2014, 01:44:08 PM

He should do hard time not just get fired.

It's not over, I'm sure. But the first step in the process was the investigation, next the hearing and termination. Official Oppression comes to mind as a charge against him
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on October 23, 2014, 01:49:00 PM
It's not over, I'm sure. But the first step in the process was the investigation, next the hearing and termination. Official Oppression comes to mind as a charge against him


Official Oppression ?

Is that police slang for rape?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 24, 2014, 01:26:20 PM

Official Oppression ?

Is that police slang for rape?

no
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: RRKore on October 24, 2014, 01:32:50 PM
Video: NYPD Officer Kicks Colleague in the Head During Arrest

http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141023/coney-island/video-nypd-officer-kicks-colleague-head-during-arrest

Didn't look like the hardest kick but the kick-ee looked pretty shaken up:
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 24, 2014, 09:41:29 PM
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-asks-cop-stop-cursing/ (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-asks-cop-stop-cursing/)

Glad to see David Barrett is now a convicted felon and will be held accountable for his actions. I am forced to wonder what the outcome would have been if he was on duty at the time of this incident? Something tells me that his official police report would be detailing how this elderly man swung his hip in a threatening fashion and he was afraid for his life.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2014, 01:39:55 PM
So it turns out the vermin viewed this as a "game" and have been doing it for years...

Warrant: CHP officer says stealing nude photos from female arrestees 'game' for cops

http://www.contracostatimes.com/my-town/ci_26793090/warrant-chp-officer-says-stealing-nude-photos-from
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on October 27, 2014, 05:22:42 AM
Law Lets I.R.S. Seize Accounts on Suspicion, No Crime Required
New York TImes ^  | October 27, 2014 | Sheila Dewan

Posted on ‎10‎/‎27‎/‎2014‎ ‎7‎:‎43‎:‎20‎ ‎AM by Makana

ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa — For almost 40 years, Carole Hinders has dished out Mexican specialties at her modest cash-only restaurant. For just as long, she deposited the earnings at a small bank branch a block away — until last year, when two tax agents knocked on her door and informed her that they had seized her checking account, almost $33,000.

The Internal Revenue Service agents did not accuse Ms. Hinders of money laundering or cheating on her taxes — in fact, she has not been charged with any crime. Instead, the money was seized solely because she had deposited less than $10,000 at a time, which they viewed as an attempt to avoid triggering a required government report.

“How can this happen?” Ms. Hinders said in a recent interview. “Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?”


(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 29, 2014, 04:16:25 PM
"Richard Alamia, attorney for the teen’s family, had also said that other Pharr police officers watched Mata commit the sexual assaults and that the department attempted to cover up the case."


Former Pharr police officer indicted on child sexual assault

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/valley/article_f56318ec-28e3-11e4-b6dc-0017a43b2370.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 03, 2014, 05:20:02 AM
Law Lets I.R.S. Seize Accounts on Suspicion, No Crime Required
New York TImes ^  | October 27, 2014 | Sheila Dewan

Posted on ‎10‎/‎27‎/‎2014‎ ‎7‎:‎43‎:‎20‎ ‎AM by Makana

ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa — For almost 40 years, Carole Hinders has dished out Mexican specialties at her modest cash-only restaurant. For just as long, she deposited the earnings at a small bank branch a block away — until last year, when two tax agents knocked on her door and informed her that they had seized her checking account, almost $33,000.

The Internal Revenue Service agents did not accuse Ms. Hinders of money laundering or cheating on her taxes — in fact, she has not been charged with any crime. Instead, the money was seized solely because she had deposited less than $10,000 at a time, which they viewed as an attempt to avoid triggering a required government report.

“How can this happen?” Ms. Hinders said in a recent interview. “Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?”


(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


I read this story last week. She said she always deposited less than the 10,000 to save the bank paper work. I almost spit out my coffee. She was cheating on her taxes. Probably very few small businesses like that report all their sales. BUT...... that is not proven at this point, and the IRS has a history of ruining lives with little or no evidence and this practice should have been stopped years ago. That it still exists indicates to me we as a people have no control of our government.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 03, 2014, 05:22:24 AM
So it turns out the vermin viewed this as a "game" and have been doing it for years...

Warrant: CHP officer says stealing nude photos from female arrestees 'game' for cops

http://www.contracostatimes.com/my-town/ci_26793090/warrant-chp-officer-says-stealing-nude-photos-from

I've never stolen a picture from a phone, nor have I had any officer share a picture they stole from a phone. Every single officer they find that did that should be fired and be held accountable in criminal and civil court. Fuktards 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 03, 2014, 06:55:17 AM
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/10/the-police-are-still-out-of-control-112160.html#.VFeXQ2x0zIV


Good story
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 03, 2014, 09:32:46 AM
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/10/the-police-are-still-out-of-control-112160.html#.VFeXQ2x0zIV


Good story

"And with all due respect to today’s police officers doing their jobs, they don’t need all that stuff anyway. When I was cop I disarmed a man with three guns who had just killed someone. I was off duty and all I had was my snub-nose Smith & Wesson. I fired a warning shot, the guy ran off and I chased him down."

I stopped reading about here...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 03, 2014, 09:47:24 AM
"And with all due respect to today’s police officers doing their jobs, they don’t need all that stuff anyway. When I was cop I disarmed a man with three guns who had just killed someone. I was off duty and all I had was my snub-nose Smith & Wesson. I fired a warning shot, the guy ran off and I chased him down."

I stopped reading about here...




You do know who Frank Serpico was right?

and no - you don't need a Tank, MRAP, etc
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 03, 2014, 10:40:13 AM

You do know who Frank Serpico was right?

and no - you don't need a Tank, MRAP, etc

yes I know. I also know a war story when I hear one
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 04, 2014, 11:33:25 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/jed-rakoff-attacks-plea-bargains-2014-11



Great article.   Agree w this 100%
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 04, 2014, 11:54:12 AM
Elderly man, 90, and two clergymen face jail time for feeding the homeless
New York Daily News ^  | 11/4/2014 | BY MARC WEINREICH

Posted on ‎11‎/‎4‎/‎2014‎ ‎2‎:‎49‎:‎37‎ ‎PM by SeekAndFind

A senior citizen and a couple of clergymen in Florida face up to two months in jail for feeding the homeless.

A group of volunteers with the non-profit charity Love Thy Neighbor in Broward County face up to a $500 fine and 60 days in jail because they were feeding the homeless last Sunday in Fort Lauderdale, the New Times reports.

World War II veteran Arnold Abbott, founder of the interfaith organization, and members of a local church were confronted by Fort Lauderdale police officers because they had reportedly been in violation of the new laws against food sharing — laws that were ironically enacted on Halloween, a night reserved for, well, sharing candy.

Trays of hot food intended to be distributed to the lines of homeless people on the street last weekend were instead thrown directly into the trash by the officers, who ordered Abbott to “drop that plate right now.” In total, four police cruisers and a half dozen uniformed cops arrived to the scene.

Abbott and two clergymen were subsequently issued citations and are due to appear in court in the coming weeks.

The new law comes on the heels of an announcement from the city in January that restrict camping, panhandling, food sharing and other “life sustaining” activities.

Not to be deterred, Abbott, who has been feeding the homeless for years, talked in the report about how his recent run-in with the law will change things.


(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 05, 2014, 09:16:43 AM
Three new alleged victims spur more sex crime charges against Oklahoma City police officer

An Oklahoma City police officer accused of raping and sexually assaulting women while on duty was charged with six more counts in Oklahoma County District Court on Tuesday.

http://newsok.com/three-new-alleged-victims-spur-more-sex-crime-charges-against-holtzclaw/article/5363617
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 07, 2014, 06:04:21 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/07/fbi-impersonates-ap-reporter_n_6118970.html


Geez! 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2014, 11:56:04 AM
The cop kicked the man in the testicles and then grabbed the phone from a witness who was filming and deleted the video (whole scene was captured on the cop's lapel camera)..


Case dismissed against man who lost testicle

http://krqe.com/2014/10/30/case-dismissed-against-man-who-lost-testicle/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 08, 2014, 07:27:09 PM
http://nypost.com/2014/11/08/manhattan-prosecutor-arrested-for-beating-woman-at-a-bar/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 10, 2014, 11:34:25 AM
Police Use Department Wish List When Deciding Which Assets to Seize
The New York Times ^  | 09 Nov 2014 | SHAILA DEWAN

Posted on ‎11‎/‎10‎/‎2014‎ ‎1‎:‎24‎:‎22‎ ‎PM by Theoria

The seminars offered police officers some useful tips on seizing property from suspected criminals. Don’t bother with jewelry (too hard to dispose of) and computers (“everybody’s got one already”), the experts counseled. Do go after flat screen TVs, cash and cars. Especially nice cars.

In one seminar, captured on video in September, Harry S. Connelly Jr., the city attorney of Las Cruces, N.M., called them “little goodies.” And then Mr. Connelly described how officers in his jurisdiction could not wait to seize one man’s “exotic vehicle” outside a local bar.

“A guy drives up in a 2008 Mercedes, brand new,” he explained. “Just so beautiful, I mean, the cops were undercover and they were just like ‘Ahhhh.’ And he gets out and he’s just reeking of alcohol. And it’s like, ‘Oh, my goodness, we can hardly wait.’ ”

Mr. Connelly was talking about a practice known as civil asset forfeiture, which allows the government, without ever securing a conviction or even filing a criminal charge, to seize property suspected of having ties to crime. The practice, expanded during the war on drugs in the 1980s, has become a staple of law enforcement agencies because it helps finance their work. It is difficult to tell how much has been seized by state and local law enforcement, but under a Justice Department program, the value of assets seized has ballooned to $4.3 billion in the 2012 fiscal year from $407 million in 2001. Much of that money is shared with local police forces.


(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/10/us/police-use-department-wish-list-when-deciding-which-assets-to-seize.html?_r=1
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 12, 2014, 10:01:19 AM
New bill would require cops to get suspect’s search consent

Members of the City Council are going to sock it to the NYPD again by introducing a bill that would force cops to get written or audio permission from a suspect before they could conduct a search, The Post has learned.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/11/12/new-bill-would-require-cops-to-get-suspects-search-consent
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 12, 2014, 03:54:47 PM
New bill would require cops to get suspect’s search consent

Members of the City Council are going to sock it to the NYPD again by introducing a bill that would force cops to get written or audio permission from a suspect before they could conduct a search, The Post has learned.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/11/12/new-bill-would-require-cops-to-get-suspects-search-consent

We've been doing that for years
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 12, 2014, 04:19:43 PM
We've been doing that for years

Is this state law (you're in TX if I'm not mistaken?) or your department's policy?
I think it is a step in the right direction. As expected the police union is always the first to react to such proposals.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 12, 2014, 04:47:14 PM
Is this state law (you're in TX if I'm not mistaken?) or your department's policy?
I think it is a step in the right direction. As expected the police union is always the first to react to such proposals.


It's our departments policy. Consent is the BEST way to search for an officer. An attorney can argue probable cause till the cows come home, but with consent, either they gave it voluntarily or they didnt. So just verbally giving it to an officer is okay, it will still be argued whether it was voluntary or not but more often than not, it will stand..but having you sign a form that lists out all your rights and that the search is voluntary and you can stop it at any time is much better.  Having you sign it on camera with audio is even better. Having you sign it on camera in blood while holding a bible is the best. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 14, 2014, 07:34:08 AM

Justice Department Admits It Misled Court About FBI’s Secret Surveillance Program

“We regret this inadvertent inaccuracy and apologize for any confusion that may have been caused.”




By Dustin Volz
Follow on Twitter


 




(Shutterstock)
 



November 13, 2014 The Justice Department acknowledged that it misled a federal Appeals Court during oral arguments last month in a case reviewing whether the government should be able to secretly conduct electronic surveillance of Americans without a warrant.

In a newly unsealed letter, a Justice Department lawyer told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit that it spoke erroneously when describing the disclosure restrictions placed upon the FBI's use of so-called national security letters. NSLs, as they are often referred, can compel companies to hand over communications data or financial records of certain users to authorities conducting a national security investigation.



Companies are often given an NSL with an accompanying gag order that prevents them from publicly revealing any details regarding the NSL, or disclosing that it even exists. But during arguments, government lawyers indicated to the contrary that a company could reveal that it had received a specific NSL and "discuss the quality" of it.

"That suggestion was mistaken," wrote Justice Department lawyer Jonathan Levy. "We regret this inadvertent inaccuracy and apologize for any confusion that may have been caused."

Levy additionally noted the letter, addressed to the Appeals Court, was an attempt to "correct that error."
 



 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital-freedom group which represented an unidentified telecommunications company in the case, said the government's mea culpa "significantly undermines its case."

"During oral arguments, we were surprised to hear the government retreat from its position that NSLs gag recipients from talking about the 'very fact of having received' an NSL," said Cindy Cohn, EFF's legal director, in a statement. "But now we learn that the government's position remains unchanged. Because the government's argument to the Ninth Circuit depended in part on the assertion that the NSL gag order does nothing to stifle public debate, this later retraction significantly undermines its case."

Cohn called the mistake a "very strategic error" by the government, noting that the correction was given only after her organization asked for specific clarification.

"They didn't draw the attention to the Court, I did," Cohn said. "You can call it an error ... but we've seen the government willing to shave the truth and mislead Congress" on surveillance matters.



In the wake of the Snowden leaks, the government relaxed some restraints on what tech companies can disclose about the government's surveillance requests. A deal announced earlier this year allows reporting on the quantity of NSLs received over the course of six months, but only within bands of 1,000. (A company that received zero NSLs, for example, could only disclose it had received between zero and 999.)

National security letters have been in use since the late 1970s, although they have grown in importance and frequency in recent years. Hundreds of thousands of NSLs have been issued since the post-9/11 USA Patriot Act expanded their authority, and an overwhelming majority have been accompanied by gag orders. The Justice Department argues the letters are necessary to protect national security and thwart terrorist attacks.

An unidentified telecommunications company, represented by EFF, challenged the legal authority of an NSL it received in 2011, as well as the gag order that prevented disclosure.


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A federal judge last year ruled that the FBI's use of NSLs violated the First Amendment, a decision privacy advocates cheered. The judge additionally found the government's limited judicial oversight over NSLs was lacking, ordered the cessation of their use, and said the FBI must halt enforcement of its gag orders.

Enforcement of the ruling was stayed due to the "significant constitutional and national security issues at stake," however, and the government appealed the decision to the 9th Circuit.

The case is one of several makings its way through the courts that challenges the legal authority of government surveillance. A decision is expected in the coming months, and many observers say it could ultimately land before the Supreme Court.

This article appears in the November 14, 2014 edition of NJ Daily.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 19, 2014, 08:02:03 PM

It's our departments policy. Consent is the BEST way to search for an officer. An attorney can argue probable cause till the cows come home, but with consent, either they gave it voluntarily or they didnt. So just verbally giving it to an officer is okay, it will still be argued whether it was voluntary or not but more often than not, it will stand..but having you sign a form that lists out all your rights and that the search is voluntary and you can stop it at any time is much better.  Having you sign it on camera with audio is even better. Having you sign it on camera in blood while holding a bible is the best.  

Egads... hearing you describe this department you work for one is left with the impression that you don't just work as a police offer, but as an incorruptible guardian of truth, justice and the American way - the last line of defense between decent people and scum - as a member of the super-mega-ultra-bestest police department ever!

Now, I do not wish to doubt your ability to subdue ruffians with but a flex of your 30" biceps, but I am forced to question the rosy picture you paint.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on November 20, 2014, 09:40:47 AM
Prosecutor Will Go to Jail for Wrongfully Convicting an Innocent Man
Huffington Post ^  | 11/08/2013 4:12 pm EST | Mark Godsey

Posted on ‎11‎/‎20‎/‎2014‎ ‎9‎:‎27‎:‎05‎ ‎AM by CorporateStepsister

Today in Texas, former prosecutor and judge Ken Anderson pled guilty to intentionally failing to disclose evidence in a case that sent an innocent man, Michael Morton, to prison for the murder of his wife. When trying the case as a prosecutor, Anderson possessed evidence that may have cleared Morton, including statements from the crime's only eyewitness that Morton wasn't the culprit. Anderson sat on this evidence, and then watched Morton get convicted. While Morton remained in prison for the next 25 years, Anderson's career flourished, and he eventually became a judge.

In today's deal, Anderson pled to criminal contempt, and will have to give up his law license, perform 500 hours of community service, and spend 10 days in jail. Anderson had already resigned in September from his position on the Texas bench.

What makes today's plea newsworthy is not that Anderson engaged in misconduct that sent an innocent man to prison. Indeed, while most prosecutors and police officers are ethical and take their constitutional obligations seriously, government misconduct--including disclosure breaches known as Brady violations--occurs so frequently that it has become one of the chief causes of wrongful conviction.


(Excerpt) Read more at huffingtonpost.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 20, 2014, 12:22:58 PM
Prosecutor Will Go to Jail for Wrongfully Convicting an Innocent Man
Huffington Post ^  | 11/08/2013 4:12 pm EST | Mark Godsey

Posted on ‎11‎/‎20‎/‎2014‎ ‎9‎:‎27‎:‎05‎ ‎AM by CorporateStepsister

Today in Texas, former prosecutor and judge Ken Anderson pled guilty to intentionally failing to disclose evidence in a case that sent an innocent man, Michael Morton, to prison for the murder of his wife. When trying the case as a prosecutor, Anderson possessed evidence that may have cleared Morton, including statements from the crime's only eyewitness that Morton wasn't the culprit. Anderson sat on this evidence, and then watched Morton get convicted. While Morton remained in prison for the next 25 years, Anderson's career flourished, and he eventually became a judge.

In today's deal, Anderson pled to criminal contempt, and will have to give up his law license, perform 500 hours of community service, and spend 10 days in jail. Anderson had already resigned in September from his position on the Texas bench.

What makes today's plea newsworthy is not that Anderson engaged in misconduct that sent an innocent man to prison. Indeed, while most prosecutors and police officers are ethical and take their constitutional obligations seriously, government misconduct--including disclosure breaches known as Brady violations--occurs so frequently that it has become one of the chief causes of wrongful conviction.


(Excerpt) Read more at huffingtonpost.com ...


10 days and 500 hours community service for knowingly sending an innocent man to prison for 25 years and destroying so many lives. The absolute minimum he should get is the time the innocent man spent in prison-25 years. Corrupt prosecutors, judges and cops should be made an example of.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 20, 2014, 12:45:44 PM
10 days and 500 hours community service for knowingly sending an innocent man to prison for 25 years and destroying so many lives. The absolute minimum he should get is the time the innocent man spent in prison-25 years. Corrupt prosecutors, judges and cops should be made an example of.

This happened in my neck of the woods. Total disgrace. Ken Anderson should have done 25 yrs
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on November 21, 2014, 12:46:03 AM
10 days and 500 hours community service for knowingly sending an innocent man to prison for 25 years and destroying so many lives. The absolute minimum he should get is the time the innocent man spent in prison-25 years. Corrupt prosecutors, judges and cops should be made an example of.

Fucking insane...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 02, 2014, 12:07:32 PM
Search info related to: low iq police recruit
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 02, 2014, 12:44:49 PM
Search info related to: low iq police recruit

 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 02, 2014, 01:28:13 PM
I still love you, 007.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 03, 2014, 01:21:15 PM
I still love you, 007.

Ditto Jack
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2014, 09:22:26 AM
‘Psychopath' ex-cop gets life in prison plus five years for torture plot


http://www.myfoxchicago.com/story/27606610/psychopath-ex-cop-gets-life-in-prison-plus-five-years-for-torture-plot
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2014, 12:00:50 PM
Man Dies During Traffic Stop From Asthma Attack as Cop Refuses to Let them Drive to Hospital


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-dies-traffic-stop-asthma-attack-cop-refuses-drive-hospital/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2014, 04:58:40 PM
Victoria police officer investigated for tasing driver, 76


http://www.victoriaadvocate.com/news/2014/dec/13/victoria-police-officer-investigated-for-tasing-dr/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2014, 11:43:43 AM
Innocent Man Raided, Tased, Beaten, & Shot By a Corrupt SWAT Team who Lied to Get the Raid

Houston, TX — A completely innocent man was shot, tasered, brutally beaten, and had stun grenades thrown at him by vicious and incompetent SWAT officers. Then, those same officers tried to cover up their mistake by charging the victim, Chad Chadwick, with six criminal offenses including felony assault on a police officer.

This incident happened in 2011, but it has taken Chadwick three years and his entire life savings, to finally beat the charges that he was falsely accused of. Last month, a jury found Chad Chadwick not guilty of interfering with police.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-raided-tased-beaten-shot-corrupt-swat-team-lied-raid/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on December 18, 2014, 06:10:15 PM
Ditto Jack

:)

If you were dumb, you wouldn't be on here discussing things as you do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 21, 2014, 08:07:05 AM
Man Dies During Traffic Stop From Asthma Attack as Cop Refuses to Let them Drive to Hospital


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-dies-traffic-stop-asthma-attack-cop-refuses-drive-hospital/



I'm not big on the argument that she should be allowed to recklessly endanger the lives of everybody else to get her boyfriend to the hospital.

That said, no reason why the cop couldn't have put him in his car and gotten him to the hospital.  Cop sounds like trash.  In Philly, that's exactly what they do cause the ambulance can't always get through in time.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 22, 2014, 08:45:10 AM
Man Dies During Traffic Stop From Asthma Attack as Cop Refuses to Let them Drive to Hospital


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-dies-traffic-stop-asthma-attack-cop-refuses-drive-hospital/

had it been any one of the 2000 cops here it would have had the same result. After decades of experience and history on dealing with these situations, policy is in place that prohibits police from allowing the people to continue on as it's obvious a danger. Protocol is to call an ambulance to the location. Cops are not allowed to load them in their cars and drive them. There is no guarantee they can make it any faster than an ambulance can make it to their location, and in most cases there is an EMS/Fire station closer than any hospital.  And if the person dies in the cop car guess what happens. So for every one person who dies waiting for an ambulance, a ton are saved by the protocol.  Doesn't make this any less tragic, it's a horrible story, but it's not because the cop didn't care. He didn't have much choice and believed what he was doing was the best option.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 22, 2014, 08:55:26 AM
had it been any one of the 2000 cops here it would have had the same result. After decades of experience and history on dealing with these situations, policy is in place that prohibits police from allowing the people to continue on as it's obvious a danger. Protocol is to call an ambulance to the location. Cops are not allowed to load them in their cars and drive them. There is no guarantee they can make it any faster than an ambulance can make it to their location, and in most cases there is an EMS/Fire station closer than any hospital.  And if the person dies in the cop car guess what happens. So for every one person who dies waiting for an ambulance, a ton are saved by the protocol.  Doesn't make this any less tragic, it's a horrible story, but it's not because the cop didn't care. He didn't have much choice and believed what he was doing was the best option.


What happens?



Philadelphia's unusual but effective policy: Police can transport trauma victims


".....The race against time that officers made with Seward is commonplace for police in Philadelphia. Officers at times must make a life-or-death choice when they come across shooting victims who are rapidly losing blood: Risk watching them bleed to death in a matter of minutes, or put them in the car and drive.

Philadelphia is one of a few cities that use police transports, sometimes called "scoop and runs" by officers, or "cop drops" by doctors.

The department does not keep numbers on it, but some patrol officers estimate that they take as many as a third of the city's shooting victims to hospitals. Police in high-crime neighborhoods often arrive at scenes several minutes ahead of an ambulance. And since Philadelphia's EMS and ambulance system has long been described as overworked and stretched thin, police commanders say a police transport is an efficient choice when a shooting victim is near death.

Police also believe that without transports, the city's murder rate would be higher.

Deputy Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel has championed the policy. Besides getting some patients to hospitals faster, he said, getting victims off the street can defuse tension and lessen the chance of a retaliatory shooting.

"Is it perfect?" Bethel said. "No. Obviously, there are some times when officers don't take someone, or they wait too long. But the bottom line is that it saves lives....."



http://articles.philly.com/2012-06-04/news/32007368_1_shooting-victims-officers-transport

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on December 22, 2014, 09:04:08 AM

What happens?



Philadelphia's unusual but effective policy: Police can transport trauma victims


".....The race against time that officers made with Seward is commonplace for police in Philadelphia. Officers at times must make a life-or-death choice when they come across shooting victims who are rapidly losing blood: Risk watching them bleed to death in a matter of minutes, or put them in the car and drive.

Philadelphia is one of a few cities that use police transports, sometimes called "scoop and runs" by officers, or "cop drops" by doctors.

The department does not keep numbers on it, but some patrol officers estimate that they take as many as a third of the city's shooting victims to hospitals. Police in high-crime neighborhoods often arrive at scenes several minutes ahead of an ambulance. And since Philadelphia's EMS and ambulance system has long been described as overworked and stretched thin, police commanders say a police transport is an efficient choice when a shooting victim is near death.

Police also believe that without transports, the city's murder rate would be higher.

Deputy Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel has championed the policy. Besides getting some patients to hospitals faster, he said, getting victims off the street can defuse tension and lessen the chance of a retaliatory shooting.

"Is it perfect?" Bethel said. "No. Obviously, there are some times when officers don't take someone, or they wait too long. But the bottom line is that it saves lives....."



http://articles.philly.com/2012-06-04/news/32007368_1_shooting-victims-officers-transport



Interesting. How can a department "not keep numbers on it"? Just about every aspect is tracked these days. If the data was tracked it could help municipalities decide for themselves if they want to implement the policy. It may be unique to them due to the overworked and stretched EMS system they have.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on December 28, 2014, 01:09:32 PM
Indecent proposition from New London chief was 'chilling' says victim

Westfall, who was 18 at the time, was arrested by Seastrand, then 50, on March 2, 2013, as she walked home from a party. She was charged with giving a false name and for being in possession of a beer can.

Four days later, Seastrand called her to the police station. The former chief told Westfall he needed to meet with her alone, and began discussing alternative measures of punishment, like community service, for the misdemeanors. Seastrand explained, she said, that they would go into the basement. "He said would grab the station's camera to shoot a series of nude photos of me, and then he'd hold it over my head for two years to be sure I didn't commit another crime," Westfall said. Seastrand told her he would deny the whole incident if she told anyone.

[...]

State prosecutors, while calling Seastrand's actions "abhorrent behavior and unacceptable behavior for anyone in that type of a position," did not file criminal charges against him.

They later explained that the only law applicable to the case was the abuse of power statute, under which a public official is guilty of a misdemeanor if he or she knowingly commits an unauthorized act "which purports to be an act of his office" or "knowingly refrains from performing a duty imposed on him by law or clearly inherent in the nature of his office."

http://www.unionleader.com/article/20141228/NEWS03/141229456
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 29, 2014, 05:23:31 AM
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-patrol-car-shot-20141228-story.html



See - this type of shit does not help at all.  FNG animals
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on December 29, 2014, 06:06:27 AM
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-patrol-car-shot-20141228-story.html

See - this type of shit does not help at all.  FNG animals

Life in prison for this jackass. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on December 29, 2014, 08:17:33 AM
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-patrol-car-shot-20141228-story.html



See - this type of shit does not help at all.  FNG animals



This doesn't belong in the police state thread, cops didn't do anything wrong.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 04, 2015, 12:40:55 AM
This is How Child Molesting Cops are Treated in a Corrupt Police State

Fauquier County, VA — The special treatment a Virginia state trooper received, who was charged with with forcible sodomy on a minor, aggressive sexual battery and indecent liberties with a child, among other charges, will turn your stomach.

Fauguier.com reported in December on the details of the charges and the subsequent outcome of the plea bargain.

    Christopher Allen Carson, 30, pleaded guilty to a felony count of criminal solicitation, a count of contributing to delinquency of a minor and one count of exposing his penis to a child. Carson also pleaded guilty to two counts of loaning pornographic videos to a child.

    Judge Herman A. Whisenant Jr. accepted Carson’s pleas as part of a bargain on the day Carson was to face a jury trial. Carson was originally charged with forcible sodomy, aggressive sexual battery and indecent liberties with a child.

    Whisenant recommended a sentence of nine years in prison, all but 30 days of which to be suspended, and two years of probation. As part of the plea agreement, Carson does not have to register as a sex offender. Also as part of the agreement, two additional active charges of forcible sodomy and indecent liberties with a child will be dropped.

This man orally forced himself onto a sleeping 7th grader and he will only be going to jail for 30 days. Let that sink in.

Also, Carson will not have to comply with Virginia’s Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry Act.

To put into perspective the level of special treatment given to Carson we can look at a similar case in which the honorable Judge Herman A. Whisenant Jr. presided. Donald Hausen, 35, racked up similarly disgusting charges of aggravated sexual battery, manufacturing child pornography, distribution of child pornography and possession of child pornography.

Whisenant gave him 66 years in jail and Hausen will also be required to register as a violent sex offender.

Hausen deserved this sentence, so did Carson. The only difference is that Christopher Allen Carson, was part of the team. Instead of being held to higher standards, like he should be, for being a police officer, Carson was given little to no punishment because of his badge.

Is this justice?

Joaquin Gonzalez Vicencio, 30, and Joaquin Berumen Cortes, 24, were caught growing marijuana in a forest in 2013 in Charlottesville, Va.. Neither one of these men had caused harm to anyone else.

Vicencio was sentenced to 11 years in a federal penitentiary and Cortes was sentenced to 10.

In America, child raping cops are let off while men trying to grow a plant are thrown in a cage. The deeper one digs into the corruption within court systems in the US, the more “Justice” looks like “Just Us.”


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/child-molesting-cops-treated-corrupt-police-state/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Parker on January 04, 2015, 01:13:50 AM
This is How Child Molesting Cops are Treated in a Corrupt Police State

Fauquier County, VA — The special treatment a Virginia state trooper received, who was charged with with forcible sodomy on a minor, aggressive sexual battery and indecent liberties with a child, among other charges, will turn your stomach.

Fauguier.com reported in December on the details of the charges and the subsequent outcome of the plea bargain.

    Christopher Allen Carson, 30, pleaded guilty to a felony count of criminal solicitation, a count of contributing to delinquency of a minor and one count of exposing his penis to a child. Carson also pleaded guilty to two counts of loaning pornographic videos to a child.

    Judge Herman A. Whisenant Jr. accepted Carson’s pleas as part of a bargain on the day Carson was to face a jury trial. Carson was originally charged with forcible sodomy, aggressive sexual battery and indecent liberties with a child.

    Whisenant recommended a sentence of nine years in prison, all but 30 days of which to be suspended, and two years of probation. As part of the plea agreement, Carson does not have to register as a sex offender. Also as part of the agreement, two additional active charges of forcible sodomy and indecent liberties with a child will be dropped.

This man orally forced himself onto a sleeping 7th grader and he will only be going to jail for 30 days. Let that sink in.

Also, Carson will not have to comply with Virginia’s Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry Act.

To put into perspective the level of special treatment given to Carson we can look at a similar case in which the honorable Judge Herman A. Whisenant Jr. presided. Donald Hausen, 35, racked up similarly disgusting charges of aggravated sexual battery, manufacturing child pornography, distribution of child pornography and possession of child pornography.

Whisenant gave him 66 years in jail and Hausen will also be required to register as a violent sex offender.

Hausen deserved this sentence, so did Carson. The only difference is that Christopher Allen Carson, was part of the team. Instead of being held to higher standards, like he should be, for being a police officer, Carson was given little to no punishment because of his badge.

Is this justice?

Joaquin Gonzalez Vicencio, 30, and Joaquin Berumen Cortes, 24, were caught growing marijuana in a forest in 2013 in Charlottesville, Va.. Neither one of these men had caused harm to anyone else.

Vicencio was sentenced to 11 years in a federal penitentiary and Cortes was sentenced to 10.

In America, child raping cops are let off while men trying to grow a plant are thrown in a cage. The deeper one digs into the corruption within court systems in the US, the more “Justice” looks like “Just Us.”


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/child-molesting-cops-treated-corrupt-police-state/
Maybe you actually might want to read what the case was about.
This happened before he became a Trooper. I thappened in 2001, when he was 18, and he became a trooper in 2005.  
Quote
"Three of the charges to which Carson pleaded guilty stemmed from a series of incidents in 2001 where Carson, then 18

 http://www.fauquier.com/news/article/state_trooper_found_guilty_of_sex_abuse_charges (http://www.fauquier.com/news/article/state_trooper_found_guilty_of_sex_abuse_charges)

I expect you to actually know your shit and do research before posting, it is unbecoming for you. What you did was post an article and make a post that makes it seem like he did this while he was a trooper. If you know anything about VA, if he did this as a Trooper, they may have used him as target practice and made an example of him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 04, 2015, 01:58:00 AM
Maybe you actually might want to read what the case was about.
This happened before he became a Trooper. I thappened in 2001, when he was 18, and he became a trooper in 2005.  
 http://www.fauquier.com/news/article/state_trooper_found_guilty_of_sex_abuse_charges (http://www.fauquier.com/news/article/state_trooper_found_guilty_of_sex_abuse_charges)

I expect you to actually know your shit and do research before posting, it is unbecoming for you. What you did was post an article and make a post that makes it seem like he did this while he was a trooper. If you know anything about VA, if he did this as a Trooper, they may have used him as target practice and made an example of him.

The point of the freethoughproject article, and the question it posed, was whether or not he received a special plea deal because he was an officer at the time charges were brought against him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 09, 2015, 08:33:06 AM
Trio of SAPD officers suspended for 'mistaken identity' beating


http://www.kens5.com/story/news/investigations/i-team/2015/01/08/sapd-beating-mistaken-identity-update/21457943/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 09, 2015, 11:00:51 AM
Trio of SAPD officers suspended for 'mistaken identity' beating


http://www.kens5.com/story/news/investigations/i-team/2015/01/08/sapd-beating-mistaken-identity-update/21457943/

Obviously it's not good enough to say "I've looked at the information, pictures and evidence and there is no indication of excessive force" Nothing the Chief has said explains the damage to the mans face. If the evidence does show the force was reasonable for whatever reason, Carlos was resisting, arguing, wouldn't comply etc etc, this Chief owes it to the public and the officers to at least say;

On the surface this looks bad, but here's why we came to this conclusion and the 5 day suspension".. then roll out the facts. As it stands, it looks to me like any male citizen remotely resembling a fleeing suspect is in danger of being hurt and scarred by pursuing police and are at risk. That's just unacceptable to me. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2015, 10:04:59 AM
Police Assault And Handcuff Wrong Man. But It’s Okay, they “Did It In Good Faith”

If a civilian assaults someone and deprives them of their freedom, they can not simply say it was an accident and be off the hook.

St. Ann, Missouri – Police in a town just outside of St. Louis recently assaulted and handcuffed the wrong person during a high speed chase. 22-year-old Joseph Swink was driving down the road, minding his own business last week, when his car was hit by a vehicle that was in a high speed chase with police.

Swink’s car was hit by the fleeing suspect, who continued to speed down the road after the collision. Instead of following after the suspect, police stopped the car that had been hit. Then they proceeded to assault and detain Joseph Swink, thinking that he was the man they were after.

As police arrived on the scene of the crash and saw Swink, they came after him as if he was the person that they were chasing. He then tried to explain to them what happened, and who he was, but according to the police department this could be considered resisting arrest. Police tackled Swink to the ground and handcuffed him as he attempted to explain the situation.

Police Chief Aaron Jimenez admitted to the incident and apologized in a statement to reporters.

“We did put handcuffs on the wrong guy, and I apologize for that. But they did it in good faith. It was literally an accident. He gets out and runs toward the back of the car, so they grab him, toss him on the ground. They didn’t Tase him. They didn’t use batons. They didn’t kick him in the face. They definitely put him on the ground and were trying to get handcuffs on him while he’s squirming around. And he’s resisting arrest because he’s trying to tell the police that it’s not him,” Jimenez said in a statement.

The police department refuses to accept any responsibility in the matter, in fact, Chief Jimenez has blamed the assault on the suspect, and said that the officers will not be disciplined because they “made an honest mistake.”

“I apologize for the mistaken identity, I am sorry he got put into that situation because of the suspect,” Jimenez Said.

However, Swink wants the officers to lose their jobs for such indiscriminate use of force.

“I don’t know what they were thinking. I’m just shocked that all of this happened,” Swink said.

According to the St. Ann Police Department, the actual suspect who was being chased was 32-year-old Anton Simmons, who was later arrested after crashing his car again a few miles down the road.

This type of unaccountable assault on innocence is sadly not isolated. Last year, three SAPD officers severely brutalized an innocent man as he tried to photograph his wife’s new location for her medical practice.

When KENS 5 news interviewed then SAPD police chief William McManus, he stated that “Clearly it was a case of mistaken identity. From the report that I’ve read, from the photo that I saw and from your description, I’ve not seen anything at this point that would indicate to me that anything out of order happened.”

The chief of police thinks that an innocent man being beaten to the point of hospitalization by incompetent police officers mistaking him for another man, and causing $15,000 in medical bills, indicates that nothing “out of order happened.”

John Vibes is an author, researcher and investigative journalist who takes a special interest in the counter culture and the drug war. In addition to his writing and activist work he is also the owner of a successful music promotion company. In 2013, he became one of the organizers of the Free Your Mind Conference, which features top caliber speakers and whistle-blowers from all over the world. You can contact him and stay connected to his work at his Facebook page. You can find his 65 chapter Book entitled “Alchemy of the Timeless Renaissance” at bookpatch.com.
 
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-assault-handcuff-wrong-man-in-good-faith/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2015, 09:40:46 AM
Ga. Supreme Court to consider police dog immunity

Atlanta, Ga. -- The Georgia Supreme Court will decide if someone bitten by a police dog is allowed to sue for damages.

A DeKalb County police officer argues she cannot be held liable for injuries suffered by a neighbor's son when her police dog bit him because she is protected by official immunity.


http://www.11alive.com/story/news/local/2015/01/20/ga-supreme-court-to-consider-police-dog-immunity/22043565/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on January 22, 2015, 10:35:25 AM
Ga. Supreme Court to consider police dog immunity

Atlanta, Ga. -- The Georgia Supreme Court will decide if someone bitten by a police dog is allowed to sue for damages.

A DeKalb County police officer argues she cannot be held liable for injuries suffered by a neighbor's son when her police dog bit him because she is protected by official immunity.


http://www.11alive.com/story/news/local/2015/01/20/ga-supreme-court-to-consider-police-dog-immunity/22043565/

wow
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2015, 10:30:40 PM
Police Response to Bill Restricting No-Knock Raids: You Can’t Have Both Freedom & Security

Atlanta, GA — A Georgia lawmaker has proposed a bill, aptly named Baby Bou’s law, that would restrict the issuance of no-knock raids.

The bill’s namesake, Baby Bounekahm “Bou Bou” Phonesavanh, suffered third-degree burns to his chest and face after sheriff’s deputies in Habersham County raided a house in the middle of the night in May of 2014. They were looking for a person who did not live there, over a $50 drug sale, and threw a flashbang grenade into the infant’s crib.

According to the bill’s sponsor, State Sen. Vincent Fort, there was also a stunning new revelation in the case of 19-month-old Bou-Bou, involving a lie.

“We know that there’s evidence someone lied, one officer lied to the magistrate in offering information for the no knock warrant,” said Fort.

Apparently Georgia has never had a specified law on the books designed to punish officers and agencies that lie to a judge to obtain a no-knock warrant.

The bill has bipartisan support from many of Georgia’s lawmakers, who are also looking to ban no-knock raids between the hours of 10 pm and 6 am.

Predictably, this bill has the police unions up in arms.

Retired drug unit officer, turned union rep for the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, Carrie Mills, is quite outspoken about the union’s opposition to the bill.

“If we knock and announce, all evidence is going to be destroyed,” Mills said.

Mills went on to threaten lawmakers by telling them they should be careful what they ask for. She then made a disgusting statement which goes against every principle of a free society, by claiming that if you want security, you can’t have privacy.

“You have to draw the line between your right as a citizen to privacy and a community’s right to live in a crime-free environment. You can’t have them both,” said Mills.

Apparently Mills has never heard the popular phrase stating that those who would sacrifice freedom for security, deserve neither freedom nor security.

The IBPO is also ignoring the tragic cases from just last year, of no-knock raids gone awry. While the case of Baby Bou has gotten international attention, the less popular death of David Hooks is equally troubling.

Acting on a bogus tip about methamphetamine from a car thief who stole Hooks’ Lincoln Aviator SUV, the Laurens County Sheriff’s office obtained a search warrant for Hooks’ residence. An hour after the judge signed the warrant police wrongfully raided Hooks’ house and took the life of this innocent grandfather.

Despite a search lasting 44 hours, police found not one single item of contraband.

If you are the IBPO, the no-knock raid tactics that led to these tragedies are fine and dandy. After all, if we aren’t locking up hundreds of thousands of people for victimless crimes, America wouldn’t be able to maintain its infamous title of Prison Capital of the World.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-response-bill-restricting-no-knock-raids-freedom-security/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2015, 01:19:43 PM
Man Acquitted of Stabbing a Police Officer, Juror says he Was “Protecting his Family”

Cortez, TX — A Texas man has been acquitted after being accused of stabbing a police officer during a violent confrontation with six “amped up” police officers.

A jury of seven women and five men cleared Shane French, 38, of four counts of assaulting a peace officer and three counts of resisting arrest. After the incident in February, French was originally charged with attempted murder.

On February 14, 2014 police responded to a 9-1-1 call asking for assistance during a family disturbance. Somehow the police were given a “10-Zero” warning, meaning that they should use caution when dealing with the suspect. This 10-zero call, is what likely led to the quick escalation by police.

“I think the 10-­Zero call was detrimental to the whole situation,” said one of the jurors in an interview with The Cortez Journal.

Jurors had to contemplate the legality of police officers entering the North Texas Street home that Valentine’s Night.

“We were divided,” said the juror.

French’s public defender, Amy R. Smith, said that her client was “beaten,” “tortured” and “insulted” by six “amped up” police officers. She said officer Casey Eubanks’ vulgar remarks, including a statement that he should have shot the defendant, also shows that officers didn’t place any value on the defendant’s life.

“Mr. French is being blamed for it all,” Smith told jurors. “It doesn’t make sense.”

During the altercation with police, officer Boyd Neagle admitted that he electrocuted French seven times, including five times in two-and-a-half minutes span, while French was in handcuffs.

“We thought he reacted to protect his family,” explained the juror.

According to the Juror, the most important aspect of the evidence was sifting through the four pages of jury instructions regarding the state’s Make My Day law, which enables a person to use force in the defense of self, others or a dwelling.

The Make My Day Law, arose in the US at the time of the 1985 Colorado statute that shielded people from any criminal/civil suits for using force – including deadly force – against an invader of the home. The law’s nickname is a reference to the line “Go ahead, make my day” uttered by actor Clint Eastwood’s character “Dirty Harry” Callahan, in the 1983 police film Sudden Impact.

In an interview, Glenn French, Shane French’s father, said he believes that the police were the criminals in the incident.

“They attacked our son,” he said. “I’ve never seen the cops act like that.”

After a three-and-a-half-hour deliberation jurors felt that there was sufficient reasonable doubt to acquit.

The family of French is now deciding whether or not they want to launch a civil suit against the city. “We have two years to file a civil suit,” said Glenn French. “We haven’t really decided yet.”

According to The Cortez Journal, the elder French also said he hoped the officers would be reprimanded or discharged. Eubanks was ordered to undergo anger management counseling, but no other officers were admonished, according to the Journal’s review of public personnel files. Police Chief Roy Lane said Neagle wasn’t at fault.

Despite the acquittal of their victim, the police chief remains unapologetic.  “I see no violation of policy by officer Neagle, and there will be no investigation or reprimand of officer Neagle by the Cortez Police Department,” Lane wrote in a email to the Journal.

The outcome of this case is entirely atypical of the normal outcomes in situations in which a citizen uses force against a police officer. It’s heartening to see that a jury was able to look past the badge and examine the facts, in turn facilitating justice.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-acquitted-stabbing-police-officer-juror-protecting-family/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2015, 09:19:11 PM
Bayonne cop beat man with flashlight and lied on reports, feds say

[...] Officially, officer Lillo was charged with the deprivation of civil rights under color of law and falsification of records. The use of excessive force count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, while the charge of falsifying records carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
Lillo "knowingly concealed, covered up, falsified, and made false entries on a Bayonne Police Department Use of Force Report about the arrest ... by not checking the box marked 'Strike/Use of Baton or other object,'" according to the indictment.


http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/2015/01/bayonne_cop_beat_man_with_flashlight_and_lied_on_r.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on January 25, 2015, 07:08:17 AM
Bayonne cop beat man with flashlight and lied on reports, feds say

[...] Officially, officer Lillo was charged with the deprivation of civil rights under color of law and falsification of records. The use of excessive force count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, while the charge of falsifying records carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
Lillo "knowingly concealed, covered up, falsified, and made false entries on a Bayonne Police Department Use of Force Report about the arrest ... by not checking the box marked 'Strike/Use of Baton or other object,'" according to the indictment.


http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/2015/01/bayonne_cop_beat_man_with_flashlight_and_lied_on_r.html


So the feds had to take this cop down, not the local PD?  Another example...

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2015, 03:27:49 PM
Joseph Sledge, wrongly imprisoned for decades, now free

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/01/23/us/man-free-after-jailed-for-half-his-life/


"During the more than three decades Sledge was in prison, he maintained his innocence, filing numerous post-conviction motions on various grounds. All were denied without hearing.

One of the inmates recanted his testimony and told the Innocence Commission that he lied in exchange for leniency for a drug violation. The other inmate died in 1991."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2015, 10:10:59 PM
Florida Film Crew Files Lawsuit Against Sheriff After Unlawful Arrest for Recording Cars from Public Space

Sav Charudattan, a Gainesville filmmaker, assisted Jeff Gray at each of Gray’s last three North Florida DUI checkpoint audits, and his company, IMV Films, created a behind-the-scenes checkpoint video.

He was also in the car when Gray drove through a checkpoint with his license, registeration and proof of insurance hanging out the window in a Ziploc baggie for a video that has now received more than 2.2 million views.

Now Charudattan is filing a federal suit against Sheriff Sadie Darnell and four other Alachua County Sheriff’s officers after being unlawfully detained and arrested for recording cars from a public right-of-way.

In 2011, Sergeant Paul Bernal detained Charudattan and two other members of his IMV crew for three hours after two other men crashed their car on the side of the road. The men who caused the accident were largely unquestioned during the detention, while Bernal demanded ID from the three filmmakers, even going as far as to seize Charudattan’s keys and tow his car.

    “The deputies made several off-color, rude, and threatening comments,” said Charudattan. “My camera was seized when backup deputies arrived, and it was returned after my criminal trial ended 3 months later, damaged, with no tape or SD card. This seizure was very poor timing, and highly damaging to my film company.”

Both the charge and prosecution of Sav Charudattan were highly unusual. To start, Charudattan and the IMV crew were unlawfully arrested and taken to jail for being a “Spectator at a Drag Race,” which is a non-arrestable, non-criminal offense by Florida statute 316.191(4)(b). The charges were later changed to “Racing on the Highway,” despite the deputies having no evidence of anyone from IMV racing. The charges were likely changed to cover up the deputies’ colossal fuck-up in detaining, arresting, car-jacking, and jailing three people for a non-arrestable offense.

Accordingly, the members of the IMV team had the charges against them dropped – except for Charudattan, who for some reason was still taken to trial. After the prosecution failed to establish a case, Charudattan was granted a Motion for Judgement of Acquittal.

At trial, Sergeant Bernal admitted to having no reasonable suspicion or probable cause to detain Charudattan, and the state prosecutor, Kenneth Keith, admitted that the arrests and charges against Charudattan’s two crew members (identical to the arrest and charge and Charudattan) were improper and illegal.

Charudattan and his IMV mates Samuel Glazer and Justin Webster are seeking damages for wrongful arrest, unlawful search and seizure, and the violation of their rights to freedom of speech and expression.


http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2015/01/florida-film-crew-files-lawsuit-sheriff-unlawful-arrest-recording-cars-public-space/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 26, 2015, 11:24:43 AM
NYPD probes two undercover officers for allegedly assaulting former Marine sergeant


http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-probes-narc-cops-marine-beatdown-article-1.2091287
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Soul Crusher on January 27, 2015, 05:25:54 PM
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WSJ: Justice Dept. Tracking Millions of Vehicles
Fox News Insider ^ | Jan 27, 2015 5:18 PM
Posted on January 27, 2015 7:02:58 PM EST by Olog-hai

The Wall Street Journal has reported that the Justice Department has been building a database which tracks vehicles across the United States.

The license-plate tracking program reportedly reads plates and tracks cars on major highways across the U.S. The program’s high-tech cameras also reportedly take photos of drivers and passengers that are clear enough to identify people.

The database was started in 2008 by the DEA to monitor drug traffickers along the Mexican border. It has since expanded, with more and more law enforcement agencies using it for non-drug-related reasons.

Justice Department officials tells Fox News that the feds limit who can access the database. They say all license plate information is deleted after 90 days.

(Excerpt) Read more at insider.foxnews.com ...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2015, 12:58:15 PM
New York City to pay $5 million to family of man killed in 'Mafia cops' case

http://www.newsday.com/news/new-york/nicholas-guido-s-family-to-get-5-million-from-nyc-in-mafia-cops-case-1.9887401
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 05, 2015, 12:02:48 PM
Tax Payers Shell Out $300k After Dashcam Video Shows Cop Shoot Unarmed Man With Hands Up

 By Jay Syrmopoulos on February 5, 2015

Columbia, S.C. –Levar Edward Jones, who was shot by a Highway Patrol trooper in early September of last year, will receive a $300,000 settlement from the state stemming from the incident.

The incident, which the Free Thought Project reported upon initially after it took place on September 4, 2014, began when trooper Sean Groubert pulled Jones over for allegedly not wearing a seat belt.

Dash cam from the trooper’s cruiser recorded the interaction.

After being pulled over, Jones could be seen exiting his vehicle, at which point Groubert asked for his license.

When Jones reached to grab his license, Groubert began shooting at him.

While shooting at Jones, Groubert yelled, “Get out of the car, get out of the car.”

To which Jones replied,”I just got my license, you said get my license.”

The trooper can be seen in the footage firing four bullets at Jones in less than five seconds, with one striking Jones.

Amazingly, Jones had enough composure to raise his hands up in surrender while being shot at, yet Groubert continued to fire on the surrendering man.

Groubert was subsequently fired by the Highway Patrol shortly after this incident. The S.C. Department of Public Safety stated that the trooper had violated several patrol agency policies, used too much force for too long and misread Jones as a threat.

In addition, Groubert currently faces charges of felony assault and battery punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

With the egregious nature of the trooper’s offenses, it’s heartening to actually see a law enforcement professional being held accountable for their actions under color of law. Unfortunately, the taxpayers will also be held accountable, for a crime that they did not commit.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/tax-payers-shell-300k-dashcam-video-shows-cop-shoot-unarmed-man-hands/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 09, 2015, 04:43:26 PM
Tax Payers Shell Out $300k After Dashcam Video Shows Cop Shoot Unarmed Man With Hands Up

 By Jay Syrmopoulos on February 5, 2015

Columbia, S.C. –Levar Edward Jones, who was shot by a Highway Patrol trooper in early September of last year, will receive a $300,000 settlement from the state stemming from the incident.

The incident, which the Free Thought Project reported upon initially after it took place on September 4, 2014, began when trooper Sean Groubert pulled Jones over for allegedly not wearing a seat belt.

Dash cam from the trooper’s cruiser recorded the interaction.

After being pulled over, Jones could be seen exiting his vehicle, at which point Groubert asked for his license.

When Jones reached to grab his license, Groubert began shooting at him.

While shooting at Jones, Groubert yelled, “Get out of the car, get out of the car.”

To which Jones replied,”I just got my license, you said get my license.”

The trooper can be seen in the footage firing four bullets at Jones in less than five seconds, with one striking Jones.

Amazingly, Jones had enough composure to raise his hands up in surrender while being shot at, yet Groubert continued to fire on the surrendering man.

Groubert was subsequently fired by the Highway Patrol shortly after this incident. The S.C. Department of Public Safety stated that the trooper had violated several patrol agency policies, used too much force for too long and misread Jones as a threat.

In addition, Groubert currently faces charges of felony assault and battery punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

With the egregious nature of the trooper’s offenses, it’s heartening to actually see a law enforcement professional being held accountable for their actions under color of law. Unfortunately, the taxpayers will also be held accountable, for a crime that they did not commit.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/tax-payers-shell-300k-dashcam-video-shows-cop-shoot-unarmed-man-hands/



That's it?

This guy deserved a hell of a lot more than that.

Maybe if he had held out for a while longer...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2015, 09:11:19 AM
Grandfather visiting Alabama from India stopped by police while taking walk, left partly paralyzed

http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/02/indian_citizen_stopped_by_madi.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 13, 2015, 11:46:38 AM
Grandfather visiting Alabama from India stopped by police while taking walk, left partly paralyzed

http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/02/indian_citizen_stopped_by_madi.html

Fired and arrested by a local department.. Skip?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2015, 12:02:27 PM
Fired and arrested by a local department.. Skip?

Updated article:

http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/02/madison_police_fire_and_arrest.html

Took them 3 days to go from blaming the victim to admitting the officer assaulted the poor man. The officer turned himself in and was released on a $1000 bond. It seems like the FBI is conducting a parallel inquiry to ascertain if there were any federal violations.

Here is the video:
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 13, 2015, 12:26:25 PM
Updated article:

http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/02/madison_police_fire_and_arrest.html

Took them 3 days to go from blaming the victim to admitting the officer assaulted the poor man. The officer turned himself in and was released on a $1000 bond. It seems like the FBI is conducting a parallel inquiry to ascertain if there were any federal violations.

Here is the video:


Idiot officer.... guy indicates he doesn't understand English, Officer is too stupid to register that info and demands after speaking rapidly about jerking away "Do you understand me!?" No.. he friggin doesn't.  Could it just be possible he is trying to take you to his sons residence? Mr Bad Ass cop has to show who's boss. Glad he's answering for it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 17, 2015, 12:06:50 AM
To use the "logic" often employed by police, if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?

Police dash cam shows part of contested arrest – until St. Louis officer turns camera off

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/st-louis-police-video-at-heart-of-lawsuit-dismissal-of/article_f4c65142-f3be-57f1-a957-9f256fb02459.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 17, 2015, 01:34:38 PM
To use the "logic" often employed by police, if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?

Police dash cam shows part of contested arrest – until St. Louis officer turns camera off

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/st-louis-police-video-at-heart-of-lawsuit-dismissal-of/article_f4c65142-f3be-57f1-a957-9f256fb02459.html


The moron who turned off the camera should be terminated. No ifs ands or buts. Regardless of if the other cameras caught what happened, any officer who turns off the camera because "If ya'll are worried about the cameras just hold up" should be fired on the spot.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on February 18, 2015, 01:21:22 PM
Fired and arrested by a local department.. Skip?



You sure?  It doesn't read that way.  If so, the props to the local PD.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 18, 2015, 09:27:41 PM
Cop gets fired after video footage proves he beat up a handcuffed vet who was breaking up a fight and then lied about it under oath

-William Escobar had been facing battery and perjury charges related to the March 2014 arrest of Refus Holloway, a former military police officer
-The incident only came to light after Holloway's sister posted cell phone footage on YouTube
-Under oath Escobar had claimed that he jumped on Holloway's legs because the man had tried to kick him
-The footage showed him punch and kick at Holloway who had been trying to break up a fight

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2959341/Cop-gets-fired-video-footage-proves-beat-handcuffed-vet-lied-oath.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on February 18, 2015, 09:36:04 PM
Recently in Oregon a man committed suicide by cop. He called 911 to report a crime in progress. When the police showed up, he came out of the house wielding an ax which he refused to drop. The police shot him several times, killing him. As it turned out, there was no crime in progress. He'd set up the police, knowing that if he presented a threat they'd react accordingly.

I wouldn't want to be a cop. You never know how an event will escalate. Obviously, cops witness a lot of shit. The resulting modus operandi is for them to shoot to kill and ask questions later. Of course dead people aren't known for providing much in the way of answers. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2015, 01:38:20 PM
Ugly on so many levels. A man is held as a suspect for killing his own child. The interrogator has the suspect handcuffed and then tries to provoke him and then attacks him, later claiming he "forgot" the suspect was chained to the wall and of course he "feared" for his life while trying to get the suspect to confess. The suspect was later found not guilty. The citizen now takes the cop to court; by using the "frame by frame" method the cop's attorneys convinced the jury that the cop indeed "feared" for his life and really "forgot" the man was handcuffed. In the meantime the cop had applied for duty disability retirement, saying "stress had left him unable to do his job" which, if approved, would mean he'd be getting lifetime tax free pay of around $57,000 a year (not only that but he would also get raises too). The cop was eventually fired by the department but of course was (of course) on paid suspension until the day of his dismissal.

Cop Chains Innocent Man to Wall, Beats Him, Gouges Eyes After Refusing to Confess to a Crime

Milwaukee, WI — In August of 2013 former detective Rodolfo Gomez savagely beat Deron Love during an interrogation. He was chained to the wall.

Love, 27, was accused of killing his 7-month-old baby, a charge he would not confess to and one that he would eventually beat.

A year after being tortured by Gomez, Love was found not guilty of first-degree reckless homicide and child neglect in the death of his infant son.

Love’s innocence was of no matter to Gomez who repeatedly compelled him to confess.

After becoming tired of being told to confess to a crime that he did not commit, Love became agitated and began screaming in the face of Gomez. Gomez, then “feared for his safety” as the man, who was chained to a wall yelled at him. So he began to beat the restrained man – savagely.

There are two videos of Gomez’s interaction with Love. In the first video, Gomez is seen unleashing multiple punches and knee blows to the face and head of Love.

In the second video, both of Love’s hands are chained to the wall. Seeing the opportunity to inflict more pain, Gomez then began gouging Love’s eyes out. The screams are hard to bare.

Gomez was subsequently fired for this despicable behavior. However, he is now appealing.

Earlier this month, using a controversial tactic of slow-motion video presentation, the defense was somehow able to convince a jury that Gomez actually “feared for his safety.”

The defense broke the video down, frame by frame, and used cherry-picked images to sway the jury into believing their ridiculous self-defense stance.

Sadly, the jury was eventually convinced.

What do you think? Watch the graphic video below and tell us in the comments if you think Gomez’s safety was ever in danger.

(link includes video)

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-refused-confess-crime-commit-cop-chains-wall-beats-him-gouges-eyes/


Additional articles with more detail:

http://www.jsonline.com/watchdog/watchdogreports/officer-charged-with-felony-seeks-disability-pay-b99132617z1-230445001.html

http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/milwaukee-police-department-fires-officer-rodolfo-gomez-jr-b99156625z1-234456521.html

http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/jury-acquits-fired-milwaukee-cop-in-suspect-beating-case-b99444390z1-291897721.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 23, 2015, 08:25:35 AM
Recently in Oregon a man committed suicide by cop. He called 911 to report a crime in progress. When the police showed up, he came out of the house wielding an ax which he refused to drop. The police shot him several times, killing him. As it turned out, there was no crime in progress. He'd set up the police, knowing that if he presented a threat they'd react accordingly.

I wouldn't want to be a cop. You never know how an event will escalate. Obviously, cops witness a lot of shit. The resulting modus operandi is for them to shoot to kill and ask questions later. Of course dead people aren't known for providing much in the way of answers. 

Prime, I witness a lot of shit. I've never killed anyone. In fact, out of the 4000 cops who've policed the streets of this city over the last 22 years less than 20 have done so.. Doesn't really add up to an M. O.   
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 23, 2015, 08:29:55 AM
Ugly on so many levels. A man is held as a suspect for killing his own child. The interrogator has the suspect handcuffed and then tries to provoke him and then attacks him, later claiming he "forgot" the suspect was chained to the wall and of course he "feared" for his life while trying to get the suspect to confess. The suspect was later found not guilty. The citizen now takes the cop to court; by using the "frame by frame" method the cop's attorneys convinced the jury that the cop indeed "feared" for his life and really "forgot" the man was handcuffed. In the meantime the cop had applied for duty disability retirement, saying "stress had left him unable to do his job" which, if approved, would mean he'd be getting lifetime tax free pay of around $57,000 a year (not only that but he would also get raises too). The cop was eventually fired by the department but of course was (of course) on paid suspension until the day of his dismissal.

Cop Chains Innocent Man to Wall, Beats Him, Gouges Eyes After Refusing to Confess to a Crime

Milwaukee, WI — In August of 2013 former detective Rodolfo Gomez savagely beat Deron Love during an interrogation. He was chained to the wall.

Love, 27, was accused of killing his 7-month-old baby, a charge he would not confess to and one that he would eventually beat.

A year after being tortured by Gomez, Love was found not guilty of first-degree reckless homicide and child neglect in the death of his infant son.

Love’s innocence was of no matter to Gomez who repeatedly compelled him to confess.

After becoming tired of being told to confess to a crime that he did not commit, Love became agitated and began screaming in the face of Gomez. Gomez, then “feared for his safety” as the man, who was chained to a wall yelled at him. So he began to beat the restrained man – savagely.

There are two videos of Gomez’s interaction with Love. In the first video, Gomez is seen unleashing multiple punches and knee blows to the face and head of Love.

In the second video, both of Love’s hands are chained to the wall. Seeing the opportunity to inflict more pain, Gomez then began gouging Love’s eyes out. The screams are hard to bare.

Gomez was subsequently fired for this despicable behavior. However, he is now appealing.

Earlier this month, using a controversial tactic of slow-motion video presentation, the defense was somehow able to convince a jury that Gomez actually “feared for his safety.”

The defense broke the video down, frame by frame, and used cherry-picked images to sway the jury into believing their ridiculous self-defense stance.

Sadly, the jury was eventually convinced.

What do you think? Watch the graphic video below and tell us in the comments if you think Gomez’s safety was ever in danger.

(link includes video)

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-refused-confess-crime-commit-cop-chains-wall-beats-him-gouges-eyes/


Additional articles with more detail:

http://www.jsonline.com/watchdog/watchdogreports/officer-charged-with-felony-seeks-disability-pay-b99132617z1-230445001.html

http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/milwaukee-police-department-fires-officer-rodolfo-gomez-jr-b99156625z1-234456521.html

http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/jury-acquits-fired-milwaukee-cop-in-suspect-beating-case-b99444390z1-291897721.html


Turd of a human being
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 24, 2015, 11:52:08 AM
Surely the old woman must have "assumed a combative stance" and the officer "feared for his life". At least she wasn't shot.

Cop Brutally Attacks 78-Year-Old Grandma For Delivering Cupcakes To Her Grandchildren

By John Vibes on February 24, 2015

Fresno, California – 78-year-old grandmother Mary Poole was brutally assaulted and pepper-sprayed by a police officer when she attempted to deliver cupcakes to her grandchildren at school.

The children’s parents are in the midst of a divorce and custody battle, so Mary wanted to do something nice for the children. She decided to deliver a gift in a neutral setting.

“I hadn’t seen my granddaughters for some time and I wanted to see them, and so I baked some cupcakes and bought some cookies for my granddaughters’ classroom,” Mary said.

When she arrived at the school she was met by a rude Clovis Unified police officer who told her that she was not allowed to visit the children because there was a restraining order against her. In reality, there was no restraining order against her and no legal reason to keep her out of the school. The officer was either lying or was totally mistaken about the situation.

Mary obeyed the officer and left the school. She then pulled over to call her son and tell him what happened. While she was on the phone, she was again approached by the officer who became immediately confrontational. As with most police encounters, he refused to hear any explanation that she attempted to give him, but instead demanded immediate obedience.

When she tried to explain her situation, the officer became violent with her. Next he pepper-sprayed the woman in the face twice during the confrontation, as she was struggling to free herself from the attack. The officer must have seen her struggling for safety as a sign of resistance.

“He wouldn’t listen to anything I had to say, period. Every time I tried telling him anything…I mean, I was even telling him, ‘I’m 78 years old,’ before he grabbed me. He sprayed me with mace twice,” Mary told reporters.

“And I was very frightened, and I told him to call the police and he said, ‘I am the police. He jerked me out of my car with my left arm with such great force, and then threw me onto the pavement. From there he dragged me by my left arm up to the school grounds,” she said.

The officer’s attack left Mary seriously injured with several broken bones and a dislocated shoulder.

When all was said and done Mary was taken to the hospital and left with more than $180,000 in medical bills.

Mary Poole filed a lawsuit this week, alleging police brutality and elderly abuse.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/78-year-old-brutally-attacked-police-delivering-cupcakes-grandchildren/

http://abc30.com/news/grandma-claims-officer-manhandled-her-in-front-of-clovis-unified-school/531845/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on February 27, 2015, 12:53:26 PM
Surely the old woman must have "assumed a combative stance" and the officer "feared for his life". At least she wasn't shot.

Cop Brutally Attacks 78-Year-Old Grandma For Delivering Cupcakes To Her Grandchildren

By John Vibes on February 24, 2015

Fresno, California – 78-year-old grandmother Mary Poole was brutally assaulted and pepper-sprayed by a police officer when she attempted to deliver cupcakes to her grandchildren at school.

The children’s parents are in the midst of a divorce and custody battle, so Mary wanted to do something nice for the children. She decided to deliver a gift in a neutral setting.

“I hadn’t seen my granddaughters for some time and I wanted to see them, and so I baked some cupcakes and bought some cookies for my granddaughters’ classroom,” Mary said.

When she arrived at the school she was met by a rude Clovis Unified police officer who told her that she was not allowed to visit the children because there was a restraining order against her. In reality, there was no restraining order against her and no legal reason to keep her out of the school. The officer was either lying or was totally mistaken about the situation.

Mary obeyed the officer and left the school. She then pulled over to call her son and tell him what happened. While she was on the phone, she was again approached by the officer who became immediately confrontational. As with most police encounters, he refused to hear any explanation that she attempted to give him, but instead demanded immediate obedience.

When she tried to explain her situation, the officer became violent with her. Next he pepper-sprayed the woman in the face twice during the confrontation, as she was struggling to free herself from the attack. The officer must have seen her struggling for safety as a sign of resistance.

“He wouldn’t listen to anything I had to say, period. Every time I tried telling him anything…I mean, I was even telling him, ‘I’m 78 years old,’ before he grabbed me. He sprayed me with mace twice,” Mary told reporters.

“And I was very frightened, and I told him to call the police and he said, ‘I am the police. He jerked me out of my car with my left arm with such great force, and then threw me onto the pavement. From there he dragged me by my left arm up to the school grounds,” she said.

The officer’s attack left Mary seriously injured with several broken bones and a dislocated shoulder.

When all was said and done Mary was taken to the hospital and left with more than $180,000 in medical bills.

Mary Poole filed a lawsuit this week, alleging police brutality and elderly abuse.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/78-year-old-brutally-attacked-police-delivering-cupcakes-grandchildren/

http://abc30.com/news/grandma-claims-officer-manhandled-her-in-front-of-clovis-unified-school/531845/

Not a biased article at all...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2015, 08:56:15 PM
Not a biased article at all...

It is a sweeping generalization that's why I provided an additional link to the ABC30 story. Haven't found any updated articles yet.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2015, 11:57:29 PM
4 days...

Denver cop's body cam captures excessive force; Officer Chad Sinnema serves 4-day suspension

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/denver-cops-body-cam-captures-excessive-force-officer-chad-sinnema-serves-4-day-suspension03122015
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2015, 10:00:35 AM
As sad as this case is, the mother should have thought better before calling the cops.

Family releases video of Dallas police fatal shooting of mental patient



http://crimeblog.dallasnews.com/2015/03/family-releases-video-of-dallas-police-fatal-shooting-of-mental-patient.html/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2015, 07:37:36 PM
Terrorizing Cop Points Gun At Innocent Man’s Head And Says “We Shoot People”

Bowie, Maryland – Police officer Jenchesky Santiago was indicted last week for holding his gun to an innocent man’s head and threatening to shoot him.

Santiago was charged with first-degree assault and misconduct in office. He has been suspended since last June when the incident was reported, but has still been collecting a paycheck the entire time.

Prosecutors say that last May, Santiago approached two young men who were minding their own business and told them that they were illegally parked. However, the car was not illegally parked and one of the occupants actually lived at the home that the car was parked.

When one of the men attempted to enter his house, officer Santiago reportedly grabbed the man and held a gun to his head, threatening to shoot.

According to prosecutors (http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/police-officer-charged-holding-gun-mans-head-29787181#.VQyD2_c28dc.twitter), Santiago told the men, “We’re PGPD; we shoot people.”

Much of the encounter was actually recorded by the driver of the car, but the video has not been released.

“We do not train our officers in this manner. These actions are not indicative of the high standards we expect of our officers.” Prince George’s County police chief Mark Magaw said in a statement.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-indicted-pointing-gun-innocent-mans-head-threatening/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2015, 07:17:37 PM
Federal Charge for Ex-Cop in Confrontation With Indian Man

 A former Alabama police officer has been charged with violating the civil rights of an Indian man who was injured during a violent confrontation in February, authorities said Friday.

Former Madison police officer Eric Sloan Parker is charged with using unreasonable force that left Sureshbhai Patel hospitalized. He was slammed face-first to the ground in the confrontation, which was captured on video.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/federal-charge-cop-confrontation-indian-man-29953713
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2015, 12:38:00 PM
Female Cop Sucker Punches Handcuffed Man in the Face for No Reason, Fellow Cops Do Nothing

Toledo, OH — Police in Toledo will have a hard time building the trust of their citizens after a cellphone video showed one of their officers assaulting a handcuffed man.

“Police brutality captured at its finest,” said Brad Bollinger, the man who filmed this flagrant assault last week.

The man being punched in the face by the officer is 20-year-old Raymond Rober. Police were serving him with an arrest warrant, and he initially ran. However, he eventually stopped and allowed police to arrest him.

He was in handcuffs and cooperating with officers when out of nowhere, a female officer walks up to him and punches him.

“As he leans his head down, he’s adjusting the handcuffs on the back of him because they’re probably uncomfortable, and the lady officer strikes him in the side of the head,” says Bollinger. “It’s a coward move. It’s a thing of complete power. She knows that she has him, and he has nowhere to go, so she took complete advantage of it. It’s a sucker move.”

“It seems to me, based on the other officer’s conduct, he didn’t do something that justified being hit in any capacity,” Phil Stinson, a criminologist at Bowling Green State University, told ABC 13 News. “Certainly not while being handcuffed.”

After he had been punched in the face, Rober was then booked into Lucas County Jail on multiple charges, including resisting arrest.

Notice in the video below that not one of the officers around the man attempted to stop the other officer’s assault.

Police have not released the officer’s name and refuse to comment after they watched the video, stating only that the department has launched an investigation.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/female-cop-sucker-punches-handcuffed-man-face-reason-fellow-cops/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 29, 2015, 12:49:03 PM
and he's such a good citizen and a roll model for the children in the neighborhood ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2015, 12:56:24 PM
and he's such a good citizen and a roll model for the children in the neighborhood ::)

That is irrelevant, he was arrested and will go to court for all the charges. There was no reason or justification for the actions of the female cop and she must be held accountable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on March 29, 2015, 02:15:39 PM
and he's such a good citizen and a roll model for the children in the neighborhood ::)

I dont give a fuck if the guy just robbed a bank.   He's in cuffs, he's going to be charged and imprisoned for his crime.

Punching him in the head, while in custody, is fucking assault.  That shitbag cop deserves prison, and the cops that 'saw no evil' deserve to be charged with aiding and abetting for not reporting her ass.

The MINUTE they start firing/prosecuting cops for that blue wall shit, the minute it stops. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on March 29, 2015, 02:17:11 PM
and he's such a good citizen and a roll model for the children in the neighborhood ::)

that's republican talk right there lol.   "Cops should be allowed to beat an unarmed, detained suspect because that persn is a bg of shit"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 30, 2015, 08:11:19 AM
that's republican talk right there lol.   "Cops should be allowed to beat an unarmed, detained suspect because that persn is a bg of shit"

I have no sympathy for trash  ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on March 30, 2015, 08:57:08 AM
I have no sympathy for trash  ;)

the constitution of the usa protects the trash and non-trash alike... we're all americans. 

and who defines trash?  ya gonna trust a hillbilly cop with a GED to decide which americans need beaten and which are cool?  lol
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on March 30, 2015, 10:19:45 AM
lol trash filming trash,you can't beat it  :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 02, 2015, 03:20:02 PM
NYPDs finest.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2015, 11:20:07 AM
Cop Who Raped Woman During Traffic Stop, Shot By Woman. Police Say Incidents are Related

San Antonio, TX — Officer Jackie Neal of the San Antonio PD, has been on paid vacation for the last year and a half for accusations of crimes that his chief referred to as “unthinkable.” After evidence linked him to this vile crime, he’s still been receiving his over-deserved salary of $62,556.00.

Neal, 40, was in full uniform, in a marked squad car and on-duty when he made a traffic stop on a Friday morning in November of 2013. He then proceeded to sexually assault a 19-year-old woman, according to the San Antonio Police Department.

He forced the young woman to bend over, with her face in the rear seat of the police car. He pulled her pants and underwear down to her ankles and sexually assaulted her, according to the complaint. At that point, Neal admonished her that if she told anyone, he would know where to find her and drove off, leaving her standing there.

hursday night, Neal was shot in the neck by an unnamed female assailant. He is currently in critical condition.

While the name of the woman in custody has not yet been released, police suggested that the incident was linked to the earlier rape allegations, says News4SanAntonio.

The shooting happened at Neal’s home in the 9100 block of Arroyo Hondo in Helotes, Texas. Police were called to the scene shortly after 7 pm on Thursday and found Neal with a bullet wound in his neck.

In January of last year, the woman claiming to be raped by Neal filed a $10 million lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in San Antonio. She named the Neal, Police Chief William McManus and the city as defendants.

According to the complaint, Neal had been suspended for three days in September, stemming from “a morally reprehensible and inappropriate” relationship with a female high school student enrolled in the Police Explorer Program. Neal was an advisor to the program in which students learn about police work, according to the Houston Chronicle.

The complaint alleged that Neal had sexual relations with the girl, who was an 18-year-old high school senior when the relationship ended in February 2013.

Judging from the past allegations against Neal, the shooter could have been any number of former female victims.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-raped-woman-traffic-stop-shot-woman-police-incidents-related/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 04, 2015, 04:09:32 PM
Cop Who Raped Woman During Traffic Stop, Shot By Woman. Police Say Incidents are Related

San Antonio, TX — Officer Jackie Neal of the San Antonio PD, has been on paid vacation for the last year and a half for accusations of crimes that his chief referred to as “unthinkable.” After evidence linked him to this vile crime, he’s still been receiving his over-deserved salary of $62,556.00.

Neal, 40, was in full uniform, in a marked squad car and on-duty when he made a traffic stop on a Friday morning in November of 2013. He then proceeded to sexually assault a 19-year-old woman, according to the San Antonio Police Department.

He forced the young woman to bend over, with her face in the rear seat of the police car. He pulled her pants and underwear down to her ankles and sexually assaulted her, according to the complaint. At that point, Neal admonished her that if she told anyone, he would know where to find her and drove off, leaving her standing there.

hursday night, Neal was shot in the neck by an unnamed female assailant. He is currently in critical condition.

While the name of the woman in custody has not yet been released, police suggested that the incident was linked to the earlier rape allegations, says News4SanAntonio.

The shooting happened at Neal’s home in the 9100 block of Arroyo Hondo in Helotes, Texas. Police were called to the scene shortly after 7 pm on Thursday and found Neal with a bullet wound in his neck.

In January of last year, the woman claiming to be raped by Neal filed a $10 million lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in San Antonio. She named the Neal, Police Chief William McManus and the city as defendants.

According to the complaint, Neal had been suspended for three days in September, stemming from “a morally reprehensible and inappropriate” relationship with a female high school student enrolled in the Police Explorer Program. Neal was an advisor to the program in which students learn about police work, according to the Houston Chronicle.

The complaint alleged that Neal had sexual relations with the girl, who was an 18-year-old high school senior when the relationship ended in February 2013.

Judging from the past allegations against Neal, the shooter could have been any number of former female victims.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-raped-woman-traffic-stop-shot-woman-police-incidents-related/

It's a shame she missed
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 04, 2015, 04:49:35 PM
and he's such a good citizen and a roll model for the children in the neighborhood ::)













No maybe not.

And the police women is such a Good Role Model.

Why does it take Police department so long to Arrest & charge her for Assault.
They have the Video Evidence.

Do they always have an inquiry before arresting some one.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 05, 2015, 02:55:32 AM
A 73-year old cop accidentally uses his handgun instead of his taser and killed the suspect. The suspect was a scumbag but that's not relevant. Police officers claimed he was reaching in his waist - alas, no weapon was found.

http://www.nola.com/crime/index.ssf/2015/04/oklahoma_cop_mistakenly_pulls.html (http://www.nola.com/crime/index.ssf/2015/04/oklahoma_cop_mistakenly_pulls.html)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 06, 2015, 12:14:44 AM
Cop 'can't remember' climbing on car hood and firing last 15 shots of 137-bullet barrage that killed unarmed couple
(even though his footprints were found and his colleague says they talked about it)

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3026549/Indicted-cop-recall-shooting-suspects-hood-car.html


I-Team: New arguments over police silence in Brelo case

http://fox8.com/2015/04/03/i-team-new-arguments-over-police-silence-in-brelo-case/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 08, 2015, 02:33:47 PM
North Charleston video:









I'm sure Blacken's ok with this cop killing the guy since he was black and had a rap sheet.




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 08, 2015, 02:36:55 PM
North Charleston video:









I'm sure Blacken's ok with this cop killing the guy since he was black and had a rap sheet.






Clear case of a bad shooting if ever I saw one..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 08, 2015, 04:23:01 PM
Cop 'can't remember' climbing on car hood and firing last 15 shots of 137-bullet barrage that killed unarmed couple
(even though his footprints were found and his colleague says they talked about it)

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3026549/Indicted-cop-recall-shooting-suspects-hood-car.html


I-Team: New arguments over police silence in Brelo case

http://fox8.com/2015/04/03/i-team-new-arguments-over-police-silence-in-brelo-case/

















137 shots fired in Total.  :o
And a Police man Climbed up on the Roof of the Car & Fired 15 of those Bullets
After his Buddies Had Stopped I Presume.
I Take It He Wasn't In Fear Of His Life Then.

Well Not From The 2 Black People in The Car As They Were Unarmed.
I Pressume They Were Both Total Scumbags & Deserved To Killed.

And a Trigger Happy Mentality Does Not Exits.
People are just Making This Up To Bash / Hate Cop. ???
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 08, 2015, 04:56:00 PM
Clear case of a bad shooting if ever I saw one..

that guy wasn't running fast enough to catch a cold.   Cop would have been able to catch him pretty easily.  Heck, the runner looked winded when the bullets started striking him anyway.

Cop was angry and was punishing the fck out this this idiot that decided to run.  I read on getbig the cop's wife was 8 months preggo.  Let's see, angry cop, not getting laid, and just blows up on a guy when the taser doesn't get the results he wants.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 08, 2015, 05:06:42 PM
North Charleston video:









I'm sure Blacken's ok with this cop killing the guy since he was black and had a rap sheet.






just like I'm sure you'll judge all cops by this one cops action :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 08, 2015, 09:09:32 PM
just like I'm sure you'll judge all cops by this one cops action :D

No need to use this one cop's action. There's plenty of other cops abusing their power that we can use.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 09, 2015, 04:23:21 AM
No need to use this one cop's action. There's plenty of other cops abusing their power that we can use.

so out of all the daily interactions with people tell us how many  cops are abusing  their power,i think you'll find it very small
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 09, 2015, 08:38:58 AM
so out of all the daily interactions with people tell us how many  cops are abusing  their power,i think you'll find it very small

would you stop with the common sense stuff please?!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 09, 2015, 08:57:03 AM
With luck we'll have the cops under constant scrutiny soon (sort of like what's been wrongly happening to us, the once-private citizen), and only then will we have an idea how to answer that question.

I've personally met many fine individuals that happened to be cops, so they do exist. But I will tell you without question that a culture of corruption exists in law-enforcement organizations all over this country. And as long as it exists, period, it is a huge problem.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 09, 2015, 09:28:14 AM
this always comes up about filming cops.. some good tips.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 09, 2015, 04:30:30 PM
so out of all the daily interactions with people tell us how many  cops are abusing  their power,i think you'll find it very small



I think most of us have agreed with that.  It's the trend that I've repeatedly noted is concerning.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 09, 2015, 04:32:50 PM
With luck we'll have the cops under constant scrutiny soon (sort of like what's been wrongly happening to us, the once-private citizen), and only then will we have an idea how to answer that question.

I've personally met many fine individuals that happened to be cops, so they do exist. But I will tell you without question that a culture of corruption exists in law-enforcement organizations all over this country. And as long as it exists, period, it is a huge problem.



I have no doubt, that had this not been on tape, nothing would have happened to this cop - even with the witness.  No doubt.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 09, 2015, 04:59:28 PM


I think most of us have agreed with that.  It's the trend that I've repeatedly noted is concerning.



i don't know if it's happening more or maybe because just about everyone has a video camera with them(cell phone)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on April 09, 2015, 06:12:37 PM
i don't know if it's happening more or maybe because just about everyone has a video camera with them(cell phone)

I suspect it is that latter. A now retired friend of mine, was a Portland police officer. When he was still a newbie on the force he liked to brag about harassing people just because he could. Being a police office can be a power trip. Despite all the psychological testing these folks go through before they become officers of the law, some nut jobs slip through. As far as I know, my friend never killed a suspect.

These days, a person can't pick their nose without risking it being videotaped. One would have to be a little out of control to think they would get away with killing someone, especially in public.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 10, 2015, 01:13:29 AM
so out of all the daily interactions with people tell us how many  cops are abusing  their power,i think you'll find it very small

There's degrees of abuse - someone need not shoot an unarmed man in the back before attempting to plant evidence. The reality is that most cops have, at some point, abused their power in some capacity. Even if we ignore trivial abuses of power (and we shouldn't) the reality is that power-tripping cops are plentiful, very often in glorious video. Here's another case: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/california-officers-pummel-man-repeatedly-after-chase-stolen-horse-n338881

But you don't worry about objective facts of reality... you want to play a game - and let's be clear, that's all asking for a percentage is. You think it will stump me, alas you're wrong. I simply won't take the approach you think I will. Instead I"ll argue that even if the percentage is very small, the sheer number of police encounters ensures that the number of people who will come to face with a copy abusing their power is not negligible.


would you stop with the common sense stuff please?!

Common sense? Funny. That is an attribute a lot people in your profession seem to lack.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 10, 2015, 05:00:15 AM
There's degrees of abuse - someone need not shoot an unarmed man in the back before attempting to plant evidence. The reality is that most cops have, at some point, abused their power in some capacity. Even if we ignore trivial abuses of power (and we shouldn't) the reality is that power-tripping cops are plentiful, very often in glorious video. Here's another case: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/california-officers-pummel-man-repeatedly-after-chase-stolen-horse-n338881

But you don't worry about objective facts of reality... you want to play a game - and let's be clear, that's all asking for a percentage is. You think it will stump me, alas you're wrong. I simply won't take the approach you think I will. Instead I"ll argue that even if the percentage is very small, the sheer number of police encounters ensures that the number of people who will come to face with a copy abusing their power is not negligible.


Common sense? Funny. That is an attribute a lot people in your profession seem to lack.


most of the people I find that have a problem with  the police are usually low lives or trash
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 10, 2015, 05:19:06 AM

most of the people I find that have a problem with  the police are usually low lives or trash
well if you know these people you must move in these circles?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 10, 2015, 05:27:03 AM
well if you know these people you must move in these circles?

you don't have to know or interact with people to see and hear shit
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 10, 2015, 05:33:10 AM
you don't have to know or interact with people to see and hear shit
Mate, this is not police hate just the few Individuals who give the good officers a bad rep. you also can´t call any critical person a piece of trash. Look at some of the videos...FFS ::)  You could be on the receiving end of an asshole Officer yourself.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 10, 2015, 05:49:45 AM
Mate, this is not police hate just the few Individuals who give the good officers a bad rep. you also can´t call any critical person a piece of trash. Look at some of the videos...FFS ::)  You could be on the receiving end of an asshole Officer yourself.

you and I agree just a few individuals,my comment is for the ones on here who think it's a wide spread problem,i didn't say they are all trash I said most
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 10, 2015, 05:58:03 AM
you and I agree just a few individuals,my comment is for the ones on here who think it's a wide spread problem,i didn't say they are all trash I said most
yes but a few Individuals in each state across the US gives an alarming amount of Unprofessional Officers. Now i wrote before i think there should be 1/2 Academies in the US to teach a set standard.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 10, 2015, 06:17:15 AM
Great posts in here, Donny. Will look today at the vid you posted.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 10, 2015, 06:22:16 AM
Great posts in here, Donny. Will look today at the vid you posted.
cheers Jack
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 10, 2015, 08:46:52 AM
most of the people I find that have a problem with  the police are usually low lives or trash

Which is, at best, anecdotal evidence. Perhaps those are the types of people you find because those are the types of people you associate yourself with. Get back to me when you have something a bit more solid.


you and I agree just a few individuals,my comment is for the ones on here who think it's a wide spread problem,i didn't say they are all trash I said most

Except that the evidence suggests that it's not just a few individuals. The evidence suggests that most abuse their authority, albeit to varying degrees. It's wrong to ignore some of abuse because it doesn't result in someone being beaten to within an inch of their life or outright killed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2015, 10:08:32 AM
i don't know if it's happening more or maybe because just about everyone has a video camera with them(cell phone)

bingo
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 10, 2015, 12:53:49 PM
bingo

Are you suggesting it's ok if it's there's no video?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 10, 2015, 02:15:31 PM
bingo













Is The Abuse of Power / Job okay in your Book.?
Or Should those With The Authority Of Law Enforcement
Be Held To Zero Tolerance.
And a Higher Standard of Professional Behaviour.
Or Do We Continually Overlook & Make Excuses.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on April 10, 2015, 03:35:58 PM
Are you suggesting it's ok if it's there's no video?

-Certainly hope not.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 10, 2015, 04:24:31 PM
.


Except that the evidence suggests that it's not just a few individuals. The evidence suggests that most abuse their authority, albeit to varying degrees. It's wrong to ignore some of abuse because it doesn't result in someone being beaten to within an inch of their life or outright killed.
[/quote]

Which is, at best, anecdotal evidence. . Get back to me when you have something a bit more solid.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on April 10, 2015, 04:42:42 PM
North Charleston video:









I'm sure Blacken's ok with this cop killing the guy since he was black and had a rap sheet.






That looks like a straight up execution. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 10, 2015, 04:42:46 PM
i don't know if it's happening more or maybe because just about everyone has a video camera with them(cell phone)


But that really just means there's been a lot of underlying abuse going on where the cops haven't been caught.

So whether it's trending up, or just being exposed, it's extremely problematic.  And, in terms of militarization of the police, I think it's all but a foregone conclusion that that is on the increase.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 10, 2015, 04:45:47 PM
There's degrees of abuse - someone need not shoot an unarmed man in the back before attempting to plant evidence. The reality is that most cops have, at some point, abused their power in some capacity. Even if we ignore trivial abuses of power (and we shouldn't) the reality is that power-tripping cops are plentiful, very often in glorious video. Here's another case: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/california-officers-pummel-man-repeatedly-after-chase-stolen-horse-n338881

But you don't worry about objective facts of reality... you want to play a game - and let's be clear, that's all asking for a percentage is. You think it will stump me, alas you're wrong. I simply won't take the approach you think I will. Instead I"ll argue that even if the percentage is very small, the sheer number of police encounters ensures that the number of people who will come to face with a copy abusing their power is not negligible.


Common sense? Funny. That is an attribute a lot people in your profession seem to lack.



This case already has all the markers of the sheriff trying to cover shit up and protect these officers at all costs.  Anytime we hear shit like 'I've called for an investigation', you know it's code for cover up.  Otherwise, just like Slager, they would move quick and decisively.

Of course, out in CA the cops can shoot up a truck with 2 women, claim they were scared it might have been a big black man, and get cleared by the DA's, police departments, and courts.  Unfuckingreal.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 10, 2015, 06:24:30 PM


I have no doubt, that had this not been on tape, nothing would have happened to this cop - even with the witness.  No doubt.



I haven't closely followed, but without the vid he would have most likely had a much better chance of getting out of it. And you can bet he would have taken every inch toward doing that.

Can't believe the bullshit on the news, fuck. I saw the indroduction to the story this morning saying "WHITE!!! officer shoots BLACK!!! man..."

There's absolutely nothing to say this cop wouldn't have shot any other person just the same. So why try to fuck with peoples' minds like that? Hm.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2015, 08:33:56 PM
I haven't closely followed, but without the vid he would have most likely had a much better chance of getting out of it. And you can bet he would have taken every inch toward doing that.

Can't believe the bullshit on the news, fuck. I saw the indroduction to the story this morning saying "WHITE!!! officer shoots BLACK!!! man..."

There's absolutely nothing to say this cop wouldn't have shot any other person just the same. So why try to fuck with peoples' minds like that? Hm.

Couldn't agree more..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2015, 08:36:04 PM
Are you suggesting it's ok if it's there's no video?

No, I'm agreeing that it is not a matter of an increase.. it's a matter of more recording devices, more interest from media. I am PRO video. Get it on tape. Should be nothing to hide. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2015, 08:36:58 PM
That looks like a straight up execution. 

\Pretty much it does..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 10, 2015, 11:09:10 PM

Is The Abuse of Power / Job okay in your Book.?
Or Should those With The Authority Of Law Enforcement
Be Held To Zero Tolerance.
And a Higher Standard of Professional Behaviour.
Or Do We Continually Overlook & Make Excuses.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 11, 2015, 01:09:32 AM
Without a video, this definitely goes down as a CLEAN SHOOT.

The cop gets a medal.  The taser is found next to body.  Cop says they were only a few feet apart.  Ballistics backs up everything and voila, bad guys goes in the ground, and cop gets a promotion for showing bravery when needed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 11, 2015, 01:17:46 AM
Without a video, this definitely goes down as a CLEAN SHOOT.

The cop gets a medal.  The taser is found next to body.  Cop says they were only a few feet apart.  Ballistics backs up everything and voila, bad guys goes in the ground, and cop gets a promotion for showing bravery when needed.
yes and round the Dinner table that evening he tells his loved ones how daddy was a brave man on that day...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2015, 09:10:31 AM


No, it's not ok
Held to a higher standard and not overlook and make excuses.

The reality is.. you and I can look at a video (as we have) and because of different experiences, conclude it was proper or improper. The problem is, there is a group who will claim that is making excuses when it is not. But in general, yes. The current Slagel Scott incident.. dude straight up acted improper and should be held accountable. Dudes kicking the guy who stole the horse, no excuse, straight up abuse, fire them and hold them accountable

It's when my opinion varies from yours that I get accused of making excuses and covering up that I have the problem with. Not saying you specifically but in general.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2015, 09:15:31 AM
yes and round the Dinner table that evening he tells his loved ones how daddy was a brave man on that day...

He may have Donny.. I know about 5 officers personally that have had to shoot someone. You would be surprised to know that's not their response. They don't beat their chest, they don't re-tell the story a choir practice as the rookies look upon them wide eyed. They do meet as a group on ocassion and talk about it with a counselor present to help them through it. They also meet with other officers that are involved in shootings to help them through the process... That's the reality of it for the most part.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 11, 2015, 09:27:51 AM
He may have Donny.. I know about 5 officers personally that have had to shoot someone. You would be surprised to know that's not their response. They don't beat their chest, they don't re-tell the story a choir practice as the rookies look upon them wide eyed. They do meet as a group on ocassion and talk about it with a counselor present to help them through it. They also meet with other officers that are involved in shootings to help them through the process... That's the reality of it for the most part.
I think that Guys like you should be teaching in a Central Academy. You say your opinion but are a fair man.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2015, 09:36:22 AM
I think that Guys like you should be teaching in a Central Academy. You say your opinion but are a fair man.

Donny, a central academy is a cool concept. But with airfare, lodging for 6 months, being away from home reducing the number applicants willing to do it.. it just isnt realistic. It's cost prohibitive to say the least. There is an Accreditation that departments can seek. CALEA which standardizes procedures.

And thanks for the compliment. I try to work at being fair.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 11, 2015, 09:48:52 AM
Donny, a central academy is a cool concept. But with airfare, lodging for 6 months, being away from home reducing the number applicants willing to do it.. it just isnt realistic. It's cost prohibitive to say the least. There is an Accreditation that departments can seek. CALEA which standardizes procedures.

And thanks for the compliment. I try to work at being fair.
You come over as an experienced Officer, Sgt i think. Maybe 2 Academies .. to make it more accessible  but you know better than me about the inner workings there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 11, 2015, 01:08:28 PM
No, it's not ok
Held to a higher standard and not overlook and make excuses.

The reality is.. you and I can look at a video (as we have) and because of different experiences, conclude it was proper or improper. The problem is, there is a group who will claim that is making excuses when it is not. But in general, yes. The current Slagel Scott incident.. dude straight up acted improper and should be held accountable. Dudes kicking the guy who stole the horse, no excuse, straight up abuse, fire them and hold them accountable

It's when my opinion varies from yours that I get accused of making excuses and covering up that I have the problem with. Not saying you specifically but in general.
























 :o Thanks some straight answers.
No issue with you having differing view point.
It's the Politically Correct whitewash none straight
Answers that I dislike, they seem evasive & as
Trying to cover or justify.

And as for accusations
you have accused me of being a cop hater
& having authority problems.

I do intensely dislike scumbags be they cops or not.
More so those that abuse there position of authority.
As I would think all right minded people do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2015, 01:17:26 PM
You come over as an experienced Officer, Sgt i think. Maybe 2 Academies .. to make it more accessible  but you know better than me about the inner workings there.

It would just be impossible due to logistics and cost. Plus, after the initial Academy, (ours runs about 7 months long) we have annual on-going training. I think there is a concerted effort to standardize training simply due to best practices. International Association of Chiefs or Police and P.E.R.F. meet and exchange ideas.. people are coming to our city to see how we handle protests as we have a pretty good system. We learn District Rep techniques from Ft. Worth or Seattle. Ultimately we should all be training with the latest information. Again, funding is a big part of it all. Generally speaking, we all have access to the same Supreme Court rulings and case law updates. No one trains warning shots anymore, it's all pretty much the same. I could go to almost any department tomorrow and handle calls. The difference would be their report writing system, procedures for booking etc. But use of force will be almost the same.

Back when I think it was Katrina hit and Houston was having issues, we sent a deployment of about 50 cops to Houston to help out. There were no real problems adapting to the city and patroling. APD rode in a squad car with a HPD. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Donny on April 11, 2015, 01:40:19 PM
It would just be impossible due to logistics and cost. Plus, after the initial Academy, (ours runs about 7 months long) we have annual on-going training. I think there is a concerted effort to standardize training simply due to best practices. International Association of Chiefs or Police and P.E.R.F. meet and exchange ideas.. people are coming to our city to see how we handle protests as we have a pretty good system. We learn District Rep techniques from Ft. Worth or Seattle. Ultimately we should all be training with the latest information. Again, funding is a big part of it all. Generally speaking, we all have access to the same Supreme Court rulings and case law updates. No one trains warning shots anymore, it's all pretty much the same. I could go to almost any department tomorrow and handle calls. The difference would be their report writing system, procedures for booking etc. But use of force will be almost the same.

Back when I think it was Katrina hit and Houston was having issues, we sent a deployment of about 50 cops to Houston to help out. There were no real problems adapting to the city and patroling. APD rode in a squad car with a HPD. 
yes it is a shame it comes down to money... that i think is the problem.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2015, 03:15:05 PM
New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez Signs Civil Forfeiture Abolition Bill

A quick and happy update from New Mexico: Gov. Susana Martinez (R) has signed HB 560, which I detailed here, into law. New Mexico has thus effectively abolished civil asset forfeiture by requiring a criminal conviction before the government can seize property.

Gov. Martinez’s statement can be read here.

    House Bill 560 (HB 560) makes numerous changes to the asset forfeiture process used by law enforcement agencies in New Mexico. As an attorney and career prosecutor, I understand how important it is that we ensure safeguards are in place to protect our constitutional rights. On balance, the changes made by this legislation improve the transparency and accountability of the forfeiture process and provide further protections to innocent property owners.

As expected, civil liberties advocates across the political spectrum cheered the move.

ACLU-NM Executive Director Peter Simonson:

    This is a good day for the Bill of Rights. For years police could seize people’s cash, cars, and houses without even accusing anyone of a crime. Today, we have ended this unfair practice in New Mexico and replaced it with a model that is just and constitutional.

Institute for Justice Legislative Counsel Lee McGrath:

    New Mexico has shown that ending policing for profit is a true bipartisan issue with broad public support. America is ready to end civil asset forfeiture, a practice which is not in line with our values or constitution. This law shows that we can be tough on crime without stripping property away from innocent Americans.

Emily Kaltenbach of the New Mexico chapter of the Drug Policy Alliance:

    New Mexico has succeeded today in reining in one of the worst excesses of the drug war. Like other drug war programs, civil asset forfeiture is disproportionately used against poor people of color who cannot afford to hire lawyers to get their property back. This law is an important step towards repairing some of the damage the drug war has inflicted upon our society and system of justice.

Civil asset forfeiture is an inherently abusive practice that provides perverse incentives to law enforcement, encourages “policing for profit,” and allows the government to take the property of individuals and businesses that are never charged with any wrongdoing. Hopefully the bipartisan spirit of the New Mexico abolition (HB 560 passed the legislature unanimously) will serve as a model for other legislatures around the country who wish to restore our cherished concepts of due process and private property to their proper status.


http://www.cato.org/blog/new-mexico-governor-susana-martinez-signs-civil-forfeiture-abolition-bill
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 11, 2015, 04:06:45 PM
Which is, at best, anecdotal evidence. . Get back to me when you have something a bit more solid.

Said the man who uses anecdotal evidence to defend positions like "everyone who gets abused by the police is low -life trash and deserves it."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 11, 2015, 04:32:47 PM
Said the man who uses anecdotal evidence to defend positions like "everyone who gets abused by the police is low -life trash and deserves it."

can you post post where i said everyone,you seem to have a problem with stretching the truth  ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 11, 2015, 05:09:52 PM
New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez Signs Civil Forfeiture Abolition Bill

A quick and happy update from New Mexico: Gov. Susana Martinez (R) has signed HB 560, which I detailed here, into law. New Mexico has thus effectively abolished civil asset forfeiture by requiring a criminal conviction before the government can seize property.

Gov. Martinez’s statement can be read here.

    House Bill 560 (HB 560) makes numerous changes to the asset forfeiture process used by law enforcement agencies in New Mexico. As an attorney and career prosecutor, I understand how important it is that we ensure safeguards are in place to protect our constitutional rights. On balance, the changes made by this legislation improve the transparency and accountability of the forfeiture process and provide further protections to innocent property owners.

As expected, civil liberties advocates across the political spectrum cheered the move.

ACLU-NM Executive Director Peter Simonson:

    This is a good day for the Bill of Rights. For years police could seize people’s cash, cars, and houses without even accusing anyone of a crime. Today, we have ended this unfair practice in New Mexico and replaced it with a model that is just and constitutional.

Institute for Justice Legislative Counsel Lee McGrath:

    New Mexico has shown that ending policing for profit is a true bipartisan issue with broad public support. America is ready to end civil asset forfeiture, a practice which is not in line with our values or constitution. This law shows that we can be tough on crime without stripping property away from innocent Americans.

Emily Kaltenbach of the New Mexico chapter of the Drug Policy Alliance:

    New Mexico has succeeded today in reining in one of the worst excesses of the drug war. Like other drug war programs, civil asset forfeiture is disproportionately used against poor people of color who cannot afford to hire lawyers to get their property back. This law is an important step towards repairing some of the damage the drug war has inflicted upon our society and system of justice.

Civil asset forfeiture is an inherently abusive practice that provides perverse incentives to law enforcement, encourages “policing for profit,” and allows the government to take the property of individuals and businesses that are never charged with any wrongdoing. Hopefully the bipartisan spirit of the New Mexico abolition (HB 560 passed the legislature unanimously) will serve as a model for other legislatures around the country who wish to restore our cherished concepts of due process and private property to their proper status.


http://www.cato.org/blog/new-mexico-governor-susana-martinez-signs-civil-forfeiture-abolition-bill













That was far too much power for cops &
Government, Stealing people's Property etc
Without any charges or court case.

Good to hear it's been brought to an end.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 12, 2015, 02:42:32 PM
can you post post where i said everyone,you seem to have a problem stretching the truth  ;)

You suggested that someone who had previous run-ins with the law and recorded an interaction between police and a third party was trash as if somehow that made what the police were doing is ok.

So cut the crap.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 12, 2015, 03:05:59 PM
You suggested that someone who had previous run-ins with the law and recorded an interaction between police and a third party was trash as if somehow that made what the police were doing is ok.

So cut the crap.

and you said i said everyone which i never did,so cut the crap
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 12, 2015, 03:10:49 PM


Except that the evidence suggests that it's not just a few individuals. The evidence suggests that most abuse their authority, albeit to varying degrees. It's wrong to ignore some of abuse because it doesn't result in someone being beaten to within an inch of their life or outright killed.
[/quote]

link to where it says most police abuse their authority
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 13, 2015, 02:26:41 PM
http://watchdog.org/211545/no-liability-for-judge/

I need a lawyer to explain this shit.

A judge can make up a charge, have you put away, and they are completely protected?

WTF




========================

Federal court: no liability for PA judge who made up criminal charge

PITTSBURGH — A federal court recently told a Lawrence County woman she’s simply out of luck and can’t sue local officials, including a Common Pleas judge who apparently made up a criminal charge that was used to place her on electronic monitoring.

Shutterstock image

Shutterstock image

DENIED: The Third Circuit said that a Lawrence County woman can’t sue the judge who used a seemingly-made-up charge in her case.

A judge has absolute civil immunity, even if the action “was in error, was done maliciously, or was in excess of his authority,” the three-judge panel ruled in its six-page opinion.

Judge Thomas Piccione had ordered Lynn Van Tassel to report to jail after she didn’t pay her ex-husband’s attorney’s fees as ordered — even though she was appealing that order. He sentenced her to 90 days in jail and had her arrested on a bench warrant.

He then put a criminal charge in the system to place her on electronic monitoring. Van Tassel had never been charged with anything, much less had a trial or been convicted. And the law the judge used clearly describes what it’s for, and there’s certainly no mention of using it to collect attorney fees.

Van Tassel was almost fired for being absent without leave from work because she was in jail and the criminal charge she could provide no paperwork for, because that process hadn’t occurred in any real-world way.

But there’s no remedy for Van Tassel.

Like a bad April Fool’s Day joke, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit officially agreed April 1 with the district court’s tossing of the case.

Van Tassel had sued the judge, the chief probation officer, the jail warden, a state trooper and the district attorney for violating a variety of her constitutional rights.

Photo courtesy of EllwoodCity.org

Photo courtesy of EllwoodCity.org

JUDGE AS COLLECTION AGENCY? Lawrence County Court of Common Pleas Judge Thomas Piccione appears to have used an irrelevant law to enforce collection of attorney’s fees against a local woman, in favor of an attorney who’s now partner with his former partner.

Instead of filing something in her existing case file, the court used a miscellaneous docket, listing a charge that looks like it could be relevant. It’s described as “contempt for violation of order or agreement.” That law deals with “indirect criminal contempt,” and under that section a judge certainly can fine and jail someone.

But there’s a problem — or looks like there should be. That law is in a chapter titled “Protection from Abuse,” and the law Van Tassel is made to look like she violated distinctly talks about protection from abuse orders.

There is no PFA in Van Tassel’s case, however, that she could have violated. While that law does discuss fines, they are to go to specific agencies — there’s nothing about “fines” to pay someone else’s attorney’s fees. Additionally, James Manolis is a partner with Piccione’s former partner. It was Manolis’ fees that Van Tassel didn’t promptly pay, resulting in jail time.

Van Tassel was jailed for six days before there was any hearing, though state law seems to require one within three.

Van Tassel was on electronic monitoring for a little over a month, paying $750 for that, and Manolis told Watchdog.org on Friday the attorney’s fees totaled more than $10,000 after Van Tassel’s appeals.

The federal court was not concerned the court seems to have made up its own procedure to use electronic monitoring in civil cases, here to essentially play collection agency for an attorney.

When Watchdog asked Piccione for comment, his secretary returned the call, saying only “he is not able to comment on cases.”

There are other remedies for alleged judicial misconduct — in theory. Van Tassel could file a complaint with the Judicial Conduct Board of Pennsylvania or try to have Piccone prosecuted for any false swearing involved with filing that charge.

She tried both and got nowhere. The Judicial Conduct Board denied her complaint, and she said the attorney general’s office, weirdly, referred her to the consumer complaint department.


Longtime Pennsylvania lawyer Charles Steele confirmed to Watchdog, “Suing a judge is almost impossible.”

It’s a matter of public policy. Otherwise, “you open the floodgates for every frustrated party,” he said, “though that doesn’t mean that judges don’t abuse their positions.”

One of the landmark cases on judicial immunity is Stump v. Sparkman, in 1978. The U.S. Supreme Court said even that judge couldn’t be sued — even though he approved a mother’s petition for authority to sterilize her “somewhat retarded” 15-year-old daughter who was perhaps having sex with boys older than her or young men, “in order ‘to prevent unfortunate circumstances.’”

The judge approved the petition the same day, without filing with the clerk and without any sort of hearing. The daughter was told she was having her appendix removed and didn’t find out about the forced sterilization until she was married and couldn’t conceive.

Nonetheless, no liability.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2015, 06:24:41 PM
A judge has absolute civil immunity, even if the action “was in error, was done maliciously, or was in excess of his authority,” the three-judge panel ruled in its six-page opinion.

Insane.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 13, 2015, 08:23:19 PM
Insane.

Stump v. Sparkman was a horrible decision by the Court and one which it hasn't had occasion to revisit, sadly. The dissents by Justices Stewart and Powell are required reading in most ethics classes in law schools and are both well worth a read.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 14, 2015, 03:11:10 PM
Last cop who made this claim got a whopping 2 years.  ::)


===============
Reserve deputy turns himself in to face manslaughter charge

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — A 73-year-old Oklahoma volunteer sheriff's deputy who authorities said fatally shot a suspect after confusing his stun gun and handgun was booked into the county jail Tuesday on a manslaughter charge.







Related Stories


1. Oklahoma deputy charged in suspect's shooting death Associated Press
2. Oklahoma officer kills suspect after confusing gun with Taser: officials Reuters
3. Oklahoma deputy charged with manslaughter in fatal Tulsa shooting Reuters
4. Reserve deputy thought he had stun gun when shooting suspect Associated Press
5. Tulsa reserve deputy charged with manslaughter for shooting Eric Harris Vox.com

Robert Bates surrendered to the Tulsa County Jail and was released after posting $25,000 bond. Bates' attorney, Clark Brewster, told reporters that his client would not make a statement, then ushered him into a waiting SUV.

Brewster said Bates is due to make an initial court appearance April 21.

The Tulsa County Sheriff's Office said Bates, an insurance executive who was volunteering on an undercover operation in Tulsa, accidentally shot 44-year-old Eric Harris on April 2. Tulsa County District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler charged Bates on Monday with second-degree manslaughter, punishable by up to four years in prison.

A video of the incident recorded by a deputy with a sunglass camera and released Friday shows a deputy chase and tackle Harris, who authorities said tried to sell an illegal gun to an undercover officer.

A gunshot rang out as the deputy wrestled with Harris on the ground and a man says: "Oh, I shot him. I'm sorry."




.Raw: Okla. Officer Shoots Gun Instead of Taser. Play video 
Raw: Okla. Officer Shoots Gun Instead of Taser
Harris was treated by medics at the scene and died at a hospital.

In a phone interview after the booking, Brewster said "there's no question" his client is not guilty and described Bates' actions after the shooting as "honest and transparent."

A spokeswoman for Kunzweiler said he would not comment on the case Tuesday.

In the video, another deputy appears to restrain Harris by holding his head to the ground with his knee. When Harris complains that he has been shot and is struggling to breathe, a deputy replies in a profanity-laden outburst that he was shot because he ran and that he should stop talking.

A Harris family statement released Tuesday said while there are "many good deputies" at the sheriff's office "who perform their jobs in the right way," Harris' treatment "clearly shows that there is a deep-seated problem within" the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office.




.. View gallery 
In this photo provided by the Tulsa County, Oklahoma, …
In this photo provided by the Tulsa County, Oklahoma, Sheriff's Office is Tulsa County reserve d …

"Sheriff (Stanley) Glanz's recent public statements also make it clear that he does not even see the problem and has no plans to change the practices within the TCSO," the statement said. "While Sheriff Glanz acknowledges that an 'error' was made when Eric was killed, he has yet to even apologize to our family."

A spokesman for the sheriff's office declined to comment on the statement Tuesday.

Andre Harris, the victim's brother, has said he does not believe the shooting was racially motivated. Bates is white and Harris is black.

Tulsa Police Sgt. Jim Clark, who investigated the shooting as an independent consultant at the request of the sheriff's office, concluded that Bates had been so engrossed in the stress of the moment that he did not think clearly about what he had in his hand when he fired his handgun rather than a stun gun.



http://news.yahoo.com/deputy-charged-manslaughter-shooting-death-061439114.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 20, 2015, 07:02:04 PM
Being a cop showed me just how racist and violent the police are. There’s only one fix.


As a kid, I got used to being stopped by the police. I grew up in an inner-ring suburb of St. Louis. It was the kind of place where officers routinely roughed up my friends and family for no good reason.

I hated the way cops treated me.

But I knew police weren’t all bad. One of my father’s closest friends was a cop. He became a mentor to me and encouraged me to join the force. He told me that I could use the police’s power and resources to help my community.

So in 1994, I joined the St. Louis Police Department. I quickly realized how naive I’d been. I was floored by the dysfunctional culture I encountered.

I won’t say all, but many of my peers were deeply racist.

One example: A couple of officers ran a Web site called St. Louis Coptalk, where officers could post about their experience and opinions. At some point during my career, it became so full of racist rants that the site administrator temporarily shut it down. Cops routinely called anyone of color a “thug,” whether they were the victim or just a bystander.

This attitude corrodes the way policing is done.

As a cop, it shouldn’t surprise you that people will curse at you, or be disappointed by your arrival. That’s part of the job. But too many times, officers saw young black and brown men as targets. They would respond with force to even minor offenses. And because cops are rarely held accountable for their actions, they didn’t think too hard about the consequences.

Once, I accompanied an officer on a call. At one home, a teenage boy answered the door. That officer accused him of harboring a robbery suspect, and demanded that he let her inside. When he refused, the officer yanked him onto the porch by his throat and began punching him.

Another officer met us and told the boy to stand. He replied that he couldn’t. So the officer slammed him against the house and cuffed him. When the boy again said he couldn’t walk, the officer grabbed him by his ankles and dragged him to the car. It turned out the boy had been on crutches when he answered the door, and couldn’t walk.

Back at the department, I complained to the sergeant. I wanted to report the misconduct. But my manager squashed the whole thing and told me to get back to work.

I, too, have faced mortal danger. I’ve been shot at and attacked. But I know it’s almost always possible to defuse a situation.

Once, a sergeant and I got a call about someone wielding a weapon in an apartment. When we showed up, we found someone sitting on the bed with a very large butcher knife. Rather than storming him and screaming “put the knife down” like my colleagues would have done, we kept our distance. We talked to him, tried to calm him down.

It became clear to us that he was dealing with mental illness. So eventually, we convinced him to come to the hospital with us.

I’m certain many other officers in the department would have escalated the situation fast. They would have screamed at him, gotten close to him, threatened him. And then, any movement from him, even an effort to drop the knife, would have been treated as an excuse to shoot until their clips were empty.

* * *

I liked my job, and I was good at it.

But more and more, I felt like I couldn’t do the work I set out to do. I was participating in a profoundly corrupt criminal justice system. I could not, in good conscience, participate in a system that was so intentionally unfair and racist. So after five years on the job, I quit.

Since I left, I’ve thought a lot about how to change the system. I’ve worked on police abuse, racial justice and criminal justice reform at the Missouri ACLU and other organizations.

Unfortunately, I don’t think better training alone will reduce police brutality. My fellow officers and I took plenty of classes on racial sensitivity and on limiting the use of force.


The problem is that cops aren’t held accountable for their actions, and they know it. These officers violate rights with impunity. They know there’s a different criminal justice system for civilians and police.

Even when officers get caught, they know they’ll be investigated by their friends, and put on paid leave. My colleagues would laughingly refer to this as a free vacation. It isn’t a punishment. And excessive force is almost always deemed acceptable in our courts and among our grand juries. Prosecutors are tight with law enforcement, and share the same values and ideas.

We could start to change that by mandating that a special prosecutor be appointed to try excessive force cases. And we need more independent oversight, with teeth. I have little confidence in internal investigations.

The number of people in uniform who will knowingly and maliciously violate your human rights is huge. At the Ferguson protests, people are chanting, “The whole damn system is guilty as hell.” I agree, and we have a lot of work to do.



http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/12/06/i-was-a-st-louis-cop-my-peers-were-racist-and-violent-and-theres-only-one-fix/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 21, 2015, 01:02:58 AM

The problem is that cops aren’t held accountable for their actions, and they know it. These officers violate rights with impunity. They know there’s a different criminal justice system for civilians and police.

Even when officers get caught, they know they’ll be investigated by their friends, and put on paid leave. My colleagues would laughingly refer to this as a free vacation. It isn’t a punishment. And excessive force is almost always deemed acceptable in our courts and among our grand juries. Prosecutors are tight with law enforcement, and share the same values and ideas.

We could start to change that by mandating that a special prosecutor be appointed to try excessive force cases. And we need more independent oversight, with teeth. I have little confidence in internal investigations.

The number of people in uniform who will knowingly and maliciously violate your human rights is huge. At the Ferguson protests, people are chanting, “The whole damn system is guilty as hell.” I agree, and we have a lot of work to do.



http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/12/06/i-was-a-st-louis-cop-my-peers-were-racist-and-violent-and-theres-only-one-fix/
[/quote]













The Whole Article is Sad & Shocking to read
Coming from a Ex Cop.

The Above Statement Summons up Very Well
What is Wrong.

No Doubt Some Will Be Along to Call Us Cop Haters
And We Have Problems With Authority.
Instead of Opening up To Fact There are Major Issues
And They Need Sorting.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 21, 2015, 02:38:31 PM
Cop that was only charged with manslaughter is allowed to go vacationing in the Bahamas.  Oh boy.


Volunteer Oklahoma deputy pleads not guilty, heads to Bahamas


The volunteer Oklahoma deputy charged in the shooting death of an unarmed black man pleaded not guilty Tuesday to second-degree manslaughter and won approval for a controversial family vacation.

A Tulsa judge ordered Reserve Deputy Robert Bates, 73, to return to court July 2 -- but approved his request to first vacation in the Bahamas.

The vacation drew an angry response from the family of Eric Harris, who was fatally shot by Bates on April 2.

"Whether intended or not, Mr. Bates' vacationing in the Bahamas at this time sends a message of apathy with respect to the shooting and Eric's life," the Harris family said in a statement released by lawyer Dan Smolen. "At a time when we are still mourning the death of a loved one that he shot down in the street, Mr. Bates will be relaxing and enjoying his wealth and privilege."

Harris, 44, had run from deputies conducting a gun-buy sting operation when he was wrestled to the ground. Bates, a retired insurance executive, had been at the scene serving as a backup for an undercover gun deal.

Bates went to provide assistance and has said he meant to stun Harris with a Taser. Instead, Bates says he accidentally drew and fired his .357-magnum revolver. Immediately after firing his weapon, Bates is heard on a video of the tragedy saying "I shot him. I'm sorry."


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/04/21/oklahoma-deputy-bates-pleads-not-guilty/26119863/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2015, 10:48:14 PM
Cop Ruptures Man’s Spleen, Fellow Cops Laugh, Take Pics, as He lays Dying, Begging for Help

Orlando, FL — An Orlando cop has been arrested after surveillance video showed him violently kneeing a handcuffed man. But further investigation into the matter shows that his fellow officers were not only complicit in covering it up, but also sadistically laughed as the man lay bleeding internally in the cell.

Orlando police Officer Peter Delio was arrested in March and charged with felony battery after surveillance video showed him kneeing a handcuffed, Robert Liese, in the gut.

Several hours later Liese underwent emergency surgery to remove his spleen.

What happened between the initial blow to the stomach and the time the paramedics were notified is disturbing, to say the least.

Robert Liese was in jail after he says a friend left him with a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. Besides being drunk, not once did Liese ever pose a threat to officers. In fact, he peacefully offered Delio his hands to be brought to jail after knowing that he was not going to be able to pay.

But Liese says that Delio didn’t care that he was nice and then kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach as he was loading him into the squad car.

Once in jail, Liese headbutted the door because he was upset and injured, and he was trying to get the attention of someone besides the officers who were outside of the door ridiculing him.

Officer Delio, who apparently wanted to take out more frustrations on the restrained man, then walked into the cell and kneed him in the stomach so hard, that it ruptured his spleen.

The pain was so great that Liese was immobilized. Delio picks the man up like a ragdoll and laughably yells to Liese, “stop resisting.”

He could barely breathe, and he fell to the floor in agony. He was then picked up and dragged out of the cell to be placed in leg restraints.

During the two hours long video after Liese was struck by the officer, he begged for help.

Sgt. Michael Faulkner reported to internal affairs that Liese not only didn’t ask for medical attention, but that he refused it.

Unlike Sgt. Faulkner, however, the video does not lie. Not five, not ten, but at least twenty times Liese can be heard on video begging for medical attention.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese said.

“What do you need medical attention for?” Faulkner asked.

“I have to lay down, please. I want to lay down,” Liese said. “My chest.”

“What’s wrong?” Faulkner asked Liese.

“I can’t breathe right,” Liese said.

But the sadistic Faulkner did not render aid, nor did he call paramedics; instead, he took cell phone pics of the injured man.

According to WFTV, Faulkner told internal affairs investigators that he was investigating Delio’s use of force. But the video shows Liese is the one who brought it up and Faulkner never asked about it.

“I got kicked in the chest in the backseat of the car,” Liese said.

Crucial minutes past that could have led to the death of Liese. During this time, the officers can be heard on the surveillance video laughing and joking about the man who lay dying just a few feet away.

“Somebody, please call the – paramedics,” Liese said suffering as the laughter continued.

Finally after nearly two hours, paramedics arrived, and Liese’s life was saved.

Once again, heroes are exposed for villains, thanks to the power of the camera lens. Luckily no lives were lost due to these criminal actions.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2015, 10:53:36 PM
Police can’t delay traffic stops to investigate crimes absent suspicion, Supreme Court rules

The Supreme Court handed down a notable Fourth Amendment ruling this morning in Rodriguez v. United States, holding that the Fourth Amendment does not allow the police to extend the duration of a traffic stop without reasonable suspicion, even for just a “de minimis” amount of time, for reasons unrelated to vehicle and driver safety.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/04/21/police-cant-delay-traffic-stops-to-investigate-crimes-absent-suspicion-supreme-court-rules/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 25, 2015, 08:00:30 AM
I LOVE the use of cell phones.  It's 1st reaction now with people.  And it's great.

Cops grab someone, they must feel the heat on their necks from 3 cell cameras tracking their every move.

This new rash of videos showing abuse - it's not that police are suddenly jerks who abuse people.  It's just that we suddenly have people recording what has always been going on.

Every cop busted for kicking a dude, stealing a pile of $, or shooting an unarmed man, we have a hundred cops that stop doing that shit, or at the very least, look for cameras first.  So it's GOOD.  Dropping vid clips right from phone to dropbox is awesome too - let the cop trash the phone, he looks even worse for destroying evidence now.

Accountability of police.  I can't believe people aren't demanding it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 25, 2015, 03:10:41 PM
Cop Ruptures Man’s Spleen, Fellow Cops Laugh, Take Pics, as He lays Dying, Begging for Help

Orlando, FL — An Orlando cop has been arrested after surveillance video showed him violently kneeing a handcuffed man. But further investigation into the matter shows that his fellow officers were not only complicit in covering it up, but also sadistically laughed as the man lay bleeding internally in the cell.

Orlando police Officer Peter Delio was arrested in March and charged with felony battery after surveillance video showed him kneeing a handcuffed, Robert Liese, in the gut.

Several hours later Liese underwent emergency surgery to remove his spleen.

What happened between the initial blow to the stomach and the time the paramedics were notified is disturbing, to say the least.

Robert Liese was in jail after he says a friend left him with a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. Besides being drunk, not once did Liese ever pose a threat to officers. In fact, he peacefully offered Delio his hands to be brought to jail after knowing that he was not going to be able to pay.

But Liese says that Delio didn’t care that he was nice and then kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach as he was loading him into the squad car.

Once in jail, Liese headbutted the door because he was upset and injured, and he was trying to get the attention of someone besides the officers who were outside of the door ridiculing him.

Officer Delio, who apparently wanted to take out more frustrations on the restrained man, then walked into the cell and kneed him in the stomach so hard, that it ruptured his spleen.

The pain was so great that Liese was immobilized. Delio picks the man up like a ragdoll and laughably yells to Liese, “stop resisting.”

He could barely breathe, and he fell to the floor in agony. He was then picked up and dragged out of the cell to be placed in leg restraints.

During the two hours long video after Liese was struck by the officer, he begged for help.

Sgt. Michael Faulkner reported to internal affairs that Liese not only didn’t ask for medical attention, but that he refused it.

Unlike Sgt. Faulkner, however, the video does not lie. Not five, not ten, but at least twenty times Liese can be heard on video begging for medical attention.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese said.

“What do you need medical attention for?” Faulkner asked.

“I have to lay down, please. I want to lay down,” Liese said. “My chest.”

“What’s wrong?” Faulkner asked Liese.

“I can’t breathe right,” Liese said.

But the sadistic Faulkner did not render aid, nor did he call paramedics; instead, he took cell phone pics of the injured man.

According to WFTV, Faulkner told internal affairs investigators that he was investigating Delio’s use of force. But the video shows Liese is the one who brought it up and Faulkner never asked about it.

“I got kicked in the chest in the backseat of the car,” Liese said.

Crucial minutes past that could have led to the death of Liese. During this time, the officers can be heard on the surveillance video laughing and joking about the man who lay dying just a few feet away.

“Somebody, please call the – paramedics,” Liese said suffering as the laughter continued.

Finally after nearly two hours, paramedics arrived, and Liese’s life was saved.

Once again, heroes are exposed for villains, thanks to the power of the camera lens. Luckily no lives were lost due to these criminal actions.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/

Holy fucking shit... I wonder if Faulkner will also face charges.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on April 25, 2015, 05:42:15 PM
Cop Ruptures Man’s Spleen, Fellow Cops Laugh, Take Pics, as He lays Dying, Begging for Help

Orlando, FL — An Orlando cop has been arrested after surveillance video showed him violently kneeing a handcuffed man. But further investigation into the matter shows that his fellow officers were not only complicit in covering it up, but also sadistically laughed as the man lay bleeding internally in the cell.

Orlando police Officer Peter Delio was arrested in March and charged with felony battery after surveillance video showed him kneeing a handcuffed, Robert Liese, in the gut.

Several hours later Liese underwent emergency surgery to remove his spleen.

What happened between the initial blow to the stomach and the time the paramedics were notified is disturbing, to say the least.

Robert Liese was in jail after he says a friend left him with a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. Besides being drunk, not once did Liese ever pose a threat to officers. In fact, he peacefully offered Delio his hands to be brought to jail after knowing that he was not going to be able to pay.

But Liese says that Delio didn’t care that he was nice and then kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach as he was loading him into the squad car.

Once in jail, Liese headbutted the door because he was upset and injured, and he was trying to get the attention of someone besides the officers who were outside of the door ridiculing him.

Officer Delio, who apparently wanted to take out more frustrations on the restrained man, then walked into the cell and kneed him in the stomach so hard, that it ruptured his spleen.

The pain was so great that Liese was immobilized. Delio picks the man up like a ragdoll and laughably yells to Liese, “stop resisting.”

He could barely breathe, and he fell to the floor in agony. He was then picked up and dragged out of the cell to be placed in leg restraints.

During the two hours long video after Liese was struck by the officer, he begged for help.

Sgt. Michael Faulkner reported to internal affairs that Liese not only didn’t ask for medical attention, but that he refused it.

Unlike Sgt. Faulkner, however, the video does not lie. Not five, not ten, but at least twenty times Liese can be heard on video begging for medical attention.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese said.

“What do you need medical attention for?” Faulkner asked.

“I have to lay down, please. I want to lay down,” Liese said. “My chest.”

“What’s wrong?” Faulkner asked Liese.

“I can’t breathe right,” Liese said.

But the sadistic Faulkner did not render aid, nor did he call paramedics; instead, he took cell phone pics of the injured man.

According to WFTV, Faulkner told internal affairs investigators that he was investigating Delio’s use of force. But the video shows Liese is the one who brought it up and Faulkner never asked about it.

“I got kicked in the chest in the backseat of the car,” Liese said.

Crucial minutes past that could have led to the death of Liese. During this time, the officers can be heard on the surveillance video laughing and joking about the man who lay dying just a few feet away.

“Somebody, please call the – paramedics,” Liese said suffering as the laughter continued.

Finally after nearly two hours, paramedics arrived, and Liese’s life was saved.

Once again, heroes are exposed for villains, thanks to the power of the camera lens. Luckily no lives were lost due to these criminal actions.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/


 :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 25, 2015, 07:07:15 PM
Cop Ruptures Man’s Spleen, Fellow Cops Laugh, Take Pics, as He lays Dying, Begging for Help

Orlando, FL — An Orlando cop has been arrested after surveillance video showed him violently kneeing a handcuffed man. But further investigation into the matter shows that his fellow officers were not only complicit in covering it up, but also sadistically laughed as the man lay bleeding internally in the cell.

Orlando police Officer Peter Delio was arrested in March and charged with felony battery after surveillance video showed him kneeing a handcuffed, Robert Liese, in the gut.

Several hours later Liese underwent emergency surgery to remove his spleen.

What happened between the initial blow to the stomach and the time the paramedics were notified is disturbing, to say the least.

Robert Liese was in jail after he says a friend left him with a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. Besides being drunk, not once did Liese ever pose a threat to officers. In fact, he peacefully offered Delio his hands to be brought to jail after knowing that he was not going to be able to pay.

But Liese says that Delio didn’t care that he was nice and then kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach as he was loading him into the squad car.

Once in jail, Liese headbutted the door because he was upset and injured, and he was trying to get the attention of someone besides the officers who were outside of the door ridiculing him.

Officer Delio, who apparently wanted to take out more frustrations on the restrained man, then walked into the cell and kneed him in the stomach so hard, that it ruptured his spleen.

The pain was so great that Liese was immobilized. Delio picks the man up like a ragdoll and laughably yells to Liese, “stop resisting.”

He could barely breathe, and he fell to the floor in agony. He was then picked up and dragged out of the cell to be placed in leg restraints.

During the two hours long video after Liese was struck by the officer, he begged for help.

Sgt. Michael Faulkner reported to internal affairs that Liese not only didn’t ask for medical attention, but that he refused it.

Unlike Sgt. Faulkner, however, the video does not lie. Not five, not ten, but at least twenty times Liese can be heard on video begging for medical attention.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese said.

“What do you need medical attention for?” Faulkner asked.

“I have to lay down, please. I want to lay down,” Liese said. “My chest.”

“What’s wrong?” Faulkner asked Liese.

“I can’t breathe right,” Liese said.

But the sadistic Faulkner did not render aid, nor did he call paramedics; instead, he took cell phone pics of the injured man.

According to WFTV, Faulkner told internal affairs investigators that he was investigating Delio’s use of force. But the video shows Liese is the one who brought it up and Faulkner never asked about it.

“I got kicked in the chest in the backseat of the car,” Liese said.

Crucial minutes past that could have led to the death of Liese. During this time, the officers can be heard on the surveillance video laughing and joking about the man who lay dying just a few feet away.

“Somebody, please call the – paramedics,” Liese said suffering as the laughter continued.

Finally after nearly two hours, paramedics arrived, and Liese’s life was saved.

Once again, heroes are exposed for villains, thanks to the power of the camera lens. Luckily no lives were lost due to these criminal actions.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/











 :o I don't know what all the fuss is about,
Cops are all Good dealing with Life Threatening
Situations like this.
I see no reason that the cops should be promoted
& or retired on full pay.
There are 1000's of police & public interactions
Daily And All of Them Are Good.
There is No Problem In The Police.

Or so The Police Say.. And You Can Trust Them.
 ::) 




Wrong a fcuking Huge Problem Exists In The Police.
It's Like A Cancer & Spreading It Needs Cutting Out.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 03:36:19 PM
Baltimore's Finest beating a photo editor.

________________________ _________

City Paper Photo Editor J.M. Giordano was tackled and beaten by Baltimore City police outside of Western District headquarters last night while covering protests over the death of Freddie Gray in police custody.

In a video shot by City Paper Managing Editor Baynard Woods you can see Giordano, wearing a green jacket, and a protester, both of whom had just been knocked to the ground by police, being beaten as Woods yells, "He's a photographer! He's press!"

Giordano says he was standing next to the protester in the video, facing the police line, at about 12:30 when someone threw a rock which hit a police officer’s shield.

“They mobilized,” he says. The police line moved forward and Giordano did not move fast enough for them. “I always move at the last second,” he says. Five or six police officers in riot gear hit Giordano and the other protester with their shields, knocking them to the ground.

“They just swarmed over me,” he says. “I got hit. My head hit the ground. They were hitting me, then someone pulled me out.”

“I kept shooting it,” he says. “As soon as I got up I started taking pictures.” He says the guy who was next to him (who did not throw anything, he is sure) got arrested and was loaded into a van. Joe was not. He thinks it is because police recognized him as a local reporter and figured arresting him would cause a backlash.

“They [police] tried to block me from shooting.”

He says Reuters photographer Sait Serkan Gurbuz, who was standing nearby, did get arrested and taken away in the police van, and was later released and cited for disorderly conduct.

Police did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the incident. Giordano suffered minor injuries on his arm, but will continue documenting the protests.

http://www.citypaper.com/blogs/the-news-hole/bcpnews-city-paper-photo-editor-jm-giordano-beaten-by-police-at-freddie-gray-protest-20150426,0,229974.story



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 03:59:39 PM
Baltimore's Finest beating a photo editor.

________________________ _________

City Paper Photo Editor J.M. Giordano was tackled and beaten by Baltimore City police outside of Western District headquarters last night while covering protests over the death of Freddie Gray in police custody.

In a video shot by City Paper Managing Editor Baynard Woods you can see Giordano, wearing a green jacket, and a protester, both of whom had just been knocked to the ground by police, being beaten as Woods yells, "He's a photographer! He's press!"

Giordano says he was standing next to the protester in the video, facing the police line, at about 12:30 when someone threw a rock which hit a police officer’s shield.

“They mobilized,” he says. The police line moved forward and Giordano did not move fast enough for them. “I always move at the last second,” he says. Five or six police officers in riot gear hit Giordano and the other protester with their shields, knocking them to the ground.

“They just swarmed over me,” he says. “I got hit. My head hit the ground. They were hitting me, then someone pulled me out.”

“I kept shooting it,” he says. “As soon as I got up I started taking pictures.” He says the guy who was next to him (who did not throw anything, he is sure) got arrested and was loaded into a van. Joe was not. He thinks it is because police recognized him as a local reporter and figured arresting him would cause a backlash.

“They [police] tried to block me from shooting.”

He says Reuters photographer Sait Serkan Gurbuz, who was standing nearby, did get arrested and taken away in the police van, and was later released and cited for disorderly conduct.

Police did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the incident. Giordano suffered minor injuries on his arm, but will continue documenting the protests.

http://www.citypaper.com/blogs/the-news-hole/bcpnews-city-paper-photo-editor-jm-giordano-beaten-by-police-at-freddie-gray-protest-20150426,0,229974.story





yeah whats wrong with police your surpose to let rocks get thrown at you,watch your tv and see how these upstanding citizens are acting
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:04:34 PM
yeah whats wrong with police your surpose to let rocks get thrown at you,watch your tv and see how these upstanding citizens are acting




The journalists didn't throw the rocks.

Great argument, tard.

::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:07:11 PM



The journalists didn't throw the rocks.

Great argument, tard.

::)

turn your tv on retard and watch what the police have to deal with,mr cop hater
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:09:54 PM
turn your tv on retard and watch what the police have to deal with,mr cop hater



Yeah, they're dealing with a tough situation so that makes beating up innocent people ok.

Like I said....great argument, tard.  ::)

BTW...they wouldn't be in this position if they weren't shoving injured people into vans, not strapping them in for the 'rough ride' and denying them medical care.

But yea, let's forget about 'why' they are in a tough situation and focus on how tough the situation is now.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:11:38 PM


Yeah, they're dealing with a tough situation so that makes beating up innocent people ok.

Like I said....great argument, tard.  ::)

BTW...they wouldn't be in this position if they weren't shoving injured people into vans, not strapping them in for the 'rough ride' and denying them medical care.

But yea, let's forget about 'why' they are in a tough situation and focus on how tough the situation is now.



i can go back on your post and your always blaming cops your nothing but a cop hater
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:23:39 PM
i can go back on your post and your always blaming cops your nothing but a cop hater



And I can go back on yours and you're nothing but an apologist.

Fuck dude, you're excusing them beating innocent people.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:27:31 PM


And I can go back on yours and you're nothing but an apologist.

Fuck dude, you're excusing them beating innocent people.  ::)

thats the fog of war you weren't there you don't know how it went down.tired of reading your post always the police's fault


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 27, 2015, 04:29:04 PM
turn your tv on retard and watch what the police have to deal with,mr cop hater

You know what I see?

I see people arrested and thrown against cement and left to bleed (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/10/30/skokie-officer-charged-after-woman-injured-in-jail-cell/), or kicked hard enough that their spleens rupture (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/). I see cops tackle and paralyze a non-violent individual whose only crime was an inability to communicate (http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=7dc_1423783854). I see cops order a mother to sexually abuse a baby (http://filmingcops.com/cop-indicted-after-conspiring-to-rape-1-yr-old-baby/). I see cops jumping out of still moving cars to kill twelve-year olds (http://nypost.com/2014/11/27/cops-release-video-of-officer-fatally-shooting-12-year-old/). I see cops forcing teens to give them head and getting away scot free (http://www.mintpressnews.com/cop-forced-teen-to-perform-oral-sex-on-himself-and-his-partner-keeps-law-enforcement-certification/204454/).

No doubt, cops have a difficult job. But it's a job they chose to do and if they don't like it, they can find something else to do instead of taking out their frustrations by throwing their weight around and abusing the rest of us under the color of authority.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:39:07 PM




Fog of war, lol.  Typical us against them mentality employed by the cops that STARTED this shit to begin with.

I don't give fuck what you're tired of I'll continue to post about abuse and corruption.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2015, 04:42:23 PM
yeah whats wrong with police your surpose to let rocks get thrown at you,watch your tv and see how these upstanding citizens are acting

Someone want to point out exactly where in the video the cops were beating the journalist?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:44:40 PM


Fog of war, lol.  Typical us against them mentality employed by the cops that STARTED this shit to begin with.

I don't give fuck what you're tired of I'll continue to post about abuse and corruption.



your a cop hater and that's. a fact you don't. have to believe me just go back as far as you want and read your post it's. all there,there are bad police but there are far more that do good,and your post are aways one sided
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:46:08 PM
your a cop hater and that's. a fact you don't. have to believe me just go back as far as you want and read your post it's. all there,there are bad police but there are far more that do good,and your post are aways one sided



And you're an apologist.  Fact is a fact.

Go cry a fucking river.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:50:10 PM


And you're an apologist.  Fact is a fact.

Go cry a fucking river.



brahaha cop hater,hope you don't need one someday
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 27, 2015, 04:51:50 PM
brahaha cop hater,hope you don't need one someday


Same here.  Seems my chances of getting a good beating may exceed my chances of getting help.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 04:57:41 PM

Same here.  Seems my chances of getting a good beating may exceed my chances of getting help.



don't surprise me you think that way
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 27, 2015, 05:34:44 PM
You know what I see?

I see people arrested and thrown against cement and left to bleed (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/10/30/skokie-officer-charged-after-woman-injured-in-jail-cell/), or kicked hard enough that their spleens rupture (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-ruptures-mans-spleen-fellow-cops-laugh-pics-lays-dying-begging-medical/). I see cops tackle and paralyze a non-violent individual whose only crime was an inability to communicate (http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=7dc_1423783854). I see cops order a mother to sexually abuse a baby (http://filmingcops.com/cop-indicted-after-conspiring-to-rape-1-yr-old-baby/). I see cops jumping out of still moving cars to kill twelve-year olds (http://nypost.com/2014/11/27/cops-release-video-of-officer-fatally-shooting-12-year-old/). I see cops forcing teens to give them head and getting away scot free (http://www.mintpressnews.com/cop-forced-teen-to-perform-oral-sex-on-himself-and-his-partner-keeps-law-enforcement-certification/204454/).


READ THIS.
No doubt, cops have a difficult job. But it's a job they chose to do and if they don't like it, they can find something else to do instead of taking out their frustrations by throwing their weight around and abusing the rest of us under the color of authority.













Well said. x2.
As you say it's a Job They Chose To Do.
No One Is Forcing Them.

How many Apologisists & How many Times are you going to Cover
For The Blantant Abuses.

I am Not Suggesting we Do Not Have A Police Service,
Just that The Existing One is Rotten To The Core.
Top Down It Needs Changing.
And The Scum Bags Prosecuting.... Best start building a lot more Prisons to cope with them All.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2015, 06:55:34 PM
Someone want to point out exactly where in the video the cops were beating the journalist?

anyone?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 27, 2015, 07:00:07 PM
anyone?

hey this is not a site for common sence,this is a site to jump to conclusions
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 27, 2015, 07:25:33 PM
anyone?

To me, it looks like a bunch of cops swarming over the guy. The video is too shaky, and there are too many bodies over the guy for me to conclusively say "he was being beaten" and point to an exact second. It certainly seems to be an overreaction, and if I had to venture a guess, given his appearance after this, I'd say that it's more than likely that the guy received a few blows.

It was certainly a charged situation and mistakes are bound to happen. The important thing is how to handle those mistakes. The problem, generally, is that many officers handle those problems badly, and when they do, they are usually not held accountable. I don't care where you lay the blame: the human resourcess, the traning, the equipment or something else. But there is a problem.

Here's the thing: cops are supposed to be cool-headed professionals, with superior training that enables them to deal with high-pressure situations while keeping their emotions in check; instead it seems that many are hot-headed idiots, whose training boils down to takedown moves and the development of an "us vs. them" mentality, along with a badge and a gun that instills on them feelings of superiority and a proverbial license to kill. So when citizens don't defer to them, as iif we're peasants and they're modern day samurai during the Shogunate, they try to teach us a lesson - that lesson being "you do what I tell you or else..."

The fact of the matter is that cops are public servants. Their job isn't to intimidate the public or to order them around. It's to protect and serve. I'm not exactly sure when cops forgot about that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2015, 07:30:35 PM
hey this is not a site for common sence,this is a site to jump to conclusions

Sure..

lol trash filming trash,you can't beat it  :D

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on April 27, 2015, 10:23:47 PM
I am happy to report that I've never had a disagreeable experience with the police. I suspect the bulk of the police are good people who just want to protect and serve.

A handful should never have become policemen. Extensive psychological testing use to weed most of these misfits out. Are police forces so understaffed that they are willing to accept anyone who walks in the door looking for a job?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 27, 2015, 10:30:38 PM
I am happy to report that I've never had a disagreeable experience with the police. I suspect the bulk of the police are good people who just want to protect and serve.

A handful should never have become policemen. Extensive psychological testing used to weed most of these misfits out. Are police forces so understaffed that they are willing to accept anyone who walks in the door looking for a job?


can't speak for all departments but ours is understaffed.. partly because we don't accept anyone who walks through the door.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 28, 2015, 03:26:45 AM
Sure..



the guy that was filming goes around robbing people,sorry but that's trash :D maybe where your from that's a great guy but where I'm from that's trash
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2015, 07:08:37 AM
the guy that was filming goes around robbing people,sorry but that's trash :D maybe where your from that's a great guy but where I'm from that's trash

"hey this is not a site for common sence,this is a site to jump to conclusions "
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2015, 07:11:14 AM
Legislation that Fines Cops $15,000 for Interfering with Citizens who Film Them, Passes CO House

Denver, CO — A recently proposed bill in Colorado imposing legal penalties on police officers who interfere with citizens filming them could soon become law. The state’s House Of Representatives passed the bill this week, and it will now move on to vote in the Senate.

If it becomes law, the bill would reportedly require police officers to have someone’s consent or a warrant to physically take or destroy a persons camera or footage. If an officer violates this law, the victim would then be able to seek damages up to $15,000 plus attorney fees. This would also be the first law in the country that would guarantee civil damages to people who have their recording rights violated by police.

After passing in the House on Wednesday, Colorado House Bill 15-1290 will now make its way to the Senate for a final vote.

Police union officials are not happy about the bill, and they say that it treats officers unfairly and holds them to a standard that citizens are not held to, which is ironic because police typically behave as if they were above the law, and not subject to the same standards as everyone else.

“The CACP does not believe that the people who put their lives at risk every day should have different standards of liability than anyone else in government,” police union representative AnneMarie Jensen, said in a statement.

According to 7 News Denver,  Rep. Joe Salazar, co-sponsor of the bill, said House Bill 15-1290 has support from both Democrats and Republicans and is not intended to penalize police.

“It takes a very special person to be a police officer,” Salazar said. “We want to honor them, but at the same time, we have a few bad apples who need to be aware that their conduct now has major, major consequences.”

One of the incidents that caught the attention of Salazar was the case of Bobbie Ann Diaz. Diaz was trying to film what happened after police shot and killed 17-year-old Jessica Hernandez.

As Diaz was trying to film the incident, she says an officer stopped her and threatened her with arrest if she continued to film.

“At that time, (the officers) put Jessie down and they were on their knees yelling at Brianna that she better not record. She better not,” Diaz said. “She got scared. She got intimated. These are big officers and she didn’t want to make things worse.”

Diaz didn’t know that she was protected by law to film the police as long as she wasn’t interfering with their investigation.

Only through shining light into the darkness, i.e., filming police encounters, will enough people finally see how corrupt and violent this system is becoming. Your right to film the police must be protected.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/legislation-fines-cops-15000-interfering-citizens-film-them-passes-house/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 28, 2015, 07:13:12 AM
the guy that was filming goes around robbing people,sorry but that's trash :D maybe where your from that's a great guy but where I'm from that's trash
"hey this is not a site for common sence,this is a site to jump to conclusions "


so you think a guy that robs people is a good guy
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2015, 07:21:55 AM
so you think a guy that robs people is a good guy

I replied before about that specific instant (with the cop vindictively punching out of nowhere, a person who was arrested and then walking away) but you seem unable to understand.

That is irrelevant, he was arrested and will go to court for all the charges. There was no reason or justification for the actions of the female cop and she must be held accountable.

Care to explain how the actions depicted in the video are affected by the record of the person filming? What about the record of the cops involved?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 28, 2015, 07:23:14 AM
so you think a guy that robs people is a good guy
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: TheGrinch on April 28, 2015, 09:18:48 AM
no legislation is going to do anything when the cop takes your phone, breaks it and then proceeds to stomp your ass.


all the more incentive for the cop to take your phone and beat the piss out of you
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on April 28, 2015, 10:07:43 AM
so you think a guy that robs people is a good guy

So you think a cop who beats or kills suspects is a good guy?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 28, 2015, 10:15:03 AM
So you think a cop who beats or kills suspects is a good guy?

no I'm sure she'll be punished for punching him in the head,do i feel sorry for the trash,not at all
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 28, 2015, 10:36:15 AM
no I'm sure she'll be punished for punching him in the head,do i feel sorry for the trash,not at all

Yes, I'm sure she'll be punished. Just like the cop who forced a nineteen year old to have sex with him (http://www.mintpressnews.com/cop-forced-teen-to-perform-oral-sex-on-himself-and-his-partner-keeps-law-enforcement-certification/204454/) was punished. His brutal punishment for what amounts to rape includes not having to register as a sex offender and keeping his law enforcement certification.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 28, 2015, 10:40:52 AM
baltimore police throwing rocks at people. 

yes, we are at that point lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on April 28, 2015, 10:42:41 AM
baltimore police throwing rocks at people. 

yes, we are at that point lol.

what they should be shooting is rubber bullets
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:51:12 AM
what they should be shooting is rubber bullets

agree
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:53:22 AM
To me, it looks like a bunch of cops swarming over the guy. The video is too shaky, and there are too many bodies over the guy for me to conclusively say "he was being beaten" and point to an exact second. It certainly seems to be an overreaction, and if I had to venture a guess, given his appearance after this, I'd say that it's more than likely that the guy received a few blows.

It was certainly a charged situation and mistakes are bound to happen. The important thing is how to handle those mistakes. The problem, generally, is that many officers handle those problems badly, and when they do, they are usually not held accountable. I don't care where you lay the blame: the human resourcess, the traning, the equipment or something else. But there is a problem.

Here's the thing: cops are supposed to be cool-headed professionals, with superior training that enables them to deal with high-pressure situations while keeping their emotions in check; instead it seems that many are hot-headed idiots, whose training boils down to takedown moves and the development of an "us vs. them" mentality, along with a badge and a gun that instills on them feelings of superiority and a proverbial license to kill. So when citizens don't defer to them, as iif we're peasants and they're modern day samurai during the Shogunate, they try to teach us a lesson - that lesson being "you do what I tell you or else..."

The fact of the matter is that cops are public servants. Their job isn't to intimidate the public or to order them around. It's to protect and serve. I'm not exactly sure when cops forgot about that.

can't tell much from the video. Certainly can't conclude a beating was being done.  But really, all someone has to do these days is put a title "Cops beat ____" and 90% of the folks here will operate on the assumption the cops beat ____ rather than look at the video independently and determine if it's true for themselves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 28, 2015, 11:16:14 AM
can't tell much from the video. Certainly can't conclude a beating was being done.  But really, all someone has to do these days is put a title "Cops beat ____" and 90% of the folks here will operate on the assumption the cops beat ____ rather than look at the video independently and determine if it's true for themselves.

You are right. Do you think there might be a reason for that?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 11:21:07 AM
You are right. Do you think there might be a reason for that?

In this case, majority of this board are anti cop and since "Cops beating ____" fits their preconceived view of cops they don't bother to review it and operate on the assumptions its true. It really doesn't matter if it's true or not and they figure their buddies on the page won't bother to look at it either so its a safe assumption. Just my 2 cents
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on April 28, 2015, 11:59:09 AM
Yes, I'm sure she'll be punished. Just like the cop who forced a nineteen year old to have sex with him (http://www.mintpressnews.com/cop-forced-teen-to-perform-oral-sex-on-himself-and-his-partner-keeps-law-enforcement-certification/204454/) was punished. His brutal punishment for what amounts to rape includes not having to register as a sex offender and keeping his law enforcement certification.

Disgusting.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 28, 2015, 12:54:59 PM
what they should be shooting is rubber bullets

Agreed.  But that might impede on what the Mayor called their right to enjoy destruction... "give those who wished to destroy space to do that"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on April 28, 2015, 01:28:43 PM
Yes, I'm sure she'll be punished. Just like the cop who forced a nineteen year old to have sex with him (http://www.mintpressnews.com/cop-forced-teen-to-perform-oral-sex-on-himself-and-his-partner-keeps-law-enforcement-certification/204454/) was punished. His brutal punishment for what amounts to rape includes not having to register as a sex offender and keeping his law enforcement certification.

I read the article. It's disgusting. Hopefully, there is more to this story then we get from the news report. The article did indicate that he will eventually be stripped of his law enforcement certification, as if that would stop him from repeating this crime.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 01:41:22 PM
I read a couple articles written by more competent journalists. Apparently the victim did not want to go to trial and sought that he be fired and spend time in jail. Without her testimony the DA was likely sucking wind on getting a conviction and had to plea bargain a deal. Background checks are done on applicants so it is very likely he will not be able to get a job in law enforcement. I would love for this guy to spend 25 yrs in a federal pen for taking advantage of a young girl like that. Then upon his release after 25 years hard time, he takes a sniper round in the head. Case is never solved.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on April 28, 2015, 02:19:49 PM
In this case, majority of this board are anti cop and since "Cops beating ____" fits their preconceived view of cops they don't bother to review it and operate on the assumptions its true. It really doesn't matter if it's true or not and they figure their buddies on the page won't bother to look at it either so its a safe assumption. Just my 2 cents

I don't think that's a fair assessment and, logically, this statement has fatal flaws (for fun, see how many logical fallacies you can identify - I could three). What strikes me the most about your analysis is the assertion that people are "anti-cop." Once you've branded them with this scarlet letter, then the rest proceeds from there: people are anti-cop, therefore they'll be against cops and thus, their criticisms can be disregarded. But it never asks why are these people "anti-cop"? I submit that a more careful and deep analysis would show that most people aren't, in fact, anti-cop; they are, however, anti-abusive-cop, and, as I am sure you'll agree, there is a big difference between a cop and an abusive cop.

So the question is _why_ do most people perceive cops as abusive? I suspect that the answer is twofold:


Taken together, these two things paint a picture of most cops as egregious abusers, armed with guns and on the brink of going postal. Perhaps this picture is inaccurate. In fact, I'm willing to concede that most cops - even when flexing their proverbial muscle when someone commits the horrible offense of contempt of cop - are unlikely to beat people hard enough to rupture spleens or crack skulls open.

But the reality remains that even if they don't rupture splees or crack skulls open, the a large percentage of cops today routinely demand respect and deference by the serfs and are willing to punish, to varying degrees, those who don't live up to that expectation.

I'll give you an example: I was once stopped by a cop. He said that I was going 30 in a 25. I may very well have been - I wasn't focused obsessively on my speedometer. I was polite and courteous, and he was very professional. He handed me over a speeding ticket, before explaining that signing it was not an admission of guilt but a promise to appear. I replied with "Yes, I am aware. And even if I wasn't, it says so in bold letters, right above where I'm supposed to sign." All of a sudden, it was like I was teleported to bizarro-world. He grabbed the clipboard with the ticket from my hands and ordered me to step out of the vehicle. I complied, closing and locking the door behind me.

At this point, he got maybe an inch from my face and yelled point blank "IT SAYS SO RIGHT THERE, DOES IT? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR TROUBLE OR DO YOU THINK THIS IS A JOKE?" I replied with "Are you detaining me or am I free to go?" which infuriated him even more. He proceeded to demand that I produce my keys so that he could unlock my vehicle and search it because, suddenly, he could smell alcohol on my breath. I explained that I don't consent to any search. He told me I was being detained, before storming off into his cruiser.

Four more cruisers arrived and I was kept there for well over two hours (the law in my State prevents officers from detaining anyone for over 60 minutes) while he and his buddies chatted. Finally, he came back, handed me my ticket (now for 45 in a 25) and said "Your signature is not an admission of guilt, just a promise to appear." I signed and turned the ticket in, which, I guess, made him feel like an alpha male that had finally asserted his dominance.

When I asked for his business card and the name of his superior officer, he replied with "my name is on your fucking ticket, now get back in your fucking car and don't let me catch you speeding again." Later that day, I filed a complaint which was "investigated" and summarily dismissed in less than 24 hours.
 
Over the next 3 or 4 months I would get pulled over repeatedly by the same group of three cops for "swerving" or "not signaling for a lane change" or for having "worn tires" or even for "possibly illegal tint" on a vehicle with no tint at all. This, of course, resulted in significant frustration for me, as it resulted in a waste of time not only during the stop, but later when I had to take time off to go to the Courthouse to pay bail to schedule my trial, then take time off and attend the trial, whereupon, charges were summarily dropped when the ticketing cop wouldn't show up in Court.

Now, again. I'm willing to believe that these cops are the exception, but only in the sense that the length they went to isn't typical.

P.S.: You seem like a nice and reasonable guy and I'm willing to take you at your word that you're a good cop and the people you work with are good cops. I'm not suggesting that all cops are rotten. I'm only suggesting is that one rotten cop can wreak a lot of damage and the culture that is cultivated - a band-of-brothers against evil - makes it easy for the rot to spread and the system is rigged in such a way that punishing the bad apples is exceedingly difficult barring an exceptionally egregious case.

And I will ask you to ponder one simple question: if the average cop has an "us-vs-them" mentality, then what mentality do you expect the average citizen, that interacts with this average cop, to have?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 02:39:08 PM
I don't think that's a fair assessment and, logically, this statement has fatal flaws (for fun, see how many logical fallacies you can identify - I could three). What strikes me the most about your analysis is the assertion that people are "anti-cop." Once you've branded them with this scarlet letter, then the rest proceeds from there: people are anti-cop, therefore they'll be against cops and thus, their criticisms can be disregarded. But it never asks why are these people "anti-cop"? I submit that a more careful and deep analysis would show that most people aren't, in fact, anti-cop; they are, however, anti-abusive-cop, and, as I am sure you'll agree, there is a big difference between a cop and an abusive cop.

So the question is _why_ do most people perceive cops as abusive? I suspect that the answer is twofold:

  • First, I thnk that most people have experienced cops flex their muscle (to varying degrees) and have heard friends and family suggest the same, which leads them to believe that this is commonplace; and
  • Second, I think that as audio and video recording become more prevalent, more people see instances of abuse - often egregious - since a "by the book" stop doesn't garner much attention.

Taken together, these two things paint a picture of most cops as egregious abusers, armed with guns and on the brink of going postal. Perhaps this picture is inaccurate. In fact, I'm willing to concede that most cops - even when flexing their proverbial muscle when someone commits the horrible offense of contempt of cop - are unlikely to beat people hard enough to rupture spleens or crack skulls open.

But the reality remains that even if they don't rupture splees or crack skulls open, the a large percentage of cops today routinely demand respect and deference by the serfs and are willing to punish, to varying degrees, those who don't live up to that expectation.

I'll give you an example: I was once stopped by a cop. He said that I was going 30 in a 25. I may very well have been - I wasn't focused obsessively on my speedometer. I was polite and courteous, and he was very professional. He handed me over a speeding ticket, before explaining that signing it was not an admission of guilt but a promise to appear. I replied with "Yes, I am aware. And even if I wasn't, it says so in bold letters, right above where I'm supposed to sign." All of a sudden, it was like I was teleported to bizarro-world. He grabbed the clipboard with the ticket from my hands and ordered me to step out of the vehicle. I complied, closing and locking the door behind me.

At this point, he got maybe an inch from my face and yelled point blank "IT SAYS SO RIGHT THERE, DOES IT? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR TROUBLE OR DO YOU THINK THIS IS A JOKE?" I replied with "Are you detaining me or am I free to go?" which infuriated him even more. He proceeded to demand that I produce my keys so that he could unlock my vehicle and search it because, suddenly, he could smell alcohol on my breath. I explained that I don't consent to any search. He told me I was being detained, before storming off into his cruiser.

Four more cruisers arrived and I was kept there for well over two hours (the law in my State prevents officers from detaining anyone for over 60 minutes) while he and his buddies chatted. Finally, he came back, handed me my ticket (now for 45 in a 25) and said "Your signature is not an admission of guilt, just a promise to appear." I signed and turned the ticket in, which, I guess, made him feel like an alpha male that had finally asserted his dominance.

When I asked for his business card and the name of his superior officer, he replied with "my name is on your fucking ticket, now get back in your fucking car and don't let me catch you speeding again." Later that day, I filed a complaint which was "investigated" and summarily dismissed in less than 24 hours.
 
Over the next 3 or 4 months I would get pulled over repeatedly by the same group of three cops for "swerving" or "not signaling for a lane change" or for having "worn tires" or even for "possibly illegal tint" on a vehicle with no tint at all. This, of course, resulted in significant frustration for me, as it resulted in a waste of time not only during the stop, but later when I had to take time off to go to the Courthouse to pay bail to schedule my trial, then take time off and attend the trial, whereupon, charges were summarily dropped when the ticketing cop wouldn't show up in Court.

Now, again. I'm willing to believe that these cops are the exception, but only in the sense that the length they went to isn't typical.

Good post. Lot of thought and time went into it. I appreciate that. My original answer was geared towards the average getbig converstation. So you are correct to point out the "anti cop" term as unfair. I can't argue that. But while I think we can all agree to dislike abusive cops. I believe there are categories of people and their opinions of cops. Haven't thought much about it so it's likely not all inclusive.

1.  there are those who believe cops can do no wrong, if a cop did it, he must have a reason. These can be as damaging as the other extreme
2. those who think cops for the most part are decent people trying to do a difficult job. Small percentage are the problem
3. Those who think most cops are power hungry bullies that ocassionally do good things

I'm in cat #2. I think many of the posters here are in #3

Your example sadly, isn't hard to believe. It is difficult for me to grasp a department that has the luxury of having several officers tied up and unavailable to take calls for that length of time without a Sergeant getting pissed but they obviously don't run from call to call like we do here.
Sorry you had that experience. If you are ever in Austin I promise to be professional when issuing you a speeding ticket and it will be for at least 15 over unless it's a school zone.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 28, 2015, 02:51:49 PM
In this case, majority of this board are anti cop and since "Cops beating ____" fits their preconceived view of cops they don't bother to review it and operate on the assumptions its true. It really doesn't matter if it's true or not and they figure their buddies on the page won't bother to look at it either so its a safe assumption. Just my 2 cents



Or...it's like any other article on here where the poster just posted what the media decided the title to be.  Interesting how now the video is conclusive given that you cops are always crying the video doesn't show the full story.

Double standard much?

Always so desperate to play the victim card.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2015, 02:52:51 PM
2 very Good posts above. Avxo & agnostic.

Still leaves the issue as how & what to do with
The scumbag cops & those that lie & cover for them.

Abuse of position by those Should be Punished Hard.
And Exposed.
Then Hopefully Those Types Will Not be Drawn to The Job.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 28, 2015, 02:57:32 PM
I am happy to report that I've never had a disagreeable experience with the police. I suspect the bulk of the police are good people who just want to protect and serve.

A handful should never have become policemen. Extensive psychological testing use to weed most of these misfits out. Are police forces so understaffed that they are willing to accept anyone who walks in the door looking for a job?



Do you think that's really it?

I would agree it's a small percentage that are highly abusive, but there's clearly more that are just abusive to varying degrees.

And it's not just the cops, it's the system.

We repeatedly see them let off as though they are above the law.  We repeatedly see light and minor punishments.  We repeatedly see absurdly high barriers to holding them accountable.

We didn't see any riots when the video came out of cop shooting a guy in the back.  There, they got the investigation done just as timely as they would a civilian, appropriate charges were made (which if I were a betting man he'll probably beat anyway), and the cops were clear and transparent.

In Baltimore, they have still yet to explain what happened.  And we see things handled like they are being handled in Baltimore far more often than the SC shooting.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2015, 03:05:29 PM


Do you think that's really it?

I would agree it's a small percentage that are highly abusive, but there's clearly more that are just abusive to varying degrees.

And it's not just the cops, it's the system.

We repeatedly see them let off as though they are above the law.  We repeatedly see light and minor punishments.  We repeatedly see absurdly high barriers to holding them accountable.

We didn't see any riots when the video came out of cop shooting a guy in the back.  There, they got the investigation done just as timely as they would a civilian, appropriate charges were made (which if I were a betting man he'll probably beat anyway), and the cops were clear and transparent.

In Baltimore, they have still yet to explain what happened.  And we see things handled like they are being handled in Baltimore far more often than the SC shooting.
















Another Good post.

You sum it up exactly with the
Repeatedly being let off or ridiculous minor punishment.
They are not above the law.
Yet often seen to be.
That's not the way to garner public support & confidence in policing.

Clear, honest & transparent it should be.

Smoke & mirrors, fudged excuses & whitewashing is what it usually is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 03:12:21 PM


Or...it's like any other article on here where the poster just posted what the media decided the title to be.  Interesting how now the video is conclusive given that you cops are always crying the video doesn't show the full story.

Double standard much?

Always so desperate to play the victim card.  ::)



Let me try and connect the dots with your post... The video was posted with the title in place. It was talked about as if the title was accurate. Leads me to believe no one actually watched it.

What video is now conclusive? Is there additional video? My comment on the video is that it doesn't show a beat down. He may have gotten beaten before or after that particular video but the title indicates  or implies it shows a beating. So ironically the video may NOT show the whole story.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 03:15:03 PM
2 very Good posts above. Avxo & agnostic.

Still leaves the issue as how & what to do with
The scumbag cops & those that lie & cover for them.

Abuse of position by those Should be Punished Hard.
And Exposed.
Then Hopefully Those Types Will Not be Drawn to The Job.



agree
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 03:18:35 PM













Another Good post.

You sum it up exactly with the
Repeatedly being let off or ridiculous minor punishment.
They are not above the law.
Yet often seen to be.
That's not the way to garner public support & confidence in policing.

Clear, honest & transparent it should be.

Smoke & mirrors, fudged excuses & whitewashing is what it usually is.

and...we're back  :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2015, 03:24:53 PM
and...we're back  :)













Yes..... Meaning.???

You work in policing
How about You Coming out with some Strong Wise words
Of How you think these issues could be resolved.

Or why the continual covering up & minor punishments
Are given out.

Do you not think it should be clear, honest & transparent then.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 28, 2015, 03:47:07 PM
Let me try and connect the dots with your post... The video was posted with the title in place. It was talked about as if the title was accurate. Leads me to believe no one actually watched it.

What video is now conclusive? Is there additional video? My comment on the video is that it doesn't show a beat down. He may have gotten beaten before or after that particular video but the title indicates  or implies it shows a beating. So ironically the video may NOT show the whole story.     


If true, I stand corrected, but this sure sounds as though you are attempting to make the video out to be conclusive:


can't tell much from the video. Certainly can't conclude a beating was being done.  But really, all someone has to do these days is put a title "Cops beat ____" and 90% of the folks here will operate on the assumption the cops beat ____ rather than look at the video independently and determine if it's true for themselves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on April 28, 2015, 03:49:49 PM












Yes..... Meaning.???






Meaning he's in total denial about systemic abuse.

Just some factual history, he's actually tried to compare the Blue Wall with the lochness monster.  He claims that cops can honestly and objectively investigate themselves and that they are held accountable.

He's a walking, talking Blue Wall and in complete denial.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2015, 04:14:31 PM


Meaning he's in total denial about systemic abuse.

Just some factual history, he's actually tried to compare the Blue Wall with the lochness monster.  He claims that cops can honestly and objectively investigate themselves and that they are held accountable.

He's a walking, talking Blue Wall and in complete denial.
















You could be right.
At times he comes across as reasonable & decent cop.
Which I hope he is.
Though it is concerning just how quick he changes.
Then is he doing this at work while on Shift.

Then he is quick to throw out the Cop Haters & Authority Issues' .
Yet he picks & choses what he wishes to answer & avoid.
That's his right of course.

I'm Yet to see him Strongly condemn the Blatant Abuses by cops
And Cover ups by Police Departments.
Or offer any Real Ideas To these Problems.

Oh yes of course Police investigating Police.
Very Clear, Honest & Transparent.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2015, 06:24:04 PM
Good post. Lot of thought and time went into it. I appreciate that. My original answer was geared towards the average getbig converstation. So you are correct to point out the "anti cop" term as unfair. I can't argue that. But while I think we can all agree to dislike abusive cops. I believe there are categories of people and their opinions of cops. Haven't thought much about it so it's likely not all inclusive.

1.  there are those who believe cops can do no wrong, if a cop did it, he must have a reason. These can be as damaging as the other extreme
2. those who think cops for the most part are decent people trying to do a difficult job. Small percentage are the problem
3. Those who think most cops are power hungry bullies that ocassionally do good things

I'm in cat #2. I think many of the posters here are in #3

Your example sadly, isn't hard to believe. It is difficult for me to grasp a department that has the luxury of having several officers tied up and unavailable to take calls for that length of time without a Sergeant getting pissed but they obviously don't run from call to call like we do here.
Sorry you had that experience. If you are ever in Austin I promise to be professional when issuing you a speeding ticket and it will be for at least 15 over unless it's a school zone.     


I think several people don't necessarily fall into these 3 categories, as in, they're not so much about percentages ("few good ones, many bad ones" and vice versa) but rather they are angered by the lack of accountability, punishment and reciprocity in some cases. If the cops who abuse their authority get exposed somehow (if they don't try to cover up their tracks), they know that quite often their buddies or other cops will investigate them ("investigation" having quite a fluid definition in some cases) and perhaps cover up for them in sick display of camaraderie (along with unions, protective associations, etc) and also they know they will not be treated the same as the rest of the citizens.
This sick situation where cops see that in several cases they can abuse their power with impunity, just ferments a toxic culture that makes it easier for officers to commit abuses (this especially applies not to the "bad apples", who would probably be abusive anyway, but to those who would be decent at their job but then enter into a downward spiral of abuse if they see they can get away with it).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 08:47:23 PM












Yes..... Meaning.???

You work in policing
How about You Coming out with some Strong Wise words
Of How you think these issues could be resolved.

Or why the continual covering up & minor punishments
Are given out.

Do you not think it should be clear, honest & transparent then.



Issue resolving-  Officers found to be using excessive force are either re-trained if minor and due to training, or fired if overtly excessive, charged if applicable

Officers found to be falsifying a report, clear indication of deception - fired, charged if applicable

nvestigators suspected of ommiting evidence or facts on a police investigation - Fired charged if applicible

Any officer witnessing a policy violation involving use of force and not writing a supplement that is factual, or sees a serious policy violation and is found to have not alerted a supervisor is fired. Supervisor doesn't pass allegation up channel is fired.

Educate public on processes of investigations. Many would be shocked there is a back log in many departments of over 200 days on some forensic evidence.

Create and educate a civilian monitor committee that oversees Internal Affairs complaints from citizens.

Executive staff makes clear the expectations and holds everyone accountable for honesty.

Training Academy and FTO are indoctrinated in the new standards and expectations and preach it constantly.

In car cameras and body mikes for anyone working the street with a clear policy that failing to turn them on, or turning them off during a contact is grounds for firing.

THEN... start charging citizens with a crime when they are found to have lied about an allegation towards a police officer. It has to be clear evidence caught on video or audio that they lied.

Educate the public that inspite of what the youtube lawyers say, you don't have a right to physically resist arrest even if you don't agree.

That's a start 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2015, 09:44:17 PM
Officers Who Used Taser 8 Times on Disabled Woman Get Prison

FLORENCE, S.C. — Apr 27, 2015, 5:59 PM ET
By JEFFREY COLLINS Associated Press

Two former small town police officers in South Carolina were sentenced to prison time Monday for unnecessarily shocking a mentally disabled woman with a Taser at least eight times.

Franklin Brown, 35, was sentenced to 18 months in prison and his fellow Marion police officer Eric Walters, 39, was sentenced to a year and a day. Brown's sentence was longer because he shocked 40-year-old Melissa Davis while she was already handcuffed in April 2013.

When fellow officers asked Brown why he shocked the handcuffed woman, he replied he "did not want to touch that nasty (obscenity)," according to the plea agreement Brown signed last October.

The sentences were at the low end of the federal guidelines for the case, but federal judge Bryan Harwell said it was important to send a message that police officers are not above the law, especially when they do something like this.

"This one incident can cause the public to lose respect and overshadow the good work, the hard work, done by thousands of officers every day," Harwell said.

Monday's sentencing came just over three weeks after a North Charleston police officer was charged with murder in the shooting of an unarmed motorist and on the same day as protests in Baltimore — some of them violent — over the death of a man who suffered a severe spinal injury in police custody.

Davis sat in the courtroom, far from Brown and Walters. When Walters told the judge he was sorry for what he did for her, Davis began sobbing and her family took her out of the courtroom. Her sister said the woman who had never been in trouble in her life has nightmares, can't even see a police officer without getting scared and is reminded what happened that night every time she looks in the mirror and sees a scar on her forehead.

"Whenever Melissa hears a siren, she tenses up," said her sister Loretta Baldwin, who has sued the officers and the city of Marion, asking for a minimum of nearly $2 million.

Davis, who had lived in the city of 7,000 most of her life, was walking from one house to another around 1:30 one night in April 2013 when Walters stopped her. Walters has never made it clear what happened, but he ended up shooting her with his Taser, then following up with four more shocks after demanding she put her hands behind her back but giving her no time to respond, according to his plea agreement.

When Brown arrived as backup, Davis was in handcuffs and Walters was removing the Taser probes from her back. Brown said it appeared one of Davis' hands had slipped from her improperly applied handcuffs and he ordered everyone to move away and shocked Davis again, even though she was not trying to fight or escape, according to his plea agreement.

Brown shocked Davis twice more, then offered to let her go if he could shoot her in the forehead one more time with his Taser, prosecutors said.

Brown said little in court. He took off his glasses and stared ahead when Davis' sister spoke. The judge agreed to let him graduate from technical school before he reports to prison for 18 months.

Walters apologized to Davis, his family and the city of Marion. He said he has no job and had to tell his children, once so proud their dad was a police officer, that he did a bad thing and has to go to jail.

"That's not me. That wasn't me. I made one mistake. Now I am going to pay the ultimate price," Walters said.

Walters' lawyer has asked for six months in prison and six months of home confinement because he has already had several heart attacks. The sentence for both Walters and Brown were well under the 10-year maximum for the deprivation of rights under color of law charge each pleaded guilty to in October.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/prosecutors-prison-officers-taser-case-30608287
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:08:04 PM
I think several people don't necessarily fall into these 3 categories, as in, they're not so much about percentages ("few good ones, many bad ones" and vice versa) but rather they are angered by the lack of accountability, punishment and reciprocity in some cases. If the cops who abuse their authority get exposed somehow (if they don't try to cover up their tracks), they know that quite often their buddies or other cops will investigate them ("investigation" having quite a fluid definition in some cases) and perhaps cover up for them in sick display of camaraderie (along with unions, protective associations, etc) and also they know they will not be treated the same as the rest of the citizens.
This sick situation where cops see that in several cases they can abuse their power with impunity, just ferments a toxic culture that makes it easier for officers to commit abuses (this especially applies not to the "bad apples", who would probably be abusive anyway, but to those who would be decent at their job but then enter into a downward spiral of abuse if they see they can get away with it).

I'm angered at some of the cases as well. overall, good post
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:12:09 PM

If true, I stand corrected, but this sure sounds as though you are attempting to make the video out to be conclusive:



what I mean was this- That particular video that made up the clip posted did not show a beating was taken place. You could hardly tell what was going on, but based on the label, it implied there was a beating taking place there. People appeared to accept it was a video showing a beating. Had they watched it as I did, they would have seen the video did not show a beating. A beating may have taken place, but the video didn't show it.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:13:54 PM













You could be right.
At times he comes across as reasonable & decent cop.
Which I hope he is.
Though it is concerning just how quick he changes.
Then is he doing this at work while on Shift.

Then he is quick to throw out the Cop Haters & Authority Issues' .
Yet he picks & choses what he wishes to answer & avoid.
That's his right of course.

I'm Yet to see him Strongly condemn the Blatant Abuses by cops
And Cover ups by Police Departments.
Or offer any Real Ideas To these Problems.

Oh yes of course Police investigating Police.
Very Clear, Honest & Transparent.

Can you give an example of "how quick he changes"?

You probably arent looking very hard if you have yet to see me strongly condemn blatant abuse by cops
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2015, 10:19:45 PM


Meaning he's in total denial about systemic abuse. Absolutley I am
Just some factual history, he's actually tried to compare the Blue Wall with the lochness monster.  He claims that cops can honestly and objectively investigate themselves and that they are held accountable. I usually speak based on my experience and my department. The rest is my opinion based on my belief the majority of cops are in this for the right reasons and want to do a good job. Also information available through friends and aquantances at other departments. I'm aware there are issues, there are some bad apples and there are likely some smaller departments that in the the 1960's when it comes to policing, but I don't believe it is a systemic, out of control problem. I think we differ on the extent.   He's a walking, talking Blue Wall and in complete denial. Then you are an anti cop radical blinded by your hatred...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on April 28, 2015, 10:34:33 PM
I think several people don't necessarily fall into these 3 categories, as in, they're not so much about percentages ("few good ones, many bad ones" and vice versa) but rather they are angered by the lack of accountability, punishment and reciprocity in some cases. If the cops who abuse their authority get exposed somehow (if they don't try to cover up their tracks), they know that quite often their buddies or other cops will investigate them ("investigation" having quite a fluid definition in some cases) and perhaps cover up for them in sick display of camaraderie (along with unions, protective associations, etc) and also they know they will not be treated the same as the rest of the citizens.
This sick situation where cops see that in several cases they can abuse their power with impunity, just ferments a toxic culture that makes it easier for officers to commit abuses (this especially applies not to the "bad apples", who would probably be abusive anyway, but to those who would be decent at their job but then enter into a downward spiral of abuse if they see they can get away with it).

As the saying goes "Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on April 28, 2015, 11:17:44 PM

Commission approves policy for Los Angeles police body cameras


Source: Yahoo! News / Reuters

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Los Angeles Police Commission approved a policy on Tuesday clearing the way for the widespread use of body cameras by patrol officers in the second-largest U.S. city, as tensions rise in the United States over police use-of-force incidents.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said in December the city would equip 7,000 Los Angeles Police Department officers with the devices over the next two years to capture their day-to-day interactions with civilians.

The commission's 3-1 vote on rules governing the use of the devices brings Los Angeles closer to becoming the largest U.S. city to put body cameras into widespread use. New York, Chicago and Washington are conducting pilot programs to test the cameras and evaluate their worth.

Officials are also testing the use of body cameras by officers in Baltimore, which on Monday saw riots following several days of protests over the death of a black man who suffered a fatal spine injury while in police custody.


Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/commission-approves-policy-los-angeles-police-body-cameras-221327121.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 29, 2015, 01:13:09 AM
Can you give an example of "how quick he changes"?

You probably arent looking very hard if you have yet to see me strongly condemn blatant abuse by cops












Easy example you have changed when replying to me.
Also resorting to the two Accusations.

Again no answers to the rest of my post.
And no constructive ideas / thoughts
On the Problem Big or Small.

It's you that has the Problem it seems, with others who dare voice
Their opinion & See issues in law enforcement & Abuse of Position.

Cops are people like the rest of us so they have Problems & Faults
Like the rest of us, Difference is they have the Law & power the
Job comes with, As Difficult as it may Be They Have to be Held
To a Higher Standard of Behaviour.

I have Said Many A time A Scumbag is A Scumbag
Be they cops, politicians, teachers, road sweepers, Drug Dealer or thug.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on April 29, 2015, 01:19:04 AM

Issue resolving-  Officers found to be using excessive force are either re-trained if minor and due to training, or fired if overtly excessive, charged if applicable

Officers found to be falsifying a report, clear indication of deception - fired, charged if applicable

nvestigators suspected of ommiting evidence or facts on a police investigation - Fired charged if applicible

Any officer witnessing a policy violation involving use of force and not writing a supplement that is factual, or sees a serious policy violation and is found to have not alerted a supervisor is fired. Supervisor doesn't pass allegation up channel is fired.

Educate public on processes of investigations. Many would be shocked there is a back log in many departments of over 200 days on some forensic evidence.

Create and educate a civilian monitor committee that oversees Internal Affairs complaints from citizens.

Executive staff makes clear the expectations and holds everyone accountable for honesty.

Training Academy and FTO are indoctrinated in the new standards and expectations and preach it constantly.

In car cameras and body mikes for anyone working the street with a clear policy that failing to turn them on, or turning them off during a contact is grounds for firing.

THEN... start charging citizens with a crime when they are found to have lied about an allegation towards a police officer. It has to be clear evidence caught on video or audio that they lied.

Educate the public that inspite of what the youtube lawyers say, you don't have a right to physically resist arrest even if you don't agree.

That's a start 















Let me say I Hadn't Seen This Post Of Yours.
In my previous Reply.

Very good points.

Thank You.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 29, 2015, 07:48:39 AM
http://harvardlawreview.org/2015/04/considering-police-body-cameras/

Interesting but long article on police body cameras by the Harvard Law Review
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on April 29, 2015, 02:02:29 PM
Here's one of the potential objections to police cameras that they came up with. They're mixing a lot of issues together, but it's also fair to say that's what happens on a slippery slope:

Quote
Surveillance State. — In a post-9/11 world, the addition of yet another form of government surveillance should not go unexamined: recent technological advances have allowed the state to move beyond the use of traditional electronic surveillance devices — like wiretaps and bugs — toward more pervasive surveillance techniques. From the Snowden leaks to reports of police drone use, citizens are more conscious than ever of being watched by their government. Moreover, “mission creep” on the part of camera manufacturers has already begun: at least one city has made plans to outfit its parking attendants with body cameras, and some advocates have called for expanding cameras into other arenas, like the classroom.

So although police body cameras have the potential to benefit citizens and officers alike, they nevertheless represent another substantial step toward a surveillance state. Police departments in recent decades have become increasingly militarized, complete with intelligence departments, devices that mimic cell phone towers, and facial recognition software. Facial recognition software in particular may pose a threat to civilian privacy when coupled with body cameras:

[T]he increasing effectiveness of facial recognition software, even in consumer products like Facebook, means that simply recording an image of a person (in a private or public space) can lead to further identification. . . . Officer-mounted wearable cameras, paired with facial recognition, could easily become much like the current crop of automated license readers, constantly reading thousands of faces (license plates), interpreting identity (plate number), and cross-checking this information against national and local crime databases in real-time.

While not necessarily “inimical to individual liberty,” this rapid expansion of police oversight may do less to empower civilians to “watch their watchers,” and more to enable the government to effectively track, detain, and arrest individuals. Indeed, many policing initiatives that have been adopted in the name of “protecting” civilians have later been used against them. Past experiences should inform present debates over national adoption of body cameras, and proponents should be particularly careful to consider the long-term ramifications of normalizing this technology.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on April 30, 2015, 06:44:44 AM
 I think body cameras for most departments will eventually be commonplace. But my instincts tell me it's not going to solve issues   Of trust like people believe it will ..  I think it will certainly be more positive than negative but it is not the cure all people seem to believe it will be
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2015, 09:01:26 AM
Baltimore prosecutor charges police with murder, manslaughter in death of Freddie Gray

DEVELOPING: Prosecutors charged six Baltimore police officers Friday with crimes ranging from murder to assault in the death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man whose death last month of injuries apparently suffered in police custody touched off peaceful protests that degenerated into a night of rioting, looting and chaos Monday.

State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, speaking at a Friday news conference, blasted the six police involved in Gray's arrest on April 12, during which he suffered a broken neck that proved fatal a week later. Mosby said the police had no basis for arresting Gray, who police said avoided eye contact and was carrying a switchblade. One police officer, identified as Caesar Goodson, 45, was charged with second-degree murder, while others were charged with crimes including manslaughter and assault.

"No one is above the law," declared Mosby, who said she comes from five generations of law enforcement and has been on the job for four months. Her husband is Baltimore City Councilman Nick Mosby, who has spoken out about the riots and anger in the city's African-American community.

Gray suffered a broken neck, apparently while riding in the back of the Baltimore police van. Mosby said Friday the medical examiner had ruled the death a homicide. Police sources have said his injuries may have been caused by his head hitting a bolt inside the vehicle, according to local reports citing sources familiar with a police report now in the hands of state prosecutors.

The charges leveled against the police include:

- Goodson was charged with second-degree depraved-heart murder, involuntary manslaughter, second-degree negligent assault, as well as other charges including failure to render aid and misconduct in office.

- Police Officer William Porter was charged with involuntary manslaughter, second-degree assault and misconduct in office.

- Police Lt. Brian Rice was charged with involuntary manslaughter and second-degree assault.

- Police Officer Alicia White was charged with involuntary manslaughter, second degree assault and misconduct in office.

- Police officers Edward Nero and Garrett Miller were charged with multiple counts of assault, false imprisonment and misconduct in office.

Mosby said her office’s police integrity unit began investigating the case the day after Gray’s arrest and interviewed dozens of witnesses, viewed video, including of police statements, reviewed medical records and canvassed “the community and the family of Mr. Gray.”

She said her probe found that the police officers, part of a bike patrol led by Rice, made eye contact with Gray, who has a rap sheet that includes several drug arrests. Gray ran from police, prompting the officers to chase after him, Mosby said. Gray surrendered a short time later and was handcuffed with his arms behind his back, she said.

“It was at this time that Mr. Gray indicated that he could not breathe and requested an inhaler, to no avail,” said Mosby, who also said the knife Gray was carrying clipped to the inside of his pants was not a switchblade and was not illegal.

Police held Gray on the sidewalk until Goodson arrived driving the van, Mosby said. Goodson, Rice, Nero and Miller loaded him into the van, she said, but did not secure him with a seatbelt, a policy that had been put in place department wide nine days earlier.

Moments later, Rice ordered Goodson to pull over and the officers took Gray back out of the van. The shackled Gray’s legs, filled out paperwork and put him back in, placing him on his stomach on the floor of the vehicle, Mosby said. It was after that, she said, that Gray suffered his injuries. Mosby said Gray was injured “as a result of being handcuffed, shackled by his feet and unrestrained inside” the wagon.

Mosby said the police stopped at least one more time to observe Gray, but did not immediately request medical assistance for him despite his pleas.

The Baltimore police officers union issued a statement before Mosby's announcement, saying the six officers are not responsible for Gray's death.

"As tragic as this situation is, none of the officers involved are responsible for the death of Mr. Gray," Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3 President Gene Ryan said in a statement. "To the contrary, at all times, each of the officers diligently balanced their obligations to protect Mr. Gray and discharge their duties to protect the public."

Gray died a week later, on April 19. Until Friday's news conference few details about the investigation had been publicly released and most of what was known came from local reports citing unnamed sources. An explosive report Wednesday night in the Washington Post cited a fellow passenger's account in a police affidavit that said Gray was thrashing around in an effort to injure himself, although that witness went on the city's CBS affiliate to say his words were taken out of context and that he now fears for his life after his statement was used to bolster the police version of events.

“When I was in the back of that van it did not stop or nothing," Danta Allen, who had been arrested for allegedly stealing a cigarette, told WJZ. "All it did was go straight to the station, but I heard a little banging, like he was banging his head,” Allen said. ” I didn’t even know he was in the van until we got to the station.”

Gray's lawyer has said his spine was nearly severed, but results of an autopsy, like the police report, remained under wraps. That has fueled frustration and suspicion in the community, where peaceful protests devolved into rioting and looting, culminating in a night of chaos on Monday.

The Gray family's lawyers said they wqant the process to play out, and urged calm.

"This family wants justice, and they want justice that comes at the right time and not too soon," attorney Hassan Murphy said Wednesday.

Meanwhile, protesters over Gray’s death continue to spread across the nation. Aside from gatherings in Baltimore, demonstrations spread into Philadelphia and New York Thursday.

Philly.com reports that Philadelphia police made three or four arrests after hundreds of protesters marched through the city to show support for Gray.

More demonstrations are planned through the weekend.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/05/01/many-questions-still-remain-in-death-freddie-gray/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 01, 2015, 09:14:02 AM
FOP calls on prosecutor to recuse herself, defends officers
 
 
 

   
Source: Baltimore Sun

A Fraternal Order of Police lodge is asking Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby to appoint a special prosecutor to the Freddie Gray investigation because of her personal connection to the Gray family's attorney, William H. "Billy" Murphy Jr., and her marriage to a city councilman.

The letter from Gene Ryan, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, also states that none of the six officers involved in Gray's arrest and death were responsible for the 25-year-old West Baltimore man's death that spurred protests and unrest, including rioting and looting on Monday. The letter was released just minutes before Mosby announced charges against the officers.

"Not one of the officers involved in this tragic situation left home in the morning with the anticipation that someone with whom they interacted would not go home that night," the letter states. "As tragic as this situation is, none of the officers involved are responsible for the death of Mr. Gray."

Ryan requests that Mosby appoint a "Special Independent Prosecutor."

Read more: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-riots/bs-md-fop-letter-20150501-story.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2015, 06:44:39 PM
Hidden Camera Catches NYPD Cops Arresting Man For No Reason, Making Up Purpose for Stopping Him

Bronx, NY – A video published on Youtube yesterday by user benfarias13 shows an apalling abuse of power by the NYPD when they pull over and arrest a man for absolutely no reason.

The video begins with the driver sitting calmly in his car when an officer walks up and opens the car door, demanding he “step out of the car.” The cop immediately tells him to put his hands behind his back and cuffs him, asking him if he has any weapons. The man complies and replies that he does not have any weapons, asking why he’s being arrested. The officer does not answer, asking again if he has any weapons. The driver reiterates that he has no weapons, asking again why he’s being arrested. The officer’s answer? “Because.”

The man asks again,

    “Because what? Why Am I being arrested? Tell me why I’m being arrested. You never even told me why I got pulled over in the first place.”

The cop repeats “You have any weapons on you?” to which the driver firmly repeats he does not. Still not getting an answer as to why he’s being detained, the driver asks

    “Why did you search my vehicle, because you saw a bag? That makes no sense.”

Apparently the officers thought he was carrying a gun around in a platic bag. Understandably bewildered, the man asks

    “Why would you assume there’s a weapon in a plastic bag?”

He continues to ask why he’s being arrested. The cops continue to ignore his question.

The camera keeps rolling as they take the man away, then return to search his vehicle further, not realizing the camera is recording. While an officer rifles through the driver’s belongings, he moves the phone, blocking the lens in the process, but the audio remains clear.

There’s silence for about two minutes until two officers return to the vehicle. What the officers can be heard saying next is incredible.

    Cop 1: “I don’t even know why we pulled him over…he keeps saying what’s the reason why you pulled me over”

    Cop 2: “Just put “Cocaine Test”

    Cop 1: “That’s what you put”

You can hear the officers laughing about it as they open the door, grab the phone and stop the recording, realizing they’ve just been caught.

New York’s finest, ladies and gentlemen.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-nypd-caught-arresting-man-reason-i-pulled-over/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 02, 2015, 04:30:59 AM
FOP calls on prosecutor to recuse herself, defends officers
 
 
 

   
Source: Baltimore Sun

A Fraternal Order of Police lodge is asking Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby to appoint a special prosecutor to the Freddie Gray investigation because of her personal connection to the Gray family's attorney, William H. "Billy" Murphy Jr., and her marriage to a city councilman.

The letter from Gene Ryan, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, also states that none of the six officers involved in Gray's arrest and death were responsible for the 25-year-old West Baltimore man's death that spurred protests and unrest, including rioting and looting on Monday. The letter was released just minutes before Mosby announced charges against the officers.

"Not one of the officers involved in this tragic situation left home in the morning with the anticipation that someone with whom they interacted would not go home that night," the letter states. "As tragic as this situation is, none of the officers involved are responsible for the death of Mr. Gray."

Ryan requests that Mosby appoint a "Special Independent Prosecutor."

Read more: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-riots/bs-md-fop-letter-20150501-story.html






Why post this twice, apologist?

Didn't hear you saying shit about the Ferguson prosecutor to recuse himself...and even the fucking bar association called for that.

Must be only important when the prosecutor isn't trying to push for the cops.

Or maybe because the Baltimore prosecutor is black.  You racists don't like that.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 05:03:47 AM





Why post this twice, apologist?

Didn't hear you saying shit about the Ferguson prosecutor to recuse himself...and even the fucking bar association called for that.

Must be only important when the prosecutor isn't trying to push for the cops.

Or maybe because the Baltimore prosecutor is black.  You racists don't like that.



skippy the cop hater,all cops are bad :D.   because there are two threads going mr cop hater
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 02, 2015, 06:23:39 AM
skippy the cop hater,all cops are bad :D.  because there are to threads going mr cop hater

Only a VERY small % of cops are bad, and they belong in prison.

IMHO, the real problem is this:
Good cops treat BAD cops differently than they would treat any other criminal.

if they saw Joe Blow on the street tell a lie that would result in a civilian losing their freedom in jail - making up an assault story, planting drugs, just plain beating his ass - the Good Cop would report them, and the Joe Blow would be in jail for it.

When Good Cops see bad COPS doing these things, they usually look the other way.  Which makes them bad cops too, because they condone, allow and endorse this action by their inaction.

THAT Is a huge difference but makes them the same.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 06:54:39 AM
Only a VERY small % of cops are bad, and they belong in prison.

IMHO, the real problem is this:
Good cops treat BAD cops differently than they would treat any other criminal.

if they saw Joe Blow on the street tell a lie that would result in a civilian losing their freedom in jail - making up an assault story, planting drugs, just plain beating his ass - the Good Cop would report them, and the Joe Blow would be in jail for it.

When Good Cops see bad COPS doing these things, they usually look the other way.  Which makes them bad cops too, because they condone, allow and endorse this action by their inaction.

THAT Is a huge difference but makes them the same.

not according to skippy
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 02, 2015, 07:47:25 AM
Only a VERY small % of cops are bad, and they belong in prison.

IMHO, the real problem is this:
Good cops treat BAD cops differently than they would treat any other criminal.

if they saw Joe Blow on the street tell a lie that would result in a civilian losing their freedom in jail - making up an assault story, planting drugs, just plain beating his ass - the Good Cop would report them, and the Joe Blow would be in jail for it.

When Good Cops see bad COPS doing these things, they usually look the other way.  Which makes them bad cops too, because they condone, allow and endorse this action by their inaction.

THAT Is a huge difference but makes them the same.


Good point, though I would add prosecutors, judges, and often juries want to look the other way as well.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 02, 2015, 07:48:42 AM
not according to skippy



Nope, I would agree with that.

Again, where are your posts criticizing the brutality?

Oh that's right, you don't have any.  Even taking down innocent people is ok with you.

lol, run along now apologist tool.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 09:10:28 AM


Nope, I would agree with that.

Again, where are your posts criticizing the brutality?

Oh that's right, you don't have any.  Even taking down innocent people is ok with you.

lol, run along now apologist tool.

lol the cop hater has spoken.my guess is you've had run in with the cops because your probably not on the up and up or you caught your wife or girlfriend cheating on you with a cop because you couldn't satisfy her :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 02, 2015, 11:08:54 AM
lol the cop hater has spoken.my guess is you've had run in with the cops because your probably not on the up and up or you caught your wife or girlfriend cheating on you with a cop because you couldn't satisfy her :D


Ah yes, you got nothing, so you have to resort to attacking my family.

Again, where are your posts criticizing the brutality?

Oh that's right, you don't have any.  Even taking down innocent people is ok with you.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 11:30:37 AM

Ah yes, you got nothing, so you have to resort to attacking my family.

Again, where are your posts criticizing the brutality?

Oh that's right, you don't have any.  Even taking down innocent people is ok with you.



lol attacking your family i'm talking about you,don' get your panties in a bunch
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: The Enigma on May 02, 2015, 11:53:54 AM
Only a VERY small % of cops are bad, and they belong in prison.

IMHO, the real problem is this:
Good cops treat BAD cops differently than they would treat any other criminal.

if they saw Joe Blow on the street tell a lie that would result in a civilian losing their freedom in jail - making up an assault story, planting drugs, just plain beating his ass - the Good Cop would report them, and the Joe Blow would be in jail for it.

When Good Cops see bad COPS doing these things, they usually look the other way.  Which makes them bad cops too, because they condone, allow and endorse this action by their inaction.

THAT Is a huge difference but makes them the same.

93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. Let me say that again......93% OF BLACKS ARE MURDERED BY OTHER BLACKS.

Black lives do matter, just not to blacks.

There's your problem, it's not the cops.

Yeah there's always some bad apples, but most are decent people doing a dirty job.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 12:05:07 PM
93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. Let me say that again......93% OF BLACKS ARE MURDERED BY OTHER BLACKS.

Black lives do matter, just not to blacks.

There's your problem, it's not the cops.

Yeah there's always some bad apples, but most are decent people doing a dirty job.

no skippy says most cops are bad
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: The Enigma on May 02, 2015, 12:21:12 PM
no skippy says most cops are bad


If 93% of blacks were murdered by cops I'd agree. But that's not the case.

93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. That's insanity.

Protests should be about that!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 02, 2015, 12:23:38 PM
93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. Let me say that again......93% OF BLACKS ARE MURDERED BY OTHER BLACKS.

Black lives do matter, just not to blacks.

There's your problem, it's not the cops.

Yeah there's always some bad apples, but most are decent people doing a dirty job.



If you were a little brighter you might realize that the issue in this thread, as well as in Baltimore, is government killing people.

Cops are supposed to be stopping murders, not contributing to them.

Private citizens are generally held accountable for hurting others.  Cops are generally given a pass.

It's not that hard to understand.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 02, 2015, 12:40:53 PM
If 93% of blacks were murdered by cops I'd agree. But that's not the case.

93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. That's insanity.

Protests should be about that!

it's much easier to blame all cops because we know they're all bad
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: The Enigma on May 02, 2015, 01:06:36 PM


If you were a little brighter you might realize that the issue in this thread, as well as in Baltimore, is government killing people.

Cops are supposed to be stopping murders, not contributing to them.

Private citizens are generally held accountable for hurting others.  Cops are generally given a pass.

It's not that hard to understand.




I'd love to see Baltimore remove ALL cops from the streets. That would be fun to watch. Let the Thugs run the place w/o law enforcement & see what happens.

Go check Freddie Grays rap sheet, that might give you an idea.










Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 02, 2015, 04:17:28 PM
Go check Freddie Grays rap sheet, that might give you an idea.

So it's ok when cops gravely injure someone who is in their custody and then repeatedly refuse to provide prompt emergency medical car because he has a rap sheet? Go fuck yourself troll.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 02, 2015, 04:33:46 PM
If 93% of blacks were murdered by cops I'd agree. But that's not the case.

93% of Blacks are murdered by other Blacks. That's insanity.

Protests should be about that!

Yes but in those 93% of cases you bet your ass that the guy who did it will be prosecuted.

The cops wont. That is not logical but your fear and need to feel safe is making you a fool.

“They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: The Enigma on May 03, 2015, 08:31:32 AM



Yes but in those 93% of cases you bet your ass that the guy who did it will be prosecuted.





Incorrect, 46% of Baltimore murders go unsolved, thus not prosecuted.

Please get your 'facts' straight before discussing subject matter.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 03, 2015, 10:36:11 AM
Incorrect, 46% of Baltimore murders go unsolved, thus not prosecuted.

Please get your 'facts' straight before discussing subject matter.



There will be no prosecution if the murder goes unsolved.
But thanks for pointing out the obvious.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 03, 2015, 12:40:19 PM
There will be no prosecution if the murder goes unsolved.
But thanks for pointing out the obvious.



 ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 03, 2015, 02:21:54 PM
So it's ok when cops gravely injure someone who is in their custody and then repeatedly refuse to provide prompt emergency medical car because he has a rap sheet? Go fuck yourself troll.


I think it is inconclusive at this point if the cops gravely injured Freddie Gray. They may have, but at this point that is not clear. What is clear is the lack of concern for his distress. That they did not call for EMS is not right. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 03, 2015, 04:44:46 PM
I think it is inconclusive at this point if the cops gravely injured Freddie Gray. They may have, but at this point that is not clear. What is clear is the lack of concern for his distress. That they did not call for EMS is not right. 

Whether they did or not isn't important to the point I was trying to make. 2Thick suggested that what happened is, somehow ok, because of Gray's rap sheet; he basically suggests that if you have a rap sheet you're a second class citizen, whose life can be snuffed out by cops. This is legally wrong and fundamentally immoral.

To your point: I'm not privy to all the evidence so I can't say if these cops injured Gray. Not that my opinion will matter since I won't be on the jury. But from what we have heard - and seen - so far the conclusion that Gray suffered grave injuries at some point after he was originally arrested and before arriving at the station, while in the custody of Baltimore police is inescapable. Furthermore, the type of injury he is alleged to have is unlikely to be self inflicted, especially in the confined space he was in. And if the injury wasn't self-inflicted, there's only one other option. We'll see what comes out during the trial.

By the way, I take exception at the FOP statement that these officers did their job. The FOP, and statements like that, is why the public is growing weary. Even if the cops hadn't injured Gray, Gray was in their custody and they had a duty and an obligation to provide him with prompt medical attention which they didn't do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 04, 2015, 10:54:04 AM
Whether they did or not isn't important to the point I was trying to make. 2Thick suggested that what happened is, somehow ok, because of Gray's rap sheet; he basically suggests that if you have a rap sheet you're a second class citizen, whose life can be snuffed out by cops. This is legally wrong and fundamentally immoral.

To your point: I'm not privy to all the evidence so I can't say if these cops injured Gray. Not that my opinion will matter since I won't be on the jury. But from what we have heard - and seen - so far the conclusion that Gray suffered grave injuries at some point after he was originally arrested and before arriving at the station, while in the custody of Baltimore police is inescapable. Furthermore, the type of injury he is alleged to have is unlikely to be self inflicted, especially in the confined space he was in. And if the injury wasn't self-inflicted, there's only one other option. We'll see what comes out during the trial.

By the way, I take exception at the FOP statement that these officers did their job. The FOP, and statements like that, is why the public is growing weary. Even if the cops hadn't injured Gray, Gray was in their custody and they had a duty and an obligation to provide him with prompt medical attention which they didn't do.

If I don't point out these things as they come up, 240 will likely quote it as fact. I agree with you. Regardless of a persons rap sheet, or how depraved an individual is, (this includes any person arrested by the police for any crime) once they are in police custody they should not be at risk of further injury by the police. I was shocked to hear that the seatbelt policy only came into effect 9 days before this happened. We've had a policy that prisoners must be seatbelted in prior to transport since at least the mid 90's.

I think when they were placing him in the van initially there were indications an injury had occurred. It may have been aggravated by rolling around in the van, or the damage may already have been done. That they didn't call EMS is just plain stupid on their part and they dropped the ball. Someone died, maybe due to the medical care not being given 30 minutes sooner, maybe not but I would hold them responsible for not acting upon information they had.

I too dislike FOP blanket statements like that. It does more harm than good. I have quit my Association 2 times in 22 years over disagreements like that. We should call a duck a duck. The TRUTH is what is important and what should always matter in any event. When we play politics, we become the very people we detest.   

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 04, 2015, 11:16:11 AM
If I don't point out these things as they come up, 240 will likely quote it as fact. I agree with you. Regardless of a persons rap sheet, or how depraved an individual is, (this includes any person arrested by the police for any crime) once they are in police custody they should not be at risk of further injury by the police. I was shocked to hear that the seatbelt policy only came into effect 9 days before this happened. We've had a policy that prisoners must be seatbelted in prior to transport since at least the mid 90's.

I think when they were placing him in the van initially there were indications an injury had occurred. It may have been aggravated by rolling around in the van, or the damage may already have been done. That they didn't call EMS is just plain stupid on their part and they dropped the ball. Someone died, maybe due to the medical care not being given 30 minutes sooner, maybe not but I would hold them responsible for not acting upon information they had.

I too dislike FOP blanket statements like that. It does more harm than good. I have quit my Association 2 times in 22 years over disagreements like that. We should call a duck a duck. The TRUTH is what is important and what should always matter in any event. When we play politics, we become the very people we detest.

We need more officers like you.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 04, 2015, 11:46:57 AM
If I don't point out these things as they come up, 240 will likely quote it as fact. I agree with you. Regardless of a persons rap sheet, or how depraved an individual is, (this includes any person arrested by the police for any crime) once they are in police custody they should not be at risk of further injury by the police. I was shocked to hear that the seatbelt policy only came into effect 9 days before this happened. We've had a policy that prisoners must be seatbelted in prior to transport since at least the mid 90's.

I think when they were placing him in the van initially there were indications an injury had occurred. It may have been aggravated by rolling around in the van, or the damage may already have been done. That they didn't call EMS is just plain stupid on their part and they dropped the ball. Someone died, maybe due to the medical care not being given 30 minutes sooner, maybe not but I would hold them responsible for not acting upon information they had.

I too dislike FOP blanket statements like that. It does more harm than good. I have quit my Association 2 times in 22 years over disagreements like that. We should call a duck a duck. The TRUTH is what is important and what should always matter in any event. When we play politics, we become the very people we detest.   

Can/will you elaborate on this?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 04, 2015, 01:00:22 PM
Can/will you elaborate on this?

We have collective bargaining in our state. Unions are not permitted for cops. Everyone is encouraged to join and you pay monthly dues. They are supposed to be a collective voice for the rank and file. The first time I quit was as a Detective in the mid 90's when I opposed some of the contract issues as well as some political things going on with the representatives at the time. After that administration left I rejoined and things were fine for awhile. I didn't agree with everything they did but that is normal. As I rose up the ranks I noticed the association was focused more on the officer level and would tend to support officers for things I felt didn't need supporting. A new radical president was elected who was anti management and very antagonistic towards management and the Chief in particular. It got to the point he was painting management as bad guys when we were ALL officers and ALL paying dues. After repeated attempts to address his behavior I decided it was silly to pay money to an organization that was attacking me at every opportunity. (The officer rank makes up a vast majority of members so they tend to pander to them and ignore the others. ) I quit for several years until recently when they got a new president in that appears to be level headed and reasonable.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 04, 2015, 01:04:07 PM
We need more officers like you.

Ironically, most of the officers I work around think about the same way. They just don't have an account here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 04, 2015, 01:05:49 PM
We have collective bargaining in our state. Unions are not permitted for cops. Everyone is encouraged to join and you pay monthly dues. They are supposed to be a collective voice for the rank and file. The first time I quit was as a Detective in the mid 90's when I opposed some of the contract issues as well as some political things going on with the representatives at the time. After that administration left I rejoined and things were fine for awhile. I didn't agree with everything they did but that is normal. As I rose up the ranks I noticed the association was focused more on the officer level and would tend to support officers for things I felt didn't need supporting. A new radical president was elected who was anti management and very antagonistic towards management and the Chief in particular. It got to the point he was painting management as bad guys when we were ALL officers and ALL paying dues. After repeated attempts to address his behavior I decided it was silly to pay money to an organization that was attacking me at every opportunity. (The officer rank makes up a vast majority of members so they tend to pander to them and ignore the others. ) I quit for several years until recently when they got a new president in that appears to be level headed and reasonable.   

Thanks.

You seem very intelligent and reasonable and I bet you are a good cop as well.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 04, 2015, 01:17:31 PM
Thanks.

You seem very intelligent and reasonable and I bet you are a good cop as well.

Thank you. I'm not certain about the intelligent part, but from day 1 I've strived to be a good cop. It can get easy to forget the importance almost anything we do in uniform in public has. From responding to a high risk call all the way down to simply eating your lunch at a diner. Everything is watched and everything is judged. I always try to remember that. My brother was a cop in Ft. Worth who retired a few years ago. He would tell me he had a game he would play whenever he felt burned out, or was going to another one of those calls you really hate to take. He said he would make it a point that on that call, on that day, he would do his very best to give that person the best police service they had ever seen. I used that trick many many times in my career and it served me well.

I've got about 12-18 months left before I throw in the towel. It's been at times very trying, very frustrating, and mentally and physically exhausting at times, but I wouldn't trade the experience for anything. I hope I leave my Department and the units I have worked for and overseen better than when I found them.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on May 04, 2015, 02:19:17 PM
Thank you. I'm not certain about the intelligent part, but from day 1 I've strived to be a good cop. It can get easy to forget the importance almost anything we do in uniform in public has. From responding to a high risk call all the way down to simply eating your lunch at a diner. Everything is watched and everything is judged. I always try to remember that. My brother was a cop in Ft. Worth who retired a few years ago. He would tell me he had a game he would play whenever he felt burned out, or was going to another one of those calls you really hate to take. He said he would make it a point that on that call, on that day, he would do his very best to give that person the best police service they had ever seen. I used that trick many many times in my career and it served me well.

I've got about 12-18 months left before I throw in the towel. It's been at times very trying, very frustrating, and mentally and physically exhausting at times, but I wouldn't trade the experience for anything. I hope I leave my Department and the units I have worked for and overseen better than when I found them.














What you say there is very admirable.
👍🏻
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 04, 2015, 03:08:20 PM

Thank you, that's very kind











What you say there is very admirable.
👍🏻
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 04, 2015, 06:20:09 PM
Ironically, most of the officers I work around think about the same way. They just don't have an account here.

Well, that is a problem. Do they even lift!?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 04, 2015, 08:47:23 PM
Suburban Georgia sheriff 'who shot woman inside a model home' is allowed to leave the scene after he refuses to cooperate with police questioning

-Clayton County, Georgia, Sheriff Victor Hill believed to have shot woman at model home near Atlanta suburb Lawrenceville on Sunday night
-Victim Gwenevere McCord, a real estate agent who knew him, was taken to hospital in critical condition and still unconscious Monday morning
-Hill legally allowed to leave scene because he is an active police officer and can't be arrested without warrant from Superior Court judge
-Sheriff re-elected after beating more than 20 corruption charges in 2013 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3067089/Georgia-sheriff-accused-shooting-woman-Atlanta-suburb.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 04, 2015, 09:01:24 PM
Suburban Georgia sheriff 'who shot woman inside a model home' is allowed to leave the scene after he refuses to cooperate with police questioning

-Clayton County, Georgia, Sheriff Victor Hill believed to have shot woman at model home near Atlanta suburb Lawrenceville on Sunday night
-Victim Gwenevere McCord, a real estate agent who knew him, was taken to hospital in critical condition and still unconscious Monday morning
-Hill legally allowed to leave scene because he is an active police officer and can't be arrested without warrant from Superior Court judge
-Sheriff re-elected after beating more than 20 corruption charges in 2013 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3067089/Georgia-sheriff-accused-shooting-woman-Atlanta-suburb.html

What a bunch of fucking bullshit is this?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 05, 2015, 07:01:49 AM
Suburban Georgia sheriff 'who shot woman inside a model home' is allowed to leave the scene after he refuses to cooperate with police questioning

-Clayton County, Georgia, Sheriff Victor Hill believed to have shot woman at model home near Atlanta suburb Lawrenceville on Sunday night
-Victim Gwenevere McCord, a real estate agent who knew him, was taken to hospital in critical condition and still unconscious Monday morning
-Hill legally allowed to leave scene because he is an active police officer and can't be arrested without warrant from Superior Court judge
-Sheriff re-elected after beating more than 20 corruption charges in 2013 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3067089/Georgia-sheriff-accused-shooting-woman-Atlanta-suburb.html

He was just doing his job nothing to see here.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 08:32:22 AM
He was elected AFTER he was indicted for felony charges. This one isn't all on the police system. For whatever reason, the public hired him for the job even with the red flags. They shouldn't be too upset about the results   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 05, 2015, 09:32:39 AM
He was elected AFTER he was indicted for felony charges. This one isn't all on the police system. For whatever reason, the public hired him for the job even with the red flags. They shouldn't be too upset about the results   

True, same with other places that vote for various shady types as sheriffs.
My problem is with this: Hill legally allowed to leave scene because he is an active police officer and can't be arrested without warrant from Superior Court judge

And this (from the article):

Possible charges against Hill would proceed differently since he's a sheriff, police said.

'When you're an active sheriff in the state of Georgia, there are certain legal requirements and steps that have to be taken,' Doan told reporters at the scene.

'It's not just an average citizen where you can take out a warrant for their arrest.'

Georgia police officers including sheriffs can only be arrested with a warrant from a Superior Court judge, said.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 09:52:48 AM
True, same with other places that vote for various shady types as sheriffs.
My problem is with this: Hill legally allowed to leave scene because he is an active police officer and can't be arrested without warrant from Superior Court judge

And this (from the article):

Possible charges against Hill would proceed differently since he's a sheriff, police said.

'When you're an active sheriff in the state of Georgia, there are certain legal requirements and steps that have to be taken,' Doan told reporters at the scene.

'It's not just an average citizen where you can take out a warrant for their arrest.'

Georgia police officers including sheriffs can only be arrested with a warrant from a Superior Court judge, said.


The article is probably not written technically correct. For example it first states because he is an active officer, but I think the reality is that he is a Sheriff. They are a unique entity as they are elected. Historically Sheriffs were afforded extra protections due to political entities attempting to use the law for their political purposes. To afford some immunity to them so they could fairly enforce the laws without fear of reprisal some protections were put in place. In this case, it certainly shows the flaw in the system. At any shooting there is forensic evidence. For example, was a swab done of the his hands prior to being able to leave? If not, that would be a big mistake. As far as "cooperating" he would be afforded similar rights as to any citizen with regard to speaking about it. He can't legally be compelled to provide a statement at that moment. I suspect a warrant will be forthcoming   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 05, 2015, 10:08:06 AM
The article is probably not written technically correct. For example it first states because he is an active officer, but I think the reality is that he is a Sheriff. They are a unique entity as they are elected. Historically Sheriffs were afforded extra protections due to political entities attempting to use the law for their political purposes. To afford some immunity to them so they could fairly enforce the laws without fear of reprisal some protections were put in place. In this case, it certainly shows the flaw in the system. At any shooting there is forensic evidence. For example, was a swab done of the his hands prior to being able to leave? If not, that would be a big mistake. As far as "cooperating" he would be afforded similar rights as to any citizen with regard to speaking about it. He can't legally be compelled to provide a statement at that moment. I suspect a warrant will be forthcoming  

it was written incorrectly for a reason, to stir up the idiots ;D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 10:24:41 AM
it was written incorrectly for a reason, to stir up the idiots ;D

Possible, or the author doesn't get the difference. In any case.. doesn't look good for the Sheriff at this point. If he is found guilty, maximum sentence would be appropriate.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 05, 2015, 10:38:09 AM
"When you're an active sheriff in the state of Georgia, there are certain legal requirements and steps that have to be taken," said Doan. "It's not just an average citizen where you can take out a warrant for their arrest."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 10:59:37 AM
"When you're an active sheriff in the state of Georgia, there are certain legal requirements and steps that have to be taken," said Doan. "It's not just an average citizen where you can take out a warrant for their arrest."

yeah...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 05, 2015, 12:05:40 PM
The article is probably not written technically correct. For example it first states because he is an active officer, but I think the reality is that he is a Sheriff. They are a unique entity as they are elected. Historically Sheriffs were afforded extra protections due to political entities attempting to use the law for their political purposes. To afford some immunity to them so they could fairly enforce the laws without fear of reprisal some protections were put in place. In this case, it certainly shows the flaw in the system. At any shooting there is forensic evidence. For example, was a swab done of the his hands prior to being able to leave? If not, that would be a big mistake. As far as "cooperating" he would be afforded similar rights as to any citizen with regard to speaking about it. He can't legally be compelled to provide a statement at that moment. I suspect a warrant will be forthcoming   

I agree - there are good reasons to afford certain privileges to some officials to enable them to do their job. But those privileges should be tightly proscribed and come with obligations, and they should only ever apply when the person is acting in their official capacity. Based solely on information on the article, it's hard for me to see why he should be afforded the privileges and protections of the Sheriff's office instead of being treated as any other citizen would.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 12:33:47 PM
I agree - there are good reasons to afford certain privileges to some officials to enable them to do their job. But those privileges should be tightly proscribed and come with obligations, and they should only ever apply when the person is acting in their official capacity. Based solely on information on the article, it's hard for me to see why he should be afforded the privileges and protections of the Sheriff's office instead of being treated as any other citizen would.

Can't argue with that
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 05, 2015, 05:54:20 PM
He was elected AFTER he was indicted for felony charges. This one isn't all on the police system. For whatever reason, the public hired him for the job even with the red flags. They shouldn't be too upset about the results   



It's rarely all on the police, it's a whole system.  Naturally there are the small number that are truly highly abusive.  But we've all agreed that's a small number (maybe rising, maybe not).

However, to believe your nonsense, we would have to accept that 6 bad cops just happened to magically come together in Baltimore at the same place, same time, same shift...and on.  Your argument defies basic logic.

It's the whole system from the laws that are passed, to new cops being socialized on the force.  It's reluctant prosecutors and judges who cover up.  It's a blue wall and an apathetic public.  It's lawmakers trying to make cops immune to situations while having insufficient controls to prevent abuse.  It's unions that will stand behind corrupt cops no matter how egregious the abuse.  It's civil service systems that prevent accountability.  And it's good officers who sit back and do absolutely nothing.

I would doubt all 6 of these cops went into work that day hoping to kill a man.  But knowing they are rarely held accountable for their actions or inactions, knowing that convictions are near impossible, knowing that accountability is low, knowing that most of the force they use will be considered 'justified' leads to, IMO, this type of stuff.



Right now, it's being reported that the knife was illegal, not legal.  So they may have had good reason to arrest him - not looking to hurt him.  But the guy still ended up dead.  6 bad cops who just magically came together?  ::)   Nope, it's a whole system that needs to be examined.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 06:05:04 PM


It's rarely all on the police, it's a whole system.  Naturally there are the small number that are truly highly abusive.  But we've all agreed that's a small number (maybe rising, maybe not).

However, to believe your nonsense, we would have to accept that 6 bad cops just happened to magically come together in Baltimore at the same place, same time, same shift...and on.  Your argument defies basic logic.

It's the whole system from the laws that are passed, to new cops being socialized on the force.  It's reluctant prosecutors and judges who cover up.  It's a blue wall and an apathetic public.  It's lawmakers trying to make cops immune to situations while having insufficient controls to prevent abuse.  It's unions that will stand behind corrupt cops no matter how egregious the abuse.  It's civil service systems that prevent accountability.  And it's good officers who sit back and do absolutely nothing.

I would doubt all 6 of these cops went into work that day hoping to kill a man.  But knowing they are rarely held accountable for their actions or inactions, knowing that convictions are near impossible, knowing that accountability is low, knowing that most of the force they use will be considered 'justified' leads to, IMO, this type of stuff.



Right now, it's being reported that the knife was illegal, not legal.  So they may have had good reason to arrest him - not looking to hurt him.  But the guy still ended up dead.  6 bad cops who just magically came together?  ::)   Nope, it's a whole system that needs to be examined.

NONSENSE ASIDE, lets wait to hear the details before we get all crazy. for one example, I doubt all 6 cops where there the whole time and had all the information. Someone, or some of them, obviously dropped the ball on calling for medical attention sooner.. but lets not get carried away
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 05, 2015, 06:17:47 PM
NONSENSE ASIDE, lets wait to hear the details before we get all crazy. for one example, I doubt all 6 cops where there the whole time and had all the information. Someone, or some of them, obviously dropped the ball on calling for medical attention sooner.. but lets not get carried away



If we're to accept the given timeline, then we know not all of the cops were there at the exact same time.  By 'same time' I meant the whole period which relatively was (or at least seems to be) 20 to 40 minutes or so.  Did my point completely sail over your head?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 06:28:15 PM


If we're to accept the given timeline, then we know not all of the cops were there at the exact same time.  By 'same time' I meant the whole period which relatively was (or at least seems to be) 20 to 40 minutes or so.  Did my point completely sail over your head?


as it often does for some reason
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 05, 2015, 06:36:11 PM
as it often does for some reason


Not to worry.  Under my tutelage you will better, smarter, faster, and stronger.  I have the tools to rebuild you.  You will be the first of your kind.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 05, 2015, 06:41:08 PM

Not to worry.  Under my tutelage you will better, smarter, faster, and stronger.  I have the tools to rebuild you.  You will be the first of your kind.



im honored
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 05, 2015, 07:57:00 PM
Remember this incident?

DEA agents jailed a student for 5 days without food, water — and just got a slap on the wrist

Federal agents responsible for leaving a 23-year-old UC San Diego engineering student in a holding cell for five days without food or water received only reprimands or short suspensions from the Drug Enforcement Administration, according to the Justice Department.

Daniel Chong was swept up in a 2012 DEA raid on his friends' house, where he had gone to smoke marijuana. After an interrogation, he was told he would be released.

But the agents responsible forgot about him, according to a Department of Justice Office of Inspector General report last summer, leaving him to drink his own urine to stave off dehydration.

The Justice Department, in a letter to members of Congress obtained by the Los Angeles Times, said that “what happened to Mr. Chong is unacceptable” and that “the DEA’s failure to impose significant discipline on these employees further demonstrates the need for a systemic review of DEA’s disciplinary process.”

Chong, who was never charged with a crime, was kept in total isolation with his hands handcuffed behind his back in a windowless cell with no bathroom, calling out periodically for help. Midway through the ordeal someone turned off the light in his cell, leaving him in darkness.

When he was finally discovered he was delirious, with serious respiratory and breathing problems. He was hospitalized for four days, and he and his lawyers said at a news conference last summer that he underwent intensive therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder. The department paid Chong a $4.1-million settlement.

The Inspector General Report said that three DEA agents and a supervisor bore primary responsibility for Chong’s mistreatment and that the DEA San Diego Field Division lacked procedures to keep track of detainees. They were not named in the report.

The Department of Justice letter said that DEA officials forwarded a report on the incident to a disciplinary board, the Board of Professional Conduct, without conducting its own investigation. The board issued four reprimands to DEA agents and a suspension without pay for five days to another. The supervisor in charge at the time was given a seven-day suspension.

This is not the first time that DEA disciplinary procedures have been called into question. Last month House Oversight Committee members expressed outrage that then-DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart had not seriously punished agents involved in sex parties with prostitutes in Colombia. They received suspensions of two to 10 days.

Leonhart, under pressure from the Obama administration, announced her retirement April 22. Former Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. ordered a review of DEA disciplinary procedures.

“The Department of Justice has serious concerns about the adequacy of the discipline that DEA imposed on its employees,” in the Chong case, said Patrick Rodenbush, a Department of Justice spokesman, in a statement.

He said that Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility “will make recommendations on how to improve the investigative and disciplinary processes for all allegations of misconduct at DEA.”

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-dea-chong-20150505-story.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 05, 2015, 10:17:53 PM
Remember this incident?

DEA agents jailed a student for 5 days without food, water — and just got a slap on the wrist

liberal college student probably deserved it.   Right, guys?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on May 06, 2015, 12:40:38 AM
NONSENSE ASIDE, lets wait to hear the details before we get all crazy. for one example, I doubt all 6 cops where there the whole time and had all the information. Someone, or some of them, obviously dropped the ball on calling for medical attention sooner.. but lets not get carried away













The 'lets not get carried away' comment ??
 ::)
There is one man dead because of 6 cops.
Scumbag he may of been, so is the sherif that shot that woman
Imagine the out cry if he had been shot.!!
Yet he is just as much if not a bigger scumbag.

As skip pointed out 6 cops all in the same unit
Likely didn't set off to work intending to kill someone
The subconscious thought that No Punishment No Conviction
We're Cops & Cops don't get held to account.
The Problem is Institutionalised in the Police, it appears so
Deeply Institutionalised that 6 cops in on place come together.
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2015, 06:10:56 PM
One of the Biggest Privacy Wins in Recent Memory Has Been Reversed

Cops no longer need a warrant when seeking cellphone records from wireless carriers in the US a federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday—reversing its own decision from last year.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled that citizens have no expectation of privacy when it comes to records held by a third party, such as a cellphone company.

The ruling is a significant setback for privacy rights in the digital age—one expert called it “devastatingly bad for privacy”— and runs contrary to trends in several states. In the last couple of years, Montana, Maine, and Minnesota, have all passed laws requiring local police to obtain warrants when requesting cellphone records, including historical location data pulled off of cell phone towers, from phone carriers like AT&T or Verizon.

In this case, prosecutors obtained 11,606 location records from MetroPCS, the cellphone carrier of Quartavious Davis, a suspect in a series of armed robberies. The records showed Davis’ whereabouts based on the cellphone towers that his phone connected to over the span of 67 days.

“The government’s obtaining MetroPCS records, showing historical cell tower locations, did not involve a physical intrusion on private property or a search at all,” reads the decision. “The records belonged to a private company, not Davis.”

That's why obtaining that data without a warrant is not in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the court ruled. The court's reasoning was based on two landmark US Supreme Court cases from the 1970s, United States v. Miller and Smith v. Maryland, which defined a much discussed legal theory known as the “third party doctrine.”

The same Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, just last year, ruled the exact opposite in this case.

“We hold that cell site location information is within the subscriber’s reasonable expectation of privacy,” the decision from last year read. “The obtaining of that data without a warrant is a Fourth Amendment violation."

Digital rights activists called the court’s reversal a “disappointing” decision based on an old law which has been made outdated by rapidly-changing technology.

“It's a shame the court felt confined by a case decided from the 1970s to decide the constitutionality of a very modern form of surveillance,” Hanni Fakhoury, a surveillance law expert and an attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), told Motherboard.

Nate Wessler, an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) staff attorney who argued the case, said that what the court did was “apply outdated doctrine from the analog age to this very sensitive digital records.”

For Wessler, the decision is far-reaching because the same interpretation could be used for other types of sensitive data held by third parties, such as email or cloud providers.

“The implications of applying the third party doctrine to these digital records are really wide reaching,” he told Motherboard, “because we live so much of our lives online, in the cloud or using technologies that leave a trail of digital breadcrumbs behind us.”

Judge Beverly Martin, who dissented with the majority ruling in this case seemed to agree with Wessler. She wrote that the ruling gives the government too much power to look into the digital lives of Americans without first obtaining a warrant.

“Now, under the majority’s rule, the Fourth Amendment allows the government to know from YouTube.com what we watch, or Facebook.com what we post or whom we ‘friend,’ or Amazon.com what we buy, or Wikipedia.com what we research, or Match.com whom we date—all without a warrant,” she wrote.

The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Davis can now appeal his case to the Supreme Court. According to both Wessler and Fakhoury, it’s likely that the Supreme Court will soon hear a case on cellphone location privacy, which will give justices a chance to set the record straight.

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/one-of-the-biggest-privacy-wins-in-recent-memory-has-been-reversed



Another analysis, more in depth, by Orin Kerr here:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/05/eleventh-circuit-rules-for-the-feds-on-cell-site-records-but-then-overreaches/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on May 06, 2015, 08:58:53 PM
One of the Biggest Privacy Wins in Recent Memory Has Been Reversed

Cops no longer need a warrant when seeking cellphone records from wireless carriers in the US a federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday—reversing its own decision from last year.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled that citizens have no expectation of privacy when it comes to records held by a third party, such as a cellphone company.

The ruling is a significant setback for privacy rights in the digital age—one expert called it “devastatingly bad for privacy”— and runs contrary to trends in several states. In the last couple of years, Montana, Maine, and Minnesota, have all passed laws requiring local police to obtain warrants when requesting cellphone records, including historical location data pulled off of cell phone towers, from phone carriers like AT&T or Verizon.

In this case, prosecutors obtained 11,606 location records from MetroPCS, the cellphone carrier of Quartavious Davis, a suspect in a series of armed robberies. The records showed Davis’ whereabouts based on the cellphone towers that his phone connected to over the span of 67 days.

“The government’s obtaining MetroPCS records, showing historical cell tower locations, did not involve a physical intrusion on private property or a search at all,” reads the decision. “The records belonged to a private company, not Davis.”

That's why obtaining that data without a warrant is not in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the court ruled. The court's reasoning was based on two landmark US Supreme Court cases from the 1970s, United States v. Miller and Smith v. Maryland, which defined a much discussed legal theory known as the “third party doctrine.”

The same Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, just last year, ruled the exact opposite in this case.

“We hold that cell site location information is within the subscriber’s reasonable expectation of privacy,” the decision from last year read. “The obtaining of that data without a warrant is a Fourth Amendment violation."

Digital rights activists called the court’s reversal a “disappointing” decision based on an old law which has been made outdated by rapidly-changing technology.

“It's a shame the court felt confined by a case decided from the 1970s to decide the constitutionality of a very modern form of surveillance,” Hanni Fakhoury, a surveillance law expert and an attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), told Motherboard.

Nate Wessler, an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) staff attorney who argued the case, said that what the court did was “apply outdated doctrine from the analog age to this very sensitive digital records.”

For Wessler, the decision is far-reaching because the same interpretation could be used for other types of sensitive data held by third parties, such as email or cloud providers.

“The implications of applying the third party doctrine to these digital records are really wide reaching,” he told Motherboard, “because we live so much of our lives online, in the cloud or using technologies that leave a trail of digital breadcrumbs behind us.”

Judge Beverly Martin, who dissented with the majority ruling in this case seemed to agree with Wessler. She wrote that the ruling gives the government too much power to look into the digital lives of Americans without first obtaining a warrant.

“Now, under the majority’s rule, the Fourth Amendment allows the government to know from YouTube.com what we watch, or Facebook.com what we post or whom we ‘friend,’ or Amazon.com what we buy, or Wikipedia.com what we research, or Match.com whom we date—all without a warrant,” she wrote.

The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Davis can now appeal his case to the Supreme Court. According to both Wessler and Fakhoury, it’s likely that the Supreme Court will soon hear a case on cellphone location privacy, which will give justices a chance to set the record straight.

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/one-of-the-biggest-privacy-wins-in-recent-memory-has-been-reversed



Another analysis, more in depth, by Orin Kerr here:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/05/eleventh-circuit-rules-for-the-feds-on-cell-site-records-but-then-overreaches/

Four words...Big Brother is watching!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: sync pulse on May 07, 2015, 01:17:53 AM
Telephone calling records have been subject to search for a considerable time.  I believe there is a legal basis in that there is no expectation of privacy of calling records,…because you are making it known to a third party, (the telephone company) by dialing the number of whom you are calling.

As I understand it…the legal precedent was set when calls were connected by human operators shoving plugs into jacks,… you had to tell the operator the number and thus you had no expectation of privacy…she would make a paper trail of the call. 

When telephones got dials, local calls were routed by large arrays of mechanical switches…(the first computer logic was based on telephone switching offices). With the exception of long distance which were still handled by human operators (who timed calls with the same timers that pool rooms used to time pool table use) no routine record was kept of local telephone calls.

To obtain a record of who people called locally became something you had to seek out by installing a device called a “pen register” on the line in question. If you refer back to the earlier telephone era of human operators whom the callers had to tell the number that they were calling…only now you are dialing the number into the switching system…with no expectation of privacy.

Enter into the scene ESS…electronic switching systems…controlled by computers.  Calls are always super clear, easy to understand, with lots of neat new things that the telephone can do.

Such as:
  • You dial someone and if the line is busy…when the person you called hangs-up the  system will call you back and connect you.
  • You can see the number of who is calling you.
  • If you are going to the gym you can have the system forward your calls to the gym’s front desk.
And many more.
All this requires the system to remember the numbers of whom you are calling,…with no expectation of privacy.

Fast forward to the cell phone era:
  • Like wired telephones you have to tell the system (dial) the number you want to call.
  • The system in order to route calls it has to know which tower you are closest to (your cell phone reports to the nearest tower every six seconds)…so the system knows where you are.
All with no expectation of privacy because originally you had to talk to human operators to route calls.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 07, 2015, 09:22:49 AM
Federal Appeals Court Says NSA Phone Records Program Illegal

A federal appeals court ruled against the National Security Agency's bulk collection of telephone call information on Thursday, completely rejecting the government's legal justification for the program.

A three-judge panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York unanimously found that Congress has not given the NSA approval for storing massive amounts of data so that it can be searched later.

The court said federal law permits gathering information only when there's something specific to investigate. By contrast, today's ruling says, the government is storing huge amounts of data so that it can be searched later when the need arises.

"Such expansive development of government repositories of formerly private records would be an unprecedented contraction of the privacy expectations of all Americans," the ruling said.

Maybe such a program is needed to fight terrorism, the court said. But if so, "such a monumental shift in our approach to combating terrorism requires a clear signal from Congress."

The court declined, however, to order the government to stop the program. It sent the issue back to a lower court, in view of the fact that Congress is now debating what to do about bulk telephone data collection.

If Congress votes to let the NSA program continue -- or votes to have the phone companies, not the government, store the data -- then the lower court can get to an issue the appeals court today left untouched: whether such a program, even if authorized by Congress, would be unconstitutional.

http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/federal-appeals-court-says-nsa-phone-records-program-illegal-n355271
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 08, 2015, 10:13:13 AM












The 'lets not get carried away' comment ??
 ::)
There is one man dead because of 6 cops.
Scumbag he may of been, so is the sherif that shot that woman
Imagine the out cry if he had been shot.!!
Yet he is just as much if not a bigger scumbag.

As skip pointed out 6 cops all in the same unit
Likely didn't set off to work intending to kill someone
The subconscious thought that No Punishment No Conviction
We're Cops & Cops don't get held to account.
The Problem is Institutionalised in the Police, it appears so
Deeply Institutionalised that 6 cops in on place come together.
 

The "guy" wasn't even a scumbag...he was riding his bike with a knife that was perfectly legal.....the arrest has since been determined to have been illegal...he was doing nothing wrong........but the fact is that due to overpolicing, black guys get caught up in this type of thing all the time...the cops aren't racist per se.....they too get caught up in a system where their supervisors want arrests and tickets so as to make quotas......these quotas which are off the record, are to insure to the supervisor that the cops are actually working and not playing billiards somewhere
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 08, 2015, 12:15:03 PM
The "guy" wasn't even a scumbag...he was riding his bike with a knife that was perfectly legal.....the arrest has since been determined to have been illegal...he was doing nothing wrong........but the fact is that due to overpolicing, black guys get caught up in this type of thing all the time...the cops aren't racist per se.....they too get caught up in a system where their supervisors want arrests and tickets so as to make quotas......these quotas which are off the record, are to insure to the supervisor that the cops are actually working and not playing billiards somewhere



It happens too everybody.

Im white as a bandage and i've meet some prick cops in my days. I have meet some good ones also though.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 08, 2015, 12:56:56 PM

It happens too everybody.

Im white as a bandage and i've meet some prick cops in my days. I have meet some good ones also though.

for God's sake, man...get a tan! :D
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 08, 2015, 10:24:28 PM
Another civil asset forfeiture case: DEA agents confiscate $16,000 from man travelling to Los Angeles. This is OK, because the DEA doesn't have “to prove that the person is guilty, it’s that the money is presumed to be guilty.” Civil asset forfeiture needs to go away.

For the details: http://www.abqjournal.com/580107/news/dea-agents-seize-16000-from-aspiring-music-video-producer.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 09, 2015, 07:39:53 AM
for God's sake, man...get a tan! :D

It's raining everyday how the fuck am i supposed to get a tan? :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 09, 2015, 11:52:57 AM
It's raining everyday how the fuck am i supposed to get a tan? :)

rains a lot there, I take it?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on May 09, 2015, 12:25:26 PM
rains a lot there, I take it?

Yup.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 10, 2015, 12:17:58 PM
Phoenix Police Detective Kevin McGowan fired after alleged police brutality

PHOENIX - A fired Phoenix police detective is asking for his job back in the wake of an investigation into alleged police brutality.

“I just tasted the blood,” said 18-year-old Patrick D’Labik, remembering the moment Detective Kevin McGowan stomped D’Labik’s back, sending his face into a convenience store floor.

“As soon as I spit, I realized my teeth was out,” D’Labik said.

McGowan told police internal affairs investigators that he stomped D’Labik’s back because he was not obeying commands.

The incident, in late December of last year, began when McGowan stopped D’Labik, who was walking near 38th Street and McDowell Rd.

McGowan wanted to ask D’Labik if he had any information about a homicide suspect.

D’Labik, who feared the officer would discover the marijuana in his pocket, ran.

McGowan caught up with D’Labik in a convenience store. A surveillance video without audio shows McGowan, gun drawn, approaching D’Labik. D’Labik, who had his hands up, begins to get on the ground.  When he is in a “push up” position, McGowan stomps him in the upper back. That sent D’Labik’s face into the floor. He lost several teeth.

“There was no need for it at all,” D’Labik said. “It makes me angry and it still makes me angry.”

The Phoenix Police Department fired McGowan, a decision the detective is appealing through the City’s Civil Service Board.

A Phoenix police spokesman released the following statement:

The use of excessive force will not be tolerated by the Phoenix Police Department, but because this case is currently being appealed we cannot discuss the specifics and will respect the civil service process."

McGowan’s personnel file shows that the department hired him in late 1997.  Of a handful of complaints against him, only one was substantiated.  He received a written reprimand after shoving a citizen in 2013 after the citizen got in his “personal space.

McGowan's attorney released this statement:

Officer McGowan is a decorated 17-year veteran of the Department. He earned dozens of commendations and has no significant prior discipline. The video obtained by the media does not show the complete series of events related to this detention/arrest.

The entirety of this incident, including the video, was reviewed by an independent expert and by a panel of attorneys at the Maricopa County Attorney's Office.

These reviews resulted in a determination that no crime was committed by Officer McGowan. Officer McGowan filed an appeal of his termination and is looking forward to being reinstated to complete his career with the Phoenix Police Department.

Officer McGowan will not be giving any interviews related to this incident, and this will be the only statement he will give related to this matter, as his appeal is currently pending before the Civil Service Board.

http://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/central-phoenix/phoenix-police-detective-kevin-mcgowan-fired-after-alleged-police-brutality-
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on May 10, 2015, 12:51:14 PM
Phoenix Police Detective Kevin McGowan fired after alleged police brutality

PHOENIX - A fired Phoenix police detective is asking for his job back in the wake of an investigation into alleged police brutality.

“I just tasted the blood,” said 18-year-old Patrick D’Labik, remembering the moment Detective Kevin McGowan stomped D’Labik’s back, sending his face into a convenience store floor.

“As soon as I spit, I realized my teeth was out,” D’Labik said.

McGowan told police internal affairs investigators that he stomped D’Labik’s back because he was not obeying commands.

The incident, in late December of last year, began when McGowan stopped D’Labik, who was walking near 38th Street and McDowell Rd.

McGowan wanted to ask D’Labik if he had any information about a homicide suspect.

D’Labik, who feared the officer would discover the marijuana in his pocket, ran.

McGowan caught up with D’Labik in a convenience store. A surveillance video without audio shows McGowan, gun drawn, approaching D’Labik. D’Labik, who had his hands up, begins to get on the ground.  When he is in a “push up” position, McGowan stomps him in the upper back. That sent D’Labik’s face into the floor. He lost several teeth.

“There was no need for it at all,” D’Labik said. “It makes me angry and it still makes me angry.”

The Phoenix Police Department fired McGowan, a decision the detective is appealing through the City’s Civil Service Board.

A Phoenix police spokesman released the following statement:

The use of excessive force will not be tolerated by the Phoenix Police Department, but because this case is currently being appealed we cannot discuss the specifics and will respect the civil service process."

McGowan’s personnel file shows that the department hired him in late 1997.  Of a handful of complaints against him, only one was substantiated.  He received a written reprimand after shoving a citizen in 2013 after the citizen got in his “personal space.

McGowan's attorney released this statement:

Officer McGowan is a decorated 17-year veteran of the Department. He earned dozens of commendations and has no significant prior discipline. The video obtained by the media does not show the complete series of events related to this detention/arrest.

The entirety of this incident, including the video, was reviewed by an independent expert and by a panel of attorneys at the Maricopa County Attorney's Office.

These reviews resulted in a determination that no crime was committed by Officer McGowan. Officer McGowan filed an appeal of his termination and is looking forward to being reinstated to complete his career with the Phoenix Police Department.

Officer McGowan will not be giving any interviews related to this incident, and this will be the only statement he will give related to this matter, as his appeal is currently pending before the Civil Service Board.

http://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/central-phoenix/phoenix-police-detective-kevin-mcgowan-fired-after-alleged-police-brutality-














Ha, it's amusing that when ever it is a video
Of a cop potentially doing something Wrong.
The ole 'it doesn't show the full entirety of the facts '
& 'let's not jump to conclusions' Phrases are rolled out.
Yet video evidence in most other cases is always used
As facts of the case.
Can't have it both ways, well cops do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 10, 2015, 12:53:33 PM













Ha, it's amusing that when ever it is a video
Of a cop potentially doing something Wrong.
The ole 'it doesn't show the full entirety of the facts '
& 'let's not jump to conclusions' Phrases are rolled out.
Yet video evidence in most other cases is always used
As facts of the case.
Can't have it both ways, well cops do.

Good observation
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 10, 2015, 03:20:30 PM
Cops act like they're vindicated every time video shows them doing something the right way.

THEYRE SUPPOSED To..  it's their job!

Like some video showing them NOT breaking the law suddenly vindicates all those who are breaking the law. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 11, 2015, 05:35:14 PM
Good article from American Conservative:

Seven Reasons Police Brutality Is Systemic, Not Anecdotal


Darrin Manning’s unprovoked “stop and frisk” encounter with the Philadelphia police left him hospitalized with a ruptured testicle. Neykeyia Parker was violently dragged out of her car and aggressively arrested in front of her young child for “trespassing” at her own apartment complex in Houston. A Georgia toddler was burned when police threw a flash grenade into his playpen during a raid, and the manager of a Chicago tanning salon was confronted by a raiding police officer bellowing that he would kill her and her family, captured on the salon’s surveillance. An elderly man in Ohio was left in need of facial reconstructive surgery after police entered his home without a warrant to sort out a dispute about a trailer.

These stories are a small selection of recent police brutality reports, as police misconduct has become a fixture of the news cycle.

But the plural of anecdote is not data, and the media is inevitably drawn toward tales of conflict. Despite the increasing frequency with which we hear of misbehaving cops, many Americans maintain a default respect for the man in uniform. As an NYPD assistant chief put it, “We don’t want a few bad apples or a few rogue cops damaging” the police’s good name.

This is an attractive proposal, certainly, but unfortunately it doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. Here are seven reasons why police misconduct is a systemic problem, not “a few bad apples”:

1. Many departments don’t provide adequate training in nonviolent solutions.

This is particularly obvious when it comes to dealing with family pets. “Police kill family dog” is practically its own subgenre of police brutality reports, and most of these cases—like the story of the Minnesota children who were made to sit, handcuffed, next to their dead and bleeding pet—are all too preventable. Some police departments have begun to train their officers to deal more appropriately with pets, but Thomas Aveni of the Police Policy Studies Council, a police consulting firm, says it’s still extremely rare. In the absence of this training, police are less likely to view violence as a last resort.

2. Standards for what constitutes brutality vary widely.

“Excess is in the eyes of the beholder,” explains William Terrill, a former police officer and professor of criminal justice at Michigan State. “To one officer ‘objectively reasonable’ means that if you don’t give me your license, I get to use soft hands, and in another town the same resistance means I can pull you through the car window, [or] I can tase you.” The special deference police are widely given in American culture feeds this inconsistency of standards, producing something of a legal Wild West. While national legislation would likely only complicate matters further, local or state-wide ballot propositions should allow the public—not the police—to define reasonable use of force.

3. Consequences for misconduct are minimal.

In central New Jersey, for instance, 99 percent of police brutality complaints are never investigated. Nor can that be explained away as stereotypical New Jersey corruption. Only one out of every three accused cops are convicted nationwide, while the conviction rate for civilians is literally double that. In Chicago, the numbers are even more skewed: There were 10,000 abuse complaints filed against the Chicago PD between 2002 and 2004, and just 19 of them ”resulted in meaningful disciplinary action.” On a national level, upwards of 95 percent of police misconduct cases referred for federal prosecution are declined by prosecutors because, as reported in USA Today, juries “are conditioned to believe cops, and victims’ credibility is often challenged.” Failure to remedy this police/civilian double standard cultivates an abuse-friendly legal environment.

4. Settlements are shifted to taxpayers.


Those officers who are found guilty of brutality typically find the settlement to their victims paid from city coffers. Research from Human Rights Watch reveals that in some places, taxpayers “are paying three times for officers who repeatedly commit abuses: once to cover their salaries while they commit abuses; next to pay settlements or civil jury awards against officers; and a third time through payments into police ‘defense’ funds provided by the cities.” In larger cities, these settlements easily cost the public tens of millions of dollars annually while removing a substantial incentive against police misconduct.

5. Minorities are unfairly targeted.

“Simply put,” says University of Florida law professor Katheryn K. Russell, “the public face of a police brutality victim is a young man who is Black or Latino.” In this case, research suggests perception matches reality. To give a particularly striking example, one Florida city’s “stop and frisk” policy has been explicitly aimed at all black men. Since 2008, this has led to 99,980 stops which did not produce an arrest in a city with a population of just 110,000. One man alone was stopped 258 times at his job in four years, and arrested for trespassing while working on 62 occasions. Failure to address this issue communicates to police that minorities are a safe target for abuse.

6. Police are increasingly militarized.

During President Obama’s gun control push, he argued that “weapons of war have no place on our streets;” but as Radley Balko has amply documented in his 2013 book, Rise of the Warrior Cop, local police are often equipped with weapons powerful enough to conquer a small country. Police use of highly armed SWAT teams has risen by 1,500 percent in the last two decades, and many police departments have cultivated an “us vs. them” mentality toward the public they ostensibly serve. Although possession of these weapons does not cause misconduct, as the old saying goes, when you have a hammer everything begins to look like a nail.

7. Police themselves say misconduct is remarkably widespread.

Here’s the real clincher. A Department of Justice study revealed that a whopping 84 percent of police officers report that they’ve seen colleagues use excessive force on civilians, and 61 percent admit they don’t always report “even serious criminal violations that involve abuse of authority by fellow officers.”

This self-reporting moves us well beyond anecdote into the realm of data: Police brutality is a pervasive problem, exacerbated by systemic failures to curb it. That’s not to say that every officer is ill-intentioned or abusive, but it is to suggest that the common assumption that police are generally using their authority in a trustworthy manner merits serious reconsideration. As John Adams wrote to Jefferson, “Power always thinks it has a great soul,” and it cannot be trusted if left unchecked.

The good news is that the first step toward preventing police brutality is well-documented and fairly simple: Keep police constantly on camera. A 2012 study in Rialto, Calif. found that when officers were required to wear cameras recording all their interactions with citizens, “public complaints against officers plunged 88% compared with the previous 12 months. Officers’ use of force fell by 60%.” The simple knowledge that they were being watched dramatically altered police behavior.

Coupled with additional reforms, like making officers pay their own settlements and providing better training for dealing with pets, camera use could produce a significant decrease in police misconduct. It is not unrealistic to think that police brutality reports could be made far more unusual—but only once we acknowledge that it’s not just a few bad apples.



http://www.theamericanconservative.com/seven-reasons-police-brutality-is-systematic-not-anecdotal/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 11, 2015, 05:36:50 PM
The "guy" wasn't even a scumbag...he was riding his bike with a knife that was perfectly legal.....the arrest has since been determined to have been illegal...he was doing nothing wrong........but the fact is that due to overpolicing, black guys get caught up in this type of thing all the time...the cops aren't racist per se.....they too get caught up in a system where their supervisors want arrests and tickets so as to make quotas......these quotas which are off the record, are to insure to the supervisor that the cops are actually working and not playing billiards somewhere



The legality of the arrest is still in question.  It won't change the fact that they should've given him medical attention, but the cops may have been justified in the arrest.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 11, 2015, 07:18:27 PM

The legality of the arrest is still in question.  It won't change the fact that they should've given him medical attention, but the cops may have been justified in the arrest.



its already come out that the knife was of a legal length
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 12, 2015, 03:13:17 PM
its already come out that the knife was of a legal length


That's not even the issue.  The issue is that the cop alleges it was a spring assisted knife and therefore illegal in Baltimore because the state does not have a preemption law.  They haven't let the public see the knife, so nobody knows what's really up.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2015, 01:05:48 AM
Video Shows Deputy Smash Autistic Man’s Skull into the Ground, Killing Him for Joking Around

Mount Vernon, OH — A Knox County deputy is now being investigated after he fatally assaulted 33-year old David Dehmann on April 21. Dehmann was autistic and had Tourette’s Syndrome, and this was well-known by the local law enforcement.

Mount Vernon police picked up Dehmann on the 21st for being intoxicated but was released within a couple hours after being cleared by a hospital for release. At 7:43pm that same day, he was arrested near a public school for disorderly conduct – harm to self, at which point he was taken to Knox County Jail by MVPD Cpl. Travis Tharp when things took a turn for the worse.

During the booking process, Dehmann would not make it 15 feet into the station before his life would be ended.

The sickening surveillance camera footage of his killing was released last week which showed this deadly act of police rage.

The video starts out showing Dehmann being completely cooperative. He maintained this cooperation throughout the entire process.

He’s seen helping the deputies to remove his clothing and his shoes. At one point, he even playfully pats one of the deputies on the back; something a child might do.

Most of the deputies in the room seemingly laugh it off as an innocent autistic man being silly because he’s drunk. This was apparent by the lack of restraints on Dehmann.

However, Deputy Chase Wright was not enjoying Dehmann’s shenanigans.

As Dehmann is walking past the officers, either drunkenly or playfully, he points his finger at them; never making actual physical contact. When he gets to deputy Wright, he points just like he did to the first, but he is swiftly met with physical retaliation. His hand is slapped and deputy Wright proceeds to slam the autistic and impaired Dehmann to the ground with so much force that when his head hit, it killed him.

Prior to the body slam, Dehmann can be seen with his arm up in what seems to be some sort of physical move. However, his fist is not closed and is fingers are out. He was obviously not trying to punch nor was he in any capacity to cause harm to Wright.

Dehmann’s family is left devastated. Dehmann’s step-mother Melissa spoke on the tragedy, saying “He might have had his issues in the past and everything, but he didn’t deserve to die because of this.”

The original statement by the KCSO stated,

    “While Dehmann was in the jail’s intake area he became aggressive with the jail staff making an aggressive move towards Deputy [Chase] Wright. Mr. Dehmann did attempt to hit Dep. Wright in the face causing Dep. Wright to place Mr. Dehmann into a take down hold, taking him to the ground to get control of him. Once control was gained it was found that Mr. Dehmann had hit his head on the floor during the incident. Mr. Dehmann was transported to KCH ER by Mount Vernon medics for a medical evaluation.”

When you watch the video below, it is all too clear who “became aggressive” in this situation.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-deputy-smash-autistic-mans-skull-ground-killing-joking/

(watch at around 5:12)

Another article with links to more videos:

Video: Sheriff’s office releases footage of April 21 incident

MOUNT VERNON — During an exclusive interview with Knox County Sheriff David Shaffer, the News was provided with details and video of the events that transpired after David Levi Dehmann was arrested by the Mount Vernon Police Department for being drunk and disorderly on April 21.

After his belongings are logged, Dehmann is seen to be led down the hall to be taken into a holding cell. According to Shaffer, Dehmann makes a gesture at the female jailer, then points at Deputy Chase Wright. Wright then swats Dehmann’s hand away and Dehmann makes another move toward Wright’s head. Wright reacts by moving his head back and to the side to avoid the action and then goes to place Dehmann in a takedown hold while placing his arm underneath Dehmann’s right shoulder, Shaffer explained.

Once Dehmann was secured, staff realized Dehmann was either passed out or unconscious and the emergency squad was called. He was taken to Knox Community Hospital where he was transferred to Grant Medical Center. Dehmann died on April 23.

See Friday’s edition of the News for more information from Shaffer about the incident.

http://mountvernonnews.com/story/2015/05/07/video-sheriffs-office-releases-footage-of-april-21-incident/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on May 13, 2015, 04:24:53 PM
Jeez & another killing ^^^^
This time a know mentally impaired man.

He pointed at me OH I know lets Smash Him To The Floor.. ::)
That seems like the appropriate response from a cop.

Ahh yes 'let's not judge to quickly on just the cctv footage
We don't have the whole background & picture'.
As some would say.

Does the above only apply to non police ?
As we see them acting on what they see without waiting
For all the info or background.

No doubt I will be called a cop hater & have authority issues
Again.

We are not allowed to question.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2015, 07:00:09 PM
Police Said the Video Showing this Cop’s Excessive Force Did Not Exist, They Were Lying

Denver, CO — Officer Choice Johnson is currently on a mandatory 30-day vacation after shoving an innocent man down a flight of stairs and lying about it (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cop-shoves-innocent-man-hands-pockets-stairs-lies-it-job/).

Had the surveillance camera footage never been released it would have been Johnson’s word against Brandon Schreiber’s, the man he assaulted. Schreiber would have most likely been convicted of a crime he did not commit.

Schreiber’s charges of assault and resisting were eventually dropped after this video surfaced. This was the first time, out of a whopping 17 complaints against officer Johnson that he was ever reprimanded.

Unlike officer Choice Johnson, the video did not lie.

Just like Schreiber, Armondo Prado was roughed up at the same bar by officer Johnson.

Prado was out with his sister and her friend in 2013 when her friend was asked to leave for being too drunk. The three were then violently thrown out of the bar by officer Johnson and Prado was slammed into the wall and punched multiple times.

Prado was charged and convicted of resisting arrest despite knowing that he did not resist. It was only his word against officer Johnson’s.

After the initial arrest, Prado’s sister, Angie Dena, contacted internal affairs to ask for the surveillance camera footage which could prove their case.

Internal affairs, in an overt lie, replied, “The HALO camera did not have footage.”

“I went back to the bar and counted about 5-7 cameras outside. All around and above the area where the incident occurred. Unless those were off the night of the incident they absolutely had to get some footage.” said Dena.

Through a public records request, the video was finally released.

“I feel like I can’t trust anybody in law enforcement,” Dena said after obtaining the footage police claimed never existed.

In his report, Officer Johnson stated that “Prado continued to actively fight with closed fists and kicks.” But when we look at the video, this is not the case.

“They don’t tell you the truth. They tell you stuff doesn’t exist, and they investigated themselves and cleared themselves,” explains Prado.

When asked to comment on why they lied and said the video did not exist, the DPD declined.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-video-showing-cops-excessive-force-exist-lying/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on May 16, 2015, 12:54:41 AM
Police Said the Video Showing this Cop’s Excessive Force Did Not Exist, They Were Lying

Denver, CO — Officer Choice Johnson is currently on a mandatory 30-day vacation after shoving an innocent man down a flight of stairs and lying about it (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cop-shoves-innocent-man-hands-pockets-stairs-lies-it-job/).

Had the surveillance camera footage never been released it would have been Johnson’s word against Brandon Schreiber’s, the man he assaulted. Schreiber would have most likely been convicted of a crime he did not commit.

Schreiber’s charges of assault and resisting were eventually dropped after this video surfaced. This was the first time, out of a whopping 17 complaints against officer Johnson that he was ever reprimanded.

Unlike officer Choice Johnson, the video did not lie.

Just like Schreiber, Armondo Prado was roughed up at the same bar by officer Johnson.

Prado was out with his sister and her friend in 2013 when her friend was asked to leave for being too drunk. The three were then violently thrown out of the bar by officer Johnson and Prado was slammed into the wall and punched multiple times.

Prado was charged and convicted of resisting arrest despite knowing that he did not resist. It was only his word against officer Johnson’s.

After the initial arrest, Prado’s sister, Angie Dena, contacted internal affairs to ask for the surveillance camera footage which could prove their case.

Internal affairs, in an overt lie, replied, “The HALO camera did not have footage.”

“I went back to the bar and counted about 5-7 cameras outside. All around and above the area where the incident occurred. Unless those were off the night of the incident they absolutely had to get some footage.” said Dena.

Through a public records request, the video was finally released.

“I feel like I can’t trust anybody in law enforcement,” Dena said after obtaining the footage police claimed never existed.

In his report, Officer Johnson stated that “Prado continued to actively fight with closed fists and kicks.” But when we look at the video, this is not the case.

“They don’t tell you the truth. They tell you stuff doesn’t exist, and they investigated themselves and cleared themselves,” explains Prado.

When asked to comment on why they lied and said the video did not exist, the DPD declined.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-video-showing-cops-excessive-force-exist-lying/














Yes 'but there are hundreds of good police interactions
every day & they largely go unreported' I can hear being
Said by some whom are not posting replys to these incidents.

Institutionalised corruption in the police service, from the top down.
That's a huge problem.
Some need to accept this then things can be changed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 17, 2015, 10:10:43 PM
Man Kicked Out of Courtroom and Threatened with Jail For “Police Lie” Shirt

Greenville, SC– A South Carolina man was threatened with imprisonment over wearing a shirt that read “Police Lie” to a pre-trial conference on May 13.  Thomas Roy was at the Greensville Courthouse on Wednesday for a conference, not appearing for the actual courtroom proceedings, yet he was repeatedly threatened with arrest by the judge over his use of his first amendment right with the simple, and true, two-word statement on his shirt.

The video, which Roy posted to Facebook, begins as he is being confronted by the judge.

    “Mr. Roy, you leave here now with that shirt on, I’m the city judge, and do not come back into this building or on this property with that shirt on again, do you understand?” the judge tells Roy.

    “Am I breaking some kind of law?” Roy asks calmly.

    “-or you are going to be in contempt of this court.” the judge finishes.

    “Am I breaking some kind of law?” Roy asks again.

    “Sir, you’re violating the common law of this state, because that shirt and what it says puts at issue… witnesses against one another.  It’s baiting, and I’m not going to have it, and I’m in charge of this courthouse, and im telling you go now- or you’re going to jail,” the judge says.

Roy is then forced to reschedule his pre-trial conference and is escorted by a police officer to do so, and out of the building.

We spoke to Roy briefly about the incident, and when asked why he decided to wear the shirt, he explained that he has been beaten by the police numerous times. He also believes he has been being targeted for speaking to the press after witnessing a police chase which ended in a wreck that killed the driver.  Roy had been listening to the scanner and was following the state trooper to witness what was unfolding.

    “I commented on scene with the news on camera and since then it’s been crazy.” Roy told The Free Thought Project.

In October, we reported on citizen journalist Michael Burns from Florida, who had stopped to film people who were being harassed by police, and then ended up being their next target after he left to head home.  The cops gave him a bogus ticket, but instead of laying down and taking it Burns decided to fight it in court- in a “F*ck the Police” shirt.  He won.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-repeatedly-targetedbrutalized-police-threatened-jail-police-lie-shirt/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2015, 06:12:45 PM
Obama announces restrictions on distribution of military-style equipment to police

WASHINGTON –  President Obama is banning local police departments from receiving a range of military-style equipment from the federal government -- from grenade launchers to bayonets to certain armored vehicles -- as he implements the recommendations of a panel that examined the controversial gear giveaways in the wake of the Ferguson riots.

The White House announced Monday that Washington would no longer provide some military-style gear while putting stricter controls on other weapons and equipment distributed to law enforcement. The details were released in advance of an Obama visit to Camden, N.J., Monday afternoon where he met with youth and law enforcement.

Nine months earlier, scenes of heavily armed police in riot gear dispelling racially charged protests in Ferguson touched off a debate about federal programs that let local law enforcement apply for such equipment. The White House initially suggested Obama would maintain those programs, but an interagency group found "substantial risk of misusing or overusing" items like tracked armored vehicles, high-powered firearms and camouflage could undermine trust in police.

Speaking in Camden, Obama said the use of militarized gear by police can give the public the feeling that law enforcement is like "an occupying force."

In previewing the president's trip, the White House said that effective immediately, the federal government will no longer fund or provide armored vehicles that run on a tracked system instead of wheels, weaponized aircraft or vehicles, firearms or ammunition of .50-caliber or higher, grenade launchers, bayonets or camouflage uniforms. The federal government also is exploring ways to recall prohibited equipment already distributed.

With scrutiny on police only increasing in the ensuing months after a series of highly publicized deaths of black suspects nationwide, Obama also is unveiling the final report of a task force he created to help build confidence between police and minority communities in particular.

In addition to the new equipment-transfer bans, a longer list of equipment the federal government provides will come under tighter control, including wheeled armored vehicles like Humvees, manned aircraft, drones, specialized firearms, explosives, battering rams and riot batons, helmets and shields. Starting in October, police will have to get approval from their city council, mayor or some other local governing body to obtain it, provide a persuasive explanation of why it is needed and have more training and data collection on the use of the equipment.

The issue of police militarization rose to prominence last year after a white police officer in Ferguson fatally shot unarmed black 18-year-old Michael Brown, sparking protests. Critics questioned why police in full body armor with armored trucks responded to dispel demonstrators, and Obama seemed to sympathize when ordering a review of the programs that provide the equipment. "There is a big difference between our military and our local law enforcement and we don't want those lines blurred," Obama last in August.

But he did not announce a ban in December with the publication of the review, which showed five federal agencies spent $18 billion on programs that provided equipment including 92,442 small arms, 44,275 night-vision devices, 5,235 Humvees, 617 mine-resistant vehicles and 616 aircraft. At the time, the White House defended the programs as proving to be useful in many cases, such as the response to the Boston Marathon bombing. Instead of repealing the programs, Obama issued an executive order that required federal agencies that run the programs to consult with law enforcement and civil rights and civil liberties organizations to recommend changes that make sure they are accountable and transparent.

That working group said in a report out Monday that it developed the list of newly banned equipment because "the substantial risk of misusing or overusing these items, which are seen as militaristic in nature, could significantly undermine community trust and may encourage tactics and behaviors that are inconsistent with the premise of civilian law enforcement." The Justice Department did not respond to an inquiry about how many pieces of equipment that are now banned had been previously distributed through federal programs.

The separate report from the 21st Century Policing task force has a long list of recommendations to improve trust in police, including encouraging more transparency about interactions with the public. The White House said 21 police agencies nationwide, including Camden and nearby Philadelphia, have agreed to start putting out never-before released data on citizen interactions like use of force, stops, citations and officer-involved shootings. The administration also is launching an online toolkit to encourage the use of body cameras to record police interactions. And the Justice Department is giving $163 million in grants to incentivize police departments to adopt the report's recommendations.

Ron Davis, director of the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services at the Department of Justice, told reporters he hoped the report could be a "key transformational document" in rebuilding trust that has been destroyed in recent years between police and minority communities.

"We are without a doubt sitting at a defining moment for American policing," said Davis, a 30-year police veteran and former chief of the East Palo Alto (California) Police Department. "We have a unique opportunity to redefine policing in our democracy, to ensure that public safety becomes more than the absence of crime, that it must also include the presence of justice."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/05/18/obama-announces-restrictions-on-distribution-military-style-equipment-to-police/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2015, 09:45:38 AM
Supreme Court Allows for Unscrupulous Cops to be Sued for Deliberately Concealing Evidence

Los Angeles, California – This week, it was reported that the U.S. Supreme Court will allow a lawsuit against the LAPD for covering up evidence that would have prevented a man from sitting in jail for 27 months prior to his trial. Lawyers for the LAPD recently filed an appeal, arguing that since the man had not stood trial yet, that it was OK for them to conceal the evidence during his detainment. However, the Supreme court has now struck down the appeal, allowing the lawsuit to continue.

The lawsuit was initially filed by Michael Walker, a man who is now dead after his health mysteriously deteriorated during his time in prison, and shortly after his release. His lawyer said that he suffered from alcoholism, which may have played a role in his poor health.

His lawsuit will move forward though, and should he win, his mother will inherit the reward. This case also brings to light the fact that police officers many times withhold evidence until a suspect’s trial, leaving them to needlessly sit in jail for many months, and in some cases even years. This is in blatant violation of a detainee’s right to a fair and speedy trial.

In the case of Walker, he was mistakenly arrested because someone thought that he looked like a man who had recently robbed a store. However, there was no evidence to convict him. Even after he was arrested, the string of robberies that he was blamed for continued to take place, but the police actually said that the robberies ceased, and used that as an excuse to keep him behind bars for even longer.

This is where the concealed evidence comes into play. The detectives who testified that the crime spree had ceased, Steven Moody and Robert Pulido, later testified that they did in fact know about the following robberies. This testimony was only made after the judge ordered that the detectives disclose the information.


As soon as these facts came to light, prosecutors dropped the charges, and Walker was released after spending 27 months in jail as an innocent man. Soon after, he sued the LAPD, along with Steven Moody and Robert Pulido, but then lost the battle for his health and his life.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/supreme-court-lawsuit-lapd-withholding-evidence/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 20, 2015, 05:44:19 PM
Supreme Court Allows for Unscrupulous Cops to be Sued for Deliberately Concealing Evidence

Los Angeles, California – This week, it was reported that the U.S. Supreme Court will allow a lawsuit against the LAPD for covering up evidence that would have prevented a man from sitting in jail for 27 months prior to his trial. Lawyers for the LAPD recently filed an appeal, arguing that since the man had not stood trial yet, that it was OK for them to conceal the evidence during his detainment. However, the Supreme court has now struck down the appeal, allowing the lawsuit to continue.

The lawsuit was initially filed by Michael Walker, a man who is now dead after his health mysteriously deteriorated during his time in prison, and shortly after his release. His lawyer said that he suffered from alcoholism, which may have played a role in his poor health.

His lawsuit will move forward though, and should he win, his mother will inherit the reward. This case also brings to light the fact that police officers many times withhold evidence until a suspect’s trial, leaving them to needlessly sit in jail for many months, and in some cases even years. This is in blatant violation of a detainee’s right to a fair and speedy trial.

In the case of Walker, he was mistakenly arrested because someone thought that he looked like a man who had recently robbed a store. However, there was no evidence to convict him. Even after he was arrested, the string of robberies that he was blamed for continued to take place, but the police actually said that the robberies ceased, and used that as an excuse to keep him behind bars for even longer.

This is where the concealed evidence comes into play. The detectives who testified that the crime spree had ceased, Steven Moody and Robert Pulido, later testified that they did in fact know about the following robberies. This testimony was only made after the judge ordered that the detectives disclose the information.


As soon as these facts came to light, prosecutors dropped the charges, and Walker was released after spending 27 months in jail as an innocent man. Soon after, he sued the LAPD, along with Steven Moody and Robert Pulido, but then lost the battle for his health and his life.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/supreme-court-lawsuit-lapd-withholding-evidence/



And, as usual, no consequences for the detectives.

 >:(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 20, 2015, 09:59:34 PM
And, as usual, no consequences for the detectives.

 >:(

Yep... You testify in court to something you later acknowledge you knew was a lie. How are you not charged with perjury and criminal contempt of Court? Amazing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on May 21, 2015, 07:46:31 AM
Yep... You testify in court to something you later acknowledge you knew was a lie. How are you not charged with perjury and criminal contempt of Court? Amazing.


agreed...but this is why these things are allowed to go on...the system doesn't police itself......there are DA's who also bring charges againast defendants and withhold evidence and nothing happens to them either..I find that to be amazing as well
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2015, 11:59:29 AM
APD officer arrested, charged with DWI

http://www.kvue.com/story/news/local/2015/05/22/apd-officer-arrested-on-dwi-charge/27826793/

(Sent from KVUE NEWS)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 23, 2015, 01:20:30 PM
APD officer arrested, charged with DWI

http://www.kvue.com/story/news/local/2015/05/22/apd-officer-arrested-on-dwi-charge/27826793/

(Sent from KVUE NEWS)

Is this the PD you work at?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: M4tad0r on May 24, 2015, 04:55:25 PM
RAW: Virginia cop pepper-sprays stroke sufferer in the face, here's a nice contribution.



Police work at it's best.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 24, 2015, 07:32:39 PM
Is this the PD you work at?

yes. Its pretty widely known if you get stopped and you are showing signs of intoxication, you're going to jail. Chief even made it policy recently that if you are caught DWI you are getting fired if the evidence indicates it's likely you were 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 25, 2015, 10:28:30 AM
APD officer arrested, charged with DWI

http://www.kvue.com/story/news/local/2015/05/22/apd-officer-arrested-on-dwi-charge/27826793/

(Sent from KVUE NEWS)



Sums up the sentiment for the most part:

Cops act like they're vindicated every time video shows them doing something the right way.

THEYRE SUPPOSED To..  it's their job!

Like some video showing them NOT breaking the law suddenly vindicates all those who are breaking the law. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 25, 2015, 10:31:01 AM

And now, let's see things from a more honest perspective:


APD firings, suspensions reduced or overturned


AUSTIN -- Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo has reinstated or reduced the suspensions of several police officers in high-profile disciplinarycases -- reversals that sometimes were the result of private negotiations between the officers and Acevedo.

In other cases, police union officials said Acevedo unilaterally reduced officers' suspension as officers were fighting their discipline.

In the past two years, Acevedo has reduced the discipline for at least seven officers, which represents about 7 percent of all suspensions he has imposed during that time, a KVUEDefenders/Austin American-Statesman investigation found.

Among them was the high-profile January dismissal of Officer Ricardo Zapata, who was fired after state troopers arrested and charged him with drunken driving. Acevedo then reinstated him with a 90-day suspension.

In another case, Acevedo reduced the suspension of Officer Brian Yarger to a written reprimand after he said Yarger used excessive force while trying to get a suspect into a patrol car.

Acevedo said he reduces discipline for a variety of reasons prior to an officer appealing their case to an arbitrator, including witnesses who will not participate in the arbitration and the cost of taking such cases to a hearing.

We are a business, he said. We run our organization like a business, and we are in the business of holding officers accountable when they re wrong, supporting them when they re right, and making our business decisions on whether to pursue litigation i.e. arbitration based on the business needs and outcomes.

Yet the police union said Acevedo s reductions in certain cases highlight what they deem excessive discipline at times.

You shouldn t ever be put in a position of giving an officer a bunch of days off, and then saying, Oh, never mind, said Sgt. Wayne Vincent, president of the Austin Police Association.


http://www.kvue.com/story/news/2014/05/26/2458344/


As an aside, one of the things about a civil service system is they evaluate consistency in punishment.  That is to say, the same punishment is expected to be applied to the same infractions.  So, if drinking and driving is acceptable in one case, it's a tough argument to claim that a cop should be fired for it in another case.


But yea...no systemic problems to see here. 

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 25, 2015, 11:08:02 AM
But yea...no systemic problems to see here. 

Some people are okay with police corruption and abuses as long as it doesnt affect them personally.

some people are okay with criminal activity if they support the person doing it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2015, 11:09:37 AM


Sums up the sentiment for the most part:



However the Skips of the world can say "cops never arrest cops" or "the blue line is alive and well" all day long and we're supposed to just accept that as fact... first time we post something showing that's not the case, you roll out the ol' "Cops are supposed to do that" sign... classic... 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2015, 11:12:31 AM
Some people are okay with police corruption and abuses as long as it doesnt affect them personally.

some people are okay with criminal activity if they support the person doing it. 

what has your comment got to do with the article?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2015, 11:16:04 AM
And now, let's see things from a more honest perspective:


APD firings, suspensions reduced or overturned


AUSTIN -- Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo has reinstated or reduced the suspensions of several police officers in high-profile disciplinarycases -- reversals that sometimes were the result of private negotiations between the officers and Acevedo.

In other cases, police union officials said Acevedo unilaterally reduced officers' suspension as officers were fighting their discipline.

In the past two years, Acevedo has reduced the discipline for at least seven officers, which represents about 7 percent of all suspensions he has imposed during that time, a KVUEDefenders/Austin American-Statesman investigation found.

Among them was the high-profile January dismissal of Officer Ricardo Zapata, who was fired after state troopers arrested and charged him with drunken driving. Acevedo then reinstated him with a 90-day suspension.

In another case, Acevedo reduced the suspension of Officer Brian Yarger to a written reprimand after he said Yarger used excessive force while trying to get a suspect into a patrol car.

Acevedo said he reduces discipline for a variety of reasons prior to an officer appealing their case to an arbitrator, including witnesses who will not participate in the arbitration and the cost of taking such cases to a hearing.

We are a business, he said. We run our organization like a business, and we are in the business of holding officers accountable when they re wrong, supporting them when they re right, and making our business decisions on whether to pursue litigation i.e. arbitration based on the business needs and outcomes.

Yet the police union said Acevedo s reductions in certain cases highlight what they deem excessive discipline at times.

You shouldn t ever be put in a position of giving an officer a bunch of days off, and then saying, Oh, never mind, said Sgt. Wayne Vincent, president of the Austin Police Association.


http://www.kvue.com/story/news/2014/05/26/2458344/


As an aside, one of the things about a civil service system is they evaluate consistency in punishment.  That is to say, the same punishment is expected to be applied to the same infractions.  So, if drinking and driving is acceptable in one case, it's a tough argument to claim that a cop should be fired for it in another case.


But yea...no systemic problems to see here. 



Oh my god..you caught us..... damn you....  ::)

The officer mentioned in the article was prior to the Chiefs policy I mentioned and the main reason the policy was implemented. The arbitrator would have likely ruled that since historically APD has allowed officers to seek help to deal with the issue in lieu of termination, it would be unfair to start with this officer without prior notification of policy change. So the Chief came out with a policy change, made a video that all were required to view and sign off on.. This will be the first case since the policy revision. It will be interesting to see if it holds up under arbitration.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 25, 2015, 11:22:51 AM
what has your comment got to do with the article?

people deny systemic problems, or excuse it.   Or they immediately attack the victim of police brutality.  I wonder if theyd do the same to a rape victim.  I guess that would depend of if the rapist was a cop or not...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2015, 11:24:01 AM
people deny systemic problems, or excuse it.   Or they immediately attack the victim of police brutality.  I wonder if theyd do the same to a rape victim.  I guess that would depend of if the rapist was a cop or not...

Let me grab my golf cart, you're so far out in left field I'm gonna need a ride..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 25, 2015, 11:33:12 AM
Oh my god..you caught us..... damn you....  ::)

The officer mentioned in the article was prior to the Chiefs policy I mentioned and the main reason the policy was implemented. The arbitrator would have likely ruled that since historically APD has allowed officers to seek help to deal with the issue in lieu of termination, it would be unfair to start with this officer without prior notification of policy change. So the Chief came out with a policy change, made a video that all were required to view and sign off on.. This will be the first case since the policy revision. It will be interesting to see if it holds up under arbitration.    




Catch you?  I'm not a cop fool.  Don't give a fuck about 'catching' you.  ::)

The point is there's a long, long, long way to go before this cops job is over.
The point is the systemic issues facing holding cops accountable (which, of course, you're total denial about, lol).

The point, as usual, has gone over your head.  And, that's just sad.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on May 25, 2015, 11:34:17 AM
people deny systemic problems, or excuse it.   Or they immediately attack the victim of police brutality.  I wonder if theyd do the same to a rape victim.  I guess that would depend of if the rapist was a cop or not...



Lot's of truth there.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2015, 11:35:54 AM



Catch you?  I'm not a cop fool.  Don't give a fuck about 'catching' you.  ::)

The point is there's a long, long, long way to go before this cops job is over.
The point is the systemic issues facing holding cops accountable (which, of course, you're total denial about, lol).

The point, as usual, has gone over your head.  And, that's just sad.



what's sad, is discussing an issue about police with you.. total waste of time
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: blacken700 on May 25, 2015, 03:00:10 PM
what's sad, is discussing an issue about police with you.. total waste of time

now that's a fact
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2015, 05:47:31 PM
Elderly Georgetown man files federal lawsuit accusing SWAT officers of using excessive force

An elderly Georgetown man says SWAT officers took him to the ground and broke his hip.

His attorney has filed a lawsuit in federal court against the city and county.

The 82-year-old man lives about five blocks away from the sheriff's office in downtown Georgetown.

He says sheriff's deputies and Georgetown police came to his home in full swat gear in late September to serve a search warrant regarding his nephew who had been staying with him.

Video shot by someone driving by that day shows Herman Crisp sitting in a chair on his lawn with a friend. He says when the officers arrived; they threw a flash-bang device at his home, knocking him out of his chair.

He says officers slammed him to the ground and handcuffed him. He says the force broke his hip. He says officers searched his home and before they left, helped him back inside, but didn't call paramedics. His family members say they found him the next day on the floor in his own feces.

“After they left I tried to get up then because I had to go to the bathroom and I couldn't go so I just crawled over here and laid on the floor right down there and my sister came and called the paramedics and they came in here," Crisp explained.

"The thing that concerns me about this is it looks to me like a conspiracy of silence. Things like this don't happen in a vacuum. There's nothing that we've been able to get that identifies the officers, that identifies the action that occurred. We have our client's information but I had to hire a private investigator just to get enough faxed to determine whether I should file a lawsuit or not. And I'm convinced that the facts are adequate to file this lawsuit and we'll find out now that we have some way to get accurate information," said Crisp's attorney, Boadus Spivey.

Although the injury is concerning, Crisps's attorney says his goal right now is to find out why this happened and who is at fault here.

Crisp has undergone two surgeries, physical therapy and uses a cane to walk.

We reached out to both the city and county but neither had heard of the lawsuit perhaps because it was filed today so neither could comment.

http://www.myfoxaustin.com/story/29130347/elderly-georgetown-man-files-federal-lawsuit-accusing-swat-officers-of-using-excessive-force
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on May 26, 2015, 08:01:32 PM
Elderly Georgetown man files federal lawsuit accusing SWAT officers of using excessive force

An elderly Georgetown man says SWAT officers took him to the ground and broke his hip.

His attorney has filed a lawsuit in federal court against the city and county.

The 82-year-old man lives about five blocks away from the sheriff's office in downtown Georgetown.

He says sheriff's deputies and Georgetown police came to his home in full swat gear in late September to serve a search warrant regarding his nephew who had been staying with him.

Video shot by someone driving by that day shows Herman Crisp sitting in a chair on his lawn with a friend. He says when the officers arrived; they threw a flash-bang device at his home, knocking him out of his chair.

He says officers slammed him to the ground and handcuffed him. He says the force broke his hip. He says officers searched his home and before they left, helped him back inside, but didn't call paramedics. His family members say they found him the next day on the floor in his own feces.

“After they left I tried to get up then because I had to go to the bathroom and I couldn't go so I just crawled over here and laid on the floor right down there and my sister came and called the paramedics and they came in here," Crisp explained.

"The thing that concerns me about this is it looks to me like a conspiracy of silence. Things like this don't happen in a vacuum. There's nothing that we've been able to get that identifies the officers, that identifies the action that occurred. We have our client's information but I had to hire a private investigator just to get enough faxed to determine whether I should file a lawsuit or not. And I'm convinced that the facts are adequate to file this lawsuit and we'll find out now that we have some way to get accurate information," said Crisp's attorney, Boadus Spivey.

Although the injury is concerning, Crisps's attorney says his goal right now is to find out why this happened and who is at fault here.

Crisp has undergone two surgeries, physical therapy and uses a cane to walk.

We reached out to both the city and county but neither had heard of the lawsuit perhaps because it was filed today so neither could comment.

http://www.myfoxaustin.com/story/29130347/elderly-georgetown-man-files-federal-lawsuit-accusing-swat-officers-of-using-excessive-force

Holy fucking shit... if what he alleges is true, this is bordering on the insane. The members of that raid - every last one of them - should be fired and should be prosecuted for - at minimum - abuse under the color of authority and face serious jail time, and the city should cover every last cent of this gentleman's medical bills and provide him with enough money to live the rest of his life without a care in the world.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on May 26, 2015, 08:25:19 PM
Cleveland Police agree to federal oversight.

Sean Hannity hates this, he went on about it today on his radio show.



The settlement comes just days after a white police officer in the department, Michael Brelo, was found not guilty of manslaughter related to a 2012 shooting of two unarmed black civilians, who had fled police after their car backfired in front of a police station. Mistaking the noise for a gunshot, 62 police cruisers pursued the vehicle. Thirteen different police officers ultimately fired 137 shots at the car, killing the two people inside – Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams.


http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/USA-Update/2015/0526/Cleveland-agrees-to-federal-police-reforms-How-often-does-DOJ-intervene-video

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2015, 08:21:51 AM
Judge grants order against sheriff
May. 23, 2015 @ 05:02 AM

Zach Potter
SANFORD —

A federal court judge approved a temporary restraining order this week against members of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office in connection with a 2009 lawsuit, which alleges excessive force by multiple deputies.

Lee County resident Steven Wayne Thomas sued the sheriff’s office for $5 million in 2009 after an incident in which he alleged deputies used excessive force by punching him and repeatedly shocking him with a stun gun after he was handcuffed on the ground. That case is set to go to trial June 2.

Clayton resident Robert Terry Wade III, 71, stated in an affidavit that he was trying to serve subpoenas to appear at the upcoming trial to Lee County Sheriff Tracy Carter and a number of deputies about two weeks ago. It was unclear from the affidavit whether the incident occurred May 12 or May 13.

Wade said he attempted to serve Carter at Carter’s residence, and that Carter yelled at him, prevented him from leaving and called deputies to arrest him.

“I tried to leave,” Wade said in his affidavit, “but Sheriff Carter came and positioned himself behind my truck and blocked me in so that it was impossible for me to leave without coming into contact with him.”

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office charged Wade with trespassing and carrying a concealed weapon on May 12. According to Wade, he notified deputies of a Smith & Wesson handgun in the door of his truck.

On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle, who is presiding over the case, issued a temporary restraining order that stated, “Sheriff Tracy Carter and the Lee County Sheriff’s Office are restrained and enjoined from interfering in any way with [Thomas’s] efforts to serve subpoenas to any witnesses in the upcoming trial.”

Carter and many of the deputies originally named in the lawsuit were dropped as defendants in 2013, but Thomas’s attorney, Kieran J. Shanahan, argued that if subpoenas were not served, there was no way “to ensure the appearance of several key eyewitnesses at trial.”

Lee County Attorney Kerry Schmid and Brad Wood, who is representing the sheriff’s office, declined to comment on the order or any other matters related to the upcoming trial.

Carter also declined to comment, as did Macks Pickett Investigative Services Inc., the company that contracted Wade to deliver the subpoenas.

The original lawsuit stemmed from an incident on April 27, 2009, in which deputies responded to call regarding property damage at the intersection of St. Andrews Church and Meadowview roads.

Deputies reported that Thomas was at the scene and acting erratically, and failed to comply with orders from deputies. According to court documents, it later was discovered that Thomas had been exposed to herbicides and insecticides that he had been using to spray tobacco plants at his nearby farm.

Thomas alleged that deputies subdued him and then continued to shock him with a stun gun and punch him while he was on the ground. He also alleged that he suffered a fractured jaw and significant damage to the root of a tooth as a result of the incident.

The June 2 trial is scheduled to take place at 10 a.m. at the U.S. District Courthouse in Elizabeth City.

http://www.sanfordherald.com/news/x219730114/Judge-grants-order-against-sheriff
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 01, 2015, 05:38:50 PM
Cop's 'Friendly' Sentence Sums Up The Police Abuse Epidemic




Published on May 29, 2015


"“Can you tell me why I’m being arrested?” Hamza Jeylani asks an officer in a video captured on his cell phone.

“Because I feel like arresting you,” the officer, who the American Civil Liberties Union identifies as Officer Rod Webber, replies in the short video.

This exchange happens after Webber calmly threatens Jeylani, who does not appear to be offering any resistance whatsoever. “Plain and simple,” Webber tells Jeylani, “if you fuck with me I’m going to break your legs before you even get a chance to run.”

According to the ACLU, Jeylani and four of his friends — all of whom are black teenagers — were pulled over after making a U-turn in a parking lot in South Minneapolis. The four young men had been playing basketball at a YMCA. Despite Officer Webber’s statement that Jeylani was arrested because the cop felt like arresting him, the police claim that they suspected the four youth of stealing the car they were driving."

Read more here:
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015...

Cenk Uygur (http://www.twitter.com/cenkuygur), John Iadarola (Think Tank; http://www.twitter.com/jiadarola), Ben Mankiewicz (What The Flick?! http://www.twitter.com/BenMank77) & Jimmy Dore (The Jimmy Dore Show; http://www.twitter.com/jimmy_dore) of The Young Turks break it down.

Go to https://www.naturebox.com/tyt for a free trial and help us out while snacking out!



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 01, 2015, 06:27:25 PM

Who Police Shot In May

Depending on the database you’re looking at, police have killed between 385 and 464 people in 2015. According to Killed By Police, a comprehensive list of the names, ages, gender, and race of people killed by law enforcement, officers took the lives of 73 people in May alone.

Although the number is the lowest monthly figure this year (see tallies from February, March, and April), police violence still took center stage. The non-guilty verdict of Officer Michael Brelo reignited national outrage over the lack of police accountability, as none of the 13 officers who shot 137 times at two unarmed black people received criminal charges. Moreover, the biker shootout in Waco, Texas highlighted the discrepancies in police force used against black people and their non-black counterparts — and how lawmakers talk about race and gun violence.
 
Black women were also put in the spotlight in May. That police are 21 more times likely to kill young black men than young white men is an oft-cited statistic, but cisgender and transgender women killed by police are often overlooked, forgotten, and erased from #BlackLivesMatter conversations. To change the narrative, a coalition of grassroots activist groups, including the Black Youth Project 100 and African American Policy Forum, organized the #SayHerName campaign. On May 21, hundreds took to the streets — and social media — to highlight black women who died at the hands of law enforcement officers.

 



Looking beyond the verdict and campaign, here are two high-profile police shootings that occurred last month:

Brendon Glenn: Venice, CA: Cops were called to investigate a homeless man who was “harassing customers” outside of an establishment, one Tuesday night. When they arrived at the scene, two officers talked to Glenn, a 29-year-old black man, who was allowed to walk away, unscathed. However, the two officers noticed him physically confronting another person soon after their talk, and attempted to detain him. A physical skirmish ensued, before one of the officers deployed his weapon. Glenn, who was unarmed, died at a local hospital. After the incident, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck viewed footage from a nearby security camera and admitted that the circumstances did not justify deadly force. Both officers have been removed from the field.

Andre Thompson and Bryson Chaplin; Olympia, WA: Police were sent to investigate a robbery attempt, after two men tried to steal beer and threw bottles at store employees who confronted them. Officer Ryan Donald says he approached two skateboarders, Thompson and Chaplin, on the street, because they fit the description of the burglary suspects. Donald claims that when he got out of his vehicle, one of the men attacked him with a skateboard, which is when he first fired his gun. Thompson and Chaplin allegedly ran into a wooded area, before returning to confront the officer. Next, Donald radioed in for backup, saying he had the two at gunpoint, before reporting that both had been shot in the torso. Thompson and Chaplin, who were both unarmed, survived serious injuries. Olympia Police Chief Ronnie Roberts later said officers have “the right to defend” themselves.


http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/06/01/3664557/police-shot-may/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 02, 2015, 02:42:43 PM
Who Police Shot In May

Depending on the database you’re looking at, police have killed between 385 and 464 people in 2015. According to Killed By Police, a comprehensive list of the names, ages, gender, and race of people killed by law enforcement, officers took the lives of 73 people in May alone.

Although the number is the lowest monthly figure this year (see tallies from February, March, and April), police violence still took center stage. The non-guilty verdict of Officer Michael Brelo reignited national outrage over the lack of police accountability, as none of the 13 officers who shot 137 times at two unarmed black people received criminal charges. Moreover, the biker shootout in Waco, Texas highlighted the discrepancies in police force used against black people and their non-black counterparts — and how lawmakers talk about race and gun violence.
 
Black women were also put in the spotlight in May. That police are 21 more times likely to kill young black men than young white men is an oft-cited statistic, but cisgender and transgender women killed by police are often overlooked, forgotten, and erased from #BlackLivesMatter conversations. To change the narrative, a coalition of grassroots activist groups, including the Black Youth Project 100 and African American Policy Forum, organized the #SayHerName campaign. On May 21, hundreds took to the streets  — and social media — to highlight black women who died at the hands of law enforcement officers.

 



Looking beyond the verdict and campaign, here are two high-profile police shootings that occurred last month:

Brendon Glenn: Venice, CA: Cops were called to investigate a homeless man who was “harassing customers” outside of an establishment, one Tuesday night. When they arrived at the scene, two officers talked to Glenn, a 29-year-old black man, who was allowed to walk away, unscathed. However, the two officers noticed him physically confronting another person soon after their talk, and attempted to detain him. A physical skirmish ensued, before one of the officers deployed his weapon. Glenn, who was unarmed, died at a local hospital. After the incident, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck viewed footage from a nearby security camera and admitted that the circumstances did not justify deadly force. Both officers have been removed from the field.

Andre Thompson and Bryson Chaplin; Olympia, WA: Police were sent to investigate a robbery attempt, after two men tried to steal beer and threw bottles at store employees who confronted them. Officer Ryan Donald says he approached two skateboarders, Thompson and Chaplin, on the street, because they fit the description of the burglary suspects. Donald claims that when he got out of his vehicle, one of the men attacked him with a skateboard, which is when he first fired his gun. Thompson and Chaplin allegedly ran into a wooded area, before returning to confront the officer. Next, Donald radioed in for backup, saying he had the two at gunpoint, before reporting that both had been shot in the torso. Thompson and Chaplin, who were both unarmed, survived serious injuries. Olympia Police Chief Ronnie Roberts later said officers have “the right to defend” themselves.


http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/06/01/3664557/police-shot-may/














None of it makes for Good reading.
Certainly appears to be Big Problem.


Though out of 300+million people & thousands of
Police / public interactions everyday it makes for a
Tiny percentage.
Considering guns, emotion, people involved.

It still needs tackling, & Highlighting.
As one Murder / Death by unwarranted / heavy handed
Policing needs addressing & Dealing with.
The same as any other Murder.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 02, 2015, 08:52:57 PM













None of it makes for Good reading.
Certainly appears to be Big Problem.


Though out of 300+million people & thousands of
Police / public interactions everyday it makes for a
Tiny percentage.
Considering guns, emotion, people involved.

It still needs tackling, & Highlighting.
As one Murder / Death by unwarranted / heavy handed
Policing needs addressing & Dealing with.
The same as any other Murder.

Every police involved shooting needs to be examined to insure it was warranted. No argument there. Whether it is 1 or 3,000, if it was a good shooting or a bad shooting is all that should matter. How many is irrelevant and often times not an officers choice
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 03, 2015, 12:27:56 AM
Every police involved shooting needs to be examined to insure it was warranted. No argument there. Whether it is 1 or 3,000, if it was a good shooting or a bad shooting is all that should matter. How many is irrelevant and often times not an officers choice














Why are you so politically correct.
A Good Shooting.. ::)  Or A Bad Shooting... ::)
How the hell do you Get a Bad Shooting.
If Someone is Shot & Killed For No Justifiable Reason
It Is Murder.
Wether It Be Cop or Not Doing The Shooting.

This inability to Speak Clearly & Picking Politically
Correct Phrases Is Part of The Problem With The Police
& Public lack of Trust & Respect.

Quick to label some one Scumbag / terrorist / Murderer Etc.
But Will Not use the same Kind of Terminology to Describe
Rogue & Awful Cops.

I believed to some extent you were one of the decent cops.
Your continued covering, excuses & Politically Correct Speak
To do With Police Is Making Me Think Otherwise.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 03, 2015, 12:50:44 AM
Every police involved shooting needs to be examined to insure it was warranted. No argument there. Whether it is 1 or 3,000, if it was a good shooting or a bad shooting is all that should matter. How many is irrelevant and often times not an officers choice

Agreed - every shooting needs to be investigated carefully and thoroughly. Which brings us to the case of Jermaine McBean...

This guy is walking down the street with an airsoft rifle that he just bought from a pawn-shop on his way home. By all accounts, he isn't brandishing the weapon or threatening anyone with it. He has it perched on his shoulders and behind his neck. And the police arrive and in short order, McBean ends up dead.

The officer who shot and killed him says that he repeatedly ordered him to drop the rifle but the suspect refused, and instead turned and threatened him and his partner. Per policy, the shooting is investigated, but before the investigation is complete, the Sheriff issues a commendation for bravery to the officer who shot and killed McBean. And we're supposed to believe that the investigation is impartial?

In the aftermath, the family of the victim complain that he had his headphones on, and at no point did the officer command him to drop the gun. The police refute this accusation, offering as proof a police report that very explicitly pointed out that the victim's headphones were found neatly tucked in his pocket after the shooting...

Now, almost two years after the fact, a photograph taken in the immediate aftermath of the shooting surfaces and guess where the headphones are? Hint: not in the victim's pocket.

The Sheriff's reaction this time? It's all McBean's fault! Any level of force and any reaction by his officers was not only justified but necessary.

For every honest, thorough investigation of a shooting, there's ten investigations like this. Investigations where the truth is fudged to keep things on the right side of the thin blue line. Investigations when cops get the benefit of their doubt and citizens get buried.

Police have squandered the trust the public has shown them by repeatedly violating that trust, by adopting an "us-vs-them" mentality and by seeing the public they're supposed to serve and protect as the people they're to direct and abuse.

If the public is now turning against them, cops have nobody to blame but themselves.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 03, 2015, 12:59:32 AM
Agreed - every shooting needs to be investigated carefully and thoroughly. Which brings us to the case of Jermaine McBean...

This guy is walking down the street with an airsoft rifle that he just bought from a pawn-shop on his way home. By all accounts, he isn't brandishing the weapon or threatening anyone with it. He has it perched on his shoulders and behind his neck. And the police arrive and in short order, McBean ends up dead.

The officer who shot and killed him says that he repeatedly ordered him to drop the rifle but the suspect refused, and instead turned and threatened him and his partner. Per policy, the shooting is investigated, but before the investigation is complete, the Sheriff issues a commendation for bravery to the officer who shot and killed McBean. And we're supposed to believe that the investigation is impartial?

In the aftermath, the family of the victim complain that he had his headphones on, and at no point did the officer command him to drop the gun. The police refute this accusation, offering as proof a police report that very explicitly pointed out that the victim's headphones were found neatly tucked in his pocket after the shooting...

Now, almost two years after the fact, a photograph taken in the immediate aftermath of the shooting surfaces and guess where the headphones are? Hint: not in the victim's pocket.

The Sheriff's reaction this time? It's all McBean's fault! Any level of force and any reaction by his officers was not only justified but necessary.

For every honest, thorough investigation of a shooting, there's ten investigations like this. Investigations where the truth is fudged to keep things on the right side of the thin blue line. Investigations when cops get the benefit of their doubt and citizens get buried.

Police have squandered the trust the public has shown them by repeatedly violating that trust, by adopting an "us-vs-them" mentality and by seeing the public they're supposed to serve and protect as the people they're to direct and abuse.

If the public is now turning against them, cops have nobody to blame but themselves.













Well said.
Yet another very good example of The Institutionalised Corruption in Policing.
When it Comes To Police & Policing Themselves....
See No Evil
Hear No Evil
Speak No Evil

Yet we are at fault for not trusting them & Daring to Question Them.. :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 03, 2015, 06:11:40 AM
Odd that they always test the blood of the dead person for alcohol and drugs, but never the blood of the shooter.  Bad guy smoked pot a month ago, and suddenly we paint him violent animal.  Shooter with a documented history of alcohol abuse and treatment never tested for anything.   Fccked up.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 03, 2015, 08:58:44 AM
Odd that they always test the blood of the dead person for alcohol and drugs, but never the blood of the shooter.  Bad guy smoked pot a month ago, and suddenly we paint him violent animal.  Shooter with a documented history of alcohol abuse and treatment never tested for anything.   Fccked up.  

Similarly a citizen's record or anything that can portray him/her in a negative light ("he was arrested as a minor for underage drinking", "she was arrested for illegally selling lemonade without a license when she was 7 ears old", "was accused of domestic battery") is mentioned but you don't see the same standard for cops (if they had any complaints for abuse, how many people they have shot/killed or if they've been disciplined). At that point usually the police will all of a sudden be very tight lipped claiming "it is an ongoing investigation and they can't comment".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on June 03, 2015, 09:28:23 AM
Similarly a citizen's record or anything that can portray him/her in a negative light ("he was arrested as a minor for underage drinking", "she was arrested for illegally selling lemonade without a license when she was 7 ears old", "was accused of domestic battery") is mentioned but you don't see the same standard for cops (if they had any complaints for abuse, how many people they have shot/killed or if they've been disciplined). At that point usually the police will all of a sudden be very tight lipped claiming "it is an ongoing investigation and they can't comment".

If anything cops should be held to a HIGHER standard than regular Citizens.

With power comes responbility.

For cops apparently its the other way around.

And with all the training they have, being afraid should not be valid reason for shooting somebody.

If you frighten that easily you should never carry a gun or a badge.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 03, 2015, 01:27:35 PM
240, skeletor & whork You all made extremely
Rational & good comments where is our resident
Police man to Shoot down what you say & Explain
To us Lesser Mortals Why Similar or Better still
Higher Standards do not Apply to cops.



See no evil.
Hear no evil.
Speak no evil.
Especially when concerning cops
& their Behaviour.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 03, 2015, 03:39:37 PM
oh and the leaks - the selective leaks of both truths and untruths.

Remember the police source that kept leaking to FOX news about the fractured orbital bone on officer WIlson?  NEVER HAPPENED>  But FOX kept on reporting it.

The police can leak all sorts of stuff that paints them ina  good light to taint the jury pool.  People should go to JAIL when they have a sworn duty to keep these facts close.  The people can't see it, the victims's family can't see it... but the police can leak it, and leak lies too, without accountability.

Fractured orbital, officer wilson.  Google it.  Never happened, no matter how many police sources kept repeating it. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2015, 02:11:59 AM
Underage Girl Brushes Off Cop’s Flirting Attempt, So She’s Swarmed by Cops, Groped and Arrested

New York City, NY — A teenager from the Bronx was recently paid $45,000 after she was wrongfully arrested and sexually harassed by a police officer. The officer was also assisted by a number of other NYPD cops who helped him take her into custody.

The incident occurred on November 4th of 2013 when a young girl named Natalie Erlich, who was 17-years-old at the time, was walking home from school. During her walk, she was approached by Officer José Peinan and another cop who were not in uniform and did not identify themselves as police officers.

According to court documents, Peinan made several attempts to flirt with the girl but was immediately brushed off, much to his disappointment. After the rejection, Peinan became aggressive with the girl and arrested her on bogus charges. The officer claimed that since the girl asked if he was a police officer, that she had “blown his cover.”

“I had on a camouflage hat and [Peinan] had on camouflage pants. He said, ‘We match.’ I brushed him off and I laughed,” Erlich told The New York Post. After that, she said that she attempted to walk away and avoid him, and that is when he became more aggressive.

“He said something slick like, ‘Where are you going?’” she said, adding that she told Peinan that she was going home and asked if he was a cop.

When the officer replied by saying “maybe,” she then told him that was “a cop answer,” and at that moment a swarm of officers descended upon the girl, and Peinan told them to handcuff her and take her into custody.

When asked why she was being arrested, Peinan told her that “You know why, you’re being a smartass.”

Erlich and one of her friends were then taken to jail and not released until 11 a.m the following day.

When she was finally released, Erlich decided to file a lawsuit against the officers and the police department for wrongful arrest and sexual harassment. According to the lawsuit, the girls were arrested because the officer was “angered at having his advances rebuffed.”

The lawsuit also states that the Erlich was groped by police while they were arresting her.

To avoid more details coming out in court, the city agreed to settle the case with a $45,000 hush payment.

Officer Peinan is currently the target of 3 other lawsuits and has reportedly not received any disciplinary action.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-arrests-underage-girl-rejecting-gropes-arrest/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2015, 02:16:37 AM
Graphic Body Cam Footage Shows Killer Cop as He Murders an Innocent Unarmed Man

Salt Lake City, UT — On August 11, 2014 Dillon Taylor was gunned down in broad daylight by Officer Bron Cruz.

The confrontation happened because Cruz confused Taylor with a possible criminal in the area.

Taylor, his brother, and his cousin were exiting a 7-Eleven in an area where police were searching for a suspect who had allegedly been waving a gun around.  These uninvolved young men allegedly matched the description.

When the three men exited the convenience store they were surrounded by officers and ordered to show their hands.  Two of the men stopped and complied, Dillon Taylor, listening to music, kept walking.

Barely 40 seconds go by from the time Dillon is approached until he is shot by Cruz.

The body cam footage was released in September of last year, however, it stopped just after the shots were fired. Apparently the department did not want you to see what happened after as the full video was not released until this week. It shows the disturbing moments before and after this innocent man was gunned down by police.

“He couldn’t hear them, so he just kept walking. Then … they had guns pointed at his face. That’s when he turned off the music,” Taylor’s brother Jerrail Taylor told the SLC Tribune. “I saw them point guns at my brother’s face, and I knew what was going to happen.”

One officer told Taylor to get on the ground, while another told him to put his hands on his head.

“He got confused, he went to pull up his pants to get on the ground, and they shot him,” Jerrail Taylor said.

A report by the Daily Kos provides a detailed breakdown of the 7-minute video:

    Now that the full video has been released, it’s disturbingly clear that nothing about this police shooting was justified. Nothing at all.

    At 0:17, Officer Bron Cruz gets out of his vehicle. You will notice people confused by his presence.

    At 0:22, Officer Cruz walks past two men who were friends with Dillon Taylor.

    At 0:24, Officer Cruz walks behind Taylor, who has on a white T-shirt and is listening to music.

    At 0:33, we see the officer has his gun drawn and is yelling at Taylor, who’s holding his sagging pants up and does not appear to hear Cruz.

    At 0:36, the officer shoots Taylor. It would be fatal.

    Starting at 0:41, you will notice the headphone cord coming out of Taylor’s pocket.

    At 0:48, you will see that the headphones were clearly going up to Taylor’s ears.

    At 0:52, the officer asks Dillon to “give me your hands,” but Taylor is already near death. His friends begin screaming and crying in the background.

    At 1:03, the officer handcuffs Taylor.

    At 1:48, the officer turns Taylor over, the headphones are visible, and the officer states “it’s clear”—meaning that Taylor was actually unarmed.

    At 2:54, the officer turns Taylor completely over, keeping him handcuffed, and begins talking to him and trying to get him to talk. Taylor appears nearly dead and is completely covered in blood.

    At 4:56, the officer is rummaging through Taylor’s pockets instead of providing any first aid.

It seems that after the officer discovered Taylor was unarmed, he pretended to care and provided a nice show for his body cam. However, he never once attempted to simply apply pressure to the gaping hole in Taylor’s chest.

WARNING: The video below is graphic and disturbing.



In October, the DA ruled this murder “justified.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/graphic-body-cam-footage-shows-killer-cop-murders-innocent-unarmed-man/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 04, 2015, 10:48:58 AM
I watched the video without reading the comments to get a unbiased look at it.

After watching the video I concur with the ruling.

The police were responding to a call where a subject was waving a gun around. As the officer pulled up on the 3, all 3 appeared to have been positioned where they saw the officer. 2 stayed, the one walked away from the officer. This is not normal. You would expect all 3 friends to remain together. Anxiety goes up

Officer calls after the guy to stop. He continues to walk. Another notch of anxiety.

The guy then reaches under his shirt in front while continuing to walk. Looks very much like a person could be accessing a weapon.

When the guy turns around and sees the officer pointing the gun at him he does not remove his hands, he leaves them under his shirt at his waiste and continues to walk backwards not appearing to obey the officers commands.

Action beats reaction every time so when the guy starts moving his hands around his waistband, not following instructions, the officer shot. I would have shot, you would have shot. This wasn't even a close one to call.

Unfortunate, but not murder.  
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2015, 02:30:44 PM
He shouldn't have settled imo.

Man gets $35K after cops thought his cracker crumbs were crack

DEPTFORD — A man arrested after he recorded cops and carried cracker crumbs in wax paper to resemble crack has agreed to settle his lawsuit against a Gloucester County police department for $35,000.

News of the settlement reached earlier this year was first reported Wednesday by NJ Civil Settlements, which compiles lists of settlements paid by New Jersey government agencies and their insurers to those who have sued them.

Plaintiff John Cokos was stopped by Deptford Township police when he was seen walking to Gloucester County College carrying a video camera in November 2011.

Cokos said police told him there has been burglaries in the area and that the camera made him appear suspicious, according to court papers.

The Wenonah resident said he got into a skirmish with police and was forced against a guardrail after he refused their orders to turn off the recorder. While searching him, a detective and another officer uncovered Saltine cracker crumbs in brown wax paper that police believed to be crack cocaine, the suit alleges.

Cokos was then arrested on drug possession charges.

While being held at the police station, Cokos said one of the officers informed him that "the supposed crack cocaine was, in fact, a piece of saltine cracker."

Police then charged Cokos with obstruction of the administration of law.

He was found not guilty of that charge in January 2012, court papers say.

In agreeing to the settlement, Deptford police don't admit to wrongdoing.

http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2015/06/man_gets_35k_after_cops_thought_his_cracker_crumbs_were_crack.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2015, 02:33:44 PM
Some unanswered questions here like why send a SWAT team for this type of inspection/violations, was there a warrant for the raid and if so, on what grounds was it given? Maybe if and when the police release their report there will be some more answers.

St. Louis County SWAT Team Killed Family Dog Over Code Violation, Suit Says

On Tuesday, a South County woman filed a federal lawsuit that dog lovers should read with caution -- the allegations are pretty disturbing.
In the lawsuit, Angela Zorich claims that St. Louis County Police tactical officers -- aka the department's SWAT team -- raided her house in April 2014 and killed Kiya, her four-year-old pit bull.

The reason for the raid: to check if her home had electricity and natural gas service.

"This is an example of police overreaching and using excessive force to get a family out of their house," said Kenneth Chackes, the attorney who represents Zorich.

Online court records suggest that Zorich and relatives have had various landlord actions and complaints filed against them since 2005 at two separate addresses in south St. Louis County.

Chackes preferred not to elaborate on the complaint, which is already 24 pages long. The St. Louis County Police Department declined to comment since the lawsuit is pending.

But here's a run-down of Zorich's story, as told in the lawsuit:

On April 25, 2014, St. Louis County Police officers came to her house. Her son cussed at them. They inspected the home's exterior and placed a "Problem Properties" sticker on the front window.

On April 28, Zorich called the police to follow up on the matter. An officer told her they were investigating the home for failing to have natural gas or electric service, as required by county ordinance. She admitted that the gas had been shut off, but said the claim about electricity was "bullshit." The officer hung up on her.
Zorich called back and spoke to a different officer. This one sounded angry that he'd been cussed at by her son three days earlier. Zorich tried to set up an inspection for a time when her husband would be home. The officer told her that was fine, but that the investigation would continue in the meantime.

The next day, around 12:41 p.m., Zorich was at home with several family members and her pit bull, Kiya, when a St. Louis County Police Tactical Response Unit burst through the door without knocking, according to her suit. The unit had at least five officers with M-4 rifles, supported by at least eight uniformed officers.

The officers entered so quickly, Zorich's suit alleges, that Kiya didn't even have time to bark. A tactical officer fired three shots into the dog, and the dog's "bladder and bowels released and she fell to the floor." The dog "was laying on the floor in her own waste and blood struggling to breathe. She had a gaping hole in her chest."

Zorich claims the officers kept trying to talk to her about the natural gas, but she was focused on her dog, whom she'd raised as a puppy and who (she says) had "never shown aggression to any person."

At one point in the raid, Zorich alleges, an officer pointed his firearm at her son's head and said "One word, guy, and I'll put three in you."

Zorich was taken into custody and later given a notice of violation from the Housing Inspector. It listed citations concerning her siding, guard rail, screens, window glass and deck.

When she returned home, she found beds overturned and items that had been on her shelves thrown to the floor.

She is suing St. Louis County and two officers, Corey Zavorka and Robert M. Rinck. Her allegations include unlawful seizure and unlawful infliction of emotional distress (for the killing of the dog) and unlawful retaliation.

We asked the police for a copy of the incident report and any stats on how frequently dogs attack officers who execute warrants. They replied that such information could take up to two weeks to release, given the "massive amount of records requests."

See also: Columbia Family Whose Dog Was Killed in SWAT Raid Is Suing the City

Stephen Ryals, who represents Zorich along with Chackes, says that within the last decade, more and more plaintiffs have filed suit against law enforcers who conducted a raid or executed a warrant and killed the family dog.

"It's a relatively recent liability that's gaining traction," he said.

http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2015/06/swat_team_kills_family_dog.php

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2015, 12:00:36 AM
Jury Convicts Female LA Officer of Assault in Deadly Arrest

 Jurors on Friday convicted a female Los Angeles police officer of felony assault for repeatedly kicking a handcuffed woman who later died.

The jury of 11 women and one man reached its verdict after about two days of deliberations in the trial of Officer Mary O'Callaghan, 50. She pleaded not guilty to assaulting a civilian in the 2012 arrest of Alesia Thomas, 35.

Dressed in a black pantsuit, O'Callaghan wiped her face, appearing to cry after the verdict was read.

Robert Rico, O'Callaghan's attorney, said he plans to appeal and ask for a new trial.

"I firmly believe the evidence presented by the prosecution did not show her force was unreasonable or unnecessary," he said, adding that he felt the jury's verdict was "based on emotion" rather than the necessary legal standard for conviction.

Officers went to arrest Thomas at her home after she left her two children outside a police station.

A dashboard camera in a police cruiser captured O'Callaghan kicking the handcuffed Thomas in the back seat seven times in the groin, abdomen and upper thigh, prosecutors said. Thomas lost consciousness and was pronounced dead at a hospital.

A report by the Police Commission said the 228-pound Thomas resisted arrest.

O'Callaghan's attorney noted his client has an exemplary record, and no complaints against her have been upheld in her 19 years on the force.

O'Callaghan was charged with assault under color of authority, but she was not charged in Thomas' death. She had been relieved of duty without pay pending an administrative hearing.

An autopsy found Thomas had cocaine in her system, but the cause of death was listed as undetermined because the struggle couldn't be excluded as a contributing factor. There were no internal injuries or bruising.

O'Callaghan faces a maximum of three years in county jail when she is sentenced July 23.

Rico said O'Callaghan was remanded to custody at her own request while she awaits sentencing to avoid causing the family any more grief. He added that he will ask for probation as a minimum based on her military service and career before the charges.

Rico gave her a hug before she was handcuffed in her seat and remanded to the custody of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department without bail.

Najee Ali, a community activist who said he spoke with the Thomas family, said they were grateful for the verdict but that "no one is celebrating" because Thomas is gone. He noted, however, that "it's very rare to have a police officer prosecuted, let alone convicted."

Ali said the family is asking that O'Callaghan receive the maximum sentence to send a message that police brutality will not be tolerated.

"It is always disappointing when an officer fails to uphold the high standards and professionalism shown by the thousands of LAPD officers" daily, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said.

He said he appreciated the partnership with the district attorney's office "to ensure that officers who operate outside of the law, and tarnish our badge, are held accountable."

District Attorney Jackie Lacey said in a statement she was "pleased that the jury agreed with our assessment of the evidence."

"The verdict proves the criminal justice system works," Lacey said.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/jury-convicts-female-la-officer-assault-deadly-arrest-31563862
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 06, 2015, 02:30:30 AM
In addition to my outrage about the story (if it's accurate) I found this interesting:

An officer told her they were investigating the home for failing to have natural gas or electric service, as required by county ordinance.

What a bunch of bullshit! Why should people be required to have natural gas? Or, for that matter, electric service?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 06, 2015, 05:54:08 AM
Everyone screws up.  It's the cover ups and false charges that make people hate cops.  Cause if one cop is caught lying in paperwork, we wonder how many aren't caught. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 06, 2015, 06:57:46 AM
I watched the video without reading the comments to get a unbiased look at it.

After watching the video I concur with the ruling.

The police were responding to a call where a subject was waving a gun around. As the officer pulled up on the 3, all 3 appeared to have been positioned where they saw the officer. 2 stayed, the one walked away from the officer. This is not normal. You would expect all 3 friends to remain together. Anxiety goes up

Officer calls after the guy to stop. He continues to walk. Another notch of anxiety.

The guy then reaches under his shirt in front while continuing to walk. Looks very much like a person could be accessing a weapon.

When the guy turns around and sees the officer pointing the gun at him he does not remove his hands, he leaves them under his shirt at his waiste and continues to walk backwards not appearing to obey the officers commands.

Action beats reaction every time so when the guy starts moving his hands around his waistband, not following instructions, the officer shot. I would have shot, you would have shot. This wasn't even a close one to call.

Unfortunate, but not murder.  

I think the cop jumped the gun a bit, but it was obviously a tense situation and I agree the kid's reactions didn't help.

However the cop fucked up majorly post-shooting. He turned a guy in very obvious medical distress and in need of urgent medical assistance over to handcuff him, and left him down there in a pool of his own blood.

And then he spits that "stay with me buddy!" bullshit out? Fuck that.

More generally about this "action beats reaction" stuff: I expect cops to be well-trained and in control of their emotions and their anxiety. I expect them to exercise sound judgement and to not be blunt instruments capable of only doing one thing: pulling a trigger.

Just because someone looks suspicious and you are in fear for your life doesn't mean you should be able to shoot, even if the politicos have granted you that right. This whole mentality that cops have every time they go out - "this could be my last day!" - is dangerous and wrong. No matter the circumstances, the cop is afraid for his life, which magically justifies everything.

This notion that "cops want to go home at the end of their shift" is unique to cops is also bullshit. Everybody wants to go home - this kid wanted too, I'm sure. It's simple: you chose to be a cop and accept certain risks. If it turns out thay the risk profile of your job exceeds your risk tolerance, don't shoot! Just get another job - mall security guard perhaps.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Bindare_Dundat on June 06, 2015, 07:50:18 AM
I watched the video without reading the comments to get a unbiased look at it.

After watching the video I concur with the ruling.

The police were responding to a call where a subject was waving a gun around. As the officer pulled up on the 3, all 3 appeared to have been positioned where they saw the officer. 2 stayed, the one walked away from the officer. This is not normal. You would expect all 3 friends to remain together. Anxiety goes up

Officer calls after the guy to stop. He continues to walk. Another notch of anxiety.

The guy then reaches under his shirt in front while continuing to walk. Looks very much like a person could be accessing a weapon.

When the guy turns around and sees the officer pointing the gun at him he does not remove his hands, he leaves them under his shirt at his waiste and continues to walk backwards not appearing to obey the officers commands.

Action beats reaction every time so when the guy starts moving his hands around his waistband, not following instructions, the officer shot. I would have shot, you would have shot. This wasn't even a close one to call.

Unfortunate, but not murder.  
 

Way too.much logic here. Judging from the comments on youtube, society is dumber then I thought because all they saw was some innocent guy get killed. As far as I'm concerned he was responsible for whatever happened to him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 06, 2015, 09:23:13 AM
However the cop fucked up majorly post-shooting. He turned a guy in very obvious medical distress and in need of urgent medical assistance over to handcuff him, and left him down there in a pool of his own blood.

x2   THIS
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 06, 2015, 09:28:35 AM




In October, the DA ruled this murder “justified.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/graphic-body-cam-footage-shows-killer-cop-murders-innocent-unarmed-man/




If this was such a scary situation and the guys actions were so frightening, how come the other cop that had his gun trained on the guy didn't shoot?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 06, 2015, 05:39:09 PM
In addition to my outrage about the story (if it's accurate) I found this interesting:

What a bunch of bullshit! Why should people be required to have natural gas? Or, for that matter, electric service?

Seems the occupants and the landlord were at a standstill. I've had ocassion to visit homes where the electricity, gas and water have been shut off and they were squatting. Not saying these were but the living conditions were impacting the neighbors with the stench from not flushing. Bathtub used as commode.They were burning candles at night and the landlord was evicting them. So the reason they are required to have some type of utilities probaby stems from similar issues. Just read the article, don't have all the info
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 06, 2015, 05:42:08 PM
I think the cop jumped the gun a bit, but it was obviously a tense situation and I agree the kid's reactions didn't help.

However the cop fucked up majorly post-shooting. He turned a guy in very obvious medical distress and in need of urgent medical assistance over to handcuff him, and left him down there in a pool of his own blood.

And then he spits that "stay with me buddy!" bullshit out? Fuck that.

More generally about this "action beats reaction" stuff: I expect cops to be well-trained and in control of their emotions and their anxiety. I expect them to exercise sound judgement and to not be blunt instruments capable of only doing one thing: pulling a trigger.

Just because someone looks suspicious and you are in fear for your life doesn't mean you should be able to shoot, even if the politicos have granted you that right. This whole mentality that cops have every time they go out - "this could be my last day!" - is dangerous and wrong. No matter the circumstances, the cop is afraid for his life, which magically justifies everything.

This notion that "cops want to go home at the end of their shift" is unique to cops is also bullshit. Everybody wants to go home - this kid wanted too, I'm sure. It's simple: you chose to be a cop and accept certain risks. If it turns out thay the risk profile of your job exceeds your risk tolerance, don't shoot! Just get another job - mall security guard perhaps.

I think your concerns deserve an answer. I don't have time this evening to give it a proper one. but I will come back to it when I return from vacation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 06, 2015, 06:22:18 PM
I think your concerns deserve an answer. I don't have time this evening to give it a proper one. but I will come back to it when I return from vacation.

To be clear: although I think the cop could have waited a bit longer before shooting, this is one of those cases where the decision to shoot could have gone either way and it was a split-second reaction that shouldn't be second-guessed. I wouldn't prosecute the cop for this shooting but I think that the department certainly ought to look at his actions post-shooting and re-evaluate the procedures for handling people who have been shot.

I also think that this incident should be studied to see how things can be done better in the future and to figure out how training can help avoid such tragedies in the future.

P.S.: Enjoy your vacation!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 07, 2015, 04:06:45 PM
A mounted officer grabs a cell phone from a bystander, smashes it on the ground, while someone else pepper-sprays the person. The Austin PD requires an investigation to determine if grabbing and smashing a phone is proper procedure.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/austin-police-investigating-viral-pepper-spray-video-n371231

What the fuck is wrong with these cops?!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 07, 2015, 05:18:16 PM
A mounted officer grabs a cell phone from a bystander, smashes it on the ground, while someone else pepper-sprays the person. The Austin PD requires an investigation to determine if grabbing and smashing a phone is proper procedure.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/austin-police-investigating-viral-pepper-spray-video-n371231

What the fuck is wrong with these cops?!

dont worry, some 'conservative' will be here to defend the police abuse.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 07, 2015, 09:28:26 PM
A mounted officer grabs a cell phone from a bystander, smashes it on the ground, while someone else pepper-sprays the person. The Austin PD requires an investigation to determine if grabbing and smashing a phone is proper procedure.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/austin-police-investigating-viral-pepper-spray-video-











In 1,2,3... comments from
Mr cops Never do anything Wrong.
See No Evil.
Hear No Evil.
Speak No Evil.

'I Read the article without reading the comments to get a unbiased look at it.

After Reading the Article I concur with the ruling.

The cops were in a highly charged situation & scared for their lives.'

You are all Cop Haters & Have Problems With Authority.
There is No Corruption.
There is No Wrong Doing.
There is No Cover ups.

 ::)


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2015, 01:48:44 PM
US police officer to face murder trial over shooting


Video showed Michael Slager shooting Walter Scott, 50, as he fled from a traffic stop in North Charleston.

A grand jury returned a murder indictment on Monday morning, clearing the way for a formal trial.
Officer Slager now faces up to 30 years in prison. He has been held in jail since charges were announced in April.

The 33-year-old has said that he feared for his safety because Mr Scott had tried to grab his stun gun.
Video of the 4 April encounter was recorded by a bystander on his mobile phone, leading to charges of murder against Officer Slager.
Scott's brother, Rodney, spoke at a press conference on Monday to say the family is "very happy and pleased" with the indictment, but that it is only the first step.
In addition to the criminal trial, a civil lawsuit will be filed by Scott's family in the next few months.
Scarlett Wilson, solicitor for the North Charleston court, warned that despite the video evidence, the murder charge must still be proved in court.
"Just because you have video in this case, it doesn't mean it's the be-all and end-all," said Mrs Wilson at a press conference to announce the indictment.
"The issue is the people who were there who were involved, who saw or heard anything, who can demonstrate what they saw and heard."
The trial date has not yet been set.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-33053409
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 08, 2015, 01:52:34 PM
US police officer to face murder trial over shooting


Video showed Michael Slager shooting Walter Scott, 50, as he fled from a traffic stop in North Charleston.

A grand jury returned a murder indictment on Monday morning, clearing the way for a formal trial.
Officer Slager now faces up to 30 years in prison. He has been held in jail since charges were announced in April.

The 33-year-old has said that he feared for his safety because Mr Scott had tried to grab his stun gun.
Video of the 4 April encounter was recorded by a bystander on his mobile phone, leading to charges of murder against Officer Slager.
Scott's brother, Rodney, spoke at a press conference on Monday to say the family is "very happy and pleased" with the indictment, but that it is only the first step.
In addition to the criminal trial, a civil lawsuit will be filed by Scott's family in the next few months.
Scarlett Wilson, solicitor for the North Charleston court, warned that despite the video evidence, the murder charge must still be proved in court.
"Just because you have video in this case, it doesn't mean it's the be-all and end-all," said Mrs Wilson at a press conference to announce the indictment.
"The issue is the people who were there who were involved, who saw or heard anything, who can demonstrate what they saw and heard."
The trial date has not yet been set.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-33053409


















In 1,2,3... comments from
Mr cops Never do anything Wrong.
See No Evil.
Hear No Evil.
Speak No Evil.

'I Read the article without reading the comments to get a unbiased look at it.

After Reading the Article I concur with the ruling.

The cops were in a highly charged situation & scared for their lives.'

You are all Cop Haters & Have Problems With Authority.
There is No Corruption.
There is No Wrong Doing.
There is No Cover ups.

 Roll Eyes


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 08, 2015, 08:39:20 PM
US police officer to face murder trial over shooting


Video showed Michael Slager shooting Walter Scott, 50, as he fled from a traffic stop in North Charleston.

A grand jury returned a murder indictment on Monday morning, clearing the way for a formal trial.
Officer Slager now faces up to 30 years in prison. He has been held in jail since charges were announced in April.

The 33-year-old has said that he feared for his safety because Mr Scott had tried to grab his stun gun.
Video of the 4 April encounter was recorded by a bystander on his mobile phone, leading to charges of murder against Officer Slager.
Scott's brother, Rodney, spoke at a press conference on Monday to say the family is "very happy and pleased" with the indictment, but that it is only the first step.
In addition to the criminal trial, a civil lawsuit will be filed by Scott's family in the next few months.
Scarlett Wilson, solicitor for the North Charleston court, warned that despite the video evidence, the murder charge must still be proved in court.
"Just because you have video in this case, it doesn't mean it's the be-all and end-all," said Mrs Wilson at a press conference to announce the indictment.
"The issue is the people who were there who were involved, who saw or heard anything, who can demonstrate what they saw and heard."
The trial date has not yet been set.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-33053409


None of us were there.  We don't know how scared the cop was when the man was 20 feet away and running.  We don't know if there was some invisible force pulling on the tazer.  We don't even know if aliens were involved or not.  Maybe the whole police dashcam was hacked or something.

None of us was there, so stone cold evidence of a man being executed plainly on video shouldn't be used to make any kind of determination here.

LOL.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2015, 08:46:31 PM
Owner of house blown apart by SWAT says: 'This is an abomination. This is an atrocity'

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/front-range/greenwood-village/owner-of-greenwood-village-house-blown-apart-by-swat-says-this-is-an-abomination-this-is-an-atrocity
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 08, 2015, 08:50:01 PM
Owner of house blown apart by SWAT says: 'This is an abomination. This is an atrocity'

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/front-range/greenwood-village/owner-of-greenwood-village-house-blown-apart-by-swat-says-this-is-an-abomination-this-is-an-atrocity

I think someone should post a pic of a cop helping an old woman across the street, which we can all use as definitive evidence that police abuse doesn't exist.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2015, 08:35:41 AM
Police Steal $16,000 from Farmer to Finance a Larger Operation to Rob More People

Livingston, MT — Lorenzo Ayala was on his way back from being stood up by a woman he met online when he was pulled over and subsequently robbed by a Montana State Trooper.

During his drive to meet his online friend, Ayala, who is also a farmer, was also going to purchase parts for his broken tractor so he had his savings of $16,000 in his trunk.

On his way to California, Montana Highway Patrol Trooper Erick Fetterhoff pulled Ayala over on Interstate 90 near Livingston, according to court records.

Fetterhoff is trained as an expert to seek out substances that his bosses tell him to kidnap and cage people for possessing.  He said in his police report that he smelled cologne and saw multiple suspicious items indicative of these substances.

Fetterhoff then deprived Ayala of his right to be secure in his own belongings and began to tear apart his vehicle in search of illegal drugs.

No drugs were found.

What was found, however, was $16,020 that Ayala had saved to purchase parts to fix his tractor. Despite the Highway Patrol not finding any illegal substances, and not charging Ayala with a crime, his money was ‘seized’ or stolen, depending on who you ask.

This money was stolen in June of 2013. It was then used to help finance an entire unit devoted to pulling people over and stealing their property. In the last 18 months alone, the patrol has spent more than $170,000 of stolen funds to build a larger operation to keep stealing more funds in a crazy cycle of robbery for growth.

The good news is, however, that their robbery scheme will soon be coming to an end, or at least it will be heavily diminished.

For years, the courts acted with the police and were able to rob people like Ayala without convicting them of a crime. But on July 1, all of that changes.

Montana became the fourth state to overhaul their “policing for profit” scam. At the beginning of next month, officers must store suspects’ assets until the owner is convicted of a crime involving that property.

“The police ought to have to prove something before they take your stuff away,” Chris Young, one of Ayala’s attorneys, said. “And now they do.”

While this is a small step forward in the fight to stop the fleecing of American citizens by law enforcement, it will likely lead to a slew of other problems. Police will likely be reluctant to bring their windfall operations to a halt, so they will likely take any means necessary to seek convictions; whether or not the person is actually guilty of a crime.
Road piracy in the US has reached epic proportions.

It has gotten so bad that the Canadian government has issued a public service announcement for its citizens warning them that American Road Pirates, aka police officers, may very well rob them upon entry into the US.

Since September 2001, there have been 62,000 incidents of road piracy; resulting in a booty of over $2.5 billion.

In the US, “298 departments and 210 task forces have seized the equivalent of 20 percent or more of their annual budgets since 2008” according to a report by the Post.

Some might try and say that this money and property is obviously “taken from criminals” in order to rationalize this theft on a massive scale. However, as is evident in the case of Mr. Ayala, the government does not have to charge you with a crime, let alone convict you, to take your property and after they steal your property the burden of proof is on you to get it back.

Only one sixth of the 62,000 cases of cash forfeitures to police in the last decade have been challenged in court due to the high cost of challenging the state; not to mention that since their money was stolen, even if they once had the funds to challenge the theft, they may not any longer.

The justice department’s asset forfeiture fund in 2011 was $1.8 billion.

In Philadelphia alone, more than $64 million in seized property has been taken in the last decade and 100% of it has gone into the pockets of cops, judges, and other bureaucrats with a hand in the treasure chest.

But these billions stolen from the citizens of this country by the ones who claim to keep them safe, are just an example of a few bad apples, right? It’s most assuredly not a systemic problem resulting from the glaring unaccountable nature of the state.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-steal-16000-farmer-finance-larger-operation-rob-people/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: polychronopolous on June 10, 2015, 08:58:50 AM
SHERIFF CLARKE: MCKINNEY, TX COP ACTIONS ‘HIGHLY PROBLEMATIC,’ BUT DON’T WARRANT CRIMINAL CHARGES

(http://onmilwaukee.com//images/articles/sh/sheriffclarkguns/sheriffclarkguns_fullsize_story1.jpg)

On Wednesday’s “The Kelly File,” Milwaukee, WI County Sheriff David Clarke offered his thoughts on the so-called pool party incident in McKinney, TX where a video appears to show recently resigned McKinney, TX police Cpl. Eric Casebolt pin a female to the ground and also draw his gun on other teens.

Clarke explained the actions of Casebolt were improper and said he didn’t anticipate Casebolt being hired by another police department in the immediate future. But he also said Casebolt’s actions did not warrant criminal action when asked by host Megyn Kelly.

“I don’t think from what I saw,” Clarke replied. “Look, I don’t have all the facts. I saw the video, watched it several times, but that’s only part of the entire incident. I want to be careful there. However, what I saw tactically, I had a huge problem with. Some of the things that that officer did. You know, he lost his head. He lost his cool. He didn’t keep his wits about him. We demand that our officers keep their wits about them in these volatile situations. You saw how chaotic he was, but he didn’t do that. I heard the chief’s comments that it was outside of their policy, but that doesn’t mean that it’s criminal. I don’t think — level of a criminal charges.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on June 10, 2015, 09:03:50 AM
Cops covering for cops.


The police force is nothing more than a glorified gang now.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 10, 2015, 09:36:25 AM
SHERIFF CLARKE: MCKINNEY, TX COP ACTIONS ‘HIGHLY PROBLEMATIC,’ BUT DON’T WARRANT CRIMINAL CHARGES

(http://onmilwaukee.com//images/articles/sh/sheriffclarkguns/sheriffclarkguns_fullsize_story1.jpg)

On Wednesday’s “The Kelly File,” Milwaukee, WI County Sheriff David Clarke offered his thoughts on the so-called pool party incident in McKinney, TX where a video appears to show recently resigned McKinney, TX police Cpl. Eric Casebolt pin a female to the ground and also draw his gun on other teens.

Clarke explained the actions of Casebolt were improper and said he didn’t anticipate Casebolt being hired by another police department in the immediate future. But he also said Casebolt’s actions did not warrant criminal action when asked by host Megyn Kelly.

“I don’t think from what I saw,” Clarke replied. “Look, I don’t have all the facts. I saw the video, watched it several times, but that’s only part of the entire incident. I want to be careful there. However, what I saw tactically, I had a huge problem with. Some of the things that that officer did. You know, he lost his head. He lost his cool. He didn’t keep his wits about him. We demand that our officers keep their wits about them in these volatile situations. You saw how chaotic he was, but he didn’t do that. I heard the chief’s comments that it was outside of their policy, but that doesn’t mean that it’s criminal. I don’t think — level of a criminal charges.


Even when they're witless.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 10, 2015, 09:37:51 AM
Cops covering for cops.


The police force is nothing more than a glorified gang now.

They are the 'authorized' gang, yes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 10, 2015, 09:42:17 AM
I think the cop jumped the gun a bit, but it was obviously a tense situation and I agree the kid's reactions didn't help.

However the cop fucked up majorly post-shooting. He turned a guy in very obvious medical distress and in need of urgent medical assistance over to handcuff him, and left him down there in a pool of his own blood.

And then he spits that "stay with me buddy!" bullshit out? Fuck that.

More generally about this "action beats reaction" stuff: I expect cops to be well-trained and in control of their emotions and their anxiety. I expect them to exercise sound judgement and to not be blunt instruments capable of only doing one thing: pulling a trigger.

Just because someone looks suspicious and you are in fear for your life doesn't mean you should be able to shoot, even if the politicos have granted you that right. This whole mentality that cops have every time they go out - "this could be my last day!" - is dangerous and wrong. No matter the circumstances, the cop is afraid for his life, which magically justifies everything.

This notion that "cops want to go home at the end of their shift" is unique to cops is also bullshit. Everybody wants to go home - this kid wanted too, I'm sure. It's simple: you chose to be a cop and accept certain risks. If it turns out thay the risk profile of your job exceeds your risk tolerance, don't shoot! Just get another job - mall security guard perhaps.

The brutal truth.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on June 10, 2015, 10:32:01 AM
They are the 'authorized' gang, yes.

Truth.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2015, 08:45:53 AM
Good Cop Demoted, Transferred & Worse for Exposing his Dept in the Killing of a College Student

Kansas, MO — On May 31 of last year, 20-year-old college student Brandon Ellingson was stopped for suspicion of driving a boat while intoxicated. Ellingson would not make it out of the water alive.

Trooper Anthony Piercy was the officer who stopped then young Iowa native that day. According to witnesses, Piercy handcuffed Ellingson’s wrists behind his back and then pulled an already buckled life vest, with armholes, over his head and upper torso, completely against the recommended use of the vest.

As Piercy drove the dangerously restrained young man back to the office for a breathalyzer, he tumbled out of the boat and into the water. He would never come back up.

An investigation by the Star showed that Piercy only had 2 days of training prior to holding this young man’s life in his hands. It also showed that the boat was travelling at over 40 mph which required patrol investigators to hold on or fall out; Ellingson was not given the option to hold on.

Only days after the death of this young man, special prosecutor Amanda Grellner announced that she would not file criminal charges against Piercy, and his death was ruled an accident.

This young college student, who was merely suspected of a misdemeanor, died at the hands of police and no one was held accountable.

Enter Trooper Randy Henry.

According to the Kansas City Star:

    Days after Ellingson’s death, Henry was interviewed by patrol investigators looking into the incident. At one point during the interview, a recording shows, Henry had questioned whether the highest degree of care was taken with Ellingson that day. When he mentioned a state law pertaining to that, his sentence was cut off and one investigator insisted the recorder be turned off.

    Earlier this month, Henry was deposed in the civil suit the Ellingson family has filed against the patrol, Piercy and top commanders. In a letter to the patrol superintendent, Col. Bret Johnson, Pleban stated: “You might want to educate yourself by requesting a copy of the transcript of Sgt. Henry’s deposition so that you can fully comprehend his status as a whistle blower.”

Since Henry has begun to expose the lack of training, the resultant death of a young man, and the subsequent cover-up of that death by his department, he has since been retaliated against.

Sgt. Henry was demoted to corporal and transferred from his nearly three-decades long patrol at Lake of the Ozarks to Truman Lake.

“Randy Henry doesn’t have a horse in the race,” Henry’s attorney, Chet Pleban told The Star. “He’s not on one side or the other. He has testimony to give that’s material. The truth is the truth. He went to his superiors to say, ‘This is wrong. This is what happened.’ And they blew him off. So now here we are.”

Since he spoke out, Henry has been forced to undergo multiple mental health evaluations at the demand of his superiors. The exams found nothing

“Ultimately, the mental-health provider warned that because she found nothing wrong with Sgt. Henry, it would be unethical for her to see him a third time at the insistence of the patrol,” Pleban wrote to Johnson. “When the mental health route failed, a Professional Standards investigation surfaced.”

The department has been silent on the reasons behind any of the investigations.

Craig Ellingson, Brandon’s father, has insisted that Piercy should be held accountable for what happened to his son. He is also outspoken about the retaliation, noting that Henry’s discipline is wrong.

“It’s retaliation,” he said. “They shouldn’t be doing that.”

Crossing the blue line to expose your own department is career suicide and can also be dangerous. The Free Thought Project has exposed countless cases of the proverbial good cop being ousted for merely seeking justice within their own ranks. If this cycle continues, eventually there won’t be any good cops left.

Randy Henry deserves commendation for his perserverence in this matter. He’s been demoted, transferred, investigated, attacked, mentally examined, and still, he seeks justice. That is what a “good cop” does.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-exposed-cover-up-mans-death-custody-demoted-transferred/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 12, 2015, 09:10:11 AM
A mounted officer grabs a cell phone from a bystander, smashes it on the ground, while someone else pepper-sprays the person. The Austin PD requires an investigation to determine if grabbing and smashing a phone is proper procedure.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/austin-police-investigating-viral-pepper-spray-video-n371231

What the fuck is wrong with these cops?!




Let's not ignore the 800lb gorilla here.  If I had to wear those gay shirts at work everyday, I'd be pissed off too.  No wonder they want to smash people's cell phones.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2015, 11:27:12 PM
Hidden Cam Catches Thug Cops Teasing Handicap Woman, Eating Weed During Raid on Pot Shop

Santa Ana, CA — Last month, police raided a marijuana dispensary and were caught on a hidden camera stealing the merchandise and playing darts. Police entered the “Sky High” dispensary in riot gear with guns drawn and were extremely disrespectful to the owners of the property.

One of the occupants was handicapped and blind, and the officers were making jokes about her disability, and suggesting to one another that they should have assaulted her.

“I was about to kick her in her f—ing nub,” one officer can be heard saying in the video after the police were in the building alone.

Once the police were alone, they began removing the surveillance cameras from the room so their activities wouldn’t be caught on video. However, the owners of the shop were expecting the raid and had hidden cameras installed, which the police did not see.

The hidden cameras captured the officers making profane jokes to one another while they played darts and tested out the merchandise in the store. In one part of the video, an officer can be seen taking a big bite out of what appears to be a marijuana edible, before he shakes his head in satisfaction and gives the other officers a “thumbs up.”

“I’d like to see the police officers disciplined for the behavior that goes on here. I’d like to see the city stop engaging in illegal conduct,” Long Beach-based attorney Matthew Pappas said.

Pappas is representing the disabled woman from the shop who is filing a lawsuit against the police. The police department has only said that they will be conducting an internal investigation, but they have offered no other details about the case to the public.

“We’re obviously concerned about the conduct that we saw in the edited video. We’re also concerned that the video was heavily edited. We’d like to see the original video in its unedited version,” police Cmdr. Chris Revere told KTLA.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-raid-pot-shop-start-eating-edibles-playing-darts/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 14, 2015, 09:47:54 AM
“We’re obviously concerned about the conduct that we saw in the edited video. We’re also concerned that the video was heavily edited. We’d like to see the original video in its unedited version,” police Cmdr. Chris Revere told KTLA.

Right... because maybe the edible in question actually resisted arrest or mouthed off or something. What a bunch of bullshit.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 14, 2015, 11:28:43 AM
More abhorrent police behaviour.
And yet again they are trying to defend them.

Blah blah blah - heavily edited video- blah blah
And of course the police Never Edit Video's To suit
There Cause Do They.

Would they be using the same terminology if it was a group of
Young lads doing the same thing.

Yes of course they would. NOT. ::)

You couldn't make these stories up.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2015, 12:01:55 PM
More abhorrent police behaviour.
And yet again they are trying to defend them.

Blah blah blah - heavily edited video- blah blah
And of course the police Never Edit Video's To suit
There Cause Do They.

Would they be using the same terminology if it was a group of
Young lads doing the same thing.

Yes of course they would. NOT. ::)

You couldn't make these stories up.


Right... because maybe the edible in question actually resisted arrest or mouthed off or something. What a bunch of bullshit.

To use the "logic" the cops often employ, "if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?"

Funny that they say about "editing" the video when they did this:

"Once the police were alone, they began removing the surveillance cameras from the room so their activities wouldn’t be caught on video.

Or when they don't release even their own videos if it will hurt their case.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 12:14:32 PM
Maybe it was just a coincidence that all the crooked cops were in the same place when it happened.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 12:16:02 PM
...the rest were out doing good deeds, maybe.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on June 14, 2015, 12:29:06 PM
To use the "logic" the cops often employ, "if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?"

Funny that they say about "editing" the video when they did this:

"Once the police were alone, they began removing the surveillance cameras from the room so their activities wouldn’t be caught on video.


Or when they don't release even their own videos if it will hurt their case.


How is that not a felony in itself?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 01:13:58 PM

How is that not a felony in itself?

They can at least claim they were concerned about protecting their identity, so it'd be interesting to know exactly what was done. The article mentions that cameras were removed, but doesn't get into it further. So this is either much worse than it looks or it's wysiwyg (which isn't good, either, with the cop eating a pot cookie etc.).

I hope the storeperson had really good stock control, because let's face it: that's what bad cops would be after. If the store caught the cops stealing that on vid, the PD is in some shit.

Could be the store-keeper didn't even know what stock was there (at least on that particular day/time), though, as ridiculous as it sounds. They expected a bust, it says, but I doubt they expected it at that moment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 05:59:06 PM
Good site, yeah:

http://photographyisnotacrime.com/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 06:07:03 PM
...about those cops in the pot-shop: local station from there says several (not just one) LEO can be seen eating the "edibles" (dope-laced stuff that's sold for people to eat and get stoned).
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 14, 2015, 07:11:37 PM
Good site, yeah:

http://photographyisnotacrime.com/















That's a great site.
I wonder if it ever suffers mysterious cyber attacks
Shutting it down.

To Paraphrase  A non responding Cop Poster.
-No Doubt it is just reporting and Focusing on the
Tiny Fraction of Bad Policing incidents.
Ignoring The Many Thousands of good encounters
Everyday.
More than Likely It's Run By Cop Haters Who Have
Serious Authority Issues.
When Will These People Learn There Are No Bad Cops,
No Police Corruption, No Police Cover Ups,
No Lying, No Planting Of Evidence, Etc.
These Good Men & Women Do A Dangerous Job They
Put There Lives At Risk For The Ungrateful Scumbags
Oh I mean Public & This is The Type of Thanks We Get-
 ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 14, 2015, 07:32:37 PM














That's a great site.
I wonder if it ever suffers mysterious cyber attacks
Shutting it down.

To Paraphrase  A non responding Cop Poster.
-No Doubt it is just reporting and Focusing on the
Tiny Fraction of Bad Policing incidents.
Ignoring The Many Thousands of good encounters
Everyday.
More than Likely It's Run By Cop Haters Who Have
Serious Authority Issues.
When Will These People Learn There Are No Bad Cops,
No Police Corruption, No Police Cover Ups,
No Lying, No Planting Of Evidence, Etc.
These Good Men & Women Do A Dangerous Job They
Put There Lives At Risk For The Ungrateful Scumbags
Oh I mean Public & This is The Type of Thanks We Get-
 ::)

I noticed a lot of "Vice News" stuff they could do without, though. That's unfortunate, because many (if not all) of those stories are legit at the core. Vice can't help but to sleaze it up with standard-keeping in their work, though, so it hurts the whole cause. Their documentaries are terrible, too.

But still lots of good content on that site.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2015, 10:03:57 PM
Horrifying Video Shows Cop Choking 13-Year-old Boy as He Tasers Him in the Spine

Fallbrook, CA — A disturbing video has been given to the Free Thought Project that shows a Fallbrook Police officer allegedly assaulting a 13-year-old boy.

The footage was given to us from our friends at FilmingCops.com.

According to the person who took the video, the 13-year-old was simply skateboarding when the officer approached.

The witness explained the details to FilmingCops:

    The child was 13-yrs-old (on the video other witnesses assume he’s “15 or 16″ but according to the source he is in fact 13). He was riding on his skateboard with other young boys behind a shopping center, and there happened to be a patrol car parked nearby.

    At some point an officer inside of the patrol car told the 13-yr-old child to “get in the car.”

    The child replied, “Why?”

    The officer then warned, “You don’t want to get dropped.”

According to witnesses, the officer then attacked the boy, hitting him from behind as the boy was skateboarding. He then got on the boys back and began choking him, according to witnesses. The video shows the choking and the subsequent tasering to the child’s spine.

The boy can be heard in the video writhing in pain as the officer attempts to subdue him.

“Put your fucking hands behind your back!” shouts the officer. To which the child replies, “I can’t.”

The witnesses can be heard telling the officer, “He’s just a kid.”

The officer then loads the beaten and tasered child into his patrol car and begins walking towards the people filming. The video then ends.

According to the witnesses, the officer then proceeded to confiscate everyone’s cellphones and deleted their video. This one video below managed to make it out.

The Free Thought Project reached out to the San Diego Sheriff’s Department Fallbrook location, but they were unable to provide any details.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/shocking-video-shows-cop-choking-tasering-13-year-old-boy/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on June 15, 2015, 05:33:57 AM
Wow just wow.

Is there any doubt most people would be better of without cops?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 15, 2015, 09:35:02 AM
Media trash, that we need cops around every corner. Pure bullshit.

The elitists trying to open the floodgates from the Third World are doing their best to change that, though, so you globalist GOPers needn't worry much longer. You'll get the gutted world you're aiming for, soon enough.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 15, 2015, 09:47:38 AM
To be clear: although I think the cop could have waited a bit longer before shooting, this is one of those cases where the decision to shoot could have gone either way and it was a split-second reaction that shouldn't be second-guessed. I wouldn't prosecute the cop for this shooting but I think that the department certainly ought to look at his actions post-shooting and re-evaluate the procedures for handling people who have been shot.

I also think that this incident should be studied to see how things can be done better in the future and to figure out how training can help avoid such tragedies in the future.

P.S.: Enjoy your vacation!

Managed to gain 10 lbs in 7 days.. not easy but I did it ;-)

I don't have a problem with the initial handcuffing until it's determined the person doesn't have a weapon or the weapon is removed and the injuries are such it makes escape or physical altercation unlikely. In this case, cuffs coulda come off within 60 seconds of putting them on and it would have been fine.

The cop coulda waited and he coulda been shot. I always mention action beating reaction because not a lot of people really comprehend the reaction time and what can happen in 1/10 of a second. You can put a gun to the back of my head and in 9 out of 10 times I can disarm you before you can pull the trigger. I would not have believed it possible until I went through the training and we actually did it over and over. My partner KNEW I what I was going to do, just not when and I beat him every time, he beat me every time. So waiting until you see a gun is just too late. The subject was giving every indication to the officer he did have the weapon the officer suspected he had based on the original call and his actions. Now that we know he didn't have a weapon, yes, cop shoulda waited. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 11:13:22 AM
Managed to gain 10 lbs in 7 days.. not easy but I did it ;-)

Nice! Bulk phase complete. Ready for epic cuts!


I don't have a problem with the initial handcuffing until it's determined the person doesn't have a weapon or the weapon is removed and the injuries are such it makes escape or physical altercation unlikely. In this case, cuffs coulda come off within 60 seconds of putting them on and it would have been fine.

I think the average amount of blood that goes through the aorta of an average, healthy adult is about 5 liters per minute. The average volume of blood in a healthy adult is between 4.5 and 5.5 liters. In 60 seconds, it's all over. It gets even worse - the body goes into what is called a hypovolemic shock when more than 20% of the normal blood volume is lost - that's about 12 seconds.

If what we know about this kid's injury is true then you don't kid with this "it would have been fine" nonsense: the kid was as good as dead the moment the trigger was pulled.


The cop coulda waited and he coulda been shot.

That's always the excuse, isn't it? Act, don't react - or you could be dead. Do, don't think - or you could be dead.


I always mention action beating reaction because not a lot of people really comprehend the reaction time and what can happen in 1/10 of a second. You can put a gun to the back of my head and in 9 out of 10 times I can disarm you before you can pull the trigger.

That's pretty damn amazing. Now, I know that you're better than the average cop, so let's say the average cop can only disarm someone that puts a gun to your head before he pulls the trigger only 7 times out of 10 - still pretty good. Now, I'm curious, why does that awesome speed not work when someone may have a gun in their pants but not in their hands and aimed?


I would not have believed it possible until I went through the training and we actually did it over and over. My partner KNEW I what I was going to do, just not when and I beat him every time, he beat me every time. So waiting until you see a gun is just too late. The subject was giving every indication to the officer he did have the weapon the officer suspected he had based on the original call and his actions. Now that we know he didn't have a weapon, yes, cop shoulda waited.

I don't argue that the kid's reaction wasn't poor - it was and I understand the cop's nervousness. I can see how this shooting is justifiable. All I'm saying is that the mentality instilled in cops - that every day is their last day, and it's kill or be killed - is a problem. It leads to this "shoot first, ask questions later but never question the shooting."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 15, 2015, 12:43:02 PM
The handcuffing we'll have to agree to disagree. If I shoot someone in the head and half their head is gone, I wouldn't bother to handcuff them. If I shot someone in the torso and they fall, I'll handcuff them. I would error on the side of caution until I'm sure the person poses no threat. If it was clear the person posed no threat and he was still handcuffed, legitimate concern.

The cop coulda waited, the cop coulda been shot- It's not always the excuse avxo. Looking at the totality of the circumstances in this instance, based on the information the cop had at the time, he gave ample opportunity for the person to comply in a manner that wasn't continuing  to be suspicious and threatening and supporting the cops belief the guy had a weapon. In this case, waiting could easily have been fatal to the cop. There are certainly times a cop will shoot too soon, I don't feel this was one of them.

"hat's pretty damn amazing. Now, I know that you're better than the average cop, so let's say the average cop can only disarm someone that puts a gun to your head before he pulls the trigger only 7 times out of 10 - still pretty good. Now, I'm curious, why does that awesome speed not work when someone may have a gun in their pants but not in their hands and aimed?"-- I'll try to make it clearer. 1. There was distance between the 2 that couldn't be covered in time. 2. The concept of action beating reaction is in favor of the first to act. In this case the cop is drawn down on the guy. The guy makes the decision to act first, he would likely beat the cop who is reacting. Awesome speed works both ways...



 "All  saying is that the mentality instilled in cops - that every day is their last day, and it's kill or be killed - is a problem. It leads to this "shoot first, ask questions later but never question the shooting."

The reality is, cops deal with shoot or no shoot situations every day and make the decision not to shoot in the vast majority of them. So I don't think your kill or be killed mentality is a big problem. I think it SEEMS like a big problem if 10 videos you see are cops shooting at someone and no one cares about or sees the 1000 videos of cops not shooting the person. It would give the perception cops shoot everyone they get a chance to. Having been in those situations many many times over 30 yrs I don't see it as an issue.

As far as the average cop I know, they don't come to work thinking it's their last day or could be their last day. We are optimists at heart. I never got in a patrol car thinking "I may  shoot someone today." In fact, when I do think about it or thought about it, it was usually "I hope I never have to shoot someone" and the times I was pointing a gun at someone telling them what I needed them to do I was thinking "Man, don't do anything stupid".   Sometimes union leaders do us a disservice with the common mantra "going home at night is the most important thing". No, it's not. Doing our jobs right, and helping people is the most important thing. Going home is secondary. If it was primary, I wouldn't go into the house with the guy holding his wife hostage, I wouldn't wade into the water to get the lady out of the drifting car or many of the things we do that put us at risk. Makes no sense. Now if there is something similar I can agree with it would be  "If you're going to try and hurt or kill me, I'm going to do my best to come out on top". That I can agree with
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 01:32:49 PM
Wow just wow.

Is there any doubt most people would be better of without cops?

Yes there is plenty of doubt.  Just look at any major city when there is an extended blackout.  We are always one step removed from anarchy and law enforcement helps maintain that step.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 15, 2015, 01:36:22 PM
Yes there is plenty of doubt.  Just look at any major city when there is an extended blackout.  We are always one step removed from anarchy and law enforcement helps maintain that step.  

good answer
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 02:01:11 PM
Yes there is plenty of doubt.  Just look at any major city when there is an extended blackout.  We are always one step removed from anarchy and law enforcement helps maintain that step.  

Correlation does not imply causation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 02:05:47 PM
Correlation does not imply causation.

In this context, there is no question that law enforcement is the primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week.  It's only when there is a natural disaster, power outage, or some other civil unrest when law enforcement is overwhelmed that people break the law en mass.

Any notion that law enforcement is not a substantial deterrent to mass crime is silly.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 02:27:23 PM
In this context, there is no question that law enforcement is the primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week.

No. False.


It's only when there is a natural disaster, power outage, or some other civil unrest when law enforcement is overwhelmed that people break the law en mass.

Really? Have you ruled out unrelateds cause and you're sure that law-breaking happens because law enforcement is overwhelmed?


Any notion that law enforcement is not a substantial deterrent to mass crime is silly.

Being a detterent - even a substantial one - is one thing. But that doesn't support the statements you're making in your post.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 02:32:24 PM
No. False.


Really? Have you ruled out unrelateds cause and you're sure that law-breaking happens because law enforcement is overwhelmed?


Being a detterent - even a substantial one - is one thing. But that doesn't support the statements you're making in your post.

Yes.  True. 

What unrelated causes are you talking about?

Of course it does.  We often see altruism in society, but you let law enforcement let up like they have been doing in Maryland and there is no question crime would spike. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 15, 2015, 04:57:05 PM
Maybe it was just a coincidence that all the crooked cops were in the same place when it happened.


LMAO...yep that's it.  It's just the tiny, tiny minority of bad cops who all once again managed to come together at the same time and same place, etc.

It's not systemic.
It couldn't be lax oversight.
It couldn't be the knowledge that they will be investigated by their buddies.
It couldn't be that DAs and Judges are lenient and sympathetic to letting cops off.

Nope, it's the perfect storm...once again.  ::)


I was reading that the Chief had said sometimes officers carry snacks with them and eat them on the raids.

Already trying to give his officers an out.

I know whenever I eat my snacks at work, I always flash my buddies thumbs up like the cops did.

It's completely believable.  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 15, 2015, 05:00:44 PM
Yes.  True. 

What unrelated causes are you talking about?

Of course it does.  We often see altruism in society, but you let law enforcement let up like they have been doing in Maryland and there is no question crime would spike. 



I think you're trying to take that as though it's the only variable that would change.  I imagine those who advocate getting rid of cops are also considering that there would be other methods available...CVS' would have security guards, or much greater protections against theft in place, etc.

I don't support it myself, I think massive reform is the optimal way to go.  There's a lot of good the cops do that we can keep.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 05:18:54 PM


I think you're trying to take that as though it's the only variable that would change.  I imagine those who advocate getting rid of cops are also considering that there would be other methods available...CVS' would have security guards, or much greater protections against theft in place, etc.

I don't support it myself, I think massive reform is the optimal way to go.  There's a lot of good the cops do that we can keep.



I guess that is one alternative, although I doubt it would be successful.  If you have a problem with the use of force by highly trained and regulated police officers, what do you think will happen with mall cops who suddenly start packing? 

I have no problem with reforms.  My broader point was about how important law enforcement is to maintaining order. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 05:57:50 PM
Yes.  True.

In other words, you believe that without cops, we'd all be lootin' and shootin'. I'm curious... cops are, like you and I, humans. Why are they immune to this tendency to loot and shoot? Does their badge give them super-powers or imbue them with a supernatural sense of justice or something?


What unrelated causes are you talking about?

I don't know - you made the statement that during a "natural disaster, power outage, or some other civil unrest" the people go crazy and start breaking the law. You assert, bluntly, that the reason they do so is because law enforcement is overwhelmed. If you have established that, then surely you must have looked at other reasons that could be behind the people breaking the law, and eliminated them as possibilities. What where those other reasons that you considered and eliminated?

Of course it does.  We often see altruism in society, but you let law enforcement let up like they have been doing in Maryland and there is no question crime would spike.

You are picking one instance, claiming that it fits the theory you propose, and then declaring your theory proven. Please book a trip to Norway and Sweden. I have it on good authority that you will be the sole recipient of all the Nobel Prizes for 2015.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 06:15:22 PM
In other words, you believe that without cops, we'd all be lootin' and shootin'. I'm curious... cops are, like you and I, humans. Why are they immune to this tendency to loot and shoot? Does their badge give them super-powers or imbue them with a supernatural sense of justice or something?


I don't know - you made the statement that during a "natural disaster, power outage, or some other civil unrest" the people go crazy and start breaking the law. You assert, bluntly, that the reason they do so is because law enforcement is overwhelmed. If you have established that, then surely you must have looked at other reasons that could be behind the people breaking the law, and eliminated them as possibilities. What where those other reasons that you considered and eliminated?

You are picking one instance, claiming that it fits the theory you propose, and then declaring your theory proven. Please book a trip to Norway and Sweden. I have it on good authority that you will be the sole recipient of all the Nobel Prizes for 2015.

No, I don't believe that "we'd all" be looting and breaking the law without cops.  I believe, as history has shown, that a substantial number of people would do so.   

Don't try that Jedi mind trick crap on me.  lol  You are the one mentioned "unrelated causes."  I can see now that you didn't have any in mind. 

I'm not just picking one instance.  I'm looking at a plethora of situations where there have been extended blackouts, civil unrest, and natural disasters.  Happens all the time.  It is actually a little scary how quickly lawlessness can envelope a community.  We saw it in Katrina, Ferguson, L.A., Maryland, etc., etc.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 06:34:26 PM
No, I don't believe that "we'd all" be looting and breaking the law without cops.  I believe, as history has shown, that a substantial number of people would do so.

Then you failed to word your argument properly. You wrote: "In this context, there is no question that law enforcement is the primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week." You should be more careful in how you express yourself.


Don't try that Jedi mind trick crap on me.  lol  You are the one mentioned "unrelated causes."  I can see now that you didn't have any in mind.

You claimed it's "primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week." If they're the primary reason, there must be secondary reasons. List them.


I'm not just picking one instance.  I'm looking at a plethora of situations where there have been extended blackouts, civil unrest, and natural disasters.  Happens all the time.  It is actually a little scary how quickly lawlessness can envelope a community.  We saw it in Katrina, Ferguson, L.A., Maryland, etc., etc.

It surprises you that in emergency situations people act differently? If I see a burning car with a child trapped inside, and you happen to own a crow-bar store, is it really a surprise if I break your storefront to take a crow-bar and rescue the child? Do some people take advantage of such emergencies? Sure. And?

You assert that these people are deterred (primarly) by law enforcement. Yet, similar incidents happen even when police are not overwhelmed. How does that work?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 06:40:31 PM
Then you failed to word your argument properly. You wrote: "In this context, there is no question that law enforcement is the primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week." You should be more careful in how you express yourself.


You claimed it's "primary reason why people don't loot on any given day of the week." If they're the primary reason, there must be secondary reasons. List them.


It surprises you that in emergency situations people act differently? If I see a burning car with a child trapped inside, and you happen to own a crow-bar store, is it really a surprise if I break your storefront to take a crow-bar and rescue the child? Do some people take advantage of such emergencies? Sure. And?

You assert that these people are deterred (primarly) by law enforcement. Yet, similar incidents happen even when police are not overwhelmed. How does that work?

This is a friggin message board.  I really don't care how "careful" I am when I express myself.  You are taking this way too seriously.

I tell you what:  You list the "unrelated causes" you were contemplating and I will list "secondary reasons" why people don't break the law en mass on any given day.

That is one really bad comparison.  We're not talking about people acting differently.  We're talking about our society being one step removed from anarchy; about how people break the law in droves when the opportunity presents itself. 

No, we do not see masses of people running through neighborhoods and looting stores when law enforcement is not overwhelmed.  Absurd.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 15, 2015, 06:51:18 PM
Chicago, Glenview police officers charged with lying in drug case


Three Chicago police officers and a Glenview police officer have been charged with lying under oath in court during a drug case last year..

The officers -- Chicago police Sgt. James Padar, Officer William Pruente, Officer Vince Morgan and Glenview Officer James Horn -- have been charged with felony perjury, according to a statement issued early Monday by the Cook County state's attorney's office.

Lawsuit filed over traffic stop caught on police video

The charges come after a video contradicted the officers' sworn testimony during a March 2014 court hearing on whether evidence in the drug case had been properly obtained. The surfacing of the video was first reported by the Chicago Tribune.

Padar, Pruente and Morgan -- Chicago narcotics officers -- had asked for help from Glenview police while making a traffic stop in the north suburb in June 2013. The officers had been watching 23-year-old Joseph Sperling, a restaurant worker, when they pulled him over and found up to a pound of marijuana in his car, according to court records.

Pruente, one of seven Chicago narcotics officers working the case that day, testified that he pulled Sperling over after the Glenview man failed to use his turn signal. Pruente said he smelled marijuana in the car while waiting for Sperling to hand over his driver's license and insurance.

He then ordered Sperling out of the car and found the marijuana inside a black backpack lying on the back seat of Sperling's gold Ford Taurus, according to his testimony.

County still investigating Glenview cops accused of false testimony


The other officers took the stand and backed up Pruente's version of the stop, to one degree or another, before Sperling's lawyer played police video of the traffic stop.

The video, a copy of which was obtained by the Tribune, showed Pruente walking up to the car, reaching through the open driver's window, unlocking the door and having Sperling step out of the car. Sperling was then frisked, handcuffed and led to a squad car while his car was searched.

Sperling's attorney, Steven Goldman, had subpoenaed the video -- taken from a Glenview sergeant's squad car at the scene that day -- and surprised prosecutors and officers with it during the hearing.

The video led Cook County Circuit Judge Catherine Haberkorn to suppress the search and arrest, leading prosecutors to quickly dismiss the felony charges. All five officers were later stripped of their police powers and put on desk duty pending internal investigations.

"Obviously, this is very outrageous conduct," a transcript of the March 31 hearing quoted Haberkorn, a former county prosecutor, as saying. "All officers lied on the stand today. ... All their testimony was a lie."


The four officers are set to appear in bond court at the Leighton Criminal Court Building on Monday afternoon.

A Chicago Police Department spokeswoman said Monday morning the investigation into the incident is ongoing and added an internal investigation was "immediately launched" and the officers were stripped of their police powers after the department learned of "the disturbing allegations."

"Chicago police officers are expected to maintain the highest level of integrity at all times," police spokeswoman Jennifer Rottner said in a statement. "The (department) will continue to fully cooperate with the (Cook County state's attorney's office.)"

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-chicago-glenview-police-officers-charged-with-lying-in-drug-case-20150608-story.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 15, 2015, 06:52:31 PM
This is a friggin message board.  I really don't care how "careful" I am when I express myself.  You are taking this way too seriously.

If you don't care to be careful how you express yourself, that's your problem. The simple fact is that if you can't bother to express yourself properly, then people who attempt to talk to you might as well be talking to a sponge. The whole point of a message board is to talk to and converse with other people. You don't do that by vomiting words. You do that by carefully expressing your thoughts.

Besides, if you don't care to be careful when you express yourself, I really don't care to not take it too seriously and I don't particularly care to heed the advice of someone who can't be bothered to carefully express himself.
 

I tell you what:  You list the "unrelated causes" you were contemplating and I will list "secondary reasons" why people don't break the law en mass on any given day.

You mentioned secondary causes in your argument. I'm asking you what they are. You're free not to answer, and we're free to summarily ignore your argument.


That is one really bad comparison.  We're not talking about people acting differently.  We're talking about our society being one step removed from anarchy; about how people break the law in droves when the opportunity presents itself.

Except it doesn't seem like we are one step removed from anarchy.


No, we do not see masses of people running through neighborhoods and looting stores when law enforcement is not overwhelmed.  Absurd.

Logical fallacy 101, by Professor D. Equis: "if masses of people run through neighborhoods, looting stores, then law enforcement will be overwhelmed. Therefore when law enforcement is overwhelmed, people will run through neighborhoods, looting stores."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 15, 2015, 06:57:47 PM


No, we do not see masses of people running through neighborhoods and looting stores when law enforcement is not overwhelmed.  Absurd. 
   



Sure we do.  They're called flash mobs and whole groups will storm a retail store, steal, and run like mad.  You can even see some footage on you tube.  As I noted earlier, I don't think eliminating cops is the answer, but I think we're more than a step removed from anarchy.

As for private security, not sure how I would feel.  Right now, the cops are highly trained, but nowhere near accountable.  So, something has to change.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Dos Equis on June 15, 2015, 07:47:09 PM


Sure we do.  They're called flash mobs and whole groups will storm a retail store, steal, and run like mad.  You can even see some footage on you tube.  As I noted earlier, I don't think eliminating cops is the answer, but I think we're more than a step removed from anarchy.

As for private security, not sure how I would feel.  Right now, the cops are highly trained, but nowhere near accountable.  So, something has to change.



I've seen flash mobs.  I'm not sure how common they are.  They do not involve the kinds of numbers we see during looting.  They are taking over entire streets, smashing windows, etc.   

I do think that some of the minority of law enforcement officers who abuse the law rather than enforce it are not held acceptable, although things have really changed in the information age.  Everyone has a camera/video.  And when we see evidence of bad cops, they are held accountable. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 15, 2015, 08:35:50 PM
LOL @ either you accept all BS that comes with cops, or you don't get cops at all.

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 

All this crap about "if you have a problem with bad cops, maybe you'd like to see life without cops..." is pure nonsense.  I'd love to see them apply this same logic to the obama they hate - either you're okay with obama's bullshit trampling of constitution, or you want to live in north korea. Obviously, the only 2 options lol.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 16, 2015, 07:09:08 AM
LOL @ either you accept all BS that comes with cops, or you don't get cops at all.

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 

All this crap about "if you have a problem with bad cops, maybe you'd like to see life without cops..." is pure nonsense.  I'd love to see them apply this same logic to the obama they hate - either you're okay with obama's bullshit trampling of constitution, or you want to live in north korea. Obviously, the only 2 options lol.















WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 
THIS. ^^^^^
Why is it So Hard for Police & Police Chiefs to Understand.
All we Get is A Constant Set of Excuse.
Just treat them the same as they would public.
Then they would Get the Respect They Want.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 16, 2015, 08:00:08 AM

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 
THIS. ^^^^^
Why is it So Hard for Police & Police Chiefs to Understand.
All we Get is A Constant Set of Excuse.
Just treat them the same as they would public.
Then they would Get the Respect They Want.


exactly.  it's okay for cops to fudge reports, lie about details, pocket money - because the 'other person' in the exchange was a bag of shit.   I dont get that thinking.  Sometimes a bad guy meets a bad cop, and at the end of the day, they BOTH belong in jail.  Getbiggers sometimes feel they have to swear allegiance to one side in a dispute, when at times, it's 2 bags of shit bumping into each other.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 09:08:08 AM
Skip, in all fairness, maybe there's some yet-unexplained force that draws all corrupt cops together in a particular area. Perhaps that force is what causes them to act in such a way, too.

(In all seriousness, though, there is such a force. It's a long-standing culture, in fact, that causes them to behave this way. There is no other explanation, and we all know it.)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 09:11:32 AM
It's a very small percentage of people, that require policing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 09:59:13 AM
LOL @ either you accept all BS that comes with cops, or you don't get cops at all.

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 

All this crap about "if you have a problem with bad cops, maybe you'd like to see life without cops..." is pure nonsense.  I'd love to see them apply this same logic to the obama they hate - either you're okay with obama's bullshit trampling of constitution, or you want to live in north korea. Obviously, the only 2 options lol.

sh*t.. I agree with you.. d**m!

The only thing I would question is your ability to determine if the person was a threat or not based on some of your previous posts, but other than that, the concept is solid. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 16, 2015, 10:04:42 AM
sh*t.. I agree with you.. d**m!

The only thing I would question is your ability to determine if the person was a threat or not based on some of your previous posts, but other than that, the concept is solid. 

I don't like the stand-your-ground mentality that is so pervasive these days.   Everyone just looking for that one moment when they're "allowed" to shoot.  Both police and citizens alike.  I like when people take 3 steps back to avoid a gun battle.  I like when police are confronted with an idiot with a pole, or a bat, or whatever, and they use a beanbag or taser FIRST.  Sure, legally, they're within their rights... but it tells society they're just taking the first chance to execute people.

When a guy 'maybe had one rock left in his hands' and is already shot once... the 4 cops on top of him don't need to shoot him any more.  But they chase him across the street and do (the recent traffic video shooting case).   Things like that - cops are justified in the initial shoot, but dozens of feet away, the rock is thrown, the guy is wounded, he is fleeing, and they just shoot him some more - I hate that kind of stuff.  When cops see no end to justified force, even when the rock-armed bad guy is suddenly a fleeing, wounded, empty-handed gimp just limping away. Ya know? 

Cops show a little reservation in those cases, and they win back the hearts/minds of 95% of people that don't trust them.  I look at every cop out there and I wonder how much he'd love to X a few people out, if they mis-step and "give him a reason to..."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 10:16:23 AM
Just got back from a vacation spent with another couple. My buddy from my old military days and his wife met us for a week in Mexico. He is a cop near Boston. During the visit we were exchanging information on our respective departments. At one point he tells me it's common for the officers, after bar closing, to find a secure lot, pull in and catch some z's. I was pretty surprised to hear that. He said in his community nothing is going on after bar closing and they listen for their call signs and someone is always awake etc etc. I couldn't believe that it was accepted practice for even the supervisors. I've never fallen asleep on duty in 33 years nor would condone that happening at all. I came away thinking there are cultures in some departments that are alien to me and still operating in the 60's and 2) that I'm glad my department is light years ahead of that in professionalism. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 10:21:35 AM
I don't like the stand-your-ground mentality that is so pervasive these days.   Everyone just looking for that one moment when they're "allowed" to shoot.  Both police and citizens alike.  I like when people take 3 steps back to avoid a gun battle.  I like when police are confronted with an idiot with a pole, or a bat, or whatever, and they use a beanbag or taser FIRST.  Sure, legally, they're within their rights... but it tells society they're just taking the first chance to execute people.

When a guy 'maybe had one rock left in his hands' and is already shot once... the 4 cops on top of him don't need to shoot him any more.  But they chase him across the street and do (the recent traffic video shooting case).   Things like that - cops are justified in the initial shoot, but dozens of feet away, the rock is thrown, the guy is wounded, he is fleeing, and they just shoot him some more - I hate that kind of stuff.  When cops see no end to justified force, even when the rock-armed bad guy is suddenly a fleeing, wounded, empty-handed gimp just limping away. Ya know? 

Cops show a little reservation in those cases, and they win back the hearts/minds of 95% of people that don't trust them.  I look at every cop out there and I wonder how much he'd love to X a few people out, if they mis-step and "give him a reason to..."

Like I said 240,. my concern is leaving it up to citizens such as yourself to judge after the fact whether it was justified or not. Just my opinion but your judgment in such things has been disappointing. I've pointed out the examples in previous posts so I won't beat a dead horse. I will agree that deadly force incidents need to be examined to insure they were justified. I will agree, like the one where the cop shot the man running away they are not, but those are rare. I don't agree at all with your assessment of the cop mentality though.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 10:27:18 AM
No, 240 is right.

And each time it happens, it makes it easier for the next guy to do it. Not only that, but it becomes increasingly expected for the next guy to do it.

Yep. Big, big problems with these guys called cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 10:34:56 AM
Just got back from a vacation spent with another couple. My buddy from my old military days and his wife met us for a week in Mexico. He is a cop near Boston. During the visit we were exchanging information on our respective departments. At one point he tells me it's common for the officers, after bar closing, to find a secure lot, pull in and catch some z's. I was pretty surprised to hear that. He said in his community nothing is going on after bar closing and they listen for their call signs and someone is always awake etc etc. I couldn't believe that it was accepted practice for even the supervisors. I've never fallen asleep on duty in 33 years nor would condone that happening at all. I came away thinking there are cultures in some departments that are alien to me and still operating in the 60's and 2) that I'm glad my department is light years ahead of that in professionalism. 

Honestly, it does sound like a good time to catch some zzzs. If it causes them to think more clearly and less dishonestly for the rest of their shifts, I'm all for it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 10:37:21 AM
Honestly, it does sound like a good time to catch some zzzs. If it causes them to think more clearly and less dishonestly for the rest of their shifts, I'm all for it.

 :)

I may be too critical... Thanks Jack
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 10:38:49 AM
Must be a lot of drunkeness in the BPD, with all the Irish genes in that place. A right comedy, I'm sure.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 10:41:38 AM
:)

I may be too critical... Thanks Jack

Well, you see there's stuff going on out there that you didn't know about (but right in line with your personality, you admitted it. So that's good.)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 16, 2015, 12:14:40 PM
It's a very small percentage of people, that require policing.

So when we keep repeating these "all the crooked cops, same place--same time" moments...

Doesn't that mean the above group of people are disproportionately supplying our police forces?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 16, 2015, 01:05:32 PM
LOL @ either you accept all BS that comes with cops, or you don't get cops at all.

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 

All this crap about "if you have a problem with bad cops, maybe you'd like to see life without cops..." is pure nonsense.  I'd love to see them apply this same logic to the obama they hate - either you're okay with obama's bullshit trampling of constitution, or you want to live in north korea. Obviously, the only 2 options lol.


sh*t.. I agree with you.. d**m!

The only thing I would question is your ability to determine if the person was a threat or not based on some of your previous posts, but other than that, the concept is solid. 













I don't feel the need for any allegiance to either side.
A bad call / person is a bad call/person regardless of
What job they may or may not do.

How or why is this so Hard to apply to police / politicians etc.

As for 240's ability to determine, I am not wholly convinced of your
Own ability 007. And the worrying part is your a cop.
That is a genuine comment Not a Blanket I hate cops.
I do question your unbiased ness as You are clearly guarded &
Politically correct when it comes to discussing any thing posted
About potential wrong doing by cops.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 01:42:47 PM
LOL @ either you accept all BS that comes with cops, or you don't get cops at all.

WHy is it so hard to accept we just want cops to follow the same laws we are expected to follow.  Don't eat stolen weed brownies.  Don't shoot people who are no threat to you.  Don't lie about what happened on police reports. 

All this crap about "if you have a problem with bad cops, maybe you'd like to see life without cops..." is pure nonsense.  I'd love to see them apply this same logic to the obama they hate - either you're okay with obama's bullshit trampling of constitution, or you want to live in north korea. Obviously, the only 2 options lol.














I don't feel the need for any allegiance to either side.
A bad call / person is a bad call/person regardless of
What job they may or may not do.

How or why is this so Hard to apply to police / politicians etc.

As for 240's ability to determine, I am not wholly convinced of your
Own ability 007. And the worrying part is your a cop.
That is a genuine comment Not a Blanket I hate cops.
I do question your unbiased ness as You are clearly guarded &
Politically correct when it comes to discussing any thing posted
About potential wrong doing by cops.



I understand your hesitance in taking my word on something pertaining to cops. I have seen occasions when cops will allow their bias as an officer to cloud their own judgment on an issue and I assume I am not immune to it. I tend to look at things from different viewpoints in a variety of categories, politics, religion and moral issues and try to use the "two sides to every story" mentality when reviewing police incidents.
We've seen first hand our differences in conclusions based on the dog/police video where our perceptions and experience affect our opinions. What you call politically correct responses might be due to my experience of drawing a conclusion to soon about something and then finding out later it was wrong. When I'm not sure about something, or the facts and information are limited as often they are from news articles, you may find my answers to be non committal because I don't know for sure about what actually happened. I would hope in cases where it is cut and dried, like the shooting by the officer of the black male "fleeing" that I made my opinion very clear.
I don't mind being called out on something I've said and given a chance to explain. I do mind getting accused of covering up for officers which often seems to be the case. I make it a point to call a duck a duck if there is compelling evidence it's a duck and not a goose. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 16, 2015, 02:43:26 PM
I understand your hesitance in taking my word on something pertaining to cops. I have seen occasions when cops will allow their bias as an officer to cloud their own judgment on an issue and I assume I am not immune to it. I tend to look at things from different viewpoints in a variety of categories, politics, religion and moral issues and try to use the "two sides to every story" mentality when reviewing police incidents.
We've seen first hand our differences in conclusions based on the dog/police video where our perceptions and experience affect our opinions. What you call politically correct responses might be due to my experience of drawing a conclusion to soon about something and then finding out later it was wrong. When I'm not sure about something, or the facts and information are limited as often they are from news articles, you may find my answers to be non committal because I don't know for sure about what actually happened. I would hope in cases where it is cut and dried, like the shooting by the officer of the black male "fleeing" that I made my opinion very clear.
I don't mind being called out on something I've said and given a chance to explain. I do mind getting accused of covering up for officers which often seems to be the case. I make it a point to call a duck a duck if there is compelling evidence it's a duck and not a goose. 















Good Reply.

I to have Different view points to many in the categories you mention
& many others.
I try to see the three sides to the story as in the 2 sides & somewhere in
The middle is the truth.
As for drawing a conclusion to soon, we are clearly seeing this happen
In some of the video's/ news stories posted in this thread.
And then get the 'act first think later' excuse / explanation.
For police actions.
And clearly some are very wrong.

As you well know I to call a scumbag a scumbag if they are
Regardless of job, colour, or creed.
 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 02:48:44 PM













Good Reply.

I to have Different view points to many in the categories you mention
& many others.
I try to see the three sides to the story as in the 2 sides & somewhere in
The middle is the truth.
As for drawing a conclusion to soon, we are clearly seeing this happen
In some of the video's/ news stories posted in this thread.
And then get the 'act first think later' excuse / explanation.
For police actions.
And clearly some are very wrong.

As you well know I to call a scumbag a scumbag if they are
Regardless of job, colour, or creed.
 ;)

Good post
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 16, 2015, 03:01:02 PM
Good post














 :o This Agreeing Business.
What's Happening to us.

It can't continue.
Must be....
Time for my Sleep.
😉 👍
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 16, 2015, 03:19:34 PM













 :o This Agreeing Business.
What's Happening to us.

It can't continue.
Must be....
Time for my Sleep.
😉 👍

You just caught me really really drunk.. I'll sober up by tomorrow  :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 17, 2015, 03:21:33 PM
Warning: Federal Court Rules that 2nd Amendment Right is Now a Reason for Cops to Detain You

Grand Rapids, Mich. – In a stunning violation of 2nd Amendment rights, the U.S. District Court of Western Michigan ruled police have the legal authority to detain individuals that choose to exercise their constitutional right to open carry a firearm. Open Carry is also specifically allowed under Michigan law.

The ruling means that people in Michigan who choose to exercise this constitutional right are now subject to being stopped by law enforcement for engaging in a completely lawful activity.

Officers detained Johann Deffert in early 2013. He was walking down the sidewalk with a holstered FNP-45 pistol, after receiving a 9-1-1 call from a woman who spotted Deffert with the open carried, but holstered, handgun on his person.

The dispatcher initially informed the caller that Michigan is an open carry state. However, the woman subsequently explained that she found Deffert’s presence alarming, due in part to his wearing of camouflage, although she admitted that he wasn’t threatening anyone. Somehow the dispatcher made the decision that someone engaging in a completely legal activity, as earlier in the call noted by the dispatcher, should now be inspected by police, due to caller saying they found wearing camo disturbing.

The absurdity in logic; that someone wearing camo takes the situation from being a completely legal situation not to be interfered with, and raises it to a level of needing police assistance, shows the extreme arbitrary nature of the entire situation.



The incident was captured on responding officer Moe Williams’ dash cam, and lasted 14 minutes. Williams had indicated he believed that perhaps Deffert was suffering from some type of mental illness, as he seemed to be “talking to nobody” when the officer arrived on scene. Upon further investigation, Deffert was revealed to have been happily singing the song “Hakuna Matata” from the Disney movie “The Lion King” while strolling down the sidewalk.

The video shows the officer command Deffert to lay face down on the ground upon arrival on the scene. Deffert was treated as if he were a criminal that needed to prove he was not doing anything wrong, as the officer detained him while running a mental and criminal background check. Deffert was polite and respectful throughout the encounter, but strongly asserted his rights regarding open carry laws in the state of Michigan.

Remember, all of this transpired despite Deffert’s total compliance with Michigan law, in respect to open carry of a firearm. Eventually, Deffert was released, as he had violated no laws, done nothing wrong, and there was no legitimate reason to hold him. Shortly after the incident, in what seemed like a vindication for Deffert at the time, Grand Rapids Police Sgt. Steve LaBreque recommended to Moe’s commanding officer, that Moe “would benefit from some additional training in handling ‘open carry’ issues.”

Several months later Deffert filed a federal lawsuit alleging his constitutional rights were violated and that he was assaulted and falsely imprisoned. The legality of open carry in the Michigan was never in question, only if law enforcement had the authority to detain an individual simply because they were open carrying a firearm, according to court records.

In the most convoluted of logic, U.S. District Judge Janet Neff claimed that officers do have such authority. Neff wrote that the officers were “justified in following up on the 9-1-1 call and using swift action to determine whether [Deffert’s] behavior gave rise to a need to protect or preserve life … in the neighborhood.”

When a call to 9-1-1 is made in regard to a completely legal activity, the police should not even be dispatched. If in fact the police needed to “determine whether [Deffert’s] behavior gave rise to a need to protect or preserve life … in the neighborhood,” they need not impeded a citizen from going about their legitimate and legal business,” as Neff asserts, but rather could passively watch from a distance to determine if there is any reasonable suspicion of criminal activity afoot, and if so act accordingly.

The most glaring problem with Neff’s logic, is that there is no reason for police to ever assess someones behavior who is simply engaging in constitutionally protected and lawful activity, regardless if another citizens takes issue with the activity. If the activity fails to rise to the level of criminality, then police have no business getting investigating or getting involved. The police, as public servants, aren’t paid to investigate non-crimes.

The idea that someone needs to prove their innocence for engaging in a constitutionally protected activity is contrary to everything America teaches its children to believe about liberty and freedom.

The case will most likely be appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The National Rifle Association and others have offered to assist in the appeal.

It will be interesting to see what open carry advocates across the nation, and specifically those in Texas, a hotbed of open carry activism, think about this ruling; and how they would respond if this were to become the standard of law in their state.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/federal-court-rules-police-detain-individuals-open-carrying-firearms
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 18, 2015, 08:23:22 AM
So the question is, what are police to do when a  citizen calls in they are alarmed about a man dressed in camo with a gun on his hip walking down a city street? That's part of the problem with the open carry law. The police are stuck between a rock and a hard place. If they don't respond and it is a nutcase, people scream.. if they do respond.. people scream. The article was obviously written by an anti police blogger just based on the wording. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 18, 2015, 10:00:13 AM
So the question is, what are police to do when a  citizen calls in they are alarmed about a man dressed in camo with a gun on his hip walking down a city street? That's part of the problem with the open carry law. The police are stuck between a rock and a hard place. If they don't respond and it is a nutcase, people scream.. if they do respond.. people scream. The article was obviously written by an anti police blogger just based on the wording. 

Is he minding his own business?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 18, 2015, 10:05:00 AM
Is he minding his own business?

...because if they can establish that, then I'd suggest they learn something from him.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 18, 2015, 10:26:21 AM
So the question is, what are police to do when a  citizen calls in they are alarmed about a man dressed in camo with a gun on his hip walking down a city street? That's part of the problem with the open carry law. The police are stuck between a rock and a hard place. If they don't respond and it is a nutcase, people scream.. if they do respond.. people scream. The article was obviously written by an anti police blogger just based on the wording. 

Yeah... "anti-police blogger"... how about they say: "Sir [or Ma'am], it is legal to openly carry in [insert State here]. Is the person in question threatening anyone with the weapon or acting in a way that poses imminent danger?" If the answer is no, then simply don't stop, detain or otherwise harass the person. Nothing in the decision stops the police from responding, by the way; they can respond and observe the person as long as they want and if they have articulable reasonable suspicion that a crime is in progress or about to be committed then they can stop that person.

It's really simple: you are a cop, not a monarch. You do not get to stop people just because you feel like stopping them or someone else feels that you should stop them. You operate within a framework that we, as a society, require you to operate under. If you don't like that, that's too bad.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 18, 2015, 10:36:42 AM
Yeah... "anti-police blogger"... how about they say: "Sir [or Ma'am], it is legal to openly carry in [insert State here]. Is the person in question threatening anyone with the weapon or acting in a way that poses imminent danger?" If the answer is no, then simply don't stop, detain or otherwise harass the person. Nothing in the decision stops the police from responding, by the way; they can respond and observe the person as long as they want and if they have articulable reasonable suspicion that a crime is in progress or about to be committed then they can stop that person.

It's really simple: you are a cop, not a monarch. You do not get to stop people just because you feel like stopping them or someone else feels that you should stop them. You operate within a framework that we, as a society, require you to operate under. If you don't like that, that's too bad.

If I had my way, we wouldn't stop anyone. It's a hassle. We're not given the option sometimes. The need/desire to carry a weapon in public in the open is relatively new in the last few years (disregarding the cowboy days). Until the shooting starts, it's difficult to tell the difference between a guy wanting to exercise his 2nd amendment right and a nut case about to open a can of whoop ass on a neighborhood/church/theater etc. I agree with you that the response should fit the circumstances, however it is a tough spot to be in dealing with a person with a gun. Either he is fine, and just exercising his right to carry and all is good or he is a nutcase that is dangerous. I also agree with you about operating under the law. And whether I think the law is a mistake or not, it's the law. I would recommend police stand down on challenging anyone carrying a weapon in a state where it is legal until they prove they are a danger by opening fire. That way we don't violate their rights, and it will either show the law was a mistake and get corrected, or the law was a good move and there isn't an issue.           
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 18, 2015, 11:21:43 AM
If I had my way, we wouldn't stop anyone. It's a hassle. We're not given the option sometimes. The need/desire to carry a weapon in public in the open is relatively new in the last few years (disregarding the cowboy days). Until the shooting starts, it's difficult to tell the difference between a guy wanting to exercise his 2nd amendment right and a nut case about to open a can of whoop ass on a neighborhood/church/theater etc. I agree with you that the response should fit the circumstances, however it is a tough spot to be in dealing with a person with a gun. Either he is fine, and just exercising his right to carry and all is good or he is a nutcase that is dangerous. I also agree with you about operating under the law. And whether I think the law is a mistake or not, it's the law. I would recommend police stand down on challenging anyone's carrying a weapon in a state where it is legal until they prove they are a danger by opening fire. That way we don't violate their rights, and it will either show the law was a mistake and get corrected, or the law was a good move and there isn't an issue.          

...by way of stories media chooses for its manipulative, collusive, conniving pinhole, of course.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 18, 2015, 11:50:59 AM
...by way of stories media chooses for its manipulative, collusive, conniving pinhole, of course.

Not a bad point..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Jack T. Cross on June 18, 2015, 12:10:57 PM
Not a bad point..

How great it would be if we couldn't make points like that so easily.

But we're actually that screwed up.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 21, 2015, 12:52:33 PM
Another article obviously written by an "anti-police blogger"..
Kill a man? No, we're talking about brave officers here so it's merely "staff failure and a systematic breakdown of jail operations". The heroic officers were "changing the logs after Farris was found dead to look as if they performed required checks". Did anyone go to prison? No, officers don't go to prison (so they'd dehydrate to death), they're just "sorry": one person got a 30 day suspension without pay, another is on leave and two others just decided to resign.


Island County sheriff apologizes for jail dehydration death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150618/NEWS01/150619222/Island-County-sheriff-apologizes-for-jail-dehydration-death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150619/NEWS01/150629944
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 21, 2015, 03:35:06 PM
Another article obviously written by an "anti-police blogger"..
Kill a man? No, we're talking about brave officers here so it's merely "staff failure and a systematic breakdown of jail operations". The heroic officers were "changing the logs after Farris was found dead to look as if they performed required checks". Did anyone go to prison? No, officers don't go to prison (so they'd dehydrate to death), they're just "sorry": one person got a 30 day suspension without pay, another is on leave and two others just decided to resign.


Island County sheriff apologizes for jail dehydration death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150618/NEWS01/150619222/Island-County-sheriff-apologizes-for-jail-dehydration-death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150619/NEWS01/150629944














They said Sorry.
Plus 2 resigned, 1 on leave, & 1 30 day suspension.
 :o :o
What other type of Harsh Punishment Could they Get,
Or Would you Expect.
They were in Fear of Their Lives.
All They want to do is Go Home To Wife & Kids & Dunkin Doughnuts.

It is Exactly these type of Excessive Punishment That is Now so
Lacking in General Society.
 ::)

Oh Brother another case of Cop Hating / Bashing.
I do Suppose.!!!!!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2015, 08:11:20 AM
Another article obviously written by an "anti-police blogger"..
Kill a man? No, we're talking about brave officers here so it's merely "staff failure and a systematic breakdown of jail operations". The heroic officers were "changing the logs after Farris was found dead to look as if they performed required checks". Did anyone go to prison? No, officers don't go to prison (so they'd dehydrate to death), they're just "sorry": one person got a 30 day suspension without pay, another is on leave and two others just decided to resign.


Island County sheriff apologizes for jail dehydration death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150618/NEWS01/150619222/Island-County-sheriff-apologizes-for-jail-dehydration-death

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150619/NEWS01/150629944


I read the article. It's not over. " The investigation has been provided to prosecutors for review, Brown said Thursday."  The Department does their thing, fire, terminate, suspend which is administrative. The criminal side does their thing. In my opinion, this would/should be prosecuted as negligent manslaughter. If nothing happens with this case I'll eat my hat, but to declare at this point nothing is going to happen is premature. There is a process. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 22, 2015, 08:47:59 AM

I read the article. It's not over. " The investigation has been provided to prosecutors for review, Brown said Thursday."  The Department does their thing, fire, terminate, suspend which is administrative. The criminal side does their thing. In my opinion, this would/should be prosecuted as negligent manslaughter. If nothing happens with this case I'll eat my hat, but to declare at this point nothing is going to happen is premature. There is a process. 

Let an average citizen "accidentally" lock a cop in his garage for a week and let him die of dehydration.  Suddenly it's a capital murder case.  This will be a suspension at best?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2015, 09:04:10 AM
Let an average citizen "accidentally" lock a cop in his garage for a week and let him die of dehydration.  Suddenly it's a capital murder case.  This will be a suspension at best?

Considering you've been wrong so many times I lost track, (Hernandez) we'll just have to wait and see. An average cop locked in a garage is kidnapping. This was incarceration, so a subtle difference. If they don't get any criminal charges out of it I'll be surprised. Certainly deserve it. We'll see
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on June 22, 2015, 09:25:43 AM
An average cop locked in a garage is kidnapping. This was incarceration, so a subtle difference

When cops imprison someone, they remove their ability to feed/drink themselves.  They now have life/death power over the person.  A casual mistake with water access can/may have killed a person. 

If anything, it's WORSE because cops have training and sworn duty and plenty of support to ensure the prisoner gets access to water.  THe cop apologized.  Tough to defend when he admits fault there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2015, 09:32:47 AM
When cops imprison someone, they remove their ability to feed/drink themselves.  They now have life/death power over the person.  A casual mistake with water access can/may have killed a person.  

If anything, it's WORSE because cops have training and sworn duty and plenty of support to ensure the prisoner gets access to water.  THe cop apologized.  Tough to defend when he admits fault there.

We can disagree on the difference between someone in a jail cell and someone being held in a garage, but I agree that there is obviously a duty to provide the basic needs of food water and shelter for the person in custody. In this case, there was clear negligence. The negligence was so egregious that it resulted in death. That sounds criminal to me

Sec. 19.05.  CRIMINALLY NEGLIGENT HOMICIDE.  (a)  A person commits an offense if he causes the death of an individual by criminal negligence.

(b)  An offense under this section is a state jail felony.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 22, 2015, 12:42:04 PM

I read the article. It's not over. " The investigation has been provided to prosecutors for review, Brown said Thursday."  The Department does their thing, fire, terminate, suspend which is administrative. The criminal side does their thing. In my opinion, this would/should be prosecuted as negligent manslaughter. If nothing happens with this case I'll eat my hat, but to declare at this point nothing is going to happen is premature. There is a process. 













Good reply.
Pls keep us posted as to what happens to these cops.
It seems from the reports on here that they should be
Prosecuted.
It's very bad news when someone is left to die in a police cell.
I don't see how they can explain that away.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 22, 2015, 01:50:54 PM












Good reply.
Pls keep us posted as to what happens to these cops.
It seems from the reports on here that they should be
Prosecuted.
It's very bad news when someone is left to die in a police cell.
I don't see how they can explain that away.

I don't see how they can explain it away either. Then modifying the documents.. shows culpability.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2015, 02:47:30 PM
More Civil forfeiture BS:

Cops pull a man over for "driving too slow in the fast lane". He does not consent to a search of his motor home. He leaves without a citation. The cops arrange for a K9 unit to pull him over for a second time. The dog is alerted but they find no drugs. Money ($167,000) is found in his motor home. Police take (or steal if you prefer) the money. Judge orders that the money must be returned after stating that the government did not reveal all the details about the initial stop.

Judge orders return of $167,000 seized by Nevada troopers

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/judge-orders-return-167000-seized-nevada-troopers
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on June 24, 2015, 02:53:41 PM
More Civil forfeiture BS:

Cops pull a man over for "driving too slow in the fast lane". He does not consent to a search of his motor home. He leaves without a citation. The cops arrange for a K9 unit to pull him over for a second time. The dog is alerted but they find no drugs. Money ($167,000) is found in his motor home. Police take (or steal if you prefer) the money. Judge orders that the money must be returned after stating that the government did not reveal all the details about the initial stop.

Judge orders return of $167,000 seized by Nevada troopers

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/judge-orders-return-167000-seized-nevada-troopers













 :o Jeez I wish I had a $167 in my car.
Clearly I have gone very wrong in my Life.. :'(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2015, 04:05:38 PM












 :o Jeez I wish I had a $167 in my car.
Clearly I have gone very wrong in my Life.. :'(


Seeing as this is a motor home, perhaps these were his life savings. It shouldn't really matter though; the issue here is why did they steal the money from this man? They pull him over once and he left without a citation. Maybe he angered the cops by refusing to consent to the search. (in a place where police do this sort of looting often). They stop him with a K9 unit, the dog that is supposed to find drugs is alerted but no drugs are found. And then they steal his money. Without charging the man for anything.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 25, 2015, 09:45:24 AM

Seeing as this is a motor home, perhaps these were his life savings. It shouldn't really matter though; the issue here is why did they steal the money from this man? They pull him over once and he left without a citation. Maybe he angered the cops by refusing to consent to the search. (in a place where police do this sort of looting often). They stop him with a K9 unit, the dog that is supposed to find drugs is alerted but no drugs are found. And then they steal his money. Without charging the man for anything.

Another plausible scenario is they were running drug interdiction on a highway known as a pipeline. There were indicators the person was involved in trafficking. They developed PC for the second stop after contacting a K-9 unit. (Pretext stops are ruled valid by the courts) and stopped the RV again. This time the dog alerted on the RV (money that is stashed with drugs can have residual on it) and discovered the $167,000. Courts have also ruled that money can be seized if there is probable cause to believe it is connected to a crime.

That is not to say seizure laws haven't been abused by L.E. agencies which is atrocious, and that it wasn't abused here, but just offering another viewpoint.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on June 25, 2015, 12:10:07 PM
Another plausible scenario is they were running drug interdiction on a highway known as a pipeline. There were indicators the person was involved in trafficking. They developed PC for the second stop after contacting a K-9 unit. (Pretext stops are ruled valid by the courts) and stopped the RV again. This time the dog alerted on the RV (money that is stashed with drugs can have residual on it) and discovered the $167,000. Courts have also ruled that money can be seized if there is probable cause to believe it is connected to a crime.

Time and time again it has been proven that there are traces of drugs on most circulating currency. Results of study after study put the percentage of contaminated currency at over 80% and some go as high as 94%... The wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contaminated_currency) article includes a number of references to such studies and some very interesting facts about how such contamination can even spread to hot-off-the-presses, uncirculated bills. So, with those results in mind, you'll forgive me if I assert that "residuals" prove nothing.

As to your other point, even if Courts have ruled that money can be seized if there is probable cause to believe it is connected to a crime (link?) one important question remains: what constitutes probable cause? Driving on a publicly accessible highway isn't probable cause. Refusing to allow officers to search isn't probable cause. Carrying legal tender isn't probable cause. So the question is: are traces of drugs on money, as indicated by a drug sniffing dog, probable cause? Again, given how much of the money supply appears tainted, then answer would seem to be no.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on June 25, 2015, 05:11:52 PM
Time and time again it has been proven that there are traces of drugs on most circulating currency. Results of study after study put the percentage of contaminated currency at over 80% and some go as high as 94%... The wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contaminated_currency) article includes a number of references to such studies and some very interesting facts about how such contamination can even spread to hot-off-the-presses, uncirculated bills. So, with those results in mind, you'll forgive me if I assert that "residuals" prove nothing.

As to your other point, even if Courts have ruled that money can be seized if there is probable cause to believe it is connected to a crime (link?) one important question remains: what constitutes probable cause? Driving on a publicly accessible highway isn't probable cause. Refusing to allow officers to search isn't probable cause. Carrying legal tender isn't probable cause. So the question is: are traces of drugs on money, as indicated by a drug sniffing dog, probable cause? Again, given how much of the money supply appears tainted, then answer would seem to be no.

Its generally the totality of the circumstances. For example, day or night, area known for crime, time of night.. so in this case, and I'm giving generalities, just the presense of a significant amount of cash alone wouldn't in itself be sufficient. If the route is documented as a drug corridor, that adds a brick. If it is commonly found that RV's are used as mules, thats another brick. If the person can't explain the reason for such a sum that's another ( Doesnt have to but not explaining is a brick when added together). The alert of the drug dog is another. If the person has been handled for drug offenses in the past that is one more. At a certain point it tips the scale from suspicion to probable cause.  And as for the majority of cash having traces of drugs on it, the follow up question would be is it of suffecient quantity to trigger an alert on the average currency? I handled a drug dog for years and never had an instance where they alerted on the average persons billfold or money. Those are just questions that would need to be answered prior to concluding an alert is not probable cause.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2015, 11:00:08 AM
What a remarkable restraint these heroic officers showed against a dangerous career criminal:
(minor detail: they busted into the wrong house, but that's no problem/no charges for them)

Pittsfield woman, 88, charged with assault on officer
http://www.berkshireeagle.com/local/ci_28388964/pittsfield-woman-88-charged-assault-officer
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2015, 08:55:58 PM
Phoenix police arrest fellow officer on charges of sexual assault, kidnapping

http://www.fox10phoenix.com/story/29423357/2015/06/27/phoenix-police-arrest-fellow-officer-on-charges-of-sexual-assault-kidnapping
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 30, 2015, 03:51:21 PM
DOJ Report Faults Police Response to Ferguson Protest

Police agencies responding to protests last year in Ferguson, Missouri employed tactics that increased tensions between law enforcement and protesters, according to a draft report prepared by the Justice Department's Office of Community Oriented Policing Service, known as COPS.

The report, which has not yet been issued, says the use of dogs, snipers, and tactical vehicles designed for the military "served to escalate rather than de-escalate the overall situation," NBC News has learned.

The COPS office is conducting a review of how police responded in the first 17 days after the fatal police shooting on August 9 of an unarmed black man, Michael Brown.

The office "will release the final after-action assessment in the coming weeks, which will convey the findings and lessons learned, following review by the agencies that are involved," said a Justice Department spokesman, who declined further comment on the initial findings.

The report says the use of canine teams for controlling crowds of protesters "is inconsistent with widely accepted policing practices and in fact exacerbated tensions by unnecessarily inciting fear and anger."

Deploying officers in tactical gear and the use of military-style vehicles also added to tensions, it says. "Armored vehicles should not be visible to protesters except in narrowly defined circumstances, for example when shots are fired."

The initial COPS findings say commanders failed to issue clear instructions to the variety of responding police agencies about lawful protest. Officers repeatedly told protesters to "keep moving."

As a result, protesters "were provided no clear alternative where they could gather in a zone and stand still."


The findings are being relayed this week to police officials in Ferguson, the city and county of St. Louis, and the Missouri State Highway Patrol. The agencies declined comment on the draft findings.

Brown was fatally shot by a white Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, who has since resigned. State and federal officials declined to prosecute him.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/doj-report-faults-police-response-ferguson-protest-n384561


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on June 30, 2015, 03:54:54 PM

Strange...when I said their conduct was deplorable, I was labeled a cop hater.

Guess the DOJ must be a bunch of cop haters.  ::)




Chances of ANYBODY being held accountable = .00000000000000000000000 000000%
Chances of cops learning from what they did wrong = .00000000000000000000000 000003%


Push for Reform.




Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 01, 2015, 12:16:01 AM
Video Catches Cop on Rampage as Fellow Cops Try to Stop Him from Torturing Handcuffed Man

Federal Heights, CO — Officer Mark Magness is no stranger to police brutality. In 2009, after being on the Federal Heights police department for a year, Magness was convicted of misdemeanor assault after he broke an innocent man’s arm while investigating the popping of illegal fireworks.

Despite pleading guilty to assault, Magness was never fired.

Now, 6 years later, we are witnessing the horrid negligence of this department for allowing a monster like Magness to remain in a position of power.

ABC 7 Denver, obtained body cam footage of two Federal Heights officers. The footage shows nothing short of torture, carried out by one, Officer Mark Magness.

The 9 minute and 30-second long video begins as Magness yanks the handcuffed man from the car and smashes his face into the wall. The man immediately starts bleeding profusely from the mouth.

“Stand up!” yells Magness to the man he just threw down. In the background, the man can be heard apologizing as he’s thrown around like a ragdoll.

The man, who is now fairly agitated after being assaulted while in handcuffs is thrown into the cell. He then makes a mistake and raises his open hand toward Magness.

At this point, Magness jumps on the man and begins pummeled him. Magness, knowing that his body camera is recording this abuse, continues to yell out, “Stop Resisting!” throughout the abuse in an attempt to justify his torturous ways.

One of the officers points at Magness’ chest in an apparent attempt to warn this maniac that his actions are being recorded. “F**k that! F**k that!” yells Magness as to imply that he has no intentions of stopping this assault, regardless of being recorded.

The man, who is now in handcuffs again, is thrown into a restraint chair by Magness, again apologizing the entire time.

“I’m sorry, sir, I won’t do nothing else,” the man says.

“We’re gonna need medical,” the second officer says pointing to his chin.

“I don’t care, strap him to the chair,” Magness replies.

Then the man yells “ow!” as Magness gouges his temple. Magness replies, “no this is ‘ow,'” as he jams his finger underneath the man’s ear.

The entire time Magness continues to yell, “Stop Resisting!”

What the man was being arrested for and the totality of his injuries were not released by the department.

However, court records show that on June 17, Magness pleaded guilty to attempted third-degree assault for this attack which happened in December.

Magness’ status with the Federal Heights police department has yet to be released publicly.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/vidoe-catches-cop-rampage-fellow-cops-stop-torturing-handcuffed-man/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 01, 2015, 12:17:56 AM
SWAT Raids Wrong Home, Breaks Windows, then Issues Family Citation for Broken Windows

St. Louis, MO — Leon Walker and his family were settling down for dinner last week when they were violently interrupted as flashbang grenades came flying into their house and began exploding.

The front door was kicked down, and armed assailants rushed in with AR-15 rifles drawn and pointed Walker and his family. These armed and incredibly incompetent and dangerous assailants were members of the St. Louis Police Department’s SWAT team.

The SWAT team was looking for an evil man who allegedly committed the ‘crime’ of selling a substance to willing customers. This man’s name was Darron Ford, and he lived two doors down from the Walker family.

The fact that the man they were looking for lived two doors down was of no consequence to these thugs in uniform as they went along with the raid, in full. For two hours, police, who knew they were at the wrong address, tore the home of Leon Walker apart in search of a non-existent reason to justify their idiocy.

Never let a botched SWAT raid go to waste.

Had Walker tried to defend his home against the armed invaders, he would have been killed, and the world would have never known about it. The blurb on the nightly news would have been that police kill an armed man who fired on them.

“Obviously they think they’re being invaded,” family attorney Bevis Schock said. “The hope is that they won’t fight back but that they’ll cower in fear – the flight response rather than the fight response.”

Schock says that police should have stopped their madness once they realized they were at the wrong home. However, they were on an apparent mission to destroy and intimidate.

After the life-threatening home invasion and subsequent destruction of their home, the St. Louis Police Department sent out a building inspector. In turn, the inspector issued the Walker family a citation for a window the SWAT team broke during the raid!

“In this case the insult was to have the building inspector cite them for the window that had been broken by the police an hour earlier as part of the entry, and that’s outrageous,” Schock said.

The Walker family could have been killed by these barbarians as they followed their controller’s orders to seek out illicit substances. Instead of an apology for threatening all their lives and ransacking their home, the Walkers were extorted!

The Walker family has since filed a lawsuit against the city of St. Louis. The taxpayers will now foot the bill for the belligerent idiocy of the St. Louis SWAT team.

The Walker’s situation is hardly an isolated one either. Also this month, and in the same town, another family was wrongfully raided by St. Louis SWAT. Angela Zorich and family were subject to a massive military-style raid during which their house was destroyed, their beloved dog killed, and their mother kidnapped. The reason for this war-like assault on a family — Zorich was on hard times and was temporarily unable to pay her gas bill.

Sadly, many Americans are still unable to see the horrors of the massive and brutally negligent police state that has exploded in this country. The apologists sit back and tell people that if they don’t do anything wrong, they don’t have anything to worry about. Share this article with your friends and family who still think they have nothing to worry about.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/swat-raids-wrong-home-breaks-windows-apology-citation-broken-windows/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 01, 2015, 02:26:33 PM
 :o Is this going to be never ending
Abuse of position / dereliction of duty / sadistic behaviour.

From what we hear & is being posted on GetBig,
I have said before There Appears to be Institutionalised abuse & corruption
In the Police.
And Very Little is Being done to Stop & Correct This.
No Wonder there is So Much Cop Mistrust & Dislike.

If they behaved in the same manner Without Their uniforms & Police Protection
They Would get Exactly What They Deserve.
Only they Don't, A Bunch of Bully boy Cowards.

Fcuk the Lot of Them Corrupt Abusing Sadistic Bully's
I can only Hope they all Catch Ebola or Necrotising Fasciitis.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2015, 03:51:47 PM
Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges

Port Orange, FL — On December 21, Port Orange Police Officer Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car at 15 mph above the posted speed limit when he struck and killed a motorcyclist.

Father of two and Navy Veteran, Andrew McIlvain, 39, was riding his motorcycle as Officer Portillo was looking down at his laptop on the way to a “non-priority” noise complaint. When Portillo looked up, it was too late, he was driving over this unsuspecting man.

Two weeks later, McIlvain succumbed to his severe injuries, and he died on January 4. The police even had the audacity to attempt to justify this officer’s reckless driving by releasing a statement that McIlvain didn’t have his driver’s license at the time of the crash — as if that is worthy of a death sentence.

All of this information was obtained by the Port Orange police during the process of their internal investigation. It is a matter of police record that Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car, was speeding, was distracted, and killed an innocent man. He was then suspended for ten days and ordered to attend an emergency vehicle operation course.

However, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, they could not legally prove those facts during Portillo’s hearing last week.

The debacle began as Portillo conveniently did not show up to his own hearing for the careless driving charge. This was likely an attempt to avoid a perjury charge if he was asked about driving the car that killed a man.

According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal:

    Portillo did not appear for the hearing before County Judge Angela Dempsey at the Courthouse Annex in Daytona Beach. Portillo’s attorney Martin White argued successfully that the police officer had not been identified as the driver of the squad car that struck McIlvain.

The FHP was responsible for an independent investigation of Portillo. Former FHP Trooper Robert Asbill interview him after the accident, however, he was conveniently absent that day as well. Even so, the FHP’s own report, prepared by Trooper Kurt Glaenzer listed Portillo as the driver of the patrol car!

“Because the defendant is not required to file an affidavit there is no evidence on the record to identify my client as the operator of that vehicle,” White said in a glaring misrepresentation of the truth.

“Your Honor, we move for a judgment of acquittal at this junction,” White said. “There’s been no identification that my client was driving behind the wheel. The state did not establish venue.”

“Judgment of acquittal is granted,” Dempsey said.

This entire dog and pony show wasn’t about whether or not to charge Portillo with manslaughter; it was only about a $166 careless driving ticket. Had Portillo received that ticket for careless driving, however, he could have been subject Florida state law 782.071 for vehicular homicide.

Instead, Portillo will escape all accountability.

Because of his negligence, Silvio Portillo killed an innocent man. And, because of the corruption and unwillingness of the supposed “justice” system to prosecute their own, no one will be held responsible for this loss of life.

Talking to the Journal, White said that while the argument that it could not be proven that Portillo was driving the patrol car might seem “counterintuitive” it was based on the law. He declined further comment.

“It bothers me to see a mother that’s heartbroken, and I have to explain the law to her,” Glaenzer said as McIlvain’s elderly mother sat silently stunned in the back of the courtroom; wondering how a cop can kill her son and face no repercussions.

Those who are tasked with upholding the law should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us, or at the very least, the same standard. However, as is the case the majority of the time, the blue line conceals a much lower set of standards.

All hope is not lost for McIlvain’s mother though, her attorney Michael Politis, said they have already begun the process for a civil lawsuit in this case. However, the unfortunate reality of the civil lawsuit is that the taxpayers will be held liable and not the man who killed her son.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-man-patrol-car-speeding-laptop-flexes-blue-privilege-charges/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 03, 2015, 03:58:19 PM
Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges

Port Orange, FL — On December 21, Port Orange Police Officer Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car at 15 mph above the posted speed limit when he struck and killed a motorcyclist.

Father of two and Navy Veteran, Andrew McIlvain, 39, was riding his motorcycle as Officer Portillo was looking down at his laptop on the way to a “non-priority” noise complaint. When Portillo looked up, it was too late, he was driving over this unsuspecting man.

Two weeks later, McIlvain succumbed to his severe injuries, and he died on January 4. The police even had the audacity to attempt to justify this officer’s reckless driving by releasing a statement that McIlvain didn’t have his driver’s license at the time of the crash — as if that is worthy of a death sentence.

All of this information was obtained by the Port Orange police during the process of their internal investigation. It is a matter of police record that Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car, was speeding, was distracted, and killed an innocent man. He was then suspended for ten days and ordered to attend an emergency vehicle operation course.

However, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, they could not legally prove those facts during Portillo’s hearing last week.

The debacle began as Portillo conveniently did not show up to his own hearing for the careless driving charge. This was likely an attempt to avoid a perjury charge if he was asked about driving the car that killed a man.

According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal:

    Portillo did not appear for the hearing before County Judge Angela Dempsey at the Courthouse Annex in Daytona Beach. Portillo’s attorney Martin White argued successfully that the police officer had not been identified as the driver of the squad car that struck McIlvain.

The FHP was responsible for an independent investigation of Portillo. Former FHP Trooper Robert Asbill interview him after the accident, however, he was conveniently absent that day as well. Even so, the FHP’s own report, prepared by Trooper Kurt Glaenzer listed Portillo as the driver of the patrol car!

“Because the defendant is not required to file an affidavit there is no evidence on the record to identify my client as the operator of that vehicle,” White said in a glaring misrepresentation of the truth.

“Your Honor, we move for a judgment of acquittal at this junction,” White said. “There’s been no identification that my client was driving behind the wheel. The state did not establish venue.”

“Judgment of acquittal is granted,” Dempsey said.

This entire dog and pony show wasn’t about whether or not to charge Portillo with manslaughter; it was only about a $166 careless driving ticket. Had Portillo received that ticket for careless driving, however, he could have been subject Florida state law 782.071 for vehicular homicide.

Instead, Portillo will escape all accountability.

Because of his negligence, Silvio Portillo killed an innocent man. And, because of the corruption and unwillingness of the supposed “justice” system to prosecute their own, no one will be held responsible for this loss of life.

Talking to the Journal, White said that while the argument that it could not be proven that Portillo was driving the patrol car might seem “counterintuitive” it was based on the law. He declined further comment.

“It bothers me to see a mother that’s heartbroken, and I have to explain the law to her,” Glaenzer said as McIlvain’s elderly mother sat silently stunned in the back of the courtroom; wondering how a cop can kill her son and face no repercussions.

Those who are tasked with upholding the law should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us, or at the very least, the same standard. However, as is the case the majority of the time, the blue line conceals a much lower set of standards.

All hope is not lost for McIlvain’s mother though, her attorney Michael Politis, said they have already begun the process for a civil lawsuit in this case. However, the unfortunate reality of the civil lawsuit is that the taxpayers will be held liable and not the man who killed her son.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-man-patrol-car-speeding-laptop-flexes-blue-privilege-charges/

I wish I could say I'm shocked. In fact, I wish I could say this raised my eyebrows even a little. It doesn't. It's business as usual.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2015, 04:01:45 PM
'Enjoy Your Ride, Cuz We Sure Will!' Sign in Baltimore Police Transport Van Under Investigation

(http://static1.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2280291.1435926790!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_635/baltimore4n-3-web.jpg)

A sign inside a Baltimore police van that says "Enjoy your ride, cuz we sure will!" has sparked criticism in the wake of the death of Freddie Gray -- and the department has launched an internal investigation, according to officials.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/enjoy-ride-cuz-sign-baltimore-police-transport-van/story?id=32214404
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on July 03, 2015, 11:18:38 PM
Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges


we had a local cop kill a kid on bike going to school. 

The cop was going 15+ mph over limit, admitted it.  He was turning on laptop, admitted it.  He was in the middle of 2 lanes, admitted it. 

Killed a 15 year old on bike, on way to school.  And to this day, the cop is fighting the careless driving ticket, after being cleared of all charges except that ticket. 


Now, if I ran over a kid, and told the officer, "Look man, I was on the computer, speeding, and in both lanes, but I don't think I was careless..." my ass would be in prison. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 03, 2015, 11:29:52 PM

we had a local cop kill a kid on bike going to school. 

The cop was going 15+ mph over limit, admitted it.  He was turning on laptop, admitted it.  He was in the middle of 2 lanes, admitted it. 

Killed a 15 year old on bike, on way to school.  And to this day, the cop is fighting the careless driving ticket, after being cleared of all charges except that ticket. 


Now, if I ran over a kid, and told the officer, "Look man, I was on the computer, speeding, and in both lanes, but I don't think I was careless..." my ass would be in prison. 














Seriously.  :o
I Think If It was My Son He Ran Over & Killed
& got away With Zero Punishment
I Would Hunt The Fucker Down & Kill Him ( only Very Slowly).
How any one could think that was a unavoidable accident after
He admitted all of them things.

Had I done the same thing & admitted what he has........
My feet wouldn't touch the ground & I'd be Banged up for
A very long Time. And Very Rightly So.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on July 03, 2015, 11:33:29 PM
he couldn't deny it... the cop cars record everything.  Once caught on his computer, he said he was just adjusting the brightness, not playing on it.

It's sad, and they said the kid didn't have enough reflective on, and was wearing dark clothes.   But going 60+ in a 45, and not looking... that's pretty bad.    They blamed the kid a lot.  Slow-released info on friday news dumps.  But if cop is going 45 mph, and his eyes are on the road, that wreck doesn't happen.   Tragic, very sad.  Trying to avoid the lawsuit by fighting the careless driving ticket.  Sickening.  :(
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 03, 2015, 11:56:10 PM
he couldn't deny it... the cop cars record everything.  Once caught on his computer, he said he was just adjusting the brightness, not playing on it.

It's sad, and they said the kid didn't have enough reflective on, and was wearing dark clothes.   But going 60+ in a 45, and not looking... that's pretty bad.    They blamed the kid a lot.  Slow-released info on friday news dumps.  But if cop is going 45 mph, and his eyes are on the road, that wreck doesn't happen.   Tragic, very sad.  Trying to avoid the lawsuit by fighting the careless driving ticket.  Sickening.  :(













Yet again then it's proof of the system being Wrong & or Blinded by the 'He Is A Cop' Mentality.

Yes of course it was the young lads fault totally....
What did he Expect to Happen attacking the front of the Police Car while Riding His Bike.
He got what he deserved & Lets make his family pay for the repairs to said police car
& all The Trauma Caused To The very Conscientious Cop.  ::)
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 06, 2015, 10:16:31 AM
NYPD destroyed evidence that officers had wrongly summoned up to 850,000 people as it attempted to hit targets

Top chiefs deleted texts, emails and paperwork, class action suit claims
Frontline officers pressured to handout extra summonses while on duty
One text about low seat belt numbers told officer it was 'unacceptable'
Rising fears about number of summonses thrown out for lack of evidence

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3150858/NYPD-destroyed-evidence-officers-wrongly-summoned-850-000-people-attempted-secretly-boost-arrest-rate.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 07, 2015, 10:46:01 AM
NYPD destroyed evidence that officers had wrongly summoned up to 850,000 people as it attempted to hit targets

Top chiefs deleted texts, emails and paperwork, class action suit claims
Frontline officers pressured to handout extra summonses while on duty
One text about low seat belt numbers told officer it was 'unacceptable'
Rising fears about number of summonses thrown out for lack of evidence

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3150858/NYPD-destroyed-evidence-officers-wrongly-summoned-850-000-people-attempted-secretly-boost-arrest-rate.html

This is just horrible. Most people would be better of without the police.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 07, 2015, 11:32:02 AM
Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges

Port Orange, FL — On December 21, Port Orange Police Officer Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car at 15 mph above the posted speed limit when he struck and killed a motorcyclist.

Father of two and Navy Veteran, Andrew McIlvain, 39, was riding his motorcycle as Officer Portillo was looking down at his laptop on the way to a “non-priority” noise complaint. When Portillo looked up, it was too late, he was driving over this unsuspecting man.

Two weeks later, McIlvain succumbed to his severe injuries, and he died on January 4. The police even had the audacity to attempt to justify this officer’s reckless driving by releasing a statement that McIlvain didn’t have his driver’s license at the time of the crash — as if that is worthy of a death sentence.

All of this information was obtained by the Port Orange police during the process of their internal investigation. It is a matter of police record that Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car, was speeding, was distracted, and killed an innocent man. He was then suspended for ten days and ordered to attend an emergency vehicle operation course.

However, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, they could not legally prove those facts during Portillo’s hearing last week.

The debacle began as Portillo conveniently did not show up to his own hearing for the careless driving charge. This was likely an attempt to avoid a perjury charge if he was asked about driving the car that killed a man.

According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal:

    Portillo did not appear for the hearing before County Judge Angela Dempsey at the Courthouse Annex in Daytona Beach. Portillo’s attorney Martin White argued successfully that the police officer had not been identified as the driver of the squad car that struck McIlvain.

The FHP was responsible for an independent investigation of Portillo. Former FHP Trooper Robert Asbill interview him after the accident, however, he was conveniently absent that day as well. Even so, the FHP’s own report, prepared by Trooper Kurt Glaenzer listed Portillo as the driver of the patrol car!

“Because the defendant is not required to file an affidavit there is no evidence on the record to identify my client as the operator of that vehicle,” White said in a glaring misrepresentation of the truth.

“Your Honor, we move for a judgment of acquittal at this junction,” White said. “There’s been no identification that my client was driving behind the wheel. The state did not establish venue.”

“Judgment of acquittal is granted,” Dempsey said.

This entire dog and pony show wasn’t about whether or not to charge Portillo with manslaughter; it was only about a $166 careless driving ticket. Had Portillo received that ticket for careless driving, however, he could have been subject Florida state law 782.071 for vehicular homicide.

Instead, Portillo will escape all accountability.

Because of his negligence, Silvio Portillo killed an innocent man. And, because of the corruption and unwillingness of the supposed “justice” system to prosecute their own, no one will be held responsible for this loss of life.

Talking to the Journal, White said that while the argument that it could not be proven that Portillo was driving the patrol car might seem “counterintuitive” it was based on the law. He declined further comment.

“It bothers me to see a mother that’s heartbroken, and I have to explain the law to her,” Glaenzer said as McIlvain’s elderly mother sat silently stunned in the back of the courtroom; wondering how a cop can kill her son and face no repercussions.

Those who are tasked with upholding the law should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us, or at the very least, the same standard. However, as is the case the majority of the time, the blue line conceals a much lower set of standards.

All hope is not lost for McIlvain’s mother though, her attorney Michael Politis, said they have already begun the process for a civil lawsuit in this case. However, the unfortunate reality of the civil lawsuit is that the taxpayers will be held liable and not the man who killed her son.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-man-patrol-car-speeding-laptop-flexes-blue-privilege-charges/




Wow.  Words really can't describe just how disgusting that is.

But hey, there's no systemic issues in policing.  It's just the one-off bad apple.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 08, 2015, 02:57:09 PM
Another brave cop "feared for his life"...

Lawsuit claims NYPD cops smashed autistic teen’s head into sidewalk and punched him when he 'failed to make eye contact'


Troy Canales was standing outside his home in The Bronx in November 2014 when two cops asked him what he was doing
Federal lawsuit filed on behalf of the 18-year-old claims officers threw him to the ground, smashed his head against concrete and punched him
Canales' mother told cops her son was autistic but they arrested him anyway
Canales was released an hour later without any charges after a police captain apologized to his mother saying 'things like this happen'
Alyson Valentine believes her son's difficulty making eye contact with strangers may have raised alarm with cops
One of the arresting officers said he 'feared for his life' while talking to the 17-year-old


According to the court papers, the NYPD provided no explanation as to why Troy Canales was beaten up and detained beyond claiming that one of the arresting officers 'feared for his life' while talking to the 17-year-old on the evening of November 12, 2014.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3153971/Lawsuit-claims-NYPD-cops-smashed-autistic-teen-s-head-sidewalk-punched-failed-make-eye-contact.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 08, 2015, 02:59:54 PM



Wow.  Words really can't describe just how disgusting that is.

But hey, there's no systemic issues in policing.  It's just the one-off bad apple.  ::)



It seems probable that he got some advice from his local goons police union.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 08, 2015, 05:22:30 PM
Another brave cop "feared for his life"...

Lawsuit claims NYPD cops smashed autistic teen’s head into sidewalk and punched him when he 'failed to make eye contact'


Troy Canales was standing outside his home in The Bronx in November 2014 when two cops asked him what he was doing
Federal lawsuit filed on behalf of the 18-year-old claims officers threw him to the ground, smashed his head against concrete and punched him
Canales' mother told cops her son was autistic but they arrested him anyway
Canales was released an hour later without any charges after a police captain apologized to his mother saying 'things like this happen'
Alyson Valentine believes her son's difficulty making eye contact with strangers may have raised alarm with cops
One of the arresting officers said he 'feared for his life' while talking to the 17-year-old


According to the court papers, the NYPD provided no explanation as to why Troy Canales was beaten up and detained beyond claiming that one of the arresting officers 'feared for his life' while talking to the 17-year-old on the evening of November 12, 2014.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3153971/Lawsuit-claims-NYPD-cops-smashed-autistic-teen-s-head-sidewalk-punched-failed-make-eye-contact.html

Cue Agnostic007 to school us on how "action is better than reaction" and all that jazz...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 09, 2015, 11:30:22 AM
Cue Agnostic007 to school us on how "action is better than reaction" and all that jazz...

Agnostic "We've heard one side of the story so far. IF their story is shown to be accurate during trial then it's atrocious behavior from the police and they should be fired, and applicable charges filed against them. "
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: polychronopolous on July 09, 2015, 11:32:15 AM
Agnostic "We've heard one side of the story so far. IF their story is shown to be accurate during trial then it's atrocious behavior from the police and they should be fired, and applicable charges filed against them. "

After all the shit the police have heaped onto the general public for so many years maybe they deserve alot of this backlash that is coming their way.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 09, 2015, 11:41:59 AM
After all the shit the police have heaped onto the general public for so many years maybe they deserve alot of this backlash that is coming their way.

While I see where you are coming from, I disagree about deserving backlash. Granted, there have been instances and there will be instances of police officers screwing the pooch. Sometimes in a big way as in criminal, sometimes ethical and sometimes stupid/poor judgment. But at the same time there is a vast majority of officers that are out there doing what most would consider is a tough job at best under often times crappy circumstances, and in many cases, for little compensation. Now you can say "Well, no one held a gun to their heads" and you would be correct. Many like myself went into the profession because we always wanted to, and we liked helping people and catching bad guys.
I don't think the answer at this point is to heap backlash upon the entire police community for the acts of a small percentage. I think it's counterproductive in the long run. I DO agree the police can and should do a better job of policing themselves and re-building the trust when it's clearly shown one of their own f*ked up.  
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on July 09, 2015, 12:49:34 PM
NYPD destroyed evidence that officers had wrongly summoned up to 850,000 people as it attempted to hit targets

Top chiefs deleted texts, emails and paperwork, class action suit claims
Frontline officers pressured to handout extra summonses while on duty
One text about low seat belt numbers told officer it was 'unacceptable'
Rising fears about number of summonses thrown out for lack of evidence

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3150858/NYPD-destroyed-evidence-officers-wrongly-summoned-850-000-people-attempted-secretly-boost-arrest-rate.html

fvckers should be in jail for that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 09, 2015, 03:31:25 PM
1. While I see where you are coming from, I disagree about deserving backlash. Granted, there have been instances and there will be instances of police officers screwing the pooch. Sometimes in a big way as in criminal, sometimes ethical and sometimes stupid/poor judgment. But at the same time there is a vast majority of officers that are out there doing what most would consider is a tough job at best under often times crappy circumstances, and in many cases, for little compensation. Now you can say "Well, no one held a gun to their heads" and you would be correct. Many like myself went into the profession because we always wanted to, and we liked helping people and catching bad guys.

2. I don't think the answer at this point is to heap backlash upon the entire police community for the acts of a small percentage. I think it's counterproductive in the long run.
3. I DO agree the police can and should do a better job of policing themselves and re-building the trust when it's clearly shown one of their own f*ked up.  














Good to see you are accepting (if trying to minimise, as you would.) There is Big Problems
Within the Police Service from Top to Bottom.

1 & 2. That's akin to what is happening to Muslims Now.
Clearly they are not all evil murdering scumbags.
Only the ones doing the killings etc are attracting so much Bad publicity,
And sadly the vast majority of other Muslims either remain silent &
Won't come out & condemn those for doing such Atrocities.
Backlash is inevitable under those circumstances.

3. It's fair to say the police are woefully inadequate at policing themselves.
Just as in any other field of work , you cannot have them policing each other
And expect it to be fair & unbiased.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 09, 2015, 04:10:03 PM
Agnostic "We've heard one side of the story so far. IF their story is shown to be accurate during trial then it's atrocious behavior from the police and they should be fired, and applicable charges filed against them. "

What about the other story posted, about the cop who was looking at this computer and killed a kid? You know, the cop whose attorney "successfully" argued that his client hadn't been identified as the driver, despite an FHP report that listed him as the driver?

That thin blue line is a lane or two wide...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 09, 2015, 05:20:42 PM













Good to see you are accepting (if trying to minimise, as you would.) There is Big Problems
Within the Police Service from Top to Bottom.

1 & 2. That's akin to what is happening to Muslims Now.
Clearly they are not all evil murdering scumbags.
Only the ones doing the killings etc are attracting so much Bad publicity,
And sadly the vast majority of other Muslims either remain silent &
Won't come out & condemn those for doing such Atrocities.
Backlash is inevitable under those circumstances.

3. It's fair to say the police are woefully inadequate at policing themselves.
Just as in any other field of work , you cannot have them policing each other
And expect it to be fair & unbiased.




Excellent points as usual.  I would add that Backlash needs to be positive.  Giving cops the finger just isn't productive and kind of a dick move IMO.  Attacking the issue via political leaders, elections, changes to the law, changes to the courts, changes in hiring practices etc., is what is really needed.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 11, 2015, 01:52:50 PM



Excellent points as usual.  I would add that Backlash needs to be positive.  Giving cops the finger just isn't productive and kind of a dick move IMO.  Attacking the issue via political leaders, elections, changes to the law, changes to the courts, changes in hiring practices etc., is what is really needed.


[/quote)













Yes well said. That is how it should be sorted out.

And yes giving the finger is probably not the best thing to do,
Inevitably the continued bad policing & cover ups, lack of real
& proper investigations & punishments is likely to lead to
Heightened frustrations, lack of confidence & respect.
Hence the bad behaviour & people taking matters into their
Own hands.
Not Good.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Nirvana on July 11, 2015, 04:08:38 PM
I am an upstanding, tax paying citizen. My driving record is immaculate.  I don't speed (or at least don't drive recklessly) and have never been in a wreck (which I also consider to be great luck as well). I have never gotten a ticket for bad driving in any form, only for petty things like dead tag (car wouldn't pass emissions yet diesel trucks from the 70's are allowed on the road), only one functioning headlight (meanwhile a motorcycle goes by doing 100) and the usual "you went left of center, have you been drinking?" (no officer I don't go "left of center" when I have a cop behind me) bullshit.

In 6 years I have been blue-lighted at least 18 times.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 12, 2015, 05:11:15 AM
How many people has to die before someone stands up to the murderers?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: andreisdaman on July 12, 2015, 09:52:05 AM
How many black people has to die before someone stands up to the murderers?

fixed for the undeniable truth
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: James28 on July 12, 2015, 10:24:19 AM
How many people has to die before someone stands up to the murderers?

Why is it that some people, like myself for instance, NEVER have any issues with the police? I've been pulled over countless times, stopped and searched and even been arrested, yet they've remained polite and civil the whole time. Is it because I was polite and civil straight off the bat? You have mouthy stupid c'unts shooting off - anything can happen.

Seriously, I've had dealings with the cops well over 20-30 times throughout my life. It's always been a pleasant experience, even when I was arrested (for pissing in public). Changes are I would've attracted a bad apple seeing they're now suddenly all bad.

Methinks the people are getting worse. More stupid and ugly, more entitled, more rude. They're only responding in kind.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on July 12, 2015, 05:01:45 PM
I am an upstanding, tax paying citizen. My driving record is immaculate.  I don't speed (or at least don't drive recklessly) and have never been in a wreck (which I also consider to be great luck as well). I have never gotten a ticket for bad driving in any form, only for petty things like dead tag (car wouldn't pass emissions yet diesel trucks from the 70's are allowed on the road), only one functioning headlight (meanwhile a motorcycle goes by doing 100) and the usual "you went left of center, have you been drinking?" (no officer I don't go "left of center" when I have a cop behind me) bullshit.

In 6 years I have been blue-lighted at least 18 times.



What kind of car do you drive?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 13, 2015, 04:35:15 AM
Why is it that some people, like myself for instance, NEVER have any issues with the police? I've been pulled over countless times, stopped and searched and even been arrested, yet they've remained polite and civil the whole time. Is it because I was polite and civil straight off the bat? You have mouthy stupid c'unts shooting off - anything can happen.

Seriously, I've had dealings with the cops well over 20-30 times throughout my life. It's always been a pleasant experience, even when I was arrested (for pissing in public). Changes are I would've attracted a bad apple seeing they're now suddenly all bad.

Methinks the people are getting worse. More stupid and ugly, more entitled, more rude. They're only responding in kind.

Responding in kind by shooting innocent people, manipulating evidence and even when called on it walks.

Consider yourself lucky. The fact that something has not happened to you doesnt mean it doesnt happen to others.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 13, 2015, 04:51:01 AM
Quote from: James28 on 12-07-2015, 18:24:19
Why is it that some people, like myself for instance, NEVER have any issues with the police? I've been pulled over countless times, stopped and searched and even been arrested, yet they've remained polite and civil the whole time. Is it because I was polite and civil straight off the bat? You have mouthy stupid c'unts shooting off - anything can happen.

Seriously, I've had dealings with the cops well over 20-30 times throughout my life. It's always been a pleasant experience, even when I was arrested (for pissing in public). Changes are I would've attracted a bad apple seeing they're now suddenly all bad.

Methinks the people are getting worse. More stupid and ugly, more entitled, more rude. They're only responding in kind.

I
Responding in kind by shooting innocent people, manipulating evidence and even when called on it walks.

Consider yourself lucky. The fact that something has not happened to you doesnt mean it doesnt happen to others.












James makes some good points in his post.
Thankfully he has not had any problems with the cops who he has had contact with,
This is how IT Should Be.

Everything Whork says is Also Very True.
And Happening Every single Day.
People should Not Be Losing Their Lives to Cops least of all over very trivial incidents
Plus the lying,covering up, etc there is Zero Excuse for that.

There other jobs where people encounter other people in sometimes similar circumstances
To cops, people with bad attitudes etc.
Yet Rarely do you hear of them Killing these types Of people they encounter.

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 13, 2015, 07:17:34 AM













Good to see you are accepting (if trying to minimise, as you would.) There is Big Problems
Within the Police Service from Top to Bottom.

1 & 2. That's akin to what is happening to Muslims Now.
Clearly they are not all evil murdering scumbags.
Only the ones doing the killings etc are attracting so much Bad publicity,
And sadly the vast majority of other Muslims either remain silent &
Won't come out & condemn those for doing such Atrocities.
Backlash is inevitable under those circumstances.

3. It's fair to say the police are woefully inadequate at policing themselves.
Just as in any other field of work , you cannot have them policing each other
And expect it to be fair & unbiased.

We have an Office of the Police Monitor that work alongside Internal Affairs to insure fairness. They are comprised of civilians. That is as good as it's going to get. I believe you need police input in policing police because there are times when the average civilian with a lack of training, experience and knowledge of laws and policies just isn't the best person to review the case. I've seen too many times on this board alone people concluding with a ridiculous statement what they think the officer should have done. I also get that there needs to be the civilian oversight to ensure we are taking that perspective into account and it alleviates the perception we are secretly sweeping things under the rug. And the police need to do a better job of making the information available within the limits of privacy laws. We work for the citizens, I've never understood why there is a need to not disclose information that is not connected with an ongoing investigation.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 13, 2015, 07:24:34 AM
What about the other story posted, about the cop who was looking at this computer and killed a kid? You know, the cop whose attorney "successfully" argued that his client hadn't been identified as the driver, despite an FHP report that listed him as the driver?

That thin blue line is a lane or two wide...

I've been frustrated many times by legal loopholes and technicalities when testifying in court or watching court cases where there is clear guilt. It works both ways. You could argue the justice system has a "Thin blue line" with criminals by that yard stick. I think it sucks, I think its an ethical issue at best that the officer doesn't up that he was driving. It's a dilemma; Officers are afforded the same legal rights as citizens with some additional protections due to the nature of their job. If they use the same legal protections a citizen uses it's labeled a conspiracy. On the other hand, should officer, who are commissioned to protect and uphold the laws, be expected to set an example face the consequences of their actions by forgoing their civil protections? For me, I would own my mistake and let the chips fall where they may. I would not use that loophole. I would hope for the best in sentencing but I'm not going to play the system.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 13, 2015, 07:25:29 AM



Excellent points as usual.  I would add that Backlash needs to be positive.  Giving cops the finger just isn't productive and kind of a dick move IMO.  Attacking the issue via political leaders, elections, changes to the law, changes to the courts, changes in hiring practices etc., is what is really needed.



Good post
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 13, 2015, 12:01:23 PM
I've been frustrated many times by legal loopholes and technicalities when testifying in court or watching court cases where there is clear guilt. It works both ways. You could argue the justice system has a "Thin blue line" with criminals by that yard stick. I think it sucks, I think its an ethical issue at best that the officer doesn't up that he was driving. It's a dilemma; Officers are afforded the same legal rights as citizens with some additional protections due to the nature of their job. If they use the same legal protections a citizen uses it's labeled a conspiracy. On the other hand, should officer, who are commissioned to protect and uphold the laws, be expected to set an example face the consequences of their actions by forgoing their civil protections? For me, I would own my mistake and let the chips fall where they may. I would not use that loophole. I would hope for the best in sentencing but I'm not going to play the system.

No, it's not a conspiracy. I'm perfectly fine with the Officer asserting his Constitutional right to not incriminate himself or to be forced to testify. When he's NOT ON THE JOB. He was on duty, driving his cruiser, doing "police business". But even if we assume that he should still be able to assert his right to not incriminate himself and can't be forced to testify, one question remains: what's the excuse for the other cop who didn't come to testify?
 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Primemuscle on July 13, 2015, 12:03:48 PM
Quote from: James28 on 12-07-2015, 18:24:19
Why is it that some people, like myself for instance, NEVER have any issues with the police? I've been pulled over countless times, stopped and searched and even been arrested, yet they've remained polite and civil the whole time. Is it because I was polite and civil straight off the bat? You have mouthy stupid c'unts shooting off - anything can happen.

Seriously, I've had dealings with the cops well over 20-30 times throughout my life. It's always been a pleasant experience, even when I was arrested (for pissing in public). Changes are I would've attracted a bad apple seeing they're now suddenly all bad.

Methinks the people are getting worse. More stupid and ugly, more entitled, more rude. They're only responding in kind.


There have been several instances of police brutality in Portland, OR where the victims had serious mental/emotional disorders such as schizophrenia. Things started getting worse once we decided to mainstream the mentally ill without providing them any resources to survive except on the streets. Drugs also play a role. Whereas alcohol which has been a longtime choice for substance abuse is basically a depressant, some of the street drugs today make people superhuman and very unpredictable. It's a crazy world out there.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 13, 2015, 12:30:49 PM
No, it's not a conspiracy. I'm perfectly fine with the Officer asserting his Constitutional right to not incriminate himself or to be forced to testify. When he's NOT ON THE JOB. He was on duty, driving his cruiser, doing "police business". But even if we assume that he should still be able to assert his right to not incriminate himself and can't be forced to testify, one question remains: what's the excuse for the other cop who didn't come to testify?
 

Could be a number of legitimate reasons, or it could be unscrupulous. The court hearing was for a traffic ticket. Our officers are required to make their court appearances for traffic tickets unless there is reason for not making it to court. then it is reviewed by their supervisor. If it is not valid, they are disciplined. The most common reason is  they are tied up on a call and can't break. This is not unusual as it is unpredictable how long a particular dispatched call will take. We do everything we can to relieve the officer but often times there are no units available to relieve them. Short of that, unless on vacation (they should have filed a motion for continuance) they will be there. This particular case is a travesty. The FHP report has the officer listed as the driver. If the FHP Officer was needed to make the case in addition to the filed police report the prosecutor should have called for a continuance. In a case as important as this, that should have been done. I'm not a lawyer, but I think that is within their right to request. I think this smells... and justice which is what court us SUPPOSED to be about, was not served that day
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 13, 2015, 01:51:14 PM
Could be a number of legitimate reasons, or it could be unscrupulous. The court hearing was for a traffic ticket. Our officers are required to make their court appearances for traffic tickets unless there is reason for not making it to court. then it is reviewed by their supervisor. If it is not valid, they are disciplined. The most common reason is  they are tied up on a call and can't break. This is not unusual as it is unpredictable how long a particular dispatched call will take. We do everything we can to relieve the officer but often times there are no units available to relieve them. Short of that, unless on vacation (they should have filed a motion for continuance) they will be there. This particular case is a travesty. The FHP report has the officer listed as the driver. If the FHP Officer was needed to make the case in addition to the filed police report the prosecutor should have called for a continuance. In a case as important as this, that should have been done. I'm not a lawyer, but I think that is within their right to request. I think this smells... and justice which is what court us SUPPOSED to be about, was not served that day

This!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 13, 2015, 02:41:27 PM
This!

Agree!
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 13, 2015, 02:44:42 PM
We have an Office of the Police Monitor that work alongside Internal Affairs to insure fairness.
2. They are comprised of civilians. That is as good as it's going to get.
I believe you need police input in policing police because there are times when the average civilian with a lack of training, experience and knowledge of laws and policies just isn't the best person to review the case.
3. I've seen too many times on this board alone people concluding with a ridiculous statement what they think the officer should have done.
4. I also get that there needs to be the civilian oversight to ensure we are taking that perspective into account and it alleviates the perception we are secretly sweeping things under the rug. And the police need to do a better job of making the information available within the limits of privacy laws.
5. We work for the citizens, I've never understood why there is a need to not disclose information that is not connected with an ongoing investigation.   














Thanks for your reply.
Though... 1,it didn't address the issues raised.

2. Yes it definitely needs outside supervision.
Your statement. 'That's as good as it's going to get' ?? Why is it.
If everyone thought like that there would not be any progress in life / society.
We wouldn't have evolved the wheel wouldn't of been invented.
That's closed mind thinking.

3. Yes we have.
We have also seen the on this board & in the news
The ridiculous & lethal consequences of irrational & idiotic police
Rational. Which you failed to comment on.

4. Correct.
Sadly Though we do see the evidence of police sweeping things
Under the carpet when it comes to matters concerning themselves.

5. Well said. You do work for the citizens.
A good number of your colleagues around the country
Would do well keep that at the forefront of their minds.

😉 👍🏻

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 13, 2015, 06:47:27 PM













Thanks for your reply.
Though... 1,it didn't address the issues raised.

2. Yes it definitely needs outside supervision.
Your statement. 'That's as good as it's going to get' ?? Why is it.
If everyone thought like that there would not be any progress in life / society.
We wouldn't have evolved the wheel wouldn't of been invented.
That's closed mind thinking.

3. Yes we have.
We have also seen the on this board & in the news
The ridiculous & lethal consequences of irrational & idiotic police
Rational. Which you failed to comment on.

4. Correct.
Sadly Though we do see the evidence of police sweeping things
Under the carpet when it comes to matters concerning themselves.

5. Well said. You do work for the citizens.
A good number of your colleagues around the country
Would do well keep that at the forefront of their minds.

😉 👍🏻





Spot on again!

The Civilian Review Boards in my area are nothing but recommendations.  That can't actually effect discipline, policy changes, etc.  It should be the exact opposite of what he's advocating.  Civilians should always control and dictate to the cops and the cops should provide recommendations based on their knowledge, experience, etc.

Problem is, the public at large is woefully apathetic.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 14, 2015, 11:32:55 AM


Spot on again!

The Civilian Review Boards in my area are nothing but recommendations.  That can't actually effect discipline, policy changes, etc.  It should be the exact opposite of what he's advocating.  Civilians should always control and dictate to the cops and the cops should provide recommendations based on their knowledge, experience, etc.

Problem is, the public at large is woefully apathetic.



We'll always disagree on the point of who makes the final decision.. I'd quit today if my career hinged on the decisions of civilians. I could work with a group of former police officers turned monitors. Trust me, if I was a citizen with no police experience I would think just the same way, "why can't citizens review incidents and allegations and come to the right conclusion? The police must be hiding something if they won't allow that" But the truth is the average citizen just doesn't have the required knowledge, background, training and experience to make the tough calls. We can all agree the Rodney King beating was horrible. We can all agree that the officer shooting the guy in the back running away was excessive to say the least, there are those cases where a 5 yr old can tell you it's wrong. I'm talking about the ones that aren't clear cut and without that background, knowledge, experience and training, would conclude the wrong answer.  We're just going to have to agree to disagree on that
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 14, 2015, 05:01:33 PM
We'll always disagree on the point of who makes the final decision.. I'd quit today if my career hinged on the decisions of civilians. I could work with a group of former police officers turned monitors. Trust me, if I was a citizen with no police experience I would think just the same way, "why can't citizens review incidents and allegations and come to the right conclusion? The police must be hiding something if they won't allow that"

No. The police aren't in a position to allow or disallow anything. They're public servants who will do as they are told and operate within the framework setup by their bosses: the public. If they don't like working under those terms then they should quit.


But the truth is the average citizen just doesn't have the required knowledge, background, training and experience to make the tough calls.

Of course. I lack the knowledge, background, training and experience to shove guns in people's mouths (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/08/28/police-commander-accused-of-assault-to-be-released-on-own-recognizance/), throw flashbangs into cribs (http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/us/georgia-toddler-stun-grenade-no-indictment/), shoot sleeping seven year old girl in the head (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/aiyana-stanley-jones-raid/), smash people's phones because they contain recording of a shoot-out (http://www.businessinsider.com/police-shoot-miami-man-100-times-video-2011-6), severely injure inmates (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/) or people in custody (http://reason.com/blog/2015/05/13/want-to-see-police-kill-a-drunk-in-custo), cause almost fatal car crash and have the victim arrested and charged (http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/) and I could go on, but frankly I'm getting sick to my stomach.

The notion that the average citizen can't be trusted to evaluate an incident involving the police is bullshit. The average citizen knows that cops have a difficult job and knows accidents happen. But the average citizen can also see through bullshit, which is what you are afraid of. And one more thing: you claim that if it came down to a civilian reviewing your decisions you'd quit. But isn't that what happens anyways if you end up in Court? Your career hinges on what between 1 and 12 civilians will say.


We can all agree that the officer shooting the guy in the back running away was excessive to say the least, there are those cases where a 5 yr old can tell you it's wrong.

And yet, in many of those cases, police unions praise the officer and blame the victim (or use the victim's past history, or his circumstances, or any number of other factors) to whitewash the situation. And in many of those cases, nothing happens to the officers. Just to give you one example: I'm pretty sure a 5 year old would say that forcibly medicating someone repeatedly, making them defecate in front of you, x-raying him repeatedly and giving him a colonoscopy is wrong. And yet that's what happened to David Eckert and guess what? The cops that did this still on their job. (http://rt.com/usa/163428-nm-cops-jobs-anal-probes/)

So apparently there are things we can all agree are wrong, except... we apparently disagree when it comes time to agree.


I'm talking about the ones that aren't clear cut and without that background, knowledge, experience and training, would conclude the wrong answer.  We're just going to have to agree to disagree on that

It's always easy to hide behind the "you can't judge what I do until you've walked a mile in my shoes." Bullshit. You (not you specifically - just being general) just don't want to be judged because you think you're above it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 14, 2015, 05:19:35 PM
No. The police aren't in a position to allow or disallow anything. They're public servants who will do as they are told and operate within the framework setup by their bosses: the public. If they don't like working under those terms then they should quit.


Of course. I lack the knowledge, background, training and experience to shove guns in people's mouths (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/08/28/police-commander-accused-of-assault-to-be-released-on-own-recognizance/), throw flashbangs into cribs (http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/us/georgia-toddler-stun-grenade-no-indictment/), shoot sleeping seven year old girl in the head (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/aiyana-stanley-jones-raid/), smash people's phones because they contain recording of a shoot-out (http://www.businessinsider.com/police-shoot-miami-man-100-times-video-2011-6), severely injure inmates (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/) or people in custody (http://reason.com/blog/2015/05/13/want-to-see-police-kill-a-drunk-in-custo), cause almost fatal car crash and have the victim arrested and charged (http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/) and I could go on, but frankly I'm getting sick to my stomach.

The notion that the average citizen can't be trusted to evaluate an incident involving the police is bullshit. The average citizen knows that cops have a difficult job and knows accidents happen. But the average citizen can also see through bullshit, which is what you are afraid of. And one more thing: you claim that if it came down to a civilian reviewing your decisions you'd quit. But isn't that what happens anyways if you end up in Court? Your career hinges on what between 1 and 12 civilians will say.


And yet, in many of those cases, police unions praise the officer and blame the victim (or use the victim's past history, or his circumstances, or any number of other factors) to whitewash the situation. And in many of those cases, nothing happens to the officers. Just to give you one example: I'm pretty sure a 5 year old would say that forcibly medicating someone repeatedly, making them defecate in front of you, x-raying him repeatedly and giving him a colonoscopy is wrong. And yet that's what happened to David Eckert and guess what? The cops that did this still on their job. (http://rt.com/usa/163428-nm-cops-jobs-anal-probes/)

So apparently there are things we can all agree are wrong, except... we apparently disagree when it comes time to agree.


It's always easy to hide behind the "you can't judge what I do until you've walked a mile in my shoes." Bullshit. You (not you specifically - just being general) just don't want to be judged because you think you're above it.



I refuse to admit this post sums things up PERFECTLY.
































Ok...I admit it.











I have nothing to offer.  I am ashamed.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 14, 2015, 10:03:10 PM
Agnostic007
I have to say Agnostic you are clearly showing the signs of thinking you are Better than us.
us being the public.
you are employed by the public & answer to the public.

Yet again you answered a reply to my post & not addressed my points.

Avxo's  reply 2355 does sum it up very very well.

You keep hiding behind The public don't know / can't make the right decisions, What like all cops
Are of Superior intelligence....No, are they even average intelligence judging by the actions we
Keep hearing of I doubt it.

And just like you & every other cop the Public would very soon learn.
Any points of law could be explained by a lawyer, barrister , judge, or professor of law.

What are you afraid of, ?? (& Cops in general)
Is it not being able to hide behind the Police Badge, & to be fully accountable & punishable for their lying, beating, evidence destroying, inhumane treatment, bad driving, & murdering.

It appears the police are seriously afraid of not having the Deck stacked in their favour.

I wish you well as change will happen.

Your statement  'That's as Good as it Going to get' is not only Offensive to me it show your contempt for the public & either resistance or inability to Accept Things are Very Very Wrong From Top to Bottom With Policing and changes need happen sooner rather than later.



I do give you that you at least come on here & fight the police corner.
And try to offer explanations & answers to most posts.
 :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 07:35:19 AM
No. The police aren't in a position to allow or disallow anything. They're public servants who will do as they are told and operate within the framework setup by their bosses: the public. If they don't like working under those terms then they should quit.


Of course. I lack the knowledge, background, training and experience to shove guns in people's mouths (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/08/28/police-commander-accused-of-assault-to-be-released-on-own-recognizance/), throw flashbangs into cribs (http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/us/georgia-toddler-stun-grenade-no-indictment/), shoot sleeping seven year old girl in the head (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/aiyana-stanley-jones-raid/), smash people's phones because they contain recording of a shoot-out (http://www.businessinsider.com/police-shoot-miami-man-100-times-video-2011-6), severely injure inmates (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/) or people in custody (http://reason.com/blog/2015/05/13/want-to-see-police-kill-a-drunk-in-custo), cause almost fatal car crash and have the victim arrested and charged (http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/) and I could go on, but frankly I'm getting sick to my stomach.

The notion that the average citizen can't be trusted to evaluate an incident involving the police is bullshit. The average citizen knows that cops have a difficult job and knows accidents happen. But the average citizen can also see through bullshit, which is what you are afraid of. And one more thing: you claim that if it came down to a civilian reviewing your decisions you'd quit. But isn't that what happens anyways if you end up in Court? Your career hinges on what between 1 and 12 civilians will say.


And yet, in many of those cases, police unions praise the officer and blame the victim (or use the victim's past history, or his circumstances, or any number of other factors) to whitewash the situation. And in many of those cases, nothing happens to the officers. Just to give you one example: I'm pretty sure a 5 year old would say that forcibly medicating someone repeatedly, making them defecate in front of you, x-raying him repeatedly and giving him a colonoscopy is wrong. And yet that's what happened to David Eckert and guess what? The cops that did this still on their job. (http://rt.com/usa/163428-nm-cops-jobs-anal-probes/)

So apparently there are things we can all agree are wrong, except... we apparently disagree when it comes time to agree.


It's always easy to hide behind the "you can't judge what I do until you've walked a mile in my shoes." Bullshit. You (not you specifically - just being general) just don't want to be judged because you think you're above it.

Like I said, we'll just have to disagree
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 07:38:33 AM
Agnostic007
I have to say Agnostic you are clearly showing the signs of thinking you are Better than us.
us being the public.
you are employed by the public & answer to the public.

Yet again you answered a reply to my post & not addressed my points.

Avxo's  reply 2355 does sum it up very very well.

You keep hiding behind The public don't know / can't make the right decisions, What like all cops
Are of Superior intelligence....No, are they even average intelligence judging by the actions we
Keep hearing of I doubt it.

And just like you & every other cop the Public would very soon learn.
Any points of law could be explained by a lawyer, barrister , judge, or professor of law.

What are you afraid of, ?? (& Cops in general)
Is it not being able to hide behind the Police Badge, & to be fully accountable & punishable for their lying, beating, evidence destroying, inhumane treatment, bad driving, & murdering.

It appears the police are seriously afraid of not having the Deck stacked in their favour.

I wish you well as change will happen.

Your statement  'That's as Good as it Going to get' is not only Offensive to me it show your contempt for the public & either resistance or inability to Accept Things are Very Very Wrong From Top to Bottom With Policing and changes need happen sooner rather than later.



I do give you that you at least come on here & fight the police corner.
And try to offer explanations & answers to most posts.
 :)

Can't help that you feel that way. I wouldn't begin to tell a certified mechanic how to diagnose an engine problem.. I don't have the training, experience etc. Civilians don't sit on Doctor review panels, they have other doctors and people in that field sit on them, for the same reason. I'm not equating policing to brain surgery, I am saying it's a specialized occupation. If that comes across as "better than you" sorry
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 15, 2015, 08:21:04 AM
We'll always disagree on the point of who makes the final decision.. I'd quit today if my career hinged on the decisions of civilians. I could work with a group of former police officers turned monitors. Trust me, if I was a citizen with no police experience I would think just the same way, "why can't citizens review incidents and allegations and come to the right conclusion? The police must be hiding something if they won't allow that" But the truth is the average citizen just doesn't have the required knowledge, background, training and experience to make the tough calls. We can all agree the Rodney King beating was horrible. We can all agree that the officer shooting the guy in the back running away was excessive to say the least, there are those cases where a 5 yr old can tell you it's wrong. I'm talking about the ones that aren't clear cut and without that background, knowledge, experience and training, would conclude the wrong answer.  We're just going to have to agree to disagree on that

You arrest people all day, put them in jail so they can be judged by a jury of civilians.

Yet civilians is not worthy of judging you ???

This is hypocracy and shows an "us vs them" mentality that is rampant in the police force.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 08:24:57 AM
You arrest people all day, put them in jail so they can be judged by a jury of civilians.

Yet civilians is not worthy of judging you ???

This is hypocracy and shows an "us vs them" mentality that is rampant in the police force.

I suppose doctors and mechanics and airline pilots and just about any profession you can imagine with specialized training have an "us v them" mentality
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 08:27:39 AM
You arrest people all day, put them in jail so they can be judged by a jury of civilians.

Yet civilians is not worthy of judging you ???

This is hypocracy and shows an "us vs them" mentality that is rampant in the police force.

Whork, it's not about "judging me" its about do they have the information, training, experience, knowledge and back ground to determine if the force used during that particular incident was within policy, the law and reason. I have not been too reassured that they are the best source for that given the comments I see on certain incidents. I understand you disagree.. that's fine.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2015, 09:11:27 AM
Aren't civilian review panels supposed to review the relevant laws and policies and how they were (or not) applied to a particular case? Similar to a jury (where the careers-and lives-of all us can hinge on the decisions of -gasp- civilians). And in some panels, the decisions (or recommendations) have no effect on the cops or the PD/SD (contrary to what a cop can do: detain or arrest even for bogus reasons only to have the charges dropped).

While lowly scum citizens can't see it, an officer with a Doctorate in Policing can discern the danger that hides behind the fragile facade of a 90 year old lady in her walker that makes even seasoned officers fear for their lives. And for all the "citizens just don't know" argument, one could also say about cops serving in these panels that they protect their ilk, they're union goons, have conflict of interest etc. Citizens (with no connections to law enforcement) should have participation in police overview panels.
(http://www.madaboutmemes.com/uploads/memes/144.png)

The whole "police officers would quit if they had to suffer actual consequences when they mess up, face the same treatment as citizens, pay out of their pockets instead of making taxpayers pay, be transparent and accountable" just shows that while they are doing an often dangerous job, they don't want to be held accountable and to the same standards as others.

Oh while we're at it: "When a cop shows up, you're not the one in charge, I don't care if it's your house":

VIDEO: Cops Illegally Break into Innocent Woman’s Home While She’s Naked, Assault and Arrest Her

Chandler, AZ — In March, Esmeralda Rossi was in the shower when two cops came to the door.

“I was in the shower,” Rossi said. “My daughter came to the shower and said there are two officers at the door. So I just grabbed a towel.”

Rossi had committed no crime, the police had no warrant, and they were only responding to a call about an argument between her and her estranged husband. However, these cops acted like they were raiding the home of a mass murderer.

Upon answering the door, Rossi was met by two police officers as she stood there in a towel. Not wanted to be gawked at while naked by two strangers, Rossi turned around to go put on some clothes.

“It made me very uncomfortable,” Rossi said. “So I closed the door. I turn to go into my living room, and I probably get about five steps in; and all of a sudden, I just hear boots running in after me, telling me stop or I’ll arrest you.”

At this point is when Rossi’s daughter and Rossi began filming.

Both officers illegally entered Rossi’s home, without probable cause. One of the officers, Doug Rose, then proceeded to assault Rossi.

As Rose attempts to illegally arrest this completely innocent woman, her completely nude body is exposed. But that did not stop this cop from continuing his assault.

“You have absolutely no clothes on?” this sex offending cop asks as he continues his attack. In the meantime, his partner stands idly by as he watches his fellow officer attack a naked woman.

Rossi was finally subdued by this monster and handcuffed, completely nude. However, she was never charged with a crime.

“This was not the proper treatment of a citizen,” said Marc Victor, Rossi’s attorney. “This was disgusting. This was barbaric.”

“Any one of us would be upset if a police officer barged into our homes without permission,” Victor said. “She had a right to be upset.”

According to ABC 15 News, after reviewing the incident, Chandler Police internal investigators determined Rose entered the home illegally and without probable cause. The investigation also determined that Rose didn’t document arresting or un-arresting the woman or the fact that she was naked.

Officer Rose was also wearing a body camera. However, it conveniently failed to record this particular interaction.


According to police records, Rose’s partner who contacted his supervisors to “raise questions about Rose’s actions,” was cleared of any wrongdoing.

Since the launch of the investigation, Rose retired which is likely a cautionary move to avoid additional charges.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-illegally-break-innocent-womans-home-naked-assault-arrest/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 15, 2015, 10:02:14 AM
I suppose doctors and mechanics and airline pilots and just about any profession you can imagine with specialized training have an "us v them" mentality


Maybe so but those people, if caught in a crime will get punished according to the law.

Cops can kill you, try to cover it up and still walk unlike the people you mentioned.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 15, 2015, 10:10:17 AM
Whork, it's not about "judging me" its about do they have the information, training, experience, knowledge and back ground to determine if the force used during that particular incident was within policy, the law and reason. I have not been too reassured that they are the best source for that given the comments I see on certain incidents. I understand you disagree.. that's fine.

Well that settles it then.

Just ignore all the dead people shoot by cops in this thread. As long as you feel assured.


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 02:20:35 PM
Well that settles it then.

Just ignore all the dead people shoot by cops in this thread. As long as you feel assured.




yep.. that's pretty much it
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 15, 2015, 02:44:38 PM
Agnostic 007.
Thank you for being good enough to come on here and argue you're points.

You come across as a reasoned & intelligent man.

I don't see how though you can keep trying to defend the indefensible
Clearly there are several other Reasoned & intelligent people on here
And they are making some very Good Factual Points.

None of us like to have our ideologies/ thoughts / beliefs questioned Let alone Proven Wrong.
Is this the case for you why you can't see or accept what others are saying.

As I have said before,  No 'this is not as good as its going to get' yet you have said it is.
I find very difficult To take on board & would dearly hope a serving policeman Would not & Should
not Have that Mind set & view point.

If that is a commonly held view by cops, (which I hope it isn't)
1. We are all doomed
2. It kind of explains most of what we are seeing & hearing at the hands of cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 15, 2015, 02:48:56 PM
Like I said, we'll just have to disagree

The problem is why we disagree: from where I stand, it's because you're trying to maintain the untenable and irrational position that the police are above the law, and that the only people that can judge the police are the police themselves and if the public doesn't like that the public can get stuffed.


Whork, it's not about "judging me" its about do they have the information, training, experience, knowledge and back ground to determine if the force used during that particular incident was within policy, the law and reason. I have not been too reassured that they are the best source for that given the comments I see on certain incidents. I understand you disagree.. that's fine.

It is only about judging you. That's the whole problem. You believe that a bunch of civilians who lack "information, training, experience, knowledge and background" should judge you. You say, that they shouldn't determine if the force used was within policy, the law and reason. So let's look at those claims one by one:


So if those three are the issues, then there should be no problem with civilian oversight. It's not like the oversight will result in firing after firing after firing of cops - and if it does, something is very very wrong somewhere; as I said in a previous post, most people are reasonable and understand that the police have a difficult job that sometimes calls for snap decisions and that accidents, terrible as they might be, happen. And if those three issues are, indeed, a problem, then we have bigger fish to fry because the jury system is horribly broken and we should just replace jurors with a panel of cops.

You are a reasonable guy and I am sure that you are a good cop and a decent human being, and even you have this "us vs. them" mentality: cops vs the public that employs you, a public that you seem to think is beneath you and should not be allowed to criticize or judge you. And if you have thise mentality, what what about the many cops who are neither as decent nor as good as you?

You say that you can't allow your job to be at the hands of civilians. But isn't it already? Couldn't the public vote to fire you today? And for any reason, even for no reason at all! Listen, the facts are simple: you don't have a right to a badge, you don't have the right to a job and you don't have a right to be above the law. If the citizens want oversight of the police, they deserve oversight of the police, and if you don't like that's too bad. But if you would quit if the citizens demanded to have that oversight, then that says a whole lot about you in particular and police in general.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 03:14:07 PM
Agnostic 007.
Thank you for being good enough to come on here and argue you're points.

You come across as a reasoned & intelligent man.

I don't see how though you can keep trying to defend the indefensible
Clearly there are several other Reasoned & intelligent people on here
And they are making some very Good Factual Points.

None of us like to have our ideologies/ thoughts / beliefs questioned Let alone Proven Wrong.
Is this the case for you why you can't see or accept what others are saying.

As I have said before,  No 'this is not as good as its going to get' yet you have said it is.
I find very difficult To take on board & would dearly hope a serving policeman Would not & Should
not Have that Mind set & view point.

If that is a commonly held view by cops, (which I hope it isn't)
1. We are all doomed
2. It kind of explains most of what we are seeing & hearing at the hands of cops.

Thanks for the kind words.  When I said, that's as good as it gets I meant this:

In devising a system where police actions are reviewed after the fact, there needs to be a review by people who know what it's like to be in similar situations. No 2 incidents are exactly alike, but there are many similarities in all of them. You cannot have someone who thinks shooting an armed person in the leg is the right answer reviewing police actions in a use of force situation. But you also need that process monitored by informed citizens to insure fairness and thoroughness. Without that, it leaves the door open for internal corruption or the perception of internal corruption which is just as bad. The final answer is decided by citizens, in the form of a jury, but the decision to discipline should be made by the Chief who is hired and fired by a civilian city manager.

In my opinion, that's as good as it gets. I can't think of a better system at the moment. Maybe one will be devised in the future as technology advances, but at this time, that's pretty good. And I concede there are departments that don't have OPM or civilian review boards and I think that is a mistake. I think it is a plus for the department and the citizens to have one.

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 03:30:13 PM
The problem is why we disagree: from where I stand, it's because you're trying to maintain the untenable and irrational position that the police are above the law, and that the only people that can judge the police are the police themselves and if the public doesn't like that the public can get stuffed.


It is only about judging you. That's the whole problem. You believe that a bunch of civilians who lack "information, training, experience, knowledge and background" should judge you. You say, that they shouldn't determine if the force used was within policy, the law and reason. So let's look at those claims one by one:

  • Policy: I assume that all relevant policies are written out and contain directions. I see no reason why only cops can interpret those directions, especially when you consider that all too frequently, they seem to interpret them incorrectly.
  • Law: Cops are neither lawyers nor judges and many cops are about as qualified to opine on what is and isn't legal as your average illegal immigrant housekeeper.
  • Reason: Reason and common sense aren't attributes exclusive to cops. You don't magically become reasonable when someone pins a badge or you, nor are the rest of us devoid of common sense.

So if those three are the issues, then there should be no problem with civilian oversight. It's not like the oversight will result in firing after firing after firing of cops - and if it does, something is very very wrong somewhere; as I said in a previous post, most people are reasonable and understand that the police have a difficult job that sometimes calls for snap decisions and that accidents, terrible as they might be, happen. And if those three issues are, indeed, a problem, then we have bigger fish to fry because the jury system is horribly broken and we should just replace jurors with a panel of cops.

You are a reasonable guy and I am sure that you are a good cop and a decent human being, and even you have this "us vs. them" mentality: cops vs the public that employs you, a public that you seem to think is beneath you and should not be allowed to criticize or judge you. And if you have thise mentality, what what about the many cops who are neither as decent nor as good as you?

You say that you can't allow your job to be at the hands of civilians. But isn't it already? Couldn't the public vote to fire you today? And for any reason, even for no reason at all! Listen, the facts are simple: you don't have a right to a badge, you don't have the right to a job and you don't have a right to be above the law. If the citizens want oversight of the police, they deserve oversight of the police, and if you don't like that's too bad. But if you would quit if the citizens demanded to have that oversight, then that says a whole lot about you in particular and police in general.

I'm sorry if you have concluded by my responses I feel cops are above the law. That is not the case. I feel cops should be held to a higher standard than the average citizen. I also know that the duties of the job can and does put officers in some bad situations and most try and make the best decision at the moment. Those that intentionally act maliciously like kicking a handcuffed prisoner in the head, or "brake checking" an unseat belted person should be punished to the maximum allowable.

To the point of the only people who can judge the police are the police themselves I'll say, the police are in the best position to judge an officers actions that resulted in use of force. If you are concerned about impartiality, the OPM can address that issue.

As far as the three areas highlighted. ..

Policy- Yes, you can certainly teach anyone policy. But policy is many cases is a guide since there is no policy book written that will cover all circumstances a cop will encounter and there are often times policy is circumvented and the reasons are considered valid. Arguing why policy should have been circumvented in that case to someone without the experience could be an issue.

Legal- we agree

Reasonable- This is the big one. Was the force used at that particular moment by that person in that particular situation reasonable? Well, without having been in that particular situation you may think one thing.. someone who has been in that situation will think another. It's not reason itself a citizen lacks because as you said, you just don't get reason with the pinning of a badge.. but applying the reason to a given situation in a force situation, especially a gray area, would be difficult without that experience. You can disagree and I respect that but I have witnessed it enough to feel comfortable saying it.

The us against them mentality in my opinion is somewhat of a misdirection. Because I think police are more qualified to judge police actions due to their training, experience etc is not an us vs them mentality.

And no.. I'm not a sheriff. The public couldn't vote to fire me today. There are civil service protections against that.

Look, I don't think citizens are beneath me. I'm a citizen. I love citizens. I encourage civilian oversight.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 15, 2015, 05:35:11 PM
Another excellent example of why police can't police themselves.  These officers have been cleared and they fought the fuck out of releasing the video.  Can't imagine why.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 15, 2015, 05:45:07 PM
Another excellent example of why police can't police themselves.  These officers have been cleared and they fought the fuck out of releasing the video.  Can't imagine why.  ::)



You are just a stupid civilian Skip, you cant judge these heroes.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 15, 2015, 06:03:50 PM
You are just a stupid civilian Skip, you cant judge these heroes.


3 boney little kids that you could thump with one hand, but THREE cops claiming they were so petrified for their lives that they had to gun him down.  Oh boy.  ::)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2015, 07:15:51 PM
Another excellent example of why police can't police themselves.  These officers have been cleared and they fought the fuck out of releasing the video.  Can't imagine why.  ::)



"Action beats reaction every time", "they feared for their lives", "you weren't there man", etc..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on July 15, 2015, 07:21:43 PM
Another excellent example of why police can't police themselves.  These officers have been cleared and they fought the fuck out of releasing the video.  Can't imagine why.  ::)



My opinion is that the guy really behaved stupidly here - he put his hands in his pocket first, then again lowered his hands despite having multiple weapons trained on him... I can't say I fault the cops for shooting here. I question the wisdom of doing it when two other people, who are compliant and obeying their orders, are right there and likely to get injured but sometimes you can't help it. I wonder why it took a Judge's order to release this video; why did the police not want it shown? It seems to me to cast the incident in a light that's favorable to them.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 15, 2015, 07:48:28 PM
fighting the release of the video is strange. Video's of police shootings, good bad or suspect get released as a matter of course all the time. Why this one was so special is beyond me. I watched the video earlier today and knew we'd be talking about it soon.

Your right in the regard the subject acted abnormally. The officers were under the impression they were out on the actual subject of the robbery. Likely based on information given to them. I don't know and I suspect that source wouldn't disclose it if it were fact. So the officers based on information they recieved (not sure, but probably) believe they are out on an armed subject. The subject is acting like a complete idiot with guns pointed at them. Very similar to the shooting we discussed at the convenience store.

What I feel added to the negative outcome besides the persons irrational reaction and actions to the situation, is the officers not being tactically sound in their approach and leaving the cover of their vehicles to expose themselves to possible gunfire if in fact the subject been armed and tried to shoot at them. Had they been behind cover they could have taken the luxury of another milisecond to determine what he was about to do. When they were out exposed like that it took that option off the table.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2015, 11:01:30 PM
Here is a bodycam video (bodycams were recently deployed in LVMPD) of a recent officer involved shooting. In this case  I think the reactions of the cops were justified, if not delayed (the gun makes a clicking sound but does not fire as there was no round in the chamber so the cop with the bodycam was extremely lucky). One cop was injured by a bullet that grazed his neck.



I think most citizens would not have a problem with this officer involved shooting. But when you have cops invading homes without warrants, arresting or killing the occupants, stealing money, detaining or arresting for bogus or no reason and not facing any real consequences, then most people would react.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 21, 2015, 08:21:14 AM
City fires investigator who found cops at fault in shootings

A Chicago investigator who determined that several civilian shootings by police officers were unjustified was fired after resisting orders to reverse those findings, according to internal records of his agency obtained by WBEZ.

http://www.wbez.org/news/city-fires-investigator-who-found-cops-fault-shootings-112423
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 21, 2015, 09:00:00 AM
City fires investigator who found cops at fault in shootings

A Chicago investigator who determined that several civilian shootings by police officers were unjustified was fired after resisting orders to reverse those findings, according to internal records of his agency obtained by WBEZ.

http://www.wbez.org/news/city-fires-investigator-who-found-cops-fault-shootings-112423

Could be he was the only honest member of the civilian monitors office.. or, he could be similar to our own retired Capt. Louie White, the first black promoted to the rank of Captain. He retired and never voiced a concern about the department. Later he became a vocal NAACP spokesperson and was very anti police. I wouldn't have wanted him sitting on any review panel either.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 21, 2015, 05:18:51 PM
My opinion is that the guy really behaved stupidly here - he put his hands in his pocket first, then again lowered his hands despite having multiple weapons trained on him... I can't say I fault the cops for shooting here. I question the wisdom of doing it when two other people, who are compliant and obeying their orders, are right there and likely to get injured but sometimes you can't help it. I wonder why it took a Judge's order to release this video; why did the police not want it shown? It seems to me to cast the incident in a light that's favorable to them.


Never disagree with me in public again.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 21, 2015, 05:20:39 PM
fighting the release of the video is strange. Video's of police shootings, good bad or suspect get released as a matter of course all the time. Why this one was so special is beyond me. I watched the video earlier today and knew we'd be talking about it soon.

Your right in the regard the subject acted abnormally. The officers were under the impression they were out on the actual subject of the robbery. Likely based on information given to them. I don't know and I suspect that source wouldn't disclose it if it were fact. So the officers based on information they recieved (not sure, but probably) believe they are out on an armed subject. The subject is acting like a complete idiot with guns pointed at them. Very similar to the shooting we discussed at the convenience store.

What I feel added to the negative outcome besides the persons irrational reaction and actions to the situation, is the officers not being tactically sound in their approach and leaving the cover of their vehicles to expose themselves to possible gunfire if in fact the subject been armed and tried to shoot at them. Had they been behind cover they could have taken the luxury of another milisecond to determine what he was about to do. When they were out exposed like that it took that option off the table.   



The guy was trying to communicate with the officers that his friends had done nothing wrong.  From the 2nd angle, his hands don't go into his pockets, they were just going up and down, and they've noted that all the cops were shouting at them at the same time.

He didn't help himself with meth in his system, or moving around.  But the instantaneous application of deadly force is jumping the gun.  I don't buy for a moment that 3 cops, all pointing guns at him and a 4th in the background were so terrified for their lives they had to kill him.

You point out something interesting with them not behind their doors.  Why isn't this an indicator that their level of supposed fear is something other than lethal?

I get the standard that it's measured from the cops perspective.  But there's something fundamentally wrong with not considering their point of view.  They did nothing and they're instantly surrounded by bunch of thugs pointing guns at them, all shouting, and clueless as to what the problem.  I doubt for a moment that any of them figured cops, of all people, would gun down innocent people.  We're becoming more acclimated to knowing the opposite is true.


As an aside, do cops presume that the people they are dealing with can speak and understand English?  I would think it a fair presumption, but problematic in certain circumstances.



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 21, 2015, 05:24:52 PM
Here is a bodycam video (bodycams were recently deployed in LVMPD) of a recent officer involved shooting. In this case  I think the reactions of the cops were justified, if not delayed (the gun makes a clicking sound but does not fire as there was no round in the chamber so the cop with the bodycam was extremely lucky). One cop was injured by a bullet that grazed his neck.



I think most citizens would not have a problem with this officer involved shooting. But when you have cops invading homes without warrants, arresting or killing the occupants, stealing money, detaining or arresting for bogus or no reason and not facing any real consequences, then most people would react.



Telling the guy shit like 'you're a grown man', doesn't help to diffuse the situation.  But yes, it's 100%, unquestionably (IMO), a good shoot.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 22, 2015, 05:40:00 AM


1..The guy was trying to communicate with the officers that his friends had done nothing wrong.  From the 2nd angle, his hands don't go into his pockets, they were just going up and down, and they've noted that all the cops were shouting at them at the same time.

2...He didn't help himself with meth in his system, or moving around.  But the instantaneous application of deadly force is jumping the gun.  I don't buy for a moment that 3 cops, all pointing guns at him and a 4th in the background were so terrified for their lives they had to kill him.

3...You point out something interesting with them not behind their doors.  Why isn't this an indicator that their level of supposed fear is something other than lethal?

4..I get the standard that it's measured from the cops perspective.  But there's something fundamentally wrong with not considering their point of view.  They did nothing and they're instantly surrounded by bunch of thugs pointing guns at them, all shouting, and clueless as to what the problem.  I doubt for a moment that any of them figured cops, of all people, would gun down innocent people.  We're becoming more acclimated to knowing the opposite is true.


As an aside, do cops presume that the people they are dealing with can speak and understand English?  I would think it a fair presumption, but problematic in certain circumstances.





1. From the 2nd angle might not be the angle the cop firing first saw. One of the things we remind people about when showing video is the video camera location may give a point of view different from the cops point of view. Something to consider, but yes, from the 2nd angle I can see that his hand didn't go under his shirt. I can also see a ball cap blocking the view from other angles.
There is a time to ignore cops directions and become animated with your movements.. when they are pointing a gun at you is not one of them.

2. I get that you wouldn't think that someone who is alleged to be armed with a gun, disobeying your orders and being animated while you have more than one subject at gun point wouldn't be a serious concern.. but it is. I don't think they "had to kill him" I think they obviously felt they needed to stop the threat.  
  
3. Because we know from a gazillion videos, including the one where they take the shooter of the 9 church people into custody that cops sometimes get tunnel vision or react in a manner that puts themselves at risk. We try and train that out of them but sometimes they forget cover is your friend. Cost a few their lives. I wouldn't say that diminishes the danger. But again, it is poor tactics, (based on the video) and could have limited their options.

4. I have stopped people who were the wrong people on a few calls. When adrenaline is flowing and you've just been in a bad situation, witnesses often get descriptions wrong. I'm sure these officers likely have done the same. In every case, we were able to resolve the issue safely because the people didn't act in a way that would cause me to be concerned. At gunpoint they may voice their innocence but they would do what they were directed to do. The ones who didn't follow instructions turned out the be the right ones. So while I agree, lets look at their perspective.. again.. when 4 guns are pointing at you, 9 out of 10 times the innocent people are going to follow instructions even if they are voicing their innocents.

5. It's a presumption. But put me in any country where I don't speak a word of their language.. I will guarantee you that if 4 uniformed officers are pointing their guns at me yelling.. I am not moving an inch and will have my hands on my head.

I think the shooting was tragic. I can safely watch video from my computer, see it several times and certainly conclude he didn't need to be shot. I have a good camera angle and can see his hand didn't go in a pocket or under a shirt. But..     it's absolutely not a clear example of why the cops can't police themselves. It may be a clear example of why civilians shouldn't determine the outcome of the investigation
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 25, 2015, 10:15:19 AM
1. From the 2nd angle might not be the angle the cop firing first saw. One of the things we remind people about when showing video is the video camera location may give a point of view different from the cops point of view. Something to consider, but yes, from the 2nd angle I can see that his hand didn't go under his shirt. I can also see a ball cap blocking the view from other angles.
There is a time to ignore cops directions and become animated with your movements.. when they are pointing a gun at you is not one of them.

2. I get that you wouldn't think that someone who is alleged to be armed with a gun, disobeying your orders and being animated while you have more than one subject at gun point wouldn't be a serious concern.. but it is. I don't think they "had to kill him" I think they obviously felt they needed to stop the threat. 
 
3. Because we know from a gazillion videos, including the one where they take the shooter of the 9 church people into custody that cops sometimes get tunnel vision or react in a manner that puts themselves at risk. We try and train that out of them but sometimes they forget cover is your friend. Cost a few their lives. I wouldn't say that diminishes the danger. But again, it is poor tactics, (based on the video) and could have limited their options.

4. I have stopped people who were the wrong people on a few calls. When adrenaline is flowing and you've just been in a bad situation, witnesses often get descriptions wrong. I'm sure these officers likely have done the same. In every case, we were able to resolve the issue safely because the people didn't act in a way that would cause me to be concerned. At gunpoint they may voice their innocence but they would do what they were directed to do. The ones who didn't follow instructions turned out the be the right ones. So while I agree, lets look at their perspective.. again.. when 4 guns are pointing at you, 9 out of 10 times the innocent people are going to follow instructions even if they are voicing their innocents.

5. It's a presumption. But put me in any country where I don't speak a word of their language.. I will guarantee you that if 4 uniformed officers are pointing their guns at me yelling.. I am not moving an inch and will have my hands on my head.

I think the shooting was tragic. I can safely watch video from my computer, see it several times and certainly conclude he didn't need to be shot. I have a good camera angle and can see his hand didn't go in a pocket or under a shirt. But..     it's absolutely not a clear example of why the cops can't police themselves. It may be a clear example of why civilians shouldn't determine the outcome of the investigation



I don't know about that, but I've had a couple of similar personal experiences overseas to know that people react differently when guns are pointed at them.

Of course, when you're trained to be scared shitless of your own shadow, there can really only be one inevitable result.  As I noted, I doubt innocent kids would have thought for a moment that cops - of all people - would gun them down for doing nothing.

And yes, we got it the first time.  Civilians are beneath you and only your cop buddies can 'objectively' and 'fairly' judge you.  And the comedy ensues...


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on July 26, 2015, 10:47:25 AM


I don't know about that, but I've had a couple of similar personal experiences overseas to know that people react differently when guns are pointed at them.

Of course, when you're trained to be scared shitless of your own shadow, there can really only be one inevitable result.  As I noted, I doubt innocent kids would have thought for a moment that cops - of all people - would gun them down for doing nothing.

And yes, we got it the first time.  Civilians are beneath you and only your cop buddies can 'objectively' and 'fairly' judge you.  And the comedy ensues...




And we got it the first time.. you hate cops in spite of your "I have friends who are black so I'm not a racist" equivelant of "There are some good cops so I don't hate cops" claims..

Why can't you stick with the discussion for more than a couple sentences before resorting to that tired worn out crap?

There are a hundred posts saying cops are corrupt, cops have no integrity, cops strangle their mothers after birth, cops are theives, cops love to shoot innocent citizens... Yet I say cops are better qualified to review use of force incidents than citizens based on knowledge, experience, training and its 'See, you think you're better than us!" Seriously?  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on July 31, 2015, 01:51:26 AM
"Stop resisting"...  Ironic that citizens (who shouldn't dare think they can review a cop's actions) are likely to determine the cop's fate..

(it's interesting that even though the cop was black and the victim white there was no outrage or racial angle-as it so often happens in similar cases with white cops and black victims).

Alabama Police Officer Breaks Down on Stand, Admits to Repeatedly Lying to Cover Up for Fellow Cop Beating Handcuffed Man

An Alabama police officer broke down at the federal trial of a fellow cop, admitting that he lied to internal affairs investigators twice, lied to an FBI agent and lied to a federal grand jury when he was questioned about his colleague brutally beating a handcuffed man and keeping his property as “trophies.”

Joshua Bates, an eight year veteran of the Huntsville Police Department, testified Tuesday that he lied to cover for fellow officer Brett Russell out of fear of losing his job, but admitted that the incident has haunted him ever since.

The incident took place on December 23, 2011 after Russell responded to a domestic violence call at the home of Gary Wayne Hopkins.  Bates, who was training a cadet at the time, was called to the scene to assist Russell with putting leg shackles on the suspect.

Once Hopkins was in custody, the dashcam footage showed Russell punching and kicking the suspect, ordering him to “stop resisting,” despite the fact that he was restrained.

Hopkins was so badly injured that the jail refused to take him until he was treated at a hospital.

Following the incident, the officers on the scene reported that Hopkins was combative and defended Russell’s actions.  A few days before testifying, Bates contacted the U.S. Attorney prosecuting the case and agreed to tell the truth about what really happened that night in exchange for immunity.

According to WAFF:

    “I didn’t think he was resisting,” Bates said on the stand. “I was still in shock about what was going on.”

Bates told the court that he had been in disbelief as the incident unfolded, and admitted that Hopkins was not resisting and had not spit at officers or head butted anyone – as was previously reported.

Another witness who testified Tuesday was the first officer who had arrived at Hopkins’ home.  He stated that he found property belonging to Hopkins inside the officer’s vehicle on January 5, 2012, which corroborates the prosecutions claims that Russell had stolen his property to keep as trophies.

In dashcam footage from the incident, Russell could reportedly be heard saying, “You deserve to get that ass whooping.”

Despite Hopkins having to be treated in the hospital for his injuries, Russell reported that he had taken the man into custody “without incident,” withholding the fact that he had beaten the man.

In May of 2012, Rusell was fired from the department, however, he was reinstated three months later by a unanimous vote from Huntsville City Council.

He is now facing federal charges of deprivation of a person’s civil rights under the color of law and obstruction of justice. If convicted on both counts, he faces up to 30 years in prison.

http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2015/07/alabama-police-officer-breaks-down-on-stand-admits-to-repeatedly-lying-to-cover-up-for-fellow-cop-beating-handcuffed-man/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on July 31, 2015, 07:17:45 AM
^^^^^

Ahh that is Good the cop finally came clean as to what happened to the victim.
Shame it took him 4yrs & several bouts of lying to various authorities.
Will he now be prosecuted for perverting the course of justice,
Falsifying statements, ( these are just guesses) or other breaches of law.
Hope agnostic can clarify what he could be charged for.

No doubt this will be passed off as a one off, & police public relations office
Will work overtime to assure public this is just a isolated case.
And cops up & down the country are Honest & Trustworthy.... ::)

Good to see they rehired the thug cop again so quickly that is so reassuring..Not.
Again agnostic maybe good enough to tell us what he could / should be charged with.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 31, 2015, 09:02:56 AM
And we got it the first time.. you hate cops in spite of your "I have friends who are black so I'm not a racist" equivelant of "There are some good cops so I don't hate cops" claims..

Why can't you stick with the discussion for more than a couple sentences before resorting to that tired worn out crap?


No idea what the fuck you're babbling about, but:

-I mentioned nothing about hating or not hating cops.  Nothing.
-You all are not the equivalent of an entire race of people who have been discriminated against for decades.  So, fuck your wannabe persecution nonsense.  ::)



Quote
There are a hundred posts saying cops are corrupt, cops have no integrity, cops strangle their mothers after birth, cops are theives, cops love to shoot innocent citizens...



Uh...exactly.  We've been down this road before.  Nobody needs to discuss when you do your jobs correctly.

You're SUPPOSED to do your jobs correctly.

You're paid to do your jobs correctly.

The purpose of this thread is discuss when cops DON'T do it correctly.

Not that hard to understand...unless you might be cop with a persecution complex who thinks us Mensch are beneath him.



Quote
Yet I say cops are better qualified to review use of force incidents than citizens based on knowledge, experience, training and its 'See, you think you're better than us!" Seriously?  ::)


That's exactly what you're saying, and you know it, which might be why is pisses you off so much when it's pointed out.

Let's not act like cops are on the level of physicians, spending countless years in rigorous study, residencies, tough licensing requirements, etc.

You spent several months at an academy, some of you may have a degree, some may not even have anything more than high school.  And those that have a degree may not even have it in Criminal Justice, policing, etc.

The public in general is more than capable of evaluating reasonableness as any cop is and juries do it EVERY SINGLE DAY.

So take your trade school diploma, and go fist yourself.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on July 31, 2015, 09:08:16 AM
This is the slow motion version of the cop shooting Samuel DuBose.  The fast version is really hard to see:




The cop has been charged with murder, pled not guilty under the justification that his hand or watch was caught in the car and the guy was trying to drive off so he feared for his life and had to kill him.

I seem to recall a case where the cop did something similar and judges let him off.

Hard to tell from the video what the truth is, but the slow motion version doesn't seem to substantiate the cops claim.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on July 31, 2015, 10:42:46 AM
wow, it looks pretty clear there.   he pulled gun and if anything, braced the driver so the headshot would be accurate.

tough to charge anything but murder there... particularly when he keeps changing story about being dragged, etc.

Without the body camera, the cop gets a medal and promotion for her heroics.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on July 31, 2015, 11:23:46 AM

No idea what the fuck you're babbling about, but:

-I mentioned nothing about hating or not hating cops.  Nothing.
-You all are not the equivalent of an entire race of people who have been discriminated against for decades.  So, fuck your wannabe persecution nonsense.  ::)




Uh...exactly.  We've been down this road before.  Nobody needs to discuss when you do your jobs correctly.

You're SUPPOSED to do your jobs correctly.

You're paid to do your jobs correctly.

The purpose of this thread is discuss when cops DON'T do it correctly.

Not that hard to understand...unless you might be cop with a persecution complex who thinks us Mensch are beneath him.




That's exactly what you're saying, and you know it, which might be why is pisses you off so much when it's pointed out.

Let's not act like cops are on the level of physicians, spending countless years in rigorous study, residencies, tough licensing requirements, etc.

You spent several months at an academy, some of you may have a degree, some may not even have anything more than high school.  And those that have a degree may not even have it in Criminal Justice, policing, etc.

The public in general is more than capable of evaluating reasonableness as any cop is and juries do it EVERY SINGLE DAY.

So take your trade school diploma, and go fist yourself.


Awesome post.

+1
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2015, 02:07:31 PM
Teenager Sues Police After Being Jailed for 40 Days Over a Snowball Then Cleared of Wrongdoing

Detroit, MI — A Detroit teenager is suing police in federal court after being wrongfully jailed for 40 days over a snowball.

Dominique Rondeau thought he would have some fun with the other kids after school by throwing snowballs. In Police State USA, however, even this immortal pastime can get you thrown in jail.

One of those icy snowballs from the crowd hit the windshield of a police car parked at East English Village High School, in just the right way to shatter it. Although officers Floyd Jenkins and Freddie Wilson did not see who threw the snowball, they looked at security camera footage and fingered Rondeau for the “crime.”

Later that day of December 16, 2013, they would nab Rondeau from his home and put him in juvenile detention for nearly 40 days under a charge of destroying police property.

“They knocked. I cracked the big door open to see who it was … They opened the (screen) door, and they just walked in, and they started putting me in handcuffs,” according to Rondeau.

He was separated from his family during Christmas and New Year’s holidays, as they could not afford the $2,000 bond to release him.

At the bench trial on February 26, the two cops testified that they saw Rondeau on the video, but when the footage was played in court, they could not pick out Rondeau. Based on this and the fact that no other evidence was offered, the case was dismissed and Rondeau was freed.

What possessed these police officers to not only go after a kid over a snowball, but also attempt to deceive the court so the kid would stay in jail?

This abuse of power is not being forgotten. Dominique Rondeau is suing the two district police officers, along with Detroit Public Schools, in federal court for false arrest and malicious prosecution. The lawsuit says his constitutional rights were violated by being arrested without probable cause or a warrant.

Rondeau’s mother, Sheron Rondeau, said the arrest and jail time has emotionally scarred her son, adding, “There’s a fear now. He doesn’t trust police officers.”

They are seeking a jury trial and unspecified monetary damages.

The district denies any wrongdoing, setting a precedent for their officers to go after kids if play time impinges upon the sanctified property of law enforcement.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/teenager-sues-police-jailed-40-days-snowball/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 03, 2015, 12:52:50 AM
Teenager Sues Police After Being Jailed for 40 Days Over a Snowball Then Cleared of Wrongdoing

Detroit, MI — A Detroit teenager is suing police in federal court after being wrongfully jailed for 40 days over a snowball.

Dominique Rondeau thought he would have some fun with the other kids after school by throwing snowballs. In Police State USA, however, even this immortal pastime can get you thrown in jail.

One of those icy snowballs from the crowd hit the windshield of a police car parked at East English Village High School, in just the right way to shatter it. Although officers Floyd Jenkins and Freddie Wilson did not see who threw the snowball, they looked at security camera footage and fingered Rondeau for the “crime.”

Later that day of December 16, 2013, they would nab Rondeau from his home and put him in juvenile detention for nearly 40 days under a charge of destroying police property.

“They knocked. I cracked the big door open to see who it was … They opened the (screen) door, and they just walked in, and they started putting me in handcuffs,” according to Rondeau.

He was separated from his family during Christmas and New Year’s holidays, as they could not afford the $2,000 bond to release him.

At the bench trial on February 26, the two cops testified that they saw Rondeau on the video, but when the footage was played in court, they could not pick out Rondeau. Based on this and the fact that no other evidence was offered, the case was dismissed and Rondeau was freed.

What possessed these police officers to not only go after a kid over a snowball, but also attempt to deceive the court so the kid would stay in jail?

This abuse of power is not being forgotten. Dominique Rondeau is suing the two district police officers, along with Detroit Public Schools, in federal court for false arrest and malicious prosecution. The lawsuit says his constitutional rights were violated by being arrested without probable cause or a warrant.

Rondeau’s mother, Sheron Rondeau, said the arrest and jail time has emotionally scarred her son, adding, “There’s a fear now. He doesn’t trust police officers.”

They are seeking a jury trial and unspecified monetary damages.

The district denies any wrongdoing, setting a precedent for their officers to go after kids if play time impinges upon the sanctified property of law enforcement.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/teenager-sues-police-jailed-40-days-snowball/














Jeez... You just couldn't make a such ridiculous stories & expect people to believe it.
Yet it happening & it's Real.
No doubt the two cops will have Perfectly valid reason to keep him detained for
40 days, I know... They were in Fear of Losing Their Lives.
Why have not been sacked, clearly not suitable as cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 04, 2015, 04:27:49 PM
wow, it looks pretty clear there.   he pulled gun and if anything, braced the driver so the headshot would be accurate.

tough to charge anything but murder there... particularly when he keeps changing story about being dragged, etc.

Without the body camera, the cop gets a medal and promotion for her heroics.


I lose sight of his left hand, but I can't imagine what it could've possibly got caught on that would drag him under the car as he claiming.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 04, 2015, 04:29:30 PM
Ya gotta be shittin' me.

 :(



Santa Ana police officers sue to quash video of pot shop raid

SANTA ANA – Three Santa Ana police officers want to quash a surveillance video that shows officers making derogatory comments about a disabled woman and possibly snacking on pot edibles during a recent raid of a medical marijuana dispensary.

A lawsuit, filed last week in Orange County Superior Court by three unidentified police officers and the Santa Ana Police Officers Association, seeks to prevent Santa Ana Police Department internal affairs investigators from using the video as they sort out what happened during the May 26 raid of Sky High Collective.

Lawyers for police and the dispensary said the video – which has been widely seen on television and several online news sites, including ocregister.com – could play a key role in the ongoing investigation into the officers’ actions.

The lawyers disagree about the video’s accuracy and authenticity.

Matthew Pappas, a lawyer for Sky High, pointed to the irony of police seeking to shoot down the use of video as evidence in an investigation when they routinely use videos to investigate other crimes.

“It’s pretty pathetic for police to say if we don’t like something that it can’t be used as evidence,” Pappas said.


Corey W. Glave, a Hermosa Beach attorney representing the Santa Ana Police Officers Association and the three officers, said the video was taken without the officers’ knowledge and was handled by Pappas, among others, prior to being made public.

Glave said Pappas has altered the video in a way to make the police look bad.

“The attorney representing the drug dispensary intentionally has misrepresented what happened,” Glave said.

Pappas has provided the Register and Santa Ana police with two versions of the raid footage, a highlight reel with subtitles and what he says are unedited video clips.

In one of the shortened video clips, armed Santa Ana police officers, some wearing masks, are seen breaking through the front door of the 17th Street dispensary and ordering at least a half-dozen customers to the floor.



At the time, Santa Ana city law did not allow for the operation of marijuana dispensaries.

After entering the building, police are seen dismantling video cameras inside the store.

After most of the cameras are taken down, a camera they didn’t detect shows the officers talking about a woman with an amputated left leg who at the time of the raid was in her wheelchair inside the dispensary.

“Did you punch that one-legged old Benita,” a male officer asks a female officer, apparently referring to the woman in the wheelchair.

“I was about to kick her in her (expletive) nub,” the female officer replies, according to subtitles with the video.


In another clip – which Pappas has titled “Officers eating edibles and playing darts” – a voice can be heard asking, “What flavor?” before an officer is seen unwrapping a small package and putting something in his mouth.

The lawsuit argues that the video doesn’t paint a fair version of events. The suit also claims the video shouldn’t be used as evidence because, among other things, the police didn’t know they were on camera.

“All police personnel present had a reasonable expectation that their conversations were no longer being recorded and the undercover officers, feeling that they were safe to do so, removed their masks,” says the suit.

The dispensary also did not obtain consent of any officer to record them, the suit says.

“Without the illegal recordings, there would have been no internal investigation of any officer,” the suit says.

Pappas counters that the suit is baseless because the officers were aware the dispensary had video cameras and managed to disable most of them.

“They knew they were on video. ... Just because they missed one camera doesn’t make it illegal.”


The city of Santa Ana, the Police Department and Chief Carlos Rojas are named as defendants. Officials with the Santa Ana Police Officers Association did not return phone calls seeking comment.

No officers have been terminated in connection with the ongoing internal affairs investigation, said Santa Ana police spokesman Cpl. Anthony Bertagna.

The three officers have received threats since the raid and have incurred damages, including attorney’s fees and lost wages, according to the suit.

A hearing date for the case has not been set.


http://www.ocregister.com/articles/police-675722-officers-video.html

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 05, 2015, 12:44:25 PM

I lose sight of his left hand, but I can't imagine what it could've possibly got caught on that would drag him under the car as he claiming.



possibly the drivers fingers...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 05, 2015, 05:08:40 PM
possibly the drivers fingers...


I suppose it's possible the guy grabbed him, though one would think he might mention that to the other cops.  That hasn't been reported, so it may come out on trial.

Here's the police report that was released (short read):

http://www.uc.edu/content/dam/uc/ucomm/docs/incident-report.pdf

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 06, 2015, 09:58:48 AM
It's possible but the officer appears to be unaware and just says his arm or hand was caught on something. I've looked at the video a number of times and it is horrible in determining whether the car was moving or not. I can only surmise from the camera view of the officer on the ground and the car 20 ft down the road already that it was certainly in drive.. and possibly moving.

When I was a rookie officer I got my right arm rolled up in a window while trying to pull the keys out of the ignition so they wouldn't drive off as they were trying to do. They put it in drive and start off at a fast speed. Thought I was going to die. Couldn't reach my flashlight to break the window, couldn't reach my gun.. the only reason I survived was my back up saw what was happening as he was pulling up and managed to cut in front of the vehicle and stopped them. Never reached in a vehicle again after that..         
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 08, 2015, 01:20:14 PM
It's possible but the officer appears to be unaware and just says his arm or hand was caught on something. I've looked at the video a number of times and it is horrible in determining whether the car was moving or not. I can only surmise from the camera view of the officer on the ground and the car 20 ft down the road already that it was certainly in drive.. and possibly moving.

When I was a rookie officer I got my right arm rolled up in a window while trying to pull the keys out of the ignition so they wouldn't drive off as they were trying to do. They put it in drive and start off at a fast speed. Thought I was going to die. Couldn't reach my flashlight to break the window, couldn't reach my gun.. the only reason I survived was my back up saw what was happening as he was pulling up and managed to cut in front of the vehicle and stopped them. Never reached in a vehicle again after that..         


















The police have a very Dangerous job.
They have to fear for their lives everyday they go to work.

Top 10 Most Dangerous Jobs in the Country: Police Officer is NOT on the List


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-top-10-dangerous-jobs-country-tanks/
 ;)

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 10, 2015, 08:56:21 AM

















The police have a very Dangerous job.
They have to fear for their lives everyday they go to work.

Top 10 Most Dangerous Jobs in the Country: Police Officer is NOT on the List


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-top-10-dangerous-jobs-country-tanks/
 ;)



Probably due in part to the precautions police take to avoid making the top 10. Just walking up on the passenger side of a vehicle during a late night traffic stop rather than the drivers side has saved a life. 2 officers at the call, able to take the suspect into custody who was resisting. I understand the distaste when police representatives lament on how dangerous the job is. We picked this career, partly because of the unknown or the danger. But on the other hand, to point to a list and say policing is not dangerous is totally ignorant as well.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 10, 2015, 04:15:42 PM
Probably due in part to the precautions police take to avoid making the top 10. Just walking up on the passenger side of a vehicle during a late night traffic stop rather than the drivers side has saved a life. 2 officers at the call, able to take the suspect into custody who was resisting. I understand the distaste when police representatives lament on how dangerous the job is. We picked this career, partly because of the unknown or the danger. But on the other hand, to point to a list and say policing is not dangerous is totally ignorant as well.     













You make some good points.
Then ruin it by your 'ignorant' remark.
Posting a table of dangerous jobs is hardly ignorant is it.
Is it because cops are not top of the list that you are so hurt.
The old line 'cops just want to go home to wife & kids'
Doesn't quite cut it compared to those other jobs.
They also Want to just go home.

It is you who is rude & ignorant.
We have had many a disagreement & you are the one to call names.
Not a likeable quality in a supposedly experienced & professional cop.
Although clearly you are not on duty & saying what you want.

Let's go back to the
See No Evil
Hear No Evil
Speak No Evil
Cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 11, 2015, 08:22:50 AM












You make some good points.
Then ruin it by your 'ignorant' remark.
Posting a table of dangerous jobs is hardly ignorant is it.
Is it because cops are not top of the list that you are so hurt.
The old line 'cops just want to go home to wife & kids'
Doesn't quite cut it compared to those other jobs.
They also Want to just go home.

It is you who is rude & ignorant.
We have had many a disagreement & you are the one to call names.
Not a likeable quality in a supposedly experienced & professional cop.
Although clearly you are not on duty & saying what you want.

Let's go back to the
See No Evil
Hear No Evil
Speak No Evil
Cops.

You started off good, then about 5 words into it you ruined it. Ignorance is not always in insult. A person who refers to a list and says policing isn't that dangerous is ignorant of the facts surrounding policing. I have commented on subjects on many occasions that I was truly ignorant about.

Evolution- I know enough to get embarrassed once the discussion moves into college level

Auto Mechanics- I can replace an alternator and plugs, don't even get me lying about air/fuel ratios

Computer IT- A 6th grader is probably more knowledgeable.

Stocks, EFT, Bonds- Know enough to lose money consistently if I chose to do so.

I'm ignorant in those areas for the most part. Probably 100's of more areas, but I know policing.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: M4tad0r on August 11, 2015, 01:56:50 PM
First they came for the blacks, now is just anybody, white kids included, and the count keep going up, up and awaaay....



 The original footage:
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 11, 2015, 02:44:19 PM
You started off good, then about 5 words into it you ruined it. Ignorance is not always in insult. A person who refers to a list and says policing isn't that dangerous is ignorant of the facts surrounding policing. I have commented on subjects on many occasions that I was truly ignorant about.

Evolution- I know enough to get embarrassed once the discussion moves into college level

Auto Mechanics- I can replace an alternator and plugs, don't even get me lying about air/fuel ratios

Computer IT- A 6th grader is probably more knowledgeable.

Stocks, EFT, Bonds- Know enough to lose money consistently if I chose to do so.

I'm ignorant in those areas for the most part. Probably 100's of more areas, but I know policing.     














It's a 50/50 on the use & interpretation of how the word was meant.
Either using the word to label someone,
Or as you say being bereft of the information.

Still it's irrelevant as the table just shows deaths per job
& policing isn't that high on the list.

Dangerous in other respects no doubt.
Then the same can be said for other jobs also.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 11, 2015, 05:14:33 PM
For Deaf Woman, NYPD Is 25 Years in the Past

MANHATTAN (CN) - Setting back the clock before the Americans with Disabilities Act, New York City argued the "extraordinary position" that it did not need to get a deaf woman a translator before arresting her, a federal judge said.
     The scathing opinion dismisses the city's final attempt to avert a trial in a civil rights lawsuit by Diana Williams, a 58-year-old deaf landlord from Staten Island.
     On Sept. 11, 2011, Diana and her husband Chris Williams tried to evict tenants who had fallen behind on their rent.
     Both of the Williamses are deaf, and neither of them can speak more than a few words verbally.
     When the tenant's hearing boyfriend gestured that he had a gun, Chris called for the police using a video relay service that the couple says should have tipped off the dispatcher to send help quickly - and bring a translator, the judge's ruling states.
     Instead, the NYPD arrived without an American Sign Language interpreter and police heard only the tenants' side of the altercation, they say.
     U.S. District Judge Valierie Caproni called arresting officer Christopher Romano's memory of the encounter "at best hazy."
     "Curiously," in the words of the judge, Romano insisted in a deposition that he spoke to Diana Williams - who cannot hear, speak English or read lips - before arresting her.
     Williams says that Romano arrested her without making any effort to communicate, and he could not understand her pleas for an ASL interpreter
     Other tenants at the scene testified that police rejected their offers to interpret for them before they brought Williams in handcuffs to the 122nd Precinct.
     Williams says that police held her for nearly 24 hours before releasing her without charges.
     She sued the city three years ago, and her most recent complaint alleged false arrest, assault and battery and other charges.
     New York City argued that an arrest did not qualify as a "service, program, or activity" that would fall under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
     Scoffing at the argument, Caproni allowed all of the claims to proceed to trial on Wednesday.
     "New York City takes the extraordinary position that, even though the Americans with Disabilities Act has been the law of the land for 25 years, it has no obligation to provide any accommodation to the hearing-impaired at the time of an arrest, even if doing so could easily be accomplished without endangering the officers or the public safety and without interfering in the lawful execution of the officers' duties," she wrote.
     New York City signed an agreement with the federal government in 2009 pledging to comply with the ADA's requirements for the deaf and hearing-impaired.
     But Carol Roberson, the city's assistant commissioner for training the NYPD on interacting with the disabled, testified during the lead-up to Williams's trial that she had made no changes in the department's program six years later, according to the ruling.
     "Moreover, five police officers who had some involvement in this case were deposed, and none could recall whether he had ever received any ADA-related training," the opinion stated.
     Caproni added that it would be "preposterous to believe that given the diversity of the population in the City of New York, the NYPD did not know full well" that it would encounter deaf and hearing-impaired citizens.
     She allowed Williams to try to hold the city accountable for municipal liabilities, awarded when authorities show "deliberate indifference" to their civil rights obligations.
     The New York City Law Department said it is reviewing the decision.
     Andrew Rozynski, the co-director of the Eisenberg & Baum Law Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing, said in a statement that his firm was "pleased" with the ruling.
     "We hope that it will send a message to all police departments across the country that providing communication access to the deaf is critical in ensuring that their rights are protected under the law," he said.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2015/08/07/for-deaf-woman-nypd-is-25-years-in-the-past.htm

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 11, 2015, 05:19:46 PM
Good example of systemic abuse (which doesn't exist, of course  ;)    ):





Cliffs:

-Cop tossing homeless guy under arrest peanuts and treating him like a circus animal.
-Cop has prior poor behavior
-Cop has been fired (don't hold your breath that he won't be re-instated)


Props to them firing the cop.  But, as we can all see, there were several officers witnessing this with at least one laughing about it.

Cops wouldn't do that, right?  They would never allow such behavior to go on.  Afterall, it's just the 'one' bad apple, here and there.  ::)

Should've fired all their asses.


*edit - cop resigned under threat of being fired.  But, props for the threat and taking it seriously.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skip8282 on August 11, 2015, 05:23:16 PM













It's a 50/50 on the use & interpretation of how the word was meant.
Either using the word to label someone,
Or as you say being bereft of the information.

Still it's irrelevant as the table just shows deaths per job
& policing isn't that high on the list.

Dangerous in other respects no doubt.
Then the same can be said for other jobs also.




Based on that list, I'd say loggers and construction workers should be provided with some big ass MRAPS from the military, you know, to keep them safe.  :D


Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 11, 2015, 06:04:38 PM
For Deaf Woman, NYPD Is 25 Years in the Past

MANHATTAN (CN) - Setting back the clock before the Americans with Disabilities Act, New York City argued the "extraordinary position" that it did not need to get a deaf woman a translator before arresting her, a federal judge said.
     The scathing opinion dismisses the city's final attempt to avert a trial in a civil rights lawsuit by Diana Williams, a 58-year-old deaf landlord from Staten Island.
     On Sept. 11, 2011, Diana and her husband Chris Williams tried to evict tenants who had fallen behind on their rent.
     Both of the Williamses are deaf, and neither of them can speak more than a few words verbally.
     When the tenant's hearing boyfriend gestured that he had a gun, Chris called for the police using a video relay service that the couple says should have tipped off the dispatcher to send help quickly - and bring a translator, the judge's ruling states.
     Instead, the NYPD arrived without an American Sign Language interpreter and police heard only the tenants' side of the altercation, they say.
     U.S. District Judge Valierie Caproni called arresting officer Christopher Romano's memory of the encounter "at best hazy."
     "Curiously," in the words of the judge, Romano insisted in a deposition that he spoke to Diana Williams - who cannot hear, speak English or read lips - before arresting her.
     Williams says that Romano arrested her without making any effort to communicate, and he could not understand her pleas for an ASL interpreter
     Other tenants at the scene testified that police rejected their offers to interpret for them before they brought Williams in handcuffs to the 122nd Precinct.
     Williams says that police held her for nearly 24 hours before releasing her without charges.
     She sued the city three years ago, and her most recent complaint alleged false arrest, assault and battery and other charges.
     New York City argued that an arrest did not qualify as a "service, program, or activity" that would fall under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
     Scoffing at the argument, Caproni allowed all of the claims to proceed to trial on Wednesday.
     "New York City takes the extraordinary position that, even though the Americans with Disabilities Act has been the law of the land for 25 years, it has no obligation to provide any accommodation to the hearing-impaired at the time of an arrest, even if doing so could easily be accomplished without endangering the officers or the public safety and without interfering in the lawful execution of the officers' duties," she wrote.
     New York City signed an agreement with the federal government in 2009 pledging to comply with the ADA's requirements for the deaf and hearing-impaired.
     But Carol Roberson, the city's assistant commissioner for training the NYPD on interacting with the disabled, testified during the lead-up to Williams's trial that she had made no changes in the department's program six years later, according to the ruling.
     "Moreover, five police officers who had some involvement in this case were deposed, and none could recall whether he had ever received any ADA-related training," the opinion stated.
     Caproni added that it would be "preposterous to believe that given the diversity of the population in the City of New York, the NYPD did not know full well" that it would encounter deaf and hearing-impaired citizens.
     She allowed Williams to try to hold the city accountable for municipal liabilities, awarded when authorities show "deliberate indifference" to their civil rights obligations.
     The New York City Law Department said it is reviewing the decision.
     Andrew Rozynski, the co-director of the Eisenberg & Baum Law Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing, said in a statement that his firm was "pleased" with the ruling.
     "We hope that it will send a message to all police departments across the country that providing communication access to the deaf is critical in ensuring that their rights are protected under the law," he said.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2015/08/07/for-deaf-woman-nypd-is-25-years-in-the-past.htm
















Come on white knight agnostic pls explain what we are obviously missing here
In this report.
A Deaf & Dumb Couple, but the cops spoke to her then arrested her.
No doubt we just got the tip of the story & the cops were in fear of their lives
And had to handcuff her & hold her for 24hrs then let her go no charges.!!!

That bitch 6yrs in charge & changed Fcuk all. 
I hope she is extremely well paid for her competence.  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on August 11, 2015, 07:26:53 PM
some idiot here will defend the cop making the hungry prisoner eat off the floor.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on August 11, 2015, 08:03:27 PM
Boston Police Commissioner Hoping to Criminalize the Recording of Cops


Source: PINAC News

In a recent interview with The Boston Herald, Boston police Commissioner William Evans whined about people who record the police, even going so far as to call for a new law that would criminalize the act of recording a police officer while standing within a certain distance of them.

“If we can get legislation to make it fair, so it protects both sides, then I’m all for it,” Evans told the Herald. “Would I love to see a little distance? I’d love to see that.”

I’m glad Evans finally admits that the public needs legal protection when they record his officers. I’ve needed protection from the Boston police for years as they have threatened me with false arrest, with “physical removal” from public buildings and have shoved me around on many occasions.

But I don’t think that’s what the commissioner meant.

Read more: http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2015/08/boston-police-commissioner-hoping-to-criminalize-the-recording-of-cops-in-public/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 11, 2015, 08:16:00 PM
Good example of systemic abuse (which doesn't exist, of course  ;)    ):





Cliffs:

-Cop tossing homeless guy under arrest peanuts and treating him like a circus animal.
-Cop has prior poor behavior
-Cop has been fired (don't hold your breath that he won't be re-instated)


Props to them firing the cop.  But, as we can all see, there were several officers witnessing this with at least one laughing about it.

Cops wouldn't do that, right?  They would never allow such behavior to go on.  Afterall, it's just the 'one' bad apple, here and there.  ::)

Should've fired all their asses.


*edit - cop resigned under threat of being fired.  But, props for the threat and taking it seriously.















I think agnostic has lost the fight the overwhelming number of incidents
Of cops Behaving Badly, Lying, Cheating, covering, watching Etc.
And growing daily.
So many just stand around & let there colleagues Behave terribly but
Just do nothing.
Where has their sense of right & wrong gone?
If they were watching joe public behave this way No doubt they would soon
Act to uphold the law & what is right & wrong & arrest them.
Why do they not act in the same way to other cops.?

It's Not Just 1 Bad Apple
The Whole Barrel is Going Rotten in one way or another.

The cops watching & doing nothing are guilty of neglect of duty.
All the Scumbags should be Sacked & Prosecuted.

No wonder so so little faith in policing & cops by joe public.

Is Clearly Indicating that it's not just the odd bad apple.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: whork on August 12, 2015, 07:26:37 AM
Should the stand-your-ground law apply if a cop approaches you?



Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: polychronopolous on August 12, 2015, 10:32:02 AM
Sheriff Clarke on Ferguson: 'A Bunch Of Thugs, Creeps and Criminals'

(http://twt-thumbs.washtimes.com/media/image/2013/01/27/wisconsin-sheriff-gun_lea_c0-0-2312-1347_s561x327.jpg?5a0bee2d7cf34370929ff9f6cbd344395ab3deba)

Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke (D) said that the Black Lives Matter protests have been”turned into a political construct” and are “nothing more than an attempt to try to energize and mobilize the black vote through the 2016 election” on Monday’s broadcast of the Fox News Channel “O’Reilly Factor.”

Clarke said the renewed protests in Ferguson were “nothing more than a return to the scene of the big lie, the hands up, don’t shoot, this whole Black Lives Matter movement. This false narrative that came out Ferguson. They destroyed the town. Look, a bunch of thugs, a bunch of creeps, criminals, race-hustlers, with a scattering of some law-abiding people, converged in this are and ripped the town up. I would like to think that this phony movement would have come back to Ferguson one year later to apologize to the people, the good law-abiding people of Ferguson, Missouri. But instead, we get this whole phony movement that’s just been turned into a political construct, Eric, I think you know that. This is nothing more than an attempt to try to energize and mobilize the black vote through the 2016 election. And there’s no better way for them to inflame it than to bring race and police together in the same narrative because it’s an explosive issue.” And “You know, I’ve renamed this movement after Baltimore ‘coming to a city near you.’ And it’s also happened in other cities. Yeah, they’re going to keep this thing going. It’s an unfortunate thing because, look, this isn’t Selma, Alabama, this isn’t Montgomery, this isn’t the Civil Rights movement. Mike Brown was engaged in felonious conduct. This is a slap in the face to people like Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. They ought to go back and study Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. I don’t remember gunfire and rioting breaking out at a protest rally or protest movement that he held.”

Clarke concluded, “the whole thing is phony. Look, if there are problems in some of these cities, and there might be, those things should be dealt with on a local level. This is not a national movement, Eric. They’re trying to turn it into [one]. Let the people at the local level work through their problems, and if problems do exist with the police, let them work it out at that level. But instead, like I said, this is a political construct now. This isn’t about civil rights. This isn’t about making — improving relations between minority communities and police. This is about mobilizing and energizing the black vote for the 2016 election.”

Clarke also stated of the handling of the Ferguson protests, “I’m glad that they called the state of emergency early. You have to preempt this sort of thing. They have to have the resources in place, and they have to be able to, and ready to, act quickly. I think in the first round. And I thought — saw this in other cities, there was an over-reliance by the police on avoiding confrontation. Look, the police are not looking for confrontation. But if someone’s going to bring the fight, then they have to respond quickly. If there’s looting, if there’s gunfire like last night, there’s rioting, there’s other sort of criminal behavior, law enforcement has to take the resources that they have, make sure they have them in place, make sure they have a solid plan, respond quickly, and crush and don’t — and give the impression to these individuals early on, that this stuff’s not going to stand.”
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on August 12, 2015, 07:15:46 PM
If you're a person that thinks we don't need cameras on police...




Cop Arrested After His Own Body Cam Refuted His Report, Shows Him Pummeling Teen

In his report, Fraser wrote that his victim, 19-year-old Michael Roquet “struck me with his left elbow in my chest,” and later “he hit me again with his elbow…. so I struck him in the leg and upper body” and then handcuffed him.

However, according to the body camera footage of the incident, it is clear that there is no violent struggle, and only a drunken college kid serving as an outlet for this cop’s rage. At no time in the report did Fraser mention that he struck Roquet in the head. Nor did Fraser mention that Roquet fell to the ground after the devastating blow and that he proceeded to pummel his inebriated victim as he curled up in the fetal position to protect himself.

“He is not resisting at that point, he is on the ground,” said Police Chief Scott Freeman as he watched the video of this beating.

Amazingly enough, when the department investigated themselves, they actually found wrongdoing. In the report investigators issued to Fraser after the incident they stated that “You violated… policy…. You used hard control strikes from an impact weapon… on an individual who was actively resistant, but was not assaultive…. a strike to the head from a baton is considered use of deadly force…. You used more force than necessary.”

http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/cop-arrested-after-his-own-body-cam-refuted-his-report-shows-him-pummeling-teen
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 13, 2015, 04:15:31 PM
If you're a person that thinks we don't need cameras on police...




Cop Arrested After His Own Body Cam Refuted His Report, Shows Him Pummeling Teen

In his report, Fraser wrote that his victim, 19-year-old Michael Roquet “struck me with his left elbow in my chest,” and later “he hit me again with his elbow…. so I struck him in the leg and upper body” and then handcuffed him.

However, according to the body camera footage of the incident, it is clear that there is no violent struggle, and only a drunken college kid serving as an outlet for this cop’s rage. At no time in the report did Fraser mention that he struck Roquet in the head. Nor did Fraser mention that Roquet fell to the ground after the devastating blow and that he proceeded to pummel his inebriated victim as he curled up in the fetal position to protect himself.

“He is not resisting at that point, he is on the ground,” said Police Chief Scott Freeman as he watched the video of this beating.

Amazingly enough, when the department investigated themselves, they actually found wrongdoing. In the report investigators issued to Fraser after the incident they stated that “You violated… policy…. You used hard control strikes from an impact weapon… on an individual who was actively resistant, but was not assaultive…. a strike to the head from a baton is considered use of deadly force…. You used more force than necessary.”

http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/cop-arrested-after-his-own-body-cam-refuted-his-report-shows-him-pummeling-teen
Amazingly enough, when the department investigated themselves, they actually found wrongdoing. In the report investigators issued to Fraser after the incident they stated that “You violated… policy…. You used hard control strikes from an impact weapon… on an individual who was actively resistant, but was not assaultive…. a strike to the head from a baton is considered use of deadly force…. You used more force than necessary.”




Not only did the internal investigation find Fraser in the wrong, but the department went against the normal circling of the blue wagons and refused to support the violent tactics of one of their own.

“That is unauthorized use of force, absolutely.  And that is something that is completely intolerable, and something we’re not going to put up with, and we dealt with it appropriately,” said Freeman.

After being accused by his fellow officers, Fraser denied striking Roquet in the head, despite the video showing it. He attempted to justify his deadly force by saying that he had “tunnel vision.” He then said, in a serious manner, that he “knows he is out of shape,” so he had to beat down the 19-year-old drunk man because he was scared and didn’t know if  “he [Roquet] was going to spring up from that position and continue resisting.  I struck him again on his back.”
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 13, 2015, 04:19:43 PM
For Deaf Woman, NYPD Is 25 Years in the Past

MANHATTAN (CN) - Setting back the clock before the Americans with Disabilities Act, New York City argued the "extraordinary position" that it did not need to get a deaf woman a translator before arresting her, a federal judge said.
     The scathing opinion dismisses the city's final attempt to avert a trial in a civil rights lawsuit by Diana Williams, a 58-year-old deaf landlord from Staten Island.
     On Sept. 11, 2011, Diana and her husband Chris Williams tried to evict tenants who had fallen behind on their rent.
     Both of the Williamses are deaf, and neither of them can speak more than a few words verbally.
     When the tenant's hearing boyfriend gestured that he had a gun, Chris called for the police using a video relay service that the couple says should have tipped off the dispatcher to send help quickly - and bring a translator, the judge's ruling states.
     Instead, the NYPD arrived without an American Sign Language interpreter and police heard only the tenants' side of the altercation, they say.
     U.S. District Judge Valierie Caproni called arresting officer Christopher Romano's memory of the encounter "at best hazy."
     "Curiously," in the words of the judge, Romano insisted in a deposition that he spoke to Diana Williams - who cannot hear, speak English or read lips - before arresting her.
     Williams says that Romano arrested her without making any effort to communicate, and he could not understand her pleas for an ASL interpreter
     Other tenants at the scene testified that police rejected their offers to interpret for them before they brought Williams in handcuffs to the 122nd Precinct.
     Williams says that police held her for nearly 24 hours before releasing her without charges.
     She sued the city three years ago, and her most recent complaint alleged false arrest, assault and battery and other charges.
     New York City argued that an arrest did not qualify as a "service, program, or activity" that would fall under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
     Scoffing at the argument, Caproni allowed all of the claims to proceed to trial on Wednesday.
     "New York City takes the extraordinary position that, even though the Americans with Disabilities Act has been the law of the land for 25 years, it has no obligation to provide any accommodation to the hearing-impaired at the time of an arrest, even if doing so could easily be accomplished without endangering the officers or the public safety and without interfering in the lawful execution of the officers' duties," she wrote.
     New York City signed an agreement with the federal government in 2009 pledging to comply with the ADA's requirements for the deaf and hearing-impaired.
     But Carol Roberson, the city's assistant commissioner for training the NYPD on interacting with the disabled, testified during the lead-up to Williams's trial that she had made no changes in the department's program six years later, according to the ruling.
     "Moreover, five police officers who had some involvement in this case were deposed, and none could recall whether he had ever received any ADA-related training," the opinion stated.
     Caproni added that it would be "preposterous to believe that given the diversity of the population in the City of New York, the NYPD did not know full well" that it would encounter deaf and hearing-impaired citizens.
     She allowed Williams to try to hold the city accountable for municipal liabilities, awarded when authorities show "deliberate indifference" to their civil rights obligations.
     The New York City Law Department said it is reviewing the decision.
     Andrew Rozynski, the co-director of the Eisenberg & Baum Law Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing, said in a statement that his firm was "pleased" with the ruling.
     "We hope that it will send a message to all police departments across the country that providing communication access to the deaf is critical in ensuring that their rights are protected under the law," he said.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2015/08/07/for-deaf-woman-nypd-is-25-years-in-the-past.htm



Cops don't carry interpreters with them so arriving to a disturbance without one is normal. Not using the services of people who do sign is not normal. We have a school for the Deaf here and I have dealt with a number of calls with people who can't hear or speak. Never had an issue working through it. Poor police work on their part.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 14, 2015, 11:38:16 AM
City of Pittsburgh named in lawsuit stemming from armed raid of family’s home

PITTSBURGH — A lawsuit filed against the city of Pittsburgh alleges that a family of six was forced from their home at gunpoint, illegally and without a warrant, during a predawn raid in January 2014.

The suit -- filed on behalf of Tabatha Werkmeister, Grinage Dion Wilson and their four young children, ages 2 through 9 -- claims that members of the Pittsburgh SWAT team broke down the door to their Fleming Avenue apartment, threw in a smoke bomb and forcibly removed them. They were then held in the back of an unheated truck for 30 to 45 minutes in temperatures of about 20 degrees.

http://www.wpxi.com/news/news/local/city-pittsburgh-named-lawsuit-stemming-armed-raid-/nnJj5/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2015, 09:02:14 AM
Police Hit Organic Farm with Massive SWAT Raid for No Reason, Taxpayers to be Held Liable

Arlington, TX — In an effort to protect the citizens of Texas, a massive military-style raid was conducted on the Garden of Eden organic farm and commune.

On August 2, 2103, nearly two dozen heavily armed SWAT officers stormed this peaceful farm in search of a plant. They found lots of plants, but much to their dismay, they did not find the plant they were looking for.

Countless tax dollars and months of  half-cocked planning went down the drain that day after it was discovered that police incompetence had led these troops into a battle to which there can be no victor.

In the days leading up to this asinine military assault on a peaceful commune, the ineptitude of the Arlington police department was oozing from the seams.

Arlington Detective Magdalena Perez, through a series of poor decisions, frivolously came to the conclusion that the peaceful hippies at the Garden of Eden were up to no good and were cultivating marijuana. The horror! However, Perez was terribly wrong.

Prior to the raid, these heroes even conducted a flyover of the farm and wrongly determined that the Garden of Eden was an evil pot farm. But they were mistaken. After their 20 soldiers had stormed the garden, the Arlington police found not one single gram of marijuana.

What they did find, however, was a myriad of fruits and vegetables; and they seized them. After seemingly disgusted in themselves for such an ignorant and ill-conceived plan, the officers heroically proceeded to confiscate, “17 blackberry bushes, 15 okra plants, 14 tomatillo plants … native grasses and sunflowers.”

Since they couldn’t arrest anyone for growing pot, these public servants decided that they didn’t want to go home empty-handed, so they began writing citations for code violations, like untrimmed bushes and tires laying around. Then they arrested a member of the commune, Quinn Eaker, for an outstanding traffic ticket.

Now, just over two years later, the Garden of Eden farm is seeking damages, and rightfully so. This peaceful group was held at gunpoint and terrorized for hours because of the incompetence of the Arlington PD and the immoral nature of the war on drugs.

The lawsuit, filed by Garden of Eden residents last month, claims police violated their rights to be free from unreasonable search and seizure.

They are seeking compensation for the property and emotional damage caused by the raid, along with the legal expenses they have incurred. They are also asking for punitive damages, “because the City of Arlington and Detective Perez showed a reckless and callous indifference” to their constitutional rights, according to Reason Magazine.

The residents of the farm will undoubtedly win this lawsuit, and the monetary settlement will come from the taxpayers. The 20 armed men who raided the farm along with the inept detective and the rest of the department who initiated the raid will remain on the job. They will receive their regularly scheduled promotions, and nothing will change.

Until officers are held individually liable for their irresponsible actions, this blank check of negligence will continue to grow, and continue to be passed on to the backs of those who do not deserve to carry its weight, the US taxpayer.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/farmers-suing-cops-mistook-organic-tomatoes-weed-raided/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 16, 2015, 10:07:27 AM
Police Hit Organic Farm with Massive SWAT Raid for No Reason, Taxpayers to be Held Liable

Arlington, TX — In an effort to protect the citizens of Texas, a massive military-style raid was conducted on the Garden of Eden organic farm and commune.

On August 2, 2103, nearly two dozen heavily armed SWAT officers stormed this peaceful farm in search of a plant. They found lots of plants, but much to their dismay, they did not find the plant they were looking for.

Countless tax dollars and months of  half-cocked planning went down the drain that day after it was discovered that police incompetence had led these troops into a battle to which there can be no victor.

In the days leading up to this asinine military assault on a peaceful commune, the ineptitude of the Arlington police department was oozing from the seams.

Arlington Detective Magdalena Perez, through a series of poor decisions, frivolously came to the conclusion that the peaceful hippies at the Garden of Eden were up to no good and were cultivating marijuana. The horror! However, Perez was terribly wrong.

Prior to the raid, these heroes even conducted a flyover of the farm and wrongly determined that the Garden of Eden was an evil pot farm. But they were mistaken. After their 20 soldiers had stormed the garden, the Arlington police found not one single gram of marijuana.

What they did find, however, was a myriad of fruits and vegetables; and they seized them. After seemingly disgusted in themselves for such an ignorant and ill-conceived plan, the officers heroically proceeded to confiscate, “17 blackberry bushes, 15 okra plants, 14 tomatillo plants … native grasses and sunflowers.”

Since they couldn’t arrest anyone for growing pot, these public servants decided that they didn’t want to go home empty-handed, so they began writing citations for code violations, like untrimmed bushes and tires laying around. Then they arrested a member of the commune, Quinn Eaker, for an outstanding traffic ticket.

Now, just over two years later, the Garden of Eden farm is seeking damages, and rightfully so. This peaceful group was held at gunpoint and terrorized for hours because of the incompetence of the Arlington PD and the immoral nature of the war on drugs.

The lawsuit, filed by Garden of Eden residents last month, claims police violated their rights to be free from unreasonable search and seizure.

They are seeking compensation for the property and emotional damage caused by the raid, along with the legal expenses they have incurred. They are also asking for punitive damages, “because the City of Arlington and Detective Perez showed a reckless and callous indifference” to their constitutional rights, according to Reason Magazine.

The residents of the farm will undoubtedly win this lawsuit, and the monetary settlement will come from the taxpayers. The 20 armed men who raided the farm along with the inept detective and the rest of the department who initiated the raid will remain on the job. They will receive their regularly scheduled promotions, and nothing will change.

Until officers are held individually liable for their irresponsible actions, this blank check of negligence will continue to grow, and continue to be passed on to the backs of those who do not deserve to carry its weight, the US taxpayer.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/farmers-suing-cops-mistook-organic-tomatoes-weed-raided/













And these were heavily armed police.. ::)
Call this person a detective... Fcuk sake.
I know They Were in Fear Of There Lives....
Fear of Being Attacked With Lentils No Doubt It's Vicious Attack weapon.  :D

Ok Let's Not Just take the hippies & reporters word for this attack.
Agnostic Pls Clarify What We are Missing.

Of Course These Decent Honest Good Cops should Stay in There Jobs & Get
Pay Rises & Promotions.
Why  Not..  ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on August 21, 2015, 09:36:03 AM
New York Police Sergeant Commits Suicide After Sex-Crime Charges


Source: New York Times

A New York police sergeant who was arrested this month on charges that he had sex with an underage girl he met online committed suicide on Thursday, the police said.

The sergeant, Joel Doseau, 43, who was suspended after his arrest, killed himself at his home in Canarsie, Brooklyn, a police official said. Earlier, the official had said he died at a home of a relative.

A family member went to the sergeant’s home after he had not been heard from for a few days and discovered his body. The official said the sergeant had inhaled gas fumes and appeared to have died from asphyxiation.

Sergeant Doseau was arrested on Aug. 5 and arraigned in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn on 40 criminal counts, including rape and sexual abuse. He had worked for the Police Department for 12 years at the time of his arrest.

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/21/nyregion/new-york-police-sergeant-commits-suicide-after-sex-crime-charges.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 21, 2015, 10:16:31 AM
New York Police Sergeant Commits Suicide After Sex-Crime Charges


Source: New York Times

A New York police sergeant who was arrested this month on charges that he had sex with an underage girl he met online committed suicide on Thursday, the police said.

The sergeant, Joel Doseau, 43, who was suspended after his arrest, killed himself at his home in Canarsie, Brooklyn, a police official said. Earlier, the official had said he died at a home of a relative.

A family member went to the sergeant’s home after he had not been heard from for a few days and discovered his body. The official said the sergeant had inhaled gas fumes and appeared to have died from asphyxiation.

Sergeant Doseau was arrested on Aug. 5 and arraigned in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn on 40 criminal counts, including rape and sexual abuse. He had worked for the Police Department for 12 years at the time of his arrest.

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/21/nyregion/new-york-police-sergeant-commits-suicide-after-sex-crime-charges.html

good
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 21, 2015, 02:25:18 PM
good














 :) Yes
At last we totally Agree..ha

Your getting it right. 😉
👍🏻
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 23, 2015, 08:03:02 AM
“Stop F**king Crying!” SWAT Raids Wrong Home, Holds Naked Mom at Gunpoint in Front of Children

Worcester, MA — Marianne Diaz and her children were asleep during the pre-dawn hours of August 18 when a gang of heavily armed militarized men kicked in the door to their apartment and began terrorizing this family.

Diaz was woken up by the sound of multiple doors being kicked in. The next thing she knew, she was naked and on her knees, looking down the barrels of several AR-15 rifles.

“Stop f**king crying and take care of your f**king kids,” she quoted one officer as saying. According to Diaz, the militarized gang would keep her in this state of terror, completely nude, for ten minutes.

With her children crying at the sight of their mother being held hostage by men in black body armor, the gang proceeded to tear apart their house.

This heavily militarized invasion of an innocent family’s home was because incompetent police had raided the wrong house.

During the assault and terrorization, dispatch records show that officers called for a female officer to come to the scene. When the female officer arrived, Diaz, who was completely naked, was then patted down by the female officer and told to spread her legs to be searched.

America can be assured, however, that this sexual abuse and destruction of a family’s home was done in the best interest of public safety, and officers claim that they acted within the confines of their authority.

The only quandary here is this; cops were looking for 36-year-old Shane B. Jackson Jr., who hadn’t lived in the home since February. Diaz had no clue who Jackson was. A simple call to the electric company would have let the police know that the utilities had been switched over to Diaz’ name, months ago.

The fact that they were at the wrong house is only part of their incompetent and brutal blunder, however. These inept barbarians actually arrested Jackson 2 weeks prior to the raid!

According to the Telegram,

    Ms. Diaz was disturbed when informed by a reporter that courthouse records show that Worcester police had arrested Mr. Jackson on a theft warrant two weeks ago.

    In the police log entry for the arrest – which occurred on Southgate Street on Aug. 6 – officers list Mr. Jackson’s address as 71 Sylvan St.

    That’s the same address listed for Mr. Jackson in multiple court cases open against him.

    “Oh my God,” Ms. Diaz said after she learned of the arrest. “How can they say he lives in my apartment if he got arrested before they raided it?”

Diaz resides at 17 Hillside St.

According to records, police conducted absolutely no investigation, or surveillance prior to terrorizing this innocent family.

“They should have come to ask me,” Ms. Diaz said. “I would have let them in my home, if they wanted to search.”

“Before they left, one (officer) said, “We treated you with respect,’” Diaz recalled. “They didn’t even apologize.”

Case after case we see SWAT teams kick down doors to homes, shoot dogs, throw grenades at babies, and even kill innocent people because they are at the wrong house or acting on incorrect information.

“This botched gun raid, without any doubt, is about an innocent family with two children – one disabled – who were utterly terrorized and abused as a result of the grossly reckless conduct exhibited by (police),” charged Diaz’ lawyer Hector E. Pineiro. “There was virtually no due diligence and surveillance done to ensure that they got the right people.”

This gross and deadly negligence is inflicted upon the citizenry with extreme prejudice, and unapologetically. Sadly, Diaz is now part of a long list of innocent people who’ve been needlessly terrorized by the American police state.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/stop-fking-crying-swat-raids-wrong-home-holds-naked-mom-gunpoint-front-children/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 24, 2015, 10:39:02 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/police-man-shot-trooper-told-him-die-soon-102114307.html#

Pretty messed up
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: polychronopolous on August 24, 2015, 10:57:18 AM
Philly Cop Extort Driver with Fundraiser Tix: ‘You Buy These or I Take Your Car’



Philadelphia police officer Matthew Zagursky is under investigation after video went viral of him extorting a driver to buy tickets to a police fundraiser or have his car confiscated.

The 32-year-old officer, who is reportedly a nine-year veteran of the department, can be heard telling the unnamed driver, “You and your friend got any money to buy these thrill show tickets? Support your police department. Ten bucks each, man.”

According to ABC News, “the incident was part of what police call a ‘live stop,’ part of crackdown on unregistered and uninsured vehicles.”

As such, Zagursky continued to threaten the driver: “Either you buy these, or I take your car because it’s unregistered. Ten bucks each man.”

And he got his way. The driver forked over the cash and proceeded onward.

The tickets were for the local Police and Fire Hero Thrill Show fundraiser for the children of fallen officers and firefighters — an event which Commissioner Charles Ramsey said is now tarnished by Zagursky’s actions. “He’s tarnished that entire event, and the entire cause that it represents, by his actions,” the commissioner told the press.

While the department investigates the incident, Zagursky has reportedly been taken off the streets. A district attorney will decide whether criminal charges are in order.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 24, 2015, 11:10:11 AM
Philly Cop Extort Driver with Fundraiser Tix: ‘You Buy These or I Take Your Car’



Philadelphia police officer Matthew Zagursky is under investigation after video went viral of him extorting a driver to buy tickets to a police fundraiser or have his car confiscated.

The 32-year-old officer, who is reportedly a nine-year veteran of the department, can be heard telling the unnamed driver, “You and your friend got any money to buy these thrill show tickets? Support your police department. Ten bucks each, man.”

According to ABC News, “the incident was part of what police call a ‘live stop,’ part of crackdown on unregistered and uninsured vehicles.”

As such, Zagursky continued to threaten the driver: “Either you buy these, or I take your car because it’s unregistered. Ten bucks each man.”

And he got his way. The driver forked over the cash and proceeded onward.

The tickets were for the local Police and Fire Hero Thrill Show fundraiser for the children of fallen officers and firefighters — an event which Commissioner Charles Ramsey said is now tarnished by Zagursky’s actions. “He’s tarnished that entire event, and the entire cause that it represents, by his actions,” the commissioner told the press.

While the department investigates the incident, Zagursky has reportedly been taken off the streets. A district attorney will decide whether criminal charges are in order.


Doesn't deserve to work at McDonalds if true. Charges should be filed.. what a jerk.  And of course the "fruitcake" comment will go along way with the LGBT community... this guy is a class act
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on August 24, 2015, 12:49:00 PM
Did he ticket driver for violation, too?  Just wondering.

Almost seems like he could have been making a joke out of it, but since guy boughg tix will never know. (didn't watch video yet, though)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 24, 2015, 01:20:28 PM
Did he ticket driver for violation, too?  Just wondering.

Almost seems like he could have been making a joke out of it, but since guy boughg tix will never know. (didn't watch video yet, though)

No, he didn't ticket the guy. Said he "paid" by buying the tickets... but to get it registered. Didn't sound like he was joking... sounded like extortion. Had he not bought tickets I believe he would have impounded the car
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on August 24, 2015, 01:53:12 PM
No, he didn't ticket the guy. Said he "paid" by buying the tickets... but to get it registered. Didn't sound like he was joking... sounded like extortion. Had he not bought tickets I believe he would have impounded the car


You think if guy was broke and not able to come up w 20, the cop would have just denied it when the guy made complaint?  (I don't know.. am asking.)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 24, 2015, 03:40:14 PM
You think if guy was broke and not able to come up w 20, the cop would have just denied it when the guy made complaint?  (I don't know.. am asking.)

Wouldn't surprise me.. anyone who would extort someone to buy tickets to a cop fund raiser would likely lie about it later
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on August 24, 2015, 03:55:04 PM
Wouldn't surprise me.. anyone who would extort someone to buy tickets to a cop fund raiser would likely lie about it later

I need to get plugin on this to play (and admittedly am not into doing that right now because it sounds like work), but probably should watch it before saying anything else.

From what I do know, though, it doesn't make sense for cop to take such a risk, when the cost of avoiding of it is only $20 to make all things the same in the end.  Because right off the bat, the guy has information that would say he knows this particular cop is selling tickets. (how would he know that, otherwise?)

But I don't know the whole shabang, will have to say that.  How was the thing exposed?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on August 24, 2015, 03:57:04 PM
btw who took vid
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 24, 2015, 05:02:49 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/police-man-shot-trooper-told-him-die-soon-102114307.html#

Pretty messed up

Very sad when one considers that the trooper tried to help him when he saw the car in the ditch.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 24, 2015, 05:04:34 PM
Police: Winter Garden officer fired, accused of speeding on motorcycle without license

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. —

A former Winter Garden police officer is off the job after he admitted he drove a motorcycle without a license at more than 50 mph over the speed limit.

Channel 9’s Mario Boone learned the officer was pulled over by one of his fellow officers, but the officer who conducted the traffic stop let him go without an arrest or citation.

Julio Negron was let go after investigators learned he barreled through a 45 mph zone on a motorcycle at speeds between 90 and 100 mph.

Negron told investigators he tried to lure a fellow officer into chasing him as a joke.

Authorities said the responding officer felt threatened at one point and drew his weapon on Negron.

Retired police chief and law enforcement expert Chuck Drago said that combined with the fact Negron isn’t legally supposed to be riding a motorcycle makes the case especially serious.

“To be deliberately breaking the law like that (it) just amazes me that a police officer would be doing that," Drago said.

The incident happened in June, but top brass didn’t find out until weeks later, because the officer who stopped Negron let him drive away without an arrest.

“It's not fair, and it's not the right thing to do, but it is the way it works,” Drago said.

Winter Garden police said the officer who let Negron off the hook broke no laws or rules.

They said in a statement, “Officer Negron's violation of agency policies, as well as criminal traffic violations is considered unacceptable, and resulted in him being terminated.”

Negron had been on the force for nearly four years.  

http://www.news965.com/news/news/local/police-winter-garden-officer-fired-accused-speedin/nnNr7/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on August 25, 2015, 01:57:08 PM
Police: Winter Garden officer fired, accused of speeding on motorcycle without license

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. —

A former Winter Garden police officer is off the job after he admitted he drove a motorcycle without a license at more than 50 mph over the speed limit.

Channel 9’s Mario Boone learned the officer was pulled over by one of his fellow officers, but the officer who conducted the traffic stop let him go without an arrest or citation.

Julio Negron was let go after investigators learned he barreled through a 45 mph zone on a motorcycle at speeds between 90 and 100 mph.

Negron told investigators he tried to lure a fellow officer into chasing him as a joke.

Authorities said the responding officer felt threatened at one point and drew his weapon on Negron.

Retired police chief and law enforcement expert Chuck Drago said that combined with the fact Negron isn’t legally supposed to be riding a motorcycle makes the case especially serious.

“To be deliberately breaking the law like that (it) just amazes me that a police officer would be doing that," Drago said.

The incident happened in June, but top brass didn’t find out until weeks later, because the officer who stopped Negron let him drive away without an arrest.

“It's not fair, and it's not the right thing to do, but it is the way it works,” Drago said.

Winter Garden police said the officer who let Negron off the hook broke no laws or rules.

They said in a statement, “Officer Negron's violation of agency policies, as well as criminal traffic violations is considered unacceptable, and resulted in him being terminated.”

Negron had been on the force for nearly four years.  

http://www.news965.com/news/news/local/police-winter-garden-officer-fired-accused-speedin/nnNr7/

what an idiot..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2015, 09:31:55 PM
Until the criminals involved start paying from their pockets, and not send the bill to the taxpayers, it is unlikely the situation will change.

Government ordered to pay legal fees in highway forfeiture case

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/nevada/government-ordered-pay-legal-fees-highway-forfeiture-case
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on August 26, 2015, 09:31:36 AM
On the earlier story:

Looks like guy himself recorded and uploaded it.

Doesn't make sense that the cop would have taken vehicle if guy didn't buy tickets, but it looks like he wanted the guy to at least think it was a real possibility.  Not good and a little weird.  I wonder why cop took for granted that he had the flexibility to treat people like that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on August 28, 2015, 11:28:16 AM
Two Innocent Men Framed by LA Cops who Lied and Threatened Witnesses, Can Now Seek Justice

Los Angeles, CA — After collectively serving 47 years in prison for crimes that they did not commit, two wrongfully convicted men are allowed to advance lawsuits against the Los Angeles detectives and deputy who withheld exonerating evidence at their trials and pressured witnesses into falsely testifying against them.

A three-judge appellate panel denied immunity to police investigators on Wednesday after determining that they had been required to turn over exculpatory evidence in separate murder trials. Although attorneys for the police have argued that the lawsuits should be dismissed because the law was unclear in 1984 and 1991, officers have been required to disclose exonerating evidence since the 1963 Supreme Court decision, Brady v. Maryland.

Convicted of killing Jay French in 1984, Frank O’Connell spent 27 years in prison for a murder that he did not commit. Detectives focused on O’Connell after learning that he had been romantically involved with French’s ex-wife, who was in the middle of a vicious custody battle with French. In 2009, O’Connell’s conviction was overturned after a judge found that detectives J.D. Smith and Gilbert Parra had failed to turn over exculpatory evidence.

The prosecution’s star witness, Daniel Druecker, initially identified O’Connell as the killer and testified against him in court. But years later, Druecker returned to court and testified that he had barely glimpsed the killer’s profile and had not been wearing his glasses at the time. Druecker admitted in court that he had testified against O’Connell because he felt pressured and intimidated by the investigators. Another witness told investigators that he was “not positive” that O’Connell was the killer.

Instead of turning in the notes from their investigation, detectives Smith and Parra also concealed the fact that another suspect attempted to kill French four years earlier. Required to turn over all of their evidence, the detectives suppressed the exonerating evidence and tampered with witnesses in order to convict an innocent man.


At the age of 16, Francisco Carrillo Jr. was arrested and later convicted for the murder of Donald Sarpy on January 18, 1991. Six teenage boys who witnessed the drive-by shooting identified Carrillo as the gunman. After spending 20 years in prison, Carrillo was released after five of the six witnesses, including the victim’s son, recanted their identifications. The sixth witness had refused to testify against Carrillo.

According to Carrillo’s lawsuit, Deputy Craig Ditsch steered witnesses into identifying him and threatened a witness who had decided to recant his identification. Ditsch allegedly pressured an eyewitness named Scott Turner into identifying Carrillo after Turner chose several photographs of other suspects after the shooting. When Turner decided to recant his identification before Carrillo’s second trial, Ditsch reportedly threatened him.

In 2011, L.A. County Superior Court Judge Paul Bacigalupo overturned Carrillo’s conviction and ordered his release after concluding that the eyewitness testimony against him was false, tainted, or both.

On top of police officers being clearly required to disclose exonerating evidence since Brady v. Maryland, in 1978, the Ninth Circuit issued a similar ruling in U.S. v. Butler. This case made it “unmistakably clear that police officers and prosecutors alike share an obligation to disclose ‘pertinent material evidence favorable to the defense,'” Judge Raymond Fisher wrote for the court on Wednesday.

Judges Carlos Bea, Jay Bybee, and Fisher unanimously decided this week to deny immunity to the investigators responsible for wrongfully imprisoning two men for collectively 47 years. Allowed to advance their lawsuits against the cops who withheld exculpatory evidence and pressured witnesses, O’Connell and Carrillo continue to seek a modicum of justice.

The three officers accused of concealing evidence and tampering with witnesses were never disciplined for their actions. Detective Parra has since died while Detective Smith and Deputy Ditsch have retired.

Last year, Carrillo, who now works as a Justice Advocate with Death Penalty Focus and is a student at Loyola Marymount University, gave a riveting talk at TEDx and described his experience.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/appeals-court-determines-wrongfully-convicted-men-sue-detectives-suppressed-evidence-pressured-witnesses-trials/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on August 28, 2015, 07:35:26 PM
Two Innocent Men Framed by LA Cops who Lied and Threatened Witnesses, Can Now Seek Justice

Los Angeles, CA — After collectively serving 47 years in prison for crimes that they did not commit, two wrongfully convicted men are allowed to advance lawsuits against the Los Angeles detectives and deputy who withheld exonerating evidence at their trials and pressured witnesses into falsely testifying against them.

A three-judge appellate panel denied immunity to police investigators on Wednesday after determining that they had been required to turn over exculpatory evidence in separate murder trials. Although attorneys for the police have argued that the lawsuits should be dismissed because the law was unclear in 1984 and 1991, officers have been required to disclose exonerating evidence since the 1963 Supreme Court decision, Brady v. Maryland.

Convicted of killing Jay French in 1984, Frank O’Connell spent 27 years in prison for a murder that he did not commit. Detectives focused on O’Connell after learning that he had been romantically involved with French’s ex-wife, who was in the middle of a vicious custody battle with French. In 2009, O’Connell’s conviction was overturned after a judge found that detectives J.D. Smith and Gilbert Parra had failed to turn over exculpatory evidence.

The prosecution’s star witness, Daniel Druecker, initially identified O’Connell as the killer and testified against him in court. But years later, Druecker returned to court and testified that he had barely glimpsed the killer’s profile and had not been wearing his glasses at the time. Druecker admitted in court that he had testified against O’Connell because he felt pressured and intimidated by the investigators. Another witness told investigators that he was “not positive” that O’Connell was the killer.

Instead of turning in the notes from their investigation, detectives Smith and Parra also concealed the fact that another suspect attempted to kill French four years earlier. Required to turn over all of their evidence, the detectives suppressed the exonerating evidence and tampered with witnesses in order to convict an innocent man.


At the age of 16, Francisco Carrillo Jr. was arrested and later convicted for the murder of Donald Sarpy on January 18, 1991. Six teenage boys who witnessed the drive-by shooting identified Carrillo as the gunman. After spending 20 years in prison, Carrillo was released after five of the six witnesses, including the victim’s son, recanted their identifications. The sixth witness had refused to testify against Carrillo.

According to Carrillo’s lawsuit, Deputy Craig Ditsch steered witnesses into identifying him and threatened a witness who had decided to recant his identification. Ditsch allegedly pressured an eyewitness named Scott Turner into identifying Carrillo after Turner chose several photographs of other suspects after the shooting. When Turner decided to recant his identification before Carrillo’s second trial, Ditsch reportedly threatened him.

In 2011, L.A. County Superior Court Judge Paul Bacigalupo overturned Carrillo’s conviction and ordered his release after concluding that the eyewitness testimony against him was false, tainted, or both.

On top of police officers being clearly required to disclose exonerating evidence since Brady v. Maryland, in 1978, the Ninth Circuit issued a similar ruling in U.S. v. Butler. This case made it “unmistakably clear that police officers and prosecutors alike share an obligation to disclose ‘pertinent material evidence favorable to the defense,'” Judge Raymond Fisher wrote for the court on Wednesday.

Judges Carlos Bea, Jay Bybee, and Fisher unanimously decided this week to deny immunity to the investigators responsible for wrongfully imprisoning two men for collectively 47 years. Allowed to advance their lawsuits against the cops who withheld exculpatory evidence and pressured witnesses, O’Connell and Carrillo continue to seek a modicum of justice.

The three officers accused of concealing evidence and tampering with witnesses were never disciplined for their actions. Detective Parra has since died while Detective Smith and Deputy Ditsch have retired.

Last year, Carrillo, who now works as a Justice Advocate with Death Penalty Focus and is a student at Loyola Marymount University, gave a riveting talk at TEDx and described his experience.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/appeals-court-determines-wrongfully-convicted-men-sue-detectives-suppressed-evidence-pressured-witnesses-trials/














It just keeps going on & on.

Hard to Fathom some on Here Totally Believe
All Cops are Good.
And Every 'Criminal' Convicted is A
Scum Bag & Deserves to Be Locked Up.

We can only hope if convicted these ex-cops get 1.) 20 & 27 yrs
Minimum to start with & 2.) the same Time on top.
1, the number of years freedom the men were locked up for.
2, their prison punishment time.

If those kind of sentences were given out IT may Just Make
Other Scum Bag Cops Think Twice Before Abusing Their Powers
& Position of Trust.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2015, 01:58:36 AM
Officer, homeowner shot when DeKalb police respond to wrong house

A DeKalb County police officer was critically injured, a homeowner injured and dog killed in a shooting Monday night.

Three officers were responding to a report of suspicious person, but instead went to the wrong home in the 1500 block of Boulderwoods Drive, near Bouldercrest Road, Cedric Alexander, director of public safety, said late Monday. Officers weren’t given a street address, but went to a home matching the description given by a 911 caller, Alexander said.

When officers got to the rear of the house, they found an unlocked screen and unlocked door and believed an intruder was inside, according to police. Officers announced their presence, but it wasn’t known how it escalated to gunfire.

Both an officer and a homeowner, whose names were not released, were shot and a dog was killed inside the home, Alexander said. But officers determined it was not the correct home.

“The residence that these officers responded to is the wrong residence that was in question,” Alexander said.

The officer, shot in the thigh, was in critical condition and underwent emergency surgery at Grady Memorial Hospital. The homeowner was also being treated for injuries, but his condition was not known, Alexander said. At least one officer discharged his gun, but no information was released on whether the homeowner also had a gun.

“A lot is yet to be determined here as to what and when shots were fired, how the officer received injuries, how the homeowner received injuries,” Alexander said. “But we did respond to the wrong residence tonight.”

The GBI was called to assist with the investigation, Alexander said.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out the homeowner,” Alexander said. “And our thoughts and prayers go out to the officer who suffered a severe, critical injury here tonight and lost a lot of blood. We just hope both of them recover well.”

A next-door neighbor told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution he heard sirens and was shocked to learn his neighbor had been shot. A resident on the street since 1971, Bob Gilman said the neighborhood is a high-crime area.

“This is the southeast side of town, so we do have a lot of crime over here, robberies, burglaries, shootings,” Gilman said. “Southeast Atlanta is relatively high-crime area that I live in.”

The officers involved were placed on administrative leave, Alexander said.

http://www.ajc.com/news/news/breaking-news/breaking-dekalb-county-police-officer-shot/nnT9R/?ecmp=ajc_social_twitter_2014_sfp
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 03, 2015, 01:23:12 AM
Deputies Caught on Video Brutally Beating Surrendering Man, Charged With Assault

Apple Valley, CA — Three sheriff’s deputies were charged with felony assault on Tuesday after a video captured them beating an unarmed man surrendering to the officers. After falling off his stolen horse, Francis Pusok dropped onto his stomach with his arms and legs outstretched. But video caught several police officers surrounding Pusok, striking him in the head and the groin as he surrendered with his hands behind his back.

At 12:12 p.m. on April 9, deputies arrived near Francis Pusok’s home in Apple Valley, California, to serve a search warrant involving an identity theft investigation. According to San Bernardino sheriff’s department spokeswoman Cindy Bachman, Pusok was already sitting in a car when the deputies approached his residence. Pusok fled in the vehicle prompting a near three-hour pursuit through the desert.

After Pusok abandoned his vehicle and ran into the desert, the sheriff’s department and California Highway Patrol deployed helicopters and off-road vehicles to continue pursuing him. A few minutes later, the deputies received a report that Pusok had stolen a horse from a group of people near Deep Creek Hot Springs. As the deputies tracked down Pusok and made contact with him around 3 p.m., Pusok fell off the stolen horse.

According to the sheriff’s department, deputies used a Taser on Pusok but it was rendered ineffective due to his loose clothing. But video shot from NBC4’s helicopter revealed Pusok surrendering to the deputies by lying facedown with his hands behind his back when one cop appears to repeatedly punch Pusok in the head. The other deputy continued kicking Pusok in the groin as he remained on the ground.

At least ten deputies exhibited excessive force by punching and kicking Pusok dozens of times and beating him with a baton after he had already surrendered. Instead of administering immediate medical attention, the deputies stood around for several minutes before transferring Pusok to a hospital for treatment. Pusok was charged with multiple counts including felony evading, reckless driving, possessing stolen property, and horse theft.

Three deputies were reportedly also hospitalized. Two received treatment for dehydration. According to the sheriff’s department, a third deputy was sent to the hospital after the horse kicked him.

Due to Pusok’s criminal history, San Bernardino Sheriff John McMahon inferred that many of the deputies involved in the initial pursuit were familiar with Pusok and bore grudges against him. With multiple convictions including attempted robbery, animal cruelty, disturbing the peace, and resisting arrest, Pusok had antagonized the sheriff’s department for over a decade. But Pusok’s past crimes did not justify the police brutality inflicted upon him after he had peacefully surrendered.

Charged with 14 felony and misdemeanor counts, Pusok eventually reached a $650,000 settlement with the county.

On Tuesday, District Attorney Mike Ramos announced the filing of criminal charges against deputies Nicholas Downey, Charles Foster, and Michael Phelps. Charged with felonious assault by a public officer, each deputy faces anywhere from 16 months to three years in county jail. The three deputies are scheduled for arraignment on September 8 in San Bernardino Superior Court.

The seven other deputies involved in the incident were not charged. Deputies Scott Hamilton, David Moore, Dominic Moody, Raymond Perez, Tyler McGee, Detective William Doemner, and Sgt. James Evans do not currently face criminal charges. All 10 deputies remain on paid administrative leave.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/deputies-charged-assault-beating-unarmed-man-captured-video/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 03, 2015, 03:08:32 AM
Deputies Caught on Video Brutally Beating Surrendering Man, Charged With Assault

Apple Valley, CA — Three sheriff’s deputies were charged with felony assault on Tuesday after a video captured them beating an unarmed man surrendering to the officers. After falling off his stolen horse, Francis Pusok dropped onto his stomach with his arms and legs outstretched. But video caught several police officers surrounding Pusok, striking him in the head and the groin as he surrendered with his hands behind his back.

At 12:12 p.m. on April 9, deputies arrived near Francis Pusok’s home in Apple Valley, California, to serve a search warrant involving an identity theft investigation. According to San Bernardino sheriff’s department spokeswoman Cindy Bachman, Pusok was already sitting in a car when the deputies approached his residence. Pusok fled in the vehicle prompting a near three-hour pursuit through the desert.

After Pusok abandoned his vehicle and ran into the desert, the sheriff’s department and California Highway Patrol deployed helicopters and off-road vehicles to continue pursuing him. A few minutes later, the deputies received a report that Pusok had stolen a horse from a group of people near Deep Creek Hot Springs. As the deputies tracked down Pusok and made contact with him around 3 p.m., Pusok fell off the stolen horse.

According to the sheriff’s department, deputies used a Taser on Pusok but it was rendered ineffective due to his loose clothing. But video shot from NBC4’s helicopter revealed Pusok surrendering to the deputies by lying facedown with his hands behind his back when one cop appears to repeatedly punch Pusok in the head. The other deputy continued kicking Pusok in the groin as he remained on the ground.

At least ten deputies exhibited excessive force by punching and kicking Pusok dozens of times and beating him with a baton after he had already surrendered. Instead of administering immediate medical attention, the deputies stood around for several minutes before transferring Pusok to a hospital for treatment. Pusok was charged with multiple counts including felony evading, reckless driving, possessing stolen property, and horse theft.

Three deputies were reportedly also hospitalized. Two received treatment for dehydration. According to the sheriff’s department, a third deputy was sent to the hospital after the horse kicked him.

Due to Pusok’s criminal history, San Bernardino Sheriff John McMahon inferred that many of the deputies involved in the initial pursuit were familiar with Pusok and bore grudges against him. With multiple convictions including attempted robbery, animal cruelty, disturbing the peace, and resisting arrest, Pusok had antagonized the sheriff’s department for over a decade. But Pusok’s past crimes did not justify the police brutality inflicted upon him after he had peacefully surrendered.

Charged with 14 felony and misdemeanor counts, Pusok eventually reached a $650,000 settlement with the county.

On Tuesday, District Attorney Mike Ramos announced the filing of criminal charges against deputies Nicholas Downey, Charles Foster, and Michael Phelps. Charged with felonious assault by a public officer, each deputy faces anywhere from 16 months to three years in county jail. The three deputies are scheduled for arraignment on September 8 in San Bernardino Superior Court.

The seven other deputies involved in the incident were not charged. Deputies Scott Hamilton, David Moore, Dominic Moody, Raymond Perez, Tyler McGee, Detective William Doemner, and Sgt. James Evans do not currently face criminal charges. All 10 deputies remain on paid administrative leave.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/deputies-charged-assault-beating-unarmed-man-captured-video/














I kind of have some feeling for the Cops in this case.  :o
That Pusok was clearly a scumbag & in all likelihood deserved
A good beating.
Only not at the time he Peacefully Lay Down Arms Behind His Back.
Sounds like these Cops Were Cowards & Thugs To Group Attack Him.
Let's Hope They Get Convicted & Get Beaten By A Group Prisoners
See How Much They Think It's Acceptable.
And as Police Officers They Should Be Upholding The Law Not Acting
As Judge & Jury. 

All this While Being Filmed. Not The Brightest Cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 03, 2015, 07:12:17 AM
BOTH sides are the problem here.

I have a LEO friend on my social media.  He defends the cops EVERY SINGLE TIME when commenting on new items.  "There's more to this" or "there were other factors at play" or "we dont know the whole story".

Dude was defending the cop that shot the man in the back at 20 feet who was just running, a few months back, remember that one?  

Yes, 99.9% of cops are awesome... but we should all admit there are a very very small % of cops that do abuse people and shoot people 'in the wrong'.  This blind defense of everything?  It tells me this cop buddy would lie/cover up a bad shoot in real life too.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2015, 10:16:34 AM
Woman Sues NYPD After Her House Was Repeatedly Raided by Cops Trying to Arrest Her Dead Husband

New York, NY — In a telling example of police incompetence, a poor woman has been repeatedly subject to cops raiding her house in a futile attempt to arrest her dead husband.

In 1996, James Jordan Sr. was arrested for jumping a turnstile in New York’s subway. A decade would pass without police pursuing him and in 2006, Jordan would succumb to his diabetes and died at the age of 46.

It wasn’t until he died that officers began looking for this turnstile-jumping hardened criminal, and they did so by harassing his widow.

In 2014 alone, cops would tear apart the apartment of Karen Fennell four times as they searched for her dead husband who was wanted on a misdemeanor charge almost two decades old.

The repeated raids had gotten so out of hand that Fennell was forced to hang her dead husband’s death certificate and funeral flyer on the front door. But still, police came into her home and turned furniture upside down looking for this deceased man.

“I wanted it to be the first thing they saw before they came into my home and flipped it upside down,” Fennell told The Post of her morbid posting. “I can’t hide anyone in my apartment. It’s not big enough for that. But they keep coming and insisting that he’s in my house.”

After being harassed by countless teams of incompetent NYPD cops Fennell hired an attorney and filed a lawsuit. Last week, Fennell had enough stress of reliving her husband’s death and settled with the city for $10,000.

While Fennell’s case may seem like a fluke, the fact is that police raid the homes of innocent people in attempts to locate suspects who do not live there, all the time.

Not only do they raid the wrong house, but in some instances they even kill the innocent occupants.

Perhaps the saddest aspect of Fennell’s story is that this settlement will likely have little if any effect on the NYPD. They may very well show up at her house tomorrow.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/woman-sues-nypd-house-repeatedly-raided-cops-arrest-dead-husband/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 06, 2015, 10:33:16 AM
BOTH sides are the problem here.

I have a LEO friend on my social media.  He defends the cops EVERY SINGLE TIME when commenting on new items.  "There's more to this" or "there were other factors at play" or "we dont know the whole story".

Dude was defending the cop that shot the man in the back at 20 feet who was just running, a few months back, remember that one?  

Yes, 99.9% of cops are awesome... but we should all admit there are a very very small % of cops that do abuse people and shoot people 'in the wrong'.  This blind defense of everything?  It tells me this cop buddy would lie/cover up a bad shoot in real life too.

I'd love to believe this with sincerity.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2015, 08:35:23 AM
I'd love to believe this with sincerity.

Just my unofficial stats but I think about 60% of the cops are awesome, 5% are tools and shouldn't be cops, 35% are okay, will manage to do the job without getting into trouble but won't be remembered or make much difference in their community. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 07, 2015, 09:16:04 AM
Just my unofficial stats but I think about 60% of the cops are awesome, 5% are tools and shouldn't be cops, 35% are okay, will manage to do the job without getting into trouble but won't be remembered or make much difference in their community. 

How is it they manage to defy the odds by always happening to be in the same place at the same time?

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2015, 11:29:27 AM
How is it they manage to defy the odds by always happening to be in the same place at the same time?



can you be more specific?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 07, 2015, 02:10:50 PM
Just my unofficial stats but I think about 60% of the cops are awesome, 5% are tools and shouldn't be cops, 35% are okay, will manage to do the job without getting into trouble but won't be remembered or make much difference in their community. 













 :o Wow Agnostic  you finally seem to be accepting that
There are Very Bad Apples in the Police Pot.  ;)

Pls, what is the total number of U.S. Police officers.
Just to see how many cops that 5% would be.

Sadly it appears the number is Greater than 5%,
With the amount of reports let alone the number
Of incidents that go unreported.
Also with so many cops being complicit or turning a blind eye
To what goes on.
👍
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2015, 02:22:05 PM












 :o Wow Agnostic  you finally seem to be accepting that
There are Very Bad Apples in the Police Pot.  ;)

Pls, what is the total number of U.S. Police officers.
Just to see how many cops that 5% would be.

Sadly it appears the number is Greater than 5%,
With the amount of reports let alone the number
Of incidents that go unreported.
Also with so many cops being complicit or turning a blind eye
To what goes on.
👍

it could just be that you are reading my posts all the way through.. I've never maintained there were no bad apples. We hire from the human race. Our disagreement has always been and likely always will be to what extent do they exist
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2015, 02:29:00 PM
So really, we just need 60% of the cops we have?

nah, the other 35 still function and perform the job.. just not all that stellar.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 07, 2015, 03:23:15 PM
can you be more specific?

Are you including all of them that have failed to report things they should have?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2015, 11:08:47 AM
Are you including all of them that have failed to report things they should have?

well, lets see. We are required to report ANY violation of policy as well as any criminal act. That would include not using a blinker, to not having shoes shined. Officers generally don't report that, but at my department, medium to major policy violations get reported, and criminal acts would be reported 99% of the time. I can't speak for every department. We have a rule of firing officers for lying, and firing officers who knew about something and didn't report it.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2015, 02:58:37 PM
it could just be that you are reading my posts all the way through.. I've never maintained there were no bad apples. We hire from the human race. Our disagreement has always been and likely always will be to what extent do they exist













No disagreement with the Fact they do exist.

How many & what percentage that is...???
I asked how many cops there are....
and what 5% would be of that number.

We are getting somewhere as admitting there is a problem
big or small is Getting somewhere and A Step Towards dealing With it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 08, 2015, 03:00:34 PM
Ag007, what's your take on stop & frisk?

Does it work?  Does it violate the shit out of people's rights?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2015, 03:02:57 PM
well, lets see. We are required to report ANY violation of policy as well as any criminal act. That would include not using a blinker, to not having shoes shined. Officers generally don't report that, but at my department, medium to major policy violations get reported, and criminal acts would be reported 99% of the time. I can't speak for every department. We have a rule of firing officers for lying, and firing officers who knew about something and didn't report it.   













That's very good to read.
clearly a more enlightened & thinking
police department.

Great get rid of the Scumbags.
Can we extend this to politicians & other Scumbags Abusing there positions.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2015, 03:38:13 PM












That's very good to read.
clearly a more enlightened & thinking
police department.

Great get rid of the Scumbags.
Can we extend this to politicians & other Scumbags Abusing there positions.

Sadly, citizens will and have re-elected politicians convicted of crimes. We rarely vote out our problems because we don't put a lot of effort into vetting our politicians. We simply insure they have an "R" or "D" after their names
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2015, 03:51:08 PM
Ag007, what's your take on stop & frisk?

Does it work?  Does it violate the shit out of people's rights?

I think it's a good rule. I also think it can and has been abused. How it is supposed to work is I get dispatched to a call of a suspicious person lurking around vehicles at 3am in a neighborhood, pulling on door handles. The description is a white male, knit cap and backpack. I drive to the location and see someone fitting that description walking down the street. I have a reasonable suspicion that he may likely be the culprit and so I detain him to determine if he is the one. Because I am alone, at night I want to make sure before we get into conversation, that he is not carrying a readily accessible weapon so I am allowed to frisk "outside of garments" him for obvious weapons. I am not allowed to go into pockets nor the backpack unless there was information from a witness that he was seen placing a weapon in the backpack. I'm not looking for stolen items, just weapons. I think it's a reasonable accommodation to make considering the places and people we often deal with in our occupation.

It does not allow an officer to arbitrarily stop a person for a fishing expedition. I can engage anyone in conversation at any time, but they are free to leave and I have no authority to frisk them. I must be based on reasonable suspicion and I reasonably suspect they may be armed. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 08, 2015, 04:08:34 PM
It does not allow an officer to arbitrarily stop a person for a fishing expedition.

Are you 100% sure police ONLY use stop and frisk when searching for a particular suspect that they have an APB on, when they find a visual match?

LOL!  my belief is that police use it as they want, when they see someone they deem shady.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2015, 04:31:06 PM
Are you 100% sure police ONLY use stop and frisk when searching for a particular suspect that they have an APB on, when they find a visual match?

LOL!  my belief is that police use it as they want, when they see someone they deem shady.

That was an example.. you can also use it when not dispatched.. another example.. 4am, subject dressed all in black, back pack, flash light, and there have been car burglaries in the area; you're driving down the road and passing a corner known for drug trafficking and you see what appears to be a "hand off" or money/drug exchange. basically when you can articulate you have reasonable suspicion you can initiate a Terry stop.

You wouldn't be wrong in assuming it has been misused. It goes back to the Corruption of the Noble Cause thing, where police want to catch the bad guys, society wants them to catch the bad guys and keep their community safe etc etc.. so some police will "bend" the rules because they mistakenly believe the ends justifies the means and abuse the system. Their intentions may be good, but they are not looking at the big picture. It is more important to maintain integrity then it is to catch that car burglar that night. Or that drug dealer that night.

There is a dilemma that is discussed on occasion. It normally uses an extreme to demonstrate the issue. I've heard it used with a hostage situation, or a terrorist situation. Would you as a citizen, want the police to violate the suspects rights, if you knew the suspect knew the location of a child buried alive with limited oxygen left. Would you okay the use of any means necessary to get that information?  What if it were your child?  So many people would say that in that case... with a life on the line, it is more important to get the information than to worry about the suspects rights. And that is how corruption of the noble cause starts in officers... just at a much lesser intensity.             
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 08, 2015, 04:36:35 PM
well, lets see. We are required to report ANY violation of policy as well as any criminal act. That would include not using a blinker, to not having shoes shined. Officers generally don't report that, but at my department, medium to major policy violations get reported, and criminal acts would be reported 99% of the time. I can't speak for every department. We have a rule of firing officers for lying, and firing officers who knew about something and didn't report it.   

In your own estimation,  is what I mean by that.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 08, 2015, 04:39:58 PM
I understand you don't have a way to know or to honestly estimate that, so just asking is all.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2015, 04:43:39 PM
I understand you don't have a way to know or to honestly estimate that, so just asking is all.

cool..

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 08, 2015, 04:58:52 PM
cool..



 ;D just curious about how you arrived at those numbers...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2015, 05:06:03 PM
Ok. as Agnostic wont give the figures i asked for.
From the figures i have found the number of US police
varies in estimates from around 900,000 to 1,200,000.

Lets say 1,000,000 cops
using agnostics estimation of 5%
& say 10% max.
5% = 50,000
10% = 100,000 cops

if anywhere between them 2 figures is remotely correct
That's one Huge problem.
No wonder Politicians & police are constantly down playing
this situation.

Armed & working together, covering for each other
While Hiding behind the Shield of The Law.

Explains all the constant reports coming in.
there's a good sized army of the scumbag fcukers.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 08, 2015, 06:15:46 PM
Ok. as Agnostic wont give the figures i asked for.
From the figures i have found the number of US police
varies in estimates from around 900,000 to 1,200,000.

Lets say 1,000,000 cops
using agnostics estimation of 5%
& say 10% max.
5% = 50,000
10% = 100,000 cops

if anywhere between them 2 figures is remotely correct
That's one Huge problem.
No wonder Politicians & police are constantly down playing
this situation.

Armed & working together, covering for each other
While Hiding behind the Shield of The Law.

Explains all the constant reports coming in.
there's a good sized army of the scumbag fcukers.

Very interesting point, I.  Those are state and local, too.. not include feds.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 08, 2015, 07:14:19 PM
A quick google search of "stop and frisk abuse" shows cops admitting they're searching people "just for being a fcking mutt"
and PLENTY of other abuses.

https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&rlz=1C1ZMDB_enUS510US528&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=stop%20and%20frisk%20abuse%20video

Video there, so it's not like we can just shrug it off.  Some cops abuse the shit out of 'stop and frisk'.   it's a shit rule.  if I'm not breaking any law, the cop can watch me all he wants, but do NOT violate my rights to walk down the street.   Making up "cause you're a mutt" should put that cop out of a job, and I bet it didn't. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2015, 07:56:09 AM
Citation Nation: Cop Writes Man a Ticket for Broken Windshield as He’s Getting it Fixed

Denver, CO – Nick Berlin was recently pulled over by police and ticketed for having a broken window, This was in spite of the fact that he was in the parking lot of an auto-glass workshop and had an appointment to get the window fixed at the same moment he was getting the ticket.

Berlin, who was the victim of vandalism just a day before, had quickly made an appointment to get his window fixed after someone threw a rock at it and cracked it.

The whole staff was waiting in the parking lot to fix his car when they saw the officer writing him a ticket, and the officer apparently did not want to hear any excuses.

“I got a ticket for something that I was close as I could be to resolving,” Nick Berlin said. “I don’t know if he’s a no-nonsense kind of cop, it was definitely a bummer,” he added.

Local news team ABC13 was able to confirm his story by pulling up the records from the auto glass shop and comparing those records with the time and date found on the ticket. They discovered that as Berlin explained to the officer, he had made the appointment moments before and was on his way to get the problem fixed.

Shop owner David Sprague and his crew were astonished by the actions of this overzealous officer and said that there was no reason to pull Berlin over in the first place.

“We were just standing here in our door and were ready for his appointment and all of the sudden we see a cop out there writing the guy a ticket, We were pretty astounded to think that was what happened,” Sprague said.

“He had plenty of visibility on the driver side,” he added.

While the Sheriff’s Department has refused to comment on the issue, the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado pointed out that this is an illustration of how police are more concerned with enforcing codes and writing tickets than actually protecting people.

“The more and more police officers see their role as ticketing as opposed to protecting public safety, that has a tendency to erode the public trust,” Denise Maes of the ACLU said.

Shop owner David Sprague has offered to cover Berlin’s $46 fine if he is not able to beat it in court.

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 09, 2015, 08:29:55 AM
That's why auto-glass companies have a van.  You shouldn't drive with a windshield that's threatening to shatter, because any bump can cause it to do that in an instant.

The guy probably couldn't afford to do anything other than what he did, though.  The officer should have acted like a human being with a heart, but let's not pretend we're surprised that he didn't.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2015, 08:59:49 AM
Federal Prosecutors Fight Back After Judge Orders Motorist Be Returned $167K Seized


http://dailysignal.com/2015/08/21/federal-prosecutors-fight-back-after-judge-orders-motorist-be-returned-167k-seized/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2015, 12:19:32 PM
A quick google search of "stop and frisk abuse" shows cops admitting they're searching people "just for being a fcking mutt"
and PLENTY of other abuses.

https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&rlz=1C1ZMDB_enUS510US528&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=stop%20and%20frisk%20abuse%20video

Video there, so it's not like we can just shrug it off.  Some cops abuse the shit out of 'stop and frisk'.   it's a shit rule.  if I'm not breaking any law, the cop can watch me all he wants, but do NOT violate my rights to walk down the street.   Making up "cause you're a mutt" should put that cop out of a job, and I bet it didn't. 

We generally don't create rules based on isolated incidents. Otherwise we wouldn't allow semi automatic weapons. We understand police need to investigate suspicious activity and should be able to do it under relatively safe conditions. So I still think it is a good sound rule. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 09, 2015, 12:41:02 PM
We generally don't create rules based on isolated incidents. Otherwise we wouldn't allow semi automatic weapons. We understand police need to investigate suspicious activity and should be able to do it under relatively safe conditions. So I still think it is a good sound rule. 

Consistently, 80 to 90% of those grabbed in stop-and-frisks are innocent.

http://www.nyclu.org/content/stop-and-frisk-data

So 80 to 90% of the time, people's rights are violated.   Great rate.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2015, 12:54:55 PM
Misconceptions of stop-and-frisk may cripple successful crime fighting strategies: NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly
New York's top cop says critics and political opportunists are blind to the fact that the NYPD's crimefighting practices have drastically cut crime in the last decade.
BY RAYMOND KELLY  NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, July 2, 2013, 9:49 PM A A A
NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
TODD MAISEL/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly defended law enforcement tactics, citing cuts in crime since Mayor Bloomberg took office in 2002.
The common law practice of police stopping to make inquiry of individuals behaving suspiciously is as old as policing itself. But the misconceptions about it are relatively new. For one thing, the New York City Police Department did not suddenly engage in such stops on a massive scale. Rather, we’ve become more careful about recording each one in detail as required by a law that went into effect only in 2002.

Even then, the department wasn’t immediately up to speed in capturing all such stops, hampered by an entirely manual system that was eventually automated. Last year, with the number of stops recorded at over 500,000, that total still translated to less than one stop a week per officer.

That shouldn’t be surprising, considering New York City has a population of 8.4 million people and its 35,000 police officers last year had 23 million contacts with members of the public, ranging from giving directions to making arrests. Some other additional context is relevant:

The NYPD responded to 4.8 million calls for service last year.

We recorded 503,646 total crime complaints, and made arrests or issued summonses 873,529 times.

Here are some more numbers to consider: A decade before Mayor Bloomberg, there were over 12,000 murders in New York City; and about 5,000 in the decade after he took office. The 7,346 fewer murders that resulted saved, if history is a guide, the lives of young men of color.

There’s another misconception about “stop-and-frisk.” About half the time, the stops of suspicious individuals involve no frisk at all, and only 9% involve searches.

In each of the city’s 76 police precincts, the race of those stopped highly correlates to descriptions provided by victims or witnesses, regardless of the population demography for that precinct. For example, in the 68th Precinct in Brooklyn, 53.4% of the violent crime suspects were white, and whites constituted 61% of the persons stopped. Similarly, in the 75th Precinct, also in Brooklyn, 78% of the violent suspects were black and 75% of those stopped were black. There are some anomalies, of course, like Greenwich Village’s 6th Precinct, where much of the crime is committed by transients and not the resident population.

Another misconception is perpetuated by critics who know better: That is that blacks are stopped at rates higher than their population as measured by the U.S. Census.

In other words, because blacks represent 23.4% of the city’s population, they should represent no more than 23.4% of those stopped by police. That’s like saying police should stop males no more than 50% of the time because they represent half of the population, when in fact men are responsible for about 90% of violent crime, and police stops reflect that.

But our critics never talk about gender bias, only alleged racial bias.

Our critics are also blind to the fact that last year, 96.3% of the shooting victims in New York City were black or Hispanic, as were 97.1% of their assailants, and that the Police Department is engaged in lifesaving in the city’s poorest neighborhoods, not racial profiling.

Critics also perpetuate the myth that stops have been ineffectual in deterring crime because a relatively small percentage lead to arrests or summons, and “only” 8,000 weapons annually are taken from persons stopped. They portray all other persons as “completely innocent.”

While innocent persons who match a suspect’s description are sometimes stopped, and suspicious behavior may have a completely innocent explanation, police officers have also prevented untold numbers of burglaries, strong-arm robberies and sexual assaults by stopping individuals casing bodegas late at night, waiting for a senior citizen to withdraw cash from an ATM machine, or quietly following a woman for blocks.

What’s not surprising, regrettably, is that successful police tactics would become a political football as a hotly contested election approaches, or that the usual suspects would use race-baiting for political gain.

What concerns responsible citizens is that the nation’s most successful crime-fighting practices and strategies will be abandoned by a successor administration that has neither the spine nor the wisdom to carry on.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 13, 2015, 11:07:00 PM
Does anyone remember this horrible case?

No Justice for Indian Grandfather Left Paralyzed by Alabama Cop — Mistrial Declared

Huntsville, AL – After a jury failed to reach a decision in the federal trial of an Alabama police officer, which left an Indian grandfather partially paralyzed, the judge declared a mistrial in the case.

The surprising announcement by U.S. District Court Judge Madeline Haikala came after jurors told the judge on four separate occasions that they were unable come to a unanimous decision.

Officer Eric Parker is accused of using excessive force while violating the civil rights of a man from India. Parker was caught on video violently slamming 58-year-old, Sureshbhai Patel to the ground in early February 2015. This left Patel with severe injuries, including partial paralysis.

Patel, who was in the U.S. visiting relatives, was approached by officer Eric Parker as he was taking a morning walk. The incident began after a paranoid neighbor reported a “suspicious” thin black man walking through the neighborhood.

Parker was subsequently arrested for assault after the brutal encounter with Patel, which was caught on dash camera. When the incident became public, it sparked international outrage. The Indian man had only recently come to the United States to assist in caring for his grandson, and spoke no English. The condemnation went so far as to force Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley (R) to  formally apologized to the Indian government.

A grand jury indicted Parker in March on one count of felony use of unreasonable force.

During the trial, the defense attempted to portray Parker as a scared officer simply reacting to the actions of Patel, claiming that the officer escalated his use of force commensurate to the victim.

“This was an escalated police action based on what Mr. Patel did,” Robert Tuten, Parker’s attorney, said during closing arguments.

Parker incredulously claimed that he simply lost his balance as he took the grandfather to the ground, which he did because he feared for his safety as Patel reached into his pockets and pulled away from him.

According to the Washington Post:

    Patel testified through a translator during the trial, telling jurors that he recognized men wearing police uniforms shouting from behind him but he couldn’t understand their commands, WHNT reported. “No English, no English,” Patel said to them, he testified. He also testified that he didn’t resist.

    Closing arguments came Wednesday and jurors first informed the judge Thursday that they were deadlocked. The judge urged the jury to come to an unanimous decision Friday after they had sent her three notes declaring that they reached an impasse, AL.com reported.

The failure of the jury to decide that Parker’s actions were criminal shows a level of indoctrination into a level of authoritarian control that baffles the mind.

The video clearly shows this cop approach a man who speaks no English and escalate the situation into a violent encounter that left a man partially paralyzed.

“The government will retry the case,” the U.S. attorney’s office in the Northern District of Alabama said in a statement. “We look forward to having another jury hear the evidence.”

The idea that this behavior was anything less than criminal shows either an extreme ignorance of what conduct is legally acceptable for a cop, or a blatant disregard for Patel’s civil rights, most likely for having a darker complexion in Alabama. Hopefully, the next jury holds Parker accountable for his thuggish behavior captured in this brutal video.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/justice-indian-grandfather-left-paralyzed-alabama-cops-mistrial-declared/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 14, 2015, 08:57:23 AM
Excessive. If I recall, the other video from the other cop car shows a better view.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 15, 2015, 11:34:26 PM
NYPD union head: Cops have ‘earned the benefit of the doubt’ despite James Blake incident

"No one should ever jump to an uninformed conclusion based upon a few seconds of video," Patrick Lynch, president of the New York City Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said in a statement titled "an open letter to all of those inclined to jump to conclusions."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 16, 2015, 11:09:16 AM
NYPD union head: Cops have ‘earned the benefit of the doubt’ despite James Blake incident

"No one should ever jump to an uninformed conclusion based upon a few seconds of video," Patrick Lynch, president of the New York City Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said in a statement titled "an open letter to all of those inclined to jump to conclusions."

I hope you read the letter..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 16, 2015, 11:43:49 AM
I hope you read the letter..

I did and I found it offensive: yet another instance of "you can't judge us!" from a group that see themselves as both above the law and above the public they serve. Yes, we get it - being a cop is a hard, difficult and even thankless job. Good for you for choosing to do this hard, and difficult job; thank you. Unfortunately, you can't be exempt from criticism. Unfortunately, we can't tolerate itchy trigger fingers, power-trips and overt aggression. Unfortunately, your spur-of-the-moment decisions will be judged, most often with 20/20 hindsight. Sorry, it's the nature of the beast. Don't cry. Shut up and do your job well, then at least you have the moral and ethical satisfaction of knowing that you did your best.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 16, 2015, 11:56:20 AM
To all arm-chair judges:

If you have never struggled with someone who is resisting arrest or who pulled a gun or knife on you when you approached them for breaking a law, then you are not qualified to judge the actions of police officers putting themselves in harm’s way for the public good.
   
 It is mystifying to all police officers to see pundits and editorial writers whose only expertise is writing fast-breaking, personal opinion, and who have never faced the dangers that police officers routinely do, come to instant conclusions that an officer’s actions were wrong based upon nothing but a silent video.  That is irresponsible, unjust and un-American.  Worse than that, your uninformed rhetoric is inflammatory and only serves to worsen police/community relations.

In the unfortunate case of former tennis pro, James Blake, -- who was clearly but mistakenly identified by a complainant -- there certainly can be mitigating circumstances which caused the officer to handle the situation in the manner he did.  Do they exist?  Frankly, no one will know for sure until there is a full and complete investigation.  That is why no one should ever jump to an uninformed conclusion based upon a few seconds of video.  Let all of the facts lead where they will, but police officers have earned the benefit of the doubt because of the dangers we routinely face.

The men and women of the NYPD are once again disheartened to read another the knee-jerk reaction from ivory tower pundits who enjoy the safety provided by our police department without understanding the very real risks that we take to provide that safety.  Due process is the American way of obtaining justice, not summary professional execution called for by editorial writers.


Sincerely,

Patrick J. Lynch
 President
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 16, 2015, 12:07:44 PM
To All Citizens,

I would change first paragraph to -- If you have never struggled with someone who is resisting arrest or who pulled a gun or knife on you when you approached them for breaking a law, then you of all people should withhold your conclusion until you have learned all the facts. Often times a snippet of video that captures a small percentage of the interaction and circumstances can be misleading taken out of context.

It is mystifying to all police officers to see pundits and editorial writers who ...(pretty much agree with this paragraph))

In the unfortunate case .... (seems reasonable)

The men and women (probably accurate)

When I read it I didn't agree with his first line. I think in many cases, the average citizen given all the available facts, can come to a pretty good conclusion about an incident. There may be exceptions but overall, I think they can. Where we may differ is, based on my experience dealing with situations over time, I will look at a tiny snippet of video alongside a civilian and I may be able to see it differently because of things I am aware of that they may not be due to lack of experience. Even at my level of experience, I really try not to come to a conclusion unless the video is encompassing and most likely all available information is contained in it, or the facts are gathered and the puzzle can be put together.
But I can see where that first line set the tone for the rest of the letter, which I found to be reasonable.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 16, 2015, 12:25:35 PM
Let's address the letter bit by bit:

To all arm-chair judges:

Ad-hominem. Not a good start...


If you have never struggled with someone who is resisting arrest or who pulled a gun or knife on you when you approached them for breaking a law, then you are not qualified to judge the actions of police officers putting themselves in harm’s way for the public good.

You can't judge me - only my peers can judge me. You're peons. I protect you, so don't mouth off to me punks.
 
  
It is mystifying to all police officers to see pundits and editorial writers whose only expertise is writing fast-breaking, personal opinion, and who have never faced the dangers that police officers routinely do, come to instant conclusions that an officer’s actions were wrong based upon nothing but a silent video.

Plenty of things cops do are mystifying to non-cops too.


That is irresponsible, unjust and un-American.

It's irresponsible to exercise one's right to free speech just because cops don't like criticism? It's un-American? Really?

 
Worse than that, your uninformed rhetoric is inflammatory and only serves to worsen police/community relations.

But when police officers are anonymously quoted or union Presidents calls critics names, that's not inflammatory rhetoric?


In the unfortunate case of former tennis pro, James Blake,

Oh, an unfortunate case... a man getting bum rushed, tackled and brought to the ground by an unidentified thug without any warning is an unfortunate case...


-- who was clearly but mistakenly identified by a complainant --

The officer's job isn't to bum rush people based on a complainant's identification. It's to INVESTIGATE.

there certainly can be mitigating circumstances which caused the officer to handle the situation in the manner he did.

You mean, by bum rushing someone, tackling them and bringing them to the ground, not once having bothered to even identify himself? That's also mitigating circumstances for the person that just got tackled to shoot his attacker too, no? And Patrick J. Lynch would be singing a very different tune then, wouldn't he?


Let all of the facts lead where they will

It's easy to say "let the facts lead where they will" when, as luck would have it, you're the one doing the leading.


but police officers have earned the benefit of the doubt because of the dangers we routinely face.

No, police officers haven't "earned the benefit of the doubt." And even if they had, they'd have lost it by now, with incidents of blatant and horrific police misconduct happening with an alarming frequency and going, mostly, underpunished.


The men and women of the NYPD are once again disheartened to read another the knee-jerk reaction from ivory tower pundits who enjoy the safety provided by our police department without understanding the very real risks that we take to provide that safety.

There we go again... "I'm keeping you safe, so respect me or else!" You know who else is disheartened? The average citizen who, evidence has shown, has good reason to fear for his life when cops are around because cops shove guns in people's mouths (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/08/28/police-commander-accused-of-assault-to-be-released-on-own-recognizance/), throw flashbangs into cribs (http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/us/georgia-toddler-stun-grenade-no-indictment/), shoot sleeping seven year old girls in the head (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/aiyana-stanley-jones-raid/), smash people's phones because they contain recording of a shoot-out (http://www.businessinsider.com/police-shoot-miami-man-100-times-video-2011-6), severely injure inmates (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/) or people in custody (http://reason.com/blog/2015/05/13/want-to-see-police-kill-a-drunk-in-custo), cause almost fatal car crash and have the victim arrested and charged (http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/), bust into homes and tase people (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/cotati-family-tasered/) or, worse still commandeer homes and arrest the owners because it suits their purpose (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henderson-nevada-commandeered-homes/).

If that's the safety you provide me, I don't want it.


Due process is the American way of obtaining justice, not summary professional execution called for by editorial writers.

Now, I understand that Mr. Lynch hasn't gone to law school and may not be well-versed in the subtleties of the legal system, but due process binds the State and its agents - not people, whether they are journalists of not, who remain free to write and comment.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 16, 2015, 12:28:17 PM
To All Citizens,

I would change first paragraph to -- If you have never struggled with someone who is resisting arrest or who pulled a gun or knife on you when you approached them for breaking a law, then you of all people should withhold your conclusion until you have learned all the facts. Often times a snippet of video that captures a small percentage of the interaction and circumstances can be misleading taken out of context.

It is mystifying to all police officers to see pundits and editorial writers who ...(pretty much agree with this paragraph))

In the unfortunate case .... (seems reasonable)

The men and women (probably accurate)

When I read it I didn't agree with his first line. I think in many cases, the average citizen given all the available facts, can come to a pretty good conclusion about an incident. There may be exceptions but overall, I think they can. Where we may differ is, based on my experience dealing with situations over time, I will look at a tiny snippet of video alongside a civilian and I may be able to see it differently because of things I am aware of that they may not be due to lack of experience. Even at my level of experience, I really try not to come to a conclusion unless the video is encompassing and most likely all available information is contained in it, or the facts are gathered and the puzzle can be put together.
But I can see where that first line set the tone for the rest of the letter, which I found to be reasonable.     

See, THIS letter I can at least stomach. I may not agree 100% with it, but at least it's reasonable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 16, 2015, 12:32:42 PM
The cop trucked this dude, without warning. 

Knocked the shit out of him.   The dude made no move about anything, looks like he didn't even see it coming.   Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound, just trucked him.

The scary thing - if this happens to any of us - someone just tackles us out of nowhere - it's probably a life/death struggle at that point.  I don't know who is beating and trying to get me to submit, just a violent man who bum rushed me. 
Can lead to a lot of unnecessary shootings. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 16, 2015, 02:55:09 PM
Quote
To all arm-chair judges:

If you have never struggled with someone who is resisting arrest or who pulled a gun or knife on you when you approached them for breaking a law, then you are not qualified to judge the actions of police officers putting themselves in harm’s way for the public good.
   
 It is mystifying to all police officers to see pundits and editorial writers whose only expertise is writing fast-breaking, personal opinion, and who have never faced the dangers that police officers routinely do, come to instant conclusions that an officer’s actions were wrong based upon nothing but a silent video.  That is irresponsible, unjust and un-American.  Worse than that, your uninformed rhetoric is inflammatory and only serves to worsen police/community relations.

In the unfortunate case of former tennis pro, James Blake, -- who was clearly but mistakenly identified by a complainant -- there certainly can be mitigating circumstances which caused the officer to handle the situation in the manner he did.  Do they exist?  Frankly, no one will know for sure until there is a full and complete investigation.  That is why no one should ever jump to an uninformed conclusion based upon a few seconds of video.  Let all of the facts lead where they will, but police officers have earned the benefit of the doubt because of the dangers we routinely face.

The men and women of the NYPD are once again disheartened to read another the knee-jerk reaction from ivory tower pundits who enjoy the safety provided by our police department without understanding the very real risks that we take to provide that safety.  Due process is the American way of obtaining justice, not summary professional execution called for by editorial writers.


Sincerely,

Patrick J. Lynch
 President


This guy should seriously STFU.  He ought to be ashamed of himself.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 16, 2015, 04:52:59 PM
"there certainly can be mitigating circumstances which caused the officer to handle the situation in the manner he did. "

"Can be".   Yes, there can be space aliens that take dumps on the sidewalk too.  This idiot is just making up scenarios which the video doesn't show.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 16, 2015, 05:26:42 PM
"there certainly can be mitigating circumstances which caused the officer to handle the situation in the manner he did. "

"Can be".   Yes, there can be space aliens that take dumps on the sidewalk too.  This idiot is just making up scenarios which the video doesn't show.

The guy is actually nuts.  Someone's brother-in-law or some shit.  No other explanation.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 16, 2015, 05:30:52 PM
Really, police need to punch the ticket on guys like this.  He's not doing them any favors.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 16, 2015, 07:10:17 PM
The guy is actually nuts.  Someone's brother-in-law or some shit.  No other explanation.

they rubber stamp defend every cop, even if there's video of the cop slamming a poor hapless innocent to the ground. 

They'd defend the cop if he had just shot the guy in the face too.   we all know it.  it's the union's job, to defend the cop 100% of the time, even if video proves the cop 100% wrong. 

I'm sure they said the same thing the other 2 times this guy was charged with punching someone
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2015, 09:32:22 AM
The cop trucked this dude, without warning. 

Knocked the shit out of him.   The dude made no move about anything, looks like he didn't even see it coming.  Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound, just trucked him.

The scary thing - if this happens to any of us - someone just tackles us out of nowhere - it's probably a life/death struggle at that point.  I don't know who is beating and trying to get me to submit, just a violent man who bum rushed me. 
Can lead to a lot of unnecessary shootings. 

Just making sure you realize it was a video without audio
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 18, 2015, 10:44:23 AM
Just making sure you realize it was a video without audio

Even without audio it's clear that the officer didn't identify himself, or if he did, Blake didn't hear it or think it was directed at him. From his perspective - and made blatantly clear in the video - Blake is minding his own business and ends up tackled by someone.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 18, 2015, 01:52:36 PM
Just making sure you realize it was a video without audio

dude didn't glance up.    cops fcked up here.  trying to invent a scenario of "maybe he screamed POLICE a dozen times and Blake ignored him" is silliness.  ANy reasonable person looks at the casual innocent man reading and knows he was just plain trucked without warning. 

it's like you're looking for any out, to make this tackling legal in any way.  It's a straight up dick move, an abuse of power, and one that he seems to have gotten away with . This union defending him with rubber stamp excuse for it, typical, it's why they have zero credibility.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 18, 2015, 02:23:58 PM
It looks like the poor bastard (Blake) was desperately trying to hang on to his last peaceful thought as he was being slammed around.

But what if the subject was a fighter, and instinctively knocked-out the cop?  You think the PD would own up to it, or do you think they'd try to find a way to destroy the guy?  Could they be trusted to safely take him into custody after that, even?

I don't think so.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 18, 2015, 02:52:56 PM
It looks like the poor bastard (Blake) was desperately trying to hang on to his last peaceful thought as he was being slammed around.

But what if the subject was a fighter, and instinctively knocked-out the cop?  You think the PD would own up to it, or do you think they'd try to find a way to destroy the guy?  Could they be trusted to safely take him into custody after that, even?

I don't think so.

what if Blake was an armed american, and upon being trucked without police warning, fired his weapon in self defense?

everyone would cry about obama killing our police, blah blah.. but this idiot breaking protocol and not ID'ing self caused it.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2015, 03:11:16 PM
It looks like the poor bastard (Blake) was desperately trying to hang on to his last peaceful thought as he was being slammed around.

But what if the subject was a fighter, and instinctively knocked-out the cop?  You think the PD would own up to it, or do you think they'd try to find a way to destroy the guy?  Could they be trusted to safely take him into custody after that, even?

I don't think so.

He'd be lucky if he didn't end up dead after being swarmed by dozens of cops. If he survived, he'd probably face felony charges while the cop would get away with it. And most likely it would be presented as another example of the "war on cops".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 18, 2015, 03:16:22 PM
He'd be lucky if he didn't end up dead after being swarmed by dozens of cops. If he survived, he'd probably face felony charges while the cop would get away with it. And most likely it would be presented as another example of the "war on cops".

yes, when police being killed was double under reagan, it's all obama's fault these days.  I think that's what walker said.  Cops like this get themselves killed - creating a hugely public and violent incident.

If any of us is standing there, and I see a man tackle, pummel and choke/pin the shit out of another man - without ID'ing himself as police... and in FL, we see what looks like a very clear forcible felony... one could draw weapon and fire upon the attacker, believing Blake's life is in danger from choking.   In court, it could go either way here. 

Cop is an idiot.  Could have gotten himself shot in the back with this renegade shit. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 18, 2015, 06:21:22 PM
I think you guys are on to something.  So instead of trying to cast doubt as to whether the cop is as fucking dangerous as we can all plainly see, these dopes should be running like hell from the situation.  Any future comment from them (about anything) is going to be laughed at, at best.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on September 19, 2015, 03:30:28 AM


No, police officers haven't "earned the benefit of the doubt." And even if they had, they'd have lost it by now, with incidents of blatant and horrific police misconduct happening with an alarming frequency and going, mostly, underpunished.


There we go again... "I'm keeping you safe, so respect me or else!" You know who else is disheartened? The average citizen who, evidence has shown, has good reason to fear for his life when cops are around because cops shove guns in people's mouths (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/08/28/police-commander-accused-of-assault-to-be-released-on-own-recognizance/), throw flashbangs into cribs (http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/us/georgia-toddler-stun-grenade-no-indictment/), shoot sleeping seven year old girls in the head (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/aiyana-stanley-jones-raid/), smash people's phones because they contain recording of a shoot-out (http://www.businessinsider.com/police-shoot-miami-man-100-times-video-2011-6), severely injure inmates (http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/) or people in custody (http://reason.com/blog/2015/05/13/want-to-see-police-kill-a-drunk-in-custo), cause almost fatal car crash and have the victim arrested and charged (http://fox6now.com/2014/05/01/sober-driver-arrested-for-owi-when-deputy-crashes-into-her/), bust into homes and tase people (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/cotati-family-tasered/) or, worse still commandeer homes and arrest the owners because it suits their purpose (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/henderson-nevada-commandeered-homes/).

If that's the safety you provide me, I don't want it.


Now, I understand that Mr. Lynch hasn't gone to law school and may not be well-versed in the subtleties of the legal system, but due process binds the State and its agents - not people, whether they are journalists of not, who remain free to write and comment.













All very Good points.

As pointed out oh so many times,
Cops & there managers Clearly think they are Better
Than the people they serve, Not only Better,
More informed, more intelligent, Better at making decisions & judgement calls Etc.
Clearly the laws don't apply to them & nor should they care about them.

Fcuking ridiculous situation.
NO I DON'T HATE ALL COPS.
Some yes i do.
Just as i dislike some non cops.
It's the system that is at fault & breeds the awful attitude of cops.
They know they are virtually unaccountable & untouchable.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2015, 09:36:00 AM
Infuriating Video Exposes the Grim Reality of Being Arrested for Resisting Arrest

Lancaster TX – Police Chief Cheryl Wilson was given a paid vacation on Thursday, while investigators determine if she acted appropriately by allowing one of her officers to return to duty while he was still under investigation for the use of excessive force.

Chief Wilson’s suspension stems from an incident on August 17th, when Lt. Michael Fine confronted Alexander Tucker on W. Pleasant Run Road. Lt. Fine approached Tucker, who immediately asked why he was being detained and instead of providing an answer, Fine told him that he would ‘get tased’ if he didn’t obey.

Fine proceeded to grab Tucker’s arm and lead him towards his squad car where he then assaulted and attempted to handcuff Mr. Tucker without providing any probable cause. When Mr. Tucker passively resisted his unlawful arrest and continued asking why he was being detained, Lt. Fine tased him without warning and placed him in handcuffs.

When Mr. Tucker asked what he was being arrested for, Lt. Fine replied “resisting arrest” in an attempt to justify his actions with stereotypical circular cop logic. Upon further questioning of the reason for his arrest, Lt. Fine simply replied “I’m not going to talk to you anymore.”

At the end of the video, Lt Fine exposes the grim reality of his despicable job when he tells Tucker, “You’re being placed under arrest for resisting arrest.”

According to City Manager Opal Mauldin-Robertson, the day after the incident, Chief Wilson told Assistant City Manager Rona Stringfellow and City Attorney Bob Hager that Fine’s actions were

    “serious, and appeared to, at a minimum, violate our policy.”

Chief Wilson met with Mayor Marcus Knight and Mauldin-Robinson two weeks later to watch the video of the incident and agreed to keep them informed about any decisions regarding the officer.

Lt. Fine was temporarily reassigned pending a review of his use of force. However, after a Dallas County prosecutor and a Texas Ranger both said he was justified in stopping Tucker, Chief Wilson returned him to regular duty even though the investigation had not been completed.

Mauldin-Robertson said Chief Wilson failed to notify her of Lt. Fine’s status for five days and went on to say that Wilson’s decision to return Fine to regular duty,

    “without any actions or recourse caused some questions and concerns regarding the completeness and independent review of this matter.”

Chief Wilson’s flip-flopping and inconsistent handling of this incident of excessive force by one of her officers is indicative of the problems created by the “thin blue line.” When police routinely shield each other from accountability for brutality, lawsuits and death are almost sure to follow.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-chief-suspended-upholding-thin-blue-line-reversing-officers-suspension/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 19, 2015, 02:09:03 PM
Infuriating Video Exposes the Grim Reality of Being Arrested for Resisting Arrest

Lancaster TX – Police Chief Cheryl Wilson was given a paid vacation on Thursday, while investigators determine if she acted appropriately by allowing one of her officers to return to duty while he was still under investigation for the use of excessive force.

Chief Wilson’s suspension stems from an incident on August 17th, when Lt. Michael Fine confronted Alexander Tucker on W. Pleasant Run Road. Lt. Fine approached Tucker, who immediately asked why he was being detained and instead of providing an answer, Fine told him that he would ‘get tased’ if he didn’t obey.

Fine proceeded to grab Tucker’s arm and lead him towards his squad car where he then assaulted and attempted to handcuff Mr. Tucker without providing any probable cause. When Mr. Tucker passively resisted his unlawful arrest and continued asking why he was being detained, Lt. Fine tased him without warning and placed him in handcuffs.

When Mr. Tucker asked what he was being arrested for, Lt. Fine replied “resisting arrest” in an attempt to justify his actions with stereotypical circular cop logic. Upon further questioning of the reason for his arrest, Lt. Fine simply replied “I’m not going to talk to you anymore.”

At the end of the video, Lt Fine exposes the grim reality of his despicable job when he tells Tucker, “You’re being placed under arrest for resisting arrest.”

According to City Manager Opal Mauldin-Robertson, the day after the incident, Chief Wilson told Assistant City Manager Rona Stringfellow and City Attorney Bob Hager that Fine’s actions were

    “serious, and appeared to, at a minimum, violate our policy.”

Chief Wilson met with Mayor Marcus Knight and Mauldin-Robinson two weeks later to watch the video of the incident and agreed to keep them informed about any decisions regarding the officer.

Lt. Fine was temporarily reassigned pending a review of his use of force. However, after a Dallas County prosecutor and a Texas Ranger both said he was justified in stopping Tucker, Chief Wilson returned him to regular duty even though the investigation had not been completed.

Mauldin-Robertson said Chief Wilson failed to notify her of Lt. Fine’s status for five days and went on to say that Wilson’s decision to return Fine to regular duty,

    “without any actions or recourse caused some questions and concerns regarding the completeness and independent review of this matter.”

Chief Wilson’s flip-flopping and inconsistent handling of this incident of excessive force by one of her officers is indicative of the problems created by the “thin blue line.” When police routinely shield each other from accountability for brutality, lawsuits and death are almost sure to follow.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-chief-suspended-upholding-thin-blue-line-reversing-officers-suspension/

I didn't get infuriated when I watched it..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 19, 2015, 02:15:07 PM
The cop trucked this dude, without warning. 

Knocked the shit out of him.   The dude made no move about anything, looks like he didn't even see it coming.   Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound, just trucked him.

The scary thing - if this happens to any of us - someone just tackles us out of nowhere - it's probably a life/death struggle at that point.  I don't know who is beating and trying to get me to submit, just a violent man who bum rushed me. 
Can lead to a lot of unnecessary shootings. 

You can't say "Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound" based on that video.
What was wrong in this video is that it was the wrong guy.
The cop was under the belief this was the right guy. I think the article said a witness identified the guy.
If you don't want to chase a suspect down it's a good idea not to announce he is under arrest until you have placed a hand on him. This is the element of surpise. We are taught that if you are going to make an arrest, you announce it as you are grabbing on to them because it is very common for someone to bolt rather than go to jail.
I can understand this innocent guys bewilderment and hesitation in complying with a guy who is in plain clothes even if he said he was a police officer. The trick..and this is very importan..is to make sure you have the right guy before you pounce. That is a very important key to avoiding seeing yourself on national TV.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2015, 02:27:39 PM
I didn't get infuriated when I watched it..

Not surprised.

If he is arrested for resisting arrest, what was the initial arrest (that he supposedly resisted) for?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 19, 2015, 02:35:37 PM
Not surprised.

If he is arrested for resisting arrest, what was the initial arrest (that he supposedly resisted) for?

That I'm not sure about, I was watching for the horrific police brutality. I'm from Texas as well and unless it is stated you are under arrest, you can't charge them with resisting arrest. However what he may have meant, I don't know, is resisting a frisk, which would be easily proven in court in my opinion. The sad thing is, had this guy been carrying, and had he wanted to kill this officer, right in front of the camera with the horribly trained officer holding one hand and the guys other hand wasnt on the car like instructed, the subject could have easily pulled a weapon out of his pocket, waiste or jacket pocket and shot the officer in the face and there wouldn't have been a thing this cop could have done about it.

Sec. 38.03.  RESISTING ARREST, SEARCH, OR TRANSPORTATION.  (a)  A person commits an offense if he intentionally prevents or obstructs a person he knows is a peace officer or a person acting in a peace officer's presence and at his direction from effecting an arrest, search, or transportation of the actor or another by using force against the peace officer or another.(b)  It is no defense to prosecution under this section that the arrest or search was unlawful.(c)  Except as provided in Subsection (d), an offense under this section is a Class A misdemeanor.(d)  An offense under this section is a felony of the third degree if the actor uses a deadly weapon to resist the arrest or search.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 19, 2015, 03:17:33 PM
You can't say "Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound" based on that video.

If the subject has everything to lose and nothing to gain by ignoring the officer (as it was with Mr. Blake), it adds up ONE WAY and ONLY ONE way.

Quote
What was wrong in this video is that it was the wrong guy.
The cop was under the belief this was the right guy. I think the article said a witness identified the guy.
If you don't want to chase a suspect down it's a good idea not to announce he is under arrest until you have placed a hand on him. This is the element of surpise. We are taught that if you are going to make an arrest, you announce it as you are grabbing on to them because it is very common for someone to bolt rather than go to jail.
I can understand this innocent guys bewilderment and hesitation in complying with a guy who is in plain clothes even if he said he was a police officer. The trick..and this is very importan..is to make sure you have the right guy before you pounce. That is a very important key to avoiding seeing yourself on national TV.


What do you advise should happen when an officer decides his way is better, and he acts like this?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 19, 2015, 03:54:44 PM
If the subject has everything to lose and nothing to gain by ignoring the officer (as it was with Mr. Blake), it adds up ONE WAY and ONLY ONE way.

What do you advise should happen when an officer decides his way is better, and he acts like this?

what do you mean by "his way is better"
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 19, 2015, 04:29:33 PM
what do you mean by "his way is better"

He decided to make his own rules, right?  How can we afford to have officers do that?  Is there a way?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 19, 2015, 04:33:19 PM
When you say "his hesitation in complying" (referring to Blake)...

What do you mean?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 19, 2015, 04:40:17 PM
That I'm not sure about, I was watching for the horrific police brutality. I'm from Texas as well and unless it is stated you are under arrest, you can't charge them with resisting arrest. However what he may have meant, I don't know, is resisting a frisk, which would be easily proven in court in my opinion. The sad thing is, had this guy been carrying, and had he wanted to kill this officer, right in front of the camera with the horribly trained officer holding one hand and the guys other hand wasnt on the car like instructed, the subject could have easily pulled a weapon out of his pocket, waiste or jacket pocket and shot the officer in the face and there wouldn't have been a thing this cop could have done about it.

Sec. 38.03.  RESISTING ARREST, SEARCH, OR TRANSPORTATION.  (a)  A person commits an offense if he intentionally prevents or obstructs a person he knows is a peace officer or a person acting in a peace officer's presence and at his direction from effecting an arrest, search, or transportation of the actor or another by using force against the peace officer or another.(b)  It is no defense to prosecution under this section that the arrest or search was unlawful.(c)  Except as provided in Subsection (d), an offense under this section is a Class A misdemeanor.(d)  An offense under this section is a felony of the third degree if the actor uses a deadly weapon to resist the arrest or search.


I am pretty certain that Texas doesn't have a stop-and-identify statute on the books. So why did he initiate the stop? He needs to have reasonable, articulable suspicion. If he doesn't this is a consensual encounter - one from which the citizen can walk away from.

Provided he had reasonable, articulable suspicion to initiate a stop, then, from my perspective, the cop didn't use excessive force, although he could have handled himself better - including informing the person as to the reason he was detaining him.

But I very much doubt he had reasonable, articulable suspicion to initiate a stop - he just saw a black guy walkin down the street at night. Without reasonable, articulable suspicion this is all excessive force, section 38.03 notwithstanding. Speaking of 38.03, paragraph (c) is horrible; it is immoral to suggest that resisting an unlawful act is, itself, unlawful. I understand the intent behind this, but that doesn't make it any less immoral.

Again, you act as if people must obey cops. We don't. Cops are public servants with tightly circumscribed authority. They aren't imperators, roaming the streets on their mechanized chariots, in command of the peons.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 19, 2015, 04:56:31 PM
You can't say "Cop never ID'd himself, never made a sound" based on that video.

It's evident that he didn't. But even if he did, it's clear as day that Blake didn't think it was referring to him. He's doing nothing and his demeanor doesn't change at any point - he's waiting, calmly, at the entrance of his hotel, until someone rushes in and tackles him.


What was wrong in this video is that it was the wrong guy.

What was wrong in the video is that a cop bum-rushed and violently took down a person who was calmly waiting and projected no indicators of suspicious behavior. What's wrong in the video is that the cop, apparently, decided to not investigate the situation but to simply tackle an individual based on nothing more than someone's statement.


The cop was under the belief this was the right guy. I think the article said a witness identified the guy.

Was that Officer's belief reasonable and justified? If I call your department and claim someone is stealing, then point him out to you, will you tackle him? Because, shit... that's very convenient. My own personal thug service just a 911 call away!


If you don't want to chase a suspect down it's a good idea not to announce he is under arrest until you have placed a hand on him. This is the element of surpise. We are taught that if you are going to make an arrest, you announce it as you are grabbing on to them because it is very common for someone to bolt rather than go to jail.

Generally a good idea, but that's a broad, broad brush you're painting with. Cops have discretion for a reason - to use their common sense and mete out force proportionally. Sadly, all we see this discretion get used for is "I fe... fe.. feared for mu... mu... mu... life" as a justification.

Your "element of surprise" deployed thoughtlessly and without care is what leaves elderly foreigners visiting their children paralyzed. James Blake is lucky to be alive and uninjured after getting "surprised" by this cop.


I can understand this innocent guys bewilderment and hesitation in complying with a guy who is in plain clothes even if he said he was a police officer. The trick..and this is very importan..is to make sure you have the right guy before you pounce. That is a very important key to avoiding seeing yourself on national TV.

Would you be equally understanding of this innocent guys' bewilderment if he was armed and, in the confusion, thought he was being attacked and shot and killed that officer? Or would you be singing a very different tune while crying thin blue crocodile tears?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2015, 09:08:10 AM
Nothing infuriating about this case of course. A good thing the careers of these cops are not hinged on the decisions of civilians. ::)

Cops Frame Innocent Man, Take His Children, Award him 1 Dollar for Destroying his Life

The abuse inflicted upon Boise resident Brian J. McNelis by the Ada County Sheriff’s Office is infuriatingly commonplace in post-constitutional America. The legal vindication he won last May, following a five-year legal ordeal, was very much out of the ordinary. Following a four-day federal civil trial in which McNelis represented himself, a jury ruled that former Ada County Sheriff’s Deputy Stephen Craig had perjured himself in order to obtain the warrant that led to a January 6, 2010 raid on McNelis’s home.

On the basis of alleged evidence that was never properly booked by the Sheriff’s Office or proven to exist, McNelis was arrested and charged with drug trafficking. Two days later, as he prepared for an emergency shelter care hearing for his high school-age daughter Andromeda, McNelis was confronted by a deputy (identified as “Officer Rodarte” in court documents), who demanded that he surrender custody of the girl. If he proceeded with the hearing, McNelis was told, he would be arrested for “child endangerment” and “felony injury to a child.”

Forced to accede to this extortion demand, McNelis relinquished custody of Andromeda, whom he hasn’t seen since – and who was alienated from him as a result of the spurious and unsubstantiated charges against him. In addition to being ostracized by other family members, McNelis, a commercial painter, lost several very profitable contracts as a result of the felony charges.

In his affidavit requesting a search warrant, Deputy Craig claimed to have received an anonymous tip that there were “a half-dozen” marijuana plants growing outside McNelis’s home. In December 29, 2009, Craig reportedly conducted a “trash pull” outside the residence that yielded no evidence of a crime. A second “pull” allegedly carried out after midnight on the morning of January 6 supposedly turned up an unspecified amount of material he identified as “marijuana trimmings” on the basis of a field test.

“How much stuff was there?” Craig was subsequently asked by internal affairs investigator John Lewis.

“I really don’t know,” Craig replied.
“Did you take any pictures of any of this stuff?” Lewis inquired.
“No, I did not,” Craig admitted.
“You didn’t send it to the ISP [Idaho State Police] forensic lab, correct?” persisted Lewis.
“That’s correct,” Craig responded, explaining that “I felt that there was no need to. It was a small quantity, field test was positive.” For the same reason, Craig continued, he didn’t bother to tell his patrol supervisor about his discovery at the time.
Not only did Craig not bother to document his alleged discovery, he didn’t confirm that the trash through which he had rummaged had actually belonged to McNelis. Among the items he claimed to have found was an unremarkable “white envelope” addressed to Brian McNelis.
“I don’t know if it was junk mail or a bill,” Craig explained to the internal affairs officer. “I didn’t look at it.”

Implausibilities, misrepresentations, and errors abounded in Craig’s affidavit. In describing the trash pull, Craig incorrectly listed BFI as the trash removal company, rather than Allied Waste, and listed the wrong day for garbage removal. He gave the wrong street as McNelis’s address. He misreported the time of the second trash pull, offering a chronology that would have had him working a 20-hour shift.

Most seriously, Craig falsely claimed to have submitted evidence from the trash pull to the Ada County Sheriff’s Office property room on December 30. It wasn’t until nearly a month later – January 20, two weeks after the raid on McNelis’s home – that Craig and his Deputy Jose Del Rio, his comrade in the ACSO’s “ACTION Team” placed evidence of any kind in the property room. Craig later insisted that the original marijuana office had been kept in a safe in the ACTION Team’s office – which would mean, in any case, that the chain of custody had been broken.

During the January 6 search of McNelis’s home, Craig claimed to have seized “grow lights” and a substantial quantity of processed marijuana. None of that evidence was properly accounted for or ever produced.

Roughly a year after the raid on McNelis’s home, Judge Timothy Hansen of Idaho’s Fourth Circuit Court ruled that the search warrant was invalid, which led to dismissal of the charges against McNelis. In a Memorandum and Order issued on April 15, 2011, Judge Hansen found that Deputy Craig had “knowingly, intentionally, or with reckless disregard for the truth” incorporated false statements into his affidavit. Judge Hansen reiterated that finding on August 8 in response to a plaintive motion to reconsider filed by the Ada County Prosecutor’s office.

Judge Hansen’s ruling certified that that Deputy Stephen Craig is a liar. This is led to the interview with internal affairs investigator John Lewis, whose highest priority was to save the deceitful deputy’s career, rather than to protect the public or provide redress to Brain McNelis.

As in all exercises of this kind, the officer was informed of his “Garrity” privileges – under which his disclosures could be used only for disciplinary purposes, rather than to build a criminal case. When a mere commoner is interrogated by a police officer, the investigator will often seek to prompt the subject into making damaging admissions, or even confessing to an offense he didn’t commit. Lewis used similar tactics in an effort to elicit self-serving answers from Craig that would help his superiors exonerate him.

“Sir, I’m not here to hang you out to dry,” Lewis assured Craig. “I’m just trying to get the facts and try to make sure that your career is not going to end up in the shambles…. [T]he more than I can come up with and show the prosecutor’s office, the better they’re going to be able to go back to the judge and say, `This guy didn’t lie. He just made some administrative errors in the thing.’”

Not surprisingly, Lewis found that Craig had committed “errors” and omissions, but declined to rule that the detective had submitted a false report. Shortly thereafter, Craig’s boss, former Ada County Sheriff Gary Raney, notified the deputy that he would be suspended “without pay for one day or the equivalent of eight (8) hours” on the following September 30 as punishment for “administrative violations.”

Rather than manning up and accepting that trivial and inadequate punishment, Craig decided to quit.
“This letter is to notify you of my decision to tender my resignation as an Ada County Detective in order to pursue other employment opportunities,” Craig informed Sheriff Raney in a letter dated September 26, 2011.

This allowed Craig to use his accumulated vacation and “compensatory” time to secure a job with another law enforcement agency – Idaho’s Canyon County Sheriff’s Office, where he remains employed today. Just as importantly, by ducking the suspension Craig may have obscured the fact that he is a repeat offender: While employed as a police officer in Howard County, Maryland in 2000, Craig was suspended for an unlawful search by “popping open” the trunk of an automobile without a warrant or probable cause.

Craig’s actions display “a serious pattern of continued disregard for the laws of the United States,” complained McNelis in a May 12 letter to Assistant U.S. Attorney Lynn Lamprecht. Protesting that Craig “attacked me, my family, and my home” by lying to a judge to obtain a search warrant, McNelis told the federal prosecutor that he fears “for the safety of my family, myself, and all Idaho citizens [who] are subjected to this man’s unchecked, illegal means and methods as a police officer.”

Apart from the likelihood that Craig — an impenitent perjurer and serial violator of the Fourth Amendment — could abuse the rights of other innocent citizens, his well-documented hostility to the truth could easily compromise investigations involving crimes of violence, McNelis warned Lamprecht: “Will the mandatory release of `Brady material’ on Stephen Craig provide the loophole that allows a murderer, child molester, or rapist to walk free?”

In his letter to Lymprecht, McNelis also referred to a May 11 conversation in which he asked the assistant U.S. attorney to investigate Craig — and described the stone wall of stolid indifference upon which that request shattered.

“After speaking to you personally … I was contacted by an FBI agent two hours later who did not provide his last name or badge number and only identified himself as `Kyle,’” McNelis recalled. “Kyle informed me that due to your unsupported decision to not pursue any form of criminal charges against Stephen Craig he would be unable to initiate any investigation whatsoever into this matters.”

Predictably, nobody has been held accountable for what was done to McNelis and his family. Like Craig, Officer Del Rio remains in law enforcement as an officer with the Boise Police Department (where he is paid more than $61,000 a year). Sheriff Raney resigned earlier this year, roughly half-way through his third elected term, to take a new position with the Justice Department that is essentially a well-compensated sinecure. Raney, who had been one of the highest-paid government officials in Idaho, arranged for his resignation to take effect the day that he became eligible to collect his $64,000 annual pension. (Idaho’s average annual household income in 2014 was a little less than $48,000.)

Ada County spent more than a half-million dollars in their futile effort to defeat McNelis’s pro se civil rights lawsuit. Without the benefit of legal training or tax subsidies, McNelis spent a considerable seeking redress for “irreparable damages” to family relationships (beginning with losing custody of Andromeda), his business, and his personal reputation.

Untutored in law but armed with an agile mind and an invincible determination to pursue justice, McNelis stood alone against the Ada County government – represented in court by a panel of five well-paid government attorneys – and won. The jury that ruled in McNelis’s favor – acknowledging the injuries that had been inflicted on him and his family through the dishonesty and corruption of Deputy Craig and the agency that employed him – awarded the victim damages in the amount of a single dollar.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/courts-award-man-dollar-life-destroyed-cops-lie/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 20, 2015, 11:44:00 AM
Wow... what a fucking insane case! :o
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2015, 09:30:54 AM
It's evident that he didn't. But even if he did, it's clear as day that Blake didn't think it was referring to him. He's doing nothing and his demeanor doesn't change at any point - he's waiting, calmly, at the entrance of his hotel, until someone rushes in and tackles him.


What was wrong in the video is that a cop bum-rushed and violently took down a person who was calmly waiting and projected no indicators of suspicious behavior. What's wrong in the video is that the cop, apparently, decided to not investigate the situation but to simply tackle an individual based on nothing more than someone's statement.


Was that Officer's belief reasonable and justified? If I call your department and claim someone is stealing, then point him out to you, will you tackle him? Because, shit... that's very convenient. My own personal thug service just a 911 call away!


Generally a good idea, but that's a broad, broad brush you're painting with. Cops have discretion for a reason - to use their common sense and mete out force proportionally. Sadly, all we see this discretion get used for is "I fe... fe.. feared for mu... mu... mu... life" as a justification.

Your "element of surprise" deployed thoughtlessly and without care is what leaves elderly foreigners visiting their children paralyzed. James Blake is lucky to be alive and uninjured after getting "surprised" by this cop.


Would you be equally understanding of this innocent guys' bewilderment if he was armed and, in the confusion, thought he was being attacked and shot and killed that officer? Or would you be singing a very different tune while crying thin blue crocodile tears?


1. It's not evident that he didn't. He very well could have, and Blake didn't have time to register it. Had it been the guilty party, the process would have been a lot quicker as in "Sh&t! They're on to me!" Blake is probably more in the "WTF??" mode

2. I didn't see a violent take down. I saw a normal take down. a violent take down would be like the take down on the visiting father who didn't speak English.

3. Depends on a variable of things. Am I alone? Is there reason to believe the subject will depart the area before additional officers arrive? Will he spot the victim/witness and me talking and take off? Is the witness credible, how sure is the witness that it's him?

4. I don't think that's all you see, maybe it is but I don't think so.

5. Agree with the 1st part. I think because James did exactly what he should have, he was fine. (6) And had he been a CCL holder and in his surprise shot the plain clothes guy thinking it was a mugging I wouldn't have any heartburn with it other than to say "Tragic turn of events". I don't know that he identified himself as a cop, I'm assuming he did because that's common practice but without hearing both sides of the story I am assuming. He may not have, I just can't determine what was said based on the video. 

 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2015, 09:54:34 AM
http://www.leagle.com/decision/In%20FDCO%2020141201475/McNELIS%20v.%20CRAIG

the legal disposition of the Craig case from a non biased source.

Sloppy work by the officer. So sloppy in fact by not including "south" in the address, and not putting the correct date of the trash run and not verifying the trash company name that the illegal contraband found in the raid was thrown out. When you are swearing to an affidavit, those things are important. He was so focused on catching the "bad guy" he lost sight of what matters.

As far as criticizing the Internal Affairs investigator in the first article, I think that's incorrect. It isn't the investigators job to hang the officer but to find the truth. Telling the officer "Im not here to hang you out to dry" is a very reasonable statement to make to an officer you are investigating. Many officers think IA is out to get them. I think the bottom line here is the officer probably didn't lie. He was just so incompetent in recording the facts, he got it wrong. It was irrelevant which trash company it was, it was irrelevant to the case whether he found the clippings on a Tuesday or Wednesday. But a major part of an officers job is reporting and recording facts. That he obviously sucked at doing that would indicate to me he needs to seek employment elsewhere. So based on the crappy job he did even if you give him the benefit of the doubt, I would fire him.     
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 21, 2015, 10:39:34 AM
http://www.leagle.com/decision/In%20FDCO%2020141201475/McNELIS%20v.%20CRAIG

the legal disposition of the Craig case from a non biased source.

Sloppy work by the officer. So sloppy in fact by not including "south" in the address, and not putting the correct date of the trash run and not verifying the trash company name that the illegal contraband found in the raid was thrown out. When you are swearing to an affidavit, those things are important. He was so focused on catching the "bad guy" he lost sight of what matters.

As far as criticizing the Internal Affairs investigator in the first article, I think that's incorrect. It isn't the investigators job to hang the officer but to find the truth. Telling the officer "Im not here to hang you out to dry" is a very reasonable statement to make to an officer you are investigating. Many officers think IA is out to get them. I think the bottom line here is the officer probably didn't lie. He was just so incompetent in recording the facts, he got it wrong. It was irrelevant which trash company it was, it was irrelevant to the case whether he found the clippings on a Tuesday or Wednesday. But a major part of an officers job is reporting and recording facts. That he obviously sucked at doing that would indicate to me he needs to seek employment elsewhere. So based on the crappy job he did even if you give him the benefit of the doubt, I would fire him.     

He would have immediately turned himself in, then.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2015, 10:47:07 AM
He would have immediately turned himself in, then.

Touche'  :)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 21, 2015, 11:07:39 AM
Touche'  :)

But I can see that the article wasn't made to be objective.  

There's more to the story, I'm sure, but the cop is terrible.  Other cops are the very last people that should be defending him.  

Same with that ape cop in NYC.  I still don't know what you mean by Blake's "hestitation in complying".
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on September 21, 2015, 02:14:33 PM
http://www.leagle.com/decision/In%20FDCO%2020141201475/McNELIS%20v.%20CRAIG

the legal disposition of the Craig case from a non biased source.

Sloppy work by the officer. So sloppy in fact by not including "south" in the address, and not putting the correct date of the trash run and not verifying the trash company name that the illegal contraband found in the raid was thrown out. When you are swearing to an affidavit, those things are important. He was so focused on catching the "bad guy" he lost sight of what matters.

As far as criticizing the Internal Affairs investigator in the first article, I think that's incorrect. It isn't the investigators job to hang the officer but to find the truth. Telling the officer "Im not here to hang you out to dry" is a very reasonable statement to make to an officer you are investigating. Many officers think IA is out to get them. I think the bottom line here is the officer probably didn't lie. He was just so incompetent in recording the facts, he got it wrong. It was irrelevant which trash company it was, it was irrelevant to the case whether he found the clippings on a Tuesday or Wednesday. But a major part of an officers job is reporting and recording facts. That he obviously sucked at doing that would indicate to me he needs to seek employment elsewhere. So based on the crappy job he did even if you give him the benefit of the doubt, I would fire him.     

I haven't read the link yet - will do so later in the evening. Until then, what about this bit:

Quote
On the basis of alleged evidence that was never properly booked by the Sheriff’s Office or proven to exist, McNelis was arrested and charged with drug trafficking. Two days later, as he prepared for an emergency shelter care hearing for his high school-age daughter Andromeda, McNelis was confronted by a deputy (identified as “Officer Rodarte” in court documents), who demanded that he surrender custody of the girl. If he proceeded with the hearing, McNelis was told, he would be arrested for “child endangerment” and “felony injury to a child.”

You think it's appropriate for a deputy to threaten charges (and serious ones at that) and demand he surrender custody of the girl instead of going to a hearing in front of (presumably) a neutral arbiter? Tell me again, how is that NOT violation of due process?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2015, 08:58:15 PM
I haven't read the link yet - will do so later in the evening. Until then, what about this bit:

You think it's appropriate for a deputy to threaten charges (and serious ones at that) and demand he surrender custody of the girl instead of going to a hearing in front of (presumably) a neutral arbiter? Tell me again, how is that NOT violation of due process?


That didn't come up in the legal ruling at all.. The demanding he surrender custody of the girl makes no sense to me. I would view that part with a grain of salt. In my experience, CPS is the ultimate authority on taking a child from their parent, at least in Texas. We can only intervene in a temporary manner and turn them over to CPS immediately if the child is in immediate danger. That days later a deputy threatened and demanded doesn't add up. BUt certainly if that did happen, its a horrible thing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on September 21, 2015, 09:37:22 PM
That didn't come up in the legal ruling at all.. The demanding he surrender custody of the girl makes no sense to me. I would view that part with a grain of salt. In my experience, CPS is the ultimate authority on taking a child from their parent, at least in Texas. We can only intervene in a temporary manner and turn them over to CPS immediately if the child is in immediate danger. That days later a deputy threatened and demanded doesn't add up. BUt certainly if that did happen, its a horrible thing.

yes, i wouldn't trust the article by itself for anything... i'm sure it's fairly accurate, but it should be checked against other sources.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2015, 09:02:22 AM
Dashcam Catches Chicago Cop Turn Off Video Seconds Before a Man Claims 6 Cops Attacked Him

Chicago, IL — Damning dashcam footage has been released this week showing a Chicago cop approach a DUI suspect with his gun drawn, only to run back a minute later and turn the camera off.

Chicago Police Department dashcam policy is clear, stating “during the recording of an incident, department members will not disengage the in-car video system until the entire incident has been recorded.”

One of the six cops who stopped him found George Roberts’ identification card that showed he was a supervisor at the IPRA. As the supervisor for the Independent Police Review Authority, (IPRA), Roberts is responsible for investigating claims of police misconduct and officer-involved shootings.

Roberts is a civilian whose job is to investigate crooked cops.
After a nightmarish interaction with six Chicago cops, however, Roberts became the subject of his own work.

Once they discovered that Roberts was a man who is tasked with holding police accountable for a living, the dashcam recording of the incident goes black and the officer is caught in complete violation of the department’s policy.

According to a federal lawsuit filed this week, after leaving a bar on New Year’s Day 2015, Roberts was pulled over by six of Chicago’s finest.

What happened next, according to the lawsuit was nothing short of sheer and brutal humiliation.

First the officers attacked Roberts by throwing him to the ground before putting him into the back of the squad car.

Roberts, who is 6′ 3″ and 315 pounds, is too large for traditional cuffs to fit behind his back. But the Chicago cops did not care and forced them onto Roberts, which in turn, caused him a lot of pain.

According to the suit, when Roberts complained to the officers that he was in severe pain, Officer R. Adams, taunted him with Eric Garner’s last words.

    “What are you going to tell me next, ‘you can’t breathe?'” said Adams.

The lawsuit then details how Roberts was thrown to the ground by the officers again. This time, he was thrown down with so much force that he lost control of his bowels.

Roberts was then taken downtown, charged with DUI, and thrown in a cell where he was forced to stay overnight in his soiled clothing. During his stay in jail, he would face further humiliation as a supervisor came to the cell to taunt and laugh at him, according to the suit.

According to the “official” police account, Roberts was drunk and fell down, causing injury to himself. They also claim that he soiled himself in the back of the cruiser.

But the official account cannot be trusted as they also claimed that there was no video evidence. During the trial for Roberts’ DUI charge, however, his counsel discovered its existence and Roberts was subsequently acquitted.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dashcam-catches-chicago-cop-turn-video-seconds-man-claims-6-cops-attacked/


Another article on the same story with more details:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-police-investigator-lawsuit-met-20150923-story.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on September 26, 2015, 09:29:53 AM
i beg ANYONE to defend the cops turning off dashcam... seconds before someone catches an ass-whooping...
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on September 28, 2015, 06:33:11 PM
cop who turned it off should be fired. 6 cops so I'm thinking there should be more dash cam footage available. If not, then sucks to be them, but whatever the guy claims happened, he gets a free chance to say whatever he wants and they'll have to eat it. That's why you don't ever turn it off
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2015, 10:52:14 AM
This was posted before, when it happened. It took a while to determine this was abuse.

Cops Rupture Handcuffed Man’s Spleen, Laugh at Him, Take Pics as He Lay Dying and Begging

Orlando, FL — A police sergeant and an officer were finally fired 14 months after surveillance video caught the officer violently kneeing a handcuffed man. After rupturing the man’s spleen, the officers ignored his pleas for medical attention for nearly two hours while laughing at him off-camera and later lying to investigators regarding the incident.

On August 12, 2014, Robert Liese was arrested for a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. While loading Liese into his patrol car, Orlando police officer Peter Delio allegedly kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach. Upset and injured after Delio left him handcuffed inside a jail cell, Liese headbutted the glass window on his cell door.

According to surveillance video, Officer Delio immediately entered Liese’s cell and kneed the handcuffed man in the abdomen so hard that it ruptured his spleen. Easily picking up Liese like a ragdoll, Delio ordered him to stop resisting even though Liese was clearly immobilized from the pain and not attempting to resist. After dragging Liese out of the cell, Delio moved him to another holding area and placed leg restraints on him.



For nearly two hours, Liese remained on the floor of his cell in restraints writhing in pain and begging for medical attention 35 times. Instead of calling paramedics, several cops could be heard in the video mocking and laughing at Liese off-camera. When Sgt. William Faulkner eventually went into the cell to check on Liese, the police sergeant failed to report that Liese had requested medical care and later lied to internal affairs officers investigating the incident.

After an hour and 50 minutes of suffering from internal injuries, Liese was rescued when paramedics finally arrived and began treating him. Requiring emergency surgery, Liese was rushed to a hospital where surgeons removed his ruptured spleen.

Upon reviewing the footage of the incident, Police Chief John Mina asked the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to conduct an investigation into his men. Initially, Delio was suspended for a week without pay in December. But in March, Delio was arrested and charged with felony battery.

On Wednesday, the Orlando Police Department terminated Sgt. Faulkner and Officer Delio 14 months after nearly killing a restrained man. The department accused both cops of failing to treat the detainee “humanely and with regard to their legal rights.” Faulkner was also accused of writing false reports and lying to internal affairs investigators.

“Sgt. Faulkner blatantly ignored Liese’s repeated pleas for medical assistance,” his termination letter stated. “Liese was obviously in a great amount of pain and distress. This put Liese at medical risk.”

In his report, Faulkner falsely stated that he had asked Liese if he needed medical attention, but Liese refused. According to the video, Faulkner did not even bother asking Liese if he required medical assistance yet Liese begged him several times.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese repeated.

According to their termination letters, Faulkner and Delio both lied to the internal affairs officers investigating the incident. Delio told investigators that he heard screaming from the cell but did not know it was coming from Liese, even though he was the only prisoner in that cell. Faulkner attempted to cover up his role in the abuse by falsely informing investigators that Liese never requested medical attention, even though the camera recorded him asking 35 times.

“While on the ground, Liese can be heard and seen through the audio/video writhing in pain crying out for medical attention 35 times over the next 1 hour and 50 minutes,” wrote Deputy Chief Robert Anzueto in Delio’s termination letter. “The conduct outlined in the investigation cannot be tolerated by an employee of the Orlando Police Department and undermines the employee’s credibility as a law enforcement officer.”

After almost dying at the hands of these sadistic cops, Liese filed a lawsuit in federal court against the Orlando Police Department. The case is still pending.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on October 03, 2015, 04:14:33 PM
This was posted before, when it happened. It took a while to determine this was abuse.

Cops Rupture Handcuffed Man’s Spleen, Laugh at Him, Take Pics as He Lay Dying and Begging

Orlando, FL — A police sergeant and an officer were finally fired 14 months after surveillance video caught the officer violently kneeing a handcuffed man. After rupturing the man’s spleen, the officers ignored his pleas for medical attention for nearly two hours while laughing at him off-camera and later lying to investigators regarding the incident.

On August 12, 2014, Robert Liese was arrested for a $60 bar tab that he was unable to pay. While loading Liese into his patrol car, Orlando police officer Peter Delio allegedly kicked the handcuffed man in the stomach. Upset and injured after Delio left him handcuffed inside a jail cell, Liese headbutted the glass window on his cell door.

According to surveillance video, Officer Delio immediately entered Liese’s cell and kneed the handcuffed man in the abdomen so hard that it ruptured his spleen. Easily picking up Liese like a ragdoll, Delio ordered him to stop resisting even though Liese was clearly immobilized from the pain and not attempting to resist. After dragging Liese out of the cell, Delio moved him to another holding area and placed leg restraints on him.



For nearly two hours, Liese remained on the floor of his cell in restraints writhing in pain and begging for medical attention 35 times. Instead of calling paramedics, several cops could be heard in the video mocking and laughing at Liese off-camera. When Sgt. William Faulkner eventually went into the cell to check on Liese, the police sergeant failed to report that Liese had requested medical care and later lied to internal affairs officers investigating the incident.

After an hour and 50 minutes of suffering from internal injuries, Liese was rescued when paramedics finally arrived and began treating him. Requiring emergency surgery, Liese was rushed to a hospital where surgeons removed his ruptured spleen.

Upon reviewing the footage of the incident, Police Chief John Mina asked the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to conduct an investigation into his men. Initially, Delio was suspended for a week without pay in December. But in March, Delio was arrested and charged with felony battery.

On Wednesday, the Orlando Police Department terminated Sgt. Faulkner and Officer Delio 14 months after nearly killing a restrained man. The department accused both cops of failing to treat the detainee “humanely and with regard to their legal rights.” Faulkner was also accused of writing false reports and lying to internal affairs investigators.

“Sgt. Faulkner blatantly ignored Liese’s repeated pleas for medical assistance,” his termination letter stated. “Liese was obviously in a great amount of pain and distress. This put Liese at medical risk.”

In his report, Faulkner falsely stated that he had asked Liese if he needed medical attention, but Liese refused. According to the video, Faulkner did not even bother asking Liese if he required medical assistance yet Liese begged him several times.

“I need medical attention, please,” Liese repeated.

According to their termination letters, Faulkner and Delio both lied to the internal affairs officers investigating the incident. Delio told investigators that he heard screaming from the cell but did not know it was coming from Liese, even though he was the only prisoner in that cell. Faulkner attempted to cover up his role in the abuse by falsely informing investigators that Liese never requested medical attention, even though the camera recorded him asking 35 times.

“While on the ground, Liese can be heard and seen through the audio/video writhing in pain crying out for medical attention 35 times over the next 1 hour and 50 minutes,” wrote Deputy Chief Robert Anzueto in Delio’s termination letter. “The conduct outlined in the investigation cannot be tolerated by an employee of the Orlando Police Department and undermines the employee’s credibility as a law enforcement officer.”

After almost dying at the hands of these sadistic cops, Liese filed a lawsuit in federal court against the Orlando Police Department. The case is still pending.














Fcking arsehole big bully coppers.. Hope they get a long time behind bars.
And Get a damn good kicking many times & are laughed at by the other
Inmates as they lay there screaming.
Where were they recruited from... German concentration camp.

That 5% of Rogue cops as Agnostic says is a Big 50,000+ Army.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 05, 2015, 09:59:45 AM













Fcking arsehole big bully coppers.. Hope they get a long time behind bars.
And Get a damn good kicking many times & are laughed at by the other
Inmates as they lay there screaming.
Where were they recruited from... German concentration camp.

That 5% of Rogue cops as Agnostic says is a Big 50,000+ Army.


with 50,000 rogue criminal cops out there, I would expect more video of abuse than we are seeing.... maybe they are hibernating?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2015, 10:09:52 AM
with 50,000 rogue criminal cops out there, I would expect more video of abuse than we are seeing.... maybe they are hibernating?













Hmmmm that's your guesstimate of 5% are rogue cops.
Out of approx 1,000,000 law enforcement.

I would like to Think You & Your buddies Would be Feeling
Very Appalled, Let Down & Disgraced With the Never ending
Barrage of Video's, News air time & Complaints Against
Cops.
Maybe even Stand up against the Rogue 5%.

Sadly that's not the vibe I'm getting from your post.
 ::)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 05, 2015, 10:20:00 AM












Hmmmm that's your guesstimate of 5% are rouge cops.
Out of approx 1,000,000 law enforcement.

I would like to Think You & Your buddies Would be Feeling
Very Appalled, Let Down & Disgraced With the Never ending
Barrage of Video's, News air time & Complaints Against
Cops.
Maybe even Stand up against the Rouge 5%.

Sadly that's not the vibe I'm getting from your post.
 ::)

I don't believe there are 50,000 rogue cops out there. I believe that there are probably 50000 out of the 1000000 that are less than stellar and should probably be in another line of work. Spread out over a department of 1000 cops (90% of the departments have less than 10 cops)  that's 50 cops. I would love to have them find another line of work. But sadly and in reality supervisors don't always do a great job in documenting performance issues which makes firing difficult. There are also civil service protections that while are in place for good reason, are often a hindrance to removing substandard officers from the job before they cross the line. Like you, I am happy to see the spot light on the bad cops, no matter how embarrassing it is for us good cops because 1. It may keep an otherwise decent person from going down that path 2. It may start sending the message to departments that culturally are still living in the 60's and 70's. 3. It may eventually lead to better, more professional departments nationwide.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2015, 10:36:37 AM
Shocking video shows the moment a mother was pinned to the ground by police officers and repeatedly punched in the face

    Cindy Hahn, 40, is suing the city of Carlsbad and several police officers
    She claims an officer told her to 'mind her own f****** business' after she asked a simple question
    The same officer later pulled her over and pushed her to the ground
    Video recorded at the scene shows her screaming 'help' as one officer holds her down while the other brutally beats her
    She says the ordeal left her with permanent memory loss and brain trauma

A mother was pushed to the ground and punched in the face by police officers while her young children watched after allegedly being pulled over for a seatbelt violation.

Cindy Hahn, 40, of Valencia, is suing the city of Carlsbad and a number of its police officers after the violent confrontation on July 31 in 2013.

She said the video recorded on ‘the worst day of her life’ shows her screaming ‘help me’ as one cop hits her in the face repeatedly while another pins her to the ground.

Hahn says her two children, aged seven and 11, screamed as they watched from the car – and her son remains traumatized.

‘The only thing that he’ll talk to me about is ‘I couldn’t protect you, Mom,’ she told CBSLA.com.

‘I could’ve. I could’ve got him off you. I could have helped you.’

Hahn, whose father is a retired police officer, says the incident was triggered after she asked an officer, who standing next to a car with its alarm blasting, what was going on.

‘He says, ‘Is this your car?’ And I said, ‘No, sir.’ And then he says ‘Then, mind your own f******* business,’ she said.

Shocked, Hahn told a man nearby what the officer has said and then started to record a video.

She said she reported the incident to police after the cop continued swearing at her, but then left the scene.

But a short while later, she alleges the same officer pulled her over and said it was due to a seatbelt violation.

She says that within moments, she was forced to the ground and claims things escalated further when back-up arrived.

The clip shows a third police officer keeping witnesses away from Hahn, who is eventually helped to her feet as the officer in a motorcycle helmet hikes down her dress.

According to court documents, Hahn suffered permanent memory loss and brain trauma.

In July this year, the San Diego District Attorney dropped felony charges against Hahn for battery on a police officer and resisting arrest – which her attorney Mark Geragos says was due to the video.

However, she is going ahead with the lawsuit due to the ‘senseless act of egregious police brutality’ and wants the police officers involved fired and reformed. Court documents alleged that they lied about the incident under oath during Hahn’s criminal proceedings.

Hahn’s father Mike Dalton, who has retired from the San Fernando Police Department, said the incident should never have happened

‘There was no need to punch her in the face,’ he said.

Officials for the city of Carlsbad said they ‘are looking forward to bringing this lawsuit before the proper judicial authorities as soon as possible.’

DailyMail.com has contacted the Carlsbad Police Department for comment.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3260527/Shocking-video-shows-moment-mother-pinned-ground-police-officers-repeatedly-punched-face.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 05, 2015, 10:43:56 AM
really should put your hands behind your back when they ask you to... How did she get from her car to there? Where is that video?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2015, 03:15:41 PM
I don't believe there are 50,000 rogue cops out there. I believe that there are probably 50000 out of the 1000000 that are less than stellar and should probably be in another line of work. Spread out over a department of 1000 cops (90% of the departments have less than 10 cops)  that's 50 cops. I would love to have them find another line of work. But sadly and in reality supervisors don't always do a great job in documenting performance issues which makes firing difficult. There are also civil service protections that while are in place for good reason, are often a hindrance to removing substandard officers from the job before they cross the line. Like you, I am happy to see the spot light on the bad cops, no matter how embarrassing it is for us good cops because 1. It may keep an otherwise decent person from going down that path 2. It may start sending the message to departments that culturally are still living in the 60's and 70's. 3. It may eventually lead to better, more professional departments nationwide.













Thank you for a civil answer.
 ;)
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2015, 06:10:52 PM
While On Desk Duty for Kicking a Cuffed Man in the Face, Cop Manages to Beat an Innocent Teen

Orange County, FL — In just the past seven years, Deputy Richard Nye, with the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, has been the subject of a whopping 21 excessive force complaints. Three of these “isolated incidents” happened in the last two months alone and were all caught on video.

Given Nye’s ludicrously violent and corrupt past, this man should have never been carrying a badge. However, this seems to be the nature of the thin blue line.

In mid-September, Nye was captured on video kicking a man in the face as he lay face-down on the ground in handcuffs. Prior to that Nye was caught on video in a brutal arrest of 21-year-old Deidra Reid in July.

For kicking the compliant and handcuffed Sammy Mike in the face as he laid face down on the ground, Nye was reportedly placed on desk duty.

Since Nye was apparently on desk duty after his most recent attack, it makes his next act of incompetent violence that much more insane. Somehow, Nye was able to assault an innocent teen while simultaneously serving desk duty.

We have reached out to the department to ask how this is possible, but our calls to the Orange County Sheriff’s office have not been returned.

In his most recent attack, Nye was accused of excessive force and admitted, in his report, that he dealt several knee blows to a 17-year-old boy after he mistook him for a 30-year-old suspect.

According to the report, police were looking for a 30-year-old suspect but instead settled for a 17-year-old boy playing basketball.

Video of this incident shows three deputies walking toward several teenagers playing basketball in a driveway. According to the reports, the teens did not know if the men approaching them were officers, so the 17-year-old took off running.

The teen had broken no law but was still the subject of a brutal attack.

“The force was excessive and brutal from the start. They didn’t identify themselves to the individual, who was 17-years-old and terrified,” family attorney Beth Aires said.

Nye claimed the innocent teen may have been reaching for a gun, so Nye hammered into his body with his knee several times. He then cuffed the teen and charged him with resisting arrest. No gun was found and the resisting charges would later be dropped.

How on earth was this man given a badge and a gun?

According to WFTV:

    Channel 9 learned that Nye was repeatedly disciplined during his less than one year as a Tavares police officer.

    Just 32 days after Tavares hired him in 2004, he was in trouble for crashing his patrol car into a stump. He was warned that further problems could lead to his termination.

    In 2005 he was disciplined again, this time for walking into a Mount Dora bank while off duty, in plain clothes, with his “duty weapon in the open-carry position.”

    Later he was disciplined for pursuing a driver accused of running a stop sign while he had a ride-along civilian in the car.

    “You never get into a police pursuit with a civilian in the car with you,” police expert Chuck Drago said.

    According to records, the next month Nye was disciplined for leaving his patrol car unlocked and running with weapons inside.

    “That is an awful lot of counseling and discipline for an officer in his first year. That’s huge,” Drago said.

    In September of that same year, Florida Highway Patrol troopers determined that Nye was speeding in his patrol car – going 90 mph in a 45-mph zone – just before he slammed into another vehicle. He was fired from the Tavares Police Department.

    A short time later, he was hired by Altamonte Springs police and then later by the Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/desk-duty-kicking-handcuffed-man-face-cop-beat-innocent-teen/

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2015, 09:11:07 PM
NYPD captain who pulled gun on two children playing tag in the street and shouted 'mother f****** get on the ground' pleads guilty to improper use of force

    Brian McCaughey confronted Kesean Smalls, 13, and Jahniel Hinds, 12
    They were playing on a Brooklyn street when he shouted at them
    The 39-year-old lieutenant told them to lay face down on the ground
    He handcuffed Smalls, but Hinds managed to hide behind his mother 
    McCaughey soon realized that he had stopped at the wrong address
    The lieutenant lost 30 days of paid vacation as a punishment 

A NYPD captain who pulled his gun on two children playing tag in the street has pleaded guilty to improper use of force.

Brian McCaughey shouted 'mother f******, get on the ground' when he took out his weapon and confronted Kesean Smalls, 13, and Jahniel Hinds, 12, in Brooklyn.

The lieutenant with Bedford-Stuyvesant’s 79th Precinct then ordered the terrified pair to lie face down on Quincy Street before family members came out and intervened.

Smalls was handcuffed while Hinds hid behind his mother Corina Sivers, 39, The New York Daily News reported.

They were freed after 37-year-old McCaughey realized he had gone to the wrong address.

He was responding to a call from a fellow officer a few blocks away and had stopped too early.

McCaughney admitted he was guilty of improper force, abuse of authority, and discourtesy during the September 2013 incident during a Civilian Complaint Review Board and lost 30 days of paid vacation.

Smalls, now 15, described the terrifying confrontation to The New York Post.

'I got on the ground. I didn’t resist or anything,' he said. 'I was nervous. I was just hoping that anything didn’t go bad.'

Hinds, now 14, said he is now afraid to play outside. He told The Post: 'I think [police] should be more careful what they do, instead of just jumping right out on kids playing in the street.'

Hinds’ mother, Corinia Sivers, was glad McCaughney admitted his guilt. But she insisted more cops there that day should have been punished.

The 39 year old now tells her son not to put his hood up when around cops and not to run.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3265694/NYPD-captain-pulled-gun-two-teenagers-playing-tag-street-shouted-mother-f-ground-pleads-guilty-improper-use-force.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 08, 2015, 10:58:16 PM
At leas the incident wasn't tragic (as in featuring a child's death) and he had the decency to plead guilty. I am almost ok with the punishment too even if I'd have pushed for something more meaningful. But that aside, I am forced to wonder: should a man with such poor judgement be out there, patrolling the streets in a position of authority?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on October 09, 2015, 12:25:10 AM
At leas the incident wasn't tragic (as in featuring a child's death) and he had the decency to plead guilty. I am almost ok with the punishment too even if I'd have pushed for something more meaningful. But that aside, I am forced to wonder: should a man with such poor judgement be out there, patrolling the streets in a position of authority?

If a mcdonalds worker screamed that at a person (even without pointing a weapon at them), that McDickhead would be fired, 100% of the time.

Do it with a gun, while wearing a badge, and you get docked a little vacation pay, and you're free to pistol whip the minority of your choice the following day under the guise of police authority, all while enjoying praise everywhere you go for your daily heroics.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on October 09, 2015, 12:39:01 AM
NYPD captain who pulled gun on two children playing tag in the street and shouted 'mother f****** get on the ground' pleads guilty to improper use of force

    Brian McCaughey confronted Kesean Smalls, 13, and Jahniel Hinds, 12
    They were playing on a Brooklyn street when he shouted at them
    The 39-year-old lieutenant told them to lay face down on the ground
    He handcuffed Smalls, but Hinds managed to hide behind his mother 
    McCaughey soon realized that he had stopped at the wrong address
    The lieutenant lost 30 days of paid vacation as a punishment 

A NYPD captain who pulled his gun on two children playing tag in the street has pleaded guilty to improper use of force.

Brian McCaughey shouted 'mother f******, get on the ground' when he took out his weapon and confronted Kesean Smalls, 13, and Jahniel Hinds, 12, in Brooklyn.

The lieutenant with Bedford-Stuyvesant’s 79th Precinct then ordered the terrified pair to lie face down on Quincy Street before family members came out and intervened.

Smalls was handcuffed while Hinds hid behind his mother Corina Sivers, 39, The New York Daily News reported.

They were freed after 37-year-old McCaughey realized he had gone to the wrong address.

He was responding to a call from a fellow officer a few blocks away and had stopped too early.

McCaughney admitted he was guilty of improper force, abuse of authority, and discourtesy during the September 2013 incident during a Civilian Complaint Review Board and lost 30 days of paid vacation.

Smalls, now 15, described the terrifying confrontation to The New York Post.

'I got on the ground. I didn’t resist or anything,' he said. 'I was nervous. I was just hoping that anything didn’t go bad.'

Hinds, now 14, said he is now afraid to play outside. He told The Post: 'I think [police] should be more careful what they do, instead of just jumping right out on kids playing in the street.'

Hinds’ mother, Corinia Sivers, was glad McCaughney admitted his guilt. But she insisted more cops there that day should have been punished.

The 39 year old now tells her son not to put his hood up when around cops and not to run.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3265694/NYPD-captain-pulled-gun-two-teenagers-playing-tag-street-shouted-mother-f-ground-pleads-guilty-improper-use-force.html













Yet another shinning example of nypd.
Aggressive Bully with Gun.
Take his Gun , uniform & tin badge away.

Can only hope he gets all ' I'm the big bully while not in uniform & carrying a gun '
Chances are he is very Different Then.

Should of been sacked, as a minimum.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2015, 09:33:40 AM
Chief Defends “Good Cop” Who Pepper-Sprayed Man For No Reason as He Walked Down the Street

Seattle, WA — On January 19, Jesse Hagopian was pepper sprayed by police while leaving a peaceful Martin Luther King Jr. Day rally and march. The incident was not in dispute as everything that happened was caught on video.



Officers had set up a bicycle barricade to block the march, but some people walked through the blockade, Hagopian did not.

The video clearly shows Hagopian come walking along calmly, minding his own business and talking on his cell phone. At this point, you can hear the officer, in typical jackboot thug fashion shout, “Stand back! Stand back!”

Out of nowhere, Officer Sandra Delafuente let loose a hefty blast of pepper spray into the unexpecting man’s face.

“I felt the piercing pain shoot through my eye, my eardrum and my nostril, all over my cheek and face,” said Hagopian, according to Komo News. “I yelled out. My mom was in distress as she heard me yell.”

Hogopian has since filed a lawsuit. His attorney, James Bible, said Hagopian was pepper-sprayed “irrationally” with “No provocation and no reason,” characterizing the officer’s assault on innocent citizens as a challenge to free speech.

The Office of Professional Accountability recommended a suspension for Delafuente. However, in typical “thin blue line fashion,” Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole defended the officer’s actions and downgraded the suspension to “an oral reprimand.”

Delafuente sprayed an innocent man, on the way home to his kids, in the face with a chemical agent and she is getting off with a stern talking to.

Delafuente proved that she had no place in her role as a public servant. This proof was caught on video, and yet she’s hailed as “good officer” who was merely thrust into a difficult situation — in which she had to pepper spray innocent people.

Imagine any other job on the planet, outside of the government, in which you assaulted an innocent person and not only were you not arrested for it, but you were not fired. It is this double standard of violence with impunity that further drives a wedge between those with authority and everyone else.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chief-defends-good-cop-pepper-sprayed-man-reason-walked-street/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2015, 09:36:06 AM
Were You One of His Victims? Scamming Cop Busted Mailing Traffic Tickets to Innocent People

Houston, TX – A police officer was recently suspended after it was discovered that he was mailing speeding tickets to random people who were not even driving in the area at the time. Officer David Carter is now under investigation because a number of drivers disputed their tickets, and it was determined that it would have been impossible for them to be speeding in the area where they were accused.

Emanuel Morfin is one of the drivers who caught on to Carter’s scam, and he told KHOU that he was mailed a speeding ticket for a date that he was out of town.

“Actually I was down south in South Texas, so I’m like, well how am I speeding in Houston if I’m out of town? It was kind of ridiculous I was kind of shocked,” Morfin said.

Morfin wasn’t alone either, Carter regularly wrote tickets and assigned them to random vehicles, although it has not been determined how he picked his victims.

Larry Karson, Criminal Justice Professor at the University of Houston said that none of the tickets are valid if the actual driver of the car can’t be identified

“You have an officer who is abusing their discretionary authority. You have no idea who’s driving that car. You’re sending that ticket to a registered owner, who may or may not be behind the wheel,” Karson said.

Carter tried to explain some of the tickets by saying that he tailed people in his personal vehicle.

“He’s actually making the situation worse because what he’s doing is he’s becoming another vehicle flying down at 90 miles an hour and no one knows that he is a police officer. All they know it’s another crazy person on the highway,” Karson said.

Randy Zamora, criminal law division chief with city’s legal department said that all of the cases in question will be dismissed.

“I do not believe the citizens had any knowledge of the citations. Therefore, I did not think it was in the interest of justice to prosecute the cases and asked that all of the citations be dismissed,” he said.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lazy-cop-busted-sending-speeding-tickets-mail-random-people/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: illuminati on October 09, 2015, 02:45:44 PM
Chief Defends “Good Cop” Who Pepper-Sprayed Man For No Reason as He Walked Down the Street

Seattle, WA — On January 19, Jesse Hagopian was pepper sprayed by police while leaving a peaceful Martin Luther King Jr. Day rally and march. The incident was not in dispute as everything that happened was caught on video.



Officers had set up a bicycle barricade to block the march, but some people walked through the blockade, Hagopian did not.

The video clearly shows Hagopian come walking along calmly, minding his own business and talking on his cell phone. At this point, you can hear the officer, in typical jackboot thug fashion shout, “Stand back! Stand back!”

Out of nowhere, Officer Sandra Delafuente let loose a hefty blast of pepper spray into the unexpecting man’s face.

“I felt the piercing pain shoot through my eye, my eardrum and my nostril, all over my cheek and face,” said Hagopian, according to Komo News. “I yelled out. My mom was in distress as she heard me yell.”

Hogopian has since filed a lawsuit. His attorney, James Bible, said Hagopian was pepper-sprayed “irrationally” with “No provocation and no reason,” characterizing the officer’s assault on innocent citizens as a challenge to free speech.

The Office of Professional Accountability recommended a suspension for Delafuente. However, in typical “thin blue line fashion,” Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole defended the officer’s actions and downgraded the suspension to “an oral reprimand.”

Delafuente sprayed an innocent man, on the way home to his kids, in the face with a chemical agent and she is getting off with a stern talking to.

Delafuente proved that she had no place in her role as a public servant. This proof was caught on video, and yet she’s hailed as “good officer” who was merely thrust into a difficult situation — in which she had to pepper spray innocent people.





THIS.
Imagine any other job on the planet, outside of the government, in which you assaulted an innocent person and not only were you not arrested for it, but you were not fired. It is this double standard of violence with impunity that further drives a wedge between those with authority and everyone else.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chief-defends-good-cop-pepper-sprayed-man-reason-walked-street/













Please some explain to me what is going on.
What I am missing about the immunity of crap cops
& them being Given Backing.

As stated if it was any other job.
Every one & cops would be jumping up & down
And screaming about it.

But there is No Bias For Cops..  ::)

Jezus Fcuking Wept.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 10, 2015, 07:33:13 PM
 NYPD on Trial: NBA Player Thabo Sefolosha Fights Back After Police Beating

 The police broke Thabo Sefolosha’s leg. His testimony, and the testimony of witnesses, could mean that they will not get away with it.
By Dave Zirin

 UPDATE: This morning, Thabo Sefolosha cleared of all charges and found not guilty of misdemeanor obstructing government administration, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest this morning in New York. Read below to find out why this was an easy call for the jury to make. The next step will almost certainly be a civil lawsuit against the city.

NBA player Thabo Sefolosha had his leg broken by the New York Police Department, an undisputed fact that is still stunning to contemplate. This week, Thabo has been in criminal court as prosecutors attempt to imprison him for the crime of “resisting arrest.”

In actuality, he is being prosecuted for not going away quietly, choosing instead to fight back.

And fight back he has. We learned this week that the prosecution, in an effort to make this go away, offered a plea deal where Thabo would just have to do a day of community service and all would be forgiven. They did not want this going to trial. They did not want a civil case, much more dicey for Thabo if he had pleaded guilty. They did not want a light shined on events of last April in the wee hours of the morning.

They did not want this, but Thabo Sefolosha demanded it, even with the risk of a much harsher punishment.

We also learned that Thabo would take the stand to proclaim his innocence, a rarity in a criminal case. It marked the first time that Thabo had given, in full, his account of what took place outside a Manhattan nightclub called 1 Oak last April.

Thabo described a scene where he was walking away from a melee outside the club alongside (white) teammate Pero Antic and two women. He talked about being singled out and followed by a police officer named John Paul Giacona who said to him, “With or without a badge, I’m going to fuck you up and I can fuck you up.” He then said they attacked him when he extended his arm to give money to a homeless person who went by the name “True.”

“I said, I’m just going to give the guy some money,’” Sefolosha said. The officer “grabbed my arm. I dropped the money. He said, ‘That’s it, you’re going to jail.’ I turned and tried to put my right hand behind my back. I had a lot of money in my left hand and I tried to put it in my pocket.

 “Two or three officers were pulling me. I said, ‘Relax.’ They never gave me a direct order. One is pulling on my right. One is pulling on my left and someone had a hand on my neck. After five seconds, I realized they wanted me on the ground. I felt my leg going up, with somebody kicking me on my right leg.”

The three people who were with Thabo, including Pero Antic, all testified to this version of events. They said Thabo was targeted and attacked.

The police counter-testimony was very simple. They said that Thabo Sefolosha gestured at them in a manner they found threatening and refused to “move along” from a crime scene. So they broke his leg.

The most damning testimony against their account was from two people from dramatically different walks of life. The first was the homeless man, True. Somehow, True was located, and he testified that the “threatening gesture” allegedly made toward police was in fact Thabo handing True a $20 bill.

The second person was his Atlanta Hawks coach, the reigning NBA Coach of the Year Mike Budenholzer. Coach Bud described Thabo’s character as being “of the highest order” and pledged that if Thabo was saying it, then his word was good. Every single person with whom I have spoken has said the same. If you were going to think of the last NBA player who would be involved in a situation like this, Thabo would top that list. This truth about his character did not, of course, protect him from the NYPD.

The State of New York v. Thabo Sefolosha bears startling similarities to another high-profile incident involving the NYPD and a top athlete: retired tennis star James Blake. This week, a city agency confirmed Blake’s account that two police officers used excessive force in taking him down to the pavement and erred in not identifying himself. The only difference between the Blake and Thabo situations is that we have video of Blake’s being approached and roughed up. Our only video of Thabo was taken by someone in his party after the police began to attack, with one officer seen swinging a nightstick.

As a jury now attempts to untangle whether Thabo Sefolosha is guilty of resisting arrest, the uncomfortable truth of this matter was said bluntly by Thabo’s lawyer, Alex Spiro. “I think [the NYPD] saw a black man in a hoodie. They grab him, they pounce on him, they pull him limb from limb, they smash him on the ground.”

As for the prosecution, they closed their case with this argument: “Imagine a world where we are allowed to say no to an officer…. that’s chaos.” (Sounds more like the missing line from a certain John Lennon song.)

This is a familiar story in New York City, but the difference this time was that Thabo Sefolosha had the financial means and political will to fight back. Even though this could have all gone away, he chose instead to seek justice. Clearly, the NYPD grabbed the wrong “black man in a hoodie.”   

http://www.thenation.com/article/nypd-on-trial-nba-player-thabo-sefolosha-fights-back-after-police-beating/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 10, 2015, 08:09:23 PM
Another crazy case. Thabo was found not guilty. Earlier the NYPD had claimed that they didn't break Thabo's leg suggesting, instead, that Thabo broke it during a game and had simply not gone to the hospital! And, quelle surprise, the DA won't bring charges against the officers. Pity, because the instigating officer especially deserves a conviction for this, if only to prevent him following the thin blue line straight to another department.

The civil lawsuit is inevitable. It's just a pity that the tax payers will shoulder the burden of another expensive settlement because a bunch of cops can't act professionally. I do hope that Thabo goes for the jugular, and sues the officers involved in their personal capacity, so that when they're found responsible, they'll have to spend a lifetime slaving away, as Thabo plays a few more years and goes on to enjoy a life of luxury while they have their paychecks garnished.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 10, 2015, 08:26:52 PM
wow
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 12, 2015, 08:19:16 AM
Were You One of His Victims? Scamming Cop Busted Mailing Traffic Tickets to Innocent People

Houston, TX – A police officer was recently suspended after it was discovered that he was mailing speeding tickets to random people who were not even driving in the area at the time. Officer David Carter is now under investigation because a number of drivers disputed their tickets, and it was determined that it would have been impossible for them to be speeding in the area where they were accused.

Emanuel Morfin is one of the drivers who caught on to Carter’s scam, and he told KHOU that he was mailed a speeding ticket for a date that he was out of town.

“Actually I was down south in South Texas, so I’m like, well how am I speeding in Houston if I’m out of town? It was kind of ridiculous I was kind of shocked,” Morfin said.

Morfin wasn’t alone either, Carter regularly wrote tickets and assigned them to random vehicles, although it has not been determined how he picked his victims.

Larry Karson, Criminal Justice Professor at the University of Houston said that none of the tickets are valid if the actual driver of the car can’t be identified

“You have an officer who is abusing their discretionary authority. You have no idea who’s driving that car. You’re sending that ticket to a registered owner, who may or may not be behind the wheel,” Karson said.

Carter tried to explain some of the tickets by saying that he tailed people in his personal vehicle.

“He’s actually making the situation worse because what he’s doing is he’s becoming another vehicle flying down at 90 miles an hour and no one knows that he is a police officer. All they know it’s another crazy person on the highway,” Karson said.

Randy Zamora, criminal law division chief with city’s legal department said that all of the cases in question will be dismissed.

“I do not believe the citizens had any knowledge of the citations. Therefore, I did not think it was in the interest of justice to prosecute the cases and asked that all of the citations be dismissed,” he said.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lazy-cop-busted-sending-speeding-tickets-mail-random-people/

WTH? Dude has mental issues.. his story is he tailed people in his personal vehicle? Which likely isn't calibrated AND likely violates policy of not enforcing misdemeanor violations when off duty. Guy needs to be fired, prosecuted for falsifying an official document and any other charge that fits..
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 13, 2015, 05:35:27 PM
Cops In Virginia Are Ticketing Cars For Expired Inspections While They Wait For Inspections

Vehicle inspections are necessary for ensuring that every car on the road is held to a similar standard of reliability and safety for everybody. But perhaps one traffic cop in Fairfax County, Virginia takes traffic enforcement a little too seriously.

Bruce Redwine, a mechanic shop owner of 21 years in Chantilly, Virginia, spoke to The Washington Post about the issue of one specific Fairfax County traffic enforcement officer writing tickets for expired registration on vehicles as they sat on his lot waiting for registration renewal.

According to the report, Fairfax County police parking enforcement Officer Jacquelyn Hogue would regularly approach Redwine’s repair shop and write tickets for vehicles out of compliance with the law - even if the vehicles had already entered the shop for inspection.

Officer Hogue cited a letter by the property owner giving law enforcement permission to access the property to ticket any vehicles on the lot - to her discretion. The letter’s language allows Hogue to write tickets for any violations of the traffic laws - though it was intended only for vehicles illegally parked to be ticketed and towed.

Frustrated with Hogue’s encroachment on his customer’s attempts at making their vehicles compliant through his shop, Redwine approached Hogue as she was writing a ticket and snatched it from her.

From the article:

    Bruce Redwine had seen enough. After years of watching a Fairfax County parking enforcement officer slap tickets on his customers’ cars for expired tags or inspection stickers, usually as the cars were awaiting state inspection or repair at his Chantilly shop, he snatched the latest ticket out of Officer Jacquelyn D. Hogue’s hand and added some profane commentary on top.

    Hogue responded by having Redwine arrested for felony assault on a police officer, though she is not a police officer. And when the case first went to court, a Fairfax judge sentenced Redwine to four days in jail.

Redwine appealed the case to a jury trial, and after a 20 minute deliberation, the jury acquitted him. He was still forced to be arrested, booked, had his fingerprints inked, and had his photo taken prior to the case being heard, tarnishing an arrest record that had been clean for 57 years.

    Hogue wrote in her report that Redwine “squeezed my hand and twisted it” and that it later began to swell. An officer took pictures of Hogue and her hand. A number of officers and supervisors arrived on the scene, the reports show, but they elected not to charge Redwine with felony assault.

    Instead, Hogue was advised to see a magistrate and obtain a misdemeanor charge. Four days later, she did.

    Redwine offered to apologize to Hogue for his angry comments to her, in exchange for dismissing the charge, but Hogue declined. He said the officers who testified “thought it was ridiculous that it was being prosecuted so vigorously. . . . Is this the kind of investigation we pay police to do?”

Though Redwine was eventually acquitted, he filed for an internal affairs investigation into the trouble-making traffic cop, but has doubts that anything will come of it. Hogue has since been reassigned to a different part of the county.

Redwine had attempted to avoid confrontation by handling some of his customer’s tickets himself - he claims up to $2,200 worth in one month. His concern was that he would lose customers if they were being ticketed for him not inspecting their vehicles before the officer arrived to prevent that very thing.

This isn’t just one shop owner either. There are multiple reports of Hogue arriving to inspection and repair shops and ticketing any vehicle sitting on the lot or in the shop for non-compliant registration or other issues.

Brooke Wright, a Fairfax County police spokeswoman referencing the letter permitting traffic officers to write tickets on site, asked “Why aren’t they barking up their property manager’s tree?”

Because I’ve delivered my car for inspection specifically to avoid being ticketed, Brooke. That’s like walking into a bar and ticketing anybody with car keys for drunk driving, even if they’re on the phone with a taxi. It just shouldn’t be done.

This is targeting. Fairfax County is punishing its drivers as they work to resolve the issues they are being ticketed for, and shop owners are losing business and even being arrested for pointing out just how counter-productive and downright stupid it is to write tickets as the ticketed issue is being taken care of.

Redwine’s lawyer Dickson Young, in reference to Officer Hogue, put it best:

    “There’s no law against using common sense,” Young said. He said the property management wouldn’t know or care about outdated tags or inspections.

Emphasis mine.

http://jalopnik.com/cops-in-virginia-are-ticketing-cars-for-expired-inspect-1736363538
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2015, 01:18:42 PM
Former Louisiana police chief jailed for tasing inmates

A former Louisiana police chief was sentenced to prison and another former state police chief pleaded guilty to civil rights violations after an investigation into excessive force found they used stun guns to discipline non-combative jail inmates, the U.S. Justice Department said.

Gregory Dupuis, 57, who served as police chief in Mamou, Louisiana from 1994 to 1997 and from 2004 to 2014, was sentenced on Tuesday to one year and one day in prison, the Justice Department said in a press release.

The sentence was handed down by U.S. District Judge Richard T. Haik of the Western District of Louisiana amid a nationwide debate over excessive police force, particularly against minorities, after a series of police killings of unarmed black men elsewhere in the United States.

Robert McGee, 44, who resigned as Mamou police chief on Oct. 8, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to violating an individual's civil rights. He faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine at his sentencing, which has not yet been scheduled.

Both Dupuis and McGee admitted using stun guns to punish inmates at the Mamou jail who were being disruptive, "even if the inmates’ disruption was purely verbal, and on inmates who were calm and compliant when the officer deployed the TASER," according to the press release.

The tiny town of Mamou, with 3,500 residents, is about 85 miles (137 km) west of Baton Rouge.

In one instance in 2010, Dupuis was called to the jail because of a verbally disruptive detainee. After the inmate complied with his order to get down from his bunk and put his hands on the far wall, Dupuis deployed a stun gun to his back, causing him to collapse in pain, injuring his knee, the release said.

That same year, McGee and an inmate were having a conversation and, "although the inmate posed no threat to himself or the officers, McGee fire the TASER at the inmate," causing him to collapse in pain.

"Law enforcement officers have a duty to ensure that detainees are treated fairly and humanely when taken into custody," said U.S. Attorney Stephanie Finley. "Mr. Dupuis and Mr. McGee breached that trust and violated their oaths by using excessive force on incarcerated individuals."

Reuters was not immediately able to identify lawyers for McGee and Dupuis.

(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Michael Perry)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/14/us-usa-police-louisiana-idUSKCN0S805520151014



It seems like this cop was out of control, an older case:

Louisiana man arrested for criminal defamation of police chief can press wrongful arrest suit


Andrea Papagianis | Libel | Feature | March 23, 2012

A U.S. District Court judge ruled that a civil lawsuit can continue against a Louisiana police chief and four officers accused of violating a former officer's constitutional rights. The court declined to dismiss the civil rights case against the officers who arrested the police veteran for criticizing the chief in email messages to a local newspaper.
The officers relied on a criminal defamation statute that was declared unconstitutional "as applied in circumstances nearly identical" to those in the case more than four decades prior to the arrest, the court wrote.

Former police officer Bobby Simmons sued Greg Dupuis, chief of police in Mamou, La. – located about 180 miles northwest of New Orleans – and four officers for wrongful arrest and violating his First and Fourth Amendment rights. According to court documents, Simmons argued that he was unlawfully arrested and charged with criminal defamation for email he sent to the Ville Platte Gazette that questioned the newspaper for not reporting on Dupuis' alleged involvement in an officer's DUI arrest.

"There can be no doubt that the freedom to criticize public officials, including police officers, is unequivocally protected by our Constitution," U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Enry Foote wrote in the court's opinion. "It is likewise well-settled that the First Amendment prohibits government officials from taking action against individuals in retaliation for exercising this protected right."

In a series of email messages sent in May 2008, Simmons probed the Gazette for not running a story about Dupuis' alleged interference with a state police investigation, according to court documents.

One message stated, "who was the mamou police officer (female) that was arrested for DUI, what happened to the arrest of Greg Dupuis last night or early morning by LSP. Why was there no story on Greg locing the state police out of the room at Mamou PD because they would not release his officer [sic]."

According to the opinion, the newspaper did not publish a story on the allegations, but their questioning into the incident and swirling rumors throughout the community led Dupuis to subpoena the paper for its source of information. After receiving the email exchange between Simmons and a newspaper editor, Dupuis obtained an arrest warrant on a criminal defamation charge. Simmons was arrested and held at the Franklin Police Department then transferred to the Mamou Police Department and held overnight before he posted bond.

With help from the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, Simmons filed a civil rights lawsuit against Dupuis and the four arresting officers in April 2009. The police officers sought dismissal of the case due to a claim of qualified immunity, but Judge Foote denied this request.

Qualified immunity is a doctrine that shields government officials from being sued for damages in some situations. In Harlow v. Fitzgerald, the U.S. Supreme Court held that officials are protected from liability "insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights which a reasonable person would have known."

A qualified immunity analysis involves two questions: first, whether the actions of the official violated the plaintiff's rights, and if so, whether that right was "clearly established" at the time of the violation, the court wrote. The second element is intended to protect officers who make reasonable mistakes.

The court did not believe that the officers made a reasonable mistake, writing that "these Defendants first relied on an unconstitutional statute, withheld relevant facts and evidence ... and misrepresented the nature of Plaintiff's communication with the Gazette."

The district court also examined Simmons' unlawful arrest claim, finding that Dupuis and Officer Todd Ortis withheld relevant information to obtain an arrest warrant. The officers relied on Louisiana's criminal defamation statute, which the U.S. Supreme Court largely ruled unconstitutional in the 1964 case Garrison v. State of Louisiana.

"A citizen was handcuffed, arrested and held overnight for sending a private email communication to a local newspaper which informed the paper of possible misconduct of a public official," Foote wrote in the opinion. "There can be no doubt that such communication constitutes protected speech in this country."

https://www.rcfp.org/browse-media-law-resources/news/louisiana-man-arrested-criminal-defamation-police-chief-can-press-wr
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2015, 01:54:31 PM
Hidden Camera Gets Justice, Cop Sentenced to Prison for Beating & Terrorizing Innocent People

Honolulu, HI — A former police officer was sentenced to prison on Friday after a surveillance video caught him brutally beating two innocent men and hospitalizing one of them. The two officers who witnessed the assault have also been charged with trying to conceal the crime and lying to FBI investigators.

On September 5, 2014, officers Vincent Morre, Nelson Tamayori, and former reserve officer Joseph Becera arrived at a Honolulu game room to serve a warrant. In an unprovoked attack, Morre suddenly kicked Jordan Topinio in the head while the innocent man was sitting on a stool. After failing to locate their target, Morre is seen on surveillance video losing his temper and attacking patrons.

Sitting next to Topinio, Francisco Franson remains on his stool and not resisting when Morre begins punching him in the face and kicking him in the chest. After viciously beating Franson, Morre kicks Topinio in the face causing him to fall off his chair. As Morre walks away, he throws a metal stool that hits Topinio in the head, requiring stitches.

Before Morre exits the room, he shoves a woman near the door for no apparent reason while officers Tamayori and Becera make no attempt to stop him. Five days later, Morre filed a false police report omitting the fact that he had assaulted Topinio and Franson. Officers Tamayori and Becera went along with the cover-up while remaining completely unaware of the surveillance camera that captured them on video.

On May 19, Morre admitted to losing his temper and pleaded guilty to two counts of depriving the two men’s right to be free from the use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officer. Former officers Tamayori and Becera were charged with failing to report the assaults. On June 29, Becera pleaded guilty to attempting to conceal the crime and making a false statement to the FBI.

Although Morre was sentenced to 30 months in prison on Friday, no federal prosecutor would have believed Topinio and Franson without the footage from the game room’s security camera. Even if these innocent men won a civil lawsuit against the department, the taxpayers would be the ones paying for the actions of these corrupt and craven officers. With promises of time off for good behavior, does our justice system truly deter other cops from abusing their authority?


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-prison-caught-video-beating-innocent-people/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 19, 2015, 07:25:34 AM
Hidden Camera Gets Justice, Cop Sentenced to Prison for Beating & Terrorizing Innocent People

Honolulu, HI — A former police officer was sentenced to prison on Friday after a surveillance video caught him brutally beating two innocent men and hospitalizing one of them. The two officers who witnessed the assault have also been charged with trying to conceal the crime and lying to FBI investigators.

On September 5, 2014, officers Vincent Morre, Nelson Tamayori, and former reserve officer Joseph Becera arrived at a Honolulu game room to serve a warrant. In an unprovoked attack, Morre suddenly kicked Jordan Topinio in the head while the innocent man was sitting on a stool. After failing to locate their target, Morre is seen on surveillance video losing his temper and attacking patrons.

Sitting next to Topinio, Francisco Franson remains on his stool and not resisting when Morre begins punching him in the face and kicking him in the chest. After viciously beating Franson, Morre kicks Topinio in the face causing him to fall off his chair. As Morre walks away, he throws a metal stool that hits Topinio in the head, requiring stitches.

Before Morre exits the room, he shoves a woman near the door for no apparent reason while officers Tamayori and Becera make no attempt to stop him. Five days later, Morre filed a false police report omitting the fact that he had assaulted Topinio and Franson. Officers Tamayori and Becera went along with the cover-up while remaining completely unaware of the surveillance camera that captured them on video.

On May 19, Morre admitted to losing his temper and pleaded guilty to two counts of depriving the two men’s right to be free from the use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officer. Former officers Tamayori and Becera were charged with failing to report the assaults. On June 29, Becera pleaded guilty to attempting to conceal the crime and making a false statement to the FBI.

Although Morre was sentenced to 30 months in prison on Friday, no federal prosecutor would have believed Topinio and Franson without the footage from the game room’s security camera. Even if these innocent men won a civil lawsuit against the department, the taxpayers would be the ones paying for the actions of these corrupt and craven officers. With promises of time off for good behavior, does our justice system truly deter other cops from abusing their authority?


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-prison-caught-video-beating-innocent-people/

The officers who witnessed it and lied about it in their reports, and didn't intervene should get the same sentence as the main person. No different than laws on organized crime. If you are driving the getaway car you get the same sentence as the person inside the bank. The theory applies here as well. Disgusting behavior by criminals with a badge
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 19, 2015, 12:03:24 PM
The officers who witnessed it and lied about it in their reports, and didn't intervene should get the same sentence as the main person. No different than laws on organized crime. If you are driving the getaway car you get the same sentence as the person inside the bank. The theory applies here as well. Disgusting behavior by criminals with a badge

Good thing they didn't know there was a camera recording, they might have attempted to take it down, as it happened before.

What would happen if the innocent man tried to defend himself against this assault? It would give the cops the excuse they wanted to arrest him on all sorts of charges. And I don't think he'd only get 30 months in prison.

In what percentage of similar cases of abuse/assault do you estimate other officers would handcuff and arrest the abusive cop on the spot versus just telling him to "take it easy"? We often see in such cases other cops arriving and joining in the assault, hardly taking a moment to assess the situation, or they just sit and do nothing.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 19, 2015, 12:49:38 PM
Good thing they didn't know there was a camera recording, they might have attempted to take it down, as it happened before.

What would happen if the innocent man tried to defend himself against this assault? It would give the cops the excuse they wanted to arrest him on all sorts of charges. And I don't think he'd only get 30 months in prison.

In what percentage of similar cases of abuse/assault do you estimate other officers would handcuff and arrest the abusive cop on the spot versus just telling him to "take it easy"? We often see in such cases other cops arriving and joining in the assault, hardly taking a moment to assess the situation, or they just sit and do nothing.

Chuckle.  Yes, one of the great questions of our time.

But seriously, we all know the accepted practices.  We can see it.  It's how their business is done.  The police are more part of the PROBLEM than the solution.  If that weren't true, we wouldn't see these episides where ALL cops on the scene fall into a synchronized crime wave, without so much as a pause.  They fall right into it, like it's nothing.  It's second nature.  Corrupt as can be.  It has become the definition of a cop.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 21, 2015, 01:23:24 PM
NYPD cop stole a three-storey family house from a dying neighbor 'by forging papers saying it had been transferred to her'



A NYPD officer allegedly stole a three-storey family house by forging papers that said it had been transferred to her.

Blanche O'Neal, 45, is accused of filing documents in 2012 which said she bought the property from the nephew of the deceased owner, Lillian Hudson for $10,000. The deed was purportedly signed by him.

The nephew and three other relatives were unaware they had inherited the property following the death of Ms Hudson in 1993.

It sat empty for many years, at which point it is claimed O'Neal filed the necessary paperwork to gain ownership falsely of the house.

Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson said in a statement: 'This defendant allegedly stole a house from its rightful owner with the stroke of a pen, apparently hoping no one would notice.

'But her brazen actions have unraveled and she will now be held accountable.

'That she is a veteran NYPD officer makes this alleged crime all the more disturbing.'

In a further twist, prosecutors allege O'Neal then tried to sell the building, at 23A Vernon Avenue, and the scheme was uncovered when a buyer contacted the building's rightful owners.

But it was in fact O'Neal who first contacted authorities about the alleged crime, Mr Thompson said.

'Officer O'Neal reported that someone was basically trying to commit deed fraud against her,' Thompson said.

O'Neal has been suspended from the New York Police Department without pay,  it has been reported.

She has pleaded not guilty to charges of possession of a forged instrument, grand larceny, filing a false instrument and perjury.

New York City Sheriff Joseph Fucito has issued a strongly worded statement warning against any one who tries to falsify legal documents within the police department. 

Mr Fucito said: The Sheriff's Office is actively investigating real property theft and related financial crimes throughout New York City.

'Those who think they can simply file false documentation with the NYC Department of Finance should take notice.

'The Sheriff will aggressively investigate and arrest any party involved in such criminal activity.'

Neal's lawyer, Edward King, told reporters outside the courtroom: 'Bottom line is, she is not guilty. And she's going to vigorously defend the case'.

She has been a cop for 12 years and was most recently assigned to the 83rd Precinct in nearby Bushwick. 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3282983/NYPD-cop-stole-three-storey-family-house-dying-neighbor-forging-papers-said-transferred-her.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2015, 10:29:51 AM
No charges for Volusia County deputy who shot, killed unarmed man

VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. —

The state attorney announced Wednesday that a grand jury has decided that a Volusia County deputy who shot and killed an unarmed suspect will not face charges.

Derek Cruice’s loved ones have been protesting since Deputy Todd Raible shot and killed him.

“After two days of testimony and in deliberation, the grand jury declined to indict Deputy Raible on a manslaughter by culpable negligence charge,” said State Attorney R.J. Larizza.

Investigators said Raible shot Derek Cruice in the face while serving a search warrant for drugs in March. Cruice was not armed.

“I want justice for him because he did not deserve to die so young, and not in this manner. Not in this manner,” said Sheila Cruice.

She had been waiting for more than six months to find out if the deputy who killed her son will face criminal charges.

“Why did they use so much force? But it’s just hard. It’s a struggle,” said Sheila Cruice.

Officials said Raible perceived a threat as he entered the home on Maybrook Drive in Deltona and fired one time, shooting Derek Cruice in the face.

Derek Cruice’s friends in the home at the time said they want to know what that threat was, and argue he could not have had a weapon, since he was only wearing shorts with no shirt.

Later, investigators said items they found in the home included 217 grams of marijuana, scales, baggies and $3,000 in cash, but no weapons.

“There was no history or reason in my son’s background, ever, to go in there with such force,” said Sheila Cruice.

“It was an incident nobody wanted to happen. It’s an incident where, if you could turn back the clock, we would. My heart goes out to the family,” Larizza said.

Raible is still working for the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, but an internal investigation is still underway.

Sheila Cruice has hired Orlando attorney Mark Nejame who is working on a wrongful death suit against the department.

They could settle with the city or take it to a civil jury, which may see the case differently.

“Volusia County has a $5 million insurance police for negligence matters and yet they refuse to tap into it,” NeJame said.

Derek Cruice was arrested twice in the past on misdemeanor drug charges, but was never convicted.

Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson released a statement which read, in part, “Law enforcement officers have a tremendous responsibility as well as a dangerous job that sometimes requires them to make split-second, life-and-death decisions. That Derek Cruice was unarmed makes the outcome of this incident truly tragic. But it in no way alters the facts and circumstances that caused Investigator Raible and the other deputies in that fateful moment to perceive that their lives were in danger.”

http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/state-attorney-announce-if-there-will-be-charges-a/nn7Kd/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on October 24, 2015, 10:37:02 AM
a local drummer was coming home from a gig in FL...

broke down, was changing tire.  An UNMARKED cop pulled over, something happened, and the cop shot and killed the broke down musician.

Details are sketchy. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 26, 2015, 09:49:01 AM
a local drummer was coming home from a gig in FL...

broke down, was changing tire.  An UNMARKED cop pulled over, something happened, and the cop shot and killed the broke down musician.

Details are sketchy. 

Is this a drummer joke?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2015, 11:03:58 PM
Once again, the taxpayers have to pay the bill for the cops' incompetence. Unless the offending cops start paying out of their own pocket, it is unlikely things will change.

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/las-vegas-police-pay-80000-woman-falsely-accused-prostitution
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on October 28, 2015, 03:40:20 AM
Is this a drummer joke?

nope.  Corey something.  he was on phone with AT&T HELP line for 53 minutes, and was dead for 47 miniutes of that (cop arrived 5 minutes into call), so there may be a recording of the shots and the drummers alleged threats to murder the cop.

One of the shots was supposedly confirmed to have hit the drummer in the back as he ran.  The first 4-5 bullets entered his front.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: avxo on October 28, 2015, 09:42:40 AM
Remember the case of Mr. Patel, an elderly Indian man who didn't speak English, who was out on a walk in the neighborhood where his son lived and was left partially paralyzed after Madison cop Eric Parker body-slammed him to ground? Well, after 2 mistrials, it's Court time again. And this time, Parker's lawyer has an interesting new strategy: to blame the incident on Mr. Patel: "When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language. Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone."

Read all about it in http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html (http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html)

This is infuriating. I get that you're trying to defend your client, but this is starting to border on the insane. There's no requirement that you speak English to visit the United States, and if a U.S. citizen had suffered this sort of injury overseas at the hands of a foreign cop, then you can bet that anyone making this argument would be excoriated by U.S. media - social and otherwise. And rightly so. But even if there was a requirement that one speak English, this sort of approach raises other questions; what if, for example, Mr. Patel was deaf and couldn't hear the instructions that Parker yelled? Would he still "bear as much responsibility"?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 28, 2015, 11:53:47 AM
Quote
Posey told the jury how Parker contacted dispatchers for help looking up crimes in the area to drum up probable cause for the stop that left Patel paralyzed.

I'm done playing Mr. Nice Guy with people making excuses for criminal cops.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 28, 2015, 12:01:55 PM
Remember the case of Mr. Patel, an elderly Indian man who didn't speak English, who was out on a walk in the neighborhood where his son lived and was left partially paralyzed after Madison cop Eric Parker body-slammed him to ground? Well, after 2 mistrials, it's Court time again. And this time, Parker's lawyer has an interesting new strategy: to blame the incident on Mr. Patel: "When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language. Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone."

Read all about it in http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html (http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html)

This is infuriating. I get that you're trying to defend your client, but this is starting to border on the insane. There's no requirement that you speak English to visit the United States, and if a U.S. citizen had suffered this sort of injury overseas at the hands of a foreign cop, then you can bet that anyone making this argument would be excoriated by U.S. media - social and otherwise. And rightly so. But even if there was a requirement that one speak English, this sort of approach raises other questions; what if, for example, Mr. Patel was deaf and couldn't hear the instructions that Parker yelled? Would he still "bear as much responsibility"?

Yep, it is insane.  I must agree.  But if there are insane people looking for some reason -- ANY reason -- to buy in, then there you go.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:02:14 PM
nope.  Corey something.  he was on phone with AT&T HELP line for 53 minutes, and was dead for 47 miniutes of that (cop arrived 5 minutes into call), so there may be a recording of the shots and the drummers alleged threats to murder the cop.

One of the shots was supposedly confirmed to have hit the drummer in the back as he ran.  The first 4-5 bullets entered his front.

We'll have to wait and see what information comes out as they investigate it. In the meantime, realize that it is not uncommon for shots to be in the back as a shooting is often a dynamic situation with people moving quickly and miliseconds is all it takes for a body to be turned. A lot faster than a human can realize the body is turning and refrain from shooting. So someone can be facing you, and as you are shooting, change position, causing your bullets to strike in the back before you make the mental adjustment. Not saying that happened, but just pointing out it doesn't always mean someone was running away   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:03:24 PM
Remember the case of Mr. Patel, an elderly Indian man who didn't speak English, who was out on a walk in the neighborhood where his son lived and was left partially paralyzed after Madison cop Eric Parker body-slammed him to ground? Well, after 2 mistrials, it's Court time again. And this time, Parker's lawyer has an interesting new strategy: to blame the incident on Mr. Patel: "When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language. Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone."

Read all about it in http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html (http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html)

This is infuriating. I get that you're trying to defend your client, but this is starting to border on the insane. There's no requirement that you speak English to visit the United States, and if a U.S. citizen had suffered this sort of injury overseas at the hands of a foreign cop, then you can bet that anyone making this argument would be excoriated by U.S. media - social and otherwise. And rightly so. But even if there was a requirement that one speak English, this sort of approach raises other questions; what if, for example, Mr. Patel was deaf and couldn't hear the instructions that Parker yelled? Would he still "bear as much responsibility"?

To me,, that whole things was an absolute screw up and there is no one to blame but that cop who threw him to the ground for no apparent reason
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 28, 2015, 12:06:26 PM
To me,, that whole things was an absolute screw up and there is no one to blame but that cop who threw him to the ground for no apparent reason

Um, weren't you saying some bullshit about video might be a "bad angle" or something like that, before?

My apologies if it was someone else.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:10:42 PM
Um, weren't you saying some bullshit about video might be a "bad angle" or something like that, before?

My apologies if it was someone else.


I think what you read was there was another video angle that showed it to be even worse than the one posted recently. 
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:11:41 PM
at least that is what I meant. I saw two angles.. both are horrible but the other was even worse
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on October 28, 2015, 12:13:03 PM
We'll have to wait and see what information comes out as they investigate it. In the meantime, realize that it is not uncommon for shots to be in the back as a shooting is often a dynamic situation with people moving quickly and miliseconds is all it takes for a body to be turned. A lot faster than a human can realize the body is turning and refrain from shooting. So someone can be facing you, and as you are shooting, change position, causing your bullets to strike in the back before you make the mental adjustment. Not saying that happened, but just pointing out it doesn't always mean someone was running away  

the kid was a local SW Florida drummer.  playing upscale gigs with a high end band.  opposite of the 'thug' that cops like to shoot and everyone likes to defend.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 28, 2015, 12:13:42 PM
Remember the case of Mr. Patel, an elderly Indian man who didn't speak English, who was out on a walk in the neighborhood where his son lived and was left partially paralyzed after Madison cop Eric Parker body-slammed him to ground? Well, after 2 mistrials, it's Court time again. And this time, Parker's lawyer has an interesting new strategy: to blame the incident on Mr. Patel: "When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language. Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone."

Read all about it in http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html (http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/10/defense_blames_indian_grandfat.html)

This is infuriating. I get that you're trying to defend your client, but this is starting to border on the insane. There's no requirement that you speak English to visit the United States, and if a U.S. citizen had suffered this sort of injury overseas at the hands of a foreign cop, then you can bet that anyone making this argument would be excoriated by U.S. media - social and otherwise. And rightly so. But even if there was a requirement that one speak English, this sort of approach raises other questions; what if, for example, Mr. Patel was deaf and couldn't hear the instructions that Parker yelled? Would he still "bear as much responsibility"?

Tuten said:"If you act like a criminal you are going to be treated like one."

Tuten told the jury that if Patel had cooperated then police could have determined there was no crime and let him go. Tuten spoke of police "survival training," telling the jury:"In any situation if someone resists they are going to the ground."
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 28, 2015, 12:19:29 PM
Tuten said:"If you act like a criminal you are going to be treated like one."

Tuten told the jury that if Patel had cooperated then police could have determined there was no crime and let him go. Tuten spoke of police "survival training," telling the jury:"In any situation if someone resists they are going to the ground."

They're throwing a Hail Mary, but lots of people will buy right into it.  Look at all the people on Getbig who take delight in the innocent being crushed.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:22:26 PM
the kid was a local SW Florida drummer.  playing upscale gigs with a high end band.  opposite of the 'thug' that cops like to shoot and everyone likes to defend.

I understand he was a local drummer.. I also understand the other person was a cop. We can easily assume the cop just murdered an innocent person, but we can't concede a local drummer could have been a threat at the time... ok
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Las Vegas on October 28, 2015, 12:22:34 PM
at least that is what I meant. I saw two angles.. both are horrible but the other was even worse

Well, I appreciate that you can see it.  I really do.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 28, 2015, 12:24:27 PM
Tuten said:"If you act like a criminal you are going to be treated like one."

Tuten told the jury that if Patel had cooperated then police could have determined there was no crime and let him go. Tuten spoke of police "survival training," telling the jury:"In any situation if someone resists they are going to the ground."

Lets say Tuten is right, and police are taught that in every case if someone turns to walk away, even if it's because they can't understand you, you take them to the ground. Ok... but are they taught that in every case it has to be a bone shattering slam to the ground? Come on....
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 30, 2015, 08:51:56 AM
Cop Arrested for Pointing Gun at Children, Video then Shows Fellow Cops Let Him Escape

Bakersfield, CA — Arrested three times within the last week for gun and drug charges, a sheriff’s deputy was recently caught on video escaping from custody as his arresting officers stood next to him in the parking lot and allowed their colleague to flee. Although the deputy was found high on meth and accused of aiming his gun at children, his arresting officers claim he’s a criminal mastermind capable of outwitting Harry Houdini.

On Saturday night, Kern County Sheriff’s Deputy Edward Tucker was arrested after allegedly pulling a gun on a group of children at a birthday party. According to a witness, Tucker told a group of girls that he was being chased and was looking for a woman on a bicycle before pulling out his gun. When the girls denied seeing anything, Tucker reportedly aimed his firearm at each of them.

“He pointed the gun straight at them, at their chest, each one individually, and told them, ‘You’re lying to me,'” the resident described.

As deputies arrived on the scene, Tucker hid inside his car and waited for them to arrest him. After placing Tucker in custody, deputies found five handguns, two shotguns, and an assault rifle in his vehicle. They also found a small amount of methamphetamine in his car and suspected Tucker of being under the influence.

Although Tucker had been bailed out after the arrest, he was arrested again on Tuesday after a retired deputy asked sheriff’s officials to check on Tucker’s welfare. After receiving suicidal text messages from Tucker, the retired deputy notified the sheriff’s office and deputies located Tucker in a park northwest of Bakersfield. They allegedly found him in possession of drugs, firearms, and an explosive detonating cord.

At 9:46 p.m. on Tuesday, Tucker can be seen on surveillance video unlocking the back door of a patrol car, while deputies Branden Routh and Salvador Orona remain focused on a computer in the parking spot next to their cruiser. According to Sheriff Donny Youngblood, the deputies rolled down Tucker’s window because he complained of nausea and gave him longer handcuffs because he complained of back problems. Instead of following protocol, the deputies also did not escort Tucker directly to jail and allowed him to escape.

For those of you who have never been arrested, cops don’t roll down your window, they don’t offer you longer handcuffs, and they certainly don’t leave you unattended in the parking garage no matter what excuses you give them. Even if Routh and Orona were engrossed in hardcore porn or fantasy football, they would have easily seen Tucker escaping from the next parking spot over or heard his flip-flops echoing across the garage as he ran towards the ramp.

Although Sheriff Youngblood doesn’t think Tucker had inside help escaping from the garage, the sheriff admitted that he doesn’t understand how Routh and Orona were unable to see or hear Tucker escape right next to them. Youngblood later speculated,

    “I don’t know this, but I suspect he may have been equipped with a handcuff key.”

Tucker was arrested for the third time this week at 3:20 p.m. on Thursday while hiding in a residential garage. He has been on unpaid leave from the sheriff’s office since October 2014. Tucker was arrested for domestic violence in 1991, and for possession/manufacture/sale of a dangerous weapon in 1988. The District Attorney’s office did not file charges in either incident.

On Wednesday, a former neighbor told KBAK that people commonly referred to the deputy as “Tweakin’ Tucker.” Preferring to remain anonymous, she recalled his aggressive and strange behavior throughout the years before his recent arrests.

“You can’t make this stuff up,” Sheriff Youngblood said during a news conference. “You just can’t.”



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-deputy-escaping-police-custody-aiming-gun-children/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on October 30, 2015, 02:15:12 PM
"For those of you who have never been arrested, cops don’t roll down your window, they don’t offer you longer handcuffs, and they certainly don’t leave you unattended in the parking garage no matter what excuses you give them. Even if Routh and Orona were engrossed in hardcore porn or fantasy football, they would have easily seen Tucker escaping from the next parking spot over or heard his flip-flops echoing across the garage as he ran towards the ramp."

Well, as someone who has arrested my fair share I can tell you this is just not true. We roll windows down half way if the vehicle is not running and it is warm out. On complaints of back issues, or people who are just too darn big, we just double cuffs, meaning we link 2 sets of cuffs together to give more slack for the arms. So it would not be rare for then to afford someone that courtesy. And I think it is speculation that the deputies could have heard him as he didn't run until he rounded a corner. But having said all that... at best we have piss poor officer safety and incompetence. That is almost as bad as if they had just allowed him to escape. We've had officers who have lost prisoners as well. It usually comes down to letting down their guard and being complacent. They face a Discipline Review Hearing and get suspended due to the dangerous nature of allowing someone to escape.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on October 30, 2015, 04:39:10 PM
Woman claims Henderson police unlawfully jailed her during investigation

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/woman-claims-henderson-police-unlawfully-jailed-her-during-investigation
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2015, 12:55:22 PM
“We reviewed the case. We didn’t find any violations of policy."  Of course.

Innocent 77-yo Blind Man Called 911 for Help, Cop Shows Up, Beat & Arrested Him for No Reason

Denver, CO — Philip White was travelling back home from a conference on technical advancements to assist the blind on May 22, 2012, when he missed his bus in Denver. White, who was 77-years-old at the time, and blind, called the police after the bus station security guard told him he had to leave the station. This call would prove to be detrimental.

White was told that the bus was full and he couldn’t get on board. He only wanted to discuss options with staffers at the terminal, but he eventually was told by a security guard that he was “trespassing” and he’d have to leave the terminal, according to court documents.

“Philip White missed his bus to the mountains, when he asked Greyhound staff for help in catching the next bus home, he was told by a security guard he was trespassing and had to leave the Greyhound Bus Depot,” said White’s attorney Mari Newman. “This is a Master’s Degree holder and long-time educator who was set upon with excessive force as police violated his civil rights, all over a bus ticket.”

After being told to leave, White declined and then called the police. Officer Kyllion Chafin of the notoriously brutal Denver police department showed up.

Chafin did not care that White was the person who had placed the call to police and instead of helping the man in need, he escalated the situation to violence.

Chafin quickly attacked White. White, having no idea if his aggressors were actually who they said they were, asked to feel Chafin’s badge to confirm he was an officer.

“He told me ‘You aren’t touching me,’” said White.

According to KDVR,

    The cop grabbed his arms, forcing them behind him, then cuffed him so tightly he suffered nerve damage in his fingers — or eyes, for him. He was then slammed into the ticket counter leaving his head bleeding.

    When Sgt. Bob Wykoff arrived, instead of trying to defuse the situation and offer the blind man help, without reading White his Miranda Rights, he began to video tape a bus station interrogation without White’s consent.

White was then brought to the downtown jail where he sat for 8 hours before police realized that they had no reason to keep him. He was then released, bloodied and bruised, without charges.

    “I thought they would have killed me if they thought they could get away with it,” said White. “I always trusted cops, but now my confidence in them is shaken. I felt so bad I wanted to leave the USA.”

On Friday, the Denver taxpayers were held liable for Chafin’s violence. A jury awarded White $100,000 in compensatory damages and $300,000 in punitive damages.

Chaffin faced zero discipline and his department defended his brutal actions against this now 80-year-old blind man.

“We respect the court and we respect the jury’s decision,” said Sonny Jackson, a police spokesman. “We reviewed the case. We didn’t find any violations of policy. We are always looking for ways to improve.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-77-yo-blind-man-called-911-help-cop-shows-up-beat-arrested-reason/

http://kdvr.com/2015/10/31/blind-man-awarded-400000-in-police-brutality-suit/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2015, 10:42:28 PM
"Gonzalez was found guilty in June of deprivation of civil rights, conspiracy to violate constitutional rights and falsification of records in the 2011 beating of Gabriel Carrillo." 8 years...

Based on the falsified reports of the cops (claiming Carrillo attacked the cops), the beaten man could have gotten up to 14 years in prison...

Former Los Angeles sheriff's deputy gets eight years for brutal back-room beating of handcuffed man who'd come to jail to visit his brother

Sgt Eric Gonzalez was taken into custody immediately on Monday after being sentenced
He was convicted of several charges in the 2011 beating of Gabriel Carrillo
These included deprivation of civil rights, conspiracy to violate constitutional rights and falsification of records back in June
Could have got a maximum 12 years' jail - while his attorneys asked for a two-and-a-half year sentence
Four other deputies have been convicted, and fifth was indicted last month

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3300675/Los-Angeles-sheriffs-deputy-sentenced-jail-beating.html

Some more background:

http://abc7.com/news/los-angeles-sheriffs-deputy-gets-8-years-in-beating-of-jail-visitor/1064555/

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2015/06/three-los-angeles-sheriff-deputies-convicted-in-beating-after-two-deputies-turn-against-them/
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2015, 02:16:02 PM
Shooting death of cop that sparked  manhunt was his own 'carefully staged suicide' after he secretly embezzled money from youth programs to pay off his mortgage and visit adult websites



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3302697/Investigators-discuss-new-information-officers-death.html
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 04, 2015, 02:16:51 PM
Just saw the story about the officers carefully staged suicide. Was stealing from the Departments Explorer program. Fitting end.. wish he hadn't wasted so much taxpayer money trying to make it look like a shooting instead of the cowardly suicide it was.   
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2015, 02:36:47 PM
Just saw the story about the officers carefully staged suicide. Was stealing from the Departments Explorer program. Fitting end.. wish he hadn't wasted so much taxpayer money trying to make it look like a shooting instead of the cowardly suicide it was.   

Do you think the response (especially investigation+resources) would have been the same if he was not a police officer?
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: 240 is Back on November 04, 2015, 05:15:08 PM
Do you think the response (especially investigation+resources) would have been the same if he was not a police officer?

LOL

Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 05, 2015, 05:56:51 PM
Do you think the response (especially investigation+resources) would have been the same if he was not a police officer?

It would be worked seriously as homicides are the #1 priority in any department. they are usually allowed the pick of the Detectives, an extensive OT budget and resources. But generally no, not as much. The thinking is, anyone who murders a uniformed policeman is extremely dangerous and will kill anyone. Similar resources would be used I believe if a child was found slain or a mass shooting took place. We can debate the right or wrong of that, but generally, that's how it is.
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Skeletor on November 05, 2015, 06:16:42 PM
Money-laundering cop who shot himself dead in fake murder approached a hit-man to kill administrator who was about to expose him and tried to plant cocaine on her to cover up his crimes


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3305986/Money-laundering-Illinois-cop-killed-fake-murder-sought-gang-member-hit-man-kill-administrator-tried-plant-cocaine-cover-thieving.html[/list]
Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
Post by: Agnostic007 on November 05, 2015, 06:47:58 PM
    Money-laundering cop who shot himself dead in fake murder approached a hit-man to kill administrator who was about to expose him and tried to plant cocaine on her to cover up his crimes

    •     Officials revealed Charles Gliniewicz, 52, killed himself on September 1
    •     He was the center of a legal investigation into his conduct in Fox Lake
    •     Sent a text message in a bid to try and get the village manager killed
    •     Administrator Anne Marrin was preparing to expose him as an embezzler   
    •     Investigators found drugs in his desk, which police say he wanted to plant
    •     His wife and son are also being investigated as part of his illicit scheme 

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3305986/Money-laundering-Illinois-cop-killed-fake-murder-sought-gang-member-hit-man-kill-administrator-tried-plant-cocaine-cover-thieving.html[/list]

    If he were still alive.. I'd advocate the death penalty
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 05, 2015, 11:43:35 PM
    Wow.

    Shock Video: Cop Executes Man as He is Lying Face Down and Complying

    Hummelstown, PA – Another cop has been cleared of charges for cold-blooded murder.

    Officer Lisa Mearkle of the Hummelstown Borough Police Department was found not guilty of criminal homicide for the shooting death of 59-year-old David Kassick on February 2. Video has just been released from the Taser camera which was deployed before she fired two bullets into the man’s back, as he lay face down on the ground in full compliance with her orders.

    The video of this cold-blooded killing by a maniacal cop, shown in full detail, somehow did not convince a jury that it was homicide. He had been chased down, shocked repeatedly with a Taser, fallen down face first in the snow, displayed his hands clearly at the officer’s orders, and then shot in the back twice.

    Officer Mearkle had attempted to pull Kassick over for an expired inspection sticker, but Kassick fled to his family home, where he tried to run into the backyard. That’s where Mearkle ended his life.

    Mearkle seems to be in a hysterical rage as she shoots the Taser into Kassick’s back. He falls to the ground, shouting and writhing in pain as police sirens blare. She applies the Taser continuously for almost 30 seconds as he was on the ground, while shouting for him to “get on the ground.”

    He is, in fact, on the ground. She shouts, “Show me your hands!”

    Kassick, face down in the snow after receiving 50,000 volts of electricity, holds his hands forward and says, “I am showing you.”

    She continues shouting “Show me your hands!” as he is showing his hands, and then fires the Taser and two bullets into Kassick’s back.

    Kassick shouts at the officer in disbelief during his last moments of life. Officer Mearkle continues behaving as if this dying man was some sort of a threat.

    In the charge of criminal homicide, the arrest affidavit stated:

        “At the time Officer Mearkle fires both rounds from her pistol, the video clearly depicts Kassick lying on the snow covered lawn with his face toward the ground, furthermore, at the time the rounds are fired nothing can be seen in either of Kassick’s hands, nor does he point or direct anything toward Officer Mearkle.”

    District Attorney Ed Marsico, in bringing the criminal charges against Mearkle, said that it appeared from the recording that Kassick was simply trying to remove the stun gun probes from his back before his life was taken.

    This is one of the most egregious displays of Blue Privilege we have witnessed, made all the more depressing because a “jury of peers” gave the verdict of not guilty.

    D.A. Ed Marsico should be applauded for attempting to bring a murderer in uniform to justice.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/shock-video-cop-executes-man-lying-face-complying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 06, 2015, 01:00:14 AM


    Jesus Christ... she was acquited?! And that's with a video that pretty much shows this was completely unnecessary.

    So, I just had to Google and make sure that this was accurate. And it is. I saw a video of her making a statement after her acquital. She says she's relieved and that this has been hard on her and taken a toll that nobody understands. She cries, while saying it will take her a while to get back to normal, but that she intends to remain an officer in the Department and serve her community! Can you imagine?!

    I'm at a loss of words.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 06, 2015, 05:52:42 PM
    very very very bad shooting. Should do time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2015, 06:02:44 PM
    "Get on the ground" while man is on the ground...

    "Show me your hands" while the man's hands are visible..

    This was murder. How she got away with it is beyond me.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 06, 2015, 06:28:16 PM
    "Get on the ground" while man is on the ground...

    "Show me your hands" while the man's hands are visible..

    This was murder. How she got away with it is beyond me.

    Oj was more questionable
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2015, 07:57:19 AM
    Two Louisiana city marshals are charged with shooting dead a six-year-old autistic boy when they fired 18 bullets at the car his father was driving


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3308046/Two-Louisiana-city-marshals-charged-fatally-shooting-six-old-autistic-boy.html



    After Reviewing Body Cam, 2 Cops Charged with Murder in Killing of 6-yo Jeremy Mardis

    Marksville, LA – On Tuesday, November 3rd, 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis was tragically gunned down by Louisiana police during a pursuit.

    In a press conference late Friday night, authorities announced that two of the four officers involved in the stop have been arrested.

    Three of the men, Lt. Jason Brouillette, Sgt., Kenneth Parnell, and Lt. Derrick Stafford, worked for the Marksville City Police Department. The fourth, Norris Greenhouse Jr., was a marshal for the Alexandria City Office.

    Lt. Stafford, 32, and Norris Greenhouse Jr., 23, are the local deputy marshals who fired at least 18 rounds at an unarmed man and his son, killing a 6-year-old boy.

    According to the Advocate,

        Stafford, Brouillette and Greenhouse were moonlighting for the local marshal’s office at the time of the shooting, Smith said.

        No use-of-force policy exists for the Marksville Police Department, said Smith, nor are there guidelines on shooting at vehicles, a practice frowned upon by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, an umbrella agency for law enforcement groups.

        The shooting laid bare tensions between the city of Marksville and a local marshal agency led by a school bus driver who lacks basic law enforcement certification. Marksville Mayor John Lemoine previously told The Advocate that Ward 2 Marshal Floyd Voinche Sr. recently began recruiting part-time officers and obtaining squad cars to issue tickets, without permission from city officials.

    Initial reports claimed that Jeremy’s father, 25-year-old Chris Few, was being served a warrant by Ward 2 City Marshals. However, police now admit that Few was not only unarmed when officers opened fire, there wasn’t a warrant at all.

    It was originally reported that Few was cornered in a dead end drive, however, the initial reports were incorrect. Through traffic was indeed allowed at the intersection.

    At least one of the officers were wearing a body camera which was on at the time of the shooting. While police have yet to release the footage, the arrests were made shortly after the Louisiana State Police reviewed the video, according to KLFY.
    When asked about the body camera footage during the press conference, State Police Col. Mike Edmonson told reporters, “It is the most disturbing thing I’ve seen, and I will leave it at that.”

    “That little boy was buckled in the front seat of that vehicle,” Edmonson told reporters. “That is how he died.”

    At approximately 10:00 pm, Friday night, authorities announced that Norris Greenhouse Jr. & Derrick Stafford were charged with 2nd-degree murder of 6-year-old and attempted 2nd-degree murder of Chris Few.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/reviewing-body-cam-2-cops-charged-murder-killing-6-yo-jeremy-mardis/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on November 07, 2015, 03:01:35 PM
    I read the above story in the newspaper this morning. Shit like this makes me cringe. What the hell were those cops on?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 07, 2015, 03:27:21 PM
    I read the above story in the newspaper this morning. Shit like this makes me cringe. What the hell were those cops on?

    No use of force policy.. no deadly force guidelines.. the head of the local Marshall office is a bus driver with no LE training? WTF?? 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2015, 03:45:33 PM
    No use of force policy.. no deadly force guidelines.. the head of the local Marshall office is a bus driver with no LE training? WTF?? 

    And from what has been revealed until now they were supposedly trying to serve a warrant. But according to the State Police Superintendent, "No warrant has materialized".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 07, 2015, 04:42:11 PM
    No use of force policy.. no deadly force guidelines.. the head of the local Marshall office is a bus driver with no LE training? WTF?? 

    Pure fucking insanity...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on November 07, 2015, 05:05:40 PM
    And from what has been revealed until now they were supposedly trying to serve a warrant. But according to the State Police Superintendent, "No warrant has materialized".

    that kind of bad info - with ZERO consequence for whoever just randomly made that shit up - is as bad as the shooting.

    Just about every time we look at police misconduct up closely, their reports fall apart quickly, loaded with lies.  How often do they jsut write whatever they want, and get away with it?  Without body cameras here, they plant a gun and write this differently, don't they?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 07, 2015, 08:03:58 PM
    that kind of bad info - with ZERO consequence for whoever just randomly made that shit up - is as bad as the shooting.

    Just about every time we look at police misconduct up closely, their reports fall apart quickly, loaded with lies.  How often do they jsut write whatever they want, and get away with it?  Without body cameras here, they plant a gun and write this differently, don't they?

    probably not..Pretty big friggin leap there mister
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on November 07, 2015, 09:13:04 PM
    probably not..Pretty big friggin leap there mister

    when i see cops busted in a lie...

    and the lie is on a report which would have sent some poor slob to jail for 20 years instead of 2 months...

    then YES, I think the penalty should be prison time.  They just fck around with decades of people's lives with the words they write on those reports.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 09, 2015, 07:54:49 AM
    So the jury foreman is saying the video everyone has been watching and basing their judgment on was heavily edited and the full version shows him reaching into his coat pocket. Anyone see that one?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 11, 2015, 06:16:43 PM
    Saw an article about this posted on the bulletin board at the University. Police escort handcuffed man who they think is delusional and/or crazy to the ER. He acts paranoid, and breaks a window with is legs. They taser him (he's still handcuffed) multiple times. He asks not to be tasered further and admits to using cocaine, at which point police arrest him, taser her again multiple times. Then, despite being outside the very ER that guidelines and a standing general order require police to take those that have been tasered, they decide it's appropriate to just go to jail, because, they claim, "he just needed a Band Aid."

    The man dies on the trip to the jail.

    Two years later, the case is still being investigated, and a lawsuit was needed to allow the man's family to see the videos... no charges have yet been filed.

    http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/driven-hospital-virginia-man-tased-shackled-and-dies-police-custody
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 12, 2015, 12:44:19 PM
    They'll win the lawsuit. I get that initially the cops just wanted to take him to the hospital. No interest in arresting him. Happens quite a bit. When he breaks the squad car window they now have to make an arrest, he adds some charges by running. They taser him. Standard practice is to avoid tazing a handcuffed subject when possible but it is usually not prohibited. We had a hard and fast rule initially of never tazing a prisoner but after some officers got kicked in the head a couple times it was reduced to "only in unique or extreme circumstances. I would hazard a guess the initial tazing will not be an issue in this case. However... at that point, outside the front doors, you can just start racking up points for the plaintiff with the multiple times he was tasered. 2 tasers deployed at the same time.. They should be taught if your taser doesn't work or is not effective after the 1st or 2nd attempt, stop using it and go to another plan. He was handcuffed, on the ground. If 3 officers can't subdue him without a taser (which isn't working at that point, they need to find another line of work or go through an academy that's worth a crap.

    Then we get into the excited delirium. Everyone should know that someone who is hopped up on drugs, in this case he admitted cocaine and has been in a physical struggle, have an increased chance of heart attack. He was also bleeding, he had also been tazed multiple times AND... you are right in front of a medical center... duh!

    So yeah.. the guy wasn't going to write a symphony, but he didn't need to die for overdosing on cocaine either. The family wins this one. They should be fired and let the chips fall where they may on criminal charges.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 12, 2015, 01:46:22 PM
    Then we get into the excited delirium. Everyone should know that someone who is hopped up on drugs, in this case he admitted cocaine and has been in a physical struggle, have an increased chance of heart attack. He was also bleeding, he had also been tazed multiple times AND... you are right in front of a medical center... duh!

    Sponsored by Taser International.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 12, 2015, 02:55:49 PM
    California cop, 52, who raped a 75-year-old stroke victim in her senior apartment complex has been sentenced to life in prison


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3314798/Caifornia-cop-52-raped-75-year-old-stroke-victim-senior-apartment-sentenced-life-prison.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 12, 2015, 05:56:21 PM
    California cop, 52, who raped a 75-year-old stroke victim in her senior apartment complex has been sentenced to life in prison

    • Former Sacramento cop Gary Dale Baker, 52, entered the woman's apartment at least three times and raped her at least twice
    • On Tuesday, Baker was sentenced to 62 years to life, meaning that he will spend the rest of his life behind bars
    • The woman, now 77, was recovering from a stroke in a senior living complex in South Sacramento when the attacks began, prosecutors said

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3314798/Caifornia-cop-52-raped-75-year-old-stroke-victim-senior-apartment-sentenced-life-prison.html

    That's fucking sickening... at least he ended up behind bars, where I'm sure justice will be served without lube.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 13, 2015, 08:36:33 AM
    That's fucking sickening... at least he ended up behind bars, where I'm sure justice will be served without lube.

    'You tarnished the badge for police officers everywhere,' Sacramento Superior Court Judge Ernest Sawtelle said as he sentenced Baker, the Sacramento Bee newspaper reported on Wednesday. 'For your crimes, you will be sentenced to life"

    If the death penalty wasn't an option, I guess this will have to do. And I do hope he gets what's coming to him there.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 16, 2015, 09:20:52 AM
    Dad Tells Cops they Need a Warrant to Search Home, So they Kick in his Door & Kill Him

    Spring Lake, NC — Three children lost their father Sunday after deputies with the Harnett County Sheriff’s Office, looking for a different man, shot and killed him.

    John Livingston, 33, was shot and killed in the early morning hours of Sunday as police were conducting an assault investigation. Police were not looking for Livingston, and the entire situation could have been avoided had they come back with a warrant like Livingston requested.

    Livingston’s roommate, Clayton Carroll told WNCN that he was shot multiple times during the altercation with officers who had no right to be there in the first place.

    According to Carroll, deputies began knocking on the door around 3:30 am as they were looking for someone who no longer lived in the home. When Deputies asked Livingston if they could search his home, Livingston said “not without a search warrant,” according to Carroll.

    Livingston then shut the door.

    Having a man assert his fourth amendment right to be secure in his property was apparently too much for the deputy to handle.

    “The cop kicked in the door, got on top of him, started slinging him around beat him…” Carroll said.

    Witnesses explain how deputies began spraying pepper spray and deploying a taser during the assault. They say that Livingston was not fighting back and merely trying to prevent the deputies from inflicting more harm on him.

    During the struggle, Livingston attempted to remove the taser from the deputy’s hand which caused the officers to fear for their lives.

    “He (Livingston) barely had the Taser in his hand, but he had it where it was constantly going off and the officer I guess that spoke to him rolled over there, says he got the Taser and shot him in this position,” Carroll said.

    Livingston died from the multiple gunshot wounds.

    “That’s the blanket I kept putting on him and telling him to breathe until he was gone because I knew he wasn’t breathing anymore,” said Bristol Edge, a friend living in the home.

    The officers involved have been placed on administrative leave, but their names have not been released.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dad-tells-cops-warrant-search-home-kick-door-kill/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2015, 08:54:37 AM
    Dad Tells Cops they Need a Warrant to Search Home, So they Kick in his Door & Kill Him

    Spring Lake, NC — Three children lost their father Sunday after deputies with the Harnett County Sheriff’s Office, looking for a different man, shot and killed him.

    John Livingston, 33, was shot and killed in the early morning hours of Sunday as police were conducting an assault investigation. Police were not looking for Livingston, and the entire situation could have been avoided had they come back with a warrant like Livingston requested.

    Livingston’s roommate, Clayton Carroll told WNCN that he was shot multiple times during the altercation with officers who had no right to be there in the first place.

    According to Carroll, deputies began knocking on the door around 3:30 am as they were looking for someone who no longer lived in the home. When Deputies asked Livingston if they could search his home, Livingston said “not without a search warrant,” according to Carroll.

    Livingston then shut the door.

    Having a man assert his fourth amendment right to be secure in his property was apparently too much for the deputy to handle.

    “The cop kicked in the door, got on top of him, started slinging him around beat him…” Carroll said.

    Witnesses explain how deputies began spraying pepper spray and deploying a taser during the assault. They say that Livingston was not fighting back and merely trying to prevent the deputies from inflicting more harm on him.

    During the struggle, Livingston attempted to remove the taser from the deputy’s hand which caused the officers to fear for their lives.

    “He (Livingston) barely had the Taser in his hand, but he had it where it was constantly going off and the officer I guess that spoke to him rolled over there, says he got the Taser and shot him in this position,” Carroll said.

    Livingston died from the multiple gunshot wounds.

    “That’s the blanket I kept putting on him and telling him to breathe until he was gone because I knew he wasn’t breathing anymore,” said Bristol Edge, a friend living in the home.

    The officers involved have been placed on administrative leave, but their names have not been released.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dad-tells-cops-warrant-search-home-kick-door-kill/













    Fcuk them cops.
    Do The same to them Shoot Them.
    End of.
    Fcuk excuses Fcuk got to wait for inquiry
    Fcuk don't no all the facts.
    Them Bastards didn't wait for anything.
    Scumbag murderers.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on November 17, 2015, 09:44:09 AM
    start releasing the officers' names.

    even if they know they'll beat the rap in court and at worse, have to change jobs...

    maybe the fear of humiliation will stop them from wasting people when it's not necessary.  When a man is on the ground, maced and tazed after you illegally enter his home, and he 'may have' reached for a taser, he's not a threat you NEED to kill.

    They found the LEAST amount of justification to kill a person they really wanted to kill (at least they thought he was the dude).  They were looking for an excuse, just enough legal justification to shoot.  He didn't get ahold of it.  he didn't "taze" anyone.  He just made a move in the middle of a beating, and they killed him because he gave them the small possibly legal loophole to execute him


    I love that the police kneepadders have become so silent on this thread.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2015, 10:37:07 AM
    It's funny how when there is an incident, there is often a concerted effort to release any information that can discredit the citizen (for example "the 60 year old suspect had a lengthy record which included being arrested when he was 7 years old for illegally selling unlicensed lemonade and then again at 20 years old for driving on a suspended license") and make them appear like a career criminal but when it comes to cops there is no mention of past incidents or any record they might have, most of the times they won't even release a name or picture of the cops.

    The police are all too happy to explain how the citizen was a lethal threat who deserved what he/she got and supposedly had a shady past and how his/her actions were the reason for the consequences but when a question is asked about the actions of the cops, all of a sudden "we cannot comment".

    Everyone should be treated equally, cops or citizens. How many instances have there been where a cop abuses his authority in a blatant way and the "backup" arrives only to immediately join in the beating and attack the citizen instead of trying to assess the situation and, if necessary, arrest the cop on the spot, like they would with a citizen.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2015, 12:17:17 PM
    Innocent man who spent 27 years behind bars after he was wrongly convicted of raping and murdering a Georgetown student was FRAMED by homicide detectives, jury finds


    An innocent man who spent 27 years behind bars for a rape and murder he didn't commit was framed by police, a federal jury has found.

    Donald E. Gates was wrongly convicted of assaulting Georgetown University student Catherine Schilling and shooting her in the head five times as she walked through park on June 22, 1981.

    The 21-year-old paralegal's naked body was retrieved from an embankment the next day in Washington D.C's Rock Creek Park along a route she used as a shortcut home from work.

    Gates, now 64, was released from prison in 2009 after DNA evidence revealed he was not connected to the crime, and a janitor at Schilling's law firm was behind the slaying.

    And now Washington D.C. officials have agreed to pay him $16.65million in damages after a jury on Wednesday found homicide detectives fabricated his confession, withheld information and fed his name to an unreliable informant.

    That's about $617,000 for every year Donald Eugene Gates spent in prison. Gates has already received more than a million dollars from the federal government for its role in his conviction. The settlement with the city brings his total compensation to $18 million.

    According to the Washington Post, the jury took less than seven hours to find retired detectives Ronald S. Taylor and Norman Brooks guilty of misconduct because Gates wasn't given the right to a fair trial.

    They also ignored warnings about the identity of the actual killer.

    A third, now-retired lieutenant John Harlow, was cleared.

    Outside the courtroom, Gates told reporters: 'It feels like the God of the King James Bible is real, and he answered my prayers.

    'Justice is on the way to being fulfilled... It's one of the happiest days of my life.'

    In October 1982, a  jury convicted a then 24-year-old Gates of the rape and first-degree murder of New Jersey-native Schilling.

    At Gates's criminal trial, a D.C. Superior Court jury was told that Gates had confessed to an informant named Gerald Max 'Bear' Smith.

    Smith said he was drinking in the park with Gates the night of the murder,

    He said Gates wanted to rob Schilling, but when Schilling resisted, Gates killed her.

    According to the Innocence Project Smith was paid $50 for the initial tip and $250 for picking out the photograph.

    In all, Smith allegedly pocketed around $1,300 for his help on the case.

    The police used his information despite a junior homicide investigator telling them that Smith was 'treacherous' and totally unreliable, The Post reported.

    There were also questionable reports Gates had been spotted purse-snatching in the same park a week earlier.

    A FBI forensic expert also told the jury he had matched hairs to one found on the victim.

    However, during Gates's  time behind bars, the Justice Department’s inspector general found problems with the work of the agent who linked Gates’s hair to the crime.

    Hair DNA, and their place in criminal trials, in FBI labs has recently come under scrutiny because of problems with testing.

    In 2009, Gates's conviction was overturned. He was freed on December 15 and used the $75 he was issued on his release to take a bus and spend Christmas with his family in Akron, Ohio.

    He now lives in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    In 2012 genetic evidence left at the Schilling scene tied to a culprit, who died a year earlier.

    He was a convict and temporary janitor who had worked in the same building as Schilling, prosecutors revealed.

    But the U.S. attorney's office has not identified him, arguing that his privacy continues past his death.

    Gate's exoneration also prompted the D.C. Public Defenders' Office to look into the cases of four different men who were convicted on flawed DNA evidence. 


    A federal law grants innocent prisoners who waive claims against federal officials $50,000 every year they are incarcerated.

    In February, a D.C judge awarded $9.2 million, including $350,000 per year of incarceration, to Kirk L. Odom, a District man wrongfully imprisoned for more than 22 years for a 1981 rape and robbery. The city has appealed that award.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3325844/Innocent-man-spent-27-years-bars-wrongly-convicted-raping-murdering-Georgetown-student-FRAMED-homicide-detectives-jury-finds.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 20, 2015, 04:22:35 AM
    Innocent man who spent 27 years behind bars after he was wrongly convicted of raping and murdering a Georgetown student was FRAMED by homicide detectives, jury finds

    • Donald Gates was convicted of slaying Catherine Schilling, 21, in 1981
    • Was walking home from work when she was shot in the head five times
    • He naked body was retrieved from an embankment in a park the next day
    • Gates, then 24, was convicted of the crime, but maintained his innocence
    • In 2009, his conviction was overturned as a result of DNA testing
    • Jurors concluded that detectives fabricated his confession
    • They also used an 'unreliable' informant and hid information from Gates

    An innocent man who spent 27 years behind bars for a rape and murder he didn't commit was framed by police, a federal jury has found.

    Donald E. Gates was wrongly convicted of assaulting Georgetown University student Catherine Schilling and shooting her in the head five times as she walked through park on June 22, 1981.

    The 21-year-old paralegal's naked body was retrieved from an embankment the next day in Washington D.C's Rock Creek Park along a route she used as a shortcut home from work.

    Gates, now 64, was released from prison in 2009 after DNA evidence revealed he was not connected to the crime, and a janitor at Schilling's law firm was behind the slaying.

    And now Washington D.C. officials have agreed to pay him $16.65million in damages after a jury on Wednesday found homicide detectives fabricated his confession, withheld information and fed his name to an unreliable informant.

    That's about $617,000 for every year Donald Eugene Gates spent in prison. Gates has already received more than a million dollars from the federal government for its role in his conviction. The settlement with the city brings his total compensation to $18 million.

    According to the Washington Post, the jury took less than seven hours to find retired detectives Ronald S. Taylor and Norman Brooks guilty of misconduct because Gates wasn't given the right to a fair trial.

    They also ignored warnings about the identity of the actual killer.

    A third, now-retired lieutenant John Harlow, was cleared.

    Outside the courtroom, Gates told reporters: 'It feels like the God of the King James Bible is real, and he answered my prayers.

    'Justice is on the way to being fulfilled... It's one of the happiest days of my life.'

    In October 1982, a  jury convicted a then 24-year-old Gates of the rape and first-degree murder of New Jersey-native Schilling.

    At Gates's criminal trial, a D.C. Superior Court jury was told that Gates had confessed to an informant named Gerald Max 'Bear' Smith.

    Smith said he was drinking in the park with Gates the night of the murder,

    He said Gates wanted to rob Schilling, but when Schilling resisted, Gates killed her.

    According to the Innocence Project Smith was paid $50 for the initial tip and $250 for picking out the photograph.

    In all, Smith allegedly pocketed around $1,300 for his help on the case.

    The police used his information despite a junior homicide investigator telling them that Smith was 'treacherous' and totally unreliable, The Post reported.

    There were also questionable reports Gates had been spotted purse-snatching in the same park a week earlier.

    A FBI forensic expert also told the jury he had matched hairs to one found on the victim.

    However, during Gates's  time behind bars, the Justice Department’s inspector general found problems with the work of the agent who linked Gates’s hair to the crime.

    Hair DNA, and their place in criminal trials, in FBI labs has recently come under scrutiny because of problems with testing.

    In 2009, Gates's conviction was overturned. He was freed on December 15 and used the $75 he was issued on his release to take a bus and spend Christmas with his family in Akron, Ohio.

    He now lives in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    In 2012 genetic evidence left at the Schilling scene tied to a culprit, who died a year earlier.

    He was a convict and temporary janitor who had worked in the same building as Schilling, prosecutors revealed.

    But the U.S. attorney's office has not identified him, arguing that his privacy continues past his death.

    Gate's exoneration also prompted the D.C. Public Defenders' Office to look into the cases of four different men who were convicted on flawed DNA evidence. 


    A federal law grants innocent prisoners who waive claims against federal officials $50,000 every year they are incarcerated.

    In February, a D.C judge awarded $9.2 million, including $350,000 per year of incarceration, to Kirk L. Odom, a District man wrongfully imprisoned for more than 22 years for a 1981 rape and robbery. The city has appealed that award.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3325844/Innocent-man-spent-27-years-bars-wrongly-convicted-raping-murdering-Georgetown-student-FRAMED-homicide-detectives-jury-finds.html

    corruption of the noble cause at work. The detectives were likely convinced he was guilty and in the interest of "justice" did whatever it took to get the conviction. Better to cheat and get a killer behind bars than take their chances in court.. however this and many other cases like it underscore just why that is never the best course to take. Police Administrations should be using this case in their Academy classes to make the point.. the system is there for a reason. Sometimes the wrong person is arrested. Let the facts speak for themselves. The 'truth" is what is important, not a conviction.

    On a side note, I find it somewhat ironic that he was incarcerated for 27 years for a crime he did not commit, and praises the biblical god for answering his prayers... 27 years later.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 20, 2015, 03:03:24 PM
    corruption of the noble cause at work. The detectives were likely convinced he was guilty and in the interest of "justice" did whatever it took to get the conviction. Better to cheat and get a killer behind bars than take their chances in court.. however this and many other cases like it underscore just why that is never the best course to take. Police Administrations should be using this case in their Academy classes to make the point.. the system is there for a reason. Sometimes the wrong person is arrested. Let the facts speak for themselves. The 'truth" is what is important, not a conviction.

    On a side note, I find it somewhat ironic that he was incarcerated for 27 years for a crime he did not commit, and praises the biblical god for answering his prayers... 27 years later.   












    Yes they probably should use this case as a example.

    More importantly.
    What about the cops who lied & framed him.
    Wouldn't it be fair that they serve 27yrs as punishment
    As they clearly have done wrong.
    That may help deter other cops from lying & cheating also
    If they new they would get similar treatment to those whom
    They frame & are innocent.

    Or I know lets let the cops off / walk free.

    Thoughts..??

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 20, 2015, 03:41:18 PM











    Yes they probably should use this case as a example.

    More importantly.
    What about the cops who lied & framed him.
    Wouldn't it be fair that they serve 27yrs as punishment
    As they clearly have done wrong.
    That may help deter other cops from lying & cheating also
    If they new they would get similar treatment to those whom
    They frame & are innocent.

    Or I know lets let the cops off / walk free.

    Thoughts..??



    The 27 years should be in addition to the punishment they would normally receive for their crimes. And of course the money this man will receive should come out of their pockets, not from the citizens. But we're talking about cops here..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 20, 2015, 04:17:04 PM
    The 27 years should be in addition to the punishment they would normally receive for their crimes. And of course the money this man will receive should come out of their pockets, not from the citizens. But we're talking about cops here..












    Agreed.

    Everyone suffers except for them untouchable Scumbags.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 22, 2015, 05:33:37 AM
    On a side note, I find it somewhat ironic that he was incarcerated for 27 years for a crime he did not commit, and praises the biblical god for answering his prayers... 27 years later.

    On the other hand, if his statement was sincere and reflects his faith, I can't help but respect him for the strength of his conviction even if I don't share his beliefs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2015, 05:43:00 PM
    Man who was severely beaten by three Texas cops in a case of 'mistaken identity' left paralyzed from the chest down



    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3329266/Man-beaten-three-Texas-police-officers-left-paralyzed-surgery.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2015, 05:44:32 PM
    Cops on a Rampage, Looking for Suspects, Raid Innocent Man’s Home and Kill Him

    Morgantown, VA —  David Michael Romanoski, 48, of Morgantown was shot and killed earlier this month by police after they broke into his house in search of two robbery suspects.

    Romanoski was not the suspect and was innocent.

    Ten deputies arrived at the home, where Isaac Barker and Justin Knisell were believed to be living and instead found Romanoski. When deputies, some of whom were in plain clothes, entered the room where Romanoski was, one of them fired 7 rounds into him. He was then transported to the hospital where he died.

    Immediately after killing this innocent man, police quickly attempted to justify the shooting by claiming to have found a handgun – as if owning a handgun is deserving of a death sentence.

    The Monongalia County Sheriff’s department was given body cameras earlier in the year, which could’ve shown the confrontation which led to the murder of Romanoski. However, the deputies chose to stop using them.

    “The reason they weren’t wearing body cameras is because the ones we had originally purchased, we found out after they were purchased that they are virtually useless in low light or darkness,” Sheriff Al Kisner said, adding that the cameras also had a very short battery life.

    David was a graduate of Morgantown High School and Miami University and an upstanding member of the community. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his fiancée, Karen Tackett.

    After her fiancée was murdered by police, Tackett told the Dominion post that Romanoski was unarmed and did not deserve to be killed.

    The death of Romanoski highlights the disastrous problem of violent and incompetent police in America and sadly no one cares. Because this man was murdered by public servants ‘just doing their jobs,’ the overwhelming majority of Americans will consider his death collateral damage in the officer’s ‘heroic’ duty of providing security.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-rampage-suspects-raid-innocent-mans-home-kill/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2015, 05:46:25 PM
    Confused Cops SWAT Raid Innocent Man, Deploy Flashbangs, Assault and Kidnap Him for No Reason

    Rutherford Institute Sues Virginia Police for Carrying out a 'Welfare Check' with a 2-Hour, SWAT Team-Style Raid, Flash Grenade, Wrongful Arrest & Detention

    CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (The Rutherford Institute)— Attorneys for The Rutherford Institute have sued Virginia police and other government officials after a request to carry out a “welfare check” on a 58-year-old man resulted in a two-hour, SWAT team-style raid on the man’s truck, a wrongful arrest, and a 72-hour mental health hold.

    According to the complaint, police acknowledged that they had no legal basis nor probable cause for detaining Virginia resident Benjamin Burruss, who was preparing to depart on a camping/hunting trip to Montana, given that he had not threatened to harm anyone and was not mentally ill.

    Nevertheless, a heavily armed police tactical team confronted Burruss, surrounded his truck, deployed a “stinger” device behind the rear tires, launched a flash grenade, smashed the side window in order to drag him from the truck, handcuffed and searched him, and transported him to a local hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and mental health hold.

    The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia, against the County of Albemarle and five Albemarle County Police officers charges government officials with violating the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments as well as state law.

    “This is just one more example of how a relatively benign situation (a routine welfare check) gets escalated into something far more violent and dangerous through the use of militarized police, armed to the teeth and trained to react combatively,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “The unnecessary use of force by police officers in response to a situation that should have—and could have—been handled non-confrontationally did not, in this instance, result in a loss of life, but that is small consolation to those who have learned to tread cautiously in their interactions with police.”

    According to the complaint, on Nov. 21, 2013, Albemarle County police officers were contacted by Benjamin Burruss’s employer and asked to conduct a “welfare check” on Burruss, who was reportedly “stressed” over work and marital difficulties. Police confronted Burruss, who was wearing camouflage pants and a bright orange hunting cap, as he was leaving the Comfort Inn and preparing to leave for a hunting trip to Montana.

    Burruss informed officers that he was fine, had no plans to hurt anyone, and just needed time to think through things, hence the trip to Montana. For two hours, officers persisted in asking Burruss to exit his truck and speak with them, with Burruss continuing to reiterate that he had no intention of harming himself or others and just wanted to be left alone and allowed to go on his hunting trip. During this time, police deployed a “stinger” device behind Burruss’s truck, which would puncture the truck’s tires and immobilize it if Burruss attempted to drive off. Police also surrounded Burruss’s truck with their squad cars, blocking his exit.

    Despite the fact that the officer speaking with Burruss informed the other officers that they had no reason to hold Burruss because he had not threatened to harm anyone and he was not mentally ill, police requested an Emergency Custody Order (ECO).  Once the ECO was obtained, a tactical team of heavily-armed police launched a flash grenade at Burruss’ truck, smashed the driver-side window, dragged Burruss out by his arms, handcuffed, searched and arrested him.

    Burruss was then taken to the University of Virginia Hospital to undergo a psychiatric evaluation and locked up under a 72-hour mental health hold. In filing suit on Burruss’ behalf, Rutherford Institute attorneys are alleging that police used excessive force in violation of Burruss’ Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/confused-cops-swat-raid-innocent-man-deploy-flashbangs-assault-kidnap-reason/

    http://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/rutherford_institute_sues_virginia_police_for_carrying_out_a_welfare_check

    http://rutherford.org/files_images/general/11-19-2015_Burruss-_complaint.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 23, 2015, 12:30:05 PM
    Law enforcement took more stuff from people than burglars did last year

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/11/23/cops-took-more-stuff-from-people-than-burglars-did-last-year/


    Police Civil Asset Forfeitures Exceed All Burglaries in 2014

    http://www.armstrongeconomics.com/archives/39102


    Stop and seize
    Aggressive police take hundreds of millions of dollars from motorists not charged with crimes


    http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/investigative/2014/09/06/stop-and-seize/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 23, 2015, 12:40:29 PM
    Here in Texas there was a case involving a guy named Michael Morton. We now have the Michael Morton act because of his case. He spent 25 years in prison on death row for the murder of his wife. Problem was, he didn't do it. The prosecutor in the case, who by last year was now a judge.. went to trial for his actions in no revealing evidence and was found guilty.   

    "Prosecutorial Misconduct Finding: During the course of the post-conviction DNA litigation, Morton’s attorneys filed a Public Information Act request, and finally obtained the other documents showing Morton’s innocence in the prosecution’s file that had been withheld at trial. The Innocence Project filed a brief on Mr. Morton’s behalf and the Texas Supreme Court ordered an unprecedented Court of Inquiry to determine whether Ken Anderson, the former prosecutor who went on to become a judge, had committed misconduct. The Court of Inquiry ruled there to be probable cause to believe Mr. Anderson had violated criminal laws by concealing evidence and charged him with criminal contempt. The State Bar of Texas also brought ethics charges against Mr. Anderson. In early November 2013, Mr. Anderson entered a plea to criminal contempt and agreed to serve a 10-day jail sentence. He resigned from his position as a district court judge and permanently surrendered his law license.

    This is a case where the prosecutor was blatant in his disregard for rules of evidence and it led to a man being convicted for murdering his wife, which he didn't and spending a quarter of a century on death row for a murder he did not do. And all the prosecutor got was a 10 day jail sentence. He should have gotten 25 years.

    In a case where it was clear there was misconduct, or blatant negligence that results in a conviction and it is later found that the defendant is unquestionably innocent, I would have no problem with lead investigators and prosecutor doing similar time. This would likely insure integrity in the case.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2015, 10:35:10 AM
    So he "discovered" he is a violent criminal only after the damning evidence was revealed? Notice how easy it is for cops to slap a citizen with all the typical bogus charges -and what sort of prison time the citizen would be looking at- yet when it's revealed the cop lied and assaulted the man, the cop doesn't go to prison.

    After Video Surfaces, Innocent Man is Exonerated for Assault on an Officer, Cop Pleads Guilty

    Despite pleading guilty to assault and being seen on video, this officer will not spend a single day in jail.


    Boston, MA — A violent cop, who beat an innocent man in front of fellow officers, and then charged him with assault, pleaded guilty to battery last week, but only after video of the incident surfaced.

    Officer Felix Rivera, Jr. 34, of the Chelsea police department, responded, along with several officers, to a call about a man with a gun on September 26, 2014. The victim, who was 20-years-old at the time, was not the man with a gun.

    When multiple officers showed up at the victim’s location, he is dragged from the doorway, and the supervisor on the scene told his fellow officers to place the man in protective custody as he appeared to be intoxicated. However, the ‘custody’ was anything but ‘protective.’

    According to Rivera’s police report, the victim pushed another officer and was taken to the ground, where his multiple injuries would occur. The victim was then arrested and brought to jail.

    After three days in jail, the victim was arraigned on Sept. 29, 2014, on charges of assault and battery on a police officer, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. He was then released on his own recognizance to face the false charges later that year.

    Had an anonymous witness not come forward, this innocent man would have likely been convicted on all charges.

    Luckily for the victim, however, the anonymous witness was filming. What the video shows is the exact opposite of what Rivera claimed. The man was placed in handcuffs with no resistance. As he was being escorted from the scene, Rivera began to repeatedly bash in his face and then knocked him to the ground for no reason.

    The victim suffered cuts to his face, malalignment of the jaw and still suffers from blurred vision because of this attack.

    After the video was shown to prosecutors, all charges were dropped, and Rivera was placed on administrative leave.

    An investigation found that none of the other officers hit the victim, and one, in fact, tried to stop Rivera. However, after watching their fellow cop assault an innocent young man and then lie about it, not one of the officers dared to cross the blue line and report their fellow brother.

    Their silence in watching an innocent handcuffed man get assaulted and face years in prison for crimes he did not commit, went unpunished.

    Rivera, being the upstanding pillar of society that he is, will not see one day in jail either.

    According to My Fox Boston:

        The DA’s office recommended three years of probation and asked for a felony conviction for injuring the victim and violating his civil rights, but a judge continued that charge without a finding. Rivera was ordered to stay away from the victim, take part in an anger management program, as well as undergo a mental health evaluation, completing any treatment recommended to him. If he obliges to all of those conditions, the court will dismiss that charge in two years.

        “We maintain that a felony conviction was appropriate to these facts,” the district attorney said. “This wasn’t police work. It was criminal conduct. It was clear throughout our investigation that Chief Kyes and his team shared that perspective and took this case extremely seriously. There’s no room in law enforcement for an officer who would beat a handcuffed suspect or lie in a report.”

    In September of this year, Rivera was still not fired, but finally resigned from the department without incident. In two years, after the charge is removed from his record, Rivera could very well become a cop again.

    This incident shows us two things, one of which is the utter special treatment granted to those with badges.

    Rivera attacked an innocent man and betrayed the public trust by trying to put this innocent man in a cage after beating him. Unfortunately, instead of being held to a higher standard because of his position as a peace officer, Rivera is subject to a much lower standard – as is par for the course that is Police State USA.

    The second important aspect that we learn from this incident is the importance of filming police encounters. This simple 22-second video made the difference in saving a man from spending an indefinite amount of time behind bars for a crime he never committed.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-surfaces-innocent-man-exonerated-assault-officer-cop-pleads-guilty/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: whork on November 30, 2015, 12:26:44 PM
    This thread should be a wake up call for many people.

    I appreciate your work Skeletor.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 30, 2015, 02:11:13 PM
    One good thing about the Internet is that, no matter what DAs and Judges do, the names of these thugs are going to preserved, associated with their actions for everyone to read. It may be a small step towards the kind of accountability that we need and deserve but it is a step.

    Say hello to today's thug with a badge, Felix Rivera Jr, formerly of the Chelsea Police Department. Felix Rivera, you abused your power to viciously beat and frame an unarmed man for a crime he didn't commit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2015, 12:42:19 AM
    VIDEO: Cop Smashes Gun into Innocent Man’s Face to Show Off for His Illegal Ride-Along Audience

    A cop has been found guilty of 1st and 2nd-degree assault after showing off for two unauthorized passengers he brought along to watch him wreak terror on innocent men.

    Upper Marlboro, MD — William Cunningham and Kennieth Smith were doing nothing wrong, had committed no crime, and were attempting to go about their daily routine when they were nearly killed by a power tripping cop.

    On Wednesday, that power tripping cop, Prince George’s County Police officer Jenchesky Santiago, was remarkably found guilty for 1st and 2nd-degree assault, use of a firearm in violence, and misconduct in office – only after cellphone footage survived and was given to prosecutors.

    The video remained private until the PGPD police department released it this week. What it shows is nothing short of a lunatic on a rampage threatening innocent people with his gun.

    On May 10, 2014, Cunningham and Smith were sitting in a vehicle outside Cunningham’s home as Smith was dropping off his cousin. At this point, Santiago approached the vehicle and told them they were parked illegally, according to prosecutors.

    However, the gentlemen were parked completely legally and prosecutors emphasized that fact during the trial by pointing out that the area in front of Cunningham’s home has no signs restricting parking, no fire hydrants nor any curb paint indicating a fire lane.

    Santiago later claimed that since there were parking places nearby, this car was illegally parked – but he was still wrong.

    As the men attempted to tell the officer that Smith was merely dropping Cunningham off, Santiago told them that they are in a drug-ridden area.

    “What does that have to do with us?” Cunningham responded.

    That’s when Santiago, who had two unauthorized occupants in his cruiser who apparently wanted to witness this jackboot thug harass innocent people, said, “You guys wanted my attention. You got my attention now.”

    Prosecutor Donnell Turner told the judge that Santiago was showing off for two friends sitting in his patrol vehicle, during this unauthorized ride-along.

    Having not been legally detained, Cunningham simply tried to walk into his house when all hell broke loose.

    Santiago, responding to an innocent man walking into his own home, pulled his gun and pointed it at Cunningham, demanding that he “get back in the car!”

    Frightened that he had a madman pressing a gun against his temple ‘so hard that it moved his head,’ Cunningham slowly made his way back to the vehicle. This slow walk was seen as a threat to the tyrant Santiago, which made him even more enraged and more apt to preen for his sadistic audience.

    He then pressed the gun directly at the center of Cunningham’s face and mouth, “Go ahead. I dare you to f**king fight me, son.” All of this was captured on video.

    After the video was turned off, Cunningham testified in court that Santiago later told them, “Y’all gonna learn about officer Santiago today. I just got back from Iraq. I’m not scared of you all.” He testified that Santiago also said, “You need to watch your attitude because us P.G. cops, we shoot people.”

    Cunningham and Smith were then illegal searched without consent. Since Santiago found nothing to charge them with, he made up two counts of disorderly conduct, which would later be thrown out after the video surfaced.

    “The actions Officer Santiago chose to take that day are his alone. His behavior is flagrant, appalling and isolated. His actions are among the worst I’ve seen as Chief of Police and that will be taken into account when I make a decision about his employment,” PGPD Chief Mark Magaw said.

    “The moment officer Santiago made the decision to act in a reckless, illegal way, he ceased being a police officer,” Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Angela Alsobrooks said. “There is no place for that type of behavior in our county or on our police force. Every citizen should be able to walk across their front yard to their door without fear of being assaulted, especially by a police officer.”

    Had Smith made the decision not to pull out his camera and shoot the video you see below, both of these men would likely still be facing the false charges brought against them by this costumed maniac. Let that sink in. Without that cellphone video, two innocent men would be in jail and a maniac cop would still be on the loose.

    However, because of that video, a tyrant’s true colors were exposed to the world and he is now facing a minimum of 5-years in prison.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/disturbing-video-shows-cop-terrorize-innocent-men-show-illegal-ride-along-audience/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2015, 12:46:32 AM
    Sadistic Cop on Trial for Tasering Unresponsive Native Man 17 Times Until Bystanders Made Her Stop

    Rapid City, SD – In August of 2014, Rebecca M. Sotherland, a police officer formerly employed for the Oglala Sioux Tribe, was videotaped tazering a citizen of the Oglala Sioux Tribe 17 times while he laid unresponsive on the ground on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

    Sotherland was indicted by a federal grand jury only days after the brutal incident and charged with violating the constitutional rights of 33-year-old Jeff Eagle Bull, by repeatedly using her Taser on him.

    The federal trial for the indicted former officer began earlier this week. If found guilty, Sotherland faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    The video footage shows Eagle Bull screaming in pain as he lay on the ground repeatedly being shocked with electricity by the officer. Never during the encounter did the man make any aggressive moves. Throughout the incident, he only lays on the ground writhing in pain screaming as he is being brutalized.

    It’s obvious from the video footage that Sotherland wasn’t using the stun gun as a means of defense, as the man can be seen lying helplessly on the ground in handcuffs. She was using it as a means of sadistic punishment in an attempt to motivate him to get into her police cruiser.

    Sotherland repeatedly yells at the helpless man to get in the car, eventually threatening that, “It’s gonna get you again,” referring to the 50,000 volts of electricity delivered by the tazer.

    The disgraced cop continues screaming, “Hurry up! Get the car before it hits you again! Hurry up!” The brutal electrical assault continues as she keeps commanding the man to, “Get up and get in the car or it’s gonna get you again.”

    Sotherland is seen on the now viral video standing over the top of a clearly helpless Eagle Bull. Eagle Bull was already in handcuffs and lying on the ground.

    Finally in disgust the bystanders yell at the cop, “Let him go, quit tazing him! Just help him up! Just stop tazing him and help him up. One of these boys will help you.”

    Sotherland responds, “You guys gonna help him up?” To which the onlooker says, “Yeah.” After that, a gentleman then can be heard saying, “I dunno, I don’t trust her myself,” referring to the cop after seeing what she has just done to the man on the ground.

    At this point, a number of bystanders go over to assist the brutalized man into the police cruiser.

    While the quick indictment of Sotherland was certainly a move in the right direction, it remains to be seen whether a South Dakota jury will actually hold the former officer accountable for her actions. Members of the tribe are skeptical that justice will actually be served, as South Dakota has a tenuous history with Native peoples.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 05, 2015, 03:13:53 PM
    This thread should be a wake up call for many people.

    I appreciate your work Skeletor.









    Well said, very true.
    It Should be A Wake Up Call.
    Sadly it Won't Be for So Many.

    See No Evil.
    Hear No Evil.
    Speak No Evil.
    When it comes to Cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: absfabs on December 06, 2015, 04:18:45 PM
    Dad Tells Cops they Need a Warrant to Search Home, So they Kick in his Door & Kill Him

    Spring Lake, NC — Three children lost their father Sunday after deputies with the Harnett County Sheriff’s Office, looking for a different man, shot and killed him.

    John Livingston, 33, was shot and killed in the early morning hours of Sunday as police were conducting an assault investigation. Police were not looking for Livingston, and the entire situation could have been avoided had they come back with a warrant like Livingston requested.

    Livingston’s roommate, Clayton Carroll told WNCN that he was shot multiple times during the altercation with officers who had no right to be there in the first place.

    According to Carroll, deputies began knocking on the door around 3:30 am as they were looking for someone who no longer lived in the home. When Deputies asked Livingston if they could search his home, Livingston said “not without a search warrant,” according to Carroll.

    Livingston then shut the door.

    Having a man assert his fourth amendment right to be secure in his property was apparently too much for the deputy to handle.

    “The cop kicked in the door, got on top of him, started slinging him around beat him…” Carroll said.

    Witnesses explain how deputies began spraying pepper spray and deploying a taser during the assault. They say that Livingston was not fighting back and merely trying to prevent the deputies from inflicting more harm on him.

    During the struggle, Livingston attempted to remove the taser from the deputy’s hand which caused the officers to fear for their lives.

    “He (Livingston) barely had the Taser in his hand, but he had it where it was constantly going off and the officer I guess that spoke to him rolled over there, says he got the Taser and shot him in this position,” Carroll said.

    Livingston died from the multiple gunshot wounds.

    “That’s the blanket I kept putting on him and telling him to breathe until he was gone because I knew he wasn’t breathing anymore,” said Bristol Edge, a friend living in the home.

    The officers involved have been placed on administrative leave, but their names have not been released.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dad-tells-cops-warrant-search-home-kick-door-kill/


    as socialism grips a nation atrocities become common, as indivdual rights fade and lawyers get to decide fate of citizens and overciminalize everything to make it ok

    I myself am victim of the legal system.

    this is what the founders of USA designed the constitution against

    nothing new

    they want to block the problem, but jokers like obama and other demagogues liek liz warren want to undo the restraints  and instead make more restrains on production so they can monopolize

    why be a tax payer when you can be a tax spender??? :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 06, 2015, 05:24:44 PM
    Man who lost part of skull in shooting files claim against LAPD

    (http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/U.S./876/493/LAPDsuit122.jpg)

    LOS ANGELES –  An unarmed man who lost a quarter of his skull after being shot by a Los Angeles police officer notified the city and police department on Wednesday that he plans to sue, claiming the shooting was part of a broad, disturbing pattern in the police force of the nation's second-largest city.

    Attorneys for Walter DeLeon, 49, filed the notice of claim in Los Angeles County Superior Court. The notice, a precursor to a lawsuit, accuses police Officer Cairo Palacios of shooting an unarmed DeLeon without warning on June 19 as he was on his regular evening walk to a popular park.

    Palacios' attorney, Gary Fullerton, said the shooting was within departmental policy because Palacios was convinced that a towel wrapped around DeLeon's hand was hiding a gun and that he and his partner were in imminent danger.

    "He basically forced their hand to deal with him," Fullerton said. "In the matter of a couple seconds they have to make a choice, and the choice is, 'Do I let him shoot me first and then fire?' or 'Do I shoot first and defend myself?'"

    Soon after DeLeon was shot, a police spokesman said Palacios and another officer were driving in stop-and-go traffic when they saw DeLeon walk aggressively toward them on a sidewalk.

    Police Cmdr. Andrew Smith, a department spokesman, said DeLeon's hands were clasped together and wrapped in a gray cloth, and that the officers believed he had a gun. Smith said DeLeon was shot after ignoring orders to drop the gun.

    DeLeon's attorney, Ben Meiselas, said DeLeon had a towel wrapped around his hand to wipe the sweat from his brow on a hot summer day, and that DeLeon had been flagging down the officers for help, though he said his client can't remember why.

    "The next thing he was shot, and the next thing he remembers is he was in the hospital," Meiselas said. "This is the most catastrophic of catastrophic injuries and it affects every aspect of life — physical, economic, family. It's a total destruction of self and self-worth, and the only way to rebuild is through this process we're initiating."

    DeLeon lost a quarter of his skull, almost all his eyesight and the ability to walk. He still has his memory and most cognitive functions but has trouble speaking.

    He spent five months in the hospital, underwent 10 surgeries and is completely dependent on his family's care.

    "My whole life was turned upside-down," DeLeon told The Associated Press through tears.

    His sister and primary caregiver, Yovanna DeLeon, said her brother has lost everything most people take for granted.

    "We get up, we get ourselves dressed and ready to eat, we go about our day ... My brother will never be able to do that again," she said. "If this had been a normal citizen that had done this to Walter, that person would have never seen the light of day."

    The DeLeons are seeking unspecified damages. They also want Palacios to face criminal charges and for the department to make changes to ensure no similar shootings ever happen again.

    Palacios' attorney said he was still working at the department but is off the streets pending an internal investigation.

    Through mid-November, there had been 45 officer-involved shootings in Los Angeles, double the total through the same time period last year. Nineteen of this year's shootings have been fatal, up from 18 deaths in all of 2014 and 26 in 2011.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/12/06/man-shot-in-head-files-claim-against-lapd/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 06, 2015, 05:29:30 PM
    Instead of Helping a Female Officer Who Was Raped, Dept Covered for the Cop Who Raped Her

    Spokane, WA — A young woman was allegedly raped at a party hosted by Spokane resident Doug Strosahl last October. When Spokane Police Sergeant John Gately learned the identity of the alleged rapist, he behaved in harmony with what he perceived to be his highest ethical duty: He contacted the suspect, fellow Spokane Sgt. Gordon Ennis, to warn him that he was the focus of a criminal investigation, and advise him of the contents of a search warrant that was being prepared.

    Sgt. Gately, the head of the Spokane Police Guild, was charged last Friday with felony first-degree obstruction and rendering criminal assistance to a suspect, reports the Spokane Spokesman-Review.

    “Our major concern is once we started investigating this was that somebody apparently tipped the suspect off as far as the search warrant and the components of the search warrant,” Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich told KXLY News on November 13. “That’s unacceptable.” At the time, Gately’s conduct resulted only in a paid suspension. Criminal charges were filed following a search of the police union official’s phone.

    For people not protected by Blue Privilege, felony charges usually result in an arrest, and when this occurs on a Friday the suspect will spend the weekend behind bars. However, “There was no indication in documents available late Friday [as to] when Gately is expected to be booked into the Spokane County jail,” continues the Spokesman-Review report. “His arraignment is scheduled for December 21.”

    Ennis was one of several police officers who had gathered at Strosahl’s home for a party. During that get-together, Ennis allegedly assaulted a fellow officer. A woman who attended described passing out after having several drinks. Upon waking up early the following morning in a guest bedroom, she found Ennis sitting next to her, with his hand down her pants. Ennis has been charged with second-degree rape and will be arraigned on December 7.

    Ennis remained on paid leave until December 4, the day that charges were filed against Gately.

    On October 25, a friend of the victim – who reportedly is also a police officer — called Assistant Chief Selby Smith, who in turn contacted Gately to inform him about the allegation, as well as the identities of both the victim and the suspect. The Assistant Chief reportedly asked Gately to “care for the victim.” The police union official, who belongs to the department’s Personnel Assistance Team, acted on different priorities, placing a brief phone call to the suspect to warn him about the investigation.

    “We could have helped the victim,” complains Sheriff Knezovich, pointing out that it wasn’t necessary for the SPD’s Personnel Assistance Team to get involved. “They didn’t have to do anything. It’s just not a good idea to tell anyone about a criminal investigation, especially early on in the process.”

    Since this is a case in which both the alleged victim and accused perpetrators are police officers, it would be expected that the Personnel Assistance Team would focus on the needs of the former, rather than on protecting the latter. Gately heads a union notorious for “defending the troublemakers, lawbreakers, and liars among its ranks,” observes the Inlander, an independent Spokane-area journal. The guilt “has come to symbolize the department’s problems, stirring accusations of cronyism, dysfunction and entrenchment. Some critics have even likened the union to the mafia.”

    Gately’s reaction to the reported rape of a female colleague would make perfect sense as an application of the blue mafia’s version of omerta – a code of silence under which a sexually exploited woman would be expected to remain silent for the sake of the tribe.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/helping-female-officer-raped-dept-covered-cop-raped/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 07, 2015, 06:16:44 AM
    Instead of Helping a Female Officer Who Was Raped, Dept Covered for the Cop Who Raped Her

    Spokane, WA — A young woman was allegedly raped at a party hosted by Spokane resident Doug Strosahl last October. When Spokane Police Sergeant John Gately learned the identity of the alleged rapist, he behaved in harmony with what he perceived to be his highest ethical duty: He contacted the suspect, fellow Spokane Sgt. Gordon Ennis, to warn him that he was the focus of a criminal investigation, and advise him of the contents of a search warrant that was being prepared.

    Sgt. Gately, the head of the Spokane Police Guild, was charged last Friday with felony first-degree obstruction and rendering criminal assistance to a suspect, reports the Spokane Spokesman-Review.

    “Our major concern is once we started investigating this was that somebody apparently tipped the suspect off as far as the search warrant and the components of the search warrant,” Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich told KXLY News on November 13. “That’s unacceptable.” At the time, Gately’s conduct resulted only in a paid suspension. Criminal charges were filed following a search of the police union official’s phone.

    For people not protected by Blue Privilege, felony charges usually result in an arrest, and when this occurs on a Friday the suspect will spend the weekend behind bars. However, “There was no indication in documents available late Friday [as to] when Gately is expected to be booked into the Spokane County jail,” continues the Spokesman-Review report. “His arraignment is scheduled for December 21.”

    Ennis was one of several police officers who had gathered at Strosahl’s home for a party. During that get-together, Ennis allegedly assaulted a fellow officer. A woman who attended described passing out after having several drinks. Upon waking up early the following morning in a guest bedroom, she found Ennis sitting next to her, with his hand down her pants. Ennis has been charged with second-degree rape and will be arraigned on December 7.

    Ennis remained on paid leave until December 4, the day that charges were filed against Gately.

    On October 25, a friend of the victim – who reportedly is also a police officer — called Assistant Chief Selby Smith, who in turn contacted Gately to inform him about the allegation, as well as the identities of both the victim and the suspect. The Assistant Chief reportedly asked Gately to “care for the victim.” The police union official, who belongs to the department’s Personnel Assistance Team, acted on different priorities, placing a brief phone call to the suspect to warn him about the investigation.

    “We could have helped the victim,” complains Sheriff Knezovich, pointing out that it wasn’t necessary for the SPD’s Personnel Assistance Team to get involved. “They didn’t have to do anything. It’s just not a good idea to tell anyone about a criminal investigation, especially early on in the process.”

    Since this is a case in which both the alleged victim and accused perpetrators are police officers, it would be expected that the Personnel Assistance Team would focus on the needs of the former, rather than on protecting the latter. Gately heads a union notorious for “defending the troublemakers, lawbreakers, and liars among its ranks,” observes the Inlander, an independent Spokane-area journal. The guilt “has come to symbolize the department’s problems, stirring accusations of cronyism, dysfunction and entrenchment. Some critics have even likened the union to the mafia.”

    Gately’s reaction to the reported rape of a female colleague would make perfect sense as an application of the blue mafia’s version of omerta – a code of silence under which a sexually exploited woman would be expected to remain silent for the sake of the tribe.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/helping-female-officer-raped-dept-covered-cop-raped/

    Read the entire article and couldn't find where the Department covered for the cop who raped her....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2015, 09:01:35 AM
    Read the entire article and couldn't find where the Department covered for the cop who raped her....

    That is the title of the original article. The article mentions that a deputy who is also the president of a local police guild informed a cop suspect that he was about to be investigated and that a warrant was being prepared (among other things).

    Perhaps this title is more to your liking:

    Spokane Police Guild president has been criminally charged
    http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/dec/04/police-guild-president-has-been-criminally-charged
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 07, 2015, 10:32:57 AM
    That is the title of the original article. The article mentions that a deputy who is also the president of a local police guild informed a cop suspect that he was about to be investigated and that a warrant was being prepared (among other things).

    Perhaps this title is more to your liking:

    Spokane Police Guild president has been criminally charged
    http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/dec/04/police-guild-president-has-been-criminally-charged

    Yes, that one appears to be accurate
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2015, 12:26:48 PM
    Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


    When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


    Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

    Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

    Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

    ‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

    According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

    The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

    On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

    “This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

    “It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

    Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

    Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

    “Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

    Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

    Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2015, 12:32:51 PM
    Ex-police chief accused of DWI crash gets raise, nearly $260K, no criminal charges

    The borough and its former police chief have reached a settlement that will allow the chief to retire following allegations that he drove while under the influence of alcohol, struck a parked car, and left the scene of a hit-and-run accident, according to a settlement agreement.

    http://www.nj.com/somerset/index.ssf/2015/12/ex-police_chief_accused_of_dwi_crash_gets_raise_26.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2015, 12:35:44 PM
    "He feared for his life".

    Cop Gets Off Scot-Free After Punting an Innocent, Compliant Man’s Head Like a Football on Video

    Dover, DE – Officer Thomas Webster of the Dover Police Department was finally indicted last May for kicking a man in the face during a despicable act of police incompetence in August of 2013. The attack was captured on the dash camera on another officer’s car, which showed the victim, Latif Dickerson getting kicked in the face by Webster as he was complying with the officer’s orders.

    Dover Police Lt. Jason Pires said that the department chose to release the video immediately after the indictment to “control the narrative,” after keeping it secret for nearly two years.

    “We released the video because the judge considered it no longer to be confidential. We’re a very transparent police department, and we feel that we handled this situation properly,“ Pires said.

    In the attack, Dickerson was knocked out and had his jaw broken despite never being guilty of committing any crime. Dickerson just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was on his knees with his hands on the ground when Webster delivered the jaw-shattering kick, leaving him unconscious.

    The case was taken before a grand jury in 2014, but Webster was not indicted. The case was reopened, however, when the Delaware Attorney General’s office took it before a second grand jury, who charged him with assault.

    “We believe that the video demonstrates the need for large-scale reform of the Dover Police Department, specifically improvements to their use of force and internal affairs practices, and supervision of their officers. The people of Dover have a right to know about this incident and deserve a dialogue with law enforcement about how they can create a safe and equitable Dover community for all.” Kathleen MacRae, executive director of the ACLU of Delaware, said.

    Webster’s defense during the trial was nothing short of laughable, yet, somehow, it worked.

    “I wasn’t intending to kick him in the head. I was intending to kick him in the body,” Webster testified to the grand jury. He then claimed that he was in “fear for his life,” because they were looking for an armed black man with a yellow shirt and their incompetence led them to an innocent unarmed black man with a yellow hat instead.

    The jury bought this ridiculous excuse for severely injuring an innocent man, whose only fault was to cross paths with this abusive tyrant. After a deliberation that lasted over three days, on Tuesday, the jury found Webster not guilty on both felony and misdemeanor charges of assault.

    “This obviously was a thoughtful verdict. I hope we can all move on from this,” James Liguori, Webster’s lawyer, told reporters before hugging his client.

    Although the department hasn’t made a public statement about whether or not Webster will be allowed back on the force, this acquittal essentially guarantees that he will.

    The federal civil rights lawsuit filed for Dickerson has been resolved, but no details were forthcoming from Richard Morse, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who spoke with AP.

    The video below is hard to watch as it shows how armed agents of the state can brutally assault an innocent man and do so with impunity. Notice at the end of the video how they realize, only after severely injuring Dickerson, that their other officers had located the actual suspect in a yellow shirt.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-scot-free-punting-innocent-compliant-mans-head-football-video/

    1:00

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 09, 2015, 04:59:23 PM
    Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


    When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


    Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

    Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

    Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

    ‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

    According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

    The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

    On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

    “This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

    “It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

    Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

    Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

    “Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

    Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

    Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/








    Seriously what the Fcuk is it with these Cops.
    Dressed in military type clothes.
    And no one must film or question us.

    It's endorsed behaviour from some Dictator run
    Banana Republic.
    This is meant to be Modern American Policing.
     ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 10, 2015, 07:43:42 AM
    Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


    When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


    Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

    Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

    Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

    ‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

    According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

    The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

    On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

    “This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

    “It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

    Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

    Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

    “Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

    Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

    Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/

    The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.
     ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 10, 2015, 07:55:08 AM
    Ex-police chief accused of DWI crash gets raise, nearly $260K, no criminal charges

    The borough and its former police chief have reached a settlement that will allow the chief to retire following allegations that he drove while under the influence of alcohol, struck a parked car, and left the scene of a hit-and-run accident, according to a settlement agreement.

    http://www.nj.com/somerset/index.ssf/2015/12/ex-police_chief_accused_of_dwi_crash_gets_raise_26.html

    Police Chiefs are usually hired and fired outside of civil service via contracts with the city. In this case, it appears the city worked out a deal with him to end his contract. As far as the DWI portion of the case, I've seen these circumstances more than once where a person makes it home and is contacted by Law Enforcement. It is almost impossible to get a DWI conviction as it can't be proven the person was intoxicated prior to reaching home. In this case the Chief said he had been drinking at home. No way to dispute that. Leaving the scene of a collision has it's own problems as no one saw who was driving at the time. It's a lower class Misdemeanor in many states if there are no injuries from the collision. The cops did the right thing in trying to hold him responsible.. apparently he is a none moral scumbag that believes it's okay to drive drunk and cause a collision and beat the system. I would like to know why the city didn't tell him to pound sand on the severance package   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 10, 2015, 08:00:50 AM
    "He feared for his life".

    Cop Gets Off Scot-Free After Punting an Innocent, Compliant Man’s Head Like a Football on Video

    Dover, DE – Officer Thomas Webster of the Dover Police Department was finally indicted last May for kicking a man in the face during a despicable act of police incompetence in August of 2013. The attack was captured on the dash camera on another officer’s car, which showed the victim, Latif Dickerson getting kicked in the face by Webster as he was complying with the officer’s orders.

    Dover Police Lt. Jason Pires said that the department chose to release the video immediately after the indictment to “control the narrative,” after keeping it secret for nearly two years.

    “We released the video because the judge considered it no longer to be confidential. We’re a very transparent police department, and we feel that we handled this situation properly,“ Pires said.

    In the attack, Dickerson was knocked out and had his jaw broken despite never being guilty of committing any crime. Dickerson just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was on his knees with his hands on the ground when Webster delivered the jaw-shattering kick, leaving him unconscious.

    The case was taken before a grand jury in 2014, but Webster was not indicted. The case was reopened, however, when the Delaware Attorney General’s office took it before a second grand jury, who charged him with assault.

    “We believe that the video demonstrates the need for large-scale reform of the Dover Police Department, specifically improvements to their use of force and internal affairs practices, and supervision of their officers. The people of Dover have a right to know about this incident and deserve a dialogue with law enforcement about how they can create a safe and equitable Dover community for all.” Kathleen MacRae, executive director of the ACLU of Delaware, said.

    Webster’s defense during the trial was nothing short of laughable, yet, somehow, it worked.

    “I wasn’t intending to kick him in the head. I was intending to kick him in the body,” Webster testified to the grand jury. He then claimed that he was in “fear for his life,” because they were looking for an armed black man with a yellow shirt and their incompetence led them to an innocent unarmed black man with a yellow hat instead.

    The jury bought this ridiculous excuse for severely injuring an innocent man, whose only fault was to cross paths with this abusive tyrant. After a deliberation that lasted over three days, on Tuesday, the jury found Webster not guilty on both felony and misdemeanor charges of assault.

    “This obviously was a thoughtful verdict. I hope we can all move on from this,” James Liguori, Webster’s lawyer, told reporters before hugging his client.

    Although the department hasn’t made a public statement about whether or not Webster will be allowed back on the force, this acquittal essentially guarantees that he will.

    The federal civil rights lawsuit filed for Dickerson has been resolved, but no details were forthcoming from Richard Morse, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who spoke with AP.

    The video below is hard to watch as it shows how armed agents of the state can brutally assault an innocent man and do so with impunity. Notice at the end of the video how they realize, only after severely injuring Dickerson, that their other officers had located the actual suspect in a yellow shirt.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-scot-free-punting-innocent-compliant-mans-head-football-video/

    1:00




    Looked like excessive force to me
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 10, 2015, 11:32:54 AM

    Looked like excessive force to me

    Looked like assault to me.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 10, 2015, 11:41:57 AM
    Looked like assault to me.

    me too
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 10, 2015, 11:04:04 PM
    “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother” NY Police Chief Finally Arrested for Brutal Act of Torture

    (http://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/12/10/nyregion/CHIEFweb1/CHIEFweb1-master675.jpg)

    Suffolk County, NY — James Burke, formerly the Chief of one of the largest police departments in the country, found himself handcuffed and facing federal civil rights charges on December 9th, reports the New York Times. Burke’s arrest follows a lengthy investigation into allegations of torture, assault, subornation of perjury, and corruption in a case involving convicted thief Christopher Loeb. The confessed larcenist’s illicit haul included a duffel bag containing some of Burke’s property, including handguns, ammunition, mace, and what Loeb described as a stash of “nasty porn” and “sex toys.”

    In 2012, Loeb was charged with breaking into several cars in Saint James, Long Island. One of the cars belonged to then-Chief Burke, who personally arrested Loeb and took him to the Suffolk County Fourth County Precinct. After attaching his handcuffs to a six-inch chain anchored in the floor of his cell, four officers took turns beating the suspect for about fifteen minutes before Burke entered the room and took over from where they had left off.

    Chief Burke “grabbed me by my cheeks,” Loeb recalled. “He took his thumb and four fingers and squeezed my face [then] he punched me right above my hairline.” According to prosecutors, Burke beat the captive so severely that at one point detectives in the room begged him to “knock it off.”

    Burke cared not about Loeb’s desperate plea for an attorney. Loeb recalled that the Chief gloatingly told him that “no one will ever f*****g believe me because I’m a convicted felon and a dope head.” After Loeb, referring to the stash of porn and sex toys, complained that the Chief was a “pervert,” Burke gave full rein to his rage — first threatening to murder Loeb through a “hot shot” — a lethal dose of heroin — and then escalating the abuse to potentially lethal torture.

    “Have you ever been choked out before?” Burke taunted the bleeding and traumatized suspect, according to Loeb’s testimony in a federal preliminary hearing last month. The Chief then applied a chokehold, whispering in Loeb’s ear: “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother.”

    “That’s the last thing I remember,” Loeb testified. “I passed out.”

    After a civil rights inquiry was opened into Loeb’s allegations, Burke brow-beat the officers who had been involved in the December 2012 incident to lie to federal investigators. He also induced one of the detectives to perjure himself on the witness stand during Loeb’s pre-trial hearing by denying that Burke had assaulted the suspect while in custody.

    Much of the conversation between Burke and Loeb, prior to the latter being rendered unconscious, focused on the “nasty porn” that was in the stolen duffel bag. The testimony of an officer who searched Loeb’s home confirmed that a stolen duffel bag had been recovered during a search, but the pornography wasn’t placed into evidence.

    Possession of conventional pornography — moral objections to its content aside – is not a crime. Chief Burke’s background suggests that he might have cause for concern about his preferred vices.

    In 1995, then-Sergeant James Burke was romantically involved with a convicted prostitute and drug dealer named Lowrita Rickenbacker. She had been repeatedly arrested in the precinct over which Burke presided, but during an internal affairs inquiry, Burke insisted that he had no knowledge of her criminal record.

    Investigators determined that Burke had engaged in sex acts with the prostitute in his patrol car, and on one occasion left her alone in the vehicle with his gun and service weapon, according to Pix11 News.

    No discipline resulted from the years-long internal affairs probe into Burke’s misconduct. Instead, in 2000, he was promoted to Lieutenant, before being named chief of detectives in 2002 and rising to become Suffolk County Police Chief ten years later. This happened despite the fact that “everybody knew he’s a bad guy,” according to former NYPD detective and Suffolk County resident Peter Fiorillo. “They [Suffolk County police officials] wanted to do something [about Burke’s corruption and abuse of power] and it never worked, because he’s too connected.”

    Burke’s powerful partisans continued the pretense that he was an honorable public servant even after he was compelled to resign in October.
    In keeping with the familiar convention, Burke claimed that his resignation was for “personal and family reasons,” rather than the accumulating allegations of criminal misconduct. His attorney insisted that the sudden retirement at the end of “a stellar and courageous career” was “unrelated to any speculation of a federal investigation.”

    Police Commissioner Edward Webber struck a similarly unconvincing pose.

    “Chief of Department James C. Burke … is one of the most outstanding supervisors, investigators, and trainers in the history of the Suffolk County Police Department,” pretended Webber in a press release following the Chief’s resignation. “I thank him for his many years of dedicated service to the people of Suffolk County.”

    Burke’s abuse of power in the service of his own interests led to federal charges of assault and obstructing a civil rights investigation. Two other officers involved in the conspiracy, Criminal Intelligence detectives Anthony Leto and Kenneth Bombace, have resigned, as well. There’s reason to suspect that the corruption has metastasized too deeply to be cured through the surgical removal of one abusive chief and two sycophantic detectives: “The potential for indictments in Suffolk County could go high up the masthead, according to sources knowledgeable of the investigation,” reported Pix11 News.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/im-rape-fg-mother-ny-police-chief-finally-arrested-brutal-act-torture

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/10/nyregion/james-burke-former-suffolk-county-police-chief-is-arrested.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 11, 2015, 07:42:52 AM
    Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

    ‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.


    The cost to litigate a case, even if an officer is totally justified is several times more than 7K. It was a strategic move to settle the lawsuit out of court for the 7K, saving a substantial amount of time and money, then continue with the original charges and let the courts determine if there is substance to the allegation
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 11, 2015, 07:49:01 AM
    “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother” NY Police Chief Finally Arrested for Brutal Act of Torture

    (http://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/12/10/nyregion/CHIEFweb1/CHIEFweb1-master675.jpg)

    Suffolk County, NY — James Burke, formerly the Chief of one of the largest police departments in the country, found himself handcuffed and facing federal civil rights charges on December 9th, reports the New York Times. Burke’s arrest follows a lengthy investigation into allegations of torture, assault, subornation of perjury, and corruption in a case involving convicted thief Christopher Loeb. The confessed larcenist’s illicit haul included a duffel bag containing some of Burke’s property, including handguns, ammunition, mace, and what Loeb described as a stash of “nasty porn” and “sex toys.”

    In 2012, Loeb was charged with breaking into several cars in Saint James, Long Island. One of the cars belonged to then-Chief Burke, who personally arrested Loeb and took him to the Suffolk County Fourth County Precinct. After attaching his handcuffs to a six-inch chain anchored in the floor of his cell, four officers took turns beating the suspect for about fifteen minutes before Burke entered the room and took over from where they had left off.

    Chief Burke “grabbed me by my cheeks,” Loeb recalled. “He took his thumb and four fingers and squeezed my face [then] he punched me right above my hairline.” According to prosecutors, Burke beat the captive so severely that at one point detectives in the room begged him to “knock it off.”

    Burke cared not about Loeb’s desperate plea for an attorney. Loeb recalled that the Chief gloatingly told him that “no one will ever f*****g believe me because I’m a convicted felon and a dope head.” After Loeb, referring to the stash of porn and sex toys, complained that the Chief was a “pervert,” Burke gave full rein to his rage — first threatening to murder Loeb through a “hot shot” — a lethal dose of heroin — and then escalating the abuse to potentially lethal torture.

    “Have you ever been choked out before?” Burke taunted the bleeding and traumatized suspect, according to Loeb’s testimony in a federal preliminary hearing last month. The Chief then applied a chokehold, whispering in Loeb’s ear: “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother.”

    “That’s the last thing I remember,” Loeb testified. “I passed out.”

    After a civil rights inquiry was opened into Loeb’s allegations, Burke brow-beat the officers who had been involved in the December 2012 incident to lie to federal investigators. He also induced one of the detectives to perjure himself on the witness stand during Loeb’s pre-trial hearing by denying that Burke had assaulted the suspect while in custody.

    Much of the conversation between Burke and Loeb, prior to the latter being rendered unconscious, focused on the “nasty porn” that was in the stolen duffel bag. The testimony of an officer who searched Loeb’s home confirmed that a stolen duffel bag had been recovered during a search, but the pornography wasn’t placed into evidence.

    Possession of conventional pornography — moral objections to its content aside – is not a crime. Chief Burke’s background suggests that he might have cause for concern about his preferred vices.

    In 1995, then-Sergeant James Burke was romantically involved with a convicted prostitute and drug dealer named Lowrita Rickenbacker. She had been repeatedly arrested in the precinct over which Burke presided, but during an internal affairs inquiry, Burke insisted that he had no knowledge of her criminal record.

    Investigators determined that Burke had engaged in sex acts with the prostitute in his patrol car, and on one occasion left her alone in the vehicle with his gun and service weapon, according to Pix11 News.

    No discipline resulted from the years-long internal affairs probe into Burke’s misconduct. Instead, in 2000, he was promoted to Lieutenant, before being named chief of detectives in 2002 and rising to become Suffolk County Police Chief ten years later. This happened despite the fact that “everybody knew he’s a bad guy,” according to former NYPD detective and Suffolk County resident Peter Fiorillo. “They [Suffolk County police officials] wanted to do something [about Burke’s corruption and abuse of power] and it never worked, because he’s too connected.”

    Burke’s powerful partisans continued the pretense that he was an honorable public servant even after he was compelled to resign in October.
    In keeping with the familiar convention, Burke claimed that his resignation was for “personal and family reasons,” rather than the accumulating allegations of criminal misconduct. His attorney insisted that the sudden retirement at the end of “a stellar and courageous career” was “unrelated to any speculation of a federal investigation.”

    Police Commissioner Edward Webber struck a similarly unconvincing pose.

    “Chief of Department James C. Burke … is one of the most outstanding supervisors, investigators, and trainers in the history of the Suffolk County Police Department,” pretended Webber in a press release following the Chief’s resignation. “I thank him for his many years of dedicated service to the people of Suffolk County.”

    Burke’s abuse of power in the service of his own interests led to federal charges of assault and obstructing a civil rights investigation. Two other officers involved in the conspiracy, Criminal Intelligence detectives Anthony Leto and Kenneth Bombace, have resigned, as well. There’s reason to suspect that the corruption has metastasized too deeply to be cured through the surgical removal of one abusive chief and two sycophantic detectives: “The potential for indictments in Suffolk County could go high up the masthead, according to sources knowledgeable of the investigation,” reported Pix11 News.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/im-rape-fg-mother-ny-police-chief-finally-arrested-brutal-act-torture

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/10/nyregion/james-burke-former-suffolk-county-police-chief-is-arrested.html

    It's refreshing to see that even a police chief and those who he got to lie for him is being held accountable. Wouldn't likely see that a couple decades ago
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2015, 09:19:30 AM
    No marches or protests for the killing of an innocent 6 year old child..

    Two marshals are charged with murder in shooting death of 6-year-old Louisiana boy who was strapped into front seat of his father's car

    Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. are charged with one count each of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder
    Police say Stafford and Greenhouse were moonlighting as deputy city marshals in Marksville on the night of Nov. 3
    They fired at least 18 rounds at a car driven by Chris Few, police say
    The shooting severely wounded Few and killed his son, Jeremy Mardis

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3354980/Grandmother-boy-killed-police-shooting-Release-video.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2015, 09:28:00 AM
    Cops Shoots Unarmed Man on Video, for No Reason then Covers it Up and Won’t be Charged

    Hopefully, this new means of police claiming they "accidentally" shot an unarmed man, does not become a trend of how cops escape charges.

    Paradise, CA — Andrew Thomas, 26, made a deadly decision to get behind the wheel after he’d been drinking on Thanksgiving night. With his 23-year-old wife, Darien Ehorn in the passenger’s seat, Thomas left the Canteena Bar and was immediately pursued by Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster.

    In a pursuit that barely lasted a minute, Thomas loses control of his Toyota Four-Runner, hit the median and flipped over. Tragically, Ehorn was ejected from the vehicle and died on the scene.

    Officer Feaster then gets out of his vehicle, gun drawn, and as Thomas attempts to get out of the vehicle, in a likely attempt to check on his wife, the cop shoots him in the neck.

    Thomas posed absolutely no threat to the officer who was 10-20 feet away from Thomas when he fired. There was no possible way the department could spin the shooting into Feaster somehow fearing for his life. So, they did something entirely different.

    They claimed it was an accident.

    Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

    If this truly were an accidental shooting, Feaster would have probably reported firing his gun. However, that didn’ happen.

    When backup arrived on the scene, Feaster said nothing of discharging his firearm. For 11 minutes, Thomas lay bleeding out in the vehicle before anyone even found the shot.

    Only when the commanding officer on the scene suggested an investigator return to the Canteena to find out if Thomas had been shot at the bar did Feaster reveal he’d pulled the trigger.

    According to Ramsey, there were multiple factors investigators used to determine the shooting to be accidental, conveniently igoring the fact that Feaster tried to cover it up.

    Ramsey, in some weird play on words, said the evidence shows the shooting to be accidental, and possibly negligent, but not criminally so. “This shooting is not justified, but also not criminal.”

    He then went on to describe things that are not at all present in the video, such as Feaster being “surprised by the gun’s firing.”

        “The dash cam video shows Officer Feaster was not prepared for and was surprised by the guns firing. The pistol discharges in mid-stride and the officer both flinches his head to the right and does a stutter step indicative of an officer not prepared for nor intentionally firing his pistol. Additionally, officers normally train to fire a minimum of two shots. There was no second shot and the officer immediately holstered his weapon after the discharge.”

    The flinch and the step were not present, and, there was no need to fire a second shot as Thomas collapsed back into the vehicle immediately after the first one.

    Thomas will certainly deserve the jail time that he gets for negligently killing his wife. But the bullet in his neck also warrants jail time. Unfortunately, because the person who put that bullet there wears a uniform and a badge, he will not see any.

    Since the shooting, Feaster has been on paid administrative leave pending an ‘internal’ investigation. But, rest assured, since the DA decided not to file charges, there is no possible way that the department will.

    Thomas, who had a blood alcohol concentration of .15, and who may never walk again, is expected to face driving under the influence and vehicular manslaughter charges.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: whork on December 11, 2015, 12:11:14 PM
    Where are the conservatives in this thread.

    They are always up in arms against government stepping over its limits.

    Here you have the people who uphold the governments law killing people with impunity and nothing ??
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on December 11, 2015, 12:32:49 PM
    Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

    ‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.


    The cost to litigate a case, even if an officer is totally justified is several times more than 7K. It was a strategic move to settle the lawsuit out of court for the 7K, saving a substantial amount of time and money, then continue with the original charges and let the courts determine if there is substance to the allegation

    Yeah - he didn't understand what he was signing. He could try to get the settlement thrown out by arguing that the prosecution is malicious but it would be an uphill battle. Still one worth fighting, imo.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2015, 12:35:31 PM
    Where are the conservatives in this thread.

    They are always up in arms against government stepping over its limits.

    Here you have the people who uphold the governments law killing people with impunity and nothing ??

    Conveniently absent (or silent), as are most cops and their supporters. The only exception is Agnostic007; even though I usually disagree with him, at least he discusses some of the stories here and offers his perspective.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on December 11, 2015, 12:37:12 PM
    Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

    Bad gun... bad, bad gun. Going off like that! Cop guns have a tendency to do that it seems. Must be a manufacturing defect, right? Good thing brave DAs like Mike Ramsey know that it's not itchy trigger fingers to blame and spares poor Officer Patrick Feaster the ignominy of a trial for, oh... I don't know...  involuntary manslaughter maybe?

    Fucking disgusting...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2015, 12:48:53 PM
    Bad gun... bad, bad gun. Going off like that! Cop guns have a tendency to do that it seems. Must be a manufacturing defect, right? Good thing brave DAs like Mike Ramsey know that it's not itchy trigger fingers to blame and spares poor Officer Patrick Feaster the ignominy of a trial for, oh... I don't know...  involuntary manslaughter maybe?

    Fucking disgusting...

    According to the article, the cop conveniently forgot to mention his weapon "discharged itself" (maybe the gun was looking at the bigmikecox wyhi thread). The other cops that arrived on scene probably couldn't imagine the cop shot this man (shouldn't they confiscate and check his gun?) and only when the supervisor asked someone to go to the bar to see if the man was shot there did the cop conveniently "remember".

    No surprises about the DA also, unfortunately.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: whork on December 11, 2015, 01:14:46 PM
    Conveniently absent (or silent), as are most cops and their supporters. The only exception is Agnostic007; even though I usually disagree with him, at least he discusses some of the stories here and offers his perspective.

    Agnostic got balls.

    In a thread like this (that for obvious reasons is anti-police) he is still contributing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 12, 2015, 09:12:32 AM
    Sad. This happened in 2009...

    Innocent Man Dies After Cop Smashed His Head into the Concrete – Cop Never Punished

    An innocent Seattle man was killed by a cop, his death ruled a homicide, and the cop who did it never got a slap on the wrist.

    Seattle, WA — An innocent man has died this week after being in a coma and on life support since he was brutally attacked by a Seattle cop.

    On May 10, 2009, Christopher Harris was walking down the street when he noticed 2 men, dressed in all black, running after him. As anyone would do when threatened by two maniacs chasing after you, Harris ran.

    When the maniacs, who happened to be King County sheriff’s deputies, caught up to Harris, one of them, Deputy Matthew Paul, threw the entire weight of his body into Harris, sending Harris’ head smashing into the concrete. Harris would never regain consciousness.

    On Thursday, Harris finally succumbed to his injuries from that attack. According to the Thurston County Coroner’s Office, Harris died of “Acute and chronic pneumonia of the lungs, due to medical sequelae, due to blunt head trauma,” and his manner of death has been ruled a homicide.

    Deputy Paul never received so much as a slap on the wrist for his brutal negligence. In spite of a $10 million settlement paid out to Harris’ family in 2011, Paul remained on the force and on full duty.

    The department never even conducted an investigation into the matter.

    In police state USA, a cop can kill a man, on video, and no one even bats an eye.

    0:11


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-dies-cop-smashed-head-concrete-cop-punished/


    According to this article, the cop was cleared by an internal investigation - no surprise:

    http://q13fox.com/2015/12/11/christopher-harris-attorney-man-slammed-into-wall-by-deputy-in-2009-dies/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 15, 2015, 11:00:42 PM
    Only Cop Charged in Raid that Maimed a Baby is Acquitted – Police Still Blaming Toddler & Family

    (http://media.cmgdigital.com/shared/img/photos/2014/06/25/f3/cc/1.jpg)

    “How is America going to justify this?” exclaimed Bounkham Phonesavankh after a federal jury in Georgia acquitted the former sheriff’s deputy whose perjured affidavit precipitated a SWAT raid that nearly cost the life of his 19-month-old son.
    “How can we explain this? I thought this country was built with the truth, and not a bunch of corruption and lying like this. I almost lost my life, my family, my son.”

    Phonesavankh’s namesake son, known by the nickname Bou-Bou, was nearly burned to death in his sleep by a flash-bang grenade hurled into his crib during a 2:00 a.m. no-knock SWAT raid by the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office on their home in Cornelia in May 2014.

    The search warrant used to justify that raid was filed by then-Deputy Nikki Austin, who claimed that a “true and reliable informant” had conducted a controlled buy of $50 worth of crystal meth at the home several hours earlier from a potentially dangerous repeat offender named Wanis Thonetheva. The affidavit characterized Thoneteheva as armed and potentially dangerous, and claimed that lookouts had been stationed at the home – elements that supposedly justified a militarized midnight raid on a home where children were known to reside.

    Every critical element of Austin’s affidavit was either a conscious lie or a culpable misrepresentation. Her “true and reliable” informant began working with the Mountain Judicial Circuit Criminal Narcotics Investigation and Suppression Team the day before the nearly fatal SWAT raid on the Phonesavanh family, which means that he had not proven his reliability. He claimed to have attempted a drug buy while in the company of his wife and roommate, neither of whom was working with the task force, and it was the roommate – not the informant – who supposedly made the purchase. As Autry later testified in court, she wasn’t even the primary author of the affidavit, which was drafted by her supervisor.

    During her trial, Autry maintained that she didn’t lie, while conceding that some of the information in the affidavit wasn’t “entirely” accurate.

    Literally thousands of people are in federal prison because of genuinely trivial inaccuracies in stories they told federal investigators. As a member of the privileged enforcement caste, however, Autry was spared punishment because the applicable legal standard required the prosecution to demonstrate that she acted “willfully” and with “reckless disregard” for the truth – and, more importantly, the prosecution had to overcome the reflexive deference to law enforcement that characterizes American juries, especially at the federal level.

    Alecia Phonesavankh, the mother of the still-recovering child, believes that Autry’s acquittal – like the grotesque display of military force in the terrifying home invasion raid — reflects deeply entrenched racial bias toward her Laotian husband, in-laws, and child.

    “It’s obvious I was the only person untouched in that house when they raided it,” Alecia said through angry tears following the verdict. “Why? Because I’m white. Why do they target Laotians and not me? Because I’m white. Why did we get a not guilty verdict? Because she [former Deputy Austin] is white!”

    Another possible explanation is found in the carefully designed mechanisms that diffuse responsibility and impede accountability. Within hours of the raid, while Bou-Bou was in a medically induced coma as doctors struggled to stitch his chest back together, Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell issued a statement exonerating his officers of all misconduct.
    “I stand behind what our team did,” Terrell declared after consulting with the county DA’ s office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. “There’s nothing to investigate, there’s nothing to look at. Bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in.”

    Public outrage eventually led to a Grand Jury inquest, which did little more than ratify the sheriff’s claims. Rather than preferring charges against the officials responsible for that crime, the grand jury suggested a handful of anodyne “reforms” and expressed satisfaction that the rouge task force that carried out the berserker raid has been subsumed into a state-wide counter-narcotics unit supervised by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

    The grand jury’s “presentment” underwent exceptionally strenuous rhetorical contortions to apportion roughly equal amounts of blame to both the perpetrators and the victims of the atrocity committed against the Phonesavankh family.

    “Nothing can be more difficult and heart-wrenching than injuries to one’s child,” the document asserts, before suggesting that inflicting such injuries can be just as traumatic as suffering them: “[W]e wish to extend our sympathy also to the law enforcement officers involved… [W]hat has not been seen before by others and talked or written about, is that these individuals are suffering as well.”

    While admitting that the investigation that produced the search warrant affidavit was “hurried, sloppy, and unfortunately not in accordance with the best practices and procedures,” the Habersham County Grand Jury asserted that this wasn’t a case of “criminal negligence,” but simply a regrettable result of “well-intentioned people getting in too big a hurry, and not slowing down and taking enough time to consider the possible consequences of their actions.”

    This isn’t to say that both parties were equally blameless. Page 13 of the Grand Jury’s presentment actually blames “the parents and extended family” of the victim, because they supposedly “had some degree of knowledge concerning family members involved in criminal activity that came in and out of the residence.”

    The alleged target of the raid, Wanis Thonethevah, had been thrown out of the home three weeks earlier. Bou-Bou’s parents had relocated to Cornelia after their home in Wisconsin had burned down, and had nothing whatsoever to do with any alleged wrongdoing of their relative; they were simply desperate for a place to live. Their only role in this affair consisted of sleeping in a home that was targeted for a post-midnight military assault on the basis of a perjured affidavit.

    In their reply to the Phonesavankh family’s lawsuit, the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office actually claimed that the “deliberate, criminal conduct of plaintiffs” – including the lead plaintiff, Bou-Bou – “supersedes any and all negligence or liability, if any, on the part of these defendants,” and that “plaintiffs’ damages, if any, were directly and proximately caused by the contributory and comparative negligence of plaintiffs and their failure to exercise ordinary care.”

    How could Bou-Bou’s parents “exercise ordinary care” sufficient to prevent a team of militarized narcotics enforcers from breaking into their home and nearly murdering their 19-month-old infant in his sleep, on the basis of a perjured affidavit? Given that the primary victim was also the lead plaintiff, the reply filed by the Sheriff’s Office actually accuses him of “negligence” and “criminal conduct,” presumably for the felonious act of sleeping in a crib into which a privileged public servant would soon hurl a flash-bang grenade.

    “Qualified immunity” protected Habersham County Sheriff’s Deputy Charles Long from legal consequences for blindly heaving that flash-bang grenade – a “destructive device,” as described by the ATF, that when detonated burns at 2,000-3,500 degrees Fahrenheit – into Bou-Bou’s crib. During Nikki Austin’s trial, defense attorney Michael Trost made what could be called an Oprah Winfrey argument on behalf of his client: Sheriff Terrell has qualified immunity; Deputy Long has qualified immunity; everybody gets qualified immunity!

    “There’s a pattern of excess in the ways search warrants are executed,” Trost complained. “That’s what led to the injuries to this child.”
    Because everybody was guilty of excess, in other words, nobody is to blame – except for the unprivileged victims of that institutionalized excess.

    “I was doing my job,” Austin crowed after the verdict, as if expecting a commendation. Her “job” was one that required neither honesty nor accuracy, and involved no personal accountability for the crimes committed against an infant who will endure years of expensive surgeries and remain disfigured for life.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-charged-raid-maimed-baby-acquitted-police-blaming-toddler-family/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 16, 2015, 06:08:53 AM
    Cops Shoots Unarmed Man on Video, for No Reason then Covers it Up and Won’t be Charged

    Hopefully, this new means of police claiming they "accidentally" shot an unarmed man, does not become a trend of how cops escape charges.

    Paradise, CA — Andrew Thomas, 26, made a deadly decision to get behind the wheel after he’d been drinking on Thanksgiving night. With his 23-year-old wife, Darien Ehorn in the passenger’s seat, Thomas left the Canteena Bar and was immediately pursued by Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster.

    In a pursuit that barely lasted a minute, Thomas loses control of his Toyota Four-Runner, hit the median and flipped over. Tragically, Ehorn was ejected from the vehicle and died on the scene.

    Officer Feaster then gets out of his vehicle, gun drawn, and as Thomas attempts to get out of the vehicle, in a likely attempt to check on his wife, the cop shoots him in the neck.

    Thomas posed absolutely no threat to the officer who was 10-20 feet away from Thomas when he fired. There was no possible way the department could spin the shooting into Feaster somehow fearing for his life. So, they did something entirely different.

    They claimed it was an accident.

    Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

    If this truly were an accidental shooting, Feaster would have probably reported firing his gun. However, that didn’ happen.

    When backup arrived on the scene, Feaster said nothing of discharging his firearm. For 11 minutes, Thomas lay bleeding out in the vehicle before anyone even found the shot.

    Only when the commanding officer on the scene suggested an investigator return to the Canteena to find out if Thomas had been shot at the bar did Feaster reveal he’d pulled the trigger.

    According to Ramsey, there were multiple factors investigators used to determine the shooting to be accidental, conveniently igoring the fact that Feaster tried to cover it up.

    Ramsey, in some weird play on words, said the evidence shows the shooting to be accidental, and possibly negligent, but not criminally so. “This shooting is not justified, but also not criminal.”

    He then went on to describe things that are not at all present in the video, such as Feaster being “surprised by the gun’s firing.”

        “The dash cam video shows Officer Feaster was not prepared for and was surprised by the guns firing. The pistol discharges in mid-stride and the officer both flinches his head to the right and does a stutter step indicative of an officer not prepared for nor intentionally firing his pistol. Additionally, officers normally train to fire a minimum of two shots. There was no second shot and the officer immediately holstered his weapon after the discharge.”

    The flinch and the step were not present, and, there was no need to fire a second shot as Thomas collapsed back into the vehicle immediately after the first one.

    Thomas will certainly deserve the jail time that he gets for negligently killing his wife. But the bullet in his neck also warrants jail time. Unfortunately, because the person who put that bullet there wears a uniform and a badge, he will not see any.

    Since the shooting, Feaster has been on paid administrative leave pending an ‘internal’ investigation. But, rest assured, since the DA decided not to file charges, there is no possible way that the department will.

    Thomas, who had a blood alcohol concentration of .15, and who may never walk again, is expected to face driving under the influence and vehicular manslaughter charges.



    The flinch and stutter step with the head movement certainly was there. Not sure why the author of the article didn't see it, I noticed it before I read the article. So the gun fired unintentionally. The problem as I see it is guns generally never fire without the trigger being pulled so it is highly unlikely it was a defective gun, and more likely it was a defective cop. That he never mentions it ... no matter how it happened, that is problematic  
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 16, 2015, 06:21:33 AM
    Agnostic got balls.

    In a thread like this (that for obvious reasons is anti-police) he is still contributing.

    in my opinion, there is a mixture of bad policing/police officers and misunderstanding policing that is discussed here. While we always don't agree on which it is, My hope is to on occasion, show the difference. If someone happens to see it from that perspective and it reduces the animosity towards police in general, that is a good thing. On the flip side, I can certainly see all is not rosy and there are issues and examples of what's wrong with policing. For example, prior to running a warrant on a house our department has several specific checks they do to insure it is the right address. Assumptions are never allowed and it has to be concrete evidence. It's amazing to me that there are still agencies that will occasionally run a no knock warrant  on a house and have the wrong address or the person hasn't lived there in awhile. That to me is just mind boggling.       
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on December 16, 2015, 06:30:46 AM
    in my opinion, there is a mixture of bad policing/police officers and misunderstanding policing that is discussed here. While we always don't agree on which it is, My hope is to on occasion, show the difference. If someone happens to see it from that perspective and it reduces the animosity towards police in general, that is a good thing. On the flip side, I can certainly see all is not rosy and there are issues and examples of what's wrong with policing. For example, prior to running a warrant on a house our department has several specific checks they do to insure it is the right address. Assumptions are never allowed and it has to be concrete evidence. It's amazing to me that there are still agencies that will occasionally run a no knock warrant  on a house and have the wrong address or the person hasn't lived there in awhile. That to me is just mind boggling.       

    Do you feel like the cops that SEE wrongdoing - but do nothing, cover up, ignore, go along with - Do you believe they should be getting punished MUCH harder?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on December 16, 2015, 06:32:02 AM
    Sad. This happened in 2009...

    Innocent Man Dies After Cop Smashed His Head into the Concrete – Cop Never Punished

    An innocent Seattle man was killed by a cop, his death ruled a homicide, and the cop who did it never got a slap on the wrist.

    Seattle, WA — An innocent man has died this week after being in a coma and on life support since he was brutally attacked by a Seattle cop.

    On May 10, 2009, Christopher Harris was walking down the street when he noticed 2 men, dressed in all black, running after him. As anyone would do when threatened by two maniacs chasing after you, Harris ran.

    When the maniacs, who happened to be King County sheriff’s deputies, caught up to Harris, one of them, Deputy Matthew Paul, threw the entire weight of his body into Harris, sending Harris’ head smashing into the concrete. Harris would never regain consciousness.

    On Thursday, Harris finally succumbed to his injuries from that attack. According to the Thurston County Coroner’s Office, Harris died of “Acute and chronic pneumonia of the lungs, due to medical sequelae, due to blunt head trauma,” and his manner of death has been ruled a homicide.

    Deputy Paul never received so much as a slap on the wrist for his brutal negligence. In spite of a $10 million settlement paid out to Harris’ family in 2011, Paul remained on the force and on full duty.

    The department never even conducted an investigation into the matter.

    In police state USA, a cop can kill a man, on video, and no one even bats an eye.

    0:11


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-dies-cop-smashed-head-concrete-cop-punished/


    According to this article, the cop was cleared by an internal investigation - no surprise:

    http://q13fox.com/2015/12/11/christopher-harris-attorney-man-slammed-into-wall-by-deputy-in-2009-dies/

    This seems to be a common theme....cop murders a person and is not charged, or is charged and gets a slap on the wrist or acquitted.  The city settles... This time to the tune of 10 million, yet the offending pig  is not only free, but still employed.

    It baffles my mind that the family of Mr. Harris doesn't take some of the payout and use it to even the score, going after the offending pig's family.....then after him. 

    That tells me that the Harris family is/was content to "trade him in" for cash. Fu@king cowards....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on December 16, 2015, 06:37:34 AM
    ya gotta wonder how often this happens.   

    dude is killed by police.  family quietly settles.  video never emerges. 

    it's nice to see people suing to see the video.  Cause you KNOW if the video cleared the cop of any wrongdoing, we all would have seen it plastered all over, the very next day.   If the cops are willing to drag out a video FOIA suit for a year, there's a decent chance the video shows wrongdoing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on December 16, 2015, 06:40:25 AM
    I think cops should STAND UP against other bad cops.  Why?

    SELF PRESERVATION.

    Every time a cop beats, abuses, kills someone and other cops ignore it, they ALL get smeared with that shitty impression.  Which opens them all up for retribution, as we saw with the shooter earlier this year (NYC?)   And it's about HELPING police too.  People are FAR less likely to help cops, saves cops ass, and inform on crimes, if they know bad cops will cover up good cops.

    Cops that enjoy community support, want to risk fewer nutjobs, and want to make sure citizens have their back should the bad guy ever get the upper hand on them... they SHOULD want to turn in all the bad egg cops.  These bad cops are turning the public against them - they should be vigilant at weeding out the lying cops.  Not defending them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 16, 2015, 06:55:22 AM
    Do you feel like the cops that SEE wrongdoing - but do nothing, cover up, ignore, go along with - Do you believe they should be getting punished MUCH harder?


    no, not much harder. If a cop witnesses a cop doing  wrong and does nothing, or covers it up, they should be punished the same as if they did it in my opinion
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 16, 2015, 06:56:21 AM
    I think cops should STAND UP against other bad cops.  Why?

    SELF PRESERVATION.

    Every time a cop beats, abuses, kills someone and other cops ignore it, they ALL get smeared with that shitty impression.  Which opens them all up for retribution, as we saw with the shooter earlier this year (NYC?)   And it's about HELPING police too.  People are FAR less likely to help cops, saves cops ass, and inform on crimes, if they know bad cops will cover up good cops.

    Cops that enjoy community support, want to risk fewer nutjobs, and want to make sure citizens have their back should the bad guy ever get the upper hand on them... they SHOULD want to turn in all the bad egg cops.  These bad cops are turning the public against them - they should be vigilant at weeding out the lying cops.  Not defending them.

    Agreed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2015, 12:33:13 PM
    Cowardly Cop Kills Family’s Cat with a Shotgun After it Hissed at Him

    North Catasauqua, PA — Six years ago, when Tom Newhart and his wife rescued a baby cat and named him Sugar, they never imagined that his life would end in a hail of gunfire. However, thanks to a North Catasauqua police officer, that’s exactly what happened.

    Last Sunday, Sugar escaped from the Newhart’s home. Hours later, he’d be gunned down by police.

    “It’s like one of your children, you raised them, bottle fed them,” said Newhart as he began tearing up.

    When Sugar escaped, a neighbor five houses down found him and decided to call the police after not being able to detain the lost cat. When the cop showed up, he pulled out a shotgun and it was open season on lost cats.

    “I found the cat sitting right here,” said the neighbor, Mike Lienert.

    When the officer showed up, he told Lienert that it’s “not politically correct, but if it’s injured we will put it down,” — as if being ‘politically correct’ has anything to do with killing an innocent animal.

    The officer then walked into Lienert’s backyard, blew the cat away, and then told Lienert that he’d have to clean up the mess. Lienert said aside from poking at the dead cat’s body, the officer never attempted to catch the cat.

    Lienert said the cat did hiss at the officer, but instead of grabbing a pair of gloves and putting the cat in a cage, this public servant did some target practice.

    After recovering Sugar’s body, the Newhart’s decided to have him x-rayed by the vet to see if the officer was justified in shooting him. However, they found that Sugar was fine, and the officer had no reason to kill him.

    “No lacerations, no blood, other than neck wound on body. ” Newhart said.

    Newhart said he called the Mayor and the chief of police, who told him that this is not policy and has never happened before.

    “This guy doesn’t deserve the badge he wears, and should be fired immediately and held accountable,” said Newhart in a Facebook post.

    In a statement, the borough said it’s in the process of gathering information and conducting a review and investigation of what took place. After this process is complete, the borough will be taking the necessary and appropriate steps, according to WFMZ.

    According to a local animal shelter, the officer’s actions could be considered animal cruelty. According to the Free Thought Project, the officer’s actions are considered cowardly and sadistic.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cowardly-cop-kills-familys-cat-shotgun-hissed/

    http://www.wfmz.com/news/news-regional-lehighvalley/north-catasauqua-man-says-lost-cat-was-shot-by-police/36981404
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2015, 12:34:40 PM
    I think cops should STAND UP against other bad cops.  Why?

    SELF PRESERVATION.

    Every time a cop beats, abuses, kills someone and other cops ignore it, they ALL get smeared with that shitty impression.  Which opens them all up for retribution, as we saw with the shooter earlier this year (NYC?)   And it's about HELPING police too.  People are FAR less likely to help cops, saves cops ass, and inform on crimes, if they know bad cops will cover up good cops.

    Cops that enjoy community support, want to risk fewer nutjobs, and want to make sure citizens have their back should the bad guy ever get the upper hand on them... they SHOULD want to turn in all the bad egg cops.  These bad cops are turning the public against them - they should be vigilant at weeding out the lying cops.  Not defending them.

    I think they should also start holding cops personally accountable and not shield them with immunity and send the bill to the taxpayers.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 16, 2015, 01:49:52 PM
    I think they should also start holding cops personally accountable and not shield them with immunity and send the bill to the taxpayers.

    Couple of issues here. There is a thing called qualified immunity that was put into place for good reason. Due to the nature of the job, police will expose themselves to all manner of lawsuits.

    "While law enforcement officers recognize the inherent risks of their occupation, they should be comforted by the description given by the Supreme Court as to the effect of the qualified immunity doctrine on one of those inherent risks—that of being sued civilly. In Harlow v. Fitzgerald, the Court explained that “government officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known"

    and

     “Qualified immunity balances two important interests—the need to hold public officials accountable when they exercise power irresponsibly and the need to shield officials from harassment, distraction, and liability when they perform their duties reasonably.” Pearson v. Callahan (07-751). Specifically, it protects government officials from lawsuits alleging that they violated plaintiffs’ rights, only allowing suits where officials violated a “clearly established” statutory or constitutional right. When determining whether or not a right was “clearly established,” courts consider whether a hypothetical reasonable official would have known that the defendant’s conduct violated the plaintiff’s rights. Courts conducting this analysis apply the law that was in force at the time of the alleged violation, not the law in effect when the court considers the case.

    "Qualified immunity is not immunity from having to pay money damages, but rather immunity from having to go through the costs of a trial at all. Accordingly, courts must resolve qualified immunity issues as early in a case as possible, preferably before discovery.
    Qualified immunity only applies to suits against government officials as individuals, not suits against the government for damages caused by the officials’ actions"

    In cases where it is clear the officers acted outside of the scope of their authority, policies an regulations they can be individually sued. While one may think removing Qualified Immunity would solve the problems you think it would solve, in would more likely make the job unaffordable to have, due to paying for unending legal fees as cops are already sued for anything and everything as it is.

    While it sounds good on the surface, I think it would be counterproductive. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: whork on December 16, 2015, 02:37:37 PM
    in my opinion, there is a mixture of bad policing/police officers and misunderstanding policing that is discussed here. While we always don't agree on which it is, My hope is to on occasion, show the difference. If someone happens to see it from that perspective and it reduces the animosity towards police in general, that is a good thing. On the flip side, I can certainly see all is not rosy and there are issues and examples of what's wrong with policing. For example, prior to running a warrant on a house our department has several specific checks they do to insure it is the right address. Assumptions are never allowed and it has to be concrete evidence. It's amazing to me that there are still agencies that will occasionally run a no knock warrant  on a house and have the wrong address or the person hasn't lived there in awhile. That to me is just mind boggling.       

    Well said.

    Its not the fact its cops.

    If carpenters could kill people, try to hide evidence and walk away with no sentence we would have carpenter thread.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on December 17, 2015, 04:42:12 AM
    Cowardly Cop Kills Family’s Cat with a Shotgun After it Hissed at Him

    North Catasauqua, PA — Six years ago, when Tom Newhart and his wife rescued a baby cat and named him Sugar, they never imagined that his life would end in a hail of gunfire. However, thanks to a North Catasauqua police officer, that’s exactly what happened.

    Last Sunday, Sugar escaped from the Newhart’s home. Hours later, he’d be gunned down by police.

    “It’s like one of your children, you raised them, bottle fed them,” said Newhart as he began tearing up.

    When Sugar escaped, a neighbor five houses down found him and decided to call the police after not being able to detain the lost cat. When the cop showed up, he pulled out a shotgun and it was open season on lost cats.

    “I found the cat sitting right here,” said the neighbor, Mike Lienert.

    When the officer showed up, he told Lienert that it’s “not politically correct, but if it’s injured we will put it down,” — as if being ‘politically correct’ has anything to do with killing an innocent animal.

    The officer then walked into Lienert’s backyard, blew the cat away, and then told Lienert that he’d have to clean up the mess. Lienert said aside from poking at the dead cat’s body, the officer never attempted to catch the cat.

    Lienert said the cat did hiss at the officer, but instead of grabbing a pair of gloves and putting the cat in a cage, this public servant did some target practice.

    After recovering Sugar’s body, the Newhart’s decided to have him x-rayed by the vet to see if the officer was justified in shooting him. However, they found that Sugar was fine, and the officer had no reason to kill him.

    “No lacerations, no blood, other than neck wound on body. ” Newhart said.

    Newhart said he called the Mayor and the chief of police, who told him that this is not policy and has never happened before.

    “This guy doesn’t deserve the badge he wears, and should be fired immediately and held accountable,” said Newhart in a Facebook post.

    In a statement, the borough said it’s in the process of gathering information and conducting a review and investigation of what took place. After this process is complete, the borough will be taking the necessary and appropriate steps, according to WFMZ.

    According to a local animal shelter, the officer’s actions could be considered animal cruelty. According to the Free Thought Project, the officer’s actions are considered cowardly and sadistic.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cowardly-cop-kills-familys-cat-shotgun-hissed/

    http://www.wfmz.com/news/news-regional-lehighvalley/north-catasauqua-man-says-lost-cat-was-shot-by-police/36981404

    If the mother cat showed up, or a squirrel happened to pass by, the pig would have cried into his radio for backup....

    This is a clear case of pussy on pussy crime.....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2015, 08:04:02 AM
    4 Innocent Native Americans Jailed For 18 Years, Set Free – But Only After Agreeing Not To Sue

    After realizing they were holding 4 innocent men in jail, authorities issued them an ultimatum - If you want freedom, promise not to sue us.

    Fairbanks, Alaska – Four innocent Native American men have been set free from prison this week after they agreed not to sue the city or the state for the wrongful conviction and the unnecessary time behind bars. Eugene Vent, Kevin Pease, George Frese and Marvin Roberts, known as the Fairbanks Four, have all been sitting in jail since 1997 for the murder of teenager John Hartman.

    Even at the time of the conviction, the case was extremely controversial, with many supporters of the four insisting on their innocence. Family and supporters have continued to fight over the years, collecting evidence of their innocence and pushing for a new trial. As the years went on, the case against them fell apart, making it obvious that the justice system had locked away innocent men for a crime that they did not commit. After years of legal posturing, a new trial was granted this month, and the wrongfully convicted men were quickly released after the new evidence was finally brought to light.

    Fearing legal retribution, the court forced the innocent men to agree that they would not sue the state or city, even though they should have every right to do so, after losing many of their adult years to prison.

    Attorney General Craig Richards admitted that there was no case against them, but insisted that the state did not make any mistakes in its investigation.

    “This is not an exoneration. In this settlement, the four defendants agreed they were properly and validly investigated, prosecuted and convicted. Nonetheless, in light of the new evidence produced at the recent hearing, this settlement is just that, a compromise by the parties in a hard-fought legal battle. This compromise reflects the Attorney General’s recognition that if the defendants were retried today it is not clear under the current state of the evidence that they would be convicted,” Richard’s office said in a statement.

    Obviously, if there was any doubt among the prosecution and the courts that these men were innocent, there is no way that they would allow them to walk free. Governor Bill Walker seemed pleased that the group was banned from filing a lawsuit, as he quickly released a statement praising the “compromise.”

    “I’m pleased the State of Alaska Department of Law and legal counsel representing the Fairbanks Four, including the State of Alaska Office of Public Advocacy, agreed on a settlement that satisfied the court. I’m glad there was a process available to the Fairbanks Four where all involved could arrive at a mutually acceptable agreement. I hope this settlement helps to begin the healing process, and provides some measure of justice and closure for Eugene Vent, Kevin Pease, George Frese and Marvin Roberts as they return home to their families,” the statement read.

    However, it is obvious that this agreement was made under duress, and that it was the only way for them to see freedom. By this logic, if the Fairbanks Four decided to pursue their legal rights and challenge their false imprisonment – they would be thrown back in jail. And these people have the audacity to call this ‘justice.’

    It is also important to point out that Native Americans face regular police brutality and discrimination in the justice system. The racial group most likely to be killed by law enforcement is Native Americans, followed by African Americans, Latinos, Whites, and Asian Americans. Native Americans represent just 0.8 percent of the population but comprise 1.9 percent of police killings.

    It is not just Native Americans who are being wrongfully accused and caught up in the US justice system either. According to a recent report from the National Registry of Exonerations at the University of Michigan Law School, 125 falsely accused prisoners were exonerated in 2014. This is actually a record number of exonerations for one year’s time and is an increase of one-third since 2012.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/4-innocent-native-americans-jailed-18-years-set-free-agreeing-sue/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 19, 2015, 08:51:40 PM
    Good Cop Crosses Thin Blue Line, Helps Family Bring Officer Who Killed Their Son to Justice

    Versailles, MO — On Friday, special prosecutor William Camm Seay announced that Trooper Anthony Piercy is being charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,
    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.

    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.


    The stiff arm of blue justice was moving in.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    But as a true servant to the public, Henry remained resilient and refused to be bullied.

    His and the family’s efforts led to the case being reopened and taken over by Seay.

    “It was an investigation not concluded at that time,” Seay said. “She [Grellner] didn’t have it. We, my people, completed the investigation. There was additional investigation after Ms. Grellner stepped down.”

    When Seay was asked about the concerns of the law enforcement agency investigating themselves, he said, “That’s what I’m for. I don’t have any concerns.”

    On Friday, Seay announced the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree against Trooper Anthony Piercy outside the Morgan County Justice Center. The charge is a Class C felony carrying a punishment of up to seven years in prison, up to a year in the county jail, a $5,000 fine or a combination.

    The Highway Patrol said in a statement that it had placed Piercy, 44, on leave without pay. He is expected to turn himself in on Friday.

    Craig Ellingson, father of Brandon, announced they were pleased with the news but noted how long it took.

    “But it should have been a lot earlier,” he said. “I think it has been a cover-up from the beginning. They had everything. They knew what Piercy did to my son.”

    For 18 months, this family, along with the now retired Henry, have fought for Piercy to be held accountable in the death of Brandon Ellingson.

    “I never imagined something like that happening to Brandon. … I think he felt like he was safe with Piercy, because he’s a cop. But he wasn’t,” said Ellingson.

    “There’s been a cover-up from the beginning,” Henry recently told The Star. “They wanted to protect the governor and the merger and protect Piercy from criminal charges because criminal charges would be a black eye for the patrol.”

    While this news of Piercy’s charges is great for the family, Craig Ellingson insists that the fight is not yet over.

    “I feel some relief, but I still want to get to the people who have covered this up,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-refused-silenced-fellow-officer-charged-teens-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 19, 2015, 11:29:03 PM
    Good Cop Crosses Thin Blue Line, Helps Family Bring Officer Who Killed Their Son to Justice

    Versailles, MO — On Friday, special prosecutor William Camm Seay announced that Trooper Anthony Piercy is being charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,
    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.

    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.


    The stiff arm of blue justice was moving in.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    But as a true servant to the public, Henry remained resilient and refused to be bullied.

    His and the family’s efforts led to the case being reopened and taken over by Seay.

    “It was an investigation not concluded at that time,” Seay said. “She [Grellner] didn’t have it. We, my people, completed the investigation. There was additional investigation after Ms. Grellner stepped down.”

    When Seay was asked about the concerns of the law enforcement agency investigating themselves, he said, “That’s what I’m for. I don’t have any concerns.”

    On Friday, Seay announced the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree against Trooper Anthony Piercy outside the Morgan County Justice Center. The charge is a Class C felony carrying a punishment of up to seven years in prison, up to a year in the county jail, a $5,000 fine or a combination.

    The Highway Patrol said in a statement that it had placed Piercy, 44, on leave without pay. He is expected to turn himself in on Friday.

    Craig Ellingson, father of Brandon, announced they were pleased with the news but noted how long it took.

    “But it should have been a lot earlier,” he said. “I think it has been a cover-up from the beginning. They had everything. They knew what Piercy did to my son.”

    For 18 months, this family, along with the now retired Henry, have fought for Piercy to be held accountable in the death of Brandon Ellingson.

    “I never imagined something like that happening to Brandon. … I think he felt like he was safe with Piercy, because he’s a cop. But he wasn’t,” said Ellingson.

    “There’s been a cover-up from the beginning,” Henry recently told The Star. “They wanted to protect the governor and the merger and protect Piercy from criminal charges because criminal charges would be a black eye for the patrol.”

    While this news of Piercy’s charges is great for the family, Craig Ellingson insists that the fight is not yet over.

    “I feel some relief, but I still want to get to the people who have covered this up,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-refused-silenced-fellow-officer-charged-teens-death/








    One very decent cop & human being.

    What a Fucking horrible bunch of messed up
    People who are meant to stand for truth & justice,
    Who tried for so long to cover this up.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 20, 2015, 09:23:55 AM
    2 years on probation and most likely not a cent out of his own pocket... About the same as a citizen would get for assaulting a cop in a similar manner and effect.
    And it appears the cop might have lied in his report to justify the assault.

    Woman who was shoved FACE-FIRST into a concrete jail cell bench by police officer during DUI arrest gets $875,000 from Chicago suburb

        Court documents show two separate settlements have been reached with Cassandra Feuerstein
        Video of the incident showed an officer shoving the woman into a cell so hard that she fell forward and hit her head on a concrete bench
        According to prosecutors, the impact broke a bone in her face and loosened teeth
        Former Skokie police officer Michael Hart pleaded guilty to official misconduct and was sentenced to two years of probation
        Court records show Feuerstein pleaded guilty to DUI and was sentenced to one year of supervision

    The village of Skokie has agreed to pay $875,000 to a Chicago woman who accused a police officer in a lawsuit of using excessive force during her arrest on suspicion of driving under the influence.

    The Chicago Tribune reports that court documents show two separate settlements have been reached with Cassandra Feuerstein.

    Video of the March 2013 incident showed an officer shoving the woman into a cell so hard that she fell forward and hit her head on a concrete bench.

    According to prosecutors, the impact broke a bone in her face and loosened teeth.

    Former Skokie police officer Michael Hart pleaded guilty to official misconduct and was sentenced to two years of probation.

    Court records show Feuerstein pleaded guilty to DUI and was sentenced to one year of supervision.

    The video of the incident clearly shows the 47-year-old woman being roughly shoved into the cell by an officer, who was later identified as Michael Hart.

    The beginning of the prison video shows her complying with a female officer during the pat down and search and gives them her bra and shoes.

    As she is shoved, she falls forward and strikes her face on the concrete bench. When she lands on the ground, a pool of blood spreads on the floor under her.

    Another officer enters the cell and pulls her head onto his lap as he attempts to stop the bleeding.

    A paramedic arrives soon after and she is taken to hospital in a stretcher.

    Feuerstein claimed the officer then filed a false report claiming she resisted police to explain his actions, according to CBS.

    'Apparently I was not looking into the camera the way the officer wanted me to', she said at a 2013 press conference, referring to having her mugshot taken right before the incident.

    Her lawyer Torreya Hamilton said in 2013: 'The video speaks for itself.

    'She does nothing to justify what this male police officer does.

    'If this was a tavern fight, which of course it wasn't, it'd be like she got sucker-punched.'

    Feuerstein was charged with resisting an officer as well as drunk driving.

    She pleaded guilty to the DUI. The other charge was subsequently dropped.

    Feuerstein was arrested after she had pulled over, realizing she had too much to drink.

    She fell asleep and was later arrested and taken to the station.

    Skokie town spokeswoman Ann Tennes said in a statement in 2013: 'The village of Skokie expresses deep concern for Ms Cassandra Feuerstein's injuries that occurred at the Skokie Police Station earlier this year.'



    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3367556/Woman-shoved-FACE-concrete-jail-cell-bench-police-officer-DUI-arrest-gets-875-0000-Chicago-suburb.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on December 20, 2015, 01:46:58 PM
    Good Cop Crosses Thin Blue Line, Helps Family Bring Officer Who Killed Their Son to Justice

    Versailles, MO — On Friday, special prosecutor William Camm Seay announced that Trooper Anthony Piercy is being charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,
    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.

    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.


    The stiff arm of blue justice was moving in.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    But as a true servant to the public, Henry remained resilient and refused to be bullied.

    His and the family’s efforts led to the case being reopened and taken over by Seay.

    “It was an investigation not concluded at that time,” Seay said. “She [Grellner] didn’t have it. We, my people, completed the investigation. There was additional investigation after Ms. Grellner stepped down.”

    When Seay was asked about the concerns of the law enforcement agency investigating themselves, he said, “That’s what I’m for. I don’t have any concerns.”

    On Friday, Seay announced the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree against Trooper Anthony Piercy outside the Morgan County Justice Center. The charge is a Class C felony carrying a punishment of up to seven years in prison, up to a year in the county jail, a $5,000 fine or a combination.

    The Highway Patrol said in a statement that it had placed Piercy, 44, on leave without pay. He is expected to turn himself in on Friday.

    Craig Ellingson, father of Brandon, announced they were pleased with the news but noted how long it took.

    “But it should have been a lot earlier,” he said. “I think it has been a cover-up from the beginning. They had everything. They knew what Piercy did to my son.”

    For 18 months, this family, along with the now retired Henry, have fought for Piercy to be held accountable in the death of Brandon Ellingson.

    “I never imagined something like that happening to Brandon. … I think he felt like he was safe with Piercy, because he’s a cop. But he wasn’t,” said Ellingson.

    “There’s been a cover-up from the beginning,” Henry recently told The Star. “They wanted to protect the governor and the merger and protect Piercy from criminal charges because criminal charges would be a black eye for the patrol.”

    While this news of Piercy’s charges is great for the family, Craig Ellingson insists that the fight is not yet over.

    “I feel some relief, but I still want to get to the people who have covered this up,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-refused-silenced-fellow-officer-charged-teens-death/

    Before reading the article, I wondered how the cop who did the right thing would be treated by his cowardly peers.......turns out he was shunned and forced to retire.

    Wonder how old the cop was who retired and if he will seek damages against his department.  Hope so.....  I also wonder if he would have done the same thing if he didn't have enough time in on the job to retire.....

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 29, 2015, 10:07:50 PM
    Many stories with questionable/criminal police behavior recently it is hard to keep up. This one, though old, is particularly interesting:

    Horrifying Video Shows Cops Sic K-9 on Infant Daughter of a Man they Mistook for a Suspect

    Henderson, NV — On January 30, 2015, a health food store in Henderson called the police after a disgruntled customer, attempting to return some protein powder, allegedly threatened to rob them. The store described the suspect to police as a black male wearing a black and tan t-shirt who left in an SUV.

    As police responded to the call, they quickly stopped the first person they saw, who happened to be Arturo Arenas-Alvarez. Arenas-Alvarez had just pulled up in the shopping center to do some shopping when police drew their weapons and demanded he put his hands in the air and step toward them.

    Arenas-Alvarez did not appear to understand why multiple armed men were pointing their guns at him, so one officer asked him in Spanish to approach the vehicle.

    Before Arenas-Alvarez makes it all the way to the vehicle, officers realized they had the wrong guy.
    “That’s not him, dude. That’s not a black man in a black shirt,” one officer said to another.

    However, they continued the detainment.

    Officers begin to assure Arenas-Alvarez that he will be fine. “They thought that you were involved in a robbery. You don’t look like the person, so it’s OK now, OK?” one officer said. However, nothing could have been further from the truth.

    As officers were telling Arenas-Alvarez that he’ll be okay, Sgt. James Mitchell can be heard on the radio telling the officers, “Stand by a couple of minutes. K9-1 is about two minutes out.”

    During the display of gross incompetence of mistaking Arenas-Alvarez for a black man in a black shirt, Arenas-Alvarez’s 17-month-old daughter, Ayleen was strapped into her car seat in the SUV.

    Before Arenas-Alvarez could communicate to the officers that his infant daughter was in the car, the “two minutes” had passed and Sgt. Mitchell arrived with his Belgian Malinois. Almost as soon as he exited the vehicle, Mithcell released the K-9 into the SUV of an entirely innocent man and his daughter.
    “My baby,” Arturo Arenas-Alvarez can be heard pleading with officers in broken English. “I’ve got my baby.”

    An officer then yelled out, “There’s an infant in that car! There’s an infant in that car!”

    But it was too late. By the time the cops realized that their immediate escalation to violence was unnecessary – the damage had been done.

    Ayleen’s blood curdling and heart-wrenching screams of agony can be heard on the dashcam. The 4-year-old dog, Doerak, was ripping into the baby’s flesh. By the time the dog let go of the infant, her right arm had been mauled. She was left with nine puncture wounds and abrasions.

    After the incident was over, Mitchell can be heard blaming his fellow officers for releasing the dog.

    “God damn, guys, you gotta f**king tell me!” he yelled. But Mitchell didn’t give the other officers any time to tell him before letting loose the dog.

    “The last forearm, the guy didn’t have anything left but bone,” Mitchell can be heard telling other officers in an apparent attempt to downplay the severity of what he just did.

    On the dashcam one officer can be heard saying that their response to this incident of mistaking a man and his daughter for a completely different looking man was “solid” and it could’ve been much worse.

    “All that happened was totally solid. Just a sh*tty set of circumstances that all rolled into — what could’ve been much worse. So just get that whole timeline out there,” the officer said.

    After the incident, Mitchell and Doerak were taken off the street as a routine practice, similar to that of officer-involved shootings. However, since then, Doerak and Mitchell have been released back to regular duty.

    For the purposeful mauling of their infant daughter, the city of Henderson agreed to pay the family a whopping $13,000 to settle their claim. But the family is unable to get the $8,537.69 (amount after legal fees) without a court order.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-video-shows-cops-sic-k-9-infant-daughter-man-mistook-suspect/


    Original article and video here:

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/confusion-language-barrier-contribute-henderson-police-dog-biting-child-video



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 30, 2015, 09:19:35 AM
    A witness told police the assailant had apparently gotten into a red SUV in the parking lot.

    But in fact, that SUV belonged to Arenas-Alvarez, who worked at the Baja Fresh in the shopping center and had just pulled into the spot with his baby daughter in the backseat.

    At first, officers couldn't tell whether anyone was in the SUV. Then they saw movement.

    Mitchell, who was driving to the scene, can be heard on the radio telling other officers: "Stand by a couple of minutes. K9-1 is about two minutes out."

    The officers who were already there used the public address system to order anyone in the car to roll down the windows and stick his arms out.

    Arenas-Alvarez didn't appear to understand, but stepped out of the car and — guided by one officer's rudimentary Spanish — walked toward the officers.

    Immediately, police could see he was not their slim 6-foot-1-inch suspect, reported to be wearing a black and tan T-shirt.

    "That's not him, dude. That's not a black man in a black shirt," one officer said to another. (Most of the officers are not identified in the videos.)

    The officers politely reassured Arenas-Alvarez things were fine, with one telling him: "They thought that you were involved in a robbery. You don't look like the person, so it's OK now, OK?"

    Meanwhile, Mitchell had arrived on the scene with his dog, Doerak. Officers were heading toward the SUV, guns drawn, to search it, but Mitchell called them off.

    Another PA announcement was heard: "Anybody inside that car, stand up now ... sending a police dog in."

    Arenas-Alvarez didn't understand what was happening until it was too late. As he slowly started to tell the officers he had seen the man they might be looking for, Mitchell released the dog.


    Stupid on the part of the K9 officer to send the dog in at that point. I suspect that while they didn't believe Alvarez to be the actual  suspect they didn't rule out that the suspect got into the vehicle and wanted to confirm that either way. Had the 2 officers continued up they would have seen the child but they were called off to wait for the K9 to clear it which in most cases, is the safest route. The lack of questioning by the officer of Alvarez as to if there was anybody else in the vehicle with him is the primary failure. It is a standard question for that scenario.  The lack of communication due to language played a part but an attempt should have been made. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 03, 2016, 12:18:17 PM
    You Could be Killed for Doing What this Drunk Cop Did – Instead, He’s Let Go and Given an Apology

    The next time you see a dozen cops pummel a man suspected of a DUI, remember that this is how they treat their own.


    Poulsbo, WA — Instead of simply doing their jobs, officers exposed the blatant double standard between themselves and ordinary citizens by refusing to arrest a deputy who admitted to driving drunk on body cam video after vomiting on himself. Although the cops had probable cause to arrest the inebriated deputy, one of the officers shut off her body camera while apparently discussing how to cover up the embarrassing incident with the police chief.

    At 9:25 p.m. on October 16, Poulsbo Officer Danielle Branes responded to a call from a movie theater employee about an intoxicated man sitting in his car ignoring suggestions from passersby not to drive drunk. Immediately after approaching Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim Porter, Officer Branes informed the deputy that she could smell alcohol on his breath. Although Branes offered to give her colleague a ride home, Sgt. Porter refused her help and waited until she left the parking lot before driving home drunk. After asking the theater employees to call 911 if they saw Porter attempting to drive, Branes reported that Porter was “totally wasted.”

    Around 11:10 p.m., a theater employee called 911 to report Porter’s vehicle leaving the parking lot. Responding to the call, Poulsbo Officer Jennifer Corn and Reserve Officer Joshua Krebs arrived at Porter’s home to find him sitting in the driver’s seat of his vehicle. While slurring his speech and refusing to wait patiently, Porter ordered the officers to “go away.”

    Officer Corn responded, “I, I wish I could. I can’t.”

    Later on in the video, Corn informed Porter, “I just came to make sure you made it home, but seeing you in the vehicle I had to check on you. I’m wishing I hadn’t, but now I’m stuck.”

    “No, you’re not stuck, Jen,” Porter retorted.

    “I am, because somebody saw you drive out of there,” Corn replied.

    “No, we’re good,” asserted Porter.

    “You’re drunk,” Corn observed.

    “Yeah,” stated Porter.

    “And you just drove here from…from the theater,” Corn noted.

    “Yes…two miles,” admitted Porter.

    “Yup, I know,” acknowledged Corn. “And I’m really hoping that there’s nothing in the law that will stick here.”

    According to Corn and Krebs, Porter had vomited on himself and clearly appeared drunk. After repeatedly attempting to walk away, Porter was forced to remain near his vehicle while waiting for Sheriff’s Sgt. Scott Dickson and Poulsbo Chief Al Townsend to arrive. Instead of administering field sobriety tests or conducting further questioning about his admitted DUI, the officers stood with Porter in awkward silence for nearly 20 minutes while waiting for their bosses.

    During this time, Porter did several things that would have gotten a normal citizen, tasered, handcuffed, beaten, or killed. Getting out of the car when told not to, repeatedly putting hands in pockets, and refusing to obey the officers’ commands have proven to be death sentences for otherwise completely innocent people.

    Immediately after Chief Townsend’s arrival, Corn informed her boss that she was shutting off her body camera before discussing the details of Porter’s DUI and subsequent detention. Instead of ordering Corn to leave the video running, Townsend allowed his subordinate to shut off her camera in order to secretly devise how to let Porter off the hook without arresting him.

    Instead of chastising Porter for driving drunk and endangering lives, Corn apologetically whimpered at Porter, “I…I’m just gonna be straight to up for you…with you, because I respect you. Um, right now, we have the reasonable suspicion to detain you. Ok? But we don’t, at this time, have probable cause for your arrest. Ok?”

    After obtaining the body cam video and police report from the city through a public records request, the Kitsap Sun also discovered that Corn never asked Porter to perform any sobriety tests, take a field Breathalyzer, search his car, or inform him of his Miranda rights before conducting further questioning after his initial confession. Although Corn claimed they did not have enough probable cause to arrest Porter, Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim McDonough disagreed with her assessment.

    “Poulsbo PD did not conduct an investigation into whether Sgt. Porter was under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs to establish probable cause for violation of (the state’s driving under the influence law) even though it appears that they had probable cause to do so,” wrote Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim McDonough on December 24. “An exact determination of Sgt. Porter’s blood alcohol/drug content when he was contacted by Poulsbo (police) cannot be determined. Based on the video alone, it is apparent that Sgt. Porter is impaired.”

    Eleven days prior to the incident, Porter rear-ended a car waiting to make a left turn at an intersection at 8 a.m. on October 5. He returned to work on November 11, after learning that no criminal charges would be filed against him.

    “Her (Corn’s) decision to call out her supervisors and the KCSO supervisor only go to reinforce that she made no effort to provide any special treatment to Porter, and in fact, suggests that he was treated with more scrutiny than an average citizen would be,” Chief Townsend wrote.

    Obviously lying, Townsend has ignored the fact that he allowed Corn to turn her body camera off during a crucial point in the investigation, while she repeatedly cowered before an inebriated suspect covered in his own vomit — who told her he’d been drinking. According to defense attorney Linda Callahan, it was “ridiculous” that Corn did not arrest Porter.

        “I would think she is derelict in her duty for not,” Callahan explained. “I defend these people, I’m not going to be leading the race to get this guy convicted, he needs help, but this is a case of the blue wall. They protect each other.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-refuse-arrest-deputy-admitted-driving-drunk-body-cam-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on January 03, 2016, 04:03:38 PM
    You Could be Killed for Doing What this Drunk Cop Did – Instead, He’s Let Go and Given an Apology

    The next time you see a dozen cops pummel a man suspected of a DUI, remember that this is how they treat their own.


    Poulsbo, WA — Instead of simply doing their jobs, officers exposed the blatant double standard between themselves and ordinary citizens by refusing to arrest a deputy who admitted to driving drunk on body cam video after vomiting on himself. Although the cops had probable cause to arrest the inebriated deputy, one of the officers shut off her body camera while apparently discussing how to cover up the embarrassing incident with the police chief.

    At 9:25 p.m. on October 16, Poulsbo Officer Danielle Branes responded to a call from a movie theater employee about an intoxicated man sitting in his car ignoring suggestions from passersby not to drive drunk. Immediately after approaching Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim Porter, Officer Branes informed the deputy that she could smell alcohol on his breath. Although Branes offered to give her colleague a ride home, Sgt. Porter refused her help and waited until she left the parking lot before driving home drunk. After asking the theater employees to call 911 if they saw Porter attempting to drive, Branes reported that Porter was “totally wasted.”

    Around 11:10 p.m., a theater employee called 911 to report Porter’s vehicle leaving the parking lot. Responding to the call, Poulsbo Officer Jennifer Corn and Reserve Officer Joshua Krebs arrived at Porter’s home to find him sitting in the driver’s seat of his vehicle. While slurring his speech and refusing to wait patiently, Porter ordered the officers to “go away.”

    Officer Corn responded, “I, I wish I could. I can’t.”

    Later on in the video, Corn informed Porter, “I just came to make sure you made it home, but seeing you in the vehicle I had to check on you. I’m wishing I hadn’t, but now I’m stuck.”

    “No, you’re not stuck, Jen,” Porter retorted.

    “I am, because somebody saw you drive out of there,” Corn replied.

    “No, we’re good,” asserted Porter.

    “You’re drunk,” Corn observed.

    “Yeah,” stated Porter.

    “And you just drove here from…from the theater,” Corn noted.

    “Yes…two miles,” admitted Porter.

    “Yup, I know,” acknowledged Corn. “And I’m really hoping that there’s nothing in the law that will stick here.”

    According to Corn and Krebs, Porter had vomited on himself and clearly appeared drunk. After repeatedly attempting to walk away, Porter was forced to remain near his vehicle while waiting for Sheriff’s Sgt. Scott Dickson and Poulsbo Chief Al Townsend to arrive. Instead of administering field sobriety tests or conducting further questioning about his admitted DUI, the officers stood with Porter in awkward silence for nearly 20 minutes while waiting for their bosses.

    During this time, Porter did several things that would have gotten a normal citizen, tasered, handcuffed, beaten, or killed. Getting out of the car when told not to, repeatedly putting hands in pockets, and refusing to obey the officers’ commands have proven to be death sentences for otherwise completely innocent people.

    Immediately after Chief Townsend’s arrival, Corn informed her boss that she was shutting off her body camera before discussing the details of Porter’s DUI and subsequent detention. Instead of ordering Corn to leave the video running, Townsend allowed his subordinate to shut off her camera in order to secretly devise how to let Porter off the hook without arresting him.

    Instead of chastising Porter for driving drunk and endangering lives, Corn apologetically whimpered at Porter, “I…I’m just gonna be straight to up for you…with you, because I respect you. Um, right now, we have the reasonable suspicion to detain you. Ok? But we don’t, at this time, have probable cause for your arrest. Ok?”

    After obtaining the body cam video and police report from the city through a public records request, the Kitsap Sun also discovered that Corn never asked Porter to perform any sobriety tests, take a field Breathalyzer, search his car, or inform him of his Miranda rights before conducting further questioning after his initial confession. Although Corn claimed they did not have enough probable cause to arrest Porter, Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim McDonough disagreed with her assessment.

    “Poulsbo PD did not conduct an investigation into whether Sgt. Porter was under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs to establish probable cause for violation of (the state’s driving under the influence law) even though it appears that they had probable cause to do so,” wrote Sheriff’s Sgt. Jim McDonough on December 24. “An exact determination of Sgt. Porter’s blood alcohol/drug content when he was contacted by Poulsbo (police) cannot be determined. Based on the video alone, it is apparent that Sgt. Porter is impaired.”

    Eleven days prior to the incident, Porter rear-ended a car waiting to make a left turn at an intersection at 8 a.m. on October 5. He returned to work on November 11, after learning that no criminal charges would be filed against him.

    “Her (Corn’s) decision to call out her supervisors and the KCSO supervisor only go to reinforce that she made no effort to provide any special treatment to Porter, and in fact, suggests that he was treated with more scrutiny than an average citizen would be,” Chief Townsend wrote.

    Obviously lying, Townsend has ignored the fact that he allowed Corn to turn her body camera off during a crucial point in the investigation, while she repeatedly cowered before an inebriated suspect covered in his own vomit — who told her he’d been drinking. According to defense attorney Linda Callahan, it was “ridiculous” that Corn did not arrest Porter.

        “I would think she is derelict in her duty for not,” Callahan explained. “I defend these people, I’m not going to be leading the race to get this guy convicted, he needs help, but this is a case of the blue wall. They protect each other.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-refuse-arrest-deputy-admitted-driving-drunk-body-cam-video/

    Is it any wonder why people hate pigs?

    Gutless cowards are probably scared that they will be looked down upon by their fellow criminal pig brethren....  The ass kissing  swine should be fired, along with the drunkard pig....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 03, 2016, 05:07:59 PM
    Chicago Cops Say Keeping Evidence of Misconduct Puts Cops in Danger – So They’re Destroying It

    With protesters thronging the streets of Chicago demanding police accountability and clamoring for the resignation of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, the city’s police union is frantically trying to destroy decades of records documenting police misconduct. As is always the case, the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) sees “officer safety” as the highest priority – including protection from legal accountability.

    “I protect all my members, and I will continue to do that,” Dean Angelo, president of the Chicago FOP, explained to CNN.

    An injunction filed by the FOP insists that preserving those records violates Section 8.4 of its bargaining agreement with the City of Chicago. That provision specifies that all files of misconduct investigations and officer disciplinary histories “will be destroyed five (5) years after the date of the incident or the date upon which the violation is discovered, whichever is longer, except that not sustained files alleging criminal conduct or excessive force shall be retained for a period of seven (7) years after the date of the incident or the date upon which the violation is discovered, whichever is longer….”

    Once that deadline passes, the episode of excessive force or other misconduct “cannot be used against the Officer in any future proceedings in any other forum” unless it deals with a matter subject to litigation during the five year period or “unless a pattern of sustained infractions exists.” This element of the bargaining agreement creates an incentive for the police department to delay, obstruct, and obfuscate investigations of misconduct and abuse complaints until the deadline expires – and to keep the process opaque to the public.

    “Basically, they bargained away transparency and accountability,” points out Chicago University Law Professor Craig Futterman, who is fighting in court to prevent the destruction of the officer misconduct records. “In a world where an incident like [the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald] happens and the public statements are `Deny, deny, deny,’ and then close off and circle the wagons, and then a code of silence and an exoneration at the end of the day – in that system, you cannot create public trust,” Futterman explained to the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin.

    Futterman, who founded Chicago University’s Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project, has spent fifteen years trying to end the official impunity of police officers. Chicago, Futterman told the Sun-Times, “is the capital of the code of silence.”

    Working with independent journalist Jamie Kalven, Futterman was able to exhume the video of the McDonald shooting and the autopsy report showing that he had been shot sixteen times – evidence that completely contradicted the official account that described the shooting as “self-defense.” Jason Van Dyke, the officer who shot McDonald, has been charged with first-degree murder, an all but unprecedented development involving an on-duty police shooting in Chicago.

    Through freedom of information requests, Futterman has also pried loose a small portion of the disciplinary files, which are available in an online database. The records Futterman seeks to preserve date back to 1967, and cover decades of corruption and abuse, including the now-notorious Jon Burge torture scandal and the unlawful detentions, interrogations, and abuse of citizens at the Homan Square “black site.” The FOP-negotiated contract requiring the destruction of records after five years went into effect on July 1, 2012 – and it is by no means clear that it applies retroactively to misconduct cases that occurred prior to that agreement. The FOP is essentially seeking to re-litigate the agreement for the purpose of obstructing an ongoing Justice Department investigation into the Chicago PD.

    Although FOP President Angelo pouts that “I don’t understand why a 77-year-old retirees’ complaint in 1967 needs to be on a database,” the records his union seeks to destroy include disciplinary histories directly relevant to very recent incidents of excessive force.

    According to CNN, “a search for Jason Van Dyke, the officer charged with the first-degree murder in the killing of Laquan McDonald, shows that he had 19 complaints before he fatally shot the teen, including 10 for use of force. The officer who shot and killed Cedrick Chatman has 30 complaints in the system, including 10 for use of force. None of the complaints, for either officer, resulted in disciplinary action. Van Dyke’s attorney says his client feared for his life in his encounter with McDonald. The Chatman shooting was ruled justified.”

    Preserving the records, and making them publicly accessible, could help identify officers who pose potential threats to the public they supposedly serve. The FOP, in keeping with its long-established priorities, is more concerned about preserving blue privilege.

    One measure of the depth and extent of the official privilege enjoyed by Chicago police officers is offered by the case of former CPD Command Jon Burge, who tortured and otherwise abused more than 100 Chicago residents over the course of three decades. Several innocent people were imprisoned on the basis of confessions extracted by Burge through torture – including the use of electric shocks, beatings, and suffocation with plastic bags. Last April, Mayor Emanuel approved a $5.5 million dollar reparations package for Burge’s victims. Even as city taxpayers absorbed the cost of Burge’s crimes, they continued to pay his pension: Despite being convicted in federal court for perjury and imprisoned in 2010, Burge continued to receive his $4,000-a-month pension.

    Some of Burge’s erstwhile comrades in torture are still under investigation – and the documents necessary to continue that probe would be fed into a shredder if the FOP prevails in court. Those records most likely would also contain information about the Chicago PD’s off-the-records interrogation facility at Homan Square, a CIA-style “black site” where thousands of people were detained without cause and interrogated without constitutionally mandated access to an attorney, reports the Guardian of London.


    An estimated 82 percent of the 7,000 people who were arrested and illegally held at Homan Square are black. Angel Perez, who was chained to a metal bar in a second-floor interrogation room at the facility in October 2012, alleges that he was sodomized with a metallic object by officers who taunted him with threats of prison rape if he didn’t cooperate. During a December 15 hearing before the Cook County Commission, several other detainees described being denied access to lawyers and being pressured to become police informants.

    “There they interrogated me, asking me things that I had no idea about, for murder and things of that nature,” testified Kory Wright. “And I sat in that room, and they turned the temperature up and I was zip-tied to a bench.”

    This Gitmo-style “rendition” site operated under Rahm Emanuel’s tenure, and it features very prominently in the accumulating demands for his resignation. With protests growing in intensity, the Mayor under political siege, and the police department desperately seeking to destroy evidence of long-festering corruption and misconduct, Chicago’s municipal government is beginning to look like an authoritarian dictatorship in the throes of a terminal crisis – Tehran circa 1978, perhaps, or Romania in December 1989.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-cops-keeping-evidence-misconduct-puts-cops-danger-destroying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 04, 2016, 07:20:28 AM
    AUSTIN (KXAN) — An Austin Police Department officer is on administrative leave following a DWI arrest last week.

    According to Austin police, Officer Albert Arevalo, 37, was arrested by fellow APD officers on suspicions of DWI on Friday. Per APD policy, Arevalo has been placed on administrative leave while the incident is investigated.

    According to data from the City of Austin, Arevalo has been employed with APD since May 2008.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 04, 2016, 07:21:43 AM
    AUSTIN (KXAN) – An Austin police officer has lost his job under Police Chief Art Acevedo’s zero tolerance policy for Austin Police Department officers involved in DWIs. A disciplinary memo shows Ofc. Albert Arevalo had blood alcohol levels of .175 and .178 after he submitted to breath and blood tests – more than twice the legal limit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 04, 2016, 01:37:50 PM
    It's Good to see Texas are Doing the right thing in this particular case.

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

    There would be less Disrespect, Distrust & a better standard of Policing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 04, 2016, 01:56:37 PM
    It's Good to see Texas are Doing the right thing in this particular case.

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

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

    Can't argue with that
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 04, 2016, 02:12:41 PM
    Can't argue with that




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


    All the Best.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 04, 2016, 02:16:08 PM
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 04, 2016, 02:26:05 PM
    ;)





    We may often be on very different sides of the fence.
    It's Good to Stand back & be able to share a laugh.
    Life on this planet is after all is just a mere blip in Time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 04, 2016, 02:42:51 PM




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

    So true. Life is too short. Case in point, one of my former Corporals died Saturday from cancer. 47 years old, had everything going for her and a total sweetheart. There are more important things in life than arguing a point all the time. Plus, in spite of our consistent disagreements, I enjoy the banter.       
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 04, 2016, 03:13:33 PM
    How much lower can they stoop entrapping an autistic friendless kid? And the veiled threat by the DA's office at 21:29..

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






    Me too I enjoy The Banter.

     “I may well disapprove of what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
     :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 06, 2016, 01:40:52 AM
    This "honorable hero" was sentenced to a mere 4 1/2 years for lying under oath about police torture but got time off for good behavior. Once again the taxpayers have to pay for this cop's crimes-and his $4000/month pension.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/527850/burge-breaks-silence-condemns-5-5-million-reparations-fund
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 12, 2016, 11:41:33 AM
    Chicago Cops Frantically Fight to Destroy Misconduct Records Before Homan Square Investigation


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-police-fight-destroy-misconduct-records-launch-homan-square-investigation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on January 12, 2016, 11:58:17 AM
    Quote
    police unions argue that red-flagged officers should not be judged by their marred past.

    Yes, let's be reasonable.  I'm sure all future victims will understand.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 12, 2016, 10:04:02 PM
    All these Thug Psychopath Scumbag Cops Running Around
    In America, And Some People Trying To Find Any Little
    Excuse To Defend & Justify Their Behaviour.
    Says A Lot About Them People Also.

    'To Protect & Serve'  Yes Themselves!!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 13, 2016, 12:13:03 PM
    Ex-Las Vegas police officer indicted on federal civil rights violation

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/ex-las-vegas-police-officer-indicted-federal-civil-rights-violation

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 13, 2016, 12:17:11 PM
    Bigot Cop Pulls Gun on Asian Man, Accuses Him of Being “an ISIS” and Beats Him

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bigot-cop-pulls-gun-asian-man-accuses-an-isis-beats/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 13, 2016, 04:49:06 PM
    “My client was very surprised that charges were filed without an investigator talking to him,” Johnson said, noting that Clark should have been given his special treatment due to his officer status.

    No need to comment further... this says it all.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 14, 2016, 11:51:36 AM
    No need to comment further... this says it all.

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

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

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

    Not sure where the other part that was in the article came from, but it wasn't apparent in the article from a real news source. No doubt cops do screwed up things.. but it really doesn't hurt to not accept every thing you read negative as gospel without considering the source and looking for verification.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 14, 2016, 11:58:31 AM
    Justice for the heroic cop who put his life on the line to save us from violent criminals.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/federal-judge-dismisses-excessive-force-case-cop-paralyzed-indian-grandfather-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 19, 2016, 10:38:26 AM
    I-40 Search Raises New 'Policing For Profit' Questions

    http://www.newschannel5.com/news/newschannel-5-investigates/i-40-search-raises-new-policing-for-profit-questions

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2016, 10:15:11 AM
    Maybe if they investigated themselves they would've found no wrongdoing.


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/deputy-pleads-guilty-charged-revenge-beatdown-witness-intimidation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 20, 2016, 02:41:37 PM
    Yet more unfounded writings about The Saintly Police
    Who Never Do Wrong, We must not jump to Conclusions
    When Reading These Very Unjust & Bias News Articles.
    It is very well know That it is all lies & exaggeration
    When writing about The Beloved Good Cops.

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

    And I have a bridge for sale.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2016, 08:28:10 PM
    "Edwards said he could not have stopped the kick because he “already had the muscles fired” in his right leg."


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://registerguard.com/rg/news/local/33951768-75/oregon-state-police-captain-defends-self-in-court-during-excessive-force-trial-in-eugene.html.csp
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2016, 09:34:20 AM
    Georgia Police Officer Indicted for Murder of Unarmed Black Man

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

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

     “The grand jury has to hear, without a doubt, the reasonable, subjective views of the officer and the reason why a law enforcement officer would act,” Lance LoRusso, a defense lawyer who works with the Georgia division of the Fraternal Order of Police, said this month. “Private citizens don’t get paid to use deadly force; law enforcement officers do.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 22, 2016, 11:49:45 AM
    Georgia Police Officer Indicted for Murder of Unarmed Black Man

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

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

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


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

     ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2016, 09:40:51 AM
    “Gotta Cover Our Ass” Illegally Confiscated Cellphone Records Cops Framing an Innocent Man

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The trial is set for April 25th.

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



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/gotta-cover-ass-illegally-confiscated-cellphone-records-cops-framing-innocent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 27, 2016, 12:55:51 PM
    Tried to listen to the whole video. In more than one place the subtitles of what they say the cops said aren't accurate. For example.. it says "We'll claim" when the cop actually clearly says "we'll explain that".. Often times words are added that can't be made out.. like "Call the Hartford Lt and see if he has any grudges". I listened to that several times and there is no way to get "grudges" out of that.

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

    Having said all that... the cop was obviously wrong for stopping the taping. The person had the legal right to film or take pictures of the cops. The covering their ass part of getting a case number for the incident was legit as it would be likely these guys would complain and having it documented makes sense. What is chicken shit is having to come up with charges to make a point. They should have dusted them off after interviewing and determining they weren't a threat and moved on. What they did is part of the problem police are having with their reputation. Stop being such tight asses and causing people to go to court because you felt they bucked up to you. Grow some balls and accept the fact challenging authority has always existed and for good reason. They weren't out of line to the point they needed tickets 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 27, 2016, 02:31:46 PM
    Watch the video below and remember that this can happen to anyone anywhere and at any time.
     All a corrupt cop has to do to ruin the lives of those they do not like, is make up a lie and get their fellow cops to corroborate that lie.
    Had the cop not left the video going, Picard’s situation would be much different and the world would think he’s a criminal.






    That is the truth of the matter.
    It happens time after time.
    Seems like there are a lot of criminals in the police service.
    Always some poxy excuse is banded about to exonerate
    or justify the cops behaviour.. ::)


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 27, 2016, 03:00:07 PM
    Watch the video below and remember that this can happen to anyone anywhere and at any time.
     All a corrupt cop has to do to ruin the lives of those they do not like, is make up a lie and get their fellow cops to corroborate that lie.
    Had the cop not left the video going, Picard’s situation would be much different and the world would think he’s a criminal.






    That is the truth of the matter.
    It happens time after time.
    Seems like there are a lot of criminals in the police service.
    Always some poxy excuse is banded about to exonerate
    or justify the cops behaviour.. ::)




    But.. I don't think that case was made here. That it happens.. certainly. There are calls that occur every day where officers deal with an incident and then discuss possible charges. They "know" something ain't right, or there is an ordinance or law that covers what they are dealing with but if it isn't a common thing, they often confer. That's what happened here in the discussion. I don't think they lied about people telling them there was a dude with a visible gun down the street and they were concerned. I don't know the laws in Connecticut but they also may be referring to what we have in Texas as Pedestrian in the roadway. The legal description of the roadway can include medians  and islands.  In his case, he was on the shoulder which is considered the roadway at one point and on an island in another.  reckless use of the highway and creating a disturbance may have been lawful possible charges. I only see what the video shows, so I have no idea what disturbance may have been caused and it probably was an unnecessary charge.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2016, 03:20:00 PM
    Video Exposes NYPD for Falsifying Charges Against a Great Grandpa After a Cop Ran Him Over

    Brooklyn, NY – Falsely charged with endangering the life of a police officer, an innocent great-grandfather suffered two fractured vertebrae in his neck after a reckless NYPD cop lost control of his vehicle and crashed into the pedestrian. Although the great-grandfather recently received a $2.9 million settlement from the city, the officer and his sergeant have not been charged for allegedly writing a false police report to justify the jaywalking charge and denying proper medical attention.

    On August 7, 2012, great-grandfather, José Flores was crossing the street when NYPD Officer Thomas Hopper lost control of his motor scooter and crashed into the elderly man. A surveillance video that recorded the crash revealed Hopper’s scooter skidding across the pavement at high speed when he sent Flores into the air, landing on his head. Instead of showing even an ounce of compassion for the severely injured man, Hopper charged him with endangering the life of a cop.


    Claiming that Flores had suddenly darted into the street from behind two parked cars, Hopper reportedly told Sergeant Colleen Price that he had no way to avoid the collision. But the surveillance video revealed Flores was not standing beside a parked car, had looked both ways before crossing, and had been in plain view during broad daylight before Hopper lost control of his scooter.

    Suffering from two fractured vertebrae in his neck, Flores was transported to nearby Brookdale Hospital when Hopper and Price allegedly pressured the hospital staff to discharge him without even taking an X-ray. Instead of releasing Flores, the police locked him up in jail for 36 hours for an open container summons from 2009. According to Flores, the other inmates gave him their sandwiches to use as a pillow because his neck had been in agony.

    After dismissing the warrant, a judge recommended Flores immediately seek medical attention for his injured neck. Diagnosed with two fractured vertebrae, Flores spent the next four months in the hospital wearing a halo brace before he was finally discharged. A few months later, he underwent major surgery on his neck. Diagnosed with dementia a month before her husband’s accident, Flores’ wife suffered a heart attack three months after his arrest and died while he remained hospitalized.

    Eventually acquitted of the charges against him, Flores filed a lawsuit accusing Hopper and Price of writing a false police report, discharging him from the hospital prematurely, and wrongfully arresting him. Instead of allowing the lawsuit to go to trial this month, the city agreed to give Flores a $2.9 million settlement.

    “I wasn’t surprised they eventually settled it,” Flores’ attorney, Steven Goldstein told the Gothamist on Tuesday. “It’s a terrible case. It was the worst-slash-best case I’ve ever had. The city just did everything they possibly could to make this a great case. Everything they could have possibly done to make the case better and better, they did.”

    Although the city decided to settle the lawsuit, the reckless NYPD officer and his police sergeant currently do not face any criminal charges. Besides crashing police scooters into innocent great-grandfathers and falsifying police reports, Hopper was suspended from the department in 2009 for pulling his gun on a fellow officer. NYPD Officer Joseph Giordano sued the force after Hopper pulled out his service weapon and threatened him for refusing to replace Hopper on the switchboard during his meal-break.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/great-grandfather-receives-3-million-settlement-cop-breaks-neck-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 27, 2016, 03:22:38 PM
    But.. I don't think that case was made here. That it happens.. certainly. There are calls that occur every day where officers deal with an incident and then discuss possible charges. They "know" something ain't right, or there is an ordinance or law that covers what they are dealing with but if it isn't a common thing, they often confer. That's what happened here in the discussion. I don't think they lied about people telling them there was a dude with a visible gun down the street and they were concerned. I don't know the laws in Connecticut but they also may be referring to what we have in Texas as Pedestrian in the roadway. The legal description of the roadway can include medians  and islands.  In his case, he was on the shoulder which is considered the roadway at one point and on an island in another.  reckless use of the highway and creating a disturbance may have been lawful possible charges. I only see what the video shows, so I have no idea what disturbance may have been caused and it probably was an unnecessary charge.









    We believe you are a good cop.
    And have good thoughts & deeds.

    What is troubling is the constant need you seem to have to find some form of
    excuse or defense for All the Scumbag abusing cops that are posted
    up on this thread.

    If it was a Scumbags criminal thread and we were continually
    trying to find a tiny excuse / loophole to try & justify there actions
    i believe you would be Worried & quite rightly so.
    So would I.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 28, 2016, 08:05:55 AM








    We believe you are a good cop.
    And have good thoughts & deeds.

    What is troubling is the constant need you seem to have to find some form of
    excuse or defense for All the Scumbag abusing cops that are posted
    up on this thread.

    If it was a Scumbags criminal thread and we were continually
    trying to find a tiny excuse / loophole to try & justify there actions
    i believe you would be Worried & quite rightly so.
    So would I.

    I'm taking meds for it..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on January 28, 2016, 09:24:02 AM
    why don't they prosecute cops when they're proven 100% to have lied on a report? 

    they would have sent this person to PRISON on this lie - and luckily video saved them - why in the world aren't THEY going to prison? 

    It's the #1 reason people don't trust cops - NO ACCOUNTABILITY.   You have trump supporters that'd blow a cop if it'd make his shift easier so he could crack a few more darker skulls.  They don't care that liars don't go go prison.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on January 28, 2016, 10:34:58 AM
    Pigs = Shit
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 28, 2016, 12:46:51 PM
    But.. I don't think that case was made here. That it happens.. certainly. There are calls that occur every day where officers deal with an incident and then discuss possible charges. They "know" something ain't right, or there is an ordinance or law that covers what they are dealing with but if it isn't a common thing, they often confer. That's what happened here in the discussion. I don't think they lied about people telling them there was a dude with a visible gun down the street and they were concerned. I don't know the laws in Connecticut but they also may be referring to what we have in Texas as Pedestrian in the roadway. The legal description of the roadway can include medians  and islands.  In his case, he was on the shoulder which is considered the roadway at one point and on an island in another.  reckless use of the highway and creating a disturbance may have been lawful possible charges. I only see what the video shows, so I have no idea what disturbance may have been caused and it probably was an unnecessary charge.

    See, this is the "us vs. them" mentality I talk about. Here's a clear case of cops fabricating charges and it's caught on video. And you are trying to explain it away. With every single post you make in this thread, you make a choice: which side of the blue line to be on. And every single time you choose to be on the side of law enforcement.

    I don't doubt you're a good person or a good cop, but you have the same problem all cops have. You've been indoctrinated to believe that the cops are your family and family sticks together against an evil public that's out to get you all.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 01:16:31 PM
    Remember this incident?

    No Charges for Cops Who ‘Accidentally’ Fired 107 Bullets at an Innocent Mom and Daughter

    Los Angeles, CA – Exposing the double standard between police and civilians, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday that no criminal charges will be filed against the eight LAPD officers responsible for nearly killing an innocent woman and her daughter. Although the cops ambushed the unarmed women without warning and fired over 100 bullets without provocation, the district attorney justified the case of mistaken identity due to the fact that the officers involved were afraid and incompetent.

    At 5 a.m. on February 7, 2013, Margie Carranza and her mother, Emma Hernandez, were delivering newspapers throughout a residential neighborhood in Torrance when eight LAPD cops suddenly opened fire. As Carranza suffered cuts from the flying glass, Hernandez was shot twice in the back while trying to protect her daughter. One bullet exited just above Hernandez’s collarbone, while the other bullet struck her lower back, near her spine. A fragment of shattered glass also flew into her eye.

    After firing 107 bullets at the innocent women, the LAPD cops ordered them out of the vehicle and immediately realized their mistake. Instead of a 33-year-old black man, two Hispanic women exited the pickup truck and demanded to know, “Why did you shoot at us?”

    Instead of rendering first aid or even apologizing for the act of attempted murder, the officers called for paramedics while refusing to offer any explanation for the ambush. Awakened by the gunfire, residents emerged from their homes to find their vehicles, houses, and front doors riddled with bullets. With five bullet holes in the entryway to his house, one neighbor asked, “How do you mistake two Hispanic women, one who is 71, for a large black male?”

    Twenty-five minutes after the shooting, Torrance police officers stopped David Perdue a few blocks away as he was driving to the beach to go surfing before work. After the officers questioned him and ordered Perdue to turn around, he complied with their commands and began driving away when another Torrance police cruiser raced towards his vehicle and broadsided him. Suffering from a concussion and back pain, Perdue remained in his vehicle as an officer opened fire on him.

    Although Torrance PD and LAPD were searching for a black man driving a gray Nissan Titan, Perdue is a white man who was driving a black Honda Ridgeline. Carranza and Hernandez were driving a blue Toyota Tacoma when the officers ambushed them without bothering to confirm their identities.

    The officers responsible for nearly killing Carranza and her mother had been tasked with guarding the house of LAPD Capt. Justin Eisenberg. Because the police captain had been a member of the Board of Rights that voted to terminate former Officer Christopher Dorner, police suspected Dorner might attempt to kill Eisenberg or his family. The police captain was also named in Dorner’s manifesto, which he posted online after the initial murders.

    In his manifesto, Dorner accused Sgt. Teresa Evans of kicking a restrained suspect named Christopher Gettler in the chest and face. After filing a complaint against Evans, Dorner was labeled a liar by the department and subsequently fired. Dorner also pointed out in his manifesto that many of the officers involved in the Rodney King beating and Rampart scandal during the 1990s have been promoted to supervisory or command positions within the LAPD and surrounding departments.

    On Wednesday, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office announced that LAPD officers Jess Faber, Marlon Franco, Sergio Gramajo, John Hart, Geoff Lear, Deshon Parker, Jonathan Roman, and Sgt. John Valdez would not face charges for the attempted murders of Carranza and her mother. Due to the fact that the entire police department was scared of one man and could not be held accountable for their incompetent actions, none of the officers who fired 107 bullets at two unarmed, innocent women will face prosecution. Although the women received a $4.2 million settlement and a new pickup truck, no cop will be held accountable for firing the first shot or failing to correctly identify the make/model of the vehicle along with the race and gender of its occupants.

    Although LAPD Chief Charlie Beck announced during the manhunt that officials would re-examine Dorner’s allegations of police misconduct, nearly three years have passed without any results. Instead, Sgt. Teresa Evans filed a lawsuit against the LAPD last year alleging racial discrimination against her. Evans is white.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/charges-lapd-cops-fired-100-bullets-innocent-mom-daughter-dorner-manhunt/

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-no-charges-lapd-shooting-newspaper-delivery-women-dorner-manhunt-20160127-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 28, 2016, 01:43:06 PM
    The salient point: "no cop will be held accountable for firing the first shot or failing to correctly identify the make/model of the vehicle along with the race and gender of its occupants."

    FUCKING BULLSHIT.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 28, 2016, 02:29:24 PM
    See, this is the "us vs. them" mentality I talk about. Here's a clear case of cops fabricating charges and it's caught on video. And you are trying to explain it away. With every single post you make in this thread, you make a choice: which side of the blue line to be on. And every single time you choose to be on the side of law enforcement.

    I don't doubt you're a good person or a good cop, but you have the same problem all cops have. You've been indoctrinated to believe that the cops are your family and family sticks together against an evil public that's out to get you all.

    Care to bet lunch I can find more than one time where I clearly come down on the side of the citizen verses cop?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 02:49:32 PM
    Cop who shot and killed Laquan McDonald in hail of 16 bullets had broken his dashcam deliberately and unplugged the microphone, records show


    The Chicago cop accused of slaying black teenager Laquan McDonald in a hail of 16 bullets had broken his dashcam on purpose and didn't sync his microphone, records have revealed.

    Officer Jason Van Dyke, 37, who gunned down the 17-year-old boy in October 2014, was accused of causing 'intentional' damage to the device in the months leading up to the shooting- and he isn't the only one.

    More than 1,800 maintenance logs reviewed by DNAinfo Chicago show that in 80 percent of cases, the lack of audio or problems with the recording device was down to the cop's deliberate actions.

    It means there was no sound on thousands of dashcam videos used to investigate police interactions with suspects - including the shooting of McDonald.

    The records show officers stashed microphones in their squad car glove boxes and pulled out batteries.

    Microphones were also broken or went missing and sometimes dashcam systems didn't have any sound recorders plugged in at all.

    Four other police vehicles at McDonald's shooting scene failed to record audio. Only two of the five vehicles had dashcams that actually captured video.

    On June 17, 2014, police technicians reported fixing a dashcam wiring issue in police vehicle No. 6412, the squad shared by Van Dyke and his partner Joseph Walsh.

    It was fixed around three months after it was reported broken, records show.

    A day later, the same vehicle's dashcam system was reported busted again.

    This time it took until October 8, 2014, to complete repairs of what technicians described as 'intentional damage'.

    Twelve days days later, on October 20, dashcam video recorded from squad car No. 6412 showed Van Dyke shooting and killing McDonald.

    However no audio on the tape was picked up.

    The video that went viral, and led to Van Dyke's murder charge was taken from a different squad car, but it, too, had no audio.

    The dashcam in police vehicle No. 8489, shared by officers Thomas Gaffney and Joseph McElligott the night of McDonald's shooting, recorded 37 'event videos' in October 2014, and had an operational dashcam the night of the shooting.

    But 'due to disk error' no video was recorded at the shooting scene, according to police reports.

    On November 21, 2014, a review of 10 videos downloaded from Van Dyke's squad car dashcam determined it was 'apparent … that personnel have failed to sync the MICs [sic]'.

    The records show Van Dyk and Walsh asked for their dashcam to be repaired five days before Laquan's shooting.

    However on October 31, technicians found 'no problems' with the equipment, DNAinfo reported.

    Van Dyke has been charged with first-degree murder in Laquan's shooting.

    Walsh, who backed up Van Dyke throughout the investigation, has been placed on desk duty as the investigation into his conduct continues.

    Daily Mail Online has asked the Chicago Police Department for comment. 

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3421247/Cop-shot-killed-Laquan-McDonald-hail-16-bullets-broken-dashcam-deliberately-unplugged-microphone-records-show.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 28, 2016, 04:26:10 PM
    I'm taking meds for it..






    very please to hear that.
    May i suggest taking off the rose tinted glasses you look at cops through.

    Though I was expecting a Slightly more detailed response.

    Perhaps you can see how thin the ice your treading is with these constant
    excuses & loopholes for cops awful behavior.

    We'll keep a watch to see the same rational from you when it comes
    to defending Scumbags & Dindu Nuffins.. ::)
     ;)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 28, 2016, 04:33:34 PM
    Cop who shot and killed Laquan McDonald in hail of 16 bullets had broken his dashcam deliberately and unplugged the microphone, records show

    • Officer Jason Van Dyke caused 'intentional damage' to recording device
    • He is also believed to have detached the 'mic' so there would be no sound
    • His conduct was put in maintenance logs before the deadly shooting
    • The 37-year-old cop gunned down the black teenager in October 2014
    • Was charged with murder after footage of the shooting surfaced
    • The records show 80 percent of cases where the dashcam was broken was because of the cop's deliberate actions

    The Chicago cop accused of slaying black teenager Laquan McDonald in a hail of 16 bullets had broken his dashcam on purpose and didn't sync his microphone, records have revealed.

    Officer Jason Van Dyke, 37, who gunned down the 17-year-old boy in October 2014, was accused of causing 'intentional' damage to the device in the months leading up to the shooting- and he isn't the only one.

    More than 1,800 maintenance logs reviewed by DNAinfo Chicago show that in 80 percent of cases, the lack of audio or problems with the recording device was down to the cop's deliberate actions.

    It means there was no sound on thousands of dashcam videos used to investigate police interactions with suspects - including the shooting of McDonald.

    The records show officers stashed microphones in their squad car glove boxes and pulled out batteries.

    Microphones were also broken or went missing and sometimes dashcam systems didn't have any sound recorders plugged in at all.

    Four other police vehicles at McDonald's shooting scene failed to record audio. Only two of the five vehicles had dashcams that actually captured video.

    On June 17, 2014, police technicians reported fixing a dashcam wiring issue in police vehicle No. 6412, the squad shared by Van Dyke and his partner Joseph Walsh.

    It was fixed around three months after it was reported broken, records show.

    A day later, the same vehicle's dashcam system was reported busted again.

    This time it took until October 8, 2014, to complete repairs of what technicians described as 'intentional damage'.

    Twelve days days later, on October 20, dashcam video recorded from squad car No. 6412 showed Van Dyke shooting and killing McDonald.

    However no audio on the tape was picked up.

    The video that went viral, and led to Van Dyke's murder charge was taken from a different squad car, but it, too, had no audio.

    The dashcam in police vehicle No. 8489, shared by officers Thomas Gaffney and Joseph McElligott the night of McDonald's shooting, recorded 37 'event videos' in October 2014, and had an operational dashcam the night of the shooting.

    But 'due to disk error' no video was recorded at the shooting scene, according to police reports.

    On November 21, 2014, a review of 10 videos downloaded from Van Dyke's squad car dashcam determined it was 'apparent … that personnel have failed to sync the MICs [sic]'.

    The records show Van Dyk and Walsh asked for their dashcam to be repaired five days before Laquan's shooting.

    However on October 31, technicians found 'no problems' with the equipment, DNAinfo reported.

    Van Dyke has been charged with first-degree murder in Laquan's shooting.

    Walsh, who backed up Van Dyke throughout the investigation, has been placed on desk duty as the investigation into his conduct continues.

    Daily Mail Online has asked the Chicago Police Department for comment. 

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3421247/Cop-shot-killed-Laquan-McDonald-hail-16-bullets-broken-dashcam-deliberately-unplugged-microphone-records-show.html







    Yet Again Heart warming & confidence building behavior By the 'To serve & protect ourselves' Bunch.
    Fucking about with official equipment but that's OK lads.

    only peoples lives at stake.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 28, 2016, 04:50:38 PM
    Care to bet lunch I can find more than one time where I clearly come down on the side of the citizen verses cop?

    Well, I'm sure if we're talking about a video-taped case of a cop shooting a person that's running away in the back,  there are instances where you've come down against the cop, but not without caveats about how difficult the job of a cop is and how split-second decisions and blah, blah blah.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 11:15:29 PM
    Man paralyzed by deputy removes shirt to show the jury his wounds after police shot him four times for riding his bike into traffic


    A paralyzed young black man winced in pain Thursday as his brother removed his suit jacket and shirt to show a federal jury bullet wound scars from being shot by a sheriff's deputy who had stopped him for riding his bicycle into traffic.

    Dontrell Stephens, 22, told the six women and two men hearing his case that he had his hands over his head and was unarmed when Palm Beach County Deputy Adams Lin began shooting in September 2013. He pointed at a scar on the inside of his right elbow, the bullet still lodged on the outside of the elbow.

    His attorney, Jack Scarola, said outside court that the wound and the bullet's position bolster Stephens' testimony that his arms were in the air and contradicts Lin's statements that Stephens had dropped his arms and was reaching into his back waistband when the officer began firing. If his arms were down, Scarola said, Stephens could not have been hit on the inside of the elbow.

    Stephens is suing Lin and the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office, alleging his civil rights were violated. He is seeking in excess of $5 million to cover medical treatment and future care.
    The case is one of several across the country that have sparked debate about the shooting of unarmed black males by law enforcement officers. Federal Magistrate Judge Barry S. Seltzer has instructed the jury that they are only to consider the specific circumstances of Stephens' shooting and no other.

    Scarola said Thursday was the first time Stephens and Lin had seen each other since the shooting.
    Lin, an Asian-American, has been cleared of criminal wrongdoing by sheriff's investigators and local prosecutors and has since been promoted to sergeant.
    He has said that after reaching for his waistband, Stephens lurched forward with a dark object in his left hand that he thought was a gun.

    With Stephens sitting in his wheelchair in the courthouse hallway before he testified, Lin looked away as he walked past. At one point, one of Stephens' relatives turned his wheelchair so he wouldn't be facing down the hallway toward where Lin was standing.

    Stephens told the jury in a calm, clear voice that he rode to a convenience on Sept. 13, 2013, and noticed Lin's patrol car parked nearby as he pedaled away.

    He said that while riding, he got a cellphone call from a friend and talked with the phone in his right hand until he heard a short siren burst behind him as he turned into a parking lot. He looked over his left shoulder as Lin turned on his blue lights, which is confirmed by video from Lin's dashboard camera.

    He rode a few more feet, jumped off his bike and then walked between two parked cars toward where Lin had moved — out of the dash cam's range.

    'I asked the officer what I was being stopped for,' Stephens said. He said Lin did not reply but had a 9 mm handgun pointed at him. Stephens indicated that they were about 6 feet apart facing each other.
    'I felt terrified, scared for my life,' Stephens said.
    'He told me to put my hands up. As soon as I put my hands up, he started shooting,' Stephens said.

    The video shows Stephens turning as he comes back into the dash cam's view and then falling to the ground, his cellphone still in his right hand. Lin stands over him with his gun drawn and orders Stephens to roll from his back to his stomach. Stephens testified that he couldn't move.
    Stephens said his last memory of that day was being in the back of the ambulance. He awoke several days later in the hospital, staring into a bright light.

    He said he is living with his three brothers in a small apartment. He has undergone rehabilitation but has no control of his bladder or bowels.
    'It's pretty bad to have pain at night and day. I try my best myself to handle it, but when it's real bad, I cry,' Stephens said. '...There's no other way I can handle it.'
    Stephens is expected to be cross-examined by Lin's attorneys Friday.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3421819/Man-paralyzed-deputy-removes-shirt-shows-jury-wounds.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 11:24:53 PM
    Chicago Cop Plans on Suing Estate of Teen He Killed Because He was Left with Emotional Distress

    The Chicago police officer who shot and killed a teenager wielding a baseball bat along with an innocent bystander last month plans to sue the teen’s estate because of the emotional distress he has suffered since killing them both.

    Robert Rialmo, who has been on the force for three years, said he was in fear for his life when he killed Quintonio LeGrier the day after Christmas.

    He also said he did not notice Bettie Jones behind the door of the two-story house.

    Jones, 55, lived downstairs. LeGrier, 19, was visiting his parents from college, who lived upstairs.

    His father, Antonio LeGrier, who owned the house and rented the downstairs flat to Jones, had called police, saying his son was having a mental episode and trying to break the bedroom down with the bat.

    It has since been discovered that Quintonio also called 911 three times, asking for help, giving dispatchers the home address, but only referring to himself as “Q.”

    As a result, he was hung up on.

    Minutes later, Antonio LeGrier called police. He then called Jones to tell her to be on the lookout for police. It was around 4:20 a.m.

    When Rialmo arrived, Jones apparently opened the door and Quintonio came running down the stairs with the bat. Rialmo opened fire, killing them both.

    Both bodies were found inside the doorway in the hallway. Rialmo was said to have been standing on the curb, according to NBC Chicago.

    LeGrier had been shot six times, including two graze wounds, as well as on the left side of his chest, lower left side of his back, right buttock and left arm. Jones was shot once in the heart.

    The shooting left Rialmo distraught, leaving him no choice but to file a lawsuit.

    According to WGN-TV:

    The police officer who shot and killed teenager Quintonio LeGrier on the day after Christmas will sue LeGrier’s estate.

    Officer Robert Rialmo answered a domestic disturbance call in West Garfield Park and wound up shooting LeGrier and a neighbor, he says, because LeGrier attacked him.

    Rialmo’s attorney Joel Brodsky confirmed for WGN-TV this morning that he’ll file a civil suit against LeGrier’s estate in a couple of weeks, citing emotional distress and assault.

    Rialmo’s planned lawsuit appears to be a defensive move against the lawsuits filed by the families of the victims. But maybe he figures he can end up owning the home where he killed the two.

    In the video interview below, Antonio LeGrier said that after Rialmo shot both people, cops make no effort to try and save their lives.

     https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/28/chicago-cop-plans-on-suing-estate-of-teen-he-killed-because-he-was-left-with-emotional-distress/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 11:28:13 PM
    Massachusetts Man Awarded $72,500 Settlement After he was Arrested Video Recording Cop Spewing Profanity

    A Massachusetts man who was arrested on wiretapping charges for video recording a cop in front of his home yelling profanities into a phone was awarded a $72,500 settlement Monday.

    George Thompson, a lifelong cook, said he is investing the money into a food truck named Bozo’s – in honor of the cop who arrested him – Fall River police officer Thomas Barboza.

    Barboza, who received a one-day suspension for the profanities, is more than welcome to dine at Bozo’s after it opens this summer, Thompson said in an interview with Photography is Not a Crime Monday evening.

    “The first meal is on me,” said Thompson.

    A generous offer considering Barboza is more than likely responsible for deleting the footage from Thompson’s iPhone after he seized it as “evidence” – not that he was ever charged with destruction of evidence.

    But Barboza is unlikely to go near the food truck as he has been trying hard to avoid Thompson since he made the arrest on January 6, 2014, refusing to make eye contact with the 53-year-old man when the two run into each other at the local Dunkin Donuts near the Fall River courthouse on those days when he had hearings.

    “He runs away,” Thompson said.

    Thompson, it turned out, became his worst nightmare, hanging up a sign in front of his home that read, “bad cop, no donut #32,” on the day of his release from jail, keeping it there for more than a year – ignoring a request from a city councilwoman to remove it – taking it down only because he moved after his landlord decided to sell the place.

    The 32 is Barboza’s badge number, a low number indicating he is an old-timer at the department. A man who has learned he can do what he wants, when he wants, all because he carries a badge.

    But he finally met his match with Thompson, who said  he will net $47,000 after the lawyers take their cut, a nice sum to launch his food truck business.

    “I’m reinvesting in the city,” Thompson said.

    On the day of his arrest in early January 2014, Thompson said that he was sitting on his front porch, noticing Barboza pacing back and forth speaking into his phone for almost an hour, saying “fuck” in almost every sentence.

    After watching an elderly woman walking by who seemed offended by his words, Thompson told the cop to watch his language.

    But Barboza told him to “shut the fuck up and mind your own business.”

    That is when he pulled out his phone to record, which prompted Barboza to rush onto the property to arrest him.

    “That’s right, I’m videotaping you,” Thompson told Barboza, according to the officer’s own arrest report, which also confirmed that Barboza was working off-duty security for a nearby construction company.

    He then followed up that statement by writing that he noticed Thompson was holding the “phone to his chest area in a hiding motion.”

    That last detail was crucial for Barboza to include in his report because Massachusetts wiretapping laws state that it is illegal to secretly record a person without their consent, even if that person has no expectation of privacy.

    Of course, it’s a little difficult to prove a person is secretly recording you when they not only announce they are recording you, but they are holding the phone at chest level, which is the best way to keep it steady while handholding the phone.

    And what the hell is a “hiding motion” anyway?

    What happened was that Barboza noticed he was being recorded but did not appreciate being recorded, so he accused Thompson of secretly recording him. Cop logic. Twisting the truth without caring about the obviousness of it, knowing that cops investigate themselves.

    Thompson said Barboza called him a “welfare bum” while arresting him, an accusation Barboza denied to internal affairs.

    However, Barboza did admit to telling Thompson that he was going to “fuck him hard on paper,” which is basically an admission that he was going to fabricate facts. There is no other way to decipher that statement.

    But even in his report, he managed to fuck himself harder than he fucked Thompson.

    The whole thing sounds absurd if you’re not accustomed to hearing police lies, but it’s all there on paper in 72 pages of discovery, which you can read here.

    And it gets even more absurd.

    At some point while the iPhone was in police custody, the phone was reset to default factory settings, a development that police tried to blame on Thompson, saying he did so remotely.

    The Fall River Police Department then hired a forensics expert who determined all the files on the phone were deleted prior to it being restored to default settings. But the expert was unable to determine when the files were deleted, so you get the picture. The files were deleted but they couldn’t prove police deleted the footage, even though they were the ones in possession of the phone the entire time.

    It wasn’t like Thompson was able to delete all the files as Barboza was pouncing on him to shove him in the back of a police car.

    Fall River police returned his phone on May 28, 2014 and internal affairs eventually determined there was no “malicious intent” behind the arrest or the deletion of the footage, concluding that the footage was “inadvertently” deleted because the cops kept trying to enter the pass-coded phone but failing.

    No, you really can’t make this stuff up. It’s all there in the discovery in reports signed by Lieutenant Ronald Furtado.

    The bottom line is this. Barboza had no right to arrest Thompson. And he had no right to seize his camera as evidence. And Fall River police had no right to tamper with his phone unless they had obtained a subpoena.

    The 72-page report states that Thompson eventually gave them the passcode to his phone, which I have yet to confirm with him as he is now sleeping, but that passcode was given to them on January 15, 2014, nine days after his arrest and seven days after the phone had already been wiped clean of all files and restored to factory settings.

    The wiretapping charges against Thompson were dismissed in April 2014 but his phone was not returned to him until the following month because they insisted upon a court order, according to the Bay State Examiner, who tried to interview Barboza, only for him to hop in his car and drive away as you can see in the video below.

    Yet the Fall River Police Department never sough a court order to view the contents of Thompson’s phone.

    Thompson filed his lawsuit in December 2014,  which you can read here.

    He said he was offered a settlement of $50,000 in August of 2015, but he demanded $60,000.

    That was when he was told they would settle with him in 2016 because they did not want the settlement to influence the upcoming November 2015 election of Mayor Sam Sutter, who happened to be the district attorney trying to prosecute him for the wiretapping charges only a year earlier.

    Sutter lost the election anyway to a 24-year-old man named Jasiel Correia, who took office two weeks ago. He is Fall River’s third mayor in 13 months.

    Sutter had only taken the mayoral reigns a year ago after resigning as Bristol County District Attorney when the previous mayor, Will Flanagan, was defeated in a recall election.

    It’s a clusterfuck of a city and Thompson said he is not going to stop his rabble-rousing.  He still wants to hold Barboza and the police department accountable for deleting his footage, so he plans on attending the next city council meeting and hand out copies of the 72 pages of discovery.

    Besides the one-day suspension for cursing, Barboza was forbidden from working off-duty security detail for 15 days.

    The real crime besides the unlawful arrest is the illegal destruction of evidence. Barboza may never be disciplined for that, but he will also never live that one down.

    Especially when the clients start lining up at Bozo’s, which they will judging by customer reviews of the restaurant where he currently works.

    UPDATE: David Milton, George Thompson’s attorney, briefly spoke with PINAC by phone. Milton, a prominent Boston civil rights attorney, has long been associated with the right to record. He was part of the team that represented Simon Glik, whose lawsuit against the Boston Police Department set a precedent that recording police is protected by the First Amendment.

    Of Thompson’s settlement, Milton had this to say:

    "The settlement is a great result and a vindication of Mr. Thompson’s—and all of our—right to record police in public … Hopefully the money will result in better training for police officers to not arrest people who record them and also not to delete footage of them when taking cell phones into custody … Fall River and other cities around the Commonwealth need to recognize that it is perfectly legal and it’s a constitutional right for people to record officers doing their duties in public. And George Thompson deserves credit for fighting back against the police department that violated his rights."

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/26/massachusetts-man-awarded-72500-settlement-for-unlawful-arrest-of-recording-cop-using-profanity/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 28, 2016, 11:31:46 PM
    New Jersey Cop Sentenced to Five Years in Prison After Dash Cam Video Proved He Lied on Arrest Report

    A New Jersey cop who did not think twice about lying on a police report to send a man to prison was sentenced to five years in prison on Friday without the eligibility of parole.

    And only because his dash cam contradicted his police report.

    Otherwise, it may have been Marcus Jeter sentenced to prison on charges of eluding, resisting arrest, aggravated assault and attempting to disarm a police officer.

    Instead, it was Bloomfield police officer Orlando Trinidad convicted on charges of simple assault, official misconduct, conspiracy to commit official misconduct, tampering with public records, falsifying public records and false swearing.

    His partner in crime, Bloomfield police officer Sean Courter, was also convicted last November and was scheduled to be sentenced on Friday, but his sentencing was postponed, according to the Associated Press.

    But like Trinidad, Courter is also facing a mandatory minimum sentence of five years.

    A third cop who also falsified reports, Albert Sutterlin, pleaded guilty in 2013 and agreed to testify against the other two cops in a five-week trial that ended with their convictions in November 2015.

    “I am truly sorry for everything that has transpired,” Trinidad said through tears, while wearing a prison uniform and with his hands cuffed in front of him. “I am a different man today as I stand here before you. I am a humbled man.”

    “He was a good cop and now he’s lost all that,” his attorney, Frank Arleo, added.

    Now he will be a convict. A career flushed down the toilet because he figured he could lie and get away with it.

    And he would have gotten away with it had he not driven his car in the opposite direction on the Garden State Parkway, striking Jeter’s car after it had been pulled over by Courter on the night of June 6, 2012.

    That aggressive act positioned his patrol car directly in front of Jeter’s car, showing Jeter’s had his hands raised when both Trinidad and Courter yelled at him to get out of the car, shattering his window and dragging him out, laying him down on the ground while ordering him to stop resisting and to stop grabbing their gun – obviously for the benefit of the camera.

    “I’m not grabbing,” Jeter kept saying. “I did nothing wrong.”

    Sutterlin walked up moments before they dragged him out of the car and later claimed he saw nothing, but went ahead with the lies in his report because he just assumed his fellow cops were telling the truth.

    This is how it all unraveled, according to NJ.com:

    The series of events leading to Jeter’s arrest began when Courter and a third officer, Albert Sutterlin, responded to a domestic-related call at Jeter’s Bloomfield home. His girlfriend’s sister called 911 after Jeter threw the girlfriend’s cell phone down a staircase during a verbal argument.

    Soon after the officers arrived, Jeter left the residence. Courter has claimed Jeter was drunk and fled after he had ordered him to stop, but Jeter has said he was not drunk and that Courter indicated he could leave the residence.

    Among other alleged lies, Arleo claimed Jeter was lying about being allowed to leave the home, noting how Courter immediately ran to his patrol vehicle and reported to other police officers via radio that “he just took off on me.”

    After Courter later stopped Jeter on Parkway, followed by Sutterlin, the officers approached Jeter’s vehicle with their guns drawn and ordered him to get out. Trinidad arrived at the scene and struck the front of Jeter’s car with his patrol vehicle.

    Jeter told ABC News that he did not get out of the car because he was in fear for his life considering he was surrounded by two cops with guns drawn, including one with a shotgun.

    Initially, only Courter’s video was released to his attorney prior to his trial. But when his attorney demanded Trinidad’s footage, that was what led to Jeter’s charges being dismissed.

    Jeter has since filed a lawsuit.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/23/new-jersey-cop-sentenced-to-five-years-in-prison-after-dash-cam-video-proved-he-lied-on-arrest-report/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:38:38 AM
    http://news.yahoo.com/police-man-shot-trooper-told-him-die-soon-102114307.html#

    Pretty messed up

    No caveat here
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:39:44 AM
    WTH? Dude has mental issues.. his story is he tailed people in his personal vehicle? Which likely isn't calibrated AND likely violates policy of not enforcing misdemeanor violations when off duty. Guy needs to be fired, prosecuted for falsifying an official document and any other charge that fits..

    nor here
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:40:33 AM
    The officers who witnessed it and lied about it in their reports, and didn't intervene should get the same sentence as the main person. No different than laws on organized crime. If you are driving the getaway car you get the same sentence as the person inside the bank. The theory applies here as well. Disgusting behavior by criminals with a badge

    or here..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:41:13 AM
    If he were still alive.. I'd advocate the death penalty

    no caveat here..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:42:40 AM
    very very very bad shooting. Should do time.

    another..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:43:54 AM
    'You tarnished the badge for police officers everywhere,' Sacramento Superior Court Judge Ernest Sawtelle said as he sentenced Baker, the Sacramento Bee newspaper reported on Wednesday. 'For your crimes, you will be sentenced to life"

    If the death penalty wasn't an option, I guess this will have to do. And I do hope he gets what's coming to him there.



    and here..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:45:49 AM

    Looked like excessive force to me

    hmmm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:47:03 AM
    The flinch and stutter step with the head movement certainly was there. Not sure why the author of the article didn't see it, I noticed it before I read the article. So the gun fired unintentionally. The problem as I see it is guns generally never fire without the trigger being pulled so it is highly unlikely it was a defective gun, and more likely it was a defective cop. That he never mentions it ... no matter how it happened, that is problematic  

    is this perhaps a caveat?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:48:09 AM
    in my opinion, there is a mixture of bad policing/police officers and misunderstanding policing that is discussed here. While we always don't agree on which it is, My hope is to on occasion, show the difference. If someone happens to see it from that perspective and it reduces the animosity towards police in general, that is a good thing. On the flip side, I can certainly see all is not rosy and there are issues and examples of what's wrong with policing. For example, prior to running a warrant on a house our department has several specific checks they do to insure it is the right address. Assumptions are never allowed and it has to be concrete evidence. It's amazing to me that there are still agencies that will occasionally run a no knock warrant  on a house and have the wrong address or the person hasn't lived there in awhile. That to me is just mind boggling.       

    is this unreasonable?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 09:51:03 AM
    I went back 9 pages for those examples

    What you may be calling a caveat is me wanting to share insight into what may be happening that might not be obvious.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 29, 2016, 10:05:47 AM
    "No Cost" License Plate Readers Are Turning Texas Police into Mobile Debt Collectors and Data Miners

    Vigilant Solutions, one of the country’s largest brokers of vehicle surveillance technology, is offering a hell of a deal to law enforcement agencies in Texas: a whole suite of automated license plate reader (ALPR) equipment and access to the company’s massive databases and analytical tools—and it won’t cost the agency a dime.

    Even though the technology is marketed as budget neutral, that doesn’t mean no one has to pay. Instead, Texas police fund it by gouging people who have outstanding court fines and handing Vigilant all of the data they gather on drivers for nearly unlimited commercial use.

    ALPR refers to high-speed camera networks that capture license plate images, convert the plate numbers into machine-readable text, geotag and time-stamp the information, and store it all in database systems. EFF has long been concerned with this technology, because ALPRs typically capture sensitive location information on all drivers—not just criminal suspects—and, in aggregate, the information can reveal personal information, such as where you go to church, what doctors you visit, and where you sleep at night.

    Vigilant is leveraging H.B. 121, a new Texas law passed in 2015 that allows officers to install credit and debit card readers in their patrol vehicles to take payment on the spot for unpaid court fines, also known as capias warrants. When the law passed, Texas legislators argued that not only would it help local government with their budgets, it would also benefit the public and police. As the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Allen Fletcher, wrote in his official statement of intent:

    [T]he option of making such a payment at the time of arrest could avoid contributing to already crowded jails, save time for arresting officers, and relieve minor offenders suddenly informed of an uncollected payment when pulled over for a routine moving violation from the burden of dealing with an impounded vehicle and the potential inconvenience of finding someone to supervise a child because of an unexpected arrest.

    The bill was supported by criminal justice reform groups such as the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition, but it also raised concerns by respected criminal justice blogger Scott Henson of Grits For Breakfast, who theorized that the law, combined with ALPR technology, could allow police officers to “cherry pick drivers with outstanding warrants instead of looking for current, real-time traffic violations.”

    He further asked:

    Are there enough departments deploying license plate readers to cause concern? Will they use them in such a fashion? How will anyone know? Is it possible to monitor—or better, measure—any shift in on-the-ground police priorities resulting from the new economic incentives created by the bill?

    As it turns out, contracts between between Vigilant and Guadalupe County, the City of Orange, and the City of Kyle in Texas reveal that Henson was right to worry.

    The “warrant redemption” program works like this. The agency is given no-cost license plate readers as well as free access to LEARN-NVLS, the ALPR data system Vigilant says contains more than 2.8-billion plate scans and is growing by more than 70-million scans a month. This also includes a wide variety of analytical and predictive software tools. Also, the agency is merely licensing the technology; Vigilant can take it back at any time.

    The government agency in turn gives Vigilant access to information about all its outstanding court fees, which the company then turns into a hot list to feed into the free ALPR systems. As police cars patrol the city, they ping on license plates associated with the fees. The officer then pulls the driver over and offers them a devil’s bargain: get arrested, or pay the original fine with an extra 25% processing fee tacked on, all of which goes to Vigilant.1 In other words, the driver is paying Vigilant to provide the local police with the technology used to identify and then detain the driver. If the ALPR pings on a parked car, the officer can get out and leave a note to visit Vigilant’s payment website.

    But Vigilant isn’t just compensated with motorists’ cash. The law enforcement agencies are also using the privacy of everyday drivers as currency.

    (https://www.eff.org/files/2016/01/26/vigilant_retention.png)From Vigilant Solutions contract with City of Kyle
    Buried in the fine print of the contract with Vigilant is a clause that says the company also get to keep a copy of all the license-plate data collected by the agency, even after the contract ends. According the company's usage and privacy policy, Vigilant “retains LPR data as long as it has commercial value.” Vigilant can sell or license that information to other law enforcement bodies and potentially use it for other purposes. (See clarification at bottom.)

    In early December 2015, Vigilant issued a press release bragging that Guadalupe County had used the systems to collect on more than 4,500 warrants between April and December 2015. In January 2016, the City of Kyle signed an identical deal with Vigilant. Soon after, Guadalupe County upgraded the contract to allow Vigilant to dispatch its own contractors to collect on capias warrants.

    Update: Buzzfeed has published an in-depth report on how police in Port Arthur, Texas also use Vigilant Solutions ALPR technology to collect fines.

    Alarmingly, in December, Vigilant also quietly issued an apology on its website for a major error: 

    During the second week of December, as part of its Warrant Redemption Program, Vigilant Solutions sent several warrant notices – on behalf of our law enforcement partners – in error to citizens across the state of Texas. A technical error caused us to send warrant notices to the wrong recipients.

    These types of mistakes are not acceptable and we deeply apologize to those who received the warrant correspondence in error and to our law enforcement customers.

    Vigilant is right: this is not acceptable. Yet, the company has not disclosed the extent of the error, how many people were affected, how much money was collected that shouldn’t have been, and what it’s doing to inform and make it up to the people affected. Instead, the company simply stated that it had “conducted a thorough review of the incident and have implemented several internal policies.”

    We’re unlikely to get answers from the government agencies who signed these contracts. To access Vigilant’s powerful online data systems, agencies agree not to disparage the company or even to talk to the press without the company’s permission:
    (https://www.eff.org/files/2016/01/26/vigilant_non-disparagement.png)

    From Vigilant Solutions LEARN-NVLS User Agreement
    You shall not create, publish, distribute, or permit any written, electronically transmitted or other form of publicity material that makes reference to the LEARN LPR Database Server or this Agreement without first submitting the material to Vigilant and receiving written consent from Vigilant thereto…

    You agree not to use proprietary materials or information in any manner that is disparaging. This prohibition is specifically intended to preclude you from cooperating or otherwise agreeing to allow photographs or screenshots to be taken by any member of the media without the express consent of LEARN-NVLS. You also agree not to voluntarily provide ANY information, including interviews, related to LEARN products or its services to any member of the media without the express written consent of LEARN-NVLS.

    You might very well ask at this point about the legality of this scheme. Vigilant anticipated that and provided the City of Kyle with a slide titled “Can I Really Do This?” which cited a law that they believe allows for the 25% surcharge.
    (https://www.eff.org/files/2016/01/26/wrp_-_local_government_code.jpg)
    The law states that a county or municipality “may only charge a fee for the access or service if the fee is designed to recover the costs directly and reasonably incurred in providing the access or service.”

    We believe that a 25% fee is not reasonable and doesn’t recover just the direct costs, since the fee is actually paying for the whole ALPR system, including surveillance capabilities unrelated to warrant redemption, such as access to the giant LEARN-NVLS database and software suite.

    Beyond that, the system raises a whole host of problems:

    It turns police into debt collectors, who have to keep swiping credit cards to keep the free equipment.
    It turns police into data miners, who use the privacy of local drivers as currency.
    It not-so-subtly shifts police priorities from responding to calls and traffic violations to responding to a computer’s instructions.
    Policy makers and the public are unable to effectively evaluate the technology since the contract prohibits police from speaking honestly and openly about the program.
    The model relies on debt: there’s no incentive for criminal justice leaders to work with the community to reduce the number of capias warrants, since that could result in losing the equipment.
    People who have committed no crimes whatsoever have their driving patterns uploaded into a private system and no opportunity to control or watchdog how that data is disseminated.
    There was a time where companies like Vigilant marketed ALPR technology as a way to save kidnapped children, recover stolen cars, and catch violent criminals. But as we’ve long warned, ALPRs in fact are being deployed for far more questionable practices.

    The Texas public should be outraged at the terrible deals their representatives are signing with this particular surveillance contractor, and the legislature should reexamine the unintended consequences of the law they passed last year.

    Update January 28, 2016: We have updated this piece to include the City of Orange's contract with Vigilant Solutions.

    Clarification January 28, 2016: We originally stated that data collected under this program may be sold "potentially to private companies such as insurance firms and repossession agencies." Vigilant generally agrees in its contracts and policies that ALPR data collected by law enforcement agencies will only be shared with (i.e. sold to) other law enforcement agencies. However, data collected by Vigilant directly may be shared for a variety of purposes, including insurance and repossession. We used the word "potentially" because it gets murky when it comes to ALPR systems licensed to law enforcement that are not the property of the agency, but rather are Vigilant's property attached to a police vehicle. Vigilant's contract with the City of Kyle, for example, allows Vigilant to use the data "in accordance with, and pursuant to, a permissible purpose set forth under the federal Drivers Privacy Protection Act (DPPA)." The DPPA includes many permissible purposes, such as insurance purposes and or private investigations, but it also usually only regulates vehicle registration data, the information that would allow you to connect a name or addresses to license plates. Vigilant itself notes in its materials that DPPA regulates connecting personal information to a license plate, but argues LPR data on its own is fair game because "there is no reasonable expectation of privacy." It's also unclear how Vigilant treats data collected by Vigilant employees and contractors on behalf of law enforcement agencies, as is the case in Guadalupe County. Vigilant's policies also allow the company to retroactively change its usage rules at anytime.


    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/01/no-cost-license-plate-readers-are-turning-texas-police-mobile-debt-collectors-and
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 29, 2016, 10:36:06 AM
    Interesting.. we will be going to LPRs with the same company brand mentioned and will not be collecting fines based on the info, nor assessing fees. I guess that is why it is costing us money
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2016, 09:36:56 AM
    “Get Your Hands Where I….” BOOM! Cop Shoots Unarmed Man Before Finishing His Command


    Eden Prairie, MN — On June 15, 2015, Matthew Hovland-Knase was allegedly driving his motorcycle at excessive speeds down a two-way street. After being clocked at speeds over 110 miles per hour, Sergeant Lonnie Soppeland gave chase and pulled him over.

    Hovland-Knase did not attempt to run, was unarmed, non-violent, and posed no threat to Soppeland at all when the officer jumped out of his cruiser with his gun drawn. As Soppeland exited the cruiser, he yelled, “Get your hands where I….” BOOM — and before he could finish the sentence, he’d shot the unarmed motorcyclist.

    “I’m bleeding,” screams Hovland-Knase after this overzealous cop squeezed off a round into the unsuspecting motorist.

    Those who’ve been trained to use firearms know that you should keep your finger straight and off the trigger until you are ready to fire. If anyone should know this, it’s a police officer. But at that moment, on that night, officer Soppeland forget one of the most important rules in handling a firearm.

    Immediately after he nearly killed a man, officer Soppeland said, “I’m not going to say anything right now, but was not intentional. I can tell you that.”

    Intentional or not, this man fired a deadly projectile at an unarmed individual who meant him no harm.

    After Soppeland had been granted a cool down period of three days, he was finally interviewed by the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office. During the interview, Soppeland told a detective, “As I was giving commands, I drew my firearm with my right hand, I planned to steady it with my left hand. When my hands made contact, the firearm discharged once unintentionally. It was not my conscious choice…I could feel the effect of the adrenaline.”

    Notice how he blamed the firearm. According to Soppeland, he did not discharge the firearm, ‘the firearm discharged.’

    In a loaded question, which was obviously used to steer the investigation in favor of the officer, the detective then asked Soppeland whether firearm training 20 days before the shooting, when Soppeland fired 50 to 100 rounds, was a factor. Soppeland replied, “Yes, I feel the muscle memory from that recent training of squeezing the trigger contributed to the unintentional discharge during a high-stress situation.”


    Luckily it wasn’t a church van full of innocent children that Soppeland pulled over that fateful night — as his ‘muscle memory’ could have killed them.

    As soon as the investigation had begun, it was then over — Soppeland was taken off of paid vacation and immediately placed back on regular duty.

    Imagine for a moment that Soppeland was not granted a badge and a uniform from the town of Eden Prairie, and he attempted to use the same excuse for discharging a firearm at an unarmed, nonviolent individual. Do you feel that he would have been granted the same leniency?

    What if Soppeland was the owner of a private shooting range and he accidentally shot one of his customers? Would that shooting range be opened the next day? Would Soppeland ever be able to operate a shooting range again? The short answer is, no. The range would likely be closed down, and Soppeland would be facing charges of negligence, at a minimum.

    However, because Soppeland is a police officer, he not only faces no consequences but he was put back out on the street to do it again.

    What this case illustrates is that police in America are subject to a different set of rules than the rest of us. Their ‘qualified immunity’ sets them above the same laws that apply to everyone else, and they are subsequently allowed to cause harm to others without the fear of repercussions.

    There was one person who was charged in this incident, however, and that was Hovland-Knase. After being shot by Soppeland, Hovland-Knase was arrested and convicted of fleeing an officer.



    Soppeland’s case is hardly unique, cops ‘accidentally’ shoot people quite often, and get away with it.

    Last year, on Thanksgiving night, with his 23-year-old wife, Darien Ehorn in the passenger’s seat, Andrew Thomas left the Canteena Bar and was immediately pursued by Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster.

    After Thomas lost control of the SUV, Officer Feaster then gets out of his car, gun drawn, and as Thomas attempts to get out of the vehicle, in a likely attempt to check on his wife, the cop shoots him in the neck.

    When backup arrived on the scene, Feaster said nothing of discharging his firearm. For 11 minutes, Thomas lay bleeding out in the vehicle before anyone even found the shot.

    Only when the commanding officer on the scene suggested an investigator return to the Canteena to find out if Thomas had been shot at the bar did Feaster reveal he’d pulled the trigger.

    In spite of shooting a man in the neck and being caught red-handed trying to cover it up, Feaster faces zero consequences. Last month, Feaster walked.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/get-hands-i-boom-cop-shoots-unarmed-man-finishing-command/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2016, 02:36:10 PM
    He should go to prison and receive multiple daily shocks from a similar shocker anklet throughout his prison term.

    Judge Convicted After He Admitted to Torturing Man in Court With 50,000 Volts to Shut Him Up

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

    Judge Robert Nalley pleaded guilty on Monday to depriving the defendant of his civil rights.

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

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

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

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

    The U.S attorney said that Judge Nalley acted as if he was above the law, and that this conviction should be a message to other state employees that they should treat the people that they encounter as equals.

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

    However, Judge Nalley may end up getting off easy, with his defense asking for just one year of probation, a sentence that is lighter than most marijuana offenders receive in some states. The charge against Nalley was also weak, as he did not simply deprive a man of his civil rights, but he tortured him. Under any other circumstances, Nalley’s actions would have been considered torture, but since he did it under the sanction of his place in government, he was given a pass.

    Nalley is still awaiting sentencing from a federal magistrate, who will decide if the judge will receive probation as requested, or if he will actually see jail time.

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


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/judge-probation-shocking-defendant-50000-volts-quiet/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2016, 02:42:40 PM
    Award-Winning Michigan Officer Known as “Robocop” Receives 13-Month Sentence for Vicious Beating Caught on Camera

    The Michigan cop known as Robocop will spend at least 13 months in prison for placing a man in a chokehold and punching him repeatedly in an incident captured on dash cam video.

    However, that sentence can stretch up to ten years if he is not granted parole after the 13-month period.

    But we know that won’t happen.

    Robert Melendez, who was fired from the Inkster police department because of the incident, reacted in disbelief at the sentence Tuesday – even though it fell below the sentencing guidelines that range between 29 months to 57 months.

    As if to make up for the lenient sentence, Wayne County Judge Vonda Evans scolded Melendez on his “Dirty Harry tactics” that he was known for throughout his long career, which included more than a decade at the Detroit Police Department where he earned his nickname.

    Melendez apologized to Floyd Dent, the 58-year-old man who ended up in the hospital with broken ribs and blood in his brain from the beating after he was accused of running a stop sign on January 28, 2015.

    Melendez then went into a spiel reciting a poem called the “The Final Inspection,” comparing himself to a soldier who deserves to go to heaven because he spent his time in hell.

    The reality is, he made Dent go through hell as he has done to so many citizens in the past. And despite the conviction, he still believes he is above the law.

    After all, as his attorney pointed out, he is an award-winning officer, a former “Officer of the Year,” according to Michigan Live.

    Defense attorney James Thomas said Melendez is a man who “put on a uniform every day and went out into public not knowing what was going to happen,” “stood in front of people being shot at and protected them,” rushed into a burning building to save lives and, was once named Detroit police officer of the year and received at least 14 awards for his police work.

    But he also received countless complaints and was sued several times, costing the city of Detroit more than a million back in 2003 when he was indicted for stealing drugs and money from suspects while planting guns, charges for which he was acquitted.

    Dent accused him and other officers of planting cocaine on him the night of his arrest, a charge that was dismissed along with the assault on a police officer and resisting arrest charges.

    Dent ended up receiving a $1.37 million settlement.

    According to Michigan Live:

    With his arms crossed, Melendez blinked frequently as Wayne County Circuit Judge Vonda Evans summarized her interpretation of the crime, calling his acts “cowardly” and “barbaric.”

    She referred to the dash-camera that captured the arrest as the “eye of justice.”

    “He was grabbed out thrown to the ground and struck 16 times in the head by the defendant,” Evans said. “Mr. Dent was struck, kicked and Tased while he was on the ground by a group” of officers who appeared to celebrate and bump fists afterwards.

    Melendez, who was convicted in November, will also received 85 days credit for time served, so he’ll probably be released around the New Year where he will likely continue his private security business.

    In a Facebook message to Photography is Not a Crime, Nick Bennett, one of Dent’s attorneys, explained how sentencing guidelines work in Michigan.

    So in Michigan we used to have guidelines. Like six months ago. A judge had to stick within the guidelines for the minimum sentence. Maximum always stayed the same based on the offense. A case came out in the Supreme Court that said mandatory guidelines are unconstitutional so now they are advisory. Before, if a judge wanted to go outside the range there had to be substantial or compelling reasons. Now they can deviate however the want. So the max was always going to be ten years in this case the minimum advisory guidelines were 27-54. Just went way under.

    Below is the dash cam video as well as the video of Judge Evans making her remarks.





    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/03/award-winning-michigan-officer-known-as-robocop-receives-13-month-sentence-for-vicious-beating-caught-on-camera/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2016, 02:47:33 PM
    Tennessee Cops Taser Middle School Cleaning Lady, Mistaking Her for Burglar

    She was doing her job, cleaning the inside of a school, when she was confronted by two gun-wielding Tennessee cops, who began barking questions at her.

    But the Guatemalan cleaning lady did not understand English, so all she could say was “No.”

    When they continued demanding information, the woman tried to walk away, then run away.

    That was when the cops chased after her, tasering her, charging her with evading arrest.

    Juana Raymundo, 36, spent the night in jail, wearing a shirt with the letters “ABM,” the company contracted to clean the school every night.

    The incident took place January 11 when two Collegedale police officers became suspicious when they noticed an open door at Ooltewah Middle School.

    They entered with their guns drawn, even though there was no sign of forced entry. They came across some cleaning supplies outside a restroom in a hallway, but that still did not satisfy their suspicions.

    They were inside a room when Raymundo entered empty-handed.

    “She obviously noticed us, as she looked directly at us, appearing to be nervous and somewhat reserved,” Sergeant Jamie Heath wrote in his arrest report.

    Officer Brian Desmond said he began to ask her for her identification in both English and Spanish but all she could say was “No.”

    According to the Chattanooga Times Free-Press:

     

    As Desmond tried to speak with the woman, she walked to the door where Heath was standing. He motioned for her to stop and asked for her “identificacion” and “licencia,” according to the report. She said “no” and continued to slowly walk through the room.

    She then rounded a corner and began to walk quickly away down a hallway, Heath wrote. He yelled “alto” — the Spanish word for stop — and the woman began to sprint away. The two men chased after her, running through the school’s cafeteria, down a flight of stairs, out the building and into the parking lot. Heath warned the woman to stop or she would be shot with a stun gun, he said in his report.

    When she didn’t stop, he deployed his Taser while running behind her. The Taser hit the woman and she fell to the ground. They then called for medical attention, according to the report.

    The woman, who gave several different names to officers and seemed to have trouble understanding both Spanish and English, was an employee of the cleaning company ABM, which regularly works in the school, ABM managers told police that night. Chas Strong, senior manager in corporate communications at ABM, declined to comment Friday.

    The woman was charged with evading arrest and booked into jail under the name Juana Raymundo, 36. She was released on a $750 bond and is due in Collegedale Municipal Court on March 2.

    The Times Free-Press notes that while the arrest report goes into great detail to justify tasering the woman, it does not even say if the cops were wearing uniforms or if they were driving marked cars or even if they identified themselves.

    One Nashville attorney questioned why didn’t they holster their weapons when realizing the woman was not much of a threat.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/01/tennessee-cops-taser-middle-school-cleaning-lady-mistaking-her-for-burglar/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2016, 03:04:27 PM
    Award-Winning Florida Deputy Charged with Attempted Manslaughter After Lying About Suspect Grabbing His Gun

    One month ago, Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri told reporters that one of his deputies had to shoot a handcuffed man because the handcuffed man pulled the gun out of the deputy’s secured holster and threatened him with it.

    That, of course, made Timothy Virden fear for his life, who in 2004, was named one of the “nation’s outstanding law enforcement officers.”

    Being the valiant hero that he was, Virden managed to snatch the gun back from the suspect and shoot him twice.

    The suspect, whose hands were cuffed behind him and his pants around his ankle, survived the shooting.

    On Friday, Gualtieri spoke to reporters again.

    This time announcing that deputy Timothy Virden was being charged with attempted manslaughter.

    It turns out, the suspect, Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, never touched the deputy’s gun.

    That, Gualtieri said, was determined by three thorough investigations that lasted a month which included evidence from a dash cam video and statements from another deputy that contradicted Virden’s claims.

    The dash cam video only captures the audio because it is pointed outward towards the front of the car and the shooting took place as Virden was trying to place the suspect in the back of the car.

    But Tompkins-Holmes was drunk and mouthing off to Virden, calling him a “pussy” and a “bitch.”

    His pants had fallen and he apparently was halfway in the car, but wanted his pants pulled back up.

    “You’re a real man, bro, you’re a real man,” Tompkins-Holmes said. “Keep going, keep going.”

    Then two gunshots are heard and a man is heard yelling in pain.

    A man, whose voice differs from the suspect, can be heard yelling “oh, shit.”

    Then a few seconds later, a deputy, possibly Virden, is informing dispatch that he needs fire-rescue because “shots have been fired.”

    Hours after the incident, Gualtieri held his press conference, defending Virden. And, of course, the media ate it all up.

    This is how ABC Action News reported it:

    A deputy shot a man Wednesday morning after he tried to grab the deputy’s gun, according to the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office.

    It started around 3:00 a.m. with a traffic stop near 129th Avenue West at Village Boulevard in John’s Pass Village.

    During the traffic stop, deputy Timothy Virden suspected the female driver of DUI, and began to investigate.

    Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said passenger Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, the driver’s boyfriend, interfered with the investigation. Gualtieri said the man was arguing with the deputy, and imploring the woman not to cooperate. At one point, he jumped into the driver’s seat.

    Deputy Virden arrested Tompkins-Holmes, handcuffed him, and placed him in the back of the patrol vehicle, a Chevy Tahoe.

    Inside the vehicle, the man’s pants fell down, and he fell to the floor. Tompkins-Holmes was loudly complaining and asked for help. Deputy Virden help him out of the SUV to pull up his pants, and Tompkins-Holmes — still handcuffed — grabbed for the deputy’s gun.

    After a short struggle, Deputy Virden got control of the gun and shot Tompkins-Holmes twice. One shot hit the man in the wrist and thigh. Another shot struck him in the abdomen.

    This is how the Tampa Bay Times is now reporting it:

    A Pinellas sheriff’s deputy shot a 26-year-old man early Wednesday outside John’s Pass Village after the arrestee — with his hands cuffed behind his back — grabbed the deputy’s weapon, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said Deputy Tom Virden was “concerned for his safety and his life,” when he shot Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, whose criminal record dates back to 2008.

    “We’re extremely lucky and fortunate that Deputy Virden is fine — when someone grabs your gun and has your gun in their hand, it could be an absolutely volatile situation,” Gualtieri said.

    The sheriff added: “Even if (people) are in handcuffs, there’s a lot of flexibility. You’re able to use your hands and fingers, and you’re able to grab.”

    Now this is the way WTSP is reporting it:

    “There is no evidence of any struggle,” said Sheriff Gualtieri, “There’s no evidence of anybody reaching for a gun.”

    Deputy Verdin had claimed Tompkins-Holmes, whose hands were behind his back, whose pants had fallen down, and whose body was wedged against the backseat of Deputy Verdin’s cruiser, was somehow able to unholster and then grab the deputy’s weapon.

    It’s a struggle that a second deputy who was standing just feet away, said never occurred.

    “While handcuffed, being able to do this, this, and this,” Gualtieri demonstrated, “and then get the gun out? Didn’t happen.”

    Gualtieri said three separate investigations all reach the same conclusion.

    On Wednesday, Verdin was charged with attempted manslaughter, and was fired from his job at the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office.

    “I’m believe Tim Verdin is a good man, and a deputy that dedicated his professional life to law-enforcement,” said Sheriff Gualtieri, “And by all accounts, up to this point, had an excellent performance record.”

    This is how Fox 13 is now reporting it:

    On Friday, Gualtieri confirmed that Tomkins-Holmes never grabbed the deputy’s weapon.

    The sheriff showed off a utility belt and gun holster to demonstrate how improbable that would have been to begin with: The 26-year-old was drunk, handcuffed, and did not have proprietary knowledge on how to release a gun out of the deputy’s twice-secured holster.What do you think?

    The sheriff added that even if that part had been true, Virden would have been the only one with the gun when he shot the handcuffed man.

    He played dashcam video of the shooting which countered the deputy’s account.

    “There’s no evidence of a struggle, no evidence of anybody reaching for a gun,” Gualtieri offered after showing the footage. “This is all inconsistent with Deputy Virden’s version of events.”

    A second deputy at the scene also refuted Virden’s claims that Tompkins-Holmes was a threat.

    “All he had to do was walk away,” the sheriff continued. “There was no justification for shooting Tompkins-Holmes.”

    Gualtieri maintained the sheriff’s office was correct in charging Tompkins-Holmes with “obstruction.” He also said he had no regrets for justifying the shooting the morning it took place, before the agency had completed an investigation.

    “Dylan’s no angel, but he’s not a bad guy,” the sheriff said, adding that he’s never been charged with any violent crimes.

    Meanwhile, Tompkin-Holmes is still recovering from his injuries, but Gualtieri said they not only dropped the obstructions charges against him and his girlfriend, they are going as far as paying for his medical bills because it’s the “right thing to do.”

    But he made it clear that the department is not civilly liable for his deputy’s actions because of qualified immunity.

    And in that, he is wrong. Dead wrong. In fact, he was an accomplice to the attempted manslaughter because he defended it within hours, only reversing judgement after three month-long investigations.

    Let’s just hope they did not coerce Tompkins-Holmes into signing away his right to sue in exchange for them paying for his medical bills.

    Below is the press conference from Friday where he announced Virden’s arrest. And below that is the dash cam video of the shooting. And below that is the video from last month where he is telling reporters that Tompkins-Holmes reached for Verdin’s gun.







    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/30/award-winning-florida-deputy-charged-with-attempted-manslaughter-after-lying-about-suspect-grabbing-his-gun/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 03, 2016, 03:13:11 PM
    Award-Winning Florida Deputy Charged with Attempted Manslaughter After Lying About Suspect Grabbing His Gun

    One month ago, Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri told reporters that one of his deputies had to shoot a handcuffed man because the handcuffed man pulled the gun out of the deputy’s secured holster and threatened him with it.

    That, of course, made Timothy Virden fear for his life, who in 2004, was named one of the “nation’s outstanding law enforcement officers.”

    Being the valiant hero that he was, Virden managed to snatch the gun back from the suspect and shoot him twice.

    The suspect, whose hands were cuffed behind him and his pants around his ankle, survived the shooting.

    On Friday, Gualtieri spoke to reporters again.

    This time announcing that deputy Timothy Virden was being charged with attempted manslaughter.

    It turns out, the suspect, Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, never touched the deputy’s gun.

    That, Gualtieri said, was determined by three thorough investigations that lasted a month which included evidence from a dash cam video and statements from another deputy that contradicted Virden’s claims.

    The dash cam video only captures the audio because it is pointed outward towards the front of the car and the shooting took place as Virden was trying to place the suspect in the back of the car.

    But Tompkins-Holmes was drunk and mouthing off to Virden, calling him a “pussy” and a “bitch.”

    His pants had fallen and he apparently was halfway in the car, but wanted his pants pulled back up.

    “You’re a real man, bro, you’re a real man,” Tompkins-Holmes said. “Keep going, keep going.”

    Then two gunshots are heard and a man is heard yelling in pain.

    A man, whose voice differs from the suspect, can be heard yelling “oh, shit.”

    Then a few seconds later, a deputy, possibly Virden, is informing dispatch that he needs fire-rescue because “shots have been fired.”

    Hours after the incident, Gualtieri held his press conference, defending Virden. And, of course, the media ate it all up.

    This is how ABC Action News reported it:

    A deputy shot a man Wednesday morning after he tried to grab the deputy’s gun, according to the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office.

    It started around 3:00 a.m. with a traffic stop near 129th Avenue West at Village Boulevard in John’s Pass Village.

    During the traffic stop, deputy Timothy Virden suspected the female driver of DUI, and began to investigate.

    Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said passenger Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, the driver’s boyfriend, interfered with the investigation. Gualtieri said the man was arguing with the deputy, and imploring the woman not to cooperate. At one point, he jumped into the driver’s seat.

    Deputy Virden arrested Tompkins-Holmes, handcuffed him, and placed him in the back of the patrol vehicle, a Chevy Tahoe.

    Inside the vehicle, the man’s pants fell down, and he fell to the floor. Tompkins-Holmes was loudly complaining and asked for help. Deputy Virden help him out of the SUV to pull up his pants, and Tompkins-Holmes — still handcuffed — grabbed for the deputy’s gun.

    After a short struggle, Deputy Virden got control of the gun and shot Tompkins-Holmes twice. One shot hit the man in the wrist and thigh. Another shot struck him in the abdomen.

    This is how the Tampa Bay Times is now reporting it:

    A Pinellas sheriff’s deputy shot a 26-year-old man early Wednesday outside John’s Pass Village after the arrestee — with his hands cuffed behind his back — grabbed the deputy’s weapon, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said Deputy Tom Virden was “concerned for his safety and his life,” when he shot Dylan Tompkins-Holmes, whose criminal record dates back to 2008.

    “We’re extremely lucky and fortunate that Deputy Virden is fine — when someone grabs your gun and has your gun in their hand, it could be an absolutely volatile situation,” Gualtieri said.

    The sheriff added: “Even if (people) are in handcuffs, there’s a lot of flexibility. You’re able to use your hands and fingers, and you’re able to grab.”

    Now this is the way WTSP is reporting it:

    “There is no evidence of any struggle,” said Sheriff Gualtieri, “There’s no evidence of anybody reaching for a gun.”

    Deputy Verdin had claimed Tompkins-Holmes, whose hands were behind his back, whose pants had fallen down, and whose body was wedged against the backseat of Deputy Verdin’s cruiser, was somehow able to unholster and then grab the deputy’s weapon.

    It’s a struggle that a second deputy who was standing just feet away, said never occurred.

    “While handcuffed, being able to do this, this, and this,” Gualtieri demonstrated, “and then get the gun out? Didn’t happen.”

    Gualtieri said three separate investigations all reach the same conclusion.

    On Wednesday, Verdin was charged with attempted manslaughter, and was fired from his job at the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office.

    “I’m believe Tim Verdin is a good man, and a deputy that dedicated his professional life to law-enforcement,” said Sheriff Gualtieri, “And by all accounts, up to this point, had an excellent performance record.”

    This is how Fox 13 is now reporting it:

    On Friday, Gualtieri confirmed that Tomkins-Holmes never grabbed the deputy’s weapon.

    The sheriff showed off a utility belt and gun holster to demonstrate how improbable that would have been to begin with: The 26-year-old was drunk, handcuffed, and did not have proprietary knowledge on how to release a gun out of the deputy’s twice-secured holster.What do you think?

    The sheriff added that even if that part had been true, Virden would have been the only one with the gun when he shot the handcuffed man.

    He played dashcam video of the shooting which countered the deputy’s account.

    “There’s no evidence of a struggle, no evidence of anybody reaching for a gun,” Gualtieri offered after showing the footage. “This is all inconsistent with Deputy Virden’s version of events.”

    A second deputy at the scene also refuted Virden’s claims that Tompkins-Holmes was a threat.

    “All he had to do was walk away,” the sheriff continued. “There was no justification for shooting Tompkins-Holmes.”

    Gualtieri maintained the sheriff’s office was correct in charging Tompkins-Holmes with “obstruction.” He also said he had no regrets for justifying the shooting the morning it took place, before the agency had completed an investigation.

    “Dylan’s no angel, but he’s not a bad guy,” the sheriff said, adding that he’s never been charged with any violent crimes.

    Meanwhile, Tompkin-Holmes is still recovering from his injuries, but Gualtieri said they not only dropped the obstructions charges against him and his girlfriend, they are going as far as paying for his medical bills because it’s the “right thing to do.”

    But he made it clear that the department is not civilly liable for his deputy’s actions because of qualified immunity.

    And in that, he is wrong. Dead wrong. In fact, he was an accomplice to the attempted manslaughter because he defended it within hours, only reversing judgement after three month-long investigations.

    Let’s just hope they did not coerce Tompkins-Holmes into signing away his right to sue in exchange for them paying for his medical bills.

    Below is the press conference from Friday where he announced Virden’s arrest. And below that is the dash cam video of the shooting. And below that is the video from last month where he is telling reporters that Tompkins-Holmes reached for Verdin’s gun.







    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/30/award-winning-florida-deputy-charged-with-attempted-manslaughter-after-lying-about-suspect-grabbing-his-gun/






    The Good Old 'He was In fear of His Life'  ::)

    Poor Cops Forced To Do The Most Dangerous
    Job On Earth.

    They Dindu Nuffin.. ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2016, 03:44:09 PM
    Good Cops Stand Around and Watch as Rogue Cop Takes Out His Aggression on Non-Violent Teen


    Pittsburgh, PA — After assaulting a 19-year-old man outside of a football game, Pittsburgh police officer Sgt. Stephen Matakovich was arrested and charged with assault. However, in a glaring and insulting display of blue privilege, on Monday, all the charges against Matakovich were dropped.

    According to the police, Matakovich was working security outside of the Heinz Field Stadium on November 28, 2015, when he arrested Gabriel Despree on a number of charges, including public drunkenness and aggravated assault.

    The entire encounter was captured on surveillance footage. As the video begins, it shows security officers appear to be asking Despree to leave. As he turns to leave and obey their request, Matakovich and several of his fellow officers stop him in an obvious move to bully this teen.

    Once police obtained the surveillance video of the incident, showing Matakovich, entirely unprovoked, attack Despree, throw him to the ground and punch him several times, the officer was charged with simple assault and official oppression.

    But, thanks to a clearly biased judge, Matakovich, who’s been on paid vacation for nearly two months, will now return back to the streets to ‘officially oppress’ once again.

    The excuses used by the defense to convince the court to throw out the charges were nothing short of laughable.

    “The video, it says a lot, but when you have an opportunity to break it down and listen to Sgt. Matakovich, his reasoning it makes total sense. The young man is going in and out of his pockets he was asked to leave his BAC was very high he admitted on the stand today he was very intoxicated,” said defense attorney Blaise Jones.

    Somehow, the court found that the 19-year-old Despree, who was no threat to anyone and was trying to leave, was the ‘aggressor,’ and there was not enough evidence to hold the charges against the violent officer.

    In a courtroom full of his fellow officers, applause exploded after the judge bought Matakovich’s claims that he feared for his safety.

    “I don’t think it’s unusual to say Sgt. Matakovich put his safety first, his and those around him,” Jones said.

    Apparently, Matakovich, an armed, 200+ pound officer, surrounded by his other fellow 200+ pound officers, who are also armed, felt that a drunk teen half his size posed a threat to him. Or, at least, he thought that the court would buy his preposterous story, and he was right.

    Still facing the entirely false charge of assault on an officer, Despree is due in court in March. Welcome to justice in the land of the free.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bully-cop-attacks-peaceful-teen-video-reason-cop-claims-victim/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2016, 02:13:23 PM
    Once again, send the bill to the taxpayers...

    NYPD Cop Wins $15M After Fellow Cops Falsely Arrested & Beat Him at His Daughter’s Birthday

    Queens, NY – After suing his fellow officers for savagely beating and falsely arresting him at his daughter’s birthday party, an NYPD cop was awarded $15 million by a federal jury on Wednesday. Although he identified himself as an officer, his colleagues viciously struck him with batons and fired pepper spray into his face before bothering to check the badge and ID in his pocket.

    On August 22, 2010, NYPD Officer Larry Jackson was off-duty at his daughter’s birthday party in Queens when an unidentified man with a gun appeared in the street breaking a bottle. Although Jackson did not have his gun with him, the off-duty cop confronted the armed man and asked him to leave while Jackson’s wife called 911. As Jackson attempted to calm down the armed man, a crowd of roughly 15 to 20 men armed with bats and sticks began to approach them.

    Instead of attacking Jackson or the armed man, the crowd immediately dispersed as a marked patrol car arrived in front of Jackson’s house. Even though Jackson’s wife told dispatchers that her husband was a cop and Jackson immediately identified himself as a fellow officer, the cops ignored him while trying to assess the situation. Hearing an argument from inside Jackson’s home, one of the officers suddenly ran into his house without a search warrant.

    After striking one of Jackson’s friends with a police baton, the officer ordered Jackson to step back. Standing his ground, Jackson again identified himself as a cop and informed the officer that they were in his house. Instead of requesting to see Jackson’s police ID or badge, the officer slammed the baton against Jackson’s throat and shoved him into the living room.

    While repeatedly punching Jackson in the face, the officer accidentally tripped over a cooler leftover from the birthday party. As Jackson attempted to help the officer up, another cop placed Jackson in a chokehold. Unable to speak, Jackson tried to pull his police ID out of his pocket but another officer restrained his hands.

    Falling backwards, Jackson and the cop choking him landed on Jackson’s 82-year-old mother-in-law, briefly knocking her unconscious. As the officer released his chokehold, Jackson again informed the cops that he was an NYPD officer when another cop struck him in the head with an ASP tactical baton. After stumbling down the front steps, Jackson remained on the ground as a group of bloodthirsty officers began beating him with their batons and pepper-spraying him in the face. While placing him in handcuffs, the cops repeatedly kicked his body and kneed him in the back.

    Following the brutal assault, the officer who initially attacked Jackson asked him, “Yeah, you motherfucking dirt bag, if you are really a cop, where is your ID?”

    “My ID has been in my front pocket the whole entire time,” Jackson responded. “I told you that in the house.”

    After finally checking his pockets, the crowd of cops immediately dispersed upon the realization that they just brutalized one of their own without justification. Despite the fact that he had his police ID and did not commit a crime, Jackson was detained at the police station for 20 hours before being transported to a local hospital. According to his medical records, Jackson’s face and torso were covered in large bruises while his right hand was fractured due to numerous baton strikes.

    On June 24, 2011, Jackson filed a federal lawsuit accusing the NYPD of negligence, assault, false arrest, and false imprisonment. Despite the fact that NYPD Officer John Czulada admitted to punching Jackson in the face, none of the cops involved confessed to beating him with their batons or placing him in handcuffs. Even though the police refused to break their code of silence, a jury decided Wednesday to award Jackson with $15 million in damages.

    “I feel vindicated,” Jackson told The NY Daily News after the verdict. “Just like they say, what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.”

    Out of the 70 cops who arrived at Jackson’s house that night, none of the officers involved in his ruthless beating have been charged with a crime. Instead of punishing the cops who assaulted a fellow officer with batons and pepper spray, the citizens of New York are held responsible for the incompetence and utter brutality of their police force. Perhaps if the police officers were held financially responsible for their actions, they might have bothered to check his badge and ID in the first place.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-awarded-15-million-fellow-officers-assaulted-falsely-arrested/


    From http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/15m-award-nypd-beaten-police-officers-article-1.2519526
    Quote
    "The jury has sent a message to the Police Department that what happened was unacceptable," said Jackson's lawyer Eric Sanders. "And that guy with the gun? No one ever bothered to look for him."

    City lawyer Matthew Modafferi had told jurors that Jackson was out of control and resisting arrest, and should have counted himself "lucky" not to be charged with a crime ultimately.

    "And we also know why he got lucky…he's a police officer right?" Modafferi told the jury.

    But the jury rejected the argument, including the claim that Jackson was drunk. "That totally didn't happen," juror Lisa Gaeth of Queens told The News.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2016, 02:22:28 PM
    Gruesome Dashcam Shows Slowly Driving Away From Cops is Punishable by Death by Firing Squad


    Billings, MT — In January of 2015, two former Yellowstone County Sheriff’s deputies Jason Robinson and Christopher Rudolph opened fire on Loren Simpson and killed him as he attempted to flee their stop.

    According to the police, Simpson matched the description of a suspect in an “allegedly stolen vehicle,” and had pursued him down a dead end road. During the officers’ attempt to block him in, Simpson veered to his left to avoid the deputies. However, Robinson, with an AR-15, and Rudolph, with a Shotgun, both opened fire, dumping 54 rounds within 5 seconds into the SUV and Simpson.

    The rifle caused the fatal shot, striking Simpson through the back of the head and immediately paralyzing him, according to Thomas Bennett, associate medical examiner for the Montana and Wyoming, reported the Missoulian.

    Likely knowing that they were going to be charged, both men resigned from the sheriff’s office just days after the shooting — as is standard protocol for officers attempting to avoid accountability.

    For the last year, this story was swept under the rug as it was just another case of some loon attempting to run over cops and getting what he had coming. However, the dashcam of the incident was released this week, and it clearly contradicts that notion.

    “I saw the front wheels turn in my direction,” Robinson said in a statement about the incident. “At that point, I knew he didn’t care he was going through me and he was going to kill me.” But the dashcam never shows the wheels coming at Robinson, and, in fact, it shows the exact opposite.



    During the two-day coroner’s inquest, a use-of-force expert and former FBI special Agent Brian Kensel was brought in to help the jury understand that the officers’ only option was to fire 54 rounds into a vehicle that was driving away from them.

    According to the Missoulian, Kensel testified the deputies were justified in their actions. He said the only thing that matters in the eyes of the law is that the deputies felt threatened in the moments before they pulled the trigger. Any actions leading up to that moment are a “smoke screen” distracting them from the matter at hand.

    Sadly, the sentiment that the only thing a cop has to do to kill someone is “feel threatened” resonated with the court and on Wednesday, a jury bought the assertion of Kensel and found the officers justified in the killing of Simpson.

    After the trial, the attorney for the Simpson family, Nathan Wagner said they are confident that the outcome of the civil case will be much different.

    “We are confident that the outcome will be different when we are allowed to present the rest of the evidence and cross-examine the witnesses at the civil trial,” Wagner said. “We look forward to the opportunity to continue pursuing justice for the family.”

    Below is the entire video from that cold January day. Watch it carefully and you will see how easily it is for police to kill – with impunity. Take note that at 5:30 in the video, the officer says, “he hit the gas and was coming right at us.” The deception had already begun.



    More info:

    Many Questions After Deputies Kill a Man


    BILLINGS, Mont. (CN) - In a deadly abandonment of protocol, Montana sheriff's officers "essentially deputized" three teenagers to look for a car-theft suspect, then shot the man to death when they found him, his family claims in court.
    Yellowstone County sheriff's Officers Jason Robinson and Christopher Rudolph killed 28-year-old Loren Benjamin Simpson on Jan. 8, shooting him with an AR-15 assault rifle and a 12-gauge shotgun as he drove along White Buffalo Road in Huntley, Mont., about 13 miles northeast of Billings.

    "Robinson and Rudolph stood in the roadway, with their vehicle serving as a barricade or blockade, and waited for the vehicle they had been following to return down White Buffalo Road," the family says in the Oct. 16 complaint in Yellowstone County Court. "As the vehicle approached, Robinson and Rudolph opened fire."

    Simpson was hit repeatedly, the car swerved into a snow bank and stopped, but Robinson and Rudolph kept shooting, the family says. Two weeks after the killing The Missoulian newspaper, citing "a document filed in Yellowstone County Court," said the sheriff's department claimed that the car Simpson was driving was "bearing down" on the officers so they opened fire.

     In the lawsuit, the family says the officers parked their squad car on a narrow plowed section of the snowy road, stood in front of it, leaving no room for passage anywhere, and opened fire on Simpson as he approached. According to the sheriff's department and The Missoulian, Robinson and Rudolph became stuck in the snow as they sought a purple Ford Explorer, so they asked three teenagers to push them free.
    "Robinson and Rudolph flagged down three teenage residents of the area, ages 16, 14 and 14, who had just been let off the bus near the intersection," the complaint states.

    The teenagers told the deputies the car would have to come back the way it had come, as it was a dead-end street, so the officers blocked the road and waited.
    "Robinson and Rudolph then exchanged phone numbers with the 16-year-old boy, and sent the three youths up White Buffalo Road toward their residence with instructions to call the officers if they saw the vehicle the officers had been pursuing," the complaint states. "Robinson and Rudolph essentially deputized the three youths on the spot and enlisted them to go investigate a vehicle that the deputies suspected had been involved in a crime."

    When the teens called the officers on a cell phone to say the car was coming, the officers took up their position in front of their car and shot Simpson to death, according to the complaint. The family says the road, covered about a foot deep in snow, had "multiple plowed driveways" nearby where the officers could have parked, so as not to stand in front of their own roadblock.
    The Simpson's attorney Nathan Wagner, with Datsopoulos MacDonald & Lind, was not available for comment Monday and did not return a phone call or respond to an email on Tuesday.
    The family seeks punitive damages for wrongful death, assault, negligence, civil rights violations, constitutional violations and loss of consortium. Simpson is survived by his mother, sister, brother and grandmother, all of them plaintiffs.

    Citing a warrant application, The Missoulian reported that a purple Ford had been reported as a suspicious vehicle and as a stolen one, in separate reports. The family's complaint calls it an "allegedly stolen vehicle." Yellowstone County Sheriff Mike Linder responded to questions in an email Tuesday afternoon.
    "Unfortunately, I am not at liberty to discuss this matter since the case ... is still an open case and the inquest has not yet been scheduled," he wrote.
    Yellowstone County Deputy Attorney Kevin Gillen said he could not comment on the case.

    http://www.courthousenews.com/2015/10/21/many-questions-after-deputies-kill-a-man.htm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2016, 04:09:02 PM
    He "feared for his life"..

    Five years trimmed from sentence of ex-New Orleans cop who burned body of man shot dead by his colleague during Katrina aftermath

     

    A former New Orleans police officer who torched the body of a man shot dead by a fellow cop in the chaos following Hurricane Katrina had his 17-year-sentenced slashed by more than five years Thursday by a federal judge.

    But Gregory McRae, who was convicted in 2010, lost his bid for an even greater sentence reduction.

    US District Judge Lance Africk trimmed McRae's sentence to 11 years and nine months because a federal appeals court last year tossed out one of his convictions related to the burning of 31-year-old Henry Glover's body four days after Katrina hit in 2005.

    But Africk insisted that a stiff sentence was still warranted, saying McRae took part in 'a blue code of silence' following the shooting.

    Africk rejected defense attorney Michael Fawer's argument, bolstered by a forensic psychologist's testimony, that McRae was mentally 'unhinged' on September 2, 2005, owing to four days with almost no sleep, pressure to help find and rescue people and horrific sights such as bodies floating in flood waters and dogs eating flesh from corpses.

    Psychologist Rafael Salcedo said he believed McRae was suffering from the early onset of post-traumatic stress disorder by the time he burned the car containing Glover's body, and that it diminished McRae's ability to realize the action was wrong.

    'Other first-responders with PTSD in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were not going around burning bodies,' Assistant US Attorney Jared Fishman said while questioning Salcedo.

    Fishman said circumstantial evidence presented at trial indicates McRae knew that Glover had been shot by then-police officer David Warren and set his corpse alight as part of a cover-up.

    Fawer said there is no evidence that McRae knew at the time that Glover was shot by a police officer.

    Five people were indicted on charges connected to Glover's death and its aftermath. McRae, who has served five years and whose wife died while he was imprisoned, is the only one whose conviction still stands.

    Warren was initially convicted on a federal manslaughter charge, but, while imprisoned, he won a new trial when an appeals court said he should have been tried separately from those charged in the cover-up.

    Warren was acquitted after testifying he feared for his life when he shot Glover. He said he thought he saw a gun in Glover's hand as Glover and another man ran toward a building he was guarding.

    An officer convicted of writing a false report on the incident had his conviction thrown out after new evidence surfaced. Two other officers were acquitted.

    One conviction against McRae was tossed in 2013 but resulted in no sentence reduction. Last summer, a federal appeals court threw out McRae's conviction for altering or destroying 'any record, document, or tangible object' with the intent to obstruct a federal investigation, basing its decision on a recent Supreme Court precedent in an unrelated case.

    McRae remained convicted on two other charges, neither of which directly deals with Glover's body. One is unreasonable seizure of the car, owned by a friend of Glover. The other is 'use of fire to commit a felony.'

    'The facts behind your conviction deal with much more than the burning of an automobile,' Africk told McRae, who did not speak at the hearing. Africk said McRae's silence about the shooting long after Glover's death, and the destruction of Glover's body, which would have provided vital evidence, remained factors in his sentencing.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3432425/5-years-trimmed-ex-cops-sentence-Katrina-body-case.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 05, 2016, 08:14:45 PM
    "Fraternal Order of Police".. Sounds more like criminal organization with police ties.

    Cops take revenge on Florida woman who pulled over speeding officer - by tweeting photo of her 'drinking and driving a boat', posting her phone number to Facebook and revealing she has 14 motoring citations - including one two weeks ago


    A police union chief in Florida has taken to social media to blast the civilian vigilante who decided to give a police officer a piece of her mind on video after the Miami woman believed the cop was speeding.
    Filming from her driver's seat, Claudia Castillo shot three videos total of Miami-Dade Police Officer Daniel Fonticiella moving quickly through traffic on Dolphin Expressway and her confronting him after he pulled over on January 29.

    Javier Ortiz, the Miami Fraternal Order of Police union president, called Castillo out in several posts to Facebook and Twitter, including a photo that appears to be her in a bikini driving a boat while drinking a beer.
    On the picture of her, Ortiz wrote: 'Nobody is above the law Except me when I'm driving.'

    In another post that has since been deleted, he shared Castillo's business card with her phone number and wrote: 'Feel free to call Claudia Castillo at her cell and let her know drinking and driving on a boat isn't safe. #shesNOTaboveTheLaw #wesupportmdpd It's important that law enforcement is aware of this woman.'

    Ortiz also shared an image of Castillo taken during an interview she gave with NBC Miami about the viral video.
    He captioned the photo: 'Oh look, cop wannabe (sic) Claudia Castillo got cited for careless driving 2 weeks ago. Sounds like a #COPhater.'

    Court records show that since 1998, Castillo has been cited at least 14 times for speeding, speeding in school zones, driving without a license and accidents, NBC Miami reported.
    Her latest crash happened two weeks ago, as she is under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol for the alleged reckless driving incident.

    'To keep up with him I've had to push the limit and everything and I actually know he was going about 100mph because I was going about 80,' Claudia says in the video as she follows the officer.
    Ironically, to catch the allegedly speeding officer Claudia herself had to speed about 20mph over the 60mph speed limit on the Dolphin Expressway.

    Claudia says in the video at one point when she was able to catch up to him due to the highway congestion, she flashed her lights and honked her horn to get him to pull over.
    Eventually when she does get him to pull over it's because he was worried she was having an emergency.

    Fonticiella pulls over with his lights on and Claudia begins to lecture him about his speeding.
    'The reason I pulled you over today and I'm asking you to come over and have a conversation is because I saw you, since Miller Drive when you were first jumping onto the Palmetto, and you were pushing 90 miles an hour,' Claudia says to Fonticiella in the video.
    'Really?' OK,' he responds.
    'You were pushing 90mph because I was going right behind you and you passed me.
    'I was going like 35mph down Miller and you passed me like I was standing still,' she says continuing to reprimand the officer.

    She begins to explain how she followed him from one highway to another and says: 'I was pushing 80 and I was still eating your dust and I just wanted to know what's the emergency?'
    Fonticiella tells her he doesn't believe he was speeding and that he's 'on his way to work'.
    He goes on to tell her she's 'entitled to her opinion' and that he was fearful she had an emergency, which is why he pulled over.
    She replies: 'No everything's fine. It's just your speeding.'
    The officer offers to give her his name and badge number, but she says no and continues to lecture him about 'being a leader in the community'.

    She tells him she drives in the car with her boyfriend's son and she has seen other cops speeding.
    The officer, appearing to want to move on, tells her to take care and be safe before going back to his vehicle and driving away. 

    Miami-Dade's top cop praised Fonticiella for his professionalism but advised citizens against chasing down or pulling over law enforcement on Tuesday.
    'The best way to denounce something, to launch a complaint against an officer, would be to just get the car number or badge and then call us and let us handle it,' Miami-Dade Police Director Juan Perez told NBC Miami.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3433965/Police-union-chief-blasts-Florida-woman-pulled-speeding-cop-social-media-bikini-photo-driving-boat-drinking-beer-posting-phone-number.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2016, 11:02:46 AM
    Missouri woman returning from a dream vacation is arrested and jailed for A WEEK in case of mistaken identity


    A Missouri woman said her dream vacation turned into a ‘nightmare’ after she was arrested on her way home and jailed for almost a week in a case of mistaken identity.
    Cynthia ‘Cindy’ Cheesbrough, 52, of Joplin, and her fiancé Jason Istas, 46, had been traveling home from Cancun, Mexico, when authorities in Texas stopped the couple.
    She said she was stopped by airport security on April 24 after getting off the plane for a layover in Houston, where authorities arrested her.
    Cheesbrough spent five days in jail for a crime she did not commit – an ordeal she described as ‘humiliating and degrading’ to the Huffington Post.
    ‘It was a nightmare,’ she told the website. ‘I was hysterical, shaking, dumbfounded and pretty angry.’

    Authorities told her there was a warrant for the arrest of Cindy Bayless – Cheesbrough’s maiden name - for more than $1,000 worth of insufficient funds charges out of Farmington, Missouri.
    ‘I haven’t used my maiden name in 30 plus years, so I really wasn’t sure what was going on and I didn’t even know where Farmington, Missouri was,’ she told KMOV.

    What Cheesbrough didn’t realize at the time was that an error about birthdates had meant she was confused with another woman who shared her first and maiden name.
    Cheesbrough spent five days in county jail before Istas was able to secure her $3,500 bail and another two days in a hotel before a judge permitted her to travel.

    She began investigating and figured out that authorities had mistaken her for someone else.
    ‘Her year of birth was 1972 and mine is 1962,’ she added to the Huffington Post. ‘They had mistakenly put a six instead of a seven in the computer, which caused my identification to be pulled instead of hers.’
    But when calling authorities to explain the situation yielded no results, she took a five-hour drive to Farmington.
    There, she learned that the charges against her had been dropped. But no-one informed her of this, she said.
    ‘I had to drive all the way there to find out and when I did, there was no apology – nothing,’ she added.

    She says St Francois County authorities refuse to compensate her for the expenses she incurred after being falsely arrested.
    Daily Mail Online has contacted authorities for comment.
    But Jerrod Mahurin, the prosecuting attorney, told KMOV: ‘I don’t know a lot of details and it’s in the hands of the county’s insurance company.’

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3436084/Missouri-woman-returning-dream-vacation-arrested-jailed-nearly-week-cops-mistake-identity.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 09, 2016, 12:40:23 PM
    If the man saw an armed intruder break his door and he tried to defend his home and family would he be alive to tell his sorry or would he be dead, shot by the "heroes" who "feared for their lives". Why weren't these cops arrested on the spot (rhetorical question)?


    Cops Spray Family’s Home with Bullets, Nearly Kill them All, Handcuff Child – Offer No Explanation

    Ocoee, FL — A Florida man and his family are lucky to be alive after his house came under gunfire by police in the early morning hours on Saturday — but it was all a terrifying mistake.

    According to the man, who asked to remain anonymous, he awoke around 1 am to pounding on his front door; but when he asked who was on the other side, no one responded.

    Afraid his home was about to be burglarized, local ABC affiliate WFTV reported, the man retrieved his gun.

    A bright light shone through the front door when he returned, and someone outside yelled “gun!”

    Then the gunfire started.

    According to WFTV, “Two bullets flew past the man’s head, and more bullets pierced walls and shattered glass windows, he said.”

    He said he never returned fire, but he, his wife, and their 12-year-old son were forced to huddle on the ground until the gunfire finally stopped.

    To add insult to the family’s terror at having been pulled from sleep and promptly fired upon, they were then handcuffed by Ocoee Police and seated on the curb outside — and weren’t allowed back into their home for 10 hours.

    Why were the family members’ lives put in jeopardy by this gang-style shootout of their home?

    According to WFTV, “he was told police officers mistakenly responded to the home after receiving a report of domestic violence.”

    Ocoee police Sgt. Bob Rivera said, “Upon arrival, a person was confronted and shots were fired. The investigation is ongoing by the Florida Dept. of Law Enforcement.” An FDLE spokesperson concurred, but refused to offer further details.

    If police want any sympathy from the public for the supposed difficulties they face on the job, perhaps they should stop making such inexcusable errors — particularly when the consequences have the potential to end people’s lives.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-spray-familys-home-bullets-kill-all-handcuff-12yo-offer-explanation/

    http://www.wftv.com/news/local/man-says-ocoee-police-mistakenly-shot-up-his-home/64826962
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2016, 09:45:22 AM
    How was this person allowed to serve in any law enforcement capacity?

    Cop Never Fired After 2 Fits of Road Rage – On the 3rd Fit, He Shot a Lady in the Head for Honking

    Houston, TX — It was recently revealed in court documents that a former police officer who shot a woman in the head during a road rage incident has a history marred with violence and anger issues.

    Kenneth Caplan, a reserve deputy constable with Harris County Precinct 6, was charged last year with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after shooting a woman in the head during a fit of road rage.

    The officer was reportedly driving on the 610 Loop at Stella Link when he cut off a 20-year-old woman who was also driving on the highway. The woman responded by pulling in front of him, and cutting him off. Next, the off-duty officer pulled up next to her car, pointed his gun directly to her window, and fired.

    Now, the lawyer for the victim is saying that Caplan should have never been a cop to begin with and that the police department had many opportunities to see that he had anger problems.

    “What sticks out is this was not an accident, this was an incident waiting to happen. First, when I read it, it was chilling,” attorney Steve Couch said.

    “It’s a huge question mark, in my opinion,” he added.

    Couch was referring to the former officers employment file, which shows that he had 21 different jobs in the past five years, 12 of which he was fired from for undisclosed reasons. He was fired from more than half of the jobs that he had in the past five years.

    His time as an officer was also filled with disciplinary problems. In just two years working at Precinct 6, Caplan had five different anger-related complaints filed against him, including two road rage incidents. In one of the road rage situations, the Caplan threatened a mother and her three children. On another occasion, he got into a road rage squabble with another police officer.

    Couch also suggests that Caplan was allowed to pass through police academy despite the fact that he was initially kicked out. Couch also said that the doctor responsible for giving the former officer a psychological evaluation may have not even done her job.

    “I engaged a psychologist that said she (Busick) fell short of the standard in testing and evaluating Caplan if she tested him at all,” Couch said.

    Caplan claims both that he shot the woman in self-defense and that he shot her by accident.

    “She was trying to run us into a wall. She got shot. The gun went off but it was an accident. It was self-defense,” Caplan said.

    Caplan also downplayed his sketchy work history, saying that he did not care about the jobs that he was fired from.

    “When you have a job you don’t care about, you really don’t care if you get fired or not,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-accused-road-rage-shooting-prior-anger-issues-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2016, 09:48:14 AM
    Sadistic Cop Forces K9 to Maul 59-Year-Old Woman Who Was In Custody – Then He Covered it Up

    Trenton, NJ – Pulled out of her car and violently thrown to the ground during a traffic stop, a 59-year-old woman recently filed a federal lawsuit against the K-9 officer responsible for releasing his police dog, which attacked the unarmed woman while she was already in custody. Although the charges against the woman were eventually dropped, the K-9 officer has been charged with official misconduct, aggravated assault, false swearing, tampering with public records, and hindering his own apprehension.

    On January 29, 2014, Tuckerton police Cpl. Justin Cherry and another officer responded to a residence where Wendy Tucker was reported as an unwelcome guest. After agreeing to leave, Tucker said she would take the bus home due to the fact that her license was suspended. But shortly afterward, Cpl. Cherry observed Tucker driving and attempted to pull over her vehicle.

    Asserting that she was distrustful of the Tuckerton police officers, Tucker did not immediately pull over and instead drove to the municipal complex in Barnegat before stopping her car in the parking lot. While in the custody of Barnegat police, Tucker remained sitting in her vehicle when Cherry and other officers dislocated her left arm by roughly pulling Tucker out of the car and throwing her to the ground. Although Tucker was unarmed and not posing a threat, Cherry allegedly sicced his K-9 partner, Gunner, on her without justification.

    After Cherry’s police dog reportedly took a bite of her right shoulder, Tucker was charged with eluding police, resisting arrest, and driving on a suspended license. The charges against her were later dismissed.

    Last year, Cherry was charged with official misconduct, aggravated assault, false swearing, tampering with public records, and hindering his own apprehension. Instead of simply allowing Barnegat police to take Tucker into custody, Cherry has been accused of using excessive force and covering up his abuse by writing false police reports. Although the dash cam video from Cherry’s patrol car reportedly captured footage of the brutal incident, Ocean County Prosecutor Joseph Coronato is fighting to keep the video suppressed.

    While a cowardly panel of judges with the Appellate Division of Superior Court sits in silence, refusing to arrive at a decision, Coronato defends the blatant lack of transparency by stating that releasing the dash cam video to the public would deem it impossible for Cherry to get a fair trial. Video evidence cannot be excluded because it makes the defendant appear guilty. Especially when the defendant is a cop, and the prosecutor routinely works with police.

    Despite the fact that Superior Court Judge Vincent Grasso ruled that the dash cam video was a public record that fell under the requirements of New Jersey’s Open Public Records Act (OPRA), Coronato filed an appeal and refuses to release the footage of the attack to the public. By building a wall of secrecy, the police and the prosecutor have merely confirmed their reckless abandonment of justice and transparency. They have traded the public’s trust in order to defend an officer responsible for attacking a helpless woman without provocation.

    Besides naming Cherry in her recent lawsuit, Tucker also accused Tuckerton Police Chief Michael Caputo and Barnegat Police Chief Arthur Drexler of failing to track complaints of excessive force by their officers or properly train them. She also blames the unidentified officers who witnessed the attack and did nothing to stop Cherry from using excessive force on her.

    Cherry has filed a cross-complaint against the same police chiefs for any role they may have played in the damages suffered by Tucker. According to Cherry, he is not responsible for any injuries inflicted on the unarmed woman who was already in police custody when he ordered his dog to attack.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sics-k9-59-year-old-woman-cover-brutality/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2016, 09:54:09 AM
    Another celebrated "honorable hero"..

    Retired Massachusetts Cop Charged with Stealing $400,000 from Evidence Room

    In 2014, Massachusetts Police Detective Kevin Burnham retired after 43 years on the job with the Springfield Police Department.

    Local media celebrated him as a dedicated cop who could have retired ten years earlier, but chose to stay on out of pure love for his job.

    Now it appears as if he stayed on solely for the purpose of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the department’s evidence room.

    Burnham, who was the narcotics evidence officer, is accused of stealing nearly $400,000 from December 2009 until July 2014.

    He was apparently living  a comfortable retirement with that money along with his monthly pension before he arraigned last month in court on several counts of larceny.

    He probably would have continued stealing money had an investigation not have been launched into the missing money in the summer of 2014, which was when he announced his retirement and was honored with a party.

    According to an July 25, 2014 Mass Live article:

    Dozens of colleagues, friends and family gathered in the department’s squad room at about 11:30 a.m. for the traditional pizza and cake farewell.

    The 65-year-old Burnham beamed as he moved about the room, shaking hands and hugging all he encountered. He laughed often as he swapped jokes and stories with well-wishers.

    Burnham, at 65, could have retired 10 years ago. He opted, however, to stay on another 10 years. “I really enjoyed coming to work,” he said. “It’s going to be hard not to answer the bell tomorrow morning at 5 o’clock.”

    But on January 11, 2016, Mass Live wrote the following:

    Kevin Burnham, a decorated and now retired Springfield police detective, pleaded not guilty in Hampden Superior Court on Monday to several charges relating to nearly $400,000 missing from the Springfield Police Department’s evidence room.

    It was a stunning fall for the once-beloved police department veteran, who retired as its senior officer in 2014 after 43 years on the job. At the time, he passed along badge No. 1 along with his longtime responsibilities in the evidence room, over which many officers said he virtually lorded for decades.

    The first signs of trouble – at least publicly – came several months after Burnham’s retirement party at police headquarters, where several of his colleagues lauded him as a “great guy” with an infectious laugh.

    Burnham had a system where he would take money out of envelopes seized from suspects, then replace that money with either counterfeit money that was seized in other cases or real money that was seized from other other cases.

    Meanwhile, lawyers whose suspects were found not guilty would ask for their client’s money back and the department would tell them the money is “unaccounted for.”

    The money would be repaid only after years of legal wrangling but it’s not clear from where the money came from.

    “The Defendant has made repeated requests upon the Springfield Police Department for the return of his currency and has been told they have been unable to locate it; the Defendant has now been deprived of his property for almost two years,” a motion Bongiorni filed with the court read.

    In both his clients’ cases, the city Law Department issued checks despite the missing status of the cash.

    “They did the intelligent thing and paid the money,” Bongiorni said during an interview at the time.

    The city offered no explanation to Bongiorni as to where the money might be, however. When asked if he had been unable to recover money seized as evidence on behalf of his clients in recent memory, Bongiorni, who has practiced criminal defense law for decades, responded:

    “This has never happened to me.”

    Burnham has pleaded not guilty and is out on bond after giving up his passport, his guns. Read his indictment here.

    Evidently, there is no surveillance camera in the department’s evidence room.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/09/retired-massachusetts-cop-charged-with-stealing-400000-from-evidence-room/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2016, 02:36:48 PM
    Another criminal organization..

    Ex-L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca to plead guilty in jail scandal, his attorney says

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-ex-l-a-county-sheriff-baca-jail-scandal-20160210-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 09:21:59 AM
    A Couple of Bad Apples? Nearly 4 Dozen Georgia Officers Arrested in Massive FBI Sting

    Georgia — As part of an investigation and crackdown on extensive contraband smuggling, drug dealing, and other criminal activity within the Georgia Department of Corrections, 46 people — mostly current and former corrections officers — were arrested by the FBI on Thursday.

    Indictments for those arrested have been handed down over the last three months. So far in the FBI’s sting, around 130 people have been taken into custody by authorities, reported local ABC affiliate, WJCL.

    U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, John Horn, said the charges represent “staggering corruption within Georgia Department of Corrections institutions.”

    Among those arrested were two civilians, one inmate, and according to CNN, five members of an “elite squad” called the Cobra Unit, whose job ostensibly involved dismantling drug rings inside the prison system.

    Investigators found the accused officers had affected drug deals both inside and outside prison walls — including large quantities of cocaine and crystal meth — by exploiting the supposed impunity of their position in law enforcement. According to WJCL, the indictments state officers “agreed to wear their uniforms during the drug transports to deter law enforcement interference.”

    Besides illicit drugs, investigators said smuggled contraband included liquor, tobacco, and cell phones — which are then used by inmates to commit wire fraud and identity theft.

    Those phones comprise “a huge challenge for law enforcement,” explained special agent in charge of the Atlanta FBI office, Britt Johnson, to CNN. “After you chase down, arrest and prosecute criminals, and put them away for life, they continue to direct crime on the streets from their jail cells.” He also called the ability for inmates to communicate with the world outside prison to “intimidate witnesses and prosecutors” a “breakdown of the judicial system.”

    After their arraignment, the arrestees were expected to be taken back into custody by the Federal Marshals to undisclosed locations in the state, pending trial.

    What this case illustrates is the criminal incentive created by the war on drugs and the monopoly of power granted specifically to those tasked with carrying it out. Outlawing substances and then locking up people who choose to use those substances creates a concentrated customer base to be exploited by those in positions of authority.

    If anything exposes the war on drugs as the massive failure that it is, it’s the fact that police can’t even keep drugs out of their own prisons.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/46-current-ga-dept-corrections-officers-arrested-sting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 09:24:17 AM
    Taxpayers Shell Out $100K to Parents After School Cop Tased 14yo Daughter for No Reason

    Allentown, PA – The family of a teenage girl was recently granted a $100,000 settlement from their local police department after an officer used his stun gun on the girl for no reason. The incident occurred in 2011, when the girl was 14-years-old while she was attending Dieruff High School.

    The settlement was to prevent the family from moving forward with a federal civil rights lawsuit which accused Jason Ammary of using excessive force on the young girl.

    According to court documents, the officer was ordering students to clear a street near the school on the day of the attack, but apparently the victim, Keshana Wilson, was not moving fast enough. So, Ammary grabbed her arm from behind and pushed her against a parked car when she instinctively pulled away from him.

    As she struggled to get away, Ammary fired his taser directly at her and she collapsed onto the street.

    The entire attack was documented by the school’s security cameras, and even the police department could not defend the actions of the officer when the recordings were made public.

    Wilson and Ammary both had different stories about what happened that day, the officer claiming that the victim was defiant and uncooperative, and the victim saying that the only reason she pulled away from the officer was because she could not breathe. However, Ammary has had a hard time keeping his story straight since filing the first report about the incident.

    At first, Ammary had claimed in the police report that Wilson was planning to fight other girls and that he was attempting to break up a fight. However, he later testified that he had never met her and had no clue who she was until he walked up to her in the street.

    “This factual inconsistency raises questions about whether officer Ammary believed Ms. Wilson was a threat to his safety when he first approached her,” U.S. District Judge Lawrence Stengel said.

    “Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, a jury could conclude that officer Ammary used excessive force when arresting Ms. Wilson,” Stengel said.

    “Given that seven officers were placed in city schools with Tasers, the department’s lack of guidance on what type of force may be used on children and teenagers and lack of guidance on when tasing juveniles was appropriate could amount to ‘deliberate indifference,’” Stengel concluded.

    Allentown solicitor Susan Ellis Wild said that the city ultimately decided to settle out of court because they wanted to avoid paying lawyers fees.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-granted-100000-settlement-cop-tases-14-year-old-girl-reason/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 09:25:53 AM
    Coward Cop Convicted for Killing Unarmed Innocent Father of Two as He Walked Home

    Brooklyn, NY – After fatally shooting an unarmed innocent man in a dimly lit stairwell, NYPD Officer Peter Liang was convicted of manslaughter and official misconduct after killing the man for no reason and making no attempt to help the dying father of two young girls. Instead of administering CPR or requesting an ambulance, Liang bickered with his partner and whined about possibly losing his job.

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

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

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

    “It was an accident,” Liang whimpered to his partner. “I’m gonna get fired.”

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

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

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

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

    Shortly after the jury convicted Liang of second-degree manslaughter and official misconduct, the NYPD fired him. Liang is the first NYPD cop convicted in an officer-involved shooting in at least a decade. His sentencing is scheduled for April 14, and he faces up to 15 years in prison.

    Akai Gurley did not deserve to die because the NYPD handed a badge and gun over to an incompetent coward. Besides locking Liang away to prevent further deaths, the NYPD must also be held responsible for failing to weed out killer cops including Peter Liang, Daniel Pantaleo, Paul Headley, Michael Carey, Marc Cooper, Gescard Isnora, Michael Oliver, Richard Neri Jr., Bryan Conroy, Edward McMellon, Sean Carroll, Kenneth Boss, Richard Murphy, etc.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/coward-cop-fired-convicted-killing-unarmed-innocent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 09:39:32 AM
    California Cop Who Killed DUI Suspect Charged with Manslaughter Two Months After D.A. Declined to File Charges (Update)

    On Tuesday it was noted the Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster, who shot an unarmed DUI suspect in November, is no longer employed at the Paradise Police Department.

    By Wednesday morning, Feaster was charged with involuntary manslaughter.

    According to the Paradise Post:

    Feaster was arraigned in Judge James Reilley’s court at 8:30 a.m. after Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey decided to bring manslaughter charges against Feaster. The former officer was charged with a single felony count of involuntary manslaughter while armed. Feaster did not enter a plea.

    The charges come two days after Paradise Police Chief Gabriela Tazzari-Dineen announced Feaster was no longer on the payroll. The chief said she couldn’t say whether Feaster was fired because of state law outlined by the “Police Officer’s Bill of Rights.”

    When asked by a reporter whether Feaster quit or was fired, Ramsey said only that Feaster did not resign.

    The California “Officers’ Bill of Rights” cites no protection from disclosing personnel information upon departure, citing only that cops under interrogation will not be subjected to being paraded in front of the media without the officer’s consent.

    However, California public records law may still protect police officers’ personnel records from being released other than basic dates of hiring and firing.


    But now that Feaster has been criminally charged, we can see why he is no longer working for the department, which ends a long career where he was renowned for cracking down on DUI suspects.

    In a 2012 news interview, Feaster said his uncle, who is his namesake, was killed by a drunk driver before he was born, which made it a personal quest for him to arrest all DUI suspects, which led to him receiving an award from MADD.

    As many of us can see in the viral video, Feaster followed the suspected DUI driver who had left a local bar without his headlights on.

    The driver,  Andrew Thomas, struck the median, causing the vehicle to roll and ejecting the passenger, Thomas’ wife, who died at the scene.

    Thomas was seen climbing from the wreckage of the vehicle, disoriented  and dazed, with his hands visible.

    As Feaster approached, he drew his service weapon and fired, striking Thomas in the neck and severing his spinal cord, causing him to fall back into the vehicle.

    Feaster later stated he thought Thomas was going to run, which is why he drew his service weapon.

    Under close examination of the video, you can see what looks like two muzzle flashes as he rocks back on the heels of his feet towards his right.

    At first, Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey said Feaster fired his weapon in a negligent manner but not in a “criminally negligent manner”, exonerating him in the shooting.

    Ramsey’s basis for this argument is that officers are taught to draw their weapon and fire twice at a target, claiming Feaster only fired once, before holstering his gun and acting as if nothing had happened.

    However, there is a discrepancy between what the video shows and what prosecutors claim.

    The video shows what looks to be two shots, while prosecutors claim it is an optical illusion by the flashing lights.

    Even then, the gun did not fire itself.

    No shell casings were found but Feaster can be seen searching the ground as Thomas was communicating with other officers, perhaps searching for shell casings to remove them from the scene.

    After the shooting, Feaster can be seen attempting to coax Thomas out of the vehicle, then claiming on the radio that he was refusing to come out of the vehicle.

    Thomas is heard on the dash cam saying “you shot me”.

    When Thomas told another officer that he could not move because he had been shot by the officer, that officer stated, “he didn’t shoot you.”

    It was only after Thomas died from his injuries that prosecutors re-opened the case, looking into possible manslaughter charges, which hinge on the fact that Feaster failed to render aid to the victim.

    And it was only when medics arrived several minutes later did they realize Thomas was shot and told the commanding officer about it.

    Feaster also failed to radio into dispatch that shots were fired nor did he tell responding medics and officers that he shot the Thomas or discharged his weapon.

    After 11 minutes had passed, the senior officer on scene told Feaster and other officers to go back to the bar to see if somebody may have shot him there.

    And that was when Feaster finally admitted that he had fired his service weapon.

    However, Feaster and other officers failed to provide aid to Thomas or his wife, who laid there taking her dying breaths as Feaster kept his mouth shut about the shooting.


    UPDATE: According to Action News reporter Cecile Juliette, Feaster if facing up to five years in prison if convicted.

    However, there was no separate charge for the fact that he waited 11 minutes to admit he shot Thomas because “California does not have a negligence of performance official duty criminal charge.”

    “They say his failure to report the shot did not delay the medical response Thomas received. However, it did (partially) lead to Feaster’s termination from the Paradise Police force,” she reported on her Facebook page.

    The autopsy shows Thomas died from septic shock stemming from the gunshot wound that severed his spine.

    There is also a video of the arraignment on her page.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 09:54:44 AM
    Ohio Man Sentenced to 240 Days for Recording Cops and Holding Up Sign Warning Drivers of DUI Checkpoint

    An Ohio man was sentenced to 240 days in jail Thursday for First Amendment-related activities, including attempting to video record police in public and warning drivers of an upcoming DUI checkpoint by holding up a sign.

    Douglas “Deo” Odolecki of Cleveland Cop Block was whisked away to jail immediately after the trial.

    His attorney, John Gold, plans to appeal.

    “The judge far exceeded her authority today,” he said in a telephone interview with Photography is Not a Crime.

    “It’s clear she had her mind made up to sentence Doug to the maximum sentence possible, but she actually went overboard.”

    It’s not surprising considering Parma Municipal Judge Deanna O’Donnell was accused by the ACLU in 2013 of running a “debtor’s” prison, one of several judges in the state who would spend hundreds of tax dollars to jail poor people for not paying fines of less than $100.

    Odolecki, who was on trial for two incidents involving the Parma Police Department, was convicted of one count of misconduct at the scene of an emergency, two counts of obstruction of official business and one count of disorderly conduct. Videos of the incidents are posted below.

    She then gave him the maximum sentence for each charge and ordered that they be served consecutively instead of concurrently, which Gold says goes against Ohio law.

    “She knows better but she doesn’t care,” he said.

    She also made very pro-police statements during his sentencing, describing how hard they work and how she is doing her part in making their job easier to by jailing the local Cop Blocker.

    She also has four plaques awarded to her by the Parma Police Department in the jury room, the only plaques on display there as if to send a message to deliberating jurors.

    We’ve seen these judges before. They are the ones whose decisions are reversed upon appeal. Read Cop Block’s account of the trial here.

    The incidents
    The first incident took place on June 13, 2014 where Odolecki was standing on a sidewalk, holding up a sign reading “Checkpoint Ahead. Turn Now!” to warn motorists of an upcoming DUI checkpoint.

    He was approached by two cops, one who told them he had the right to stand there with the sign, but he needed to remove the phrase “Turn Now!” from the sign.

    “This is coming directly from our law department,” claimed Parma police officer James Manzo, who beat a 16-year-old boy, costing the city a $40,000 settlement.

    Police cited Odolecki for obstructing and had his sign confiscated.

    Then on July 29, 2015, in an incident which we covered here, Odolecki came across a group of cops gathering around a teenager near a bridge off a busy thoroughfare.

    Thinking the teen may have been getting unlawfully harassed, he began recording from across the street before crossing the street to get a better angle.

    He stood about 40 feet away with a railing separating himself from the cops when the cops told him to get lost because the teen was having “a real bad day.”

    When Odolecki refused to go away, Parma Police Sergeant Ken Gillissie stormed up to him and assaulted him.

    “First of all, he’s a juvenile so you can’t film him without his parent’s permission,” Gillissie said, taking a swipe at the camera.

    “Take a walk!” Gillissie ordered as Odolecki told him, “don’t touch my shit again.”

    “Take a walk or you’re going to jail,” Gillissie continued.

    “For what?” Odolecki asked.

    “For obstructing,” Gillissie responded.

    “For obstructing what, I’m on public property,” Odolecki asked.

    Gillissie assaulted him again, so Odolecki complied with his order to “take a walk.”

    Odolecki walked across the street and continued recording.

    “Public property, arrest me now,” he said. “This guy likes to violate people’s fucking rights over here.”

    “Say hello to YouTube, guy!”

    One cop started yelling at him that he was “offending small children.”

    Less than a minute later, Gillissie and another cop cross the street and place him under arrest.

    He was charged with misconduct at the scene of an emergency, accused of adding distress to an autistic suicidal teen by recording when he never knew the teen was suicidal.

    They also charged him with obstructing even though they were the ones who hurdled over the guard railing to attack him.

    And the disorderly conduct charge stems from the fact that he cursed at them after they had assaulted him and forced him across the street.

    But the First Amendment allows citizens to curse at police as long as they are not threats or fighting words.

    The maximum sentence for those charges are 90 days for the obstructing charges and 30 days each for the other two charges.

    Both incidents were violations of his First Amendment rights, which obviously not recognized in O’Donnell’s courtroom.

    “It was very clear as the trial progressed that she did not think very highly of our case,” Gold said. “She was very aggressive towards myself and my co-counsel.

    “During sentencing, she went into a diatribe about how cops are abused for trying to do their job.

    “She said, ‘I don’t have the power to make it end, but I have the power to make it stop for a little while.'”

    And with that, Odolecki was whisked away to serve his 240-day sentence.

    So perhaps it’s time for the ACLU of Ohio to revisit the Parma Municipal Court. Below is an excerpt of the letter it sent to O’Donnell in 2013.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/12/ohio-man-sentenced-to-240-days-for-recording-cops-and-holding-up-sign-warning-drivers-of-dui-checkpoint/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on February 12, 2016, 01:52:42 PM
    Finally, some good news.........

    Close your eyes, piggy san......that's not soy sauce on your back..... Hahahahahaha.....

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-peter-liang-guilty-fatal-shooting-akai-gurley-article-1.2528827

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2016, 02:16:48 PM
    Finally, some good news.........

    Close your eyes, piggy san......that's not soy sauce on your back..... Hahahahahaha.....

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-peter-liang-guilty-fatal-shooting-akai-gurley-article-1.2528827



    Posted on top of page. And look at how some criminal goons reacted:

    Quote
    “We are very disappointed in the verdict and believe that the jury came to an absolutely wrong decision,” Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch said. “This bad verdict will have a chilling effect on police officers across the city because it criminalizes a tragic accident.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 12, 2016, 02:37:55 PM

    Quote from: Deacon Jeschin on Today at 22:52:42
    Finally, some good news.........

    Close your eyes, piggy san......that's not soy sauce on your back..... Hahahahahaha.....

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-peter-liang-guilty-fatal-shooting-akai-gurley-article-1.2528827



    Posted on top of page. And look at how some criminal goons reacted:

    Quote
    “We are very disappointed in the verdict and believe that the jury came to an absolutely wrong decision,” Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch said. “This bad verdict will have a chilling effect on police officers across the city because it criminalizes a tragic accident.”








    Ahha at last the jury's are starting to come to there senses
    Regarding these Scumbag Cops & there Contiual Shooting of
    Innocent Unarmed People.
    Clearly by the Reaction of the Cop He Thought It was a Forgone
    Conclusion He would be Found Not Guilty just as so many before him.
    No Doubt 'The He Was In Fear Of His Life ' Get out of Jail Free
    Card Didn't Work This Time.

    Maybe just maybe with a few more Scumbag Killer Cops Being Jailed
    The Rest Of Them Might Behave as though they are part of the Law
    & Not Above It.

    As for the quote from the patrol mans association  ::)   Really are some
    Sick People in Jobs They shouldn't be in.
    Exactly Why There is So Much Annimosity & Distrust to do with all
    Thing Police.

    See No Evil
    Hear No Evil
    Speak No Evil

    When it comes to the Police.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2016, 02:22:18 AM
    Memphis Police Abuse Man; Local Media Blind to Abuse

    The local media in Memphis captured a video of police chasing a man who surrendered, only for the Memphis police officer to strike him with a baton and kick him twice before planting his foot on the suspect’s back and handcuffing him.

    It was a clear case of police brutality because the man had surrendered.

    But Local Memphis was still not certain, so they had to turn to their “experts” to educate them.

    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the problem with corporate media these days.

    Rather than state the obvious, they had to turn to their so-called experts in order to appear “objective.”

    This station is so objective that it blurred the faces of the cops involved as well as the face of the  suspect (but only because they wanted to protect the cops.)

    And who were these experts?

    The head of the Memphis police union, of course.

    And can you guess what Michael Williams, president of the Memphis Police Association, said?

    Mike Williams said it is important to consider the incident from the officer’s point of view.

    “Yes they were they were rough because he has already had indications that he did not want to comply with authority so until he is in custody he is going to be treated as such. Period,” Williams said.

    In a later article, they were able to contact more experts, who had varying opinions.

    State Representative G.A. Hardaway watched the video and said he was outraged by what he saw.

    “There’s obviously some abuse going on here, excessive force. When I’m looking at a young man that’s on the ground and supporting himself with one arm laying down, that is not a position where he’s a threat to anybody standing,” said Hardaway.

    Steve Mulroy, a former federal prosecutor and civil rights lawyer for the Department of Justice, agrees.

    “When the suspect was already down on the ground with his arms indicating that he was going to comply, offering no resistance and not failing to obey any commands from the officer, it was not justified for the officer to strike him with the nightstick or to kick him,” said Mulroy.

    Not everyone agrees. Out for a walk with his wife and son, James Richey witnessed the arrest. He was pleased with the officer’s response.

    “They pretty much followed standard procedures that an MPD officer would follow, took him down. You had the other officers detain him,” said Richey.

    According to the police report, the suspect in this case hit a woman and in the process hit his child. The report says he fought with police.

    So there you have it. A split decision between the experts with the police union president and some random guy in the neighborhood saying it was justified and a state representative and a former prosecutor saying it was not justified.

    But the real problem is that Local Memphis was unable to come out and state the obvious.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/12/memphis-police-abuse-man-local-media-blind-to-abuse/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2016, 03:36:41 PM
    State Supreme Court Rules Cops No Longer Need a Warrant to Enter Homes and Seize Evidence

    Wisconsin Just Lost its 4th Amendment Rights by the Single Vote of a Judge Appointed by Scott Walker

    The Wisconsin Supreme Court just dealt a death blow to the Fourth Amendment, which is supposed to protect a citizen against unreasonable search and seizure. What’s more, the decision was made by a single, newly-appointed judge who was not even present when arguments were made in court.

    In a 4-3 decision, the state’s highest court ruled that evidence seized in a person’s private home during a warrantless search can be used against the person under an expanded view of the “community caretaker” clause.

    Police went to Charles Matalonis’ house after his brother was found bloodied at a nearby residence. Matalonis, admitting he fought with his brother, let the cops in, where they saw blood in the apartment and some cannabis. They wanted to look inside a locked room, and when Matalonis refused to unlock it, the cops broke in. There they found a cannabis growing setup, whereupon Matalonis was arrested and charged with manufacture of cannabis.

    The Court of Appeals had previously ruled this to be an unreasonable search. However, in the majority opinion of the Supreme Court, “Justice Annette Ziegler found that police were not investigating a crime but exercising their “community caretaker” function by checking to make sure no other injured people were in the house.”

    This was challenged by three other Justices, who argued that “by the time officers entered the locked room, some 20 minutes or more after they had been in the house, there was little reason to suspect someone else was in the bedroom, but plenty of reason to suspect it might house marijuana.”

    If the case had remained deadlocked at 3-3, then the Court of Appeals ruling that the evidence should be suppressed would have stood. But in a move that is without precedent in the U.S. or the Wisconsin Supreme Courts, newly-appointed Justice Rebecca Bradley cast the deciding vote without participating in oral arguments.

    “No precedent appears to exist in the United States Supreme Court or in this court for a new justice who did not participate in oral argument to participate in the case without re-argument,” said Justice Shirley Abrahamson.
    Bradley was appointed by Governor Scott Walker after Justice Patrick Crooks passed away on Sept. 21, and is now running for election. Bradley had not participated in five earlier cases since her appointment, but decided to chime in on this one. She believed that listening to taped recordings of the arguments, instead of being there in person and involved, was sufficient for her to make the call.

    So, an unelected judge appointed by a partisan politician cast a single vote, without being present during arguments, which effectively nullified the Fourth Amendment in that state. Now in Wisconsin, cops can enter a person’s home without a warrant, seize evidence and use it against the person.
    The irony is that this attack on the Fourth Amendment is being carried out under the guise of cops being “community caretakers.” In other words, the state presumes that it is doing what’s best for the common good by violating the rights of the individual.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wisconsin-lost-4th-amendment-rights-single-vote-justice-appointed-scott-walker/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2016, 03:40:42 PM
    Watch Free Speech Die: Cop Tickets Man Because It’s Now “Illegal to Offend Someone”

    Austin, TX — A video uploaded to Youtube this week shows an ominous precedent being set in America. Offending someone is now grounds for police action.

    A preacher near the University of Texas at Austin documented this death blow to the freedom of speech. The preacher was voicing his opinion on anal sex, just outside of the campus when students became ‘offended’ and sought out state force to punish the man for his speech.

    When the officer came up to the preacher, he essentially explained to him that the 1st Amendment is irrelevant, “The law says if you offend someone, and they wanna press charges.”

    “It’s against the law to offend someone?” the preacher asked in complete surprise.

    “Yes,” the cop repeated.

    The officer then proceeded to repeat the words that hurt the oh-so-sensitive ears of the passersby, prompting them to sic the cops on a man for his words. “Dirty penis. Genital warts. You can’t keep your legs closed. It’s a war on the anus. Homosexuals at UT,” repeated the officer, as if he was exhibiting evidence of an actual crime.

    While the Free Thought Project certainly doesn’t agree with the preacher’s views, we will stand up for his right to voice them.

    Even the vilest, most repugnant, and hateful speech must be defended with our lives. For if we ever give the state the ability to silence one of us, they will silence all of us.

    In the video, the officers actually admit that they write “so many of these tickets” that it is hard to keep track of them. So, this is hardly an isolated incident.

    When the Free Thought Project called the campus police department for a statement, we were told that the citation was voided. But this was most likely due the outpouring of calls from the tens of thousands of viewers who watched the video on Youtube, with the department’s phone number in the title.

    Had the man in the video attempted to ‘resist’ his unlawful citation and detainment, the officer could have killed him and this would have been justified — in the land of the free.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-free-speech-die-cop-tickets-man-illegal-offend-someone/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2016, 02:28:32 PM
    “Sickening” Video Shows Cops Attack a Peaceful Old Man and Break His Arm for No Reason

    Burlington City, NJ — In February 2014, Steven S. Kahn, 60, was peacefully sitting in his car, had not harmed anyone and was not suspected of committing any crime. However, these facts would prove to be no defense against Burlington City police officers and their tendency that night to escalate a peaceful situation into a violent one.

    The entire interaction was captured on police dashcam.

    According to the Courier-Post, Michael J. McKenna, a Cherry Hill attorney representing Kahn, said the video “demonstrates a use of force by police against a 60-year-old man so excessive that it can only be called sickening.”

    According to a lawsuit filed on behalf of Kahn, police went to the Wawa gas station where he was parked in response to Kahn’s passenger being involved in a dispute over a clerk’s refusal to sell her tobacco products without an ID.

    As shown on the dashcam, the situation looks peaceful enough as three officers surround the car. However, the scene quickly turns violent as the female passenger, the alleged subject of the police investigation, becomes the target of cops.

    In the video, the officers are seen shouting at the woman, who is then yanked from the car and slammed on the hood of the patrol car as she is placed in handcuffs.

    While this was going on, Kahn sat peacefully and calmly in his car, until he became the subject of the officers’ “swift, severe and unprovoked violence,” according to the suit

    The Courier-Post reports,

    The suit alleges Patrolman Jeremy Bright then approached Kahn and believed he saw the man “nudge” the remnants of a marijuana cigarette into a Wawa coffee cup.
    Bright ordered Kahn to step out of his vehicle, then pulled him out “without giving Mr. Kahn time to unbuckle his seat belt,” says the suit.
    It says Bright repeatedly ordered Kahn to “stop resisting,” while the Philadelphia man shouted, ““I’m not doing nothing.”
    After the officers had slammed the 60-year-old man face down on the concrete, they knelt on him while placing him in an arm lock. Wanting to join in on the assault, officer William Lancenese, jumped in and also “applied weight and force on top of Mr. Kahn,” the suit says.

    As multiple cops applied their weight and force to the 60-year-old, Kahn noted that he couldn’t comply with giving the officers his right arm because it was pinned underneath him by the officers’ weight.

    According to the lawsuit, it was at this point that Bright “suddenly and with great force” bent Kahn’s left arm until it snapped.

    The brutalized and tormented Kahn was then placed in handcuffs which “caused further agony and suffering,” according to the suit. Then, instead of bringing him to a hospital, the injured man was brought to jail.

    The ‘charges’ against Kahn, which apparently required such brutal force to arrest him, were all dropped as a part of a conditional plea. The entire violent interaction in the video below was carried out by these officers for no reason at all.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sickening-video-shows-cops-attack-peaceful-man-break-arm/

    http://www.courierpostonline.com/story/news/2016/02/11/steven-kahn-burlington-city/80231962/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on February 14, 2016, 02:31:43 PM
    Something like that would be perfect for Harley to jam it up their wazoos.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2016, 02:32:26 PM
    Elderly Woman Tasered, Her Arm Broken, for Not Removing Her Earrings Fast Enough

    Chattanooga, TN — When 60-year-old Nancy Mason was in the process of being booked into the Hamilton County, Tennessee, jail on theft charges she refused to remove her earrings quickly enough setting off a violent chain of events. For not complying fast enough, Sheriff’s Sergeant Rodney Terrell tased her — sending the woman crashing to the ground, landing on and breaking her arm in the fall.

    Before being booked, Mason is ordered to remove her jewelry but refuses to do so. “I will report you,” she says to Terrell. Terrell, can be heard saying, “Report all you want, I will not keep telling you.”

    Then he fires his taser.

    “You broke my arm,” Mason says in video footage, clutching her wrist in disbelief, after recovering from the fall.

    “I didn’t break your arm, you broke it,” the officer retorts.

    Meanwhile, despite Mason’s complaints of pain, a group of officers stands around and makes no move even to offer medical assistance.

    This exchange is now the subject of a $1.75 million lawsuit for the ‘alleged’ use of excessive force by Terrell, and the failure by him and four other sheriff’s deputies, as well as the arresting Chattanooga police officer, to adequately protect her from harm. Mason had, in fact, suffered a fracture of her wrist — which she is still recovering from.

    According to local ABC affiliate News Channel 9, Mason’s attorney, Robin Flores, said, “She was deprived of due process in that she was in a helpless position, or was in the care and control of the government actors, and they failed to protect her.”

    The lawsuit names the City of Chattanooga and Hamilton County for failure to “properly train its officers and agents to intervene and prevent injury.”

    Despite the suit — and an internal affairs investigation by Hamilton County of the incident — all officers involved remain on the job in their same roles.

    The Hamilton County Sheriff declined to comment due to the pending legal case and the City of Chattanooga. only saying that “their officer did nothing wrong,” reported Channel 9.

    “Whenever there’s a constitutional wrong done to one person, it’s going to be done to everybody and someone needs to step in to help,” said Flores, according to WRCBtv. “Lawyers are usually in the best position to do that.”

    After this unjustifiable exchange, Mason now feels about cops the way many across the United States have unfortunately concluded after experiencing excessive force. According to Flores,

    “She fears police, she fears being around them and she fears seeing them.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/elderly-woman-tasered-removing-earings-fast/

    http://newschannel9.com/news/local/accusation-of-excessive-force-against-a-hamilton-county-deputy

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 16, 2016, 10:18:39 PM
    North Carolina Police Department Sued for Probing Man’s Anus for Non-Existing Drugs

    After forcing a man to strip naked in a cheap motel room, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department is being sued for compensatory and punitive damages under state and federal law. No dollar amount has been set.

    Two men have filed a lawsuit against Charlotte police, claiming police assaulted and kidnapped them while violating their civil rights by subjecting them to illegal searches in April 2014 at a west Charlotte motel.

    The lawsuit was filed in January 2016. Defendants in the lawsuit include the city of Charlotte, former Police Chief Rodney Monroe, Sergeant John Gorrod, and officers Michael Bodenstein and Michael Wallin, .

    The plaintiffs Jeramie Barideaux and Jonathan Harris claim they were sitting in a vehicle at the Rodeway Inn in west Charlotte listening to music and discussing future endeavors when officer Michael Wallin parked his patrol car in front of their car.

    Officer Wallin said he was responding to a suspicious vehicle 911 call.

    Sergeant John Gorrod and officer Michael Bodenstein arrived seconds later. Officer Wallin said he wanted to search the vehicle, but they refused.

    Wallin ordered the two men out of the vehicle and began searching them for drugs without consent, which happens to be a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment.

    Officer Bodenstein began to search Harris, that search included his genitalia and buttocks. Upon the first search, Bodenstein searched Harris a second time, telling Harris that he believed he was hiding crack cocaine in his anus.

    Even though the first two illegal searches yielded no drugs, Bodenstein stated, “I can either squeeze your ass for crack now, or arrest you and check your ass for crack downtown.”

    Harris was then taken inside of a motel room where he was ordered to strip search down to bare nudity. It was then that Harris was ordered to bend over while Bodenstein and Wallin searched Harris’s buttocks.

    But still no drugs were found in the third search.

    The two plaintiffs were released on the scene.

    The attorney for the plaintiffs Morris McAdoo said the lawsuit is designed “to bring justice for these young men by revealing the details of this painful night.”

    The lawsuit, which can be read here states:

    “Plantiffs were improperly seized without probable cause or reasonable suspicions. Plantiffs were denied liberty without justification in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The seizure was unreasonable and undertaken in malice, willfulness, and reckless indifference.”

    The officers’ conduct was extreme and outrageous exceeding all bounds of human decency

    The suit alleges that Sergeant Gorrod gave Bodenstein and Wallin the green light to perform multiple body cavity searches, and was aware of the probable consequences in doing so.

    In fact, police records show that Gorrod was suspended in February 2010. The department would not detail the reason as to why Gorrod was suspended.

    The suit also claims former Chief Monroe, “Adopted and encouraged a policy and approach in conducting warrantless search and seizures including body cavity searches that violate the constitutional and privacy rights of citizens”

    Oddly enough, Chief Monroe retired shortly after the department and city settled a $2.25 million settlement with the family of a unarmed man that was shot and killed by Charlotte police.

    The lawsuit describes Officer Wallin’s actions as corrupt, intentional and illegal.

    It’s interesting to note that Wallin’s wife also works for the police department. Although officer Jessica Wallin was not named in the suit, she is the Public Information Officer, meaning her job is to speak to the media.

    In a one-on-one interview with PINAC News, she said, “I look forward to my husband being cleared of any wrong doing once the truth comes out.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/16/north-carolina-police-department-sued-for-probing-mans-anus-for-non-existing-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 18, 2016, 12:29:17 AM
    Los Angeles police officers accused of raping women while on duty

    LOS ANGELES –  While one Los Angeles police officer acted as a lookout in the front seat of a departmental car, a 19-year-old woman working as a drug informant was forced to perform oral sex on his partner in the back seat after being told, "You have to do what the police tell you to do," the teenager said in a federal court filing.

    Another woman, also working as a drug informant, said the same two officers each forced her to have sex with them twice after threatening her with jail time.

    Two other women told similar stories.

    On Wednesday, prosecutors announced that veteran Officers James Nichols and Luis Valenzuela had been arrested and charged with repeatedly raping the four women over a three-year period, mostly while they were on duty.

    The charges against Nichols, 44, and Valenzuela, 43, include rape under color of authority and oral copulation by force. Valenzuela also is charged with pointing a gun at one of the women.

    They could face life in prison if convicted.

    Attorneys representing the officers in civil litigation filed by the women did not return messages seeking comment Wednesday. The officers, who have denied all the claims in court records, were set to be arraigned on Thursday.

    Prosecutors are asking that they each be held on bail of more than $3.5 million.

    Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said at a news conference Wednesday that both officers have been suspended without pay since 2013. Their employment status is pending an administrative hearing that would follow their criminal case, he said.

    "These two officers have disgraced themselves, they disgraced this badge, they disgraced their oaths of office," Beck said. "It's a violation of public trust."

    He said investigators are actively seeking other potential victims.

    Prosecutors said the rapes began in December 2008 after Nichols and Valenzuela became partners in the department's Hollywood Division. They were working as narcotics investigators.

    Prosecutors say all four women assaulted had been arrested on drug-related charges at various times by the officers, and court records show at least two had been recruited by the officers to work as drug informants.

    Those women have filed civil rights lawsuits against the officers. The Los Angeles City Council settled one case last year after agreeing to pay one woman $575,000, while the other case is still being litigated.

    A third lawsuit is expected to be filed.

    Beck said the department's internal affairs bureau began investigating the officers after the first woman complained of being raped in 2010. In 2014, the department's elite Robbery Homicide Division took over.

    Asked why it took so long for the charges to filed against the officers, Beck said the investigation was complicated and involved reluctant witnesses who were difficult to find.

    Dennis Chang, an attorney who represents two of the women in the case, said the officers took advantage of the women's positions and threatened them with jail time or outing them as informants.

    "These women were drug users, they're primarily arrested and in custody, in an extremely vulnerable state," Chang said. "They were afraid."

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/02/18/los-angeles-police-officers-accused-raping-women-while-on-duty.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 18, 2016, 02:21:07 PM
    I just don't know Why There is So Much Outcry
    Against The Police....

    It Is Only A Very Very Few That are Rotten Scumbags.
    And it only Very Very Rarely Covered up By Other
    Police...  ::) ::)  ::)


    And I Have Some Prime Location Real Estate,
    Sea side Location on The Moon For Sale.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 21, 2016, 02:54:08 PM
    Disturbing Video Catches Cop Plotting to Shoot an Unconscious Man in Need of Medical Help

    Meriden, CT — Responding to reports of an intoxicated man asleep in the middle of the road, a Meriden, Connecticut police officer said, flatly, “I think we oughta just f***ing pop him.”

    If by now you still have any lingering doubts about the widening disconnect between police and civilians — or the culture of violence and contempt rampant in police culture — this footage could tip your opinion. Though the incident was captured on video by dash camera and audio by body cam, it was only released on Thursday following a Freedom of Information Act request by the Record-Journal.

    Officer John Slepski arrived on the scene on September 19, 2015, and approached the sleeping man — whom he immediately referred to as a “f***ing a**hole.” Officer John Slezak, already standing over the clearly intoxicated individual, seems as if he’s attempting to mitigate the potential that Slepski might go overboard in the interaction.

    “He’s fine,” Slezak says to Slepski, “he just wants a ride to the hospital.”

    “I know … f***ing douchebag,” Slepski responds, obviously annoyed he’s been summoned to help a citizen in need. “I think we oughta pepper spray this f***ing douche.”

    “Alright. You gonna pepper spray him to get him up?” Slezak asks.

    Though the video appears to show Slepski following through on that plan with a brief burst of spray, and his statement, “Whoa. That’ll wake you up,” Lt. Sal Nesci somehow determined, after an investigation, no pepper spray had been deployed.

    In repeated attempts by the two officers to stir the man, Slepski continues to use vulgarities and is alarmingly disrespectful — particularly considering the man likely needed medical aid. Fortunately, this attitude and behavior didn’t escape his superiors’ attention.

    “Your conduct while acting as a Meriden Police Officer is disgraceful,” Police Chief Jeffry Cossette wrote to Officer Slepski in a disciplinary letter, according to the Record-Journal. “Your dehumanizing and demoralizing treatment of this citizen in need of medical attention sickens me. Your actions did not perpetuate the mission of the Meriden Police Department.”

    Slepski received a 60-day suspension as a result of the interaction and subsequent Internal Affairs investigation.

    “If a fellow officer is behaving in a demeaning and demoralizing way toward a citizen, you have a Duty to Act,” Cossette wrote to Officer Slezak. “You said nothing to Officer Slepski as he directed the derogatory comments toward the citizen. When the citizen was directed to ‘crawl on the ground if he had to,’ you offered no assistance to this citizen. You allowed for this citizen to be treated in this matter.”

    Slezak received a five-day suspension, though Detective John Williams, president of the police union, said Slezak had filed a grievance over the disciplinary action. Williams noted that Slezak “did not swear at the individual, did not cuss, did not call him any names, he even walked alongside of him when the individual stumbled to the roadway to catch him if he fell.” Williams added Slezak “cannot control what comes out of Slepski’s mouth.”

    Slepski’s suspension began February 2 and Slezak’s on February 5.

    The unidentified man appears lucky to have escaped the encounter unharmed.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/i-pop-him-damning-video-shows-mentality-police-claim-serve
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 21, 2016, 02:59:37 PM
    In the Land of the Free, A Cop Can Kill 2 Girls, Face No Charges, then Be Elected to Office

    Carroll County, GA — In September, on a rainy Saturday night, Georgia state trooper Anthony Scott was flexing his above the law privilege and driving at dangerously high speeds for no reason.

    Scott was not on his way to a call, nor did he have any official reason for driving fast, when he slammed into a Nissan Sentra carrying four kids. Kylie Hope Lindsey, 17, and Isabella Alise Chinchilla, 16, who were in the back seat of the Nissan, were killed.

    Dillon Lewis Wall, 18, who was driving, and front-seat passenger Benjamin Alan Finken, 17, were critically injured and taken to Grady Memorial Hospital.

    Five months later, and Dillon is still recovering from a brain injury, paralysis, hearing loss and multiple broken teeth from the crash. However, according to Dillon, it’s his heart that hurts the most as this young man was crazy about Kylie.

    After the crash, Capt. Mark Perry of the Georgia Department of Public Safety released a statement noting that Scott had no reason to be travelling that fast.

    “Turns out he was running at a high rate of speed through this intersection in a territory that’s he’s familiar with and should have known the dangers that potentially exist,” Perry said speaking about the 10 crashes that had occurred at this intersection in the last 3 years.

    An internal ‘investigation’ said that Scott’s speed only ‘contributed to the crash,’ but that Dillon’s failure to yield was to blame. However, according to Dillon’s aunt, he could not see the trooper.

    Recently released dashcam video of the crash backs up Dillon’s claim of not being able to see Scott approaching. As Scott sped up the hill on that dark highway, Dillon had no way of seeing or reacting fast enough to the trooper’s car travelling at such a high speed.

    After watching the dashcam footage, you can clearly see who was at fault in this scenario. However, Anthony Scott is a privileged member of law enforcement, and, therefore, he is entitled to a privileged form of justice — or injustice rather.

    According to the Atlanta-Journal-Constitution,

    This week, that former trooper went before a grand jury, which was investigating why he was driving 91 mph on a dark highway in Carroll County seconds before his car collided with that of the teenagers. Anthony Scott made use of a privilege that Georgia extends to law enforcement officers: the officer may choose to make a statement to a grand jury that is deciding whether to indict him for a crime. The statement comes at the end of the proceeding, and no one may challenge it or cross-examine the officer.
    Scott took advantage of that privilege and was the concluding witness before the grand jury, District Attorney Pete Skandalakis said.

    The grand jury chose not to indict Scott.
    “There are no winners here,” Scott’s attorney, Max Pilgrim, said. “This has been harder on him than anything he ever did in the Marine Corps.” Scott saw combat during four years in the Marines.
    Scott’s attorney is wrong. There is a clear “winner” here, and it’s the man who is alive and who gets to go home to his family in spite of his criminal negligence.

    Because Scott was a cop — he will not face any consequences for killing two kids and paralyzing another — and we call this the ‘justice system.’

    “The officer chose to speed. The officer chose to do this,” Lena Wall, Dillon’s aunt, said Thursday. “And his choice killed two people.”

    Imagine for a moment that this was your nephew or son, or these two beautiful girls were your daughters. The emptiness and hopeless feeling from watching the man responsible for killing your child get off scot-free would be overwhelming.

    To add insult to death, Scott was elected to city council three months after killing young Kylie and Isabella. Now, after the lack of charges, he can even return to law enforcement.

    His attorney said that Scott is eager to move on, but will never be able to fully get over his remorse.

    “When his daughter starts driving, he’s going to remember it, and he’s going to have to live with it,” Pilgrim said.

    Well, he should have to live with it. Had he not been negligently driving nearly 40 mph over the speed limit, on a rainy night, those kids would be alive today.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/land-free-cop-kill-2-girls-face-charges-elected-office/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 21, 2016, 03:02:23 PM
    Cops Caught Forcing Scientists to Falsify DNA Tests To Get More Prosecutions — Now They’re Furious

    New York, NY – A group of scientists who worked at a crime lab for the New York State police are now suing the department, claiming that the agency encouraged them to overlook false test results so they could get more prosecutions. The three scientists who filed the lawsuit said that they attempted to correct some of the errors that were taking place in the crime lab, and they were silenced and retaliated against because the errors were working out in the department’s favor, and ensuring them more prosecutions.

    Scientists Shannon Morris, Melissa Lee and Kevin Rafferty are seeking monetary damages in the lawsuit, but it has not been revealed how much. The group says that they wanted to implement the computerized DNA analysis system called TrueAllele in their crime lab, to ensure that the results of their tests were correct. The crime lab was working with the program for a short period of time before it was ultimately canceled by the department. However, the state police rejected the suggestion and they began to put more pressure on the scientists to secure convictions.

    According to lawyer John Bailey, who will be representing the scientists, the crime lab in question had a culture of corruption.

    “There are people that are very pro-prosecution. They were putting pressure on scientists to reach conclusions that were not scientifically valid. That’s what my clients were objecting to,” Bailey said.

    All three of the scientists are now facing disciplinary proceedings at work for speaking out against the “pro-prosecution” culture at the lab, and one of the scientists, Shannon Morris has already been fired. Each of the researchers have worked with the state police for over 20 years and have not had any disciplinary issues until now.

    As expected, State Police spokeswoman Kristin Lowman has denied the allegations and said that they canceled the program due to an investigation, but that they are not opposed to it.

    “The program was not progressing because of the internal investigation. The State Police is committed to the technology and is seeking a new request for proposals to move forward. We were audited by the American Association for Laboratory Accreditation on all aspects of our forensic biology (DNA) operation and are in full compliance with all of our accrediting and oversight body requirements,” Lowman said.

    In a similar but totally unrelated case in New York City this week, a doctor has filed a lawsuit alleging that she was forced out of her job at the medical examiner’s office because she spoke out about how the city was using a disputed method of analyzing DNA to gather evidence.

    According to CBS, Dr. Marina Stajic was working for the medical examiner until she was confronted and she could either retire or be fired from her job as a laboratory director. This all came after she questioned the use of the DNA profiling technique known as low copy number, which critics have argued is unreliable and should not be used in court.

    In the lawsuit from that case, Stajic says that her superiors were “displeased that [she] appeared to be aligned with the criminal defense lawyers on the commission.”

    In both of these labs, there was obviously a culture of corruption where doctors and scientists were forced to go against their values and against their own research and professional opinions, for the sake of securing convictions.

    Both lawsuits have yet to be taken to court.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/scientists-sue-ny-state-police-forced-falsify-dna-results-prosecutions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 23, 2016, 08:37:31 AM
    U.S. Marshals Kill Wrong Man in Wrong Trailer While Trying to Serve Arrest Warrant in New Mexico

    United States Marshals shot and killed the wrong man in the wrong trailer before turning their attention to the right trailer and arresting the right man early Saturday morning in New Mexico.

    But now they are not admitting any wrongdoing.

    However, 23-year-old Edgar Alvarado was shot dead before they eventually nabbed 25-year-old murder suspect George Bond.

    Alvarado lived in trailer number 26 in the West Central trailer park in Albuquerque.

    Bond was hiding out in trailer number 29, which was three trailers down.

    SWAT team members were seen fist bumping each other after Bond had been arrested, so at least somebody found cause to celebrate.

    According to the Albuquerque Journal:

    “The United States Marshal Service was in the process of serving an arrest warrant when an incident occurred and shots were fired,” Pierce wrote in a news release.

    The Marshals Service said that George Bond, 25, and six others were arrested at the trailer park. Bond was wanted in connection with a 2014 murder in Los Lunas. He had managed to flee from authorities at Albuquerque’s main post office, near Broadway and Mountain NE, on Friday afternoon.

    Ben Segotta, a spokesman for the Marshals Service, said the arrests were made near where the shooting took place, but he declined to comment on the shooting.

    Pierce didn’t say if the marshals opened fire or if it was officers from another law enforcement agency.

    As the scene came to a close, SWAT officers were seen fist-bumping one another.

    Alvarado was described as a small and outgoing man. He was a graduate of the Academy of Trades and Technology and was planning to propose to his girlfriend, his family said.


    Although law enforcement is not publicly commenting on the shooting, Alvarado’s family is outraged.

    On Friday, Bond had eluded authorities when he ran into a post office and ran out the back door.

    Last week U.S. Marshals made national news by arresting a Texas man over a 29-year-old student loan debt.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/21/u-s-marshals-kill-wrong-man-in-wrong-trailer-while-trying-to-serve-arrest-warrant-in-new-mexico/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 23, 2016, 08:39:27 AM
    New Mexico Cops Confiscate Phone from Witness After Shooting Innocent Man in Botched Raid

    Law enforcement officers are still not saying much about shooting the wrong man during a botched raid on the wrong mobile home over the weekend, but now we’re learning they confiscated a phone from the victim’s little brother who witnessed the shooting.

    It is unclear if Edgar Camacho-Alvarado’s 11-year-old brother recorded the shooting or just the aftermath or if he recorded anything, but generally that is the reason cops confiscate phones after killing citizens.

    And it’s far from legal, but so is shooting the wrong man dead, then asking family members for his name indicating they had no clue who they had just killed.

    Their real target, George Bond, was actually inside another mobile home about 200 feet away, according to the Albuquerque Journal, which said the raid consisted U.S. Marshals, FBI Agents, New Mexico State Police, Albuquerque police, Bernalillo County sheriff’s deputies and Rio Rancho police,

    After killing Camacho-Alvarado and confiscating his brother’s phone, the cops then moved on to the next trailer and began throwing flash bombs through its windows, eventually forcing its occupants outside.

    Meanwhile, Camaco-Alvarado’s body lay dead in front of his mobile home for 14 hours.

    And cops refused to answer any questions from family members as you can see in the video below.

    Bond, 25, was wanted for a 2014 murder in which charges had been dropped in 2015, only for the case to be reopened in January 2016.

    In fact, Bond had already been in custody in September 2015 for the murder of 21-year-old Charles Davlin before they dismissed the charges and released him.

    On Friday, law enforcement officers were about to arrest him, but he ran into a post office and somehow managed to escape, even though they had set up a perimeter.

    But they then tracked him down to the West Central mobile home park where they gathered their troops and proceeded to arrest him before dawn Saturday morning.

    Bond was hiding out in trailer #29.

    Camacho-Alvarado was working on his truck’s engine in front of trailer #26.

    Police say “a confrontation” took place and “shots were fired,” which is police talk for they confronted Camacho-Alvarado before killing him.

    He did not have a gun nor did he have a warrant. All he had was the misfortune to have been working on his truck while authorities swarmed the mobile park with multiple agencies and armored vehicles, looking for any excuse to use violence in the name of officer safety.

    And now they’re probably looking for an excuse to pin his death on Bond, who should have been in custody all along.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/22/new-mexico-cops-confiscated-phone-from-witness-after-shooting-innocent-man-in-botched-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 23, 2016, 12:06:38 PM
    Where's agnostic??
    He's not posted on here for awhile.

    We need that expert cop view of why a
    Innocent unarmed man was shot dead
    & left lying outside for 14hrs.

    And these are law enforcement people
    Or low down murdering scumbags
    Shooting & killing who they feel like
    & leaving their bodies lying around.

    It's good it wasn't some bunch of dindu nuffinks
    Then it be all over news.
    How they have no respect or regard for life.

    Cops ---- oh !! That's okay Then.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 24, 2016, 12:19:51 AM
    Award-Winning Texas Cop Indicted for Unlawfully Searching PINAC Correspondent’s Car While He Was Incarcerated for Recording

    The Texas cop who unlawfully searched the car of a PINAC correspondent while he was incarcerated for recording a police memorial last year was indicted on a misdemeanor criminal trespass charge Thursday.

    Galveston Police Sergeant Archie Chapman faces up to 180 days in jail and a $2,000 fine, according to the Houston Chronicle.

    As of Monday, the award-winning officer who has a history of abuse has yet to be arrested for the incident captured on Phillip Turner’s dash cam.

    However, he remains on paid administrative leave for the incident that took place in November where he and other cops arrested Turner outside the Galveston Police Department while Turner video recorded a police memorial.

    Police claim they arrested him for not identifying himself, but Turner was under no legal obligation to identify himself unless they articulated a reasonable suspicion that he was involved in a crime.

    Video recording a police memorial in front of the department – or even the license plates of cars leaving the police parking lot as they accused him of doing – did not meet that burden.

    After all, the whole point of license plates is that they remain visible to the public eye to allow police and the public to read them.

    Video of the arrest was captured by David Worden, who incidentally was not arrested for video recording. At least not that time.

    Once Turner was arrested, he continued to refuse to identify himself, saying he would be more than happy to do so, if only they could provide a legitimate reason to arrest him.

    But they were unable to do so, which prompted the infuriated cops to take his keys and use them to enter his car that was parked at a nearby parking lot.

    “This is what happens when you question authority,” Galveston police officer Gilbert Villareal told Turner after they had found his wallet in his car and were able to identify him.

    Charges were dismissed against Turner within a week.

    Turner, who operates the YouTube channel, The Battousai, has two pending lawsuits against the Forth Worth and Round Rock police departments.

    Chapman’s lawyer told the Houston Chronicle that the officer was only trying to keep the community safe by entering Turner’s car without permission or a warrant.

    “Sgt. Chapman was trying to do his job as a police officer,” Greg Cagle said. “He had no motive other than to protect the public and the officers.”

    But that was not enough to convince the grand jury, who went ahead with the indictment anyway.

    In 2013, Chapman was one of several Galveston police officers captured on a dash cam kicking, punching and submerging a man’s head under water after the man was found sleeping in his car by a seawall.


    “As of 2005, there were more than fifty-four such complaints pending against the Galveston Police Department. The complaints of excessive force since 2005 have continued and have been numerous and well publicized,” the complaint stated.

    Videos of Turner’s arrest by Galveston police as well as the one of police unlawfully entering his car are posted below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/23/award-winning-texas-cop-indicted-for-unlawfully-searching-pinac-correspondents-car-while-he-was-incarcerated-for-recording/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 24, 2016, 10:56:19 PM
    Elderly Grandma Defends Herself Against Cops Raiding Wrong the Home – She’s the One Arrested

    Conroe, TX — 70-year-old grandmother, and teacher Judy Cox was recently assaulted by police after they wrongfully invaded her home, and at the end of the encounter, she was the one taken to jail for assault.

    “I have never experienced anything so terrible and all the days of my life,” Judy Cox said.

    According to Cox, the police came to her door without a warrant, demanding to search her home because the GPS signal from a stolen Ipad had directed the officers to her home.

    “At least four or five cops came there and they told me that they were there looking for an iPad and the trace came back to my address,” family member Ysonji Lundy said.

    “They destroyed my home and left without any explanation,” she added.

    At first, the family denied the police entry to their home and said that they would have to get a warrant if they wanted to search the house.

    “I told them, no, to get a search warrant and I shut the door,” Lundy said.

    Moments later, more police returned and said that they had spoken with the district attorney who ruled that they had probable cause to search the home since the GPS signal was traced there. The owner of the stolen Ipad, who was from another town, was standing there with police and was a total stranger to the family.

    Reluctantly, the family allowed the police in the home and they searched it thoroughly, tearing the entire house apart and throwing their property everywhere.

    Things took a turn for the worse when the police attempted to rummage through 70-year-old Cox’s purse, which was obviously far too small to fit an Ipad.

    “I asked what are you doing? Everything that was in my purse I earned,” Cox said.

    Next the officer became physical with her.

    “He slammed me against the wall so hard that my hair fell off, my wig,” she said.

    In the scuffle to keep her purse from the officer, she inadvertently scratched the officer’s face.

    “Then they tell me oh you assaulted a police officer. I said I’m sorry I was reaching for my purse. They arrested me and handcuffed me in front of my grandchildren and my children and took me to jail,” she said.

    She was then taken to jail for assaulting a police officer after her home was invaded and after she was assaulted by armed men much larger than she is.

    “I was humiliated. But being placed under arrest and put in jail by people who weren’t supposed to be there in the first place. And they want to make me out to be some monster. I’m not a violent person. I’ve been an educator for over 40 years. I even told the police officers I was just going for my purse,” she said.

    After searching the home, the police found nothing.

    Cox and her family have contacted local activists to learn how they can fight back, and they plan on filing a complaint with internal affairs.

    Police oftent hurt or kill innocent people during raids on the wrong house. Just yesterday we reported on the story of a young man who was shot and killed by police as he fixed his truck in his driveway because US Marshalls got the address wrong.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-storm-wrong-home-warrant-assault-70-year-old-woman-arrest-assault/

    http://abc13.com/news/grandmother-70-accused-of-assaulting-officer/1213724/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 25, 2016, 09:19:16 AM
    Remember this case?

    Cop Awarded $230K After Punting an Innocent Man’s Head Like a Football on Video

    Dover, DE – Caught on dash cam video kicking a compliant man in the face and breaking his jaw, a police corporal announced his resignation from the department after the city agreed to pay him $230,000 over the next six years. Although the ex-cop is prohibited from returning to work at the Dover Police Department, the agreement does not prevent him from seeking employment with other law enforcement agencies.

    In August 2013, Cpl. Thomas Webster of the Dover Police Department was captured on police dash cam video appearing behind Lateef Dickerson and kicking the back of his legs. Ordered to get on the ground, Dickerson began complying with the officers’ orders when Cpl. Webster suddenly kicked him in the head without provocation, fracturing his jaw and knocking him unconscious. Initially charged with resisting arrest, the charges against Dickerson were later dropped after reviewing the dash cam footage.



    Charged with felony and misdemeanor assault, Webster was found not guilty in December after testifying that he had intended to kick Dickerson in the body, not his face. On Tuesday, the Dover Police Department accepted Webster’s resignation following weeks of secret negotiations.

    In a statement released on Tuesday, the Dover Police Department announced, “Following his acquittal, the City and then Cpl. Webster entered into discussions concerning the continued employment of Cpl. Webster. Those discussions resulted in an amicable end to Cpl. Webster’s employment relationship with the City, and he submitted his voluntary resignation to the Dover Police Department. While the resignation was immediately accepted such that former officer Webster is no longer a Dover Police Officer, his official date of separation from service will be June 30, 2016.”

    According to the terms of Webster’s separation agreement, which was released on Wednesday, the former police corporal is barred from seeking employment with the Dover Police Department or any other job with the Dover city government. But the agreement does not prohibit Webster from getting hired at another police department or law enforcement agency.

    Besides contributing to Webster’s pension, salary, and benefits through June 30, 2016, the city also agreed to pay him $230,000 delivered in six payments between 2017 and 2022. Although Webster and the city refuse to discuss how they reached the terms of their agreement, one of the stipulations does release both parties of “all claims, demands, and liabilities.”

    “I do have a concern because of the fact that he’s voluntarily resigning, whether or not he’ll be able to serve in other municipalities. I’m hoping he will not. I was really hoping he would be terminated,” the Rev. Rita Page, pastor at Star Hill AME Church, recently told The News Journal. “We’re not settling for injustices. We’re going to keep the pressure on until justice is served.”

    Despite the fact that the police corporal was caught on video using excessive force to subdue a compliant person, Webster was not only acquitted of the assault charges but also received $230,000 to prevent him from suing the city. Although he can no longer work for the Dover Police Department, Webster is still eligible for a job at any other police department across the nation. Instead of discouraging cops from using unnecessary force, Webster has become a prime example of the two-tiered justice system operating within this country.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-receives-230k-kicking-compliant-man-face/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 25, 2016, 11:08:00 AM
    Multiple Florida Deputies from Marion County Fired and Indicted Within One Year

    An internal affairs and state attorney’s investigation has prompted several more Marion County sheriff’s deputies to resign last Friday, continuing a pattern that began last year.

    Marion County State Attorney Brad King investigated 400 dash cam videos of deputy Eduardo Bustamante, who said:

    “Beyond the use of force issues, we found a pattern of behavior in many of the other videos. That pattern involved some, or all, of the following:

    -Traffic stops based on trivial, or non-existent, traffic violation;
    -Searches based on either a questionable claim that Deputy Bustamante smelled marijuana or “consent” that was illegally obtained;
    -Admissions that were obtained after illegal coercion or inducements;
    -Police reports that, were either false as to a material fact; or failed to include the pertinent details about the search or admission which would show they were unlawfully obtained.
    The most frequent outcome of these cases was an arrest for misdemeanor marijuana charges.”

    Bustamante is an award-winning deputy who received the “Sheriff’s Star” because he was “involved in 3 separate incidents where his life was in jeopardy,” according to a 2014 press release.

    The report has since been forwarded to the FBI.

    The Marion County sheriff’s spokesman Lieutenant Ryan Robbins confirmed that Bustamante resigned after being confronted with the state attorney’s report.

    Now all the court cases that Bustamante is scheduled to testify in will not be accepted by the prosecutor’s office.

    Not to mention, there were two more Marion County Sheriff’s Deputies that resigned following a report issued by the sheriff’s internal affairs division. Deputies Kimberly Bray and Beth Billings both resigned after internal affairs determined that Bray brought drugs at a party that Billings was hosting.

    Apparently, cocaine was the drug of choice for Bray as she successfully brought the drug from Billings’ nephew. Internal affairs got involved after a unidentified deputy notified the department that Bray used drugs at the party.

    Following the investigation, Bray refused to take a drug test ordered by the sheriff’s office.

    Police parties have been known to get crazy as PINAC reported in December.

    In a potent statement, Marion County Sheriff Chris Blair said:

    “This type of behavior is completely unacceptable from individuals who [have] sworn to uphold the law and to serve and protect the citizens of Marion County. However, we want to make sure that our employees know that if they are struggling with any kind of personal or emotional issues, we encourage you to seek help before your integrity becomes compromised. Our citizens deserve to be served by deputies who have high integrity and values.”

    In a statement, State Attorney King noted:

    “We cannot ignore the fact that there have now been over a dozen Marion County deputy sheriffs who have been convicted, indicted, fired, demoted, suspended, or are currently under investigation. There’s been a spell of mistakes by the officers that need to be held accountable, and the sheriff has held them accountable.”

    Just last year, several Marion County sheriff’s deputies were fired and indicted for unlawfully beating Derrick Price during an arrest.

    Derrick Price was a ringleader sought out in a drug raid. As police centered in on Price’s house, he saw them on his surveillance system and fled on foot.  It was not until an hour later, that deputies spotted Price and arrested him.

    Price was fully compliant with his hands up, but as outlined by prosecutors, the deputies used unnecessary and unreasonable force. The video is posted below.

    Even more alarming, Adam Crawford, who was one of the deputies involved in the beating, deliberately lied on a police report regarding the situation. In his report, deputy Crawford wrote that Price resisted arrest and refused to comply with deputies orders to put his hands behind his back. The video refutes all of those claims.

    Regarding the excessive force charges, Sheriff Blair said in a statement:

    “The abusive and unprofessional actions they displayed shocked me to my core, and there was absolutely no hesitation for me to immediately inform the Florida Department of Law Enforcement of their actions, to immediately suspend those former deputies without pay and, ultimately, to request their resignation and/or termination.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/24/multiple-florida-deputies-from-marion-county-fired-and-indicted-within-one-year/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: absfabs on February 25, 2016, 06:10:14 PM
    in 2015 sheriff of los angles county and 30 of his crony were booted and I heard almost nothing !!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on February 26, 2016, 08:03:06 PM
    Pure insanity from  McCARTY v. CITY of SOUTHFIELD (http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/16a0112n-06.pdf), a case in which a woman sues after an officer rammed, without warning, her disabled vehicle hard enough to push into an intersection and then again, causing significant damage, before driving away and destroying evidence.

    The Officer is arguing that while the behavior he exhibited was below the standard of care, it doesn't shock the conscience and he should enjoy qualified immunity:

    Quote
    For purposes of this appeal, Officer Birberick accepts McCarty’s version of the facts (i.e., evidence and inferences therefrom) but claims that those facts do not prove a clearly established constitutional violation. Thus we proceed from those facts, which are that Officer Birberick:

    ( 1 ) knew that McCarty’s car was disabled on a heavily trafficked city street, given that it was still parked where he had left it earlier but now with its emergency lights flashing;
    ( 2 ) knew that she had already been there for at least 20 minutes, indicating that assistance could already be on the way or even nearby;
    ( 3 ) knew that McCarty was likely unreceptive to his assistance, given that she had earlier accused him of lying and racism, refused to accept the ticket, and rolled her eyes at him upon his return;
    ( 4 ) chose not to call for assistance, either from a tow truck or another officer, perhaps one who had not just had an uncomfortable interaction with McCarty;
    ( 5 ) knew that three small children were passengers in the car, given that he had approached the car on foot at least three times—once before the ticket, again after writing the ticket, and again upon his return to the scene;
    ( 6 ) knew that he had not spoken with McCarty upon his return, to investigate the situation or warn McCarty of his intent to ram her car with his SUV;
    ( 7 ) knew that McCarty likely either had the brake engaged or the transmission in “park” when he rammed it, since it was stopped there, and that neither McCarty nor the children were expecting the violent rear end collision;
    ( 8 ) chose not to instruct McCarty to (a) put the car in neutral, (b) steer the car toward the gas station, (c) prepare herself for the contact, or (d) remove the children from the car before he rammed it;
    ( 9 ) knew that his police SUV was substantially larger than McCarty’s sedan and did not gently “push” the car with his SUV but instead struck and rammed McCarty’s sedan hard enough to jolt it forward and knock it into the street, and then berated her for the resulting circumstances and danger;
    ( 10 ) knew that his first ramming of the car damaged it and jarred the occupants;
    ( 11 ) rammed the car a second time, again without warning, instruction, or removal of the children—this time hard enough to knock the back of the car up off the ground and send it careening into the gas station toward the gas pumps, leaving McCarty dazed and knocking the children from their seats onto the floor and the girl in the front seat into the dashboard, cutting her head;
    ( 12 ) immediately left the scene without speaking with McCarty, checking on her or her car, or calling for medical or automotive assistance; and
    ( 13 ) later destroyed the dash cam recording from his police car.

    Officer Birberick contends that while this conduct falls below the expected standard of care for a reasonable officer, it is not so outrageous as to “shock the conscience,” which is the applicable standard here.

    Luckily the three-Judge panel wasn't willing to enjoy bullshit soup courtesy of Keith Birberick (https://www.linkedin.com/in/keith-birberick-498a1186), who has already moved on to become a Public Safety Officer at a Community College; I hope that the college students at the campus treat him with the respect that he so richly deserves - which is none at all.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2016, 03:15:16 PM
    Exclusive — Self-Declared “Supercop” Not So Super After Diligent Citizen Fought Him Back and Won

    Hamilton, OH — Kevin Gray volunteered to be a designated driver for a friend, only to end the evening in handcuffs and facing unwarranted felony charges. His only “offense” was to attract the attention of Butler County, Ohio Sheriff’s Deputy Jasen Hatfield, who had been characterized by Butler County Prosecutor Michael T. Gmoser as a “rogue,” a liar, a felon, and a huge civil liability for the department.

    Following an expensive 14-month ordeal, Gray prevailed in court on February 9. Originally facing four offenses (two of them felonies), Gray was acquitted of all charges except for a misdemeanor — “failure to notify” an officer about a licensed handgun in the glove compartment of his vehicle – that was added by the prosecutor’s office several months after the December 13, 2014, traffic stop.

    “The trial judge told me, `Look, I have to fine you something,’” Gray informed The Free Thought Project.
    After issuing a $100 fine, District Judge William Wulff “ordered that my firearm be returned to me immediately,” Gray observes, describing the judge’s demeanor as apologetic.

    While it’s very likely that Gray would win an appeal, his attorney said that “by the time the case got before an appellate judge, my record will have been expunged.” A better use of his time and resources might be to prepare a civil action against Butler County to address the pervasive corruption revealed during the criminal trial.
    “This experience has been costly, time-consuming, and exhausting, but we may be able to help people who have been abused by the sheriff’s office and the county,” Gray declares.

      Meeting “Supercop”

    “I don’t want to brag or anything … but I’m a f**king SuperCop,” gloated Deputy Hatfield in a January 19, 2013, Facebook chat. “It is pretty kick ass that I wear a bullet proof vest and gun with me to work …. Just sayin [sic].”

    “SuperCop” was lurking outside Big Leagues bar in Hamilton, Ohio on December 13, 2014, eager to exploit any pretext for a traffic stop. In fact, the more questionable the stop, the more dubious the citation, and the more lucrative it would be for Hatfield.

    Owing to a provision in the Butler County collective bargaining agreement (see section 46.04), each court appearance arising from a citation is an opportunity to reap a financial bonus, including overtime hours. Recently divorced and facing stiff child support payments, Hatfield had abundant reasons to exploit the county’s ticket-writing racket.
    Whatever the specific blend of motivations, Hatfield began to stalk Gray as he drove away from the bar with his friend, Christopher Ebbing, in the front passenger’s seat.
    “The cop vehicle started following us after I made a legal U-turn a short distance from Big Leagues,” Gray recalled to The Free Thought Project. “After he activated his lights, I pulled over at the next well-lit, safe location,” which was the parking lot of a Zip Trip service station.

    Rather than walking over to the driver’s side of the vehicle to ask for Gray’s license and registration, Deputy Hatfield went directly to the passenger side, “yanked open the door, and demanded identification from my passenger,” Gray continued. “I leaned over and told him that I had a conceal carry license and that there was an unloaded handgun in the glove compartment. He replied by telling me to shut up and to keep my hands on the [expletive] steering wheel.”

    Standing firmly on his rights, Ebbing demanded to know what crime he was suspected of committing. Hatfield snarled that he hadn’t been wearing a seat belt, and then reached into the vehicle to drag Ebbing out.
    “After throwing him to the ground, Hatfield gets on the radio and says that he has a suspect who’s resisting – and here comes the cavalry,” Gray related, weary resignation coloring his voice. Gray was already in handcuffs and en route to the jail before being informed that he had been charged with two felonies – operating a vehicle while intoxicated and “improper handling of a firearm.”
    Gray was not intoxicated, and had not been given a sobriety test of any kind. Ebbing had not been publicly intoxicated, and had called Gray to act as his designated driver. Nonetheless, Ebbing was eventually forced to plead guilty to a charge of “resisting and obstructing” and spend twenty days in jail.

       The “Rap” Evolves

    The initial pretext charge filed by “SuperCop” against Gray was that he had made an “improper turn.” That violation was quickly disposed of once it was established that he had executed a perfectly legal U-turn. Despite the absence of a breath test or field sobriety test, the prosecutor’s office demanded that Gray plead out to a misdemeanor OVI (Operating a Vehicle while Inxoticated) charge in exchange for dropping the felony charges. When he rejected that proposed deal, Gray was offered one in which he would plead guilty to misdemeanor “improper handling” of a firearm.
    “Plead to what?” he recalled in exasperation. “I didn’t do anything wrong, and I’d be damned if I let them bend me over.”

    Despite the clear and obvious fact that the charges against Gray were devoid of merit, assistant Butler County Attorney Brad Burress obtained an indictment in March 2015. In addition to the charges filed by Deputy Hatfield, Burress added a misdemeanor “failure to notify” charge. After being arrested without cause or explanation, Gray had supposedly violated the law by not informing Deputy Mike Brockman, the officer who arrested him, about the unloaded handgun in the glove compartment – despite the fact that he had informed Hatfield within seconds of the traffic stop.

      “SuperCop”: Liar, Rogue, Liability

    The eagerness of the Butler County Prosecutor’s Office to pursue Hatfield’s charges against Gray is remarkable, given that the officer is an acknowledged liability to the county.
    “Recently it was brought to my attention by two of my assistant prosecutors that Deputy Jason Hatfield was deficient in his understanding of the U.S Constitution concerning permissible searches and Ohio law concerning obstruction of justice,” wrote Butler County Prosecutor Gmoser in an angry letter to Sheriff Richard Jones last July 6. After one of “SuperCop’s” cases was no-billed because of his misconduct, Gmoser was made aware of a “fact pattern” visible in Hatfield’s cases; in other words, he is a habitual violator of the law.

    “To my surprise, the deputy stated to me that no one raised any concerns about his conduct and he did receive a stern warning from me concerning the civil liability that could attach to you and him from impermissible searches and pretext arrests,” wrote the county prosecutor. “Regrettably, Deputy Hatfield has chosen the path of defiance. Not long after his case was no-billed I received information [indicating] … that his superiors, including you, see nothing wrong with his conduct….”

    “As a result,” continued the Gmoser, “this matter has gone from the need for simple remedial education of a zealous deputy to consideration of criminal conduct by a rogue deputy. Offenses that may apply if the allegations are true are theft in office and a pattern of corrupt activity – a second degree felony.” (Emphasis added.)

    An official reprimand by a superior documented at least one instance in which Hatfield stole contraband following a traffic stop.

    During a September 7, 2013 traffic stop for a suspected OVI, Hatfield confiscated from driver Robert Van Skaik a plastic bag containing marijuana. Rather than reporting the contraband and turning it over to the property room to be inventoried and then destroyed, Hatfield kept and “discarded” it.

    This resulted in an official letter of reprimand from Lieutenant John Sons for violating department regulations regarding “Rules of Conduct,” “Obedience to Rules,” and the handling of “Property and Evidence.”
    “Continued conduct of this nature cannot and will not be tolerated” and could result in “more severe action against you up to and including termination,” concluded Lt. Sons.

      Witness Intimidation

    Neither the reprimand nor the warning caused “Supercop” to reform his ways – and the absence of tangible discipline apparently encouraged Hatfield to give rein to his bullying impulses.
    Last June 21st, an off-duty Hatfield and a handful of hangers-on saw Ebbing at Big Leagues bar.

    “Mr Ebbing went to the bar and was approached by Deputy Hatfield and friends,” narrates an official report filed by Butler County Deputy Joe Fuller. “One of them asked Mr. Ebbing for ID. When Mr. Ebbing refused, Deputy Hatfield threatened to arrest him for DUS [Driving Under Suspension]. Deputy Hatfield also said something along the lines of arresting Mr. Ebbing next time he was on duty. One of the subjects with Deputy Hatfield poked his finger into Mr. Ebbing’s chest.”

    Six months later, following another perfunctory reprimand, Hatfield was given another opportunity to bully Ebbing, but this time he displayed a touch of subtlety. Last December 13, Ebbing and Gray went to Major Leagues and saw Hatfield in the room in the company of several friends. Hatfield left the room, and one of his companions – subsequently identified as John Hatfield, “SuperCop’s” brother — approached Gray, “firmly poking me” in order to get his attention.

    “It was blatantly obvious that he was `baiting’ Mr, Ebbing and myself into a physical altercation,” wrote Gray in a formal complaint to Butler County Sheriff Jones. “He stated to me, `You must be the pussy that was with him, you’re next.’” Gray told the pest “to never touch me again,” and an employee of the bar ordered him to leave.
    “I will have Butler County deputies sit on this f**king place every single day once you take ownership” John Hatfield bellowed, continuing to threaten “the use of law enforcement to harass, charge, and arrest us as he left the building,” continued Gray’s complaint.

    Since Hatfield’s brother displayed intimate knowledge of the charges against both Ebbing and Gray, this incident appeared to be “nothing short of witness intimidation,” Gray pointed out. As someone who has “multiple family members who are Law Enforcement Officers … I cannot fathom the decision to physically threaten, and threaten by means of their agency … an individual they have arrested.”
    One possible explanation for this otherwise inexplicable incident, Gray suggested, would be that it was an attempt “to taint my trial” by provoking an altercation, thereby allowing Deputy Hatfield to claim “that I was involved in an assault with a member of his family. To be seen as culpable in assaulting a family member of my arresting officer, prior to trial, seems like a brilliant way to fight the reputation that Deputy Hatfield has,” concluded Gray.

    Pervasive Corruption

    Hatfield and his comrades knew they were riding a weak case against Gray, but owing to the financial benefits accruing to them from courtroom overtime, this probably didn’t bother them. The prosecutor’s office, which had described Hatfield as a liar, a legal ignoramus, and a potential felon, continued to run interference for the rogue deputy – and now may find itself dealing with a class-action suit as a result.
    In at least two official letters in response to discovery requests by Gray’s defense attorney, Jeff Meadows, the attorney for the BCSO insisted that no video recordings of the December 2014 traffic stop existed. Assistant Butler County prosecutor David Kash offered similar categorical assurances.

    “About half-way through the first day of the trial, we found out that there was a videotape,” Gray related to The Free Thought Project. “By this time three deputies had already testified that there was no video, because it was against BCSO policy to make dashcam or body camera recordings. But it turns out that Deputy Brockman kept all of the tapes in his basement, and at some point he handed over the tape from the traffic stop to Hatfield.”

    On the morning of the trial’s second day, deputies Brockman and Hatfield reviewed the video, along with deputy prosecutor Kash and defense attorney Meadows.
    “There was about four and a half minutes of video, then snow,” Gray recalled. “Brockman insisted that this was the entire record.”
    A few hours later, when Brockman was on the stand, Meadows insisted on playing the entire tape.
    “Shortly before the video cuts out, you can see the car shake, and it’s pretty clear that the officer killed the camera,” Gray continues. “After about a six-minute gap, the video resumes – which means that all of the evidence from the traffic stop was apparently erased.”

    At this point, “Jeff [the defense attorney] pointedly asked Brockman, `Do you understand the penalty for perjury? Why did you lie to me upstairs?’”
    “I wasn’t under oath then,” Brockman simpered, unwittingly acknowledging that lying appears to be his default behavior.


    That response must have caused a collective shoulder-slump on the part of the numerous high-ranking deputies who were attending the trial. The deputies who testified – Jasen Hatfield, Mike Brockman, and Bill Brown – have, in the aggregate, dozens of years of service with the BCSO. Brockman has been with that department for 32 years – and the casual corruption he displayed in this case testifies eloquently about its corrupt practices and patterns of abuse.

    “There was a lot of `brass’ who were sitting in the courtroom,” Gray states. “This was obviously more than an ordinary OVI case to them. And now they may have a huge mess on their hands, because of the revelations about routine concealment, misplacement, and destruction of evidence in OVI traffic stops and similar cases. Anybody who has taken a plea deal on a charge of that kind over the past dozen years or so now has grounds to challenge his conviction, and perhaps join in a civil rights suit against the county.”

    If this happens, and Butler County taxpayers discover the costs associated with tolerating a corrupt sheriff’s office, Sheriff Jones won’t have the luxury of pretending that he wasn’t warned about the “civil liability” that “SuperCop” Hatfield represented. It’s quite likely that Jones will have reason to lament that he didn’t give Hatfield an opportunity follow the “Gypsy Cop” ratline to a job in a different jurisdiction.
    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/citizen-fights-back-defeats-supercop-psycho-court/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: polychronopolous on February 27, 2016, 05:14:59 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on February 27, 2016, 05:25:21 PM


    The A-A dude has spaghetti for arms, though.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: polychronopolous on February 27, 2016, 05:36:37 PM
    The A-A dude has spaghetti for arms, though.

    I wonder how many years in jail that little stunt cost him?  ???  :-\
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on February 27, 2016, 05:47:40 PM
    I wonder how many years in jail that little stunt cost him?  ???  :-\

    It's probably Home, Sweet Home for him anyway.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2016, 05:54:17 PM
    Before Video Surfaced of a Cop Smashing Man’s Face In, Everyone Believed He “Kindly Assisted” Him

    Bethel, AK – A former Bethel cop who claimed that he “kindly tried to assist” Alaska Native Wassillie Gregory into his cruiser is now facing criminal charges. Andrew Reid, 29, is charged with fourth-degree assault and official misconduct after a video surfaced which shows his treatment of Gregory was anything but kind.

    “The incident itself provoked outrage from some Bethel residents. Bethel’s tribe, Orutsaramiut Native Council, said publicly that it was concerned for community members who felt threatened by police.”
    In the video obtained from a store surveillance camera, Reid can be seen repeatedly picking up and slamming an inebriated Gregory to the concrete before arresting him. Gregory clearly has poor motor control and is pushed away from the cruiser before being tossed around like a sack of potatoes. He sustained a fractured rib and shoulder which needed surgery.

    A visitor from Arizona witnessed the brutality on July 12, 2014 and reported it to police. Gregory pleaded guilty to harassment two days later without a lawyer present. However, the complaint from the witness prompted Bethel Police Chief Andre Achee to investigate the incident, whereupon he obtained the video footage.

    It wasn’t until Gregory’s new lawyer, Sean Brown, got the video in May 2015 that Gregory’s conviction was dropped, and the City of Bethel paid $175,000 to settle a civil suit.
    After this, the city sent the investigation to the FBI, which referred it to Alaska’s Office of Special Prosecutions. The charging document states that Reid’s use of force “was excessive and unnecessary.”

    Reid, who was fired from the department last year, told a police sergeant that he had never thrown or slammed Gregory to the ground. He does not live in Alaska anymore, but may have to appear in court after the criminal case begins on March 15.

    Even though the conviction against Gregory was not dismissed until after his lawyer obtained the video, the fact is that the police chief can be commended for opening the investigation after the witness complained about the brutality. Brown, Gregory’s attorney, said, “People should be pleased that police officers are being held to the same standard as everyone else.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cop-kindly-assist-native-alaskan-slamming-concrete-repeatedly-facing-charges/

    https://www.adn.com/article/20160219/bethel-police-officer-charged-assault-misconduct-rough-2014-arrest
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: polychronopolous on February 27, 2016, 05:57:32 PM
    It's probably Home, Sweet Home for him anyway.

    haha yeah  :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on February 27, 2016, 06:00:59 PM
    Quote
    “People should be pleased that police officers are being held to the same standard as everyone else.”

    I hadn't noticed, but anyway.

    They should be held to a higher standard, for the exact same reason a person killing an officer is given different treatment.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2016, 06:01:57 PM
    Pittsburgh Cop Wrongly Cleared of Assault Now Facing New Felony Charges

    The Pittsburgh cop wrongly acquitted by a kangaroo court, packed with officers and a friendly judge is facing new, more serious charges in the wake of a gruesome miscarriage of justice earlier this month.

    Charges against Pittsburgh Sgt. Stephen Matakovich were refiled today, along with the felony charge of perjury for ejecting a man from Heinz Field in a video that has since gone viral and can be seen below.

    The officer’s face was probably as red as that stadium’s namesake catsup when he found out that he’d have to go on trial again.

    Matakovich is also facing two counts of official oppression, simple assault, unsworn falsification to authorities in addition to that felony perjury charge resulting from the officer writing an official report which is disproven by the video of the incident.

    Early this month Sgt. Matakovich had assault charges dismissed without the judge seeing the video evidence in the case as PINAC News reported earlier this month.

    Meanwhile, Sgt. Stephen Matakovich remains on paid suspension, according to the Pittsburgh Police Department.

    Mayor Bill Peduto stated that he intends to end the practice of paying suspended officers overtime pay for non-essential positions, which brings into question the practice of paying officers who are accused of crimes at all.

    But, in a sign of growing intolerance for dirty cops even in heavily pro-cop cities like Pittsburgh, Matakovich was also served with notice that he is facing termination in response to this incident.

    Public outrage forced Allegheny County District Attorney to refile charges in the case, which only happened because of the video depicting victim Gabriel Despres being shoved, and then punched multiple times

    After the brutal assault, Matakovich added insult to injury when he filed criminal charges against Despres for trespassing, public drunkenness and underage drinking at the WPIAL high school football championships.

    Despres was outside of Heinz Field, the famed field where the Pittsburgh Steelers play, was ordered to leave the public area by security guards.

    The guards were standing and chatting with Despres, when Sgt. Matakovich, who was also working security, off-duty and in plain clothes, approached the men.

    Matalovich is seen in the video pointing away with is right hand then shoving Despres who had his hands by his side.

    Once on the ground Matakovich can be seen punching Despres repeatedly, who was at a severe disadvantage and unable to defend himself from the powerful blows delivered by Sgt. Matakovich.

    It’s unfair that taxpayers must now pay for a second trial, but at least it is a positive sign to see police being charged for lying in their official duties, when the evidence is clear and their report blames the victim of police brutality for their wounds.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/26/video-pittsburgh-cop-wrongly-cleared-of-assault-now-facing-new-felony-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on February 28, 2016, 01:30:58 AM
    i was playing the beach today - saw this one cop macking to this female cop while she did her makeup and stuck her ass out for him.  She was pretty hot, lots of makeup.    he was singing along with the band all night too.   Seemed like 2 cool cops, I have to be honest.  I have to give shit to the lying cops that frame/beat people... but as I drank my wine glass in the sand (i'm in the band, hey, we go anywhere), the cop nodded at me and smiled and smirked at the big booty female partner we were both glancing at... and he kept on mackin' to her... it was a cool moment.  Great to see cops kicking ass and being nice to people.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 29, 2016, 10:38:30 AM
    WATCH: Detroit Police Shot Man’s Chained Dog in Video, Pay $100,000 Settlement

    Detroit police shot and killed a man’s dog chained up legally at his home for ‘no reason‘, now the deteriorating city’s taxpayers will pay the price.

    The Detroit City Council approved an agreement to settle with Darryl Lindsay, who brought a suit after police shot his dog Babycakes, a French Mastiff while chained in his home’s yard, on a cold January day in 2015 as you can see in the video below.

    Detroit agreed in legal proceedings last November to settle the suit, this week’s vote was the final formality where the city agreed to the payment in a city council meeting.

    Lindsay’s civil rights Attorney Christopher Olson said in a local television interview, “We don’t live in a world where police are permitted to just show up to your house, trying to do some police business, and willy-nilly kill our pets.”

    Olsen is no stranger to these lawsuits, and was featured in another puppycide caught on camera in a Huffington Post story in 2014.

    In fact, shooting and killing a family pet violates the Constitution’s 4th Amendment, because in a quirk of law, pets are legally considered property.

    Killing a family pet is considered an illegal seizure of property.

    But most people can’t afford lawyers to enforce that right.

    Babycakes was chained up on a ten foot leash and in accordance with state law.

    Two officers jumped the fence beyond Babycakes’ reach and were able to secure the backdoor.

    Detroit Officer Darrell Dawson, according to dashcam video, was several feet away from the dog.

    The cop radioed to dispatch that he was going “take down the dog”.

    Officer Dawson then drew his service weapon, and shoot the dog, claiming he was in fear of Babycakes, who was chained safely out of his reach.

    Cops were at Lindsay’s house seeking a suspect unrelated to the victim for questioning.

    Darryl Lindsay was only questioned and never criminally charged in any case whatsoever.

    Later, officers could not describe the person of interest related to the questioning of Lindsay, nor could officers explain why so many officers were there in order to question someone.

    It not known of Officer Dawson was disciplined after shooting Babycakes, other than reports that a Lieutenant later counseled Dawson in properly entering private property.

    But we know that without discipline for the officer, and behind his shield of qualified immunity and taxpayer indemnification, little will change at the Detroit Police Department for this dog killing cop.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 29, 2016, 02:24:51 PM
    i was playing the beach today - saw this one cop macking to this female cop while she did her makeup and stuck her ass out for him.  She was pretty hot, lots of makeup.    he was singing along with the band all night too.   Seemed like 2 cool cops, I have to be honest.  I have to give shit to the lying cops that frame/beat people... but as I drank my wine glass in the sand (i'm in the band, hey, we go anywhere), the cop nodded at me and smiled and smirked at the big booty female partner we were both glancing at... and he kept on mackin' to her... it was a cool moment.  Great to see cops kicking ass and being nice to people.








    Good to Hear that.
    Good to know some of them Behave & have a lighter side.

    As Much as I Slag off & Dislike The Scumbag cops & the system
    That protects them.

    There are clearly a good number of honest decent cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 01, 2016, 12:05:23 AM
    Police Sergeant Found Guilty of Ordering Fellow Cops To Beat Up Handcuffed Children

    Dekalb County, GA – Police Sgt. Anthony Robinson was recently found guilty of ordering other officers under his authority to assault underage suspects while they were in handcuffs. Robinson reportedly told officers Blake Norwood and Arthur Parker to beat up four different suspects, on different occasions. Three of the four suspects were reportedly minors at the time of the beatings.

    One victim named Travarrius Williams told Channel 2 reporters that he was badly beaten well after his arrest while he was restrained.
    “They were punching, kicking, stomping. They broke my teeth on the back of the windshield,” Williams said.

    “That’s why black, young men really run from the police. We ain’t running because we did something, we’re running because we’re scared they’re gonna beat us, shoot us. When people get high authority, they feel like they’ve got power over anybody, so the Police Department’s really like another game,” Williams said.
    “This is the kind of conduct by police officers that, if it goes unchecked, people get killed,” Brian Spears, Williams’ attorney added.

    Surprisingly, another cop witnessed the assault and filed a report.
    Williams was allegedly selected for the beating because he accused one of the officers in the department of wrongfully arresting his brother on another occasion. According to court documents, Robinson told Williams that “We don’t let people disrespect us like that in our house,” before ordering the beating.

    After the investigation began, Officer Norwood turned on Robinson and told investigators about other occasions where Robinson had ordered him to beat up underage suspects. In that case, Robinson had ordered Norwood and another officer to beat up three young men, aged 15-16, also while they were handcuffed.

    “(Williams) never did anything to us. We beat him because we were told to beat him by Sgt. Robinson because he was being disrespectful,” Norwood told investigators.
    Norwood and Parker took a plea deal in exchange for their testimony in Robinson’s trial, and both men were given probation, according to wsbtv.

    Robinson was convicted on two counts of felony violation of oath of office, three misdemeanor counts of simple assault, and one misdemeanor count of simple battery and is facing up to 14 years in prison.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-sergeant-ordered-cops-assault-underage-suspects-handcuffed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 01, 2016, 03:29:39 PM
    i was playing the beach today - saw this one cop macking to this female cop while she did her makeup and stuck her ass out for him.  She was pretty hot, lots of makeup.    he was singing along with the band all night too.   Seemed like 2 cool cops, I have to be honest.  I have to give shit to the lying cops that frame/beat people... but as I drank my wine glass in the sand (i'm in the band, hey, we go anywhere), the cop nodded at me and smiled and smirked at the big booty female partner we were both glancing at... and he kept on mackin' to her... it was a cool moment.  Great to see cops kicking ass and being nice to people.

    After f#%cking the public, the two pigs will now f#%k each other...Fitting, since nobody else will.  The alleged female pig has most likely swallowed half the department's jizz anyhow.....

    Anyhow, hope your gig went well......😀
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 01, 2016, 11:55:31 PM
    This sounds like some people in the politics board..

    ‘What’s up ‘obamabam?’ — Racist Cop Arrested in Stabbing of a 17-yo Boy for Speaking Arabic

    Huntington Beach, CA — A 17-year-old boy was attacked on Sunday by three suspects as he walked home in Huntington Beach. One of the assailants was 28-year-old Arthur Roman, an Oak Forest police officer in Illinois.

    Karam Jarrah, the victim, and his brother-in-law believe they were targetted because they were speaking Arabic.
    “Was it like a racial issue? Is it because we were speaking Arabic or it can be like just the way we look,” said Karam.

    Karam explained that Arthur Roman, his brother Martin Roman, and his brother’s wife Jessica Roman, all from Lake Forrest, approached the pair and began intimidating them with racist idiocy. The gang was apparently waiting in their car in the parking lot of a 24-hour Fitness Sunday afternoon — seemingly looking for a fight.

    “He was like, ‘What’s up ‘obamabam?’ I don’t even know what that means,” Karam recalled. “So, I said, ‘What?’ and he said, ‘What’s up ‘obamabam?’ He said it like he was mad.”
    “I came back very, very nicely, because we have faced this type of situation before,” said Karam’s brother-in-law Asem Dghem.

    Despite being nice, the family of bigots attacked, and Martin Roman allegedly stabbed the young boy twice before fleeing in their car.
    “When I stood up, it was just like a fountain squirting blood, like blood everywhere,” said Karam.
    Karam was transported to a local hospital and treated for his injuries which were, thankfully, non-life-threatening.

    A short time later, the vehicle with the attackers was pulled over, and all three of them were arrested. The suspects, including the cop, now face charges of felony assault with a deadly weapon as well as battery.
    Karam and his brother-in-law Asem are flabbergasted that an officer of the law was involved in this apparently racist assault.

    “They have to actually protect us, not stab us,” Asem said. “He’s a police officer, actually, he’s supposed to be role model.”

    Sadly, Asem and his brother-in-law Karam learned the hard way that not all police officers are there to protect and serve. Many police officers, in fact, as was the case in this incident, do quite the opposite.
    The Free Thought Project reached out to the Lake Forest police department for a statement. However, we have yet to hear back. Investigators in Huntington Beach haven’t stated whether or not this was a racially motivated attack.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/whats-obamabam-racist-cop-arrested-stabbing-17-yo-boy-speaking-arabic/#VZKooJz7KeWpjhyL.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2016, 08:55:45 AM
    Cops Arrest Drunk Driver with his Penis Out — But then They Find Out Who He Is and Let Him Go

    Blaine, MN — Blaine Police officers, responding to reports of an alarm at the Lexington Avenue Fleet Farm in November, discovered something startling — a man passed out behind the wheel of a car with its engine running. But that wasn’t all.

    Two officers spent a few minutes pounding the roof of the car and banging the windows in an attempt to rouse the driver. According to reports, they observed “open containers of silver Coors Light cans in the passenger seat.”

    Dash cam footage obtained by local KARE 11 shows the Blaine officers beating the car while repeatedly yelling for its occupant to “Wake up!” When they finally manage to capture the driver’s attention, he appears incapable of understanding or following basic commands.

    “Can you open it?” Officer Brad Nordby asks — nine times, according to the footage — “Ok, open the door.”
    Then he realizes something more is amiss.

    “Oh, great,” he says to his partner. “His penis is out of his pants.”

    After first revving the engine, the driver eventually exits the vehicle; but he remains incoherent and unable to understand what the officers are saying.
    They then proceed to administer basic sobriety tests — which the man stumbles through but simply cannot complete. Eventually, one of them tells the clearly impaired driver, “Why don’t you just go sit on my bumper, ok? You’re going to fall [over] on me.”

    Video shows the driver with his arms extended, as one of the cops asks “Can you take off your hat for a second?” But he has to repeat the question a number of times. Finally, the driver, later identified as William Monberg, explains, “I don’t understand what you want me to do.”

    Dash video records Monberg blowing into a breathalyzer, and according to police reports, he registered .202 — more than two and a half times above the legal limit.
    “William, right now I’m going to place you under arrest for DWI,” says the officer. “Ok, so put your hands behind your back for me.” He is then placed in the back of the patrol car.
    It would seem to be an open-and-shut case. Not quite.

    Upon examining the contents of Monberg’s wallet, one officer says, “Oh, crap.”
    Looking at one another, without saying a word, both officers pull their body mics out of their pockets — and shut them off. Then they step away from the camera.
    The mic and camera in the patrol car is still recording as the pair allow the inebriated Monberg out of the back of the vehicle.

    When he’s placed back in patrol car, he is no longer in handcuffs.
    “I just need to figure out a way to get him home,” one of the cops can be heard saying.

    As it turns out, William Monberg is an investigator for the Columbia Heights Police Department. And Norby and his partner, Officer Brandon Fettig, are performing what is known as “professional courtesy” — the unspoken rule among police that they will not arrest one of their own.

    KARE 11 reported, Monberg “was not taken into custody. No mugshots were taken. His car was not towed. Instead, the Blaine officers helped him arrange a ride home.” In fact, “no official police reports were filed at the time.”


    Talk about Blue Privilege.

    Monberg almost got away scot-free — with the help of fellow officers. Until Blaine Police Chief Chris Olson had an investigator find out what had happened that night.
    Monberg ended up officially charged with DWI in December, though he has pled not guilty. His court date is scheduled for March 2.

    As for Norby and Rettig, Olson told KARE 11, “In this case, inexperienced officers made a mistake. It’s not acceptable” — though neither has faced disciplinary action.
    Officer Monberg issued a statement to KARE 11 in which he said he is “profoundly ashamed, embarrassed, and disappointed” in himself over the incident.

    This was not a case of officers excusing another from a parking ticket — though that wouldn’t be acceptable, either. Monberg was seriously incapacitated on the night of November 7, 2015, and could have gravely injured or killed someone had he attempted to drive in that state. The lack of discipline for the officers involved in this attempted cover-up leaves little doubt similar “professional courtesy” will happen again.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-arrest-drunk-penis-hanging-cops-wallet-magic/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 02, 2016, 10:33:40 AM
    Pigs< Dogshit on the ground left by a medium sized mixed breed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2016, 11:19:04 AM
    Exclusive: Mom Arrested for Saving Her Dog From Being Murdered by a Cop Found NOT GUILTY

    Parkersburg, WV — Last year, the Free Thought Project broke the story and the video of a courageous mother, Tiffanie Hupp who stepped in front an officer who was about to shoot her dog.
    Randall Hupp, Tiffanie’s father-in-law explained to the Free Thought Project what happened that day,

    The trooper approached with gun in hand, grabbed her by the arm and slammed her to the ground. After the troopers realized that they had been filmed, they entered the home illegally without warrant or probable cause and confiscated all digital devices including my 4-year-old grandson’s tablet. We only recently received the devices back and released the video.

    The incident began after a neighborhood argument escalated to the point of a man calling the police to prevent further turmoil. The homeowner, Cliff, called the police after his neighbor allegedly threatened him.
    Cliff’s dog, which was on a chain, merely barked as the officer walked up to the home. His tail was still wagging, and he seemed to calm down immediately. However, the fact that this dog was on a chain, not growling, nor posing any threat whatsoever, was of no consequence to the state trooper who quickly pulled out his service pistol, took aim, and almost killed the dog.

    For stopping the trooper from killing her dog and getting slammed to the ground in front of her 4-year-old son, Tiffanie was charged with misdemeanor obstruction.

    Of course, Tiffanie Hupp pleaded not guilty, as the video clearly showed that she was the victim. However, the city railroaded Tiffanie by forcing her to use their public appointed defender, with obvious conflicts of interest.

    She was given a public defender who was married to a state trooper. She was told she had no legal grounds for a lawsuit because she lacked serious bodily harm and she was well on her way to being declared guilty for a crime she clearly did not commit.

    However, thanks to a selfless attorney who saw Hupp’s story, Tiffanie was able to fight back. Charleston Attorney, David Schles took her case pro bono.
    “I was shown the video of the incident last August and I found it unjustifiable for Tiffanie to be charged with any crime for her reasonable, non-forcible,  actions to defend Buddy the dog. When I was told the lawyer appointed to represent Tiffanie was married to a state trooper and did not inform Tiffanie of this  relationship, I decided I would represent Tiffanie pro bono if she wanted my services,” Schles tells The Free Thought Project.

    In spite of the video evidence proving she committed no crime, prosecutors still went after Mrs. Hupp. But on Monday, a jury returned the verdict of not guilty.

    “For reasons I do not know, the Wood County Prosecuting Attorney refused to dismiss the charge and so  we went to trial on February 29, 2016.  After viewing the video and hearing the testimony and assessing the relative credibility of  of Trooper Cook and Tiffanie, a  Wood County jury unanimously found Tiffanie Not Guilty  after a short period of deliberation,” Said Schles.


    Hupp told the Free Thought Project that she had a hard time not bursting out in court when Trooper Cook, who assaulted her, took the stand.
    “When the trooper was on the stand, it was hard to keep my mouth shut…lie after lie after lie. He told them I had a crossbow in my hand, that I stepped up to him, not in between (him and the dog), that I raised my hands at him first,” explained Tiffanie.

    But the video proved these were all lies, illustrating the importance of filming police encounters. Had Tiffanie’s husband decided not to pull out his camera that fateful day, an innocent woman would have been found guilty of a crime she did not commit.

    “My personal belief is that Trooper Cook was wholly in the wrong and Tiffanie was the aggrieved party. While it is disappointing that the trooper acted as he did on the day of the incident, unfortunately, it is not surprising that a law enforcement officer failed to act competently and properly. It is surprising, and to me disturbing, that following the incident no one in the WVSP or the Wood County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office reviewed the evidence in a reasonable manner and took the proper action to have this case dismissed. Instead, taxpayer money was wasted and Tiffanie was forced to wait over nine months with a criminal charge hanging over her head for doing nothing more than standing between a chained and defenseless dog and a man pointing a gun and threatening to shoot for no justifiable reason.
    “Thankfully, if slowly, and inefficiently, the system can work and the jury made the correct decision and exonerated Tiffanie,” said Schles.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/mother-assaulted-arrested-stopping-cop-shooting-dog-video-guilty/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 03, 2016, 01:29:38 PM
    Cops Arrest Drunk Driver with his Penis Out — But then They Find Out Who He Is and Let Him Go

    Blaine, MN — Blaine Police officers, responding to reports of an alarm at the Lexington Avenue Fleet Farm in November, discovered something startling — a man passed out behind the wheel of a car with its engine running. But that wasn’t all.

    Two officers spent a few minutes pounding the roof of the car and banging the windows in an attempt to rouse the driver. According to reports, they observed “open containers of silver Coors Light cans in the passenger seat.”

    Dash cam footage obtained by local KARE 11 shows the Blaine officers beating the car while repeatedly yelling for its occupant to “Wake up!” When they finally manage to capture the driver’s attention, he appears incapable of understanding or following basic commands.

    “Can you open it?” Officer Brad Nordby asks — nine times, according to the footage — “Ok, open the door.”
    Then he realizes something more is amiss.

    “Oh, great,” he says to his partner. “His penis is out of his pants.”

    After first revving the engine, the driver eventually exits the vehicle; but he remains incoherent and unable to understand what the officers are saying.
    They then proceed to administer basic sobriety tests — which the man stumbles through but simply cannot complete. Eventually, one of them tells the clearly impaired driver, “Why don’t you just go sit on my bumper, ok? You’re going to fall [over] on me.”

    Video shows the driver with his arms extended, as one of the cops asks “Can you take off your hat for a second?” But he has to repeat the question a number of times. Finally, the driver, later identified as William Monberg, explains, “I don’t understand what you want me to do.”

    Dash video records Monberg blowing into a breathalyzer, and according to police reports, he registered .202 — more than two and a half times above the legal limit.
    “William, right now I’m going to place you under arrest for DWI,” says the officer. “Ok, so put your hands behind your back for me.” He is then placed in the back of the patrol car.
    It would seem to be an open-and-shut case. Not quite.

    Upon examining the contents of Monberg’s wallet, one officer says, “Oh, crap.”
    Looking at one another, without saying a word, both officers pull their body mics out of their pockets — and shut them off. Then they step away from the camera.
    The mic and camera in the patrol car is still recording as the pair allow the inebriated Monberg out of the back of the vehicle.

    When he’s placed back in patrol car, he is no longer in handcuffs.
    “I just need to figure out a way to get him home,” one of the cops can be heard saying.

    As it turns out, William Monberg is an investigator for the Columbia Heights Police Department. And Norby and his partner, Officer Brandon Fettig, are performing what is known as “professional courtesy” — the unspoken rule among police that they will not arrest one of their own.

    KARE 11 reported, Monberg “was not taken into custody. No mugshots were taken. His car was not towed. Instead, the Blaine officers helped him arrange a ride home.” In fact, “no official police reports were filed at the time.”


    Talk about Blue Privilege.

    Monberg almost got away scot-free — with the help of fellow officers. Until Blaine Police Chief Chris Olson had an investigator find out what had happened that night.
    Monberg ended up officially charged with DWI in December, though he has pled not guilty. His court date is scheduled for March 2.

    As for Norby and Rettig, Olson told KARE 11, “In this case, inexperienced officers made a mistake. It’s not acceptable” — though neither has faced disciplinary action.
    Officer Monberg issued a statement to KARE 11 in which he said he is “profoundly ashamed, embarrassed, and disappointed” in himself over the incident.

    This was not a case of officers excusing another from a parking ticket — though that wouldn’t be acceptable, either. Monberg was seriously incapacitated on the night of November 7, 2015, and could have gravely injured or killed someone had he attempted to drive in that state. The lack of discipline for the officers involved in this attempted cover-up leaves little doubt similar “professional courtesy” will happen again.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-arrest-drunk-penis-hanging-cops-wallet-magic/

    Our police Chief was at a IACP meeting recently where he was addressing his peers. He said that the problem isn't with the police officers, the problem is with those in the room with him. He said accepting mediocrity and failing to hold the officers accountable is the problem. I tend to agree with him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 03, 2016, 03:26:07 PM
    Our police Chief was at a IACP meeting recently where he was addressing his peers. He said that the problem isn't with the police officers, the problem is with those in the room with him. He said accepting mediocrity and failing to hold the officers accountable is the problem. I tend to agree with him.








    Hi your back - was starting to think you left this thread.
    Why am I not Surprised you would agree with him.

    The problem as most none cops would see is
    Both.
    Corrupt cops out there & corrupt cops
    Who defend & cover for them of higher rank.
    The whole system is corrupt from the top down,
    Mind that is likely the case with many/ most other
    Big organisation.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: absfabs on March 03, 2016, 03:27:48 PM
    PRIVATIZE POLICE AND FIRE
    BAN UNIONS
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 03, 2016, 03:40:18 PM
    Independent public body to oversee & investigate
    Cops.
    With power to suspend, sack, demote, & prosecute.
    All done in the open.

    Oh let's wait for the million & 1 reasons why the public
    In general cannot understand police issues.
     ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: absfabs on March 03, 2016, 04:21:11 PM
    Every government program grow because it thinks itself good

    like cancer

    to cancer it is simply trying to live and grow
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2016, 12:23:05 AM
    White Police Chief Arrested on Corruption Charges

    City of White Police Chief David King and officer Blake Scheff were arrested Wednesday for arresting people on bogus charges with the sole intention to collect fines from the arrests.

    The Georgia Bureau of Investigation indicated the two engaged in this misconduct for four years, from December 2011 to April 2015. The GBI arrested the pair following an investigation that started in October 2015.

    After a barrage of complaints, the Bartow County District Attorney’s Office requested that the GBI conduct an investigation on the White Police Department, according to a press release.

    After months of investigating, search warrants were executed by the FBI and GBI at the White Police Department and White City Hall on January 21.

    The search warrants garnered files, records, and computers – which all contained fine and ticket information induced on innocent people. The FBI and GBI spent nearly six hours gathering all of the aforementioned evidence during the raid.

    In an apparent abuse and misuse of authority, King and Scheff decided to arrest people on false trumped up charges, only to later reduce those charges to citations to collect the fines.

    The day after the January raid, King and Scheff were both suspended with pay.

    A GBI press release stated the following:

    Police Chief David King’s charges

    Count 1: OCGA 16-5-42 False imprisonment under color of legal process:
    On 4/25/15 Lois Kitchens was arrested in Bartow County for cruelty to children in the 1st, a crime she did not commit. Chief King advised Officer Blake Scheff to swear out the warrant.

    Count 2: OCGA 16-5-42 False imprisonment under color of legal process: On 3/31/12 Brittny Brown was arrested in Bartow County for felony deposit account fraud, a crime that she did not commit.

    Count 3: OCGA 16-8-16 Theft by extortion: On 4/22/15 Chief King advised Officer Blake Scheff to speak with the Kitchens’ family about accepting a disorderly conduct citation instead of swearing out state warrants. Nigel Brett, Lois Kitchens’ husband, was told that the family could accept a disorderly conduct citation, pay $1,000 fine, and White PD would not pursue felony state warrants against Lois Kitchens for cruelty to children in the 1st.

    Count 4: OCGA 16-8-16 Theft by extortion: On 12/31/11 Brittny Brown was told that she could accept a disorderly conduct citation, pay $1,000 fine, and White PD would not pursue felony state charges against Brittny Brown.

    Count 5: OCGA 16-10-1 Violation of oath by public officer: Between the dates of December 2011 and April 2015 Chief King violated his oath of office when he committed theft by extortion and false imprisonment.

    Officer Blake Scheff charges:

    Count 1: OCGA 16-5-42 False imprisonment under color of legal process: On 4/25/15 Lois Kitchens was arrested in Bartow County for cruelty to children in the 1st, a crime she did not commit. Officer Scheff had sworn out the arrest warrant at Chief King’s request.

    Count 2: OCGA 16-8-16 Theft by extortion: On 4/22/15 Nigel Brett, Lois Kitchens’ husband, was told by Officer Scheff that the Kitchens could accept a disorderly conduct citation, pay $1,000 fine, and White PD would not pursue felony state warrants against Lois Kitchens for cruelty to children in the 1st.

    Count 3: OCGA 16-10-1 Violation of oath by public officer: On 4/22/15 Officer Scheff violated his oath of office when he committed theft by extortion and false imprisonment

    They were both charged with false imprisonment under color of legal process, theft by extortion and violation of oath by a public officer.

    Now that King and Scheff have been arrested – only one officer is left in the small town White Police Department.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/02/white-police-chief-arrested-on-corruption-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2016, 12:26:47 AM
    Cop Rams Car Full of Children, Flees, Deletes Dashcam — Says it Was all in the ‘Scope of his Job’

    Southfield, MI — This week the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth District ruled that on an officer, who violently endangered the lives of an innocent grandmother and her three grandchildren by repeatedly ramming his car into theirs, is not immune from a lawsuit.

    On Oct. 24, 2011, Cheryl McCarty was driving her three young grandchildren to school when she was stopped by Southfield police officer Keith Birberick. Birberick accused her of illegally passing a school bus.
    Claiming that she hadn’t passed a school bus, McCarty voiced her discontent with the several hundred dollar ticket she was receiving for it. She also informed the officer that she planned to file a complaint with the Mayor’s Office over this incident.

    “She argued with him, claimed there had been no school bus, accused him of racism, and refused to accept the ticket, letting it instead drop on the ground,” says the appeals ruling. “Officer Birberick returned to his patrol car—a large SUV—and drove away.

    “But McCarty, who had turned off her ignition, but not her headlights had accidentally drained her car battery and could not restart her car.”
    McCarty was stuck on the roadside for 20 minutes before officer Birberick came driving by again. Seeing her in the same spot apparently angered the officer, so he took action to remove her and her grandchildren from the roadside — with extreme prejudice.

    McCarty “then noticed that (Birberick) had first pulled beside her and then got behind and hit her car so hard that her grandkids came out of their seats,” says a September filing from McCarty’s attorney, Diana L. McClain, according to MLive.

    After Birberick initially rammed the car full of children, he “waited for traffic to clear and then got out of his car and approached (McCarty’s) car yelling that he could have ‘killed them, and it would have been his fault.'” the filing says.

    But that wasn’t enough. Birberick then got “back in his car and rammed (McCarty) a second time” pushing it “into a nearby gas station narrowly missing oncoming motorists and a row of gas pumps … ”

    The entire time, according to court records, McCarty’s vehicle was in park. One can only imagine the metal smashing chaotic scene that unfolded as a police SUV cruiser forced a parked car into a gas station parking lot by ramming it over and over.

    The patrol car hit her vehicle so hard that the children were thrown to the ground, and one of them suffered a cut to the head.
    Birberick then sped off and made no mention of the incident.

    The very next day, McCarty went to the Southfield Police Department to file a formal complaint against the maniac who’d almost killed her and her grandkids. However, upon entering the station, officials dissuaded her from filing a complaint, noting that the dashcam video had been destroyed by Birberick.

    Naturally, McCarty immediately filed a lawsuit against Birberick and the department, but Birberick appealed — claiming he was “protected by law enforcement immunity while performing his job.”
    Birberick asserted his blue privilege and noted that because he was operating within the scope of his job, he should be immune.

    Luckily, however, a court decided the idea of granting immunity to a cop acting in such a manner is a preposterous idea.
    The U.S. Appeals Court said Birberick’s actions “shock the conscience” and rose to a level of “gross negligence.”

    “In short, without consent or even warning, he violently rammed (a woman’s) car with his much larger SUV, needlessly damaging her car and propelling it into traffic, endangering the safety of the occupants, which included three small children,” the court ruled. “He then fled the scene of the accident he had just caused and destroyed evidence that might have proven his motivation or malicious intent.”
    “In fact, this would be shocking—and criminal—behavior if committed by an ordinary citizen,” the ruling says.

    Naturally, the attorney for the city denies it happened in such a manner and denies that Birberick intentionally deleted the dashcam footage.
    “The next step is we’ll let a jury decide what really happened,” Attorney Joe Seward said. “Her version, her story as to what happened, those facts are not accurate.”

    Seward claims that McCarty is merely angry about getting a ticket and so, for the last 4 years, she’s been attempting to sue.
    MLive reports that Birberick is no longer with the Southfield Police Department, but Seward said his departure from Southfield has nothing to do with this incident.
    According to his Linked In profile, Birberick, previously a Southfield police officer and member of the U.S. National Guard, is a police officer at Oakland Community College. The profile indicates he worked in Southfield for 29 years and retired in 2013.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-rams-car-full-children-flees-deletes-dashcam-scope-duty/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2016, 12:29:40 AM
    Instead of Helping a Car Crash Victim, this Cop Raped Her – His Lack of Punishment is Infuriating

    Greenville, AL – Former state trooper, 36-year-old Samuel H. McHenry II managed to get off with minimal jail time after raping a car accident victim and leaving her stranded afterward.
    McHenry pleaded guilty to misdemeanor sexual misconduct under a plea deal and managed to avoid more serious charges that were originally filed against him. McHenry originally faced charges of rape and sodomy but he was able to cut a deal and get those charges dropped and replaced with less serious charges.

    Under the plea deal, McHenry will have his state certification revoked and will be unable to be a police officer, and he received a 182-day jail sentence. The sentence does not even have to be served at the same time, he has the freedom to go in a few days at a time and go back home, as long as he serves all 182 days within the span of a year.

    According to court documents, McHenry was called to the scene of an accident on December 6th around 10 pm, when he found a young woman waiting for help. Instead of helping the victim, he threatened to take her to jail because he saw an empty pill bottle and a nasal spray bottle in her vehicle, neither of which are illegal. He then restrained the woman and threw her in the back of the cop car, drove her to a secluded area and raped her. He then left her at a closed store, away from her car, and sped off.

    Alabama Secretary of Law Enforcement Spencer Collier said that the officer was fired after the department learned about the incident.
    “Upon notification by local law enforcement, SBI Agents immediately responded and began a criminal investigation related to serious allegations of criminal activity of a trooper while on duty,” Collier said after news of the attack went public.

    “Although everyone is entitled to due process, the severity of the allegations are unsettling. Probable cause was established, and that led to the arrest. This type of behavior is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Because of the seriousness of this incident, SBI Agents have worked nonstop with local law enforcement and the district attorney. We appreciate the cooperation of Sheriff Kenny Harden and the Butler County Sheriff’s Department,” Collier added.

    In addition to his prison sentence, McHenry paid a $500 fine.

    This is no isolated incident, 1,000 policemen across the US had their licenses revoked and lost their jobs over the last six years due to sexual crimes while on duty, and this number is likely only a fraction of the actual cases that have occurred.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-182-days-jail-raping-innocent-car-accident-victim-leaving-stranded/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2016, 09:29:21 AM
    Alabama Cop Charged with Murder for Killing Unarmed Man as He Cried Out for His Mother

    An Alabama police officer was arrested on murder charges Wednesday for shooting to death an unarmed man who was walking home from a card game at 3 a.m. last week.

    It is not clear why Montgomery police officer Aaron Smith stopped Gregory Gunn last Thursday other than the 58-year-old man may have been carrying a retractable painter’s stick.

    But even that is not certain. And it’s certainly not illegal.

    All that is known now is that Smith chased Gunn down to his next door neighbor’s front porch and shot him several times as Gunn yelled out for his 87-year-old mother, whom he lived with.

    Smith’s attorney, Mickey McDermott, justified the shooting by saying his client was patrolling a “high-crime area,” which just happened to be Gunn’s neighborhood.

    According to the Montgomery Advertiser:

    “We’ve had protests all over the city – there are people outside of my building protesting right now,” McDermott said. “They have sold out a good officer – a second generation officer whose parents were both in MPD. He was doing his job when a tragedy occurred, but Officer Smith followed protocol and followed his training.”

    “Because of the staffing issues in this department, under this administration, you have a young, 23-year-old officer out there in a high-crime area on patrol on third shift by himself,” McDermott said. “But Officer Smith accepted this assignment and was doing his job.”

    McDermott said Smith stopped Gunn and began a routine search when Gunn “broke and ran, and Officer Smith gave chase.” Over the next several seconds, McDermott said Smith fought with Gunn, used his Taser on Gunn six times and attempted to subdue him with his baton.

    “After all of that, Mr. Gunn picked up a weapon and turned towards (Smith),” McDermott said. “He had no choice at that point but to use his firearm to protect himself. It is a terrible tragedy what occurred. But Mr. Gunn bears the responsibility for that tragedy, not this young officer.”

    But Gunn’s father was also a Montgomery police officer, one of the first black police officers in the department.

    Neighbors say Gunn became afraid after being confronted by the officer and ran onto the front porch of his next door neighbor and started banging on the window.

    But Smith chased him down and shot him at least four times. One neighbor heard him call out for his mother.

    According to the Washington Post:

     

    “He was banging on the window and calling my name as loud as you could call it, his voice raising more and more,” Hinson (who lived in the house where Gunn was shot) told the Advertiser. “That was the only voice I heard. I didn’t hear anybody say, ‘Stop, halt, lay down.’ Nothing.”

    Another neighbor, Scott Muhammad, said he spotted someone get “thrown around” and went outside to break up what he thought was a fight.

    “It escalated. You could just feel the energy,” Muhammad told the Advertiser. “I turned around and told my wife to call the police. Then I saw him shoot four or five times and said, ‘Damn, that was the police.’”

    He also said Gregory Gunn was shouting for help when he was shot.

    “I saw when they killed him,” Muhammad said. “He was calling for his mother, his neighbor. He was knocking on the window.”

    Gunn’s family said the painting stick was on the neighbor’s porch and police tried to pin it on him, but as mentioned, there is nothing illegal about carrying a painting stick in the first place.

    Residents began protesting and the case was handed over to the State Bureau of Investigation, which made an arrest six days later.

    Montgomery County District Attorney Daryl Bailey released this statement:

    “SBI and I agreed at the beginning of this investigation that this case would be treated as any other case,” Bailey said. “We agreed that if there were probable cause that a crime had been committed then an arrest would be made. After meeting extensively with SBI agents, we have concluded that probable cause exists to make an arrest in this case.”

    Bailey further noted that Smith’s arrest is not an indictment, and that the case is ongoing. However, Montgomery Mayor Todd Strange is pursuing termination proceedings against Officer Smith. Per city policy termination proceedings must take place when a city employee is charged with a felony. The Grand Jury has yet to hear the evidence surrounding the arrest.

    Smith’s bail was set at $150,000, and was able to bail out shortly thereafter, thanks to officers raising the money for him.

    Earlier this year an Alabama cop was acquitted in a case in which he paralyzed a Indian man walking down the street.

    Below is a video from the Washington Post capturing the anger from the community addressing the Montgomery Police Department about the shooting.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/03/alabama-cop-charged-with-murder-for-killing-unarmed-man-as-he-cried-out-for-his-mother/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 07, 2016, 11:40:25 AM







    Hi your back - was starting to think you left this thread.
    Why am I not Surprised you would agree with him.

    The problem as most none cops would see is
    Both.
    Corrupt cops out there & corrupt cops
    Who defend & cover for them of higher rank.
    The whole system is corrupt from the top down,
    Mind that is likely the case with many/ most other
    Big organisation.


    I think you might have missed the point, based on your response. I could be wrong though.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2016, 10:00:00 AM
    Denver PD Caught Stealing People’s Assets, Using Them to Pay for Massive Propaganda Campaign

    A couple of years ago, the Denver Police Department (DPD) was under fire for a spate of excessive force complaints. They wanted to change their image, so they began a massive public relations campaign, ramping up spending from $599 in 2011 to $136,783 in 2013.

    The “media affairs unit” is made up of very well-paid employees who push their message in social media such as Facebook and Twitter. Last year the DPD spent $450,000 on six employees in the media team, which is far more than six cops on the beat would make.

    However, an investigation by Denver7 ABC found that the DPD has been using funds derived from civil asset forfeiture to pay for much of this propaganda campaign. This may constitute a violation of policy, as those funds are only supposed to be used for equipment and training.

    “According to the report more than $120,000 from that fund was used to buy equipment for DPD’s media relations unit, including an Apple desktop editing system, a MacBook Pro computer and even spent $22,000 developing an app for iPhone and Android.”

    That’s not all. They spent $2,460 to pay for entries into a local Emmy competition. The funds for this bizarre act were requested under “police training,” even though there were no seminars or instructional time.
    Detective Nick Rogers, head of Denver’s police union, has something to say about that:
    “Winning an Emmy is a self-promotion, self-gratification type of situation that has nothing to do with … getting better at your profession.
    We’re spending that kind of money on videos that don’t drop the crime rate. [Videos] don’t solve burglaries and robberies. That’s our mission and I think we lost sight of that.”

    When Denver7 asked Police Deputy Chief Matt Murray about funding, he initially lied and denied the money came from civil asset forfeiture—until they presented him with the records. Murray then claimed that the campaign “helps us do a better job” in “reaching out” to the community.
    However, the sad irony is that the DPD is stealing cash and assets from innocent Denver citizens to pay for their outreach to Denver citizens.

    The insidious practice of civil asset forfeiture (CAF) is alive and well in Colorado. The scheme, which takes places across most of the U.S., allows law enforcement to seize cash and assets from people on the mere suspicion (often fabricated) of a crime, and they can keep this loot even if the person is never charged with a crime.

    In some cases, the person can get his or her assets back, but the legal fees and headache of dealing with authorities are often too much to make it worthwhile. In Colorado, though, a loophole “allows law enforcement to keep confiscated cash even after charges are dismissed.”

    An untold number of abuses have taken place using CAF, such as Joseph Rivers, who lost his life savings of $16,000 to the DEA while he was traveling to Los Angeles to pursue a music career. The Mesa County Sheriff’s Office in Colorado sent 20 lawyers to a ski resort conference using CAF funds.

    “According to the Institute for Justice’s national report on civil forfeiture, Policing for Profit, from 2000 to 2013 Colorado law enforcement agencies collected nearly $12.8 million in state forfeiture funds and an additional $47.7 million through the Department of Justice’s equitable sharing program. Given such large sums, it’s little wonder law enforcement is blocking State Senator Laura Woods from even getting a hearing on a bill that requires reporting of seizures of private property and law enforcement’s expenditures of forfeiture proceeds.”

    Chalk up the Denver Police Department as another abuser of the injustice of civil asset forfeiture. The fact that it is using these seizures for a massive propaganda campaign makes it all that much more offensive.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/denver-pd-caught-stolen-cash-propaganda-campaign-emmy-award-entries/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2016, 11:21:06 AM
    Baltimore City School Officer Charged For Assault In Viral Video, Faces 35 Year Sentence

    Once again, a viral video has led to criminal charges for a Baltimore cop, and this officer was fired from another agency for police brutality already in 2002.

    This time, it’s serious.

    Baltimore City School Officer Anthony Spence, was in the viral-video you can see below which PINAC News reported last week, hitting a student, along with Officer Saverna Bias, the other officer in the video whose identity has been verified.

    The cop was charged Wednesday morning with second degree assault, second-degree child abuse by a custodian, and official misconduct.

    All three criminal allegations against Spence are felony charges, according to the Baltimore Police Department who investigated the incident.

    Spence faces up to a total of 35 years for the criminal charges.

    The 53-year-old officer Bias was also charged with second degree assault and official misconduct.

    Baltimore School Police Chief Marshall Goodwin placed both officers on paid vacation (aka paid administrative leave), before the Chief placed himself on paid vacation over the incident too.

    Oddly, Baltimore schools won’t say why the Chief has suspended himself, or if it’s related to this investigation which is highly likely, as you can see from the video tweeted by Baltimore Sun reporter Colin Campbell below.

    Spence was seen striking and kicking the student while yelling “Get the fuck out of here” in the video, which was shot in selfie mode, presumably to shield the photographer from repercussions on the scene.

    It is unknown if either officer reported the incident to authorities, however school officials stated they found out after the viral video was posted online.

    Both Officers were released on $50,000 bond.

    School officials had stated the 16-year-old in the video was not a student at the REACH Partnership School on the north east side of Baltimore, and had tried to dismiss the video by saying the person was an intruder at the school and was told multiple times to leave.

    He was actually a student.

    Spence was previously fired from the Baltimore City Sheriff’s Office for his role in tazering an innocent man at Lexington Market in 2002. There is no word from officials if Spence is still employed at the Baltimore City School after charges were filed.

    Anthony Spence was previously hit with a temporary restraining order in 2011 by his girlfriend at the time who was also a Baltimore City School officer.

    Both officers face multiple felonies, but we suspect they will be given a light sentence just like Baltimore City Police Sergeant Dennis Workley who was given a suspended jail sentence and probation after facing 10 years in jail for perjury and misconduct in a case in 2012. Baltimore public defender Todd Oppenheim has described the advantages Baltimore’s police typically receive over regular defendants in criminal proceedings.

    Maybe, a conviction on these charges will at least be enough to have the violent Baltimore City Schools cop fired, and to finally lose his license to carry the badge.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/09/baltimore-city-school-officer-charged-for-assault-in-viral-video-faces-35-year-sentence/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 09, 2016, 03:39:47 PM
    Baltimore City School Officer Charged For Assault In Viral Video, Faces 35 Year Sentence

    Once again, a viral video has led to criminal charges for a Baltimore cop, and this officer was fired from another agency for police brutality already in 2002.

    This time, it’s serious.

    Baltimore City School Officer Anthony Spence, was in the viral-video you can see below which PINAC News reported last week, hitting a student, along with Officer Saverna Bias, the other officer in the video whose identity has been verified.

    The cop was charged Wednesday morning with second degree assault, second-degree child abuse by a custodian, and official misconduct.

    All three criminal allegations against Spence are felony charges, according to the Baltimore Police Department who investigated the incident.

    Spence faces up to a total of 35 years for the criminal charges.

    The 53-year-old officer Bias was also charged with second degree assault and official misconduct.

    Baltimore School Police Chief Marshall Goodwin placed both officers on paid vacation (aka paid administrative leave), before the Chief placed himself on paid vacation over the incident too.

    Oddly, Baltimore schools won’t say why the Chief has suspended himself, or if it’s related to this investigation which is highly likely, as you can see from the video tweeted by Baltimore Sun reporter Colin Campbell below.

    Spence was seen striking and kicking the student while yelling “Get the fuck out of here” in the video, which was shot in selfie mode, presumably to shield the photographer from repercussions on the scene.

    It is unknown if either officer reported the incident to authorities, however school officials stated they found out after the viral video was posted online.

    Both Officers were released on $50,000 bond.

    School officials had stated the 16-year-old in the video was not a student at the REACH Partnership School on the north east side of Baltimore, and had tried to dismiss the video by saying the person was an intruder at the school and was told multiple times to leave.

    He was actually a student.

    Spence was previously fired from the Baltimore City Sheriff’s Office for his role in tazering an innocent man at Lexington Market in 2002. There is no word from officials if Spence is still employed at the Baltimore City School after charges were filed.

    Anthony Spence was previously hit with a temporary restraining order in 2011 by his girlfriend at the time who was also a Baltimore City School officer.

    Both officers face multiple felonies, but we suspect they will be given a light sentence just like Baltimore City Police Sergeant Dennis Workley who was given a suspended jail sentence and probation after facing 10 years in jail for perjury and misconduct in a case in 2012. Baltimore public defender Todd Oppenheim has described the advantages Baltimore’s police typically receive over regular defendants in criminal proceedings.

    Maybe, a conviction on these charges will at least be enough to have the violent Baltimore City Schools cop fired, and to finally lose his license to carry the badge.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/09/baltimore-city-school-officer-charged-for-assault-in-viral-video-faces-35-year-sentence/

    Typical pussy pig.....Attacks children and has a restraining order taken out against him by his girlfriend.  Can't handle females or kids.....  What's the matter pig?  Had a tough day abusing children, then took it out on your girl later in the day?  What a coward..... 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 10, 2016, 11:02:39 AM
    Cops Wrongly Raid 86-yo Man’s Home, Taser and Arrest Him for Cooking Soup

    New York, NY — (RT) John Antoine, an 86-year-old tasered by a police officer while cooking soup, has been cleared of charges, a court ruled. The elderly man’s apartment had been raided by officers searching for his granddaughter’s boyfriend, said to be suicidal after running out of medication.

    The incident took place while Antoine was cooking soup at his Brooklyn home back in October. Standing in the kitchen with a knife in one hand and an onion in the other, little did he imagine that a group of five armed police officers was about to break into his apartment.

    The officers were looking for the 23-year-old boyfriend of Antoine’s granddaughter, as the young man was thought to be emotionally disturbed after he ran out of medication.

    “The police came in and say, ‘You so and so, put down the knife,’ and I said, ‘Why are you coming in my apartment? What do you want?’” Antoine told NY Daily News. “They wouldn’t tell me.”
    Seeing Antoine with a knife, an officer demanded that he drop it. But when the retired pipefitter turned to put the knife back on the table, he felt a sharp pain – one of the officers had fired a Taser into his neck and leg.

    “I felt like I was dead,” the 86-year-old later said.

    He was later taken to a nearby hospital, where doctors found him mentally fit.

    “Just imagine you are a human being, to get this thing on your neck,” Antoine told NBC New York. “That comes as a nightmare.”

    However, the suffering of the elderly man who just wanted to cook soup in his apartment was not over – officers said he was being charged with harassment for his refusal to drop the kitchen knife.

    “The individual he [the officer who Tasered Antoine] encountered inside the residence was armed with a large kitchen knife and was in immediate proximity to both the sergeant and a three-year-old who was present in the residence,” an NYPD spokesman said.

    Police added that Antoine “refused to comply with the sergeant’s commands to drop the knife, instead making statements to the effect, ‘I am not going to jail, I’m not going to the hospital.’ ”

    The charges against the pensioner were finally dropped on March 7, five months after the incident. There is no information that any charges have been pressed against the officer who attacked Antoine.
    The NYPD spokesman told NBC that “the responding sergeant demonstrated a level of intelligent restraint that is to be commended.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-wrongly-raid-86-yo-mans-home-taser-arrest-cooking-soup/

    Additional information:

    "An NYPD dispatcher had apparently failed to pass along information given to the 911 operator that the emotionally disturbed man threatening to commit suicide was the 23-year-old boyfriend of Antoine's granddaughter, The Daily News previously reported."

    "Antoine was charged with “harassment” and transported by cops to two different hospital emergency rooms for mental exams - apparently looking for a doctor to say he was nuts - but he was given a clean bill of mental health, according to his lawyer Scott Rynecki who has filed notice to sue the city for $5 million."

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/nypd-taser-victim-86-cleared-criminal-charges-article-1.2556288
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 10, 2016, 11:05:34 AM
    SWAT Goes to Wrong Home, Smash Windows Deploy Flashbang on Innocent People Anyway

    Sweetwater County, WY — Multiple members of Sweetwater County’s Joint Special Weapons and Tactics Team made an epic blunder last week when executing a search warrant in search of arbitrary substances deemed illegal by the state, crystal meth. As the heavily militarized team began smashing up the house and deploying flashbang grenades, they realized they were destroying the wrong home.

    “It’s our responsibility to be in the right place at the right time; and we failed to do that,” Tom Jarvie, Patrol Lieutenant for the Green River Police Department said.

    The SWAT team had the correct address which was 355 Fir Street. However, they were apparently so enthralled with the idea of breaking into someone’s home to arrest them for selling drugs, that they forgot how to work the GPS and arbitrarily picked an innocent family’s home to victimize.

    But fret not, after breaking into the home through the front window and deploying a flash-bang at the wrong home, officers then found the correct home and arrested the owner for possession of methamphetamine.
    Jason Normand, 35, was arrested Thursday, March 3, by DCI and charged with two felony counts of unlawful delivery of methamphetamine and one felony count of possession of methamphetamine with the intent to deliver.

    After their blunder, the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office, Green River Police Department, and Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation released a joint press release:

    "On Thursday, March 3, 2016, at approximately 8:30 p.m., members of Sweetwater County’s Joint Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) team, at the request of the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation, executed a high risk search warrant at 355 Fir Street, Green River, Wyoming where individuals believed to be armed and in possession of controlled substances were located.  This warrant had been issued by a Judge in Sweetwater County, who authorized the search for weapons, illegal drugs and other drug paraphernalia.

    During the execution, some members of the Sweetwater County Joint SWAT team regrettably broke a window and utilized flash bang distraction device at an incorrect address.  Immediately recognizing this mistake, personnel from the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office and the Green River Police Department made contact with the homeowners and coordinated the repair of the damaged property.
    As previously reported, the execution of the search warrant at 355 Fir Street resulted in the seizure of methamphetamine, multiple firearms, and the arrests of multiple individuals."

    Jarvie said the address accidentally targeted by SWAT would not be released, citing concerns of maintaining the homeowner’s privacy.

    Thankfully no babies were asleep in cribs when officers threw the flashbang into the wrong home.  Bounkham “Baby Bou Bou” Phonesavanh, was not so fortunate when police wrongfully entered his house and blew his face apart with a flashbang.

    Police departments raiding the wrong homes and harming innocent people in search of illicit substances is commonplace in the land of the free.

    All too often innocent children, parents, and grandparents become the unwitting victims of the state’s immoral war on what people choose to put into their own bodies. How many more unjustified state-sponsored murders will have to happen before America ends this vile practice?

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/swat-wrong-home-smash-windows-deploy-flashbang-innocent-people/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 13, 2016, 07:18:38 PM
    Georgia Cop Illegally Arrests Passenger Recording During Broken Tail Light “Investigation”

    A video surfaced this weekend showing fast-talking, southern Georgia cop arresting a college student, just for being the passenger in a car with a broken tail light, after refusing to participate in the cop’s sham “investigation” of a minor traffic infraction.

    It would spiral of control in under three minutes.

    The cop started the traffic stop by saying, “You’d better step out of the vehicle, ma’am,” to ‘Kaylin’, the properly seat-belted driver – whose name we learned from the video you can see below.

    The Valdosta Police Department Officer pulled over an SUV on a dark road, because it had a broken tail light back in June 2015, in what must’ve been near city limits for the southern Georgia college town of 50,000 residents.

    Kaylin’s passenger exited the vehicle to continue recording the stop, but probably never imagined that she’d be arrested for recording the whole scene on her cellphone.

    Because she was recording for publication onto YouTube it is entirely possible that the arrest is a 1st Amendment violation too.

    At first glance, even with the dubious order to exit the vehicle, there does appear to be a reasonable discussion between citizen and officer.

    But the Georgia cop demanded to, “Grab me everyone’s ID,” about 1 minute and twenty seconds into the recording for no articulable reason. For international readers, ID is short for identification.

    “What do you need my ID for?” asked the girl recording the traffic stop.

    “I’m need everyone’s ID,” replied the officer who appears to be in his early 30s, and not a wet behind the ears rookie.

    “There’s no need for you.”

    “This is, this is the problem,” said the officer as he began to temporize, “I conducted a traffic stop, the reason I was talking to you was your defective tail light, you’ve got it all taped up over there.”

    “Yes, yes, I know,” replied the Kaylin, honestly and without malice or outward fear.

    “So you acknowledge there’s a problem,” began the officer into a quick patter.

    At this point, his own words pretty clearly limit the officer’s own probable cause for an “investigation” to citing a broken tail light.

    “Ok, here’s a problem, you’re in this vehicle, this vehicle is part of my investigation”

    “What are you investigating?” said Kaylin the driver, and her passenger firmly exclaimed without yelling afterwards, “What is your reasonable suspicion?

    “What it is,” the Georgia cop stuttered, “What it is, is this is now an investigation. The fact that I pulled you over it is now an investigation.”

    “About what?”

    “Ok, I need everyone’s ID in that van, now,” replied the cop firmly in a Waffle House syrup coated southern accent, clearly annoyed that these college students were not going to surrender their 4th Amendment rights so easily.

    “But, I don’t understand what happened,” asked the driver

    “I told you, I stopped you for this defective tail light.”

    “Right, you said you were investigating, what were you investigating?” asked the driver, hitting the nail right on the head like an experienced criminal defense lawyer might.

    Under the landmark Supreme Court decision about the 4th Amedment in Terry Vs. Ohio, officers may only ask for identification if they can reasonably articulate suspicion of a crime, but that’s not all.

    “The fact that I made a traffic stop, this is my investigation. Ok” deadpanned the cop, “So, ma’am i need your ID.”

    “There’s no need for you to have my ID, sir,” said the teenage girl politely, while continuing to record the scene,”I’m so sorry.”

    “Ok, that’s fine, you can put the phone down, you’re under arrest for interference with an investigation.”

    Under Georgia law, the cop could’ve demanded ID if he suspected the passenger of Loitering or Prowling, but clearly it was not the case in this video, nor did he articulate that either.

    “Are you serious, sir?” asked the shocked citizen who continued to calmly record her own arrest.

    “Yes”

    “There’s no need for you to have my ID,” she repeated.

    And she was right.

    The Valdosta officer proceeded to place her under arrest, which any court would seriously consider as a false arrest in betrayal of the 4th Amendment and even the 5th Amendment right to remain silent.

    Because, Georgia doesn’t even have a true stop and identify statute, which Terry vs. Ohio requires.

    Georgia’s ACLU made this guide about requirements to show ID.

    Georgia cops won’t even arrest Cop Block activists who refuse to provide ID, but for some reason this cop had to arrest this young citizen who was entirely within her rights to remain anonymous.

    “Here Kaylin! Get my phone and record this.”

    The video stops there.

    In so doing, he trashed the 4th Amendment and a landmark Georgia Supreme court decision Williams vs. State of Georgia, from only a month earlier which delineated the line between implied consent and actual consent too.

    But he proved one thing for certain.

    A bunch of young college students knew the Constitution better than he did.

    The Valdosta officer was probably allowed to request the driver to exit the car, under Georgia’s odd laws, which deem traffic infractions criminal. However, the officer clearly only had probable cause to issue a broken tail light citation, and didn’t articulate any other reason for an investigation.

    In the wake of Williams vs. Georgia, decided by Georgia’s Supreme Court just a month before this incident was recorded, the Georgia Association of Police Chiefs created and distributed this handy two page guide to the 4th Amendment for Law Enforcement Officers to better understand the intersection of state law with the constitution.

    Clearly, Valdosta Police missed the memo.

    Right off the bat, the driver had clearly and respectfully articulated that she was concerned about the lack of light where he wished to conduct the traffic stop.

    It’s a pretty reasonable concern for a young lady, or group of young ladies, considering the totality of the circumstances, and when you consider the irony of searching for a properly lit spot when missing a tail light.

    PINAC readers might remember Walter Scott being shot in the back by indicted Charleston ex-cop Michael Slager during a broken tail light stop just a month prior.

    Georgia was originally founded as a penal colony, ironically as an alternative to debtor’s prison. Southerners all recognize immortal words of Falkner “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

    However, this arrest is more reminiscent of a popular punchline bandied about the bars of Buckhead in Atlanta: “I went to Georgia on vacation, and left on probation.”

    Perhaps it’s time for the Valdosta Police Department to get the memo that photography is not a crime like interfering with an investigation, and that these Georgia police need to respect the 4th Amendment rights of their fellow citizens.


    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/13/georgia-cop-illegally-arrests-passenger-recording-during-broken-tail-light-investigation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2016, 10:58:57 AM
    “Hero” Cop Targeted Gays, Falsely Arrested 130 People to Make Extra Cash — Avoids All Charges

    Cook County, IL – A corrupt cop by the name of Richard Fiorito has avoided charges after falsely arresting over 130 people for drunk driving. A recent investigation has uncovered that Fiorito was protected by state’s attorney Anita Alvarez, who is notorious for letting police off the hook. During that investigation, some old cases of Fiorito’s had shown vast corruption.

    For six years, Fiorito was running a scheme in which he falsely arrested people on DUI charges so he could get overtime pay for the resulting court appearance.

    In most of the cases, Fiorito would stop drivers on suspicion of driving drunk and would give them a field sobriety test, and he would fail them whether they passed or not, in many cases lying about his encounters with the victims and making up details about their behavior.

    It was also suggested by some of the victims that Fiorito unfairly targetted the LGBT community, and would hunt for victims in a part of town where gay people often spent their time. Some victims reported that he used homophobic slurs while he was arresting them.

    “He intends to be dual motivated,” attorney Jon Erickson said after the first dashcam surfaced.  “One, for the money, and two, to target gays and lesbians.”

    For years, Fiorito would arrest at least one person each day for drunk driving on average and was called a hero by both Mothers Against Drunk Driving and the Alliance Against Intoxicated Motorists.

    Eventually, Fiorito slipped up and dash camera footage was able to prove that he lied about at least one of his DUI arrests. However, he was not fired for the offense but was just reassigned to desk duty. After further investigation, the attorney’s office was forced to drop charges against more than 130 people who were arrested for drunk driving.

    After the full scope of his corruption was revealed, Fiorito resigned, but state’s attorney Anita Alvarez never pressed charges against him, despite claiming that her office was investigating the officer for over a year. Sadly, Fiorito has found himself in the 96 percent of cops, who have committed a crime, even on video, and will not be prosecuted.

    Alvarez will soon be up for re-election, and many of the victims in this case are hoping that she loses.

    One victim, James Dean, told reporters, “Anita Alvarez, she’s part of the system. She certainly proved to me that she’s not on the right side of the law. If she gets re-elected, then we’re just in for more of the same corruption.”

    “I’m hoping that Foxx gets elected, because she understands how the system has been used against particularly people of color. Hopefully, she can be a catalyst for change,” he added, speaking of the candidate competing with Alvarez in the election.

    Sadly, there are officers just like Fiorito in every police department across the country, officers who are willing to put innocent people in jail so they can get a fatter paycheck.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-falsely-arrested-130-people-drunk-driving-avoids-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 14, 2016, 10:05:59 PM
    I think you might have missed the point, based on your response. I could be wrong though.








    Hmmm -- Are you also not missing the point in most of the
    Cop related articles posted on here.

    IE there is some very flawed cops out there & the very flawed
    System covers & backs them up.

    Jeez we have seen enough evidence posted here.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 15, 2016, 10:35:38 PM
    Remember this case? Seems like they're getting off lightly, as it often happens with cops.

    Cops Charged after Breaking into Pot Shop, Stealing & Eating Edibles, Destroying Property

    Santa Ana, CA — In June of last year, police raided a marijuana dispensary and were caught on a surveillance camera stealing the merchandise and breaking things. Police entered the “Sky High” dispensary in riot gear with guns drawn and were extremely disrespectful to the owners of the property as well as the guests, some of whom were disabled.

    One of the occupants was a partially blind paraplegic, and the officers were making jokes about her disability. They even suggested to one another that they should have assaulted her.

    “Did you punch that one-legged old Benita,” a male officer asks a female officer.

    “I was about to kick her in her f—ing nub,” the female officer replies after the police were in the building alone.

    The cameras captured the officers making profane jokes to one another while they played darts and testing out the merchandise in the store. In one part of the video, an officer can be seen taking a big bite out of what appears to be a marijuana edible, before he shakes his head in satisfaction and gives the other officers a “thumbs up.”

    In the video released by the dispensary, cops, in an effort to conceal their acts were seen destroying all the cameras they could see before stealing property and insulting people with disabilities. However, there was one camera that remained hidden and intact, and only because of this camera was the investigation even launched.

    After this video was released, it went super viral and exposed these abusive and corrupt officers for the criminals they are.

    For nearly a year, the officers have fought to get out of any charges, claiming that the cameras inside the store were “illegal,” and, therefore, not admissible.

    The District Attorney appears to be on their side too, as they quickly maintained that the snack items eaten inside the pot shop did not contain marijuana — in spite of the shop owners showing that the cookies were “edibles.”

    “Because some were consuming regular food products does not mean they were not consuming edibles,” said attorney Matthew Pappas.

    Despite their best efforts to fight all their charges, it was announced on Monday that three of the officers will be charged — all misdemeanors, of course.

    For stealing and eating the cookies and protein bars from the shop, all the officers were charged with petty theft. The officer who smashed all of the surveillance cameras in the store was also charged with vandalism.


    If convicted of petty theft, according to ABC7, officers Jorge Arroyo, 32 and Nicole Lynn Quijas, 37, face a maximum sentence of six months in jail and a $1,000 fine. Officer Brandon Matthew Sontag, 31, faces up to 18 months in jail and a $2,000 fine for petty theft and the additional misdemeanor vandalism count for smashing the cameras.

    The officers are scheduled for arraignment on April 11.

    Watch the video below and you decide who the criminals are in this scenario. Are the criminals the peaceful people attempting to purchase a plant to help with their ailments — or, were they the armed gang members who assaulted those people with assault rifles, smashed up private property, stole property, and attempted to destroy the evidence of their unscrupulous behavior?



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-charged-breaking-pot-shop-stealing-eating-edibles-destroying-property/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 16, 2016, 07:00:16 AM
    I don't understand why in the last few instances, the victims of police misconduct don't take matters into their own hands..... Especially in the story of the pig who falsely arrested and charged over 100 people to make himself look better.  Were these people waiting for the bullshit court system to punish the cops?  That will never happen..... Wake up and do some work, people.... Go after the pig personally.  Go after his ( or her) family... Make it so they are held responsible for their crimes.....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 17, 2016, 02:45:42 AM
    I don't understand why in the last few instances, the victims of police misconduct don't take matters into their own hands..... Especially in the story of the pig who falsely arrested and charged over 100 people to make himself look better.  Were these people waiting for the bullshit court system to punish the cops?  That will never happen..... Wake up and do some work, people.... Go after the pig personally.  Go after his ( or her) family... Make it so they are held responsible for their crimes.....







    Yes. You make a good point.
    I am also surprised some or at least one person
    Hasn't taken matters into their own hands.

    Mind can you just imagine How Quick & How Loud the Cops
    Would Complain, Let alone The Cop loving & Backing So called
    Justice Sytem Would do to them if Caught.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2016, 10:49:30 AM
    Florida Man Arrested Peacefully Exercising First Amendment Near Public School

    St. Johns County deputies ignored the constitution and followed orders blindly.

    They arrested PINAC reporter Jeff Gray this week.

    The Florida deputies failed to find Jeff Gray on school property at St. Augustine High School, they failed to issue a trespass warning, and they relied on what is probably an unconstitutional “school safety zone” trespassing law to arrest the PINAC reporter, who did nothing more than protest unfair treatment by the school district educating his children in north Florida this week.

    You can see Gray’s video report from his HonorYourOath Youtube channel below.

    PINAC News reported earlier this week that the nature of the arrest is purely retaliatory, because Gray has committed no crime other than investigating school bus safety, as is his right as a member of the free press.

    Video clearly shows the arresting deputy relying on Florida’s statute 810.0975 as you can see below.

    The original PINAC report shows how the officers waffled about what to charge him with after the arrest, as the PINAC reporter rotted in jail waiting for a hearing, instead of being released on his own recognizance as most registered voters will be for minor offenses.

    First, Gray was charged with a common trespassing charge, which requires, you know, actually trespassing on a property, not near a property on the public sidewalk.

    Only later the north Florida deputies decided to try the “school safety zone” charges instead.

    Just look at the letter below, and you’ll see that the Principal of St. Augustine High School warned Gray to stay away from “[NAME OF SCHOOL]” and cited Florida Statute 810.097 which is actually a completely different statute, and one which can only be enforced if a person enters school grounds, which Gray did not.

    Principal DeArmas Graham never gave the deputies a “school safety zone” warning letter, nor sent one to Gray by certified mail as part of the package of 38 censorship letters demanded by St. Johns County Schools Superintendent Dr. Joseph Joyner who can be reached at (904) 547-7502.

    The abominable “school safety zone” requires “each principal” or his designee to issue the warning, hence the absurd 38 letter package.

    (2)(a) Each principal or designee of each public or private school in this state shall notify the appropriate law enforcement agency to prohibit any person from loitering in the school safety zone who does not have legitimate business in the school safety zone or any other authorization, or license to enter or remain in the school safety zone or does not otherwise have invitee status in the designated safety zone.

    A St. Johns County Judge still required a $250 bail after the arraignment hearing, and refused to even listen to a reading of the statute, which says expressly: “(3) This section does not abridge or infringe upon the right of any person to peaceably assemble and protest.”

    “I don’t know why they kept me in shackles during the arraignment,” said Gray who spent the day in jail because St. Johns County won’t release anyone on bond after 5pm and prolonged his booking process, “because the judge was on a television and not even in the same room.”

    Jeff Gray was holding a sign saying, “The First Amendment is Not a Crime” in front of St. Augustine High School when four St. Johns County Sheriff’s deputies arrived and arrested him in under a minute.

    It’s doubtful that the “school safety zone” law is even enforceable, after a 2008 ruling United States Southern District Court in Miami issued a definitive ruling in the case named Gray vs. Kohl.

    In that case, Thomas Gray, a member of the Gideons handing out bibles near schools successfully challenged the Florida “school safety zones” law as unconstitutional for being vague and lacking proper provisions for notice. The relevant part of the ruling states:

    Subsections 2(a) and 2(b) of § 810.0975, Florida Statutes, are declared unconstitutionally vague. The State of Florida and its officers are hereby permanently enjoined from enforcing these subsections.

    Florida’s legislature changed the law in 2013, but did nothing to comport with the Federal ruling, so it’s likely that the state may not be enjoined from enforcement, but it’s a pretty dubious idea for the state to take up a law already invalid, and fail to do anything to fix it.

    Lawmakers did note that the purpose of the school safe zones is, “An act relating to criminal gang prevention,” which means that St. Johns deputies and school Superintendent Dr. Joyner must think of PINAC a ‘reporter gang.’


    But St. Johns County must be its own Country, since it has got own rules which don’t include any of the free speech or open government laws of Florida like the Sunshine Law, or the Constitution, both of which should expressly prohibit the kind of arrest Jeff Gray broadcast on Bambuser this past Monday morning.

    If you’re concerned about school officials overstepping the boundaries of their offices, operators are standing by to take your calls to Dr. Joseph Joyner at  (904) 547-7502.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/17/florida-cops-relied-wrong-law-arrest-pinacs-jeff-gray/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2016, 10:52:01 AM
    Louisiana Sheriff Facing Ten Years in Prison for Ordering the Beating of Inmates

    An embattled Louisiana sheriff was indicted this week by a federal grand jury following guilty pleas by eight former deputies from his department.

    Iberia Parish Sheriff Louis Ackal is facing ten years in prison and a fine of $250,000 for ordering the beatings of five inmates at the notorious Iberia Parish Jail.

    The eight former deputies pleaded guilty to the deprivation of civil rights stemming from at least two separate incidents involving the beating of inmates in a plea deal that protects them from future indictments in exchange for their testimony against the sheriff.

    Also indicted this week was Iberia Parish Lt. Colonel Gerald Savoy, who is said to have participated in the beatings, according to the United States Department of Justice.

    The department has been under fire since the Houdini suicide of Victor White III, said to have shot himself in the chest while handcuffed in the back of a deputy’s cruiser.

    White’s death two years ago lead to an FBI probe of the department.  The agency was also being investigated for two other incidents that occurred in the chapel of the jail, incidents that came to light after a whistleblower lawsuit was filed by former warden Wesley Hayes.

    Ackal and Savoy were said to have ordered the assault of inmates and watched as deputies beat them with batons, forcing one inmate to simulate oral sex on the baton used to beat him.

    The eight deputies who have already pleaded guilty are Robert E. Burns, Byron LaSalle, Wade Bergeron, Bret Broussard, Jason Comeaux and David Hines, former warden Wesley Hayes and Wesley’s brother Jesse Hayes.

    Wesley Hayes is also the plaintiff in a whistleblower lawsuit he filed against the sheriff.  The suit  alleges  Hayes was fired for trying to report problems occurring in the jail. His suit claims that he reported the criminal activity of at least two employees to supervisors who overlooked and failed to report the criminal activity of the deputies.  Hayes’ lawsuit also describes an altercation between deputies and several inmates who were taken into a jail house chapel, with no surveillance, and beaten while Ackal and Savoy were present.

    Hayes and brother Jesse were also named as defendants in a lawsuit filed after the in custody death of Michael Jones, an inmate who suffered from both bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. The suit listed five other defendants including nurse Stephanie Celestine, who failed to render aid to Jones before his death.

    Jones died after an altercation with the Hayes brothers that began when Jones charged out of his cell and bit one of the deputies. The brothers, said to weigh a combined 700 pounds, sat on Jones to restrain him, according to other inmates who witnessed the assault.

    “Wesley Hayes and Celestine, were ordered to split the cost of $61,000 in damages — an amount reflecting Jones’ status as a single, unemployed man without children at the time of his death.”

    The Advocate reports that the department has faced more than 30 lawsuits since Ackal became sheriff in 2008.   The department has also paid out $1.1 million to settle at least ten of suits since the sheriff took office in 2008.


    “At least six people, including five inmates, have died in Sheriff’s Office custody during that time. Documents examined by The Advocate — including complaints filed by inmates and settled civil lawsuits — allege a wide array of misconduct by Sheriff’s Office employees, ranging from excessive force used in routine arrests to an inmate beating that was so savage that guards slipped and fell in the victim’s blood.”

    Missing from the list of guilty pleas and indictments was David Prejean who was fired last year after video surfaced of he and his K9 partner repeatedly attacking a inmate who lay face down on the floor of a common area in the jail, an incident that was covered by PINAC in May.  Prejean is also a defendant in a lawsuit filed by the mother of the seventeen year old shown in the same Sugarcane Festival video that landed Laperousse in hot water.

    It remains unclear if Sheriff Ackal, who was re-elected last year, will continue to serve out his term or resign.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/10/louisiana-sheriff-facing-ten-years-in-prison-for-ordering-the-beating-of-inmates/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2016, 06:03:12 PM
    Denver Cops Abused Confidential Database To Get Dates, Enable Stalking: Report

    Officers in other cities have misused the database, too.

    Denver Police officers caught using a confidential database for personal reasons should face stiffer penalties, the city’s independent monitor argued in a report released Tuesday.

    The report, which reviewed both the Denver Police and the Denver Sheriff Department’s performance for 2015, found several instances of officers abusing both the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) and it’s state counterpart, the Colorado Crime Information Center (CCIC). Independent Monitor Nicholas Mitchell said in the report that he believes the penalties for those caught aren’t stiff enough to deter further abuse.

    The database includes information about arrests, whether or not someone is a sex offender, alleged gang affiliations and missing persons. It also contains more sensitive information, like a person’s home address, their immigration status and “personal information about victims of domestic violence who have obtained protection orders,” the report said.

    One officer, for example, was found to have used the database to assist an acquaintance who was going through a divorce determine the identity of the man he believed his wife was having an affair with. Then it spiraled out of control, possibly enabling violence from the vengeful ex-husband:

    Shortly thereafter, the ex-husband began driving by the man’s house and threatening him. The ex-husband also found and contacted the man’s wife to tell her that the man was having an affair. The ex-husband told the wife that he knew their home address, showed her a picture of the man’s car, and asked her questions about the man to find out what gym he worked out at, what shift he worked, and where he spent his leisure time.
    The officer was issued a written reprimand for his involvement.

    In another instance, a Denver Police officer who was at a hospital investigating a reported sexual assault made “small talk” with a female employee at the hospital who wasn’t involved in the investigation. The report continues:

    At the end of her shift, the female employee returned home and found a voicemail message from the officer on her personal phone. She had not given the officer her phone number, and was upset that he had obtained it (she assumed) by improperly using law enforcement computer systems.
    That officer was fined two days’ pay for misusing the database, and also given a written reprimand.

    “NCIC and CCIC are sensitive criminal justice databases that contain significant amounts of personal information about community members,” the report added. “When used appropriately, they can be powerful tools to investigate crime. But the misuse of these databases for personal, non-law enforcement purposes may compromise public trust and result in harm to community members.”

    “We believe that the reprimands that are generally imposed on DPD officers who misuse the databases do not reflect the seriousness of that violation, and may not sufficiently deter future misuse,” it added.

    Denver Police spokeswoman Daelene Mix told the Associated Press the department only investigates cases after a complaint is filed. As such, it’s difficult to know if the situations described in the report are isolated incidents or if the problem is more extensive.

    The police department’s 1,400 or so officers access the database hundreds of times a day, reports the Denver Post.

    Other officers across the nation have allegedly used the NCIC for less-than-official reasons. In 2013, various New York Police Department officers were accused of using the database for personal gain, including officers who tipped off drug dealers, staged robberies and, in one particularly gruesome case, planned how to abduct and cannibalize women.

    Around 90,000 agencies use the database 9 million times a day.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/denver-police-database_us_56e986bde4b0860f99db3134
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2016, 05:24:12 PM
    SWAT Killed Dad Having Diabetic Episode, Kids Say
    By ELIZABETH WARMERDAM
       
    FRESNO, Calif. (CN) - Sheriff's officers in California's Central Valley shot and killed a 76-year-old man as he sat in his vehicle on the side of the road suffering from a diabetic episode, the man's family says in Federal Court.

    Plaintiffs Stacey Berbereia, Daniel Hanson and Kimberly Niz filed a lawsuit against Kings County and three officers on Tuesday, asserting civil rights and wrongful death claims in connection to the fatal shooting of their father, Albert Hanson, Jr., last year.

    On April 26, 2015, Albert Hanson decided to go squirrel shooting, as he frequently did with permission of certain landowners, his family says.
    They believe that while he was on route, Hanson had a diabetic episode and pulled off the road near the west bank of a canal.

    Hanson had firearms in his vehicle for the purpose of squirrel shooting, but never used one during the incident or brandished a firearm at anyone, his family says.
    "Instead, Mr. Hanson remained in the driver's seat of his vehicle and reasonably appeared to be someone who was either ill or emotionally distressed," his family says.

    The Kings County Sheriff's Office dispatched deputies to the location of Hanson's vehicle in an apparent response to a citizen's report, the complaint says.
    A California Highway Patrol helicopter also went to the scene and the helicopter personnel reported to officers that the person in the driver's seat of the vehicle was possibly sleeping, according to the complaint.
    One of the deputies on the scene ordered Hanson to exit the vehicle with his hands up, but Hanson remained in the vehicle with his hands on the steering wheel, his family says.

    The deputy, who reported he was able to see a person in the driver's seat but nothing else, requested backup and waited for additional units to arrive, the complaint says.
    When the sheriff's SWAT team arrived and took control of the scene, "things quickly escalated, although Mr. Hanson presented no more of a threat then than he had previously," the family says.

    Hanson remained largely unresponsive in his vehicle, never attempted to exit the vehicle, and was never observed wielding a firearm in a manner indicating he was an imminent threat, according to his family.
    "Despite the plethora of tactical options and strategic advantages possessed by law enforcement personnel on scene, deadly force was exercised as the first and only considered option, and in the absence of apparent justification," the family says.

    Several SWAT members - including the identified defendants Deputy Taylor Lopes, Detective Marius Barsteceanu and Deputy Thomas Olson - fired a total of 47 shots at the vehicle. Eleven of the shots struck Hanson, according to the complaint.

    "Mr. Hanson died at the scene without any effort made to tend to his injuries," his family says.

    According to news stories following the incident, the sheriff's office said it responded to Hanson's vehicle after a farmworker reported that Hanson had two rifles and was making obscure comments.
    The sheriff's office told news outlets that Hanson was holding a rifle with a scope and fired off a round in an unknown direction while the SWAT team was trying to negotiate with him, prompting the officers to return fire.

    The Kings County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to an after-hours request for comment.
    Hanson's family is represented by Kevin Little, who also did not respond to a late request for comment on Wednesday.

    http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/03/17/swat-killed-dad-having-diabetic-episode-kids-say.htm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2016, 05:37:07 PM
    Arizona Cop Killed Man with AR-15 Rifle Inscribed with the Words “You’re Fucked” as Man Pleaded for His Life

    Daniel Shaver may have had a few drinks in him when he was ordered out of his Arizona hotel room at gunpoint by a group of six screaming police officers last January.

    The Mesa police officers were barking all kinds of orders; each one with a different demand, telling him to get down on his hands and knees and crawl towards them, to place his hands over his head, to sit on the floor and cross his legs in front of him.

    The traveling businessman was trying to comply, but he was confused by their contradictory demands. The fact that he had been drinking with friends that evening did not help.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver reportedly pleaded as he lifted his hands up, then down again.

    But then one cop did, shooting him five times with an AR-15 rifle inscribed with the  words “You’re Fucked.”

    It was Philip “Mitch” Braisford’s personal gun, which he had personally inscribed, and it offered a glimpse into his personality.

    Naturally, the 25-year-old Mesa police officer claimed he was in fear for his life, which was enough for internal affairs to find no wrongdoing on his part; the same investigative unit where his father had recently retired from as a lieutenant after working 19 years in the department.

    But the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office charged him with second-degree murder several weeks later after reviewing footage from his body cam, a decision that left him “stunned” and “shocked,” especially considering the charge carries a minimum sentence of ten years in prison.

    However, now he is being offered a plea deal of negligent homicide, which carries a minimum sentence of probation, a judicial “get out of jail, free” card that he would be stupid not to accept, according to Shaver’s wife, Laney Sweet, who is posting information on a Facebook page she created in support of her husband.

    Braisford, who has not spent a minute in jail, has until May 16 to decide whether to accept the deal offered to him on Tuesday, said Sweet, who is already sensing that he will never spend a day in jail.

    Especially considering he has not spent a minute in jail since he was charged with second-degree murder, the judge apparently believing his lawyer who said that he “honorably served his community as a Mesa police officer.”

    But now the department is taking the steps to terminate him, not over the shooting, but because he had inscribed the profane phrase on his personal gun, which he was allowed to use over any department-issued gun.

    Meanwhile, Shaver’s wife has already filed a $35 million wrongful death lawsuit.

    And the body cam footage of Shaver’s killing has already been viewed by her attorney, even though it has not been released to the public.

    Sweet posted the following on the Facebook page:

    I was told Daniel’s hand never even touched his side or waistband. They said that while he was up on his knees with his hands above his head that he went to all four and it appeared that he could have lost balance. His right arm brushed beside his body. The officer shot him five times and Daniel fell forward and died instantly. Daniel had a few drinks with the two guests he was eating pizza with in his room, who were co-workers there for a conference.

    Shaver was 26 and lived in Texas with his wife and children. He worked in pest control and was traveling for business with two pellet guns he routinely traveled with for his job.

    He had dinner and drinks with a man and a woman and invited them back to his La Quinta hotel room on the fifth floor. At one point, he was showing them the pellet guns.

    Meanwhile, two people sitting by the pool looked up and saw a man pointing a gun out the window, so they became alarmed and called police.

    The two pellet guns were found inside his room after he had been killed outside his room.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/17/arizona-cop-killed-man-with-ar-15-rifle-inscribed-with-the-words-youre-fucked-as-man-pleaded-for-his-life/

    http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2016/03/16/report-man-fatally-shot-mesa-officer-may-have-been-drunk-and-confused-police-commands/81879134/

    http://www.wfaa.com/news/crime/mesa-ariz-officer-heads-to-court-for-murder-of-n-texas-man/82912536
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 21, 2016, 06:33:42 PM
    Arizona Cop Killed Man with AR-15 Rifle Inscribed with the Words “You’re Fucked” as Man Pleaded for His Life

    Daniel Shaver may have had a few drinks in him when he was ordered out of his Arizona hotel room at gunpoint by a group of six screaming police officers last January.

    The Mesa police officers were barking all kinds of orders; each one with a different demand, telling him to get down on his hands and knees and crawl towards them, to place his hands over his head, to sit on the floor and cross his legs in front of him.

    The traveling businessman was trying to comply, but he was confused by their contradictory demands. The fact that he had been drinking with friends that evening did not help.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver reportedly pleaded as he lifted his hands up, then down again.

    But then one cop did, shooting him five times with an AR-15 rifle inscribed with the  words “You’re Fucked.”

    It was Philip “Mitch” Braisford’s personal gun, which he had personally inscribed, and it offered a glimpse into his personality.

    Naturally, the 25-year-old Mesa police officer claimed he was in fear for his life, which was enough for internal affairs to find no wrongdoing on his part; the same investigative unit where his father had recently retired from as a lieutenant after working 19 years in the department.

    But the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office charged him with second-degree murder several weeks later after reviewing footage from his body cam, a decision that left him “stunned” and “shocked,” especially considering the charge carries a minimum sentence of ten years in prison.

    However, now he is being offered a plea deal of negligent homicide, which carries a minimum sentence of probation, a judicial “get out of jail, free” card that he would be stupid not to accept, according to Shaver’s wife, Laney Sweet, who is posting information on a Facebook page she created in support of her husband.

    Braisford, who has not spent a minute in jail, has until May 16 to decide whether to accept the deal offered to him on Tuesday, said Sweet, who is already sensing that he will never spend a day in jail.

    Especially considering he has not spent a minute in jail since he was charged with second-degree murder, the judge apparently believing his lawyer who said that he “honorably served his community as a Mesa police officer.”

    But now the department is taking the steps to terminate him, not over the shooting, but because he had inscribed the profane phrase on his personal gun, which he was allowed to use over any department-issued gun.

    Meanwhile, Shaver’s wife has already filed a $35 million wrongful death lawsuit.

    And the body cam footage of Shaver’s killing has already been viewed by her attorney, even though it has not been released to the public.

    Sweet posted the following on the Facebook page:

    I was told Daniel’s hand never even touched his side or waistband. They said that while he was up on his knees with his hands above his head that he went to all four and it appeared that he could have lost balance. His right arm brushed beside his body. The officer shot him five times and Daniel fell forward and died instantly. Daniel had a few drinks with the two guests he was eating pizza with in his room, who were co-workers there for a conference.

    Shaver was 26 and lived in Texas with his wife and children. He worked in pest control and was traveling for business with two pellet guns he routinely traveled with for his job.

    He had dinner and drinks with a man and a woman and invited them back to his La Quinta hotel room on the fifth floor. At one point, he was showing them the pellet guns.

    Meanwhile, two people sitting by the pool looked up and saw a man pointing a gun out the window, so they became alarmed and called police.

    The two pellet guns were found inside his room after he had been killed outside his room.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/17/arizona-cop-killed-man-with-ar-15-rifle-inscribed-with-the-words-youre-fucked-as-man-pleaded-for-his-life/

    http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2016/03/16/report-man-fatally-shot-mesa-officer-may-have-been-drunk-and-confused-police-commands/81879134/

    http://www.wfaa.com/news/crime/mesa-ariz-officer-heads-to-court-for-murder-of-n-texas-man/82912536







    Jeez Yet another scumbag gun tooting Fcuking cop
    Being the big man with 5 others all with guns.
    Yeah Right He Feared For His Life.
    Let's Hope He Gets 10 yrs Minimum
    Then He Can Fear For His ArseHole
    & Have Tattooed 'I'm Fcuked'
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 22, 2016, 06:29:58 PM
    This weak pig rapes children AND pets.......


    http://metro.co.uk/2016/03/21/pcso-jailed-for-raping-child-and-filming-himself-having-sex-with-a-dog-5765771/ (http://metro.co.uk/2016/03/21/pcso-jailed-for-raping-child-and-filming-himself-having-sex-with-a-dog-5765771/)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2016, 07:08:37 PM
    NYPD cop 'lied in court to convict an innocent man and sabotaged fresh investigation into the case 20 years later'


    An NYPD officer committed perjury to convict an innocent man and sabotaged the re-investigation that led to the real killers, court papers say.
    Eric Glisson and four other people spent 18 years in prison for the 1995 fatal shooting of livery driver Baithe Diop.

    Glisson, who was 20 when he was convicted, was released in 2013 along with Cathy Watkins, Michael Cosme, Devon Ayers and Carlos Perez when two gang members were found to be the actual killers.
    Now, Glisson and the others say Lieutenant William O'Toole lied in court about how he caught Glisson and got in the way of a detective trying to find the real murderers, the New York Post reported.

    O'Toole said at the time that he had seen Glisson in the building where he lived and grabbed him just before Glisson dashed into his apartment.
    But Glisson, who was imprisoned at New York's maximum security facility Sing Sing, said O'Toole actually tricked him into opening the apartment's door by using a neighborhood child.

    Glisson, Watkins, Cosme, Ayers and Perez have sued the city for malicious prosecution.
    As part of the proceedings, they also claim there's 'ample evidence to infer' that O'Toole destroyed the notebook of a detective who was re-investigating the case.
    The city has admitted that the notebook disappeared, the New York Post wrote. That detective's new probe into the case eventually led to Glisson's and the others' being set free.

    'I've been innocent, I've been fighting all these years and the hard work finally paid off,' Cosme told NBC after his release in January 2013.
    Another detective who worked under O'Toole's supervision in the Bronx said he gave O'Toole a tip that could have spared Glisson and the others more than a decade behind bars.

    Peter Forcelli told O'Toole that Gilbert Vega and José Rodriguez, two members of the Sex Money Murder gang who later turned out to be the real killers, were bragging about killing a livery driver in 1995, the court papers say.
    Forcelli said O'Toole stayed silent and didn't bring up Diop's murder event though he had testified at Watkins and Glisson's trial just months earlier.

    The NYPD 'may have looked only in the open homicide drawer and never bothered to even look to see if there was anything other than an unsolved homicide that fit that decision', Forcelli told NBC's Dateline in an episode chronicling Glisson's quest to be freed.
    The conversation happened in late 1997 or early 1998, the New York Post reported.

    O'Toole told the newspaper the allegations were untrue, adding he 'absolutely hadn't lied under oath' and that Forcelli's claims were 'baloney'.
    'There's no reason for me to hide the notebook or take the notebook,' O'Toole told the New York Post.
    'Obviously, anyone can put anything they want in court documents. I have nothing to hide and I know I didn't do anything wrong.'

    Glisson opened a juice bar in the Bronx, called Fresh Take Juice Bar, a year after his exoneration.
    His daughter Cynthia was just a week old when he was incarcerated and almost 18 years old when Glisson was released.
     He had a second daughter, named Scarlett, in April last year, NBC reported.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3502667/NYPD-cop-Lieutenant-William-Sean-O-Toole-lied-court-convict-innocent-Eric-Glisson-worked-sabotage-hunt-real-killers-1995-murder-Baithe-Diop.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2016, 11:58:29 AM
    20 Years and 13 Alibis Later, Bronx DA Agrees to Vacate Richard Rosario's Murder Conviction

    Richard Rosario has spent two decades behind bars, insisting for every one of those years that 13 alibi witnesses could prove he was innocent of a 1996 New York City murder.

    On Tuesday, the Bronx District Attorney's Office told NBC News it intends to ask a judge to throw out Rosario's conviction.

    In a statement, a spokeswoman for Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark confirmed that the DA will move to vacate the conviction and ask that Rosario be released from prison "after a review by her office determined that he did not receive a fair trial."

    But, the statement added, "The charges against Mr. Rosario remain open pending further investigation."

    For years, former Bronx DA Robert Johnson stood by the conviction and appellate courts have consistently upheld it. But when Clark took office on January 1st of this year, she vowed that potential wrongful convictions would be a focus for her office, and began to look into the Rosario case.

    The news comes just two days before the launch of "Conviction," a streaming documentary series produced by Dateline NBC that is set to be released on NBCNews.com on Thursday. It documents a producer's two-year investigation into the long and twisted history of Rosario's case.

    "We are very happy that Richard is going to be free, that he's going to get a measure of justice after 20 years," said Rosario's attorneys, Rebecca Freedman and Glenn Garber of The Exoneration Initiative, a not-for-profit organization that investigates claims of innocence.

    The Bronx DA's office says it has begun the process of bringing Rosario from Eastern Correctional Facility in upstate New York, where he was housed, to the Bronx to appear in court. A law enforcement source tells NBC News that could happen by Wednesday.

    Rosario is currently in the 20th year of a 25-to-life sentence for the 1996 murder of 17-year-old Jorge Collazo in the Bronx.

    Rosario insists he was 1,000 miles away in Florida on the day of the crime and among the witnesses who can vouch for him are a sheriff's deputy, a pastor, and a federal correctional officer.

    "I turned myself in when I heard police were looking for me," Rosario, now 40, told Dateline two years ago. "I gave detectives everything they needed that first night to prove my innocence. They never investigated any of it."

    "Do you believe I'm still here?" he said in 2014, "It's insane."

    Rosario's story has never changed.

    On June 30, 1996, he says he boarded a Greyhound bus in Deltona, Florida and headed back to New York City to clear up what he thought was a misunderstanding. A few days earlier, when Rosario had called home to speak to his mother, she'd told him that NYPD detectives had been to their Bronx apartment because they wanted to speak with him about a murder.

    Once he arrived in the Bronx, Rosario called detectives at the 43rd precinct saying he knew nothing about a murder, but he'd voluntarily turn himself in the next day to answer any questions they had. Instead, detectives came to the apartment that evening and took Rosario to the precinct.

    Two eyewitnesses had picked Rosario's photo out of a book of mug shots, saying he was the gunman who'd shot Collazo in the face on the afternoon of June 19, 1996 after a brief altercation in the street. The eyewitnesses then picked Rosario out of a live line-up.

    But Rosario insisted he'd never killed anyone, and said he'd been in Florida the whole month of June. He gave a detailed voluntary statement to detectives, providing them with the names, phone numbers and addresses of his alibi witnesses.

    While in Florida, he explained, he'd been staying with his friend John Torres and John's wife Jeannine, who was pregnant. In fact, said Rosario, he was with them on June 19 when Jeannine went into labor. He'd celebrated with the couple and their friends the next day when the baby was born.

    If true, there was no way he could have pulled a trigger in the South Bronx on June 19. More than a dozen people could confirm his story.

    "I didn't expect to be in jail for another day," Rosario says now. "I figured they'd make a few calls and I'd be released that evening."

    Detectives, however, did not follow up with any of the alibi witnesses. So, with no evidence other than two stranger eyewitness identifications linking him to the murder, Rosario — the 21-year-old father of a 1-year-old boy and a 4-year-old girl — was arrested for murder.

    Rosario had already had contact with the justice system. At the time of his arrest, he was wanted for a robbery. Although he also contended he was not guilty of the robbery either, after he was convicted of the murder, he pleaded guilty to the robbery. His sentence would run concurrently with the sentence for the murder conviction. He had also pleaded guilty to a robbery as a juvenile, which is why his photo was among the mug shots shown to eyewitnesses.

    In 2014, as he worked on the "Conviction" series, Dateline producer Dan Slepian tracked down nine of the alibi witnesses that Rosario named the night he turned himself in. All said they had never been contacted by anyone from the NYPD or the Bronx District Attorney's office, which has also been confirmed in court documents.

    Last week, that changed, when investigators from the Bronx DA's office went to Florida to interview alibi witnesses, law enforcement sources told NBC News.

    Rosario challenged his conviction in state court in 2004, arguing that his original attorneys were ineffective by not sending an investigator to Florida. During that hearing, seven of the alibi witnesses came to New York and told a judge that Rosario had been in Florida. But the state judge ruled against him, saying that his lawyers had on the whole "represented Rosario skillfully and with integrity" and that their failure to send an investigator to Florida was the result of a "misunderstanding or mistake" that "was not deliberate."


    For 20 years, Rosario has hoped to be reunited with his son and daughter, now 21 and 23 years old.

    "All I care about is the truth," Rosario said in 2014. "I just hope the truth comes out."

    http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/california-family-files-appeal-keep-girl-who-1-64-native-n543886
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2016, 04:51:16 PM
    88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2016, 04:54:06 PM
    Cop Who Filmed Himself Raping Children and Having Sex with a Dog Gets Measly Sentence

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-filmed-raping-children-sex-dog-measly-sentence/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2016, 09:49:48 AM
    82-yo Grandma Hospitalized After Chicago Cops Wrongly Raid Her Home Looking for Drugs

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-cops-hospitalize-great-grandmother/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 25, 2016, 03:26:05 PM
    88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/








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

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

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

    It's got to be very tough to see & hear of so much evil,wrongdoing & corruption
    All around you & be part of the Group responsible, when your a 'Good one'.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2016, 04:59:31 PM







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

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

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

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

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




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

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

    Ha, yes the irony that then the Public Have to pay for their wrong doing.
    Win win situation for the cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on March 26, 2016, 09:59:31 AM
    88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/19/texas-man-exonerated-of-false-charges-by-home-video-camera-files-lawsuit-against-local-sheriffs-office/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 26, 2016, 01:50:29 PM
    GRAPHIC: California Cops Kill Suspect in 8 Seconds, Holding Garden Hose Spray Nozzle

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

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

    But Freddy Centeno did not have a gun.

    Just a black spray nozzle.

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

    The two California cops fired nine times.

    Seven rounds impacted Freddy Centeno.

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

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

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

    It was comply or die.

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

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

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

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

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

    Centeno died from his wounds on September 26th.

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/24/graphic-california-cops-kill-suspect-in-8-seconds-in-chilling-body-cam-footage/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 28, 2016, 09:24:44 AM
    Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

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

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

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



    Not one I would hang my anti police hat on..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on March 28, 2016, 10:52:04 AM
    Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

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

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

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



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

    You only have a pro-police hat...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 28, 2016, 11:04:23 AM
    Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

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

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

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



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









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

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

    Are they no working as an organised criminal gang ??

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

    Hang which one of your Hats On That.
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 28, 2016, 03:01:33 PM
    You only have a pro-police hat...

    Life would be easier if I did, that's for sure.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 28, 2016, 03:22:14 PM







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

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

    Are they no working as an organised criminal gang ??

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

    Hang which one of your Hats On That.
     ;)

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








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

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

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

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

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

    Sack the Bastard lot of them & start again.
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 29, 2016, 09:04:55 AM







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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    KTVU reports:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2016, 09:50:44 AM
    NYPD Officers Arrest US Postal Worker On Duty Delivering Packages Who Criticized Them

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Criticizing the police isn’t a crime.

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

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

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

    Adams as demanded a thorough review of the incident.

    The NYPD has stated that they are already investigating themselves.

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

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



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/23/new-york-city-postal-worker-arrested-duty-delivering-packages/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 29, 2016, 02:41:51 PM
    Accessing info without a valid reason  is a violation of policy for certain and may have other implications as well. Not typically dealt with as a criminal act, the discipline is internal. I don't know that they didn't receive consequences at that level. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't.

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

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

       








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

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

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

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

    Oh but none of that language for the cops.

    Fucking Stinks.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on March 29, 2016, 11:46:00 PM
    NYPD Officers Arrest US Postal Worker On Duty Delivering Packages Who Criticized Them

    [...]

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

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

    Some NYPD cops are going to be spending a lot of time wondering how badly their assholes will be violated in federal prison... and all because they were pompous, power-tripping arrogant asses.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2016, 12:17:52 AM
    Arizona Cop Fired For Killing Daniel Shaver, Who Prosecutors Admit “Didn’t Do Anything Wrong”

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

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

    It was all caught on a body camera.

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

    Brailsford was charged with second degree murder earlier this month.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    An update from Facebook:

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

    https://www.facebook.com/JusticeForDaniel/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2016, 10:33:04 AM
    Woman Reports Cop for Stepping On Her in the Donut Line, So He Smashed in Her Face

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

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

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

    “Next time, move out of the way.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Indeed, that speaks volumes.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/doughnut-cop-foot-stomper/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 01, 2016, 10:14:15 AM
    North Carolina Deputy Lied in Court; Now He Is Fired And His Cases Will Be Thrown Out

    Cops even have a word for it: Testilying.

    How far will a lie or two get you?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The judge saw the video.

    Deputy Davis was lying.

    There were absolutely no witnesses present in the breathalyzer room.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Testilying is nothing new.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Davis’ suspect made a phone call to her attorney.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    And a great many deputies demonstratively do break their oaths.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/01/north-carolina-deputy-lied-court-now-fired-cases-will-thrown/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 01, 2016, 04:43:02 PM
    Horrifying Video Shows Sadistic Judge Order Cop To Torture Peaceful Man in Courtroom for Talking

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-video-shows-sadistic-judge-order-cop-torture-peaceful-man-courtroom-talking/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 01, 2016, 04:50:01 PM
    Florida Cops Busted Lying, Beat Man to Pulp Costing $275,000 Legal Settlement

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

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

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

    By a Mack truck.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Florence contended police should have been charged for assaulting him.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Instead, they were rewarded for their crimes.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Benthal was promoted to detective.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    And only one of them can be right.

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

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

    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/joseph-florence.jpg)

    Graphic image from "arrest". (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/lakeland01-1.jpg)

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/01/florida-cops-busted-lying-beat-man-to-pulp-costing-275000-legal-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on April 01, 2016, 06:43:10 PM
    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/joseph-florence.jpg)

    Graphic image from "arrest". (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/lakeland01-1.jpg)

    Holy fucking shit... wow. JUST $275,000?!? And the people who did this got promoted?! Fucking insane.


    Also, calling out the following bit from the post, in reference to the fact that no charges were filed:

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

    Dear Sgt. Terri Smith: he's PRESUMED innocent until proven guilty in a Court of Law you dumb bitch.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2016, 09:12:23 PM
    “You gonna pay for this Boy” Cops Mistake Hemorrhoid for Drugs, Sodomize Innocent Man in Public

    Aiken, SC — On Oct. 2, 2014, Lakeya Hicks and Elijah Pontoon had broken no law, violated no traffic code and were simply driving down the road when they were targeted and pulled over by Aiken police officer Chris Medlin.

    Medlin explained to the couple that he stopped them because they had temporary tags on the car. According to South Carolina law, there is nothing wrong with temp tags, so long as they aren’t expired. Hicks explained that she had recently purchased the car, and that is the reason for the tags. Medlin even tells the couple that the tags check out.

    The stop, which never should have happened in the first place, should have ended right then. However, Medlin, working on a hunch, just knew that this couple was up to no good. Medlin orders Pontoon out of the car and handcuffs him — for no reason.

    “Because of your history, I’ve got a dog coming in here. Gonna walk a dog around the car,” says this tyrant, and apparently racist cop. “You gonna pay for this one, boy.”

    Pontoon has no history though, at least not since 2006, which is hardly a reason to stop the man now.

    After unlawfully detaining the couple, with no probable cause, a drug dog shows up — but it finds nothing. Again, this illegal stop should have ended here. But it didn’t, and, instead, got much worse.

    By now, there are four officers on the scene, one of whom is a female. Medlin then tells the female officer to “search her real good,” referring to Hicks. While the search of Hicks happened off camera, according to a federal lawsuit filed by attorney Robert Phillips, it involved exposing Hicks’ breasts in the populated area. Mind you, this is at noon on a Friday.

    After sexually assaulting Hicks and finding nothing, the cops then direct their attention to Pontoon.

    “You’ve got something here right between your legs. There’s something hard right there between your legs.” Medlin says, noting that he’s going to “put some gloves on.”

    Again, the cops appear to move out of the view of the camera to protect themselves while sodomizing a man on the roadside. However, the graphic audio leaves no room for speculation as to what happened.
    As cops launch their assault on this innocent man’s rectum, Pontoon complains that they are grabbing his hemorrhoid.

    “I’ve had hemorrhoids, and they ain’t that hard,” replies the apparently racist, and now rapist, cop.

    As Radly Balko points out in his article on the Post, at about 12:47:15 in the video, the audio actually suggests that two officers may have inserted fingers into Pontoon’s rectum, as one asks, “What are you talking about, right here?” The other replies, “Right straight up in there.”

    The cops continue their attack on this innocent man for several minutes moving their fingers in and out of his rectum searching for non-existent drugs.

    “If that’s a hemorrhoid, that’s a hemorrhoid, all right? But that don’t feel like no hemorrhoid to me,” one officer says as he sexually assaults Pontoon.

    Much to the rapist and racist cops’ shagrin, they found nothing. Medlin then tells Pontoon to turn around and says, “Now I know you from before, from when I worked dope. I seen you. That’s why I put a dog on the car.”

    Medlin effectively admits that he had no probable cause to stop the couple, as Pontoon lacks any charges for the last decade. He then lets the couple off with a “courtesy warning.” However, as the Post points out, according to the complaint, there’s no indication of what the warning was actually for. Perhaps it was to warn to steer clear of police officers in Aiken.

    The vileness of the state’s wicked and immoral war on drugs has reared its repugnant face. When will the rest of society see that face and wake up to this atrocity? When will the people say “enough is enough,” and that finger raping innocent people on the roadside in search of arbitrary substances is no longer welcome in our culture?

    Please share this article with your friends and family to help wake them up to this very real American Horror Story.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/you-gonna-pay-boy-cops-mistake-hemorrhoid-drugs-sodomize-innocent-man-public/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2016/04/01/video-shows-white-cops-performing-roadside-cavity-search-of-black-man/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/r/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2016/04/01/Editorial-Opinion/Graphics/Summons_&_Complaint_FILED_9-21-15_Redacted_OCR.pdf

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on April 02, 2016, 10:16:52 PM
    That's a pretty horrific and shocking article. :o

    These people pigs that abuse their power and violate people with impunity simply won't learn because they will never face serious consequences because of the thin blue line. I'm not an eye for an eye kind of guy, and know it's exceedingly unlikely, but I hope that Chris Medlin and his cohorts are investigated by the Federal government and end up in a Federal prison, spending year after miserable year having their various orifices violently and relentlessly penetrated.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 03, 2016, 11:07:42 PM
    “You gonna pay for this Boy” Cops Mistake Hemorrhoid for Drugs, Sodomize Innocent Man in Public

    Aiken, SC — On Oct. 2, 2014, Lakeya Hicks and Elijah Pontoon had broken no law, violated no traffic code and were simply driving down the road when they were targeted and pulled over by Aiken police officer Chris Medlin.

    Medlin explained to the couple that he stopped them because they had temporary tags on the car. According to South Carolina law, there is nothing wrong with temp tags, so long as they aren’t expired. Hicks explained that she had recently purchased the car, and that is the reason for the tags. Medlin even tells the couple that the tags check out.

    The stop, which never should have happened in the first place, should have ended right then. However, Medlin, working on a hunch, just knew that this couple was up to no good. Medlin orders Pontoon out of the car and handcuffs him — for no reason.

    “Because of your history, I’ve got a dog coming in here. Gonna walk a dog around the car,” says this tyrant, and apparently racist cop. “You gonna pay for this one, boy.”

    Pontoon has no history though, at least not since 2006, which is hardly a reason to stop the man now.

    After unlawfully detaining the couple, with no probable cause, a drug dog shows up — but it finds nothing. Again, this illegal stop should have ended here. But it didn’t, and, instead, got much worse.

    By now, there are four officers on the scene, one of whom is a female. Medlin then tells the female officer to “search her real good,” referring to Hicks. While the search of Hicks happened off camera, according to a federal lawsuit filed by attorney Robert Phillips, it involved exposing Hicks’ breasts in the populated area. Mind you, this is at noon on a Friday.

    After sexually assaulting Hicks and finding nothing, the cops then direct their attention to Pontoon.

    “You’ve got something here right between your legs. There’s something hard right there between your legs.” Medlin says, noting that he’s going to “put some gloves on.”

    Again, the cops appear to move out of the view of the camera to protect themselves while sodomizing a man on the roadside. However, the graphic audio leaves no room for speculation as to what happened.
    As cops launch their assault on this innocent man’s rectum, Pontoon complains that they are grabbing his hemorrhoid.

    “I’ve had hemorrhoids, and they ain’t that hard,” replies the apparently racist, and now rapist, cop.

    As Radly Balko points out in his article on the Post, at about 12:47:15 in the video, the audio actually suggests that two officers may have inserted fingers into Pontoon’s rectum, as one asks, “What are you talking about, right here?” The other replies, “Right straight up in there.”

    The cops continue their attack on this innocent man for several minutes moving their fingers in and out of his rectum searching for non-existent drugs.

    “If that’s a hemorrhoid, that’s a hemorrhoid, all right? But that don’t feel like no hemorrhoid to me,” one officer says as he sexually assaults Pontoon.

    Much to the rapist and racist cops’ shagrin, they found nothing. Medlin then tells Pontoon to turn around and says, “Now I know you from before, from when I worked dope. I seen you. That’s why I put a dog on the car.”

    Medlin effectively admits that he had no probable cause to stop the couple, as Pontoon lacks any charges for the last decade. He then lets the couple off with a “courtesy warning.” However, as the Post points out, according to the complaint, there’s no indication of what the warning was actually for. Perhaps it was to warn to steer clear of police officers in Aiken.

    The vileness of the state’s wicked and immoral war on drugs has reared its repugnant face. When will the rest of society see that face and wake up to this atrocity? When will the people say “enough is enough,” and that finger raping innocent people on the roadside in search of arbitrary substances is no longer welcome in our culture?

    Please share this article with your friends and family to help wake them up to this very real American Horror Story.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/you-gonna-pay-boy-cops-mistake-hemorrhoid-drugs-sodomize-innocent-man-public/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2016/04/01/video-shows-white-cops-performing-roadside-cavity-search-of-black-man/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/r/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2016/04/01/Editorial-Opinion/Graphics/Summons_&_Complaint_FILED_9-21-15_Redacted_OCR.pdf








    Agnostic can you shed some clear light on this one?
    Perhaps we are missing some thing in the Behaviour of these Cops..??
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2016, 09:37:56 AM
    Louisiana Marshal Sentenced to Jail and Huge Fine For Violating Public Records Law

    A Louisiana Marshal is going to jail for violating willfully violating public records law, and court orders to comply.

    Lafayette’s top cop the elected City Marshal Brian Pope, was sentenced to 30 days under key with all but 7 of them suspended, for blatantly violating Louisiana’s open records law.

    The Lousiana lawman will also have to pay more than $100,000 in attorneys fees, court costs and fines related to withholding records from The Independent, a local publication.

    Pope will also have to perform 173 hours of public service, one hour for each day he withheld records about his use of public office to endorse a candidate for County Sheriff and initiate an unusual press conference accusing the candidate of encouraging illegal immigration.

    City Marshal Pope specific punishment is to have to teach about the state’s public records law for 173 hours.

    Maybe some of that teaching will sink into the teacher too.

    As local outlets reported, Marshal Pope withheld records even after a court ordered their release, leading to a judge finding that he’d “willfully and obstinately” failed to comply and showed up armed and in uniform to court in contravention of court rules too, leading presiding Judge Jules Edwards III to opine thusly from the bench from his written opinion:

    “There is a long-standing rule in this court that law enforcement officers who are the named parties in litigation are not allowed to come into the courtroom while armed and in uniform,” Edwards read from his ruling. “The rationale for this rule is the safety of the bailiffs and prevention of witness intimidation. The marshal’s conduct in this regard is another example of his apparent attitude that he is above the law.”

    But Pope’s candidate for Sheriff lost, and while the Judge in the case only settled the public records case issues, as is often the case in these sort of public interest lawsuits, obtaining the public records is a pre-cursor to a subsequent corruption investigation.

    Judge Edwards continued to say:

    “The events that gave rise to this litigation may serve as ground to investigate Marshal Pope for various crimes such as perjury, malfeasance, and others,” Edwards said. “This court specifically did not and could not consider those questions because the marshal has not been formally charged with those offenses.”

    The legal decision arrived barely a week after Brian Pope made local headlines hiring controversial cop Clay Higgins, who is also known as the Cajun John Wayne, and who PINAC News’ Theresa Richard interviewed last October.

    Pope must be shocked by the verdict, because judging by his hiring of Clay Higgins, the Lafayette City Marshal planned his department to get a whole lot more press attention.

    Just not this kind of negative coverage.

    Or maybe he thinks Higgins will make a good Public Relations representative, but Pope obviously didn’t notice the video blogging ex-sheriff’s deputy’s last failed attempt at going viral.

    Higgins did go viral, but for all the wrong reasons after making the infamous “War on Gangbangers” video this past February.

    Now his new boss is also going viral for the wrong reasons.

    Higgins, the so-called ‘Cajun John Wayne’, actually resigned from his Sheriff’s department job just over a week after releasing the infamous viral video.

    And Pope couldn’t resist making the high profile hire.

    Just in time.

    Pope will get just a little more time to enjoy Higgins’ company too, as Judge Edwards did grant post-conviction bail to the City Marshall of only $500 as the convicted cop appeals the decision to a higher court.

    So his incarceration hasn’t yet begun as planned, yet.

    Judge Edwards also added an extra $9,000 to Pope’s tab for The Indepdendent’s cost of hiring a computer expert too.

    City Marshal Pope probably needs to save a few dollars to hire some expert legal counsel for himself, if he’s planning on remaining in public affairs after this fiasco is completed, or before a criminal trial starts.

    While Pope hasn’t criminally been charged yet, he’s likely to face more legal action after testifying in a recorded deposition according to The Advertiser that:

    He used the resources of his public office, specifically the personnel of the Lafayette City Marshal, to prepare a fundraising mailing package for his personal campaign ventures. When questioned about the matter by The Independent’s attorney, Gary McGoffin, Pope responded, “Because I’m a political figure. I mean, I can use my office for my campaign.”

    He added in the deposition that it was acceptable to use public funds for his campaign because “everyone does it.”

    Judge Edwards isn’t letting Pope walk free without any penalty just yet though.

    City Marshal Brian Pope has posted a $150,000 appeals bond as he takes his case up the legal ladder, so at least we know that once the last motion has been filed, newsmen at The Independent and taxpayers won’t be on the hook for the lawman’s tremendous legal bill.

    Both news outlet and citizens might celebrate though, the day Marshal Pope is finally jailed for breaking the law.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/louisiana-marshall-jailed-violating-public-records-law/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 04, 2016, 01:32:25 PM





    Agnostic can you shed some clear light on this one?
    Perhaps we are missing some thing in the Behaviour of these Cops..??

    Thanks for asking, I appreciate the opportunity to provide insight into these things from a professional perspective so that any misgivings or misunderstandings can be avoided.


    In this case I viewed the edited portion of the video so I am drawing a conclusion based on what is available to me at the time but keep that in mind.
    It's my professional opinion, based on reviewing the police officers actions and comparing it to case law that these particular officers are just stone cold Neanderthal cavemen with a badge and uniform. It was painful to watch and the response from the department was disappointing. Never ever ever is a road side cavity search appropriate even if you had enough PC to choke a horse. This was a fishing expedition of the worst order and jobs should be in jeopardy. If the department isn't coming out and acknowledging concerns, they are the problem and lord help those people..

    That pretty much sums it up. I hope I was able to shed some light on the incident from an insiders perspective
     
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 04, 2016, 02:06:52 PM
    Thanks for asking, I appreciate the opportunity to provide insight into these things from a professional perspective so that any misgivings or misunderstandings can be avoided.


    In this case I viewed the edited portion of the video so I am drawing a conclusion based on what is available to me at the time but keep that in mind.
    It's my professional opinion, based on reviewing the police officers actions and comparing it to case law that these particular officers are just stone cold Neanderthal cavemen with a badge and uniform. It was painful to watch and the response from the department was disappointing. Never ever ever is a road side cavity search appropriate even if you had enough PC to choke a horse. This was a fishing expedition of the worst order and jobs should be in jeopardy. If the department isn't coming out and acknowledging concerns, they are the problem and lord help those people..

    That pretty much sums it up. I hope I was able to shed some light on the incident from an insiders perspective
     









    Thanks.
    A well & carefully worded reply.
    Politically correct  ;)

    Can't argue with your response, well said.


    Does being 'politically correct' come naturally or is it hand in hand with being a cop
    On a internet site - and you having to be careful what you say in case it comes to
    Light, And could affect your job.

    Personally I would of just said something like, The Cops are Scumbags & Should be
    In prison - Then They can Enjoy the Benefits of having their arse holes Violated
    on a Daily Basis. And Any Of the Shitbags who try and defend / cover / justify there
    Actions Should go to Prison also, and Experince the Same Daily Pleasures.
    See if they defend / cover / justify that being done to them.

     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 04, 2016, 02:14:00 PM








    Thanks.
    A well & carefully worded reply.
    Politically correct  ;)

    Can't argue with your response, well said.


    Does being 'politically correct' come naturally or is it hand in hand with being a cop
    On a internet site - and you having to be careful what you say in case it comes to
    Light, And could affect your job.

    Personally I would of just said something like, The Cops are Scumbags & Should be
    In prison - Then They can Enjoy the Benefits of having their arse holes Violated
    on a Daily Basis. And Any Of the Shitbags who try and defend / cover / justify there
    Actions Should go to Prison also, and Experince the Same Daily Pleasures.
    See if they defend / cover / justify that being done to them.

     ;)

    Thought I said that ...  :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 04, 2016, 03:17:17 PM
    Thought I said that ...  :)






    Ha Ha, A sense of Humour.  :D

    You kinda did in that Politically Correct' worded way.

    As I asked is That how you answer outside of work.
    Or because it's the internet & you got to be careful.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2016, 09:16:17 AM
    Remember this case from last summer?

    LAPD Tried to Execute this Innocent Man, But He Survived — Now He’s Fighting Back

    Los Angeles, CA – Shot in the head for holding a towel, a disabled man filed a civil rights lawsuit against the LAPD on Monday for attempting to kill him without reason or warning. Although witnesses assert the man did not pose a threat to anyone, the officer immediately jumped out of his patrol car and shot him without issuing any commands.

    At 6:35 p.m. on June 19, 2015, LAPD Officer Cairo Palacios and his unidentified partner were sitting in their patrol car stuck in traffic when they noticed a man standing on the sidewalk attempting to flag down the officers. According to LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith, the cops heard 48-year-old Walter DeLeon calling out to them saying, “Police, police.”

    According to witnesses, Palacios and his partner momentarily spoke with DeLeon when Palacios suddenly exited the police cruiser and fired multiple shots at DeLeon without warning. After Palacios shot him in the right side of his head, DeLeon immediately fell to the ground.

    The officers searched him for weapons but found that DeLeon had been unarmed. A passing motorist recorded a graphic video of the officers refusing to administer medical attention while callously handcuffing DeLeon even though he appeared unconscious with a massive exit wound in the back of his head and blood pouring down his neck. One of the motorists can be heard in the video exclaiming, “Oh! I see his brain!”

    Charged with a felony count of assaulting a police officer, DeLeon spent weeks in a coma. Shortly after the shooting, the LAPD called DeLeon’s family to inform them that the charges against DeLeon had been dropped.

    After spending two weeks in a coma, DeLeon awoke to discover that he lost one pound of cranial matter, the ability to walk, most cognitive functions, and an eye with “near complete and permanent blindness in the other eye.” Enduring nine massive surgeries, DeLeon spent five months in hospitals fighting to survive.


    “He can’t go to the restroom by himself. He can’t feed himself. He can’t dress himself,” his sister Yovanna DeLeon told ABC7.

    Although DeLeon remembers taking a walk while holding a water bottle and a towel wrapped around his hand to wipe the sweat off his face, he can no longer recall why he had flagged down the officers for help. DeLeon suspects the officer mistook the water bottle for a gun and overreacted.

    “How threatening can I be toward them with a bottle of water and a towel?” DeLeon asked.

    According to DeLeon’s recent civil rights lawsuit, Palacios acted unreasonably for shooting DeLeon in the head for holding a towel. Instead of engaging in de-escalation protocols, Palacios immediately resorted to deadly force without justification and nearly killed DeLeon without issuing a warning or command to drop his towel.

    The lawsuit also pointed out that LAPD officer-involved shootings doubled in 2015 from the previous year. Due to a lack of transparency and accountability, the LAPD have also been accused of sending inexperienced officers with inferior training into the field. Palacios and his partner had been working for the City of Los Angeles’ Department of General Services providing security at public landmarks when the LAPD absorbed their department in 2013. Instead of gaining experience patrolling the streets, Palacios and his partner primarily worked at Griffith Park.

    “This complaint gives me a voice for the people who are weak,” DeLeon said in a video statement. “There are hundreds who did not make it, who are no longer living. So I’m here for that purpose, to be heard and to bring change to the law enforcement departments as to how they go about enforcing the law.”





    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/disabled-man-sues-lapd-shooting-head-holding-towel/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 05, 2016, 11:36:29 AM





    Ha Ha, A sense of Humour.  :D

    You kinda did in that Politically Correct' worded way.

    As I asked is That how you answer outside of work.
    Or because it's the internet & you got to be careful.

    I'm pretty much the same on or off duty. While there are things I would not be able to say due to employment, they are things I wouldn't say anyway such as derogatory slurs of minorities. But when dealing with the posts here think I am answering like I would if I were retired. We'll find out in the next 12 months or so. You can compare my answers then as a retired cop verses now.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 06, 2016, 09:11:35 AM
    Cops Mistake Innocent College Student for Suspect, Beat Him Unconscious — Confiscated Videos

    Grand Rapids, MI – In a case of mistaken identity, an undercover cop and an FBI agent beat an innocent college student unconscious because he matched a vague description of a different suspect. After a jury acquitted him of felony charges, the young man recently filed a lawsuit against the officers for using unreasonable force and ordering witnesses to delete footage taken of the incident.

    On July 18, 2014, Grand Valley State University student James King was walking to his job when FBI Special Agent Douglas Brownback and Grand Rapids Police Detective Todd Allen approached him asking for identification. After King told them that he didn’t have his ID with him, the undercover cops ordered him to lean against an unmarked SUV with his hands behind his head. As King complied and Brownback took his wallet, King reportedly asked them, “Are you mugging me?”

    When the unshaven, plainclothes cops refused to reply or identify themselves as law enforcement officers, King fled in fear for his life. According to King’s lawsuit, the then-21-year-old student managed to run three steps before the undercover cops tackled him to the ground. Before being choked unconscious, King screamed for witnesses to call the police.

    While later testifying under oath, Allen recalled beating King in the head and face “as hard as I could, as fast as I could, and as many times as I could.”

    After regaining consciousness, King once again shouted for help and bit Allen’s arm “in a panicked attempt to save his own life.” As uniformed officers arrived on the scene and asked King if he had any weapons, the assaulted student answered, “No, sir. I thought they were trying to mug me.”
    When King asked “please guys, is he a real police?” an officer refused to respond and ordered him to stay on the ground while waiting for an ambulance.

    Although witnesses recorded the brutal beating on their cell phones, Grand Rapids Police Officer Connie Morris immediately ordered several of the bystanders to delete their videos without the legal authority to do so.
    “We got undercover officers there… Delete it, delete it. It’s for the safety of the officers,” Morris can be heard saying in audio recorded through police car dash cam video obtained by FOX17. According to a ruling from the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, citizens have a constitutional right to record video and audio of officials in a public space. By ordering at least two people to delete their footage, Morris participated in the destruction of evidence without a lawful order.

    “They were out of control, pounding him,” one bystander can be heard saying in the only video that still exists. “They were pounding his head for no reason. They were being brutal… We thought they were going to kill him.”

    Initially taken to a hospital for his injuries, King was later arrested and transported to jail. Despite the fact that King was not the suspect that the undercover cops were looking for, King was charged with three felonies: assaulting, resisting, and obstructing an officer causing injury; felonious assault; and assaulting, resisting, and obstructing an officer. Following an eight-month trial, a jury acquitted King of all counts in February 2015.

    Equipped with a seven-year-old driver’s license photo and a Facebook photo in which the suspect’s face was not visible, the undercover cops working within a joint fugitive task force between the FBI and Grand Rapids were looking for a fugitive named Aaron Davison. Wanted for home invasion, Davison is five years older than King and his vague police description referred to him as a 26-year-old white male between 5 feet 10 and 6 feet 3 inches tall. Mistaking King for Davison, the undercover cops beat him unconscious simply for not presenting his identification while failing to identify themselves.

    If he had been found guilty for the three felonies, King could have faced up to ten years in prison. Due to his mounting legal expenses, King dropped out of his computer science program and is currently working to become an electrician. After his family spent their life savings on his criminal case, King filed a lawsuit this week accusing Brownback, Allen, and Morris of violating his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights.

    The FBI and Grand Rapids Police Department have refused to comment on the incident or the pending lawsuit.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-college-student-sues-undercover-cops-beating-unconscious-ordering-witnesses-delete-cell-phone-videos/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 06, 2016, 06:28:19 PM
    Cops Mistake Innocent College Student for Suspect, Beat Him Unconscious — Confiscated Videos

    Grand Rapids, MI – In a case of mistaken identity, an undercover cop and an FBI agent beat an innocent college student unconscious.
    and ordering witnesses to delete footage taken of the incident.
    ---- oh What A Surprise.


    While later testifying under oath, Allen recalled beating King in the head and face “as hard as I could, as fast as I could, and as many times as I could.”
    --- There's A Long Queue Of People Who Would Dearly Love To Do The Exact Same Thing To Him.

    After regaining consciousness, King once again shouted for help and bit Allen’s arm “in a panicked attempt to save his own life.”
    ---- Bit His Arm.!! It's a Fcuking Shame He Couldn't of Bit It Off. ,

    Although witnesses recorded the brutal beating on their cell phones, Grand Rapids Police Officer Connie Morris immediately ordered several of the bystanders to delete their videos without the legal authority to do so.
    “We got undercover officers there… Delete it, delete it. It’s for the safety of the officers,” Morris can be heard saying in audio recorded through police car dash cam video obtained by FOX17. According to a ruling from the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, citizens have a constitutional right to record video and audio of officials in a public space. By ordering at least two people to delete their footage, Morris participated in the destruction of evidence without a lawful order.
    ---- Delete it Delete it !!! Of Course They want it Deleted. That would be too much evidence against them ArseWipes -- Ha, Shows how much said idiots Knew the Law. Fuck Them.

    “They were out of control, pounding him,” one bystander can be heard saying in the only video that still exists. “They were pounding his head for no reason. They were being brutal… We thought they were going to kill him.
    --- if that had been said about some young lads doing that to him just how long banged up would they get.
    This Scumbag Thug Cops Should Get The Same Time.

    Equipped with a seven-year-old driver’s license photo and a Facebook photo in which the suspect’s face was not visible, the undercover cops working within a joint fugitive task force between the FBI and Grand Rapids were looking for a fugitive named Aaron Davison. Wanted for home invasion, Davison is five years older than King and his vague police description referred to him as a 26-year-old white male between 5 feet 10 and 6 feet 3 inches tall. Mistaking King for Davison, the undercover cops beat him unconscious simply for not presenting his identification while failing to identify themselves.
    --- !!! Great Detective Work & preparation By These Highly Trained Baffoons.
    And They are Being Paid For This Thuggery.!!!

    If he had been found guilty for the three felonies, King could have faced up to ten years in prison.
    ---- Lets Hope These ArseWipe Cops get 10yrs.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2016, 02:09:31 PM
    Here is a 2 year old story:

    Lawsuit: State trooper preached about Jesus during traffic stop

    In August of 2014, when Ellen Bogan was pulled over by Indiana State Trooper Brian Hamilton for supposedly passing another car illegally (which she denies), she was expecting him to ask her for her license and registration… but she wasn’t expecting questions like these:

    Did she have a home church?

    Did she accept Jesus Christ as her savior?

    “It’s completely out of line and it just — it took me back,” Bogan, 60, told The Indianapolis Star.

    … [he later] handed her a church pamphlet that asks the reader “to acknowledge that she is a sinner.”

    Hamilton gave her a warning ticket before asking these questions, but given the situation and the blaring sounds and flashing lights, Bogan didn’t feel that she could just drive away. I don’t blame her. Hell, if I were in her shoes, I probably would’ve just lied, said I accepted Jesus, and hoped that’s what the cop wanted to hear.

    Bogan and the ACLU eventually filed a lawsuit against Hamilton for overstepping his bounds:

    Bogan’s complaint also claims that Hamilton asked if he could give her something and that he went to his car to retrieve a pamphlet from First Baptist Church in Cambridge City.
    The pamphlet, which was included in the lawsuit, advertises a radio broadcast from “Trooper Dan Jones” called “Policing for Jesus Ministries.” It also outlines “God’s plan for salvation,” a four-point list that advises the reader to “realize you’re a sinner” and “realize the Lord Jesus Christ paid the penalty for your sins.”

    “I’m not affiliated with any church. I don’t go to church,” Bogan said. “I felt compelled to say I did, just because I had a state trooper standing at the passenger-side window. It was just weird.”

    That case was eventually settled:
    According to court records, Hamilton was counseled not to question others regarding their religious beliefs, nor was he to provide religious pamphlets or similar advertisements to them.

    http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2014/10/05/lawsuit-state-trooper-preached-jesus-traffic-stop/16678275/

    Typical slap on the wrist for the zealot cop.




    Fast forward to today:

    Jesus-preaching Indiana State Police trooper sued again

    [...]

    A complaint filed in federal court Tuesday by the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, on behalf of Wendy Pyle, accuses Hamilton of asking her whether “she had been saved” after pulling her over in Fayette County in January. Court documents claim Hamilton then told the woman about his church and gave her directions to it.

    [...]

    If this story sounds familiar, that’s because Hamilton has been sued before. The ACLU filed a similar lawsuit in 2014 when a woman named Ellen Bogan claimed Hamilton stopped her that August for an alleged traffic violation in Union County. After he handed her a warning ticket, she said, he asked her if she had a home church and whether she accepted Jesus Christ as her savior.

    http://www.thestarpress.com/story/news/crime/2016/04/06/jesus-preaching-indiana-state-police-trooper-sued-again/32576509/

    We'll probably hear again about how "his beliefs should be accomodated and protected" and how "christians are being persecuted" in the US...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 08, 2016, 03:16:33 PM
    He should be fired and a church can hire him as a security guard
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 09, 2016, 10:25:13 AM
    Innocent Man Beaten by Cops, Given Forced Medical Procedures in Search of Drugs He Never Had

    In part of an investigative report on racism in South Carolina’s police departments by the Washington Post, Radley Balko has been exposing a series of horrifying police incidents that have taken place in the state.

    His latest article in the series, The Watch covers the case of Kelvin Hayes, a successful business owner in Dorchester County. Hayes has recently settled a lawsuit against the Dorchester County sheriff’s office for a horrid act of brutality against him.

    On March 27, 2011, Hayes, who was 52-year-old at the time, was driving with his friend Karen Skipper. Hayes, who is black, was driving Skipper, who is white, back to her house, when the couple passed a roadside traffic stop with multiple police cars.

    One of those police cars immediately began pursuing the couple and pulled them over shortly after. Hayes had broken no traffic laws. However, Deputy Tim Knight still pulled them over.

    Knight would claim that Hayes failed to turn on his blinker in time to make a turn. According to South Carolina state law, the blinker must be deployed at least 100 feet prior to making a turn.

    Knight claimed that Hayes only turned it on 20 feet out. But a subsequent review of Knight’s own dashcam revealed that Hayes not only turned on his blinker well before the 100-foot mark but at a distance five times greater.

    The entire reason for the stop was now unlawful.
    However, Knight was on the war path and he knew, that without a doubt, this man was a criminal.

    As the Post reports:

    It’s at about the 1:29:00 mark in the video that things begin to deteriorate. Knight asks Hayes whether he can search his person. Hayes understandably objects. He asks whether Knight plans to give him a ticket. Knight says, “I don’t know.” Hayes responds that he doesn’t see why he needs to be searched if he isn’t getting a ticket. At this point, Hayes has been out of his vehicle for several minutes, has not appeared angry or threatening and has completely complied with Knight’s instructions. But his objection to being searched appears to irritate Knight. A few seconds later, Knight asks Hayes whether he has a mint in his mouth. Hayes says he does.

    Knight would later testify that at this point in the stop, he believed Hayes was engaged in some sort of criminal activity. From the video, it’s hard to fathom how. Knight later claimed he saw a plastic baggie in Knight’s mouth, though that isn’t at all apparent in the video. Knight then demands that Hayes open his mouth so he can inspect it. Hayes again asks whether he’s getting a ticket and objects to Knight searching his mouth. At that point, a clearly agitated Knight says, “You take that out of your mouth right now or I will choke you out.” He then grabs Hayes by the lapels of his shirt and says again: “I will choke you out right now. Take that out your mouth.”

    By this time, another deputy, Kieth Hunt arrives on the scene. As the dashcam shows, Hayes is thrown to the hood of the vehicle and then pulled out of the view of the dashcam by Knight. The audio records Hayes, who is only 140 pounds crying out in pain as the 270 pound Knight lays into him.

    In the lawsuit, Hayes alleges that Hunt held him down while Knight beat him. By the time Hayes reappears on the video, he is handcuffed and covered in blood.

    One would assume at this point that Knight would concede he was wrong about Hayes having drugs, dish out the standard charges of resisting or assault and haul Hayes to jail. However, one would be wrong.

    This tyrant officer just knew, deep down in his gut, that this successful owner of a tile and flooring company was a hardened criminal drug pusher. So, instead of bringing Hayes to jail, he brought him to the hospital to receive forced medical procedures to search for drugs.

    According to state law, medical personnel can only forcibly draw blood to test for HIV or hepatitis B if the person had been convicted of a sex crime, or has exposed others to bodily fluids during the commission of a crime. Hayes met none of this criteria, but Knight convinced the hospital staff to go much further than a simple blood test.

    Hayes was forced on to a hospital bed as the staff held him down to draw his blood. He was tested for cocaine, HIV, and hep B. He was then given an X-ray, to see if he swallowed the non-existent bag, a CT scan, and an EKG. All of this was done to him without his consent.

    In spite of the myriad of unethical medical violations carried out against Hayes, police and hospital staff found nothing. Hayes had no drugs in his system, and the scans revealed that he had not swallowed any mythical bag of drugs.

    Hayes was then thrown in a cage where he would stay until the next day.


    When the prosecutor finally got around to watching the dashcam video, all charges were immediately dismissed.

    In spite of Dorchester county paying out a settlement to Hayes, and in spite of the damning evidence against Knight and Hunt, neither of the two officers were ever disciplined. And, in fact, Knight was promoted, received awards, and is now the head of security for a local school district.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-beaten-cops-forced-medical-procedures-search-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 09, 2016, 12:46:53 PM
    California Cop Fired For Retaliation After Facebook Debate Over “A Heist Gone Bad”

    “I think they targeted me,” said the critical California man who spoke out on Facebook, and whose Christmas present for criticizing his local police department was a $300 lump of coal in the form of an unlawful vehicle fine.

    A California cop lost his job this week for his brazen act of censorship.

    Stockton Police themselves were criticized for firing 600 shots after the pursuit ended, 10 of which from the police ended the life of a hostage, leading to a lawsuit by the surviving hostage and a 60-plus page rebuke from The Police Foundation which you can read below.

    It’s called “A Heist Gone Bad.”

    Stockton police justly fired the California cop, who used his ticket book to retaliate against a department critic speaking out about the high-speed chase and shooting incident.

    Local resident Motecuzoma Sanchez criticized the department on Facebook over a high-profile bank robbery response, which involved shots fired by fully one out of every four members of the 132 person department.

    He also holds a masters degree in public administration.

    Sanchez woke up on the day after he celebrated Christmas in 2015, to find a citation for expired registration on his car.

    And this week, California cop Aaron Adams was fired for retaliating against the community activist, which local news station CBS13 confirmed.

    Adams shouldn’t have sought revenge against Motecuzoma Sanchez.

    “My Christmas present was a $300 fine for exercising free speech,”  said the community activist Motecuzoma Sanchez in an interview.

    Legally, Sanchez was cited under a code which states that cars with expired registration can be ticketed on highways and public parking areas.

    But not in a private driveway.

    Sanchez’s care was parked with the stickers facing away from the street.

    So, someone at the police department would have had to walk onto his property, in order to see the expired stickers on the car, while Sanchez was sleeping.

    The ticket was illegal.

    So Motecuzoma Sanchez proceeded to file a harassment complaint within the department.

    Stockton Police subsequently placed Aaron Adams on paid administrative leave for the retaliatory citation, before he was fired this week.

    “They looked up my address, they came to my house just to send me a message in the middle of the night. We can find you any time. No way they just stumbled across my car,” said the infuriated activist Sanchez.

    And petitioning the government, or criticizing government is a strongly protected act of free speech under the 1st Amendment.

    “I look at the process of if they targeted me, which possibilities could or couldn’t be true,” Sanchez told PINAC News, explaining that he investigated the circumstances of his unusual ticket carefully before drawing a the conclusion leading to his formal compaint, “Based on the facts, I was left only with the conclusion that I was targeted.”

    And that is an act of state censorship.

    “They weren’t ticketing other cars on my street.”

    And Sanchez was wise to point out that no other cars on his block were ticketed, because selective enforcement of the law is a clear violation of the Constitution’s 14th amendment’s equal protection clause, which specifically applies to the states and their conduct towards citizens, stating:

    No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

    In December, Motecuzoma Sanchez criticized the leadership at the Stockton Police Department over the violent crime rate that’s been rising, funding “cheesy government programs” and a bank robbery where Stockton police killed not only the robber, but also a hostage.

    “They shot 600 rounds into a vehicle with a known hostage inside the vehicle and killed the hostage,” the activist told PINAC News about Stockton PD’s response to a bank robbery which became a high speed, shoot-em-up chase resulting in a dead hostage, “That’s basically a quarter of the police department, 32 officers, shooting at this one vehicle.”

    “You can’t pin it on one cop, because they all did it.”

    Sanchez’s masters degree is from University of Southern California, and his education is all about governance and how it affects the public, so he decided to do his own assessment of the shooting, and took some criticism from local police supporters.

    “I do my research based on what I know from college. I don’t just throw it out there and hope it sticks,” he said.

    After The Police Foundation did their review of the bank robbery hostage shooting, Sanchez said that it mirrored his assessment almost word-for-word.

    The review found that officers actions were “excessive” and “unnecessary” as the LA times reported in 2015:

    The report called the Stockton robbery a “sentinel” event that will change law enforcement forever, similar to the 1997 North Hollywood shooting, in which Los Angeles police officers found themselves initially outgunned by two bank robbers in body armor, and the 2013 Christopher Dorner manhunt, in which a former LAPD officer hunted local police before he died in a Big Bear gun battle. Both tested the nation’s public safety system and exposed its holes.

    “They tried to rush the issue. Police are trained not to confront any bank robber inside of the building,”said Sanchez, “That’s police and bank protocol.”

    When Sanchez brought up the hostage shooting, the officers began trolling him over Facebook.

    That’s when he discovered at least three of them were cops because they were on his page sporting thin blue-line profile pictures.

    The other thing that clued in Sanchez that they were cops, is that once he brought up the bank robbery, hostage shooting, they resorted to name calling, leading Sanchez to remark it was then, “I started thinking these guys were cops.”

    Sanchez told Fox40 that he’s pursuing the matter over more than just the $300 ticket, it’s about what he sees as a misuse of power and police intimidation.

    “The way they’re handling this investigation,” he says, “that shows me that this is something they take very serious.”

    But even though Adams has been fired, Sanchez said it’s not over.

    12963590_102086784916214 66_6962879999109687403_n -1
    Stockton Police Officer Pancho Freer who was named a lawsuit by a hostage after the “Heist Gone Bad” chase, where he fired some of the 600 bullets by police at robbers.

    He responded to the news Adams had been fired over Facebook said,

    “This is by no means finished. I never met Aaron Adams or had any interaction with him. This guy who’s on SPD was the original instigator, Pancho Freer (seen inset), plus another guy I’m giving a pass to. It was this guy who began attacking me for my position about SPD and city leadership with rising crime rates amidst millions in additional spending by tax payers. This “spat” in which he proceeded to call me expletives was most likely the result of the fact that he’s one of the cops being sued for firing some of the 600 bullets which killed innocent hostage Misty Holt Singh.”

    Officer Freer, who Sanchez mentioned, became upset over Sanchez’s comments because was named in a lawsuit filed by the family of the slain hostage who became a victim of police when 32 officers fired 600 rounds into a Stockton bank robber’s car, which killed the innocent hostage.

    Sanchez said Adams did not act alone and insinuated that the department still has to do some more house-cleaning before he’s satisfied.

    He also expressed concern that this could happen again in the future.

    “Now, thanks to law enforcement resources,” Sanchez lamented, “they know where I live.”

    “And have an even bigger grudge.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/09/california-cop-who-retaliated-against-activist-over-facebook-debate-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2016, 12:48:48 AM
    Virginia Navy Vet Exonerated by DNA 33-Years After Convicted by Dubious Bite Mark “Evidence”

    Virginia freed an ex-navy sailor 33-years after wrongfully convicting him based on bite mark evidence, when the state’s high court granted him a writ of actual innocence.

    Keith Allen Harward narrowly escaped the death penalty.

    This week Harward, walked out of prison a free man.

    DNA evidence exonerated Harward after serving 33-years in prison for a rape and murder he did not commit.

    New DNA evidence definitively proved Harward’s innocence, pointing to another man as the real assailant after the Innocence Project tested the rape kit and other pieces of crime scene evidence.

    Results excluded Harward and identified his now-deceased former shipmate.

    Jerry Crotty, served on the USS Carl Vinson with Keith Harward.

    Crotty committed a heinous murder and rape of a married couple.

    But it was bite mark evidence that wrongly convicted Harward, eventually leading the Virginia Supreme Court to grant him a writ of actual innocence.

    Keith Allen Harward’s unjust conviction was based on the testimony of two forensic dentist who claimed his teeth matched the bite mark on the victim.

    “There is not a shred of scientific evidence supporting this erroneous forensic practice, yet it is still permissible in courtrooms across the nation,” said Dana Delger, an attorney with the Innocence Project, “Hopefully Mr. Harward’s case will once and for all persuade judges and law enforcement that this unreliable evidence has no use in criminal prosecutions.”

    Harward was convicted of a rape and murder that occurred in 1992 in Newport News, Virginia.

    The Innocence Project also said Mr. Harward is at least the 25th person to have been wrongfully convicted based on discredited bite mark evidence.

    The Washington Post’s Radley Balko wrote a four part series in 2015 on flawed ‘forensic science’ which uses bite evidence to manufacture convictions without any real basis in actual science. (Part 2, Part 3, Part 4)1

    Attorneys for the Innocence Project suggested the practice of identifying a perpetrator based on bite marks left on the skin is bad science, and they say that all states should look at cases like Harward’s.

    The Innocence Project later discovered that the security guard’s identification of Harward occurred only after he was placed under hypnosis–a practice that is now known to be highly unreliable too.

    And these writs of innocence are being issued more frequently as science advances and bad decisions are reversed.

    In fact actual innocence isn’t necessarily always grounds for release, and as the famous Supreme Court case Herrera vs. Collins showed in 1993, even the probably innocent can be executed, for lacking a legal foothold to appeal their trial court’s decision if they lack constitutional grounds for appeal.

    Herrera’s haunting last words were: “I am innocent, innocent, innocent. . . . I am an innocent man, and something very wrong is taking place tonight.”

    But more recently, the Supreme Court ruled in McQuiggin vs. Perkins that actual innocence is as SCOTUSblog writes, “a gateway through which a petitioner may pass whether the impediment to consideration of the merits of a constitutional claim is a procedural bar, as it was in Schlup v. Delo and House v. Bell, or expiration of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act statute of limitations, as in this case.”

    In other words, facially valid actual innocence claims give the imprisoned a right to be heard even many years after the fact, if they dilligently pursue their claims as information is discovered.

    THE TERRIBLE CRIME KEITH ALLEN HARWARD DID NOT COMMIT

    The real perpetrator who raped and killed broke into a couple’s home, killed Jesse Perron and raped his wife as he lay dying and watching.

    During the attack, the assailant repeatedly bit the wife’s leg.

    The wife could never identify the attacker, but told police he was wearing a sailor’s uniform.

    A dentist reviewed the dental records of Marines stationed to the USS Carl Vinson at the time of the murder and initially excluded Harward, according to the Innocence Project.

    He became a suspect six months later, after his then-girlfriend reported to police that he’d bitten her in a dispute.

    At his trial, the prosecution relied mostly on the testimony of two forensic dentists, Alvin Kagey and Lowell Levine.

    The pair of dental professionals claimed that Harward’s teeth matched bite mark’s on the female victim.

    The only other evidence against Harward at trial was the testimony of a security guard who claimed he’d seen Harward enter the shipyard wearing a bloody uniform the morning after the attack.

    “Moreover, that this technique [bite mark evidence] is still used in our justice system, including current capital prosecutions, presents a public safety threat,” said Chris Fabricant, Director of Strategic Litigation for the Innocence Project, continuing:

    “We have no idea how many other people may have been wrongly convicted based on this evidence, but any conviction resting on this grossly unreliable technique is inherently flawed.  Every state in the nation should be conducting reviews to see if there are others like Mr. Harward sitting in prison for crimes they didn’t commit.”

    Throughout his trials, six bite mark analysts all agreed that bite marks on the victim matched Harward.

    Harward’s defense lawyers even hired two forensic dentists; they both said the bite marks match Harward.

    In another case in 2008, Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks were convicted on rape charges, but later exonerated after forensic experts examined their cases.

    It turned out, the bite marks on the victims were not human bite marks at all, and instead caused by crawfish, insects and decomposition.

    In other another case, Steven Mark Chaney was set free last year after spending 25 years behind bars for murder after faulty bite mark science sent him to prison.

    Dentist Jim Hales told a Dallas jury there was a “one in a million” chance that someone other than Chaney made the bite marks on the murder victim’s body.

    Then this February, the Texas Forensic Science Commission recommended that the state issue a state-wide moratorium on the use of bite mark evidence analysis in prosecutions, after hearing expert testimony on the reliability of bite mark evidence.

    “Unless and until our leaders in Washington take action to discourage the use of unreliable and unvalidated techniques such as bite marks,” said the Co-Director of the Innocence Project, Peter Neufeld, “and instead create rigorous science-based standards for all forensics, we are doomed as a nation to endure hundreds more Harwards.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/09/virginia-navy-vet-exonerated-by-dna-33-years-after-convicted-by-dubious-bite-mark-evidence/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2016, 01:16:38 PM
    Houston Cop Busted for Lying by Camera, Falsely Arrested Man Who Accidentally Dropped Legal Gun

    “I just don’t see how he has the heart to lie,” a tearful Julian Carmona told local TV, as you can see below, “I mean, when there’s kids… Can he be honest and tell the truth?”

    Houston cop William Wright has been busted by video for an arrest he made last week, claiming a Julian Carmona pointed a gun at him, when in fact his gun was in his pickup truck the whole time.

    Carmona is accused of felony aggravated assault.

    Both of Julian Carmona’s children witnessed their father getting arrested at gunpoint in the convenience store parking lot.

    Carmona is only free on a $30,000 bond.

    In the video below, Carmona tried to show the officer his concealed weapons permit, but wisely thought twice and raised both hands high in the air where the Houston cop could see them.

    At that point Houston cop said he then “feared for his life” which means he was about to kill Carmona, which led to the arrest at gunpoint.

    Then Carmona was falsely arrested by Wright and charged the innocent man.

    His only crime was accidentally dropping his gun getting out of his own car.

    William Wright was off-duty and driving his personal pickup truck, but in a Houston Police uniform at the time of the arrest.

    He was buying beer in uniform, which is against department policy.

    Julian Carmona had driven speedily through the parking lot into his space, and when he stepped out of the car, his gun tumbled to the ground.

    Officer William Wright claimed that Carmona pointed the gun at him twice during the brief encounter.

    The video shows otherwise.

    Then Houston cops tried to claim that Carmona’s 2007 arrest for possessing cocaine made his gun carry illegal.

    But Carmona’s lawyer produced documents proving that Carmona cleared his name, and his gun carry and ownership is completely legal too.

    And now a father of two must wait to see if Harris County Prosecutors will do the right thing and drop all charges, which you can see below the video.

    Because you can see clearly, which of the two Houston men below should be charged, and it’s not the citizen.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2016, 10:53:18 PM
    North Carolina Deputy Justified in Killing Man Asking for Search Warrant

    A North Carolina grand jury chose not to indict a sheriff’s deputy who shot and killed a man after he demanded to see a warrant to search his home last year.

    Harnett County sheriff’s deputies banged on John Livingston’s door last November, searching for an assault suspect who was not at the home.

    Livingston demanded to see a search warrant, but the deputies had none, so Livingston shut the door in their face.

    That prompted deputies to kick in the door where they dragged him out on his porch, placed him facedown, and began beating, tasering and pepper spraying him.

    At one point during the torture, Livingston grabbed on to a deputy’s taser, which was when Harnett County sheriff’s deputy Nicholas Kehagias pulled out his gun and shot him three times.

    Livingston’s roommate said Livingston was not fighting back, just trying to keep from being tortured.

    But the 18-member grand jury, which met in secret Monday, apparently was led to  believe that the act of grabbing a taser to keep from being tased was a threat to the deputy, which was why they decided to not indict him.

    According to the News Observer:

    After the grand jury declined to indict Kehagias, Reives said: “I’m happy for Nick and his family that this portion is over. He’s a really good person who got put in a really difficult situation.”

    Reives added: “I know he is sorry for how things are.”

    The grand jury’s decision came after months of unease in Harnett County. Livingston’s friends and family have protested in front of the courthouse, telling anyone who would listen that Kehagias killed Livingston for no reason.

    They congregated on Facebook, sharing their worries and speculation. As the weeks and months passed without an arrest, they feared his death would go unanswered. They were skeptical that a grand jury would indict.

    “I don’t know how to go on,” Kathy Livingston, John Livingston’s mother, said Monday after learning of the grand jury’s decision. “That’s a failure to my son. There is no justice.”

    Bradley Timmerman, who was at John Livingston’s home and witnessed the shooting, said the 18 jurors asked him very few questions. He said they wanted to know if Livingston used any force on Kehagias that night.

    “It wasn’t too good of a crowd,” Timmerman said. “They looked at me like they couldn’t wait to be done.”

    Kehagias, 26, has been on the force for less than three years. He has been on paid administrative leave since the November 15, 2015 shooting.

    But now that he has been cleared of charges, he is expected to go back on duty.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/12/north-carolina-deputy-justified-in-killing-man-asking-for-search-warrant/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on April 12, 2016, 11:46:09 PM
    From http://reason.com/blog/2016/04/12/another-sexual-assault-in-service-of-the:

    Quote
    Yet another case of a driver sexually assaulted in the name of the war on drugs dramatically illustrates the dangerously broad power that police officers have to mess with motorists. According to a lawsuit filed last September, described in a February 3 ruling by federal judge in Pennsylvania, Kimberlee Carbone was pulled over by New Castle police in November 2013, ostensibly because "she did not apply her turn signal at least 100 feet before the intersection." She was then subjected to a degrading five-hour ordeal that included a bogus DUI arrest, a search of her person and her car, a strip search at the county jail, and multiple probings of her anus and vagina at a hospital. As with David Eckert in New Mexico and the various women whose body cavities have been invaded by cops in Texas, no drugs were found.

    For the full details, check out the original article.

    Pretty insane, especially when you keep the Eckert case in New Mexico in mind: it suggests an ugly and terrible pattern. Here's to hoping that David Maiella and Bernard Geiser find themselves out of a job and end up sucking dick in dark alleys to try and make ends meet.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on April 13, 2016, 11:06:22 AM
    Cops = Shit

    People need to wake up and fight back against the uniformed gang.

    Glad to see that NYC pigs are squealing over one of their dumbfuck robots badmouthing Mayor DeBlasio while harassing a driver with a ticket.  The pig was mouthing off to the driver trying to explain his actions like the coward he is.  Hope they fire his worthless ass..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 15, 2016, 09:50:22 AM
    Cops = Shit

    People need to wake up and fight back against the uniformed gang.

    Glad to see that NYC pigs are squealing over one of their dumbfuck robots badmouthing Mayor DeBlasio while harassing a driver with a ticket.  The pig was mouthing off to the driver trying to explain his actions like the coward he is.  Hope they fire his worthless ass..

    Following your logic, all of the following are shit

    Cops
    Doctors
    Ministers
    Soldiers
    Politicians
    Judges
    Nurses
    Firemen

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on April 15, 2016, 11:38:49 AM
    Following your logic, all of the following are shit

    Cops
    Doctors
    Ministers
    Soldiers
    Politicians
    Judges
    Nurses
    Firemen



    Your detecting skills are lacking.  Some on that list do qualify as shit, although not for the reasons pigs do.

    Firefighters actually provide a useful service.....helping people, saving lives, etc.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2016, 09:35:15 AM
    Ex-cop pleads guilty to involuntary manslaughter before murder trial begins

    A former Fairfax County police officer accused of fatally shooting a man who had his hands up during a 2013 standoff pleaded guilty Monday to involuntary manslaughter, prosecutors said.

    The prosecutors noted the former officer was angry about the breakup of his marriage and unfit for duty when he responded to a domestic dispute.

    Adam Torres, 33, struck the plea bargain just before his murder trial was scheduled to begin in Fairfax, nearly three years after Torres shot and killed John Geer, 46, of Springfield.

    Torres spoke very briefly at the end of the hearing, saying, "I am truly sorry ... There are no words I can say to adequately express my remorse."

    Commonwealth's Attorney Ray Morrogh said he agreed to the plea, in part, to spare Geer's daughters from testifying. He said that while Geer's longtime partner, Maura Harrington, supports the plea bargain, Geer's mother does not.

    The plea calls for Torres to serve a 12-month sentence. Sentencing is set for June. The judge accepted the deal, but reserved the right to reject it after he reviews a presentence report.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/04/18/ex-cop-pleads-guilty-to-involuntary-manslaughter-before-murder-trial-begins.html?intcmp=hpbt3
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 18, 2016, 10:53:05 AM
    Your detecting skills are lacking.  Some on that list do qualify as shit, although not for the reasons pigs do.

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

    so do police officers, though you pretend in spite of an encyclopedia of examples, they don't
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 18, 2016, 02:10:26 PM
    so do police officers, though you pretend in spite of an encyclopedia of examples, they don't





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

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

    As I've said before it may just be down to your 'Politcaly Correct'
    Way of Writting About Scumbag Cops Behaviour.
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 20, 2016, 10:17:29 AM
    In Spite of a Jury Conviction – The Cop Who Killed an Innocent Father of Two is Not Going to Jail

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/spite-jury-conviction-cop-killed-innocent-father-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 20, 2016, 10:22:44 AM
    South Florida Cop Arrested After Red Light Camera Proves He Lied on Accident Report

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/south-florida-cop-arrested-for-lying-about-accident/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 21, 2016, 07:59:27 AM
    South Florida Cop Arrested After Red Light Camera Proves He Lied on Accident Report

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Uphill battle..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 22, 2016, 09:37:54 AM
    screw that cop who lied.  Screw him.  He deserves jail for it.  The other cop automatically believing him and taking his word for it needs a hard look too - first time he's done this?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 22, 2016, 10:15:23 AM
    screw that cop who lied.  Screw him.  He deserves jail for it.  The other cop automatically believing him and taking his word for it needs a hard look too - first time he's done this?

    Men are talking here..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 22, 2016, 10:32:19 AM
    Men are talking here..

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

    So yes, screw the cop that wore a badge and lied and had another man charged.  He took an oath to enforce the law, not ignore it when it serves him personally.  Screw him.  And I never post things like that.  But in cases of police abuse, teacher abuse, and other cases where a person takes a higher oath of ethics and is given additional power and authority - and they abuse it - screw them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 22, 2016, 11:43:45 AM
    I cannot understand ANY defense of this cop lying about the accident.   Makes me sick. It's why people hate cops - they can lie without the same consequences as the rest of us.  In THIS case, the lying cop was charged - and that's great.  Most of the time, whne they're caught lying, there is no punishment. 

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

    Oh I agree with you on this one, he lied, screw him. Glad he was charged.. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 22, 2016, 11:54:21 AM
    Oh I agree with you on this one, he lied, screw him. Glad he was charged.. 

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

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

    I like consistency.  I applaud it.  When shady cops are caught lying, it makes my blood boil.   Cause if I lie on a police report, I'm getting charged.  They should too.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2016, 12:21:21 PM
    NYPD Officers Charged for Assaulting Man Who Gave Directions to Notorious Cop Killer

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    That video has not yet been released.

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

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

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

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

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/nypd-officers-assault-man-giving-directions-notorious-cop-killer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2016, 12:23:38 PM
    Cops Receive Slap on the Wrist for Pleading Guilty to Slaughtering Innocent Civilians on a Bridge

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-drastically-reduced-sentences-pleading-guilty-killing-innocent-civilians/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 22, 2016, 04:33:25 PM
    Cops Receive Slap on the Wrist for Pleading Guilty to Slaughtering Innocent Civilians on a Bridge

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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









     :o  Bastards.
    How can they have got such short sentences.
    We can only hope that there time inside is horrendous for them
    At that they are either Killed or commit suicide.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 25, 2016, 07:29:10 AM
    in SW Fl, we had a bunch of cops who had to pay red light tickets, and their chief enforced it.   

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

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

    While I would hope everyone would, it isn't the case. We've had 2 cases here in the last few years where a citizen was driving drunk, hit a person walking or biking and left them for dead. At trial they either got off or got a light sentence. Right or wrong, jurors tend to look at those cases and think "there but for the grace of god go I".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 25, 2016, 07:34:03 AM

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

    Crime & Law

    By Jazmine Ulloa - American-Statesman Staff
    0
     

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



    Highlights


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



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


    A hit-and-run driver must serve two years in prison followed by eight years probation for the death of an Austin bicyclist nearly three years ago.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 25, 2016, 07:37:22 AM
    Nearly two years after Courtney Griffin was killed in a hit-and-run collision, district court Judge Karen Sage on Monday ordered the woman (Gabrielle Nestande ) responsible for Griffin’s death to serve 10 years probation, six months of which she must spend in Travis County jail.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2016, 12:29:41 AM
    9 years.

    NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

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

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

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

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

    According to the Associated Press:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/nypd-cop-sentenced-to-prison-for-shooting-random-people-while-drunk/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 26, 2016, 09:08:26 AM
    9 years.

    NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

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

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

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

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

    According to the Associated Press:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

    Holy crap.. nutcase

    On a side note I make it a point to not carry when I know I will have more than a drink. Common sense and judgement tend to be absent and having a gun is a recipe for disaster. But drunk off my ass, I can't imagine doing that
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2016, 11:19:47 AM
    Officer Loses It, Goes ‘Robocop’ and Breaks an Innocent Elderly Man’s Leg Over a Tomato

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

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

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

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

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

    “My leg started giving out,” Carnegay said.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-officer-loses-it-robocop-breaks-innocent-elderly-mans-leg-tomato/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2016, 11:23:07 AM
    Worse than Criminals — Cops Use Asset Forfeiture to Steal $53K from an Orphanage and a Church

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/worse-criminals-cops-asset-forfeiture-steal-53k-orphanage-church/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 26, 2016, 11:34:44 AM
    9 years.

    NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

    Something tells me any of us would get a lot more than 9 years for the same crime.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2016, 11:56:28 AM
    Something tells me any of us would get a lot more than 9 years for the same crime.

    A most reasonable assumption.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on April 26, 2016, 01:14:45 PM
    Officer Loses It, Goes ‘Robocop’ and Breaks an Innocent Elderly Man’s Leg Over a Tomato

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

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

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

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

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

    “My leg started giving out,” Carnegay said.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    I wonder why they aren't naming the cop - assholes like that ought to be publicly named and shamed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2016, 03:44:26 PM
    Remember this case?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    According to Oregon Live:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Video of his 2014 arrest is below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/oregon-man-found-guilty-five-months-after-receiving-settlement-for-same-arrest-involving-recording-of-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 27, 2016, 04:09:37 PM
    It's a never ending stream of Bad Cops Supported By A bad Justice System.

    When is it going to stop.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2016, 06:46:17 PM
    Remember this case?

    Ex-Oklahoma deputy Robert Bates guilty of killing unarmed suspect
    By Ralph Ellis, Christopher Lett and Sara Sidner, CNN

    Tulsa, Oklahoma (CNN)A jury found a sheriff's deputy guilty of second-degree manslaughter Wednesday in the fatal shooting of an unarmed suspect.

    Robert Bates, who was a volunteer reserve sheriff deputy for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office last year at the time of the shooting, never denied killing Eric Courtney Harris.
    Bates, 74, said he meant to use his Taser stun gun, not his revolver, on the suspect, who had been tackled by other deputies and was being held on the ground.

    The jury deliberated less than three hours and recommended Bates serve four years in prison, the maximum possible sentence. Preliminary sentencing is set for May 31. After the verdict, Bates was escorted out of the courtroom by two deputies from the department he once served.

    In his closing argument to the jury, defense lawyer Clark Brewster said Bates should be be thanked for trying to help his fellow deputies. He displayed the stun gun and Bates' pistol and showed how they were similar size and weight.

    "He got out of his vehicle to man up and help," Brewster said. "I truly believe you will find this was an accident driven to this point by the actions of Mr. Harris."

    Prosecutor John David Luton told the jury Bates was nodding off in his car before the arrest. He said it was wrong to blame Harris for the shooting.

    "Bob Bates didn't act with usual and ordinary care," Luton said in his closing argument. "He also didn't do what a reasonable person would do under similar circumstances. ... Eric Harris deserved to be chased, he deserved to be tackled, he deserved to be arrested. He did not deserve to be killed by reserve deputy Bob Bates."

    Read the rest of the article:

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/27/us/tulsa-deputy-manslaughter-trial/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 28, 2016, 07:00:26 AM
    Remember this case?

    Ex-Oklahoma deputy Robert Bates guilty of killing unarmed suspect
    By Ralph Ellis, Christopher Lett and Sara Sidner, CNN

    Tulsa, Oklahoma (CNN)A jury found a sheriff's deputy guilty of second-degree manslaughter Wednesday in the fatal shooting of an unarmed suspect.

    Robert Bates, who was a volunteer reserve sheriff deputy for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office last year at the time of the shooting, never denied killing Eric Courtney Harris.
    Bates, 74, said he meant to use his Taser stun gun, not his revolver, on the suspect, who had been tackled by other deputies and was being held on the ground.

    The jury deliberated less than three hours and recommended Bates serve four years in prison, the maximum possible sentence. Preliminary sentencing is set for May 31. After the verdict, Bates was escorted out of the courtroom by two deputies from the department he once served.

    In his closing argument to the jury, defense lawyer Clark Brewster said Bates should be be thanked for trying to help his fellow deputies. He displayed the stun gun and Bates' pistol and showed how they were similar size and weight.

    "He got out of his vehicle to man up and help," Brewster said. "I truly believe you will find this was an accident driven to this point by the actions of Mr. Harris."

    Prosecutor John David Luton told the jury Bates was nodding off in his car before the arrest. He said it was wrong to blame Harris for the shooting.

    "Bob Bates didn't act with usual and ordinary care," Luton said in his closing argument. "He also didn't do what a reasonable person would do under similar circumstances. ... Eric Harris deserved to be chased, he deserved to be tackled, he deserved to be arrested. He did not deserve to be killed by reserve deputy Bob Bates."

    Read the rest of the article:

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/27/us/tulsa-deputy-manslaughter-trial/

    He should be thanked? what a f'd up thing to say
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2016, 08:08:40 AM
    He should be thanked? what a f'd up thing to say








    Yes it is-- Shows Just How Fucked Up The System & Their Perspective Is.
    Judge is an ArseWipes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2016, 09:46:37 AM
    The other guards who sat passively should also be investigated.

    New Mexico Jail Guard Knocked Out Prisoner, Charged With Aggravated Assault

    Surveillance video is sending a New Mexico jail guard to criminal court for knocking out a handcuffed prisoner, body slamming him on a concrete floor in a detention area when he wasn’t posing any threat to the safety of officers.

    Inmate Timothy K. Black ended up losing consciousness in the November 2015 incident, according to the Las Cruces Sun-News.

    Now Dona Ana County detention officer Luis Ruiz is being charged with aggravated battery resulting great bodily harm for “guiding the Black to the floor”. Ruiz has been with the correctional department since April 2010, now possibly faces being on the other side of the bars.

    After throwing Black to the ground and knocking him out, the officers are seen continuing to strip the man of his clothing as six other officers standby and watch. None of the officers watching seem to reach as the man is laying there not moving. Even after he is pulled up to his knees against medical protocol for possible head or neck injuries, no officer is seen reacting to intervene or administer medical assistance.

    Black was unable to soften the blow or protect himself from the fall with his hands already cuffed behind him. Medical personnel were called to assist and evaluate Black, where they treated him. A nurse from Las Cruces Hospital later confirmed Black had lost consciousness.

    Black was searched a second time while standing against the wall after being evaluated for his injuries.

    Ruiz claimed Black had attempted to kick him while he was searching his legs. The other officer who was assisting him could not collaborate Ruiz’s claim. After reviewing the video New Mexico State Police investigator, Erika Contreras, determined Black did not attempt to kick him.

    Black who was arrested for “resisting or obstructing officers”, also known as contempt of cop charges, after reporting of him welding a knife.

    On January 19, Contreras initally wrote in her report prosecutors initially declined to bring charges against Ruiz, however the District Attorney’s Office disputed that claim and stated they were still reviewing the video.

    The county jail administrator, Christopher Barela, stated internal investigation immediately ordered and is an ongoing investigation into policy and procedures.

    “We have an obligation to the community and to the detainee population to ensure this facility operates in a humane and professional manner at all times,” Barela said in a statement. “A full investigation will allow the management team to fully evaluate what happened and why, so that appropriate disciplinary action — if any — can be taken.”



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/new-mexico-jail-guard-criminally-charged/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2016, 09:49:58 AM
    Federal Judge Allows Lawsuit to Proceed Against Texas Cops who Shot and Killed Passive Dog

    A federal judge in Texas ruled in favor of a plaintiff in a case against an officer who admitted a man’s dog didn’t pose a threat before he shot and killed it.

    Austin police officer Daniel Walsh said Shiner Bock, the dog, “was just kinda walking at me, he wasn’t, he didn’t, I mean . . .’before breaking off the end of his sentence,” an officer at the scene heard him say, according to the lawsuit.

    On April 24th in 2013, Julian Reyes was at his artist-warehouse preparing his art for an event at Eeyore’s Birthday Party, an annual party in Austin, when he heard gunshots.

    When Reyes walked outside to investigate, Austin officers Walsh and Christopher Anderson, forced him to the ground at gunpoint and handcuffed him, frisking him and searching his truck and storage unit – even though was not suspected of a crime.

    While handcuffed, Reyes repeatedly asked officers what happened to his dog, who he’d noticed bleeding.

    Eventually officer Anderson stated, “your dog is dead.”

    He later learned Walsh had shot and killed him while investigating “banging noise” that ended up being a piece of loose tin blowing in the wind.

    According to the lawsuit, police had already determined the noise was caused from ‘loose siding blowing in the wind’ when Walsh drove his vehicle onto private property, parked and approached Reyes’ storage unit on foot.

    When he got closer to the unit, he heard Shiner Bock bark and saw the dog standing outside the unit.

    According to the police report, officer Walsh then shouted to the dog, “Don’t move! Get back!”

    Bock barked again, and Walsh shot him several times in the chest.

    The dog then bled to death as Reyes watched.

    United States Judge Robert Pitman allowed eight of ten of Reyes’ civil rights claims to go forward. His order was issued and filed on April 20th.

    The lawsuit names Austin officer Daniel Walsh, officer Christopher, as well as Police Chief Hubert “Art” Acevedo and City Manager, Marc Ott in their ‘individual capacities’.

    Reyes’ initial complaint alleged his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when police performed warrantless searches on his storage unit, truck and person and that his detainment, as well as the violent shooting death of his dog, constitute unconstitutional seizures and unreasonable searches of his self and his property.

    It also alleged that Chief Hubert “Art” Acevedo and City Manager Ott, “formulated, approved, and put into effect an inadequate training program regarding the use of force against animals.”

    The judge’s order means the evidence and testimony about the claims will be heard at a future date after more evidence becomes available. But it’s not looking good for Austin police, a department that shot and killed 21 dogs in 2012 alone.

    Judge Pitman denied two of Reyes’ claims of negligence against the City of Austin regarding failure to develop proper policies regarding use of force against dogs.

    We caught up with Reyes to talk about what happened that day as well his thoughts about the lawsuit, which he filed pro se to preserve the statute of limitations after things with his lawyer didn’t work out.

    He was later appointed an attorney after claiming indigence.  We’ll keep you updated as the case moves along. You can also follow his case on his Facebook page, Support for Shiner Bock.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/federal-judge-allows-lawsuit-to-proceed-against-texas-cops-who-shot-and-killed-passive-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2016, 09:21:39 PM
    Brothers Who were Arrested for Fighting Back Against Violent Cops — Beat Charges, Win Settlement

    Southfield, MI —  Two men went from being arrested and facing felony charges to being released, cleared of all charges, and now, given a six-figure settlement — after getting into a restaurant brawl with two belligerent Detroit cops.

    Tywonn Mitchell, 20, and Naybon Moore, 26, were driving to Grandy’s Coney Island back in May of 2013 when they were followed into the parking lot by two Detroit cops.

    Having done nothing illegal and knowing their rights, the two men thought little of the police car and walked inside to get their food.

    At the time, Mitchell was about to be a Junior at Madonna University, studying criminal justice. Mitchell’s brother Moore is also college educated, and both of them were entirely informed on their rights.
    After they had entered the store, two bully Detroit police officers followed them in. That’s when the harassment began.

    The officers demanded that the two men produce their IDs. However, these two gentlemen weren’t the pushovers that the officers took them for.

    Mitchell and Moore knew that they were being shaken down for no reason and that these two officers were trying to unlawfully detain them. When the men refused to be harassed and refused to “show their papers,” one officer became violent.

    The officer, as if he was intentionally trying to start a fight, pushed one of the brothers in the chest. That’s when Moore merely pushed the officer’s hands away. He and his brother were then met with a cop’s fist to the face. A full-on brawl ensued.

    The two brothers eventually stopped the fight and were booked and charged with felony assault on an officer.

    The Detroit police department also cleared both officers in this case, stating that the “use of force [was] appropriate and reasonable.”


    However, in a completely atypical move by the prosecutor’s office, after reviewing the footage, all of the charges were dropped.

    Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office disagreed with Detroit police and said that the detainment was unreasonable and that the two men were acting in self-defense.

    When police are threatened, they react with violence, and the situation can get out of hand quickly. Had these circumstances been slightly different these two brothers could have been killed.

    Both of these Detroit police officers are still on duty today.

    The settlement was just paid by the city of Detroit – or more accurately the taxpayers.

    “It is an unfortunate circumstance that taxpayers continue to pay for stupid mistakes,” said Herbert Sanders, and attorney for the men.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/brothers-arrested-fighting-violent-cops-beat-charges-win-settlement
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2016, 10:03:36 AM
    Video Shows Cops Do Nothing as Fellow Officer Brutally Beats a Handcuffed Woman

    Jacksonville, FL — Mayra Martinez, 31, had a bad first day on the job at the local Scores Bar in Jacksonville. That afternoon, she became intoxicated, quit, and refused to leave, so police were called — this would turn her bad day into a horrifying one.

    When police arrived at the bar around 5 p.m., they arrested Martinez and charged her with trespassing and resisting.

    According to the police report, Martinez was drunk and belligerent when two officers showed up to remove her from the property. One of those officers was Akinyemi Borisade, 26. When police tried to place her in handcuffs, Martinez tried to kick and bite officers, according to the report. However, as Martinez is much smaller than the two officers who were taking her in, they were easily able to overpower her.

    Martinez was then transported to the Duval County jail where things would take a turn for the worse. Video released by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office shows Martinez attempt to walk over to the officers before Borisade grabs her and slams her into the wall.

    After being slammed into the wall by the officer, Borisade proceeded to unleash a fury of fists to the head and face of Martinez after her foot grazed his pant leg.

    “He could have turned her around and held her in a transporting position that they are trained in back over to the location to wait by the door,” Undersheriff Pat Ivey said. “He could have stood there with her, but there was no need to strike her.”

    After standing there and watching their fellow officer violently assault a restrained and incapacitated woman, the officers reported Borisade. On Thursday, the JSO announced that he had been fired and charged with battery.

    Equally as disturbing as watching a cop pummel a handcuffed woman was the fact that the other officers stood by and allowed it to happen.

    “They could have moved in. One officer did at least walk over and put his hand on the officer to stop him from continuing to punch the suspect. So I’m glad one officer did take action,” Gil Smith, News4Jax crime and safety analyst, said. “Now in this particular situation, these other officers do have a person who is handcuffed. So they do have to keep a watch on him, if they engage with this officer no one is watching the prisoner.”

    However, the officers certainly were not watching the handcuffed prisoner as they were fixated on watching Borisade beat Martinez to a pulp — not to mention the other prisoner was in a jail and in handcuffs. If he tried to run, he would have quickly been apprehended.

    The only officer not at fault in this situation is the one who walked up to Borisade and put his hand on his shoulder to stop him.

    Ivey said because Borisade is a probationary officer, he can’t appeal his firing, but he can ask for a name-clearing hearing with JSO, according to News4Jax. If he passes that he would regain the ability to be an officer with another agency.

    If history is any indicator, this will be swept under the rug and Borisade will be quietly hired on with another agency.

    As New4Jax points out, Borisade should have never been a cop in the first place as he had a criminal record. When he was 19-yeas-old, reports show he took items into a dressing room from a store at the Regency Square Mall and came out without them and tried to leave the store without paying. The report shows he admitted to doing it. He later pleaded no contest.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-cops-fellow-officer-begins-brutally-beating-handcuffed-woman
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 29, 2016, 12:38:18 PM
    Video Shows Cops Do Nothing as Fellow Officer Brutally Beats a Handcuffed Woman

    Jacksonville, FL — Mayra Martinez, 31, had a bad first day on the job at the local Scores Bar in Jacksonville. That afternoon, she became intoxicated, quit, and refused to leave, so police were called — this would turn her bad day into a horrifying one.

    When police arrived at the bar around 5 p.m., they arrested Martinez and charged her with trespassing and resisting.

    According to the police report, Martinez was drunk and belligerent when two officers showed up to remove her from the property. One of those officers was Akinyemi Borisade, 26. When police tried to place her in handcuffs, Martinez tried to kick and bite officers, according to the report. However, as Martinez is much smaller than the two officers who were taking her in, they were easily able to overpower her.

    Martinez was then transported to the Duval County jail where things would take a turn for the worse. Video released by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office shows Martinez attempt to walk over to the officers before Borisade grabs her and slams her into the wall.

    After being slammed into the wall by the officer, Borisade proceeded to unleash a fury of fists to the head and face of Martinez after her foot grazed his pant leg.

    “He could have turned her around and held her in a transporting position that they are trained in back over to the location to wait by the door,” Undersheriff Pat Ivey said. “He could have stood there with her, but there was no need to strike her.”

    After standing there and watching their fellow officer violently assault a restrained and incapacitated woman, the officers reported Borisade. On Thursday, the JSO announced that he had been fired and charged with battery.

    Equally as disturbing as watching a cop pummel a handcuffed woman was the fact that the other officers stood by and allowed it to happen.

    “They could have moved in. One officer did at least walk over and put his hand on the officer to stop him from continuing to punch the suspect. So I’m glad one officer did take action,” Gil Smith, News4Jax crime and safety analyst, said. “Now in this particular situation, these other officers do have a person who is handcuffed. So they do have to keep a watch on him, if they engage with this officer no one is watching the prisoner.”

    However, the officers certainly were not watching the handcuffed prisoner as they were fixated on watching Borisade beat Martinez to a pulp — not to mention the other prisoner was in a jail and in handcuffs. If he tried to run, he would have quickly been apprehended.

    The only officer not at fault in this situation is the one who walked up to Borisade and put his hand on his shoulder to stop him.

    Ivey said because Borisade is a probationary officer, he can’t appeal his firing, but he can ask for a name-clearing hearing with JSO, according to News4Jax. If he passes that he would regain the ability to be an officer with another agency.

    If history is any indicator, this will be swept under the rug and Borisade will be quietly hired on with another agency.

    As New4Jax points out, Borisade should have never been a cop in the first place as he had a criminal record. When he was 19-yeas-old, reports show he took items into a dressing room from a store at the Regency Square Mall and came out without them and tried to leave the store without paying. The report shows he admitted to doing it. He later pleaded no contest.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-cops-fellow-officer-begins-brutally-beating-handcuffed-woman


    I saw this in my feed this AM.

    EVERY cop standing there should be suspended for a few weeks, for witnessing an assault and doing nothing.

    This blue shield bullshit...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2016, 12:45:01 PM

    I saw this in my feed this AM.

    EVERY cop standing there should be suspended for a few weeks, for witnessing an assault and doing nothing.

    This blue shield bullshit...

    They did not arrest or even try to stop the criminal (the cop) at the spot. They should face actual punishment, not just paid vacation or firing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on April 29, 2016, 12:49:12 PM
    They did not arrest or even try to stop the criminal (the cop) at the spot. They should face actual punishment, not just paid vacation or firing.

    they must not have realized they were on video.  IMO, video has changed everything.  cops in my town have gone from being known as rude, to being the most pleasant in the state.  I think adding body cameras had a lot to do with that.  I've chatted with many at shows, I've had them on my block a few times, I've been stopped... always a pleasant experience.   Most cops are hard working schmucks like the rest of us. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2016, 09:10:26 PM
    Innocent Couple Would be In Jail Had they Not Secretly Recorded this Corrupt Cop Extorting Them

    Clayton County, GA — An innocent couple exonerated themselves after secretly recording a Clayton County cop trying to shake them down.

    Earlier this year, Mike and Michelle Pierce, who run a thrift and salvage business in Griffin, decided to buy a car from an auction; a decision that would later haunt them. It turned out that the car was stolen.

    The Pierces had no clue the car they just purchased was stolen, but as soon as they found out it was, they called 9-1-1 and handed the car over. However, after they turned the car over, police gave it back and then arrested them for having it.

    “They arrested us in our store in the middle of the day,” said Michael Pierce.

    “We didn’t know why. They just threw the cuffs on me and put me in the back of the car,” Michelle Pierce cried as she told WSB-TV her story. “That was the worst thing.”

    The gross police incompetence that led to the innocent couple be locked up was only the beginning of their legal debacle with Clayton County police, however.

    After being thrown in a cage for a crime they did not commit, the couple learned that an officer, not related at all to their case, Grant Kidd, wanted to talk to them.

    “We didn’t want to talk to him because he was a Clayton County officer and we’ve already been arrested for no reason,” Michael Pierce said. “We were scared to (and) scared not to, so we talked about it at the kitchen table with my kids, and my kids said we’d go meet and talk to him, but they were going to film it…to cover our butts in case we got arrested again.”

    The decision to record their conversation with officer Kidd would prove to be crucial, as it would have been their word against his otherwise. As the conversation begins, Kidd claims he has someone on the inside of the DA’s office who can get their case thrown out — for a price.

    “We ain’t had nothing yet that didn’t go away. If it don’t go away, if it go into the grand jury (inaudible) you get your money back,” said Kidd. “You’ll never see him. He (inaudible) actually works with the DA in the office.”

    Mr. Pierce then asked, “And we won’t get in trouble for bribing?”

    “No,” Kidd replied. “You ain’t never going to talk to him.”

    “It’s unbelievable,” said attorney Lee Sexton who represented the Pierces in their criminal case.

    After the recording, the charges were dismissed. That’s when the FBI launched their investigation into Kidd.

    Of course, Clayton County District Attorney Tracy Lawson denies that Kidd had any contacts within the office. But in the conversation, it sounded like this was a frequent practice for this corrupt cop.

    “Any conceivable reason he could be saying that?” WSB-TV reporter asked Clayton County Police Chief Michael Register. “No,” said the chief. “It certainly is a conversation from my standpoint that just turns your stomach.”

    “Instances such as this undermine public trust and confidence in our judicial system,” said attorney Darryl Scott. “Their sense of security has been violated, and they did exactly what they were supposed to do by contacting law enforcement, and it backfired.”

    To say that this instance undermines the trust is accurate and the reason for so much of the divide in America today. Law enforcement in this country, we are told, is composed of heroic men and women who put their lives on the line every single day to maintain order. However, this case, and many more like it, sends this fantastical facade crumbling to the ground.

    In an interview with WSB-TV, Cheif Register summed it up perfectly by stating that this is “another reason people feel the way they do about law enforcement.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-couple-jail-secretly-recorded-corrupt-cop-extorting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 30, 2016, 12:29:09 AM
    "Apologized"...

    SWAT Raids Family, Terrorizes Disabled Woman & Arrests Family Members — Whoops, Wrong House

    Philadelphia, PA – Police apologized on Wednesday after raiding an innocent family’s home and traumatizing a disabled woman who nearly fell down the stairs. Touted as “innovative” and “state-of-the-art,” the Real Time Crime Center mistakenly directed officers to the wrong house and another botched raid.

    Around 2:30 a.m. on Wednesday, cops suddenly broke down the Jardine family’s door and raided their home while holding them at gunpoint. Despite the fact that the family had committed no crime, officers ordered them out of their rooms and placed them in handcuffs during the middle of the night.

    “I’m coming out of the shower, and there’s a Pump Action Rifle to my chest,” Angel Jardine told WPVI. “He’s just like, ‘Put your hands up.’ Rifle in my chest, and I’m like, ‘Whoa.’”

    Physically impaired after an ex-boyfriend shot her in the head, forty-eight-year-old Ronik Jardine had been asleep in her bed when the cops woke her up and immediately ordered her out of the room.

    “He said, ‘Go down the steps. Go down the steps now.’ I said, ‘Officer, I’m handicap.’” recalled Ronik Jardine. “He still didn’t care that I was handicap. They almost made me fall down the steps.”

    After taking some family members into custody and interrogating them, the police concluded they had raided the wrong residence and apologized. According to Michael Jardine, an officer told him that it was a case of mistaken identity and offered to give them a ride back home.

    “I just still feel like it shouldn’t have never gotten that far, you coming in our house drawing guns,” said Michael Jardine.

    Ironically, the police claim they were searching for armed suspects committing violent home invasions when the cops mistakenly broke down the Jardine’s door. Described as “an innovative unit that provides real time analytical and investigative support to the Philadelphia Police Department,” the Real Time Crime Center reportedly reviewed surveillance video that led the heavily armed officers into raiding the wrong home.
    On the Philadelphia Police Department’s website, they boast, “Video feeds from city of Philadelphia, SEPTA, and independent businesses cameras are available for monitoring around the clock, by staff in the Real Time Crime Center.”

    Equipped with disturbingly Orwellian technology, the police still managed to raid the wrong home and terrify an innocent family in the middle of the night at gunpoint.
    “I’m scared of guns,” Ronik Jardine told WPVI. “It traumatized me so bad, I had to go to the doctor this morning.”

    Earlier this year, a police flashbang grenade disfigured the face and melted the hand of a former Miss Australia during an early morning drug raid. In May 2014, a police flashbang grenade landed in 19-month-old Bounkham Phonesavanh’s crib and blew a hole in the baby’s face and chest, covering him in third-degree burns.

    Just past midnight on May 16, 2010, a Detroit SWAT team tossed a flashbang grenade into the living room where 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones had been sleeping on the couch. As the flashbang incinerated her blanket, Aiyana was immediately shot in the head by Officer Joseph Weekley. Weekley claimed that Aiyana’s grandmother had reached for his weapon, but ballistics and another officer’s testimony refute his accusations. Police later realized they had forcibly entered the wrong apartment. The suspect, Chauncey Owens, lived upstairs.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-raid-wrong-home-terrorize-innocent-disabled-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 02, 2016, 01:41:12 AM
    San Diego Cop Negligently Fires at Baby Crib Less Than a Year After Killing Unarmed Man

    In April 2015, San Diego police Neal “Nick” Browder shot and killed a homeless man in an alleyway after claiming the man came charging at him with a knife.

    Surveillance video eventually proved that Fridoon Rawshan Nehad not only did not charge at Browder, he was only carrying a pen.

    But Browder was cleared anyway because he uttered the magic words that he was in fear for his life.

    More recently on February 20, 2016, Browder was searching the home of a probationer when he “accidentally” fired his gun, sending a bullet through a baby crib.

    Fortunately, the crib was empty, but that incident was enough for San Diego police to take him off the streets and reassign him to a desk job, which is meant to be some type of disciplinary action for the cop who made more than $150,000 in pay and benefits in 2014.

    ABC 10 broke the story after receiving a tip from a source, reaching out to the police union and Browder’s lawyer, but receiving no comment.

    Negligent shootings, which police refer to as “accidental shootings,” are quite common among police officers despite the belief that they are highly trained professionals when it comes to firearms.

    Last December, a cop in California said he accidentally fired when was pulled out his gun and shot a man who was climbing out of a rollover accident after a pursuit.

    Initially, Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey said he would not file charges against Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster because he believed he never meant to shoot and kill him.

    But after a national backlash, Ramsey filed involuntary manslaughter charges against Feaster.

    Then there was New York City police officer Peter Liang who negligently fired a gun in a dark stairwell, killing a man named Akai Gurley who was doing nothing but walking downstairs with his girlfriend because the elevator in their building was not working.

    Liang was convicted of manslaughter but last month received probation.

    And let’s not forget the Florida campus cop who negligently fired his gun earlier this week, leaving a bullet hole in the roof of his patrol car.

    But back to Browder.

    After killing Nehad, he told fellow officers that he did not see a weapon, so maybe it was another negligent shooting. It was only after he was allowed to watch the surveillance video that he changed his story, claiming he thought the pen was a knife.

    But just because Browder was allowed to watch the video prior to giving an official statement does not mean the video was released to the public.

    No, that took another eight months with San Diego police saying releasing the video would place officers’ lives at risk. And it was only released after Browder had been cleared of any wrongdoing.

    Nehad’s family has filed a lawsuit against the department over the shooting, which is still pending.

    Generally speaking, when a cop is assigned to desk duty, he is stripped of his badge and gun and authority to make arrests.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/san-diego-cop-negligently-fires-at-baby-crib-less-than-a-year-after-killing-unarmed-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 04, 2016, 02:13:57 PM
    Horrifying Dashcam Shows Psycho Cops Laugh as they Pepper Spray a Baby, Beat Her Innocent Mom

    Chicago, IL — A mother travelling with her two small children in her car tried to pull into her driveway when they crossed paths with two psychotic Chicago cops. The interaction would end with an innocent woman being dragged from her car, her and her children doused in pepper spray, and this mother of two facing attempted murder charges.

    The nightmare unfolded for this mom, who is also a local Reverend, back in 2013. Rev. Catherine Brown was returning home, about to pull into her driveway, when a police cruiser with no lights or sirens on came barrelling down her alleyway. Had Brown not proactively honked her horn, the police cruiser would have likely smashed into her car head on.

    “It’s a blessing I did blow my horn,” said Brown, recalling that fateful night.

    However, the blessing of stopping a head on collision would quickly morph into a horrifying experience. Inside the police cruiser were Officer Michelle Morsi Murphy and Officer Jose Lopez, who were blocking Brown from entering the driveway to her home.

    Seemingly to proud to back up and let the mother and her two children pull into their house, officer Murphy jumped out of the vehicle and began swearing at Brown demanding she move her vehicle.

    Before she can even respond, Lopez rushes the innocent mother and children with his gun drawn and aims it at Brown’s head. Remember, she had done absolutely nothing wrong.

    “It startled me,” Brown says. “I reached for my license … The other officer takes the gun and points it at the front of my head.”

    Fearing that these maniacs might hurt her and her children, Brown called 9-1-1, repeatedly. The recordings of those calls reveal that she was being terrorized and threatened. She begged for a police lieutenant to come to the scene.

    Brown’s oldest daughter Georgia was 8-years-old at the time, and when asked what she thought the cops were going to do, she responded by saying, “they might shoot and kill us.”

    Instead of waiting for their lieutenant to show up, Brown’s attackers, two of Chicago’s finest tried to force open her door. Terrified that these sociopaths might kill her, Brown drove backwards out of the alley and began screaming to her neighbors for help.

    “Now she’s chasing me with the car. I come to a complete stop, and then she takes the car and rams it into me,” Brown says.

    The dashcam video of the rest of incident is nothing short of infuriating and horrifying. After smashing the cruiser into a car full of children, Officer Murphy jumps out and begins dousing Brown with pepper spray. Murphy was so careless that she sprayed Brown’s small baby too.

    After hitting her with a chemical agent, Murphy held her pistol to Brown’s head as another officer approached and began smashing her car with a baton. Both cops then violently pull the mom out of the car as her children scream in terror.

    To illustrate the sadistic nature of these cops, the video even catches officer Lopez smiling as he beats down this innocent woman.

    They “Beat me down to my underwear, pulled my skirt off me,” Brown says. “They beat me with the sticks and hit me with their boots in my head.”

    After assaulting and arresting an innocent mother in front of her own children, police then charged Brown with attempted murder because Murphy claimed she was dragged as Brown tried to flee. However, after going to trial for the incident, Brown was found not guilty as there was no evidence of Murphy ever being in danger.

    Brown was still convicted of reckless conduct for driving backwards, but she has appealed that charge as well. Any sane person will see that she did so to avoid these two savage public servants.

    Brown’s attorney, Ed Fox pulled the records from The Citizens Police Data Project, which shows the outright insane history of these two Chicago cops. Morsi Murphy has been hit with a whopping 19 complaints, and Lopez has received even more at 21.

    The disturbing video below shows the dangerous power of belligerent and violent individuals being given badges. Had the dashcam video of this incident not existed, Brown could be rotting in a jail right now, serving time for an attempted murder that she never committed.

    The Chicago police have declined to comment on the case because of the pending legal action against them by Brown. They only released the following canned statement:
    “Reaffirming our commitment to accountability and integrity is paramount in our efforts to rebuild trust between police officers and communities,” the spokesperson said in a prepared statement. “Since there is pending litigation in this case, CPD is not able to comment on specifics. However, we take allegations of excessive force and discourtesy very seriously. These matters are thoroughly investigated by the Independent Review Authority and individuals are held accountable when wrongdoing is discovered.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-dashcam-shows-psycho-cops-laugh-pepper-spray-baby-beat-innocent-mom/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2016, 12:29:49 AM
    Remember this case?

    Cop Assaults Disabled Combat Vet on Video for Legally Parking in Handicap Spot and Keeps His Job

    Riviera Beach, FL — After his gross incompetence led him to assault an innocent disabled veteran, Sgt. Gary Wilson with the Riviera Beach police department was charged with misdemeanor battery and criminal mischief. However, because police in America are subject to a different set of rules and held to lower standards, Wilson was found not guilty of battery — in spite of the entire assault being recorded.

    During the trial, Wilson told the jury that it was James’ fault he assaulted him because he responded with hostility when being accused of a crime he didn’t commit.

    “He immediately started cursing me,” Wilson said of James. “I don’t think it was warranted.”

    Isiah James is a combat veteran who served two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. During his deployment, James took fire and was hit with a blast from an IED, which left him medically discharged and permanently disabled.

    Because of his disability, Florida issued James a handicap hanging tag since he has trouble walking long distances. However, James’ disability was not an issue with Officer Wilson of the Riviera Beach police department.

    Upon pulling into a Walgreen’s parking lot last year, James was confronted by this officer who was on a mission to harass. Officer Wilson confronted James and became not only verbally abusive but physically too.
    Luckily for James, he recorded the assault.

    “Officer, I’m a damned disabled veteran,” James explains to Wilson, who thinks he’s captured some criminal mastermind. However, James is squeaky clean.

    While trying to tell Wilson that he is disabled, and his handicap tag is legitimate, Wilson slaps the phone out of his hand subsequently cracking the screen.

    After being physically assaulted by Wilson, James proceeds to unleash a verbal lashing fit for its recipient. The resultant video is as infuriating as it is encouraging as James stood his ground and refused to be bullied by this cop who had nothing better to do.

    For endangering an innocent man’s life and assaulting him for no reason, officer Wilson will not face consequences. In fact, after proving he is unfit to wear a badge and carry a gun, Wilson remains on the job.
    Sadly, the treatment James received is anything but an isolated incident. Veterans are often the targets of police officer aggression.

    Last year, we reported on the story of Anthony Hill, 27, who was gunned down by a police officer during a psychotic breakdown. Hill was completely naked and unarmed when he was killed.

    Before the Hill incident, a Louisiana cop was indicted after surveillance video showed him gun down an unarmed veteran outside of a West Monroe gas station.

    The list goes on.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-assaults-disabled-combat-vet-video-legally-parking-handicap-spot-job/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2016, 01:53:19 AM
    New Jersey Cops Arrest Woman for Remaining Silent Before Reading Her Rights

    New Jersey state police arrested a woman for exercising her Constitutional right to remain silent.

    Or as they called it; “obstruction.”

    But they were sure to inform Rebecca Musarra that she had the right to remain silent – once she was handcuffed and placed in the back of the patrol car.

    She was then transported to a local police department, but released two hours later with no charges against her after a supervisor reviewed the footage and chalked it up to a rookie mistake.

    The two arresting officer, Matthew Stazzone and Demetric Gosa, were hired in 2014.

    Now Musarra is suing.

    The incident took place on October 16, but a dash cam video of the incident was just obtained by NJ Advance Media, which posted it today.

    Musarra, an attorney from Philadalphia, was pulled over for speeding. He walked up to her car and asked for her drivers license, registration and proof of insurance.

    “While you’re looking for that, do you know why you’re being pulled over tonight?” he asked.

    She handed over her documents, but remained silent.

    But Stazzone wanted her to answer the question, so he asked her again. And again. And again.

    “Do you know why you’re being stopped tonight?”

    When she continued to remain silent, he threatened to arrest her.

    “You’re going to be placed under arrest if you don’t answer my questions,” he said.

    She then told him she was an attorney, exercising her right to remain silent.

    But that did not stop them from ordering her out of the car and handcuffing her.

    “Are you detaining me because I refused to speak?” she asked as they walked her to the police car.

    “Yeah,” Stazzone said.

    “Yeah, obstruction,” Gosa added.

    At the police station, she was patted down and handcuffed to a bench inside a cell, according to NJ.com.

    Musarra’s father is a former prosecutor and her mother is a former probation officer, so she told the news site that she understands “cops have a difficult job to do,” she told NJ.com.

    But she also said “there has to be some sort of accountability.”

    “Who knows what will happen to the next person who comes down the road who decides they have these constitutional rights they want to assert?” Musarra said.

    “What happens to them when they don’t have the sort of privileges I have?”

    What would have happened is that they would still be fighting the charges.

    Read her lawsuit here (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/311609484-MUSARRA-v-STATE-OF-NEW-JERSEY-et-al.pdf).



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/new-jersey-cops-arrest-woman-for-remaining-silent-before-reading-her-rights/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2016, 03:08:12 PM
    South Carolina Cop Who Shot and Killed Walter Scott Now Facing Federal Charges

    Four months after he was released from jail on bond, a South Carolina cop who shot and killed a man who was running away from him, only to claim he had been charging at him, is expected to be jailed again.

    But this time on federal charges.

    Michael Slager, the North Charleston police officer who killed Walter Scott in 2015 in an incident captured on video by a bystander, was indicted this week by a federal grand jury on three charges.

    According to the Washington Post:

    In the indictment filed Tuesday, the grand jury accuses Michael Slager, a former North Charleston police officer, of depriving Scott of his rights under color of law. The grand jury said that when Slager shot Scott “without legal justification” in April 2015, he took away his constitutional right “to be free from the use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officer.”

    Slager is also charged with obstruction of justice, with the grand jury saying that he knowingly misled state investigators by telling them that that Scott, who was not armed, was approaching him with a Taser. He was also charged with one count of using a weapon during “a felony crime of violence.”

    In convicted, Slater could be sentenced to life in prison. But because there are no minimum sentences for the charges, he could also wind up on probation.

    He is also still awaiting trial on state murder charges, which could also land him with a life sentence.

    The fact that federal prosecutors decided to pursue charges against him is a rarity considering the U.S. Department of Justice declined to take 96 percent of cases involving law enforcement officers since 1995, according to a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review investigation.

    But few cases are as cut and dry as this one.

    The incident took place in April 2015 when Slager pulled Scott over for a broken tail light, resulting in Scott running away from the scene to avoid being incarcerated for missed child support payments.

    Slager began chasing him through a field, then pulled out his gun and shot him several times.

    Then he walked up to the body and dropped his taser gun next to it.

    And then he claimed that Scott had charged him, trying to pry the stun gun from his hands while beating him.

    But it was all being recorded by a man with a camera.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/south-carolina-cop-who-shot-and-killed-fleeing-man-now-facing-federal-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2016, 03:10:54 PM
    Illinois Police Arrest Man for Felony Wiretapping After He Recorded Them in His Home

    An Illinois man was arrested on felony eavesdropping charges after informing police he was recording them in his own home over the weekend.

    New Lenox police claim Daniel Murphy made this announcement while “surreptitiously recording” them, which is legal jargon for secretly recording

    Nevertheless, the arrest of the 25-year-old man raises legal questions about the state’s new and improved eavesdropping law, which replaced the previous Draconian law that was ruled unconstitutional in 2014 after numerous citizens were arrested for recording police in the line of duty.

    Not much different than how Murphy was arrested.

    The questions are:

    Do police have an expectation of privacy in the home of a person they are investigating?

    Can a person be surreptitiously recording while publicly announcing he is recording?

    Did Illinois legislators surreptitiously amend the new eavesdropping law  to provide more protections to citizens recording police in the line of duty?

    According to local news reports, police had responded to Murphy’s New Lenox home to investigate a “domestic disturbance.”

    “While handling the domestic, Murphy informed the officers that he was surreptitiously recording the officers,” police told Patch.
     
    Neither the Patch article or the WJOL News goes into much detail about the incident and no other media has reported on the arrest yet.

    All we know is that he was also charged with simple assault and felony eavesdropping on Sunday.

    And on Monday, he was charged with felony aggravated battery to a peace officer and misdemeanor false report to a public safety agency, according to WJOL, which said it does not know if the latter charges are related to the former charges.

    We have reached out to Murphy on Facebook for comment but he has not yet responded, so perhaps he is still in jail.

    Now let’s take a look at the new eavesdropping law, which went into effect in January 2015 under much controversy and confusion.

    We tried to clear up some of the confusion here, even though we acknowledged it was vaguely written, considering (or maybe because) how much taxpayers paid to defend the old law.

    The new law did not even specify that citizens were now legally allowed to record cops, which was the whole point of ACLU vs. Alvarez, the lawsuit where Cook County State Attorney Anita Alvarez fought tooth and nail to keep it illegal to record cops.

    She not only lost that costly battle but ended up losing the election last March.

    The vagueness of the bill was done on purpose, according to the Chicago Reader.

    In the era of Ferguson and “I can’t breathe,” can Illinois citizens now record police officers in action? The ACLU says yes: the new law “respects” an appellate court ruling that cops on duty have “no reasonable expectation of privacy in their conversations in public places.” You won’t find that language in the law itself, however.

    State representative Elaine Nekritz, who sponsored the bill in the house, says that’s no accident. We made a decision “not to specifically state that citizens can record cops,” Nekritz says. “I thought if we tried to describe every instance in which you either were or were not committing eavesdropping, we would run into more trouble than we’ve created by having this more general standard. We just can’t write every circumstance in which someone has a reasonable expectation of privacy.” Like the definition of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, she says, “we know it when we see it.”

    Fortunately, an Illinois legislator named Elgie R. Sims, Jr. added a paragraph to the law, which went into effect in June 2015, stating the following:

    Nothing in this Article shall prohibit any individual, not a law enforcement officer, from recording a law enforcement officer in the performance of his or her duties in a public place or in circumstances in which the officer has no reasonable expectation of privacy. However, an officer may take reasonable action to maintain safety and control, secure crime scenes and accident sites, protect the integrity and confidentiality of investigations, and protect the public safety and order.

    Sims slipped the passage into a larger police reform bill addressing police body cameras that he and a state senator named Kwame Y. Raoul sponsored, which also states:

    No officer may hinder or prohibit any person, not a law enforcement officer, from recording a law enforcement officer in the performance of his or her duties in a public place or when the officer has no reasonable expectation of privacy. The law enforcement agency’s written policy shall indicate the potential criminal penalties, as well as any departmental discipline, which may result from unlawful confiscation or destruction of the recording medium of a person who is not a law enforcement officer. However, an officer may take reasonable action to maintain safety and control, secure crime scenes and accident sites, protect the integrity and confidentiality of investigations, and protect the public safety and order.

    So let’s get back to the questions.

    Do police have an expectation of privacy in the home of a person they are investigating?

    Although a person’s home is not public, police have no expectation of privacy from the residents of that home when they are on duty and investigating a potential crime, unless one of them decides to use the restroom and shuts the door behind them to take care of personal business.

    Can a person be surreptitiously recording while publicly announcing he is recording?

    Like the Massachusetts wiretapping law, the Illinois eavesdropping law makes it clear that citizens are not allowed to surreptitiously record others, even if they have no expectation of privacy, which is not the case in other all-party consent states, which only make it a crime if you secretly record somebody who has an expectation of privacy.

    And this provision also applies to police officers wearing body cameras, who are required to inform citizens who have an expectation of privacy that they are being recorded.

    However, the law states that officers must record proof of this warning, which means the cameras need to be turned on before they inform citizens that they are being recorded.

    The officer must provide notice of recording to any person if the person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and proof of notice must be evident in the recording. If exigent circumstances exist which prevent the officer from providing notice, notice must be provided as soon as practicable.

    Police will no doubt argue that Murphy was interfering with the “integrity and confidentiality” of an investigation.

    But considering he is the one being accused of creating a domestic disturbance, he should have a Constitutional right to record police in his own home if that could be the determining factor whether he is innocent or guilty.

    Did Illinois legislators surreptitiously amend the new eavesdropping law to provide more protections to citizens recording police in the line of duty?

    The amendment that citizens can record police was overshadowed by the police reform bill, which mostly addressed body cameras.

    According to the Chicago Daily Law Review:

    Lawmakers on Saturday overwhelmingly approved a package of rules for police body cameras that also requires independent investigations of officer-involved citizen deaths, creates a process for appointing special prosecutors and bulks up data-collection efforts on police stops and misconduct.

    Senate Bill 1304, which the Senate approved on a 45-5 vote, was a direct response to national controversies over use-of-force policies after officer-involved deaths of unarmed black citizens in New York City; Ferguson, Mo., and other places.

    The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Kwame Y. Raoul and Rep. Elgie R. Sims Jr. — both Chicago Democrats — was approved by the House on a 107-3 vote earlier last week amid contentious budget talks that have forced legislators to schedule session days beyond their normally scheduled May 31 adjournment.

    The law wouldn’t force departments to use body cameras. Instead, it would rely on a $5 hike to all traffic tickets issued in Illinois to create a grant program that subsidizes the cost for departments to opt in to the program.

    Raoul said part of the reason the bill doesn’t require camera use was that, even with some added revenue from ticket fees, it would have been too costly for the state to mandate them for every department.

    “One thing I think is that it’s going to, in short time, be so widely used voluntarily that at that point we can cross that road,” he said today. “But, at this point, this state is obviously dealing with a resource challenge.”

    The bill also bans police chokeholds — the tactic that caused an outcry when police used it in a confrontation that killed an unarmed New York City man last year.

    And, in light of confusion over a state eavesdropping law that went into effect in December, the bill clarifies that citizens can record police when officers have no “reasonable expectation” of privacy.

    And that final sentence was pretty much all the media coverage the amendment to the eavesdropping law received at the time, which goes to show just how short attention spans tend to be in the media.

    So back to Daniel Murphy, who is facing two felonies from what started out as a misdemeanor domestic disturbance call and who may still be sitting in jail.

    We have very little details to go on at the moment, but it is unlikely the eavesdropping charge will stick considering the circumstances.

    And it’s rare that police would tack on a felony assaulting an officer charge a day after the initial arrest.

    Of course, anything can happen once they order you to stop recording.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/illinois-police-arrest-man-for-felony-wiretapping-for-recording-them-in-his-home/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2016, 03:39:29 PM
    California Deputies Charged in Viral Video Beating; More Deputies Facing Charges for Coverup

    A pair of California deputies who were caught on camera viciously beating a suspect with their batons after chasing him for several miles were charged with multiple felonies Tuesday.

    And more Alameda County sheriff’s deputies may be charged in the coming weeks for taking part in the ensuing coverup, including one deputy accused of stealing money and gold from the victim and giving it to a homeless couple in exchange for their silence as well as supervisors allowing the two deputies to revise their reports once the video had surfaced.

    It all took place on November 12, 2015 when Alameda County sheriff deputies Luis Santamaria and Paul Wieber – not realizing they were on camera – struck the suspect 30 times in a 40-second span in a San Francisco alleyway.

    “Get on the fucking ground,” one of them can be heard saying while beating the suspect who was already on the ground.

    “I’m sorry. Oh my God, help me,” pleaded Stanislav Petrov, who was accused of stealing a car, then striking two sheriff patrol cars, leaving a deputy with minor injuries.

    He then led deputies on a pursuit through the streets of Oakland before crossing the bay into San Francisco.

    The owner of the camera, who is remaining anonymous, submitted the video to the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, which released it four days after the incident.

    That was when Santamaria and Wieber were allowed to revise their reports, claiming Petrov was resisting and that they were in fear for their safety as well as the safety of the community.

    The initial report was apparently destroyed.


    The two deputies are charged with assault under color of authority, battery with serious bodily injury and assault with a deadly weapon.

    And other deputies will likely be charged with making false statements, theft, bribery and witness tampering, according to the San Francisco Examiner.

    The deputy who tried to bribe the homeless couple is Shawn Osborne, who is on paid administrative leave.

    Meanwhile, no charges have been filed against Petrov, who was left with broken bones in both hands, deep cuts in his head and mild traumatic brain injury.

    He is, however, facing unrelated drug and gun charges after an FBI raid in his apartment in March.

    Prosecutors say that none of the deputies involved in the chase, including the multitude that arrived after the initial beating, had activated their body cameras during the pursuit except one, who turned it on by accident.

    That footage, which has not been released, is now part of the investigation.

    Both Santamaria and Wieber turned themselves in today and were released on bail.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/california-deputies-charged-in-viral-video-beating-more-deputies-facing-charges-for-coverup/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2016, 09:26:53 AM
    Alabama Cop Who Paralyzed Indian Man Cleared of State Criminal Charges After Two Federal Mistrials

    The Alabama cop who left an Indian grandfather paralyzed because he chose to stroll through his son’s neighborhood without knowing how to speak English is no longer facing state criminal charges.

    Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange apparently figured it was pointless to proceed with assault charges against Madison police officer Eric Parker considering two federal trials resulted in two mistrials.

    “After a careful review of the witness testimony included in 2,000 pages of federal trial transcripts and a re-evaluation of the evidence, we are seeking to dismiss State charges against Mr. Parker,” Strange stated in a press release today.

    But all it takes is a cursory review of the dash cam video from the February 6, 2015 incident below to show Parker is another power-drunk thug of a cop.

    Parker’s defenders will say that Sureshbhai Patel deserved what he got because he was walking through the neighborhood peering into garages.

    But even if he was doing that, he was doing it from the public sidewalk he was walking on.

    Besides, having just arrived from India to visit his family, he was probably curious at how different things are here.  And probably figured he was free to do that considering how much the United States hypes its freedom to the world.

    But curiosity is just another word for suspicious in the eyes of police. And freedom takes a back seat to police in this country as we learn daily.

    Parker, who was 26 years old, testified that he felt threatened by the 57 year old man.

    And he gave the old spiel about fearing for his life because Patel had his hands in his pockets, which Parker called “passive resistance” – failing to see the irony in that is exactly what Gandhi practiced, who just happens to be another frail, Indian man, one who happened to preach non-violence.

    Martin Luther King, Jr. also practiced passive resistance, but that was also met with violence from police in Alabama.

    But unlike Gandhi and King, Patel was not even protesting. He was not out to make change.

    He was just out for a stroll.

    According to WHNT19:

    Parker testified Patel gave indications from his behavior that he posed a threat to Parker and the officer he was training.

    That included Patel repeatedly walking away from the officers when they approached to investigate possible trespassing as well as putting his hands in his pocket, described as ‘passive resistance.’

    Parker told jurors he did not use a ‘leg sweep’ to ground Patel, saying when he shifted his weight to take Patel down, he lost his balance and both men fell to the ground.

    Parker said Patel pulled his left hand away four times while he was trying to control them. He said the fourth time resulted in the takedown.

    Parker reiterated several times throughout his testimony during prosecution’s questioning that the actions he took were in the interest of officer safety. On responding to a call about a suspicious man lurking in the neighborhood and look into garages, Parker said “I was there to investigate.”

    Parker has been on paid administrative leave since the incident, but now that he is free from all charges, he will likely return to his beat to keep the neighborhoods safe from people like Patel, who arrive in this country without learning English.

    “When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language,” said (Parker’s defense attorney) Robert Tuten. “Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone.”

    The federal judge who dismissed his case earlier this year agreed with Parker’s attorneys that Patel committed a crime by walking out of the house without identification.

    However, Madison Police Chief Larry Muncey was outraged at the incident and fired Parker, but Parker appealed, which is why he is on paid leave.

    And Muncey was found guilty of contempt of court when a federal judge discovered he had questioned his officers about their testimony.

    Muncey sent emails demanding to know why some of his officers who were called as witnesses had testified that the takedown was within policy. Muncey, who said he had a duty as chief to correct his officers, was found guilty last month of criminal contempt of court and fined $2,500.

    Muncey is now on paid administrative leave as he appeals the decision.

    So to sum it up, the only person convicted from this incident was the guy who wanted to fire Parker for his actions.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/alabama-cop-paralyzed-indian-man-cleared-state-criminal-charges-two-federal-mistrials/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2016, 01:43:36 AM
    Gang of Cops Choke Innocent Man Unconscious Because There Was a Beer Can in the Parking Lot

    San Leandro, CA – In a blatant abuse of authority, San Leandro police officers were caught on body cam video choking an innocent man unconscious and arresting him under false pretenses. Although the suspect was charged with resisting arrest, driving under the influence, and multiple weapons violations, the district attorney later dismissed all of the charges against him.

    In January 2015, San Leandro Police Officers Michael Olivera and Alexander Ying approached 51-year-old Douglas Babbitt, who was sitting in his vehicle while speaking to a friend on his cell phone. Spotting a beer bottle in the 7-Eleven parking lot, Olivera began interrogating Babbitt despite the fact that the officer had no probable cause to believe that the beer belonged to Babbitt.

    “Did I say it was your beer?” Olivera asked.

    “Yeah, you asked me if it was my beer,” Babbitt responded.

    “Alright,” Olivera offered.

    “So how am I gonna put a beer way over there when I’m sitting over here?” Babbitt asked.

    “Well, who does it belong to?” Olivera retorted.

    “Why don’t you ask the person who put it there?” Babbitt retaliated. “Because I don’t know.”

    “Well, do you know who put it there?” Olivera tried again.

    “No,” Babbitt calmly answered. “Anything else you want to ask me?”

    “No,” Olivera lied, “But why you so aggravated?”

    “’Cause you come asking about a beer that wasn’t mine,” Babbitt replied.

    Although Babbitt handed over his driver’s license and offered to take a breathalyzer, Olivera instead suddenly grabbed Babbitt’s arm and handcuffed his wrist before aggressively twisting his arm.
    “I’m not gonna resist,” Babbitt could be heard on police body cam video. “Why are you searching?”

    An unidentified officer smashed Babbitt’s passenger window for no apparent reason while Olivera continued twisting his handcuffed arm. As Babbitt peacefully exited the vehicle, several officers tackled him to the ground while incessantly repeating, “Stop resisting! Stop resisting!”

    According to Olivera’s body cam video, Babbitt did not appear to resist and actually lost consciousness as one of the officers applied a carotid restraint, or chokehold, used to prevent blood from passing through the carotid artery. After twitching and convulsing for a few moments, Babbitt finally regained consciousness with several stupefied cops standing over his body.

    “You just passed me out,” Babbitt told the overzealous cops.

    “Yeah, you’re alright,” an officer without any medical knowledge responded.

    “I have to sit up,” Babbitt pleaded. “I can barely breathe.”

    After transporting Babbitt to the hospital, police found a knife and four firearms inside his vehicle. Accused by officers of smelling like alcohol with bloodshot eyes, Babbitt was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, driving under the influence of alcohol, and multiple weapons violations. The Alameda County District Attorney’s office later dismissed the charges after watching the video and discovering that a toxicology report found Babbitt did not have any alcohol in his system that night.

    According to Babbitt, the former Army reservist has repeatedly been followed and questioned by San Leandro police, but this was his first arrest. In July 2015, Babbitt filed a lawsuit accusing the officers of violating his constitutional rights and using excessive force, while unlawfully arresting and falsely imprisoning him.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-choke-innocent-man-unconscious-reason/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2016, 11:32:43 PM
    This man was looking at up to 10 years in prison because of those cops. These criminal cops should face at least 10 years of prison.

    Man Exonerated and Cops Exposed as Lying Thugs After Video Surfaces Refuting ‘Official’ Story

    San Francisco, CA – Caught on video assaulting a man and later lying to justify his actions, a San Francisco police officer was accused of perjury before a federal judge dismissed the case against his arrestee. Although officers eventually discovered a handgun on the suspect, the judge determined that the police had no legitimate reason to attack and search him.

    On December 1, 2015, a surveillance camera captured roughly a dozen men playing an illegal dice game on the corner when a patrol car suddenly pulled up next to them. As many of the men calmly stood up and began walking away, Officer Nicholas Buckley and his partner exited their vehicle while immediately confronting people on the sidewalk.

    According to Buckley’s report and testimony, Brandon Simpson ignored several commands to stop while concealing his hands under his coat and near his waist. Acting aggressively, Simpson allegedly attempted to “sprint away up the hill” before Buckley tackled him along with other officers and subdued Simpson on the ground.

    But surveillance video from a nearby nonprofit housing building revealed that Simpson had been walking in Buckley’s general direction with his hands clearly visible when the officer abruptly assaulted him. Although Buckley admitted to punching Simpson twice, one of the officers in the video can be seen punching Simpson at least eight times.

    Despite the fact that Simpson did not appear to fight back, several cops tackled him to the ground and subdued him. After finding a loaded handgun on him, the police arrested Simpson and charged him with possession of a gun while on probation for a prior felony. On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed the case against Simpson after watching a video of the incident.

    “The worst thing in the world is the prosecution and conviction of an innocent person, or a conviction based on perjured testimony,” Judge Breyer stated after dropping the charges against Simpson. “The affront is to all of us… I am not enraged, but I am deeply saddened.”

    During Simpson’s recent trial, Buckley falsely testified to witnessing Simpson’s aggressive behavior and attempt to flee. But after watching the surveillance video of Simpson’s arrest, Breyer dismissed the federal charges against him on Thursday while publicly accusing Buckley of committing perjury.

    “The video was unequivocal in rebutting everything the police officer testified to — at least to all the pertinent details,” Breyer admitted after dismissing the case.

    Facing up to 10 years in prison based on a cop’s false testimony, Simpson walked out of court a free man, while Breyer ordered prosecutors to give copies of the video to San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr. Even though cops are rarely charged with perjury, District Attorney George Gascón has received pressure to prosecute Buckley and his partner, Officer John Fergus, with committing perjury under oath.

    “Video has become a champion of justice,” declared Public Defender Jeff Adachi. “They should be charged with perjury.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/judge-dismisses-case-accusing-cop-lying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2016, 12:50:59 PM
    Los Angeles Deputies Forced to Release Handcuffed Man when Cop Watchers Catch them Making Unlawful Arrest

    Spotting a man riding a bicycle on a sidewalk, Los Angeles sheriff’s deputies sprung into action and stopped their car, ordering the man off his bicycle.

    They then handcuffed Ricky Munday and frisked him, telling him he was breaking the law.

    But two of Munday’s friends – also riding on the sidewalk – came riding up on the scene with their cameras recording, telling the deputies they had no grounds to detain him because they were out of their jurisdiction.

    “Fuck you, you can’t ride a bike on the sidewalk,” shouted Daniel Saulmon aka Tom Zebra.

    “What city are we in ? Tell me the ordinance. Why are you handcuffing him?”

    Turns out, the deputies were wrong to detain him because it is not illegal to ride a bicycle on the sidewalk within Los Angeles city limits.

    But it is illegal to do so in the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County.

    And it apparently is such a serious offense that people need to be handcuffed and frisked.

    The incident took place earlier this month on Vermont Avenue, which serves as a border between city and county. The east side, where the detainment took place, is within the city. The west side is county.

    But when Saulmon and his friend, Katman, began berating the cops for unlawfully detaining their friend, several more sheriff patrol cars sped up.

    Eventually, at least five patrol cars had pulled up to the scene with at least ten deputies – all for three men riding their bikes on the sidewalk.

    But the deputies eventually became aware that they were detaining a man who had broken no law and released him.

    The first video below is Katman’s, and it is the best quality. The second video is Munday’s, and shows the initial detainment just before the 4:30 mark.

    And the last video is Zebra’s.







    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/los-angeles-deputies-forced-to-release-handcuffed-man-when-cop-watchers-catch-them-making-unlawful-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2016, 11:58:33 PM
    Cops Kill Unarmed Man on Body Cam — But There Was No Investigation Since Cops Didn’t Fire a Shot

    Hayward, CA — A routine traffic stop by BART police officers quickly turned deadly for a California father after police escalated force to the point he suffocated to death. After filing a lawsuit, the family has chosen to make the body camera footage public.

    On May 23, 2014, James Greer was pulled over by BART police and given a field sobriety test.

    According to the police report, which we will learn is untrue, police claimed that Greer “got out of his vehicle but would not participate in a field sobriety test.” However, the body camera footage shows that Greer was entirely compliant, and he merely sought to inform the officers of his hernia and injuries.

    As the stop progresses, cops begin to swarm the non-violent and obedient man. Decidedly scared of the massive police presence, Greer puts up his hands and merely attempts to back away.
    “Don’t be walkin’ away,” barks an officer.

    “Wait, wait, wait, wait, what are you guys doing to me?” Greer asks as he is swarmed by police officers who immediately begin attacking him and bringing him down.

    Greer, who was 380 pounds the night he was killed, had a hard time putting his arms completely around his back. Officers, utterly ignoring this physical impossibility, continued to force Greer’s arms back.

    “Hey, hey, hey, hey! You’re breaking my arm,” Greer says in agony as cops jump all over him, slamming him to the ground.

    “When he was on the ground I hear him screaming in agonizing pain,” Greer’s former wife, Deana Greer said.

    “Mr. Greer, you need to stop resisting, or you’re going to be tazed,” says an officer as five other officers pounce on the non-violent man who is only trying to prevent his face from being slammed into the ground and the excruciating pain of his stomach hernia.

    Greer is tasered three times as multiple cops sit on him, squeezing the air out of this distressed large man.

    Police then place Greer in a restraint device called “the wrap,” which is designed to immobilize a suspect.

    After suffocating this father for 6.5 minutes, cops then turned Greer over to find that he was unconscious and turning blue. Instead of helping him or rendering aid, police are seen and heard on the body cam footage laughing and making jokes.

    According to their report, police said, “emergency medical personnel immediately intervened.” However, Greer family attorney Fulvio Cajina, after reviewing the body cam footage, says that is not at all what happened.

    “You see that his lips look blue and discolored. This is someone in urgent medical distress,” Cajina said. “Nearly 7 minutes went by before anyone tried CPR on Mr. Greer. There’s no sense of urgency. In fact, what they’re doing is they’re joking around.”

    One hour after Greer had been pulled over, he was pronounced dead at the Saint Rose Hospital.

    Tom Nolan, a criminologist at Merrimack College who worked as a Boston police officer for 27 years, was sharply critical of the actions of officers after viewing the video, reports the East Bay Times.

    “I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a hyper-exaggerated, borderline-hysterical response,” Nolan said. “We don’t need 20-plus police officers, including superior officers, on the scene to take a guy into custody for a drunk driving offense.”

    “I’d say that the heavy hand of the Taser is what contributed to this guy’s demise,” Nolan added.

    His father died from the “excessive and unbearable weight of the officers” and from “multiple Tasings,” son, Joseph Greer says.

    According to the state-sanctioned medical examiner’s report, however, Greer died from “exerting himself while under the influence of PCP.”

    To add insult to death, the Hayward police never investigated Greer’s death because, according to ABC7 News, the county’s policy has been to only investigate deaths in which police fired their weapons.

    In spite of the video evidence which shows the officers lied in their reports because a gun was not fired, this man’s death was a non-issue to the department.

    “He was kind of the glue that always kept everyone together,” Deana Greer said. “We believe police are there to protect us and to see somebody who we trust to do such a thing. I don’t think I will ever accept that.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-kill-unarmed-man-body-cam-investigation-cops-fire-shot/

    http://abc7news.com/news/i-team-investigation-hayward-family-blames-police-for-mans-death/1340093/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2016, 12:27:39 PM
    Chicago Cop Charged with Felony After Beating Handcuffed Patient

    A Chicago man was held down, beaten with brass knuckles and left naked in a jail cell before being taken to a hospital for injuries where he was then beaten again by the same cop while still handcuffed.

    Chicago police officer Clauzell Gause was charged with official misconduct on May 17 after newly-released surveillance video from 2014 captured him pushing a handcuffed man into a hospital room, throwing him face-first into a wall and then punching him in the face before shoving him onto a hospital bed.

    According to a lawsuit filed by the victim’s attorney, Jerome James was in a restaurant drive-thru throwing a beer bottle in the trash when he was arrested and taken to Calumet District lockup on June 3, 2014.

    There, he exchanged words with one of the officers, which prompted a vicious assault by Gause, who beat him with brass knuckles while another officer held him down.

    According to the Chicago Tribune, video footage from the jail shows Gause carrying something metal in his hand after attacking James, but the city’s law department denies video from inside the cell shows the beating.

    After beating James, Gause and a second officer who has not yet been charged, stripped him naked and left him for hours in a jail cell, bloodied and with a broken tooth, according to the lawsuit.

    Only after another inmate complained to a supervising sergeant that he needed medical attention was James transported to Roseland Community Hospital.

    That’s where the 6-foot-6 Gause who weighs 235 pounds claims he was suddenly assaulted by James during a blood pressure check, which prompted him to handcuff the man, and then reciprocate the alleged assault, along with another officer.

    However, video of that assault has yet to surface.

    According to prosecutors, photographs and medical records show James suffered swelling and lacerations to his forehead.

    Julie Herrera, an attorney for James, told the Tribune that officers at Roseland Community Hospital claimed James was a “violent mental” and sedated him against his will before they transported him to Jackson Park Hospital for a mental evaluation, where it was determined he had no mental issues.

    He was released without being criminally charged later that day.

    Records show the city of Chicago settled the lawsuit with James in December of 2015 for $60,000.

    Gause was demoted to desk duty, but remains on the department’s payroll. Anthony Guglielmi, Chicago Police Department’s chief spokesperson, said it was unclear if further disciplinary action would be taken in light of the recent felony charge.

    According to city records, Clauzell Gause managed to stockpile 11 complaints from 2006-2014 including a 2013 excessive force complaint and the one made by James, who filed his complaint with the Independent Police Review Authority three days after the assault at the hospital.

    An attorney for Gause, William Fahy, however, told Judge Adam Bourgeois Jr. in court on Tuesday that the officer had no disciplinary record.

    After telling Gause he had to face the consequences of his actions, Judge Bourgeois said, “I don’t think locking you up is going to serve any purpose. … I don’t think you are a danger to anybody.”

    Fahy told the judge his client ‘served the police department honorably’.

    Judge Bourgeois declined to watch video of the incident after the state attorney insisted twice and released Gause on his own recognizance, which means the officer did not have to pay bail.

    If convicted, Gause faces anywhere from probation to five years in prison.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2016, 12:35:00 PM
    Arizona Cop Recalls “Terrifying” Experience as He Shot and Killed Unarmed Daniel Shaver as New Crime Scene Photos Surface and Body Cam Video Expected to be Released Today

    Arizona police officer Philip “Mitch” Brailsford, a bespectacled Ramboesque nerd of a cop, was one of six Mesa police officers who had their guns drawn on Daniel Shaver after they ordered him out of his hotel room last January.

    Show us your hands, they first shouted. Place your hands behind your head, they then ordered. Place your hands on the floor and come crawling to use, they then commanded.

    Shaver, a 26-year-old man who only moments earlier was showing his pellet gun to a couple of new acquaintances he had met in the hotel, began crawling towards the cops.

    At one point, it appeared as if his shorts began slipping off and he instinctively reached back to pull them up, but a Mesa police sergeant told him not to do it again because it can be perceived as a threat.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver begged as he kept crawling.

    But his shorts kept slipping, so he reached back again to pull them up and that was when Brailsford fired five rounds from his personal AR-15 rifle with the words “You’re Fucked” inscribed on it, killing Shaver instantly.

    One bullet struck Shaver in the back of the head. Another stuck him in the upper back. Another ripped into his upper chest. Another tore into his lower leg. And another grazed his cheek.

    The autopsy report indicates that Shaver had his head down on the carpet for those two bullets to enter the back of his head and upper back.

    Brailsford would later tell investigators that watching Shaver crawl towards him wearing nothing but a t-shirt and shorts was a “terrifying” experience each time he reached back to pull up his shorts, which you can see in the photo above, were not tightly fastened.

    But his body cam footage convinced Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery that there was no need to kill Shaver – which is why the other five cops held their fire – and charged him with second-degree murder.

    Today, Brailsford is due in court for a preliminary hearing where a judge will determine if second-degree murder is the appropriate charge, for which he has already pleaded not guilty.

    Shaver’s widow, Laney Sweet, said in March that they plan to offer him a plea deal that would reduce the charge to negligent homicide, which would not be the appropriate charge considering it is geared towards individuals who accidentally kill another person through negligence.

    Brailsford meant to kill Shaver. That’s what cops are trained to do. And that is what Brailsford apparently could not wait to do, carrying his personal AR-15 even though he had a loaded Glock in his holster.

    A personal AR-15 with the words “You’re Fucked” inscribed on the side. He wanted to send a message. That much is clear.

    But he is the son of a longtime internal affairs officer from the Mesa Police Department and we know how the justice system works, which is why it would not be surprising if he is offered the negligent homicide charge, which could leave him with a light probation sentence.

    Mesa police are already claiming Shaver was highly intoxicated. And his autopsy states he had a blood alcohol content of .29, which is more than three times the legal limit – a figure the local media ran with.

    However, the autopsy was not conducted until four days after the shooting, which means the figure could be a “false positive” because alcohol can continue fermenting in the body post mortem.

    Special:
    In fact, numerous studies can be found on the internet determining that alcohol readings on bodies can only be trusted within 48 hours of death.

    According to Atlanta attorney Ken Shigley, who simplified it best:

    As discussed in a recent article by forensic scientist Jim Wigmore, over half of postmortem blood is not sterile, and contains bacteria, yeast or fungi. In addition, postmortem blood sugar (glucose) concentration can be 7 to 10 times greater than blood before death.

    Fermentation is the formation of alcohol from sugar.  Yeasts can convert 100 milligrams of glucose into approximately 40 to 50 milligrams of alcohol.  Bacteria and fungi generally can convert 100 milligrams of sugar into 10 – 20 milligrams of alcohol.

    During fermentation other volatile compounds such as acetaldehyde and n-propanol are produced and may assist in the determination of elevated blood alcohol scores due to fermentation or putrefaction.

    It has been well established for many years that:

    Blood alcohol levels at autopsy are valid up to 48 hours after death when solid protocols are observed in the collection and storage of samples.

    Alcohol levels in samples of blood taken from the intact heart are as significant as levels of blood from the femoral veins.

     False blood alcohol levels greater than 0.200% can be generated in autopsy blood samples which are not correctly stored.

     High blood alcohol levels may develop during putrefaction and levels up to 0.200% do not necessarily indicate that alcohol was imbibed before death.

    Significant false high blood alcohol levels do not develop during incineration in absence of putrefaction.

    However, the man and the woman who were with Shaver in the hotel room in the moments leading up to his death said that he was very drunk. In fact, they did not even know him until he met them in the elevator and invited them to his room for a shot of Bacardi.

    That was when he showed them his pellet guns, which he uses to shoot birds that fly into Walmart. A specialized job that took him from Texas to Arizona.

    In the room, Shaver and the other man were pointing the weapon out the window, checking out the scopes, which led to a couple downstairs to call the front desk, who in turn, called police.

    But Arizona is an open carry state and guns are common, so it does seem like it was an overreaction just based on something somebody saw through a window.

    Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery has refused to release the body cam footage, but Sweet’s attorney, Ben Meiselas, said it should be released today, so stay tuned.

    Below is a video from Laney Sweet where she talks about her frustrations about not being allowed to see the body cam footage, which includes a secret recording she made of the prosecutor, which is legal in Arizona.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/arizona-cop-recalls-terrifying-experience-shot-killed-unarmed-daniel-shaver-new-crime-scene-photos-surface-body-cam-video-expected-released-today/

    (link includes several graphic crime scene photos)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2016, 09:56:27 AM
    Innocent Woman Beaten by Maniac Cop for Filming Him Accuse Her of Stealing Her Own Car

    Reading, PA – Caught on video punching an innocent woman in the face and destroying her cell phone for recording him, a Pennsylvania police officer faces criminal charges after allegedly falsifying reports and blatantly abusing his authority. Although the deceitful cop initially accused the woman of punching him, several videos of the incident revealed that he lied in order to justify the beating and false arrests.

    At 12:24 p.m. on April 5, Reading Police Officer Jesus Santiago-DeJesus pulled over Marcelina Cintron-Garcia and her boyfriend for not using a turn signal before parking despite the fact that surveillance video revealed she actually did use her turn signal.

    “The vehicle comes back to a Mitsubishi. You’re driving a Honda,” Santiago-DeJesus falsely accused the couple, who had been driving a Mitsubishi Mirage.

    After Santiago-DeJesus accused them of driving with a license plate belonging to a Mitsubishi instead of a Honda, Cintron-Garcia walked over to the front emblem to show the moronic cop that the car she was driving is a Mitsubishi. But he was having nothing of it.

    According to the initial police report, Cintron-Garcia suddenly pulled away before punching Officer Santiago-DeJesus. But according to five videos that recorded the incident, Santiago-DeJesus falsified the reason for pulling her over and falsely accused her of driving a stolen car before resorting to violence for no reason.

    While complying with the officer’s orders, Cintron-Garcia began recording the incident on her cell phone when Santiago-DeJesus abruptly attempted to grab the phone from her hand. As Cintron-Garcia refused to hand over her phone, two mindless cops aggressively grabbed her boyfriend and threw him against the sidewalk even though he did not pose an immediate threat.

    After snatching the phone from her hand, Santiago-DeJesus violently smashed it against the ground in an impulsive act of cowardice before shoving Cintron-Garcia and punching her in the face for no apparent reason. According to police, Cintron-Garcia required staples in her scalp after Santiago-DeJesus hit her head against an exposed metal pipe.

    “I cried for three days in jail thinking about my kids,” Cintron-Garcia told WGAL.

    Spending three days in jail, Cintron-Garcia was charged with assault, harassment, and resisting arrest. Although her boyfriend did not appear to commit any crimes on the videos of the incident, Joel Rodriguez was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

    Withdrawing the charges against Cintron-Garcia and her boyfriend, Berks County District Attorney John Adams announced Wednesday criminal charges against Santiago-DeJesus for official oppression, tampering with evidence, false reports, and criminal mischief. Pending an investigation into Santiago-DeJesus’ overzealous actions, the department has placed him on paid administrative leave.

    None of the officers who assisted Santiago-DeJesus in his unjustified assault currently face any criminal charges.

    Below is the full video of the incident.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cop-arrested-punching-innocent-woman-smashing-cell-phone-recording/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2016, 09:37:37 PM
    Florida Cops Beat Innocent Man who Walked in Store During Drug Bust

    Florida cops were in the midst of conducting a drug bust at a Jacksonville convenience store when they pounced on a man who entered the store – who had nothing to do with the drug suspects – and slammed him against a shelf, then grabbed him and forced him into a back room where they repeatedly punched him.

    Jacksonville sheriff’s officers then charged Demarcus Brown with trespassing and resisting arrest with violence.

    However, surveillance video shows the cops were the only ones who were violent.

    The incident took place Monday as Brown was sitting in his car outside the store waiting for his father who was inside buying a drink.

    Brown noticed cops entering the store and decided to walk inside to make sure his father was all right.

    A video from an outside surveillance video shows a cop pointing at Brown as he walks in, apparently talking to him, but Brown doesn’t seem to hear or see him.

    But that is what prompted the cop on the outside to run after Brown after he had stepped inside and grab him from behind, shoving him against a counter, then throwing him against a shelf, causing food items to spill.

    That, of course, prompts other cops to jump in and grab him in a headlock where they force him into a back room – perhaps thinking there would be no camera there – where they proceed to repeatedly punch him.

    It’s almost like a scene out of Goodfellas except the thugs are the ones wearing badges.

    News4Jax, which broke the story, blurred out the faces of the cops, even though their names and faces should be made public.

    This is what Brown told reporters:

    “I’m trying to cover my face so they won’t hit me in my face. Then they pushed me in the back room and get me on the ground, get me in a choke hold. I tell them, ‘I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe.’ I said like three or four times,” Brown said. “Finally they let go, then another officer hit me in the head twice.”

    News4Jax also resorted to former cop Gil Smith, who is their in-house police apologist, who said Brown erred when he failed to heed the police order not to go inside, even though we are not even sure it was much of a command considering Brown doesn’t appear to hear it.

    “He sees a bunch of police run in there with guns in their hands. Even though he may have been warned, he wants to go and check on his father. So I can understand someone wanting to do that. But still, you have to obey what police are saying,” Smith said.

    The article states that internal affairs is reviewing the footage, which will determine if the cops were out of line.

    But it is clear they did considering Brown was never a threat to anybody, no matter how hard they will try to spin the truth and tell us he was a threat.

    The video cannot be embedded, so click here to watch it.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/florida-cops-beat-innocent-man-who-walked-in-store-during-drug-bust-in-store/

    http://www.news4jax.com/news/investigations/video-captures-officer-punching-man
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 21, 2016, 03:04:41 PM
    Los Angeles Deputies Convicted for Beating Schizophrenic Man in Jail, Marking 21 Convictions in Federal Investigation

    Two Los Angeles sheriff’s deputies were convicted this week for beating a mentally ill male inmate to “teach him a lesson” after he had mouthed off to jailers in March 2010.

    Bryan Brunsting, 31, and Jason Branum, 35, were both convicted on counts of conspiracy, falsifying records and violating the inmate’s civil rights, marking a total of 21 Los Angeles sheriffs deputies to have been convicted of crimes since the federal government began investigating the largest jail system in the country in 2011.

    The mayhem all started at The Twin Towers Correctional Facility when Philip Jones left his jail cell without permission and mouthed off to guards when confronted, according to the Los Angeles Times.

    It was then that the deputies led Jones down a hallway off the security camera grid. They then beat Jones in order to “teach him a lesson”, court documents note.

    Jones is schizophrenic.

    Brunsting and Branum decided that the beating was a great on the job learning opportunity for rookie Deputy Josh Sather. At the commands of Brunsting and Branum, Sather participated in the beating , but backed out once he saw the inmate was not resisting. Sather was not charged in the case because of his cooperation with prosecutors as a key witness.

    And if beating the inmate wasn’t enough, Brunsting and Branum also pepper sprayed him. In a final act of recklessness,  Brunsting and Branum capped off the beat down by spreading open the inmates legs and kicking him in the genitals.

    Upon the beating the deputies convened to come up with a trumped up story on justification for the beating; which they eventually put in official reports to superiors. The falsified reports indicated that Jones threw punches at the deputies, which prompted them to restrain Jones.


    “The civil rights in the Constitution are guaranteed to everyone in the United States, even those who are being held in jail, “The victim was tackled. Brunsting and Branum then beat the victim with fists, kicked him in the genitals and sprayed him in the eyes with pepper spray,” United States Attorney Eileen M. Decker said.

    A defense attorney for the defendants noted that his clients used reasonable force on Jones.

    The sentencing is scheduled for August, both Brunsting and Branum face up to 40 years in prison each. Brunsting is the subject of a civil lawsuit in a separate civil rights case.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/la-deputies-convicted-beating-schizophrenic-man-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 21, 2016, 04:18:29 PM
    Los Angeles Deputies Convicted for Beating Schizophrenic Man in Jail, Marking 21 Convictions in Federal Investigation


    And if beating the inmate wasn’t enough, Brunsting and Branum also pepper sprayed him. In a final act of recklessness,  Brunsting and Branum capped off the beat down by spreading open the inmates legs and kicking him in the genitals.



    A defense attorney for the defendants noted that his clients used reasonable force on Jones.

    The sentencing is scheduled for August, both Brunsting and Branum face up to 40 years in prison each. Brunsting is the subject of a civil lawsuit in a separate civil rights case.





    Yet more Scumbag Big Tough Cops.
    At least 1 out of the 3 is half decent.

    We can but hope they get a lengthy prison sentence
    And are Poked in the eyes & Kicked in the Bollocks Every Single Day.

    And That Stupid Defence attorney -- May they also be Subjected to the
    Reasonable force dished out by the 2 Scumbags & See what they have to
    Say about their brush with reasonable Force.. ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2016, 05:14:33 PM
    What these Cops Did Would Have Gotten a Citizen Killed — Instead they Were Let Go

    Fairlawn, OH – While driving more than twice the speed limit in a failed attempt to evade fellow officers, an Ohio cop was caught on police dash cam and body cam videos leading officers in a high-speed chase to capture him. Although his fellow officers immediately released the reckless cop after catching and recognizing him, prosecutors eventually decided to charge the officer over two weeks after the incident.

    Around 1:44 a.m. on May 7, Fairlawn officers noticed an SUV driving 77 mph in a 35-mph-zone. As the pursuing patrol car turned on its lights and siren, the SUV attempted to flee by turning down several streets before blindly running into a blocked residential driveway.

    “I have a silver SUV coming westbound on Market, and it is flying!” an officer could be heard exclaiming over the police radio moments before the fleeing vehicle was trapped inside a driveway.

    According to police dash cam video, officers exited their patrol car with guns drawn while the SUV rolled backwards and forwards in a failed attempt to escape before finally parking. After realizing that the vehicle was occupied by two off-duty Fairlawn officers, an on-duty officer could be heard in the video informing the criminal cops, “Well, that was fucking stupid!”

    Identifying the reckless driver as off-duty Fairlawn Police Officer Justin Herstich and his passenger as off-duty Fairlawn Police Officer Brandon Foster, Fairlawn police immediately released both cops without a citation or field sobriety test despite the fact that Herstich was captured on video driving over twice the speed limit.

    When asked why his cops were caught running, Fairlawn Police Chief Ken Walsh absently responded, “Don’t know what was on their mind. They should’ve pulled over. They didn’t.”

    Sixteen days after the initial incident, the Akron Prosecutor’s Office finally decided to charge Herstich with failure to comply, reckless operation, and speeding. Although reckless operation and speeding are minor misdemeanors, failure to comply is a first-degree misdemeanor that carries up to six months in jail.

    Herstich’s passenger, Officer Foster, currently does not face any charges.

    “They made a bad judgment in what they did there,” Chief Walsh tried to rationalize the criminal actions of his off-duty officers. “We place a lot of trust in them prior to that and we’re shocked. We’re surprised. I don’t know what word to use on it.”

    Had Herstich and Foster been civilians instead of off-duty cops, the system would not have allowed them to escape criminal charges that night. And, as we’ve seen time and again, they could have even been killed. But according to Akron Deputy Chief Prosecutor Craig Morgan, Herstich was not charged with a felony because no one was wounded, traffic was light, and the chase was relatively short.

    While denying allegations of preferential treatment for police officers who regularly work with the prosecutor’s office, Morgan unconvincingly stated, “We look at it just as we would anybody else.”

    Both officers currently remain on the force.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-finally-prosecuted-leading-police-chase-speed-limit-released-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 25, 2016, 01:18:31 PM
    Arizona Judge Releases Body Cam Footage from Daniel Shaver Shooting Death

    An Arizona judge finally released body cam footage from the shooting death of Daniel Shaver, which led to murder charges against Mesa police officer Philip “Mitch” Brailsford.

    However, the videos are edited, removing the actual shooting of the unarmed man who died begging for his life.

    But we already know Brailsford shot and killed Shaver after he was ordered to crawl towards police on his hands and knees.

    And we already know that Brailsford was the only officer out of six that felt compelled to shoot.

    Brailsford later told investigators that it was a “terrifying” experience for him as he watched the unarmed man crawling towards him  – essentially saying he was in fear for his life.

    But it was Shaver who was in fear for his life.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver said according to a witness, who was also ordered to crawl towards police.

    But Mesa Police Sergeant Charles Langley never gave him that assurance.

    “There is a very severe possibility that if you make another mistake you are going to get shot,” Langley said according to prosecutor Susie Charbel as she read the transcript of the body cam footage in court.

    Shaver then tried to ask a question.

    “Shut up. I’m not here to be tactful and diplomatic with you. You listen, you obey.”

    The incident took place on January 18, 2016 inside a fifth-floor hotel room where Shaver was showing his pellet guns to two acquaintances.

    Mesa Police Officer Brailsford kneeling down in hallway niche with his AR-15 Rifle

    People downstairs saw a man through the window appearing to be pointing a gun from inside and called the front desk, who in turn, called police.

    After police ordered them out the room, they issued several commands to Shaver, telling him to show his hands, then place his hands on his head, then come crawling towards them.

    As he was crawling towards them, his shorts kept slipping off, so he reached back to pull them back up, only to be threatened with death by one officer, which was when Shaver begged them not to shoot him.

    However, his shorts slipped off again, prompting him to pull them up again, which was when Bailsford fired five times, killing the 26-year-old man instantly.

    Two videos were released, the first one showing officers arriving to the hotel, the second one showing officers standing in the fifth-floor hallway, ordering Shaver and his acquaintance to step outside.

    “Listen to my instructions or it’s going to be very uncomfortable for you,” one cop yells.

    Special:
    The video then cuts to a clip showing the woman asking the officers if Shaver is dead, telling them she is very scared.

    “It is unfortunate that the Mesa PD coverup continues,” said Shaver’s widow, Laney Sweet, in an email to Photography is Not a Crime.

    “My husband was brutally murdered while he begged for his life. Redacting the evidence won’t change the facts.”

    Brailsford has pleaded not guilty to the murder charges.

    His next court date is June 30. Read the transcript of the incident here.


    (The judge ordered the part of the actual shooting to be redacted)

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/arizona-judge-releases-body-cam-footage-from-daniel-shaver-shooting-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 25, 2016, 01:21:24 PM
    Colorado Cop who Fabricated Shooting on Himself Receives Probation

    Trying to capitalize on the fabricated War on Cops, a Colorado cop fabricated a shooting on himself last year, prompting a statewide manhunt that ended up costing $38,000 in taxpayer money.

    Commerce City police officer Kevin Lord even pointed out a suspect in a photo lineup, telling investigators that he was 90 percent sure it was the man in the photo, encouraging officers to arrest him.

    A $20,000 reward was offered for the capture of the suspect while Commerce City police issued the following statement after the November 5, 2015 incident:

    “Words cannot begin to express the outpouring of love, prayers and support we have felt from the law enforcement community and the community at large. Kevin is a fighter and our family is focused on his recovery. At this time, we ask the media and public to respect our privacy and focus on the one thing that matters: catching the suspect and bringing him to justice.”

    But five days later, Commerce City police arrested Lord after he confessed to lying about the incident, using his back-up gun to shoot into his bulletproof vest.

    The 52-year-old cop was charged with one felony count of attempting to influence a public official and one misdemeanor count of false reporting in the incident.

    Even though he had confessed after police found multiple discrepancies in his story, he pleaded not guilty to those charges in March.

    He then accepted a plea deal where he pleaded guilty to one count of  felony tampering with evidence and a misdemeanor charge of false reporting – claiming he fabricated the attack because he suffered from post traumatic stress disorder.

    The judge sentenced him to 36 months of probation and 500 hours of community service.

    In 2013, he was suspected of staging another attack on himself, which did not stop him from receiving a Purple Heart award.

    Special:
    And there may have been another incident in 2014, according to CBS Denver:

    Records show that in 2013 Commerce City then paid Lord $10,864.53 for 38 days he was on injury leave, presumably related to the Purple Heart incident.

    In 2014 the department paid Lord for another 17 days he was on injury leave. That total was $4,888.70. The nature of the 2014 injury was not specified in the records released to CBS4 on Tuesday.

    The judge also ordered him to undergo a mental health evaluation. And the sentence also forbids him from ever being a cop again.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/colorado-cop-fabricated-shooting-receives-probation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on May 25, 2016, 03:09:25 PM
    “Officer of the Year” Sentenced to Life in Prison for Horrifying Child Porn and Abuse



    Fort Pierce, FL — In an unprecedented sentence for a police officer, a former cop with the Fort Pierce and Port St. Lucie police departments, was sentenced to life in prison Monday after being convicted of child exploitation.

    According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Micheal Edwin Harding pleaded guilty in February to possession and distribution of material involving sexual exploitation of minors, attempting to coerce and enticing a minor to engage in sexual activity and production of child pornography.

    This hero cop was named Officer of the Year in 2011, when he was an officer at the Fort Pierce Police Department. Shortly after he was given the award, Harding left the Fort Pierce Department to join Port St. Lucie in 2012.

    The reason for leaving Fort Pierce, was due to the fact that he was found to have been viewing and posting child porn online while sitting in his patrol car during his midnight shifts.

    According to court documents, Harding posted multiple images and videos to a chat room on a popular social media application between July 23 and Aug. 4, 2015. The images — later found to be on Harding’s phone — depicted children engaging in sexually explicit acts, according to the Palm Beach Post.

    Harding, who is married with three children, would spend his shifts posting child porn with an app called Kik messenger that allowed him to access a chat room called #toddlerfuck, where child porn was viewed and exchanged, according to a report by PINAC.

    The nature of the videos investigators found Harding in possession of, is nothing short of horrifying. According to court documents, the videos depicted children as young as 6-years-old being raped by adults.

    Officers of the year, as the Free Thought Project has pointed out time and again, raping, murdering, and molesting, is nothing new. However, being given a life sentence is incredibly rare.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-year-sentenced-life-prison-unspeakable-crimes-children/#fVizxCGrH0ye0dIv.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2016, 09:51:26 PM
    Sickening. This criminal gang still lurks out there.


    Chilling Transcript and More Video Released from Arizona Police Shooting Death of Daniel Shaver

    In the moments before he was shot and killed, Daniel Shaver was trying his best to comply with orders from Mesa police, specifically Sergeant Charles Langley, who was berating and threatening to kill him while barking out a series of confusing orders, according to a chilling transcript from an officer’s body camera released today.

    “Occupants of Room 502, this is the Mesa Police. Listen to my instructions or it’s going to become very uncomfortable for you. The female is to step outside of the  room,” Langley ordered while Shaver was still inside the room with Monique Portillo, a woman he had met with another man earlier that evening before inviting them both back to his room for drinks.

    Mesa police had been called to the hotel after people downstairs reported seeing a man holding a gun through a fifth-floor window, which was just a pellet gun Shaver was showing to his two new friends, one he used for his pest control job.

    The man, Luis Nunez, had stepped out to call his wife, however, so it was only Shaver and Portillo inside the room when six Mesa police officers stood in the hallway with their guns drawn, ordering them out.

    The transcripts shows that Mesa police officer Philip “Mitch” Brailsford asked another officer for another magazine to keep in his pocket.

    Brailsford ended up shooting and killing Shaver with an AR-15 rifle that had the words “You’re Fucked” inscribed on it.

    “Stop. Stop. Get on the ground. Both of you lay down on the ground,” ordered Langley seconds after they both stepped out.

    “Fuck,” says Shaver, a 26-year-old man in town from Texas for a pest control job.

    “Lay down on the ground,” Langley orders again.

    “I did. I did,” Shaver responds.

    “Who else is in the room?” Langley asks.

    “Nobody,” responds Shaver.

    “You’re positive?” Langley asks.

    “I’m absolutely positive,” Shaver responds.

    While Shaver appears to be understanding and responding to the questions, Langley begins berating him for not following instructions.

    “Okay, since apparently we have a failure to comprehend simple instructions, I’m going to go over some of them again, okay,” Langley says.

    “Can you both hear and understand me?” Langley asks.

    “Yes,” Portilla responds.

    “All right, if you make a mistake, another mistake, there’s a severe possibility that you’re both going to get shot. Do you understand that?” Langley says.

    “Yes,” says Shaver, who was married with two children.

    “I do,” Portilla says.

    “Yes,” Shaver repeats. “What the ….”

    “This is … shut up, I’m not here to be tactful and diplomatic with you,” Langley says. “You listen. You obey.”

    “For one thing, did I tell you to move, young man? Did I tell you ….” Langley asks.

    “No, sir. No, sir. No, sir. No, sir,” Shaver responds.

    “Put both of your hands …” Langley orders.

    “No, sir. No, sir,” Shaver continues.

    “Put both of your hands at the top of your head and interlace your fingers,” Langley orders. “Take your feet and cross your left foot over your right foot.”

    Langley again asks if anybody else is in the room an Shaver again reassures him nobody is in the room.

    Portillo asks if she can go to her room.

    “No, you’re not going to do anything but come towards us,” Langley responds.

    “Young man, you are not to move,” Langley says to Shaver. “You are to put your eyes down and look down at  the carpet. You are to keep your fingers interlaced behind your  head. You are to keep your feet crossed. If you move, we’ re going to consider that a threat and we are going to deal with it and you  may not survive it.

    “Do you understand me?” Langley asks.

    “Yes, sir,” Shaver responds.

    “Just let me go,” Portillo says.

    “Young lady, just shut up and listen,” Langley responds.

    “Okay,” she says.

    “All right, you are to keep your feet crossed,” Langley orders, apparently talking to Portilla.

    “Take both of your hands, place them flat in front of you. You are to push yourself up to kneeling position. Now put both hands in the air. Okay, crawl towards us.”

    “I’m so sorry,” Shaver says, apologizing for something that is not clear in the transcript.

    Portilla apparently complies with the orders and she is cuffed and frisked.

    Langley then turns his attention to Shaver.

    “Okay, young man, listen to my instructions and do not make a mistake,” Langley says.

    “You are to keep your legs crossed, do you understand me?” Langley asks.

    “Yes, sir,” Shaver responds.

    “You are to put both of your hands on down straight out in front  of you. Push yourself up to a kneeling position. I said keep your legs crossed.”

    “I’m sorry. I just pushed my …” Shaver tries to explain.

    “I didn’ t say this was a conversation,” Langley responds. “Put your hands up in the air. Hands up in the air. You do that again and we’re shooting you.”

    “No, please do not shoot me,” Shaver pleads.

    “Then listen to my instruction,” Langley says.

    “Okay, I’m trying to do what you …” Shaver says.

    “Don’t talk, listen,” Langley orders.

    “Hands straight up in the air. Do not put your hands down for any reason. If you think you’ re going to fall, you’re going to fall on  your face. If your hands go back into the small of your back or  down, we are going to shoot you.

    “Do you understand me?”

    “Yes, sir,” Shaver says.

    “Crawl towards me,” Langley orders. “Crawl towards me.”

    “Yes, sir, please ….” Shaver says.

    “Don’t …” Langley orders before Mesa police officer Philip “Mitch” Brailsford opens fire five times, killing Shaver.Brailsford later told investigators he found it to be a “terrifying” experience watching Shaver crawl towards him, even though he was standing behind a wall in a door well, which led to second-degree murder charges filed against him.


    None of the officers expressed any shock or regret in that Shaver was now dead, mostly being concerned with getting Portillo out of there, then going into Shaver’s room.

    But not before turning off the body camera. Footage from the camera was released Tuesday, but the actual shooting was redacted.

    Brailsford later told investigators he found it to be a “terrifying” experience watching Shaver crawl towards him, even though he was standing behind a wall in a door well, which led to second-degree murder charges filed against him.

    None of the officers expressed any shock or regret in that Shaver was now dead, mostly being concerned with getting Portillo out of there, then going into Shaver’s room.

    But not before turning off the body camera. Footage from the camera was released Tuesday, but the actual shooting was redacted.

    Full transcript: https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/Daniel-Shaver-transcript.pdf

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/chilling-transcript-released-from-arizona-police-shooting-death-of-daniel-shaver/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2016, 09:57:56 PM
    Some interesting information regarding the Daniel Shaver execution:

    Quote
    Brailsford's father was previously a Mesa Officer. For over 20 years he worked with their PD and was even the head of internal investigations. Tell me why on earth he was granted access to the scene?

    I find it very "convenient" that the bodycams get turned off shortly after the shooting and before they enter Daniel's room. Reports released from Mesa PD are already conflicting about things like if the window was open or not... Some clearly state it was closed, while later on there's pictures of it wide open.

    Brailsford was given the opportunity to sit down and watch the video with his father and then given a private moment to talk BEFORE his recorded interview with Detective Sipe.

    (https://scontent.flas1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/t31.0-8/13308366_1752266541663677_1827864464115370124_o.jpg)


    Quote
    Has anyone noticed how this was originally written up by the officer in charge? They wrote it up as if Daniel Shaver committed Agg. Assault of a police officer. He never assaulted anyone!!!!
    (https://scontent.flas1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/t31.0-8/13305172_167123610356832_4713083323053194399_o.jpg)


    https://www.facebook.com/JusticeForDaniel/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2016, 10:59:36 AM
    You hardly see the "lower the taxes" folks complain when they have to pay out of their own pockets for the crimes of this organized gang.

    Washington Cops Settle Suit for Tasering, Siccing Dog on Non-Resisting Man

    The city of Tukwila in Washington agreed to settle a lawsuit for $100,000 plus attorney’s fee after officers punched a restrained man in the face and head, shocking him with taser darts and then siccing a police dog on him in what the department calls “pain compliance” – a use of force tactic they say falls “within policy.”

    The lawsuit not only alleged officers used excessive force, it also challenged the city’s de facto policy allowing dogs to bite suspects as a “pain compliance” technique.

    A police dog bite is “the most severe force authorized short of deadly force,” according to the 9th Circuit of Appeals.

    On August 22, 2014, Tukwila police officers Brent Frank and Mike Boehmer were dispatched to the city’s United Parcel Service freight facility in response to a call about a man dancing, yelling and walking around the freight yard.

    When the officers arrived, they saw Linson Tara standing with freight yard workers with a hand on his hip.

    Dashcam video shows Frank approach and then grab Tara’s left arm in a two-handed hold while walking him to the front of the police cruiser. That’s when Boehmer arrives on the scene and takes control of Tara’s left arm while Frank grabs Tara by the neck and bends him over backward onto the hood of the police car.

    Boehmer then grabs his taser while Frank lifts Tara off the hood and slams him to the pavement. Frank then begins punching Tara in the head and face while holding him down with his knee.

    As Frank punches Tara, Boehmer shoots taser darts in his abdomen and leg, shocking him several times.

    Frank then releases a police dog named “Ace” from the patrol car that begins biting the man’s legs. While sitting on top of Tara, Frank repositions the dog to an exposed section of his legs making it easier for it to bite him.

    As the dog continues to bite Tara’s leg, Tukwila police officer Don Ames, who was not named in the lawsuit, arrives and places Tara in cuffs while holding a knee on his head.

     Officer Frank then returns the dog back to its cage in the patrol car.
    While the officers remove taser darts and lift Tara to a kneeling position, Tara appears only semi-conscious in the video, and probably out immediately after the beating.

    Tara was then taken to the hospital where he was treated for injuries, including dog bites on his leg and buttocks and then transported to jail where he was charged with three counts of fourth-degree assault that were all later dismissed upon reviewing the video evidence, which doesn’t show an assault.
     

    According to the lawsuit, Frank sicced the dog on Tara “to assist in providing pain compliance” in order to apprehend the dancing man, who the video shows wasn’t violently or forcefully resisting.

    Tara’s lawsuit alleges the department’s use of the police dog to bite his legs was “within their own policy” and his attorney, Joseph R. Shaeffer, sought an injunction against the department alleging the “pain compliance” tactic was unconstitutional.

    The use of police dogs for “pain compliance” was approved and acknowledged by one or more reviewing supervisors who stated the “use of force appears appropriate” and that it was a policy of the city.

    In addition to the $100,000 settlement, the city also agreed to pay an undisclosed amount for Tara’s attorney’s fees.

    Nicholas Hogan Indicted by Department of Justice for Excessive Force

    In a separate case, a federal grand jury indicted former Tukwila cop Nick Hogan for excessive force after he doused a man strapped to a gurney with pepper spray at the Harborview Medical Center in 2011.

    Hogan worked for the Tukwila Police Department from 2009-2012 before he was fired after the city settled for $425,000 in two excessive force claims not related the indictment.

    The department’s decision to finally fire Hogan came in 2012 after the department investigated the 2011 incident at the Harborview Medical Center.

    He also admitted to using knee-strikes to the back of the handcuffed man’s head while he moved him from the back of the patrol car into the hospital.

    Hogan’s fellow cops even complained he was overly-aggressive, especially when it came to dealing with people of color or intoxicated individuals.

    In another case settled by the city Hogan remarked, “this one isn’t going to play basketball anymore” after a black man suffered a broken arm while being arrested by Hogan. The city settled that matter for $175,000.

    The victim in the Harbourview Medical Center incident was also an intoxicated African American man, according to Tukwila police internal-affairs documents.

    Hogan is expected to appear on June 2nd in U.S. District Court for an initial hearing. He has not yet been jailed.

    In 2015, a civil rights lawsuit alleging Tukwila police used excessive force to arrest a 60-year-old handcuffed man who they pepper sprayed and slammed on a car at a bus stop in 2011 settled for $300,000.

    The Seattle suburb Tukwila covers nine and a half square miles with a population just over 19,000.

    Below is the dash cam footage from the freight yard involving Linson Tara and the complaint filed by his attorneys.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/washington-cops-settle-suit-for-tasering-siccing-dog-on-non-resisting-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2016, 11:09:26 AM
    Armed gangsters preying on the weak and elderly again.

    Innocent Elderly Woman Brutalized By Cops at Church on Her Way to Pray, For Asking them to Move

    Los Angeles, CA – Caught on video assaulting an elderly woman in a church parking lot for honking at them, two LAPD officers have recently been named in a lawsuit filed by the innocent 62-year-old woman. No longer able to place her trust in police officers after becoming a victim of excessive force, the traumatized woman has become fearful of interacting with people.

    Early on the morning of April 14, a surveillance video captured two LAPD cops in a marked SUV slowly following 62-year-old Ok Jin Jun’s car into a Koreatown church parking lot. According to CBSNews, Jun admitted to honking her car horn about six times because the police vehicle had been blocking the church driveway.

    After parking her car, Jun was immediately confronted by the two officers and ordered to show her registration despite the fact that she had not committed a crime. Confused and unable to speak much English, Jun attempted to call her husband and a 911 interpreter from her cell phone.

    Suddenly, one of the officers appeared to grab Jun’s arms for no reason before both cops abruptly shoved the elderly woman against her own car. Although Jun did not pose an immediate threat, the officers slammed her onto the pavement before placing her in handcuffs.

    “They grabbed her by the wrists, twisted her into a submission position,” Jun’s son, David, told CBSNews.

    Shortly after the incident, four more police vehicles arrived to provide backup for the two cowardly LAPD officers arresting an innocent elderly woman. Instead of allowing a 62-year-old to attend morning services, the two cops decided to brutally assault her for simply honking at them.

    Taken to the hospital to receive treatment for her wounds, Jun was photographed with a large contusion and laceration on the right side of her face. Psychologically traumatized by the violent experience, Jun said, while using her son as an interpreter, “I’m even fearful of people because police officers are the ones I’m supposed to be able to trust.”

    Although the LAPD refused to comment on the incident, a source within the department unofficially told CBSNews that the officers involved are under review for use-of-force and that “mental health” could be a factor. The source did not disclose whether the mental health in question refers to the victim or the aggressive cops who attacked her inside a church parking lot.

    Jun recently filed a lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles, the LAPD, and the two officers caught assaulting her on surveillance video. No cops currently face criminal charges for attacking the churchgoing woman.
    Below is the full video of the assault posted to Facebook by Jun’s son.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-elderly-woman-sues-cops-assaulting-church-parking-lot-morning-prayer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2016, 11:12:46 AM
    i will be adding to this too
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2016, 11:17:44 AM
    Insane case. Why did the police force this person to forcibly expose his genitals to them and have them photographed? Why are they not being held accountable for their actions?

    Teen in Manassas City ‘sexting’ case sues Prince William prosecutor, detective for civil rights violations

    The investigation of a “sexting” case involving a Prince William County teenager, and the desire by prosecutors and police to repeatedly obtain photos of his genitalia, sparked a national uproar in the summer of 2014. Authorities backed down from their second search warrant for explicit photos, and the teen was placed on probation. The case took a further turn last December when the detective, David E. Abbott Jr., was accused of molesting two young boys and killed himself as police moved to arrest him at his Gainesville townhouse.

    [...]

    In June 2014, Abbott did get a search warrant and photograph Sims with a cell phone, which attorney Victor M. Glasberg alleged was manufacturing child pornography. When Abbott and Richardson obtained a second search warrant, for photos of Sims erect, reports in The Washington Post “prompted a firestorm of public protest,” Glasberg wrote, causing Richardson and Abbott to withdraw the warrant.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/true-crime/wp/2016/05/26/teen-in-manassas-city-sexting-case-sues-prince-william-authorities-for-civil-rights-violations/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2016, 11:59:45 AM
    http://www.sbnation.com/longform/2014/3/12/5496096/james-scott-jailhouse-boxer-profile


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 28, 2016, 01:31:05 PM
    Federal Judge Allows Plaintiff to Sue Officers After He Was Detained for Videoing a Police Station

    An Austin federal judge has ruled that an amateur photographer can pursue a civil rights case against four police officers after they detained and handcuffed him for filming the Round Rock Police Department building.

    The background to the recent decision in Turner v. City of Round Rock is as follows. Phillip Turner sued the officers and the City of Round Rock in a U.S. District Court last year under U.S.C. § 1983, alleging the defendants deprived him of his rights under the First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

    Turner is a student and part-time employee whose hobbies include photography and filming police for public viewing on his website.

    Turner alleges in his suit that he was approached by an officer in 2014 while he was filming the front of the Round Rock police department and the activity outside the building. He was not armed and was only carrying a video camera.

    Turner told officers he was taking pictures of the building. He also refused to show the police his identification. After the officers insisted he identify himself, Turner asked officers if taking pictures of a public building was illegal. They told him it was not.

    When Turner asked if he was free to go, the officers told him he was not. Turner replied that he would identify himself if the officers were accusing him of a crime. The officer then grabbed Turner's arm and handcuffed him. Three other officers later arrived and continued to question him while in handcuffs until he provided his name and date of birth. He was later released.

    After Turner filed his suit against the defendants, both the officers and the City of Round Rock filed separate motions to dismiss the claims.

    In his May 26 ruling, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman refused to dismiss a majority of claims filed against the officers who alleged they had qualified governmental immunity from Turner's First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims.

    Pitman concluded that Turner had sufficiently plead that his Fourth and Fourteenth amendment rights had been violated by the detention. He noted that the Fourth Amendment accommodates the temporary detention of a person as long as they have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.

    "However, defendants never articulate what sort of 'criminal activity' they reasonably suspected," Pitman wrote. "The officers' argument is circular—they suspected Turner of being suspicious; he confirmed their suspicion by behaving suspiciously."

    Pitman also ruled that Turner had sufficiently pled that his First Amendment rights had been violated after officers detained him after photographing the police building. Noting that the U.S. Fifth Circuit has not yet considered whether citizens have a right to film police officers, he ruled that Turner established that it was a violation of his free speech rights to be detained for photographing the police.

    "The court finds that the right to film or photograph police in public, without interfering with police business and subject to reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions, is clearly established," Pitman wrote.
    Pitman has yet to rule on the City of Round Rock's motion to dismiss Turner's claims.

    Kervyn Altaffer, a partner in Dallas' Altaffer & Chen who represents Turner, said the ruling made it clear that the police detained his client for something that isn't against the law.

    http://www.texaslawyer.com/id=1202758743915/Federal-Judge-Allows-Plaintiff-to-Sue-Officers-After-He-Was-Detained-for-Videoing-a-Police-Station
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 28, 2016, 08:40:06 PM
    “Officer of the Year” Sentenced to Life in Prison for Horrifying Child Porn and Abuse



    Fort Pierce, FL — In an unprecedented sentence for a police officer, a former cop with the Fort Pierce and Port St. Lucie police departments, was sentenced to life in prison Monday after being convicted of child exploitation.

    According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Micheal Edwin Harding pleaded guilty in February to possession and distribution of material involving sexual exploitation of minors, attempting to coerce and enticing a minor to engage in sexual activity and production of child pornography.

    This hero cop was named Officer of the Year in 2011, when he was an officer at the Fort Pierce Police Department. Shortly after he was given the award, Harding left the Fort Pierce Department to join Port St. Lucie in 2012.

    The reason for leaving Fort Pierce, was due to the fact that he was found to have been viewing and posting child porn online while sitting in his patrol car during his midnight shifts.

    According to court documents, Harding posted multiple images and videos to a chat room on a popular social media application between July 23 and Aug. 4, 2015. The images — later found to be on Harding’s phone — depicted children engaging in sexually explicit acts, according to the Palm Beach Post.

    Harding, who is married with three children, would spend his shifts posting child porn with an app called Kik messenger that allowed him to access a chat room called #toddlerfuck, where child porn was viewed and exchanged, according to a report by PINAC.

    The nature of the videos investigators found Harding in possession of, is nothing short of horrifying. According to court documents, the videos depicted children as young as 6-years-old being raped by adults.

    Officers of the year, as the Free Thought Project has pointed out time and again, raping, murdering, and molesting, is nothing new. However, being given a life sentence is incredibly rare.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-year-sentenced-life-prison-unspeakable-crimes-children/#fVizxCGrH0ye0dIv.99










    Well for once The Fcuking Scumbag Cop Got A Proper Sentence
    Let's hope he gets Raped everyday.
    The perverted Bastard.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2016, 12:10:02 PM
    Body Cam Catches Cops Make Up Charges to Arrest Innocent Man Who Helped Them

    Chandler, AZ — In May 2014, Luke Hein was arrested after officers accused him of interfering with an officer’s investigation. However, recently released body camera footage shows that Hein was asked by police for help, gave them help, and was then assaulted and charges fabricated against him.

    The incident began after Hein’s ex-girlfriend, Zoe Shunick, had crashed a car into a tree at the couple’s apartment complex while driving drunk. Shunick was uncooperative with police and refused to exit her vehicle. At this point, Hein, who was inside his apartment, had come outside to see what was happening.

    As Hein talked to police, they asked him to help talk Shunick out from the car. After successfully calming her down and getting her out of the vehicle, one officer who apparently couldn’t wait to escalate the situation, shoved Shunick.

    Seeing a cop brutalize a woman like this prompted Hein to say, “Hey.”

    When the cop’s violence was questioned, the situation became even more chaotic. As the body cam shows, officer Brian Hawkins, then grabs Hein, slams him into the hood of the car and chokes him — for helping them.

    Quickly realizing that his temper got the best of him, Hawkins immediately said, “I apologize things went the way they did.” Shortly after, he said, “I’m not charging you with any crime.”

    After Hein is told that he will not be charged with a crime, several more officers arrive on scene, one of whom is Sgt. William Nocella.

    ABC 15 reports what happened next as Nocella discusses falsifying charges against Hein:

    "When getting briefed from Officer Hawkins about what happened, Sgt. Nocella said, “So he can go ahead and head to jail, right?”

    As Hawkins responds by saying he doesn’t have a problem with letting Hein go, Nocella interrupts and said, “Once the handcuffs go on, he goes to jail.”

    Nocella continues, “If you date an animal, this type of (expletive) happens. So if he decides to help an animal and not act like a law-abiding citizen, his sorry (expletive) goes to jail.”

    “Hindering?” asks Officer Hawkins, regarding what charge they should place on Hein.

    “Hindering, uh, not following or obeying, whatever,” Nocella answers. “You were here. If you can make a stretch, if he raises his voice above what mine is now, he goes for (disorderly conduct). But he goes in a patrol car going to jail in the next five (minutes).”

    Hein was subsequently arrested and charged with a crime that he never committed.

    It took months for the department to complete their “investigation,” and once the video was finally shown to prosecutors all charges against Hein were dropped.

    For lying on video and falsely accusing a man of a crime, Nocella was given a single day of suspension. However, as police records indicate, falsifying charges was only the tip of the iceberg.

    As the body cam footage later revealed, the police report was entirely false. According to their report, Shunick “charged” officers prompting the attack, but the footage shows that never happened.

    Also, after the footage was released, an investigation revealed that Nocella approached the two officers and reprimanded them for wearing body cameras.


    In an interview with internal investigators, Hawkins said Nocella “pressured” him to stop wearing it.

    “He told me that these cameras will never help us they will only hurt us,” Hawkins said.


    As for Nocella, ABC15 asked Chandler Police if Hawkins’ claims against Nocella were investigated further. A spokesman said, “There has not been a subsequent investigation; it is closed.”

    Nocella remains on the job and a danger to public safety — entirely financed by the citizens of Chandler.


    Below is a perfect example of why there is a growing mistrust of police in America.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/body-cam-catches-cops-charges-arrest-innocent-man-helped/



    http://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/unlawful-arrest-body-camera-video-now-the-focus-of-federal-lawsuit-against-chandler-police

    Quote
    However, Hein said it took months for officials to release the video. Before they did, they continually tried to get him to take a plea deal, records show.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 30, 2016, 03:35:20 AM
    Happy Memorial Day.

    VA Cops Attack 71-Year-Old Vietnam Veteran for Walking Through Metal Detector Without Showing ID

    Video surfaced this Memorial Day weekend showing police officers wrapping their arms around the neck of a 71-year-old Vietnam veteran and tackling him to the ground before handcuffing him inside a Veterans Administration clinic in El Paso.

    His crime: He allegedly walked through a metal detector without first showing identification while having something on (or in) him that set the alarm off.

    However, Jose Oliva said he placed his identification into the bucket with the rest of his belongings that were in his pocket to be screened.

    And even if he didn’t, there was no need to abuse him as they did.

    However, the VA police officers were found to have done nothing wrong, according to the Office of Security and Law Enforcement (OS&LE) and Law Enforcement Training Center, which oversees VA police.

    But the video does not lie. Oliva did nothing to deserve the violent treatment he received from police, who ended up dragging him into a back room and citing him for disorderly conduct.

    The incident took place in February but Oliva, who has filed a lawsuit, just obtained the video and shared it with KVIA-TV, which stated the following:

    Oliva says he was stunned, he was scared and hurt. The guards, employed by the VA and considered the clinic’s police, cuff him, and take him to a side room where questioning continues. All the while, Oliva says he doesn’t understand why he’s being treated so aggressively in the very place where he seeks care.

    “I’ve seen my psychiatrist three times, and he told me my PTSD treatment that he started with me over a year ago just got shot,” Oliva said.

    The VA guards ended up giving Oliva a citation for disorderly conduct. ABC-7 reached out to the VA for their side of the story. They tell us:

    “After the incident on February 16, 2016, the officers involved were interviewed and videotapes of the incident were reviewed by representatives from the Office of Security and Law Enforcement (OS&LE) and Law Enforcement Training Center….The investigators found that the charge of excessive use of force leveled by the Veteran could not be substantiated. Our Police Service takes seriously its role to safeguard our Veterans, family members, volunteers and employees while they are on our campus. Our officers’ focus is to promote a safe and secure environment and prevent criminal activity.”

    The VA says it requires all its officers to go through eight weeks of training to prepare them to deal with any situation that may arise.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/va-cops-attack-71-year-old-veteran-for-walking-through-metal-detector-without-showing-id/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 30, 2016, 10:08:30 AM
    Federal Judge Allows Plaintiff to Sue Officers After He Was Detained for Videoing a Police Station

    An Austin federal judge has ruled that an amateur photographer can pursue a civil rights case against four police officers after they detained and handcuffed him for filming the Round Rock Police Department building.

    The background to the recent decision in Turner v. City of Round Rock is as follows. Phillip Turner sued the officers and the City of Round Rock in a U.S. District Court last year under U.S.C. § 1983, alleging the defendants deprived him of his rights under the First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

    Turner is a student and part-time employee whose hobbies include photography and filming police for public viewing on his website.

    Turner alleges in his suit that he was approached by an officer in 2014 while he was filming the front of the Round Rock police department and the activity outside the building. He was not armed and was only carrying a video camera.

    Turner told officers he was taking pictures of the building. He also refused to show the police his identification. After the officers insisted he identify himself, Turner asked officers if taking pictures of a public building was illegal. They told him it was not.

    When Turner asked if he was free to go, the officers told him he was not. Turner replied that he would identify himself if the officers were accusing him of a crime. The officer then grabbed Turner's arm and handcuffed him. Three other officers later arrived and continued to question him while in handcuffs until he provided his name and date of birth. He was later released.

    After Turner filed his suit against the defendants, both the officers and the City of Round Rock filed separate motions to dismiss the claims.

    In his May 26 ruling, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman refused to dismiss a majority of claims filed against the officers who alleged they had qualified governmental immunity from Turner's First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims.

    Pitman concluded that Turner had sufficiently plead that his Fourth and Fourteenth amendment rights had been violated by the detention. He noted that the Fourth Amendment accommodates the temporary detention of a person as long as they have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.

    "However, defendants never articulate what sort of 'criminal activity' they reasonably suspected," Pitman wrote. "The officers' argument is circular—they suspected Turner of being suspicious; he confirmed their suspicion by behaving suspiciously."

    Pitman also ruled that Turner had sufficiently pled that his First Amendment rights had been violated after officers detained him after photographing the police building. Noting that the U.S. Fifth Circuit has not yet considered whether citizens have a right to film police officers, he ruled that Turner established that it was a violation of his free speech rights to be detained for photographing the police.

    "The court finds that the right to film or photograph police in public, without interfering with police business and subject to reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions, is clearly established," Pitman wrote.
    Pitman has yet to rule on the City of Round Rock's motion to dismiss Turner's claims.

    Kervyn Altaffer, a partner in Dallas' Altaffer & Chen who represents Turner, said the ruling made it clear that the police detained his client for something that isn't against the law.

    http://www.texaslawyer.com/id=1202758743915/Federal-Judge-Allows-Plaintiff-to-Sue-Officers-After-He-Was-Detained-for-Videoing-a-Police-Station

    The same dude was photographing and video taping one of our police stations prior to this incident, or shortly thereafter can't remember which. I can see the judge letting it go to court as rights violations are not likely to get dismissed at that level. I would be very surprised if the plaintiff wins though.

     http://www.nationalterroralert.com/suspicious-activity/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on May 30, 2016, 04:08:56 PM
    The same dude was photographing and video taping one of our police stations prior to this incident, or shortly thereafter can't remember which. I can see the judge letting it go to court as rights violations are not likely to get dismissed at that level. I would be very surprised if the plaintiff wins though.

     http://www.nationalterroralert.com/suspicious-activity/

    Oh... well... if some random website says it's suspicious, it must be! ::)

    Unless there's a specific and articulable, suspicion of criminal activity, that's reasonable, then the cops have no authority to detain someone (modulo state "stop and identify" statutes that are, by and large, a travesty). And if they have no authority, then the cops should mind their own business and not use the powers of their office to harass citizens.

    It's about time cops start to be held accountable for their power-tripping, instead of hiding behind their shield and the checkbook of the taxpayers. And video is making all the difference because the typical cop narrative can now be rebutted by an objective and accurate recording of the incident. Although - wouldn't you know it - the unions and the bootlickers are claiming it doesn't tell the whole story and blah blah blah and difficult job and blah blah blah and life on the line and blah blah blah.

    It's simple: if a cop uses his power to detain (or arrest someone) someone without meeting the statutory requirements to detain or arrest, he should be held accountable and if his department won't do it, the Courts should.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2016, 07:06:23 PM
    Oklahoma Reserve Deputy Sentenced to Four Years in “Fuck Your Breath” Slaying

    When it came down to it, the pay-for-play cop wannabe was treated nothing like a cop when it came to sentencing.

    Instead of the usual probation or slap-on-the-wrist sentencing, Oklahoma reserve deputy Robert Bates was sentenced to four years in prison for shooting a man in the back while trying to taser him – the maximum allowed by law for the charge of second-degree manslaughter, according to News 9.

    His mistake: admitting he had made a mistake in the seconds after he shot Eric Harris in the back on April 2, 2015.

    “I shot him, I’m sorry,” Bates was recorded saying as he dropped his gun, a man whose training documents were falsified by Tulsa County Sheriff Stanley Glanz, which led to the sheriff’s resignation.

    Meanwhile, Tulsa County sheriff’s deputy Joseph Byars offered no apologies in the seconds after Bates fired his gun, killing the unarmed man who had been caught up in a sting operation for illegal gun sales.

    “He shot me! He shot me, man. Oh, my god. I’m losing my breath,” Harris said.

    “Fuck your breath,” Byars said. “Shut the fuck up!”

    Byars, obviously, was the properly trained cop in this case. A man who would not only would never had apologized for shooting a man in the back, a man who would have blamed the victim for causing him to fear for his life.


    We know that because we see it almost daily from cops whose training documents were not falsified. They know how to kill and get away with it.

    But Bates was nothing more than an insurance salesman. A rich insurance salesman who lavished the sheriff with donations and gifts and vacations.

    A Sheriff Sugar Daddy who was unable to buy himself a ticket to freedom even as his attorneys argued that it was “an excusable homicide.”

    That, we all know, requires a real badge.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/oklahoma-reserve-deputy-sentenced-to-four-years-in-fuck-your-breath-slaying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 01, 2016, 06:02:37 PM
    South Florida Cop Charged in Shooting Death of Corey Jones Because of Audio Recording

    Palm Beach Gardens police officer Nouman Raja had no idea he was being audio recorded when he pulled up to Corey Jones at 3 a.m. on the side of the road last year and killed him.

    But it was that audio recording that led to his indictment today where he is now facing life in prison.

    And he deserves nothing less.

    He not only pulled up to Jones in an unmarked vehicle wearing plainclothes on October 18, 2015, he never identified himself as an officer.

    And as we’ve seen so many times before, he rewrote the narrative as to what led to the shooting when he called 911 minutes after killing Jones.

    But Jones, a 31-year-old drummer who had broken down on the side of an off-ramp on Interstate 95, was on the phone with a tow truck dispatcher when Raja pulled up.

    And we all know those calls are always recorded for “quality assurance.”

    But the recording became quality evidence against Raja.

    The grand jury indicted Raja on one count of manslaughter by culpable negligence, a second-degree felony that carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison, as well as one count of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm, which can send him to prison for life.

    Perhaps the legal experts will explain how a cold-blooded murder can turn into attempted murder, but if it lands him in prison for life, then it’s all good.

    Raja had claimed he was in fear for his life, of course, claiming Jones pulled out a gun on him after he had identified himself as a police officer.

    He even said Jones had charged him. Textbook police fiction from the cop with a history of disciplinary problems who was also a certified firearms instructor.

    But forensics indicate Jones was running from Raja as he was being shot.

    The recording, which became the key piece of evidence against Raja, captured the following exchange, according to the charging documents, which you can read here.

    Jones: Huh?

    Raja: You good?

    Jones: I’m good

    Raja: Really?

    Special:
    Jones: Yeah, I’m good.

    Raja: Really?

    Jones: Yeah

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Get your fucking hands up!

    Jones: Hold on!

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Drop!

    Raja then fired three time, causing the dispatcher to gasp, “oh my gosh!”

    And he fired three more shots ten seconds later.

    He then called 911 and before the dispatcher could respond, he said, “drop that fucking gun right now.”

    And then he stated the following:

    “I came out, I saw him come out with a handgun. I gave him commands, I identified myself, and he turned, pointed the gun at me, and started running. I shot him.”

    Raja has been taken into custody.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/south-florida-cop-charged-shooting-death-corey-jones/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2016, 08:02:28 PM
    South Florida Cop Charged in Shooting Death of Corey Jones Because of Audio Recording

    Palm Beach Gardens police officer Nouman Raja had no idea he was being audio recorded when he pulled up to Corey Jones at 3 a.m. on the side of the road last year and killed him.

    But it was that audio recording that led to his indictment today where he is now facing life in prison.

    And he deserves nothing less.

    He not only pulled up to Jones in an unmarked vehicle wearing plainclothes on October 18, 2015, he never identified himself as an officer.

    And as we’ve seen so many times before, he rewrote the narrative as to what led to the shooting when he called 911 minutes after killing Jones.

    But Jones, a 31-year-old drummer who had broken down on the side of an off-ramp on Interstate 95, was on the phone with a tow truck dispatcher when Raja pulled up.

    And we all know those calls are always recorded for “quality assurance.”

    But the recording became quality evidence against Raja.

    The grand jury indicted Raja on one count of manslaughter by culpable negligence, a second-degree felony that carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison, as well as one count of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm, which can send him to prison for life.

    Perhaps the legal experts will explain how a cold-blooded murder can turn into attempted murder, but if it lands him in prison for life, then it’s all good.

    Raja had claimed he was in fear for his life, of course, claiming Jones pulled out a gun on him after he had identified himself as a police officer.

    He even said Jones had charged him. Textbook police fiction from the cop with a history of disciplinary problems who was also a certified firearms instructor.

    But forensics indicate Jones was running from Raja as he was being shot.

    The recording, which became the key piece of evidence against Raja, captured the following exchange, according to the charging documents, which you can read here.

    Jones: Huh?

    Raja: You good?

    Jones: I’m good

    Raja: Really?

    Special:
    Jones: Yeah, I’m good.

    Raja: Really?

    Jones: Yeah

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Get your fucking hands up!

    Jones: Hold on!

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Drop!

    Raja then fired three time, causing the dispatcher to gasp, “oh my gosh!”

    And he fired three more shots ten seconds later.

    He then called 911 and before the dispatcher could respond, he said, “drop that fucking gun right now.”

    And then he stated the following:

    “I came out, I saw him come out with a handgun. I gave him commands, I identified myself, and he turned, pointed the gun at me, and started running. I shot him.”

    Raja has been taken into custody.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/south-florida-cop-charged-shooting-death-corey-jones/










    Poor Bloke -- Killed in Cold Blood.

    The old 'in fear for his life' Bollocks hopefully won't save Scumbag cop from
    The life sentence he deserves.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 02, 2016, 01:10:10 PM
    "To serve and protect".

    Ohio Man Beaten and Stuffed in Closet for Four Days Awarded $22 Million

    Already having been accused of murdering a prostitute, East Cleveland Police Detective Randy Hicks was drunk when he and another cop pulled Arnold Black over, accusing the 45-year-old man of possessing a kilo of cocaine because he was driving a truck similar to a known drug dealer.

    When Hicks found no cocaine, he punched Black in the face two times while officer Jonathan O’Leary held him up, telling Black he was angry at having left the bar where he had been pounding drinks with friends.

    Realizing they had left an innocent man bloodied and bruised, the two cops then transported Black to the station and stuffed him inside a storage closet to keep his injuries from going public.

    Black remained in the closet for four days with no toilet, food or water except for a single carton of milk, which kicked off a three-month order in 2012 when he found himself facing prison time on fabricated charges.

    At one point, another East Cleveland police officer discovered Black in the closet and expressed surprise and even concern, allowing Black to use his cell phone to call his fiancee, but forcing him back into the closet after he made the call.

    Black’s fiancee drove to the station to pick him up, but a cop at the front desk told her, “you can’t see people that are under investigation.”

    She left and came back a second time, but was denied again after a cop told her the “jailer is on vacation.”

    It eventually took an East Cleveland councilwoman to spring him from the closet, but he was then transported to an actual jail cell on fabricated cocaine charges.

    MISSING DASH CAM FOOTAGE

    The cops even convinced a grand jury to indict him, even though they presented no evidence, only lies.

    In fact, a dash cam video of the April 28, 2012 traffic stop – which not only would have shown the beating, but have shown Hicks slurring drunkenly – disappeared, never to be seen by the public.

    Special:
    The fabricated charges against Black were dismissed on July 19, 2012 and he filed a lawsuit, which you can read here.

    On Tuesday, a jury ruled in his favor, awarding him $22 million in damages, according to Fox8 News.

    But East Cleveland officials say they will appeal the decision, claiming they had no idea a trial was even taking place, pointing out that not a single East Cleveland attorney attended the three-day trial.

    However, Black’s attorney, Bobby DiCello, told the Associated Press that the judge allowed the trial to proceed because all parties had been notified.

    Still, East Cleveland is on the verge of filing for bankruptcy, so it is unclear how it will pay Black the $22 million.

    Hick resigned shortly after the lawsuit was filed and is now working as a railroad police officer, according to his LinkedIn page.

    DEATH OF A PROSTITUTE

    And Hicks was apparently was never investigated for the death of a prostitute named Sandra Varney in 2007, even though another prostitute told a television reporter in 2009 that he was the last person she was with before she died.

    That prostitute, whose interview can be seen in the video below, also accused Hicks of exchanging drugs for sex with local prostitutes more than 100 times.

    After that report aired, an East Cleveland police detective named Henry “Pete” McCurdy told the East Cleveland Tattler that Chief Ralph Spotts tried to thwart his investigation on Hicks.

    Special:
    Spotts – who has also resigned – was then accused of ordering a SWAT team raid on McCurdy’s home in retaliation, according to the Tattler.

    In 2012, former East Cleveland Mayor Eric Jonathan Brewer wrote an article in the Tattler saying he tried to get the FBI to investigate Hicks for the murder of Varney, but it does not appear as if they ever did.

    However, the FBI did investigate three other East Cleveland cops who ended up indicted last year for stealing money from citizens after conducting illegal searches.

    The second video below shows a citizen named Art McCoy complaining to city council about Hicks being allowed to resign instead of being fired.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/ohio-man-beaten-and-stuffed-in-closet-for-four-days-awarded-22-million/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on June 02, 2016, 06:42:47 PM
    LE are unable to control their weapons.  This has been happening a lot.

    Claim filed against ICE in death of Oakland artist shot with gun stolen from agent's car

    (http://extras.mnginteractive.com/live/media/site568/2016/0602/20160602__ramos~3.JPG)

    (Above) David Burke, center, the mural project's art director, grieves with family and friends of Antonio Ramos after a vigil at the site of the mural project in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015.

    BURLINGAME -- The parents of an artist shot dead in Oakland last year with a gun stolen from the car of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent announced Thursday that it has filed a claim against the agency.

    The claim, a first step in suing ICE, says that the agency has "failed to train their employees" and failed to "follow mandatory regulations, policies and/or procedures for securing and storing a firearm," said Frank Petri, the attorney for the family of Antonio Ramos. Ramos was killed in Oakland on Sept. 29 as he was painting an anti-violence mural under an I-580 overpass on West Street.

    Speaking with reporters at his Burlingame office Thursday morning, Petri said Ramos' family wants to "hold people accountable for not enforcing regulations that weapons be secured by law enforcement."

    The 9 mm Glock handgun used to kill Ramos was stolen from a bag left in an unattended vehicle in San Francisco's South of Market district on Sept. 13.

    An ICE spokeswoman, Virginia Kice, declined to comment on the claim, writing in an email that it was agency policy to not discuss pending litigation. The alleged gunman, Marquise Holloway, is charged with murder and remains jailed without bail. He is due in court later this month.

    The claim comes during a period of growing concerns about weapons being stolen from law enforcement officers after the theft of an FBI agent's handgun in San Francisco last week. It was recovered Tuesday.

    On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, announced he is introducing a bill that would "require standards for federal law enforcement officers to lock their guns when not in use and to institute a reporting mechanism to better understand the frequency and severity of this problem."
    vehicle in San Francisco's South of Market district on Sept. 13.

    An ICE spokeswoman, Virginia Kice, declined to comment on the claim, writing in an email that it was agency policy to not discuss pending litigation. The alleged gunman, Marquise Holloway, is charged with murder and remains jailed without bail. He is due in court later this month.

    The claim comes during a period of growing concerns about weapons being stolen from law enforcement officers after the theft of an FBI agent's handgun in San Francisco last week. It was recovered Tuesday.

    On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, announced he is introducing a bill that would "require standards for federal law enforcement officers to lock their guns when not in use and to institute a reporting mechanism to better understand the frequency and severity of this problem."

    In February, an ICE agent lost his gun in San Francisco when he drove off after leaving it on the roof off his car.

    In January, three FBI weapons were stolen from a car in Benicia in Solano County.

    Pitre also represents the family of Kate Steinle, who was shot and killed on a San Francisco pier last year with a gun stolen from the vehicle of a Bureau of Land Management ranger. The Steinle family filed suit against the BLM last month.

    Her killing, allegedly by Juan Francisco López-Sánchez -- a homeless Mexican national who was in the country illegally after being released to the streets from the city jail despite an ICE request to be notified when he was freed -- ignited a national debate last year on illegal immigration. The rhetorical flames were fanned mostly by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who cited the case as one reason to build a wall along the nation's southern boarder.

    López-Sánchez has pleaded not guilty. His lawyers claim he fired the gun accidentally.

    BLM records show that guns were also stolen from rangers in San Diego in 2010 and Ridgecrest in Kern County in 2012. The San Diego gun was stolen from a ranger's personal vehicle. A BLM investigation found it had been properly secured, records show.

    San Jose Mercury News
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 03, 2016, 02:08:01 AM
    It seems laws only apply to innocent citizens, not psychotic cops criminals.

    This Cop is the Definition of Insanity, Despite 19 Complaints and Macing a Baby, She’s Still a Cop

    Chicago, IL — All too often we hear about a tragic incident of police brutality or police killing and find out after the fact that the criminal cop responsible should have never had a badge in the first place.

    Time and again we see officers with rap sheets longer than their service records, yet they are still given a badge and a gun and sent out on the streets as ticking time bombs waiting to explode.
    Officer Michelle Morsi Murphy is one of those officers.

    In 2013, Officer Murphy came across Rev. Catherine Brown and her two small children, who were returning home. Murphy was driving erratically down the street and nearly hit Brown head on. However, thanks to Brown honking her horn, Murphy stopped just before crashing into the car full of children.

    “It’s a blessing I did blow my horn,” said Brown, recalling that fateful night.

    However, the blessing of stopping a head on collision would quickly morph into a horrifying experience.

    Seemingly too proud to back up and let the mother and her two children pull into their house, officer Murphy jumped out of the vehicle and began swearing at Brown demanding she move her vehicle.

    The dashcam video of the rest of the incident is nothing short of infuriating and horrifying. After pulling her gun multiple times on this innocent family and smashing the cruiser into a car full of children, Officer Murphy jumps out and begins dousing Brown with pepper spray. Murphy was so careless that she sprayed Brown’s small baby too.

    After this incident, it was Brown who was charged with a crime and Murphy who kept her paycheck, her gun, and her badge.


    An eye-opening report from CBS Chicago shows that ramming her car into a mother and macing children is par for the course for this Chicago hero.

    The same year Murphy nearly killed an innocent family, she also arrested an innocent woman for buying legal prescription drugs for her elderly grandmother. She was held in jail overnight for no reason.
    On top of that debacle, she called 9-1-1 while off-duty and made false claims against three innocent people buying food in a convenience store.

    CBS Chicago received a copy of that 9-1-1 call which shows that Murphy blatantly lied about what was going on in the store. Thankfully, there were surveillance cameras which proved that the three men she claimed “robbed the store with a knife” did nothing of the sort, and, in fact, paid for their items without causing a disturbance at all.

    That lie was only the tip of the iceberg, however. The 9-1-1 call recorded a frantic and disturbed Murphy, who was told repeatedly by the dispatch officer to calm down and act like a cop. Lying through her teeth, Murphy then claimed the innocent men robbed another store they never even entered.

    Murphy’s lies got these innocent men pulled over by Chicago PD and held at gunpoint, handcuffed and searched.


    In her brief ten-year stint with the Chicago police department, Murphy has been the subject of multiple lawsuits, has been suspended, and has racked up a whopping 19 complaints. Somehow, this psychotic cop still has her job.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-definition-insanity-19-complaints-including-macing-child-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: M4tad0r on June 03, 2016, 07:06:16 AM
    Missouri Cop Sentenced to Four Years in Prison for Leaving Teen in Coma for Video Recording Traffic Stop


    It started off as a routine traffic stop on a high school student in a residential neighborhood in Missouri with the cop getting angry that the teen was asking questions, so he tasered him for 20 seconds, sending the 17-year-old into cardiac arrest.

    Independence police officer Timothy Runnels then yanked the boy out of the car, handcuffing him before picking him up and slamming him face first into a sidewalk, leaving the boy in a coma.

    Runnels later claimed he had smelled marijuana in the car.

    But witnesses said that Runnels became angry when Bryce Masters would not fully roll down the window. They also said he pulled out his phone to record the traffic stop, asking the officer questions about the legality of the stop, which is what set Runnels off.

    It was only later when Runnels discovered that Masters was the son of a Kansas City police officer, who had taught his son how to ask questions during traffic stops. And the window was apparently broken, which is why Masters was unable to roll it down.

    On Tuesday, 20 months after the September 2014 incident, Runnels was sentenced to four years in prison.

    According to the United States Department of Justice:

    As part of his guilty plea, Runnels admitted that while he was employed as an officer of the Independence Police Department, he deprived the minor of his civil rights by deliberately dropping the minor face first onto the ground while the minor was restrained and not posing a threat to Runnels or others. According to the court filings, Runnels also admitted that his actions resulted in bodily injury to the minor.

    During a sentencing hearing before Senior U.S. District Court Judge Dean Whipple of the Western District of Missouri, the government provided evidence that Runnels deployed his taser into the minor’s chest during a traffic stop and then caused the electric current to run for approximately 20 seconds, four times longer than officers are trained to deploy a taser. Evidence at the hearing revealed that as a result of the tasing, the minor went into cardiac arrest and became unresponsive. Dash camera video of the incident depicts Runnels handcuffing the minor after the taser deployment and then picking him up. The video and other evidence presented at the sentencing demonstrates that Runnels then deliberately dropped the handcuffed victim face-first into the pavement. Although the minor suffered cardiac arrest and facial injuries, he survived the incident due to timely medical treatment by medical personnel at the scene and at the hospital.

    Judge Whipple issued the sentence, which will be followed by two years of supervised release.

    Although Masters is said to have recorded the incident, his phone was seized by Independence police and no further mention was ever made of it. But the incident was also captured on Runnels’ dash cam, which also has not been released.

    And as you can see in the news reports below, Independence police stuck to their guns after the incident, putting the blame on Masters for forcing the cop to almost kill him.

    But because Masters’ friends witnessed the incident, even capturing the tail end of the altercation on video – not to mention the fact that his father is a cop – the FBI was asked to step in and investigate.

    And as a result, Runnels will spend the next four years behind bars.

    Masters recovered from the incident but still suffers from traumatic brain injury.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/missouri-cop-sentenced-four-years-prison-leaving-teen-coma-video-recording-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 03, 2016, 07:32:49 AM
    It seems laws only apply to innocent citizens, not psychotic cops criminals.

    This Cop is the Definition of Insanity, Despite 19 Complaints and Macing a Baby, She’s Still a Cop

    Chicago, IL — All too often we hear about a tragic incident of police brutality or police killing and find out after the fact that the criminal cop responsible should have never had a badge in the first place.

    Time and again we see officers with rap sheets longer than their service records, yet they are still given a badge and a gun and sent out on the streets as ticking time bombs waiting to explode.
    Officer Michelle Morsi Murphy is one of those officers.

    In 2013, Officer Murphy came across Rev. Catherine Brown and her two small children, who were returning home. Murphy was driving erratically down the street and nearly hit Brown head on. However, thanks to Brown honking her horn, Murphy stopped just before crashing into the car full of children.

    “It’s a blessing I did blow my horn,” said Brown, recalling that fateful night.

    However, the blessing of stopping a head on collision would quickly morph into a horrifying experience.

    Seemingly too proud to back up and let the mother and her two children pull into their house, officer Murphy jumped out of the vehicle and began swearing at Brown demanding she move her vehicle.

    The dashcam video of the rest of the incident is nothing short of infuriating and horrifying. After pulling her gun multiple times on this innocent family and smashing the cruiser into a car full of children, Officer Murphy jumps out and begins dousing Brown with pepper spray. Murphy was so careless that she sprayed Brown’s small baby too.

    After this incident, it was Brown who was charged with a crime and Murphy who kept her paycheck, her gun, and her badge.


    An eye-opening report from CBS Chicago shows that ramming her car into a mother and macing children is par for the course for this Chicago hero.

    The same year Murphy nearly killed an innocent family, she also arrested an innocent woman for buying legal prescription drugs for her elderly grandmother. She was held in jail overnight for no reason.
    On top of that debacle, she called 9-1-1 while off-duty and made false claims against three innocent people buying food in a convenience store.

    CBS Chicago received a copy of that 9-1-1 call which shows that Murphy blatantly lied about what was going on in the store. Thankfully, there were surveillance cameras which proved that the three men she claimed “robbed the store with a knife” did nothing of the sort, and, in fact, paid for their items without causing a disturbance at all.

    That lie was only the tip of the iceberg, however. The 9-1-1 call recorded a frantic and disturbed Murphy, who was told repeatedly by the dispatch officer to calm down and act like a cop. Lying through her teeth, Murphy then claimed the innocent men robbed another store they never even entered.

    Murphy’s lies got these innocent men pulled over by Chicago PD and held at gunpoint, handcuffed and searched.


    In her brief ten-year stint with the Chicago police department, Murphy has been the subject of multiple lawsuits, has been suspended, and has racked up a whopping 19 complaints. Somehow, this psychotic cop still has her job.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-definition-insanity-19-complaints-including-macing-child-cop/

    WTF
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 03, 2016, 12:49:54 PM
    Only 4 years...

    Missouri Cop Sentenced to Four Years in Prison for Leaving Teen in Coma for Video Recording Traffic Stop

    It started off as a routine traffic stop on a high school student in a residential neighborhood in Missouri with the cop getting angry that the teen was asking questions, so he tasered him for 20 seconds, sending the 17-year-old into cardiac arrest.

    Independence police officer Timothy Runnels then yanked the boy out of the car, handcuffing him before picking him up and slamming him face first into a sidewalk, leaving the boy in a coma.

    Runnels later claimed he had smelled marijuana in the car.

    But witnesses said that Runnels became angry when Bryce Masters would not fully roll down the window. They also said he pulled out his phone to record the traffic stop, asking the officer questions about the legality of the stop, which is what set Runnels off.

    It was only later when Runnels discovered that Masters was the son of a Kansas City police officer, who had taught his son how to ask questions during traffic stops. And the window was apparently broken, which is why Masters was unable to roll it down.

    On Tuesday, 20 months after the September 2014 incident, Runnels was sentenced to four years in prison.

    According to the United States Department of Justice:

    As part of his guilty plea, Runnels admitted that while he was employed as an officer of the Independence Police Department, he deprived the minor of his civil rights by deliberately dropping the minor face first onto the ground while the minor was restrained and not posing a threat to Runnels or others. According to the court filings, Runnels also admitted that his actions resulted in bodily injury to the minor.

    During a sentencing hearing before Senior U.S. District Court Judge Dean Whipple of the Western District of Missouri, the government provided evidence that Runnels deployed his taser into the minor’s chest during a traffic stop and then caused the electric current to run for approximately 20 seconds, four times longer than officers are trained to deploy a taser. Evidence at the hearing revealed that as a result of the tasing, the minor went into cardiac arrest and became unresponsive. Dash camera video of the incident depicts Runnels handcuffing the minor after the taser deployment and then picking him up. The video and other evidence presented at the sentencing demonstrates that Runnels then deliberately dropped the handcuffed victim face-first into the pavement. Although the minor suffered cardiac arrest and facial injuries, he survived the incident due to timely medical treatment by medical personnel at the scene and at the hospital.

    Judge Whipple issued the sentence, which will be followed by two years of supervised release.

    Although Masters is said to have recorded the incident, his phone was seized by Independence police and no further mention was ever made of it. But the incident was also captured on Runnels’ dash cam, which also has not been released.

    And as you can see in the news reports below, Independence police stuck to their guns after the incident, putting the blame on Masters for forcing the cop to almost kill him.

    But because Masters’ friends witnessed the incident, even capturing the tail end of the altercation on video – not to mention the fact that his father is a cop – the FBI was asked to step in and investigate.

    And as a result, Runnels will spend the next four years behind bars.

    Masters recovered from the incident but still suffers from traumatic brain injury.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/missouri-cop-sentenced-four-years-prison-leaving-teen-coma-video-recording-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 03, 2016, 12:56:04 PM
    How many more criminals like him are out there, hiding behind their badge?

    Road-Raging Texas Cop Sentenced to 20 Years for Shooting Woman In Head

    A Houston cop was convicted by a jury last week and sentenced to the maximum of 20 years in prison for shooting a woman in the head during a road-rage incident while he was on paid leave for several other road-raging incidents.

    He was also one of thousands of cops deemed mentally stable by a psychologist who this month pleaded guilty to not conducting face-to-face evaluations with police recruits.

    In other words, there are probably many more like him patrolling the streets of Houston.

    As a Harris County reserve deputy, Kenneth Caplan racked up 18 road rage incidents over a two-year span, including waving his gun at drivers while driving 95 mph on Interstate 45, according to the Houston Chronicle.

    On another occasion, he pulled over a driver in his civilian role – but that driver was a police officer who filed a report.

    On Friday, his defense lawyer said he should have never been licensed as a peace officer.

    Caplan was already on employee probation for anger issues when he opened fire on a 20-year-old Lori Annab for honking her horn when he cut her off during rush hour in Houston on 610 Loop at Stella.

    When the cop caught up with the woman, he rolled down his window and shot into her car.

    Thankfully, the bullet only grazed Annab’s head and despite being badly injured, she survived. But she now suffers seizures as a result of the attack.

    “The doctor told me your case in one in a million. I don’t ever see this,” she said.

    “I feel like I got a taste of death, honestly.”

    Caplan at the time said shooting the woman wasn’t intentional, but even if it was, it still would have been justified because she was driving “aggressively”.

    After all, he told the Houston Press, Annab was not the victim, and she should be the one prosecuted for aggravated assault instead.

    In a January interview with the Press, Caplan explained why he thought he was innocent for shooting into Annab’s car and grazing her head with a bullet.

    “What I did was more than legal. I had every right…I don’t bullshit anybody; I’m not the kind of person to lie. And I’m going to tell you this: If I really tried to kill this woman in cold blood, I wouldn’t be saying anything to anybody. My mouth would have been shut from the very beginning; I would’ve said ‘lawyer,’ and that would have been the end of it. I tried to explain to the detectives…they would not believe it…I’m a fellow fucking police officer. What the hell is wrong with these people?

    Annab is suing not only Caplan and Harris County in civil court, she’s also suing the psychologist who vouched for him becoming a cop.

    “What sticks out is this was not an accident, this was an incident waiting to happen. First, when I read it, it was chilling,” her attorney Steve Couch said.

    It’s a huge question mark, in my opinion,” he added, referring to Caplan’s employment file which showed he had been fired from 12 of the 21 jobs he had over the past 5 years.

    Just last week, Dr. Carole Busick pleaded guilty to tampering with government records and admitted to  tampering with the mental health evaluations of peace officers, because, often times, she never even saw them face-to-face.

    “I engaged a psychologist that said she fell short of the standard in testing and evaluating Caplan if she tested him at all,” Couch said, referring to Dr. Busick.

    According to Harris County financial records, Busick was paid nearly $700,000 for her services since May 2013.

    She was sentenced to ten years of deferred adjudication probation.

    According to the Chronicle, Dr. Busick certified 1,860 of 4,000 Harris County Sherriff’s Office’s employees, which is nearly half. As of May 0f, 2016 only 82 have been retested.

    The Texas Tribune found Busick was signing off on the mental health of police officers without even meeting them face-to-face.

    “I think if she would have evaluated him like she was supposed to, this would have never happened,” said Anabb.

    Kaplan was also kicked out of law enforcement academy for acting hostile, ignoring safety standards, jumping the chain of command several times, and lying.

    Jurors deliberated less than an hour before deciding to sentence Caplan to the 20-year maximum Friday.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/road-raging-texas-cop-sentenced-to-maximum-20-years-for-shooting-woman-in-head/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2016, 09:50:01 PM
    More coverups by the criminal gangs.

    Chicago Cop Who Admitted To Perjury Allowed To Resign After Prosecutor Refuses Criminal Charges

    A Chicago cop who perjured herself under oath about showing a photo-lineup to a robbery victim who was shot in the leg during a liquor store stick-up was allowed to resign last week rather than face criminal charges – even after she confessed to prosecutors she committed the crime.

    According to CBS2, former Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez admitted Allyson Bogdalek was “untruthful” when she testified on the stand that she hadn’t shown a photo-spread to the victim prior to arresting Ranceallen Hankerson, who was charged with attempted murder in connection with the robbery.

    But after she testified, Hankerson’s defense lawyer played a video recording from officer Bogdalek’s patrol car that proved otherwise.

    In the video, Bogdalek can be heard in a cell phone conversation asking a superior officer if she should arrest Hankerson even though the store owner failed to identify him in the photo-array she showed him after the stick-up.

    After the trial, Bogdalek admitted she lied and indeed showed the photo-lineup to the victim. She confessed that police detectives, multiple superiors and Dominick Catinilla, her partner, encouraged her to lie.

    Bogdalek told prosecutors that she wanted to inventory the photo-array but officer Catinella wanted her to forget about it because it “hurt the case” against Hankerson.


    Due to Bogdalek’s misconduct, Alverez’s office swiftly dropped the charges against Hankerson.

    In 2013, Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Freeman opened an investigation and requested Bodalek be charged with three felonies: perjury, obstruction of justice and official misconduct.

    Freeman offered officer Bogdalek’s partner Dominick Catinella immunity in exchange for testifying against her if he agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanor charges of attempted obstruction of justice.

    However, Alvarez ordered Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Freeman not to file criminal charges against the perjurious cop, but gave no written explanation as to why.

    According to prosecutors, Bogdalek became anxious after she was unable to clear her conscience over the lie. So she went to her superior, Sgt. John Ward and asked him what to do.

    Sgt. Ward called officer Catinella to his office, and asked him if they’d shown the victim a photo lineup.

    Catinella said, “no.”

    Sgt. Ward then assured Bogdalek the “argument was settled,” and told her never to mention it again.

    The line up was never inventoried.

    That information became available after a Chicago civil rights attorney filed a suit against Chicago Police for stonewalling his FOIA requests seeking to obtain public records about Bogdalek and Catinella lying under oath.

    According loevy.com, officer Bogdalek was a defendant in three separate civil rights cases: Martinez et al. v. City of Chicago (which resulted in a $650,000 settlement against Chicago), Aldridge v. Haggerty and  Martinez v. City of Chicago.

    After taking criticism from the public for being soft on prosecuting cops, Sally Daly, a spokesperson for the State’s Attorney’s office said, “The ultimate analysis in this case led to the determination that the State would not have been able to meet the legal standard that is required, which is proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”

    “We face a reality here in Cook County, and around the country, that it is extremely difficult to convince judges or juries to convict police officers of misconduct in the line of duty.”

    University of Chicago Law School professor and civil rights attorney, Craig Futterman, viewed the case and told Salon, “If she’s not going to prosecute perjury in this case, it’s difficult to imagine any case in which she would. It sends a strong message to police officers not only that this is OK, but to keep on doing it. This is how we win our cases. She’s not going to bite the hand that feeds her convictions.”

    “Police perjury is so common here in Chicago that we call it ‘testilying'”, he said. “The state’s attorney has relied on those very lies to win convictions.”

    Hankerson’s defense attorney, Nick Graspas, a former Cook County prosecutor said Bogdalek should have been fired.

    “I lost all respect for that office at that point. I thought that when this was going to be reviewed that it was going to be seen for what it is. You can’t reconcile the video with that testimony.”

    Until her resignation, Bogdalek made $84,450 after being relegated to desk duty for over three years, while being investigated by Internal Affairs, according to records obtained by the Better Government Association.

    Alvarez was voted out of office in March losing to Kim Foxx who led with 61 percent of the votes with 76 percent of the precincts reporting, according to the Huffington Post.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/chicago-cop-admitted-perjury-allowed-resign-prosecutor-refuses-criminal-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2016, 11:53:33 PM
    Another attack by a criminal gang.

    Video Refutes Cops Lies, Shows Them Tase and Beat Innocent Fire Fighter for no reason

    St. Petersburg, FL — Multiple videos have surfaced this week highlighting the sheer corrupt nature of police and their ability to lie in order to deprive innocent people of their freedom.

    The video of the arrest of 32-year-old Clinton N. Walker, a Hillsborough County firefighter, and emergency medical technician shows just how much a police officer’s word means — even when it is entirely false.

    According to the official police report, officers said Walker was being combative and assaulted an officer, so they were forced to taser him and kick him. However, surveillance video and cellphone video shows that never happened.

    Walker’s arrest came after St. Petersburg police were called early Saturday to the Del Mar Gastro Lounge at 243 Central Ave., where a man had been knocked unconscious, according to ABC Action News. The injured patron was later hospitalized with a cracked skull and bleeding on the brain, according to a police report.

    According to police, someone said it was Walker who hit the man. However, as the surveillance footage shows, that never happened. The footage actually showed an unidentified man hit the victim, but police never bothered to conduct an investigation prior to assaulting and arresting Walker.

    According to police, when they attempted to detain Walker, he became “combative.” Again, however, surveillance footage shows that never happened.

    What actually happened, according to the video of the incident, is that Walker complied with officers and did exactly as he was told. As he places his hands behind his back to be handcuffed, officer Ruben DeJesus tasers him in the neck. Then, after the innocent man falls to the ground, DeJesus kicks him in the groin.

    “He’s literally standing there with his hands behind his back and then they tasered him to the ground and then continued to taser him.” says Jerry “T” Theophilopoulos, Walkers attorney.

    Walker wasn’t the only one to be assaulted that night either. Another Hillsborough firefighter, Robert Ramirez was also arrested and charged with obstruction of law enforcement. Police claimed Ramirez was “continuously aggressively approaching” them. However, the video shows DeJesus assault him too as he grabbed him by the face and shoved him after he was in handcuffs.

    As for now, Walker is still facing charges and DeJesus remains active on the force. According to the St. Petersburgh Police, their Office of Professional Standards department is reviewing the video.

    When police can fabricate an entire scenario and deprive innocent people of their freedom, and assault and charge them for no reason, something is wrong.

    The video below highlights the importance of recording the police. It also highlights the fact that police can be recorded assaulting innocent people and face no consequences.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-refutes-cops-lies-shows-tase-innocent-compliant-fire-fighter-reason/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2016, 12:25:08 AM
    Home invasions by armed criminal gangs are on the rise.

    NYPD Cop Once Again Points Gun at Man Recording

    For the second time in less than a month, a video has surfaced showing an NYPD cop pointing a gun at a citizen for recording them making an arrest.

    New York City Police Sergeant Diana Pichardo then snatched the phone from the man’s hands, yelling, “Give me that phone, guy!,” while other cops entered and searched his apartment without a warrant.

    But David Rivera – who installs security cameras for a living – had several surveillance video installed inside his apartment, capturing the warrantless invasion.

    However, he still ended up spending 43 hours in jail on felony charges before the charges against him were dismissed.

    Now he plans to file a lawsuit against Pichardo and the NYPD, according to the New York Daily News.

    But Pichardo has already been named in 20 federal lawsuits that have cost the city more than $400,000 in her 13-year career, so she is probably not too worried about this lawsuit.

    The incident took place March 8, 2015 while Rivera was sitting in his apartment with his girlfriend when they heard commotion outside in the hallway.

    Rivera, 45, stepped into the hallway and saw at least two cops wrestling with at least one of his neighbors.

    “I can’t breathe,” a man says, possibly one of the cops.

    “Don’t put your hand around his neck,” Rivera says.

    Then more cops arrive, including Pichardo, who pulls out her gun and points it at Rivera.

    “Don’t point that gun at me,” Rivera says, walking back towards his apartment door.

    Several cops rush towards him and stand in his doorway, refusing to budge as he tells them to back off.

    That was when Pichardo storms up and rips the phone from his hand, calling him a “guy” before other cops arrest him and enter his apartment without a warrant.

    Last month, we reported that an NYPD cop named Risel Martinez was stripped of his gun and badge and assigned to desk duty after he pointed a gun at a man recording him making an arrest.

    Martinez then walked up to the man and punched him in the face. That incident was caught by another man recording.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/nypd-cop-once-again-points-gun-at-man-recording/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 07, 2016, 06:35:30 PM
    Another attack by a criminal gang.

    Video Refutes Cops Lies, Shows Them Tase and Beat Innocent Fire Fighter for no reason

    St. Petersburg, FL — Multiple videos have surfaced this week highlighting the sheer corrupt nature of police and their ability to lie in order to deprive innocent people of their freedom.

    The video of the arrest of 32-year-old Clinton N. Walker, a Hillsborough County firefighter, and emergency medical technician shows just how much a police officer’s word means — even when it is entirely false.

    According to the official police report, officers said Walker was being combative and assaulted an officer, so they were forced to taser him and kick him. However, surveillance video and cellphone video shows that never happened.

    Walker’s arrest came after St. Petersburg police were called early Saturday to the Del Mar Gastro Lounge at 243 Central Ave., where a man had been knocked unconscious, according to ABC Action News. The injured patron was later hospitalized with a cracked skull and bleeding on the brain, according to a police report.

    According to police, someone said it was Walker who hit the man. However, as the surveillance footage shows, that never happened. The footage actually showed an unidentified man hit the victim, but police never bothered to conduct an investigation prior to assaulting and arresting Walker.

    According to police, when they attempted to detain Walker, he became “combative.” Again, however, surveillance footage shows that never happened.

    What actually happened, according to the video of the incident, is that Walker complied with officers and did exactly as he was told. As he places his hands behind his back to be handcuffed, officer Ruben DeJesus tasers him in the neck. Then, after the innocent man falls to the ground, DeJesus kicks him in the groin.

    “He’s literally standing there with his hands behind his back and then they tasered him to the ground and then continued to taser him.” says Jerry “T” Theophilopoulos, Walkers attorney.

    Walker wasn’t the only one to be assaulted that night either. Another Hillsborough firefighter, Robert Ramirez was also arrested and charged with obstruction of law enforcement. Police claimed Ramirez was “continuously aggressively approaching” them. However, the video shows DeJesus assault him too as he grabbed him by the face and shoved him after he was in handcuffs.

    As for now, Walker is still facing charges and DeJesus remains active on the force. According to the St. Petersburgh Police, their Office of Professional Standards department is reviewing the video.

    When police can fabricate an entire scenario and deprive innocent people of their freedom, and assault and charge them for no reason, something is wrong.

    The video below highlights the importance of recording the police. It also highlights the fact that police can be recorded assaulting innocent people and face no consequences.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-refutes-cops-lies-shows-tase-innocent-compliant-fire-fighter-reason/











    Think I'm going to have to stop reading this thread.
    It's Doing me in -- The Never Ending Stream Of Abusing Scumbag Cops
    & There Awful Behaviour.

    Like you say & So Many are Getting Away With It.
    It's Almost Condoned.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2016, 10:02:20 PM
    The armed criminal gang is out of control.

    Cop Rapes Woman in Jail, When Supervisors See Video, They Threaten to Kill Her, Offer Her a Taco

    McCallen, TX — A woman’s stay in jail for an alleged misdemeanor probation violation turned into a nightmare after she was repeatedly raped, on video, and the officers who saw it, covered it up and threatened to kill her if she talked.

    The woman, identified in court documents as A.R., has since filed a lawsuit after the officer who raped her was sentenced to prison for official oppression.

    On May 29, 2014, A.R. was picked up by La Joya police officers for a misdemeanor probation violation and booked into the La Joy City Jail. While the other officers were out on patrol, Felipe Santiago Peralez entered her cell and conducted an “all-night invasion” of her body, according to court documents.

    A.R. has sued Peralez, the City of La Joya, its former and current police chiefs, its city administrator and several La Joya police officers. She also sued the City of Peñitas, its police chief, and two other officers.
    “Peralez began an all-night invasion of plaintiff’s body, by inserting his fingers, hands, and other objects into her buttocks and vaginal areas of plaintiff’s body,” reads the nightmarish 38-page complaint.

    A.R. says she cried in pain throughout the assault, which ended with Peralez forcing her to suck and masturbate him. She says she told two female police officers about the rape, and several other officers saw video footage of it, but each one refused to take her to an emergency room for an examination, as mandated by Texas law for all rape investigations, according to Courthouse News Service.

    The complaint states: “On May 30, 2014 [defendant] Lieutenant Ramon Gonzalez reviewed the video recording, questioned plaintiff (A.R.) about the incident from the night before, obtained her statement, offered her a taco, declined her request for medical attention and released her to [defendant] Peñitas police Officer Elizabeth Garza without offering her medical attention or counseling.”

    It would later be revealed that after A.R. told Garza about the incident, she would threaten her life if she told anyone else about it.

    “Garza advised her that she should forget all about the incident and go on with her life, because ‘people come up missing all the time in the Valley,'” the lawsuit states.
    By the end of the next day, everyone in the department had seen the video, and they all failed to act.

    According to CNS, La Joya’s police chief at the time, defendant Geovani Hernandez, also saw the footage and briefed the city administrator, defendant Mike Alaniz, about it on May 30, 2014, A.R. says. She says Garza also told her boss, defendant Peñitas Police Chief Roel Bermea, about the rape and he told Garza to write a report, but did not call an ambulance for her.

    A year later, once Texas Ranger Robert Garcia heard about the assault and discovered the existence of the video, Peralez was arrested.

    According to CNS, a Hidalgo County grand jury charged Peralez with three counts of civil rights violations and one count of official oppression in August 2015, and he was sentenced to 180 days in state jail and 30 days in county jail after pleading guilty to official oppression and one civil rights charge, court records show.

    The measly sentence highlights the level of corruption within the department and city and shows the extent to which police will go to cover up a crime of one of their own.
    After the rape, A.R. says she was terrified to tell anyone about the incident as she felt her life was in danger.

    “Plaintiff suffered physical pain from intrusions of her vagina and buttocks, loss of weight, concern for the well-being of her children and elderly parents, due to threats made against them by defendants if plaintiff sought recourse regarding the incident,” the lawsuit states.

    In the land of the free, a woman can be repeatedly assaulted, raped, terrorized, and forced into performing various sex acts during an “all night invasion of her body” while she was in the custody of the La Joya police department for a misdemeanor probation violation, and the people who did this to her and covered it up receive little to no punishment. And some people still have the audacity to refer to this as ‘justice.’

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-rapes-woman-jail-supervisors-video-threaten-kill-her-offer-taco/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: 240 is Back on June 07, 2016, 11:57:03 PM
    South Florida Cop Charged in Shooting Death of Corey Jones Because of Audio Recording

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/south-florida-cop-charged-shooting-death-corey-jones/

    kid was a local drummer.   nice young person.   Cop outright lied - caught on recording thanks to the OnStar.

    Without that lucky break, the cop is still on the street today.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2016, 02:30:37 AM
    Stellar work by these buffoons. They arrested and jailed a paraplegic man for a crime where the suspect was seen running. The man was jailed for 2 weeks and the prosecutor didn't even know the man was paraplegic until the night before the hearing.

    Prosecutors drop charges that paraplegic man ‘wasn’t physically capable of’

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/prosecutors-drop-charges-paraplegic-man-wasn-t-physically-capable-video
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2016, 01:13:00 PM
    Cop Exposed for Planting Cocaine on a Woman While Filming an Episode of ‘COPS’

    Gwinnett County, GA — A young woman has been forced to pursue her own form of justice after a police officer, while showing off for an episode of the TV show COPS, allegedly planted fake cocaine on her to make a bust for the camera crew.

    Elizabeth Leigh Butler has filed a lawsuit against the Gwinnett County police for planting “suspected” cocaine on her to show off during the filming of COPS. On Tuesday, Judge Leigh Martin May dismissed large portions of her suit. However, the parts alleging misconduct against Senior Officer Paul Tremblay for framing her, are allowed to continue.

    According to the Gwinnett Daily Post, Martin May found that Butler had sufficiently alleged that Tremblay didn’t have probable cause to arrest her for loitering and plausibly could have planted fake cocaine, leading to a “warrantless arrest.”

    On August 22, 2013, the police state propaganda show COPS was filming on location in Lawrenceville. As the crew pulled into the First United Methodist Church parking lot, they saw Butler sitting in a van with a friend. Tremblay immediately accused Butler of loitering and began puffing his chest for the cameras.

    “Her life has simply been destroyed,” said attorney John Burdges. “It’s well over 33,000 hits. What’s really damaging is the officer’s statements on the video.”

    The video shows Tremblay talking about Butler’s marijuana leaf tattoo and the tattoo of a Grateful Dead bear on her foot as if this implies Butler is some hardened criminal.

    “That is consistent for some drug users,” Tremblay said in the video.

    He then accuses the young woman of having cocaine, but when he tested it, the results were negative. “This was the result of first test. It was pink. There is no drugs in this test,” Burdges said in an interview last August as he held up the evidence, clearly showing a negative result.

    However, according to Burdges, the unedited video shows that after the test came back negative, Officer Tremblay goes to the trunk of his squad car and gets a “second kit.”

    According to Burdges, the unedited version of the footage also shows the officer saying he was going to try another test and then “give them the bad news,” as if he knew his next test would be positive.

    “That would be cocaine. That’s positive for cocaine,” Tremblay said in the video — after the first test failed and after he went to his trunk.

    “We submit that the test was turned positive because the only person that possessed cocaine that night was the officer,” Burdges said.

    Burdges says that both Tremblay and the production team behind COPS knew full well Butler and her friend didn’t have any drugs.

    Butler was then arrested and charged with possession of a controlled substance. However, after the cameras had been turned off, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation found no drugs, so the charges were dropped.

    “Now she’s tarnished for life,” Burdges said after the COPS show made it seem like she was a junky. “I think the officer had the drugs.”

    For wrongly accusing an innocent girl of having drugs, and depriving her of her freedom, Tremblay has faced no consequences.
    He is still employed with the Gwinnett County police department — and he is still enforcing the immoral war on drugs as part of the department’s K9 unit.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-exposed-planting-cocaine-woman-filming-episode-cops/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2016, 03:29:51 PM
    Criminal unions.

    Norman Seabrook, NYC correction officers' union head, arrested on federal corruption charges

    Norman Seabrook, the powerful and politically connected head of the city’s Correction Officers’ Benevolent Association, was arrested early Wednesday on federal corruption charges — including taking a $60,000 payoff delivered in a designer bag, officials said.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/norman-seabrook-arrested-federal-corruption-charges-article-1.2665557
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 09, 2016, 10:29:12 AM
    Innocent Father of 3 In Critical Condition After Cops Responded to Wrong Home and Shot Him

    Stockbridge, GA – Responding to a 911 call, Henry County police arrived at the wrong house on Wednesday and shot an innocent homeowner in the neck. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) is investigating the incident due to the fact that the Henry County police shot a man who had committed no crime and who had no involvement with the initial 911 call.

    According to the GBI, a 911 dispatcher received a call reporting gunshots and a woman screaming for help at 11:54 p.m. on Tuesday. Unable to obtain an exact address, the 911 operator dispatched three Henry County cops who arrived at the wrong house around 1:30 a.m. on Wednesday.

    Hearing his dogs barking around 1:30 a.m., William Powell, 63, grabbed his gun and went outside to check their safety. According to his mother-in-law, Geraldine Huey, 85, Powell had gone outside to investigate a possible intruder.

    “He went to see what the dogs were carrying on about,” recalled Huey, who lives next door. “He (picked) up his gun and when he got to the gate, they shot him.”

    Although officers told GBI investigators that Powell refused to drop his gun, neighbors assert that the cops failed to identify themselves before suddenly shooting Powell in the neck. Shot in his driveway, Powell was taken to Atlanta Medical Center and remains in critical condition as of Thursday morning.

    After eventually locating the correct house, Henry County police discovered that no shots had been fired and no one inside the residence confirmed accusations of a woman screaming.


    “There was an argument there, however, they indicated that there was no screaming for help or shots fired,” GBI spokesman Scott Dutton told WGCL.

    According to the GBI, Henry County PD arrived at the wrong house and shot a man who had nothing to do with the initial 911 call. An Air Force veteran and father of three, Powell had no reason to interact with police according to GBI investigators.

    With no officers injured in the shooting, the Henry County police refuse to identify the cops involved in the attempted murder of an innocent man on his own property. After placing the officer who shot Powell on paid administrative leave, the Henry County police refuse to answer any questions regarding the unnecessary shooting.

    “He worked all his life. Went to school,” Huey described her wounded son-in-law. “Just somebody you’d really like to know. He’s right here for me any time.”

    According to GBI spokesman Dutton, much remains unclear about the shooting.

    “The officers were at the wrong location,” Dutton admitted. “Something got lost in communication.”

    Last month, Henry County police SWAT officers killed a man who had attempted to shoot his father earlier that evening. His father had fled the house unharmed before the militarized cops killed his son.
    Dispatched to the wrong house on a burglary call less than a year ago, a DeKalb County officer shot a homeowner and a fellow officer. A dog was also killed in the needless shooting.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-arrive-wrong-house-shoot-innocent-homeowner-neck/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 09, 2016, 11:50:38 PM
    Inmate: Deputies choked me for smiling in mugshot

    HARRIS COUNTY, TX (KTRK) -- A Harris County jail inmate claims he was assaulted by deputies because he smiled for his mugshot.

    Christopher Johnson is suing after he says two county employees put their hands around his neck and choked him for about 30 seconds.

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2016/06/09/23/351A14FB00000578-0-image-a-4_1465510606536.jpg)

    http://abc13.com/1378404/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2016, 02:57:22 AM
    California Highway Patrol Kills Teenager While Driving and Looking Down at his Computer

    In many states, it is illegal to text while driving, including California. But those states all make police exempt from these laws, believing they are adequately trained to use electronic devices.

    However, this week, a California Highway Patrol officer rear-ended another car while looking down at his department-issued computer, killing a teenage boy in the back seat.

    Weston Sites, 15, died on the scene. The name of the 49-year-old CHP officer has not been released.

    The incident took place Tuesday on Interstate 5 near the city of Orland.

    Sites was riding in the back seat of a 2013 Hyundai when out of nowhere, the CHP cop slammed into the back with his patrol cruiser.

    The officer was using his computer, and didn’t realize the traffic in front of him had slowed. He applied his brakes, but it was too late.

    It has not been stated how fast the officer was driver, but the force was strong enough to send the Hyundai into two other cars. Also, images of both the patrol car and the Hyundai show it was no fender bender.
    Two females in the front seat of the Hyundai were injured, but have since been released from the hospital.

    California Highway Patrol Sgt. Tony Odell said:

    “[The officer’s] attention was diverted away from the road, looking down at, I believe, his computer. When he looked up, traffic was slowing and coming to a stop. [He] applied his brakes and rear-ended the vehicle that was in front of him, which subsequently got pushed into two other vehicles that were stopped.”

    The officer suffered minor injuries, he is a 20 year veteran of the department.

    If the investigation finds that the officer was at fault, then the findings will be forwarded to the Glenn County District Attorney’s office, who will then explore any and all possible charges against the officer.

    On its website, the California Highway Patrol has a page dedicated to warning driversagainst the dangers of using computer devices while driving, stating that a first offense can result in a $162 fine and that drivers using these devices are 23 times more likely to crash.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/california-highway-patrol-kills-teenager-while-driving-and-looking-down-at-his-computer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2016, 12:12:37 PM
    Horrific Video Shows Cops Allow K9 to Maul Man for Several Minutes Over Riding Bike With No Light

    Punta Gorda, FL — An officer’s dashcam video uploaded to YouTube this week shows a disturbing scene unfold as a police officer stops a man on a bicycle. An unarmed, shirtless, shoeless man is mauled for several minutes by a police K-9.

    The reason for the stop, according to the uploader, was the cyclist was riding without a light on his bike.

    As the video begins, the man on the bike is riding away from the police officer, despite the officer telling him to stop. However, after a 15-20 second slow ride down the road, the man eventually stops. That’s when all hell breaks loose.

    As the man gets off the bike, he puts his hands up and faces the officer. As the officer yells at him to get on his knees, it becomes apparent that the man is in a state of mental duress.

    If what the uploader says is true, that this stop was for a bicycle light only, what happened next is nothing short of torturous criminal action. Just before siccing the dog on the man, he had apparently caused no harm to anyone and was simply riding his bicycle down the road.

    It was the officer’s choice to escalate to the graphic violence in the video below.

    Because the man was in a diminished mental state, he was not complying precisely and as quickly as the officer demanded, so he released his dog. For the next several minutes, the dog tore into the man as he screams in agony.

    About one minute into the mauling, in between shouts of “Stop Resisting,” the officer tells the dog, “Good boy,” as it tears the man’s flesh from his arm.

    The officer continues to yell at the man to stop resisting as if someone can simply lay calmly as a dog tears a hole in them.

    Finally, the officer stops the attack, after the scene begins to resemble a horror movie. As other officers arrive, the man lays on the ground, covered in his own blood and bleeding out.
    When other officers see how badly injured he is, they had to call in for a helicopter to medivac him to the nearest hospital.

    Below is a graphic example of an unnecessary violent escalation. In many departments, using a K9 to assist in an arrest or to physically engage or bite a suspect, there must be a reasonable belief that the suspect is armed with a weapon capable of producing death or significant physical injury or otherwise poses an imminent threat of death or serious physical injury to the handler or others, or is engaged in active aggression or escaping. None of those factors were present during this stop.

    The Free Thought Project contacted the Punta Gorda police department to get their version of this story, but we have yet to hear back.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrific-video-shows-cops-k9-maul-man-minutes-riding-bike-light/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on June 16, 2016, 01:37:12 PM
    Disgusting! The ass-wipe cop tries to explain himself to the female officer. No explanation needed; the video doesn't lie.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 16, 2016, 01:43:24 PM
    http://nypost.com/2016/06/16/gun-shop-told-authorities-about-suspicious-mateen-before-slaughter


    So now the response by the govt despite being notified is to rob people of more rights.   ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2016, 02:17:18 PM
    Once again the union mob comes to support deranged criminals.

    Video Shows Cop Remove Suspect’s Handcuffs and Beg Him to Fight for His Freedom

    San Antonio, TX — A recently released in-car video from a San Antonio police officer’s cruiser gives America a rare look into the sadistic nature that thrives in some police departments. The video shows the officer agreeing to engage in a fist fight with the suspect in exchange for his freedom.

    Last August, SAPD officer Matthew Belver arrested Eloy Leal for allegedly interfering with the duties of a public servant — a charge often associated with officers not wanting to be questioned or filmed. Leal was handcuffed and placed in the back of the cruiser for just a few moments before Belver began antagonizing him.

    The video begins as Belver challenges Leal to a fight. The officer says that he’ll remove Leal’s handcuffs so the pair can fight.

    “As soon as they come off, I’m gonna beat your a**, that’s what I’m going to do. You ready?,” Belver is heard saying.

    After he removes the handcuffs, Belver continues, “There you go, there you go, now you can get out. Let’s go, run, do something, do something.”

    Leal, knowing full well that Belver will be immediately backed up by the other officers on the scene if he takes a swing and possibly killed, refuses to fight. Instead of engaging in violence with the deranged officer, Leal apologizes for any disrespect.

    His unwillingness to fight lands Leal back in handcuffs and back in the squad car. The professional officer then continues to berate the man.

    “I thought something was going to come out of this. I thought you were going to (expletive) fight, like you said,” Belver is heard saying. “You had me all excited, I was ready for it.”

    When Leal asks why he’s even being arrested, Belver can’t think of anything. He begins spouting off random charges, noting “I’ll think of something.”

    As Belver drives Leal back to the station, the verbal abuse continues as the officer teases the man for the silly arrest in the first place.

    “You’re like, Hey cop can I walk through here? Hey, some investigation you guys did. Who talks to people like that?” Belver is heard saying. “You had the chance to run, to fight, to do whatever, but you didn’t because not only are you stupid you’re a coward.”

    Since the department became aware of the video, Belver has been suspended, but the San Antonio Police Officer’s Association disagrees with the discipline. According to ABC 12, Mike Helle, president of the SAPOA, says Belver should have never removed the handcuffs, but his behavior doesn’t rise to the level of being terminated.

    “I think it was the end of his shift, he was tired, he works graveyards and I think this guy just got underneath his skin and it was something that he shouldn’t have let that happen to him,” Helle said, apologizing for the sheer insanity of Belver — throwing all logic, accountability, and professionalism out the window in the name of being ‘tired.’

    To make matters even worse, this wasn’t the first time Belver has gotten in trouble for attempting to fight suspects. According to ABC 12, Belver was given a 30-day suspension for a similar incident that happened in 2009 which resulted in a conviction being overturned on a suspect he arrested.

    “Matt had a problem with force issues and I think in the last five to however many years he’s been back he has not had a single issue at all,” Helle said, standing up for this problem cop again. However, Helle has no idea how many times this has happened before.

    It is entirely clear from the video below that Belver never learned fighting suspects is not allowed.

    Belver has been suspended indefinitely since this incident, but he’s in the process of appealing. If history is any indicator, he will be back out on the force in no time — challenging more innocent until proven guilty suspects to fist fights for his own sadistic pleasure.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-released-showing-cop-remove-suspects-handcuffs-beg-fight/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2016, 02:23:44 PM
    Horrific Video Shows Cops Allow K9 to Maul Man for Several Minutes Over Riding Bike With No Light

    Punta Gorda, FL — An officer’s dashcam video uploaded to YouTube this week shows a disturbing scene unfold as a police officer stops a man on a bicycle. An unarmed, shirtless, shoeless man is mauled for several minutes by a police K-9.

    The reason for the stop, according to the uploader, was the cyclist was riding without a light on his bike.

    As the video begins, the man on the bike is riding away from the police officer, despite the officer telling him to stop. However, after a 15-20 second slow ride down the road, the man eventually stops. That’s when all hell breaks loose.

    As the man gets off the bike, he puts his hands up and faces the officer. As the officer yells at him to get on his knees, it becomes apparent that the man is in a state of mental duress.

    If what the uploader says is true, that this stop was for a bicycle light only, what happened next is nothing short of torturous criminal action. Just before siccing the dog on the man, he had apparently caused no harm to anyone and was simply riding his bicycle down the road.

    It was the officer’s choice to escalate to the graphic violence in the video below.

    Because the man was in a diminished mental state, he was not complying precisely and as quickly as the officer demanded, so he released his dog. For the next several minutes, the dog tore into the man as he screams in agony.

    About one minute into the mauling, in between shouts of “Stop Resisting,” the officer tells the dog, “Good boy,” as it tears the man’s flesh from his arm.

    The officer continues to yell at the man to stop resisting as if someone can simply lay calmly as a dog tears a hole in them.

    Finally, the officer stops the attack, after the scene begins to resemble a horror movie. As other officers arrive, the man lays on the ground, covered in his own blood and bleeding out.
    When other officers see how badly injured he is, they had to call in for a helicopter to medivac him to the nearest hospital.

    Below is a graphic example of an unnecessary violent escalation. In many departments, using a K9 to assist in an arrest or to physically engage or bite a suspect, there must be a reasonable belief that the suspect is armed with a weapon capable of producing death or significant physical injury or otherwise poses an imminent threat of death or serious physical injury to the handler or others, or is engaged in active aggression or escaping. None of those factors were present during this stop.

    The Free Thought Project contacted the Punta Gorda police department to get their version of this story, but we have yet to hear back.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrific-video-shows-cops-k9-maul-man-minutes-riding-bike-light/

    Florida Cop Who Allowed Dog To Maul Suspect Previously Fired for Police Brutality

    Florida cop Lee Coel released his K-9, Spirit, on a compliant suspect, in a video that went viral recently, and you can see it below too.

    He’s facing a civil lawsuit now, and a consecutive second pink slip from a Florida police force.

    New information shows the Florida officer has a storied past – not in a good way, and the Punta Gorda Police Department was aware of an excessive force incident by the same officer while serving the Miramar Police Department in Miami-Dade County.

    Scott Weinberg is the attorney representing Schumacher in a federal suit and said, “Sadly, I was not shocked but not surprised about the appalling history of the officer.”

    Weinberg went on to say that, “The Punta Gorda Police generally behaves professionally. It is specifically Officer Coel who was a liability for the city of Punta Gorda and its fine police department.”

    The complete police report can be seen below.

    The cyclist who was bit was is now suing the department, and officer for excessive force.

    Small town Punta Gorda, Florida grew famous in 2004 after Hurricane Charlie ran ashore devastating the community.

    Now it is making headlines just like big cities with police abuses.

    Punta Gorda Chief Tom Lewis was asked if officer Coel had any prior incidents of excessive force.

    He stated Coel had a clean record there, and no complaints against him while with the department.

    However, Coel was dismissed from the Miramar Police Department during his probationary period over and excessive force complaint.

    Punta Gorda’s chief said that there was also a video of the Miramar excessive force, which his department reviewed during their hiring decision of Coel.

    Local news station Fox 4 reached out to the Police Benevolent Association union for comment:

    PBA President Matt Sellers stated “Most police departments thoroughly investigate complaints and if you look deeply into each incident individually, you’ll find out that complaints are often more times than not, frivolous and unfounded.”

    Sellers went on to say “it is highly unlikely an agency would hire someone with a legitimate high liability.”

    Schumacher’s arm was extensively injured, by Spirit, tearing open muscles and degloving his skin from underneath his arm which can be seen below.

    Schumacher was charged with fleeing/eluding, DUI, violation of probation, and obstructing; he was also given a warning for no lights on the bicycle”.

    Schumacher pled to the lesser charges and quickly released.

    In the recent viral video of Coel, he persued Richard Schumacher after seeing him ride his bike without a headlight.

    It was a minor safety infraction.

    Schumacher refused to immediately stop at the officer’s demand and continued to ride his bicycle for several blocks.

    Finally, Schumacher eventually pulled over which led to a series of confusing commands by the Punta Gorda officer.

    When, Schumacher was ordered to show his hands and he complied reluctantly after giving the Coel the finger multiple times.

    Officer Coel then began barking orders to get on his knees, which Schumacher eventually did too.

    Finally, officer Coel ordered Schumacher to get down on his face.

    The cyclist gave Coel the finger again, which infuriated Coel, who then ordered his K-9 partner Spirit to attack the suspect for his expression of displeasure.

    As Schumacher was struggling to keep the dog off him, officer Coel is heard yelling for him to stop resisting.

    Officer Coel continued to struggle with Schumacher without regard to the injury the unleashed K-9 had done.

    When Schumacher finally stopped struggling, he sat still awaiting medical treatment while Lt. Reynolds and Coel continued to order a visibly injured Schumacher to lay face down to be cuffed with his hands behind his back.

    Even with a gaping hole in the cyclist’s armpit.

    Officer Coel’s lone punishment was counseling and retraining regarding the use of a K-9.

    For mauling a man in a minor bicycle traffic stop.


    Punta Gorda Chief Lewis stated Officer Coel had not violated any departmental policy and would not face further punishment, and he changed the department rules on using animal partners too.


    The K-9 however was suspended for an unspecified amount of time until the internal affairs investigation was over.

    Spirit the dog was then sent for retraining too.

    It’s not the first time PINAC has reported on the poor use of K-9s in law enforcement in the southwestern Florida area.

    “Coel should have never been hired after two previous complaints at Miramar,”Weinberg stated, “which lead to his dismissal while he was still in his probationary period. It’s surprising how difficult it is for officers like Coel to be fired even after egregious incidents like the one involving my client Schumacher”.

    But Weinberg was still insistent that this incident was not reflective of the small town of Punta Gorda and he stands by the department’s efficacy, but he is seeking Coel’s dismissal in addition to civil damages for his client.

    All because a man riding a bike didn’t have a headlight.

    He probably doesn’t feel any safer now, but Punta Gorda taxpayers will feel poorer for it.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/watch-florida-cop-allowed-dog-maul-suspect-previously-fired-police-brutality/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2016, 06:35:39 PM
    Boston Police Commissioner Says Road-Raging Cop in Viral Video is Not a “Threat”

    Boston police officer Edward Barrett, the off-duty cop seen attacking a pedestrian in a viral video, is being allowed to work during an internal investigation because he is not a “threat,” Commissioner William Evans said Tuesday during an appearance on Boston Public Radio.

    “I’ve talked to his supervisors. They say for the most part he’s a quiet kid, minds his own business, and they were a little surprised with what happened there,” Evans said.

    That “quiet kid,” Edward Barrett, is a 20-year veteran of the Boston Police Department who, on May 24, was caught on camera forcing his knee in the back of a pedestrian he had chased down, telling the pedestrian he was under arrest, then making a 911 call in which he falsely accused the pedestrian of cracking his car window.

    In the video, Barrett claims the man had jaywalked, then hit his car window with an umbrella so hard it cracked. The pedestrian claims he was in a crosswalk when Barrett cut him off, so he tapped on Barrett’s window.

    Several on-duty police officers arrived on scene after Barrett called 911, but they released the pedestrian with no charges. The police report confirms that while there was a mark on Barrett’s window, it “was able to be wiped from the surface of the glass.”

    However, the report makes no mention that Barrett chased down and attacked the pedestrian, told the pedestrian he was under arrest, falsely reported that his window was cracked, or even that he was a police officer.

    The responding officers covered up the attack but got caught because the video went viral. Stephen Harlowe, the man who shot the video, said the responding officers refused to take statements or contact information from witnesses to Barrett’s attack.

    “We asked the officers, ‘Do you want our information? There are a bunch of witnesses including an international person. He is flying back today, but he wants to give you his information.’ They said, ‘I am not putting it in my report.’ He absolutely did not want our info,” Harlowe told The Boston Herald.

    During his Boston Public Radio appearance, Evans said Barrett was right to “confront” the pedestrian if he thought his vehicle was damaged, but said the department was investigating whether Barrett “acted in an unprofessional manner” or “used excessive force.”

    After the video was published, The Boston Globe learned Barrett’s identity and reported that he has been the subject of two excessive force complaints, one in 2005 and one in 2006.

    Evans was asked on Boston Public Radio why Barrett was being allowed to stay on active duty while he was investigated over the recent road rage incident.

    Evans changed the subject to Barrett’s two older excessive force complaints, saying they happened over 10 years ago. He also pointed out that the department did not sustain either complaint.

    However, it’s unclear what the police department did to investigate these complaints, because it has not released Barrett’s internal affairs records. We requested a copy of his IA file on May 26, and state law requires government agencies to turn over public records within 10 days, but the department has not responded to our request.

    Moreover, the Boston police internal affairs division has a history of conducting shoddy, inefficient investigations, so the fact that neither complaint was sustained does not mean that neither was valid.

    But most importantly, it’s not clear why the fact that these past complaints weren’t sustained means Barrett should remain on duty while being investigated for a more recent incident. Still, that’s what Evans concluded.

    “He doesn’t have a history of any type of excessive force,” Evans said. “A lot of our instances, unless they really rise to a level that we think he’s a threat, we don’t pull him off.”

    Evans said he would not criticize Barrett’s violent behavior at this time due to the ongoing investigation.

    “I’m not gonna convict him on the radio here. We all have a right to due process,” Evans said.

    In fact, most workers in Massachusetts do not have a right to due process in the workplace because of the at-will employment doctrine. Police officers and other government employees have special legal privileges that guarantee them the right to due process when they are the subject of disciplinary action at work.

    Evans has complained in the past about how the disciplinary action he metes out is often overturned, so it seems disingenuous for him to invoke this system to justify not speaking out against violent police in his department.

    The due process that most people are entitled to is due process of law, which only comes into play when someone is charged with a crime. But since Evans has already decided Barrett isn’t a threat even though he’s supposedly waiting on the results of the internal investigation, it seems unlikely Barrett will have any need for that sort of due process in the near future.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/boston-police-commissioner-says-road-raging-cop-in-viral-video-is-not-a-threat/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 17, 2016, 11:20:55 AM
    Yet another incident.

    Border Patrol Kidnaps Teen Girl, Rapes and Sodomizes Her in Search of Non-Existent Drugs

    A 19-year-old Arizona woman was forced to endure humiliating, invasive ‘body cavity’ probes after border patrol agents accused her of attempting to smuggle illegal drugs from Mexico inside her body.

    Ashley Cervantes initiated a lawsuit against U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CPB) after a brief trip across the border for breakfast turned into a nightmare. CBP agents detained Cervantes for about eight hours upon her return to the U.S., because they were convinced she had secreted drugs inside her body for transport, according to local ABC affiliate KGUN9. 

    According to Cervantes’ attorney, Brian Marchetti, CBP officers never offered an explanation for why they suspected his client of being a drug mule, but they soon brought two K-9s to sniff for illicit substances.

    “We believe they used at least two different K9s on her for the purpose of trying to get them to alert,” Marchetti explained. “We don’t know why they used two. Did the first one not alert and they were fishing for one that would? Or did the first one alert and they were looking for a second one to corroborate it?”

    Though it appears CBP never explained their decision to ramp up their investigation of Cervantes, officers proceeded to fully pat down the teen — eventually writing an order she be transported to Holy Cross Hospital for an X-Ray.

    Transported to Holy Cross in handcuffs, Cervantes suffered something more invasive than a forced X-Ray of her body.

    “A male physician enters the room,” Marchetti continued, “asks her a few questions, we believe and proceeds to conduct a full body cavity search on the vaginal and rectal cavities and young Ashley who was nineteen at the time had not yet in her life been to a gynecologist and her first ever pelvic exams were conducted in that setting.”

    Yet, Cervantes again wasn’t offered an explanation for why it was necessary to be molested and sodomized by a male doctor instead of the simple X-Ray — which would have proven there were no drugs inside her — as originally ordered by CBP.

    It appears no female doctors were present for this blatant violation of Cervantes’ rights.

    No drugs were found on — or inside — the 19-year-old.

    According to the FBI, the summary definition of Rape is: “Penetration, no matter how slight, of the vagina or anus with any body part or object, or oral penetration by a sex organ of another person, without the consent of the victim.” Make no mistake, what this woman experienced was rape, over and over again — all of it, so cops could look an arbitrary and entirely non-existent substance.

    After this highly intrusive, wholly unnecessary, and unjustified ‘exam,’ Cervantes was transported back to the border crossing, where CBP officers finally allowed her to return home.

    Adding insult to inexcusable injury, Holy Cross sent Cervantes’ parents a bill for $575 for the doctor’s probe of their child.

    KGUN9 reported CBP declined to comment due to the ongoing litigation. Holy Cross refused to comment as the hospital had been under different ownership at the time of the incident.

    Though Cervantes certainly had the option to sue anonymously, Marchetti explained she wants to be public about this nightmarish experience in hopes no one else will have to endure the same.

    Customs and Border Protection is the largest federal law enforcement agency in the United States — but consistent anecdotal reports show an apparent pattern of intrusive violations and horrific abuse similar to what Cervantes endured.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/border-patrol-kidnaps-teen-girl-rape-sodomize-search-non-existent-drugs
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2016, 09:27:13 AM
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-orlando-san-bernardino_us_575f1802e4b0e4fe51435eb2

    Donald Trump on Monday proposed punishing Americans if they don’t turn in their friends and neighbors for behaving suspiciously.

    “In San Bernardino, people knew what was going on, they knew exactly, but they used the excuse of racial profiling for not reporting it,” Trump said during a speech in the wake of the Orlando mass shooting.

    The presumptive GOP presidential nominee was presumably referring to unverified reports that a woman who lived near the mother of one of the San Bernardino shooters had noticed that the family received “quite a few packages within a short amount of time, and they were doing a lot of work out in the garage.” 

    A man who claimed to be friends with this neighbor said she did not report the packages and the behavior to authorities because she “didn’t want to do any kind of racial profiling.”

    In Trump’s America, however, that woman would face serious consequences. “We need to make sure every single person involved in this plan, including anyone who knew something, but didn’t tell us, is brought to justice,” Trump said in New Hampshire. “These people need to have consequences, big consequences.”

    Trump failed to mention that many of the San Bernardino shooters’ neighbors described them as “quiet, religious people who didn’t attract attention or suspicion.”

    He also strayed slightly from the prepared remarks posted on his website, which read, “If it can be proven that somebody had information about any attack, and did not give this information to authorities, they must serve prison time.”

    Trump’s proposal that Americans be forced to report their neighbors expands on an idea he’s been peddling since last year, when he told a crowd in South Carolina, “People move into a house a block down the road, you know who’s going in. You can see and you report them to the local police. Most likely you’ll be wrong, but that’s OK. That’s the best way. Everybody’s their own cop in a way.”

    Those earlier remarks, however, stopped short of proposing that people be punished for not informing on their neighbors — a hallmark of some of the most brutal and deadly regimes in history, including Nazi Germany and Russia under Joseph Stalin.

    Trump’s latest proposal was part of a speech during which he repeatedly vilified and attacked Muslims, as well as immigrants more generally.

    As he frequently does, Trump conflated “radical Islam” with Islam in general, and warned that “Radical Islam is coming to our shores.”

    The Orlando shooter was a U.S. citizen who was born in the United States in 1986, at a time when the United States and guerrillas in Afghanistan were allies in the fight to contain communism. 

    Nevertheless, Trump said that the correct response to attacks like the one in Orlando is to ban Muslims from visiting or immigrating (Trump regularly confuses these two ideas) to the United States.

    He also attacked presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, who Trump said “wants to allow radical Islamic terrorists to pour into our country — they enslave women, and murder gays. I don’t want them in our country.”

    Trump’s claim about the former secretary of state is patently false. Clinton has proposed allowing some Syrian refugees into the United States through the American refugee screening process, which takes an average of two years to approve resettlement.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2016, 03:13:09 PM
    Supreme Court Says Police May Use Evidence Found After Illegal Stops

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that evidence found by police officers after illegal stops may be used in court if the officers conducted their searches after learning that the defendants had outstanding arrest warrants.

    Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority in the 5-to-3 decision, said such searches do not violate the Fourth Amendment when the warrant is valid and unconnected to the conduct that prompted the stop.

    Justice Thomas’s opinion drew a fiery dissent from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who said that “it is no secret that people of color are disproportionate victims of this type of scrutiny.”

    “This case tells everyone, white and black, guilty and innocent, that an officer can verify your legal status at any time,” she wrote. “It says that your body is subject to invasion while courts excuse the violation of your rights. It implies that you are not a citizen of a democracy but the subject of a carceral state, just waiting to be cataloged.”

    The case, Utah v. Strieff, No. 14-1373, arose from police surveillance of a house in South Salt Lake based on an anonymous tip of “narcotics activity” there. A police officer, Douglas Fackrell, stopped Edward Strieff after he had left the house based on what the state later conceded were insufficient grounds, making the stop unlawful.

    Officer Fackrell then ran a check and discovered a warrant for a minor traffic violation. He arrested Mr. Strieff, searched him and found a baggie containing methamphetamines and drug paraphernalia. The question for the justices was whether the drugs must be suppressed given the unlawful stop or whether they could be used as evidence given the arrest warrant.

    “Officer Fackrell was at most negligent,” Justice Thomas wrote, adding that “there is no evidence that Officer Fackrell’s illegal stop reflected flagrantly unlawful police misconduct.”

    Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Stephen G. Breyer and Samuel A. Alito Jr. joined the majority opinion.

    In a dissent that cited W. E. B. Du Bois, James Baldwin and Ta-Nehisi Coates, Justice Sotomayor said the court had vastly expanded police power.

    “The court today holds that the discovery of a warrant for an unpaid parking ticket will forgive a police officer’s violation of your Fourth Amendment rights,” she wrote. “Do not be soothed by the opinion’s technical language: This case allows the police to stop you on the street, demand your identification and check it for outstanding traffic warrants — even if you are doing nothing wrong.

    “If the officer discovers a warrant for a fine you forgot to pay,” she continued, “courts will now excuse his illegal stop and will admit into evidence anything he happens to find by searching you after arresting you on the warrant.”

    Justice Sotomayor added that many people were at risk. Federal and state databases show more than 7.8 million outstanding warrants, she wrote, “the vast majority of which appear to be for minor offenses.” There are, she added, 180,000 misdemeanor warrants in Utah. And according to the Justice Department, about 16,000 of the 21,000 residents of Ferguson, Mo., are subject to arrest warrants.

    Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined most of Justice Sotomayor’s dissent, along with all of a separate dissent from Justice Elena Kagan. But Justice Sotomayor reserved her most personal reflection for a part of her dissent in which she wrote only for herself, setting out in detail the dangers and indignities that often accompany police stops.

    “For generations,” she wrote, “black and brown parents have given their children ‘the talk’ — instructing them never to run down the street; always keep your hands where they can be seen; do not even think of talking back to a stranger — all out of fear of how an officer with a gun will react to them.”

    “We must not pretend that the countless people who are routinely targeted by police are ‘isolated,’” she wrote. “They are the canaries in the coal mine whose deaths, civil and literal, warn us that no one can breathe in this atmosphere. They are the ones who recognize that unlawful police stops corrode all our civil liberties and threaten all our lives. Until their voices matter, too, our justice system will continue to be anything but.”

    Justin Driver, a law professor at the University of Chicago, said Justice Sotomayor’s dissent was remarkable. It is, he said, “the strongest indication we have yet that the Black Lives Matter movement has made a difference at the Supreme Court — at least with one justice.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/21/us/supreme-court-says-police-may-use-evidence-found-after-illegal-stops.html?_r=0
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2016, 03:17:19 PM
    Four Officers Severely Beat Non-Violent Boy as Their Supervisor Watches in Approval

    Los Angeles, CA — For years, LA County juvenile detention centers have been under Department of Justice monitoring because of overcrowding and excessive force used on children. However, as a newly released video from inside LA County Probation’s Sylmar Juvenile Hall shows, the federal oversight has accomplished nothing.

    Celeste Fremon, editor of WitnessLA, said she obtained the four-minute video from sources inside the probation department. The disturbing video captures the beating of a teenage inmate by multiple prison guards — while the supervisor stands by and watches.

    According to Fremon, the video is taken from what appears to be a ceiling-mounted camera. In the beginning of the recording, only the supervising officer and the boy are present. He and the tall probationer are several feet apart and the supervisor appears to be instructing the kid. (The video is a bootleg of the original, thus has no sound.)

    The probationer does not appear to be behaving in any way that is aggressive, threatening or combative. But, presumably, there is some verbal conflict between the two. As the supervisor talks, the man conspicuously rolls up the sleeves of his shirt in what several of our probation sources who have seen the video labeled a threatening gesture.

    While the video is silent, it illustrates the entirely unprovoked violent response from four grown men beating a teen. The alleged reason for the response from guards was over the teen throwing a balled up piece of paper and another unidentified object at the door. However, as the video clearly shows, the boy with a cast on his arm is not a threat to anyone as his cell was empty before the beating.

    When the officers enter the room, only a few seconds pass before all hell breaks loose as one officer, entirely unprovoked, tackles the teen from behind, slamming him down into the concrete bunk in the cell. After slamming him down, the officer unleashes blow after blow into the boy’s body. The supervisor in the room does nothing to stop it.

    As the first officer continues his assault, two other officers pile on and begin to punch and throw knees into the boy. Seconds later, yet another officer enters and piles on. For several moments, four officers deliver blow after blow while taking turns holding him down.

    Approximately 60-seconds into the beating another supervisor walks in, witnesses the assault for a few seconds, then turns and walks out. He never attempted to stop it.

    For nearly two minutes, the officers beat the boy while their supervisor watched until it suddenly ended. As if it was a routine response, the supervisor opened the door and made a shooing gesture. The officers then stood up, straightened up their clothes and walked out.

    The boy is left in agony, hunched over the cement cot with his pants around his knees from being pulled down during the beating. He finally manages to get up to a seated position and then hunches over, apparently crying. As he attempts to walk, he quickly collapses in pain and lies on the floor.

    According to Witness LA,  a nurse came in to check on the boy some minutes after the five probation officers vanished from his room. Her entrance and time with the kid are on the extended version of the video, which we have not seen. Her ministrations were allegedly minimal. She swabbed the abrasions and swelling on his face, and the like. Then she reportedly left the room without a thorough check for injuries.

    Later, however, the boy reportedly called for a staffer due to his pain, according to reports. The second staffer sent him to the hospital where, in addition to bruising, reported black eyes, bruises, swelling and abrasions, it is learned that he has a badly and painfully sprained ankle.

    On Friday, the probation chief, Cal Remington, responded to the incident saying the department takes mistreatment of juveniles very seriously, reports ABC 7.

    “We hold our staff to a very high standard. We have zero tolerance for mistreating the juveniles in our care. And while I can’t really comment on an ongoing investigation, this matter is being thoroughly investigated, and we take matters of this nature very, very seriously,” he stated.

    As Freemon pointed out, “there is no reason for this kind of force – ever, under any circumstances, even if you have a riot.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-officers-severely-beat-non-violent-boy-supervisor-watches-approval/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2016, 03:35:07 PM
    Instead of sending this criminal gang in death row, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill and this man's youth is ruined. How many innocent people have fallen prey to this ruthless criminal gang?

    Man wrongly jailed for 13 years sues police after disturbing video shows detectives hounding the then-14-year-old without a parent or lawyer to confess to a murder he didn’t commit


    A man who spent more than a decade in jail for a murder he didn't commit is suing police after a shocking video emerged showing detectives hounding the then-14-year-old to falsely confess.

    Lawrence Lorenzo Montoya, now 31, became one of the youngest people in Denver history to be sentenced to life without parole in an adult jail over the death of teacher Emily Johnson on New Year's Day, 2000.

    He spent the next 13 years of his life behind bars - four of those in solitary confinement - before his conviction was overturned on DNA evidence in 2014.

    Now a disturbing video of his police interview has been released which shows detectives pushing Montoya, then 14, to confess to a murder he did not commit.

    Police officers allegedly lie to Montoya, who did not have his parents or a lawyer in the room, about the evidence and statement from other teens during the interrogation, footage of which was obtained by FOX31 Denver.

    Attorney Lisa Polansky said they were: 'Yelling and screaming in his face, making up evidence, banging on the table and cornering him against the wall. Telling him he's going to spend the rest of his life in prison and should say goodbye to his mother.'

    Montoya tells his interrogators more than 65 times said he didn't commit the crime, that he was not at the scene and had no knowledge about the murder.

    But the lead detective continued his interrogation, asking Montoya: 'Did you beat some lady up?

    'Are you listening to me?' he asked, pointing in the frightened suspect's face. 'You better tell us what your involvement in this murder was.

    'This is the time to save yourself Lorenzo.'

    Finally, after being grilled for more than two and a half hours without a parent or lawyer present, according to Fox 31, Montoya broke down in tears.

    Sobbing, he told police what they wanted to hear.

    'He ends up being convicted of a crime because the police coerced him to confess,' attorney David Fisher said.

    The lawyer said people should be 'outraged and furious' over the false conviction.

    'This stuff needs to change and the only way it will change is if people get behind it and people understand it because, you win these lawsuits, you win trials, and they keep doing it.'

    He added that almost half of all juveniles exonerated by DNA evidence had been coerced into false confessions.

    'To me there's nothing worse than a kid who at 14 years old went into an adult prison facility. It could be avoided and it needs to be avoided,' he said.

    Montoya has now filed a lawsuit against the City and County of Denver and Denver Police for $30 million.

    The lawsuit also accuses police of disregarding about other evidence that would have exonerated Montoya at the time.

    It also calls for the District Attorneys to admit their 'mistake'.

    'And I think it's more than a mistake, their intentional conduct in fabricating and continuing this injustice' Polansky added.

    The city has not yet filed a response to the lawsuit.

    Skinner Middle School teacher Emily Johnson, 29, was found dead at her home on New Year's Day in 2000 and her car was stolen.

    Police have since found that she was beaten to death by Nicholas Martinez, then 16, when he stole her brand-new Lexus.

    The following day, Montoya, then 14, along with others in the neighborhood, took a ride in the car which Martinez told some people he had bought and to others admitted he had stolen.

    Montoya was brought in for police questioning over the stolen car in the company of his mother.

    When she left the room, a detective aggressively hounded the teenager. Montoya's police statement was disallowed at his murder trial.

    Montoya, then 15, after the prosecution convinced the jury that a sneaker print and a Bronco jacket found in the house belonged to Montoya.

    He was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

    However forensic testing carried out by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, at the request of Polansky and her team at the Center For Juvenile Justice, found no DNA belonging to Montoya on either item.

    Polansky took on Montoya's case free of charge in 2011 and brought it back to court by arguing that his initial lawyer had failed him.

    After 13 years and seven months in prison, he was cleared on the new DNA evidence. Montoya decided not to opt for a new trial, which could have taken several years to come to court, and took the DA's offer of a guilty plea to accessory to murder and was sentenced to ten years.


    He was automatically then released because of time served.

    Polansky said that the moment Montoya walked out of court he was 'like a kid all over again'.

    Montoya had planned to move away from Denver and bad influences from his youth, complete his GED and learn a trade. He was also teaching himself about the internet.

    But, after spending much of his formative years in jail, she said he was struggling to reintegrate with society.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3650835/Man-wrongly-jailed-13-years-sues-police-disturbing-video-shows-detectives-hounding-14-year-old-without-parent-lawyer-confess-murder-didn-t-commit.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 21, 2016, 12:48:05 PM
    Video Shows Cop Having Sex in Patrol Car, On Duty — While Ignoring Calls

    Pasadena, TX — The in-car video of a Pasadena police officer was released publicly this week showing him ignoring calls and opting to have sex on duty instead. In spite of being grossly derelict in his duties, getting paid with taxpayer money to have sex, and refusing to do his job — officer Jeff Mubarak was never fired.

    While the incident happened last August, the heavily redacted in-car video was not released until this week. Although approximately 23 minutes of the video has been redacted, what happened in the car is glaringly obvious.

    The woman in the car is part of the citizen ride-along program who took her position in the front seat to an extreme.

    As the video begins, the young woman is seen rubbing officer Mubarak’s leg. Shortly after that, she leans toward the officer and the two begin kissing. Moments later, the woman leans down toward Mubarak’s lap and disappears. The officer can be heard moaning, and then the police scanner blows up — however, those calls for help would fall on deaf ears.

    The remaining portion of the video was withheld from public view. According to ABC 7, the Texas AG’s office says the redaction is allowed because, “the portion of that video would be highly intimate or embarrassing, the publication of which would be highly objectionable to a reasonable person and of no legitimate public concern.”

    According to the internal investigation, the pair would go on to engage in intercourse for an extended period, and Pasadena PD says this incident happened while Officer Mubarak was on duty, while parked in a parking lot.

    After they had become aware of the incident, the Pasadena police department gave Mubarak a 30 day paid vacation. However, he has since been placed back on active duty as if nothing happened.

    “I think the punishment is light,” said Tom Nixon to KTRK, a former Houston Police Officer, who was fired from his job a decade ago for speaking out.

    When speaking of the video, Nixon explained, “It’s going to diminish his credibility as an officer for the remainder of his tenure as an officer. There is not deleting it, no expunging it, it’s in the public record. People hold police officers to a higher standard higher stand for a reason, it’s because they have the power to take away people’s liberty.”

    Liberty, however, is not something that Mubarak will be losing, in spite of betraying the public trust. Houston attorney Pat McCann has even gone on record defending the officer.

    “This is simply foolish and amusing and embarrassing,” said McCann. “It is not a crime it’s not a breach of public trust. It is a grown man and woman doing something they will regret.”
    However, it is a breach of public trust, and it is a crime.

    Had a regular citizen been caught having sex in public like this officer, they would have likely been arrested and charged with public lewdness and indecent exposure. But since Mubarak has a badge, he is not held to the same standards as everyone else.

    Of course, having sex in a vehicle harms no one. But this man was getting paid by taxpayer dollars while doing it
    — and he will, and likely has arrested people for the same thing. If anything, Mubarak should be held to a much higher standard because of the badge he wears. Instead, however, Mubarak, like all of his law-breaking brethren on the other side of the thin blue line, avoids any and all accountability.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-cop-sex-patrol-car-duty-ignoring-calls/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2016, 05:20:25 AM
    http://nypost.com/2016/06/22/bratton-reinstates-cops-tied-to-corruption-probe-so-they-can-retire


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2016, 10:56:34 AM
    http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-06-22/senate-falls-1-vote-short-of-giving-fbi-access-to-browser-histories-without-court-order


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2016, 11:11:10 AM
    http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-06-22/senate-falls-1-vote-short-of-giving-fbi-access-to-browser-histories-without-court-order


     >:(

    Unfortunately many people believe "if you have nothing to hide, what are you afraid of". Moreover, if they can't see or feel their rights being violated they're ok with it. Despicable.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on June 22, 2016, 01:10:35 PM
    Unfortunately many people believe "if you have nothing to hide, what are you afraid of". Moreover, if they can't see or feel their rights being violated they're ok with it. Despicable.

    We teach young people to be honest and we tell them if they are, everything will work out. This could not be further from the truth when it comes to the authorities and HR. The police want to win which is why they will  co-hearse self incrimination. Everything you say to them will be used against you in court. Best to say as little as possible. An example of this tactic is when you're stopped by the police for a supposed traffic infraction and when they ask if you've been drinking, you say; "I only had one or two drinks."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2016, 01:15:07 PM
    We teach young people to be honest and we tell them if they are, everything will work out. This could not be further from the truth when it comes to the authorities and HR. The police want to win which is why they will  co-hearse self incrimination. Everything you say to them will be used against you in court. Best to say as little as possible. An example of this tactic is when you're stopped by the police for a supposed traffic infraction and when they ask if you've been drinking, you say; "I only had one or two drinks."

    Just look at the post "Man wrongly jailed for 13 years sues police after disturbing video shows detectives hounding the then-14-year-old without a parent or lawyer to confess to a murder he didn’t commit".
    This young man did not murder anyone, yet the criminals had him imprisoned in a room with no lawyer and through repeated and persistent threats and intimidation made him confess to a murder. Makes you wonder how many people were pressured and intimidated by these criminals to admit to crimes they did not commit.
    What's more disgusting also is the lack of accountability and punishment for criminals like that. An innocent person spends decades in prison or even gets executed, and those responsible for that get away with it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2016, 02:23:40 PM
    These criminals tried to destroy this man. It is amazing he fought for 8 years instead of taking a plea deal. How about the criminals who tried to destroy him are held accountable and face the same sentences and consequences as this man would face if convicted?

    Man sues Las Vegas police over handling of sexual assault case

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/man-sues-las-vegas-police-over-handling-sexual-assault-case
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 22, 2016, 03:46:21 PM
    Just look at the post "Man wrongly jailed for 13 years sues police after disturbing video shows detectives hounding the then-14-year-old without a parent or lawyer to confess to a murder he didn’t commit".
    This young man did not murder anyone, yet the criminals had him imprisoned in a room with no lawyer and through repeated and persistent threats and intimidation made him confess to a murder. Makes you wonder how many people were pressured and intimidated by these criminals to admit to crimes they did not commit.
    What's more disgusting also is the lack of accountability and punishment for criminals like that. An innocent person spends decades in prison or even gets executed, and those responsible for that get away with it.








    It stinks to High Heaven - The Behaviour of Not Just Some But A lot of Cops.
    There are a Fairly Large Percentage of them that are a Liability & Real Menace
    To The General Public.
    They should be pursued & prosecuted & Recieve The lengthiest Sentence Possible.

    Instead Most of the time We Have Police Apologists Making excuses for their Behaviour.
    These People are as Bad.
    Who Gives a Fcuk about what they have to do in their job - They Choose to do it --
    Like wise They Choose to Behave they way they do.

    The Hippocracy of them arresting others for doing what they do.
    It's corrupt & Stinks from the top down.

    How about zero tolerance for cops 1st Then sort The public out.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2016, 03:27:20 PM
    More armed, violent criminals invading homes and abusing citizens.

    IMPD officer under investigation after video appears to show him slamming teen into wall

    http://fox59.com/2016/06/23/impd-officer-under-investigation-after-video-appears-to-show-him-slamming-teen-into-wall/

    Quote
    The video shows the officer asking for ID. The teen responds, "I don't have ID on me because I'm in my house."

    The officer then slams the teen into the wall and says, "You're in your house and right now, you're being detained. So if I were you, I would shut your (expletive) mouth."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2016, 03:32:16 PM
    Even the union presidents mafia dons participate in mob attacks. Why is he not being investigated? (rhetorical question)

    Texas Police Union President Caught On Camera Slugging Restrained Man Who Touched a Horse

    The head of a Texas police union was caught on camera punching a restrained suspect in the back of the head.

    But Austin’s Police Union President Ken Cassaday won’t be investigated.

    The man’s crime?

    Petting a horse.

    The video was shot on June 18th by independent activist and photographer Julian Reyes, who sometimes joins forces with the Peaceful Streets Project to document activities of Austin police downtown and near homeless populations.

    It starts as any weekend night on Austin’s famous 6th street downtown area, showing patrons having a good time after a night of drinking at the bars around 2 a.m.

    Shortly after the video begins, an Austin Police Department (APD) mounted-patrol can be seen pointing his finger in a man’s face, allegedly for being drunk.

    More likely because he was standing close to the mounted-patrol horses, which has brought debate amongst locals as to whether they’re even necessary.

    APD insists they are.

    That’s when the man decided to pet the officer’s horse.

    And things got violent.

    One cop is seen slapping the man’s hand away from the horse.

    When the man backs up two APD cops step towards him, one grabbing his arm, the other grabbing the him by the back of the head, pulling him downward.

    As he’s being pulled downward, a third cop, Police Union President Cassaday can be seen winding up and then slugging the man in the back of the head in a downward motion.

    “Peaceful Streets says Cassaday hit the man on the back of the head,” wrote Pro-APD “news outlet” KLBJ radio in Austin, “although the video doesn’t support that claim since no point of impact can be seen.”

    “Whether or not Cassaday actually assaulted, or even hit the man, is still up for debate.”

    Although no author put his/her actual name on that report, it was written by “KLBJ’s Newsroom”.

    Cassaday told KVUE News, who broke the story, he was responding to a call about a disturbance at Toulouse Bar on Sixth Street. But he didn’t specify whether the man in the video was the man they received the call about, or if the man even committed a crime.

    Other than petting the horse.

    The horse-petting man was placed in handcuffs and walked towards the jail, although it’s not clear if he was arrested.

    Antonio Buehler, founder of the Austin-based cop-watch group, said he thinks Cassaday should be investigated.

    “That’s assault. There’s nowhere in the guidelines of their policies that suggest it’s okay to punch someone who is not a risk to anyone in the back of the head. That could kill someone.”

    During Ken Cassaday’s tenure, there has never been a use-of-force incident where he didn’t defend the cop, lobbying to keep his job, standing against any criminal charges.
    The volatile Texas Police Union president has made his feelings about activists groups such as Peaceful Streets Project and Black Lives Matter well-known.

    After the Feb 8 shooting of unarmed, naked 17-year-old David Joseph by Austin cop Geoffrey Freeman, Chief Acevedo fired the cop for using excessive force.

    Austin Chief Acevedo listed several other methods Freeman could have used to subdue Joseph instead of deadly force (such as mace, a baton or taser) and then stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Black Lives Matter activists, who issued some criticism and some praise towards the department, during a press conference.

    Cassaday lashed out at Chief Acevedo, accusing him of politicizing the shooting by inviting the activists to speak at the February 11 press conference.

    “The public perception is the chief agrees with everything they said,” said Cassaday  “They got up in front of a badge much like this one behind me and degraded police officers in the worst ways, and that was absolutely unacceptable. Do that behind closed doors.”

    Cassaday whipped out a bull-horn, out in the open, at a 2015 Police Lives Matter rally.

    Apparently, you only have to be behind closed doors to exercise free speech if you’re not criticizing the precious badge.

    Or if you’re black.

    APD isn’t commenting on the case. So far, Cassaday has not been investigated.

    Or fired.


    But feel free to express your thoughts about the matter, or urge them to do so, on their Facebook page.

    Video of Union President Ken Cassaday assaulting the unarmed man last week can be seen below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/texas-police-union-president-caught-camera-slugging-restrained-man-touched-horse/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 26, 2016, 10:49:58 PM
    The perverted and violent armed criminal gang strikes again.

    Texas Cop Raped Prisoner, Entire Police Department Watched, Offered Victim Taco Instead of Reporting Assault

    A Texas cop raped his prisoner on video, while the entire department watched.

    Now the victim is suing the town of 4,000 residents for $5,000,000.

    The tiny border town of La Joya only has a total of 11 police officers, and seven active officers have been named in the lawsuit including the current chief. La Joya’s former chief is also a named defendant.

    Even after several high-ranking La Joya cops, now named in the complaint, knew about their officer’s sexual assault of “Autumn Renee” after witnessing footage from the jail’s video-surveillance cameras, the officers never transported the victim to a medical facility, they also failed to give her an on-site examination, or even a welfare check.

    But they did offer her a taco.

    Video footage of the savage assault was recorded on La Joya police’s surveillance cameras May 29, 2014,

    Those who’ve seen the video footage say Felipe Santiago Peralez III made contact with “Autumn” 49 times, which left her with several injuries after he repeatedly forced his fingers, hands and other objects into her vagina and anus.

    Peralez pleaded guilty in October 2015 to official oppression and to violating the civil rights of an inmate.

    He was sentenced to 180 days in jail after he was caught on video committing sexual assault.

    49 times.


    The victim is using the pseudonym “Autumn Renee” to protect her identity, and informed La Joya police department supervisors inside the jail, she was repeatedly invaded and raped the night she was arrested on misdemeanor charges in 2014.

    “Autumn” is seeking punitive and compensatory damages in the amount of $5 million dollars against the defendants, according to the lawsuit.

    Lawyers for the rape-victim are suing the Texas cop who raped her, and his superiors, claiming they failed to follow protocol-standards established in the Federal Prison Rape Eliminations Act.

    The federally mandated protocol requires law enforcement to immediately report a sexual assault that takes place inside of a jail to an independent department for investigation and to transport the victim to an independent medical facility for testing.

    And then told her she should forget all about being raped and go on with her life, because “people come up missing all the time in the valley,” according to the lawsuit obtained by the monitor.

    On May 30, 2014, La Joya Police Lieutenant Ramon Gonzales and Chief Geovani Hernandez reviewed the video together up until the point where the sexual assault was committed.

    Chief Hernandez then ordered Lieutenant Gonzales and a sergeant to keep watching the video and left to go brief the City Administrator.

    Lawyers for the disabled South Texas woman “Renee” allege that the video-documented sexual assault by Peralez took place over several hours and that high-ranking officers refused medical attention after she reported the violation to the his supervisors, who witnessed video footage of the assault.

    Continuing in their legal filing, while she was in her cell, La Joya communications Officer Felipe Santiago Peralez, “began an all-night invasion” of her body when he forced her to give him oral sex, telling her to move to the end of her cell and he would “take care of her” by letting her use the phone.

    Employee records show Felipe Santiago Peralez III parted ways with the La Joya police department twice since 2011 after receiving several infractions such as not showing up to work, forgetting to log-in a vehicle and working without a valid driver’s license.

    But it appears his connections to the mayor, or the fact that he dates her granddaughter might be a beneficial relationship not just for being rehired with police, but when it comes down to the kinds of plea deals he gets offered.

    In what some might suggest is a conflict of interest, Officer Peralez is reportedly in a relationship with La Joya Mayor “Fito” Salinas’ granddaughter Jordan, nicknamed “Pinky” Garcia, and worked as a dispatcher with the police department from about June to October 2011 and was rehired on Feb. 12, 2012.


    He left again sometime in 2012, but returned to the department on March 25, 2014 and was promoted to a full-time job in May 2014— a week before the sexual assault.

    Officer Peralez resigned June 6, 2014 a week after he raped the female inmate, according to employee records obtained through a public information request.

    Texas Rangers launched an investigation into Paralez after an anonymous La Joya police employee, who is not identified in the complaint, reported he saw the rape on a video recording.

    Autumn Renee’s lawyers chilling conclusion defines the inhumane conduct of the entire La Joya, Texas law enforcement agency’s rotten barrel of cops:

    “The fact that local city governments of La Joya Texas and Peñitas Texas treated a female prisoner (with a mental disability) with such blatant brutality and inhumanity should outrage contemporary society.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/26/texas-cop-raped-prisoner-entire-police-department-watched-offered-victim-taco-instead-of-reporting-assault/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Deacon Jeschin on June 27, 2016, 01:35:13 PM
    I would like to nominate Celeste Guap  as the citizen of the month.  Ms. Guap's involvement with the Oakland Police department has yielded the following results: 28 pigs being investigated for fucking a prostitute, and  other departments being looked at for similar actions.  Three police Chiefs gone in a very short time.  Must be a great place to work these days.

    Oh, dear......That means a whole lot of alimony and child support will be in the works.  Ha Ha.

    Sadly, only two suicides have been reported due to this story.....

    Keep up the good work, Celeste  :)

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/24/us/oakland-police-scandals/ (http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/24/us/oakland-police-scandals/)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2016, 04:31:39 PM
    Armed criminal gangs expanding their operations and devising new methods to steal from the unsuspecting public.

    Civil Asset Forfeiture Goes Digital In OK, Cops Emptying Bank Accounts

    Civil asset forfeiture has gone digital in Oklahoma with the state’s highway patrol now utilizing an electronic device that allows them to seize money from bank accounts and prepaid cards.

    Civil-asset-forfeiture has become a key revenue generator for state and local law enforcement agencies nationwide. Under federal and state law, citizens can be deprived of their property and cash if police merely allege they are involved in criminal activity – even if no charges are filed against them.

    Property owners are then left having to prove a negative, reversing the burden of proof, that their property or cash was not gotten by criminal means before it is used to fund police departments and governments.

    The device now being used by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol to electronically snatch money is called an ERAD, or Electronic Recovery and Access to Data machine. The state police agency began using 16 of them last month.

    Using an ERAD is simple. A trooper need only deem that a motorist or citizen has money tied to some type of criminal activity. All that needs to be done then is a scanning of bank debit or prepaid cards. Any money on the cards is then in the possession of state police officers.

    “We’re gonna look for different factors in the way that you’re acting,” Oklahoma Highway Patrol Lt. John Vincent said. “We’re gonna look for if there’s a difference in your story…If you can prove that you have a legitimate reason to have that money it will be given back to you.”

    A contract made by the state of Oklahoma with ERAD Group Inc. for the devices illustrates the symbiotic relationship between government and the corporate world when running such a scheme. The contract shows the company receives 7.7 percent of all cash the highway patrol seizes.

    Use of civil asset forfeiture has exploded in recent years. In 2014 alone, police took $4.5 billion using the statutes, surpassing the cost of all burglaries made that year, $3.9 billion, according to the FBI.

    Police in Oklahoma are notorious abusers of the property grabs and have earned a grade of D- in the Institute For Justice’s Policing For Profit report. According to the Institute, police in the state have received almost $99 million from the sale of forfeited property between 2000 to 2014 (an average of around $6.6 million per year). Seventy-two percent of that amount came directly from seized cash.

    One of the most publicized cases in the state occurred in April, when Muskogee County officers seized $53,249 in cash from a Christian rock band after stopping their tour bus for a broken tail light. After the media began reporting on the story however, and the public reacted with outrage, the money was returned.

    That prompted Oklahoma politicians to began looking into forfeiture. Republican State Sen. Kyle Loveless has now promised to put forth legislation that would require officers obtain a conviction before taking property or cash. He has cited multiple incidents of cops abusing the current process.

    “We’ve seen single moms’ stuff be taken, a cancer survivor his drugs taken, we saw a Christian band being taken. We’ve seen innocent people’s stuff being taken. We’ve seen where the money goes and how it’s been misspent,” Loveless said. “If I had to err on the side of one side versus the other, I would err on the side of the Constitution and I think that’s what we need to do.”

    Until any comprehensive measure is passed in the state, ERAD will continue to sell its reader to more local and state police agencies. Residents of the state beware. Being pulled over in Oklahoma means the real possibility of having your bank account emptied by men with guns.

    https://www.copblock.org/161321/civil-asset-forfeiture-goes-digital-in-ok-cops-emptying-bank-accounts/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 28, 2016, 05:13:48 AM
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/ron-wyden-fbi-browser-history_us_5771a7cae4b017b379f71469?section=



     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2016, 08:49:41 PM
    Wasted DA Nearly Kills Multiple Motorists – No Arrest, Cops Change Her Tire, Let Her Drive Away!

    Silver City, NM — In a testament to the special privilege granted to those within government, a clearly inebriated district attorney was dangerously let loose back out on to the streets by, not one, but two separate police departments who stopped her for a DUI.

    Instead of arresting the woman, who was caught on video coming dangerously close to multiple head-on collisions, and completely unable to stay in her lane, cops changed her tire and sent her on her way.

    The incident began when a motorist behind Grant County District Attorney Francesca Estevez witnessed her swerving all over the road. The motorist took out his phone and began recording as Estevez veered in and out of her lane coming perilously close to several head-on collisions with innocent drivers.

    When the witness finally got a cell phone signal, he called 9-1-1 to report this menace to society. However, as multiple body cameras will show, his call fell on deaf ears.

    Body cam video shows that Silver City and state police suspected Estevez was drunk or high, yet they did nothing to stop her. In fact, they helped her.

    When officer Leticia Lopez originally stopped her, Estevez claimed that her flat tire was the reason she was swerving all over the road. In spite of the 5 minutes of video taken by the witness, police would go with this narrative.

    As state troopers arrived on scene, it appeared that a DUI was imminent, especially after multiple cops witnessed Estevez almost drive into a light pole when moving her car for the tow truck. However, they just giggled and let it slide.

    For two hours, cops watched as Estevez stumbled around the parking lot. At one point, the district attorney even gave herself a field sobriety test, walking “heel toe.” Her embarrassing attempt to prove her sobriety failed miserably — yet still, cops said nor did a thing.

    Then, with a few slurred ‘thank yous,’ the privileged district attorney was set loose back into daytime traffic by those who claim to protect society. Luckily, we’ve yet to receive any information that Estevez killed anyone on the way home.

    As for the officers involved, Silver City Police never even mentioned the stop in a report. According to WPXI News, however, New Mexico State Police says it is still conducting an internal investigation into its officer’s actions.

    The glaring double standard applied to Estevez has to be pointed out. This incident only illustrates the notion that there are two sets of laws for people in this country; a special set for those with ties to the system — and then one for everyone else.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/new-mexico-cops-release-drunken-da/

    http://www.wpxi.com/news/district-attorney-gets-free-pass-on-dui-charge-despite-weaving-all-over-road/367413143
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2016, 08:53:25 PM
    California Cops Sued for Attacking Diabetic Man at Gunpoint, Mistaking Insulin for Heroin

    A California man with diabetes is suing Long Beach police for attacking him while injecting the insulin that keeps him alive after mistaking his medicine for heroin.

    The complaint states that 67-year-Miguel Angel Llamas was hanging out at his neighbor’s home when several cops rushed up to him brandishing their handguns and grabbing his arm, pulling out the medical-tubing attached to his arm for the dialysis treatment he undergoes each week – resulting in a bloody, painful experience.

    “The unreasonable and unnecessary yanking and pulling of Plaintiff’s arms caused Plaintiff’s medical tubing to become disconnected, causing Plaintiff to suffer severe pain and visible bleeding,” states the complaint, which can be read here.

    “One of the other defendants then slammed plaintiff up against the wall, causing Plaintiff to strike his head.”

    Then two cops forcefully yanked him by the arms in an “extremely forceful and violent manner,” the lawsuit alleges.

    As the cops became violent and the commotion ensued, Llamas says he pleaded with cops to be careful dealing with him due to his health issues.

    Llamas questioned why they were being so violent with him. That’s when a cop-named-defendent in the lawsuit came up and swept Llamas’ leg and then forced the 67-year-old diabetic man on dialysis into handcuffs.

    Llamas informed them he was in pain, but his pleas went ignored as cops restrained him in the back of a police cruisers for about 15 minutes, which could raise Terry stop issues if the police didn’t have reasonable suspicion he committed crime when they detained him.

    In a conversation with PINAC, Llamas’ attorney, Humberto Guizar implied his client may have been profiled as an illegal drug user.

    “Police were there because of a call by someone saying there was a man with a gun. My client did not have a gun. They saw him injecting himself and they assumed he was a drug addict. That is why they attacked him.”

    Guizar’s lawsuit argues Long Beach police deprived his client’s rights to be free from state action so badly it would ‘shock the conscience under the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause’ and also alleges violations of the Fourth Amendment, failures to develop appropriate training policy, and excessive force.

    The suit also states that the officers witnessing the attack with “deliberate indifference,” refusing to do anything to prevent it should be held liable as well.

    The officers released Llamas from the police car after realizing he had committed no crime, but never offered him medical attention or even an offer to call an ambulance.

    Llamas seeks to recover for damages due to the unreasonable search and seizure, excessive force, denial of medical care, assault and battery, constitutional violations, and municipal liability.

    And an apology might be nice, too.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/28/california-cops-sued-for-attacking-diabetic-man-at-gunpoint-mistaking-insulin-for-heroin/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2016, 09:01:21 PM
    Armed and dangerous criminal gangs attacking people.

    California Cops Savagely Beat Teen For Recording Police, Caught in Massive Cover Up

    Three California cops were caught on camera in a one-minute video (seen below) giving a 16-year old a devastating beating, cracking his legs with a baton and threatening the young man with a taser.

    Three Pomona Police officers beat teenager Christian Aguilar into submission at the Los Angeles County Fair when he recorded them arresting his family.

    Now the teenager and his family are suing six named cops and the Pomona Police Department, and the City of Pomona and Los Angeles County for a seven-part civil rights claim which you can see below.

    His only crime: recording the police.

    Then, Pomona Police officers arrested Robert Hansen, the man who recorded them beating the teenager too.

    They illegally seized and searched Hanson’s phone.

    And charged him with bogus offenses.

    Finally, California cops tried to cover their tracks, and maliciously prosecuted everyone involved.

    All charges were dropped against the teen, and his family.

    After all of that hard work, the Pomona Police delivered a coup de main: they edited Robert Hanson’s video of the arrest of Christian Aguilar and gave the video to the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office.

    All of the officers lied in their official reports too.

    They only charged the teenager Aguilar with resisting arrest, which itself isn’t a crime if there is no criminal accusation against a person, and the Los Angeles Sheriff’s department kept him housed in the adult population despite his protestation of juvenile status.

    “In the criminal trial, after watching the officers’ explanations of the discrepancies between the full video and their police reports unravel during cross examination,” says family lawyer David Gammill, of the Los Angeles based Geragos Law Firm, and that, “The judge dismissed Christian’s criminal case before the defense ever had to call a single witness.”

    The officers had just arrested his father Ignacio Aguilar Jr. and cousin, accusing them of public intoxication and Christian Ignacio decided to record the officers from 30 feet away.

    Aguilar’s brother, Ignacio Aguilar IV, was also taken to the ground, and physically detained by the police for yelling as his family’s civil rights were violated one at a time.

    Ignacio Aguilar IV was a junior officer at the Pomona Police Department at the time of the incident.

    Luckily, another citizen – Robert Hanson, the “neutral third party” – whipped out their cellphone and recorded the entire shocking police brutality incident started by Pomona Officer Jensen.

    As is clear in the video, Aguilar didn’t ever challenge the first officer on the scene’s use of inappropriate force, when Officer Jensen smashed his head into a fence  – instead putting his hands at his sides and thrusting his chin forward in a posture of frustrated readiness.

    Officer Jensen thrust his forearm into Aguilar’s face twice at maximum thrust, before Pomona Officers Hutchinson and Correa arrived.

    Hutchinson thoughtfully held the teenager along with Jensen, and that’s when Pomona Officer landed a devastating blow, with his long black baton to Christian Aguilar’s knee, sending the teenager to the ground.

    As the three grown men beat the teenager, another Pomona Officer came over an discharged his taser near the teen to strike terror.

    There’s no other reason to deploy a weapon in that manner.

    Eventually, at least seven cops responded to the call.

    Five of them hovered over the beaten Aguilar, as two kept a perimeter.

    The video ends as a police officer asks Hanson for his name in a familiar scene, where police seek to claim that photography is somehow a crime enabling them to illegally demand identification.

    Photography is not a crime, it’s a First Amendment protected right.

    Surely, the taxpayers of Pomona will be forced to cough up big bucks, and we still haven’t seen a single officer named below in this lawsuit charged with any crime for beating a teenager, and arresting him for recording the police.

    According to the Geragos firm, Ignacio Aguilar was a highly regarded cardiac nurse and was forced out of his job by the slanderous allegations. Christian Aguilar’s mother Eraine Aguilar has been in law enforcement since 2001 and was sickened by the conduct of Pomona PD.

    The family lawyers claim that Eraine Aguilar was actually intimidated by Pomona PD when she wanted to complain, and Pomona PD told that Christian could not have a lawyer if he wanted to make a complaint when he was arrested..

    But now, a federal court will settle the matter, and maybe, just maybe the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office will think twice about any evidence put forth by the rotten barrel California residents call the Pomona Police Department.

    Because the Pomona police department crossed the line, from law enforcement to thugs.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/28/graphic-three-california-cops-beat-teenager-senseless-resisting-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 29, 2016, 04:30:23 AM
    http://abc7news.com/news/i-team-exclusive-woman-at-center-of-opd-scandal-speaks-out/1403842



    -TEAM
    I-TEAM EXCLUSIVE: WOMAN AT CENTER OF OAKLAND POLICE SEX SCANDAL SPEAKS OUT

    I-TEAM EXCLUSIVE: Woman at center of OPD scandal speaks out
    There's new info in the Oakland police sex scandal -- the woman at the center of it all is telling it all. In an exclusive in-depth interview with I-Team reporter Dan Noyes, Celeste Guap reveals how and why she started having sex with an Oakland police officer at just 16. (KGO-TV)
    EMBED
    By Dan Noyes
    Monday, June 27, 2016 06:39PM

    OAKLAND, Calif. (KGO) -- The ABC7 News I-Team has exclusive new information from an interview with the 18-year-old woman at the center of the Oakland police sex scandal. It has spread to more law enforcement agencies, with the latest, Livermore police. It's a story you'll see only on ABC7 News.

    RELATED: I-TEAM EXCLUSIVE: Cop's murder played role in Oakland police sex scandal

    The scandal is growing. At this point, dozens of careers are on the line. Officers, sergeants, and captains are under investigation for having sex with a young prostitute; several incidents when she was underage.

    In many ways, Celeste Guap is a typical teenager, concerned about her appearance for our interview.

    Celeste: "I don't have lipstick on."
    Dan: "That's alright. Go ahead."
    Celeste: "I'm sorry, I'm sorry."
    Dan: That's okay."

    But, she has seen more in her 18 years than anyone should in a lifetime. Meet Celeste Guap -- that's not her real name.

    Celeste: "Guap means money."
    Dan: "Guap means money?"
    Celeste: "Yeah, it's slang, like street for money."

    Even though her mother holds a good job as an Oakland police dispatcher, Celeste was exposed to drugs and prostitution growing up in Richmond, and then decided to hit the streets herself.

    Dan: "Can you tell me at what age you actually took money for sex?"
    Celeste: "I was 12 the first time."

    Celeste tells me she now works an Oakland street corner, and finds clients on social media.

    Celeste says she was 16 when she had sex with her first officer, an Oakland cop, who was her mother's friend.

    RELATED: I-TEAM EXCLUSIVE: Secrets to what sparked OPD sex scandal revealed

    "And he would tell me, he be like, 'Hurry up and turn, hurry up and turn 18,'" she said. "But I talked him into it. I feel guilty because he was trying to do the right thing."

    Celeste tells me two more OPD officers had sex with her when she was underage, as did a Contra Costa Sheriff's deputy. She says the officers told their friends.

    Celeste: "I would get texts, you know."
    Dan: "Saying what?"
    Celeste: "Yeah, 'I'm an Oakland cop, too.' And straight up, they just be like, 'My friend blah blah blah told me about you.'"
    Dan: "And you would meet after that?"
    Celeste: "Yeah."

    Celeste says she slept with "more than 30" in all -- street cops, sergeants, captains, even a police dog handler.

    "So I wanted to meet his canine, he did," she said. "There's this one time we did it in the car and he had his canine watching us from the backseat."

    RELATED: I-TEAM EXCLUSIVE: Raising questions about Bay Area police sex scandal investigation

    Celeste tells me investigators have interviewed her and copied everything on her phone -- texts and chats with officers, even photos of them having sex.

    Here's how the police sex scandal is spreading. According to Celeste, it involves:

    16 officers from the Oakland Police Department
    6 Richmond police officers
    4 Alameda County Sheriff's deputies
    3 San Francisco cops
    1 Contra Costa Sheriff's deputy
    1 Livermore cop
    1 police officer from the U.S. Military's Defense Logistics Agency, who contacted Celeste after the scandal erupted

    It was just a coincidence that the Richmond park I chose for the interview was the same place many cops took her for sex.
    Celeste: "Three out of all the 30 paid me."
    Dan: "Only three out of the 30."
    Celeste: "Yeah, yeah."
    Dan: "Why did you have sex with the other ones who didn't pay you?"
    Celeste: "I don't know, I just look at them like information. Their perks become your perks, you know."

    Celeste showed me texts in which officers appear to tip her off to police operations. One exchange from this past March with a cop she nicknamed "Superman" reads, "Want some advice?" Celeste answered, "Tell me handsome." The response was, "Stay off E14 from Fruitvale to 42 tonight. There's a uc (or undercover) operation."

    Celeste also tells me on at least 10 occasions, officers provided police reports or inside information on criminal cases for her and her friends.

    And now, she's trying to protect those officers, by refusing to turn over their names.

    Celeste: "Even OPD is mad at me because I won't give them everybody, but..."
    Dan: "But do you think they're standing up for you in any way?"
    Celeste: "No, they all turned their back on me."
    Dan: "Yet, you won't give up all the names?"
    Celeste: "No."

    All this would have remained a secret if an officer had answered a single phone call Celeste placed. Click here for that story.

    At least seven law enforcement agencies have launched investigations, but the Alameda County Sheriff is done. They tell me they cleared four deputies who had sex with Celeste, because it was consensual, no one paid, and she was 18 at the time. We'll have more on that in the coming days.

    Click here for more stories and videos by Dan Noyes and the I-Team.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2016, 02:08:00 AM
    Disabled Teen Beaten Bloody By TSA Agents After Intrusive Search Confused and Frightened Her

    MEMPHIS, TN – A special needs teenager returning home from a brain tumor treatment at St. Jude Hospital was left battered, bloodied and in jail  after an encounter with TSA agents at a security checkpoint.

    It’s a trip they’ve made for 17-years, according to the teen’s mother Shirley Cohen, but this one was unlike any they had experienced before – and hopefully never have to experience again.

    Upon arriving at the security checkpoint with her mother, Hannah Cohen, 19, set off a metal detector and was identified for further screening by TSA agents.

    “They wanted to do further scanning, she was reluctant, she didn’t understand what they were about to do,” said her mother, Shirley Cohen.

    Shirley Cohen, upon realizing her daughter’s confusion at the situation, attempted to tell the TSA agents that her daughter is partially deaf, blind in one eye, paralyzed, and easily confused. However, police restrained her from doing so, as she was kept away from the TSA agents, according to WREG 3.

    The frightened and confused disabled teen – not understanding what was transpiring due to her disabilities – attempted to flee. She was violently taken to the ground, causing the young woman, who had just finished a brain tumor treatment, to hit her head on the ground.

    “She’s trying to get away from them, but in the next instant, one of them had her down on the ground and hit her head on the floor,” Shirley Cohen said. “There was blood everywhere.”

    The young woman, who should have been celebrating the end of her treatment at St. Jude, was ultimately taken from Memphis International Airport in handcuffs. Terrified and bloodied, she was arrested and booked into jail for the night.

    “Here we were with nowhere to go, not even a toothbrush, our bags had gone to Chattanooga,” said Shirley Cohen.

    While all charges against Hanna Cohen were subsequently dismissed, the family has filed a lawsuit against the Memphis International Airport, Transportation Security Administration and the Memphis Airport Police.

    The organizations have refused to comment due to pending litigation, but Sari Koshetz of the TSA released a statement that said, “Passengers can call ahead of time to learn more about the screening process for their particular needs or medical situation.”

    Shirley Cohen can’t believe that her daughter had to needlessly go through such a traumatic experience after having already been through so much in her 19-years.
    “She’s 19 but she’ll always be my baby. We’ve been through so much.”

    This type of reckless behavior is indicative of a system that emphasizes protocol over common sense. Had anyone simply taken the time to listen to the girl’s mother as she attempted to inform the TSA agents of her daughter’s disabilities all of this could have been avoided.

    Therein lies the true problem with the ever-growing security state in the United States – if you only have a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/disabled-teen-beaten-bloody-tsa/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2016, 08:38:13 PM
    Organized criminal gangs of armed rapists attacking innocent people.

    Cops Charged with Official Oppression for Publicly Raping Woman after They “Smelled Marijuana”

    Houston, TX — Charnesia Corley was on her way to the store to get medicine for her sick mother last June when she was detained by police for allegedly running a stop sign. Within minutes, this routine traffic stop turned into a waking nightmare as cops publicly raped her in search of a plant.

    According to her lawyer, Sam Cammack, the charges were all eventually dropped and there never was any marijuana.

    Corley hired Cammack in an ongoing civil case against Harris County for the despicable violations perpetrated by public servants.

    As a result of an investigation by the Civil Rights Division of the Harris County District Attorney’s office into the incident, two of the three officers involved have been charged with Official Oppression, a Class A misdemeanor. The defendants, Ronaldine Pierre (33) and William Strong (36), could face up to a year in jail — a ridiculously insignificant punishment for such a gruesome crime.

    Both of the rapist deputies have kept their jobs in spite of the charges. However, they have been moved to civilian duties pending the outcome of their cases.

    According to the Harris County Sheriff’s Department, the deputy who pulled Corley over asked her to step out of the vehicle after “smelling what he believed to be marijuana.”

    However, during a search of Corley’s vehicle, without her consent, no illegal plants were found. But this sadistic cop wasn’t done just yet. He knew deep down that this woman’s story about getting medicine for her mother was a lie, and she must have been smuggling this evil plant inside her body somewhere. The deputy then handcuffed Corley and placed her into the back of his cruiser.

    Being a male, the deputy felt that it would be in poor taste to penetrate this woman’s bodily orifices himself, so he called a female deputy over to conduct the public roadside rape in a politically correct fashion.
    Upon arriving, the female deputy ordered the handcuffed woman out of the car and into the parking lot.

    “She tells me to pull my pants down. I said, ‘Ma’am, I don’t have any underwear on.’ She says, ‘Well, that doesn’t matter. Pull your pants down,'” Corley said.

    Because Corley didn’t immediately prostrate herself to be vaginally raped by a peace officer’s appendages in search of an illegal plant, the deputy charged her with resisting arrest.

    In spite of her verbal protests, Corley was then stripped down in public and forcefully penetrated by this public servant — in the best interests of society, no doubt.


    “I bend over and she proceeds to try to force her hand inside of me. I tell her, ‘Ma’am, No. You cannot do this,'” Corley explained.

    Corley maintains that at no time did she ever consent to be raped by deputies.

    According to Harris County Sheriff’s spokesperson, Thomas Gilleland, this stop was justified and the department did everything by the book. According to deputies, the rapist cops recovered .02 ounces of a plant which they consider to be evil. However, as Corley’s attorney pointed out — there was never any marijuana.

    Even if Corley had been carrying hundreds of pounds of marijuana, the act of penetrating her vaginally is horrifically unjustified and immoral. Corley had caused harm to no one. She was merely driving to get medicine for her mother when she was detained and held under the threat of death and raped by agents of the state who claim to protect the citizens.

    Who is “served” by the actions of these officers? Who exactly are the police “protecting” by publicly humiliating and sexually assaulting this poor woman in a gas station parking lot?

    “It’s undeniable that the search is unconstitutional,” said Cammack. However, it is far worse than “unconstitutional.” It is evil. It is atrocious. It is depraved.

    The vileness of the state’s wicked and immoral war on drugs is rearing it repugnant face. When will the rest of society see that face and wake up to this atrocity? When will the people say “enough is enough,” and that finger raping innocent people on the roadside in search of a plant that’s legal in 5 states is no longer welcome in our culture?

    Please share this article with your friends and family to help wake them up to this very real American Horror Story.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-publicly-raped-smelling-marijuana/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 05, 2016, 12:03:12 AM
    California Cops Tow Car with Occupants Inside After Driver Refuses to Roll Window More Than Three-Quarters Down

    California police were not satisfied that a man driving through a DUI checkpoint had rolled his window three-quarters of the way down and handed them his drivers license.

    No, they wanted the window rolled all the way down, so when he refused, they ordered a tow truck driver to latch on to the car and drive it away from the video of the men recording the stop – while the occupants remained inside – then had the driver use a slim jim to open the driver’s door.

    The driver was then arrested on unknown charges, even though he showed no signs of impairment.

    The incident took place Sunday in Hawthorne in Los Angeles County and the video was recorded by Onus News Service, who said there is no law in California requiring drivers to roll their windows all the way down.

    The driver, who is not named, initially handed his license to a California Highway Patrol officer, which was when he rolled the window three-quarters of a way down.

    When the driver refused to roll it all the way down, the CHP officer called over Hawthorne Police Lieutenant Ty Goetz, who accused the driver of not complying with “the rules of the checkpoint.”

    Onus News Service posted another video last year showing Lieutenant Goetz telling him that the law requires drivers to perform field sobriety tests as they drive through checkpoints.

    Onus News Service told the lieutenant that there is no law in California that requires drivers to submit to these tests, an assertion that went unchallenged by the officer.

    “Can you cite the law that requires them,” the journalist asked.

    “Nope,” the lieutenant said, shaking his head.

    “No, because there is no law,” the journalist responded.

    “Go ahead and tell them not to cooperate but I guarantee you it will end up bad,” Goetz responded, adding that the driver will end up in jail for refusing to comply with his unlawful orders.

    This is how Onus News Service worded it on his video:

    Not only does he say motorists are required by law to take FST’s, but he also admits to not informing motorists of their right to refuse tests. California law MANDATES that police inform motorists that pre arrest breathalyzers are option.

    23612 CVC
    (i) If the officer decides to use a preliminary alcohol screening
    test, the officer shall advise the person that he or she is
    requesting that person to take a preliminary alcohol screening test
    to assist the officer in determining if that person is under the
    influence of alcohol or drugs, or a combination of alcohol and drugs.
    The person’s obligation to submit to a blood, breath, or urine test,
    as required by this section, for the purpose of determining the
    alcohol or drug content of that person’s blood, is not satisfied by
    the person submitting to a preliminary alcohol screening test. The
    officer shall advise the person of that fact and of the person’s
    right to refuse to take the preliminary alcohol screening test.

    Below are three videos, including the one from Sunday as well as two previous videos where Lieutenant Goetz says all drivers must comply with all orders under all circumstances.







    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/04/california-cops-tow-car-with-occupants-inside-after-driver-refuses-to-roll-window-more-than-three-quarters-down/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2016, 10:46:53 PM
    More cops who "feared for their lives". No protests for this young man. At this point the police investigate themselves so it is unclear if the 2 cops involved will be held accountable.

    California Police Release Body Cam Video in Shooting Death of Dylan Noble

    California police were looking for a man in camouflage walking down the street carrying a rifle when they decided to pull over a man in a truck who was not wearing camouflage and not carrying a rifle.

    An unarmed man named Dylan Noble whom Fresno police shot and killed anyway.

    Today, after viewing body cam footage of the shooting, Noble’s family filed a claim to sue the Fresno Police Department, stating that they had no justifiable reason to shoot the 19-year-old man on June 25.

    California law requires citizens to file a tort claim before filing the actual lawsuit to give the government entity a chance to settle.

    Fresno police claim Noble reached for his waistband, causing them to fear for their lives. They also claim he said, “I hate my life,” as if that’s supposed to justify them taking his life.

    But the attorneys who viewed the video – which has not been released – says Noble stepped out of his vehicle with his hands in the air before he was shot repeatedly by two officers.

    In fact, one cop shot him twice from about ten feet away, causing Noble to fall to the ground. That same cop waited about 30 seconds before walking up to Noble and shooting him again.

    Then, after 15 seconds, another officer walked up to Noble with a shotgun and finished him off, according to the claim, which you can read here.

    But this is how police describe the incident, according to the Los Angeles Times.

    Officers at the scene had warned Noble not to reach into his waistband, believing he may have a gun, but Noble twice reached under his shirt for his waistband, Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer said.

    Fearing for their lives, one of the officers fired two shots, then a third. Another officer fired the fourth shot.

    Police initially responded to a report of a man walking with a rifle about 3:20 p.m. and saw a black pickup speeding. Police tried to stop the truck, but it drove for about half a mile before pulling into a gas station.

    Lt. Burke Farrah said Noble did not show his hands, then tried to hide one hand behind his back. Despite officers’ orders to show his hands and drop to the ground, he did not comply. After telling police that he “hated his life,” he approached officers, who opened fire.

    While prosecutors say they won’t release the body cam footage until the investigation is complete, which can take two months, a witness to the shooting posted a video capturing the tail end of the shooting.

    UPDATE: The body cam footage showing Fresno police shooting and killing Dylan Noble was just released and it’s not pretty, showing the cops pull him over at gunpoint, ordering him to show him his hands.

    It appears as if one hand wasn’t visible so they shot him. And when he fell to the ground and clutched his chest in the area where he had been shot, they shot him again because he would not spread his arms to his side.

    And when he continued clutching his chest, they shot him again.

    There was nothing indicating he was the man walking down the street wearing camouflage carrying a rifle.

    According to the Fresno Bee:

    The Fresno Police Department released body camera video Wednesday showing Dylan Noble repeatedly ignoring officers demands that he stop moving back and forth at a gas station parking lot and show his hands before officers fired their weapons.

    Police Chief Jerry Dyer said the investigation into the shooting is still under way, and he has not made a decision whether it was justified. But he said he wanted to release the video so the public could see a more complete picture of what the officers saw as they confronted Noble and had to make decisions in mere seconds.

    In releasing the video, Dyer appealed for calm from the community, saying tensions are high in the community and around the nation over police shootings, and one spark could ignite a forest fire.

    “I am praying this video doesn’t serve as that spark in this community,” Dyer said.

    He should pray it does not serve as a spark in the nation because this was murder.





    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/13/california-cops-sued-for-killing-unarmed-teenager-in-case-of-mistaken-identity/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2016, 02:48:17 AM
    Dangerous violent criminals.

    Cop Brutally Attacks Innocent Disabled Man with One Hand — Then Arrests Him

    Providence, RI — Surveillance video from an assault on a police officer case shows how cops will lie and deprive people of their freedom to cover up their violent ways.

    Last year, Esmelin Fajardo was arrested and charged with resisting arrest and assault on a police officer. However, the only one assaulted in this incident was Fajardo.

    The incident happened last September as police were shutting down a nightclub for being open too late. As police were ‘protecting’ society from the dangers of people being in a private establishment past 2:00 a.m., Fajardo tried to tell them that he worked at the club. However, officers weren’t having it.

    As cops were escorting everyone out of the building, all hell broke loose when one of them attacked Fajardo.

    According to the cowardly officer’s report, Fajardo balled up his left fist and attempted to swing at him. But, because of a birth defect, that is impossible.

    “There was no way for me to make a fist,” Fajardo said. “Especially with my left hand.”

    Fajardo’s left hand has been disabled since birth and has no fingers with which to even make a fist.


    “I stepped away. You can see it in the video,” he said. “He grabbed me, punched my face, hit me with a flashlight. I was just trying to save my life.”

    Fajardo, fearing that he was going to be killed by this maniac officer, simply put up his feet in defense. This defensive move was interpreted by the cop as an attack, so he became even more violent.
    “I just thought I was going to die that moment,” Fajardo said. “I thought I was going to lose my life.”

    The video then shows Fajardo getting up, with the officer who had punched him striking at him again. Fajardo picked up a broomstick, again, in a move to simply protect himself as the pepper spray had blinded him.
    “I couldn’t see or breath after the pepper spray,” Fajardo said. “I was scared.”

    As the officer took out his baton, the assault finally stopped and Fajardo was arrested.

    According to the Providence Police Department, the unnamed officer is still on the force. However, they assure the public that he was disciplined. When asked what punishment the officer received for assaulting an innocent man and attempting to deprive him of his freedom for years, the department wouldn’t say.

    Luckily for Fajardo, after the video surfaced, prosecutors realized they don’t have a case and are allowing him to plea not guilty.

    Amy Kempe, the Public Information Officer for the Rhode Island Attorney General’s office, explained that this matter will soon be off his record. “He was allowed to enter a not guilty plea,” Kempe said. “If he stays out of trouble, the matter is off his record.”

    “I’m very relieved,” Fajardo said. “It was very stressful. You don’t even know what I went through over the past year. It was painful.”

    This case highlights the dangerous nature of violent cops. This officer committed a crime, on video, and could have ruined an innocent man’s life. However, because he carries a badge and a gun, not only will he not be charged, he won’t even lose his job.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/surveillance-footage-cop-assault-one-hand/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 14, 2016, 02:52:59 PM
    More cops who "feared for their lives". No protests for this young man. At this point the police investigate themselves so it is unclear if the 2 cops involved will be held accountable.

    California Police Release Body Cam Video in Shooting Death of Dylan Noble

    California police were looking for a man in camouflage walking down the street carrying a rifle when they decided to pull over a man in a truck who was not wearing camouflage and not carrying a rifle.

    An unarmed man named Dylan Noble whom Fresno police shot and killed anyway.

    Today, after viewing body cam footage of the shooting, Noble’s family filed a claim to sue the Fresno Police Department, stating that they had no justifiable reason to shoot the 19-year-old man on June 25.

    California law requires citizens to file a tort claim before filing the actual lawsuit to give the government entity a chance to settle.

    Fresno police claim Noble reached for his waistband, causing them to fear for their lives. They also claim he said, “I hate my life,” as if that’s supposed to justify them taking his life.

    But the attorneys who viewed the video – which has not been released – says Noble stepped out of his vehicle with his hands in the air before he was shot repeatedly by two officers.

    In fact, one cop shot him twice from about ten feet away, causing Noble to fall to the ground. That same cop waited about 30 seconds before walking up to Noble and shooting him again.

    Then, after 15 seconds, another officer walked up to Noble with a shotgun and finished him off, according to the claim, which you can read here.

    But this is how police describe the incident, according to the Los Angeles Times.

    Officers at the scene had warned Noble not to reach into his waistband, believing he may have a gun, but Noble twice reached under his shirt for his waistband, Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer said.

    Fearing for their lives, one of the officers fired two shots, then a third. Another officer fired the fourth shot.

    Police initially responded to a report of a man walking with a rifle about 3:20 p.m. and saw a black pickup speeding. Police tried to stop the truck, but it drove for about half a mile before pulling into a gas station.

    Lt. Burke Farrah said Noble did not show his hands, then tried to hide one hand behind his back. Despite officers’ orders to show his hands and drop to the ground, he did not comply. After telling police that he “hated his life,” he approached officers, who opened fire.

    While prosecutors say they won’t release the body cam footage until the investigation is complete, which can take two months, a witness to the shooting posted a video capturing the tail end of the shooting.

    UPDATE: The body cam footage showing Fresno police shooting and killing Dylan Noble was just released and it’s not pretty, showing the cops pull him over at gunpoint, ordering him to show him his hands.

    It appears as if one hand wasn’t visible so they shot him. And when he fell to the ground and clutched his chest in the area where he had been shot, they shot him again because he would not spread his arms to his side.

    And when he continued clutching his chest, they shot him again.

    There was nothing indicating he was the man walking down the street wearing camouflage carrying a rifle.

    According to the Fresno Bee:

    The Fresno Police Department released body camera video Wednesday showing Dylan Noble repeatedly ignoring officers demands that he stop moving back and forth at a gas station parking lot and show his hands before officers fired their weapons.

    Police Chief Jerry Dyer said the investigation into the shooting is still under way, and he has not made a decision whether it was justified. But he said he wanted to release the video so the public could see a more complete picture of what the officers saw as they confronted Noble and had to make decisions in mere seconds.

    In releasing the video, Dyer appealed for calm from the community, saying tensions are high in the community and around the nation over police shootings, and one spark could ignite a forest fire.

    “I am praying this video doesn’t serve as that spark in this community,” Dyer said.

    He should pray it does not serve as a spark in the nation because this was murder.





    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/13/california-cops-sued-for-killing-unarmed-teenager-in-case-of-mistaken-identity/

    I was surprised the video of the actual shooting looked nothing like the author of the article described it as..  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 20, 2016, 02:39:07 PM
    Once again the bill goes to the taxpayers, no accountability for the cops (and/or prosecutors, witnesses) who are responsible for what this man went through, 20 years in prison he and his family will never get back:

    L.A. County to pay $10 million to man whose murder conviction was overturned

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-francisco-carrillo-settlement-20160719-snap-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 23, 2016, 02:18:16 PM
    Bad Apples? HALF of All TSA Employees Accused of Misconduct — Many of them Repeat Offenders

    Earlier this month, a special needs teenager returning home from a brain tumor treatment at St. Jude Hospital was left battered, bloodied and in jail after an encounter with Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents at a security checkpoint.

    Seventy-two TSA agents are on the DHS terrorist watch list. The blue-gloved bandits have been caught in every crime from smuggling cocaine to sexually assaulting passengers in the bathroom to groping children — yet the American public is forced to keep funding them.

    Aside from being a criminal gang of sexual predators and thieves, the TSA is entirely incompetent in their ostensible position of keeping airlines safe. Multiple reports and incidents have pointed out the sheer inability of the TSA to protect anyone.

    This facade of protection also comes with a hefty price tag, outside of the forced taxation — long lines. According to CNTraveler.com:
    Despite the Transportation Security Administration’s ten-point action plan to reduce long lines at airports across the country, lengthy queues remain.

    It’s time to face the facts — the police state monstrosity known as the TSA is an utter rights-violating disaster.

    Nothing highlights this notion quite like a recent study conducted by the Department of Homeland security.

    According to the report from the House Homeland Security Commission entitled “Misconduct at TSA Threatens the Security of the Flying Public,” nearly half of the TSA’s 60,000 employees have been cited for misconduct in recent years.

    In their 29 page report, the word misconduct appears a whopping 237 times!

    According to the report:
    Almost half of TSA’s entire workforce allegedly committed misconduct, and almost half of that number allegedly did so repeatedly. According to TSA data, from fiscal year 2013 through 2015, almost 27,000 unique employees had an allegation of misconduct filed against them. Moreover, about half of those employees had two or more misconduct allegations filed against them, with some employees having 14, 16, and 18 allegations. In fact, 1,270 employees had five or more misconduct allegations filed against them (see Table 2).

    (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/w9bO5Fe.png)

    In a similar fashion to the police in America, when TSA agents are accused of and investigated for misconduct, they are awarded with a paid vacation.

    In addition, TSA provided data showing that 781 employees received paid administrative leave while under investigation for alleged misconduct from fiscal years 2013 through 2015, with 20 of these employees receiving such leave for six months or more. Five employees received paid administrative leave for 1 year or more. In total, TSA spent almost $5.9 million paying these 781 employees while they were being investigated for alleged misconduct.

    Up until this comprehensive report, Americans had no idea how corrupt the TSA was because the TSA, just like the police, reports no data on allegations of their misconduct.

    As Techdirt notes, if the agency is unwilling to do even the minimum to curb misconduct, it should come as no surprise that it’s become host to a large number of misbehaving employees. Fifteen years of mismanagement has turned a response to a horrific attack into a playground for people who like lots of power and zero accountability.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/tsa-accused-misconduct-repeat-offenders/

    https://homeland.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/TSA-Misconduct-Report.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 24, 2016, 03:01:27 PM
    Florida cop who shot unarmed therapist was aiming for his patient
    nydailynews.com ^ | July 22, 2016 | Meg Wagner
    Posted on 7/24/2016, 1:44:14 PM by Morgana

    Sorry about that bullet, man. I was aiming for the autistic guy.

    A Florida cop who wounded an unarmed black therapist was actually trying to shoot the man’s patient, a union official said Thursday.

    The unidentified North Miami police officer thought Charles Kinsey — who was lying on his back with his arms in the air — was in danger, his union chief said. The patient, who escaped from MACtown Inc., a nearby group home where Kinsey works, had a toy in his hand.

    “All he has is a toy truck, a toy truck,” Kinsey told the cop Monday, according to video obtained by his lawyer. “I am a behavior therapist at a group home.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2016, 03:12:24 PM
    Florida cop who shot unarmed therapist was aiming for his patient
    nydailynews.com ^ | July 22, 2016 | Meg Wagner
    Posted on 7/24/2016, 1:44:14 PM by Morgana

    Sorry about that bullet, man. I was aiming for the autistic guy.

    A Florida cop who wounded an unarmed black therapist was actually trying to shoot the man’s patient, a union official said Thursday.

    The unidentified North Miami police officer thought Charles Kinsey — who was lying on his back with his arms in the air — was in danger, his union chief said. The patient, who escaped from MACtown Inc., a nearby group home where Kinsey works, had a toy in his hand.

    “All he has is a toy truck, a toy truck,” Kinsey told the cop Monday, according to video obtained by his lawyer. “I am a behavior therapist at a group home.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...



    Imagine, this "veteran" cop was a member of the SWAT team... He even won “Officer of the Month” in September 2013 and in October 2014.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2016, 04:35:36 PM
    Massachusetts, New Hampshire Troopers Arrested After Violent Arrest in Multi-State Chase

    It took two months but authorities arrested two police officers Tuesday who were caught on video beating a suspect after he had surrendered.

    The beating took place on May 11 after a high-speed car chase that spanned two states; an adventure that ended in New Hampshire when suspect Richard Simone stopped his truck on a dead-end street, stepped out and fell to his knees in attempt to lay down on the ground.

    While that should have been the end of the story, two state troopers ran up to him and began kicking and punching him as a news copter from Massachusetts hovered overhead, recording the entire beating.

    The two cops struck him at least 22 times during a 20-second span as other cops surrounded him. One cop even yelled “easy” to get them to stop beating them, which caused them to pause for a moment before continuing the beating.

    The cops eventually handcuffed him, lifting him up and escorted him away to a patrol car.

    “Sarge, I’m sorry, I fucked up,” Monaco told his supervisor after the beating. “I just ruined my life over one shit.”

    Monaco then received medical attention for his bleeding knuckles.

    The entire beating was captured by WCVB, a news station out of Boston, which is what sparked the investigation.

    As a result, Massachusetts State Trooper Joseph Flynn was charged with two counts of simple assault, and New Hampshire State Trooper Andrew Monaco was charged with three counts of simple assault.

    Charges could be enhanced as the crimes were committed while officers were on duty, according to the Union Leader, who pointed out that the prosecutor avoided the usual habit of taking the case before a grand jury.

    Although a misdemeanor, the crime the two are accused of carries enhanced penalties: two to five years in New Hampshire State Prison, compared to 12 months in a county jail for a simple assault charge, Associate Attorney General Jane Young said.

    The investigation determined that given the number of police officers present — nine, including a police dog team — and the fact that Simone was not resisting, no reason existed to justify the use of force.

    Young said she would only discuss specifics and not make on overall comment about the behavior because her office is prosecuting the case. She said the evidence warrants the misdemeanor charge, and her office did not bring it before a grand jury.

    Both were released on their own recognizance after paying bail. Flynn, 32, and Monaco, 31, will be arraigned in Nashua in September.

    Simone, 50, was wanted on multiple arrest warrants, including assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and larceny, when he led police on the chase that reached speeds of 90 mph.

    Both officers have been suspended without pay.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/20/massachusetts-new-hampshire-troopers-arrested-violent-arrest-multi-state-chase/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2016, 04:36:28 PM
    South Carolina Deputy Threatened to Arrest Woman and her Boyfriend if She Refused to Perform Oral Sex on Him

    A South Carolina deputy is facing ten years in prison after he was accused of forcing a woman to perform oral sex on him, threatening to arrest her boyfriend if she did not comply.

    The woman said she complied after Orangeburg County sheriff’s deputy Dereck Johnson threatened to arrest her too.

    The sexual assault lasted four minutes while the woman’s 16-year-old daughter slept in a bedroom nearby. When it was over, Johnson left the woman inside the mobile home, walked up to her boyfriend with a smirk on his face and shook his hand.

    “He looked me in the eye and shook my hand,” the boyfriend told the Associated Press. “Who does that?”

    Johnson, who was arrested Wednesday, was given a personal recognizance bond, which means he got out of jail for free.

    Johnson was one of two deputies that responded to the couple’s home after an argument over something posted on social media resulted in the boyfriend calling the cops to their home.

    The couple was separated and questioned.

    While a sworn deputy waited outside with the boyfriend, Johnson, a trainee at the time, stepped inside of the single-wide mobile home.

    Once alone with the woman, deputy Johnson threatened to arrest her boyfriend.

    Unless she performed oral sex on him.

    When she began crying and begging him he said, “If you don’t do it, you’re going to jail, too.”

    After the deputies left, the woman was dejected and visibly upset.

    Upon learning what took place, her boyfriend convinced her to call the police again, and a third deputy arrived to take her statement.

    But that deputy never offered or suggested the woman seek immediate medical care in order to collect evidence or address health concerns, which is standard protocol.

    He also never offered to call a victim advocate to provide the woman with counseling options, which is also standard.

    “If it wasn’t an officer, I believe that things would have been handled differently,” said state Rep. Justin Bamberg, the woman’s attorney. “She was not treated as the victim that she was.”

    “What this is about is the powerful taking advantage of the powerless. You’ve got a badge, a set of handcuffs,” said Bamberg. “You are extremely powerful. Who do you call for help when the police are the ones that terrorize you?”

    Johnson was a sworn deputy who never completed the 12-week training course at the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy that is required in South Carolina.

    Sheriff Leroy Ravenell fired Johnson a day after learning of the assault and turned the case over to state police who investigated for over a month before issuing a warrant for Johnson.

    According to Bamberg, his client feared nobody would believe she was assaulted by a law enforcement officer, but Johnson’s arrest provided some relief.

    “We’re looking forward to a conviction,” said Bamberg. “Because it sends a very important message that these things are not OK.”

    “If these things aren’t fixed, it could one day be your daughter.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/23/south-carolina-deputy-threatened-to-arrest-woman-and-her-boyfriend-if-she-refused-to-perform-oral-sex-on-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2016, 04:39:59 PM
    Cop Pulls Gun on Jack in the Box Employee for Not Making his Burger Fast Enough


    Santa Clara, CA — A video was anonymously posted online this week showing a Santa Clara County Sheriff’s deputy involved in a standoff with police after he decided to pull his gun on a Jack in the Box employee.
    Benjamin Lee, 33, was arrested about 2:40 a.m. earlier this year after he drunkenly drove into the Jack in the Box order line and apparently thought his status as a cop could speed up his service.

    According to witnesses, Lee became very frustrated that the drive-through line was taking so long. When he finally reached the window to order his food, he pulled out his gun instead of his wallet.

    Naturally fearing for their lives when assaulted with a deadly weapon by a cop, the employees called 9-1-1. Lee, obviously thinking he did nothing wrong or feeling that he was above the law, sat and waited for his food.
    However, before Lee’s food would arrive, officers with the Santa Clara police department would show up.

    When officers arrived, a tense standoff ensued as they pinned their AR-15s on Lee’s car and his passengers. Eventually, however, police would take them in without incident. Anyone else accused of the same crime would likely have experienced a deadly fate.

    Lee was arrested on suspicion of DUI and brandishing a weapon. When the vice president of the Deputy Sheriffs’ Association, Roger Winslow, released a statement on the incident, he conveniently failed to mention the assault with a deadly weapon.

    “Our deputies make arrests for these crimes regularly. They see firsthand the consequences caused by impaired drivers,” Winslow said. “DUI by anyone is unacceptable; doubly so when it involves a deputy sheriff. We are held to a higher standard and rightly so.”

    He then cautioned the public not to rush to judgment.

    “We fully expect that appropriate action will be taken after all the facts are determined,” he said.

    However, it is unclear if any ‘appropriate action’ has been taken. Following his arrest, Lee was placed on paid vacation, also known as administrative leave.


    The Free Thought Project contacted the Santa Clara Sheriff’s Department to inquire about Lee’s status, but they did not comment on his status or charges. It can be assumed that this officer, drunk on his perceived authority and alcohol — who threatened the lives of fast food employees with a gun for not making his burger fast enough — is still receiving a taxpayer funded paycheck.



    Police officers pulling guns on food workers in not uncommon. After this incident happened in January, the Free Thought Project was given a video by a Pizza delivery driver who was held at gunpoint by a cop and nearly killed while delivering pizza.

    In 2014, officer Scott Biumi pleaded guilty to assault and was sentenced to 10 years probation for pointing a gun at teenagers in the drive-through line at a McDonald’s.

    Also in 2014, Tuscon Police Officer, Kyle James McCartin, was drunk and belligerent when he walked into a Giant Gas Station wearing his bulletproof vest and began pointing his pistol at the clerk.

    For assaulting innocent people with deadly weapons, none of the officers mentioned above spent a single day in jail.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cop-pulls-gun-jack-box-employee/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2016, 02:43:47 PM
    Las Vegas police to pay $200K to settle lawsuit accusing ex-officer of excessive force

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/las-vegas-police-pay-200k-settle-lawsuit-accusing-ex-officer-excessive-force

    Civil rights violation, excessive force, falsifying his report to obstruct FBI investigation... And yet the taxpayers pay the bill once again...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 26, 2016, 08:25:39 PM
    Cop Who Killed his Son By Leaving Him in a Hot Car All Day, Not Charged — Because He’s a Cop

    In yet another example of privilege granted to those who work for the system, an officer from Rome, New York, will not be charged in the death of his infant son, who perished after being left in inside a hot car for 8 ½ hours.
    Officer Mark Fanfarillo left his 4 ½-month-old baby, Michael, in his car during the summer for nearly nine hours — but Oneida County District Attorney Scott McNamara refused to press charges.
     
    According to local WSYR-TV, the D.A. said Fanfarillo first realized he’d abandoned the baby in the car when his wife contacted him to say Michael had never been dropped off at the family’s daycare provider.
     
    Fanfarillo, McNamara explained, rushed out to the car after that call and “found his son’s lifeless body.” Although Fanfarillo “relentlessly” attempted to resuscitate the baby, the effort was ultimately unsuccessful.

    As McNamara’s office said in a statement:
    “The facts and evidence in this case do not reach the threshold required for criminal liability,” which, in New York, demand “a person must fail to perceive that a substantial and unjustifiable risk will result from their conduct. A lapse or loss in memory is insufficient proof to satisfy the legal requirement of failing to perceive a risk — something more is required.”

    According to McNamara, the officer placed Michael in the back seat to drop his elder child at daycare — though he typically didn’t bring the youngest along for the ride. After returning home, Fanfarillo simply forgot the baby was strapped into his carseat, did a few chores, and fell asleep — while Michael suffered in oppressive summer heat, eventually dying of hyperthermia, over 8 ½ hours later.

    “The law in our state recognizes a fundamental difference between the offender who leaves a child in a car knowing that the child is there but wrongly failing to appreciate the risk of such conduct, and a person who walks away from a vehicle after having forgotten that the child was still inside of it,” the district attorney’s statement explained.

    Fanfarillo’s cooperation with authorities also played a role in the district attorney’s decision not to prosecute — including both his willingness to submit to drug and alcohol testing (which found neither) and choice not retain an attorney during the course of the investigation — as did his lack of prior history of negligent or abusive behavior.

    “There is no evidence to suggest this is anything more than a tragic accident,” McNamara noted, as syracuse.com reported. “Unfortunately prosecutors see tragic accidents all the time that do not arise from criminal conduct and therefore do not result in homicide prosecutions.”

    While the death of Michael at the hands of his feckless father does, indeed, appear to be a tragic and highly avoidable ‘accident,’ decisions not to press charges against parents for leaving children to perish in sweltering vehicles disproportionately favor those in law enforcement and other occupations of State authority.

    In May 2015, as The Free Thought Project reported, Assistant Public Defender Young Kwon accidentally killed his 16-month-old son in strikingly similar circumstances. In soaring 92-degree heat, Kwon forgot to drop the infant girl at daycare and left her in the oppressively hot car for several hours until a family member inquired about the child. Kwon also rushed to try to save the infant but the heat had already killed her.

    In that case, the Sheriff refused to arrest the man, specifically noting he and the man’s wife, Assistant State Attorney Wendy Kwon, “routinely” interacted with his department. Unsurprisingly, no charges were filed — and the couple’s attorney, a public defender, specifically emphasized the Kwons were “excellent” and “dedicated” parents.

    And in another instance of blatant bias, Garland County Circuit Judge Wade Naramore wasn’t prosecuted after picking his 2-year-old son Thomas up from daycare and forgetting to bring the child inside his home. Thomas endured four hours in crushing heat before the judge realized the mistake — too late to save his life. Naramore, also, was never arrested and didn’t face consequences for neglecting to free the child from the car.

    In striking contrast, the same law enforcement department immediately arrested civilian Mandy Wilson for the same neglectful leaving of a child in a car, and charged her with Endangering the Welfare of a Minor.

    A couple in Florida left their 11-month-old child in a car in a Walmart parking lot for 39 minutes — when they emerged from the store, waiting police promptly arrested the pair and charged them with neglect.
    In Arizona, also in a Walmart parking lot, another woman without a State job was also arrested for leaving her child trapped in a vehicle.

    In fact, the list of average, ordinary, non-cop, non-judicial system, non-State employees charged for the exact same leaving of children in impossibly hot vehicles — whether the incidents proved lethal or not — is endless, as can be found with a simple online search.

    Just as endless are the same incidents where no arrests or no charges were ever handed down when one or both parents works for The Man.

    So, while McNamara might have explained New York’s conditions for such arrests, the fact is, authorities will find a way to prosecute parents for neglectfully leaving their kids in hot cars — unless they have such connections, in which case they will find a way not to.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-escapes-charges-son-hot-car/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 28, 2016, 03:08:44 PM
    One would expect that these criminals would, of all things, recognize the remnants of a donut..

    Cops Mistake Krispy Kreme Donuts for Meth, Throw Innocent 64-yo Man in Jail, Strip Search Him

    Orlando, FL — Thanks to the highly flawed means of testing for drugs and incompetent armed agents of the state enforcing immoral drug laws, a man’s donut got him arrested, strip searched, thrown in a cage and drug charges.

    Tens of thousands have been convicted and served time — even earning the black mark of a felony — for crimes they likely didn’t commit, a recent report found, because the cases against them relied on horribly unreliable field drug test kits.

    So prone to errors are the tests, courts won’t allow their submission as evidence. However, their continued use by law enforcement — coupled with a 90 percent rate at which drug cases are resolved through equally dubious plea deals — needlessly ruins thousands of lives.

    Daniel Rushing, of Orlando, is one of these people.

    Last December, Rushing, 64, was bringing his friend to his weekly chemotherapy session when he was stopped by police for the alleged ‘crime’ of not stopping all the way before pulling out of a gas station.

    This routine revenue generating stop would quickly descend into a nightmare after this highly trained police officer would see the crumbs of a Krispy Kreme donut on Rushing’s floor board.

    The officer, Cpl. Shelby Riggs-Hopkins spotted “a rock like substance on the floor board where his feet were,” she wrote, according to a report in the Orlando Sentinel.

    Her ‘professional’ training that has taught her how to identify all the substances deemed illegal by the state immediately set off alarms.

    “I recognized through my eleven years of training and experience as a law enforcement officer the substance to be some sort of narcotic,” she wrote.


    Rushing, who is a concealed carry permit holder, told the officer that there was a weapon in the car. Luckily he was not shot. However, he was asked to step out of the car and then the officer asked to search his vehicle.

    Rushing, knowing that he had nothing to hide, agreed to the search. Even though Rushing had nothing to hide, he should have never agreed to a search as this is rule number one when dealing with police during a traffic stop.

    After the fact, however, Rushing realized his mistake in allowing the officer to rummage through his car. “I didn’t have anything to hide,” he said. “I’ll never let anyone search my car again.”

    Riggs-Hopkins and other officers spotted three other pieces of the suspicious substance in his car, according to the report.

    “I kept telling them, ‘That’s … glaze from a doughnut. … They tried to say it was crack cocaine at first, then they said, ‘No, it’s meth, crystal meth.'”

    The arrest report even noted Rushing pleaded with officers to tell them it was donut crumbs. However, they just knew that this 64-year-old man, with no criminal record, was some drug kingpin transporting meth by dropping tiny bits of it on his carpet.

    “Rushing stated that the substance is sugar from a Krispie Kreme Donut that he ate,” Riggs-Hopkins wrote.

    Officers then tested the Krispy Kreme crumbs with their criminally unreliable field test kits and received not one but two positive results.

    As the Free Thought Project has previously reported, the director of a lab recognized by the International Association of Chiefs of Police for forensic science excellence has called field drug testing kits “totally useless” due to the possibility of false positives. In laboratory experiments, at least two brands of field testing kits have been shown to produce false positives in tests of Mucinex, chocolate, aspirin, chocolate, and oregano. Some of these kits even return a positive when completely empty.

    According to the Orlando Sentinel, Riggs-Hopkins booked him into the county jail on a charge of possession of methamphetamine with a firearm. He was locked up for about 10 hours before his release on $2,500 bond, he said.

    “I got arrested for no reason at all,” he said.

    After being kidnapped and caged because of the incompetence of police officers and the brutal drug war, Rushing has decided to sue. He will undoubtedly win and the taxpayers will be held accountable — not the police officers.

    When asked how many other road-side drug tests have produced false positive results by the Orlando Sentinel, an OPD spokeswoman wrote, “At this time, we have no responsive records. … There is no mechanism in place for easily tracking the number of, or results of, field drug testing.

    As police across the US scramble to push the war on cops narrative and note that only criminals dislike the police, thousands of cases like this one play out every year. Instead of rectifying a broken system, the overwhelming majority of police and politicians ignore the problems created by the war on drugs and choose to increase force instead.

    Until we bring an end to the war on drugs, innocent people like Bernstein and Cruz will continue to be targetted and continue to be kidnapped, caged, or killed — for no other reason than cops looking for arbitrary substances.

    Next time someone says, “if you don’t break the law, you have nothing to fear,” show them this incident which completely destroys that dangerously ignorant narrative.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/krispy-kreme-mistake-police-meth/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 29, 2016, 10:34:21 AM
    http://www.nbcnewyork.com/investigations/Night-Judge-Queens-Court-Leave-Early-Investigation-388646272.html?_osource=SocialFlowFB_NYBrand

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2016, 05:05:34 PM
    Chicago Police Cost Taxpayers $18.6 Million in Police Brutality Lawsuits So Far This Year

    One year after the city of Chicago fired a police review investigator for finding several police shootings unjustified, the city continues to dish out millions of dollars in police brutality settlements, including $18.6 million so far this year.

    The most recent settlements were approved last week; three cases totaling $4.72 million, including the last of 25 lawsuits stemming for a rogue cop named Jerome Finnigan.

    But Finnigan, who is now serving time in prison, is hardly the only dirty cop responsible for the slew of lawsuits that have cost Chicago taxpayers more than $500 million over the past decade.

    Chicago Aldermen expressed their frustration about the number of claims the city has settled so far this year.

    But a city attorney said they should be relieved that the settlements are not even higher, given the number of police abuse lawsuits against the city.

    “Both this administration and the prior administration, given the large number of cases, I think did pretty well with settling many of them for a small amount of money,” said First Deputy Corporation Counsel Jenny Notz, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

    The largest of Wednesday’s settlements was $3.75 million, which will go to the family of an intoxicated man named Esau Castellanos-Bernal, who was shot and killed after he crashed his vehicle in 2013.

    Chicago police initially claimed they shot him after he fired at them, but that turned out to be a lie. Turns out, they were probably responding to the sound of his car backfiring because no gun was ever found on the scene.

    Another $550,000 was approved for a city firefighter, Robert Cook, who was beaten by the aforementioned Finnigan and other officers in front of his girlfriend and her children in 2002.

    The firefighter, Robert Cook, was beaten by Finnigan and other officers in front of his girlfriend and her children. Officers threatened Cook with planting drugs on him and charging him if he reported the incident. Cook reported the beating to the supervisor Ken Abels, who threatened him with the loss of his job for lying.

    Finnigan was part of the now defunct Special Operations Section, a plain clothes swat team, who served warrants for violent offenders. The SOS team was dismantled after multiple controversies. Finnigan is now serving a 12 year sentence in an unrelated murder-for-hire plot, where he attempted to have another officer killed because he thought he was working as an informant for the FBI.

    The Cook settlement is the last of the claims against the city involving Finnigan and the Special Operations Section totaling $1.93 million.

    “I just wanted to underscore the point that this one man has cost the taxpayers a tremendous amount of money for gross misconduct and breaching the public trust,” said Alderman Brendan Reilly.

    An additional settlement of $425,000 was agreed after a police chase injured Gentila Mitchell’s children as a vehicle was being chased by police. The driver of the vehicle lost control and struck her elder child, while the other child was injured when a light pole fell on him.

    In December, Mayor Rahm Emanuel stated in a publicly televised interview that police engaged in a “code of silence” after the lengthy battle to prevent the release of the Laquan McDonald video. In the McDonald video, which the city fought the release for more than three years, was walking parallel to police when he was shot. The only officer to shoot claimed he had lunged at him with a knife, as other officers backed up his claim, which was disproved by the video.

    However, when given the opportunity to testify about this code of silence in a civil trial involving two whistleblower cops, Emanuel chose to remain silent.

    The code of silence is so prevalent in the Windy City that in July 2015, it fired Independent Police Review Authority investigator Lorenzo Davis for finding fault with police in several shootings, then refusing to reverse those findings, claiming he displayed “clear bias against police.”

    Davis was a former Chicago police commander.

    Last month, the Chicago Tribune reported that the civilian review board gave victims a “false sense of justice,” where only 3.8 percent of complaints were deemed credible.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/25/chicago-pays-18-6-million-police-abuses-year/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 31, 2016, 04:03:29 PM
    Armed and dangerous intruders attacking innocent people once again.

    New Jersey Cops Shoot Elderly Man After Responding to Wrong Home

    New Jersey cops arrived at the wrong address to investigate a 911 hang-up call, shooting an elderly man multiple times as he stood in his own living room.

    The man had fired his shotgun at them through the door thinking they were intruders.

    But only after police fired first.

    An investigation conducted by New Jersey State Police has since determined the 911 call did not come from 76-year old Gerald Sykes’ residence in Cumberland County as they first believed.

    “They have admitted that he was not the target,” Evelyn Zielke, Skyes’ sister said. “They made a mistake in address.”

    According to police, the 911 call looked to have originated from a house on Centerton Road 11:30 p.m., which they responded to by sending two state troopers who arrived at about 12 a.m.

    When they arrived, New Jersey State Police didn’t realize the call did not come from Skyes’ Upper Deerfield Township residence and began shining flashlights through his door.

    That’s when 76-year-old Gerald Skyes fired his shotgun through his door at who he believed were intruders trying to break into his home.

    New Jersey State Police fired back and hit Skyes three times, shooting four rounds from a hand-gun through the innocent home owner’s sliding glass door.

    Richard Kaser, a family friend and attorney, said Sykes went to get his shotgun after his wife woke him up when his dogs began barking.

    When he looked out through his French doors leading to his deck, he saw the shadow of a person outside.

    “He felt intruders were trying to get in and he was yelling to his wife to call 911,’  Rich Kaser told NJ.com.

    “He thought there were bad people out there,” said Kaser.

    Sykes was airlifted to Cooper University Hospital and reportedly in critical but stable condition and is expected to survive.

    According to DailyMail, both troopers who mistakenly responded to Sykes’ residence were taken to Inspira Medical Center in Vineland, but were treated and released.

    One was treated for a graze wound from the Sykes’ shotgun or a cut from the glass.

    New Jersey’s attorney general said it was later determined the call didn’t come from Mr. Sykes’ residence, but that it’s not uncommon for police to follow up on hang up calls to err on the side of caution.

    Although the initial story was that Sykes fired shots first, DailyMail reports Sykes’ friends and family stated a New Jersey State Trooper fired the first shots.

    “One of the troopers shot first as Sykes stood in his living room,” according to Kaser.

    Authorities stated Sykes was home with his wife at the time of the shooting.

    After being shot, Sykes called his daughter, who called 911 to report her father had been shot.

    Dispatchers then “facilitated Mr. Sykes coming out of his house so that he could receive medical treatment,” according to USAToday.

    Kaser stated Sykes was ordered by police to come out of the house, even though he’d been shot three times and his shirt was soaked in blood as his wife assisted him out of the house.

    As he exited his home, police ordered Sykes to lay face-down on the ground, and handcuffed him.

    Kaser said the misunderstanding was “a tragic mistake.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/31/new-jersey-cops-shoot-elderly-man-after-responding-to-wrong-home/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2016, 01:33:37 PM
    Criminal gangs covering up for their deranged members.

    Cop Loses it, Shoots Up Church in Rampage Over Violence Toward Police — NO CHARGES

    Sommervell County, TX — A 27-year-old deputy was arrested after he admitted to getting drunk and unloading pistols into a Presbyterian church. Instead of facing charges for dangerously discharging a firearm in public, Sommervell County Sheriff’s Deputy, William Cox was set free.

    The incident began on July 13 when officers responded to a 9-1-1 call about a maniac shooting up a church. When police arrived they found Cox drunk in the parking lot, who immediately admitted to the crime.

    Cox is seen on an officer’s body cam saying he fired the shots “cause my boys are getting killed in Dallas” and said, “the black coon started killing my boys.”

    Cox attempted to justify his actions by claiming he needed to relieve some stress. His stress relief was to go into a residential neighborhood and endanger the lives of everyone near him by firing off guns in a church parking lot.

    According to FOX 4, Cox was charged with deadly conduct and taken to the Ellis County Jail. But on the same day he was arrested, the pastor signed an affidavit of non-prosecution. The pastor said he didn’t want charges filed because it’s all about forgiveness.

    Not only was he not charged, he was also not photographed for his mugshot. This special treatment has the Ellis County District Attorney furious.

    Even though the pastor didn’t file charges, Cox was still guilty of multiple crimes. However, because Cox wears a badge, the department used their discretion and he was released.

    “This, in my mind is a tremendous abuse of that discretion,” Patrick Wilson, the Ellis County District Attorney said. “In today’s climate, it’s inexcusable. I cannot understand how these facts escape the narrative of favoritism.”

    “With criticism that is being launched at law enforcement in our community today, the foundation of that criticism is what’s illustrated in this case. And that is favoritism,” said Wilson. “Some people in the criminal justice system get treated differently. How can I dispell that narrative when these facts completely support that?”

    What Wilson is referring to is a common practice among those in power. In the United States, there are two forms of justice; one for those who are in power and one for everyone else.
    Had a person who did not wear a badge been caught shooting up a church, he would undoubtedly be sitting in jail right now and could have even been killed.

    As police apologists across the country fumble to make bogus excuses about why people are angry with law enforcement, this case provides a glaring example — police officers are almost never held accountable.

    Cops in America can kill innocent people while on duty and not face a single charge and keep their jobs. Even when they are off-duty and commit crimes that endanger the lives of innocent people, as this case illustrates, they are still not held accountable.

    Until this double standard of blue privilege is eliminated, the divide will continue to grow.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-loses-shoots-church-anger-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 03, 2016, 01:00:04 AM
    Criminal gangs covering up for their deranged members.

    Cop Loses it, Shoots Up Church in Rampage Over Violence Toward Police — NO CHARGES

    Sommervell County, TX — A 27-year-old deputy was arrested after he admitted to getting drunk and unloading pistols into a Presbyterian church. Instead of facing charges for dangerously discharging a firearm in public, Sommervell County Sheriff’s Deputy, William Cox was set free.

    The incident began on July 13 when officers responded to a 9-1-1 call about a maniac shooting up a church. When police arrived they found Cox drunk in the parking lot, who immediately admitted to the crime.

    Cox is seen on an officer’s body cam saying he fired the shots “cause my boys are getting killed in Dallas” and said, “the black guy started killing my boys.”

    Cox attempted to justify his actions by claiming he needed to relieve some stress. His stress relief was to go into a residential neighborhood and endanger the lives of everyone near him by firing off guns in a church parking lot.

    According to FOX 4, Cox was charged with deadly conduct and taken to the Ellis County Jail. But on the same day he was arrested, the pastor signed an affidavit of non-prosecution. The pastor said he didn’t want charges filed because it’s all about forgiveness.

    Not only was he not charged, he was also not photographed for his mugshot. This special treatment has the Ellis County District Attorney furious.

    Even though the pastor didn’t file charges, Cox was still guilty of multiple crimes. However, because Cox wears a badge, the department used their discretion and he was released.

    “This, in my mind is a tremendous abuse of that discretion,” Patrick Wilson, the Ellis County District Attorney said. “In today’s climate, it’s inexcusable. I cannot understand how these facts escape the narrative of favoritism.”

    “With criticism that is being launched at law enforcement in our community today, the foundation of that criticism is what’s illustrated in this case. And that is favoritism,” said Wilson. “Some people in the criminal justice system get treated differently. How can I dispell that narrative when these facts completely support that?”

    What Wilson is referring to is a common practice among those in power. In the United States, there are two forms of justice; one for those who are in power and one for everyone else.
    Had a person who did not wear a badge been caught shooting up a church, he would undoubtedly be sitting in jail right now and could have even been killed.

    As police apologists across the country fumble to make bogus excuses about why people are angry with law enforcement, this case provides a glaring example — police officers are almost never held accountable.

    Cops in America can kill innocent people while on duty and not face a single charge and keep their jobs. Even when they are off-duty and commit crimes that endanger the lives of innocent people, as this case illustrates, they are still not held accountable.

    Until this double standard of blue privilege is eliminated, the divide will continue to grow.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-loses-shoots-church-anger-no-charges/









    Well at least the district attorney in this particular case
    Smells a rat & says so - A few more standing up against
    The corrupt police & the tide will turn.

    How thick are these cops not to realise what they are doing
    Is isolating them more & more from general public.

    In the very hostile circumstances around now You would
    Think the police would have a different attitude - Nope
    Let's carry on the same.
    Fuck what the public think & feel towards us.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2016, 10:28:46 AM
    POLITICS
    Cop Who Allegedly Plotted To Assist ISIS Had Ties To Convicted Terrorists
    Undercover FBI agents were talking to Nicholas Young for years before he was arrested.
     08/03/2016 12:38 pm ET
    Andy Campbell 
    Reporter, The Huffington Post
    As he got closer to joining one of the world’s most notorious terror groups, Nicholas Young was getting paranoid that the FBI was watching him.

    It turns out the FBI was, in fact, watching him. They had been for years.

    Young, a 36-year-old officer with the District of Columbia region’s Metro Transit Police Department, was arrested on Wednesday morning at police headquarters in the district after a years-long investigation into his ties to ISIS, the U.S. Attorney’s Office confirmed to The Huffington Post.

    There was never any “direct threat” to the transit system and most of Young’s alleged interests were overseas, a spokesman said.

    Authorities say they first made contact with Young in 2010 after he complained about the arrest of his buddy Zachary Chesser, who was later famously convicted on terrorism charges for threatening the creators of “South Park.”

    Over the next six years, Young met with several undercover FBI officers and informants in various attempts to send money overseas, communicate with known terrorists and plan an attack on the FBI, according to his arrest affidavit (featured below). Alongside undercover officers, he also met with Amine El Khalifi, who in 2012 was sentenced to 30 years in prison over a plot to carry out a suicide bomb attack in Washington, D.C.


    All the while, Young suspected ― and rightly so ― that he was being watched. He allegedly told undercover officers that he used burner phones to avoid FBI detection, and worried that officers would show up to his house and find his stockpile of weapons, according to the affidavit. If they did, he said he would have attempted to kill them.

    If he were ever betrayed, he reportedly said, “That person’s head would be in a cinder block at the bottom of Lake Braddock.”

    On another occasion, he discussed an attack on an FBI establishment, and in 2011 allegedly said he wanted to kidnap and torture an FBI agent who interviewed him about Chesser.

    Last month, Young allegedly took action. He told an informant that he wanted to purchase mobile phone gift cards that would allow the self-described Islamic State to communicate and recruit via text. Authorities say that on July 28, Young sent 22 gift card codes ― worth about $250 ― to an undercover FBI agent, and said:

    “Respond to verify receipt . . . may not answer depending on when as this device will be destroyed after all are sent to prevent the data being possibly seen on this end in the case of something unfortunate.”
    The move was apparently the last straw for the FBI, and agents arrested him on several charges of attempting to give support to a foreign terrorist organization. He faces a maximum of 20 years in prison if convicted.

    Metro General Manager Paul J. Wiedefeld told WTOP that he was horrified by the allegations.

    “Metro Transit Police alerted the FBI about this individual and then worked with our federal partners throughout the investigation up to and including today’s arrest,” he said Wednesday. “Obviously, the allegations in this case are profoundly disturbing. They’re disturbing to me, and they’re disturbing to everyone who wears the uniform.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: falco on August 04, 2016, 02:49:59 PM
    Interesting vid on How We All Could Handle Cops & STOP Enabling Them:

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: falco on August 04, 2016, 03:48:23 PM
    [youtube][/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHxPK2t1O-oyoutube]
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 04, 2016, 04:15:23 PM
    Two Days of Pot Raids Turns into Dog Killing Spree — Innocent Woman Shot at, Toddler Terrorized

    Buffalo, NY — In their relentless and often violent pursuit to control what citizens can and cannot put in their bodies, the state leaves behind a trail of blood and suffering. As the Buffalo Police Department illustrated last week, this trail often contains the blood of defenseless animals.

    Police incompetence coupled with deadly training came to a head last week and wreaked havoc on the residents of Buffalo. The Narcotics Division of the Buffalo Police Department executed a series of drug raids last week leading to a handful of arrests and the seizure of small quantities of drugs — mostly cannabis.

    After the department released their heroic numbers to the press on how much dangerous cannabis was taken off the streets, they remained conveniently silent about the dogs they slaughtered along the way.

    On Friday morning, Buffalo cops, in their search for a 170 lb 5’11” black male, raided the home of Michael Urban — a 5’11” 210 lb white male.

    While police were ramming the innocent man’s face into his kitchen floor, Urban pleaded with them not to kill his dog. But it was to no avail.

    Police took aim at the helpless dog who, according to Urban was simply standing there in a non-threatening manner. ‘Boom,’ one officer fired, but the bullet only injured Urban’s 18-month-old pit bull named Gotham, sending him running away frightened and crying.

    As the dog is wailing in agony, another officer fires a round directly into the dog’s skull, exploding the innocent animal’s head. But, it gets worse.

    Urban lives on the second floor of an apartment. When the second officer shot, that bullet went through the floor and almost killed the tenant downstairs.

    “What just happened?” Urban recalls. “As the bullet hole went through the floor through the ceiling, as the dog’s blood is dripping through the downstairs apartment… who’s accountable?”

    As Gotham’s blood drips from the bullet hole in Urban’s floor and out of the hole of Jami Krafchak’s ceiling in the apartment below, cops decided to go after her too.

    After they nearly killed her, cops raided Krafchak’s home. She was manhandled, searched with no warrant, and humiliated as she stood there in her nightgown.

    Neither Urban nor Krafchak were charged with a crime.

    The night before the heroic cops of the Buffalo Narcotics Division killed an innocent man’s beloved pet, they raided the home of Cory and Cindy Meer.

    According to Meer’s lawyer, Matthew Albert, Meer and his two-year-old son watched helplessly as jackboots murdered their beloved family dog, Damian, a six-year-old Pit Bull.

    Meer tells Artvoice that his dog was not a threat to officers. “He is the most family friendly dog I’ve ever had… he’s never hurt anyone,” said Meer. “He would have licked the cops.”

    Just like Urban, Meer lied face down as he begged the cops not to shoot Damian. Again, this was to no avail.

    As Meer’s 2-year-old watched in horror, a cop blasted the family dog to death.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/buffalo-cops-dog-killing-spree/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 04, 2016, 09:17:40 PM
    Interesting vid on How We All Could Handle Cops & STOP Enabling Them:







    That driver took his life in his own hands.
    Had he been a young Black Man Speaking & Acting exactly the same
    I wonder just how that Meeting may of ended.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 05, 2016, 02:12:30 AM
    Kentucky Woman Taken to Court with No Pants, Infuriating Judge, who Scolds Jailers

    Corrections officers at a Kentucky jail humiliated a woman by taking her to court with no pants and giving her no feminine hygiene products during her three-day incarceration, leaving a local judge shocked and dumbfounded.

    “Am I in the Twilight Zone?” asked Jefferson District Court Judge Amber Wolf as the woman with no pants stood before her.

    The unidentified female defendant can be heard saying she was arrested in Fayette County three days prior for failing to complete a diversion program for her first-ever offense of misdemeanor shoplifting. That landed her in front of the judge for a sentencing hearing.

    Jailers said the woman had been arrested wearing athletic shorts and a long t-shirt, according to WDRB.

    The woman’s attorney told Judge Wolf during the hearing that her client requested a jail uniform, but jailers “refused to give her pants as well as any kind of hygiene products that she needed.”

    “Excuse me? This is outrageous . . . Is this for real? I’m sorry; this is going to take a little bit,” said the judge.

    Judge Wolf then stopped the hearing, got on the phone and rang Metro Corrections Director Mark Bolton.

    “Hi, Jenny, this is Judge Wolf in court room 102. I’m actually calling for Director Bolton, or anyone, uh, who can come to my courtroom and tell me why there is a female defendant standing in front of me with no pants on,” explained an irritated Judge Wolf. “She’s been in our jail for three days and reports to me that the jail has refused to give her pants and feminine hygiene products.”

    “Can we give her something to cover up with?”

    “Anything . . . anything. I don’t care what it is,” Wolf said, looking towards the defendant. “Also, I’m changing your sentence to a hundred dollar fine and time served.”

    The soft-spoken defendant had been rearrested several times for not completing the diversion program she agreed to complete in order to have the misdemeanor shoplifting charge wiped from her record. She eventually pleaded guilty to 75 days in jail. But she never showed up in court for that sentencing, which is why there was a warrant for her arrest.

    However, Judge Wolf decided being brought to court with no pants and being given no feminine hygiene products while in jail was punishment enough for the first-time offender and reduced her sentence from 75 days to time-served plus a $100 fine.

    But she wouldn’t let the Kentucky woman go back to the jail to process out until she was given proper clothing and hygiene products.

    “What the hell is going on?“ Wolf says into the phone. “I’m holding her here until she is dressed appropriately to go back to jail. This is outrageous.”

    “I’m not trying to embarrass you; I’m very sorry,” she told the woman.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/07/31/kentucky-woman-taken-to-court-with-no-pants-infuriating-judge-who-scolds-jailers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2016, 11:00:44 AM
    Skip to comments.

    FBI Agent Apparently Egged on ‘Draw Muhammad’ Shooter
    The Daily Beast ^ | Thursday, August 4, 2016 | Katie Zavadski
    Posted on 8/5/2016, 10:47:57 AM by kristinn

    Days before an ISIS sympathizer attacked a cartoon contest in Garland, Texas, he received a text from an undercover FBI agent.

    “Tear up Texas,” the agent messaged Elton Simpson days before he opened fire at the Draw Muhammad event, according to an affidavit (pdf) filed in federal court Thursday.

    “U know what happened in Paris,” Simpson responded. “So that goes without saying… No need to be direct.” That revelation comes amidst a national debate about the use of undercover officers and human sources in terrorism cases. Undercover sources are used in more than half of ISIS-related terror cases, according to statistics kept by the George Washington University Program on Extremism, and civil liberties advocates say some of those charged might not have escalated their behavior without those interventions.

    SNIP

    The texts were included in the indictment, released Thursday, of Erick Jamal Hendricks of Charlotte, North Carolina. He was charged with conspiring to provide material support to ISIS. The 35-year-old tried to recruit other Americans to form an ISIS cell on secret compounds and introduced an undercover agent to one of the Draw Muhammad attackers, according to the FBI. But Hendricks did more than make a connection. According to the court papers, he asked the undercover officer about the Draw Muhammad event’s security, size, and police presence, during the event, according to an affidavit filed in court.

    The affidavit does not specify what the undercover responded to questions about size and security. “If you see that pig [Pamela Geller] make your ‘voice’ heard against her,” Hendricks allegedly told the undercover agent, referring to a notorious Islamophobe.

    (Excerpt) Read more at thedailybeast.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 05, 2016, 11:57:15 AM
    It seems that once again the taxpayers will be extorted to pay the bill while the deranged armed criminals walk around free without losing a cent from the pocket or a minute in jail.

    Police shooting victim files federal lawsuit against North Miami officer

    Two weeks after a controversial shooting, Charles Kinsey has filed a federal lawsuit against North Miami police Officer Jonathan Aledda.

    In the lawsuit, Kinsey argues that Aledda and other officers wrongfully arrested him and used excessive force — saying that Aledda did not help stop the bleeding after the shooting, even after officers recognized there was no weapon at the scene. They are demanding a jury trial, unstated monetary damages and any other fees due to the physical, emotional and mental pain the incident caused.

    Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/north-miami/article93720952.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2016, 11:11:54 PM
    South Florida Cop Proven to be Liar by Surveillance Camera in Shooting of Unarmed Man

    A South Florida cop who shot a man he had pulled over, then claimed the man kept his hands in his waistband, was proven to be a liar by a surveillance camera.

    But Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Rundle Fernandez refused to prosecute South Miami police officer Aryo Rezaie because she would rather not break her 23-year streak of not prosecuting a single police officer for shooting unarmed citizens.

    However, charges of possession of marijuana and resisting arrest were dropped against Michael Gavins, allowing him to file a lawsuit against the police department on Friday, according to NBC Miami.

    Nevertheless, Gavins lost his job as a security officer as a result of the shooting and arrest. And Rezaie, who has previous complaints of racial profiling, was not even disciplined by his department.

    Rezaie pulled Gavins over on November 15, 2015, claiming he was driving at a “high rate of speed,” according to his police report.

    When Gavins pulled over into a gas station, the cop claimed he smelled marijuana and saw a bag of weed in the center console of Gavins’ car, which is when he ordered him to step out of the car.

    “‘You can check me. You can check the car, you can do whatever you want. Please don’t shoot me,” Gavins told the officer according to a news report from last year.

    But that was when the cop began fearing for his life, claiming Gavins kept both hands down the front of his waistband – which is standard Police 101 bullshit to justify shooting unarmed citizens.

    But a surveillance video shows Gavins holding one arm up high in the air. The other arm is obstructed by a column, so it’s not clear where that arm is at that moment.

    However, Rezaie’s police report state that “Gavins continued to keep his hands inside of his waistband and began to act in a nervous  manner by turning his back towards officer.”

    Claiming a citizen is acting in a “nervous manner” is also standard Police 101 bullshit to justify shooting unarmed citizens.

    Besides, who wouldn’t be nervous around a trigger-happy cop?

    Despite the video evidence, the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office said that “a reasonable officer could believe that Mr. Gavins was about the retrieve some firearm or weapon.”

    Perhaps a reasonable officer who is both paranoid and delusional, which seem to make up the ranks of officers, especially in South Florida.

    Watch the NBC Miami news reporter below, which includes the surveillance video from the traffic stop. And read Gavins’ lawsuit here.


    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/06/south-florida-cop-proven-to-be-liar-by-surveillance-camera-in-shooting-of-unarmed-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2016, 02:05:57 PM
    Cops Suspended for Sadistically Chasing Down, Killing a Groundhog During Police Golf Tournament

    Troy, NY — Two Rensselaer police officers have been suspended following reports they chased down and ran over a groundhog during a police union golf tournament in Troy, New York.

    Chief Rick Fusco promised both officers would be fired if an investigation finds them guilty.

    “If in fact this alleged situation happened, I will be recommending they be terminated,” Fusco said. “There is no room in any police agency for a person like this to be carrying a badge and a gun.”

    Three-year veteran of the force, Tyler Sammon, drove the golf cart, and Matt Spath rode as passenger when the two reportedly chased the animal until it was exhausted, and then cruelly crushed it beneath the cart’s tires — possibly more than once — in what the Albany Times-Union deemed an act of “woodchuck homicide.”


    “There is zero tolerance for this behavior,” said Troy City Council President Carmella Mantello in a statement cited by the Troy Record, “and the City Council, Mayor, Police Chief [John] Tedesco, and detectives are investigating this serious animal abuse incident and inappropriate actions.”

    Witnesses said the same officers also drove the cart over tee boxes and onto greens on the course. Local ABC News 10 columnist John Gray theorized alcohol likely played a role in the officers’ rowdy and cruel behavior, though that has not been confirmed. Gray called for the pair to be terminated on principle, saying [emphasis added]:

    “If you follow this page, you know I’m a big supporter of police, but that job requires a certain level of maturity and decency, and killing an animal that way shows a massive lack of both. Frankly, it is the kind of stunt from a disturbed teenager who needs mental help. There is nothing funny about it. There is no excuse for it.

    “I know golf tournaments often involving [sic] drinking alcohol, and I’m sure … that will be the excuse. ‘We had a few too many and were just goofing around.’ Fine. Go goof around in a job that doesn’t involve you carrying a gun.”

    Witnesses also said the woodchuck crawled about 10 feet after being struck by the golf cart before dying.

    The callous killing sparked local and national outrage and vocal demands the two officers be removed from the force. Sammon and Spath have been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

    Local Rensselaer Police Benevolent Association hosted the tournament, which took place at Frear Park.

    As one of the few species unprotected by law, the Washington Post reported, woodchucks may be “killed during any season in any number,” though the City of Troy bans the killing of any animals in public parks.

    Nevertheless, chasing a woodchuck in a golf cart and running it over can hardly be equated with hunting.

    “This is really bothersome for me,” said Chief Fusco. “There is no room for a police officer to continue to be a police officer if in fact he did this, if he intentionally killed an animal … but we need witnesses to come forward.”

    Come forward they did. As William Meissner, former head of the Troy Housing Authority, posted to Facebook, as cited by a local NBC affiliate:

    “While playing Frear Park golf course today, I witnessed two people in a golf cart chase down a woodchuck until it couldn’t run anymore and then they ran over it with their golf cart. The woodchuck managed to crawl about ten feet and rolled around a little before it died …

    “To the both of you: you guys must really feel good about yourselves, killing an innocent animal. To make it worse, there was a baby woodchuck nearby on hole number 12 probably wondering where it’s [sic] mother was. DON’T EVER COME BACK TO FREAR PARK.”

    It appears that demand will indeed be met.

    “Two bad seeds put a negative light of the whole organization,” asserted Mantello. “I have talked to park staff and we will ban that organization from future outings here at the park.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/groundhog-cops-suspended-killing/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 08, 2016, 10:41:10 AM
    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/drinking-coffee-driving-crime


     :(  >:(  >:(  >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2016, 01:05:16 PM
    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/drinking-coffee-driving-crime


     :(  >:(  >:(  >:(

    Ridiculous. Most often the cops are exempt from such laws, because laws are only for plebs and in their minds law enforcement=law exempt. Plus, the criminal cop unions would react to any infringement of the god given right to eat donuts and look at the computer while driving.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 08, 2016, 01:06:47 PM
    Ridiculous. Most often the cops are exempt from such laws, because laws are only for plebs and in their minds law enforcement=law exempt. Plus, the criminal cop unions would react to any infringement of the god given right to eat donuts and look at the computer while driving.

    today coffee - tommorow a suicide belt
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 08, 2016, 05:12:14 PM
    Ridiculous. Most often the cops are exempt from such laws, because laws are only for plebs and in their minds law enforcement=law exempt. Plus, the criminal cop unions would react to any infringement of the god given right to eat donuts and look at the computer while driving.

    Their donuts addiction doesn't bother me. Them playing on the computer while speeding down the road does though.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2016, 05:11:12 AM
    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/woman-fatally-shot-by-florida-police-officer-during-gun-demonstration/?ftag=CNM-00-10aab6a&linkId=27502880


    only cops should have guns
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 10, 2016, 06:29:03 PM
    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/woman-fatally-shot-by-florida-police-officer-during-gun-demonstration/?ftag=CNM-00-10aab6a&linkId=27502880


    only cops should have guns





    Ha ha -- Yeah Right
    The police level of stupidity in many cases is just beyond belief
    'To Serve & Protect' yes there Donughts & each other.

    Wouldn't trust them to organise a Piss up in Brewery.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 10, 2016, 06:33:54 PM




    Ha ha -- Yeah Right
    The police level of stupidity in many cases is just beyond belief
    'To Serve & Protect' yes there Donughts & each other.

    Wouldn't trust them to organise a Piss up in Brewery.

    Interesting information emerges about the cop:

    Coel was hired by the Punta Gorda Police Department in 2014 after he was allowed to resign from the Miramar Police Department in South Florida for excessive force.

    37% of Coel’s cases have been dismissed; the state attorney dismissed those cases because he either violated procedure or somebody’s Constitutional rights according to attorney Scott Weinberg, who added that most cops have between 5-7% of their cases dismissed.

    Same cop who appears in this video:

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 10, 2016, 07:31:11 PM
    Interesting information emerges about the cop:

    Coel was hired by the Punta Gorda Police Department in 2014 after he was allowed to resign from the Miramar Police Department in South Florida for excessive force.

    37% of Coel’s cases have been dismissed; the state attorney dismissed those cases because he either violated procedure or somebody’s Constitutional rights according to attorney Scott Weinberg, who added that most cops have between 5-7% of their cases dismissed.

    Same cop who appears in this video:










    That's a very Bad, Sad, Dangerous & Worrying state of affairs the Police are in
    And Clarly The Public Who Have Large No.s of these Dangerous morons out
    There meant to 'Serve & Protect' Them.

    And those in Charge are as bad or worse - With never ending cover ups & Pityfull Excuses.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 11, 2016, 01:25:58 PM
    Once again the mobsters mouthing off and defending the torture their gang members inflict.

    Albuquerque Jail Guards Torture Woman for Posters in Cell

    It all started when Sgt. Eric Allen found posters on the walls of inmate Susie Chavez’s jail cell inside Metropolitan Detention Center in Bernalillo County, New Mexico.

    Video released Wednesday shows body cam footage from a corrections officer Sergeant, in charge of training other jailers on use-of-force, instructing a subordinate to put a female inmate in a wrist-lock because she wouldn’t be quiet, and his subordinates tasering her for asking another jailer’s name and then macing her for crying from being tasered.

    The damning new video that took place on September 19, 2015 captures jailers obeying every order as their superior threatens, mocks and intimidates the female inmate, Susie Chavez.

    When Chavez, sobbing throughout the ordeal, alleged to jailers they were using excessive force, Sgt. Eric Allen replies, “Now you’re getting into stuff where we’re going to hurt you over. You need to be quiet.”

    The shocking video starts with Sgt. Allen, who has been suspended from work-duty since January, at Chavez’s cell demanding she, “stand up!”

    The video, obtained by ABQJournal through a FOIA request, begins showing a female jailer pull Susie Chavez, the tiny female inmate, up from the ground by her hair.

    “What’s your name?” Chavez demanded.

    It only takes a second for another male officer standing nearby pulling out a stun gun, tasering Chavez, apparently for asking for the female jailer’s name.

    As Chavez falls to the ground from being tasered, Sgt. Allen says coldly, “stop resisting.”

    “I wasn’t.”

    “Yes . . . you were,” added allen, slightly joyed.

    “Stay right there. Don’t move,” Allen told Chavez, hovering over her.

    Chavez begins crying, and sobbing out in pain, apparently from being tasered by the male jailer after asking for the female jailer’s name.

    “I need you to be quiet. Quiet!” yells Allen. “I need you to stay there until we’re done.

    Chavez continues to call out in pain, seemingly hoping for one of the other officers to stand up for her.

    But that never happens.

    Sgt. Allen then instructs, “Put her in a wrist lock,”and twist her wrist until she shuts up and stops crying.”

    Allen then walks inside of a room, although the video does not show him since it’s recorded from the perspective of his body cam.

    Chavez begins asking the female officer her name, which she never responds to.

    Obeying every command, the male jailer and the female jailer hold Chavez down and administer a wrist-lock.

    “Ah, fuck!” Chavez screams out.

    “Be quiet,” the female jailer attempts to hush the woman.

    “You’re going to break my fucking wrist!” Chavez shouts. “That fucking hurts!”

    “Be quiet! Be quiet! Be quiet!”

    Video then shows the female jailer holding Chavez in a wrist lock saying, “lift your head up.”

    “That fucking hurts!”

    Chavez Screams out in pain, “you’re going to break my fucking wrist, bitch!”

    Sgt. Allen then tells Chavez to stop crying, so she can be taken to medical.

    As she’s being taken down the jail’s corridor, Chavez continues crying, protesting the officers who assaulted her.

    “Stop. Stop. Stop,” Allen repeats, attempting to quell the grieving mother’s crying.

    “You’re going to get mace,” he humored to himself. “You’re doing it now.

    “If you don’t stop crying, I’m going to have to mace you.”

    “I’m gonna mace her here in a second. Last warning.”

    Chavez then pauses in the hallway with her head on the hand railing, and begins crying in grief.

    “We need you to be quiet,” the female jailer tells the grieving woman.

    “She won’t shut up. You won’t shut up, like a…”

    “We’re not trying to hurt you,” the female jailer assured Chavez. “We’re just here to escort you to medical.”

    “Yeah, you are, you’re using excessive force.”

    “Now you’re getting into stuff where we’re going to hurt you over. You need to be quiet.”

    A few seconds go by before the condescending jailer quips.

    “Just like you are right now.”

    Chavez then bangs her head on the floor at which point she is maced.

    After she begins drooling, reacting to the mace, a mask is placed over her head to prevent her from spitting.

    Whistling, Sgt. Allen brings Chavez into medical where she begins crying to medical staff, what appears to be a jailhouse counselor and EMS personnel.

    Concerned, at one point, an EMS worker walks up to Allen and begin questioning him.

    After her visit with medical, concerned jail personnel escorted Chavez back to her cell.

    Bernalillio County fired Allen 2008 allegations of excessive use-of-force surfaced. Allen was accused of slugging an inmate twice in the head. The union argued the inmate had punched him first.

    In 2009, an independent arbitrator ordered the county to reinstate Allen, stating that the county’s use-of-force policy was “too confusing” and found “gross discrepancies” in training.

    The arbitrator’s argued Allen’s reaction to the inmate’s punch was reasonable, and in-line with how he was trained.

    Sgt. Allen was reinstated in 2009.

    He is now under investigation for events that occurred in the video, but Lt. Stephen Perkins, president of the police union that represents jailers in Albuquerque says his jailers did nothing wrong.

    “There was no policy violation,” Perkins told the ABQJournal Wednesday.

    “Now, we have lay people . . . claiming things are excessive force.”



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/11/watch-albuquerque-jail-guards-torture-woman-for-posters-in-cell/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 11, 2016, 01:52:05 PM
    SWAT Destroys Innocent Woman’s Home During ‘Standoff With Her Dog’

    Police in Caldwell, Idaho, managed an epic act of incompetence when they shot up and teargassed a woman’s home — even though she had given them the key — worse, the only one home at the time was her dog.

    “Basically, they had a standoff with a dog,” the woman’s attorney said, Courthouse News Service reports.

    Shaniz West told her ex-boyfriend, Fabian Salinas — a wanted felon — to finish clearing out his belongings from her home while she was away registering one of her daughters for first grade on the morning of August 11, 2014.

    When West, who was six months pregnant, returned with her children, an eight-year-old and six-month-old, a slew of Caldwell police SWAT officers surrounded her home.
    West gave officers the key to the front door since she wasn’t sure whether Salinas was still inside — but they never bothered to use it.

    Instead, SWAT brought in an armored vehicle and, for the next ten hours, waged war on the house.

    “During the course of the standoff Caldwell police officers broke numerous windows to gain entry, crashed through ceilings while they were maneuvering through the home, and punctured holes in the house by shooting canisters of tear gas that released noxious chemicals into the home,” West explained.

    While the prolonged assault on the house continued for hours, the irate homeowner says, her “pet dog Blue was the only occupant of the home.”

    Unsurprisingly, officers nearly decimated the house and everything inside — even though they had possession of the key the entire time.

    According to her complaint:

    “When Ms. West was allowed to re-enter the home, she found the house destroyed. Her and her children’s personal possessions were saturated with tear gas and littered with debris from the walls and ceiling, and broken glass from the windows.

    “Ms. West, who was 6 months pregnant at the time, was left to clean up the wreckage by herself and it was two months before Ms. West and her children could occupy their home.”

    West also noted she only gave consent for police to enter the home, nothing more.

    Vaughn Fisher, the woman’s attorney, told Courthouse News that although police did have a warrant for Salinas — who was wanted for assaulting a police officer and other crimes — they did not obtain a search warrant for West’s home.

    Fisher says no explanation has been provided by authorities about why it took the SWAT team ten hours to figure out Salinas wasn’t even inside.

    “I have no idea,” Fisher said. “I’ve read the police reports and debriefing, and it’s my recollection that someone heard a deadbolt activate, which was impossible, and saw the curtains move, which is possible because there was a pitbull in the house at the time. Basically, they had a standoff with a dog.”

    Although the city offered to reimburse West for her belongings, Fisher said the amount was woefully insufficient given the extent of damage caused by the feckless cops.

    “Practically the entire contents of the house were destroyed, and they didn’t treat her very well,” he said. “They made a very paltry offer to replace some of it. It was grossly inadequate.”
    West is now suing for damages from the City of Caldwell, the Caldwell Police Department, the SWAT team leader, and several individual law enforcement officers.

    Though West’s ordeal would seem a rare occurrence, in Police State, U.S.A., destruction of civilians’ homes — and authorities’ failure to compensate appropriately, if at all — has become sadly routine.

    Thanks in large part to the failed war on drugs, SWAT teams routinely trash the homes of suspects and their unwitting families — worse, a growing number of reports of officers raiding and trashing the wrong house indicate police can’t operate GPS, navigate a map, or even read an address correctly. Sometimes, their gross incompetence is lethal — for people or their pets.

    Police apparently also have a difficult time — despite the presence of a massive surveillance state in the U.S. — keeping up with who lives where.

    As in West’s case, hours-long standoffs with empty homes also frequent headlines.

    Incidents caused by hapless Keystone cops — in which civilians are left no choice by the pay the price for law enforcement reckless incompetence — clearly illustrate why a growing segment of the public not only mistrust, but despise American police.

    Though police apologists largely worship the badge and the laws enforced regardless of whether or not either are moral or ethical, what they fail to grasp is that in order to earn respect, it must also be given.

    It would be difficult at best for someone in West’s shoes to respect the authorities who obliterated her home and failed to provide adequate compensation in the aftermath — especially considering they didn’t ever try the key she willingly provided.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/standoff-swat-innocent-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 11, 2016, 11:10:00 PM
    Once again criminals threatening, intimidating and conspiring to send people to prison. Why are they never held accountable for their actions?

    Man spent 28 years in prison after his friend accused him of murder. Now, the friend said he lied.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2016/08/09/man-spent-28-years-in-prison-after-his-friend-accused-him-of-murder-now-the-friend-said-he-lied/

    Quote
    He said that he lied because Wilmington Police Department detective James Lightner told him to and threatened to arrest him for murder if he didn’t cooperate. Bollinger said Lightner told him that he would be charged with Dreher’s murder and receive the death penalty, the Associated Press reported.

    “They questioned and interrogated me one night, and the rest of the time it was coaching — telling me what to say,” Bollinger said, according to the Star.

    Bollinger said he told his grandfather, a former police officer and FBI agent, about the police forcing him to lie, but his grandfather encouraged him to stick to that story.

    And what's not so surprising is that in 2003 the cop was promoted to Acting Division Commander of the Professional Standards Division, where he was "responsible for department ethics including the investigation of misconduct by WPD officers."

    But 3 officers he investigated claimed Lightner himself violated ethics: "...he had pressured them into dismissing individuals' traffic tickets. Lightner concedes that on occasion he asked ticketing officers to help certain people whom they had ticketed, but maintains that he did not inappropriately pressure them."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2016, 04:45:38 PM
    Tennessee Cop Fires Live Bullet Instead of Blank During Gun Safety Drill in Middle School

    Two days after a Florida cop fired live rounds instead of blanks during a training exercise, killing a 73-year-old librarian who was showing her support for police, a Tennessee cop fired a live round during a “firearm safety for teachers” training drill in a middle school Thursday.

    Luckily, nobody was killed this time around, but it certainly raises questions of incompetency with firearms among our nation’s police forces because this officer also thought he was shooting blanks.

    Rockwood Police Chief Danny Wright called it an “accidental discharge,” which is a term they use to mean negligent discharge.

    But perhaps the cop meant to shoot the gun, thinking it was loaded with blanks. That’s how it was planned in the gun safety lesson at Rockwood Middle School.

    They say they even had the Florida incident on their minds at they prepared for Thursday’s exercise, but nobody had the mind to ensure the gun was not loaded with real bullets.

    No students were at the school because it was a teachers work day, giving police the chance to show the teachers how to react in an active shooter situation, which it ended up becoming.

    According to WBIR:

    During the drill, teachers, staff and school personnel are locked in a classroom with the police chief while an officer fires blank rounds in the hallway.

    However, the officer’s weapon contained a live round.

    “It was a blank-fire drill, is what is was. There was not to be any discharge of live ammunition,” explained Roane County Schools Superintendent Leah Watkins.

    No one was injured and no students were in the building at the time because Thursday was an in-service day for teachers. Officials also locked the doors to the school so no one mistakenly wandered in.

    Officials then canceled a second drill planned for Ridge View Elementary School later in the morning.

    “We just felt it was in the best interest to discontinue that simulation,” Watkins said.

    Watkins said no one was in the proximity of the weapon when it fired. The bullet damaged a “minor little piece” of a cinder block on the wall, “but it’s really not anything that would be noticeable,” she said.

    The officer who fired the gun is now on paid administrative leave, but, of course, they won’t release his name.

    But don’t be surprised if he has a long history of incompetency or abuse because it takes arrogance to think you’re too skillful to take basic safety steps to ensure your gun is not loaded.

    On Tuesday, the day when Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel killed librarian Mary Knowlton, the Rockwood Police Department posted the following information on its Facebook page, advising the community about it plans to conduct the shooting drill in order to keep the “children safe.”

    And below is a classic video of a DEA agent speaking to a group of students at a school in Florida about gun safety, telling them he is the only one in the room with the training to handle a gun, when the gun goes off and shoots him in the foot.

    Lee Paige ended up suing the DEA, accusing them of releasing the video, which he said violated his privacy, causing him embarrassment, but that suit was thrown out of court.

    Maybe he should have sued them for not properly training him how to handle a gun.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/13/tennessee-cop-fires-live-bullet-instead-of-blanks-during-gun-safety-drill-in-middle-school/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2016, 04:49:36 PM
    Posted this a few months ago ago, now there is video of the incident.

    Video Shows Police, TSA Brutalize Disabled St. Jude Patient After Intrusive Search Disoriented Her

    Memphis, TN — In June, Hannah Cohen, a St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital patient, was attempting to travel back home to Chatanooga with her mother when she was told by TSA she needed additional screening. Only minutes later, Cohen, who is blind in one eye and deaf, would be in handcuffs on the ground with blood pouring from her head thanks to airport police and the TSA.

    The incident occurred on June 30, as Cohen, 19, and her mother, Shirley, were traversing one of the many highly invasive, corrupt, ineffective, and often brutal TSA checkpoints at the Memphis airport. According to a lawsuit filed on behalf of Cohen against the TSA and the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority, an alarm went off as Hannah went through the security screening.

    Becuase of her disability, the alarm confused and disoriented Hannah immediately.

    “(She) became disoriented and confused by the warning alarm and the actions of the personnel manning the security checkpoint to try to search her person because of her disability. The security personnel failed to recognize that she was confused because of her obvious disability and was unable to cooperate with the search,” the lawsuit said.

    Shirley immediately attempted to explain to the TSA and airport police that her daughter is impaired from radiation treatment and the removal of a brain tumor. The aggressive cancer treatment left the teen with limited ability to talk, walk, stand, see and hear. However, they wanted nothing of it.

    Instead of patiently listening to the mother or trying to calm down the situation, in only a matter of seconds, the officers escalated force. Two guards grabbed her daughter from both sides, Shirley said.

    “It freaked her out,” she told The Commercial Appeal. “They didn’t listen to me at all. When they grabbed her, it scared her, and she was trying to get away from them. The next thing I know, one of them slammed her down on the floor and busted her head open. There was blood everywhere.”

    Hannah Cohen was then arrested on allegations she lashed out and punched the officer in the face. However, as seen in the video below, Hannah was merely trying to pull her arms out of her aggressor’s hands and in the process may have hit his shoulder.

    The only person injured during the exchange was the teenage cancer patient who is blind in one eye. None of the officers involved were hurt.

    She had refused to go through additional screening or leave the checkpoint, an airport police report states. However, according to Hannah’s mother and the video, she was merely trying to get her special needs daughter, the proper treatment.

    TSA spokesman Mark Howell and Jerry Brandon, chief of public safety of the Memphis International Airport Police Department, said they could not comment on pending litigation, according to USA Today. The Memphis International Airport Police Department is an independent agency, which is not part of the Memphis Police Department or Shelby County Sheriff’s Office.

    “At this point, it is alleged,” Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority president and CEO Scott Brockman said. “Anybody can file anything, and we don’t comment on active litigation. Clearly there are additional facts in this matter, and we won’t comment until we address the litigation.”

    The lawsuit is seeking a “reasonable” sum of $100,000 for damages that include medical expenses, personal injury, emotional injury, pain, suffering and embarrassment.

    Since her arrest, all charges against Hannah Cohen have been dropped.

    As Jay Syrmopolous points out, this type of reckless behavior is indicative of a system that emphasizes protocol over common sense. Had anyone simply taken the time to listen to the girl’s mother as she attempted to inform the TSA agents of her daughter’s disabilities all of this could have been avoided.

    Therein lies the true problem with the ever-growing security state in the United States – if you only have a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-police-tsa-brutalizing-st-jude-patient/

    https://www.facebook.com/commercialappeal/videos/10154056864744864/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2016, 04:56:06 PM
    Body Cam Video Contradicts Kentucky Police Narrative of Shooting Death

    Body cam video prove three Kentucky cops told tall tales in their narrative on August 4 when they said non-violent 57-year-old Army Veteran Darnell Wicker came at them with a knife and refused their commands to put it down, which made two of them fear for their lives and shoot him several times, killing him.

    The knife was actually a handsaw Wicker used for his job as a landscaper, according to USAToday.

    “They just said, ‘Drop your weapons,’ said Anita Jones, Wickers girlfriend of 22-years, who witnessed the shooting and called the cops about a domestic dispute.

    “He had no chance to drop the weapon. He had no time to even drop the weapon. When they said drop your weapon, it was pow, pow, pow, pow . . . that fast. Exactly like that. He had no chance at all.”

    The videos released on August 9 supports Jones’ eye-witness testimony about what took place after Louisville Metro cops Taylor Banks, Beau Gadegaard and Brian Smith arrived at her home.

    Banks and Gadegaard, the ones who shot Wicker, are currently on paid leave during a so-called internal affairs investigation.

    As Banks’ body cam video footage shows the distance between Wicker and police, recorded audio captures the amount of the time between the initial command to drop what appears to actually be a saw and the time they fired several rounds into his body is about two seconds.


    Wicker appears to be several feet away, not posing an immediate threat, even though he was legally carrying a potentially dangerous weapon before he was shot.

    “Do not move!” the two cops yell at his lifeless body until they finally handcuff it.

    After the shooting, things continue to spiral downward.

    During precious moments critical to possibly save Wicker’s life, police stood by and never attempted life-saving CPR efforts on Wicker, even though they were equipped and trained to do so.

    Instead, the Kentucky cops worked on securing the area with crime scene tape for nine minutes, telling EMS to hurry up and get there because the man they shot had stopped breathing.

    Meanwhile, Jones’ son can be heard asking, “Ya’ll ain’t gonna try no first aid or nothing bro?”

    “We’ve got an ambulance on the way,” one cops assures him.


    EMS arrived and pronounced Wicker dead.

    Wicker was completely deaf in one ear, and hard of hearing in the other.

    His girlfriend said he was never violent and thought calling the cops was a good idea, because it had worked to make him leave in the past.

    “He’s never been violent, he’s just hard-headed,” Jones told courier-journal. “He just does stuff that makes me mad. We’ve been through this a couple times, but he’s never been violent.”

    “I didn’t want that to actually happen,” said a regretful Anita Jones. “I just wanted the situation to be OK. I didn’t want them to shoot. I didn’t think that was gonna happen and that made me feel sad.”

    Jones’ said she called the police after Wicker had kicked in her door. After she noticed his bike outside, she called 911 and requested assistance from Louisville Metro Police.

    Now the Joneses are questioning why it took so many gunshots to “neutralize one old man,” how come it took so long for emergency aid to arrive.

    And, apparently having not witnessed the same events Louisville Metro cops claimed they saw, what it meant when Bank said Wicker “started kinda swinging around a bit, kinda came at us, so we shot.”

    Banks can be heard in the video getting his story lined up with another officer.

    “He came out the door, was holding the knife in his hand. He started kinda swinging it around a little bit,” he concocted. “He kind of came at us. And so we shot.”

    According to the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights (LEOBR), all cops are granted 10 days before investigators can legally question them about what took place during any on-duty shooting,

    “It went from zero to 60 fast, didn’t it?”  Smith says to another officer in the video.

    Anita Jones’ son Arthur said, “No matter how this turns out, they can’t tell me that this situation could have ended up totally different. He had knives. He could not do any harm to anybody unless you get within his reach or he comes to where he can reach you.”

    “They [officers] all know CPR,” he added.  “They couldn’t use it?”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/12/body-cam-video-contradicts-kentucky-police-narrative-of-shooting-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2016, 05:00:03 PM
    Innocent Family Sues After Cops Broke Into Home, Shot Dad, Killed the Dog, Then Shot Each Other

    DeKalb, GA — Police in DeKalb, Georgia, have yet to explain why they broke into the wrong home last August, killed a dog, shot the homeowner, and managed to shoot one of their own officers — so the terrorized couple have now planned to file a lawsuit.

    Chris and Leah McKinley and their one-year-old child had settled in to watch a movie in their den when they heard a strange noise. They slowly cracked open the door and saw three men standing in their kitchen.

    “As I’m opening it, pow pow pow pow pow,” Chris told WSB-TV in an interview, emphasizing officers started shooting before he’d even fully opened the door. One of the bullets hit him in the leg.

    Immediately, the McKinleys assumed the armed men dressed entirely in black to be robbers — and Leah panicked.

    “It was five shots and I thought they just murdered him, they’re going to come for me and they’re going to get my baby,” Leah explained. “And that’s all I could think about.”

    One officer was also hit by a fellow officer’s gunfire — and though two men had been shot, police ignored the homeowner to tend to the wounded cop.

    Officers entered the McKinleys’ home through two closed but unlocked doors, where they encountered and then shot the family dog, a 10-year-old boxer named Yanna.

    “Watching her do exactly what a dog is supposed to do,” Chris recalled of seeing Yanna in a pool of blood on the kitchen floor. “All she did was warn us, she didn’t bite them, she just warned us by barking that, ‘Hey someone’s not supposed to be in here and you’re not safe.’”

    An emergency caller reported a suspicious person in the cul-de-sac at the far end of the couple’s street, but dispatch did not provide an address, just a vague description that matched the McKinleys’ residence.

    Worse, the complainant described a 50-year-old black man — and the McKinleys are both white. Worse still, had the person opening the door actually been the suspicious individual instead of Chris, police still took it upon themselves to shoot before asking any questions.


    According to the McKinleys, police incompetence didn’t end with dangerously errant gunfire.

    In the police incident report, the wounded officer was listed as the victim and Chris as the offender, the house had the wrong address, and Yanna was described as a pit bull.

    “It’s just a slap in the face and a reminder of the incompetence from the very beginning until now still,” Chris said.

    “They were trying to spin a story that would protect them, that would cover what they did,” asserted the couple’s attorney, Mark Bullman.

    Leah also told WSB-TV DeKalb investigators repeatedly and falsely tried to claim Chris had a gun.

    “We’re good people. I’m a teacher. I’m not doing anything wrong,” she explained. “And because they made a poor choice they’re going to try to blame us.”

    Police have investigated the egregiously botched incident, whose findings have yet to be made public — though they apparently never questioned key witnesses.

    “I would have thought that if they were going to perform an investigation they would ask the victims,” Chris said, “and nothing, not a word this entire year.”

    WSB-TV filed an open records request but has not yet received a response.


    Chris had to undertake a year of physical and emotional therapy, and the couple realized they were too traumatized by what had happened to remain in their beloved home — they’ve since moved.

    “It carries this hard, heavy, heavy weight on your heart. And it really screws with you,” Chris explained.

    Leah echoed her husband, saying, “I can’t turn it off. I see it all the time, I imagine it all the time, if I hear noises if I’m home by myself.”

    Police have never fully explained their actions nor apologized to the couple for what amounted to a violent takeover of their property.

    Out of options, the McKinleys now plan to sue to “at least force them into accountability if they’re not willing to admit they did anything wrong,” as Leah put it.
    According to WSB-TV:

    “DeKalb Police Chief James Conroy said his heart goes out to the McKinley family and confirmed that his department did do a review of the incident. He said he could not comment on the facts of the case because of potential litigation, but vowed to make the requested records available as quickly as possible. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation finished its review of the case last September, but refused to provide a copy, as the case is still pending in the DeKalb District Attorney’s Office.”

    Thus far, police have only admitted to being at the wrong address and that the shooting of the officer violated departmental policy, as officers are required to not jeopardize their own safety.

    “Are we perfect? Absolutely not,” Conroy said at the time. “But when we find we made a mistake, we own it. We own the fact that we were at the wrong house. We didn’t hide it. We didn’t mismanage it. We were at the wrong location based on information that was given to us.”

    Conroy, of course, failed to mention that mistake left an innocent family physically harmed, emotionally distressed, and their beloved pet dead.

    Officers were perhaps quite fortunate the McKinleys didn’t respond to the armed intrusion with gunfire — though police claim they announced themselves as law enforcement, the couple has never verified hearing them say anything.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-couple-sues-georgia-cops-shot/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2016, 01:27:51 PM
    Ohio Man Acquitted For Making Parody Police Department Facebook Page that Led to SWAT Raid

    An Ohio man facing criminal charges for making a satire Facebook page mocking the Parma Police Department got the last laugh last week after he was acquitted by a jury that unanimously decided the page did not violate the state’s felony disrupting public services law.

    Anthony Novak made international headlines after he created the satire page on March 2 and posted jokes like suggesting helping the homeless was illegal for three months, encouraging minorities not to apply to the department and announcing a police-sponsored ‘Pedophile Reform’ event that offered sex offenders a chance to become an “honorary police officer of the Parma Police Department.”

    Parma Police didn’t find the page funny, claiming it was a “risk to public safety.”

    Even though Novak took the page down after less than a day, a SWAT team raided his apartment at gunpoint three weeks later, while his roommate sat on the toilet, seizing all of their electronic equipment including laptops, his roommates laptops, cellphones and gaming consoles.

    But Novak wasn’t home.

    Later that day, Novak was leaving a convenient store when a police cruiser pulled up.

    “We even tried to walk past it because we’re like, someone’s screwed,” he told Cleveland.com. “Somebody came up to me and said, ‘Fake Parma Police Facebook page.'”

    “And then they arrested me.”

    In the video interview with Cleveland.com, posted below, Novak said he forgot about the page after he deleted it and said, “I didn’t think it would go past my friends on Facebook; the fact that it went viral so quickly is why I got noticed. I didn’t expect that at all.”

    While he sat in jail over the weekend, news of his arrest also went viral, making international headlines.

    “My roommate called in to tell my boss that I had been arrested, and they said don’t bother, we saw it on TV,” Novak recalled. “People were coming and wanting to take my photograph, because I had been arrested for a felony.”

    After his arrest, several other parody accounts of the Parma Police Department have been created in protest including “The Parma Police Department,” “For Real Parma Police Department Page,” and “City of Parma Police.”

    As of yet, no news reports have surfaced of those page creators being arrested.

    After a grand jury indicted him on a fourth-degree felony for disrupting public service by creating the satire page, a charge that carries up to 18 months in prison, Novak declined a plea offer to dismiss the felony if he pleaded guilty to a lessor charge.

    “I knew that I didn’t do anything wrong. I wasn’t going to plead guilty to something that wasn’t wrong in the first place.”

    Disrupting public service charge laws have historically been used when someone sabotages physical transmission facilities or jams frequencies, but not for protesting an unconstitutional police department.

    Gary Vick, Novak’s attorney, filed several motions to dismiss the felony arguing the satire Facebook page is a form of protected free speech.

    Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Maureen Clancy denied the motions.

    After Parma cops testified at trial that his Facebook page prompted 911 calls that distracted the Parma police department’s emergency dispatchers, a jury decided unanimously to acquit Novak of the felony charge.

    “They claimed that those calls disrupted their dispatch function even though the function of dispatch is to take calls and deal with the public,” Vick said.

    The American Civil Liberties Union criticized the Parma Police Department and Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office saying the case shouldn’t have came this far in this first place because it’s “clearly protected by the First Amendment.”

    “The ability to make commentary using satire and parody is so important to our ability to express ourselves and hold the state accountable for its actions,” ACLU Attorney Elizabeth Bonham, who is watching the case, said. “To show that speech can be unprotected, the state has a very, very high burden to show that it was actually and imminently going to cause harm.

    Novak said he plans to file a civil rights lawsuit against the Parma Police Department and the individuals involved in his arrest, claiming they violated his First Amendment rights.

    After his acquittal on Thursday, the Parma Police department still haven”t returned his or his roommate’s electronics.

    Novak said he doesn’t regret creating the page and wants to send a message by suing the department for violating his right to parody.

    “I just want them to pay for what they did. They maliciously arrested me because they were mad about what I said,” he said. “I live in Parma right now and it makes me a little uneasy that my police department probably doesn’t like me.”

    Below is a Facebook Live interview conducted by Cleveland.com of Novak and his attorney discussing his arrest and trial and plans to sue. Click here to see the original posting and read the comments.

    While it’s refreshing the jury sided with the First Amendment in this case, another Parma jury convicted another man earlier this year for First Amendment related activity, including video recording police in public and holding up signs warning drivers of an upcoming checkpoint.

    Parma Municipal Judge Deanna O’Donnell ended up sentencing Douglas “Deo” Odeolecki of Cleveland Cop Block to 240 days in jail.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/15/ohio-man-acquitted-making-parody-police-department-facebook-page-led-swat-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2016, 01:35:18 PM
    When will those deranged violent criminals be held accountable and sent to prison?

    “Insane & Violent” Cop Holds Innocent Dad and 7yo Daughter at Gunpoint

    Flagstaff, AZ — (RT) A father and his young daughter claim they were terrorized by a highway patrolman in Arizona while they were en route to the Grand Canyon on Friday.

    Ken Walton, who is from California, described the horrifying ordeal in a lengthy Facebook post where he and his 7-year-old daughter were held at gunpoint after being pulled over by the out-of-control highway patrolman.

    “Tonight, I was arrested at gunpoint by an Arizona highway patrol officer who threatened to shot me in the back (twice) in front of my 7-year-old daughter. For a moment, I was certain he was going to kill me for no reason,” he wrote.

    Walton had been making his way to the Grand Canyon in a rented car when he was pulled over by the Arizona Highway Patrol who had been tailing him for a few miles.

    “I hadn’t been speeding so I wondered if perhaps the car had a broken taillight or something. I rolled down my window and waited,” he said.

    Rather than approach the driver’s side, the officer instead “rapped on the rear passenger side window with his pistol.”

    His daughter who was “sitting inches from the barrel of his gun, jumped with fear as the officer yelled at me to roll down the front passenger window, his service weapon pointed directly at me.”

    While the police officer continued to shout orders, the young passenger panicked and attempted to get out of her booster seat to roll down the front window. It was at this point that the agitated officer screamed at her and pointed his gun at her.

    Walton said he then exited the car he assumed the position to be arrested at gunpoint.

    “Then, as I had my hands in the air, he yelled, at the top of his lungs in a voice I will never forget, as my daughter looked on in terror, ‘Get your hands away from your waist or I’ll blow two holes through your back right now!”

    The father said he was “utterly terrified,” at this stage. “I’ve heard stories of police yelling out false things like this before they unjustifiably attack someone as a way to justify the attack and I thought this was what was happening to me. I braced for bullets to hit me and all I could think of was my daughter having to watch it happen and being left alone on the side of the highway with an insane, violent cop.”

    After being arrested, he was placed in the back of the police car and Walton then confronted the officer for threatening to kill him. He also got the patrolman’s name – Oton Villegas – and his badge number.

    “He stood by his story that I had made a threatening movement toward my waist, and I said it wasn’t true, and he said this wasn’t the place to discuss it. He let me go attend to my daughter but continued to ‘detain’ us for another 20 minutes as he talked to his supervisors, presumably plotting damage control.”

    The dad is now deciding on if he will take legal action, but added that his daughter was “thoroughly traumatized by the event.”

    In March, a police officer was charged with second-degree murder after shooting dead an unarmed 26-year-old man in Arizona.

    Body camera footage of the incident, which took place in January, confirmed the victim, Daniel Shaver, pleading with the officer not to shoot him as he crawled along the hallway outside his room at the La Quinta Inn in Mesa.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/insane-violent-cop-dad-daughter-gunpoint
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2016, 01:45:22 PM
    Corruption runs deep.

    Notice the words of the prosecuting attorney..
    "trying to reconcile the video with the two officers’ statements"
    "I reached the difficult conclusion"


    Video Catches Cops Lying About Being Shot At To Justify Shooting at Unarmed Man

    Marshall, MO — As tensions between police and citizens rise amid tragic police shootings and despicable attacks on cops, two officers in Missouri were exposed for faking a story about being shot at — and their supervisor helped cover it up.

    Donald Stouffer, the prosecuting attorney in Saline County in central Missouri, dropped all the charges against a man who was accused of trying to shoot police officers.

    In a press release last week, Stouffer said he saw no evidence that Carl Roettgen even had a gun when the two Marshall police officers tried to arrest him for a parole violation.

    “After hours spent examining the video, trying to reconcile the video with the two officers’ statements, and consulting with staff, I reached the difficult conclusion that no reasonable juror could find the officers’ accounts credible,” he said.

    What Stouffer found was that officers Tyler Newell and Josh O’Bryan fabricated a story to frame a man they tried to arrest for a parole violation.

    According to the officers’ account, they tried to arrest Roettgen for a parole violation on May 13, 2015, in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Marshall, a city of about 13,000 people roughly 75 miles east of Kansas City. Newell wrote that a passenger jumped out of Roettgen’s car as he was trying to drive off, and that he, Newell, got into the car to try to put it in park. He said Roettgen then pointed a gun at his face and that he heard a click. O’Bryan said he was on the driver’s side and that he saw a gun.

    But there never was a gun, Roettgen never pulled the trigger, and Newell never got in the car. All these facts are backed up by video evidence.
    However, as Roettgen sped away, Newell began firing at the man anyway in an attempt to kill him.


    Roettgen’s attorney, John James, said Newell “lost his cool” and tried to kill him. “Then he compounded that mistake by lying about it and fabricating a story to explain why he discharged his weapon,” said James.

    A week later, Roettgen was arrested in Alabama and was returned to Missouri. He was set to stand trial for three counts of first-degree assault of a law enforcement officer, two counts of armed criminal action and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm — all stemming from the officers’ fake story.

    Had he been convicted on those counts, Roettgen was facing life in prison.

    To add to the corruption of these two officers, their supervisor knew their story was a lie but covered it up to pursue the criminal case.

    According to a report in the AP, Stouffer said the officers’ commander supported their false story so that the outcome of the criminal case would not be affected, raising further concerns about the department’s handling of the case. Furthermore, he said he will not file charges in any pending cases in which the officers, Tyler Newell and Josh O’Bryan, had a major role and that he’ll review other cases in which either officer was a key witness.


    “It is inconceivable that there is an apparent belief among some members of the command staff that the outcome of a criminal case is more important than taking action to prevent Marshall police officers from presenting testimony, under oath, that is ‘questionable at best’ and suborning perjury at worst,” Stouffer said.

    As for the two cops who lied to put a man in jail for life for crimes he did not commit — they are on paid vacation, pending the outcome of an investigation.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/missouri-cops-caught-lying-shooting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 15, 2016, 03:00:27 PM
    Corruption runs deep.

    Notice the words of the prosecuting attorney..
    "trying to reconcile the video with the two officers’ statements"
    "I reached the difficult conclusion"


    Video Catches Cops Lying About Being Shot At To Justify Shooting at Unarmed Man

    Marshall, MO — As tensions between police and citizens rise amid tragic police shootings and despicable attacks on cops, two officers in Missouri were exposed for faking a story about being shot at — and their supervisor helped cover it up.

    Donald Stouffer, the prosecuting attorney in Saline County in central Missouri, dropped all the charges against a man who was accused of trying to shoot police officers.

    In a press release last week, Stouffer said he saw no evidence that Carl Roettgen even had a gun when the two Marshall police officers tried to arrest him for a parole violation.

    “After hours spent examining the video, trying to reconcile the video with the two officers’ statements, and consulting with staff, I reached the difficult conclusion that no reasonable juror could find the officers’ accounts credible,” he said.

    What Stouffer found was that officers Tyler Newell and Josh O’Bryan fabricated a story to frame a man they tried to arrest for a parole violation.

    According to the officers’ account, they tried to arrest Roettgen for a parole violation on May 13, 2015, in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Marshall, a city of about 13,000 people roughly 75 miles east of Kansas City. Newell wrote that a passenger jumped out of Roettgen’s car as he was trying to drive off, and that he, Newell, got into the car to try to put it in park. He said Roettgen then pointed a gun at his face and that he heard a click. O’Bryan said he was on the driver’s side and that he saw a gun.

    But there never was a gun, Roettgen never pulled the trigger, and Newell never got in the car. All these facts are backed up by video evidence.
    However, as Roettgen sped away, Newell began firing at the man anyway in an attempt to kill him.


    Roettgen’s attorney, John James, said Newell “lost his cool” and tried to kill him. “Then he compounded that mistake by lying about it and fabricating a story to explain why he discharged his weapon,” said James.

    A week later, Roettgen was arrested in Alabama and was returned to Missouri. He was set to stand trial for three counts of first-degree assault of a law enforcement officer, two counts of armed criminal action and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm — all stemming from the officers’ fake story.

    Had he been convicted on those counts, Roettgen was facing life in prison.

    To add to the corruption of these two officers, their supervisor knew their story was a lie but covered it up to pursue the criminal case.

    According to a report in the AP, Stouffer said the officers’ commander supported their false story so that the outcome of the criminal case would not be affected, raising further concerns about the department’s handling of the case. Furthermore, he said he will not file charges in any pending cases in which the officers, Tyler Newell and Josh O’Bryan, had a major role and that he’ll review other cases in which either officer was a key witness.


    “It is inconceivable that there is an apparent belief among some members of the command staff that the outcome of a criminal case is more important than taking action to prevent Marshall police officers from presenting testimony, under oath, that is ‘questionable at best’ and suborning perjury at worst,” Stouffer said.

    As for the two cops who lied to put a man in jail for life for crimes he did not commit — they are on paid vacation, pending the outcome of an investigation.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/missouri-cops-caught-lying-shooting








    😃 At last a prosecutor seeing the lies & cover up

    Let's hope more do -- & These lying scumbag cops get what they deserve.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2016, 03:15:00 PM







    😃 At last a prosecutor seeing the lies & cover up

    Let's hope more do -- & These lying scumbag cops get what they deserve.

    From the words used it didn't seem like the prosecutor was completely objective; it actually seemed like he wanted to side with the cops but just couldn't find a way to do it. I hope if he reviews other cases where these cops are involved he will examine them objectively and not try to "reconcile" facts with the cops' story.

    It just goes to show that the cops can easily arrest a person on bogus charges, deprive them of their liberty and destroy the life of a person yet they do not face similar punishment for the crimes that they commit. The cops should've been arrested the moment the prosecutor said the cops' accounts would not be found credible and dropped the charges against Roettgen.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 15, 2016, 05:37:10 PM
    From the words used it didn't seem like the prosecutor was completely objective; it actually seemed like he wanted to side with the cops but just couldn't find a way to do it. I hope if he reviews other cases where these cops are involved he will examine them objectively and not try to "reconcile" facts with the cops' story.

    It just goes to show that the cops can easily arrest a person on bogus charges, deprive them of their liberty and destroy the life of a person yet they do not face similar punishment for the crimes that they commit. The cops should've been arrested the moment the prosecutor said the cops' accounts would not be found credible and dropped the charges against Roettgen.







    Agreed - just why they weren't arrested & charged Stinks.
    I'm always going about this double standards for cops & Others in
    Jobs with power to affect others lives -- They Should be Held Accountable
    & To The same standards if not Higher.
    Yet invariably they are punished with a 'Beating on the Wrists With A Wet Lettuce' !!

    Fcuking Totally Wrong -- Is it any real Wonder People Dislike Cops / Don't Trust Them
    & Sadly Now Shooting Them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2016, 04:59:26 PM
    Ironic how those who actively try to accuse and incarcerate people end up being the criminals.

    Pennsylvania’s Attorney General Is Convicted on All Counts

    By JESS BIDGOODAUG. 15, 2016

    NORRISTOWN, Pa. — She was a rising Democratic star. She was the first in her party to be elected state attorney general. She was one of the most powerful women in Pennsylvania.

    But on Monday night, Kathleen G. Kane, the state’s top prosecutor, became a convicted criminal.

    A jury found Ms. Kane, 50, guilty of nine criminal charges, including perjury and criminal conspiracy, convicting her of leaking grand jury information, and then lying about it, in an effort to discredit a political rival.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/16/us/trial-kathleen-kane-pennsylvania-attorney-general.html?_r=0
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2016, 05:03:59 PM
    Once again the dangerous criminals get off easy.

    New York City to Pay $4.1 Million in Akai Gurley NYPD Negligent Shooting Death

    New York City will pay $4.1 million to the family of Akai Gurley, the 26-year-old unarmed man who was shot in a darkened stairwell in his apartment building by a cop who negligently fired his gun.

    The NYPD officer, Peter Liang, was convicted in February of manslaughter, but that  judge reduced the charge to criminally negligent homicide and sentenced him to probation and 800 hours of community service.

    However, Liang was also ordered to pay $25,000 to Kimberly Ballinger, the mother of Gurley’s daughter, Akalia, who was two years old when her father was killed on November 20, 2014.

    The rest of the money will be placed in a fund for Akalia, which she can’t access without court approval until she turns 18.

    The New York Daily News reports “the money will be invested in rock-solid annuities that will actually provide the girl with an estimated $10 million over the course of her lifetime.”

    On the night he was shot and killed, Gurley had stepped into the stairwell from the seventh floor of the building with Melissa Butler, his  girlfriend at the time.

    Liang and his partner, Shaun Landau, had stepped into the stairwell from the eighth floor. Liang had his gun drawn and his finger on the trigger and was apparently spooked by the sound of the others entering the stairwell from below because he fired once.

    The bullet struck a wall and ricochetted, striking Gurley in the chest, causing him to tumble down to the fourth floor.

    The two cops then walked down, stepped around the body and began arguing about who should call the supervisor as Gurley lay dying.

    They both claimed they did not know how to perform CPR, even though they are supposedly trained to do that.

    A neighbor called 911 and relayed CPR instructions to Butler as the two cops argued.

    Initial reports said that Liang texted the police union after the shooting, but the district attorney and the NYPD said that was not true.

    The New York City Housing Authority will pay $400,000 towards the settlement because they did not change a lightbulb in the stairwell, causing it to go dark, which made Liang fear for his life.

    The elevator was also broken that day, which is why Gurley and Butler decided to take the stairs.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/16/new-york-city-to-pay-4-1-million-in-akai-gurley-nypd-negligent-shooting-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2016, 05:07:14 PM
    Massive Bully Cop Smashes Innocent Teacher into Car, Dangles Her Over the Road

    Washinton, D.C. — A disturbing video was uploaded to Twitter Monday afternoon showing a cop holding a small woman up off the ground while smashing her against his patrol car. The woman was an innocent school teacher, and the cop was a bully.

    According to the victim, who looks like a little girl in the video, but is actually a 32-year-old woman named Shadon, she was assaulted for no reason at all. The lack of an arrest in the incident is evidence of this claim.

    According to Shadon, she was arguing with a man who was harassing another woman. When officers saw this, they perceived her as a threat. So, without question or just cause, this 250-pound cop tossed this 90-pound woman around like a rag doll.

    “It was harassment, and I asked for the police officer’s badge – they wouldn’t give me no names, no numbers or nothing – so I left – I never knew this was being recorded,” Shadon said in an interview with FOX 5.

    As soon as the Twitter user, @MacAndCheeks, posted the video, it quickly went viral sparking outrage toward the DC police department.

    After countless tweets at the department, they finally released a statement noting that “We’ve been made aware of this video and have contacted their commanding officer as we investigate this matter.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bully-cop-slams-innocent-teacher/

    Video: https://twitter.com/MacAndCheeks/status/765273920266235906
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2016, 10:27:17 PM
    Drunk Arizona Cop Turns Angry After Demanding Blue Courtesy in DUI Stop and Not Receiving It

    An Arizona police officer pulled over a drunk driver who turned out to be a cop and went through with the arrest anyway.

    Not that Mesa Police Lieutenant Rick Van Galder didn’t try to use his badge to talk his way out of the arrest.

    But the Gilbert police officers refused to give Van Galder the Blue Courtesy that he expected. At least at first.

    As a result, Van Galder became belligerent and condescending. A man with a whopping .306 blood alcohol content. Almost four times the legal limit of .08.

    Not just Extreme DUI, which in Arizona, comes with harsher penalties than just a DUI, but Super Extreme DUI, which comes with even harsher penalties.

    And that’s considering his blood was drawn more than 45 minutes after the stop because Van Galder, like most cops who get pulled over for drunk driving, refused to do field sobriety tests.

    The story comes to us from 12 News, who did a thorough job of investigative reporting, obtaining body cam footage from the February 2016 incident, even driving to Van Galder’s home to attempt to interview him, only for him to threaten to call Gilbert police on them.

    “Gilbert police did the right thing and didn’t cave into pressure,” the reporter says in the news segment.

    Body cam footage shows Van Galder trying to talk his way out of the arrest, telling the Gilbert cops that he’s been on the force for 20 years, asking them to let him walk home, even though he lives five miles away.

    Once they placed the cuffs behind his back, he became angry that they did not cuff him in the front. He even mentions his Blue Line tattoo on his arm, asking the cops to lift up his sleeve to view it to prove he was a member of the same gang.

    However, Gilbert police did release him to a relative 90 minutes after his arrest after he agreed to a blood test, which certainly seems like Blue Privilege, but maybe they release all their DUI suspects  in time to make last call.

    And even after he pleaded guilty to Super Extreme DUI, which comes with a mandatory 45-day sentence, he ended up serving only three days in jail.

    That’s because the 45-day sentence was reduced to 14 days, which only three of those days required to be served in jail and the remaining 11 days to be served on house arrest. He was also placed in a segregated cell and his sentence was schedule to not interfere with his job – except that is not an issue considering he is on paid leave raking his $90,0000-a-year salary while siting at home.

    But let’s read the Super Extreme DUI statute, which is defined as anyone having a blood alcohol content of .20 or higher.

     A person who is convicted of a violation of subsection A, paragraph 2 of this section shall be sentenced to serve not less than forty-five consecutive days in jail and is not eligible for probation or suspension of execution of sentence unless the entire sentence is served.

    An Arizona DUI attorney breaks it down for us on his website.

    For a regular DUI conviction, there is a minimum jail term of 1 day.  For an extreme DUI (BAC result of .150 and below a .200) conviction, there is a minimum jail term of 30 days.  For an Arizona Super Extreme DUI, the minimum jail term is 45 days.

    Because Van Galder was never booked in the Maricopa County jail, which is operated by Sheriff Joe Arpaio and is notorious for forcing inmates to wear pink underwear, he ended up facing Gilbert Judge John Hudson, who ensured the cop would not serve the mandatory 45 days in jail by allowing him to serve three days in a Scottsdale jail.

    So in the end, no matter how much 12 News praised the arresting officers, he was granted Blue Privilege by the judge, who saved him from the pink underwear.

    The news report mentions that Van Galder is the first high-ranking Mesa police officer to be arrested for DUI in five years, which probably means he is the first high-ranking Mesa police officer to not receive Blue Courtesy at the time of his arrest.

    Click here to view the news report if you can’t see it below.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/16/drunk-arizona-cop-turns-angry-after-demanding-blue-courtesy-in-dui-stop-and-not-receiving-it/

    http://www.12news.com/news/investigative/mesa-pds-finest-how-one-lieutenant-acted-like-he-was-above-the-law/292312834
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 17, 2016, 11:27:15 AM
    Houston Cop Arrested Four Days After Killing Man in Drunk Driving Crash in Which He Refused Field Sobriety Tests

    It was an apparent case of favoritism.

    A Texas cop was not arrested Friday even though his blood alcohol level was twice the legal limit when he swerved into an oncoming lane, slamming his SUV head-on into a Corvette and rolled over it, killing the man inside.

    Brian Manring, 36, the father of a 6-year-old daughter, was pronounced dead at the scene.

    But Houston the police cop responsible for Manring’s death, James Combs, refused to take a field sobriety test and a breathalyzer test after Fort Bend County sheriff’s deputies smelled alcohol on him, which we have learned over the years, is standard procedure for cops who get pulled over while drunk.

    The off-duty cop even told deputies he was on his way to work, but Houston police have not confirmed yet if he was scheduled to work that morning.

    Combs, 33, ended up transported to a hospital to be treated for minor injuries, which was where deputies obtained a warrant to draw blood from him.

    He was then released from the hospital and allowed to go on his way because deputies claimed they did not have enough evidence to arrest him at the time, according to KHOU.

    “It does take time. Charges have not been filed. We have his blood, so that will be sent off to a crime lab. Once we receive the results, depending what they are along with the other things at the scene, he could be charged at that time,” said Major Chad Norvell, with the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office.

    He was not arrested until Tuesday after the results came back from the laboratory, indicating he had a blood alcohol content of .17 – more than twice the legal limit.

    Police charged Officer Combs with intoxication manslaughter, which carries a sentence between two to 20 years in prison.

    A judge set his bond at $100,000.

    Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy Nehls insisted Combs did not receive the standard Blue Courtesy treatment expected from many cops who get pulled over while drunk.

    “It’s a sad day any time you have to take a man in blue in custody,” Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy Nehls told ABC 13. “Especially now with the trying times law enforcement, and all the scrutiny we’ve been receiving for the past several years.”

    “But it is our job. If you enter Fort Bend County, you’re drinking and driving, you cause a crash that takes the life of another Fort Bend County resident, I don’t care what your occupation is.”

    However, a Houston criminal defense attorney named Dan Cogdell said that is a lie.

    “I have handled thousands of DWI cases and tried hundreds of DWIs,” he told Click2Houston.

    “I’ve never had a situation where the individual wasn’t arrested at the scene, unless there was a catastrophic injury to that person and he needed immediate medical care.

    “They treat their own special,” he said. “They treat law enforcement better than you and me.

    “Period. End of story.”

    Prior to the 6:30 a.m. crash, Combs had been at a strip club called Show Palace, according to his wife and credit card receipts.

    His wife told investigators that her husband had a “drinking problem” and that they had been arguing on the phone prior to the crash while he was at the strip club.

    Meaning’s friends said he was a good father to his 8-year-old daughter and enjoyed being  a dad.

    “That’s what Brian lived for, to put a smile on Holly’s face and she’s not going to have that anymore,” Taryn Keene, Manring’s neighbor, told ABC13. “It’s horrible. I’m crying for him and I’m crying for Holly.”

    Combs has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal affairs  investigation.

    Meaning, he still draws a salary.

    It was only last night we reported on an Arizona cop named Rick Van Galder who was arrested for Super Extreme DUI after his blood results came back with a .306 blood alcohol content, a charge that carries a minimum sentence of 45 days in jail.

    However, Van Galder ended up spending on three days in jail after pleading guilty.

    Then there’s the case of Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputy Stephen Miller, who has been stopped for DUI three times since 2014, including one time when police found him snoring behind the wheel of a running car with his foot on the brake in the parking lot of a police station.

    The Palm Beach Gardens cop described Miller as “discourteous, disrespectful, clearly intoxicated, uncooperative and belligerent.”

    “Cut me a break … We are all brothers,” Miller told the Palm Beach Gardens cop that night on September 12, 2015.

    The cop did cut him a break, calling Miller’s girlfriend, who is a West Palm Beach police officer, to pick him up and drive him home.

    The same thing happened just a week earlier on September 5, 2015 as well as in January 2014.

    It was only after the third time that he came under investigation by internal affairs, which resulted in a ten-day suspension.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/17/houston-cop-arrested-four-days-after-killing-man-in-drunk-driving-crash-in-which-he-refused-field-sobriety-tests/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 17, 2016, 11:29:54 AM
    No DNA or Fingerprints on Gun Used to Justify New Mexico Police Shooting Death of 19-year-old Woman

    Albuquerque police officer Jeremy Dear – whose body camera was unplugged when he killed a woman in 2014 – claimed he was in fear for his life because she had pointed a gun at him.

    Now newly surfaced evidence shows Mary Hawkes’ fingerprints or DNA was never on the gun, which Albuquerque police knew all along.

    But they had justified the shooting because they said they had traced the gun to a man who once exchanged Facebook messages with the woman.


    According to KOAT:

    In May 2014, Albuquerque police say Officer Jeremy Dear was chasing Hawkes, a suspected car thief, on foot when she turned and pointed a .32-caliber pistol. Dear opened fire and Hawkes died.

    A lawsuit filed by Hawkes’ family claimed that there were no fingerprints and no evidence to tie Hawkes to that gun. Nearly 1,000 newly-released pages say officers knew days after the incident that there were no fingerprints but that the department had other evidence to tie Hawkes to the pistol.

    According to the report, APD had previously looked into that gun and traced it to a man who had exchanged Facebook messages with Hawkes. In another message, the report said someone else accused Hawkes of stealing a pistol.

    It was enough for APD to believe that was the gun Hawkes pointed at Dear. But her godmother, Carolina Acuna Olvera, who lives in California, said nothing will convince her that Hawkes deserved to die.

    Dear, who was fired for failing to have his body camera on during this incident and several other incidents, was rehired after he appealed the decision, so he is still patrolling the streets with his camera, even though he never has it on during questionable incidents.

    This is how Dear described the shooting of the 19-year-old suspected car thief, according to KOAT.

    “Seeing the gun coming at me, looking down the barrel, her finger on the trigger, I thought I was going to die,” he told investigators. “I was afraid to die. I didn’t want to die. I have a girlfriend that I love very much. I have my son, my 6-year-old son. I want to go home.”

    Police were looking for her in connection with a stolen car. Dear said he was running after Hawkes when she turned around with a gun.

    “I said, ‘Drop it, drop it.’ The gun was still pointed at me. I fired until she dropped,” he said.

    When asked if he had lapel camera video of the shooting, Dear said it was unplugged.

    “I remember at the end, I was like oh (expletives), my camera, it was unplugged,” he said. “I mean, I’ve had problems in the past, they come unplugged, you catch that little cord on something and it snags out.”

    Considering his body camera once caught him in a lie, it is understandable why he does not like to keep it turned on.


    In 2011, Dear was at the scene when another cop shot an unarmed man named Alan Gomez. Dear later told investigators he thought he saw a gun in Gomez’s hands.

    But his body camera recorded him saying he was unable to see Gomez’s hands.

    Gomez’s family sued and received $900,000 in December 2013.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/12/no-dna-or-fingerprints-on-gun-used-to-justify-new-mexico-police-shooting-death-of-19-year-old-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 17, 2016, 11:34:08 AM
    Those violent armed criminals who attack and abuse innocent elderly people should be sent to death row.

    Innocent 84yo Grandma Hospitalized After Cops Attacked & Pepper Sprayed Her for No Reason

    Muskogee, OK — An innocent 84-year-old grandmother was attacked by police, pepper sprayed, arrested, and hospitalized last week after officers chased a suspect during a traffic stop.

    Police were after the victim’s son, who they say refused to stop for a traffic stop and ran into her home instead. When officers showed up, according the Smith, they kicked in her door and as she got up to see who was there — she was met with a face full of chemical agent.

    According to Smith, after police pepper sprayed her for no reason, they arrested her, dragged her to the police car and brought her to jail. Clearly stressed over being kicknapped and thrown in a cell, this 84-year-old woman began to have a panic attack. She was then rushed to the hospital.

    When FOX 23 contacted the Muskogee police department, they couldn’t comment on the case citing an internal investigation.

    It was unclear as to what police charged the woman with. However, it is likely the standard ‘resisting, interfering, or obstructing.’

    Smith now plans to take legal action against the department for her assault.

    Cops attacking elderly people is an unfortunate yet all too common problem.

    Earlier this year, two LAPD officerswere named in a lawsuit filed by an innocent 62-year-old woman. No longer able to place her trust in police officers after becoming a victim of excessive force, the traumatized woman has become fearful of interacting with people.

    Early on the morning of April 14, a surveillance video captured two LAPD cops in a marked SUV slowly following 62-year-old Ok Jin Jun’s car into a Koreatown church parking lot. According to CBSNews, Jun admitted to honking her car horn about six times because the police vehicle had been blocking the church driveway.

    After parking her car, Jun was immediately confronted by the two officers and ordered to show her registration despite the fact that she had not committed a crime. Confused and unable to speak much English, Jun attempted to call her husband and a 911 interpreter from her cell phone.

    Suddenly, one of the officers appeared to grab Jun’s arms for no reason before both cops abruptly shoved the elderly woman against her own car. Although Jun did not pose an immediate threat, the officers slammed her onto the pavement before placing her in handcuffs.

    Before Jun, there was Tyrone Carnegay, an innocent Atlanta man who spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought.

    Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail before the charges were finally dropped. The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera.

    As the incidents above illustrate, being innocent and elderly is no defense from police. The old apologist saying of “if you don’t want to be attacked by police, don’t break the law,” rings hollow to those in the destructive wake of police brutality.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandma-pepper-sprayed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 18, 2016, 09:42:08 AM
    http://www.cnbc.com/2016/08/18/justice-department-says-it-will-end-use-of-private-prisons-report.html?_source=Facebook



    damn   thats shocking
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 19, 2016, 05:39:46 PM
    NYPD Cop Caught on Video in Gangstyle Beatdown that Nearly Killed a Man

    New York, NY — An NYPD officer has been suspended after video of a brutal street fight involving his friends made the rounds on social media. The off-duty cop not only failed to provide assistance to the victim but didn’t identify himself as law enforcement to responding officers.

    Although Officer Ronnie Velez received the suspension for failing to inform responding officers he was one of their own, video shows him forcefully restraining Ray Cordero from assisting as Velez’ friends cruelly attack Elliott Ambert — leaving him with multiple facial fractures and bleeding on the brain.

    “He never identified himself as a police officer to me,” Cordero explained, as the New York Daily News reported. “I don’t understand how you can be an officer of the law and still let that happen.”

    Three of Velez’ pals have been charged with felony assault over the alleged beating which occurred around 6 p.m. Sunday, as Ambert and Cordero left the Il Bastardo restaurant in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan.

    According to Cordero, a bouncer broke up a brief verbal confrontation between Ambert and another man, but once they left the immediate area, it didn’t take long for Velez’ friends to pounce.

    Cordero says Velez, who can be seen on a bystander’s cellphone video in a black shirt and shorts, came up behind him and began throwing punches — striking Cordero in the head.

    Reid Koran, Jeremy Gonzalez, and Michael Batista — the now-suspended officer’s friends — relentlessly pummeled Ambert while Velez, and then another one of the men, restrained Cordero, as seen in the bystander’s video.

    Cordero said the second man, who put him in a headlock and pulled him slightly away from the ongoing assault, flashed a police shield. This move, could only be considered a threat, considering the unidentified officer — like Velez — wore street clothes and also failed to either intervene or offer help to Ambert afterward.

    “I wasn’t going to hit a cop,” Cordero said, indicating the police shield likely had its intended effect. “I started to back up.”

    As the man who had flashed the police shield pulls Cordero away from the beating, Velez can be seen in footage looking around as sirens are heard, backing away, and leaving the scene.


    A bystander finally attempts to assist the ailing Ambert as a bevy of patrol cars finally arrive at the scene.

    Cordero explained he didn’t learn Velez was an officer until Internal Affairs investigators told him.

    He also noted investigators said the shield-flashing man may be the son of a police sergeant — though, according to the Daily News, Deputy Chief Edward Mullen “would only say no one was charged with impersonating a police officer.”

    It’s unclear whether the New York City Police obtained a copy of the video, which shows Velez briefly participating in the attack on Ambert, restraining Cordero, and fleeing the scene of a crime — none of which factored into his suspension.

    As for the man who whipped out the badge, though investigators told Cordero he was possibly only related to an officer, no explanation has been given concerning the failure to charge him with impersonating a cop.
    Ambert’s injuries were so extensive, he has yet to be interviewed by investigators.

    “He doesn’t remember much ‘cause literally he received so much head trauma,” Cordero explained. “His face is pretty bad.”

    Although The Free Thought Project reached the NYPD, the appropriate person was unavailable to answer these questions or provide comment.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/nypd-cop-gang-beating/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 19, 2016, 05:42:47 PM
    Utah Police Have Yet to Charge Teenage Subway Worker Accused of Drugging Cop

    Earlier this month, Utah police arrested an 18-year-old Subway worker on charges that he drugged a police officer by placing THC and methamphetamine in his drink, causing the officer to become sick and hospitalized.

    The story quickly went viral with the media taking the word of police at face value with many commenters calling for the death penalty for Tanis Ukena.

    Commenters also blamed the incident on Black Lives Matter, even though the teen does not have a single black Facebook friend nor does he appear to be involved in any type of activism.

    And police throughout the country were quick to pin the incident as the latest chapter in the mythical War on Police.

    But the story did not add up because not only did Ukena come across as a straight-laced, sports-loving Mormon teen on his Facebook page (and yes, we know that can be deceiving), but the Layton Police Department seemed to have flimsy evidence at best.

    Now, almost two weeks after his arrest, Layton police have yet to formally charge Ukena for surreptitious administration of a substance, a second-degree felony, indicating they don’t have much of a case, according to the Associated Press.

    After all, they based their arrest on a surveillance video at the Subway showing Ukena taking an “unusual amount of time” preparing the cop’s lemonade as the officer sat in the drive-thru window in full uniform and in a marked car.

    They also said the video shows Ukena – “for some unknown reason” – walking away from the drive-thru window, out of camera view, before returning to finish pouring the drink.

    Although Layton police hyped up the arrest, they never released the video, which is something cops always do when they have solid evidence of a crime.

    In other words, the video does not show Ukena placing anything inside the drink. Nor did they find any THC or methamphetamine on his possession.

    Layton police also they used an ion scanner to determine the drink contained methamphetamine and THC, which is the active ingredient in marijuana.

    However, ion scanners have long been proven to be unreliable, producing false positive results, especially when it comes to marijuana and methamphetamine, according to one study.

    One drawback of IMS technology is that it measures drug particulates down to the nanogram, identifying ‘false positives frequently (SCA Inc., 2001). In examining the practical reliability of detection by IMS units in a laboratory and prison setting, one study found that cocaine was the only drug that was reliably detected, while heroin and amphetamine were poorly detected. Detection capability was also found for the prescription drug temazepam (Sheldon et al., 1998). IMS units most effectively detect powdered or liquid forms of drugs; the finer the powder the greater the likelihood of detection. This renders other forms of drugs such as pills and larger particles (i.e. marijuana), less likely to be detected (Butler, 2002).

    Ukena has denied the allegations, even though police point out he admits he was the only one who prepared the cop’s drink. He bailed out of jail after his family posted a $10,000 bond.

    The cop, whose name has not been released, claimed the drink “tasted funny” after taking a few sips, according to initial media reports.

    “The (sergeant) began feeling the effects of being drugged,” the report says. “While approaching an intersection that had a red light, he had difficulty getting his foot to move to the brake pedal. (He) drove to the Layton Police Department, where he was observed to have signs of impairment. He was unable to process information and drifted off, and was unable to focus on questions being asked of him.”

    But anybody familiar with edible cannabis knows it takes about 45 minutes to begin feeling the effects of THC. And methamphetamine is a stimulant, which would produce the opposite effect of what the officer was feeling.

    Layton police also said a separate test also “tested positive for narcotics,” but do not elaborate if that was a blood test conducted on the officer himself.

    If that’s the case, then it’s possible the cop drugged himself and needed a scapegoat to blame it on.


    As of now, police say they are waiting for results from a state laboratory before they proceed with the case, but even if the lemonade does come back containing the alleged drugs, that is still no evidence that the  teen was responsible for placing them there.

    Unless we have a confession or solid video evidence as well as video evidence that police did not drug the drink themselves, then Ukena should never be charged, let alone convicted.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/19/utah-police-have-yet-to-charge-teenage-subway-worker-accused-of-drugging-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 22, 2016, 01:54:16 PM
    Cop Caught on Video Pepper Spraying Innocent Motorists on the Highway — Will NOT Be Punished

    Fort Worth, TX — In March, Fort Worth police confirmed that one of their officers was under investigation after a video was uploaded to Facebook showing him pepper spray innocent people as they drove by on motorcycles. On Friday, the Department quietly released a statement noting that they will not discipline the officer involved.

    After Fort Worth police officer William Figueroa was seen shooting out pepper spray into the faces of motorcyclists as they drove by on a busy highway, he was placed on paid vacation pending an internal investigation. The investigation was wrapped up in June. However, investigators left it up to Figueroa’s bosses to decide what, if any, punishment he would receive.
    Now, nearly two months after the investigation, and Figueroa back on the streets, the department announced that he wouldn’t be punished. Instead, the department said that Figueroa will receive “internal sanctions.” When asked what “internal sanctions” are, Sgt. Marcus Povero, a police spokesman, said Friday that he could not specify. However, he added that they could include retraining or a “commander’s admonishment.

    In other words, an officer who nearly caused a deadly pileup, from being unable to control his rage, will not be punished.

    The video, uploaded by Facebook user Chase Stone, captured the dangerous and downright insane actions by this public servant. The video was posted with the following description.
    During the big ride today we had a law enforcement officer, that looked as if he was pulling over a truck, stepped out of his vehicle with mace in hand and began spraying it towards the riders with intention of causing an accident!!! This is a video EVERYONE NEEDS TO WATCH!! Law enforcement is here to protect and serve, not intentionally try to harm others
    Luckily, Stone had his HD helmet cam on and caught this maniac in his despicable act. Otherwise, no one would have believed it.

    According to Povero, no witnesses called in to file a complaint against Figueroa.

    “Nobody that witnessed or was involved in this situation ever filed a complaint,” Povero said. “This was an internal investigation started by our own internal affairs unit.”
    However, according to the person who filmed it, he did complain, and he’s planning legal action.

    When asked by internal affairs why he would make such an asinine and dangerous move, Figueroa said, “Multiple motorcycles would not vacate the lane closest to my marked patrol car. I deployed my pepper spray into the lane closest to me, at which point approaching motorcycles began to vacate the lane, allowing me to conduct a traffic stop.”

    Luckily for the innocent motorists, Figueroa didn’t reach for his firearm instead.

    The actions of the officer in the video below are beyond unreasonable and, in fact, enter into the realm of criminal behavior. Had one of the motorists wrecked as a result of the pepper spray, the results could have been catastrophic.

    His lack of punishment is a kick in the teeth of those who want police to be held accountable and speaks to the reason of why there is so much divide in America today.

    No amount police apologist logic will justify the careless deployment of pepper spray into the faces of dozens of bikers traveling down a highway. This officer needs to be fired immediately and arrested.

    Fort Worth Police Department complaints on Officers line. — 817-392-4270


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-pepper-spray-motorists-charged/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 22, 2016, 01:57:00 PM
    Cop Shoots and Kills Unarmed Deaf Man as He Tries to Communicate Using Sign Language

    Charlotte, NC — A community and family is mourning the loss of Daniel Kevin Harris, whose life was taken this week by a State Trooper who apparently fears sign language. Harris, who is deaf, was gunned down in front of his house.

    According to police, trooper Jermaine Saunders attempted to pull Harris over around 6:14 p.m. on Thursday. For an unknown reason, Harris did not stop and, instead, drove to his home.
    During the pursuit, both cars became damaged and eventually came to a stop near Harris’ home.

    “I was here in my driveway and I saw the highway patrol car come through and it was smoking really bad,” said neighbor Mark Barringer. “About 10 seconds later, I heard one gunshot.”
    According to WCNC, Barringer says when he went to take a closer look, he saw Harris in the middle of the street. He died just a few feet from his front door. Several neighbors have put flowers near where Harris took his final breaths.

    “It was surreal, you just don’t expect to see something like that,” said Barringer. “When the gunshot went off, it was scary.”

    According to police, detectives say Saunders and Harris got into “an encounter” before the officer killed him. However, according to neighbors, as soon as Harris got out of his vehicle, Saunders fired.

    “While on Seven Oaks Drive, the driver exited his vehicle and an encounter took place between the driver and the trooper causing a shot to be fired,” according to a statement from the State Highway Patrol.

    Detectives say Harris was trying to communicate with the trooper using sign language before he was killed.
    Harris died on the scene. He was 28-years-old.

    “They should’ve deescalated and been trained to realize that this is an entirely different situation, you’re pulling someone over who is deaf, they are handicapped,” said Barringer.  “To me, what happened is totally unacceptable.”

    Neighbor Ryan Russell said he’d see the man out in the neighborhood speaking in sign language with his family. “It seemed like a very peaceful family,” Russell told WBTV. “These things are always heartbreaking.”

    Audria Bridges, special agent in charge of the SBI office that covers the Charlotte region, said Saunders has been placed on administrative leave and an investigation is underway.
    “The SBI is in the process of obtaining all available dash cam or body camera video present on the scene from the State Highway Patrol as well as Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, as CMPD responded to the scene immediately after the shooting,” Bridges said.

    According to the Charlotte Observer, public records show an interpreter provided sign language for Harris at a court hearing in Florida in 2010. At the hearing, he was found not guilty of misdemeanor larceny and had a charge of misdemeanor resisting property recovery dismissed, records show.

    Harris was found guilty of resisting an officer in 2010 when he lived in Connecticut, according to public records. However, this resisting charge was likely due to the fact that Harris could not hear the officer’s commands.

    In the land of the free, a deaf man suspected of driving too fast can be killed in cold blood. Unfortunately, as we’ve shown time and again, this type of mistreatment and attacks on the deaf by police are all too common.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-shoots-kills-unarmed-deaf-mute-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 22, 2016, 03:09:37 PM
    LAPD Cop Kick Handcuffed Suspect in Head While Two Cops Hold Him Down

    The man had surrendered and two Los Angeles police officers were holding him down and a third cop had just re-holstered his gun when a fourth LAPD cop came running up and kicked the suspect in the head – who turned out to be innocent.

    Los Angeles police officer Richard Garcia then kneed the man in the back, following that with a punch to the head, then several elbows.

    Even after the other two officers stepped off the handcuffed suspect, Garcia kept his knee planted on the man’s back and at times his head.

    The incident, which took place in October 2014, was captured on a surveillance video, resulting in felony assault charges filed against the LAPD cop.

    But even after Garcia agreed to a plea deal in May 2015 where he served no jail time, police and prosecutors refused to release the video.

    That is, until the Los Angeles Times obtained it through a court order, posting on their site earlier today.

    Garcia faced up to three years in jail if convicted of the felony assault charge. Earlier this year, prosecutors quietly agreed to a deal that allowed him to plead no contest and avoid jail time if he completes community service, follows all laws, stays away from Alford and donates $500 to a charity by late May 2017.

    Under the agreement, Garcia, 35, would be allowed to enter a new plea to a misdemeanor charge that would replace the felony and would be placed on two years of probation. If he violates the plea terms, the felony will stand and he will be placed on three years of probation. If he doesn’t appear in court for the 2017 hearing, he could be sentenced to jail.

    But Garcia is still a cop, even if he is a cop on probation.


    And Clinton Alford, the man who was kicked and has filed a lawsuit against the city over the arrest.

    On October 16, 2014, Alford, 22, was riding his bicycle when an unmarked car pulled up to him and a man inside yelled at him to stop.

    He said someone grabbed the back of his bicycle, so he jumped off his bicycle and started running, fearing for his life.

    After a short foot chase, he apparently realized they were cops and gave up, lying down in the street as the cops ran up and handcuffed him.

    That was when Garcia pulled up in his patrol car and ran out, kicking, punching and elbowing him as he was facedown on the ground already handcuffed, leaving him with a gash on his ear that required stitches at a hospital.

    He was charged with drug possession and resisting arrest, although he insisted he never had drugs and it was never made clear what kind of drugs they found on him.

    However, his attorney said police continued to harass him after the incident and he now is in jail on other charges, including rape, pimping and assault with a deadly weapon, but the Los Angeles Times offers no details on those charges.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 24, 2016, 12:29:55 PM
    TSA, Police & DHS Detain Disabled 9yo Boy Claiming His Pacemaker Makes Him a Terror Threat

    Phoenix, AZ — Chille Bergstrom is a 9-year-old boy who’s endured more pain and suffering than any child should ever have to deal with because of a rare defect in his heart. However, his pacemaker and his 15 open heart surgeries were nothing compared to the abuse and harassment of TSA.

    Chille is no stranger to flying. He was born with a rare congenital disease called Goldenhar Syndrome which has caused his heart to develop incompletely. He’s constantly traveling to receive medical care. And, up until this week, his traveling experiences have been pleasant.

    Because of his condition, Chille has a pacemaker, and he and his family are required to request alternative screening when they fly. The Bergstroms have all the documentation to support their special needs for screening modifications required to keep little Chille alive.

    The alternative screening is a simple, two-minute process in which Chille bypasses the metal detectors and naked body scanners.

    When the Bergstroms show the TSA their documentation and they see Chille, who clearly has a pacemaker, they usually smile and allow him through. But not this time.

    “We were told immediately by the TSA that he was not allowed to be screened alternatively and instead would need an exemption,” said Ali Bergstrom in an interview with FOX 9.

    This exemption required them to be delayed over an hour as they were shaken down by ‘terror experts’ from DHS, TSA, and police.

    “[I was] shocked beyond belief. In walks the head of the Department of Homeland Security for the entire airport, followed by other supervisors, and managers with ten other people from TSA,” said Ali.

    “And four police officers,” Chille added.

    “With everything, guns, Tasers, all that,” said Chille.

    According to the Bergstroms, the TSA berated them for over an hour as they demeaned the child and his parents.

    “One of the TSA agents told me they’d prevented terrorist attacks using nine-year-old boys with pacemakers and children before, so I laughed and said, ‘Oh when?’ At that point, the TSA agent became very quiet and said, ‘Oh we’re not at liberty to discuss this,’ ” recounted Ali.

    It is also no secret that the TSA failed to stop 95 percent of tests simulating potential terror attacks at major airports. The $8 billion spent on the TSA every year has proven to be entirely worthless — and brutal.

    “Could you please explain to me what’s happening right now? Because I’m not used to this,” Chille asked during his hostile detainment.

    The poor child thought that he’d done something wrong to deserve this treatment.

    “It was very scary,” said Chille, “I thought it was my fault.”

    “Because he has been reared with this pacemaker I always tried to empower him,” the mother explained to FOX 9. “This was the first time I’d ever heard him talk like this,” she said.

    After treating a sick little boy and his parents like terrorists, the TSA then canceled their flights.

    “At that point, the TSA agent said he wouldn’t be flying today,” Ali said. “He woke up with nightmares on Saturday night and on Sunday night,” Ali told FOX 9.

    In a statement to FOX 9, TSA Spokesman Nico Melendez wrote, “TSA is committed to ensuring all travelers are treated with respect and courtesy. TSA is reviewing Saturday’s incident and working to contact the family.”

    In true tyrannical fashion, the Bergstroms never received so much as a verbal apology from the TSA.

    “TSA has not contacted me. No one has apologized. No one has reached out,” said Ali.

    “It was really terrible,” the nine-year-old affirmed. “The representative said ‘We will find you and apologize,’ and you know what they did? They did the exact opposite.”

    In spite of being severely traumatized by his experience, this brave little boy said he hopes that people sharing his story will prevent it from happening to others.

    “Not just me, but any heart kid,” Chille said.

    Sadly, and infuriatingly, this is the second time in just a short period the TSA has attacked someone’s disabled child.

    As the Free Thought Project previously reported, in June, Hannah Cohen, a St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital patient, was attempting to travel back home to Chattanooga with her mother when she was told by TSA she needed additional screening. Only minutes later, Cohen, who is blind in one eye and deaf, would be in handcuffs on the ground with blood pouring from her head thanks to airport police and the TSA.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/disabled-boy-hostile-tsa-detainment/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 24, 2016, 12:37:48 PM
    Drunk South Florida Cop Slugs Security Guard Twice While Holding Baby

    A South Florida cop told investigators he doesn’t remember slugging a security guard twice in the face while holding his baby after staggering into a private area of the Ritz-Carlton’s parking lot last year.

    Fort Lauderdale police officer David Knapp also doesn’t remember how his gun came flying out of his holster during the altercation, landing on the floor.

    And that was apparently enough for prosecutors not to charge Fort Lauderdale police officer David Knapp, figuring he was so drunk, they could not prove he intentionally belted the man.

    Florida law also forbids carrying guns while drunk, but Knapp also got a pass on that.


    Nevertheless, Knapp is now facing a 20-day unpaid suspension from his $81,000-a-year job as a result of the incident where witnesses say he was “extremely intoxicated.”

    But he still won’t attribute his lapse of memory to alcohol, saying it could be a result of head injuries he sustained from his altercation with the security guard.

    “It could be anything from being tired to being, uh — having had alcohol to having unfortunate injuries due to the event,” explained Knapp, according to the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

    On October 20, 2015, Knapp, 33, spent the day at the beach with his wife and child, sharing a bottle of champagne with his wife.

    They then went shopping and made their way to the Ritz-Carlton bar where Knapp downed three Johnnie Walker Black Label drinks.

    He then picked up the baby and made his way to the bathroom but wound up wandering into a restricted portion of the hotel’s parking garage where he was spotted by a valet, who saw him staggering around in the parking lot with his baby in-hand.

    The valet notified security.

    Loss prevention officer Fernando Ramirez began questioning Knapp, but the cop refused to answer questions.

    Instead, he flipped Ramirez the bird, then socked him twice in the face – all while holding his baby.

    “When Officer Knapp struck Mr. Ramirez a second time, Mr. Ramirez grabbed the child from Officer Knapp’s arms, to prevent the child from falling, and took Officer Knapp to the ground,”  wrote Major Karen Dietrich in an internal affairs report.

    According to the Sun, Dietrich’s report revealed: “During the physical altercation, officer Knapp’s off-duty weapon flew out of his holster and landed on the ground.”

    Investigators claimed they could not specify why the gun came out.

    It was only after Ramirez apprehended Knapp when he discovered he was actually a cop.

    Then, Ramirez sat on top of Knapp, holding him down, while hotel workers rushed to care for his child.

    Meanwhile, Knapp’s wife was still sitting at the bar, wondering what became of her husband.

    Ramirez declined to pursue assault charges against Knapp and prosecutors extended officer Knapp some Blue Courtesy by not charging him.

    However, Knapp still faces almost three weeks of unpaid suspension.

    On August 29th, a Citizens Police Review Board is scheduled to make a recommendation on the disciplinary matter.

    Then it goes to the desk of Ft. Lauderdale’s City Manager, Lee Feldman, who’ll make the final call.

    And then, of course, there’s police union, who you can be sure will have Knapp’s back.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/24/drunk-south-florida-cop-slugs-security-guard-twice-while-holding-baby/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2016, 11:29:05 PM
    Sheriff Arrested for Taking Mentally Impaired Inmate with a ‘Kid’s Brain’ to His House to Rape Her

    Sedgwick County, CO — An egregious case of alleged rape under the color of authority comes from rural Colorado, where a sheriff has been arrested for taking a developmentally delayed inmate to his home, sexually assaulted her, and threatened life imprisonment if she told anyone what he did to her.

    “I just want sex,” Sedgwick County Sheriff Tom Hanna told the inmate, as quoted in court documents.

    Hanna, 43, was taken into custody from his office on Tuesday with bail set at $250,000 — though, according to the Associated Press, he has not yet been formally charged.
    According to the affidavit written by the district attorney’s office investigator, Jeff Huston, the unnamed inmate told him that on August 10, Hanna brought her to his home in a personal vehicle, offered her $60, forced her to strip, and then proceeded to sexually assault her — when he was supposed to be transporting her to jail.

    “He told me if I say anything, he was going to try to put me in prison,” the inmate said, as quoted in the affidavit. “I felt like I was raped, to be honest and this has bothered me a lot, and it feels good to get it out because I’m telling the truth.”

    According to the documents, after digitally penetrating the woman, Hanna told her, “This has to stay between us. If it don’t, I’m gonna take you to prison for the rest of your life.”
    Described by Huston in the document as timid and having difficulty organizing her thoughts, the inmate said she had been malnourished as a child, and told Huston her “brain is like a kids.”

    If the allegations prove true, such descriptions would show a law enforcement officer taking advantage not only of his professional position, but of an inmate who might not have fully understood the situation — and who was likely more prone to feel as if she had no choice by to comply.

    In denying the allegations, Hanna explained he had interviewed the inmate after she told him there might be information pertaining to a crime on her cell phone. Huston said the sheriff did acknowledge making a mistake in bringing the inmate to his home, the affidavit states. Hanna claimed he brought the inmate to his home to avoid anyone in the small town seeing her interact with him about sensitive information.

    As the AP writes:

    “The sheriff later dropped off the inmate at a jail in neighboring Logan County and put $20 on her commissary tab because he said he has a big heart and wanted to make sure she could call her brother, according to the affidavit.”

    According to Huston, the inmate had not grasped what was done to her amounted to rape, and when he explained that was the case, she said, “Oh, my God, I didn’t know that,” and began throwing up.

    State prosecutors and investigators were alerted to the incident by a sheriff’s deputy who noted the transportation of an inmate in Hanna’s personal vehicle was against departmental policy. That deputy also said he observed the sheriff’s vehicle outside his home for “at least 20 to 30 minutes.”

    Formal charges against the sheriff are expected in the next ten days.

    As the Denver Post reported, Hanna is being held on suspicion of felony sexual assault on an at-risk adult and felony sexual assault on a correctional inmate, as well as soliciting prostitution and first-degree official misconduct, both misdemeanor offenses.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sheriff-rape-inmate-mentally-impaired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2016, 12:24:26 PM
    These are the buffoons who are "trained" to handle and use firearms against the people.

    Glock scheduled for trial in personal injury case

    A $75,000 personal injury case against Glock filed by an Arkansas policeman has been scheduled for trial in a federal court, according to the final scheduling order issued last week.

    The jury trial will start Aug. 21, 2017, in a federal court in Helena, Arkansas, the order says. Final arguments and discovery exhibits are due in the beginning months of the year.

    The plaintiff in the case, Larry Jones, of Cherry Valley, Arkansas, was injured when his Glock 19C pistol discharged unexpectedly at the shooting range in June 2013, the lawsuit says. At the time he was trying to attach a tactical light.

    According to the complaint, the pistol had not been modified or changed since he bought it in December 2000. The lawsuit alleges Glock sold the pistol “in a defective condition which rendered (it) unreasonably dangerous.”

    The Glock pistol’s lack of a manual safety and other similar features are the subject of what the lawsuit characterizes as defects that led to the injury. Also, Glock did not give “a reasonable and adequate warning of dangers inherent and/or reasonably foreseeable in the use” of the pistol, the lawsuit says.


    According to the complaint, Jones injured his left foot and has experienced pain and suffering since the incident. In response, Glock denied all allegations presented in the complaint. The case was originally filed in a Arkansas state court, but was transferred to a federal civil court in May.

    Glock, an Austrian company with its U.S. headquarters in Smyrna, Georgia, has had its fair share of criticism due to the lack of a manual safety. Critics have long said the design is attributable to a rise in accidental discharges and misfirings and requires more training to handle it adequately.

    Despite the criticism, the company is the leading producer of handguns for law enforcement with 65 percent of market share. In fact, the Federal Bureau of Investigation just renewed contracts with Glock to the tune of $85 million. According to recent estimates, Glock has an annual revenue of $400 million.

    http://www.guns.com/2016/08/24/glock-scheduled-for-trial-in-personal-injury-case/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 28, 2016, 03:05:18 PM
    Those violent armed criminals who attack and abuse innocent elderly people should be sent to death row.

    Innocent 84yo Grandma Hospitalized After Cops Attacked & Pepper Sprayed Her for No Reason

    Muskogee, OK — An innocent 84-year-old grandmother was attacked by police, pepper sprayed, arrested, and hospitalized last week after officers chased a suspect during a traffic stop.

    Police were after the victim’s son, who they say refused to stop for a traffic stop and ran into her home instead. When officers showed up, according the Smith, they kicked in her door and as she got up to see who was there — she was met with a face full of chemical agent.

    According to Smith, after police pepper sprayed her for no reason, they arrested her, dragged her to the police car and brought her to jail. Clearly stressed over being kicknapped and thrown in a cell, this 84-year-old woman began to have a panic attack. She was then rushed to the hospital.

    When FOX 23 contacted the Muskogee police department, they couldn’t comment on the case citing an internal investigation.

    It was unclear as to what police charged the woman with. However, it is likely the standard ‘resisting, interfering, or obstructing.’

    Smith now plans to take legal action against the department for her assault.

    Cops attacking elderly people is an unfortunate yet all too common problem.

    Earlier this year, two LAPD officerswere named in a lawsuit filed by an innocent 62-year-old woman. No longer able to place her trust in police officers after becoming a victim of excessive force, the traumatized woman has become fearful of interacting with people.

    Early on the morning of April 14, a surveillance video captured two LAPD cops in a marked SUV slowly following 62-year-old Ok Jin Jun’s car into a Koreatown church parking lot. According to CBSNews, Jun admitted to honking her car horn about six times because the police vehicle had been blocking the church driveway.

    After parking her car, Jun was immediately confronted by the two officers and ordered to show her registration despite the fact that she had not committed a crime. Confused and unable to speak much English, Jun attempted to call her husband and a 911 interpreter from her cell phone.

    Suddenly, one of the officers appeared to grab Jun’s arms for no reason before both cops abruptly shoved the elderly woman against her own car. Although Jun did not pose an immediate threat, the officers slammed her onto the pavement before placing her in handcuffs.

    Before Jun, there was Tyrone Carnegay, an innocent Atlanta man who spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought.

    Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail before the charges were finally dropped. The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera.

    As the incidents above illustrate, being innocent and elderly is no defense from police. The old apologist saying of “if you don’t want to be attacked by police, don’t break the law,” rings hollow to those in the destructive wake of police brutality.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandma-pepper-sprayed/

    Shocking Video Shows Cops Kick In Door, Assault, & Pepper Spray Innocent 84yo Grandma

    Muskogee, OK — Last week, an innocent 84-year-old grandma was attacked by police, pepper sprayed, arrested, and hospitalized after officers chased her son during a traffic stop. On Friday, the graphic body camera video of that attack was released showing the horrid and outright insane response to her son rolling a stop sign.

    Police were after the victim’s son, who they say refused to stop and ran into her home instead. When officers showed up, according to Smith and the body camera video, they kicked in her door and as she got up to see who was there — she was met with a face full of chemical agent.

    “Turn around or I’ll spray you!” screams the cop just before dousing this innocent elderly woman in the face with the painful spray. Smith then falls to the ground in agony.

    The body cam footage then shows police shoot her son with a taser because they said he refused to come out. With his hands in the air and walking toward police, Smith’s son was tased and fell to the ground.
    All of this over a stop sign.

    According to Smith, after police pepper sprayed her for no reason, they arrested her, dragged her to the police car and brought her to jail. Clearly stressed over being kidnapped and thrown in a cell, this 84-year-old grandma began to have a panic attack. She was then rushed to the hospital.

    The Muskogee police department says they released the body camera footage to maintain public trust in an exhibit of transparency. While it’s certainly noteworthy to release the footage, the last thing this video does is maintain public trust in police.

    When watching the horrifying video below, ask yourself if you think these cops would treat their own grandma this way. Ms. Smith had committed no crime and posed no danger to these officers, but she was still attacked and her life put at risk.

    It was unclear as to what police charged the woman with, however, it is likely the standard ‘resisting, interfering, or obstructing.’

    Smith now plans to take legal action against the department for her assault and the taxpayers, not police, will be held liable for this disturbing behavior.

    Cops attacking elderly people is an unfortunate yet all too common problem.

    Earlier this year, two LAPD officers were named in a lawsuit filed by an innocent 62-year-old woman. No longer able to place her trust in police officers after becoming a victim of excessive force, the traumatized woman has become fearful of interacting with people.

    Early on the morning of April 14, a surveillance video captured two LAPD cops in a marked SUV slowly following 62-year-old Ok Jin Jun’s car into a Koreatown church parking lot. According to CBSNews, Jun admitted to honking her car horn about six times because the police vehicle had been blocking the church driveway.

    After parking her car, Jun was immediately confronted by the two officers and ordered to show her registration despite the fact that she had not committed a crime. Confused and unable to speak much English, Jun attempted to call her husband and a 911 interpreter from her cell phone.

    Suddenly, one of the officers appeared to grab Jun’s arms for no reason before both cops abruptly shoved the elderly woman against her own car. Although Jun did not pose an immediate threat, the officers slammed her onto the pavement before placing her in handcuffs.

    Before Jun, there was Tyrone Carnegay, an innocent Atlanta man who spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought.

    Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail before the charges were finally dropped. The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera.

    As the incidents above illustrate, being innocent and elderly is no defense from police. The old apologist saying of “if you don’t want to be attacked by police, don’t break the law,” rings hollow to those in the destructive wake of police brutality.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/grandma-pepper-sprayed-body-cam/

    http://www.fox23.com/news/musokgee-police-release-video-of-officer-using-pepper-spray-on-84-year-old-woman/430507250




    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2016, 10:42:42 AM
    This dangerous criminal gang should have been in prison years now.

    Indiana Jury Awards Man $1 After Cops Enter Home Without Warrant to Unlawfully Arrest Him in Mistaken Identity Case

    It was 2012 when Indiana police entered a home without a warrant and shook awake a sleeping 18-year-old high school student, punching him six times, then tasering him before dragging him outside and stuffing him into a patrol car.

    Handcuffed in the back of the car, DeShawn Franklin demanded to know what he had done wrong.

    A South Bend police officer told him he had matched the description of a man they were looking for, specifically, he had the same hairstyle; dreadlocks.

    Franklin argued that dreadlocks were a popular hairstyle among young black men and that he had not broken any law.

    It was only then that it dawned on police that they had arrested the wrong man, so they released him from the car and apologized.

    In fact, the man they were looking for was Franklin’s brother, Dan Franklin, who was suspected of domestic abuse. But to this day, Dan Franklin has not been arrested or charged with that crime.

    The younger brother filed a lawsuit over the incident and after rejecting several settlements, insisting on taking the case to trial.

    Earlier this month, a federal jury sided with him, determining that police did indeed violate his Fourth Amendment rights by entering his home without a warrant and wrongfully arresting him.

    But the jury decided those violations were worth only $1 in damages.

    Yes, one dollar for each Constitutional violation, which ended up totaling $18, paid by the three officers to Franklin and his two parents who were inside the home that night on July 7, 2012.

    The city of South Bend also insists that the Franklin family pay $1,500 in legal expenses, which includes hotel room and mileage for the officers because the trial was held in another city.

    Mario Sims, pastoral counselor for the Franklin family, believes the lowly sum is the jury’s way of saying they support police, even when the evidence shows they violated a family’s civil rights.


    According to WNDU:
    “I think in the environment that’s in America now where police officers have been gunned down in the street, I think the jury was sending a message of support for the police officers,” said Mario Sims, Pastoral Counselor to the Franklin family. “Now somewhere between supporting the police officers and the constitution, they forgot that there’s a family whose constitutional rights were violated. The message you’re sending by awarding them a nominal award of a dollar is essentially, so what? So what that sworn police officers broke into your home and punched your son and tased them.”

    So what went wrong?

    Peter Agostino, the attorney who represented the city, blames the family attorney, Johnny Ulmer, for doing a poor job in representing them.

    Ulmer, who spent 20 years as a sheriff’s deputy, took the case pro bono.

    According to Indy Star:

    The family filed a civil suit in February 2013, accusing the officers of excessive force, unlawful entry, false imprisonment, false arrest and battery. Johnny Ulmer, an attorney from Elkhart who spent 20 years as an Elkhart County Sheriff’s Department deputy, took on their case pro bono. The city hired Peter Agostino, an attorney who has represented plaintiffs and defendants in federal civil rights cases for nearly 30 years, to represent the officers, who are still employed by the South Bend Police Department.

    Agostino said the city made four settlement offers to the Franklin family. The family said they were offered $15,000 to settle. Agostino said higher amounts were offered, but declined to say how much higher. The family opted for trial, and the jury, one African American and five white individuals, reached its verdict Aug. 1.

    Agostino called DeShawn Franklin “an outstanding young man” and acknowledged that some compensation was warranted. During trial, though, Agostino said the plaintiffs failed to prove damages beyond the rights violations. For example, no wages were lost or medical bills incurred.

    Agostino said DeShawn and his family were not served well by their attorney, who should have told them to take the settlement.

    A city spokesman told the newspaper that he understands the family’s frustration but points out that the officers were disciplined with written reprimands and were ordered to undergo training on Fourth Amendment rights.

    Be sure to click on Indy Star to see video interviews regarding the jury’s decision.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/29/indiana-jury-awards-man-1-after-cops-enter-home-without-warrant-to-unlawfully-arrest-him-in-mistaken-identity-case/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2016, 10:46:33 AM
    You Can’t Make This Up! — Cop Caught on His Own Body Cam Stealing Pot from Police Dept

    Grants, NM — As the Free Thought Project pointed out many times before, police departments in America can legally discriminate against hiring individuals if their IQ is too high. Couple this with the fact that thieves aren’t always the sharpest tools in the toolbox, and you get the makings of a scenario like the one that unfolded in New Mexico last week. A Grants cop was caught on his own body cam stealing weed.

    Grants Police Department Sgt. Roshern C. McKinney, 33, was arrested last week after an investigation found that he’d stolen both money and marijuana from the police department. McKinney has since been charged with marijuana distribution, conspiracy, and felony embezzlement.

    State police also charged McKinney’s 23-year-old girlfriend Tanicka Gallegos-Gonzales, for drug distribution and conspiracy. Both were arrested in Albuquerque and booked into the Sandoval County Detention Center, according to KOB.

    Public Information Officer for the New Mexico State Police, Elizabeth Armijo said Grants police chief, Craig Vandiver alerted state police after the department found video from Mckinney’s lapel camera that “exposed possible illicit activity by a Grants Police Department sergeant.”

    According to the NMSP statement:

    State Police Agents began investigating the activity on July 11, 2016. The six week long investigation into this incident included approximately eighteen interviews, analysis of numerous documents and paperwork and the review of numerous lapel camera recordings.

    Agents viewed the lapel camera recording in question and observed Grants Police Department Sergeant Roshern C. McKinney (33) on duty, in uniform, driving his marked patrol car to the Grants Police Department. He entered his private office, obtained a substance believed to be marijuana and placed the substance in his uniform pocket. Sergeant McKinney then left the department and drove to his girlfriend’s residence located in Grants, NM. Upon arrival at the residence, Sergeant McKinney is recorded, on video, stating that he was giving the marijuana to his girlfriend, Tanicka Gallegos-Gonzalez, to give to her father, which she ultimately did.

    Investigators also alleged that McKinney embezzled at least two items taken as evidence “including $785.00 in currency and an eight ounce brick of marijuana.”

    According to the report, “these items were never submitted to the department’s evidence vault.”

    While there is no harm in possessing and giving marijuana to willing adults, McKinney’s actions are indicative of a much more ominous problem created by the war on drugs.

    Making substances illegal and having cops enforce these immoral laws allows for and fosters corruption by putting cops in tempting situations. This sort of thing undoubtedly happens every day in police departments across the country. However, most cops probably turn off their body cameras before stealing weed and cash from the evidence locker.

    While the investigation continues, McKinney remains on paid vacation.

    Before McKinney made this hilariously corrupt blunder, a former Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper accused of receiving oral sex while on duty from a Knoxville porn actress was dubbed the world’s worst decision maker.

    However, it appears that there is now a tie between McKinney and former state trooper James Randy Moss.

    Moss served 4 years of probation for his corrupt and hilarious actions, after stopping Justis Ellen Richert, who’s known in the “industry” as Barbie Cummings.

    Cummings said the trooper spotted alcohol and a bottle of illegal Vicodin pills in her car after she was pulled over heading home from her aunt’s house.

    Cummings said she told the trooper about her job and sat beside him in the front seat of his cruiser as he checked her website from his state-issued laptop. She said he ended up tossing the pills into the bushes, then said yes when she offered him oral sex.

    Cummings said the trooper shot photos and video of the act with his cell phone and sent her copies. He then asked her to put them on her blog so he could brag to his buddies on the force.
    And, he still wrote her a ticket.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-body-cam-stealing-marijuana/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 31, 2016, 05:34:25 PM
    Should have been 14 years.

    San Francisco Cop Sentenced to 14 Months in Prison After Video Proves he Falsified Report

    An award-winning San Francisco cop was sentenced to 14 months in prison Tuesday for conducting an illegal search on a hotel room, then falsifying a police report to make it seem as it was a legal search.

    Defense attorneys argued that Arshad Razzak, who spent 19 years on the force,  was never trained in how not to violate the rights of citizens.

    The 44-year-old cop was also not trained in common sense because it was as surveillance video that led to his conviction.

    The incident took place on December 23, 2010 after Razzak received a tip from a confidential informant that a man and woman inside room 504 at the Henry Hotel were in possession of a large quantity of heroin.

    Razzak and his partner, Richard Yick, then met up with two other officers outside the hotel, Arthur Madrid and Robert Forenis, where they discussed entering the hotel to make their way up to the room.

    All four officers were in plainclothes. Madrid had a master key to the room, later claiming he had no idea how he had the key.

    The video, posted below, shows the officers using the key to enter the room, where they then arrested occupants Carlos Hutcherson and Jessica Richmond for 65 grams of heroin.

    In his report, Razzak claimed that they knocked on the door, which was opened by Richmond, who then gave them consent to search the room. He even pointed out that Richmond signed a consent form admitting she let them in.

    But Richmond testified that she was coerced by two uniformed officers into signing the document.

    A judge dismissed the drug charges against Richmond and Hutcherson after viewing the video obtained by San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi in 2011.

    Razzak and Yick were arrested in February 2014 while Madrid was given immunity in exchange for his testimony and Forensis was never charged.

    In January 2015, a federal jury found Razzak guilty on four felonies related to Constitutional violations. Yick was found not guilty because he did not search the occupants of the room nor did he falsify any reports.

    Part of Razzak’s defense was that he lacked the training in how to make drug arrests without violating a suspect’s Constitutional rights.

    According to KQED:

    Razzak’s defense attorney, Michael Rains, told the jury that officers were doing their job lawfully, as they understood it. He showed Razzak’s training records and argued the senior officer had very little training on the key issue.

    “In the last week,” Rains told the jury, “you have heard more about securing a room pending the issuance of a search warrant and exigent circumstances than these defendants have heard in 16 years.”

    He added, “He got no training. They’re throwing this guy into hotel rooms … and he’s doing the best he can.”

    But despite his lack of training, his sentencing was delayed for more than a year to allow him to produce a training video to other officers to help them “avoid some of the pitfalls Mr. Razzak found himself in.”

    Razzak’s 14-month sentence is less than half of the minimal federal guidelines of 33-months for his offenses. He could have received more than 30 years. In June 2008, he and several other officers were awarded with a “Medal of Honor.” That photo has since been removed from the San Francisco Police Association website.

    Razzak is at least the fourth San Francisco cop since last year to be sentenced to prison.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/08/31/san-francisco-cop-sentenced-to-14-months-in-prison-after-video-proves-he-falsified-report/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 31, 2016, 05:40:57 PM
    Criminals covering up for the higher ups.

    DASHCAM: Cops Conspire to Cover for Police Chief After He’s Caught Drunk Driving at 109 mph

    Moss Point, MS — Time and time again, police officers and public officials are caught driving drunk only to be let go or given a ride home — a convenience seldom afforded to the peasant class. Even when driving a dangerously fast 109 mph through neighborhood streets, and reeking of alcohol, the chief of police for Moss Point, Mississippi was shown a despicable level of favoritism and let go. The entire scene was captured on dashcam.

    Only after the public became aware of the situation and forced the local government’s hand, was Moss Point Police Chief Art McClung suspended — a month after he got off scot free.

    “I saw the video,” said Mayor Billy Broomfield, who pointed out that the suspension is only based on the video at this point. “Based on what we’ve seen, which is all we have, we have not received any legal certification or confirmation from anybody other than what we all have read or seen in the papers.”

    On Tuesday night, the town’s board voted to suspend McClung after the dashcam of the incident was publicly released. In the infuriating dashcam, you can hear the responding officers admit he’s drunk after they caught him driving at deadly speeds through city streets — only to uncuff him and bring him home.

    “He’s obviously DUI,” says one officer.

    “Does he smell like alcohol?”

    “Oh yeah, he’s toast. He knows it too, you can tell from the time we walked up,” answers the officer.

    During the stop, McClung admitted to having drinks. However, during a statement this week, he changed his story and said, “I’m never impaired. I would never put myself in that position.”
    Even if he wasn’t impaired, which he obviously was, he was driving insanely fast and could’ve killed someone.

    Not wanting to step on toes outside of their pay grade, the responding officers called Pascagoula police chief Kenny Johnson for advice on how to handle this situation that could have led to the average person being shot or killed.

    “The officer called for a supervisor and the supervisor called me,” explained Johnson. “We made a decision not to pursue the matter further and, in an abundance of caution, I instructed the supervisor to have one of our officers drive chief McClung to his home.”

    Must be nice.

    One simple phone call and this top cop who was driving over 100 mph in the middle of the day, down city streets, drunk, was let off the hook.

    When the local media asked residents how they felt about this special treatment, they were naturally upset.

    “When I get stopped by the police, they take me to jail. They don’t take me home,” said Moss Point resident Robert Henderson, according to WLOX.

    “Oh, I’m going to jail. I’m going to jail,” said Moss Point Terry Roberts, imagining himself in a similar situation as the chief.

    “If the stories are true that he didn’t get cited, he should have been cited from drinking and driving definitely. I don’t think that’s right. I think that shows favoritism,” said Raphael Patterson.

    However, as if they had Stockholm Syndrome, they then condoned his behavior and said he should keep his job.

    “I don’t think anybody should lose their job for making a mistake. I think he should just be reprimanded and apologize to the public for what he did and move on,” said Patterson.
    “We need a police chief in Moss Point. He seemed to be doing a pretty good job,” said Henderson.

    Yes, people make mistakes. However, this is the chief of police who not only made a potentially deadly mistake, but he lied about it and conspired with fellow cops to cover it up. He betrayed the people of the town and proved to them he has no business being a cop. Still, they want him to keep his job.

    It is a mentality like that which allows corrupt cops to trample on the rights of individuals and never be held accountable. Sadly, until enough people stand up and demand these cops be held accountable, this abuse and double standard will continue.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-chief-dui-drunk-driving-109/

    http://www.wdam.com/story/32935228/moss-point-residents-say-chiefs-traffic-stop-shows-favoritism
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2016, 10:57:09 AM
    North Carolina Cop Impregnates 14-Year-Old Girl While Mentoring Her to Prove “Policemen are Good”

    A North Carolina cop impregnated a 14-year-old girl while mentoring her in an attempt to prove that “policemen are good.”

    The mother said she was reluctant at first to allow the cop to become friendly with her daughter after she had run away, but allowed it because she had trust in police.

    Now that trust is gone.

    The Lowell police officer has not been identified at his time, but is described as a middle-aged man who has been on medical leave for the past 80 days in an apparent unrelated incident.

    But he is now under investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation after the girl’s mother discovered texts on her daughter’s phone.

    She confronted the cop and he admitted to taking the girl’s virginity and impregnating her while having sex with her in his patrol car and in his home. He also told her he wanted the girl to have an abortion to save his own skin.

    But the girl’s mother said she does not believe in abortion.

    According to WSOC-TV:

    She said the veteran officer came to her home asking to connect with her 14-year-old daughter, who had run away before, and her sibling.

    “To show them, ‘Hey, policemen are good,’” the mother said.

    He would visit often and even took them on a trip. Then the mother discovered text messages that indicated her daughter was pregnant and the officer was the father.

    One of messages, which is in the hands of the SBI, states, “If you keep that baby I’m done and you know it.”

    Another said, “Do whatever you wanna do, just remember I love you and name it after me.”

    “He told me he took her virginity. He told me it was his baby. He told me things happened and he said he was so sorry. And he kept saying, ‘Please forgive him,’” she said.

    She said then the officer asked her to do something that she considered unimaginable.

    “‘Get rid of the baby or I’ve lost my life. I’ve lost my life.’ How do I kill a baby? I don’t kill no baby. I don’t believe in abortion,” the mother said.

    The age of consent in North Carolina is 16, so even if she did consent, he would still be guilty of statutory rape.

    In the past week, North Carolina media reported the arrest of three different men on statutory rape charges, so police in that state do seem to take that crime seriously. They even arrested a National Guard military police officer in early August on statutory rape charges.

    So we need to keep an eye on this to see how quickly they move to arrest this police officer, who has already confessed to the crime.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/01/north-carolina-cop-impregnates-14-year-old-girl-while-mentoring-her-to-prove-policemen-are-good/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 02, 2016, 12:06:51 PM
    Cops Mistake Innocent Man’s Medical Emergency for a Crime and Brutally Beat Him

    “The safety and protection of Oklahoma’s citizenry is of paramount priority and should always be a core function of government,” proclaimed Oklahoma Lt. Gov. Todd Lamb in an August 28 op-ed column berating opponents of a proposed salary increase for Oklahoma State Troopers.

    State troopers “are present day in and day out, at tremendous sacrifice, in all corners of Oklahoma,” Lamb continued, scolding the ingrates who do not support additional funding to train additional troopers and enrich the salaries of those already on the force.  Refusing to spend more money on the OHP “will further place the public’s personal safety in jeopardy,” he warns.
    Lamb, a former Special Agent with the U.S. Secret Service, offered only a passing allusion to the fact that in 2015 the Oklahoma legislature approved a 22.8 percent across-the-board salary increase for OHP troopers. In making his case for additional tax-plundered wealth to be channeled into the OHP, Lamb counted on public ignorance of an August 18 incident that demonstrated beyond dispute that troopers are trained to treat “officer safety,” not “the public’s personal safety,” as “paramount” in any encounter with the citizenry they purportedly serve – even a helpless driver suffering a critical medical emergency.

    At about 3:00 am on August 18, a construction worker saw a car swerve off the Turner Turnpike near Mile Market 146. After the vehicle embedded itself in a ditch, the construction worker – who was the actual first responder to the emergency – sprinted over to the scene. He found the driver slumped over the wheel and sweating profusely, but exhibiting no signs of intoxication.

    Acting as the public has been trained to, the Good Samaritan called 911. Within five minutes, two of the intrepid heroes from the OHP who, according to Lt. Gov. Lamb, were serving the public “at tremendous sacrifice,” arrived at the crash site. As is generally the case when police respond to an emergency, matters became immediately and dramatically worse.

    One trooper tried to get the driver’s attention and demanded that the driver put his car in park. The dazed and obviously ailing driver could not comply. A few seconds later the trooper used a nightstick to shatter the driver’s side window, and instructed his comrade to do the same on the passenger side.

    It had taken the construction worker just a few seconds to recognize that the driver needed medical attention. This realization came very tardily to the troopers, who are supposedly trained observers but whose training actually emphasizes the use and justification of aggressive violence.

    After breaching the window, one trooper beat the incapacitated victim while barking orders at him.

    “To me, it seemed aggressive,” the shocked witness later recounted to Oklahoma City’s Fox affiliate, explaining why he captured the incident on a cell phone video. Not surprisingly, given the assault that unfolded in front of him, the witness asked not to be named.

    Roughly thirty seconds after the beating began, the driver was roughly extracted from the vehicle, thrown to the ground and handcuffed. Only at that point did the uniformed assailants recognize that their victim had suffered a medical episode.

    To the uninitiated public that has not been tutored regarding the protocols of state-sanctified violence, the behavior of the troopers looked like a patent case of excessive force – if not an outright gang assault. Performing the familiar ritual of institutional self-absolution, Captain Paul Timmons, an official spokesman for the OHP, insisted that the troopers handled the situation “by the book,” because “officer safety is paramount in a situation like that…. You have to take control of the situation and make sure it’s done in a safe way for everyone involved.”

    Captain Timmons didn’t explain how the victim’s “personal safety” – to borrow Lt. Gov. Lamb’s phrase — was enhanced by the actions of the troopers who beat and shackled him without cause. As a former law enforcement officer, Lamb surely agrees with Timmons that in any situation where officer safety conflicts with that of an innocent member of the public, the needs of the former far outweigh those of the latter.

    Oklahoma tax victims under pressure to redirect more of their income into the budget of the OHP should view that incident as representative of the variety of “safety” being purchased with their plundered wealth.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/oklahoma-cops-beat-man-medical-emergency

    http://okcfox.com/news/local/ohp-defends-actions-after-smashing-window-striking-driver-with-night-stick
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 02, 2016, 01:21:31 PM
    You do some excellent work on here Skeletor
    Though sometimes I wish you wouldn't post these
    As The cops & their protectors Behaviour & Reading about it
    Drives Me Fcucking Mad !!!
    Ha,

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 02, 2016, 02:43:48 PM
    Incompetent buffoons.

    DA: Pct. 4 destroyed more than 20,000 pieces of evidence, scope of problem unclear
    Office has already dismissed 142 cases, more than 1,000 may be affected

    The Harris County Precinct 4 Constable's Office destroyed more than 20,000 pieces of evidence, forcing the District Attorney's office to dismiss nearly 150 pending criminal cases and potentially endangering more than 1,000 others, District Attorney Devon Anderson said Friday.

    [...]

    The revelations brought new light to a Precinct 4 evidence room scandal which developed after deputy constables destroyed the evidence from pending cases while trying to clean out the property room.

    http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Deputy-fired-in-Precinct-4-evidence-scandal-9199911.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2016, 01:15:56 PM
    Outrageous how when armed criminal gangs murder and execute innocent people it's always "an accident" and rarely face any charges.

    Massachusetts Town Settles With Family of Innocent Grandfather Killed by “Accident” During SWAT Raid

    Eurie Stamps, 68, a grandfather and retired Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority worker, was not suspected of any crime when police assaulted him inside his home and shot him dead shortly after midnight on January 5, 2011.

    Now, more than five years later, Stamps’ family has reached a settlement with the town of Framingham, which to this day employs Stamps’ killer.

    Details of the settlement, which was made Friday, have not yet been made public.

    But the one thing that is clear is that Stamps is one of the countless victims of the government’s war on drugs.

    The night he was killed, the Framingham SWAT team was serving a warrant targeting Stamps’ stepson, Josesph Bushfan, who police suspected of selling crack.

    Bushfan was arrested outside the apartment, but police decided to raid it anyway, smashing the door down with a battering ram and setting off a flashbang grenade — a dangerous weapon that can injure, kill and start fires.

    Inside the apartment, Framingham police officer Paul Duncan confronted Stamps, who was lying face down on the floor in an act of surrender.

    Then Duncan shot Stamps in the head.

    After the shooting, Duncan told investigators that he tried to kneel on Stamps’ back to restrain him, but tripped and somehow unintentionally shot Stamps.

    In March 2011, the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office issued a press release calling the shooting an “accident” and declined to pursue charges against Duncan.

    In April, the police department put Duncan, who had been on paid leave since the shooting, back to work.

    “There’s no reason for him not to come back to work. He didn’t commit a crime,” then-Police Chief Steven Carl said at the time.

    “That sounds like a pretty low standard for someone entrusted with keeping the public safe,” the MetroWest Daily News responded in an editorial.


    According to MetroWest Daily News, which was first to report on the settlement:

    U.S. District Court Judge F. Dennis Saylor on Friday dismissed the suit, according to court records, writing that the parties have settled the case out of court.



    Leonard Kesten, who represented the town and Framingham Police Officer Paul Duncan, a former SWAT team member who fired the fatal shot, said the terms of the settlement will be released publicly once they are finalized.

    “The Defendants are pleased that the parties have reached an acceptable resolution of this unfortunate matter,” Kesten wrote in an email Sunday.

    Cheryl Tully Stoll, chairwoman of the Framingham Board of Selectmen, said she had not yet seen the details of the settlement but she hoped the Stamps family could find some closure in ending the case.

    “I believe this tragic accident is going to leave a stain on the town,” she said. “My thoughts and prayers go out to the Stamps family because whatever the settlement is, it could never be enough to replace a loved one. I personally can’t imagine they could ever be able to truly put this behind them, so I hope they are able to find peace.”

    Chief Carl disbanded the SWAT team in 2013 shortly before he left the department to take a job as campus police chief at Assumption College.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/06/massachusetts-town-settles-family-innocent-grandfather-killed-swat-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2016, 01:23:06 PM
    Another update on this horrible case. Instead of this criminal being sent to death row, he got his job back.

    BREAKING: Cop Who Paralyzed Innocent Grandfather On Video — Just Got His Job Back!

    Birmingham, AL — Although the governor of Alabama formally apologized to the Indian government last year and promised that justice would be served, Madison police officer Eric Parker, the cop who left an innocent elderly grandfather paralyzed, not only escaped justice — but is now back on the job.

    In what can only be described as the epitome of everything wrong with police in America today, this brutal monster, who attacked and left severely disabled, an innocent old man out for a walk, will have his badge reinstated, his gun given back, and put out on the streets to strike again.

    In a statement Tuesday morning, by Major Jim Cooke, the acting Madison police chief, it was announced that Parker will return to work following a long-term paid vacation.

    “Officer Eric Parker will return from administrative leave today and will be assigned to the MPD Training Unit until he completes his required re-certifications. After his training is complete, he will receive his duty assignment,” reads the statement.

    Despite the fact that two separate police dashcam videos recorded the blatant use of excessive force on an elderly man, major Cooke went on to justify this disgusting move.

    “I have extensively reviewed all of the documentation regarding the case, and I have made the factual determination that Officer Parker’s actions in February 2015 did not amount to a policy violation,” said Cooke.

    The acting chief said that the Memorandum Opinion, issued by Federal Judge Madeline H. Haikala after Officer Parker’s second federal trial, helped him to get to this decision.

    “[T]he evidence demonstrates that Officer Parker complied with MPD policy regarding preliminary investigations of suspicious individuals and MPD’s ‘Response to Resistance’ policy…Officer Parker made a split-second decision in a rapidly evolving situation rather than a premeditated decision to use violent force.”

    These statements, to those who’ve seen the video below, are outright denials of reality. Sureshbhai Patel in no way resisted or otherwise posed any threat whatsoever, when he was brutally attacked by this public servant.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Beware Madison residents — a violent criminal with the authority to violate your rights is posing as a public servant.


    Please feel free to peacefully voice your concern with the department’s choice to welcome back this violent officer.
    Madison, Alabama Police Department: (256) 772-5685



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/eric-parker-paralyzed-grandfather-job/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2016, 01:27:21 PM
    Cop Gets Into Fight With His Own Son, Shoots Him TWICE — Dept Says it Was ‘Accidental’

    Philadelphia, PA — A 19-year-old man is in critical condition suffering gunshot wounds inflicted on him by his father — a Philadelphia cop. In spite of the officer admitting that he fired the weapon, no charges have been filed against him — for obvious reasons.

    Monday afternoon, at approximately 6:30 pm, police responded to multiple calls about shots fired at a northeast Philadelphia residence; home of the unnamed police officer. Police say the officer got into an argument with his son, which then escalated into a physical altercation. During the altercation, the officer brandished a gun and fired, striking his son in the torso.
    According to police, there were four people inside the home.

    On Tuesday morning, Police Commissioner Richard Ross said in a statement to ABC6 News, that the shot was ‘accidental or inadvertent.’ This claim was made in spite of any evidence as the officer involved has not been interviewed by internal affairs.

    “Apparently, they got into some type of a scuffle, argument or something. The off-duty (sic) accidentally or inadvertently discharged his weapon,” claimed Ross.

    To assert from the get go that the officer’s decision to fire his gun at his son was accidental, speaks to the nature of the thin blue line of protection. This cop admitted to shooting his own son, hasn’t been questioned yet, but here’s the commissioner immediately claiming it was an accident.

    The commissioner’s claim of an accidental discharge, or an inadvertent stray round would likely hold more water — had the cop not shot him twice.


    That’s right. According to police, the officer’s gun was fired twice, striking the 19-year-old man in the torso.

    The officer is enjoying special treatment and was not even interviewed by internal affairs. Instead, according to ABC6, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office will decide whether the officer will be charged. Must be nice.

    As for the other two occupants of the home during the shooting, including the officer’s other son, they have not been afforded the same convenience. Both of them have been held for questioning.

    Had the man inside the home not been employed as a Philadelphia police officer, you can rest assured that he would be in jail, or, at the very least, he would’ve been questioned.
    However, this man did have a badge which granted him the privilege of police circling the wagons and protecting him.

    Shockingly enough, this is not an isolated incident. Last year Palm Beach police officer Shatara K. Shatara was afforded the same blue privilege after he too killed his own son.

    On Christmas Eve, Shatara killed his son Khamis, 21, during a domestic dispute. Ironically, Khamis was aspiring to be a cop. However, he was apparently mentally ill.

    For 9-months, and without ever facing a single charge, Shatara enjoyed a paid vacation, only to be quietly placed back on regular duty last September.

    Nothing exposes the tendency of police to quickly escalate to deadly violence quite like police officers shooting their own children.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/philadelphia-cop-shoots-son-accident/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2016, 09:49:06 PM
    North Carolina Cop Indicted for Manslaughter After Tasering Man to Death

    A North Carolina cop who tasered an unarmed man to death earlier this year was indicted by a grand jury on manslaughter charges Tuesday.

    The incident took place on March 3 when Kenly police officer Jesse Craig Santifort tasered Alexander Warren Thompson after a high-speed car chase through two counties that ended when Thompson wrecked his vehicle.

    Santifort claims Thompson came charging towards him, which was when he tasered him four times.

    “Central, I have tased him,” Santifort reported to dispatch, according to an audio recording.

    “Uh, a little electrified at the moment, but I think we’ve come to an understanding.”

    Thompson was transported to a hospital and died three days later.

    According to ABC 11:

    The short-form indictment doesn’t explain the grand jury’s reasoning and only says Santifort “unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously did kill” Thompson.

    While most cops who taser citizens to death never even have to go before a grand jury, a state investigation on the cop after the incident led to 27 charges dropped against 12 people he had arrested in unrelated cases.

    According to the News & Observer:

    The State Bureau of Investigation launched an investigation of the death, and Johnston County District Attorney Susan Doyle was reviewing a report from the SBI to determine whether she would file criminal charges related to the death.

    Following an internal investigation, Santifort was allowed to return to duty by Kenly Police Chief Josh Gibson.

    But the Johnston County Clerk of Superior Court and the DA’s office released a list of 27 charges that were dismissed because “the state is ethically prohibited from calling the charging officer to testify given a recent review of personnel records,” according to Assistant District Attorney Paul Jackson.

    The DA’s office declined to comment further “to preserve the integrity of an ongoing investigation.”

    The 27 charges filed against 12 people included three DWIs, four drug charges, two child abuse charges, a felony charge of obtaining property by false pretense, two misdemeanor larceny charges and several others.

    Thompson, a father of three who was engaged to be married, led police on a pursuit after arriving at a home that police were monitoring for drugs. An autopsy said he marijuana and amphetamines in his system.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/06/north-carolina-cop-indicted-for-manslaughter-after-tasering-man-to-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2016, 10:07:09 PM
    When will this violent criminal gang be put to prison?

    Chicago Cops who Attacked Man in Restaurant Might Finally Get Fired … or Maybe Not

    The three off-duty Chicago cops were apparently drunk when Obed “OJ” DeLeon walked into a taco joint late one night and began complaining about a driver who had left a Camaro blocking the entrance to the parking lot.

    “Yeah, that guy’s an asshole for parking like that,” DeLeon told another two men he did not know, whom were also waiting in line to place an order.

    Overhearing DeLeon’s comments was the owner of the car, Jason Orsa, one of the three cops sitting at a nearby table with a fourth friend.

    “What if I’m an asshole?” Orsa replied.

    “You need to quit acting like an asshole and go move your car,” DeLeon responded.

    That was when one of the cops sitting at the table, Brian Murphy, pulled out a gun and pointed it at DeLeon’s face while shoving him against a wall.

    A series of surveillance videos show Orsa and the third cop, Daniel McNamara, joined in the assault, beating DeLeon along with their friend, Matthew Walsh, a Marine who had just returned from Iraq.

    Witnesses say the cops never identified themselves as cops, so somebody called 911 to report “a white man with a gun.”

    However, when the uniformed on-duty cops arrived, they arrested DeLeon, who by then, was beaten and bruised and had his shirt ripped off from him.

    Also arrested were two witnesses, Joseph Mularczyk and Shawn Nelson, the two men whom DeLeon was conversing with while waiting to place an order.

    They had tried to tell the responding cops that DeLeon was the victim, not the aggressor. But they ended up charged with assaulting Walsh, even though the surveillance videos show that never took place.

    Meanwhile, the off-duty cops who started the melee were allowed to leave through a back door, never once providing an official statement.


    The incident took place on March 24 2006, leading to a lengthy investigation by the Independent Police Review Authority after DeLeon filed a complaint only days after the incident.

    During the investigation, the cops claimed that DeLeon had walked into the restaurant shouting gang slogans and threatening to kill cops, making them fear for their lives.

    However, after reviewing the video evidence and statements from witnesses, the Chicago Review Board decided to terminate two officers in January 2011; Murphy, who drew his gun, and Orsa, whose comments started the altercation.

    The sergeant who responded to the incident, Louis Danielson, was also suspended for six months for his failure to conduct a proper investigation into the melee.

    But as they always do, the cops appealed the decision and won their jobs back after Cook County Circuit Judge Kathleen M. Pantle overturned the review board’s decision in 2012, awarding them back pay for the year they were out of work. Danielson’s suspension was also lifted after the judge’s ruling.

    However, last month, a state appeals panel overturned Pantle’s ruling, determining that the two cops deserved to be fired.

    The city appealed the judge’s decision and, four years after her decision as well as ten years after the incident, a state appeals panel sided with the city, ruling that the cops deserve to be fired.

    According to the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin:

    A state appeals panel on Tuesday upheld the firing of two Chicago police officers who assaulted a man inside a Northwest Side restaurant more than 10 years ago while off-duty.

    But the 1st District Appellate Court took the extra step of criticizing Cook County Circuit Judge Kathleen M. Pantle, who ruled in favor of officers Jason Orsa and Brian Murphy, finding their version of events credible despite contrary video evidence.

    “Not only does the circuit court disregard the board’s determination that the testimony of the two witnesses was particularly credible and the testimony of the police officers was not worthy of belief, but it also interprets what occurs on the surveillance video in ways that twist the facts and defy reason,” Justice Michael B. Hyman wrote.

    “Our careful and close review of the video leaves us dumbfounded by the circuit court’s rejection of the board’s prima facie true and correct findings,” Hyman added.

    But that doesn’t mean the cops will actually be fired. No, that would be too easy.

    It just means that the Chicago Police Board can fire them if it wishes, but only after it receives the appellate court order, which apparently it does not have, even though it’s been nearly a month since the decision was made.


    According to the Chicago Tribune:

    DeLeon and the two eyewitnesses who were arrested as well that night in 2006 were surprised to learn from a Chicago Tribune reporter that both officers were still on the force. All three said the handling of the investigation was another example of the city’s reluctance to root out police misconduct.

    “My (then-unborn) son is 10 years old now!” DeLeon, 32, said recently on learning the officers had been reinstated on the force and given back pay after the judge reversed their firings in 2012.

    “The amount of evidence that they had against these guys, it’s amazing to me that it’s still going on,” said Shawn Nelson, 37, a restaurant patron that night who tried to intervene on DeLeon’s behalf. “I can’t even believe it.”

    “This is the reason why the general public has issues with police officers,” said Joseph Mularczyk, 36, the other eyewitness. “It’s misbehavior like this. It’s covered up. It’s pushed under the table, and here we are 10 years later (and) these guys are still on the Police Department.”

    Even if the Chicago Police Board finally decides to obtain the appellate ruling and proceed with the termination process, the officers can still file another appeal with the Illinois Supreme Court, so this is probably not over yet.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/05/chicago-cops-who-attacked-man-in-restaurant-might-finally-get-fired-or-maybe-not/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2016, 03:13:37 PM
    Once again a criminal gang conspiring to cover up their crimes.

    Oklahoma Cop Says, “We Can Spin It,” After They Pepper Spray 84-year-old Woman

    In the ensuing moments after Oklahoma police pepper sprayed an 84-year-old woman after kicking her door down without a warrant to arrest her son for running a stop sign, one cop tells another cop that “we can spin it” in order to justify their questionable tactics.

    But Muskogee police are having a tough time spinning the incident considering it was all caught on body cam video.

    And they will have an even tougher time spinning it with the latest revelations, which were reported today by Fox 23, the Oklahoma news station that first reported on the story a month ago after obtaining the body cam videos, and apparently finally  got around to viewing it all.

    Muskogee police and the city’s mayor are not saying much about the incident, saying it is under investigation, but Fox 23 did interview a couple of city councilman who are bothered by what took place on the night of August 7.

    That night, Muskogee police were patrolling the streets when they noticed 56-year-old Arthur Blackmon running a stop sign. They said they tried to pull him over, but he continued driving until he pulled up to his mother’s home and ran inside.

    Police knocked on the door for several minutes while voices on the other side of the door said they were calling 911, even though it is not clear if they actually did.

    Police then decided to kick the door down, later claiming they suspected Blackmon had committed a home invasion and that they were just trying to keep everybody safe.

    But once inside, they not only tasered Blackmon, they pepper sprayed his 84-year-old mother, Geneva Smith, after she refused to turn her head away from them arresting her son.

    Both Blackmon and Smith were handcuffed and transported to jail where Smith ended up having a panic attack, resulting in her needing to be hospitalized.

    Smith was not charged with anything, but her son was charged with driving under the influence, obstructing an officer, driving with a suspended license and carrying a weapon.

    Smith is now contemplating filing a lawsuit.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/07/oklahoma-cop-says-we-can-spin-it-after-they-pepper-spray-84-year-old-woman/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2016, 02:55:03 PM
    When will this violent criminal gang be put to prison?

    Chicago Cops who Attacked Man in Restaurant Might Finally Get Fired … or Maybe Not

    The three off-duty Chicago cops were apparently drunk when Obed “OJ” DeLeon walked into a taco joint late one night and began complaining about a driver who had left a Camaro blocking the entrance to the parking lot.

    “Yeah, that guy’s an asshole for parking like that,” DeLeon told another two men he did not know, whom were also waiting in line to place an order.

    Overhearing DeLeon’s comments was the owner of the car, Jason Orsa, one of the three cops sitting at a nearby table with a fourth friend.

    “What if I’m an asshole?” Orsa replied.

    “You need to quit acting like an asshole and go move your car,” DeLeon responded.

    That was when one of the cops sitting at the table, Brian Murphy, pulled out a gun and pointed it at DeLeon’s face while shoving him against a wall.

    A series of surveillance videos show Orsa and the third cop, Daniel McNamara, joined in the assault, beating DeLeon along with their friend, Matthew Walsh, a Marine who had just returned from Iraq.

    Witnesses say the cops never identified themselves as cops, so somebody called 911 to report “a white man with a gun.”

    However, when the uniformed on-duty cops arrived, they arrested DeLeon, who by then, was beaten and bruised and had his shirt ripped off from him.

    Also arrested were two witnesses, Joseph Mularczyk and Shawn Nelson, the two men whom DeLeon was conversing with while waiting to place an order.

    They had tried to tell the responding cops that DeLeon was the victim, not the aggressor. But they ended up charged with assaulting Walsh, even though the surveillance videos show that never took place.

    Meanwhile, the off-duty cops who started the melee were allowed to leave through a back door, never once providing an official statement.


    The incident took place on March 24 2006, leading to a lengthy investigation by the Independent Police Review Authority after DeLeon filed a complaint only days after the incident.

    During the investigation, the cops claimed that DeLeon had walked into the restaurant shouting gang slogans and threatening to kill cops, making them fear for their lives.

    However, after reviewing the video evidence and statements from witnesses, the Chicago Review Board decided to terminate two officers in January 2011; Murphy, who drew his gun, and Orsa, whose comments started the altercation.

    The sergeant who responded to the incident, Louis Danielson, was also suspended for six months for his failure to conduct a proper investigation into the melee.

    But as they always do, the cops appealed the decision and won their jobs back after Cook County Circuit Judge Kathleen M. Pantle overturned the review board’s decision in 2012, awarding them back pay for the year they were out of work. Danielson’s suspension was also lifted after the judge’s ruling.

    However, last month, a state appeals panel overturned Pantle’s ruling, determining that the two cops deserved to be fired.

    The city appealed the judge’s decision and, four years after her decision as well as ten years after the incident, a state appeals panel sided with the city, ruling that the cops deserve to be fired.

    According to the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin:

    A state appeals panel on Tuesday upheld the firing of two Chicago police officers who assaulted a man inside a Northwest Side restaurant more than 10 years ago while off-duty.

    But the 1st District Appellate Court took the extra step of criticizing Cook County Circuit Judge Kathleen M. Pantle, who ruled in favor of officers Jason Orsa and Brian Murphy, finding their version of events credible despite contrary video evidence.

    “Not only does the circuit court disregard the board’s determination that the testimony of the two witnesses was particularly credible and the testimony of the police officers was not worthy of belief, but it also interprets what occurs on the surveillance video in ways that twist the facts and defy reason,” Justice Michael B. Hyman wrote.

    “Our careful and close review of the video leaves us dumbfounded by the circuit court’s rejection of the board’s prima facie true and correct findings,” Hyman added.

    But that doesn’t mean the cops will actually be fired. No, that would be too easy.

    It just means that the Chicago Police Board can fire them if it wishes, but only after it receives the appellate court order, which apparently it does not have, even though it’s been nearly a month since the decision was made.


    According to the Chicago Tribune:

    DeLeon and the two eyewitnesses who were arrested as well that night in 2006 were surprised to learn from a Chicago Tribune reporter that both officers were still on the force. All three said the handling of the investigation was another example of the city’s reluctance to root out police misconduct.

    “My (then-unborn) son is 10 years old now!” DeLeon, 32, said recently on learning the officers had been reinstated on the force and given back pay after the judge reversed their firings in 2012.

    “The amount of evidence that they had against these guys, it’s amazing to me that it’s still going on,” said Shawn Nelson, 37, a restaurant patron that night who tried to intervene on DeLeon’s behalf. “I can’t even believe it.”

    “This is the reason why the general public has issues with police officers,” said Joseph Mularczyk, 36, the other eyewitness. “It’s misbehavior like this. It’s covered up. It’s pushed under the table, and here we are 10 years later (and) these guys are still on the Police Department.”

    Even if the Chicago Police Board finally decides to obtain the appellate ruling and proceed with the termination process, the officers can still file another appeal with the Illinois Supreme Court, so this is probably not over yet.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/05/chicago-cops-who-attacked-man-in-restaurant-might-finally-get-fired-or-maybe-not/








    Fcuking utter crap -- Arsehole cops should of been prosecuted & jailed 10yrs ago.

    No doubt agnostic will be along shortly to say -- We should wait till all the evidence is in
    & These honourable cops were in fear of their Lives.

    Oh and it's just The odd 1 or 2 rogue cops -- The Rest are All Honest & Good.. ::)
    Yeah right.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 08, 2016, 02:59:25 PM







    Fcuking utter crap -- Arsehole cops should of been prosecuted & jailed 10yrs ago.

    No doubt agnostic will be along shortly to say -- We should wait till all the evidence is in
    & These honourable cops were in fear of their Lives.

    Oh and it's just The odd 1 or 2 rogue cops -- The Rest are All Honest & Good.. ::)
    Yeah right.

    We are talking about a criminal gang here: they go around attacking and terrorizing people and then have their cronies arrest and intimidate the victims and witnesses. And this whole ordeal has lasted 10 years.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 08, 2016, 03:05:02 PM
    Laws? Just apply however you see fit. Will these criminals face consequences?

    Louisiana Man Charged with Hate Crime for “Verbally Attacking” Cops

    Less than four months after Louisiana gave cops hate crime victim status with the nation’s first Blue Live Matters bill, New Orleans police made what appears to be the state’s first arrest under that law Monday.

    A drunk man who yelled racist and sexist slurs at officers after they arrested him for disorderly conduct and damaging property in the French Quarter

    New Orleans police say Raul Delatoba called a black cop a “dumb ass black” and a female cop a “dumb ass girl,” which in their eyes, is a hate crime – punishable by an extra five years in prison.

    That is, if New Orleans police are able to make the charge stick against the homeless man.

    According to NOLO:

    Raul Delatoba, 28, was booked Monday (Sept. 5) on charges of simple criminal damage to property, disturbing the peace and a felony-level hate crime, his arrest warrant says. During his arrest, but after he had broken the window, Delatoba is accused of using sexist and racial slurs against police officers, the document shows.

    The regional director of the Anti-defamation League, an organization that trains law enforcement agencies to enforce hate crimes, said she does not believe a hate crime occurred in this incident, based on the circumstances described in Delatoba’s warrant.

    Allison Padilla-Goodman, the group’s director, said she believes Delatoba is possibly the first person charged with a hate crime under the “blue lives matter” provision the Legislature recently added to the state’s hate crime law. The provision adds law enforcement occupation to the list of targeted victims for which a hate crime applies.

    According to arrest documents, Delatoba was drunk and banging on a window at the Royal Sonesta Hotel, 300 Bourbon St. around 5:15 a.m. Monday, when a witness who heard the banging told him to stop. Delatoba’s warrant says he yelled at the witness, “calling him a n—–.”

    That witness, a security guard who works at a nearby building’s mezzanine, along with a security supervisor for the Royal Sonesta, flagged down two Louisiana State Troopers who then escorted Delatoba to NOPD’s 8th District station, the warrant states. Once at the station, the warrant states, Delatoba began to verbally “attack members of the New Orleans Police Dept.” The warrant states Delatoba called one female officer a “dumb a– c—” and another officer a “dumb a– n—–.”

    As explained by the regional director of the Anti-defamation League in the above excerpt, it takes a little more than just hurling racist and sexist epithets while drunk and angry to make it a hate crime.

    But is anybody surprised they would waste no time in abusing this law?

    UPDATE: The New Orleans Police Department issued a statement late Thursday that they had misapplied the law in this man’s arrest.

    “After reviewing the initial facts of the case, it is clear that the responding officer incorrectly applied the law relative to a hate crime in this incident.”

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/08/louisiana-man-charged-with-police-hate-crime-after-verbally-attacking-cops-during-drunken-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2016, 03:06:21 PM
    We are talking about a criminal gang here: they go around attacking and terrorizing people and then have their cronies arrest and intimidate the victims and witnesses. And this whole ordeal has lasted 10 years.







    Sadly -- What you are saying is So Very True.

    And Not so much a Gang as an Army.

    By Agnostics own Low Estimate of 5-10% of Cops out of around 1,000,000
    That's 50,000 to 100,000  :o
    And He doesn't Reconize That as A Major Problem.,!!!

    Says it all really.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 10, 2016, 11:08:53 AM
    Cop With Broken Headlight Wrongly Stops Man to Cite Him for a Broken Headlight

    Forest City, PA — A Forest City police officer was caught on camera in a glaring display of hypocrisy and abuse when he pulled over a man for an alleged headlight violation — only to be shown up as the one with the headlight out.

    Brian Karwowski, the man who took the video, explained to the Free Thought Project that the police in his town are notorious for stopping people who drive nice vehicles to fish for evidence of drug dealing. Karwowski, who is a diesel mechanic, has a brand new Toyota truck which happened to make him a target.

    In March of this year, Karwowski was targeted by a lying officer who claimed he had a headlight out. However, Karwowski happened to be returning home from the dealership after receiving his free service for his new vehicle, and he has the paperwork to prove it.

    While servicing his vehicle, the dealership conducted a multipoint inspection, part of which included checking the headlights. Karwowski has the paperwork to prove that his truck, with only 8,000 miles on it, was in full working order prior to being stopped by this cop.

    In fact, during the stop, as illustrated by the video, Karwowski showed that his headlights were fully functional.

    However, as shown in the video below, the cop should have pulled himself over — as it was he who was in violation — not the innocent motorist.

    Sadly enough, this was the second time this officer stopped Karwowski for the same fake violation.

    Karwowski explained to the Free Thought Project that this officer had previously targeted him in a fishing expedition because he somehow thinks that driving a new vehicle is suspicious.

    Karwowski says he filed a complaint with the department but noted that he doesn’t think anything will come of it as the rest of the town’s government is also corrupt.

    Below is what “protecting and serving” looks like in a police state.

    When police aren’t kidnapping, caging, and killing people for possessing substances deemed illegal by the state, in turn creating a criminal black market for them which drives up crime, they are out enforcing traffic laws.

    Any number of arbitrary traffic infractions will lead to your extortion, arrest, imprisonment, or in the case of Philando Castile, death.

    Policing for profit in the United States is the norm. And, although Karwowski wasn’t given a ticket, this flagrant abuse of power was used in an attempt to generate revenue by fishing for other supposed violations.
    The total number of people who receive speeding tickets only, is 41,000,000 a year with an average cost of $152.00 each. That is 1 in every 5 licensed drivers in the US.

    The total number of speeding tickets paid each year is $6,232,000,000, which breaks down to around $300,000 generated per police officer for speeding alone. Tack on seat belt violations, license plate lights, window tint, rolling stop signs, headlights, and expired state-mandated stickers and that number skyrockets.

    Police departments need you to break traffic laws. Revenue generated from traffic tickets is not for your safety, it is necessary for the survival of police departments and county officials alike, as seen in the above example.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 10, 2016, 01:08:57 PM
    Once again the ruthless criminal gang trying to frame and destroy an innocent man.

    Confession in 1989 abduction clears man under scrutiny

    MINNEAPOLIS –  An elementary music teacher who has lived under a cloud of suspicion since 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was kidnapped from his Minnesota driveway in 1989 can breathe easier now that another man has confessed to the boy's abduction and killing.

    Dan Rassier was questioned about Jacob's abduction several times over the years and was subjected to lie detector tests and hypnosis. In 2010, authorities got search warrants to dig up his farm after they said he made suspicious statements to investigators and to Jacob's mother. He was then named a person of interest.

    "I became toxic," Rassier said.

    The case that haunted Minnesota for decades and devastated the community of St. Joseph, 80 miles northwest of Minneapolis, impacted Rassier's life in ways that he says are hard to explain.

    On Tuesday, Danny Heinrich, 53, of Annandale, confessed in federal court that he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed Jacob. The confession "essentially cleared Dan Rassier as a person of interest in the Jacob Wetterling case," Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner said in an email to The Associated Press on Thursday.

    Heinrich said he buried the boy's body in a field in Paynesville, where Jacob's remains were recovered last week.

    Rassier, now 60, was just days shy of his 34th birthday and home alone at his family's farm when Jacob was abducted from the road at the end of Rassier's driveway on the night of Oct. 22, 1989. He was questioned that night and told authorities about a car that had turned around in his driveway. Later, he told them he might have seen Jacob inside.

    Court documents made public Friday show why authorities had Rassier on their list of potential suspects. Although he was highly organized, he couldn't account for time surrounding Jacob's abduction. He acted strangely under hypnosis, crying when Jacob's abduction was mentioned. He also made comments that authorities found unusual — for example, pointing out that there were many places on his property where someone could hide a body.

    In 2009, authorities asked Jacob's mother, Patty Wetterling, to talk to Rassier while wearing a recording device. According to the documents, Rassier told Wetterling he didn't know what happened to Jacob and insisted that the driver of the car he saw was the abductor. He also expressed a fear that if someone buried Jacob on his property, he'd be blamed.

    Those statements and others were enough for the search warrant, a judge found.

    After his name came out in 2010, parents at one school where he teaches got nervous, and an aide was put in his classroom. People stopped asking him to play the trumpet at weddings. His private music lessons virtually dried up. He lost some friends. All the while, Rassier, whom students call "Mr. BeBop," maintained he had nothing to do with Jacob's abduction.

    Ann Reischl, a lifelong resident of St. Joseph Township and the town clerk, said she always knew Rassier couldn't have harmed Jacob, but she knows some people wondered about him.

    "I just don't think any apology (from law enforcement) is going to be big enough," she said. "The continual interrogation, and asking Dan to admit it ... and he kept saying, 'No, I didn't do it.' It's got to be frustrating."


    Rassier says because of the experience he no longer trusts law enforcement. The stress impacted his health, leaving him with headaches and causing him to miss work. As his relationships changed, he had to adapt and do more things on his own.

    Yet he looks for the silver lining: Because of the scrutiny, he started helping his ailing father more. His dad died last year, two days after authorities announced Heinrich was a person of interest.

    "I got to spend more time with my dad because of this happening," he said. "You try to look for something good out of it."

    And while Heinrich's confession cleared Rassier, the case still haunts him. He feels for the Wetterlings, and now the truth has him wondering whether he could have done anything to stop the abduction.

    "Would there have been anything that could've been done that could've saved him — if I would've done something differently?" he paused. "The only thing that could've saved him would've been me chasing the car."

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/09/09/confession-in-18-abduction-clears-man-under-scrutiny.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 13, 2016, 06:09:23 PM
    Cop Who Savagely Beat Footbal Fan on Video, Used Unnecessary Force 56 Times, Injured 17 People

    Pittsburgh, PA – Caught on video savagely beating a teenage football fan and falsifying arrest reports, a fired police sergeant has recently been accused by the district attorney of using more force than necessary at least 56 times. Establishing a pattern of violence and falsifying reports, Allegheny County prosecutors introduced the new evidence on Monday in preparation for the ex-cop’s upcoming state trial.

    On November 28, 2015, a surveillance video captured off-duty police Sgt. Stephen Matakovich ordering 19-year-old Gabriel Despres to leave Heinz Field. In his arrest report, Matakovich falsely claimed that Despres adopted an “aggressive posture” and appeared ready to attack him.

    But according to the video, Despres calmly stood with his arms down at his sides when Matakovich suddenly shoved the teen to the ground and began punching him in the head. Although Despres did not provoke the attack and did not appear to fight back, the off-duty cop repeatedly struck him while several other security guards watched.

    Treated for a bloody nose, Despres eventually pleaded guilty to trespassing and public drunkenness. After watching the video of the incident, Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay fired Matakovich and opened an investigation that led to his state trial.

    Charged with simple assault and official oppression in state court for attacking Despres, Matakovich also faces federal counts of deprivation of civil rights and falsification of a record. Even though the state charges are only misdemeanors that carry no more than two years in prison, Matakovich could be sentenced up to 30 years for the federal charges.
    In an attempt to establish the ex-cop’s history of violence, county prosecutors introduced a motion on Monday detailing Matakovich’s use of unnecessary force against 56 other people and another case in which he assaulted a security guard then arrested him on false charges.

    On December 28, 2014, Matakovich had been assigned to work as a plainclothes officer at Heinz Field. After an altercation broke out, Matakovich responded to the scene and tried to break up the fight.

    Due to the fact that Matakovich was not in uniform, security guard Dylan Burton failed to recognize the cop before tapping him on the shoulder and questioning him. When Matakovich ignored his questions, Burton grabbed his shoulder a moment before the plainclothes cop turned around and began repeatedly punching Burton in the face. Although the security guard had committed no crime, Matakovich arrested Burton and charged him with aggravated assault.

    Instead of going to trial, Burton ended up pleading guilty to a summary count of harassment. By showcasing Matakovich’s actions against Burton, county prosecutors will also be able to present a pattern of violence stemming from at least 56 other incidents since 2011 in which Matakovich claimed that a person had resisted.

    Out of those 56 reports, 20 cases involved strikes to the face and head, with 17 of those resulting in injuries including broken noses, broken jaws, and loss of consciousness.

    “In both cases, the defendant charged aggravated assault on a police officer when neither Despres nor Burton had come anywhere close to committing such an offense,” the motion said. “Furthermore, in an attempt to support this felony charge and justify his excessive force, in each case the defendant concocted a version of events to fit his narrative. Finally, in an attempt to clear himself of potential accusations of wrongdoing and put the incidents to rest, the defendant offered Despres and Burton pleas to summary harassment.”

    According to the prosecution and video footage, Matakovich brutalized innocent people and arrested them under false charges in order to cover up his own violent provocations. Instead of succumbing to the proliferation of Big Brother watching us, the public continually finds ways to use those electronic eyes against corrupt members of our government.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beat-teen-unnecessary-force-56-times/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 13, 2016, 06:15:23 PM
    Of course nothing comes out of this dangerous cop's pocket. The sad thing is that this girl's medical bills in the future might exceed the settlement amount.

    Innocent Family Gets $780K After Cop Tries to Kill Their Dog & Shoots Their 4yo Daughter Instead

    Columbus, OH – Responding to the house of a woman requesting medical treatment, a Columbus police officer arrived at the front door and immediately shot her 4-year-old daughter when attempting to kill their dog. Fearing that a jury would award the family substantially more money, the Columbus City Council unanimously approved a $780,000 settlement with the innocent girl’s family on Monday.

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

    Arriving at Ellis’ front door, Thomas suddenly pulled out his gun when he noticed the family dog approaching him. Although the pet did not attack Thomas, the officer abruptly opened fire and missed.

    Instead of gunning down the dog, Thomas had mistakenly shot Ellis’ 4-year-old daughter, Ava Ellis, in the thigh.

    While the paramedics began treating her gunshot wound, their daughter Ava reportedly asked, “Mommy, am I gonna die?”

    “It hit her pretty much square in the middle of her leg and went through and broke the bone. She had to have a plate and screws to help pin the bone in place,” Ava’s father, Brad Ellis, told ABC6. “Emotionally, mentally she has nightmares. You could see it affects her now and again. I pray with her being young it will fade out.”

    According to City Attorney Richard Pfeiffer Jr., Ava was hospitalized for nine days while accruing more than $250,000 in medical bills. Ava will also require future surgeries to remove a plate and screws in her right leg.

    Neither Thomas nor the dog suffered any injuries.

    Instead of firing Thomas or arresting him for negligently shooting an innocent child, police supervisors merely recommended a three-day suspension and retraining. Thomas is disputing the decision, claiming that he fired at the pet in self-defense even though the dog never attacked him.

    Seeking $1.6 million in damages, Ava’s family agreed to settle their lawsuit on Monday for $780,000. Despite the fact that Thomas almost killed a 4-year-old girl, the taxpayers will once again be held financially responsible for another cop’s cowardly mistake.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/780k-settlement-cop-shoots-4yo-daughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 15, 2016, 04:55:21 PM
    Hidden Cameras Catch Cops in Illegal Smash and Grab Raid on Legal Pot Shop

    Costa Mesa, CA – The Costa Mesa Police Department (CMPD) is trying to pull a fast one after a lawsuit was filed against it for the illegal raid of a medical cannabis dispensary. Knowing they have little chance in state court to defend their actions, which were caught on hidden cameras, the CMPD is attempting to move the case to federal court because cannabis is prohibited under federal law.

    In January, cops busted into the Costa Mesa Collective in militaristic fashion, pointing guns at customers and telling them to get on the ground. They immediately began removing surveillance equipment, but didn’t know about the four hidden cameras which caught them damaging store property, interrogating customers and seizing cannabis, money, confidential patient records and other property.

    These seizures were done with no legal justification, as police Chief Robert Sharpnack said they had obtained an inspection warrant, “which is used to enter a premises to investigate whether it is complying with building, fire, zoning and civil codes.”

    According to the Orange County Register:

    “If a business refuses access, a city can obtain an inspection warrant and seek a judge’s permission to make forcible entry, but investigators can’t seize evidence for a criminal case, said Jen McGrath, another attorney representing Costa Mesa Collective.”

    But there’s more. The OC Register has not been able to find any type of warrant for the operation, and Chief Sharpnack has refused to provide a copy of the supposed warrant used to carry out the raid.

    Even if such an inspection warrant exists, it does not allow for the seizure of cash, assets and medical records that was recorded by the hidden cameras.

    Cops involved in the raid, believing they had removed all video recorders in the store, proceeded to violate the law and the constitutional rights of people inside the store.
    Video shows one officer interrogating a female in a separate room, attempting to get her to admit to a crime as she repeatedly says she wants an attorney.

    “Were you being a lookout outside? Were you a lookout? Were you asked to look out for people?” said the unidentified officer. As she hesitates, he says, “…you don’t have to tell me if you don’t want to…”

    The subject then says, “Oh, ok, that means you can just speak to my lawyer then.”

    But the cop continues prodding her, saying, “If you’re the lookout, then that means you’re an employee here. You’re helping these people out. Unless you care to tell me what your involvement is.”

    Five people were arrested on suspicion of possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and they spent four days in the county jail before being released with no charges.

    Two hours of hidden camera footage was provided to the OC Register by the attorney representing Costa Mesa Collective, Mathew Pappas. Footage shows a cop breaking the ceiling open in the room and other cops looting the place for cash, including the tip jar.

    The same cop who interrogated the female subject is heard telling another subject, “The reason why we’re here is because we’re conducting an inspection.”

    But the hidden cameras clearly show this is not just an inspection.

    In the main room of the dispensary, other cops are taunting a customer laying on the floor.

    “Don’t be dumb, dude. Don’t tell me, dah, dah.”

    Patient: “You asked if I ever got arrested.”

    Officer: “I’m just asking a simple question. You ever been arrested before for anything? It’s a yes or no question. It’s not hard. I’m not interrogating you. Just asking if you had a…”

    Patient: “Then let me talk to my lawyer.”

    Officer: “That’s a pretty libertarian thing to say.”

    Officer 2: “Who’s your lawyer? Call him right now. Phone is right here.” (Tries to hand a phone to the customer) “You don’t have a lawyer dude. I love when people say that. Who’s your lawyer? We’ll call him up.”

    They can later be heard making jokes about the fact that cannabis is used as medicine, with one cop pretending to be the salesperson and another cop the customer.

    “Looks like you’re gonna be busy counting money,” one cop says as he hands the loot to another cop.

    It’s no wonder that attorneys for the CMPD filed a motion to move the case from state to federal court, which is an attempt to dodge the fact that their actions – unknowingly recorded by hidden cameras – violated the law and constitutional rights.

    “Costa Mesa’s effort to move the case to federal court is meant to prevent any recovery for their illegal actions because marijuana is prohibited under federal law,” Pappas said. “However, the lawsuit filed is based on state law in an area that should be decided by state courts.”

    …The lawsuit filed last month in Orange County Superior Court seeks unspecified damages and the return of marijuana, money, confidential patient records and other property seized Jan. 27 at the now-closed Costa Mesa Collective on Harbor Boulevard.”

    The footage provides a rare glimpse into the modus operandi of law enforcement who feel they can get away with anything in their vendetta against peaceful people providing medical products. The Costa Mesa Collective was clearly a target for these cops, but the raid may turn out to be one of their biggest mistakes.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/hidden-cameras-cops-raid-pot/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 16, 2016, 10:16:11 AM
    So now the criminals are in the business of executing animals and demanding a ransom for the carcasses...

    Idaho Cop Murders Dog In Own Yard, Demands Cash from Owner for Remains

    An Idaho cop murdered a dog in its own front yard while serving an arrest warrant on a compliant citizen after officers took advantage of a door left ajar.

    The arrest warrant turned into a death warrant for the beloved family pet named Targaryan.

    Now Caldwell police are threatening to charge an innocent woman with “having a vicious animal at large.”

    And they sent her a $200 bill before they’ll release the remains of her deceased beloved pet dog.

    But the body camera videos released today show a very different story.

    After the August 18 incident, Caldwell police told the local news that the dog “lunged” at the officers but the video reveals an officer who is apparently afraid of dogs who fires his gun after his partner seemed to have no issues with the mixed-breed 85-pound dog who barked but did not charge or lunge.

    Alinah Stelly’s sister was wanted on a warrant and the Caldwell Police knocked on her door to serve it, but they didn’t alert the young woman who was drying her hair with a maroon towel as she casually chatted with them for a few seconds to the real reason for visiting her townhouse.

    They had an arrest warrant for Stelly’s 31-year-old sister on a probation violation.

    “I’m looking for Crystal, Crystal Holden,” said the Idaho cop.

    It was a subterfuge on the part of the officer, but one that they are legally allowed to use when serving an arrest warrant.

    “What is this for?” asked Stelly.

    “I’ve just got to talk with her… for some follow up,” replied the Caldwell police officer.

    The 20-year-old Stelly dutifully went upstairs to get her sister, and accidentally left her front door slightly ajar

    That’s when the Caldwell police officer quite literally crossed the line from acceptable to probably unconstitutional policing.

    He crossed the threshold of Alinah Stelly’s private residence to push the front door wide open so he could visually search her residence.

    An arrest warrant is not a search warrant

    Moments later, Targaryan, the 85-pound German Shepherd and Pitbull mixed breed dog trotted downstairs and started barking, he faced a wide open front door in his own yard.

    The nearest Caldwell cop wisely pulled out a rather large baton, and held it at nose height for the barking dog, which ran up to the cop, and then continued to move to his left while barking.

    That’s when the second officer on the scene lost his cool.

    Targaryan the dog came near him, while barking.

    The gruesome end result nearly took off the foot of the officer, since the dog was sniffing the cop, as most dogs do when strangers visit their homes. According to the Statesman:

    Later, as the officer who shot the dog is looking for the shell casing, he can be heard telling another officer, “I was almost shooting my own damn feet, that thing was right at me. Scared the crap out of me.”

    After seeing the video, Stelly, who said she is considering filing a lawsuit, believes her dog wouldn’t have been shot if the first officer hadn’t pushed the door open. “I would have had more control of him and put him in the kennel,” she said.

    But Stelly couldn’t have guessed that police would open the front door to her home so they could conduct a visual search of her apartment.

    Nor should she have had to.

    The officer used terrible judgement in testing the boundaries of constitutional policing, and now his department will likely face a lawsuit over his partner’s dog murdering ways.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/16/idaho-cop-murders-dog-routine-call-nearly-shoots-partner/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 16, 2016, 08:12:51 PM
    Wow.

    Grandmother files $5M suit after Florida jail puts her in an all-male cell
    By Rebekah Sager
    Published September 15, 2016
    Fox News Latino

    When Fiordaliza Pichardo, an attorney and city councilwoman from Bonao in the Dominican Republic, was detained at the Miami International Airport en route to see the birth of her first grandson on an old New York warrant, she never imagined she would end up in a Miami jail for 10 hours surrounded by at least 40 male inmates.

    On Thursday Pichardo’s attorneys filed a federal lawsuit against the Miami-Dade Corrections Department seeking $5 million in damages and an effort to repair her reputation.

    Despite the fact that Pichardo, 50, has been married to her husband for 32 years, has three children, and is also a grandmother, a nurse employed by Miami-Dade County Corrections and Rehabilitation Department, examined her and determined that she exhibited “non-traditional male characteristics and male reproductive organs,” and placed Pichardo in an all-male jail cell.

    According to the suit, as a correctional officer was placing her in the cell, he said to her in Spanish, “Suerte si te veo viva manaña.” (You’ll be lucky if I see you alive tomorrow.”)

    Her attorney, David M. Kubiliun told Fox News Latino that correctional staff asked her repeatedly if she’d had a sex change, and every time she answered no emphatically.

    Pichardo reports being sexually harassed and tormented during her 10-hour stay in the jail and fearing she’d be raped or worse. At one point she urinated on herself to avoid using the toilet in front of the men.

    Her family wasn’t able to find her for hours. Once they discovered she’d been placed in the male cell, the family told guards she was not a man.

    Pichardo’s lawsuit claims she has suffered continued physical and psychological damage from the incident, and she has been under the care of a psychiatrist, affecting her personal and professional life. Since the incident she has neglected to seek re-election to the Bonao city council for fear of further humiliation. 

    Pichardo was eventually extradited to New York to settle the 1988 warrant, which she believed had been resolved, and returned to the Dominican Republic.

    “Back at home they’re teasing her children, saying their mother has a penis," Kubiliun told FNL. "She was an elected official and very well-respected. I can’t imagine this happening to a woman.”

    The Miami-Dade Department of Corrections told Fox News Latino that they don’t comment on pending litigation.

    “The lady was wronged," her attorney said. "Why or how this could have happened is anyone’s idea. No one can explain it. We think they made a big mistake and then tried to cover it up.”

    http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2016/09/15/woman-files-5m-suit-after-jail-reassigns-her-gender-to-male-puts-her-in-all/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 17, 2016, 09:08:54 AM
    Mafia don ordering his goons to rough up people. Why doesn't this constitute a criminal organization?

    Louisiana Sheriff Faces More Charges for Ordering Deputies to Beat Inmates

    Iberia Louisiana Parish Sheriff Louis Ackal, Lt. Colonel Gerald Savoy and former Captain Mark Fredrick were named in a second superseding indictment handed down today by the United States Western District Court in Lafayette.

    Ackal was originally indicted in March on civil rights violations related to the beating of five inmates in the chapel of the parish jail.  Another indictment was also handed down in June for other civil rights charges related to the beating of a prisoner in retaliation for the assault of one of Ackal’s relatives.

    In June, after the first superseding indictment against him, Ackal defiantly told a KLFY reporter the following:

    “What they have cannot be substantiated. It’s bull as far as I’m concerned. I’m very disgusted and aggravated that this is continuing and continuing. There still running grand jury which is costing the taxpayers quite a bit of money. But, let’s see if they can come up with anything else.”

    But it looks like investigators and the grand jury did come up with something else. The indictment includes new allegations that Ackal instructed his employees and supervisors to “work over” anyone who “sassed or spit” on them, among other things.

    According to the indictment:

    “Ackal further directed IPSO employees and supervisors during various staff meetings that if they ‘worked over’ a person, hey should charge the person with resisting arrest. Ackal instructed senior IPSO officials involved in Internal Affairs (IA) that, if a use of force complaint came in and the paperwork indicated that the subject ‘resisted arrest,’ the IA official should find the complaint unfounded.”

     Ackal’s directives may not have sat well with internal affairs investigators after a November 2008 altercation between three drunk off -duty narcotics agents that encountered two African American men and violently assaulted them. An Iberia Parish deputy responded to the incident and listed the agents as suspects of the assault in the report he filed.

    The indictment alleges that Ackal then directed a “high-ranking official” to delete the report. He didn’t stop there though. In early 2009 Ackal also directed all of the internal affairs files to be destroyed to avoid them becoming public and in March of that same year he disbanded the internal affairs unit altogether.

    The allegations don’t stop there. The indictment also mentions another incident between Savoy and a suspect who assaulted a deputy during an earlier arrest. Savoy is said to have driven the suspect to a remote location, forced him out of the car to kneel on the ground. The suspect was forced to hold one of Savoy’s bullets in his mouth before the deputy put his gun in the suspect’s mouth and threatened to kill him for assaulting the deputy.

    Nine former deputies have already pleaded guilty to reduced charges in exchange for their testimony against Ackal, Savoy, and Mark Fredrick. The trial is set to start on October 31 in Shreveport.

    You can read the new indictment here.

    https://www.scribd.com/document/324260400/Louis-Ackal-Superceding-Indictmnet-2

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/16/louisiana-sheriff-faces-more-charges-for-ordering-deputies-to-beat-inmates/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2016, 10:57:51 AM
    The child must have assumed a "combative stance" and the brave cop was in dire fear for his life.

    Horrifying — School Cop Handcuffs 7yo Child Shoves Him Around — For Crying After Being Bullied

    Kansas City, MO — The American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a 7-year-old boy who was a victim of unnecessary and cruel punishment at the hands of a school cop. Kaylb Wiley Primm, who is now 9, was yanked out of class, forced into handcuffs and shoved down the hall — for crying.

    Children cry, it is what they do and Kaylb is no different. After he’d been bullied, Kaylb started crying just as the officer was walking by the classroom. Instead of allowing the teacher to simply calm Kaylb down, this hero public servant yanked the child out into the hallway. He then handcuffed him and dragged him to the principal’s office where he’d sit for 15 minutes in handcuffs waiting on his mother.

    According to the police officer’s account, which sounds like any number of justifications for police violence, the child had been “out of control in his classroom and refused to follow my directions.”

    Apparently unable to calm down a 3′ 10″ 45 lb child, this officer violated Kaylb’s right to be free from unreasonable seizures and excessive force, according to the lawsuit.

    “Our children need trained and concerned figures in schools that know how to intervene. It’s not okay to abuse your authority and handcuff kids as a means of discipline,” said Tomesha Primm, Kalyb’s mother. “As a parent, I want to make sure no other child – in Kansas City or anywhere else in the country – experiences what my son did.”

    When she got to school, Primm was horrified, as any parent would be, when she saw her little boy in handcuffs after being assaulted by a police officer.

    “I couldn’t believe it because I couldn’t imagine they were allowed to do anything like that, or I would never have put him in there,” said Primm. “He knew he didn’t do anything wrong. He didn’t know if the man was going to take him to jail.”

    “This child committed no crime, threatened no one, and posed no danger to anyone,” said ACLU of Missouri Legal Director Tony Rothert. “Gratuitously handcuffing children is cowardly and violates the constitution.”
    After this incident, Kalyb was too scared to return to school, so Primm made the wise decision to pull him from the school as she was concerned for his safety. She homeschooled her son for the next two years.
    According to the ACLU, this incident also violated state policy, which says that the use of restraints for elementary and secondary students should be used only in extreme circumstances or emergencies.

    However, the police were quick to defend the actions of their officer and released a statement noting how the Kansas City Police Department can apparently assault children as part of their job.

    “Contrary to reports that KCPS security officers violated certain [Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education] regulations, all KCPS officers are commissioned by the Kansas City Police Department in accordance with state law. This important distinction alters the parameters of their capacity to act in certain situations. Notwithstanding the expanded scope of their authority, the school system’s present administration is taking numerous steps to ensure that our security officers are focused on de-escalation, conflict resolution, trauma intervention and relationship building.”

    “What happened to this child is simply wrong,” said ACLU of Missouri Executive Director Jeffrey Mittman. “This is a call to action for all of us to stop the unnecessary punishment that happens to young boys of color all across our nation – and particularly in Missouri.”

    The lawsuit, filed last week in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri, seeks to get better training for school police officers and asks for compensatory damages.

    Handcuffs for 7-year-old child for crying shows that the mere act of being a child is now criminalized.

    As the Free Thought Project previously reported, according to statistics released by the U.S. Department of Education and published by NBC News, in the 2011-2012 school year, teachers called the cops on students a total of 31,961 times in the state of California alone, leading to 6,341 arrests.

    With 175 school days lasting eight hours each, that means that every 2.6 seconds a cop is called!

    At one California school district, in particular, East Side Union High School District in San Jose, police were called on students 1,745 times during the 2011-2012 school year. This one school called the police on students more than ten times a day!

    In May, we reported on the video showing a San Antonio Independent School District police officer body slam a 12-year-old girl. In February, the Free Thought Project brought you the story of the Baltimore School cop who was seen beating a student who had done nothing wrong.

    In fact, recent videos have revealed a myriad of school cops attacking unarmed students. In December, Officer Rigo Valles was cleared of any wrongdoing after grabbing a student by the neck and slamming him to the floor. In October, Richland County Deputy Ben Fields was fired after students recorded him flipping over a girl’s desk and dragging her across the floor. Oklahoma City Master Sgt. Thomas Jaha was charged with assault and battery in October as well, after repeatedly punching a student in the face for not having a hall pass.

    In November, prosecutors agreed to dismiss assault charges against Louisville Metro Police Officer Jonathan Hardin for punching a student in the face if the former officer completes anger management classes. Hardin still faces wanton endangerment, official misconduct, and assault charges for choking another student unconscious in a separate incident five days later. In separate incidents earlier this year, school cops have also been caught attacking an autistic boy, body-slamming a child, and raping nearly two dozen students.

    And these are the ones the public knows about. How many more incidents, just like this one, go unreported and unpunished?

    Instead of attempting to solve a problem with logic and reason, schools are now taking the easy road and turning to the barrel of a gun to force compliance. This is not only dangerous and lazy, but entirely unnecessary.

    A study of more than 185,000 private and public school users from 2010 to 2014 revealed that violence is largely a problem in the public school sector. Private schools, unlike public schools, have an incentive to create a safe and caring environment for their students, so they take a far more proactive approach to prevent bullying — and it works.

    Without using police force, private schools are able to reduce bullying and violence to levels far below that of public schools. Imagine that.

    What this data illustrates is the societal dependence on the state to solve matters that should be handled without government. Being dependent upon the state to solve one’s problems is a de facto dependency upon violence.

    “The State represents violence in a concentrated and organized form. The individual has a soul, but as the State is a soulless machine, it can never be weaned from violence to which it owes its very existence.” -Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

    If you truly want a glimpse into the horrid effects of the police state on all school children, take a scroll through our archives, at this link.

    Until people wake up to the reality of relying on a system of violence to maintain “order,” we can expect this problem to get worse.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-7yo-forced-handcuffs-crying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2016, 07:56:18 PM
    It seems like the police chief did his job properly.

    Watch: Louisiana Cop Punch, Kick And Drag Compliant Suspect, Landing him in Jail

    A Louisiana cop was caught on a store surveillance camera in April kicking, punching and dragging a handcuffed suspect who appeared to offer no resistance.

    Gretna Police Chief Arthur Lawson fired Robert Wallow Thursday just before charging him with simple battery and malfeasance in office on Friday. Wallow was booked into the Jefferson Parish Jail.

    The officer was responding to a burglary call at a local gas station when Carlos Gustavo Pineda, 21, exited the station wearing a black ski mask. Wallow took Pineda into custody but not before trowing him on the ground and delivering three hard blows to his head and neck.

    After Pineda was placed in handcuffs, Wallow is seen kicking him several times while another officer looks on and does nothing.

    As reported by NOLA.com

    Wallow was placed on administrative leave on Aug. 26. The department terminated him Thursday.

    “We certainly have acted swiftly upon discovering this information,” Lawson said.

    At least one other officer has been placed on administrative leave, Lawson said, though he did not name the officer.

    Lawson is also investigating why it took so long for police administration to learn of the excessive force allegation in light of an internal investigation opened by Wallow’s supervisors in the Field Operations Bureau on April 25.  

    “It all had been documented, it just did not move as quickly as it should have,” Lawson said.

    And because the investigation didn’t move as quickly as it should have the chief has opened an internal investigation into how the original investigation was handled.


    Pineda pleaded guilty to five counts of simple burglary and was sentenced to probation.

    Wallow faces five-and-a-half years in jail and fines of up to $6,000.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/17/watch-louisiana-cop-punch-kick-and-drag-compliant-suspect-landing-him-in-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2016, 12:23:13 PM
    Entire Police Department Just ‘Accidentally’ Deleted Massive Chunk of Body Camera Video

    Oakland, CA — Body cameras should hold police accountable when questions about excessive force are raised — or they would, unless you’re the Oakland Police, who managed to delete a quarter of five years of footage the department had stored during a software upgrade two years ago.

    Considering Oakland had been one of the first departments in the country to outfit officers with body cams beginning in 2009, the quantity of irretrievable footage constitutes a tremendous loss.
    Sgt. David Burke revealed the astonished flub as he testified Tuesday in the trial of two men accused of murdering Judy Salamon in 2013. Though body cam footage represented only a minor facet of that case, the revelation nonetheless evidences pitfalls common with fledgling technology.

    “Nothing should have ever been lost from the system,” Burke told the court, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. “The settings were set to never delete.”
    However, human error — not the technology, itself — was responsible for the vanishing the recordings.

    Deputy District Attorney Butch Ford, prosecutor in the Salamon murder trial, told the court information technology workers attempting an upgrade of the police department’s computer system — that stores ‘dozens of terabytes of the body-worn camera footage’ — checked the wrong box.

    Instead of hitting “preserve everything,” Ford explained, the hapless workers chose only “preserve.”

    The Chronicle reports:

    “A month later, Burke said, officers realized there was a problem when they searched for a video and couldn’t view it. Metadata revealed that 25 percent of all videos that had been captured since the start of the body-camera program in 2009 were wiped out. A backup system had been purchased but hadn’t been set up, Burke said.”

    Oops.

    Fortunately, some footage escaped the accidental mass deletion: anything specifically marked as evidence and footage also stored on an external hard drive. Ford insisted the inept expunging hadn’t significantly affected any cases, though how the department discovered the mistake — searching for a specific tape — would seem to show otherwise.

    In fact, having the history of an officer’s behavior as captured by body cam could be imperative to determining guilt or innocence if allegations of misconduct or excessive force occur in the future.

    Oakland, a trailblazer in police body camera policy, didn’t necessarily score so well in an August report on such policies in departments nationwide, as RT reported.
    In fact, Oakland Police were dinged for — you guessed it — footage retainment policy.

    Although activists and advocates have zeroed in on the need for federal law requiring the use of body-worn cameras to reduce police violence, a surprising study published in August found that might not be such a good idea.

    Researchers with Temple University’s Fox School of Business wrote:

    “Surprisingly, we found that the use of wearable video cameras is associated with a 3.64% increase in shooting-deaths of civilians by police. We explain that video recordings collected during a violent encounter with a civilian can be used in favor of a police officer as evidence that justifies the shooting. Aware of this evidence, the officer may become less reluctant to engage in the use of deadly force.”

    On May 1, 2015, the Justice Department announced $20 million would be expedited as part of President Obama’s three-year, $75 million plan to outfit 50,000 officers with body cameras.
    Whether or not violence increases when police use the wearable technology, body cams are becoming commonplace everywhere in the United States.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-delete-body-camera-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2016, 12:26:42 PM
    “Put Your Hands Up” — BOOM — Cop Gave Man Less than a Second to Comply Before Killing Him

    Tustin, CA — Tustin Police Officer Osvaldo Villarreal didn’t give 31-year-old Benny Herrera more than a second before shooting him dead, an appeals court asserted in refusing to dismiss a wrongful death lawsuit Friday — but the undoubtedly disturbing dash cam video remains under court seal.

    “Less than a second elapsed between Villarreal commanding Herrera to take his hand from his pocket and Villarreal shooting him,” the Los Angeles Times quoted the court’s statement. “Just as Herrera’s hand came out of his pocket, Villarreal fired two shots in rapid succession … The command and the shots were almost simultaneous.”

    Because he acted so swiftly, a three-judge panel for the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco found Villarreal could not have reasonably feared for his life — a finding which directly contradicts a 2013 determination by the Orange County district attorney’s office claiming Herrera had ignored the officer’s demands to raise his hands.

    Villarreal encountered Herrera as he responded to a 911 call made by the man’s ex-girlfriend on December 17, 2011. Hilda Ramirez told the dispatcher Herrera, who had never been violent before, stole her cellphone and hit her in the head, but added he did not have a weapon.

    Villarreal and Officer Brian Miali were told Herrera might have a traffic warrant and that he was on parole for drug charges — two obviously nonviolent offenses — but when they approached the man in the street, Villarreal nearly immediately opened fire.

    In deposition, the officer testified he believed Herrera had a weapon in his sweatshirt pocket — despite having received the information the man was unarmed. Both officers, according to Courthouse News Service, admitted they never saw anything in Herrera’s hands. A cellphone was later found in the man’s pocket.

    “It has long been clear that ‘[a] police officer may not seize an unarmed, nondangerous suspect by shooting him dead,” Circuit Judge William Fletcher wrote for the panel, as cited by CNS.
    “[T]he traffic warrant and drug possession conviction were relatively minor crimes, neither of which entailed violence or gun possession,” Fletcher continued, “and the dispatcher’s information included a statement that Herrera was not known to be armed.


    “Villarreal commanded Herrera to take his hand out of his pocket immediately upon driving up beside him. Villarreal then shot Herrera just as he was taking his hand out of his pocket. Less than a second elapsed between Villarreal commanding Herrera to take his hand from his pocket and Villarreal shooting him.”

    In other words, the fatal shooting is yet another case of a cop so hell bent on using deadly force, Herrera most likely was in the act of complying when Villarreal gunned him down.
    Villarreal had thus far claimed qualified immunity should prevent the civil rights lawsuit filed in 2012 by Herrera’s family and four children — all under the age of seven — from proceeding.

    Disturbingly, the Orange County district attorney’s seven-page review of the fatal shooting, according to the Times, did not cite or mention the existence of perhaps the most crucial evidence: dash cam video — but appeared to rely almost solely on Villarreal’s statements about the incident.

    Further, “Sonia Balleste, the senior deputy district attorney who wrote the review, said Friday she didn’t immediately recall the case or why the review didn’t mention the video but that she was sure she ‘looked at all the evidence that was available,’” wrote the Times.

    “As a general practice it wasn’t my custom and habit to write down everything I looked at,” Balleste dismissively stated, adding the review procedure has since been reformed for thoroughness.

    Tustin City Attorney David Kendig confirmed the D.A. had received the critical video, but had no explanation for why it hadn’t been cited in the review.
    Attorney for Herrera’s family, Dale Galipo, justifiably called that investigation a “farce.”

    “Are they not getting all the information from the agency? Did they not get the video, or are they just ignoring facts that support that the shooting was excessive?” Galipo queried. “The whole process is flawed. It really is a joke.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/52066-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2016, 04:33:44 PM
    Award-Winning Oklahoma Cop Shoots Man with Hands in the Air, then Claims he was Not Complying

    Oklahoma police initially said Terence Crutcher would not comply, which is why he had to die, never mind the fact that his only crime was driving a car that had stalled in the middle of the street, which, of course, is not a crime.

    But police videos released today shows he was complying when he was shot dead on Friday, raising both arms in the air after police had pulled up to his stalled vehicle.

    The videos, one from a dash cam, the other from a police helicopter, appear to show one Tulsa police officer tasering him, prompting another Tulsa cop to shoot him. Not that the videos show he even deserved to be tasered, but perhaps it had something to do with “officer safety.”

    Tulsa police have not explained why they demanded he place his hands in the air after responding to the stalled car, but we imagine it also has something to do with officer safety, that notion where every possible threat must be neutralized – even if there is no obvious threat – before police can breathe easy.

    It’s all part of their training. That assurance that they can make it home to their families even if it means keeping somebody else from doing the same.

    But Crutcher had no gun. And the video shows he was no threat.

    And to the dismay of the Tulsa Police Department, he didn’t even have much of a criminal record, pleading no contest back in 1996 to carrying a concealed weapon and resisting an officer, receiving a suspended six-month sentence for those charges, according to the Associated Press.

    Crutcher was just a 40-year-old father of four that had the misfortune of breaking down on a Tulsa street after attending a music appreciation class at a local college; a man who sang in his local church choir and whose last traffic infraction was in 2005.

    But he was black. And he was heavyset. So even if he was complying with police who found it suspicious that his car would break down on a public street – to the point where they had to dispatch a helicopter – he was still deemed a threat.

    That is evident from the helicopter video that shows Crutcher walking back to his car as three cops hold him at gunpoint.

    “That looks like a bad dude, too,” one cop in the air says. “Can be on something.”

    And even after he was shot dead, three officers appeared to still be fearing for their lives as they slowly walked backwards from the bleeding body, clutching each other with their guns drawn as if Crutcher’s lifeless body could prop itself up at any moment and come after them.

    It took more than a minute after shooting Crutcher that they gathered their courage to walk back and handcuff the body, also in the name of officer safety.

    And it was only then that they began to act like they were trying to save his life, but by then, it was pointless. He was dead.

    And now the United States Department of Justice is investigating.

    THE AWARD-WINNING COPS WHO FEARED FOR THEIR LIVES

    The cop who shot him is Tulsa police officer Betty Shelby, who has been with the department since 2011. Before that, she worked for the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office since 2007.

    The cop who tasered him, Tyler Turnbough, has been with the department since 2009.

    Both Shelby and Turnbough are award-winning officers, which doesn’t mean much considering police departments hand out awards out to every officer at one point or another, but it does sound good to the police-adoring public, especially those that have the fortune of not being threatened at gunpoint for having a car stall on them.

    Here is how the Associated Press reported the shooting on Saturday after interviewing a Tulsa police spokesperson:

    A police officer shot and killed a black man who ignored repeated requests to put up his hands before reaching into an SUV that was stalled in the middle of a street, the police department said.

    Terrence Crutcher, 40 years old, died in the hospital after he was shot by the officer around 8 p.m. local time Friday, police said.

    Police spokeswoman Jeanne MacKenzie earlier told reporters that two officers were walking toward the stalled SUV when Mr. Crutcher approached them from the side of the road.

    “He refused to follow commands given by the officers,” Ms. MacKenzie said. “They continued to talk to him, he continued not to listen and follow any commands. As they got closer to the vehicle, he reached inside the vehicle and at that time there was a Taser deployment and a short time later there was one shot fired.”

    The video contradicts the claim that he “ignored repeated requests to put his hands in the air.”

    And while the videos released do not show include the segment where they first pulled up, let’s just say that perhaps it’s true that he “approached them from the side of the road” because maybe he did not feel like remaining in the middle of the street for safety reasons.

    But, of course, one must never approach a police officer unless granted permission because that makes them fear for their lives.

    However, both videos begin with Crutcher walking towards his car with his hands in the air as cops train their guns on him, so it appears that he was following their orders after committing the faux pas of walking up to them without permission.

    We will probably never know what words were exchanged between the cops and Crutcher because even though the Tulsa Police Department was supposed to receive a $600,000 match grant last year for body cameras, they say none of the officers were wearing a camera that day.

    So despite the two videos that show he did nothing to deserve to be shot and killed, we can imagine the scenario they will now create to justify the killing.





    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/19/award-winning-oklahoma-cop-shoots-man-with-hands-in-the-air-then-claims-he-was-not-complying/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2016, 10:41:08 AM
    Cops investigating themselves? Or they just don't investigate at all.

    San Diego Cop who Lied About Shooting Unarmed Homeless Man, then Cleared, was Never Interviewed by Internal Affairs

    A San Diego cop who was allowed to change his story after he watched surveillance footage that captured him fatally shooting an unarmed, mentally ill homeless man in an alley was never interviewed by internal affairs investigators.

    Nor did the California cop have to answer to any superior officers in his department because none of them were interested in investigating the shooting.

    He did speak with homicide detectives five days after the shooting, but they were only investigating whether he broke any law. Internal affairs would have determined if he had violated departmental policy.

    But even giving conflicting statements to homicide detectives did not arouse any interest from internal affairs to conduct their own investigation.

    Not even his claim that his body cam was turned off, which is a violation of departmental policy, was enough to launch an internal affairs investigation.

    In December of 2015, PINAC’s Maya Shaffer reported about video evidence showing an interview with homicide detectives just hours after San Diego cop Neal Browder shot Fridoon Rawshan Nehad dead in an alley.

    That footage reveals Browder telling investigators he didn’t see any weapons on Nehad when he shot him dead in the alley.

    But after viewing the surveillance his shooting, days later, and apparently consulting an attorney, Browder changed his story saying, “He was going to stab me. There’s no doubt in my mind that he was going to stab me.”

    Nehan was holding a shiny pen.

    The video actually shows Browder charging Nehad, while he appears alive, immediately after he shoots him.

    On Sept 19 2016, The San Diego Union Tribune reported officer Browder was never questioned by internal affairs after interviewing with San Diego homicide detectives five days later.

    In a deposition, reported about last month by the Voice of San Diego, Browder stated in a deposition that he knew up to 10 other cops who’d been involved in fatal shootings.

    And none of them had been questioned by internal affairs before returning back to work.

    Browder testified he was not disciplined over the shooting nor did any department official or any internal affairs investigator speak to him about his actions that night.

    Officer Browder also stated he hadn’t been drug tested, and that nobody ever asked him to take a drug test.


    Jeffrey Noble, the former Irvine deputy police chief and expert on police matters, said testing ideally should be a “routine part of any investigation when there is deadly use of force.” Other public employees are subjected to drug testing, especially when involved in fatalities.

    This May, PINAC’s Carlos Miller reported that after Browder was cleared and put back on duty, he was involved in a shooting at an apartment while checking on a probationer.

    A bullet from his gun was shot through a baby’s crib.


    Luckily no baby was in the crib at the time, but after that incident, he was assigned to a desk job at the Field Training Office.

    San Diego police also resisted making the video of last year’s shooting death public, saying it would put police at risk, but finally released it eight months later.

    A newly released,  much clearer, higher-quality video of the shooting can be seen below.

    Attorneys who filed a lawsuit for the Nehad family say officer Browder is a “repeat offender.” They requested all records for fatal and non-fatal shootings committed by San Diego cops for the past three years and argued it was to sh0w “the extent to which SDPD has or has not improved its policies and practices as to the investigation of police shootings and the discipline of those involved.”

    The city contested the request, saying it would cost the city approximately $12,000 to assemble and redact confidential, private or legally privileged information from 15,000 documents, 403 compact discs and 217 DVDs.

    Former Irvine deputy police chief Jeffrey Noble said the fact that internal affairs investigators never interviewed Browder separately from homicide investigators is troubling, because homicide investigators focus on whether the use of deadly force was criminal; internal affairs investigators focus on training and policy issues and whether or not they were followed.

    “These investigations are very different,” Noble said. “It tells me the department is turning a blind eye to training and policy issues.”

    Officer Browder’s body cam was turned off, which is against SDPD’s policy.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/20/san-diego-cop-who-lied-about-shooting-unarmed-homeless-man-then-cleared-was-never-interviewed-by-internal-affairs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 20, 2016, 01:58:11 PM
    Food for thought:

    Cops can and do apprehend dangerous bombers (http://abc7ny.com/news/bombing-suspect-ahmad-khan-rahami-charged-with-attempted-murder-of-officers/1517053/) without killing them, but will shoot dead unarmed motorists, with their hands in the air (http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/20/us/oklahoma-tulsa-police-shooting/).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 20, 2016, 02:03:11 PM
    Cops investigating themselves? Or they just don't investigate at all.

    San Diego Cop who Lied About Shooting Unarmed Homeless Man, then Cleared, was Never Interviewed by Internal Affairs

    A San Diego cop who was allowed to change his story after he watched surveillance footage that captured him fatally shooting an unarmed, mentally ill homeless man in an alley was never interviewed by internal affairs investigators

    But even giving conflicting statements to homicide detectives did not arouse any interest from internal affairs to conduct their own investigation.

    Not even his claim that his body cam was turned off, which is a violation of departmental policy, was enough to launch an internal affairs investigation.

    But after viewing the surveillance his shooting, days later, and apparently consulting an attorney, Browder changed his story saying, “He was going to stab me. There’s no doubt in my mind that he was going to stab me.”


    Browder testified he was not disciplined over the shooting nor did any department official or any internal affairs investigator speak to him about his actions that night.

    Officer Browder also stated he hadn’t been drug tested, and that nobody ever asked him to take a drug test.

    This May, PINAC’s Carlos Miller reported that after Browder was cleared and put back on duty, he was involved in a shooting at an apartment while checking on a probationer.

    A bullet from his gun was shot through a baby’s crib.


    Luckily no baby was in the crib at the time, but after that incident, he was assigned to a desk job at the Field Training Office.

    "San Diego police also resisted making the video of last year’s shooting death public, saying it would put police at risk," -- WHY WOULD THEY SAY THIS IF THE COP WASNT MURDERING A MAN FOR NO REASON--!!! .!!
    SAYS IT ALL REALLY..!!!!!

    The did finally released it eight months later.







    Wholly Fcuk.!!!
    People would think you were Lying it's so Ridiculous.

    Not Riduclous For The Murdered Man & His Family Though.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2016, 09:38:04 AM
    Once again no real consequences for the criminal.

    Ohio City Council Approves “Error in Judgement” Settlement for Cop who Shot Girl While Trying to Kill her Dog


    “It hit her pretty much square in the middle of her leg and went through and broke the bone. She had to have a plate and screws to help pin the bone in place,”  Brad Ellis, Ava’s dad told ABC6.

    The City Council of Columbus Ohio approved a $780,000 pending settlement that we reported about last week in a case where a cop was trying to kill the family dog as it retreated into its home, but the bullet wound up going through, 4-year-old Ava Ellis’ leg, shattering her bone, ricocheting and then lodged in the cabinet in the families’ kitchen.

    Ava, who is 6-years-old now, has been through several surgeries since being shot and has had to miss most of her first grade year.

    Michael Wright, attorney for Ava Ellis family, said the $780,000 settlement approved by the city holds police accountable for their “error in judgment.”

    But the Ellis’ still think officer Thomas should be held accountable, but he is appealing the disciplinary action taken against him by his department and is still on the police force, saying he shot at the dog in self-defense.

    But officer Thomas is the only one who remembers it that way.

    Several witnesses there that say the 40-pound family said the dog had came out to bark, but was retreating into the house when he shot, missing it and hitting Ava instead.

    No criminal charges were filed against him, even though instead of rendering aid and making sure Ava was OK, officer Jonathan Thomas then walked down the driveway, got in his patrol car and left the scene without administering aid or making sure an ambulance was on the way.

    On June 19 2015, officer Jonathan Thomas was responding to a separate call in the same neighborhood when Ava’s mother, Andrea Ellis, accidentally cut herself.

    Andrea’s sister Kelly called 911 screaming, “she’s bleeding all over the place! I need a paramedic!”

    Kelly then noticed officer Thomas a few houses down and cried to him for help.

    When Thomas approached their home, one of their family dogs allegedly ran towards him.

    Thomas shot at the dog, but the bullet missed it and struck 4-year-old Ava in the leg instead, shattering the bone.

    A neighbor then called 911 again.

    “My neighbor across the street had an officer at her door and she’s screaming that he shot a child,” the neighbor told the police dispatcher.

    “I felt it is his job to protect, if it was an accident he should still be there to check on my child, to make sure she was okay, to make sure somebody was on the way,” Andrea Ellis said.

    Thomas never gave a reason why he left the scene.

    Ava reportedly now drinks a lot of chocolate milk to make her bones strong.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/21/ohio-city-council-approves-error-in-judgement-settlement-for-cop-who-shot-girl-while-trying-to-kill-her-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2016, 09:42:45 AM
    Criminal gang conspiring:

    Cops Steal Man’s Phone, Accidentally Record Themselves Conspiring to Falsely Charge Him

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

    On Monday, Picard informed the Free Thought Project the ACLU had picked up his case and they are now planning legal action against Connecticut’s Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection.

    The Free Thought Project spoke to the ACLU who put out a press release:

     In a complaint filed today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut, the American Civil Liberties Union of Connecticut (ACLU-CT) contends that three state police troopers illegally retaliated against a protester by searching and detaining him, confiscating his camera, and charging him with fabricated criminal infractions. On behalf of Connecticut resident Michael Picard, the ACLU-CT alleges that John Barone, Patrick Torneo, and John Jacobi, all employed by the state police division of Connecticut’s Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, violated Picard’s First Amendment rights to free speech and information and Fourth Amendment right against warrantless seizure of his property.

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

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

    “Police should be focused on public safety, not punishing protesters and those who film public employees working on a public street,” said ACLU-CT legal director Dan Barrett, who is representing Picard in the lawsuit. “As the video shows, these police officers were more concerned with thwarting Mr. Picard’s free speech and covering their tracks than upholding the law.”

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

    The fact that there was no threat did not stop the subsequent assault, however.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

    “Community members like me have a right to film government officials doing their jobs in public, and we should be able to protest without fearing political retribution from law enforcement,” said Picard. “As an advocate for free speech, I’m deeply disappointed that these police officers ignored my rights, particularly because two of the troopers involved were supervisors who should be setting an example for others. By seeking to hold these three police officers accountable, I hope that I can prevent the same thing from happening to someone else.”

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

    “The evidence clearly shows that these police officers violated Mr. Picard’s rights,” said attorney Joseph R. Sastre, who defended Picard against the criminal charges and is joining Barrett to represent Picard in the civil case. “We are confident that the court will agree, and we hope that it will send a strong message to police and the public alike that enforcing the law means respecting free speech, not trampling on it.”
    The complaint filed in U.S. District Court is available here.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-record-conspiring-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on September 21, 2016, 10:02:35 AM
    Food for thought:

    Cops can and do apprehend dangerous bombers (http://abc7ny.com/news/bombing-suspect-ahmad-khan-rahami-charged-with-attempted-murder-of-officers/1517053/) without killing them, but will shoot dead unarmed motorists, with their hands in the air (http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/20/us/oklahoma-tulsa-police-shooting/).

    Great point.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on September 21, 2016, 10:08:43 AM
    Criminal gang conspiring:

    Cops Steal Man’s Phone, Accidentally Record Themselves Conspiring to Falsely Charge Him

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

    On Monday, Picard informed the Free Thought Project the ACLU had picked up his case and they are now planning legal action against Connecticut’s Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection.

    The Free Thought Project spoke to the ACLU who put out a press release:

     In a complaint filed today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut, the American Civil Liberties Union of Connecticut (ACLU-CT) contends that three state police troopers illegally retaliated against a protester by searching and detaining him, confiscating his camera, and charging him with fabricated criminal infractions. On behalf of Connecticut resident Michael Picard, the ACLU-CT alleges that John Barone, Patrick Torneo, and John Jacobi, all employed by the state police division of Connecticut’s Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, violated Picard’s First Amendment rights to free speech and information and Fourth Amendment right against warrantless seizure of his property.

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

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

    “Police should be focused on public safety, not punishing protesters and those who film public employees working on a public street,” said ACLU-CT legal director Dan Barrett, who is representing Picard in the lawsuit. “As the video shows, these police officers were more concerned with thwarting Mr. Picard’s free speech and covering their tracks than upholding the law.”

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

    The fact that there was no threat did not stop the subsequent assault, however.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

    “Community members like me have a right to film government officials doing their jobs in public, and we should be able to protest without fearing political retribution from law enforcement,” said Picard. “As an advocate for free speech, I’m deeply disappointed that these police officers ignored my rights, particularly because two of the troopers involved were supervisors who should be setting an example for others. By seeking to hold these three police officers accountable, I hope that I can prevent the same thing from happening to someone else.”

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

    “The evidence clearly shows that these police officers violated Mr. Picard’s rights,” said attorney Joseph R. Sastre, who defended Picard against the criminal charges and is joining Barrett to represent Picard in the civil case. “We are confident that the court will agree, and we hope that it will send a strong message to police and the public alike that enforcing the law means respecting free speech, not trampling on it.”
    The complaint filed in U.S. District Court is available here.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-record-conspiring-video/

    Business-as-usual for many cops.  Except the part about getting caught.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2016, 12:24:12 PM
    Boston Police Commissioner Says Only “Minor Issues” With Off-Duty Officer’s Road Rage Attack

    “There’s no victim here,” Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said at a press conference Tuesday.

    That conclusion might come as a surprise to the countless people who watched a bystander video of off-duty Boston police officer Edward Barrett’s brazen road rage attack on a pedestrian in May.

    In the video, Barrett is seen using his knee to pin Milton Gurin, then 64, to the ground. Gurin said that Barrett nearly struck him with a vehicle while he was trying to cross the street, so he tapped on the officer’s window with his umbrella, which prompted the attack.

    Barrett falsely claimed that Gurin broke his window, told him he was under arrest, and called for backup. Responding officers determined there was nothing but a smudge on Barrett’s window and released Gurin with no charges.

    But Evans said there were only “minor issues” with Barrett’s actions. Evans defended Barrett, saying that Gurin crossed the street against the light and that the officer “believed” Gurin broke his window, which would have been felony had it happened outside of the officer’s imagination.

    Evans said that after speaking with a number of witnesses, including Gurin himself, and watching more video of the incident, the department refuted excessive force allegations made by Stephen Harlowe, the man who shot the viral video that brought the incident to the public’s attention.

    According to Evans, Gurin “wasn’t violently tackled, his head wasn’t slammed to the ground, and his hair wasn’t pulled”—he just tripped after Barrett chased him.

    “All I see here is an officer having his knee in someone’s back,” Evans said dismissively.

    But Carl Williams, the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts lawyer who is representing Gurin, said the force was still unjustified because his client didn’t commit a crime.

    According to Williams: “You have an officer up there saying, ‘This is what we’re trained to do.’ Well, then that’s terrifying. If you’re training your police officers to jump on people who are of the age Mr. Gurin is, and to put their knee in their back and put all their weight on them, that’s worrisome—because no crime was committed.”

    Williams pointed out that Barrett could have simply looked at the window to check for damage before deciding to chase Gurin.

    Williams said Gurin tapped Barrett’s window with a “very small, plastic umbrella” and started running “because someone was yelling at him.”

    “[Gurin] was in fear,” Williams said. “[He] started to get chased down the street, and was running because a person was chasing him, and fell because a person was chasing him, and was injured because a person was chasing him.”

    Williams added that the outcome of the investigation may “embolden police to do more physically harmful activities to Boston civilians.”

    Evans said that “there will be some counseling” but no disciplinary action for Barrett. Evans said Barrett should have identified himself as an officer sooner and called a supervisor to the scene.

    Prior to the road rage incident, Barrett had two excessive force complaints that the police department did not sustain.

    In an interview in June, Evans said Barrett’s supervisors described the 20-year veteran of the police force as a “quiet kid,” and he said the officer was not a “threat” to the public.

    Barrett was not placed on leave during the investigation. Last year, he made $105,754.37.

    Williams would not comment to reporters on whether Gurin plans to file a lawsuit.





    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/21/boston-police-commissioner-says-minor-issues-off-duty-officers-road-rage-attack/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 21, 2016, 01:38:29 PM
    http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/09/video-charlotte-race-protesters-loot-walmart-flat-screen-tvs-ipads

    The case in Charlotte is total nonsense why the thugs are looting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2016, 10:26:37 AM
    Georgia Cop Gets Shot, Blames Black Man, Gets Charged with Fabricating Story

    Sherry Hall was two months into the job as a Georgia police officer when she came across a scary black man who shot her before escaping into the woods, sparking an intense manhunt that was followed by the usual condemnation of Black Lives Matter on social media.

    But as we’ve seen so many times before, Hall had fabricated the entire story.

    And now the Jackson police officer is facing four felonies.

    Hall, who was careful to keep her dash camera turned off, did not realize investigators could still find ways to expose her lies.

    Or maybe she didn’t expect the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to spend 600 hours investigating the shooting that took place on September 13, 2016 where she reportedly was shot in the abdomen, but protected by her bulletproof vest.

    According to a statement released from the GBI Friday.

    Earlier today, the GBI secured four criminal arrest warrants through the Superior Court of the Towaliga Judicial Circuit on Sherry Hall. They are as follows: False Statements, Tampering with Evidence, Interference with Government Property, and Violation of Oath of Office.

    After following the leads and evidence, the investigation has now revealed that there is no, and never was, a suspect shooter at large in Jackson, Georgia.

    The GBI was requested by the Jackson Police Department to independently investigate both the Officer Involved Shooting/ Use of Force and the alleged Aggravated Assault of a Police Officer. The GBI Milledgeville Office committed all available assets and resources, which included personnel from two regional offices. To date, there have been in excess of 600 investigative work hours expended on this investigation and certain aspects of this investigation are still ongoing.

    The alleged incident began at approximately 12:08 a.m. on Tuesday, September 13, 2016 when Sherry Hall called out over the radio that she had been shot. Several law enforcement officers from the Jackson Police Department and the Butts County Sheriff’s Office immediately responded to assist in the officer down call. Sherry Hall alleged through three separate interviews with the GBI that she was shot by a black male subject who was positioned near the wood line at the cul-de-sac on Camellia Court. Sherry Hall further advised that she did not engage her in car video and audio recording equipment.

    As part of this investigation, the GBI solicited input from the manufacturer of the in car camera system as well as a GBI Digital Forensic Investigator, in an effort to further this investigation. Video and audio evidence was recovered from the hard drive of the unit. After hours of subsequent examination of that video evidence, it was revealed that inconsistences existed with regard to Sherry Hall’s statements, witness statements, physical evidence, and later examination of forensic evidence.

    As of late Friday, Hall was staying in “private facility, of her own volition,” where she will be arrested upon release.

    Hall who began working at the Jackson Police Department on July 3, 2016 previously worked with the Griffin Police Department as well as with the Butts County Sheriff’s Office.

    In the 1990s, before she went into law enforcement, she was charged with first degree criminal damage to property, which is a felony. She was fined $1,700 and served five years of probation.

    But that obviously had no effect on her ability to be hired as a law enforcement officer.

    Below is a lengthy interview she conducted with CBS 46 after the shooting where she proves herself to be a natural liar.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/23/georgia-cop-gets-shot-blames-black-man-gets-charged-with-fabricating-story/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2016, 10:30:54 AM
    Cops Exposed as Liars After Video Shows Them Severely Injure Man By Sadistically Tasering Him in the Back

    Richmond County, GA — Carlos Seals was harming no one and being entirely compliant when Richmond County deputies deployed a taser into his back causing him to fall backward and hit his head. Seals was severely injured during the fall and was forced top pay for his own medical treatment after deputies lied and said he deserved it.

    According to the initial police report, deputies claimed Seals was being combative and would not comply. While Seals admitted to using profanity, the video shows he was not at all combative.

    According to the police report, one of the deputies deployed his stun gun, but it didn’t connect. It goes on to say that Seals is still combative so the deputy writes he reached for his stun gun and it connected.
    However, this was simply not true.

    This attack happened on Aug. 30, 2015, and Seals has yet to receive a single penny for his more than $20,000 in medical expenses.

    Video shows Seals enter a secure area in the Richmond County Jail in Augusta and while there is no audio, we can clearly see that there is no physical struggle.

    “I screamed and everything was over with,” Seals told WSB-TV.

    In the video, Seals is complying with the deputies’ orders to get up against the wall. He has his hands behind his back and his face to the wall when two deputies sadistically deploy their tasers.

    “I watched him come through the door and he said, ‘pop his a**.’ As soon as he said that, dude shot me in my back,” Seals said.

    After he was hit, Seals’ body locked up and he fell to the floor, smashing down on his head. He was knocked out.

    For more than 90 seconds, deputies simply look down at him as if they thought he was faking. Then, one of them finally checks his pulse.

    Deputy Donnie Crawford wrote in the police report that Seals was being physically combative and they had no other choice but to deploy their tasers. However, as the video shows, this was a lie.
    “None of those facts applied. He was in the surrender position,” said DeKalb County-based attorney Anita Lamar. “I’d rather go by the video rather than what they say is on the video.”

    Lamar and Craig Jones filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against Richmond County, Deputy Donnie Crawford and Deputy Christopher Alexis over the incident, according to WSB-TV.

    While the Sheriff’s Office said they can’t comment, they did say that Deputy Crawford was fired. However, no action was taken against Christopher Alexis.

    “You don’t shoot a dart and then run electricity through the dart unless they are violently resisting you,” Seals said.

    “They are refusing to pay the bills, so now not only does he have injuries to deal with but has bills to pay,” Lamar said.

    What the video below shows is the power of police lies. Had this surveillance footage been kept from the public, no one would have believed that Seals did not deserve to be tasered. Next time someone says “do what the police tell you, and you will not be hurt,” show them this video.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-liars-taser-man-back/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2016, 10:35:06 AM
    Family Awarded $1.2 Million After Cops Executed their ‘Unconscious’ Father in His Car

    OAKLAND, Calif. (CN) — The city of Oakland has agreed to pay $1.2 million to the family of a man shot to death by police who found him unconscious in his car.

    The settlement, which brings to a close two separate lawsuits filed by Demouria Hogg’s family, will be split among his mother, two children and one other family member.

    Oakland Police officer Nicole Rhodes shot and killed Hogg on the morning of June 6, 2015, after firefighters spotted him sleeping in a BMW parked near Lake Merritt with a handgun resting on the passenger seat next to him.

    Rhodes and two other officers spent the next hour trying to wake Hogg with a bullhorn, loudspeakers and by firing beanbag rounds to break out the car’s windows.

    When they finally roused him, officer Daniel Cornejo-Valdivia used a stun gun on Hogg while Rhodes fired two shots into the car, according to an amended complaint. Hogg was pronounced dead at Highland Hospital.

    John Burris, an attorney for Hogg’s son, said that Hogg didn’t wake up right away because he was hard of hearing. He said the officers should have given Hogg time to comply with their orders before shooting him.

    Instead, the family claimed, police killed him as soon as he awoke. Hogg hadn’t committed any crime or made any aggressive move that would have led officers to believe he was dangerous, the family said.

    According to CBS SF, Rhodes thought Hogg was reaching for his gun and that’s why she fired two rounds into the car. The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office declined to file criminal charges against Rhodes.
    The killing sparked several protests in Oakland. Many protesters said Hogg was killed for simply sleeping in his car.

    After the killing, the California Department of Corrections said Hogg had a criminal record involving drug charges and was in violation of parole when he was shot.

    “Defendants express their sincere condolences to Demouria Hogg’s family,” City Attorney Barbara Parker said in a July answer to his son’s complaint. But she added that “defendants maintain that that the city’s officers’ actions during the subject incident were in line with the United States Constitution and with state law.”

    Hogg’s family settled with the city on August 12, according to court filings. The Oakland City Council approved the settlement 7-1 on Tuesday, with Councilmember Desley Brooks dissenting.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-cops-executed-unconscious-father/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2016, 10:57:24 AM
    Cop Feels Wrath of Police State as He’s Falsely Arrested for Terrorism and Unable to Get Justice

    Oklahoma City, OK (CN) — An off-duty cop who was detained after being mistaken for a terrorist was not falsely arrested, the Oklahoma Court of Appeals ruled.

    Joshua Shaw was at an Oklahoma City pub with a female officer in December 2012. They were talking about going to the gun range and shooting their weapons.

    Another off-duty officer overheard them and feared that they were planning terrorist acts. He talked to the bartender, who told him that the couple were police officers, not terrorists.

    Still, the officer called Oklahoma City police.

    Shaw complained that one officer yanked him off his bar stool and another dragged him outside. Shaw told them he was also a cop, and one of the officers noticed his badge under his jacket.

    Shaw claimed that he was detained for 25 minutes and that the officers explained to him that an off-duty cop had reported that someone was discussing shooting an AK-47.

    Shaw sued Oklahoma City for false arrest, assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

    The city moved to dismiss the case, arguing that its officers had probable cause to detain Shaw. The trial court ruled in the city’s favor.

    Shaw appealed, but the Oklahoma Court of Appeals also ruled for the city.

    According to Judge William Hetherington Jr., Shaw cannot prevail on his emotional distress claim because he failed to show that the officers acted in bad faith.

    He added that Shaw cannot win on his assault claim, because it would fall outside the scope of the officers’ employment.

    “(The) city’s motion for summary judgment lists as an ‘undisputed fact’ that Shaw believes the officers were acting intentionally and maliciously and attaches his deposition testimony as support,” Hetherington wrote.

    He also agreed with the city that Shaw was not falsely arrested because he admitted to being off-duty and carrying a gun in a bar.

    “The serious nature of the information communicated to OKCPD by an undisputedly reliable source and then communicated to the police officers is sufficient to warrant 1) reasonable belief Shaw has committed or is committing a felony and 2) the officers’ actions in seizing a potentially armed and dangerous arrestee in a public place to protect not only the customers but also the officers themselves,” he wrote. 

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-wrath-police-state-terrorism-justice/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2016, 11:08:14 AM
    Cop Quietly Given Back Job After Executing Handcuffed Man on Video

    El Paso, TX — A former El Paso cop was just given his job back after he shot and killed a handcuffed man on March 8, 2013. The entire incident was captured on video, yet the county had no problem giving back this officer his badge and gun.

    Officer Jose Flores was quietly reinstated to the El Paso Police Department in August after the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas appealed the department’s decision to fire Flores, according to the El Paso Times.

    Arbitrator Mark Sherman ruled that while Flores violated use of force policies, the shooting was accidental and he should be reinstated, reports the Times.

    “Obviously, this was a very tough case because there was a person who lost his life and he should not have lost his life,” said James Jopling, lawyer for the association that represented Flores in the arbitration.
    “Nevertheless, Officer Flores was a very good officer at the time this happened and he continues to be. The department and city are going to benefit from his service.”

    The disturbing footage shows former Mr. El Paso, Bodybuilder Daniel Saenz, 37, being dragged through the corridors and then outside because guards refused to admit him.

    Once outside, the shirtless man struggles with Flores and another civilian guard who lose control of him. Flores then reaches for his taser but quickly decided to go for his gun instead. He then claims that the security guard bumped his finger causing him to kill Saenz.

    Here is that graphic video:



    Earlier that day, Saenz had been arrested for acting strangely at a local grocery store and got into a scuffle with police during the arrest.

    Several hours later he was shot and killed by Officer Jose Flores. Flores claimed he used the Glock to subdue Saenz, because the tazer was used several times before with no effect.

    According to CLEAT (Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas) Flores was not found guilty of a crime because Saenz still posed a significant threat, despite the cuffs.

    ‘Saenz could quickly front his cuffs and turn them into a deadly weapon, given his considerable strength, agility and demonstrated resistance to the Taser …

    ‘At the same moment Officer Flores draws his weapon, Mr. Saenz pushes off on that curb and, with remarkable strength, sends the civilian escort flying backwards.

    ‘The civilian escort’s arm then hits the trigger hand of Officer Flores, causing his weapon to discharge.’

    The decision to rehire Flores is in spite of the department previously decrying his actions in a public notice of termination. The notice also stated that they were aware Flores lied about the incident. As the El Paso Times reports:

    A Notice of Termination, which was issued to Flores on Oct. 28, 2014, stated that Flores was fired “based on the evidence, the shooting of Daniel Saenz falls outside Department policies, procedures, rules and/or regulations. Your use of deadly force against Saenz was not justified under Department policy.”

    It goes on to state, “Saenz was handcuffed at all relevant times and you re-engaged in the struggle with him after you drew your weapon. Your conduct was the result of poor judgment and such conduct is not considered to be within the policy, practice or custom of the Department.”

    The notice also states that Flores “misrepresented facts regarding res gestae statements made to supervisors and whether or not your conduct was intentional or accidental. By misrepresenting the facts you are considered to have been dishonest and untruthful.” Res gestae, Latin for “things done,” is the legal term for the circumstances and events that in this case led to the shooting.

    When a cop can kill a man in handcuffs, on video, and not only avoid jail but also be given back their job — something is seriously wrong.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-executing-handcuffed-man-video-job-amp/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2016, 03:14:55 PM
    Being responsible for your firearms? Only applies to citizens..

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

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

    Quote
    Southern California police agencies regularly lose track of all manner of firearms, from high-powered rifles and grenade launchers to standard service handguns – weapons that often wind up on the street.

    Quote
    Often, the reports show, officers treated their guns in ways that wouldn’t be legal for most civilians. High-caliber firepower was stowed in backpacks or gym bags and stuffed behind car seats. Handguns were stashed in center consoles or glove boxes.

    Quote
    Law enforcement officers – unlike most civilians – don’t have to follow state law requiring that guns left in unattended vehicles be locked in the trunk or secured in a locked gun box and placed out of sight.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 26, 2016, 04:19:50 PM
    Re: Police State - Official Thread
    « Reply #3113 on: 26-09-2016, 23:14:55 »
    Reply with quoteQuote
    Being responsible for your firearms? Only applies to citizens..

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

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

    Quote
    Southern California police agencies regularly lose track of all manner of firearms, from high-powered rifles and grenade launchers to standard service handguns – weapons that often wind up on the street.

    Quote
    Often, the reports show, officers treated their guns in ways that wouldn’t be legal for most civilians. High-caliber firepower was stowed in backpacks or gym bags and stuffed behind car seats. Handguns were stashed in center consoles or glove boxes.

    Quote
    Law enforcement officers – unlike most civilians – don’t have to follow state law requiring that guns left in unattended vehicles be locked in the trunk or secured in a locked gun box and placed out of sight.







    Jeez -- You couldn't make this stuff Less Believable !!

    What or why are they not held to a higher accountability
    Yet more examples of Why there is Such A Serious Problem
    With the Police & Policing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2016, 04:25:23 PM
    Jeez -- You couldn't make this stuff Less Believable !!

    What or why are they not held to a higher accountability
    Yet more examples of Why there is Such A Serious Problem
    With the Police & Policing.


    The same people who, unlike the citizens plebs have "special training" on how to handle firearms (even though their firearms have an odd habit of "accidentally discharging themselves") and will arrest citizens who mishandle or lose theirs, somehow are being held to a lower standard.

    Once again, it appears that in the police state not only do laws not apply equally to everyone but in many cases Law Enforcement=Law Exempt.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 26, 2016, 05:04:32 PM
    The same people who, unlike the citizens plebs have "special training" on how to handle firearms (even though their firearms have an odd habit of "accidentally discharging themselves") and will arrest citizens who mishandle or lose theirs, somehow are being held to a lower standard.

    Once again, it appears that in the police state not only do laws not apply equally to everyone but in many cases Law Enforcement=Law Exempt.







    Very well said,
    Still so many people just don't see it or don't want to see it / Believe it.
    Though the tide is turning slowly -- With the continued highlighting of
    The awful & unlawful behaviour -- It will Change.

    As I have stated before it's painful & infuriating reading some ( most )
    Of your posts --
    Though BIG THANKS & You Do an Excellent job Bring it to others Attention.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 27, 2016, 12:08:13 AM
    Barbaric..
    Will there be any outrage and protests for this since the attacker was black?
    What would've happened if there was no video and only the cops' word?
    Why didn't the other cop arrest the violent criminal?
    Why was the victim arrested for resisting arrest and tresspassing?
    Will those 2 violent criminals  be arrested? Will they face any actual consequences?

    Rhetorical questions of course.

    Houston police officer resigns after surveillance video emerges showing him beating a civilian at a train station with his baton


    A Houston police officer has resigned after surveillance footage emerged showing him using 'excessive force' against a civilian at a local train station.
    Graphic video released by Houston officials Monday shows an officer viciously beating a man on a train platform with his baton earlier this month, KTRK-TV reported.
    The video was caught by surveillance cameras at a train station in Houston, where police officers approached a man sitting on a bench in the early morning hours of September 14.

    The man, Darrell Giles, appeared to be asleep when the officers, Jairus Warren and Daniel Reynoso, approached him.
    After a brief conversation, the video shows Warren taking out his baton and striking Giles  at least 12 times.

    When an injured Giles fell to the ground, another brief conversation ensued before Warren continued wielding the baton.
    Giles was arrested and booked for resisting arrest, but those charges were dropped.

    'I am writing this letter to serve as formal notice that effective immediately, I am resigning from my position as a licensed enforcement officer with the METRO police department,' Warren wrote in his resignation letter, dated Monday.

    'It has been a great pleasure and honor to serve with the METRO police department. The department provides a great service to the people of Houston, and I hope you all have continued success.'

    Warren and Reynoso were both suspended after the incident, but the latter will remain on the force as the video does not show him taking an active part in the beating.

    Instead, Reynoso will be subject to additional training.

    Houston police acknowledged that the video shows Warren used excessive force against Giles.

    'Let me just say that I did count the number of times Mr. Giles was struck, but one is too many in my opinion if it's not justified,' Houston Metro police chief Vera Bumpers told KTRK.

    Bumpers said that the encounter shown on video was the second between police and Giles.

    The police chief said that Giles was asked to leave the platform by transit employees, but that he did not cooperate.

    'They had dealt with him a couple of times earlier that morning asking him to leave the platform and he was combative,' she said.

    Earlier this month, Giles told KTRK of his ordeal.

    'I thought he pulled a gun out,' Giles said on September 17, a few days after the incident.
    'He hit me so hard, he knocked me to the ground, so the first couple licks, he's just standing over me going bom, bom, bom making some noise.'
    'I don't remember too much. All I remember is bracing myself and just taking the licks and I was holding my arm up,' Giles added.



    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3808938/Houston-police-officer-resigns-surveillance-video-emerges-showing-beating-civilian-train-station-baton.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 27, 2016, 12:25:02 AM






    Very well said,
    Still so many people just don't see it or don't want to see it / Believe it.
    Though the tide is turning slowly -- With the continued highlighting of
    The awful & unlawful behaviour -- It will Change.

    As I have stated before it's painful & infuriating reading some ( most )
    Of your posts --
    Though BIG THANKS & You Do an Excellent job Bring it to others Attention.

    Thank you for the kind words. Hopefully by highlighting some of these injustices and atrocities some people, even on getbig, will indeed change and have a different outlook. The problem is that many times the most barbaric, violent and inexcusable cases of injustice and violence are ignored by the media and people get the impression that these things rarely, if ever, happen and that there are only 3-4 bad cops across the US. Or in some cases, people willfully choose to ignore these stories and blindly support the cops (or BlackLiesMatter or whoever) thinking "well the cops wouldn't do that without a reason, he must've done something to deserve it" and "I haven't done anything wrong, I have nothing to hide so I don't care if my rights are trampled". They don't realize how the laws do not apply equally and do not protect equally and they do not realize that many of these things could happen to them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 27, 2016, 01:46:28 PM
    Thank you for the kind words. Hopefully by highlighting some of these injustices and atrocities some people, even on getbig, will indeed change and have a different outlook. The problem is that many times the most barbaric, violent and inexcusable cases of injustice and violence are ignored by the media and people get the impression that these things rarely, if ever, happen and that there are only 3-4 bad cops across the US. Or in some cases, people willfully choose to ignore these stories and blindly support the cops (or BlackLiesMatter or whoever) thinking "well the cops wouldn't do that without a reason, he must've done something to deserve it" and "I haven't done anything wrong, I have nothing to hide so I don't care if my rights are trampled". They don't realize how the laws do not apply equally and do not protect equally and they do not realize that many of these things could happen to them.







    Well said - Totally agree.
    Some of it is The Media covering for them & some is simple brainwashing.
    Also lots of otherwise intelligent people see & know deep down what is going on
    Is wrong - only they choose to ignore it or can't quite accept it as it goes against
    All they have been taught about the police.
    It would mean they have been lied to & a lot of their world would have to be re-evaluated
    And as it isn't directly affecting them (yet) it's easier to continue with the False Belief.

    Keep up the good work.
    It's not just America that has awful corrupt police & judicial system
    The U.K. isn't far behind. Only public & police are not all carrying guns.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on September 27, 2016, 02:10:37 PM
    The reason a person gets in so much more trouble for offending against an officer, is the same reason an officer should be in all the more trouble in the situations seen here.  Exact same reason.  No excuses, trying to have one without the other.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 27, 2016, 07:02:57 PM
    South Florida Cops Ordered to Pay $6.2 Million for Rape and Coerced Punching of Genitals On-Duty

    One South Florida cop forced a woman to perform oral sex on him before raping her on the hood of his car under threat of arrest.

    The second cop ordered the woman’s female friend to punch him in the genitals, which is what got him off.

    Now Franklin Hartley and Thomas Merenda, who have since by fired from the Lauderhill Police Department, have to pay the women $6.2 million after a federal judge ruled against them in a civil trial last week.

    But the former cops may never be able to pay that amount considering they are still facing criminal charges that may send them to prison.

    And even if they don’t get convicted in their upcoming criminal trial, they will still likely not be able to pay that amount unless they happen to win the lottery or something.

    But they will never be able to live those debts down by filing for bankruptcy, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams ruled on Thursday.

    So they will likely have their wages garnished for the rest of their lives, not to mention have their property and assets seized. A steep price to pay for 90 minutes of coerced action in a vacant parking lot four years ago.

    But because they never retained lawyers or responded to the civil suit, the judge took the women’s claims as truth.

    And that will likely be used against them in their upcoming criminal trial.

    According to the South Florida Sun Sentinel:

    Merenda’s lawyer in the criminal case, Eric Schwartzreich, said his client did not hire an attorney to represent him in federal court because he could not afford it.

    “Getting water from a rock is going to be difficult in the collection process,” Schwartzreich said. “You can get a judgment but you gotta be able to collect. He doesn’t have anywhere near that type of money.”

    Before the alleged rape, Hartley had served five years as a cop and Merenda had served 11.

    Investigators later found Jane Doe 1’s underwear at the scene and GPS data supported the women’s claims that the encounter took place behind a closed tire shop on Commercial Boulevard and lasted more than 90 minutes, according to the lawsuit.

    Included in Jane Doe 1’s award was $75,000 in compensatory damages against Hartley “for his attempts to intimidate her after her sexual battery,” court documents show.

    The judge in Hartley’s criminal case rebuked Hartley for the same thing last October. He found Hartley had violated the terms of his release on bond by calling Jane Doe 1 at the restaurant where she worked.

    As a result, Hartley was placed on house arrest and ordered to wear a GPS monitor to track his whereabouts. He is allowed to leave home for work and certain errands and activities.

    The incident took place on May 24, 2012 after Hartley pulled the two women over after they had left a strip club, where they had been drinking. He ordered them to follow him to the parking lot where he then called Merenda.

    They were not arrested until more than a year later, which was when they were first placed on unpaid administrative leave, then terminated.

    Hartley, 36, was ordered to pay $4.5 million. Merenda, 38, was ordered to pay $1.7 million.

    Both have pleaded not guilty for their upcoming trial.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/27/south-florida-cops-ordered-to-pay-6-2-million-for-rape-and-coerced-punching-of-genitals-on-duty/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2016, 09:52:52 AM
    Once again the armed goons attacking innocent people and yet they face no actual consequences for their crimes. If it was normal citizens who did this they would have been arrested and taken to court for harassment and assault. But laws do not seem to apply to cops.

    Belligerent Cops Accuse Innocent Man of Breaking Into His Own House & Savagely Beat Him

    Greensboro, NC — In the American police state, sitting on your own porch in broad daylight, doing nothing untoward, could still earn a punch in the face and tackling to the ground by an ignorant, rogue cop — even if you’re fully compliant and respectful.

    Dejuan Yourse found that out the hard way on June 17, when he waited for his mom to meet him at the Greensboro, North Carolina, house he’d intermittently shared with her for years. Because he did not have a current key to the home, Yourse’s mother told him to relax on the porch until she arrived.

    Officer Travis Cole and an as-yet unidentified female officer, however, pulled up before she got there, and proceeded to harass, intimidate, insult, and ultimately brutalize Yourse — on his own front porch — for literally no reason.

    Body camera footage revealed the male officer’s unjustified “disturbing” excessive force, and — although far too many similar incidents go unpunished — this time, video led to some semblance of justice.

    Although the encounter begins cordially enough — the officers politely ask basic investigatory questions after being summoned to the scene by someone unfamiliar with Yourse who had assumed it was a case of breaking and entering — the tension escalates quickly, thanks to Cole’s assumption the man must be lying. Were it not for the costumes and badges of the police, the startling encounter would constitute pure thuggery.

    “What are you doin’ breaking into your mom’s house?” the officer asks, only partly sarcastically.

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

    Cole asks about the shovel next to the man, having been alerted to its presence by the unknown caller. Yourse explains he found it in the yard and then demonstrates how he pried open bottom of the automatic garage door to ensure the family dogs weren’t inside.

    Intent to find trouble where none exists, Cole continues questioning the man, remarking, “you can understand what it looks like.”

    “Yes, sir,” Yourse acknowledges repeatedly, adding he’d lived at the address for ten years.

    Still, Cole persists — somehow convinced a burglar would park their own car in the driveway of the house they intend to rob, and then wait on the front porch in the middle of the day for its occupants to return.

    To prove he isn’t lying, Yourse resorts to calling his mother, even handing the phone to Cole as it rings on speaker, to show him the number he dialed. Unfortunately and likely because she’s driving to meet her son, the call goes to voicemail.

    Having lived in the home for a decade, Yourse appears stunned by the cop’s obvious skepticism about his belonging there, but still maintains a respectful tone and does not hesitate to provide information. When the call to his mother fails to alleviate the situation, Yourse tells the cop his neighbors would be more than happy to verify his identity — and even offers to contact them by phone.

    There was a time where officers would perform due diligence when investigating a situation, and in this instance, with two officers on scene, one of the pair should have approached the neighbors Yourse repeatedly insists would verify he lived at that address.

    Instead the pair take it upon themselves to assume the black man in the quiet neighborhood must be fabricating a tale. After quibbling over the pronunciation of the man’s unusual last name — and even though Yourse has been polite, compliant, and phenomenally restrained, given the circumstances — Cole inexplicably decides he’s had enough.

    Poking Yourse with his finger, the thug cop firmly orders, “I said sit down.”

    “Hey, man, why are you doing this?” Yourse asks, showing obvious frustration at the needless harassment, again adding the address matches that on his ID, which he doesn’t happen to have with him.

    Cole then ironically tells the man he’s acting suspiciously ‘animated,’ which, of course, happened purely in response to the officer’s own rude escalation of the encounter.

    Fed up, Yourse dials someone and asks them to come to the house to prove he lives there.

    “Okay, off the phone,” Cole says, snatching the phone right out of the man’s hand.

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

    But it’s too late. Cole made the decision when he arrived on scene that — no natter what the black man on the front porch had to say — he didn’t belong and would be going to jail.

    Video shows the officer physically grab Yourse in an attempt to place him in handcuffs — for no reason.

    Repeatedly, the man asks the cop what he’s doing and tells him, rightly, he “can’t do this.”

    Cole insists he’s resisting, but Yourse says again and again, “I am not resisting!”

    As the female officer joins the struggling pair on Yourse’s front porch, Cole suddenly punches the man in the eye.

    Pulling him from the chair and onto the bricks, Cole over and over again tells Yourse to stop resisting — even though it’s clear the physically imposing and highly perplexed man did not do so, even after being decked in the face.

    After wrangling two pairs of cuffs onto Yourse’s wrists, the pair of costumed thugs drag him across his lawn toward a waiting patrol car, stopping at one point with the man face down.

    “Sit right here! Do NOT fuckin’ move. Don’t say another damned word,” Cole bellows at the innocent man. “This is not working out, apparently.”

    “Be an adult,” the female cop patronizingly adds.

    “What did I do?” Yourse demands.

    “Be an adult. Be an adult.”

    In an astonishingly rare outcome, however, the body cam footage of Yourse’s encounter with the errant cops led to a bit of justice. To avoid being charged, Cole resigned in August — but, ordinarily, that would mean he’d be free to simply move along to another department to brutalize other innocent civilians.

    “I was very concerned and disturbed about what I saw,” said Greensboro City Manager Jim Westmoreland last week after city officials viewed both officers’ body camera footage, local FOX8 reported.

    “Well it’s horrible!” exclaimed City Councilman Mike Barber. “And I say this as a white male representative.

    “If you get down to common decency and respect, that officer didn’t show it.”

    Greensboro Police Chief Wayne Scott told FOX8, “I wouldn’t dare as a chief tell anyone this kinda thing never happens. We have around 900 employees, over 680 sworn police officers on any given day getting dozens of calls and interactions. But what they can be assured of is we take this very serious.”

    On Monday, Greensboro City Council voted unanimously, 8 to 0, in favor of the permanent suspension of Cole’s law enforcement certification — cementing not only his resignation from the Greensboro force, but from any police work in any department. Mayor Nancy Vaughn apologized to Yourse, who attended the heated meeting, calling the incident “ugly.”

    Many in attendance felt Cole — and the female officer — should be criminally charged. Yourse did not sustain serious injuries, despite the blow to his eye.

    However, that permanent suspension might have, indeed, saved a life — Cole’s attack on Dejuan Yourse wasn’t his first time harassing and accosting innocent people.

    According to FOX8, the former officer once arrested two brothers for public intoxication and blocking traffic — on an empty street — as well as resisting arrest.

    One brother recorded the peaceful arrest on his cell phone, disproving Cole’s claims and eventually allowing charges to be dropped and forcing the officer to be suspended.


    Considering the thuggery, needless harassment, and blatant rudeness, contempt, and pretentiousness these bully cops displayed on film, the Council’s decision to prohibit Travis Cole ever to work in law enforcement again might be the best outcome possible.

    This is what sitting on your own porch waiting for mom, looks like in a police state:



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-sitting-porch-beaten-police-state/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2016, 03:32:32 PM
    Armed criminals threatening and terrorizing without real consequences.

    Massachusetts Detective who Threatened to Murder Teens and Plant Drugs Won’t Be Fired or Charged

    A Springfield, Massachusetts narcotics detective has been placed on leave for 60 days, but not fired, after videos surfaced showing him threatening to murder two teenagers and plant drugs on them — videos which have cast doubt on the detective’s numerous drug cases.

    Detective Gregg A. Bigda was caught on video on February 26 at the Palmer Police Department, where he interrogated two teenagers, who along with a third teen were suspected of stealing an undercover police car outside a pizza shop, when he made the threats, according to a report on MassLive.com.

    The videos were placed under seal by a judge to avoid exposing the identities of the two teens. However, a lawyer described them in court last week. According to MassLive:

    Details of the videos were discussed during arguments in Hampden Superior Court this week by defense lawyers attempting to get cases dismissed for defendants in unrelated drug cases. The attorneys contend the Palmer incident has damaged Bigda’s credibility, which now potentially taints the integrity of scores of drug investigations.



    Defense lawyer Jeanne Liddy on Wednesday quoted the videos in an unsuccessful attempt to get her client’s indictment for heroin distribution dismissed.

    “He was yelling and making very strong threats of physical violence,” Liddy told Hampden Superior Court Judge Tina S. Page. “Threatening to ‘crush his skull in the parking lot’ and ‘plant a kilo of cocaine in his pocket to put him away for 15 years.'”

    To drive his point home, Bigda tells one suspect that he could pin the Kennedy assassination on him “and make it stick.”

    “I’m not hampered by the truth because I don’t give a f—,” Bigda reportedly screams on video, which allegedly also includes sneering racial remarks leveled at the suspects.

    “You probably don’t even know who your f—ing father is,” he barks at one.

    This week, prosecutors allowed a man to plead guilty to heroin charges as a first-time offender because of Bigda’s involvement in the case, and Page sentenced the man to time served rather than sending him to prison, according to MassLive.

    Springfield Police Commissioner John Barbieri said he did not fire Bigda because he believed the case would not survive a civil service hearing, and the department could be forced to rehire Bigda and give him back pay.

    Instead, Bigda will be reassigned to a uniform day shift once his suspension ends.

    Barbieri added: “Based on the circumstances and the information available, I decided that that a very lengthy suspension was proper based on: the incident; Officer Bigda’s acceptance of responsibility for improper behavior; and his previous lengthy employment without recent serious disciplinary history.”

    Despite that last claim from the commissioner, a judge issued two restraining orders against Bigda earlier this year related to an incident during which an ex-girlfriend said the detective broke into her home at night, threatened her, and got into a “physical altercation” with her and a second incident in which the detective showed up at the woman’s home uninvited. Both restraining orders were eventually dropped, but Bigda was suspended from his job for 10 days.

    In 2005, Bigda was involved in an illegal search of a UPS package that was later thrown out by a Hampden Superior Court judge.

    The incident involving the teens is currently under investigation by the Hampden District Attorney’s Office.

    According to a report filed by a Wilbraham police officer, one of the Springfield police officers who responded to the police cruiser theft kicked one of the teens in the face while he was on the ground and in handcuffs. The officer was not named in the report.

    Detective Steven Vigneault, who filed the report about the stolen cruiser, recently resigned from the force.

    However, Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni said that Bigda will not face charges over his threats against the teens.

    The incident involving Bigda is the latest reminder that scandals related to the War on Drugs are extremely common in Massachusetts.

    For instance, since 2013, the Lowell Police Department has faced four lawsuits alleging that the department used informants to plant drugs and weapons on people to frame them. The scandal led to prosecutors dismissing 17 cases and vacating two convictions, although prosecutors denied the allegations and said police did nothing wrong.

    Recently, the American Civil Liberties Union asked the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court to overturn 24,000 drug convictions from 2003 to 2012 — about one in six drug convictions from that period. These cases were compromised by a corrupt chemist at a Massachusetts State Police crime lab named Annie Dookhan who was caught faking lab results in 2012.

    Less than a year after Dookhan was caught, a chemist at a different lab, Sonja Farak, was found to have stolen drugs from the lab where she worked over the course of eight years, compromising thousands of additional cases.

    And this year, an audit found that more than $400,000, thousands of pieces of drug evidence, and at least 60 firearms went missing from the Braintree Police Department’s evidence room. The officer who was in charge of the evidence room killed herself after the audit began; two of the missing firearms were later found in her home. Prosecutors have already dropped dozens of criminal cases as a result of the scandal.

    Also this year, the State Police opened an investigation into thefts of cash and prescription drugs from the Lee Police Department.

    Perhaps it’s time for police to use their limited resources to investigate real crimes, like murder, which often go unsolved in Springfield and elsewhere — and to get the investigations right.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/28/massachusetts-detective-who-threatened-to-murder-teens-and-plant-drugs-wont-be-fired-or-charged/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2016, 08:20:23 PM
    The "brave heroes" shot dead a 6 year old kid in "self defense"... #kidlivesmatter? Where is the outrage for this killing? Even though it happened almost a year ago it has been hardly mentioned in the news.

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

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

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

    His car is not even pointed in their direction.

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

    “I never saw a kid, bro.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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





    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/28/watch-louisiana-deputies-shoot-into-car-killing-6-year-old-jeremy-mardis/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 29, 2016, 01:54:18 PM
    The "brave heroes" shot dead a 6 year old kid in "self defense"... #kidlivesmatter? Where is the outrage for this killing? Even though it happened almost a year ago it has been hardly mentioned in the news.

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

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

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

    His car is not even pointed in their direction.

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

    “I never saw a kid, bro.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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





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









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

    Big tough cops with guns & No Brian's
    Take there Badges & Guns away they'd Crap Themselves.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on September 29, 2016, 02:27:00 PM
    Being responsible for your firearms? Only applies to citizens..

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

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


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

    LE get weapons stolen regularly, and innocent people die as a result.  It happened a couple times just recently.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2016, 12:01:46 PM
    This sounds equal parts odd and ridiculous. Once again, criminals hiding behind "qualified immunity".

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2016, 12:04:30 PM
    Disturbing Dashcam Shows Raging Cop Shatter His Windshield With Handcuffed Man’s Face

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

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



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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/52599-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2016, 02:43:17 PM
    Once again the "fearless heroes", "fearing for their lives", murdering innocent people and not facing any real consequences.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/52611-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 01, 2016, 05:05:53 PM
    This case was posted about a week ago. When will those criminals, as well as the criminal organizations who support them, face actual consequences for their crimes?

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

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

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

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

    An unidentified person who did not recognize the man thought he was a prowler and called police to report a possible case of breaking and entering. Responding officers Cole and Jackson approached Yourse under the assumption the caller — not the man relaxing calmly in broad daylight on the front porch where anyone passing by could clearly see him — must be correct.

    Although the encounter didn’t begin badly, the situation quickly unravels when it becomes apparent the feckless cops don’t actually want the truth, but would rather arrest a cooperative and  innocent man who had literally done nothing wrong.

    Jackson, whom police did not immediately identify, first walks to the porch and briefly interviews Yourse to assess the situation, and learns he’s waiting for his mother. Cole, dead set on prowler scenario, then walks to the porch, saying,

    “What are you doin’ breaking into your mom’s house?”

    “I’m not breaking in here,” Youse replies, laughing.

    Their exchange continues, with Yourse showing impressive restraint and remaining unflustered by the officer’s obvious skepticism he isn’t a robber. Although the man did not have his ID, had Cole employed even a smidgen of logic — Yourse was fully cooperative, sitting on a chair on the front porch of the home, with his own car parked in the driveway — the disturbing events that followed might never have happened.

    At one point, Yourse attempts to call his mother, handing the phone to Cole to prove he isn’t lying — but, as footage indicates, learning the truth about Yourse’s presence was likely never the goal for either officer.

    When his mother doesn’t answer, Yourse points to and names neighbors who would be glad to clear up the misunderstanding if one of the pair of cops would simply inquire.

    None of Yourse’s attempts to placate the cops work, and eventually, Cole decides it’s time to play tough guy — poking the man as he stands up, saying, “I said sit down.”

    “Hey, man, why are you doing this?” Yourse asks, finally showing a bit of frustration with the needless harassment.

    Cole shoots back with the ridiculous assertion Yourse is acting ‘animated,’ which was not the case until the thug cop escalated the encounter from harassment to intimidation.

    Determined to prove he isn’t out of place on the front porch of his own home, Yourse begins to call someone to the residence to prove his identity — but Cole, becoming the robber he assumed Yourse to be, snatches the man’s phone from his hands.

    “Hey, man, you can’t grab my phone like that!”

    But the bully cop has already decided to arrest the black man for being out-of-place in his own neighborhood, on his own front porch — truth be damned.

    Body cam footage shows Cole grab Yourse, knocking him to the porch floor as he tries to cuff his wrists. Several times, the officer bellows at the man to stop resisting, but video clearly shows — despite the wholly unjustified arrest — he never does.

    Jackson joins the ‘struggle,’ and Cole punches Yourse in the eye before the two finally figure out the man’s size would require two sets of cuffs. They then drag Yourse through his front yard to a waiting patrol car, at one point slamming him on his chest.

    “Sit right here! Do NOT fuckin’ move. Don’t say another damned word,” Cole threatens the innocent man. “This is not working out, apparently.”
    “Be an adult,” Jackson patronizingly adds for no reason.

    “What did I do?” the perplexed man demands fruitlessly.

    “Be an adult. Be an adult.”

    Before body cam footage was released, Yourse faced a litany of charges — documents cited by Triad City Beat said Jackson accused the man of “using his shoulder to press her wrist against a door frame” — but they have all since been dropped.


    Greensboro City Council voted unanimously last week to permanently suspend Cole’s law enforcement certification, which is perhaps the most fitting disciplinary action, considering many violent cops terminated from one department are free to move on to join another. In fact, Cole attempted to stave off such a move by resigning August 16th ahead of a disciplinary hearing, despite the District Attorney having found he did not commit a crime.

    Now Jackson has resigned — although many residents wondered whether she should have faced the same fate as Cole.

    But police association attorney William Hill, reported WFMY, claims the public release by the city of Jackson’s body cam video violated the N.C. Personnel Privacy Act — which is a misdemeanor — and trampled her rights to due process.

    Asked if Jackson or the police association plan to file a lawsuit in the matter, Hill had no comment.

    When people who support police without question claim the cops are ‘just doing their jobs’ and are keeping law and order, they ignore the growing number of cases like this.

    Yourse had not done anything illegal. He wasn’t  disrespectful or noncompliant. He did not escalate the situation. He did not become violent.

    He did, however, try to sit peacefully on his own front porch waiting for his mom — in a police state.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-resigns-video-beating-innocent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2016, 12:05:41 PM
    Arkansas State Rep. Who Pushed for Law to Film Cops — Arrested for Filming Cops

    Little Rock, AK — (RT) An Arkansas politician who helped pass state legislation protecting people who film the police, has been arrested for… filming the police.
    Representative John Walker was arrested by Little Rock police on Monday for filming the arrest of a driver and his passenger following a traffic stop and charged with “obstruction of government relations”.

    “I’m just making sure they don’t kill you,” said Walker to the driver being pulled over and subsequently arrested for an outstanding warrant, according to the police report.

    “I ordered Walker several times to leave or be arrested. Walker replied ‘arrest me’ at which point I did,” wrote the arresting officer.

    Walker’s associate, lawyer Omavi Shuker, 29, was also arrested at the scene for walking between the police vehicle and pulled over car.

    LRPD released dashcam footage of the incident so members of the public could see how the situation unfolded.

    By Tuesday, the Little Rock Police Department realized they had slipped up and dropped the charges against Walker, released a formal letter of apology and issued a full refund of his $1,000 bond. However, the charge against Shuker is still pending.

    Walker rejected the city’s apology for their reluctance to recognize “pervasive racial bias in some quarters of the police department” and for their decision to uphold the charges against his colleague.
    “It’s a mess,” said president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Tommy Hudson, to the Arkansas Times. “It’s a bad situation for everyone involved,” he added.

    Hudson went to reiterate that members of the public are well within their rights to film law enforcement.

    “There’s nothing you can do about it. You may not like it, but there’s nothing you can do,” he said.

    Walker co-sponsored the passage of a 2015 bill protecting the right of citizens to film events in public places, Arkansas was the first state in the country to adopt such a legislation.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/arkansas-state-rep-law-film-cops-arrested/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2016, 09:54:48 AM
    No free speech in the police state.

    Library Worker Beaten and Arrested for Peacefully Defending Free Speech of Patron

    Kansas City, KS — Since 9/11, the American police state has been constantly trying to outdo itself in the oppression of civil rights. From the Patriot Act to National Security Letters to warrantless wiretapping to militarized protest crackdowns, the State has been unable to hide its authoritarian desires.

    The oppression of rights and free speech was put on full display recently at the Kansas City Public Library, where a senior library staff member was brutally taken down and arrested by police and private security officers — for peacefully intervening in the harassment of a library patron.

    The armed guards were present as security detail for Dennis Ross, champion of the Israeli lobby and former Bush official who pushed for the Iraq invasion. Ross was giving a talk called “Truman and Israel.”
    Steve Woolfolk, director of public relations at the library, became the victim of abuse when he tried to remind the security detail of library policy after an audience member was forcibly removed from the microphone during the Q&A session.

    The library hosts several speaking events every month, and Woolfolk knew this would be one of the more controversial events where the library makes a rare exception allowing armed security guards. The library has conditions when security details are brought in for speakers.

    According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee (BRDC):
    “First, nobody could be forcibly removed for asking an unpopular question. Second, nobody could be removed at all without consulting with the library staff, who would only allow an individual to be removed if staff concluded they were an imminent threat.”

    Woolfolk had positioned himself near the stage where people ask questions, prepared to ask those who went on too long to give up the microphone for the next person. Jeremy Rothe-Kushel was first up.
    According to an official statement from the Kansas City Public Library issued on September 30:

    “The activist, Jeremy Rothe-Kushel, was first to the microphone when Ross’ presentation turned to Q&A, and his question inferred that the U.S. and Israel have engaged in state-sponsored terrorism. Ross responded and, when Rothe-Kushel attempted to follow up, he was grabbed by one of the private security guards and then by others in the private security detail. Steven Woolfolk, the Library’s director of programming and marketing, attempted to intervene, noting that public discourse is accepted and encouraged at a public event held in a public library.”

    Woolfolk thought he had successfully defused the situation, noting that Rothe-Kushel said he would leave voluntarily, which he attempted to do.

    But these off-duty police officers, along with private security guards from the Jewish Community Foundation (JCF), couldn’t stop themselves from initiating violence once they had caught the scent.
    The BRDC describes how Woolfolk, seeking to keep the peace and the commitment to free and lively discourse, became the victim of brutality by agents of the State and the Israeli lobby.

    “Woolfolk wanted to make clear that this was a public event at a public library and thus Rothe-Kushel was not trespassing. He went to find his supervisor, but before he could do so Woolfolk says an off-duty and out of uniform police officer grabbed him from behind and threw him against a pillar. Per Woolfolk, the officer never announced who he was or told Woolfolk he was under arrest, but just kept telling him to “stop resisting.” As Woolfolk told the Dissent NewsWire, he informed the officer, “I’d be happy to do whatever he wanted, and that all I was resisting was the urge to fall face first onto the floor.”  According to Woolfolk, a second police officer, this one in uniform, delivered several blows to Woolfolk’s knee, causing him to be diagnosed with grade 1 torn MCL. Eventually he was thrown over a chair and handcuffed. When he asked what he was being arrested for, the officer told him he didn’t know.”

    One can only imagine how other members of the audience felt as they watched this shameless assault by armed security on a library worker who did nothing more than peaceably calm down a volatile situation.
    Woolfolk was charged with interfering with the arrest of Rothe-Kushel, who was himself charged with trespassing and resisting arrest. Library director Crosby Kemper says the arrests were unwarranted and “an egregious violation of First Amendment rights.”

    “The First Amendment’s protection of the rights of free speech and assembly is cherished by all Americans but particularly by libraries and their patrons,” he says. “An overzealous off-duty police officer violated the rights of one of our patrons at Ambassador Ross’ talk in the Library and doubled down by arresting Steve Woolfolk, who was trying to explain the Library’s rules to the officer.

    In defense of the freedom of speech, the Library stands fully in support of Steve.”

    “For someone to be assaulted and then arrested for asking a question, in a public library of all places, is abhorrent. The library should be a place where people of all points of view can feel safe and welcome,” said Woolfolk. “Nobody, be it an individual or an agent of the state, should be able to take it upon themselves to silence a point of view simply because they disagree.”

    The security detail for Dennis Ross – who held important diplomatic positions in the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations – was certainly tapped into the surveillance state and most likely knew about the activism of Rothe-Kushel. He and an associate were the only ones searched before being allowed to enter, according to Rothe-Kushel.

    Ross has a notorious history in pushing the “statecraft” behind America’s military hegemony focused on the Middle East. He worked under neocon war-monger Paul Wolfowitz early in his career, and signed two letters in March 2003 by the Project for a New American Century supporting an invasion of Iraq.

    Ross served in various “special” roles involving the Middle East and Southwest Asia under three presidents and is a “distinguished fellow” at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which is funded by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

    Considering this background, it’s no wonder Ross didn’t stop his jackboots from pouncing on a peace activist challenging the narrative, or assaulting a member of the library staff who dared defend free speech. Stifling dissent is crucial to the message that invading countries and drone bombing women and children is necessary to secure the peace.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/library-worker-beaten-arrested-defending-free-speech/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2016, 09:37:11 PM
    Perverted criminal gang. Throw them in prison for life (and leave them in the general population).

    Michigan Cop Forces Fingers into Man’s Anus After Discovering Suspended License

    A Michigan cop forced his fingers into a man’s anus, then fondled the man’s genitals after arresting him for driving with a suspended license earlier this year.

    Something he can only do with a valid search warrant and a valid medical license, according to the man’s attorney.

    The incident was caught on video, prompting a federal lawsuit against Allen Park police officer Daniel Mack, who can be heard on video telling Kevin Campbell he has every right to probe his anus with his fingers.

    According to WXYZ-TV, the local news station that obtained the video:

    You can’t do that,” says Kevin Campbell on video captured inside the police lock-up on June 7, 2016.

    “Yes, I can. Yes, I can,” says Allen Park Police Officer Daniel Mack.

    “Why you putting your fingers in my [expletive]?? Why you feeling my [expletive],” says Campbell in the video.

    “Cause you got [something] tucked into your [expletive],” said Mack.

    But Campbell had nothing tucked into his anus.

    And Mack not only did not have a warrant, he is not a licensed medical professional. And Michigan law states both are necessary before a cop can legally probe a citizen’s anus, according to Campbell’s attorney, David Robinson.


    The incident took place June 7, 2016 after Mack pulled Campbell over for not having a visible license plate.

    Campbell said he had just purchased a minivan for his wife, so the car still had a temporary license plate, which was taped to the window.

    During the stop, Mack discovered Campbell was driving with a suspended license, which was when he was arrested.

    Once he was handcuffed in the patrol car, Mack then had a police dog search through the car for drugs which he can only do with probable cause and a search warrant, Robison said.

    But even after the dog didn’t find anything, Mack still was not satisfied, so he ordered Campbell to drop his pants after placing him in a jail cell at the police station.


    “Your pants [are] unzipped. I’m gonna find it one way or another, alright? So we can do this the easy way or the hard way,” said Mack on the video. “What you got in your drawers,” said Mack.

    After Campbell is put in the holding cell, Officer Mack appears to become irate.

    “Drop ‘em,” said Mack.

    “Drop what,” asked Campbell.

    “Your drawers,” said Mack.

    “You want me to get naked,” asked Campbell.

    “Yeah, you’re getting naked. You’re in a holding cell, you’re getting naked,” said Mack.

    Two other officers entered the cell to ensure Campbell drop his drawers and allow himself to be sodomized.

    Mack made no mention of the cavity search in his report.

    As we’ve seen with many officers who violate the Constitutional rights of citizens, Mack has a history of abusing his power.

    Last year, he arrested and abused a man for speeding in a Dodge Challenger when witness video show he had actually clocked another Dodge Challenger for speeding.

    Robison, the attorney representing Campbell, is also representing Arthur Chapman, the man in the above incident.

    Sexual abuse seems to be a common and accepted among officers at the Allen Park Police Department considering earlier this year, a female police officer named Tracie Brown filed a sexual harassment suit against a male officer named Sergeant Daniele Cerroni, whom she accuses of pulling out his penis and forcing her down, ordering her to perform oral sex on him.

    Brown also accused Cerroni of using both hands to choke her when she refused his sexual advances.

    When Brown filed an internal complaint, the chief assigned Allen Park Lt. Dave Williams to investigate.

    But Brown said he also sexually harassed her while investigating the allegations.

    When the local news reported on Brown’s lawsuit, a man named Matt Tracer came forward with his own lawsuits against the department, claiming he had been roughed up by Allen Park cops, then arrested when he tried to complain about it at the city council meeting.

    Tracer settled the first suit for $75,000, and the second suit for $58,000, according to Fox 2 Detroit.

    Campbell’s lawsuit, which you can read here, lists Mack, a cop named P. Morris and an “unknown officer.”

    Mack is seeking qualified immunity, claiming he had no idea that penetrating a man’s anus would be a violation of his Constitutional rights.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/03/michigan-cop-forces-fingers-into-mans-anus-after-discovering-suspended-license/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2016, 09:47:23 PM
    Another child dead because the scum "was visiting" and left the child unattended for 4 hours. Tragically ironic that cops will arrest parents who leave children in the car unattended even for minutes but somehow it appears that it's different if someone is a cop. As of yet, no arrests of course.

    2 Mississippi officers on paid leave after child left in patrol car dies

    KILN, Miss. –  Two police officers in Mississippi are on paid leave after a 3-year-old daughter of one of the officers died unattended in a patrol car.

    Hancock County Chief Deputy Sheriff Don Bass said Long Beach police officer Cassie Barker's daughter died Friday after the child was left in the car for four hours while her mother was visiting with Long Beach patrolman Clark Ladner. Both officers were off-duty at the time.

    Long Beach Police Chief Wayne McDowell told The Sun Herald that Barker and Ladner were placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation.

    Hancock County Sheriff Ricky Adam said the car was running and the air conditioning was on when investigators found the child, who died at a hospital.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/10/03/2-mississippi-officers-on-paid-leave-after-child-left-in-patrol-car-dies.html

    http://www.sunherald.com/news/local/counties/hancock-county/article105649806.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2016, 10:00:46 AM
    Cop Caught on Video Threatening to Kill Two Kids, Plant Cocaine on Them Gets Vacation — Not Fired

    Springfield, MA — Some residents and public officials of Springfield Massachusetts are wondering what it takes to get a police officer fired after a narcotics detective reportedly threatened to crush the skull of a juvenile joy ride suspect and plant cocaine on his body.

    The incident took place in February when Detective Gregg Bigda interrogated two of three juveniles who were suspected of taking an unmarked police car left idling outside a pizza shop. Bigda has been a police officer for more than 20 years, with more than 12 years of service as a detective.

    Bigda reportedly told one of the teens he’d crush his skull and plant a kilo of cocaine on his body, supposedly to make his death look drug related. The video recording of the interrogation was ordered sealed by a judge to protect the identities of the underage youth involved in the crime.

    But word of the threats led to an investigation which ultimately found Detective Bigda guilty of having violated department policies. He was ultimately suspended without pay for 60 days as a result of an internal affairs investigation. But that punishment wasn’t enough for many residents and public officials who say his actions warranted his firing.

    Springfield’s Mayor Domenic Sarno says he supports Police Commissioner John Barbieri’s decision to suspend Bigda, instead of firing him. He says that move would not have been successful because he would have likely won an appeal to the firing and the city would have been obligated to rehire Bigda.

    “I am not happy about it. This is what was recommended,” Sarno said. “It’s a severe, most severe suspension of 60 working days without pay and retraining.” But Mayor Sarno and five other councilmen, in an apparent attempt to be transparent, are calling on the video, as much of it as possible, to be released to the general public and the media.

    While the public and the media haven’t been privy to seeing the video and hearing Bigda’s alleged murderous threats, defense attorneys who represent accused criminals involved in drug cases of which Bigda was involved, have been given copies of the video. They’re now being permitted to use Bigda’s comments in defense of their clients, some of whom have already seen their sentences reduced. As a result, an alleged heroin dealer was released after having served only 3 years in jail awaiting trial, due in part to Bigda’s involvement as a potential witness in the court proceedings.

    Bigda’s actions, according to City Councilman Adam Gomes, have cost the city an untold amount of money as Bigda’s death threats and threats of planting evidence have called into question all of his involvement with alleged criminals and their cases. “It is a public safety issue with the opioid crisis and now some of these big dealers are going to be coming back to our communities,” said Gomez.  “We spend a lot of money trying to lock these people up and  now look at what we are going to do,” referring to being forced to let hardened criminals walk free.

    Whether or not Bigda is a crooked cop, who goes around doing what he threatened he’d do to the teens is anybody’s guess. However, many politicians are already voicing their own outrage over commissioner Barbieri’s decision to let Bigda off the hook with what some are calling a slap on the wrist.

    Springdale City Councilor Justin Hurst asked, “I think we have to ask when it comes to this case, at what point, at what standard is there when the commissioner feels a cop should be terminated?” The case against Bigda underscores how tolerant police departments are to their officers, while other professions, such as the teaching profession, may not be as lenient.

    The Springfield Police Departments handling of Detective Gregg Bigda may lead many to question, once again, why it is that abusive police officers seem to be held to a lower standard that the rest of America’s workforce. For example, if a teacher was filmed on tape threatening to crush the skull of a student or threatened to falsely report to administrators he or she had found drugs on a kid, would that teacher be allowed to continue teaching, even after being suspended without pay for two months?


    Bigda’s case has cost the taxpayer an untold amount of money, may very well have traumatized the young men involved, and may now serve to further illustrate the need for more effective police accountability.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/detective-threatened-kill-kids-suspended/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2016, 01:10:16 PM
    About time. Or how about allowing citizens to use ERAD against cops and police departments if the citizen files a complaint against them: they could seize the cop's and department's assets and money, even if there is no conviction or court decision. Now that's where you'd suddenly see the cops reacting and screaming about their "rights" and "due process".

    Police Theft So Out of Hand, State Just Passed a Law Banning Cops from Robbing Innocent People

    California — In a refreshing and unfortunately rare instance of reasonableness in policy, California Governor Jerry Brown recently signed into law a piece of legislation requiring police to secure an actual conviction before stealing people’s stuff in drug-related offenses.

    Civil asset forfeiture has been rightly likened to state-sanctioned armed robbery, as it allows police to commandeer cash, vehicles, homes, or any property of value — even if the person is never charged with a crime — and then use or sell the items for profit for their departments.

    Police in Oklahoma, for example, recently honed their thievery by rolling out nefarious Electronic Recovery and Access to Data machines, known as ERAD, which can scan your bank account and prepaid cards, and — if an officer believes any balances are tied to a crime — can wipe those accounts dry.

    California’s new law, formerly Senate Bill 443, quashes this nightmarish policing-for-profit in the exact way advocates of civil asset forfeiture (CAF) reform have been demanding for years.

    For police to keep cash stolen from people in amounts under $40,000 under the premise it has something to do with a drug-related crime, there must be an actual guilty verdict in court.
    “The new law establishes some of the strongest property rights protections in the most populous state in the nation,” explained Theshia Naidoo, legal director of criminal justice at the Drug Policy Alliance, in a statement. “The reforms are a model not only because of the policy enacted, but also for how the legislative process should work to promote the best interests of Californians.”

    California’s version of legalized armed robbery is particularly pernicious, as the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California pointed out, allowing some police departments to keep 80 percent of the proceeds from their CAF booty — well over the 65 percent cap mandated by state law.

    In part, this is due to civil asset forfeiture’s evil twin — federal equitable sharing — a convenient workaround for strict laws protecting civilians from greedy cops.

    “Unfortunately, California law enforcement has found a lucrative way to evade the state’s better-than-average laws: the federal government’s equitable sharing program,” wrote the Institute for Justice last year. “Indeed, a recent report by the Drug Policy Alliance noted that while state forfeiture revenue has remained flat, equitable sharing revenue has skyrocketed. Between 2000 and 2013, California agencies collected an eye-popping $696 million, or nearly $50 million each calendar year, through equitable sharing with the Department of Justice. A large majority of both assets seized and proceeds received resulted not from adoptions but from joint task forces and investigations with the federal government. This vehicle for equitable sharing will continue despite DOJ policy changes announced in January 2015. California law enforcement also hauled in almost $108 million from the Treasury Department’s equitable sharing program during fiscal years 2000 to 2013.”

    As High Times noted, a report by the Drug Policy Alliance in 2013 found the average cash seized totaled $5,100 — an alarmingly high sum, considering the same report cited an investigation which discovered in roughly 80 percent of those cases, the person was never charged with a crime.

    Law enforcement unions around the country have adamantly opposed any reforms to their convenient second profit source, and after a brief federal suspension of civil asset forfeiture at the beginning of the year, the Department of Justice reversed course, re-implementing CAF in April.

    As voracious as police appetites’ for your stuff might be, one of the original creators of the civil asset forfeiture program excoriated its current manifestation as profiteering from behind a badge in an op-ed penned in the Wall Street Journal in February this year. Brad Cates, director of the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Asset Forfeiture Office from 1985 through 1989, wrote:

    “During the Reagan administration I helped establish these programs because I believed they would quickly channel seized criminals’ profits into the fight against organized crime and drug cartels. Yet over time we have created a new bad incentive: policing for profit, out of the reach of the proper legislative budget process.”

    California’s law will go into effect in the beginning of 2017, and — out of several states recently attempting to curb the ridiculous practice — is so far the only legislation to mandate an actual conviction, a guilty verdict, in order for police to keep assets.

    Writes the Drug Policy Alliance:

    “Civil asset forfeiture has allowed the government to seize and keep cash, cars, real estate, and any other property suspected of being connected to criminal activity even if the owner is never convicted of a crime. While civil asset forfeiture was originally conceived in the 1980s as a way to target the resources of criminal organizations, it has become a method for law enforcement to confiscate and profit from the savings and property of those not charged with any criminal wrongdoing […]

    “SB 443 requires that state and local agencies abide by stricter standards before they profit from federal forfeitures.”

    Echoing countless others, Cates concludes his editorial in no uncertain terms:
    “Three decades ago I helped create our civil-asset forfeiture system; now it is time to end it.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/theft-robbery-police-ban-california/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2016, 01:14:10 PM
    Sadistic Officers Murder Handcuffed Man by Stuffing Toilet Paper Down His Throat

    Chicago, IL — (CN) A woman claims in federal court that prison guards beat her glaucomic ex-husband while his limbs were cuffed and stuffed paper down his throat until he suffocated and died.

    Terrance Jenkins, 56, an avid card and dominoes player, had gone from his cell at Pontiac Correctional Center, about 100 miles southwest of Chicago, toward the outdoor recreation area on Oct. 4, 2015, when three correctional officers approached him, according to the complaint.

    During a pat-down search, either Officer Deal or Bufford, whose first names are not included in the lawsuit, allegedly noticed that Jenkins had a small amount of toilet paper in his breast pocket.

    The officer threatened to take Jenkins’ “yard time” away, as the paper was not allowed, the complaint states.

    “Jenkins told the officer that he needed the toilet paper because of his glaucoma and excessive eye drainage,” for which he was receiving ongoing medical treatment, his ex-wife, Phyllis Ellis, claims.

    “Deal or Bufford cursed at Mr. Jenkins and yelled at him to ‘cuff the f*ck up,’ or words to that effect,” according to the lawsuit, which Ellis filed Monday in Chicago federal court.
    Correctional Lt. James Boland then “approached Mr. Jenkins and sprayed him with mace,” Ellis claims.

    “[Boland], Bufford, and Deal attacked Mr. Jenkins, beating him and dragging him away from the area,” the lawsuit continues. “At one point, defendants slammed Mr. Jenkins against the floor, causing him to scream out in pain that they were breaking his arm.”

    Ellis says the officers “restrained Mr. Jenkins with handcuffs and leg irons, and led him into a room out of the view of the other prisoners.”

    “Despite the fact that he was totally immobilized, defendants then viciously attacked Mr. Jenkins, beating him about the face, head, neck, back, wrists, ankles, and knee,” the lawsuit continues. “Defendants then shoved a piece of paper (perhaps the same toilet paper that triggered the beating) so far down Mr. Jenkins’s throat that he suffocated. They then smothered him with their weight, causing him to asphyxiate.” (Parentheses in original.)

    Jenkins’ autopsy said he died as a result of “restraint asphyxia and airway occlusion by a foreign object” caused by weight applied to him while in a prone position with arms and legs restrained, according to the complaint.

    “This was not the first instance of excessive force by defendants [Boland], Deal, and/or Bufford,” the complaint states. “For example, approximately one week before they killed Mr. Jenkins, defendants Deal and Bufford beat another prisoner at Pontiac.”

    In addition to Boland, Deal and Bufford, the complaint also names as defendants the warden, Randy Pfister; assistant warden, Marvin Reed; and Reed’s unknown predecessor, who allegedly “failed to provide appropriate supervision, discipline, or training, or to take any action to prevent the repeated instances of excessive force.”

    The eight-count complaint asserts claims for excessive force, failure to intervene, conspiracy, emotional distress, battery, negligence, wrongful death and survival.

    Ellis seeks compensatory and punitive damages, attorneys’ fees and costs, and a jury trial. She is represented by Sarah Grady with Loevy & Loevy in Chicago.

    The Illinois Department of Corrections did not immediately respond Tuesday to an emailed request for comment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officers-murder-man-stuff-paper-throat/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2016, 12:26:24 PM
    Texas Man Dies after Pleading “I Can’t Breathe” as Jail Guards Pile on Top of him Pepper Spraying him

    A disturbing and infuriating video has surfaced showing a group of Texas jail guards piling on top of an inmate who repeatedly tells them he can’t breathe, only for him to be found dead in his cell the following morning.

    Nineteen times in nine minutes is how many times Michael Sabbie told the guards, “I can’t breathe,” only for them to pepper spray him and tell him to stop resisting when the video shows him not to be resisting.

    The incident took place at a private prison in Texas on July 21, 2015, but the video was made public today by The Huffington Post as part of an investigative report on jailhouse deaths.

    The basic details of Sabbie’s death, one of more than 800 jail deaths counted by The Huffington Post in the year after Sandra Bland died in jail on July 13, 2015, wouldn’t normally raise much suspicion. The initial news reports said that Sabbie, who was arrested on a domestic assault charge, was found “unresponsive” on the morning of July 22, 2015, suggesting he died in his sleep. A medical examiner ― noting Sabbie’s obesity and that he had significant heart muscle damage ― deemed his death “natural,” a label that implies it was an unavoidable tragedy. Those circumstances wouldn’t make Sabbie’s death terribly unique: Heart disease killed an average of 226 jail inmates a year from 2000 until 2013, making it the leading cause of jail deaths after suicides.

    But calling Sabbie’s death “natural” obscures more than it illuminates, and would hide the failures that very likely could have prevented his death. A quick internal investigation might have absolved jail employees of any wrongdoing. But in Sabbie’s case, there’s video.

    “If you just looked at the cause of death, you would think that Michael died of some sort of hypertensive heart condition, and that may be true,” said Erik J. Heipt, one of the attorneys representing the Sabbie family. “But if we didn’t have a video, we’d never know that he had been begging for help due to his shortness of breath and inability to breathe. We’d never know that he said ‘I can’t breathe’ 19 times in the nine minutes that we hear in that video.”

    Sabbie, 35, had been arrested two days earlier after arguing with his wife over money. Police said his wife accused him of threatening her before stepping out of the car and walking away.

    Sabbie denied threatening his wife, but was charged with misdemeanor assault.

    He was transported to the privately run Bi State Jail in Texarkana, a city on the Texas/Arkansas border, where guards make about ten dollars an hour.

    A United States Department of Justice investigation found the guards did nothing wrong.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/06/watch-texas-man-dies-after-pleading-i-cant-breathe-as-jail-guards-pile-on-top-of-him-pepper-spraying-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2016, 12:30:23 PM
    Cop Watcher Arrested at His Home After Police Issued a Warrant for Filming a Traffic Stop

    Ryan Scott was arrested at his home Monday evening by Dekalb County Sheriff’s officers.
    Scott is being charged with obstructing a peace officer during a traffic stop on Saturday night, which was initiated by Officer A. Becker because Scott had expired registration on his vehicle.

    The warrant states that Scott “knowingly obstructed the performance of Deputy A. Becker of an act within his official capacity.” The warrant goes on to claim, “[Scott] repeatedly refused and failed to comply with lawful orders to exit his vehicle.”

    During the traffic stop, Becker became agitated and attempted to escalate the situation because, according to Becker, the window was not down far enough when he began to slip the ticket and clipboard into Scott’s hand. Scott immediately asked for a supervisor.

    However, there was no supervisor called to the scene.

    Scott merely exclaimed that the window was opened enough for the officer to give the clipboard and that there was no cause to ask him to remove himself from the vehicle. Meanwhile, he is still waiting for a supervisor to be called to the scene, as he requested.

    After several minutes, Becker finally decides to hand the clipboard to Scott, showing that indeed there was enough space to hand Scott the ticket and clipboard; this means that there was no reason to request Scott to exit the vehicle in the first place.

    The facts are clear: there was no obstruction.

    Scott did not knowingly obstruct the officer in any capacity. The ticket was signed, and there was absolutely no cause for Scott to be removed from the vehicle.
    So, why were there two officers serving an arrest warrant on Scott two days later? Why is Scott being targeted?



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-watcher-arrested-filming-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2016, 01:43:12 PM
    What an honorable hero, stomping on a man's head and then retiring at the old age of 46, like many criminals who just happen to resign or retire after violent incidents: "I had my 20 years in, and I proudly served the city

    Meanwhile, it took 31 cops to stop 2 people in a stolen car.

    Police Release Video Of Arrest At Center Of Excessive Force Investigation

    http://www.courant.com/community/hartford/hc-hartford-arrest-footage-1006-20161005-story.html


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2016, 02:09:44 AM
    Abusing the elderly should warrant the death penalty.

    Texas Cop with History of Abuse Tackles Elderly Man, Breaking his Ribs

    An elderly couple riding scooters in a Texas Walmart ended up losing each other, so the wife rode outside the doors with items in her basket, prompting an employee to detain her and call police, accusing her of shoplifting.

    Guadalupe Martinez, who is in her 70s, said she was not shoplifting, but looking for her husband, Juan Martinez, who is also in his 70s.

    But they brought her into a back room anyway and began telling her she was permanently banned from Walmart.

    When Buda police officer Demerriel Young arrived on the scene, he stepped into the room, and was followed by Juan Martinez, who stepped off his scooter to remain with his wife.

    Body cam footage released this week shows Young ordering him out of the room, but Juan Martinez insisted he wanted to remain in the room with his wife.

    That was when Young tried to shove him out the door, causing the elderly man to fall on the floor, yelling out in pain.

    Juan Martinez remained laying on the floor for five minutes with several broken ribs until paramedics arrived, according to a federal lawsuit filed Monday.

    The lawsuit, which you can read here, also states that the Buda Police Department hired Young despite knowing he had a history of using excessive force.

    The incident took place October 3, 2014 in the city of less than 10,000, just south of Austin, but charges against the couple, including shoplifting charges against Guadalupe; and interference charges against Juan; are still pending.

    Walmart provided the following statement to WVUE, who first reported on the body cam video.

    “We take this matter seriously. We haven’t been served with the complaint yet. Once we have the opportunity to review the allegations, we’ll respond appropriately with the court.”



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/07/watch-texas-cop-with-history-of-abuse-tackles-elderly-man-breaking-his-ribs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2016, 02:16:17 AM
    What an honorable hero, stomping on a man's head and then retiring at the old age of 46, like many criminals who just happen to resign or retire after violent incidents: "I had my 20 years in, and I proudly served the city

    Meanwhile, it took 31 cops to stop 2 people in a stolen car.

    Police Release Video Of Arrest At Center Of Excessive Force Investigation

    http://www.courant.com/community/hartford/hc-hartford-arrest-footage-1006-20161005-story.html




    More on this case:

    Disturbing Video Shows a Cop Stomp Handcuffed Man’s Head So Hard He Bounces Off the Ground

    Hartford, CT — Concerns over excessive force only intensified after Hartford, Connecticut, police released dash camera footage of a controversial arrest — showing an officer in street clothes walk up to a handcuffed suspect sitting on the curb, and kick his head into the ground — for no apparent reason.

    “That there is obviously of serious concern to the police department and now to the state’s attorney’s office,” Hartford Deputy Police Chief Brian Foley asserted, according to WFSB.
    Ricardo Perez’ mugshot — eyes bruised and one swollen shut, a large bandage on his forehead, and his right jaw alarmingly distended — was sufficiently disturbing to spark an immediate internal investigation, even before the department viewed the video.

    “The following morning, based on the appearance solely on the mugshot because we weren’t aware of the video at that point, we started an immediate internal investigation,” Foley stated.
    On June 4, officers pursued Ricardo Perez and Emilio Diaz through the streets of Hartford and West Hartford in a vehicle police suspected to be stolen. When the chase ended, officers arrested the pair — but the details of those arrests are now the subject of multiple investigations.

    According to reports, officers punched, struck, and used their Tasers against Perez and Diaz — both men’s mugshots show facial injuries.

    While Hartford police initially claimed Perez’ dramatic head injuries occurred when the vehicle’s airbags deployed, the new dash camera footage shows a cop in street clothes — later identified as Sgt. Sean Spell, a 20-year veteran of the force who has since retired — walking up to the handcuffed man sitting calmly on the curb and deliberately, stomping his head onto the pavement with enough force, it bounces.

    (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/1bwiqr.gif)

    Video proves Perez had done nothing to warrant such a vicious attack — regardless of whether the officers believed the men had stolen the vehicle. Spell’s ferocious kick to the head — and reports the officers punched both suspects — appear to be little more than cops resentful the two men tried to flee.

    In addition to the Hartford Police internal review of possible “excessive force,” the state attorney’s office has also initiated a separate investigation.
    Hartford police initially attempted to allay the public’s concerns over the excessively violent arrest by reiterating Perez’ criminal record.

    “This is a man [who’s] been arrested 18 times in the city of Hartford,” Foley said in June, reported WFSB, “he’s a convicted felon, he’s run from the cops at least four times before this, he has multiple reckless driving charge, multiple interfering with police charges, he rammed several cruisers and actually hit one of our detectives with his car as he was pulling away and getting away.”

    It is imperative to note, there have been no reports Perez had a history with firearms or that any gun was recovered at the scene. Simply put, a man in hand cuffs sitting on the side of the road, acting in compliance with police at that moment, did not need to be subdued or otherwise further physically engaged by officers — and nothing can justify Spell’s rogue, tough-guy stomp.

    However, the now-retired cop told WNPR, “There is a reason for the use of force” — although he declined to elaborate on what that reason might be, or to comment further except to reiterate he’s cooperating with the investigations.

    Hartford police released the long-awaited dash cam footage yesterday — which, despite the months of delay — represents an effort toward transparency.
    “[W]e’re not going to wait until the end of the investigation to release the facts to the public. We’ve seen nationally this has caused great distrust in the community,” Foley was quoted by WFSB. “We were told this morning we could release the information. It was important for us to get it out to you today.”

    Foley acknowledged to WNPR the footage is indeed ‘difficult to watch,’ and explained he has had problems explaining why Spell was allowed to retire.

    “I know that the optics of it are difficult and it seems that way. That would be for him to answer. The question we get is, how do you allow someone to retire? The answer is there are no mechanisms in place for us — no state law, no ordinance, nothing in our HR rules, nothing in our collective bargaining agreement — that would prevent an employee from retiring when involved in this type of an investigation.”

    Retiring or resigning following accusations of excessive force is how rogue officers are able to move from one department to the next without facing sufficient, if any, disciplinary measures. The phenomenon has become so prevalent, it’s earned a moniker: “Gypsy cops.”

    Several state officials and civil rights groups are additionally concerned Spell will ultimately be able to retain his pension — while others who previously viewed the video believe the former officer’s arrest is imminent.

    “On its face, the video raises very serious concerns, and I commend the Hartford Police Department for making the video public as soon as they were permitted to do so by the State’s Attorney,” said Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin in a statement cited by WNPR. “As a city, we are committed to transparency and openness, we have an outstanding and dedicated police force, and we expect our officers to uphold the highest standards – and to be held accountable when they fall short.”

    In addition to Spell’s savage pounding of Perez’ head, footage seems to show officers beating one or both men several times with their batons.
    State Rep. Angel Arce told WNPR he and other legislators viewed the footage several weeks ago, and were “disturbed” by what they saw. But, he explained, the footage makes clear the attack was unprovoked and feels Spell will be charged.

    “I truly believe that I’m going to see an arrest being made. I mean, it’s all on tape,” he told the outlet. “They’ve got evidence enough to do it to make an arrest and press charges on this officer.”
    The full footage of released video can be seen below:



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-stomp-suscpects-head/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2016, 09:56:03 AM
    Cop’s Own Dashcam Catches Him Pulling Over and Raping Multiple Women While On Duty

    Spring Hill, TN — The lure of authority is attractive to those who seek domination over others, and there’s no easier outlet to assert that authority than becoming a police officer. A now-former Spring Hill cop proves the case quite well after being caught pulling women over and raping them. His sick desire to dominate and rape was so flagrant that he cared not about these crimes being recorded on his own dashcam.

    According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Spring Hill Police Officer Christopher Odom was caught raping at least two women in two separate incidents during on-duty traffic stops.
    The TBI say they launched their investigation on August 1 after they learned Odom pulled over a car driven by a female in June and raped her.

    According to a press release, the TBI says it happened again with another female in July.

    Even more worrisome was the fact that in his spare time, Odom worked as a substitute teacher last year in Lewis County. According to WSMV, students at Lewis County High School who used to have him as a substitute teacher told Channel 4 they were shocked.

    “It’s crazy. He talked to us just like an everyday teacher did,” said Donavan Conner, a student. “It makes you wonder about everybody else you talk to. ”

    However, ‘everybody else’ is not drawn to the job of asserting authority over others. As the famous quote by Lord Acton goes, Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

    It is this draw to power that leads to an increase in sexual assault among police officers. According to the Cato Institute, more than 9 percent of reports of police misconduct in 2010 involved sexual abuse, making it the second-most reported form of misconduct, after the use of excessive force. Comparing that data to FBI crime statistics indicates that “sexual assault rates are significantly higher for police when compared to the general population.”

    Odom is one of many officers who are caught raping those they’ve sworn to protect. A short google search will reveal the near epidemic of police rape that takes place in the United States.
    Not only is sexual assault higher among cops, but it also largely goes unpunished.

    Police sexual misconduct is so common that more than 1,000 officers have had their licenses revoked in just the last six years for it, that we know about — nearly half of them involving underage victims. However, only a small fraction of those officers received jail time.

    In regards to Odom’s despicable crimes, the Spring Hill Police Department released the following canned statement:

    “The actions of Officer Odom are not indicative of a Spring Hill Police Officer and is in direct violation of departmental policies. The department takes great pride in serving our community and preserving the trust of our citizens.”

    The department also asked for any other victims to come forward.

    “If there are [more victims] we want to know, we want to get them justice. We want them to come in, be able to look us in the eye, speak with us about what’s going on in their lives.”
    On Monday, 26-year-old Odom was indicted by a grand jury on charges of rape, sexual battery, and two counts of official misconduct.

    According to the indictment, Odom detained the victims beyond the scope of a traffic stop for the purpose of coercing the victims into performing sexual acts.
    The indictment states he used force to accomplish the act and knew the victim did not give consent.

    As PINAC reports, the bureau watched hundreds of Odom’s dash cam traffic stops and saw the evidence they needed to seek a criminal indictment on Odom. Additionally, upon watching the dash-cam, prosecutors say there may be a third unidentified female victim.

    He was arrested and booked into the Maury County jail on $75,000 bond. He spent only one hour behind bars before being released.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-dashcam-raping-women/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2016, 09:59:37 AM
    Cop Illegally Enters Innocent Family’s Backyard & Kills Their Dog, Leaving 7 Puppies Without Their Mom

    Shreveport, LA — A Shreveport, Louisiana, cop inquiring about trash in someone else’s lot, walked into Patricia Powell’s backyard — after she explicitly told him not to — and executed her beloved dog for literally no reason.

    “I told him I had a dog in my yard just had puppies,” Powell told local NBC 6 News. “Do not step in my yard because she is protecting her babies and he got out anyway and so when she came from up under the house, he shot her, twice.”

    Powell, devastated by the inexplicable turn of events that led to the untimely death of Coco, told NBC 6 the unnamed officer had responded to a call further down the street when he stopped to ask about refuse in a lot near her property.

    Although she doesn’t own the lot where the officer spotted the trash, Powell told the NBC 6 she cleans it on occasion because of its proximity to her home — but she suspects the errant dog-killing officer was only looking for trouble where none existed.

    “What reason you have to stop at 8:15 behind some trash?” Powell said of the cop. “The lot doesn’t even belong to me. Why did you stop here? That means you were picking.”

    Public Information Officer for the (as-yet unidentified) Shreveport Police Officer, Corporal Marcus Hines, refused to comment on the matter as the department is in the process of investigating whether or not policy and procedure were followed when Powell’s dog was shot dead.

    Such internal investigations so infrequently lead to proportional, if any, disciplinary action, they’ve become the subject of a cynical quip: We investigated ourselves and found we did nothing wrong.

    Hines acknowledged that the “information we have is that the officer did not receive a call or a dispatch call to that residence” — confirming he would not have had any justifiable reason to be on Powell’s property or kill her pet.

    “You don’t have to necessarily be dispatched out to the call,” Hines explained of officer-initiated encounters. “The officer can see something that draws his or her attention and make contact at that point.”

    Although that explanation appears vaguely reasonable, the officer who fired two shots at Powell’s dog had no justifiable reason to be on her property — particularly after she advised him not to enter the area where Coco protected the new puppies.

    As pursuant to any investigation, Hines told NBC 6 that a supervisor is summoned to the scene any time an officer fires their service weapon, and statements are then taken from all involved parties and any witnesses.

    “All I want is help for my babies,” Powell lamented. “The seven children I have to raise by myself. The kids, the puppies. They are my life, because their mother was my life.”

    Tragically, Powell’s interaction with a trigger-happy cop too cowardly to deal with a pet dog is far from uncommon — and is now termed ‘puppycide.’
    As John Whitehead wrote for the Rutherford Institute in August, “a dog is shot by a police officer ‘every 98 minutes’” in the United States. According to the Department of Justice, that means 25 dogs are killed by cops every single day.

    In many instances, officers claim fear for their lives of dangerous dogs — but the reality proves otherwise.

    As journalist and author of “Rise of the Warrior Cop,” Radley Balko, has exhaustively documented, “dog shootings in which a police officer said he felt ‘threatened’ and had no choice but to use lethal force, including the killing of a Dalmatian (more than once), a yellow Lab , a springer spaniel, a chocolate Lab, a boxer, an Australian cattle dog, a Wheaten terrier, an Akita… a Jack Russell terrier… a 12-pound miniature dachshund… [and] a five-pound chihuahua.”

    Even when the breed is generally if unjustifiably considered ‘dangerous,’ police frequently create circumstances to putatively justify shooting and killing a dog — such as pushing open a closed door intended to prevent a dog from exiting, or as in Powell’s case, entering an area the officer was specifically advised not to.

    “They’re very close relationships that are developed between pets and their owners so for a pet to be killed, unfortunately, is something that we would hope that never happens,” Hines asserted.
    Powell plans to raise the puppies and was referred by NBC 6 for additional help from a local animal shelter.

    While the Shreveport Police Department busies itself with the investigation of the fatal shooting of Coco, the cowardly trigger-happy cop remains on the force — free to again enter someone’s property against their wishes and for no reason — and to execute their beloved pets.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-womans-dog-leaving-puppies/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2016, 02:57:14 PM
    I can't imagine a parent being held at gunpoint by dangerous armed criminals and then watching his child being shot and not responding in kind to defend the life and safety of their child and their family.

    Innocent Family Sues After Police Tried to Kill Their Dog, But Shot Their 10yo Son Instead

    Coffee County, GA — The family of an innocent 10-year-old boy has recently filed a $4 million lawsuit on behalf of their son after he was shot by a trigger happy Georgia cop. The boy, Dakota Corbitt was shot in the back of his leg while officer Michael Vickers was attempting to kill his dog.

    Dakota Corbitt and the rest of his family had done nothing wrong when they were swarmed by cops who held them at gunpoint before shooting the child.

    The incident happened in July of 2014 when officers were looking for the suspect of an armed robbery and police shooting. The suspect, 19-year-old Christopher Barnett had fled to the woods near Corbitt’s home.
    During Barnett’s apprehension, all hell broke loose as this innocent family had their rights violated at the hands of public servants.

    According to the lawsuit, the defendants, Coffee County, Sheriff Doyle Wooten and deputy Michael Vickers, “jointly and severely deprived the plaintiffs and plaintiffs’ minor children of their rights secured by the 4th and 14th Amendments of the United States and as a direct and proximate result of said deprivation defendants’ negligence, gross negligence, and the wanton and willful indifference to the rights of the plaintiffs individually and the rights of the plaintiffs’ minor children, caused the physical pain, suffering, mental anguish and ultimately the permanent restriction of one minor’s right leg.

    “On that date, Vickers, along with other officers of the Coffee County Sheriff’s Department and GBI agents, participated in an operation to apprehend a criminal suspect, Barnett. The defendants and fellow officers entered the plaintiff’s property at 145 Burton Road and demanded all persons in the area, including the children, to get down on the ground. Other than the suspect, one adult citizen, Damion Stewart, was on the property outside the residence with two children. While complying with the officers’ demands, Stewart was brutally handcuffed in the presence of his children and the barrel of a gun was placed in his back. Others located on the property included Jerry Rich, who was a minor at the time, Amy Corbitt’s minor child, Elizabeth Bowen’s minor child, and Tonya Johnson’s minor child. Corbitt was inside the home.

    “The remaining minors were held at gunpoint, each having an officer forcefully shove the barrel of a loaded gun into their backs. These children feared for their lives and have been stripped of their confidence in the justice system.

    “While the children were lying on the ground obeying the orders of Defendant Vickers, said Defendant unreasonably, maliciously, negligently and without necessity or any immediate threat of cause, discharged his firearm at the family pet twice. The first shot missed the animal, which retreated under the residence. At no time during the interim did Vickers ask someone to restrain the animal and at no time did any other agent attempt to restrain or subdue the animal. Approximately eight to ten seconds elapsed since the first shot and Vickers then discharged his weapon a second time as it was approaching the pet’s owners. He again missed the animal and struck Corbitt’s son in the back of the right knee.”

    “I ran out the house with one of my kids and saw my little brother on the porch pouring blood,” Janelle Rich, Corbitt’s sister said after the shooting.

    According to the lawsuit, Vickers is no stranger to excessive and unnecessary force. This trigger happy dog killing cop was an apparent ticking time bomb and Corbitt just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    “Defendant Vickers has an extensive history of using unnecessary, excessive force of which Defendant Wooten is and was at the time of the subject matter incident aware of,” reads the lawsuit. “Vickers’ extensive prior excessive force record includes approximately 10 separate occurrences in the immediate three years prior to the incident, the most recent of which was when Vickers shot and killed a dog during the execution of a search warrant about a month before the incident.”

    Corbitt is still required to receive therapy for the wound, now two years later. He’s also left emotionally traumatized and has little faith left in the system that led to him being shot.

    The lawsuit seeks a total of $4 million, with $2 million of that for Corbitt and the shooting victim to cover past and future medical expenses, recovery for pain and suffering, emotional distress, permanent disfigurement, and punitive damages.

    Unfortunately, cops shooting children while trying to kill their dog is not isolated.

    After interviewing the victim of a hit-and-run incident on June 19, 2015, Officer Jonathan Thomas was returning to his patrol car when he heard a woman from another house calling for help. Andrea Ellis had cut her arm on a piece of broken glass, and her sister, Brandie Kelly, called 911 to request an ambulance. While Kelly was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, she noticed Officer Thomas outside and called out to him for medical assistance.

    Arriving at Ellis’ front door, Thomas suddenly pulled out his gun when he noticed the family dog approaching him. Although the pet did not attack Thomas, the officer abruptly opened fire and missed.
    Instead of gunning down the dog, Thomas had mistakenly shot Ellis’ 4-year-old daughter, Ava Ellis, in the thigh.

    Last month, Ellis’ family was awarded $780,000 for the incompetent actions of officer Thomas.

    Instead of firing Thomas or arresting him for negligently shooting an innocent child, police supervisors merely recommended a three-day suspension and retraining.
    Officer Vickers received similar treatment from his department. He never received so much as a slap on the wrist for putting a bullet in an innocent boy. And so the vicious cycle of police negligence and their taxpayer supported unaccountable nature continues.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-sues-police-went-shoot-dog-shot-10yo-son-instead/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 10, 2016, 01:49:11 PM
    While there are tears for the "war on cops", the criminal gang is exposed once again trying to cover up their crimes and rewarding their "brave heroes".

    Man Cleared of Attempted Murder After Leaked Dashcam Shows Cop Shoot HIM in the Back, TWICE

    Birmingham, AL — In May 2015, officer Daniel Aguirre was given a Combat Cross Medal after he said in a police report that he successfully fended off a struggle in which he and his partner were in danger. However, someone on the inside leaked Dashcam footage showing Aquirre shooting a man in the back as he lay prostrate on his hands and knees. Still, Birmingham police charged their victim, Aubrey Williams, with attempted murder.

    But, last week, after spending more than a year in jail for a crime he never committed, the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office finally showed a semblance of logic and dropped the charges against Williams.

    “After an extensive review of all the evidence in this case, the state is unable to meet the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt,” according to the press release issued by the Jefferson County District Attorney’s office late Friday.

    “This man stayed in jail for more than a year and a half on some trumped up charges by these Birmingham police officers,” Anthony said. “Not all police officers are bad, but when they make a mistake they should own up to it,” he said, according to AL.com.

    According to the entirely fabricated police report, Aguirre began to struggle with a man named Aubrey Williams who pulled a gun and pointed it at his partner officer Richard Haluska. When he ordered the man to drop his gun, the suspect then pointed his gun at Aguirre. Aguirre fired and struck the suspect.

    Newspapers reported on it, and the local media hailed Aguirre as a hero. However, the dashcam video of the incident was released in November that contradicted Aquirre’s claims.

    Immediately after the dashcam was released, Aguirre was stripped of his medal. However, the department still pursued murder charges against a man innocent of murder — and neither of the cops was disciplined for lying.

    On April 24, 2014, Aguirre and Haluska were in search of suspects involved in a robbery when they encountered Aubrey Williams and Devon Brown. That much of the story is true.

    But the dashcam video shows what really happened after the encounter. A struggle ensued and Haluska had Brown under control when Aquirre approached Williams, who was on his hands and knees.

    Aguirre then unnecessarily feared for his life and fired two rounds into a man complying with his orders, on his hands and knees.

    Williams wasn’t pointing the gun at anyone, and the department had to have known this, but they gave Aguirre the award anyway.

    The dashcam was leaked to AL.com from a confidential source inside the department. After it had been posted on their website, the department had no choice but to issue a statement saying they are taking back the award.

    “In regards to the officer involved shooting that took place on April 24, 2014, the award is rescinded until further review by the Awards Committee,”  said Officer Lt. Sean Edwards at 10:57 p.m. last November.

    According to Anthony, Williams even told officers he was carrying the gun.

    “We have been in communication with the DA’s Office throughout this entire process,” Edwards stated in an email to AL.com. “We do understand with Alabama being an open carry state there will be times when officers may use force without any subsequent criminal charges.”

    “When you look at the video and different statements given by police officers it should never have been brought,” Emory stated in regards to the murder case. “There was never any evidence that Aubrey Williams pulled a gun or pointed a gun at the police officers.”

    Instead of an award ceremony, there should have been an investigation. A man was shot twice as he was laying on the ground, and there was video showing that he may not have been an actual threat to the officers at the time. At the very least, an inquiry by the department was warranted…..but that never happened.
    Instead, a police department knowingly went along with a false narrative and perpetuated a lie and charged their victim with attempted murder.


    Aguirre’s attorney issued a statement to AL.com on Saturday.

    “Officer Aguirre stands firm on the justification for having to use lethal force in this instance,” Aguirre’s attorney, Scott Morro, stated. “Officers are called upon to make split second decision with regard to their own safety and the safety of others. Ultimately those who decide to prosecute or not do so after scrutinizing much more information then what the officer on the scene has. Officer Aguirre has no control over those prosecuting decisions.”

    “Any suggestion by anyone that officer Aguirre is a “bad cop” is completely and utterly false and defamatory,” Morro wrote.

    Apparently, according to Morro, ‘good cops’ lie on police reports and receive medals for shooting non-threatening men in the back.

    “This video provides evidence that Police Officer Daniel Aguirre shot Aubrey Williams twice despite the fact that Williams was on his hands and knees and not in a position to fire a weapon,” Frank James Matthews of the Outcast Voters League said in a statement in November. “It is clear that the Birmingham Police Department attempted to prevent the release of this footage, and it seems that Officer Aguirre’s actions were rewarded based on outright lies.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/53140-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 10, 2016, 11:44:22 PM
    Once again the criminal gangs trying to cover up their crimes, ignoring the laws. Because in their mind, law enforcement=law exempt.

    Hundreds of police departments in Texas, California broke laws on reporting police shootings, study finds

    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/police-departments-texas-and-california-broke-law-reporting-police-shootings-study/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 12, 2016, 01:30:32 AM
    After dragging this young man through the mud with laughable "evidence", the only thing the criminals say is "thank you for your patience". No responsibility, accountability or punishment for the criminals, only for innocent citizens. It would nice if he could sue them to the ground and take every last penny from the criminals' pockets, but as always, the taxpayers will foot the bill.


    Utah Police Drop Charges Against Teen Accused of Drugging Cop After Lab Reports Find No Drugs in Drink

    Two months after Utah police dragged his name through the mud, accusing the teen of drugging an officer while preparing his food at Subway, police are now saying there were no drugs in the officer’s drink.

    So the Layton police officer apparently drugged himself.

    Not that they have even released his name.

    But they were sure to release Tanis Lloyd Ukena’s name as well as his mugshot after arresting the 18-year-old man on August 8 in a story that quickly went viral, charging him with a felony, accusing him of lacing the cop’s drink with marijuana and methamphetamine.

    And almost every single commenter took the word of police without ever thinking why would a teenager waste his drugs on a cop, not to mention how is it even possible to lace a drink with pot without it being obvious?

    Also, not only does ingested marijuana take about 45 minutes to take effect, methamphetamine produces completely different effects than the paralyzing effects the officer was reporting, being unable to find the gas pedal after taking three sips of the drink.

    Even a cursory look through the young man’s Facebook page indicates he is a church-going Mormon who excels in school and is obsessed with sports – and never once expressed any negative sentiment towards officers.

    Not that there is anything wrong with that.

    Layton police sent out a press released earlier today saying that further laboratory tests were “unable to confirm that contaminates were in the officer’s drink,” which contradicts earlier reports that they found “the presence of a foreign substance in the officer’s drink.”


    However, their initial tests were done on what is known as an ios scanner, which as we reported back in August, is highly unreliable when attempting to detect marijuana and methamphetamine.

    Police also said at the time that they had obtained surveillance video showing Ukena taking an “unusual amount of time” preparing the cop’s drink, but they never released that video, which was also an early indicator that they had flimsy evidence.

    The initial articles on his arrest generated calls from commenters that Ukena needs to be executed because how dare him try to drug a uniformed hero?

    His lawyer also said he received “death threats and nasty letters” from the cop-loving populace.

    But now that it turns out it was all a lie, what is going to happen to the officer who had to be hospitalized because he was under the influence of drugs while on duty?

    Or did they even test his blood to see if he was drugged? If so, it was never reported to the media, which is another indicator they were grasping for straws.


    As for now, the public has the right to know the officer’s name to know to never trust a word that comes out of his mouth.

    But all police can say at this time is: “The Department would also like to express our appreciation for the patience of Tanis and his family during this investigation.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/11/utah-police-drop-charges-against-teen-accused-of-drugging-cop-after-lab-reports-find-no-drugs-in-drink/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 12, 2016, 11:00:42 AM
    Deranged and violent career criminals terrorizing innocent people.
    Point a gun, cellphone or hot dog at a cop: summarily executed. Cop pointing gun at innocent citizens: 11 months.

    Florida Cop Sentenced to Jail for Pulling Gun on Couple with Baby in Back Seat

    In a case of excessive road rage, Florida sheriff’s deputy Sheila Langlais lost her cool and pulled a gun on an unassuming couple in a car with a 2-year-old in the back seat.

    Now the Pinellas County sheriff’s deputy is out of a job and will spend nearly a year in jail in addition to paying a $500 fine.

    The embattled deputy has resigned from three law enforcement agencies since 2001.

    It all went down on February 7 when Brett Dowd and his fiancee, Brittany Byrne, were driving in the parking lot of Twin Lakes apartment complex to visit friends for a cookout.

    As Byrne was driving, she pulled into a parking spot as you normally would.

    But the off-duty deputy was also pulling into the spot, which is when all hell broke loose, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

    Langlais began shouting profanities to Byrne and Dowd, who shouted profanities back.

    That was when Langais pulled out her pistol, pointing it at the couple, all while their 2-year-old child was in the backseat.

    After apparently gaining some sort of satisfaction from pointing her gun at innocent people, Langlais then drove off.

    The couple called police and gave a description of the gun-touting suspect and the vehicle. Police located Langlais’s vehicle within minutes in the complex parking lot.

    Subsequently, Langlais was located in a nearby apartment.

    As police investigated, Langlais denied carrying a gun. But investigators found Langlais’s gun inside the apartment of a fellow deputy named Sarah Swanner, whom Langlais was visiting that day.

    In a last ditch effort to avoid being fired, Langlais resigned the next day.

    Even Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri weighed in on the situation:

    “She made a very, very bad decision. I wouldn’t even call it a mistake. It’s a lie. It’s not a mistake.”

    The trial concluded on Friday, resulting in Langlais being sentenced to eleven months in county jail.

    She was charged with two felony counts of aggravated assault, but a jury found her guilty of two misdemeanor counts of improper exhibition of a firearm. Pinellas Circuit Judge William Burgess III dismissed one count citing double jeopardy.

    Langlais began her career with the Tarpon Springs Police Department in 2000, but resigned a year later after it was discovered that she was having a romantic relationship with a sergeant in her department.

    She also got the Tarpon Springs Police Department sued after Langlais wrongfully arrested a man and had him sitting in jail for 39 days. The department eventually settled that lawsuit for $7,000.

    In 2001 Langlais joined the Pinellas Park Police Department, but resigned in 2005 after she refused to end a high speed pursuit the way her supervisor instructed her to.


    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/12/florida-cop-sentneced-jail-pulling-gun-couple/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 12, 2016, 01:35:29 PM
    Crenshanda hung up on 911 callers when “she did not want to talk to anyone at that time”, including a robbery call which resulted in the store manager being shot to death.

    911 operator faces charges after admitting to hanging up on callers

    http://www.click2houston.com/news/911-operator-facing-charges-after-admitting-to-hanging-up-on-callers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 13, 2016, 01:25:25 AM
    Insane.

    Missouri won’t Exonerate Innocent Man Because he’s not on Death Row

    Eyewitness testimony from a 7-year-old girl who saw her mother stabbed to death was the “linchpin” that put Rodney Lincoln behind bars for life for the April 1982 murder of a St. Louis woman.

    The deciding factor for the outcome is now doubting her own story, and she wants her mother’s supposed killer to go free.

    On Tuesday the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District denied Rodney Lincoln a writ of habeas corpus that would have forced a retrial of his 1983 conviction.

    In the opinion filed Tuesday by the Western District, the court agreed with the Cole County’s June ruling that Lincoln’s Constitutional right to due process was not threatened because he was not on death row.

    Lincoln’s attorneys from the Midwest Innocence Project challenged the Constitutionality of Lincoln’s imprisonment using a 2003 case, State ex rel. Amrine v. Roper, in which Missouri man Joseph Amrine was wrongly convicted of a prison murder based on false witness testimony.

    The Missouri Supreme Court ordered a retrial when three witnesses subsequently recanted their statements. Amrine was released after prosecutors declined to retry him.

    In 1982, JoAnn Tate was found stabbed to death in her St. Louis apartment, lying face down in a pool of blood. Tate’s daughters, then aged seven and four, were found stabbed but alive. The testimony of the older sibling, Melissa Davis (who now goes by Melissa DeBoer) was key to finding Lincoln guilty of murder and two counts of assault.

    A relative identified Lincoln, who used to date Tate, as a suspect based on a composite sketch of the killer made with the help of Davis. Davis picked out Lincoln in his mug shot, next to a picture of a distant relative, and later in a lineup.

    After his first trial ended in a hung jury, Lincoln was sentenced a year after the murder to life in prison without parole.

    Deboer’s first doubts about Lincoln’s guilt surfaced last year after she participated in a true-crime TV show that speculated whether serial killer Tommy Lynn Sells, who had once lived in St. Louis, might instead have been the culprit.

    Until the Missouri Supreme Court recognizes that “continued incarceration … of an actually innocent person violates principles of due process, we have no authority to presume that Missouri’s habeas jurisprudence permits such a claim in a non-death penalty case,”  Presiding Judge Cynthia L. Martin wrote in the court’s opinion. Judges Gary Witt and Rex Gabbert concurred.

    “Because the Missouri Supreme Court has not recognized a freestanding claim of actual innocence in cases where the death penalty has not been imposed, we are not at liberty to expand Missouri habeas jurisprudence to permit consideration of the claim in this case,”

    “It’s hard to wrap your brain around, but as it turns out innocence is not a good enough reason to release a prisoner in Missouri,” Sean O’Brien, one of Lincoln’s attorneys, told KSHB on Tuesday.


    More than faulty eyewitness testimony was allowed into Lincoln’s murder trial, Lincoln’s attorneys say.

    In 2005, when Lincoln successively petitioned for DNA testing of the hair found at the scene of the crime, a lab determined that the hair did not belong to Lincoln. An expert witness had testified in Lincoln’s trial that DNA from a strand of hair found at the crime scene was a “match” to Lincoln’s.

    In 2013 the Eastern District agreed with prosecutors who downplayed the significance of the hair for the conviction. The judge concluded that DeBoer’s testimony, not the discredited DNA evidence, was the “linchpin” that determined Lincoln’s guilt.

    IS A SERIAL KILLER TO BLAME?

    DeBoer now believes serial killer Tommy Lynn Sells was the man who attacked her.

    “When the veil fell from my eyes I was horrified,” DeBoer wrote in a November Facebook post announcing her belief in Lincoln’s innocence according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I have kept an innocent man in prison for 34 years … I did not know I was wrong but I was.”

    Sells was convicted for the 1999 murder of a 13-year-old girl in Del Rio, Texas. Police connected him to at least 17 other killings, while Sells claimed credit for dozens more before he was executed in Texas in 2014.

    When Lincoln’s daughter contacted a private investigator, he confirmed that Sells lived in St. Louis at the time of the murder.

    When Lincoln petitioned for release from the Jefferson City Correctional Center in Cole County court in June, DeBoer appeared in court to recant her key childhood testimony fingering Lincoln as the murderer of her mother.

    DeBoer said investigators manipulated her to accuse Lincoln, and that the experience had left her traumatized.

    DeBoer’s sister, Renee Tate, who was unable to identify Lincoln in lineups in 1982, has since died from natural causes, leaving DeBoer the only survivor.

    The Cole County judge didn’t find her change of opinion credible. He also noted that a jail log found by the prosecution indicated Sells was in juvenile custody in Arkansas at the time of the murder.

    “[F]or a freestanding claim of actual innocence to support habeas relief, a petitioner must establish that his continued restraint is manifestly unjust because it violates the constitution or laws of the state or federal government,” the Western Court’s opinion says.

    Unlike life imprisonment “executing an innocent person, in the face of clear and convincing evidence of innocence is a manifest injustice,” the Western District concluded.


    Lincoln, now 72 years old, isn’t done fighting.

    “I’ve lasted this long because I know I’m innocent. I want everybody in the world to know I’m innocent,” he told KSHB. “The confidence in the system has slipped some, but not the expectation that I will walk through that front door,” he said.

    Lincoln’s attorneys are considering appealing to the Missouri Supreme Court, according to Missouri Lawyers Weekly.

    “This cannot be the law of a just society,” the Midwest Innocence Project wrote on Facebook on Tuesday. “We are not done fighting.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/12/court-wont-exonerate-man-hes-not-death-row/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2016, 12:05:55 PM
    When caught in the act, the head of the criminal gang just "apologizes". No real consequences and punishment for the crimes. Because you can't expect the law to apply to everyone equally.

    VIDEO: Innocent Man’s Dashcam Exonerates Him After Exposing the Cop as the One Who Broke the Law

    Kingston, NY — Filming the police has proven to be an essential part of exposing police corruption. Without direct evidence of their crimes, captured on video, the public would never believe the commoner over the state. Charlie Balakubak, of Kingston, New York, just recently illustrated the power of filming when his dashcam captured a police officer nearly hit him — and then charge Balakubak with a crime that the cop committed!
    Balakubak’s run-in with the police was almost literal last September when a cop crossed a double yellow line and swerved at him head on. Narrowly escaping a deadly collision, Balakubak honked at the offending officer and simply carried on.

    However, this cop was either out for revenge, or entirely delusional — so he pulled Balakubak over and accused Balakubak of a crime that the cop just committed.

    Knowing he’d done nothing wrong and, in fact, had video of the officer breaking the law, Balakubak was confident during the stop. In spite of telling the officer he had video of him breaking the law, Balakubak was still issued a citation for the cop’s crime.

    The Free Thought Project spoke with Balakubak, who explained how the video of the incident quickly helped him out.

    “The incident occurred at 7:30 PM, I had the video up by 11 PM that night. Shortly after, I sent an email to the chief of police. 9 AM the following morning,” explains Balakubak, “I spoke with the chief who said they were reviewing that video. I then called the District Attorney and left a message for them. They never returned the call. At 3 PM, I sent the link to two of the TV stations locally as well as to two newspapers locally.”
    According to Balakubak, the video worked!

    “At 4:30 that day, I received a call from the Deputy Chief with an apology and letting me know that the officer was being reprimanded and that the ticket would be dismissed. On Friday the 7th, I received a letter from the city explaining that the ticket was dismissed. The letter came from the city lawyer who is also an ADA, which would explain why the DA’s office never returned my call.

    “The chief in Kingston is a good guy, unfortunately, they are tasked with having to rely on some whose integrity is less than honorable. In the video, you’ll hear me ask how that moron Strand is. Strand was the supervisor that showed up at the stop that night after Mills took my information. In the extended video, I give it to him as well. They both were responsible for the ticket I received. They must have taken a gamble that I either didn’t have a camera OR that it was not working, then decided to write the ticket.The whole stop took about 30 minutes to complete.”

    Had video not existed showing this officer break the law, no one would have ever believed Balakubak, and he knew this as he’s been through it before.

    “A very similar incident occurred in 2008 with the Saugerties NY police,” he told the Free Thought Project. “They, however, weren’t going to be one-upped by a peasant. They tried everything they could to get me to plead guilty, which I did not. Video evidence in that case also exonerated me but, the Judge in his dismissal letter did his best to convict me anyway by describing my actions as reprehensible. I sued in State Supreme court on civil rights violations and won that case. I even drafted all my accusatory instruments to get into State Supreme court.”

    As Balakubak tells the Free Thought Project, he’s not anti-cop, only anti-corrupt cop.

    “They seem to forget that, once the officer crosses the line from LEO to LEA (law enforcement abuser) their actions are criminal, and at that point they can no longer expect courtesy. Furthermore, I am a Oath of Service bearer which requires me to support and defend the constitution of the United States, against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Ulster County NY is very corrupt, as are some of the towns that reside in it. Judges, Mayors, Police and more seemed to be immune to prosecution, conviction or even being arrested in this area, even though they are out of control. One mayor here died about 15 years ago because of cocaine abuse. That was covered up and an autopsy report was never disclosed to the public.”

    Below is a brief video showing the power of lying cops and the power of citizens with cameras to expose them. Please share this article and video with others so that they may see the power we, as a people, still have.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/citizen-dashcam-video-innocent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 14, 2016, 06:56:42 PM
    The Driver was Fortunate He wasn't a Black man
    As speaking to that cop like that could of made
    The cop in Fear For His Life & Shot Him  ::)
    He was also Fortunate with that move to get his
    Driving License !!!

    As Agonostic would say - It's only a Tiny Percentage of Bad Cops
    & They are Doing a Dangerous job...  ::) yeah right.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2016, 08:53:32 PM
    The pig and those who cover her should be locked up in prison for at least 10 years, tied in a chair and pepper sprayed every day. But what happens to criminals like these? They get a promotion.. The pig is now a "Captain".

    Horrifying Video Shows Cop Torturing Restrained Woman With Mace Until She Falls Unconscious

    Dayton, OH — “I thought I might die,” said Amber Swink of her harrowing experience being pepper-sprayed while in a seven-point restraint chair in the Montgomery County Jail in Dayton, Ohio, on November 15, 2015.

    Video footage of the torturous incident shows Swink so tightly restrained in the chair, she is hardly able to move her head; but that didn’t stop Sgt. Judith L. Sealey from entering the isolation cell and unleashing pepper-spray in the 25-year-old’s face — at near point-blank range — for seemingly no reason but sadistic pleasure.

    Swink acknowledged to the Washington Post she had, indeed, been drinking heavily at home that evening when police arrested her, and was still somewhat intoxicated when cameras recorded what happened. But she doesn’t understand what brought on the senseless attack.

    “It felt like somebody just crushed up fresh peppers and made me use them as face cream,” Swink told the Post. “It took my breath away. You’re fighting for air. I remember my mouth was filling with a thick slobber, like foaming up — and that was also blocking my airway.”

    As the Post described, “In the four-minute clip captured by a camera in the isolation cell, Swink can be seen struggling and coughing; she appears to pass out after her face is covered with a bright orange substance.”

    Officers had already coated her face with the thick, orange substance once — and despite being a bit drunk, Swink recalls the jailers laughing outside the sterile isolation cell immediately before Sgt. Sealey’s inexplicable act.

    In fact, it takes quite some time for officers to even attend to Swink — and when someone finally enters the cell to douse her eyes with a cruelly sparing amount of water, the air is so thick with pepper spray, he’s forced to vacate the room more than once.

    Montgomery County Sheriff Phil Plummer agreed in September that — even though he had yet to view the surveillance footage — pepper-spraying a restrained individual violated departmental policy.
    But Plummer characterized Swink’s experience as an “isolated incident.”

    “Thirty percent of my jail is people suffering from mental illnesses,” the sheriff told the Post by phone, unintentionally highlighting one of the most critical issues surrounding America’s prison- and police-industrial complex. “There are a lot of situations that the police officers should not be dealing with, but everybody wants to blame the police.”

    Police — including officers working in jails and prisons — in the overwhelming majority of departments across the United States do not receive proper or sufficient training to manage encounters with people suffering a wide variety of mental illnesses; and the resulting lack of understanding means those individuals are often subjected to excessive force.

    Swink has filed an excessive force lawsuit in U.S. District Court accusing the sheriff’s department of acting in a manner “that amounted to torture,” and alleging law enforcement attempted to hide wrongdoing by destroying evidence.

    “We will definitely oppose the lawsuit,” Plummer asserted unsurprisingly. “This isn’t that egregious where she’s walked away with any serious injuries. The officer she spit on should sue her.”
    Describing being subjected to torture as ‘not that egregious’ simply because the victim did not sustain permanent injury shows a chilling level of callous cruelty and lack of comprehension Sealey’s actions constituted misconduct.

    As the Post pointed out, a National Institute of Justice memo says pepper spray has been used by law enforcement in the U.S. since the 1980s “as a use of force option to subdue and control dangerous, combative, or violent subjects in the field. OC [oleoresin capsicum], with its ability to temporarily incapacitate subjects, has been credited with decreasing injuries among officers and arrestees by reducing the need for more severe force options.”

    Swink — with arms, legs, and body restrictively strapped to a restraint chair — obviously posed no threat to jailhouse officers, however, and video proves the motivation to spray her must have been akin to unadulterated sadism.

    “You cannot find any training manual that will tell you it is allowable to pepper-spray somebody who is restrained,” Kamran Loghman, a U.S. Naval Academy professor who helped develop pepper spray for law enforcement use, told the Post. “It is used to avoid confrontation or injury, so you don’t escalate to higher levels of confrontation. Pepper spray, therefore, should not be used if the subject is expressing verbal disagreement or anger.”

    Ironically, if police deployed pepper spray more often in confrontations with the public — rather than immediately pulling the trigger of a gun — needless deaths could be reduced dramatically.
    However, in the incident involving Swink, video proves an absolute lack of cause to deploy pepper spray, despite — as Plummer, Swink, and her attorney agree — her belligerent behavior prior to landing in the restraint chair.

    Swink had yelled, banged on a window, kicked at an officer, and generally caused a disturbance after being brought to the Montgomery County Jail — for which officers justifiably used pepper spray the first time, and then strapped her to the restraint chair in the isolation cell.

    “Shortly thereafter,” the lawsuit states, “Defendant Sealey went into Plaintiff Amber Swink’s cell with another can of OC spray and intentionally and maliciously sprayed Plaintiff Amber Swink’s face and body with the OC spray until she became unconscious and suffered permanent, serious, and debilitating injuries.”

    Plummer told the Post Sealey had been disciplined for the misconduct — meaning she had received a write-up that would remain in her file for six months. Nothing more.

    “We don’t tolerate once you’re secured using pepper-spray on you because the threat is neutralized,” the sheriff explained. “That’s the mistake that Sgt. Sealey made.”

    Sealey has, in fact, since been promoted to Captain.


    Attorney Douglas Brannon, representing Swink, asserted Sealey should have been criminally charged and immediately fired.

    “I can’t fathom that the sheriff would even consider keeping this employee in light of the fact that her conduct was intentional, deliberate and abusive and directed towards an individual that was completely unable to protect herself,” he told the Post.

    Now, Dayton Police are investigating to decide whether or not criminal charges should be filed against Sealey, who was placed on paid administrative leave last week for the duration of that investigation. On Wednesday, Plummer said,“[Sealey] is not exempt from criminal prosecution, she is not exempt from termination. She is going to be treated like everybody else.”

    Swink, who suffered with asthma as a child, said the unnecessary use of pepper spray has brought back some of those breathing difficulties.

    “My whole life, I looked up to law enforcement,” Swink told the Post. “They would come into our schools and talked to us and they were supposed to be some of the best people you could trust and call on.
    “But now I wonder if there’s really anybody watching out for me and my family.”



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sadistic-cop-tortures-restrained-woman-spray/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 18, 2016, 01:42:51 PM
    Only 5 years. Pays off to belong in the biggest criminal gang.

    California Cop Patrick Feaster Guilty of Manslaughter in Shooting Death of DUI Suspect

    Former Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster was found guilty of manslaughter today for the shooting death of a DUI suspect last November in an incident captured on his own dash cam.

    Feaster, who won numerous awards for the number of DUI arrests he made, faces five years in prison. He has not yet been sentenced.

    It was a karmic decision considering Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey initially announced he would file no charges against the cop because the shooting was an “accident.”

    But Ramsey had a change of heart after a huge national outcry.

    Today, during closing statements, Ramsey told the jury the shooting was no accident, according to KRCR News.


    District Attorney Mike Ramsey began closing arguments Monday by talking about the victim, Andrew Thomas, calling him the “every man”. Ramsey then delved into Feaster and the kind of officer he was.

    “Feaster is the officer that should have known better” Ramsey said, “He made choices that Thanksgiving night”.

    Ramsey even held up Feaster’s handgun to show the jury where an officer is supposed to put their finger and the importance of a trigger guard.

    “This case is not an accidental shooting. This was a negligent shooting and, as it will show, a criminally negligent shooting.”

    The incident took place on November 26, 2015 after Feaster tried to pull over Andrew Thomas, a 26-year-old man who had just left a bar with his wife.

    Thomas rolled the van over, ejecting his wife, then stuck his head out the window as Feaster stepped out of his patrol car after pulling up to the scene.

    Feaster fired once, striking Thomas, who fell back down into his vehicle.

    However, Feaster waited more than ten minutes before informing his supervisor that he had shot Thomas.

    Thomas’ wife ended up dying on the scene, but he did not die until almost a month later.

    Feaster was then charged with involuntary manslaughter and left his job, even though they never said if it was a resignation or termination.

    In March 2016, while awaiting trial, he was arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct along with his brother.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/18/california-cop-patrick-feaster-guilty-of-manslaughter-in-shooting-death-of-dui-suspect/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 18, 2016, 01:53:47 PM
    Please read up on this story while considering the mythical "war on cops". You will not see the manipulative MSM giving this story (and others like it) any airtime. Another violent member of the biggest criminal gang who committed crimes against an innocent citizen and for weeks no one objected. Did his fellow goons try to cover up and downplay his violent past and disregarded his crimes? Yet, this violent criminal only got 27 months in prison. It would be better for all law abiding citizens if he and others like him never saw the light of day again.

    Cop Beats, Tasers, Falsely Arrests Innocent Man after He Asked the Cop Not to Block His Driveway

    Louisville, KY — Deric Baize had committed no crime and was in his own home when a belligerent cop, with a history of brutality, attacked him, tasered him in the back, kidnapped him and threw him in a cage for weeks — causing him to lose his job, his house, and his dignity. On Monday, that cop, deputy Matthew Corder with the Bullitt County Sheriff’s Office, was sentenced to more than two years in jail for that fateful night.

    The incident began in October of 2014 as Corder arrived in the neighborhood responding to an unrelated call and chose to park in front of Baize’s driveway instead of on the shoulder. When Baize asked the deputy to move his car and not block the driveway, Corder, being the belligerent cop that he is — refused.

    After Corder refused to move his vehicle, Baize told the officer to “F**k off.” This response caused the deputy to snap and immediately resort to abusing his authority.

    Without probable cause, or a warrant, or reason, Corder ordered Baise out of his home, who refused. So, Corder, drunk on power and anger, forced his way in and attacked the innocent man.

    “You’re about to get your ass tased,” warned Corder, as he forced his way into Deric Baize’s home.

    “I am asking a question,” Baize pleaded as he’s being assaulted by someone who claims to keep society safe.

    “I don’t need no warrant dude,” said Corder.

    “No, no, no, no, no,” screamed Corder to a handcuffed Baize. “F**k gets you a whole different ballgame buddy.”

    “I apologize,” Baize said.

    “F**k that, “ Corder said. “You get to go to jail tonight.”

    Apparently saying ‘F**k’ only gets you arrested if you’re not a tyrant cop.

    As WDRB reports, the deputy charged Baize with fleeing and evading, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.  Baize sat behind bars for two weeks, deemed a danger to the public. He lost his job and eventually his home.

    “It’s made (Baize) very reticent to interact with the public and to be out in public areas,” Attorney Todd Lewis said. “A great amount of anxiety and distrust.”

    In spite of Corder receiving dozens of awards and commendations as a deputy, in an apparent attempt to mask his brutal record, his past would not go away. According to a report by WDRB, Corder has a violent record — and, he’s even beaten someone else for using the word ‘F**k’ before.

    Corder’s attorney attempted to claim that he was ‘baited’ into assaulting, kidnapping, and charging an innocent man with a slew of fake crimes. However, his nearly 20-year history of beating people made this defense a hard sale.

    “What happened here is not a misunderstanding or a mistake,” Judge David Hale said.

    “As they serve and protect, police are entrusted with immense power and authority,” stated U.S. Attorney John Kuhn, “and it is absolutely critical that their power and authority be used lawfully and responsibly. Matthew Corder abused that authority, and today he is held to account. His actions are not representative of the good and honorable work that distinguishes our law enforcement agencies in the Western District of Kentucky.”

    Corder will also have to pay restitution to Baize for the time he spent in jail and the home he lost while he was unemployed because of it, according to WDRB. However, the exact amount has not been determined.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/belligerent-cop-assaults-innocent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 18, 2016, 06:50:46 PM
    Remember this "fearless hero"?

    Florida Police Settles Horrific Dog Mauling Lawsuit involving Cop who later Killed Woman in Training Exercise

    For the price of $70,000, Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel can claim he did nothing wrong by allowing his dog to attack and maul a man for riding his bicycle at night without lights.

    Not that he will pay a dime of that settlement.  And not that it will absolve him of shooting and killing a 73-year-old woman during a citizens academy training exercise in which he was supposed to be using blanks.

    That second incident would never have occurred if he had been fired for the dog mauling incident, but Coel is an award-winning officer, which apparently gives him protective status.

    Attorney Scott Weinberg, who represented the victim in the dog mauling case, had tried his best to warn the police chief and city council that they had a loose cannon on their hands, but they failed to heed his advice.

    The dog mauling incident took place on October 30, 2015 when Coel spotted Richard Schumacher riding his bicycle through the sleepy Southwestern Florida town without lights.

    Sensing Schumacher was placing himself in danger, Coel ordered him to stop or he would send his attack dog.

    But Schumacher kept peddling, so Coel sped up behind him and pulled him over on a quiet residential street.

    Coel ordered Schumacher to get on his knees, then on his face, to ensure officer safety because you never know about those guys riding their bikes without lights.

    “Get on your knees, do it now,” Coel orders as his dog, Spirit, can be heard barking from the backseat.

    But Schumacher was being stubborn, remaining standing for more than a minute with his hands in the air, at times flipping the cop off, before he eventually got down on one knee.

    “Get down on your face,” Coel then orders. “Get down on your chest.”

    But Schumacher did not get down on his chest and face, which evidently made Coel fear for his life, leaving him no choice but to release the dog.

    Spirit mauled on Schumacher for nearly two minutes before Coel called him off, finally obtaining that ever-evasive officer safety.

    Coel later wrote in his report that Schumacher kept hiding his hands, which struck fear in his heart.

    Schumacher spent 11 days in the hospital where he had to undergo surgery to repair his latissimus dorsi muscle that had been ripped apart by the dog.

    And then he spent almost three months in the county jail on charges of fleeing and eluding, resisting arrest without violence and DUI, but ended up pleading to the two latter charges in exchange for having the first charge dropped.

    And now that settled, he will be able to afford a new bike with lights, not that he will ever be the same physically.

    Coel, for his part, remains on paid administrative leave for shooting and killing Mary Knowlton, a 73-year-old librarian attending the citizens academy to show her support towards police, whom she believed were being treated unfairly.

    However, Punta Gorda Police Chief Tom Lewis said he issued a new policy, forbidding real bullets to be mixed with blanks during training exercises.

    But this is the same chief who congratulated Coel last year after he led Spirit through an obstacle course, earning him an award.

    “We are extremely proud of Lee and Spirit,” Punta Gorda Police Chief Tom Lewis said on Facebook last year in regards to Coel winning an award at a police dog tournament.

    “Their dedication to our Department has been an asset to our City, and we are excited to cheer them on through all of their future success.”

    However, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement just concluded its investigation on the shooting, so now the case will be reviewed by the state attorney’s office.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/18/florida-police-settles-horrific-dog-mauling-lawsuit-involving-cop-killed-woman-training-exercise/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2016, 11:42:15 AM
    Why are these criminals not arrested and forced to pay out of their pockets for the damage they caused?

    Cops Mistake a Wig in a Car for a Child, Smash Woman’s Windows Out and Refuse to Pay for Damage

    Suffolk, VA — Illustrating their callous disregard for private property and ability to pass the liability of their destruction onto the backs of the taxpayer, Suffolk police smashed an innocent woman’s car windows as they looked for a nonexistent child. Police then left without any word or any way for the innocent woman to repair her car.

    Last week, Jasmine Turner, of Suffolk, Virgina, received a call from police claiming there was a child locked in her car. This came as a huge surprise to Turner as she has no children.

    “I don’t have a baby so I’m like, ‘Where’d the child come from? Who put the child in my car?’” Turner said. “I’m as surprised as they were when they got the phone call.”

    Turner, who was shopping for supplies for her job, told police that she didn’t have a child and had no idea how a child would’ve gotten into her car. However, she told them that she would be right out in five minutes to open the door.

    Police could not wait that long.

    When Turner arrived back at her car, her windows were smashed out and police were gone. After police vandalized the car, they quickly found this ‘child’ to be a pile of laundry and a wig.

    “By the time I get from Walmart back to my job, the police aren’t there. The windows busted out of my car and there’s glass everywhere,” Turner said.

    The damage from police left several hundred dollars in repairs — repairs that Turner feels she should not have to pay. However, according to Turner, police told her they couldn’t pay for it.
    “I just want my window fixed and them to pay for it, either being in a rental or whatever the case is. I can’t take off work. I have bills to pay,” Turner told WAVY.

    Police showed up to the scene because a person in the parking lot dialed 911 after seeing the wig. The smashing of the windows is arguably warranted as police truly believed there to be a child in the car. However, it is what happened after that is cause for concern.

    The officers smashed the windows and disappeared. They didn’t wait for Turner to arrive to inform her they did this, nor did they inform Turner that there wasn’t actually a child in her car.

    Now Turner is left without a vehicle as she is scared to drive it as it has no windows. When Turner inquired as to who was going to pay for the damage to her car, she was told police gave her contact information for the City’s Risk Management Department. Buck passed. In the meantime, however, Turner is carless.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wig-child-police-smash-windows/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2016, 09:47:49 PM
    A corrupt Attorney General operating like she is above the law. How many others like her have destroyed lives of innocent people?
    Not surprisingly during the hearing she broke down in tears and asked the judge to "consider her children". I wonder if she considered the children of all the people she prosecuted.

    Former Pa. Attorney General Sentenced To 10-23 Months In Jail For Perjury

    Pennsylvania's former attorney general, Kathleen Kane, has been sentenced to 10 to 23 months in jail after she was embroiled in a scandal that shook the state's political establishment.

    Kane, who was once viewed as a rising star within the Democratic Party, was "convicted on all nine counts – including perjury, obstruction and official oppression – in connection with a complicated case in which she leaked grand jury information about an investigation in retaliation against a political rival and then lied about it under oath," as The Two-Way has reported. She resigned from office a day after her conviction in August.

    She was also sentenced to eight years of probation "by a Montgomery County judge who said Kane's ego drove her to take down enemies and break the law," as The Associated Press reported.

    Here's more on the origins of this trial from The Two-Way:

    "Kane has argued that the allegations against her were part of a high-stakes political feud involving charges that past prosecutors had mishandled the Jerry Sandusky molestation case. Sandusky is the former Penn State assistant football coach who was convicted in 2012 of molesting boys."
    "Kane contends that when she investigated the case, she uncovered a trove of government email accounts in which high-level state officials traded pornography and bigoted jokes about women and minorities. However, the judge in her perjury trial did not allow the jury to hear about the email scandal."
    This trial stems from a complicated political feud between Kane and Frank Fina, a former prosecutor at her office. According to the wire service, Kane "had a campaign consultant pass confidential files to a reporter about a corruption case Fina declined to charge before he left office. She then tried to frame someone else for the leak, aides testified at the perjury and obstruction trial."

    During today's hearing, Kane "broke down in tears," and pleaded that the judge "consider her two teenage sons," as The New York Times reported.

    She had argued that "the loss of her career, law license and reputation is punishment enough," as The Associated Press has reported. "She [had] asked a judge in suburban Philadelphia to sentence her to probation or house arrest so she can be home."

    Ahead of today's sentencing decision, Kane told the AP that the long wait to learn her fate was like "watching the potential funeral of your own family."

    Kane faced "a maximum sentence of between 12 and 24 years in state prison," PennLive has reported, though the judge had "the discretion to hand down a far shorter sentence."

    But as she delivered Kane's sentence, Judge Wendy Demchick-Alloy said "any lesser sentence than total confinement will absolutely depreciate the seriousness of the crime. A violation of this magnitude and severity is an extraordinary abuse of the system," according to the Times.

    Kane's career had skyrocketed when she was elected the state's attorney general less than four years ago. As the Times reported, she was seen as a "Democratic outsider with no political experience, vowing to shake to its foundations the state's male-dominated, corruption-prone political establishment that she mocked as 'the Harrisburg old boys.'"

    http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/10/24/499173124/former-pa-attorney-general-sentenced-to-10-23-months-in-prison-for-perjury
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 26, 2016, 04:38:30 PM
    Once again, instead of the dangerous criminals involved being held accountable, the bill gets sent to the taxpayers.

    Santa Ana Pays $100,000 Settlement for Dispensary Raid where Cops Dismantled Cameras and Consumed Cannabis

    They were so sure of themselves, these California cops who raided a marijuana dispensary last year, terrorizing customers while wearing masks, forcing them to the floor at gunpoint, then disabling surveillance cameras inside the shop to ensure their crime went unnoticed.

    But the Santa Ana cops failed to remove a hidden camera, which caught them eating marijuana-laced snacks while mocking a handicapped woman.

    And as a result, the city of Santa Ana just had to pay a $100,000 to settle a lawsuit stemming from the May 27, 2015 raid.

    According to the Los Angeles Times:

    The suit alleged that Mayor Miguel Pulido and other city employees favored certain dispensaries over others. It said the city put up a ballot proposal, Measure BB, for the November 2014 election, soliciting payments from collectives with the promise of winning a spot in an eventual marijuana permit lottery.

    Sky High Holistic did not win a spot in the lottery and its patients allege that because Pulido and other city employees had financial ties with competing dispensaries, they used their positions to close down the competition.

    Pulido denied the allegations and said the city hired a firm to conduct the lottery.

    Earlier this year, three police officers were charged with misdemeanor petty theft and one with vandalism for allegedly stealing snacks and damaging surveillance cameras. They are no longer employed by the city’s police department.

    The three cops who are no longer on the force are Brandon Matthew Sontag, Nicole Lynn Quijas and Jorge Arroyo. They were fired, according to San Francisco Gate.

    They have pleaded not guilty to vandalism and theft charges. They are due back in court next month.

    Matthew Pappas, the attorney for the Sky High Holistic dispensary, said he is still trying to get the city to return more than $7,000 in cash as well as marijuana seized from the raid.

    After obtaining the video from the hidden camera, Pappas sent it to Voice of Orange County, which published it on its YouTube channel where it has more than 1.2 million views as of today.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/26/santa-ana-pays-100000-settlement-for-dispensary-raid-where-cops-dismantled-cameras-and-consumed-cannabis/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 26, 2016, 04:42:06 PM
    Finally! After More than 2 Years, The Cop Who Killed Eric Garner Will Be Charged

    New York, NY — On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner, father of six, had just broken up a fight outside of his shop when he was targeted by NYPD cops for harassment and extortion. Fed up with the constant persecution from cops, Garner voiced his discontent. He was subsequently assaulted and killed by “compression of neck, chest and positioning during restraint by police.” In spite of investigators ruling his death a homicide, and the video evidence, no one has ever been held responsible for the murder of Eric Garner — until now.

    According to the NY Post, a source within law enforcement told them Washington-based federal prosecutors plan to aggressively pursue charges against NYPD cop Daniel Pantaleo for the chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island.

    “It’s going to happen sooner than later,” the source said of an indictment. “Washington wants to indict him.”

    According to the Post:
    Federal investigators in Brooklyn were replaced by DC counterparts because of their reluctance to bring charges, the source said.
    The New York feds are privately seething. They accused their Beltway colleagues of trying to “make an example out of Pantaleo” at any cost, said one source familiar with the case.

    “We already … came to a conclusion which they didn’t like. It’s truly disgraceful what they’re doing,” the source said.

    “I can’t breathe,” Garner pleaded, eleven times — as officer Daniel Pantaleo choked the life from this kind and loving man.

    As Claire Bernish pointed out, Garner’s plea for his life became the rallying call of Black Lives Matter and police brutality activists across the nation and around the world — though the inhumanity of having to beg for one’s life after committing a nonviolent, victimless crime remains sadly all-too-common.

    But though news of violent and deadly acts committed by police top headlines with alarming frequency, the fact Pantaleo used his bare hands to strangle the life from Garner was a startling departure from shootings that typify brutal policing. So personal is choking a man to death, even ordinary Americans were suddenly forced to question what, exactly, happened to the romanticized image of friendly neighborhood police from mere decades ago.

    Since this murder caught on video, Pantaleo has enjoyed his full salary and millions of taxpayer dollars in security costs to protect one of New York’s most loathed peace officers.
    Until this week, the only person to face any consequences for Garner’s death is the man who filmed it.

    Ramsey Orta, the man who filmed one of the most infamous police killings in history – and was thereafter targeted by police in a barrage of “false and/or trumped up charges” – was sentenced to four years in prison for gun possession and drug charges earlier this month.

    The events leading up to the murder of Eric Garner were nothing short of insidious. For years, these same NYPD cops targeted Garner for harassment and extortion. As the Free Thought Project exclusively reported back in December 2014, Garner had been sexually assaulted by the NYPD — on more than one occasion.

    In an interview with Garner’s stepfather as well as his children, the Free Thought Project was told that police had actually stolen money from Garner, who subsequently planned to file a complaint against the NYPD for this theft. Police were there that day, Benjamin Carr, Garner’s stepfather says, not to shake Garner down for selling smokes, but to retaliate against him for trying to expose their theft.

    Before he killed Eric Garner on video, Pantaleo had been sued three times for violating the constitutional rights of other black males in the area, by performing humiliating strip searches and fondling the genitalia of his victims, some of them in public view.

    The most recent of these lawsuits was filed the November following Garner’s death, and comes from Kenneth Collins, who says in the lawsuit that he “was subjected to a degrading search of his private parts and genitals by the defendants.”

    The NYPD paid out a settlement in 2013 to two men who sued the city because Pantaleo forced them to strip naked in public as he “touched and searched their genital areas, or stood by while this was done in their presence.”

    According to another lawsuit, victim Rylawn Walker, was charged with marijuana possession and underwent similar rights violations by Pantaleo. The charges were dismissed against Walker and the case sealed on a motion from prosecutors. His lawsuit against the NYPD stated that Walker “was committing no crime at that time and was not acting in a suspicious manner.”

    Defense lawyer Michael Colihan summed up this atrocity when he wrote a letter in August 2014 to U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos. In his letter, Colihan said:
    To put it mildly, many police on Staten Island have been playing fast, loose and violently with the public they seem to have forgotten they are sworn to protect. After litigating about 200 of these civil rights matters in the Eastern and Southern Districts of New York since 1977, I have seen no interest by the managers of the New York City Police Department, or anyone employed by the city of New York, in doing anything to stop this.

    For two years, the complacency and failure to act on the crimes of the NYPD have continued. But now, Garner’s family has renewed hope that the man who took their beloved father, husband, and son, will soon be held accountable for his actions.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/2-years-cop-killed-eric-garner-charged/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2016, 10:45:09 AM
    If you don't wear your gang colors, you should expect gang members to attack you.

    Washington D.C. Cop Thrown to Ground and Punched in Face by Maryland Cops in Case of Mistaken Identity

    A Maryland cop searching for a shooting suspect described only as a “black man with a hoodie and jeans” ended up pouncing on a black man with a hoodie and jeans walking down the street, slamming him to the ground and handcuffing him while another officer punched him in the face.

    Turns out, the man was an off-duty cop.

    Now Washington D.C. police officer Robert Parker Jr., 28, is claiming racial profiling.

    However, the Prince George’s County police officer who accosted him is also black, if that makes any difference. The officer who punched him is white.

    Meanwhile, the actual shooting suspect, Nicco Rashaad Young,  20, is still at large.

    The incident took place Tuesday in the parking lot of Iverson Mall in Temple Hills when the gunman shot another man several times in the stomach over an argument.

    The gunman then took off running as the victim managed to survive.

    Parker, wearing a jacket over his hoodie, had just dropped his car off at the repair shop and was walking down the street about three blocks away when the Prince George’s County cop pulled up alongside him.

    According to the Washington Post:

    “I kept my hands out and to the mid-side of my body,” Parker said. “My hands were visible, out to my side.” He said the sergeant told him: “I’ve seen you out here walking earlier. We’re looking for somebody, and we want to make sure you’re good.”

    Parker said the sergeant immediately “walked up to me and started patting me down.”

    “I was in disbelief,” Parker said. “He didn’t tell me what for. He feels my gun, and I said, ‘I’m a police officer.’ At that moment, he took me to the ground.”

    Prince George’s County police say they have an audio recording of the incident, which proves their officers did everything by the book, which, of course, is not saying much, knowing how “the book” allows them to do as they please.

    They provided the following statement to Fox 5 News:

    “Based on our preliminary investigation and preliminary review of an audio recording of the encounter in question, we believe our officer acted professionally and with restraint. This encounter took place within several minutes of the shooting being reported at the mall and approximately three blocks from the scene. Our officer who was responding to the shooting, which had just prompted the lock-down of two nearby schools – spotted a man walking who matched the description. Our officer, a sergeant assigned to our district 4 station, got out of his cruiser and began an investigatory stop. During a pat down, our officer discovered the man had a gun on his waistband. At that point, our officer took the man to the ground during a brief struggle. Our preliminary investigation reveals that it was only after the man was restrained by the original officer and backup officers did he identify himself as a police officer.”

    Parker, whose father spent 30 years as a Washington D.C. cop before retiring, has hired an attorney and plans to file a formal complaint.

    “I never want to be the person to say that. But unfortunately, that’s what it was. . . . I thought, if I were in another neighborhood, if I were someone else, if the lookout was for a white guy in a hoodie and I was white, I don’t think I would have been approached like that. I think I would have been given a lot more courtesy,” he told the Washington Post.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/27/washington-d-c-cop-thrown-to-ground-and-punched-in-face-by-maryland-cops-in-case-of-mistaken-identity/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2016, 10:56:20 AM
    Another gun that "discharged itself". And this is from someone who is not a mere pleb but a "trained officer" who "knows" how to handle firearms and is allowed to use firearms that citizens don't have access to.
    Why has he not been charged yet and why is his name not released?

    Cop Fires Round From His 9mm Glock into a Daycare Center in a ‘Gun-Free Zone’– Yet to Be Charged

    Cuyahoga Falls, OH — Authorities are only ‘contemplating’ criminal charges against an East Cleveland police officer today after he discharged his weapon sending a bullet hurling into a day care center.

    The staff and children at the KinderCare Learning center were likely terrified when a bullet came blasting through the fence and lodged into the wall of the school around 3:35 pm on Tuesday.

    Police have refused to release the name of the officer who negligently discharged his firearm. Authorities did, however, note that the officer was unloading his 9mm Glock inside his home, directly behind the daycare, when it ‘accidentally’ discharged.

    Up until that point, the staff and parents of the children at KinderCare probably thought that their children were safer being neighbors with a police officer.

    Despite the officer clearly admitting to committing the misdemeanor offense of discharging a firearm within city limits, police have yet to charge him.

    “Right now our law department has it and they are reviewing it to see if there should be any charges,” Police Chief Jack Davis said Wednesday morning.

    “It was a very unfortunate incident for the school, as well as him,” he added.

    Outside of skating out of the misdemeanor charge so far, this officer also seems to be avoiding the felony offense of discharging a weapon in a gun-free school zone.

    Imagine for a moment that you were cleaning your pistol and all of the sudden, you accidentally squeeze off a round sending the deadly projectile through the wall of a daycare center, in a gun-free zone.

    There are two possible scenarios that would take place; the first one being that a SWAT team responds and you are killed. The second, less lethal result would be your inevitable arrest and charges of public endangerment, unlawful discharge, illegal use of a firearm, assault with a deadly weapon, terrorism, or a myriad of other charges associated with sending a deadly projectile hurling through walls and near the heads of innocent people. You would immediately be facing fines, jail time, probation, and firearms restrictions.

    However, if you are a government agent who’s trusted with carrying a deadly weapon into places others cannot, you needn’t worry about any of those repercussions as this case will likely prove.

    When the Akron Beacon Journal contacted the East Cleveland police department to inquire as to what would happen to this officer, they said their department was unaware of the incident.

    “We’re just grateful that nobody was hurt,” KinderCare spokeswoman Colleen Moran told Ohio.com. So are we.

    As the gun controllers call for guns to be taken out of the hands of US citizens, what they really mean is they only want cops to have guns. This cop proves how silly, and dangerous, that demand actually is.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/daycare-cop-shoots-bullet-charged/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 27, 2016, 02:23:25 PM
    Another gun that "discharged itself". And this is from someone who is not a mere pleb but a "trained officer" who "knows" how to handle firearms and is allowed to use firearms that citizens don't have access to.
    Why has he not been charged yet and why is his name not released?

    Cop Fires Round From His 9mm Glock into a Daycare Center in a ‘Gun-Free Zone’– Yet to Be Charged

    Cuyahoga Falls, OH — Authorities are only ‘contemplating’ criminal charges against an East Cleveland police officer today after he discharged his weapon sending a bullet hurling into a day care center.

    The staff and children at the KinderCare Learning center were likely terrified when a bullet came blasting through the fence and lodged into the wall of the school around 3:35 pm on Tuesday.

    Police have refused to release the name of the officer who negligently discharged his firearm. Authorities did, however, note that the officer was unloading his 9mm Glock inside his home, directly behind the daycare, when it ‘accidentally’ discharged.

    Up until that point, the staff and parents of the children at KinderCare probably thought that their children were safer being neighbors with a police officer.

    Despite the officer clearly admitting to committing the misdemeanor offense of discharging a firearm within city limits, police have yet to charge him.

    “Right now our law department has it and they are reviewing it to see if there should be any charges,” Police Chief Jack Davis said Wednesday morning.

    “It was a very unfortunate incident for the school, as well as him,” he added.

    Outside of skating out of the misdemeanor charge so far, this officer also seems to be avoiding the felony offense of discharging a weapon in a gun-free school zone.

    Imagine for a moment that you were cleaning your pistol and all of the sudden, you accidentally squeeze off a round sending the deadly projectile through the wall of a daycare center, in a gun-free zone.

    There are two possible scenarios that would take place; the first one being that a SWAT team responds and you are killed. The second, less lethal result would be your inevitable arrest and charges of public endangerment, unlawful discharge, illegal use of a firearm, assault with a deadly weapon, terrorism, or a myriad of other charges associated with sending a deadly projectile hurling through walls and near the heads of innocent people. You would immediately be facing fines, jail time, probation, and firearms restrictions.

    However, if you are a government agent who’s trusted with carrying a deadly weapon into places others cannot, you needn’t worry about any of those repercussions as this case will likely prove.

    When the Akron Beacon Journal contacted the East Cleveland police department to inquire as to what would happen to this officer, they said their department was unaware of the incident.

    “We’re just grateful that nobody was hurt,” KinderCare spokeswoman Colleen Moran told Ohio.com. So are we.

    As the gun controllers call for guns to be taken out of the hands of US citizens, what they really mean is they only want cops to have guns. This cop proves how silly, and dangerous, that demand actually is.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/daycare-cop-shoots-bullet-charged/









    For Fcuks Sake !!
    What is it with Not charging Cops
    As stated anyone else -- it's end of.
     ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2016, 02:38:55 PM
    This is indeed terrifying.

    Digital Rights Group: AT&T Spying Revelation ‘More Terrifying’ Than Snowden NSA Discovery

    The revelation of AT&T’s spying program is “more terrifying than the illegal NSA surveillance programs that Edward Snowden exposed,” according to Evan Greer, the campaign director for non-profit digital rights organization Fight for the Future.
    “AT&T customers are outraged but this affects everyone,” said Greer in an interview with Newsweek. “AT&T went far beyond complying with legal government requests and actually built a powerful data mining product to sell our private information to as many government agencies and police departments as they could.”

    “The for-profit spying program that these documents detail is more terrifying than the illegal NSA surveillance programs that Edward Snowden exposed” he continued. “If companies are allowed to operate in this manner without repercussions, our democracy has no future.”

    AT&T’s alleged spying program was revealed by the Daily Beast, who claimed that under the codename “Project Hemisphere” AT&T granted law enforcement agencies access to “trillions of phone call records and cellular data to locate a specific user.”

    Hemisphere is reportedly deployed in approximately 28 intelligence centers in the US, many of which collaborate with the DEA. The centers are monitored by both federal agents as well as local law enforcement; however data analysis is done by AT&T employees on behalf of the law enforcement agencies in order to keep law enforcement and federal agents from ever directly accessing AT&T’s data personally.

    The Daily Beast claims that departments pay from $100,000 to over $1 million just to access project Hemisphere’s huge library of data and content. AT&T documents further state that a search warrant is not needed to access Hemisphere, just an administrative subpoena, a document that does not require probable cause to be issued.

    http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2016/10/27/digital-rights-group-att-spying-revelation-more-terrifying-than-snowden-nsa-discovery/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 28, 2016, 08:05:39 PM
    Award-Winning Pennsylvania Cops Sued for Brutal Arrest Thanks to Video They Tried to Destroy

    Five months after agreeing to pay a $45,000 settlement to a man they arrested for recording them tasering a man on his front porch, the Allentown Police Department is being sued again.

    This time, by the man they tasered and tortured that night.

    One of the cops mentioned in the lawsuit filed Wednesday, Jason Ammary, is responsible for a $100,000 settlement dished out in February from another lawsuit when he tasered a 14-year-old girl in the groin for walking in the street in an incident captured on video.

    Not surprisingly, he is also an award-winning officer.

    The incident regarding the latest lawsuit took place in October 2014 when Alexander Aron, a 23-year-old black college student, was returning home from a friend’s house when he was stopped by police, accusing him of matching the description of “an Afro-American wearing sweats” who had held up a nearby grocery, according to The Morning Call.

    When they demanded his identification, he told them he had to walk inside his house to retrieve it, so they followed him inside, even though he told them to wait outside to conduct an illegal search, the lawsuit states.

    Aron then stepped back onto the front porch where he handed his identification to one of the cops, who then demanded that he state his name.

    Aron told him his name was on his identification, which was when they ordered him to place his hands behind his back. When Aron asked why, the four cops pounced on him, punching him, kneeing him, tasering him, even though he was not resisting.

    That was when Eli Heckman, who was walking by, pulled out his phone to start recording, which drew the attention of Ammary, who then ordered him to “get off the block” – even though Heckman had every legal right to be on the block.

    When Heckman did not walk away fast enough, Ammary slammed him against a parked car, then smashed his phone.

    Although the phone was damaged, the video survived, which is why charges were dismissed against both Aron and Heckman, and there is enough evidence to sue the cops.

    Aron’s lawsuit is seeking $150,000. The three other officers named in the suit Andrew Holveck, who made the initial stop and has been sued in the past for another incident of police brutality caught on video, as well as Alexander Boehm and Anthony Bowland.

    Like Ammery, the three officers are all award winners, along with the entire police department, judging by this webpage.


    Aron is being represented by attorneys Robert Goldman and Joshua Karoly, the latter who filed a lawsuit last week against another officer, Joseph Iannetta, for kicking an armed robbery suspect in the head, leaving him with a broken jaw, in an incident that was also caught on video.

    Like the four other cops, Iannetta is also an award-winning cop.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/28/watch-award-winning-pennsylvania-cops-sued-for-brutal-arrest-thanks-to-video-they-tried-to-destroy/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 29, 2016, 11:53:24 AM
    This case has been posted before. A 6 year old child killed by violent criminals and yet no outrage and of course no riots. Just the continuing BS narrative on the "war on cops" and "cop lives matter".

    Family Sues After Cops Shot 6yo Autistic Boy and Watched Him “Suffer Immensely” As He Died

    Marksville, LA — A federal lawsuit has now been filed against several Louisiana law enforcement agencies for the fatal shooting of six-year-old Jeremy Mardis, who “suffered immensely” on November 3, 2015, due to “a barbaric and excessive use of deadly force.”

    Attorneys representing Christopher Few, Jeremy’s father, who suffered serious injuries in the incident; mother, Catherine Mardis; and Candace Few, whose vehicle her brother, Christopher, drove the night of the shooting, filed a federal civil lawsuit on Thursday in an attempt at justice for the needless death of the young child.

    In fact, video footage of the incident so shocked Louisiana State Police Col. Mike Edmonson, he told reporters in November, “It is the most disturbing thing I’ve seen, and I will leave it at that.”
    According to the lawsuit, referenced by KLFY, defendants include “Norris Greenhouse Jr. and Derrick Stafford, the two former Marksville Ward 2 deputy marshals facing second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder in the case. Both pleaded not guilty and are facing separate trials.

    “But the lawsuit also names as defendants Marksville City Marshal Floyd Voinche, the Marksville City Court, the town of Marksville, Avoyelles Parish, Progressive Paloverde Insurance Company and the other two officers involved in the chase of Few that night — Jason Brouillette and Kenneth Parnell III.”

    On November 3, 2015, according to the original police account, the four officers were attempting to serve a warrant for Few — who then fled in his sister’s Kia Sport, with Jeremy buckled in the passenger seat.
    Police had claimed Few was armed and posed an imminent deadly threat — so Officers Greenhouse and Stafford opened fire — emptying 18 rounds at the vehicle, critically injuring Few and killing the 6-year-old, who had autism.

    In actuality, no warrant had been issued for Few, and both father and son were unarmed — indeed, as video evidence shows, Few had his hands in the air when he received “two or three” bullets to the head and chest, while Jeremy suffered “four or five” shots to the head and neck.

    Appallingly, Jeremy languished in agony, still holding onto life for over five minutes after being shot multiple times — but officers failed to even check for a pulse or render assistance.
    “During this time, Jeremy was bleeding profusely and suffered immensely due to the gunshot wounds,” the lawsuit states, according to KFLY.

    “It was not until approximately some seven and one-half to eight minutes or so after the hail of gunfire, that an officer at the scene, believed to be Parnell, finally checked Jeremy for a pulse and discovered that he was still alive, despite having been shot multiple times including in the head and neck,” it reads.

    “However, none of the officers at the scene, including Stafford, Greenhouse, Brouillette and Parnell initiated or rendered any form of first aid, nor did they undertake any other measures in an attempt to stop Jeremy’s bleeding or otherwise alleviate or mitigate Jeremy’s suffering, or made any attempts to save his life.

    “Sadly, Jeremy was left to suffer — and die — while the officers casually searched for ‘gloves.’”


    An exact motive for the original traffic stop — given the fictitious claim of a warrant and that Few did not have a weapon — has yet to be publicly released by officials. Attorneys for Greenhouse and Stafford stated during court proceedings Few had been standing in the road, blocking traffic, ignored officers’ commands, and then fled the scene.

    But the lawsuit contends there had been no clear reason for police to pursue the vehicle Few was driving, and when he ultimately did pull over, the vehicle, “even if it were moving forward or backwards — did not and could not have presented an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm to any of the officers at the scene or innocent bystanders.”

    As video clearly shows, Few pulled to the side of the road, raised his arms above his head and made no threatening gestures — in other words, he posed not even the slightest legitimate threat to their safety. The lawsuit continues:

    “Moreover, at the time the pursuit of Christopher was initiated, and thereafter during the pursuit, none of the officers had reasonable or probable cause to believe that Christopher had committed some crime, was committing a crime or was about to commit a crime. The pursuit was unlawful, as was the subsequent use of deadly force.”

    Fatally shooting a 6-year-old child wasn’t the first brutal act by either Stafford or Greenhouse. As The Free Thought Project reported, the pair of rageful cops have a history of brutalizing their town with impunity — and as the lawsuit notes, it seems no vetting procedure was in place when Greenhouse and Stafford were hired.

    Additionally, when attorneys made a public records request with Marksville City Marshal Floyd Voinche for hiring, training, and disciplinary guidelines concerning deputy marshals, they received a telling one-sentence reply: “No such records exist.”

    “The need for such policies is so obvious,” KFLY quotes the lawsuit, “for the safety of the public and the protection of constitutional rights that the lack of such policies constitutes deliberate indifference and a reckless disregard for the public and plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.”

    But the fact it took an innocent 6-year-old’s death to force the city to examine such policies is endemic of brutal policing in the United States — and one means officers can employ to work around appropriate discipline is to resign and simply move on to the next department.

    In late September, in a stunning act of hubris, Stafford again requested charges be dropped since he acted in self defense — despite damning evidence to the contrary.
    The family of Jeremy Mardis is requesting a jury trial in this lawsuit.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/54107-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 29, 2016, 12:24:35 PM
    A citizen would likely have been shot.

    Award-Winning California Cop Flees Scene after Crashing Patrol Car

    An award-winning California cop crashed his patrol vehicle into a parked car and utility pole Thursday, then refused to step out when ordered to do so by responding officers, putting the car in reverse and speeding off with flashing emergency lights, a broken windshield and a dangling passenger side mirror.

    The incident was caught on video by shocked bystanders as more than 1,000 homes and businesses were left without power.

    Refraining from pulling their guns, the California Highway Patrol officers then tried to chase the state park law enforcement officer on foot as he pulled up to a traffic light, but then he sped away.

    Oroville police officers eventually got him to pull over and placed him in handcuffs, handing him over to the CHP who transported him to the hospital and determined he was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

    Daniel Kenney, who is listed as a state park peace officer supervisor, was then handed over to his department, who promptly placed him on paid administrative leave.

    Kenney, a K-9 officer who made more than $95,000 last year,was the recipient of the 2012 Top Dog Award along with his dog Kilo for “demonstrating the best discipline, teamwork, and overall skills.”

    It is not clear if Kilo was in the car with him as he made his getaway but the video shows the words “K-9 Unit, Stay Back” on the side of his patrol car.

    Meanwhile, a man sitting inside the parked vehicle that was struck by Kenney’s patrol car was also transported to the hospital with minor injuries, according to Action News Now.

    The incident took place at 2:30 p.m. when Kenney struck the parked car, causing both cars to strike the utility pole, which snapped in half.

    It is not clear why Kenney crashed and it’s even less clear why he fled, but authorities assure us it is all under investigation.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/28/watch-award-winning-california-cop-flees-scene-after-crashing-patrol-car/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 29, 2016, 04:07:11 PM
    A citizen would likely have been shot.

    Award-Winning California Cop Flees Scene after Crashing Patrol Car

    An award-winning California cop crashed his patrol vehicle into a parked car and utility pole Thursday, then refused to step out when ordered to do so by responding officers, putting the car in reverse and speeding off with flashing emergency lights, a broken windshield and a dangling passenger side mirror.

    The incident was caught on video by shocked bystanders as more than 1,000 homes and businesses were left without power.

    Refraining from pulling their guns, the California Highway Patrol officers then tried to chase the state park law enforcement officer on foot as he pulled up to a traffic light, but then he sped away.

    Oroville police officers eventually got him to pull over and placed him in handcuffs, handing him over to the CHP who transported him to the hospital and determined he was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

    Daniel Kenney, who is listed as a state park peace officer supervisor, was then handed over to his department, who promptly placed him on paid administrative leave.

    Kenney, a K-9 officer who made more than $95,000 last year,was the recipient of the 2012 Top Dog Award along with his dog Kilo for “demonstrating the best discipline, teamwork, and overall skills.”

    It is not clear if Kilo was in the car with him as he made his getaway but the video shows the words “K-9 Unit, Stay Back” on the side of his patrol car.

    Meanwhile, a man sitting inside the parked vehicle that was struck by Kenney’s patrol car was also transported to the hospital with minor injuries, according to Action News Now.

    The incident took place at 2:30 p.m. when Kenney struck the parked car, causing both cars to strike the utility pole, which snapped in half.

    It is not clear why Kenney crashed and it’s even less clear why he fled, but authorities assure us it is all under investigation.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/28/watch-award-winning-california-cop-flees-scene-after-crashing-patrol-car/








    The Biggest Surprise is they didn't shoot the man in the parked car
    & blame him for causing the accident & making them in fear of their lives.!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 30, 2016, 09:14:18 PM
    The pig and those who cover her should be locked up in prison for at least 10 years, tied in a chair and pepper sprayed every day. But what happens to criminals like these? They get a promotion.. The pig is now a "Captain".

    Horrifying Video Shows Cop Torturing Restrained Woman With Mace Until She Falls Unconscious

    Dayton, OH — “I thought I might die,” said Amber Swink of her harrowing experience being pepper-sprayed while in a seven-point restraint chair in the Montgomery County Jail in Dayton, Ohio, on November 15, 2015.

    Video footage of the torturous incident shows Swink so tightly restrained in the chair, she is hardly able to move her head; but that didn’t stop Sgt. Judith L. Sealey from entering the isolation cell and unleashing pepper-spray in the 25-year-old’s face — at near point-blank range — for seemingly no reason but sadistic pleasure.

    Swink acknowledged to the Washington Post she had, indeed, been drinking heavily at home that evening when police arrested her, and was still somewhat intoxicated when cameras recorded what happened. But she doesn’t understand what brought on the senseless attack.

    “It felt like somebody just crushed up fresh peppers and made me use them as face cream,” Swink told the Post. “It took my breath away. You’re fighting for air. I remember my mouth was filling with a thick slobber, like foaming up — and that was also blocking my airway.”

    As the Post described, “In the four-minute clip captured by a camera in the isolation cell, Swink can be seen struggling and coughing; she appears to pass out after her face is covered with a bright orange substance.”

    Officers had already coated her face with the thick, orange substance once — and despite being a bit drunk, Swink recalls the jailers laughing outside the sterile isolation cell immediately before Sgt. Sealey’s inexplicable act.

    In fact, it takes quite some time for officers to even attend to Swink — and when someone finally enters the cell to douse her eyes with a cruelly sparing amount of water, the air is so thick with pepper spray, he’s forced to vacate the room more than once.

    Montgomery County Sheriff Phil Plummer agreed in September that — even though he had yet to view the surveillance footage — pepper-spraying a restrained individual violated departmental policy.
    But Plummer characterized Swink’s experience as an “isolated incident.”

    “Thirty percent of my jail is people suffering from mental illnesses,” the sheriff told the Post by phone, unintentionally highlighting one of the most critical issues surrounding America’s prison- and police-industrial complex. “There are a lot of situations that the police officers should not be dealing with, but everybody wants to blame the police.”

    Police — including officers working in jails and prisons — in the overwhelming majority of departments across the United States do not receive proper or sufficient training to manage encounters with people suffering a wide variety of mental illnesses; and the resulting lack of understanding means those individuals are often subjected to excessive force.

    Swink has filed an excessive force lawsuit in U.S. District Court accusing the sheriff’s department of acting in a manner “that amounted to torture,” and alleging law enforcement attempted to hide wrongdoing by destroying evidence.

    “We will definitely oppose the lawsuit,” Plummer asserted unsurprisingly. “This isn’t that egregious where she’s walked away with any serious injuries. The officer she spit on should sue her.”
    Describing being subjected to torture as ‘not that egregious’ simply because the victim did not sustain permanent injury shows a chilling level of callous cruelty and lack of comprehension Sealey’s actions constituted misconduct.

    As the Post pointed out, a National Institute of Justice memo says pepper spray has been used by law enforcement in the U.S. since the 1980s “as a use of force option to subdue and control dangerous, combative, or violent subjects in the field. OC [oleoresin capsicum], with its ability to temporarily incapacitate subjects, has been credited with decreasing injuries among officers and arrestees by reducing the need for more severe force options.”

    Swink — with arms, legs, and body restrictively strapped to a restraint chair — obviously posed no threat to jailhouse officers, however, and video proves the motivation to spray her must have been akin to unadulterated sadism.

    “You cannot find any training manual that will tell you it is allowable to pepper-spray somebody who is restrained,” Kamran Loghman, a U.S. Naval Academy professor who helped develop pepper spray for law enforcement use, told the Post. “It is used to avoid confrontation or injury, so you don’t escalate to higher levels of confrontation. Pepper spray, therefore, should not be used if the subject is expressing verbal disagreement or anger.”

    Ironically, if police deployed pepper spray more often in confrontations with the public — rather than immediately pulling the trigger of a gun — needless deaths could be reduced dramatically.
    However, in the incident involving Swink, video proves an absolute lack of cause to deploy pepper spray, despite — as Plummer, Swink, and her attorney agree — her belligerent behavior prior to landing in the restraint chair.

    Swink had yelled, banged on a window, kicked at an officer, and generally caused a disturbance after being brought to the Montgomery County Jail — for which officers justifiably used pepper spray the first time, and then strapped her to the restraint chair in the isolation cell.

    “Shortly thereafter,” the lawsuit states, “Defendant Sealey went into Plaintiff Amber Swink’s cell with another can of OC spray and intentionally and maliciously sprayed Plaintiff Amber Swink’s face and body with the OC spray until she became unconscious and suffered permanent, serious, and debilitating injuries.”

    Plummer told the Post Sealey had been disciplined for the misconduct — meaning she had received a write-up that would remain in her file for six months. Nothing more.

    “We don’t tolerate once you’re secured using pepper-spray on you because the threat is neutralized,” the sheriff explained. “That’s the mistake that Sgt. Sealey made.”

    Sealey has, in fact, since been promoted to Captain.


    Attorney Douglas Brannon, representing Swink, asserted Sealey should have been criminally charged and immediately fired.

    “I can’t fathom that the sheriff would even consider keeping this employee in light of the fact that her conduct was intentional, deliberate and abusive and directed towards an individual that was completely unable to protect herself,” he told the Post.

    Now, Dayton Police are investigating to decide whether or not criminal charges should be filed against Sealey, who was placed on paid administrative leave last week for the duration of that investigation. On Wednesday, Plummer said,“[Sealey] is not exempt from criminal prosecution, she is not exempt from termination. She is going to be treated like everybody else.”

    Swink, who suffered with asthma as a child, said the unnecessary use of pepper spray has brought back some of those breathing difficulties.

    “My whole life, I looked up to law enforcement,” Swink told the Post. “They would come into our schools and talked to us and they were supposed to be some of the best people you could trust and call on.
    “But now I wonder if there’s really anybody watching out for me and my family.”



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sadistic-cop-tortures-restrained-woman-spray/


    More information on this story. Funny how the criminal gang says "if you have nothing to hide, what are you afraid of", yet they are too willing to delete anything that could reveal their crimes. In effect, the criminals have access to evidence that can incriminate them and can do what they please with the evidence, while the victims don't. But as you can see, violent criminals don't get punished for their crimes, instead they get promotions and paid vacations.


    Ohio Sheriff Sued after Video She tried to Destroy Surfaces, Showing Deputy Pepper Spraying Restrained Woman

    An Ohio sheriff’s sergeant thought it was all fun and games when she and fellow deputies deleted video footage that showed her pepper spraying a women strapped down in a restraint chair.

    But now the joke is on her because the video still exists, resulting in a lawsuit against Montgomery County Sheriff Sergeant Judith Sealey and her cohorts.

    The video is below and the lawsuit can be read here, which goes into detail about how they conspired to delete the footage, but does not explain how the law firm obtained the footage.

    Apparently, the video was leaked to attorney Douglas Brannon, who is representing the victim, because Montgomery County Sheriff Phil Plummer accused the attorney of possessing “stolen property.”

    It all started November 15, 2015 when the victim, Amber Swink, 25, was arrested after deputies responded to a call of domestic violence at her home. Montgomery County sheriff’s deputies said she was drunk and belligerent.

    Once at the Montgomery County Jail, sheriff’s deputies placed Swink in a restraint chair with her legs and arms strapped down, which was when she was peppered sprayed in the face by then-Sergeant Judith Sealey, who is now a captain.

    According to the lawsuit:

    It was ultimately determined by the Defendants that the videotape of Defendant Sealey spraying Plaintiff Amber Swink with OC spray while she was restrained in the restraint chair should be intentionally destroyed, along with other electronic data and reports to prevent probable civil litigation, criminal investigation and protect a black female being promoted to the command staff from discipline and/or termination.

    Under orders and/or with the consent of Defendant Plummer, Defendant Crosby, Defendant Sealey and/or another member of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office all videotape, electronic and other evidence of Defendant Sealey spraying Plaintiff Amber Swink with OC spray while in the restraint chair was destroyed.

    Because the video contained evidence of a use of force incident, the lawsuit states that the jail was required to maintain possession of it for seven years.

    But when attorney Brannon made a public records request for it, he was told there was an “automatic data overwrite” of video every seven days, so it no longer existed.

    The lawsuit also states that the department protected and promoted Sealey because she was black and the sheriff was trying to prove the department was not racist after firing two deputies earlier this year for sending racist texts.

    Sealey is on paid administrative leave. She was a Sergeant at the time of the incident, but has since been promoted to Captain.


    Sheriff Phil Plummer even said the pepper spraying violated department policy. Evidently, Sealey was suppose to complete a use of force form upon her use of the pepper spray but that form was never filled out. Sheriff Plummer also said the video footage was stolen.

    According to the Dayton Daily News:

    “This looks orchestrated from within the inside. It’s disturbing because, you know, we have faith in our employees. Systems are set up that employees have access to all these records to do their jobs. So now, somebody thinks something wasn’t handled properly. They’re going to steal records. This is a theft. This is obstructing official business. This is tampering with evidence,” said Sheriff Plummer.

    The proper protocol entails the sergeant downloading the video onto a CD, completing all the reports, and sending it all over to the captain. Once the captain looks at the given information, the determination will be made to send it to the major and so on to the chief.

    But, the information never even made it to the captain.

    As for Swink, she said she will never get over the incident.

    “It felt like somebody just crushed up fresh peppers and made me use them as face cream. I remember my mouth was filling with a thick slobber, like foaming up — and that was also blocking my airway, I thought I might die.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/30/ohio-sheriff-sued-after-video-he-tried-to-destroy-surfaces-showing-deputy-pepper-spraying-restrained-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2016, 10:01:10 PM
    The blue wall of silence. Once again, the criminals conveniently ignoring the laws and covering up, because in their minds law enforcement=law exempt. The whole stop lasted 45 seconds and they all laughed. Why are these criminals exempted from the laws? What would've happened to a citizen who was clocked at 107mph?


    Dashcam: Chief Caught Doing Over 100 mph Only for Fellow Cops to Stop Him and Laugh About It

    Brinkley, AR — Dashcam video showing preferential treatment of an Arkansas police chief has him scrambling to defend himself for being let off easy — without so much as a warning — after speeding to an off-duty job as a referee at a football game.

    Footage obtained by THV11 from Arkansas State Police following a viewer tip, shows Brinkley Police Chief Edward Randle being pulled over in his personal vehicle, a red pickup truck, near Clarendon on Friday, October 21.

    A state trooper assisted an officer from the Brinkley force upon request, and makes a U-turn after witnessing the speeding red pickup driving in the opposite direction, to make the stop.

    As the trooper approaches the driver’s side, dashcam video shows he immediately recognized the Brinkley chief of police, and laughingly asks, “Where are you going so fast?”

    Randle — obviously familiar to the state trooper — isn’t asked to produce identification, and tells the officer he’s headed for the game, which he later clarified for THV11 was the Clarendon-Marvell football game.
    At that point, the Brinkley officer, who had summoned state police for assistance with the stop, also approaches Randle — as the trooper tells the chief the officer had been tailing him for miles when he finally called for assistance.

    “I know you didn’t call the State Police!” Randle quips to the Brinkley officer.

    “I didn’t have your plate,” the officer replies, “so it didn’t go over.”

    As THV11 posits, that statement “could indicate that, since the officer did not announce the truck’s license plate number into his radio, nobody else would know the chief had been pulled over.”

    The trio laughs about the chief’s excessive speed, and the officer tells him, “I had you locked in at 107.”

    “It won’t do 107. It’ll only do 95,” Randle responds, referring to a governor capping his truck’s speed, as he later explained to THV11 in an unrecorded interview.

    After a few more laughs, the officer tells Randle he measured the truck’s speed over 90 miles an hour — and the chief was still pulling away at the time.

    Despite the obvious dangers of such high speeds on the narrow, curvy road, both the trooper and Brinkley officer simply walk away from the truck, as the officer says dismissively, “See you later, Chief.”
    Video captures the last exchange between the two cops as Randle pulls away — the state trooper notes he clocked the chief doing “71 at the curve.”

    In two phone interviews with THV11 — which were not recorded, by request — Randle disputes he ever came close to the truck’s alleged top possible speed of 95, as well as the trooper’s claim in dashcam footage he had been rounding the curve at 71 mph.

    Additionally, “Though the state trooper claimed that the officer had been pursuing Randle for miles, Randle told THV11 that the officer was on his way to Clarendon to get fingerprints from someone at the county jail.”
    THV11 spoke with local business owner, Benjamin Martin, who first noticed the stop by a Brinkley officer inside Clarendon city limits.

    “I find it, you know, very disheartening, that anyone, public official or not, would show such blatant disregard for the speed limit, and put the lives of innocent others at risk,” Martin told the station in a video interview.

    “I just feel that no one’s above the law, and you know, if it was me, I would’ve gotten a ticket.”

    Indeed, the public might be lucky the off-duty Brinkley police chief didn’t lose control of his vehicle while traveling at such a high rate of speed — simply to make it to a football game.

    Neither the Brinkley officer nor the state trooper are being investigated for wrongdoing — despite giving the chief a free pass. Arkansas State Police told THV11 the incident fell under control of the Brinkley Police Department as soon as the officer arrived on scene, even though the trooper affected the stop.

    “As a chief of police, and as a law enforcement officer, you’re sworn to protect and serve,” Martin asserted, “which is the opposite of putting the lives of others at risk.”

    Although nothing serious resulted from Randle’s excessive speeds, it was notorious blue privilege that allowed him to drive away without even a warning.

    These seemingly small favors afforded to police by police on a constant basis highlight the divide civilians feel in their encounters with law enforcement. Indeed, the idea police belong to an exclusive club of impunity — simply because of their chosen occupation — only increases tension and resentment in their communities.

    If police don’t uphold and enforce the laws they enforce against civilians, the law becomes an arbitrary, exploitive method for generating revenue — and nothing more.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dashcam-speeding-cop-laughing/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2016, 10:06:47 PM
    Notice how with cops it is always an "accidental discharge" and the gun "discharged itself". These are the people who are "trained" in firearms and have access to weapons that the mere plebs can only dream of. Notice how it is instantly considered an "accident" and the shooter is given special treatment and privileges.

    California Deputy Kills Fellow Deputy in Negligent Discharge while Discussing Gun Safety

    They were talking about gun safety when a sheriff’s deputy’s gun went off, killing another deputy.

    But Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims announced today that it was “nothing but an accident.”

    Not that they have interviewed the cop who shot and killed Sergeant Rod Lucas, a 46-year-old father of four who had worked for the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office since 1996.

    Nor have they released his name for that matter.

    All we can tell you now is that Lucas became the 961st police shooting victim this year, according to Killed by Police.

    And even though he was shot and killed in the line of duty, he is not mentioned on Officer Down, the site that tracks the names and numbers of officers killed in the line of duty.

    The incident took place Monday inside “a room at the sheriff’s special investigations unit office near Fresno Yosemite International Airport,” according to the Fresno Bee.

    At a news conference Tuesday afternoon, Mims said Lucas and a colleague, described only as a detective, were discussing safety of backup weapons when the detective’s gun went off.

    Lucas died later at Community Regional Medical Center. Mims said staff in the investigations unit are plainclothes officers who investigate crimes such as narcotics and vice. No one was wearing a bulletproof vest.

    “He was truly a leader in the best terms I can describe,” Mims said of Lucas, who joined the Sheriff’s Office in September 1996. “He was the sergeant that people wanted to work for.”

    The incident still is being investigated. Mims said the detective whose gun went off has not been interviewed, nor had the sheriff spoken to him, “because of his mental state,” she said.

    Message Sgt. Rod Lucas’ wife asked Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims to pass along

    “We’re giving him the time he needs,” said Mims, who declined to identify the detective by name. “We’re taking care of him.”


    There was no disagreement or argument occurring when the gun went off, Mims said. “There was nothing like that going on. We have no reason to think it was anything but an accident.”

    But as any gun owner will tell you, there are no accidental gun discharges. This was a negligent discharge.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/01/california-deputy-kills-fellow-deputy-in-negligent-discharge-while-discussing-gun-safety/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2016, 08:52:30 AM
    Don't forget that only cops are "highly trained" in using firearms, unlike the citizens.

    Cop Fired After Shooting Own 11-year-old Daughter at a Halloween Party

    Lincolnton, NC — Time and again, police prove that the government having a monopoly on the use of weapons is a terrible idea. A glaring example of this incompetence is evidenced through a recent case in North Carolina in which a police officer shot her own daughter.

    On Monday, the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office announced that deputy Misty Michelle Flowers, 38, was terminated after she shot her 11-year-old daughter over the weekend.
    The shooting happened as Flowers, who is entrusted by the state to act responsibly with a firearm, was showing off her service weapon to friends Saturday night when she squeezed the trigger. The bullet then went through the wall and hit her daughter in another room.

    “I find gross negligence and the disregard for the safety of others was displayed in the incident Saturday night and therefore Officer Flowers was terminated today,” Sheriff David Carpenter said. “This is totally separate from the SBI investigation into the incident that occurred at her residence.”

    According to WNCN:

    Lincoln County deputies said they were called to the home at 11:23 p.m. and started tending to the girl’s injury. The child was taken to CHS-Lincoln and then airlifted to Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte for surgery. According to deputies, she was in stable condition after treatment.

    Neighbors say there was a Halloween party going on at the house where this happened.

    Flowers has been with the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office since 2015 and worked for the Catawba County Sheriff’s Office before that.

    “During this entire situation, my focus has been on the well-being and condition of the child involved and am of the understanding the child is going to be ok after the surgery. This is a very tragic situation for all involved, the officer, her family, her career and everyone that has been touched by this,” Carpenter said. “We continue to pray for healing of the child and the entire family as the investigation continues over the next several days.”

    According to the SBI, an investigation into the incident is still ongoing. It is unclear whether or not Flowers will face any charges.

    This is the second such incident in only a week in which a police officer accidentally fired their weapon endangering the lives of children. Last week, the Free Thought Project reported on the Ohio cop who fired his weapon into a daycare center while it was fully occupied.

    Despite the officer clearly admitting to committing the misdemeanor offense of discharging a firearm within city limits, police have yet to charge him.

    “Right now our law department has it and they are reviewing it to see if there should be any charges,” Police Chief Jack Davis said last Wednesday morning.
    “It was a very unfortunate incident for the school, as well as him,” he added.

    Outside of skating out of the misdemeanor charge so far, this officer also seems to be avoiding the felony offense of discharging a weapon in a gun-free school zone.

    Imagine for a moment that you were showing off your pistol to friends at a Halloween party and all of the sudden, you accidentally squeeze off a round and shoot your own daughter.

    There are two possible scenarios that would take place; the first one being that a SWAT team responds and you are killed. The second, less lethal result would be your inevitable arrest and charges of public endangerment, unlawful discharge, illegal use of a firearm, assault with a deadly weapon, terrorism, or a myriad of other charges associated with sending a deadly projectile hurling through a wall and into a child. You would immediately be facing fines, jail time, probation, and firearms restrictions.

    However, if you are a government agent who’s trusted with carrying a deadly weapon into places others cannot, you needn’t worry about any of those repercussions.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-fired-weapon-daughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2016, 08:55:17 AM
    Criminal gang robbing helpless people.

    Cop Caught on His Own Body Camera Stealing Money From Unconscious Crash Victim

    Denver, CO — A Denver cop has been arrested and suspended without pay after his own body camera footage caught him stealing $1,200 in cash from a crash victim.

    Instead of helping an unconscious crash victim, officer Julian Archuleta took advantage of the situation for his own personal gain by going through the man’s clothing and robbing him. Archuleta now faces charges of misdemeanor theft, 1st-degree official misconduct and tampering with physical evidence.

    According to an arrest affidavit, Archuleta responded to a call of shots fired in the early morning hours of October 7. The call then led to a short pursuit which ended as the car crashed. The driver got away while the passenger of the vehicle was knocked unconscious.

    Archuleta’s body camera then recorded the officer for the next 24 minutes and 40 seconds. In the footage, he took pictures of the scene and then searched the man’s clothing which had been removed by paramedics.
    In the video, Archuleta finds a stack of cash in the man’s pants with a $100 bill on top, according to the arrest affidavit. He then separates the $100 bill from the stack and a $1 bill remains on top.

    Throughout the footage, Archuleta shuffles money and rearranges paperwork in his patrol car, the affidavit said.
    According to the Denver Post, when a detective collected the cash and logged it into the property bureau as evidence, he counted $118 and did not find any $100 bills, the affidavit said. But while reviewing Archuleta’s body camera footage as part of the investigation, the detective noticed the $100 bill.

    Amazingly enough, instead of covering up the theft, the detective crossed the thin blue line and reported the inconsistency with the $100 bill to internal affairs. When confronted by investigators, Archuleta told them he would “check his war bag” to see if any of the money had slipped into a crevice in his patrol car.

    According to the arrest affidavit, Archuleta called the detective back an hour later and claimed he found 12 $100 bills that “must have fallen in his bag.” After being caught red-handed, Archuleta then turned in the money.

    According to the Post, the Denver district attorney’s office declined to prosecute the shooting suspect because of the missing cash and because Archuleta allegedly moved evidence inside the suspect’s vehicle before detectives had a search warrant, the affidavit said.

    Earlier this year, the Denver police department was equipped with body cameras. We now know why it took so long for the department to adopt them. Archuleta will now go down in history as the first Denver cop to be criminally charged based on body camera evidence.

    Like most cases of police theft, this incident is not isolated. In fact, just 2 months ago, Grants Police Department Sgt. Roshern C. McKinney, 33, was arrested after an investigation found that he’d stolen both money and marijuana from the police department. Like Archuleta, the entire theft was captured on the officer’s own body camera. McKinney has since been charged with marijuana distribution, conspiracy, and felony embezzlement.

    State police also charged McKinney’s 23-year-old girlfriend Tanicka Gallegos-Gonzales, for drug distribution and conspiracy. Both were arrested in Albuquerque and booked into the Sandoval County Detention Center, according to KOB.

    Public Information Officer for the New Mexico State Police, Elizabeth Armijo said Grants police chief, Craig Vandiver alerted state police after the department found video from Mckinney’s lapel camera that “exposed possible illicit activity by a Grants Police Department sergeant.”

    What does it say about the criminal tendency of some police officers when they are unable to practice restraint from theft — knowing that they are being recorded?

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-caught-body-camera-stealing-money/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2016, 10:15:52 AM
    The irony of the criminals who appear on reality shows trying to show how tough their job is and how they have to deal with crimes when they themselves are more despicable than the people they confront on screen. Quite poetic too that it is a woman that is arrested for domestic violence. As expected this cop had previously  won an award for "heroism".

    “Domestics are the most dangerous calls a police officer can go on,” The irony...

    Connecticut cop from ‘Live PD’ reality show reportedly arrested for domestic violence

    Just hours after filming wrapped on an episode of A&E’s new reality show “Live PD,” Connecticut police officer Stacey Lyons was arrested for domestic violence.

    The Bridgeport Police Department sergeant allegedly broke into her ex-boyfriend’s home Friday night and assaulted him when she found him with another woman, according to the Connecticut Post.

    Lyons, 33, was taken into custody hours after she was shown on “Live PD” arresting a man for allegedly choking his girlfriend.

    “Domestics are the most dangerous calls a police officer can go on,” she said on the show.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/live-pd-reality-show-conn-arrested-domestic-violence-article-1.2854350

    Title: Re: ATF Agent Pleads Guilty to stealing money, planting drugs and framing people
    Post by: Howard on November 02, 2016, 11:33:07 AM
    Every single time some whackos get corrected there's a conspiracy theory that turns them into martyrs.

    Agree 100%.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2016, 09:05:07 PM
    Armed violent gangs invading homes of innocent people and terrorizing them and then trying to cover up their crimes. What would have happened if these innocent people  tried to defend themselves with a firearm?

    Drunk California Cop Violently Invades Home of Innocent Couple Looking for House Party

    A California cop got drunk and went to a random couple’s house, thinking he was at the home of a fellow officer throwing a party.

    But Oakland police Cullen Faeth ended up arrested on home invasion charges when he attacked the house’s occupants, knocking the woman to the ground and kicking her husband several times.

    While the rookie cop was attacking the couple, another cop who has not been identified ran out from the couple’s backyard while pretending to hold a gun underneath his shirt before running away.

    The responding officers then spent the remainder of the night pressuring the couple into not filing charges – never once telling them that Faeth was a cop.

    Now the home owners Olga and Nemesio Cortez have filed a lawsuit against the city of Oakland and five police officers. Olga is a probation officer.

    On December 7, 2015, Faeth and several other off-duty Oakland cops were drinking at Monaghan’s Bar, according to KTVU.

    Afterwards they agreed to go to an officer’s house party.

    Cue the house party from hell.

    At 9:30 p.m.,  Faeth approached the Cortez’s home, mistaking it for the officer’s house party.

    “Open the fucking door!” Faith yelled as he banged on the Cortez’s front door.

    When Nemesio Cortez cracked the door to see what the commotion was, Faeth tried to force his way inside the home and in doing so, overpowered the man, pulling him outside and kicking him in the stomach.

    His wife, Olga Cortez, called the police to report the invasion, then stepped outside in her bathrobe to help her husband.

    But Faeth tackled her, exposing her nude lower body.

    “Out of nowhere, he kind of faced my direction and then just walked towards me and jumped on me, and grabbed me really, really tight and we fell to the ground. I was exposed and humiliated,” said Olga Cortez.

    It was not until neighbors jumped in on the action that Faeth was held down until the sober police arrived where he was arrested.

    The lawsuit, which was filed on October 28, 2016, identifies the other officers involved as Sergeant Micheal Turner – who shot and killed a man with a pellet gun last year – as well as Lieutenant Roland Holmgren, and officers Trevor Stratton and Bryan Budgin.

    All the cops who were with Faeth that night fled the scene before police arrived.

    Oakland police then returned to the Cortez home several times throughout the night to intimidate them into not filing charges.

    At this point, the couple had no idea the suspects were cops.

    The lawsuit states that around midnight, several uniformed officers arrived at the Cortez home in an attempt to persuade the couple that no crime had been committed.

    At 3 a.m., a new group of on-duty officers arrived to do the same thing.

    It was not until a week later that the couple learned through a friend that Faeth was a cop.

    The Cortez’s tried to get the incident report for months but the Oakland Police would not release it. The couple’s attorney, John Burris had to convince the police department to release the report, which they finally did, but it was heavily redacted.

    The Oakland Police Department had this to say:

    “The Oakland Police Department takes all allegations of misconduct involving our employees seriously. We hold all of our employees to a high level of ethical and professional accountability and will not tolerate criminal behavior.”

    Faeth is charged with two counts of battery and one count each of trespassing and public intoxication, he has pleaded not guilty. All the officers involved have been put on administrative leave.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/31/drunk-california-cop-violently-invades-home-of-innocent-couple-looking-for-house-party/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 03, 2016, 09:08:05 AM
    Accountability baby! Now cops know they can't go around inserting screwdrivers up arrestee's asses! The system wor...

    I'm trolling you guys. Closeted homo cops can keep raping those they pull over with vaguely phallic tools they keep in their glove box. Just remember to not keep your Philips-head dildo in the glove box - no muss, no fuss.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/chicago-police-coprez-coffie-screwdriver-assault-scott-korhonen-gerald-lodwich-a7350006.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 03, 2016, 11:28:41 PM
    Accountability baby! Now cops know they can't go around inserting screwdrivers up arrestee's asses! The system wor...

    I'm trolling you guys. Closeted homo cops can keep raping those you pull over with tools. Just remember to not keep your screwdrivers in the glove box - no muss, no fuss.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/chicago-police-coprez-coffie-screwdriver-assault-scott-korhonen-gerald-lodwich-a7350006.html

    And this happened 12 years ago. As is typical, no consequences for the violent criminal gang and the bill goes to the taxpayers. These cops should have been locked up for at least 20 years and sodomized daily with a screwdriver. But of course "blue lives matter".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2016, 07:12:00 PM
    An autopsy shows that Angerbaur's blood sugar soared to 813 at the time of her death. They should throw the nurse and the cops who stood around texting in a cell and let them starve.

    Texas Jail Nurse Allows Woman to Die in Diabetic Coma after Refusing Requests to Test Blood Sugar

    The parents of an insulin-dependent 20-year-old diabetic woman who died in an Texas jail cell after a licensed nurse ignored her pleas and refused to help released a surveillance video of her death Thursday in hopes it will bring about changes in the “prison for profit” industry.

    “We want to see things change in jails everywhere. Morgan had a family that loved her,” Jennifer Houser, the mother of Moran Angerbaur said.

    “This has to change. Nobody deserves to die like that.”

    Morgan Angerbauer, 20, was booked into Bi-State Justice Building in Texarkana in the afternoon of June 28 for violation of her probation for possession of drugs – the same jail we reported on last month where guards killed a man on camera who told them multiple times, “I can’t breathe.”

    She was found dead in her cell three days later on July 1 after a jailhouse nurse refused to administer a blood sugar test – despite the fact Angerbauer banged on her cell door over several hours asking to get her blood tested.

    Brittany Johnson, the licensed vocational nurse who refused her requests for blood tests, has since been charged with negligent homicide, a misdemeanor.

    In the days leading to her death when they did test her blood, Angerbauer’s glucose readings were so high they exceeded the jail’s equipment’s testing range.

    But she was never taken to the hospital.

    The video shows Johnson, who admitted she refused to check on Angerbauer’s blood sugar, finally entering the cell at 4:12 a.m. after previously ignoring several of her cries for help.

    Angerbauer’s last dose of insulin was administered at 5:30 a.m. on June 30.

    At 10:30 a.m., nurse Tiffany Venable, documented Angerbauer’s blood sugar at 74, which is within the normal range of 70-110.

    At 4:30 p.m. Venable noted that Angerbauer refused a blood sugar test.

    According to jail policy, refusals are documented when an inmate doesn’t show up for a pill call even if the inmate is asleep or incapacitated.

    At around 5 p.m., Angerbauer tells nurse Brittany Johnson she wanted her blood sugar checked.

    Johnson refused.

    “Johnson also admitted that she was fully aware of the severity of Angerbauer’s medical diabetic situation, but rather than treat her, she told her that things don’t work that way, if you miss your medical call you have to wait until it’s time for your next medical call,” the affidavit for Johnson’s arrest states.

    “Johnson told investigators that if she allowed all offenders to do that, she’d never get anything done.”

    Angerbauer had been pleading for help throughout the night.

    At around 4:00 a.m., trustees at the jail observed Angerbauer laying unconscious in her jail cell and informed medical staff.

    At 4:12 a.m., video shows Angerbauer unconscious next to what appears to be vomit when Johnson looks through the glass panel in her cell. At this point, Angerbauer has received no insulin in almost 23 hours.

    Johnson appears to yell at Angerbauer, flips the lights off and on, and knocks on the glass window of her jail cell.

    About a minute later, a correctional officer opens the door to Angerbauer’s cell for Johnson. She walks in carrying a folder and shakes Angerbauer.

    Angerbauer is motionless and doesn’t move or respond.

    Nurse Johnson leaves then returns with a tube of glucose used for diabetics and squirts it into Angerbauer’s mouth at around 4:15 a.m.

    A correctional officer stands by Angerbauer, attempting to provide support, as she remains motionless and by this time appears completely unconscious.

    At 4:37 a.m., Angerbauer’s body appears lifeless, her legs are lopsided, her mouth is open and her head is tilted back.

    At this point, nobody on the medical or jail staff bothered to call 911 for medical attention, although one correctional officer appears to be texting as he stands in the doorway.


    Nurse Johnson continues to test Angerbauer’s blood sugar levels while Angerbauer remains limp and unresponsive.

    At 4:57 a.m., a female correctional officer enters the cell with a video camera.

    A male correctional officer standing in the cell begins talking on a cordless phone, presumably calling 911 attempting to summon paramedics for medical help.

    Paramedics arrive and enter Angerbauer’s cell at 5:06 a.m. just shortly after Johnson decided to administer CPR, using a portable defibrillator.

    Emergency personnel is unable to revive Angerbauer. Paramedics leave at 5:10 a.m. just minutes after they arrive.

    About a minute later, Johnson closes Angerbauer’s eyes, places an orange sheet over her deceased body and exits the jail cell.

    Johnson has pleaded not guilty to charges negligent homicide. Her next court date, which is set on a trial docket, is in February.

    Andy and Jennifer Hauser, the parents of Angerbauer, filed a lawsuit for civil rights violations and wrongful death, which can be seen below or read here.

    “It was the most excruciating thing I’ve ever had to do in my life,” Jennifer Houser said after viewing the video of her daughter’s death. “All of those people, all had cell phones, not one of them thought to call 911.”

    “Her civil rights were stripped away the moment she entered that cell,” Jennifer Houser said.

    “Had they just taken her to the ER in the first 30 minutes, there is a good chance she would’ve lived,” Matthew Campbell, the attorney representing the Houser’s said. “They didn’t follow their own procedures ”

    Campbell says Angerbauer should have been taken to the hospital by at least June 29 when several of her blood sugar readings were over 400 and 500 to be treated for ketoacidosis and high blood sugar levels.

    The lawsuit Campbell filed on the Houser’s behalf names nurse Brittany Johnson; LaSalle Corrections, the company responsible for managing the Bi-State Jail; LaSalle owners and administrators as well as Johnson’s supervisor, along with 20 John Doe and Jane Doe defendants who failed to call for emergency help, but have yet to be identified.

    The Houser’s say they hope the aftermath daughter’s death and their pending lawsuits will prompt the “prison for profit” system to re-evaluate and spark changes in jails across the country.

    Angerbauer’s death at the Bi-State jail in Texarkana comes less than a year after inmate Michael Sabbie’s death at the same jail after he was pepper sprayed.

    Sabbie complained to correctional officers he could not breathe. But like Angerbauer’s, Sabbie’s pleas for help were ignored by staff at Bi-State jail.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/04/watch-texas-jail-nurse-allows-woman-to-die-in-diabetic-coma-after-refusing-requests-to-test-blood-sugar/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2016, 07:30:34 PM
    Ironic how cops always have excuses "it was a joke", "it was an accident", "it was no big deal". But there do not seem to be any legal consequence for this vile criminal.
    However, a few months ago (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8563252#msg8563252) when a cop blamed a teen who worked at a Subway that his drink supposedly contained THC and methamphetamine, the young man was arrested simply because "he took too long" and therefore (according to the criminal gang) he must have poisoned the cop's drink.


    Veteran Cop Fired For Giving a Homeless Man a Shit Sandwich — Claims It Was a Joke

    San Antonio, TX — “It was a disgusting, vile act — that, there is no excuse; there is no explaining it; there is no justification,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus told KOMO News after the termination of an officer for, quite literally, giving a homeless man a shit sandwich.

    “It’s a disgrace to the department, it’s a disgrace to the badge,” McManus continued.

    In May, Officer Matthew Luckhurst inexplicably thought it would be humorous to place feces in between two slices of bread and offer it to a likely-starving homeless person in a styrofoam takeout box, and then boast of this ‘prank’ to his partner.

    His partner, however, didn’t share the sentiment — and the pair of cops returned to the scene, where Luckhurst ostensibly disposed of the sickening, cruel offering.

    According to the chief, news of Luckhurst’s shameful deed eventually wound its way up the chain of command — thanks to an unnamed officer’s tip to his supervisor — and internal affairs began an investigation in July.

    Ultimately, two review boards — one sworn advisory panel and one comprised of civilians — both recommended Luckhurst be ‘indefinitely suspended.’ This week, McManus upheld that recommendation — and as his interview with KOMO evidences, disgust over Luckhurst’s puerile, disrespectful ‘joke’ is universal in the department.

    “It’s embarrassing that someone would do something like that — ever do something like that,” the chief told KOMO, obviously fighting the desire to use stronger language.

    Although McManus told the outlet the San Antonio Police Department has since endeavored to locate the unfortunate homeless victim, they have thus far been unsuccessful — but he did offer a decisive apology on air should that person perhaps see the interview.

    In a prepared statement cited by MySanAntonio.com, the chief explained, “The fact that his fellow officers were so disgusted with his actions that they reported him to Internal Affairs demonstrates that this type of behavior will never be tolerated. The action of this one former officer in no way reflects the actions of all the other good men and women who respectfully serve this community.”

    McManus had not personally met the officer prior to this incident and investigation, but Luckhurst worked for the San Antonio department for five years, including his assignment to downtown bike patrol for the last year.

    “Firing this officer was the right thing to do,” Major Ivy Taylor asserted in a statement. “His actions were a betrayal of every value we have in our community, and he is not representative of our great police force.”
    As the police chief noted in no uncertain terms, Luckhurst’s single, abominable act set the department’s achievements in reaching out to the homeless community back “100 steps.”

    Luckhurst, who has already filed an appeal to be reinstated through arbitration, hired a private attorney and insists the allegations are unfounded.

    “The chief’s allegations are not true,” attorney Ben Sifuentes told KOMO in a phone interview, adding, contrary to the officer’s own excuse-making, “It didn’t happen.”

    Sifuentes and Luckhurst claim the matter was a ‘joke’ run horribly amok, and that no such, well, shit sandwich ever materialized, much less ended up next to a sleeping homeless person.

    “I’m confident that in arbitration, we will prevail,” Sifuentes insisted, noting no recording of the incident exists, and the person allegedly receiving the depraved ‘gift’ has not come forward.

    Asked whether Luckhurst explained his actions or gave any excuse for such contemptible behavior, McManus said that after attempts to wriggle out of taking responsibility, he was told, “It was a joke.”

    “It’s an absolute disgrace,” he continued, “I can’t politely put it any more … strongly than that.”

    Elaborating further about the department’s reaction to the fecal sandwich, McManus flatly state, “I can’t even say that we won’t tolerate that, because that sounds stupid.”

    “That was something that should’ve never, ever happened,” he concluded, “and if I were to speak to that [homeless] individual, I would say I’m sorry that ever happened.”

    Fortunately, Luckhurst will continue to be off the streets, stripped of his right to carry a gun and a badge, at least for the foreseeable future. Displaying a hapless, misguided, shameless, repugnant, and alarming lack of compassion should, after all, prevent any person from an occupation where humanity and compassion should be considered imperative.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/veteran-cop-fired-giving-homeless-man-sht-sandwich-claims-joke/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 05, 2016, 10:28:16 AM
    The timeline of the diabetic girl and the nurse's actions (or lack thereof) is disturbing. I imagine she'all lose her license regardless of the outcome of the trial, but I do hope that she's convicted and give some serious jail time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2016, 02:26:52 AM
    Another innocent person attacked and injured by the violent gang. Notice the last line of the article and how the representative of the goon division tries to place the blame on the innocent victim.

    Minnesota Cops Release Video of K9 Mauling Innocent Man as Officers Kick Him

    Minnesota cops released a video of an incident that happened over the summer showing an innocent man being kicked by several cops and mauled by a K9.

    St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell released an apology on Facebook.

    Frank Arnal Baker’s legs were severely mauled during the attack and he suffered several broken ribs and collapsed lungs.

    The 52-year-old’s injuries were so severe, he was hospitalized for a couple weeks, according to his attorney Robert Bennett who said the dog tore “hunks of flesh” as its teeth bit “down to the bone” of his client’s leg.

    The June 24 video, which can be seen below, shows officers responding to a call about a fight.

    According to St. Paul police, dispatchers gave cops a description of a black man with dreadlocks wearing white T-shirt who was armed with a gun. Upon arriving at the scene, Baker matched the description given by dispatchers, although he was simply returning home after his day at work.

    Baker was commanded to put his hands in the air, but police allege he only raised one hand. St. Paul cops say Baker was “slow to respond” after repeated commands.

    That’s when St. Paul cop Brian Ficcadenti sicced a K9 “Falco” on Baker, who fell to the ground when the attack dog made contact with him.

    “Get him, buddy,” one cop can be heard saying to the attack dog. “Get him, buddy. Good.”

    After “Falco” attacks Baker, several cops began kicking Baker in the ribs because he disobeyed commands to keep his hands visible while being mauled on the ground.

    Paramedics were called after “Falco” the K9 was pulled from Baker’s leg.

    After being handcuffed and searched, no guns were found on Baker.

    He was taken to the hospital where he stayed for two weeks while being  treated for his injuries.

    St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell did something that never crossed most police chiefs minds. He apologized.

    Axtell met with Baker while he was being treated at the hospital and after he was released stating he “deeply apologized” and assured him the department was in the process of investigating the act of brutality.

    “As a result of this incident we have increased our training for officers,” Chief Axtell said. “When we don’t get things right, we have to own it.”

    “And we have to apologize.”

    Not only did Chief Axtell apologize to Baker in person, he made a public apology over Facebook on the St. Paul Police Department’s Facebook page.

    “As Saint Paul’s police chief, I’m disappointed and upset by what the video shows.” Chief Axtell wrote. “As a person who cares deeply about other people, I am profoundly saddened.”

    “When I became chief, I promised to do everything possible to ensure that the people we serve have faith in their police department. I want you all to know that the video does not reflect the way we strive to do our jobs—day in, day out. This is not the Saint Paul way.”

    Axtell said in addition to increased training, he reaffirmed his expectations to the entire department, including being more transparent and a dedication to doing what’s right.

    “When the wrong thing happens, we are absolutely committed to being the best police department possible,” Axtell assured. “I apologized and I believe truly in my heart that he appreciated that apology.”

    “I accepted his apology because he was genuine about it. He’s a good guy, and we just want things to be peaceful,” Baker explained, saying he wants to keep quiet about his beating because he doesn’t want it to lead to protests on his behalf.

    Baker’s attorney, Robert Bennett, said the way the chief approached the investigation and issued an apology is a “breath of fresh air.”

    On top of the apology, Chief Axtell disciplined K9 cop Brian Ficcadenti, suspending him for 30 days and placed officer Brett Palkowitsch on unpaid leave.

    Steve Linders, a spokesperson for St. Paul police, said Palkowitsch is being investigated for a complaint filed against him, but would not provide details.

    Police Union lawyer, Chris Wachtler, said the incident wouldn’t have happened had Baker complied with officers’ orders.



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2016, 10:01:30 AM
    This is how violent, depraved and ruthless this armed gang has become:

    Cop Caught on His Own Body Camera Sexually Assaulting Domestic Violence Victim Who Called 911 for Help

    Pueblo, CO — A domestic violence victim has found out the hard way that calling 911 for help is a crap shoot. After an unnamed victim had been beaten by a male assailant, who she had a restraining order against, she called the police. When police showed up, they arrested her attacker and left. However, hours later, Cpl. Benjamin Candelaria, 48, would return, cover his body camera, and sexually assault the victim, according to a recent arrest report.

    On Friday, Pueblo police arrested one of their own after he was was accused of sexually assaulting the victim he was supposed to be helping.
    According to KOAA, officer Candelaria, along with other Pueblo officers, were called to a report of domestic violence between a man and a woman early Thursday morning.  After a brief investigation, the officers arrested the man on domestic violence and violation of a protective order charges.  Court documents say all of the officers left the residence, but Candelaria returned shortly thereafter to finish paperwork.

    According to the arrest report, ‘paperwork’ was the last thing on Candelaria’s mind. The next day, the woman went to Parkview Hospital and claimed that she’d been sexually assaulted by a police officer. However, her memory was limited because she’d been hit in the head with a wrench, beaten, knocked unconscious, and was intoxicated.

    Amazingly enough, the Pueblo police department immediately opened an investigation and pulled officer Candelaria’s body camera footage. Police quickly found that the body camera footage corroborated the victim’s story.

    The footage showed Candelaria showing up the to victim’s residence, after the call was over, and then initiating a sexual conversation with the heavily intoxicated woman. According to the police record, Candelaria turned off his body camera for approximately 15 minutes.

    In some of the footage, according to the police report, Candelaria is seen in the woman’s dark bedroom, standing over her bed as she lay there unconscious. The woman remains unresponsive as Candelaria calls out her name.

    At one point during the interaction, the woman is crying and naked from the waist down, according to the arrest report. Investigators also noted that when Candelaria’s body camera was actually on, he repeatedly turned it away to conceal his actions.


    According to the vehicle location records, investigators found that Candelaria returned to the woman’s home a third time at approximately 6:45 am. This stop was made after Candelaria’s shift had ended.
    The next day, Pueblo police brought Candelaria upstairs, read him his Miranda rights and sat him down for questioning. He initially denied all contact. However, after telling Candelaria that they had evidence to the contrary, he admitted to sexually touching the woman — and noted that what he had done was wrong.

    Before investigators asked him, Candelaria claimed that he would have semen in his underwear, not from sexually assaulting a domestic violence victim, but from having sex with his wife prior to the call.
    Candelaria has since been arrested and charged with sexual assault.  He has also been placed on administrative leave.

    Police officers showing up to help people and assaulting them instead is a far too common occurrence.

    Former state trooper, 36-year-old Samuel H. McHenry II managed to get off with minimal jail time after raping a car accident victim and leaving her stranded afterward.

    Officer Micah Meurer responded to a call at a 22-year-old woman’s northwest Amarillo home last year when she was in distress. The officer was later fired after it was exposed that Meurer forced himself on her and raped her.

    Karl Fields, a police officer from Chattanooga, Tennessee was accused of sexually harassing and stalking a rape victim that he claimed to be helping with a criminal case.
    Fields reportedly stalked the woman, parking out in front of her house on numerous occasions, and contacting her on a frequent basis.

    According to a lawsuit recently filed by the victim, Fields attempted to call her 73 times in one night, and would frequently text her, requesting nude photographs and making obscene demands.
    The list goes on.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-sexually-assault-body-camera/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 08, 2016, 11:27:24 AM
    What?

    Cop Forced Two Teen Girls to Remove Their Tops and then Ripped Their Nipple Rings — One With Pliers

    Fort Worth, TX — A Texas state trooper has been placed on administrative duty after two teenage females he arrested had their nipple rings forcefully removed — one with pliers.

    The two women came forward after they were injured while being processed into jail for riding in the back of a vehicle in which the trooper found a single pill. 18-year-old Tayler Myers and 19-year-old Courtney Palacios were returning to Fort Worth from a concert in Houston when Trooper Michael Tice stopped them.

    While processing them into jail for a single pill in the driver’s door, Tice told the two teens to remove any piercings. When they asked where they can go to remove their nipple rings, the male trooper told the two females to do it right there — in front of him.

    “And then we told him, ‘Well, where do we go to take out our nipple rings?'” Myers said. “And he was like, ‘You are going to have to do it right here, in the open.'”

    The teens complied. They simply turned around, lifted up their shirts and each removed one of their nipple rings. However, both of them had trouble with one of them.

    “We ended up getting one of them out,” Palacios said. “We each got our right one out. But we were having trouble with the left. It was not coming out at all.”

    At this point, the trooper intervened and went to his vehicle to retrieve a set of pliers.

    When he got back, he told the girls to try one more time to remove the piercings, but they could not. That’s when things took a turn for the worse.

    In spite of the trooper already being in clear violation of these girls’ rights, he brought it to a new level of sick.

    “He came up to me and he got really close to it, and he was just staring,” Palacios said. “He’s like, ‘I think it unscrews from the left side.’ So then, without gloves or anything — and I could see dirt under his nails, it was extremely disgusting — he gets on there and he tried to twist it and he starts shaking from trying so hard and he ends up pulling it and ripping it and it starts bleeding.”

    In an interview with NBC 5, Palacios described the pain and how it made her start screaming. She begged for him to stop.

    “I’m like ‘ow, ow, ow, ow, ow,’ saying it really loud,” she said. “He finally stops and backs away and he just stares at me. He didn’t say sorry or anything or acted like it was a big deal.”

    With her nipple bleeding, Palacios then watched her friend undergo a similarly vile procedure as a female trooper took the pliers and tried to remove Myers nipple ring — while Tice stood by and watched.

    “I feel like it’s not right, what he did, at all,” said Myers, whose father is a Fort Worth police sergeant and mother is a police dispatcher, according to NBC 5.

    The two young women have since retained an attorney and are planning legal action against the trooper.

    “He has violated every policy and procedure known to police work,” said Fort Worth attorney Curtis Fortinberry, a former Fort Worth officer. “That is just absolutely mind-boggling that he would do this.”

    Finally, after being subjected to such inhumane treatment, Palacios was released and went to the hospital on her own where she was treated for her injuries. She is expected to recover.

    According to NBC 5, the two women also were cited for having alcohol in the car and Palacios was charged with having a fake identification card.

    After they were released, the two teens were interviewed by Texas Rangers who took pictures of Palacios’ injury for evidence.

    In what world would this treatment be considered okay? The officer’s callous disregard for the teenagers’ privacy by making them remove their shirts in front of him speaks to the brutal nature of police in America today.

    These young women had not harmed anyone, yet they were subject to prison camp treatment by those sworn to protect them. Disturbing indeed.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/state-tooper-nipple-rings-pliers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2016, 11:59:06 AM
    Will they unleash the RICO act on this whole criminal organization?
    Funny how the tough guys who "fear for their lives" were ordered out of their lair and could not do anything about it.

    Sherriff’s Office So Corrupt, The Entire Dept Was Just Raided by Dozens of Federal and State Police

    Crown Point, IN — The FBI and the Indiana State Police have descended upon Lake County Sherriff’s Department (IN) and the home of Sherriff John Buncich, subpoenas in hand, and dollies in tow. While the FBI would not comment on the purpose of their raid, one source indicated the federal and state authorities were investigating a large-scale bribery scheme.

    A reported 38 federal and state investigators were inside the department, ordered everyone out, and then began to peruse through campaign finance records which seemed to indicate Sherriff Bunich had received nearly $9,000 in campaign donations from local towing companies.

    One of those companies was also raided. Sampson Towing was said to have been the target of the FBI’s investigation, and FBI agents swooped into the towing company’s place of business which reportedly has a back lot used for stowing towed vehicles. Typically, when an accident happens, towing companies are usually contacted by the police to arrive on scene and effect the removal of inoperable vehicles, vehicles involved in accidents, and vehicles which have been impounded by police. Often, the towing company collects a per diem storage fee while legal matters are resolved. While, at the moment, the federal and state officials have not publicly commented on their investigation, one might be tempted to put two and two together and arrive at a conclusion the three separate raids are related to each other.

    Typically, when an accident happens, towing companies are usually contacted by the police to arrive on scene and effect the removal of inoperable vehicles, vehicles involved in accidents, and vehicles which have been impounded by police. Often, the towing company collects a per diem storage fee while legal matters are resolved. While, at the moment, the federal and state officials have not publicly commented on their investigation, one might be tempted to put two and two together and arrive at a conclusion the three separate raids are related to each other.

    Dean Delisle told a local newspaper he was inside the Sheriff’s Bureau of Identification at the time the raid occurred and said the feds were searching for information related to a specific automobile accident, as well as police reports related to said accident. Delisle said, “They were taking pictures of everything,” and added the sheriff’s deputies were very upset by the presence of the FBI in their department.

    According to The Times, “Buncich’s campaign finance reports indicate he received more than $9,000 in contributions in 2014 and 2015 from several towing and auto firms in Crown Point, Gary, Highland, Hobart, Merrillville, St. John and Whiting.”

    Mark Back, spokesman for the sherriff, said in a statement, “The Lake County Sheriff’s Department is cooperating with our federal law enforcement partners and fully assisting the FBI with their inquiry. Regular Sheriff’s Department operations are continuing. We assure the citizens of Lake County that their safety remains our top priority. There was no interruption of police duties.”

    Back also said, “Employees were asked to at least step away from their desks while the FBI were completing their inquiry and look for whatever they were looking for,” adding that further questions would need to be directed to the FBI.

    According to the Times, “The county sheriff’s department has had agreements with as many as eight towing firms who police use to remove abandoned cars from accident and arrest scenes.”
    Just days after the presidential election of 2016, rumors abound as evidenced by Facebook posts about the Sherriff from locals living in the area.

    One Jeff Crook (true identity unknown) said on Facebook, “This just in: The FBI and Indiana State Police just raided the Lake County Government Center, specifically the Sheriff’s office and the the voter registration office. They are hauling out boxes of stuff. For those of you that don’t already know, Sheriff John Buncich, in addition to being a corrupt/dirty cop, is also the chairman of the Lake County Democratic party. He took over after the Corrupt Thomas McDermott Jr. appointed his equally corrupt “friend” (GF?), Michelle Fajman, to be the head of elections. If I recall correctly, Fajman had been nailed for taking multiple tax exemptions on her real estate that she was not entitled to take. Looks like we may have a new sheriff in town soon.”

    According to the Northwest Indiana Gazette, the raid may have also included at least two other towing companies, “Sources said at least three towing contractors were also visited by agents. CSA Towing in Lake Station, Samson Towing in Merrillville and Gary, and Kustom Towing in Portage were all reportedly visited by FBI Agents today. At least one of the homes of the owners of the above businesses was also visited. When asked if the FBI visited, an employee of Samson Towing replied ‘no comment.’ It is important to remember that a criminal investigation does not imply wrongdoing. FBI Agents have seized records many times and those seizures of records do not always result in criminal charges being brought.”

    With power comes corruption, and this case is a prime example of John Acton’s most prophetic and oft-proven sentiment:
    Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sherriffs-office-raided-fbi/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2016, 12:00:40 PM
    Man Awarded $36 Million After Video Showed 5 Cops Beat Him, Strap Him Down and Torture Him

    Genesee County, MI — (RT) The victim of a brutal police beating has been awarded $36.6 million in mostly punitive damages after a jury found five Genesee County Sheriff’s officers used excessive force.
    William Jennings, 42, was arrested in Michigan for driving drunk in September 2010. When he was going through intake at Genesee County Jail, things quickly went from standard procedure to a takedown by police. Thrown to the floor, Jennings was then beaten by the officers.

    The entire incident captured by a jailhouse camera was shown to the jury, which decided to award Jennings $36.6 million, more than double the $16 million requested by his attorney.
    “I asked them for $16 million. I think they thought the conduct was extremely outrageous and returned a verdict that exceeded what we asked for,” Kevin Ernst, attorney for Jennings, told WJBK.
    An award of this sum is unusual in these kinds of cases. The family of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old shot and killed by a Cleveland police officer in 2014, received $6 million in a settlement with the city of Cleveland. The family of Eric Garner, a Staten Island man killed by an NYPD officer in 2014, received a $5.9 million settlement.

    Defense lawyers justified the five officers’ actions by claiming that Jennings was “admittedly drunk” and “non-compliant, resistant and combative during the booking process” after he was arrested for drunk driving and was believed to have been in a fight at a bar in Flint, the Detroit Free Press reported.
    “The force and maneuvers utilized were appropriate to control the situation,” the defense claimed.
    However, the tape shows him being dogpiled by multiple police officers that began after Jennings removed his hand from the wall during a pat down.
    “They attacked him in the jail. Then they handcuffed him and continued to assault him, smashing his face into the wall,” Jennings’ other attorney, Dean Elliott, told the Free Press. “They took him into a safety cell … covered his mouth, Tasered him and put a bag over his head and tied him down.”
    “I ended up busting my tooth chewing a hole in the mask so I could breathe,“ Jennings told WJBK, adding, “I thought I was going to die.”
    The award is believed to be a symbolic gesture that speaks to the nature of Jennings’ attack, “I think that the jurors were sending a message to the sheriff that these kinds of actions cannot go on,” Elliott said.

    The defense has already made plans to appeal the decision and possibly get the award reduced. Defense attorney Christopher Scott told the Free Press that “an appeal will be undertaken, if needed, as the verdict is not supported by the law or facts.”
    Whether the award is reduced or given in full doesn’t seem to matter much to Jennings, who told WJBK, “I am not the same person and I never will be. Can you put a number on that? I don’t know.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/36-million-police-brutality/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2016, 12:04:21 PM
    In many states, criminals cops are afforded special rights and privileges if they are involved in any crime, thanks to criminal unions. Meanwhile, if you are a citizen pleb you can be threatened, intimidated and abused. Laws applying equally? Think again plebs.

    Massachusetts Police Detective Threatens to Beat, Kill and Plant Drugs on Teens in Newly Released Videos

    Videos of a Massachusetts police detective threatening to beat, murder and plant drugs on two teenagers, then cover it all up — videos which prosecutors sought to keep secret — have been released, thanks to The Republican newspaper.

    The videos show police interrogating the two teenagers, who along with a third, police suspected of stealing a police SUV after breaking into a business and stealing rolled coins.

    During the videos, Detective Gregg Bigda makes a number of threats against the teens — neither of whom had an attorney or legal guardian present, or were read their rights.

    The interrogations were conducted at the Palmer Police Station. Bigda tells both teens that he is eventually taking them back to the Springfield Police Station, which he stresses does not have cameras.

    In the first video, he tells a 16-year-old boy in a red shirt: “See that camera up there? It don’t fucking exist [at the Springfield Police Station]. So anything happens to you at my place never happened. If I don’t write it in my report, it never happened.”

    He later tells the teen: “You know I’m gonna beat the fuck out of you when you get back to Springfield right now, ’cause you just lied to my face … When we get back, I’m gonna tune you the fuck up, because you just lied to me. And I’m telling you in advance, and I’m being nice to you.”

    In the second video, a teen wearing a gray-shirt says that his face hurts. Bigda responds: “You think it hurts now? You know where we’re going after this? We’re going back to fucking Springfield.”

    He then explains how the Springfield Police Station doesn’t have cameras. He makes another threat to injure the teen’s face later in the video, even telling him it will require a trip to the hospital.

    The threats continue: “I could fucking crush your skull and fucking get away with it.” Bigda then threatens to “fucking bring the dog back, let him fucking go after ya.”

    And: “Don’t even fucking speak if you’re gonna lie to me, ’cause I’ll fucking kill you in the parking lot.”

    And: “I’ll charge you with killing Kennedy and fucking make it stick … I’m not hampered by the fucking truth, ’cause I don’t give a fuck … I’ll stick a fucking kilo of coke in your pocket and put you away for fucking 15 years.”

    In the third video, Bigda threatens the red-shirted teen again: [W]hen we get back to Springfield — I’m not even waiting for Springfield. When we get that fucking lying, I’m gonna bloody your body.”

    In all three videos, Detective Luke Cournoyer is with Bigda and does not seem bothered by his threats and coercive interrogation techniques.

    Both the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office recently opened invetigations into the Bigda videos.

    The existence of the videos was publicly revealed this summer when defense attorneys, who had obtained them from the Hampden District Attorney’s Office, began quoting them in court to argue that Bigda lacked credibility. The district attorney’s office asked defense attorneys to sign a voluntary non-disclosure agreement before providing the videos.

    The videos were not shown in court because Hampden Superior Court Judge Tina Page put them under seal to protect the identities of the teens since they are juveniles. However, Page blasted the district attorney’s office for “borderline prosecutorial misconduct” for its use of NDAs.

    The Republican did not say how it obtained the videos and merely reported that it “gained access to the videos this week.” It also edited the videos so the teens’ faces can’t be seen and so that identifying information can’t be heard.

    Maida Wasserman, an assistant district attorney, said by phone that the videos are still under seal and the district attorney’s office will not release them in response to public records requests. The Springfield Police Department still has not responded to PINAC’s September 28 request for the video and related police reports even though state law requires a response in 10 days.

    The Republican reports that “a number of accused drug dealers have walked out of jail or received more generous plea deals in Superior and District court cases in the wake of the videos having been released to defense attorneys.”

    After the three teens accused of stealing the SUV were arrested, Wilbraham police officer Christopher Rogers filed an excessive force complaint alleging that a Springfield detective he could not identify kicked one of the teens in the face, which may explain why the gray-shirted teen was in pain.

    After the incident, Detective Steven Vigneault, who was also involved in the arrests, resigned from the Springfield Police Department. But he insists he never kicked anyone.

    He did tell The Republican that he saw Bigda spit on one of the teens and yell “Welcome to the white man’s world.” However, he did not file a report about this.

    The reported kick is being investigated by the district attorney’s office.

    The third teen, who is not depicted in any of the videos, was hospitalized for police dog bites.

    For his threats against the teens, Bigda — who has been the subject of more than two dozen complaints — was punished by Police Commissioner John Barbieri with a 60-day suspension.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/07/watch-massachusetts-police-detective-threatens-to-kill-and-plant-drugs-on-teen-in-newly-released-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 14, 2016, 09:32:27 AM
    Cop Caught on His Own Dashcam Raping Women, Arrested AGAIN for Raping Another Woman On Duty

    Spring Hill, TN — A man who swore an oath to uphold the constitution, and whose ostensible job description is to protect the public he serves, has been charged with sexual assault while on duty — for the second time — in just two months.

    According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Spring Hill Police Officer Christopher Odom was caught raping at least two women in two separate incidents during on-duty traffic stops in June and July. Only two months after he was charged with sexual battery in those instances, Odom was charged again for another incident last September.

    In September of last year, according to TBI, Odom stopped an adult female, followed her home on the Williamson County side of Spring Hill, and made her engage in sexual contact with him while he was on duty.
    As the Free Thought Project reported last month, the TBI say they launched their investigation on August 1 after they learned Odom pulled over a car driven by a female in June and raped her.

    According to a press release, the TBI says it happened again with another female in July. The September assault was apparently discovered while the investigation into the June and July assaults was ongoing.
    Even more worrisome was the fact that in his spare time, Odom worked as a substitute teacher last year in Lewis County. According to WSMV, students at Lewis County High School who used to have him as a substitute teacher told Channel 4 they were shocked.

    “It’s crazy. He talked to us just like an everyday teacher did,” said Donavan Conner, a student. “It makes you wonder about everybody else you talk to. ”

    In regards to Odom’s despicable crimes, the Spring Hill Police Department released the following canned statement:
    “The actions of Officer Odom are not indicative of a Spring Hill Police Officer and is in direct violation of departmental policies. The department takes great pride in serving our community and preserving the trust of our citizens.”

    The department also asked for any other victims to come forward.
    “If there are [more victims] we want to know, we want to get them justice. We want them to come in, be able to look us in the eye, speak with us about what’s going on in their lives.”
    Last month, 26-year-old Odom was indicted by a grand jury on charges of rape, sexual battery, and two counts of official misconduct.

    According to the indictment, Odom detained the victims beyond the scope of a traffic stop for the purpose of coercing the victims into performing sexual acts.
    The indictment states he used force to accomplish the act and knew the victim did not give consent. Investigators reviewed multiple hours of Odom’s dashcam footage and noted in October that there was a possible third victim.

    Last Monday, according to the Chattanoogan, the Williamson County Grand Jury returned indictments charging Odom with two counts of rape and two counts of official misconduct. Odom turned himself in Monday afternoon and was booked into the Williamson County Jail on a $150,000 bond.  He is no longer employed by the Spring Hill Police Department.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-charged-dashcam-raping-again/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2016, 11:20:07 AM
    The teen is lucky to escape alive. Dangerous violent criminals like this should not be allowed to roam the streets freely, terrorizing and threatening.

    Video Catches Cop’s Wish to Kill Teens — “If I could get away with it, I woulda put a bullet in their…heads”

    Weiser, ID — A concerning video was uploaded to YouTube this week, from an alleged Weiser police officer’s body camera demeaning a teenager for no reason. After a brief period of unprofessional and disrespectful behavior, the officer’s body camera then catches him wishing he could shoot teenagers.

    The video was uploaded to YouTube Monday night and it has since garnered over 5,000 views. As the video begins, the alleged Weiser police officer is berating a teenager, claiming they were at a location at which they deny being.

    When the officer asks the teen for their ID, he begins acting like a drill instructor.

    “Where’s your license at?” barks the officer.

    When the teen turns to retrieve the license, like 99 percent of all people would have, the officer begins playing demeaning games.

    “I didn’t say to go get it! I asked you where it was!” yells the cop.

    As the teen struggles to comply with the belligerent officer, the cop continues his verbal abuse.

    “Do you not understand English?” asks the tyrant. “Do you know how to comprehend?”

    “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean any disrespect in that,” the teen apologizes as the cop continues the abuse.

    “No, you’re disrespecting me!” asserts the officer attempting to imply that a teen trying to curtsey to every one of his orders is somehow ‘disrespect.’

    “I thought that meant to go get my license. If that was wrong of me….”

    “No!” interrupts the officer.

    “I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” continues the teen.

    “Since when does, ‘where is your license?’ mean walk away and go get your license?” asks the officer, ignoring the fact that anyone could have interpreted that statement in such a way.

    The cop then continues to demean the teen before the scene cuts to what appears to be the inside of the dispatch office.

    “Mouthy little bitches,” utters the officer as the person at the desk uncomfortably smiles.

    “Oh my fucking god. If I could get away with it, I would’ve put a bullet in the center of each one of their heads.”
    The video then ends.

    On Tuesday, the Free Thought Project reached out to the Weiser police department to confirm whether or not this was one of their officers and if they wanted to make a statement on the matter. We have not yet received a response.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-caught-video-wishing-kill-teens/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2016, 01:15:59 AM
    Such violent criminals should not be let out in society again. But then again these criminals belong to big criminal gangs with connections and power.

    REHIRED: Minnesota Deputy Convicted Of Drunkenly Beating K9 Partner After Groping Casino Patrons

    A Minnesota sheriff’s deputy who was convicted of animal cruelty on his own K9 service dog in a video recorded beating has been rehired by the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office.

    The Law Enforcement Labor Services police union fought to keep the convicted criminal cop Brett Barry on public payrolls.

    State arbitrator Gil Vernon decided that the deputy will be forgiven for his rampage, even though it was a drunken frenzy that would land any regular citizen in jail for assaulting a police officer – his K9 partner.

    Ironically, Barry will now be paid to guard Ramsey County’s detention unit, instead of spending time behind its bars to repay society for his crime.

    The Minnesota deputy didn’t just beat his dog either.

    Deputy Barry’s drunken on-duty rampage included previously undisclosed sexual assaults by the 20-year veteran which remained buried in the Ramsey Sheriffs internal affairs records until today, seventeen months after the incident, according to the StarTribune:

    Ramsey County sheriff’s deputy Brett A. Berry forcibly kissed and groped patrons at the Black Bear Casino before beating his K-9 partner in frustration several minutes later, according to documents released Tuesday. An internal affairs investigation into Berry’s actions on June 15, 2015, said that he acted in an “aggressive manner” toward three people while drinking at the casino’s Cobalt lounge in Carlton, Minn.


    “His conduct in the Cobalt Lounge toward [redacted] patrons was disrespectful,” said the investigation report. “He agreed that his conduct … was inappropriate.” Berry, 49, of Oakdale, pleaded guilty in January to beating his K-9 partner, Boone, but the full extent of his unwanted advances at the bar hadn’t been disclosed until the sheriff’s office released documents from its investigation Tuesday.

    Judging by the redacted blow-by-blow about “someone identified in the investigation only as “off duty [redacted],” whom he grabbed by the shirt.

    When security confronted the deputy, he demanded, “Who the [expletive] am I harassing? I have a right to know.”

    The report describes three instances of sexual assault, but identities and genders of the victims were redacted.

    Twenty minutes later, Barry beat his K9 partner brutally in the infamous attack that led to his guilty plea for animal cruelty charges.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/16/rehired-minnesota-deputy-convicted-of-drunkenly-beating-k9-partner-after-groping-casino-patrons/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2016, 08:24:48 AM
    Cop’s Typo Leads Innocent Woman’s Car Crashed with a Spike Strip, Police Holding Her at Gunpoint

    Portland, OR — Sophia Holmes had done nothing wrong, committed no traffic violation and was simply on her way home when police popped her tires with a spike strip, sending her crashing off the road. She was then pulled from the vehicle, forced to the ground and held at gunpoint — all because a cop made a typo.

    Last week, Portland’s city council approved a $10,000 payout to settle a lawsuit brought against the police department by Holmes. On January 10, of this year, Holmes was driving home when she crossed paths with Officer Christopher Gjovik who was patrolling the area Holmes drove through every day to get home.

    For an unknown reason, Gjovik ran Holmes’ plates. But, when he typed in the numbers into his unit’s computer — he entered them incorrectly. The car came back as stolen, according to the lawsuit. Gjovik then radioed in for backup and all hell broke loose.

    “After falsely reporting that the plaintiff was operating a stolen motor vehicle, Officer David Arnold deployed spike strips as the plaintiff’s vehicle passed his location,” the suit said.
    According to the lawsuit, Holmes alleged false arrest, reckless endangerment, and negligence. After mediation, Holmes’s lawyer said her client is satisfied with the settlement.

    Holmes had been on her way home from work when her front tires suddenly were flattened and her Honda veered onto the shoulder, reports Oregon Live. She was then ordered out of the car in a felony stop, placed on the ground and detained, her lawyer Josephine Townsend wrote in the suit.

    Even though police acknowledged their mistake led to the assault of an innocent woman, they tried to assert that  “its make, model and license plate number closely resembled a car on the ‘hot sheet’ of stolen vehicles.”

    So what? The vehicle was not stolen and a woman’s life was deliberately endangered because police wrongly believed that fact.

    “This incident was clearly a mistake on the part of the officers. While they may have had good intentions, the results were damaging to Ms. Holmes, a completely innocent driver on her way home from work,” Townsend said. “We are hopeful that training and better communications between officers engaged in critical situations will reduce or eliminate these types of events from occurring in the future.”

    Sadly enough, police misreading license plates and endangering the lives of others because of it, is not uncommon. Last October, the Free Thought project reported on a dashcam video showing officers from the Fairfield Police Department open firing on a vehicle after a pursuit that should not have even taken place.

    Fortunately, Dakota Murray, 19, and his passenger were not hit by police bullets as they were sitting in their car, stuck in a ditch. The teenagers were the victims of a cop’s mistake, who misread Murray’s license plate and attempted to stop the vehicle.

    Unsurprisingly, Fairfax police spokesman Colin Smith says there was nothing wrong with the actions of the officers. The video makes it hard to believe that these officers “feared for their lives.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/typo-spike-strips-crash-assault/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2016, 10:42:07 AM
    Innocent Couple Locked in a Cage for Months Because Cops Mistook Baking Soda for Cocaine

    Fort Chaffe, AR — On May 8 of this year, Gale Griffin and her husband Wendall Harvey, who’ve been driving trucks together for the last seven years, were targeted by public servants whose job it is to seek out arbitrary substances deemed illegal by the state. While it is certainly bad enough that the state kidnaps, cages, and kills people for ingesting a substance that makes them happy — they are often dead wrong — and innocent people suffer at the hands of police incompetence. After being falsely accused of possessing cocaine, Griffin and Harvey are living proof that the war on drugs lays waste to any and all lives, not just those who use drugs.

    In May, Griffin and Harvey were on a delivery. The couple has a security clearance and has been delivering explosive ingredients since 2009. However, they were targeted by incompetent cops who used criminally ineffective drug test kits on a white powdery substance found inside the couple’s truck. The kit identified the substance as cocaine. But it was not cocaine. It was baking soda Griffin used for stomach problems.
    “I use baking soda for everything,” said Griffin.

    “When you start talking about a schedule one controlled substance, your talking about a major case,” Fort Chaffee Police Chief Chuck Bowen said of the case in May, apparently ecstatic that his officers had found a couple with some cocaine.

    The police at Fort Chaffee thought they had caught themselves two dangerous cocaine traffickers with 13 ounces of fine white powder.

    “I saw the guy hand out a bag of baking soda outside the driver’s door, and I told him that’s just baking soda, and I think that’s when it started,” said Harvey.

    The Barling Police Department’s narcotic unit, who specializes in depriving people of their freedom for possessing substances, was called to the scene.

    “We tested it three different times out of two different kits to make sure that we weren’t having any issue, and each time we got a positive for controlled substance,” said Chief Bowen.

    “They thought we had like 13.22 ounces of cocaine, and the guy said I had over $300,000 in cocaine,” said Griffin.

    Harvey, who is a former cop from Indiana was shocked to learn that he’d been traveling with cocaine. Since he was a former LEO, he never doubted that the police could have possibly been wrong.

    “How did cocaine get into the baking soda?” Harvey recalled. “You don’t even doubt the tests because I guess I’m stupid, I’m just a citizen and it never occurred to me that the tests were invalid,” said Harvey.

    “They’re not infallible. They are subject to misreadings,” explained Greg Parrish, Director of the Public Defender Commission. “There’s a lot of these instances where they get false positives.”

    Yet, he and his band of government drug enforcers continue to use them!

    For being in possession of 13 ounces of baking soda, the couple was kidnapped and thrown in a cage.

    “The door opened, and there’s a woman in the top bunk and a woman in the bottom bunk and a woman on the floor, and I had to sleep on the floor on the other side right next to the toilet,” recalled Griffin. “I thought that I’d died and gone to hell. Really.”

    They couple would be held in a cell for 10 days before they even got to speak to a public defender. Since their cellphones were confiscated and they did not know their family members’ phone numbers by heart, four weeks went by before they were able to communicate to Harvey’s son that they’d been thrown in jail.

    “I felt like I was somewhere that didn’t feel like America. I can’t call anybody, nobody knows where I’m at,” said Harvey.

    But he was in America, and it’s in America where people get treated like this over substances deemed illegal by the state.

    After continuous negligence and dereliction, it would be four more weeks before the police would finally figure out that the substance in the bags was not cocaine.

    After spending two months in jail for a crime entirely fabricated by those sworn to protect them, they were released. However, the damage was already done and their lives had been ruined.

    After their employer found out they were in jail, the couple was fired and their security clearances revoked. Also, they couldn’t go back to work even if they hadn’t lost their jobs as it took two additional months for the couple to get their trucks out of impound.

    When asked how an innocent couple could be kidnapped and locked in a cage for carrying around baking soda, Chief Bowen callously responded, “We’re not chemists and we don’t roll with a chemistry set in the back of police cars.”

    Well chief Bowen, these are people’s lives. If you are going to be depriving people of their freedom for completely legal substances, maybe it’s high time you do start to ‘roll with a chemistry set in the back of police cars.’

    “Two law-abiding working people, and there’s no telling how many mistakes they’ve made. It’s a mistake, but these mistakes happen quite often I think,” said Harvey — and he’s right. Thousands of innocent people have been deprived of their freedom as a result of these faulty tests.

    According to the national litigation and public policy organization, the Innocence Project, at any given time there are an estimated 40,000 to 100,000 innocent people currently locked in cages in U.S. prisons.
    Couple this staggering number with the number of people locked up for non-violent drug possession and the United States looks more like the Gulag of the 1930’s than the Land of the Free.

    But how can so many innocent people be locked up, how does the state present evidence, that it doesn’t have, to get a conviction? Well, the folks at the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the U.S., Marijuana Policy Project, made a short video that explains just how easy it is for police to turn an entirely innocent person into a criminal.
    During the short video below, the researchers demonstrate how easy it is for police to generate a false positive during a field test for drugs.

    The group tests over the counter Tylenol PM in a police test kit for cocaine — the test kit says the Tylenol is cocaine.
    The group also tests the most popular chocolate in the world, Hershey’s chocolate, for marijuana, it also tests positive.
    Perhaps the most disturbing test was when the group put absolutely nothing into the field test kit, and they received a positive result.
    The implications associated with wrongfully accusing and then claiming to have evidence of an individual in possession of an illegal substance are formidable — to say the least. Most people are simply unaware of the fact that police test kits are a crapshoot.

    According to Forensic Resources:
    The director of a lab recognized by the International Association of Chiefs of Police for forensic science excellence has called field drug testing kits “totally useless” due to the possibility of false positives. In laboratory experiments, at least two brands of field testing kits have been shown to produce false positives in tests of Mucinex, chocolate, aspirin, chocolate, and oregano.

    In spite of these recommendations and multiple examples of innocent people being incarcerated for their error, police departments across the country continue to employ the use of these “totally useless” kits.
    In October, college student John Harrington was thrown in prison after police, with one of these field drug test kits, tested sugar, and came up with a false positive for cocaine.
    “Really, I’m really in jail right now for powdered sugar, ” John Harrington thought after it happened.

    We’ve also seen the case in which police mistook Jolly Ranchers for meth and jailed an innocent man. Love Olatunijojo, 25, and an unidentified friend purchased Jolly Ranchers at the It’Sugar candy emporium in Coney Island in June of 2013. Several blocks away, cops stopped and searched the friends and mistook the candies for crystal meth. Olatunijojo was then thrown in jail.

    In August, we reported on the story of a man who was held in prison for over four months because police falsely identified salt as crystal meth.
    And the list goes on…

    What does it say about police departments across the country who knowingly use test kits that will implicate innocent people in a crime that they did not commit that will land them in jail?

    It is bad enough that the state will kidnap, cage and kill people when they possess a substance deemed illegal by the state. But, when they kidnap, cage and kill people because of their own negligence involved in testing someone’s personal items — they stoop to an entirely new low.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-couple-prison-cops-mistook-baking-soda-cocaine/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2016, 10:51:17 AM
    Albuquerque Police Dept Was Just Caught Illegally Deleting & Editing Videos of them Killing People

    Albuquerque, NM — On March 16, 2014, Albuquerque police officers executed James Boyd for illegal camping. The entire incident was captured on the officer’s body cam which led to the now-retired Officer Keith Sandy and Officer Dominique Perez being charged with the murder of the 38-year-old homeless man suffering schizophrenia in August last year. It also started a firestorm of backlash against police and a nationwide demand for cops to wear body cams. However, the additional accountability of police filming themselves has been brought into question as the Albuquerque police department has just been caught ‘deleting, encrypting, altering, and destroying’ these very videos.

    The department’s former records supervisor has alleged in a sworn affidavit that Albuquerque Police Department officials have altered and, in some cases, deleted videos that showed several controversial incidents, including at least two police shootings.

    According to Reynaldo Chavez, the former APD employee, he learned of the shooting videos being destroyed and edited because there were so many Inspection of Public Records Act (IPRA) requests from victims of the APD, that he was immersed in the audit logs — eventually finding tons of evidence. According to the affidavit:

    Quote
    From 2013-2015, I had so many IPRA requests for SD card or lapel video that there were approximately five to six new people, at the APD Forensic Unit, tasked with burning copies of video. That is how I learned about SD cards and lapel camera video being either deleted, encrypted, altered, or destroyed.

    When Chavez found that officers were deleting evidence of themselves shooting people, he attempted to notify his superiors that it was illegal.

    Quote
    I learned that Lieutenant Aragon was allowing Frank Pezzano to erase, corrupt, alter or encrypt camera video and I told him that it was illegal and unlawful to do so.

    After Chavez crossed the thin blue line, however, he was immediately snubbed out. According to the Santa Fe New Mexican, the police department placed Chavez on leave in April 2015 while it investigated unprofessional conduct in the records division, which he led. Ultimately he was fired. In a whistleblower lawsuit he filed against the city in January, Chavez claims he was fired for raising concerns about department higher-ups’ unlawful orders that forced him to deny public records requests in high-profile cases. The city denies those claims, and the case is pending.

    According to Chavez, the deletion and alteration of videos were common practices and were not only used to deny anyone who would attempt to request evidence of police misconduct but also to retaliate against other officials.

    Quote
    I know that “political calculations” motivated City employees to commit such unlawful or improper actions. Such political reasons included but were not limited to: concealing misconduct by City personnel, mitigating negative media and public reaction concerning actions by City personnel, retaliating against City personnel, depriving opposing pmties of discovery related to pending civil actions against the City and shooting APD officers, encrypting or altering audio and video so that requestors were not able to access information contained therein, and concealing relevant records from the United States Depmtment of Justice.

    These allegations by Chavez tell a chilling story and now all the past corruption and cover-ups begin to make sense. Officer Jeremy Dear, who has a history of malfunctioning body cameras, shot and killed 19-year-old Mary Hawkes in the early morning hours of April 21, 2014. However, we were told that his body camera ‘malfunctioned’ just as the shooting took place.

    Although Dear’s camera ‘malfunctioned’ when he killed Hawkes, three other officers’ cameras captured some of the events of that night. According to Chavez’s affidavit, as reported by the New Mexican, one officer’s video was “altered by changing the gradient of the resolution on the video.” Twenty seconds were deleted from another officer’s video. And officer Tanner Tixier’s video, which shows the shooting from a distance, “has been altered by using the functionalities within Evidence.com where you can make … the video blurry or unclear.”

    Then, in August, the Free Thought Project learned that the gun Dear claims Hawkes pointed at him, causing him to shoot her, contained zero DNA from Hawkes, nor did it have her fingerprints on it.
    Documents cited by local ABC affiliate KOAT, said no DNA or fingerprints were found on the firearm Hawkes putatively pointed at Dear — and the Albuquerque police knew about it the entire time — painting a picture of a massive conspiracy to cover it up.

    According to the New Mexican, District Attorney Kari Brandenburg said Friday that she had just become aware of the affidavit and was contemplating her office’s response. She said she sent the affidavit to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    “These are extremely concerning allegations,” Brandenburg said. “This throws everything into question. As prosecutors, we have to rely on what we get and the integrity of everyone in the process. These kinds of allegations raise so many questions.”

    Not only does this new information throw every case in the recent history of the Albuquerque police departing into question, but it brings every department in every city across the country into question.

    Many departments across the country rely on a video service from Taser International Inc. which uses a cloud-based storage system, Evidence.com.

    Evidence.com allowed Chavez others at the police department to “edit lapel camera video in any number of ways,” according to the affidavit, including by “inserting or blurring images on the videos or by removing images from the video.”

    “I was able to see, via the Evidence.com audit trail, that people had in fact deleted and/or altered lapel camera video,” he says in his affidavit. Furthermore, reports the New Mexican, Chavez says that APD employees uploaded video from other sources, such as cellphones and surveillance cameras, to Evidence.com and altered those as well.

    Taser’s Evidence.com also provides an online manual supporting the claims by Chavez of officers being able to edit or delete videos.

    Unfortunately, other than filming the police yourself, there is no real solution to this problem. Holding police accountable for providing the entire unedited video will be next to impossible since all departments will claim that they need to be able to edit the videos to protect the privacy of officers and victims. This leaves Americans in the dark when it comes transparency as well as voiding any reliable accountability provided body camera footage.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/abq-police-illegally-deleting-editing-videos/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2016, 10:55:56 AM
    Violent criminals.

    Cops Mistake Man’s Diabetic Episode as ‘Resisting’ — Beat, Taser, Mace and Arrest Him

    Commerce City, CO — Carl Leadholm was in medical distress and needed help when he was targeted by five Commerce City Police officers. However, his innocence and the fact that he needed help was of no consequence to the officers who mistook low blood sugar for a criminal act. This week, Leadholm filed a federal civil lawsuit against the department for the abuse during that stop that left him beaten and in the hospital.

    In November 2014, Leadholm’s blood sugar began to drop causing him to swerve while driving. This swerving caught the attention of five of Commerce City’s finest who pulled Leadholm over. However, instead of simply talking to the man and asking him what was going on, they yanked him from the car and began assaulting the innocent diabetic.

    “It would have taken a simple conversation and this never would have happened,” said David Fisher, Leadholm’s attorney to CBS Denver. “They admit, we just went up there knocked on the window, pulled him out of the car to the ground, boom- start hitting him in the leg.”

    According to Fisher, Leadholm had scratches to his face, baton bruises on his neck; he was pepper sprayed, tased and had two surgeries on a broken finger.

    Leadholm would spend several days in the hospital as a result of his injuries only to find out he’d been charged with resisting arrest and failing to yield to an emergency vehicle. All charges would later be dropped.

    “They just went straight to force, and severe force,” Fisher said. “It’s just poor training because as soon as the EMTs show up, they recognize the guy has a problem and they immediately start talking to him, he explains he has diabetes.”

    Now, two years later, Leadholm is still undergoing therapy to treat his injuries.

    Ironically enough, two of the five cops who beat Leadholm down that fateful afternoon had awards from the department for lifesaving, according to online records. Yet, instead of saving Leadholm’s life that day, they chose to attempt to ruin it.

    One of the other responding officers was Kevin Lord, who the Free Thought Project exposed last November for dangerously perpetuating the fake war on cops. Lord was arrested last year after it was revealed he faked being shot at during a traffic stop. Lord claimed he was shot at close range while making a traffic stop in the 9700 block of Peoria Street. His bullet-proof vest was credited with saving his life.
    He’s since pleaded guilty.


    “You can’t have dangerous people like that in police uniforms. When you have officers who are doing the wrong thing and the department knows it, they should fix it,” Fisher said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-mistake-mans-diabetic-episode/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2016, 10:59:16 AM
    When will these criminals be held personally accountable and suffer legal consequences like all other citizens?

    California Deaf Man Beaten, Tasered and Choked by Police for not Understanding Commands Awarded $55,000 Settlement

    After mistaking a deaf man for a thief, beating him, tasering him and choking him because he was unable to understand their commands, the Hawthorne Police Department in southwest Los Angeles has settled a lawsuit for $55,000. The settlement was approved by the City Council on Tuesday.

    The deaf man identified as Jonathan Meister and co-plaintiff Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness Inc. will receive the settlement on the basis of civil rights violations under the Federal Americans with Disabilities Act.

    Meister was at a friends house in February 2013 gathering items from his vehicle when a neighbor called police thinking he was a car thief, according to NBC Los Angeles.

    Although there were four officers that responded to the call, Officers Jeffrey Salmon and Jeffrey Tysl were identified as the aggressors.

    Once on scene, they yelled out to Meister and he in return motioned that he was deaf.

    The officers motioned for Meister to come towards them, which he did, but then they grabbed his wrists and placed his hands behind his back – a very uncomfortable position for Meister given the fact that he is deaf and uses his hands to speak.

    The lawsuit, which can be read here, describes how officers Salmon and Tysl got close to Meister and roughed him up. Amidst the miscommunication, Meister ran away from the officers who gave chase, only to catch him, fight with him more and taser him.

    The officers pushed Meister up against the wall. Officer Salmon put Meister in a choke hold and subsequently kneed him twice in the abdomen.

    Officer Tysl then punched Meister in the face repeatedly.

    That was when Salmon shot Meister with a Taser X-26 which brought Meister careening to the ground. Officers kicked and elbowed Meister repeatedly while another officer shocked him a second time with the taser.

    After a second choke hold and third Taser shock, Meister lost consciousness.

    According to the suit, the officers, “shot taser darts into Mr. Meister, administered a number of painful electric shocks, struck him with fists and feet, and forcibly took him to the ground.”

    “They ended up grabbing his arms and turning him around, and if you do that to a deaf person, it’s like gagging them. It would be like if I put my hand over your mouth if you try to tell me something,” says Meister’s lawyer John Burton.

    Meister was arrested, taken to the hospital, and then into custody at the county jail, but officials dropped the charges at the jail due to the circumstances.

    The suit claims Meister suffered, “extreme physical pain and suffering, humiliation, hardship, anxiety, and indignity, and severe mental and emotional anguish pain.”

    Meister is a graduate of the University of Ohio and holds a Masters degree in Architecture. In a recollection of events, Meister’s wrote:

    “I didn’t mean to resist — it’s ultimately my responsibility. But, with claustrophobia, logic gets pushed down a bit! I did not mean to resist, only to put space between myself and the officers so I could communicate.”

    Per the settlement, the Hawthorne Police Department has pledged to change its communication and use of force policies regarding deaf civilians. The new policy includes providing qualified interpreters to jailed deaf suspects, a booking video and transcript to describe the arrest process, and a video or TTY phone.

    Just a few months ago in Charlotte, NC a deaf man was shot and killed by a state highway patrol officer. The man lead officers on a brief high speed chase. When the chase came to an end, the deaf man exited his vehicle charging at the officer on foot who in return fatally shot the man after repeated verbal commands to stop.

    The North Carolina Highway Patrol officer has not yet been charged with a crime because the investigation is still pending.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/18/california-deaf-man-beaten-tasered-and-choked-by-police-for-not-understanding-commands-awarded-55000-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2016, 11:04:35 AM
    When it comes to cops, it's always the damn weapon that "discharges itself".

    School Cop Fires Gun in School for No Reason, Hitting a Teacher in the Neck — Not Arrested

    Auburn, MI — A school resource officer at Bay City Western High and Middle School in Auburn, MI, discharged his weapon in the line of duty on Friday, Nov. 11th, at 12:30pm. But it’s not what one might think. Officer Adam Brown was reportedly in an empty room when the incident occurred. According to Michigan Live, Brown discharged his backup weapon, a .380 caliber Sig Sauer handgun, the bullet passing through a wall before striking a teacher in the neck.

    Bay County Sheriff John E. Miller stated Brown’s possession of the weapon “conforms to departmental policy” and added, “he qualified with it and he was cleared by the range officer.”

    Police officers must qualify at a gun range by shooting at targets with predetermined acceptable accuracy. But most police officers’ backup weapons usually never come out of their holsters, often located around the ankle. Why Brown removed his secondary weapon from his presumed ankle holster is anyone’s guess, and the police have offered few explanations. The shroud of silence has alarmed many parents, according to MI Live, who were only notified of the discharge by an automated school-delivered voicemail to their phones.

    Brown is no rookie, having already logged more than 20 years with the department. There’s no question as to his competence to handle a weapon. However, the officer’s judgment is now a concern. An investigation is underway, but until concluded, Brown’s superiors are not commenting on how the incident occurred, neither are school officials. For now, they’re mum, having complied with Michigan State Police’s request not to comment.

    Pauline Helmling, president of the Bay City Public Schools Board of Education, did address the officer’s discharged firearm. Helmling told reporters, “This shook all of us to the core. It was very scary. And we are so grateful that no one got hurt.” Helmling offered no details but did say, “Being that it’s still under investigation and in the hands of the Michigan State Police, we know only as much as the public knows right now.”

    Jenny LaPlant, a parent, voiced her concerns. “I didn’t even know there was a police officer in this school,” she said adding, “I don’t believe it’s that bad of a school that it needs a police officer, let alone an officer with a gun. To me, they just put my kid and everybody else’s kid in harm’s way and they don’t have enough respect for us parents. They should have called a meeting, but they’re throwing it under the rug. My kid goes to that school and I do need to know what happened.”

    Another parent, Kevin Cliff, addressed the school board with his concerns and stated, “They didn’t say a word.” Cliff continued, “It seems like they’re trying to cover their behinds. I think the secure mode (lockdown following the shooting) wasn’t done to make sure kids were actually safe; it was done to say they did it. That’s the only justification. It really seems they’re trying to close ranks. They’re not being forthcoming. It makes me really question if there’s more to the story.”

    From what we can tell from the MI Live story, a female teacher was struck in the neck while she was instructing her class. Brown, who once was named the “Officer Of The Year,” has reportedly been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

    You may have heard it said that “Guns don’t kill, people do.” Responsible gun owners are well aware that firearms simply do not discharge all by themselves. When a gun is fired, it happens because either the trigger has been pulled, or an object has struck the back of the hammer (if the gun has one), causing the firing pin to make contact with the bullet’s primer, firing the weapon. Many handguns have several safety features to prevent such unintentional discharge. So, in all likelihood, Officer Brown was handling his backup weapon, either cleaning it, or admiring its fine characteristics, and pulled the trigger. Either way, it is safe to say the firearm did not discharge while it was holstered around his ankle.

    With a teacher having been struck in the neck by the officer’s bullet, many parents are questioning whether or not school resource officers are even necessary. One problem with school resource officers on campus is with what they customarily do after an incident occurs. They arrest teenagers (a great number of whom are minorities) take them to jail, and often prosecute them in the judicial system. There are innumerable instances where students have been arrested –all of which may mean the students are sometimes more likely to get an arrest record by the time they graduate high school, than they are to earn a high school diploma.

    But we cannot help but look at the incident with another point of view. If a teacher accidentally discharged his/her weapon at school, striking another teacher, the teacher would subsequently be arrested. So why are police held to a lower standard? The teacher, even if he/she had a concealed carry permit, would have committed the crime of discharging a weapon in public, not to mention a ‘gun free zone,’ but when a police officer discharges his weapon in school, in the end, no arrest of the police officer will likely take place.
     
    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/school-resource-officer-fires-weapon-teacher/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 23, 2016, 12:42:39 AM
    Missouri Man Remains Imprisoned Despite Police Commissioner and Prosecutor Saying he is Innocent

    A Kansas City man who has been in prison for two decades for a double murder has long claimed he is innocent.

    And now a Kansas City Police commissioner as well as a former prosecutor who have reviewed his case are also saying he is innocent.

    But Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster said it’s too late for Ricky Kidd because he did not appeal it in time.

    However, the Midwest Innocence Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to exonerated innocent people imprisoned for crimes they did not commit, is fighting to get him freed.

    Kidd is serving two life sentences at a maximum security prison in Cameron, Missouri without the possibility of parole for the 1996 double murder of two men.

    There is no physical or forensic evidence linking Kidd to the murder in which three men killed two men in a drug ripoff.

    In fact, one of the convicted killers testified that Kidd was not involved in the double murder.

    And the four-year-old daughter of one of the victims who witnessed the murders did not identify him as one of the killers.

    Also, Kidd was at the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department on the same day of the murders, according to records.

    However, his attorney at the time failed to obtain the VHS surveillance video showing him at the sheriff’s office.

    But records show they conducted a criminal background search on Kidd at 1:37 p.m. that day, just over two hours after the 11:30 a.m. murder.

    The only reason he became a suspect was because police received an anonymous tip saying he was one of the killers, which appears to have been placed by one of the actual killers, according to the Midwest Innocence Project.

    The murders took place on February 6, 1996 when three men wearing black skull caps robbed and murdered George Bryant and Oscar Bridges in Kansas City at Bryant’s home.

    The three men were robbing a drug house. In an apparent dash for drugs and cash, the men fatally shot Bryant and Bridges.

    Kidd became a suspect only after anonymous crime stoppers tips were called in to police. With not much to go on, police arrested Kidd.

    The murder weapon was never found. During trial, Jackson County Sergeant Tim Buffalow verified Kidd’s gun permit application.

    “We know who the killers are,” said Kansas City Police Commissioner Alvin Brooks.

    “One of them is dead, one is in the penitentiary, the other is still on the street. The one in the penitentiary gave a sworn deposition that Kidd was not with him.”

    Commissioner Brooks is referring to Kidd’s alleged co-conspirator Marcus Merrill. Merrill claims that Kidd was not even with him at the time of the murder.

    Merrill, instead, swore that his accomplices were a pair of men named Gary Goodspeed Sr. and Gary Goodspeed Jr., one who passed away, the other who is still free.

    Former Jackson County Prosecutor Cindy Dodge said she was reluctant to believe Kidd was innocent until she started her own investigation.

    “Ricky didn’t commit these murders,” she said. “He is innocent. There’s no question in my mind. I wouldn’t be working on this and spending hundreds of hours of free time.”

    Dodge is Kidd’s current public defender, who is representing him pro-bono. Kidd’s first attorney failed to retrieve VHS surveillance tapes of the sheriffs department where Kidd applied for a gun  permit, which would have confirmed Kidd’s alibi.

    The National Association Against Police Brutality has joined in the fight to free Kidd.

    According to official court documents— here is the problem now, the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office will only allow new evidence to be submitted to Kidd’s appeal. The documented gun permit alibi is considered old evidence because it was submitted during the initial trial.

    However, in February 2016, the court declared an order for DNA testing. Physical evidence from the scene will be tested for DNA and eventually compared with Kidd’s DNA.

    But there is a chance that could prove to be inconclusive.

    Click here to read all the documents pertaining to Ricky Kidd’s case.

    Last month, we reported on another incarcerated man in Missouri who is likely innocent, but who was not granted a new trial by the state because he is not on death row.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/22/missouri-man-remains-imprisoned-despite-police-commissioner-and-prosecutor-saying-he-is-innocent/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Irongrip400 on November 23, 2016, 03:33:41 AM
    The timeline of the diabetic girl and the nurse's actions (or lack thereof) is disturbing. I imagine she'all lose her license regardless of the outcome of the trial, but I do hope that she's convicted and give some serious jail time.

    What's crazy though is the charge is only a misdemeanor. How much time can she actually get for that?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 23, 2016, 11:50:52 AM
    Cops Taze Disabled Woman For Filming Daughter’s Arrest Until She Falls From Her Wheelchair

    Harris County, TX – Caught on video deploying a Taser against a mother in a wheelchair simply recording her daughter’s arrest, several deputies from the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are under an internal affairs investigation for needlessly attacking the disabled woman. Instead of treating her like a human being, the deputies can clearly be seen grabbing her cellphone and throwing it away before tasing the disabled woman until she collapsed out of her wheelchair.

    Last Wednesday, 36-year-old Sheketha Holman arrived at a Valero gas station in northwest Houston after discovering her daughter was under arrest for marijuana possession and criminal mischief. A surveillance camera recorded Holman in her wheelchair as she filmed her daughter’s arrest with her cellphone camera.

    “I was taking pictures of them, and he was like, ‘Just leave the property, you’re trespassing. They don’t want you here,’” Holman told KHOU.
    “I was like, ‘I’m trying to leave. I can’t take off running, but I’m trying to leave,’” Holman recalled. “‘Oh, you’re resisting?’ I was like, ‘I’m not resisting.’ That’s when I had my hands up like this.”

    Despite the fact that Holman appears non-threatening in the video, a deputy can be seen abruptly snatching the phone out her hand before immediately tossing it away. Instead of using her cellphone footage as potential evidence against Holman or her daughter, the deputy appears to be obstructing justice by attempting to destroy evidence during an open investigation.

    Ironically wearing a shirt with the words “Love, Love, Love” written across the front, Holman’s body suddenly seized up before falling out of her wheelchair and collapsing to the pavement when a deputy deployed a Taser against her. After repeatedly telling deputies that she was physically unable to comfortably place both arms behind her injured back, Holman dropped to the ground as deputies ignored her medical concerns.

    Due to several years of severe back injuries, including back surgery and a hit-and-run accident, Holman relies upon a wheelchair and cannot understand why the arresting deputies felt excessive force was necessary against a disabled woman posing no actual threat.

    “When I came to, I was like face down or whatever, and my leg was underneath me,” Holamn remembered. “They still was tasing me, man. That’s wrong.”
    Charged with resisting arrest and trespassing, Holman is scheduled to return to court next month.

    In response to the newly released surveillance video, the sheriff’s office recently released the following statement:
    “The Harris County Sheriff’s Office has an open Internal Affairs incident report. It is currently being investigated by IAD personnel. When the investigation is complete, if any policies and procedures were violated, then disciplinary actions will be implemented. These actions may be suspension and or termination.”

    In a recent interview with ABC13, Holman asserted, “I feel like [the officers] used the law to abuse a disabled person who can’t fight back. I think they should be punished.”

    None of the deputies involved in Holman’s unnecessarily violent arrest have yet been identified or indicted.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-taze-disabled-woman-wheelchair-filming/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 23, 2016, 11:58:55 PM
    Lock him up for 15 years and sodomize him daily.

    Texas Jailer Arrested for Thrusting Baton into Inmate’s Anus Multiple Times

    A Texas jailer was arrested and fired after he tried to wake up an inmate for fingerprints and a mugshot by thrusting a baton into his anus, according to a criminal complaint.

    It was such a egregious act, several  jailers who witnessed the assault gave sworn statements against their fellow detention officer, 32-year-old Michael David Hinojosa of Mercedes, confirming the inmate’s story.

    One jailer “confirmed that he observed Detention Officer Michael Hinojosa push his ASP baton into [the inmate’s] anus four to five times.”

    Investigators with the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Officer arrested Hinojosa on Monday, charging him with improper sexual activity with a person in custody, a state jail felony.

    Sheriff Eddie Guerra issued a public statement about the assault Monday night saying he was “disappointed”, but promised to investigate the matter and to take necessary actions preserve the public’s confidence and trust in the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office.

    As your Hidalgo County Sheriff, I oversee hundreds of deputies, detention officers and employees everyday, of whom I hold to high standards of police distinction and excellence. I do this because I truly believe that as public servants, we must maintain accountability and trust from the people we serve, to continue the mission of public safety. I am greatly disappointed and concerned, over the actions of one of my detention officers that does not reflect our office’s commitment to these high standards.

    After learning of a use of force incident between Detention Officer Michael Hinojosa, and an inmate at our adult detention center, I initiated an internal investigation which revealed violation of protocols, policies and Texas state law. I have since terminated Hinojosa’s employment from the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office, and also filed criminal charges against him for Violation of Civil Rights of Person In Custody.

    I stand behind my promise that I am committed to restoring and preserving the public’s confidence and trust in the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office. We will continue to investigate all allegations of employee misconduct, and I will take the necessary and appropriate actions to maintain accountability and transparency to you, the citizens we serve.

    Hinojoas was released at 10:55 p.m. Monday after being booked into the Hidalgo County Jail at 10:07 p.m.

    He was unavailable for comment.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/23/texas-jailer-arrested-for-thrusting-baton-into-inmates-anus-multiple-times/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 24, 2016, 08:55:39 AM
    If a drunk citizen started firing at cops, he would most likely be dead now and we'd hear about the mythical "war on cops". If a drunk cops shoots at citizens, she can just resign.

    Drunk Florida Cop who Claimed She was Targeted in Drive-by Shooting Resigns after Investigation Shows She Lied

    A Florida cop who claimed she was shot at in a drive-by shooting while walking her dog, forcing her to return fire on the suspects, resigned last week after an internal affairs investigation determined she was drunk and lied about what happened.

    Daytona Beach police officer Michelle Smith’s lies became evident to investigators when her victims provided them with three Snapchat videos that depict her as the aggressor.

    In her resignation letter, Smith wrote that she was humiliated and treated unfairly during the investigation, according to WFTV.

    Smith told investigators a group of suspects occupying two vehicles began challenging her to fight, so she called over her pit bull. She claimed at that point both cars sped off and shot at her as they fled and that she only fired back to protect herself.

    Smith claimed she spotted the two cars near her apartment complex and determined  a drug deal was taking place on September 8 around 3 a.m. after she returned home from a night out partying with friends.

    That’s when she said the cars began following  her and the people inside began egging her on to fight.

    Investigators discovered not only was officer Smith’s story a lie, but that she was the one who instigated the confrontation, then fired shots at six people in two cars while intoxicated and without any provocation from the victims she confronted in the car.

    The witnesses told police investigators they were at the apartment looking for a lost set of keys when Smith approached while walking her dog. When a male passenger asked Smith if she was security, she did not reply.

    Officer Smith tied her dog to a tree, then approached and began asking questions indicating she wanted to fight.

    One Snapchat video taken of the confrontation shows Smith challenging the group to a physical altercation, saying she wants to “wrap them up,” which means to fight.

    Smith can be heard asking a group if they lived at her apartment complex. When a man says they don’t  have to answer, Smith replies, “You don’t, but watch when I wrap you all up….”

    A woman in the car interpreted that to mean officer Smith wanted to fight. Another passenger who witnessed the confrontation told investigators that officer Smith pointed her gun at two of the men.

    Smith described the two as a gray Ford Taurus and a red “long four-door”, similar to the older model Grand Marquis that police drove.

    Officer Smith stated shots were fired at her from the red car and gave investigators a fake license plate number. But it turned out the “red car” was a two-door Chevy Camaro, similar to the one she admitted her fiancé drives that she also admitted she could distinguish between a Grand Marquis.

    “They look nothing alike,” Smith told investigators.

    Department violations against Smith include unauthorized use of deadly force, unlawful conduct and department morale.

    She was reportedly unavailable for comment.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/24/drunk-florida-cop-who-claimed-she-was-targeted-in-drive-by-shooting-resigns-after-investigation-shows-she-lied/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 24, 2016, 11:11:41 AM
    When will these violent and armed terrorists be held accountable for their actions?

    Innocent 58yo Man Raided by SWAT, Assaulted, Flashbanged, Kidnapped for 3 Days for ‘Welfare Check’

    CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — (Rutherford Institute) Attorneys for The Rutherford Institute have identified eight members of a tactical police squad in an amended complaint to a lawsuit against Virginia police over a “welfare check” on a 58-year-old man that resulted in a two-hour, SWAT team-style raid on the man’s truck and a 72-hour mental health hold.

    In documents filed with the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia, Rutherford Institute attorneys named specific members of the Albemarle County Police Department tactical team who were previously identified only as “John Does” because of the County’s resistance to Freedom of Information Act requests. As the November 2015 lawsuit makes clear, despite the fact that police acknowledged they had no legal basis nor probable cause for detaining Benjamin Burruss, given that he had not threatened to harm anyone, was not suspected of any criminal activity, and was not mentally ill, a police tactical team confronted Burruss, surrounded his truck, deployed a “stinger” device behind the rear tires, launched a flash grenade, smashed the side window in order to drag him from the truck, handcuffed and searched him, and transported him to a local hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and mental health hold. Affiliate attorney Michael Winget-Hernandez is assisting The Rutherford Institute with the lawsuit, which charges police with violating the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments as well as state law.

    “This is just one more example of how a relatively benign situation (a routine welfare check) gets escalated into something far more violent and dangerous through the use of militarized police, armed to the teeth and trained to react combatively,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “The unnecessary use of force by police officers in response to a situation that should have—and could have—been handled non-confrontationally did not, in this instance, result in a loss of life, but that is small consolation to those who have learned to tread cautiously in their interactions with police.”

    According to the complaint, on Nov. 21, 2013, Albemarle County police officers were asked to conduct a “welfare check” on Benjamin Burruss by his employer. Police confronted Burruss as he was leaving the Comfort Inn and preparing to leave for a hunting trip to Montana. Burruss informed officers that he was fine, had no plans to hurt anyone, and just needed time to think through things, hence the trip to Montana. For two hours, officers persisted in asking Burruss to exit his truck and speak with them, with Burruss continuing to reiterate that he had no intention of harming himself or others and just wanted to be left alone and allowed to go on his hunting trip. During this time, police deployed a “stinger” device behind Burruss’s truck. Police also surrounded Burruss’s truck with their squad cars, blocking his exit. The officer speaking with Burruss informed the other officers that they had no reason to hold Burruss because he had not threatened to harm anyone and he was not mentally ill. Nevertheless, a tactical team of heavily-armed police launched a flash grenade at Burruss’ truck, smashed the driver-side window, dragged Burruss out by his arms, handcuffed, searched and arrested him. Burruss was forced to undergo a psychiatric evaluation and locked up under a mental health hold.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/58-man-raided-swat-assaulted-health/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2016, 04:17:07 PM
    Massachusetts Cop Married to Police Chief Rapes Inmate in Closet

    What happens in the closet stays in the closet, right?

    At least that’s what a Massachusetts cop was hoping for when he forced a drunk, naked inmate into a closet and performed oral sex on him before raping him on Halloween night.

    Salem police officer Brian Butler, 56, said he simply “gave into temptation.” And insists the sex act between him and the 28-year-old man was consensual.

    Considering he is married to the department’s police chief, he should be protected, right?

    Except there’s video.

    Police say a surveillance video confirms the victim’s allegations against Butler, which led to his arrest by Massachusetts State Police on November 8.

    Butler, who has since resigned, was charged with rape, indecent assault and battery and is facing 20 years in prison. He was released on a $10,000 bond.

    His wife of 29 years, the department’s first female police chief who took over last year, was so shocked and disheartened over her husband’s excursions that she took vacation time off immediately after his arrest.

    Salem Police Chief Mary Butler, who has since returned to duty, said the department should not be judged by the actions of her husband.

    “The alleged actions of one person shouldn’t reflect badly upon the department and the officers that are working very diligently every day to do their job,” she said.

    According to the Boston Globe:

    In a police report filed in court, authorities wrote that Salem police went to the Clipper Ship Inn on Bridge Street at about 3:07 a.m. on Oct. 31, where they found an intoxicated man wearing “soaking wet” clothing because he had flooded his motel room.

    The man was taken into protective custody and driven to the police station, where he removed his clothes and fell asleep in a holding cell. Between 6 a.m. and 9 a.m., the man was lying naked in his cell when Butler asked if he could do anything to help him. The man asked for a blanket, which Butler provided.

    He also asked to use the telephone, and while standing outside the cell, Butler allegedly placed his hand around the man’s hip in a suggestive manner, asked whether he could touch the man’s genitals, and molested him, the report said.

    “He asked if it was, ‘OK’ and I said, ‘Yes’ out of fear,” the man wrote in a statement. He contacted police with his accusations Nov. 5.

    After the man finished using the phone, he said, Butler took him to a broom closet near the booking room and cells and asked to perform oral sex on him, according to the statement.

    “In fear, I said, ‘Yes,’ ” the man wrote in a statement.

    The man told investigators Butler raped him in the closet, Essex Assistant District Attorney A.J. Camelio said in court.

    The victim, whose name has not been released, filed a complaint on November 5. The investigation was handed over to the Massachusetts State Police on November 8 and arraigned him the following day in Salem District Court. It was not until two days later that Butler finally resigned.

    When a police captain confronted Officer Butler about the sexual assault, Butler confessed saying:

    “I am embarrassed and I gave into temptation. I’ve embarrassed myself, my family and the police department, I’ve ruined a 24-year career.”

    His wife, Chief Mary Butler, released the following statement pertaining to her husbands illicit activity:

    “Though I will not get into any discussions about the incident, know that in all matters, regardless of who is involved, we must always put our integrity and the service to the public above all as it reflects on the solid reputation this Department has worked so hard to build and maintain.”

    Butler has pleaded not guilty even though he admitted guilt in a statement.

    PINAC reported on how a Louisiana police chief forced a woman to perform oral sex on him.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/28/massachusetts-cop-married-to-police-chief-rapes-inmate-in-closet/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2016, 04:20:37 PM
    What would happen to a citizen who abused a police dog? (nevermind the alleged sexual assaults)

    Cop Sexually Assaults Multiple Women, Beats Own K9 on Video, Found Guilty — Gets Job Back

    Ramsey Co., MN — In April of this year, Ramsey County Deputy, Brett Arthur Berry was fired after he was charged and convicted of assaulting a public safety dog and animal cruelty for severely beating his dog at a K9 training seminar. In spite of being found guilty and being sentenced to a year of probation, this ‘model cop’ was quietly rehired earlier this month.

    In June of 2015, surveillance footage from the Black Bear Casino in Carlton, where the seminar took place, captured this sadistic officer as he beat, strangled, and hurled his K9 partner to the ground.
    In spite of the video evidence showing his cruel behavior, Berry was allowed to keep his job for almost an entire year after the incident and wasn’t fired until April 2016 — months after he’d already been sentenced.
    However, last month, an arbitrator overruled the sheriff’s office’s attempt to fire him for the conduct and forced the department to take back this dog beating cop.

    “These kinds of incidents tarnish the badge,” Ramsey County Chief Deputy Jack Serier said of Berry’s behavior, apparently unable to fight the decision of the arbitrator. “It’s very much a difficult situation.”
    “There are times when someone does something so egregious that you have no choice but to take very harsh discipline,” Serier said.

    However, state arbitrator, Gil Vernon disagrees.
    According to the Pioneer Press, in his decision, Vernon wrote that the sheriff’s office did not sufficiently consider mitigating factors in reaching its decision, including Berry’s low risk for future misconduct. He also noted that Berry had taken responsibility for his actions, had a nearly 20-year incident-free employment record, and had sought alcohol abuse treatment.

    After Vernon rationalized the dog beating, Serier gave in, and in a glaring example of cognitive dissonance, he rehired the deputy, noting, “the arbitrator in his case has ruled and (now) it is our responsibility to ensure that Deputy Berry serves the citizens of Ramsey County with honor, truth, respect and responsibility.”

    Imagine if you are a civilian and you beat one of your coworkers on video, are charged for it, get convicted of it, and get fired for it, and some higher-up comes down and says to your boss, “hire him back.” Would this be a rational decision?
    However, if you are a public servant and your ostensible duty is to protect society — it is totally okay to be convicted of a heinous act of animal cruelty and get your job back.

    This decision also completely ignores the sexual assault that took place inside the Casino, before Berry beat his dog. Buried in an internal investigation of the deputy during the time, and not made public until last week, are the details of Berry’s drunken sexual assaults inside the casino bar. According to the Star Tribune:

    Ramsey County sheriff’s deputy Brett A. Berry forcibly kissed and groped patrons at the Black Bear Casino before beating his K-9 partner in frustration several minutes later, according to documents released Tuesday.
    An internal affairs investigation into Berry’s actions on June 15, 2015, said that he acted in an “aggressive manner” toward three people while drinking at the casino’s Cobalt lounge in Carlton, Minn.
    “His conduct in the Cobalt Lounge toward [redacted] patrons was disrespectful,” said the investigation report. “He agreed that his conduct … was inappropriate.”

    During the investigation and since the incident, none of these details were released. Not until he was already hired back did the public find out that Berry was not only a dog abuser — but also a sexual predator.
    Luckily for the 7-year-old German shepherd, Boone, his abuser will not be allowed near him, nor any other dogs for that matter.

    Sadly, this is the second officer to be caught on camera abusing their K-9 partner. The Free Thought Project broke the story of a Hammond, IN police officer who was fired after cell phone footage caught him suspending his dog by the neck.



    One of the known warning signs of certain psychopathologies, including antisocial personality disorder, also known as psychopathic personality disorder, is a history of torturing pets and small animals, a behavior known as zoosadism.
    According to the New York Times, “the FBI has found that a history of cruelty to animals is one of the traits that regularly appears in its computer records of serial rapists and murderers, and the standard diagnostic and treatment manual for psychiatric and emotional disorders lists cruelty to animals a diagnostic criterion for conduct disorders.
    “A survey of psychiatric patients who had repeatedly tortured dogs and cats found all of them had high levels of aggression toward people as well, including one patient who had murdered a young boy.”

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beats-k9-sexually-assault-job/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2016, 04:26:32 PM
    Remember this case? Once again the citizens paying the bill for this pig who killed a young man (and of course the rest of his criminal gang tried to cover up for their goon).

    Missouri Pays $9 Million Settlement to Family of Brandon Ellingson, Man who Drowned while Handcuffed in Custody of Police

    The family of a man who fell off a police boat while handcuffed and allowed to drown by the Missouri state trooper operating the boat will receive a $9 million settlement, attorneys announced Thursday.

    And there is still a chance the cop will be convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the death of Brandon Ellingson, a 20-year-old college student from Iowa who had been arrested for boating while intoxicated.

    Missouri Highway Patrol officer Anthony Piercy is scheduled for a hearing Monday for his upcoming trial.

    The only reason the case came this far is because of another Missouri Highway Patrol officer named Randy Henry, who blew the whistle, only to face retaliation from his superiors. The sergeant was forced into retirement last year, ending a 29-year career.

    According to the Kansas City Star:

    A spokesman for the patrol released a statement to The Star Thursday morning.

    “The mission of the Missouri State Highway Patrol is to serve and protect all people, and any loss of life is a tragedy,” said Capt. John Hotz. “With this case now settled through the court system, the patrol will have no additional comment on this matter.”

    The Missouri attorney general’s office, which represented the agency and troopers, did not immediately return requests for comment.

    The Ellingson family — his parents and older sister Jennifer — filed the lawsuit in federal court on Dec. 5, 2014, two days before Brandon would have turned 21. The suit initially named the patrol and several top commanders and troopers, as well as Piercy, who stopped Ellingson on May 31, 2014 for boating while intoxicated.

    Piercy’s actions and inactions that day caused Ellingson’s death, according to the lawsuit. The state and patrol were also responsible, the suit alleged, because of a lack of training for troopers after the 2011 merger of the Missouri Water Patrol into the Highway Patrol.

    As the civil case played out in federal court, the judge dismissed several counts and claims against multiple defendants. Only three counts — including conspiracy and negligence — remained, all against Piercy.

    The incident took place on May 31, 2014 when Piercy arrested Ellingson for boating while intoxicated at the Lake of the Ozarks.

    Piercy, having spent years as a patrol officer on the highways, was not properly trained to operate a boat with a person in custody as a result of a 2011 merger between the Missouri Highway Patrol and the Missouri Water Patrol that was not followed up by proper training.

    After handcuffing Ellingson and placing him in the boat, he slipped a life jacket over his body, which made it impossible for him arms to be placed through the sleeves.

    Obviously, even the most fundamental tasks that should take basic common sense cannot be performed by cops without specialized training.

    Piercy then throttled the boat to 46 mph, striking a wave, which caused Ellingson to fall into the water.

    Once in the water, the life vest slipped off, leaving Ellingson unable to swim because he was handcuffed.

    Piercy, meanwhile, hesitated to jump into the water to save him, and when he eventually did, it was too late.

    The Missouri Highway Patrol then tried to coverup for Piercy, which was when Sergeant Henry blew the whistle, leading to the department to suspend him.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/17/missouri-pays-9-million-settlement-to-family-of-brandon-ellingson-man-who-drowned-while-handcuffed-in-custody-of-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 29, 2016, 06:56:09 PM
    The heads of a criminal organization stealing from their own members and goons. Hard to find any victims here.

    Idaho Police Union President and Wife Arrested for Heist on Police Union Lodge

    A picture posted to Facebook on March 13 shows a former Idaho police union president and his wife eating well after tens of thousands of dollars were discovered missing from a Boise police union lodge.

    The money was discovered missing in January, which was when Boise police officer Mark Furniss was asked to step down as union president. His wife, Sara, who was office manager for the union lodge, also stepped down.

    On Friday, they were both charged with grand theft and booked into the Ada County jail by Meridian police, accused of stealing the money from Fraternal Order of Police Valley Lodge #11.

    Both have since been released on bond.

    Police haven’t release the amount of money allegedly stolen by the duo, but current union president, Joe Andreoli, said tens of thousands of dollars that went missing were ultimately linked to the couple.

    Andreoli said that about a dozen new processes were put into place after the investigators made the discovers in order to protect union members from theft in the future.

    The group says it now conducts quarterly audits of its finances plus an annual audit by an outside firm. Now all expenditures made by the union will go through a voucher process that requires signatures from two board members.

    In January, after discovering the theft, the evidence Boise internal investigators used to come to their finding was handed over to the Meridian Police Department and the Boise Police Department’s Internal Affairs office.

    Boise and Meridian police turned the investigation over to Nampa police over concerns about conflict of interest.

    Mark Furniss previously worked for the Garden City Police Department after being hired from the Ada County Jail.

    Mark and Sara Furniss are scheduled for their first court appearance on December 5.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/11/29/idaho-cop-wife-pull-heist-police-union-lodge/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 01, 2016, 12:38:39 PM
    Cops Get Off Scot Free Despite Shattering Handcuffed Man’s Face, Cracking His Skull On Video

    Las Cruces, NM — Two Las Cruces cops were caught on video, severely beating a handcuffed man, and they will face no consequences for their crimes. The victim, Ross Flynn was in jail for being accused of pulling a gun on his neighbor — a crime of which later he’d be found not guilty.

    Flynn was beaten so badly that he suffered several broken facial bones and a cracked skull.

    When video of this incident surfaced, the officers weren’t immediately fired. It took an ‘investigation’ lasting over 5-months before they were relieved of duty. Now, however, nearly two years after the assault, the District Attorney’s office announced that they will not be pursuing the aggravated battery charges against former officers Richard Garcia and Danny Salcido — so they can likely get their jobs back.
    In a clear display of America’s broken justice system, a defunct prosecution, along with the Attorney General came to the decision not to try the officers after Garcia’s first trial was declared a mistrial.

    According to ABC7:

    Court documents obtained by ABC-7 state the prosecution and the Attorney General’s office came to a joint decision that because a majority of the jurors believed Garcia was not guilty the first time around, they didn’t believe the outcome would be different a second time around.

    “The evidence against Danny Salcido is virtually the same as was presented in the trial of Richard Garcia. Given the nature of the evidence, the State is unable to reasonably expect a different result,” the filing states.

    In layman’s terms, because the system was broken for Garcia, they let off Salcido as they believe the system will likely be broken for him too.
    “I think that makes them look horrible, they shouldn’t let him be abused like that and let the cops get off,” one resident told ABC7.
    “Just unacceptable, I’m really mad at that,” another resident said.
    According to online court records, as reported by Las Cruces Sun-News, Salcido’s jury trial was scheduled to begin Dec. 5 with Macias presiding. The charges were dismissed without prejudice, which means they can be refiled in the future.

    There is now no chance for justice.

    The incident began as officers attempted to arrest Flynn over false charges that he’d pointed a gun at a neighbor. When police attempted to bring him in, he resisted as he felt he’d done nothing wrong.
    For resisting, he was tasered and taken to LCPD headquarters. Because of back pain, Flynn was outfitted with a belly chain, so his hands were cuffed in the front to his waist.
    When Garcia and Salcido entered the cell after Flynn appeared to kick the door, they began to assault the entirely defenseless man. The beating would last over a minute as the officers threw the handcuffed Flynn around like a ragdoll.

    As we reported in March of 2015, Officers Richard Garcia and Danny Salcido were caught blatantly lying about the incident when the surveillance footage showed them barging into the cell and brutally beating 47-year-old Flynn. The video shows the cops pinning the restrained man down, beating him, throwing him against the bars of the cell, and bashing his head so hard against the wall it fractured his skull. Flynn was in the ICU for several days according to attorneys.

    His skull was fractured in two places, he suffered multiple facial fractures, and he sustained a brain hemorrhage.


    Not shockingly, the offending officers had quite a different story before the footage was revealed. Officer Garcia’s report claimed Flynn “was walked back all the way where he did hit his back and head against the wall.” Garcia goes on to lie in the report stating they knee-kicked the restrained man to stop him from “grabbing at the officer’s belt,” and that Flynn actually pinned the officer between him and the wall.
    Not even close.

    According to the Las Cruces Sun-News, in April of this year, Flynn was acquitted of the two assault charges but convicted on one misdemeanor count of resisting or evading arrest. He was sentenced in May to 364 days of supervised probation.

    Flynn has since hired an attorney and is seeking a multi-million dollar settlement in a federal lawsuit filed against the LCPD, the former officers and the city of Las Cruces.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-get-off-scot-free-despite-video-handcuffed-beating/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2016, 09:30:25 AM
    Innocent 59yo Mother Assaulted by Cops in Walmart for No Reason

    Homewood, AL — Homewood police department has launched an internal investigation after video of their officers assaulting a 59-year-old mother in Walmart has gone viral.
    The victim, Brenda Rivers had done nothing wrong, committed no crime, and was minding her own business when she was targeted by police who mistook her for a criminal.

    Without a warrant or reasonable articulable suspicion, as Rivers did not match the description of the actual suspect, police detained her and demanded they be allowed to search her belongings.
    Knowing she had done nothing wrong, Rivers refused.

    “He just accused her,” Rivers’ husband said, trying to explain to cops that they had just entered the store. “He wanted to go through her purse without a search warrant or anything. Our rights are being infringed.”
    For demanding police get a warrant to search her, Rivers was assaulted, wrestled to the ground, placed in handcuffs, and humiliated as police detained her for nearly thirty minutes. All the while, her husband is demanding they stop the abuse.

    Instead of simply reviewing the Walmart security camera footage, police went off half-cocked and just started grabbing and searching people. Rivers was the second woman to wrongfully be accused by police.
    According to the bystanders in the video, even the woman who had her wallet stolen tried to tell police that it was not Rivers. However, they had already smelled blood in the water.
    “I felt very emotional watching this go on. I had to record it because it’s time for something to be done about the mistreatment from police,” Jasmine Thomas, the woman who filmed the abuse, told AL.com. “This is unacceptable and the officer violated her rights. It’s very sad that we have to endure things like this or even witness it. I really hope this open everyone eyes and make them aware of what’s really going on now.”
    According to Homewood police, officers were dispatched to Walmart around 8 p.m. after a woman who was shopping with her daughter claimed her wallet was stolen from her cart while she looked at toys. A wallet theft is apparently a felony in Homewood, Alabama.

    However, the felony charge is irrelevant considering the fact that Rivers was not the one who committed the crime.
    The video of the incident in Walmart has quickly begun to go viral as the excessive force used on this poor innocent woman is nothing short of blood-boiling.

    “My mama is traumatized and my daddy is very disturbed at what happened,” said the couple’s daughter, Monica Dawkins. “She’s in a lot of pain. That was excessive force.”
    “What if it was your mother?” Dawkins asked an officer as she protested Friday night. “How would you feel if it was your mother, 30 years older than you right now, and somebody body-slammed her to the floor? How would you feel? Would you not be angry? Would you not be hurt? Would you not want answers?”

    In a press conference Friday night, Homewood police Lt. Eric Hampton said Homewood police want to be transparent. “We would like to ensure and foster trust, and also mutual respect, between the community, the Rivers family and our agency,” he said.

    According to AL.com, activist Carlos Montez Chaverst Jr. said Rivers’ clothing didn’t fit the description of the suspect. The victim told police the suspect was wearing a skirt and boots, and Rivers was wearing burgundy pants and shoes. “She shouldn’t have been detained to begin with. There’s a lot of missing pieces to this deal,” Chaverst said.

    “We’re ready to galvanize,” he said. “We want the mayor to speak out, we want the police chief to speak out. We’re asking for transparency. We want honest and full, complete details as to what happened.”
    When AL.com asked about Chaverst about the police statement that accused Rivers of failing to comply with police, Chaverst said, “Comply? Police make up their own policies. Comply is whatever they say comply is. That’s how comply works.”   



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/59yo-mother-assaulted-walmart-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2016, 01:55:35 PM
    Three South Carolina Prison Guards Charged With Attempted Murder for Stabbing Handcuffed Inmate

    A male inmate was handcuffed in his cell when three guards stabbed the inmate multiple times. The stabbing occurred at Kirkland Correctional Institution in Columbia, South Carolina.

    Jarrell Boyan, 26, Pernell Fogle, 24, and Jaquan Smith, 24, have now been arrested for attempted murder and misconduct in office. And they have all been fired from the South Carolina Department of Corrections.

    The charges against the three officers were announced on December 1st just one day after they were fired.

    The incident took place on October 6, 2016 when the three officers rushed into an inmate’s cell, stabbing the inmate four times in the torso according to ABC Columbia.

    The attempted murder charges could send the guards to prison for 30 years.

    Little details are available now, but this is the second employee firing at the Kirkland Correctional Institution this week. Corrections Officer Tierra Armstrong hit a handcuffed male inmate in the face several times. Armstrong was arrested for 3rd degree assault and ultimately fired.

    Under staffing and bad pay at the prison make the guards feel unsafe and in return they lash out on inmates.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/03/three-south-carolina-prison-guards-charged-with-attempted-murder-for-stabbing-handcuffed-inmate/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2016, 02:13:53 PM
    Leaked Docs Expose Real Story of Man Accused of Killing a Cop in Botched Raid

    As we have faithfully reported on numerous occasions, a man named Marvin Louis Guy sits in a jail cell in Killeen, Texas, awaiting trial for killing a police officer. Arguably, however, the police officer, Charles “Chuck” Dinwiddie, a beloved member of the Killeen Police Department, would still be alive had the KPD not chosen to serve a “no-knock” search warrant at Mr. Guy’s apartment home.

    The first thing Guy likely heard, at 5:30 am, on May 9th, 2014, was the breaking of his bedroom window glass. Possibly startled by the fact someone was breaking into his home, and hearing someone attempting to break down his front door, Guy started shooting, striking three of the officers, and killing Dinwiddie with one fatal shot to the face. While Guy has never denied he did fire his weapon, he’s repeatedly maintained he did not know he was firing at police.
    The cops were searching for drugs. Finding none, they took Guy into custody and charged him with capital murder in Dinwiddie’s death.
    With one police officer dead, and a would-be innocent man now charged with his murder, the community was understandably shaken, and so was the reporter covering the story.

    Clay Thorp, reporter for the Killeen Daily Herald, was the newspaper’s crime reporter, and he’d been in the business for many years. Thorp has long since moved on from the KDH, and Killeen, TX, but hasn’t been able to shake off the unsettling concerns he’s had surrounding the treatment of Mr. Guy. The Free Thought Project had a chance to catch up with Thorp, get a better understanding of the impact Dinwiddie’s death had on the community, and to further explain the complexities of Guy’s case.

    When Thorp saw the memorial erected in Dinwiddie’s honor, he was moved. The KDH reporter said, “I felt sorrow for his family.
    “There’s been a lot of speculation that Dinwiddie may have been killed by friendly fire,” Thorp explains. “There were a lot of bullets flying through Guy’s home that night. It is possible he was killed by friendly fire,” he said and addressed the time that has passed, “It’s been almost three years.”

    Even if Dinwiddie wasn’t killed in a hail of friendly fire, he admits it’s also very possible Guy was the one who killed the beloved officer. “He (may have) been murdered on purpose by an alleged drug dealer…and the possibility that he wasn’t murdered by Guy is just heartbreaking for me,” he said lamenting the entire incident.

    Thorp said the Dinwiddie family will go through another troubled valley in life as Guy’s capital murder trial approaches. “This trial is going to be the hardest thing they’ve gone through in their lives. This is not going to be easy for Dinwiddie’s family and they know it. My heart goes out to them. It really does,” he said.

    The Dinwiddies are upstanding citizens, according to Thorp. “I’ve met his (Chuck’s) family. They’re wonderful, wonderful people who are very giving in the community and do a lot of outreach work because of Dinwiddie’s death. But this trial is not going to be easy. I can only imagine the kind of hurt and heartbreak they potentially will suffer because of this upcoming trial,” the news reporter said.

    But even with the compassion Thorp feels for the fallen officer’s family, he raises serious concerns over Guy’s case. The Castle Doctrine states the citizenry has a right to defend themselves, their homes, and even their property, if the citizenry feels at all threatened, and is allowed to use deadly force. According to Thorp, that’s precisely what Guy maintains. He should know. He’s interviewed Guy on at least a dozen occasions.

    In fifteen minute intervals, which often included videotaping the alleged cop killer, Thorp says Guy thinks a lot about his own case, “he (Guy) would talk about wanting justice for Dinwiddie’s family,” indicating he too hopes the Dinwiddie family receives the justice they are seeking, conveying the compassion he has for them, along with remorse at the thought he may have taken the officer’s life. But Thorp says he’s still a bit skeptical of Guy’s claims his lawyers were corrupt, that the police were out to get him, and that he may not have been the one who killed Dinwiddie. He remarked, “I was never 100 percent convinced,” adding his career in journalism did not afford him the luxury of taking sides. He had to remain objective, but he did find it unusual that the lawyer assigned to his case, reportedly a lawyer named “Mr. White”, was not certified to work with clients in murder trials. “Just the fact he wasn’t certified to work with capital murder clients was suspect to me,” Thorp confessed. Guy fired those first few lawyers because “the process frustrated Marvin.” He further explained, “Marvin felt like the process wasn’t fair.”

    The veteran crime reporter has some very strong feelings, however, about Guy’s right to a speedy trial. He said, “he’s been in jail for almost 3 years and still no trial. That’s wrong.” And he wants to know why. “What’s going on…who’s failing, is it the prosecution or the defense and why?”

    Believe it or not, Guy’s case is not the only “no-knock” search warrant execution which resulted in the killing of a police officer. A similar incident took place in December of 2013, in Somerville, Texas.  “Burleson County Sgt. Adam Sowders, led a team in a no-knock marijuana raid on Henry Goedrich Magee’s home.  Magee, who was home with his pregnant girlfriend, believed that someone was breaking in.  Concerned for his girlfriend and unborn child’s safety, Magee opened fire and killed Sowders. In February (2014), all charges against Magee were dropped when a Texas grand jury refused to indict, based on the belief that he feared for his safety and that this was a reasonable act of self-defense.” Magee is White. Guy is Black. And we wanted to know how much race is playing a factor in Guy’s case.

    After asking Thorp about race, the crime reporter commented, “You know there were instances, other instances, which occurred in Bell county and surrounding counties that would lead me to believe that it is possible that race is involved in this and it plays some part in the public’s want for justice against Marvin Guy who’s a black guy, and who has a previous history of being a bad guy.”
    Remaining neutral, Thorp elaborated, “In my job as a reporter, I always tried to keep away from that subject, but it always came back to that.” Guy himself reportedly has no doubt the reason why he’s still in jail facing capital murder charges and a lifetime on death row is because he’s Black, not because he may have killed Officer Dinwiddie.

    Thorp said as much, “Marvin is convinced that it is because he’s black…It always came back to race with Marvin,” who would often quote the fabled meaning of Killeen’s name in the Black community, “Kill Each and Every black.” The former Killeen reporter explained that where Guy lived was more likened to a war zone than an American dream type of neighborhood. “He lives in the Killeen ghetto, a small-time war zone, where 15-16 people died in just a few months (that year)…It was all gang related violence…a lot of those murders are still unsolved and they’ve been unsolved for a while…It was a violent area where he lived…It seems to me he had reason to be protective. He lived in a rough area you know.” The journalist’s opinion of Guy’s community gave him justification enough for being afraid of someone trying to break into his home. Felon or not, Guy felt compelled to defend his family, in an area of town where being on the defensive was second nature.

    After earning Guy’s trust, one day, the one-time bank robber turned cook, presented Thorp with a gift, his entire case file, with the condition that Thorp would take a close look at it. Sure enough, the file was complete with police reports, autopsy notes, and other relevant information that is now under gag order by Judge Gant, not to be released by the defense or prosecution teams. What those groups may not know is that Thorp, also, has a copy of the case file, and has shared some of its contents with The Free Thought Project.

    We asked how it came into his possession. “So his case file is essentially, it looked to be a conglomeration of documents of which he and his family member, they were able to make several FOIA requests…they compiled that and Marvin was able to get ahold of a lot the paperwork from his attorney the time.”  Thorp said “the juicy parts”, also are the most controversial ones, those statements given by the police officers who were involved in the deadly event.
    “When I read through them there were a couple of things that jumped out at me that were kind of unjust. When the bullets started flying through his home and Marvin ran for the back door, the police were there,” he explained. Guy was taken into custody, and when one of the officers learned Dinwiddie had been shot, he admittedly forced his service pistol down Marvin’s throat. “I think the exact wording in the police report was, ‘I did enter his mouth with my pistol,’ I think that’s illegal,” the reporter emphatically stated.

    Actually, the police report is much more graphic and detailed. Officer Juan E Obregon Jr., per the document The Free Thought Project received, recalled his involvement in the arrest of Marvin Guy. He wrote,
    I then heard someone yell out, “IT’S CHUCK FUCK IT’S CHUCK!” At that moment I became very enraged with anger and the suspect began to speak so I struck him with my pistol in the mouth area. I did not strike him hard enough to cause him any visible marks however; I did enter his mouth with my pistol. I noticed the male spit up so I quickly removed my weapon and then placed it to the side of the suspects head and yelled out “YOU MOTHER FUCKER WHO SHOT? DID YOU SHOOT? WHO ELSE IS INSIDE.” Next, l was being pulled off the suspect by other SWAT operators and told to watch the corner of the C/D side, the back door.

    It’s unclear, from the records, at which point Guy was handcuffed, but it is clear that he was not treated as someone who was innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

    It’s been said Guy’s girlfriend was also roughed up immediately following the incident. It was Thorp’s understanding she was also injured. “She suffered some injuries. I wasn’t able to confirm what they were or to even find her…she did go to the hospital for unknown injuries.”

    Asked if he was satisfied with the coverage Guy’s case received by the press, Thorp responded, “You know I was (satisfied) up until we got the case file and it had all the police statements and which I thought that we should publish and that we should report on and it had all the evidence…history…the evidence list of everything that was collected,” he said. “So you see why I was so upset about not publishing what was in this file that Marvin gave us. I was basically told to sit on it. I wasn’t given the time to investigate it. It was put on the back burner. And when I pushed it, I was shot down. I was told we can’t publish it because ‘it would sway a potential jury in his trial.’”

    Also important to reveal to the general public were the statements by the officers on duty at the time of the shooting. “I think that what is in this file is…you know we have police statements…we have an officer admitting to having placed a pistol inside Guy’s mouth…that’s assault. Was he ever charged with assault? I was never given the time to find that out,” he said implying there’s a double standard at work for police.

    The veteran crime reporter was admittedly miffed that his employer, the local newspaper, wouldn’t run the story. He said, “There were handwritten notes on those reports (ballistics and autopsy)…there were hand drawings of the home and that kind of thing…shell casings, bullet fragments that they pulled out of the parking lot that were alleged to have come from Guy’s gun…but of course no drugs, which was the original reason they were there.”

    The subject matter of Guy’s case file warranted publication, according to Thorp, and the fact that no drugs were found in Guy’s home, the reason why the police were even there to begin with, made Guy’s case more important to get right in the court of public opinion.

    After being told to sit on the case, and feeling angered the newspaper chose not to reveal the public record of the events to the public, Thorp said it only got worse, personally, from there. Soon, he says, he himself became a targeted individual by the police. At subsequent crime scenes, the KPD disallowed him from interviewing witnesses, and at press conferences wouldn’t take any of his questions. He believes he was blackballed, run out of town for publishing articles related to Guy’s case, and his coverage of another SWAT incident.

    “I was pushed out over this. The police department knew that I had the file…The police department basically went to my publisher, not too long after this. I believe that it was this, the file issue, and coupled with the fact that I wasn’t allowed to interview witnesses after police shootings. I basically threatened civil action after they disallowed me from interviewing beckoning witnesses,” he added.

    He explained the measures he had to go through to get a story. “There was a period for a few months where I was writing questions and sending them to another reporter because the police and the city wouldn’t answer my questions on any case I was working on. I was basically blacklisted…and they tried to arrest me for talking to neighbors before the detectives had a chance to. It’s not my fault they don’t want to talk to you (the police). It’s not my fault the general public wanted to be interviewed. It was a series of events that led to the city blacklisting me and the paper capitulated.”

    The harassment by the KPD eventually came to a head when, as Thorp states, “The city manager came to our office and requested that I be removed from the beat. And that’s what they did. They capitulated, and caved under a relatively mild amount of pressure.”

    He admitted he almost resigned over the Marvin Guy case file not being published, “because I felt that our readers and the public needed to know and we needed to work to authenticate those attorney’s notes. We needed to do that. We couldn’t just ignore what was in that file and they did. They absolutely completely ignored it. There it was, journalism gold. What more do you want? We have the documents we have the statements and you (KDH) don’t want to report on any of it? Why? It blows my mind to this day why they haven’t done anything with it. I don’t want to think they’re in on some kind of corruption. I just think the publisher caved into city pressure way too easily. I was told they were prioritizing their relationship with the city and the police department. They didn’t want to threaten their relationship with the police department. That’s troubling to me. The fact they’ve sat on it for this long is inexcusable. What they have in their possession…the people deserve to know. I don’t think a lot of that should wait until the trial.”

    Thorp is now calling on the judge, the prosecution, and the defense, to give Guy his due process. The crime reporter admits, “what I have is Marvin’s side of the story…but I want to see what the prosecution has. If the prosecution is trying to get ballistics tested…let’s see it. Let’s get a move on with this…”

    The former Killeen, TX news reporter has a lot of respect for all parties involved. He explained, “I think there are a lot of good people, defense attorneys, and prosecutors that fight every day to serve the State of Texas with their great work.”

    But, he admits to also being bothered with the fact the Castle Doctrine hasn’t been applied to Guy’s case, “The question that still remains in my mind, ‘Why wasn’t protection under the self-defense law (Castle Doctrine) not been extended to Marvin Guy?’” Thorp wants to know, “Why does he deserve to be tried for capital murder?”

    The seasoned reporter explains the issue is not simply a cut and dry, black and white, open and shut case against Guy, and he explained there’s a lot of pressure on the officials to get it right. “It’s possible Judge Gant is under pressure from the community or the police department to get a conviction against Guy.” Thorp noted that judges are elected officials, with respect to Judge Gant he stated, “He’s very respected in the community, and it’s his time to show the community and Bell County we can ensure a fair trial in cases like these and we can ensure all the evidence comes out in a way that’s fair to Marvin and Dinwiddie’s family.”
    Thorp stops far short of declaring Guy is innocent or that the police are culpable. He reveals his caution saying, “I’m going to reserve judgement on that question when I see what comes out at the trial because I’m going to compare evidence in the trial with what I have and go from there.”

    The former Killeen Daily Herald crime reporter said, “I think that it’s important that, again, your readers understand there are some great people that work in Bell County and a lot of them are on the criminal defense side. They represent a lot of troubled kids who get into trouble…in a fair and responsible manner. The same can be said of the prosecution.”

    But Thorp admits there’s an atmosphere of revenge in the air, “You can’t deny there are some radical elements that exist in every community…I think that the police community in Bell County, especially, want to see Marvin fry, want to see him killed. And I think there are some elements in the community that want to see Marvin put to death. I just don’t know who’s going to win out. Is it going to be Garcia (Guy’s lawyer) who makes sure Marvin gets a fair trial or is it going to be the prosecution influenced by the police community?”

    Thorp feels that by coming forward now and blowing the whistle, so to speak, he’s able to finish what he was never able to do at the KDH. He explained it this way, “You know I never got to finish what I started there and that alone made me wonder what more I could have found. “(With Guy) sitting in jail for this long without a trial…that in itself is an injustice…no-knock warrants are an injustice…You (the police) gotta announce who you are…if you have a signed search warrant…this is Texas and this is America. This is something that is protected by law to act in defense of home and property when we feel like our home and property are threatened. Officers have a right by law to defend themselves when they feel threatened. Why was that same right not extended to Marvin?” he asks.

    Thorp explained that after Dinwiddie’s death, the KPD changed their policy, and no longer perform “no-knock” search warrants, but, he says, “that doesn’t remove a fact that an officer died and a man is sitting in jail right now who really may have been acting in self-defense.”

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/leaked-documents-marvin-guy-killed-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2016, 04:07:05 PM
    Cop Convicted of Drunk Driving With His Child, Letting Her Drive — Up for Promotion

    Milwaukee, WI — Milwaukee police sergeant John P. Corbett was recently convicted and sentenced to jail time for driving drunk with his child in the car, and now he is up for a promotion. The 46-year-old police officer allowed his 13-year-old daughter to drive his vehicle while he was drunk, and after getting a slap on the wrist in the court, he still has his job and may even be getting a raise.

    According to the police report, Corbett and his daughter took turns behind the wheel throughout the trip, and he took over the drive when she got lost.

    Corbett was given a misdemeanor charge of “driving drunk with a child in the car” and only served 30 days on work release. Corbett did receive a 60-day suspension but was able to work while serving his sentence, working his shift at the police department by day, then sleeping in the jail at night. It is important to note that the average citizen would be looking a lengthy prison sentence, steep fines, and they would likely lose their job had then been caught driving drunk with their child in the car.

    At the scene, Corbett refused to take a breathalyzer test and then was able to get that dismissed in court as a result of a plea agreement. Again, these are circumstances that would never be granted to the average citizen.
    Corbett was seen smiling ear to ear in his mug shot because he knew that he would see no consequences.


    According to a scathing report by the Journal Sentinel in 2011, Corbett’s case is par for the course in the Milwaukee PD. JS Online reports:
    At least 93 Milwaukee police officers – ranking from street cop to captain – have been disciplined for violating the laws and ordinances they were sworn to uphold, a Journal Sentinel investigation found.
    Their offenses range from sexual assault and domestic violence to drunken driving and shoplifting, according to internal affairs records. All still work for the Police Department, where they have the authority to make arrests, testify in court and patrol neighborhoods.
    Officers who run afoul of the law often aren’t fired or prosecuted, the newspaper found.

    Milwaukee police spokesman Sgt. Timothy Gauerke said that Corbett and the department have moved on since the incident.

    “As a result of the suspension, he lost approximately $17,000 in pay. He also fulfilled the criminal sanctions set forth by a judge in Fond du Lac County. Having completed the suspension and judicial process he is relieved from further sanctions related to this incident,” Gauerke said in a statement.

    Corbett’s promotion was requested by Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn, who wrote that Corbett had been “put through a timely internal vetting process wherein the members’ entire record was reviewed, including disciplines, open and closed investigations, administrative matters (e.g. use of force reports, squad accidents, criminal investigations, citizen complaints), fitness and history with the FPC.”
    “I certify that these members are in good standing with the department and suitable for promotion,” the statement concluded.

    On Monday, The Civilian Fire and Police Commission will gather for a meeting to decide the status of Corbett’s promotion.

    If Corbett does receive the promotion, he will be the second police officer surrounded in controversy to receive a promotion for the Milwaukee Police Department this year. Earlier this year, Officer Richard Ticcioni was promoted to detective, despite the fact that was involved in the arrest of a man who died in police custody.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-officer-promotion-drunk-child-drive/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2016, 02:20:12 PM
    ‘Treated Like a Slave’ — Innocent Cop Beaten by Fellow Cops Who Mistook Him for a Criminal

    New York, NY — Nothing exposes the brutality of police quite like cops beating up one of their own. If police mistake you for a criminal, there is nothing you can do to stop their assault and a retired cop just learned that the hard way.

    Ronald Lanier, retired Nassau County corrections officer, is now planning to sue the Garden City Police Department after he says they mistook him for a criminal, handcuffed, and then beat him.
    “I’ve never been cursed, physically abused, beaten and treated like a slave as I was two days ago,” Lanier said through tears as explained how he ended up battered and in the hospital. “For somebody to grab me by the neck in the supermarket, and I’m telling you, ‘I’m one of you,’ and you disrespect it — it was like you’re just another black dude.”

    “They cursed at him, they abused him verbally, they then start to beat him,” his attorney, Fred Brewington, told 1010 WINS. “He was taking blows with his hands cuffed behind him as he laid facedown.”
    According to Lanier, when he tried to explain to the officers who were beating him that he was also a cop, they laughed in his face.

    The cops who beat Lanier claimed he fit the description of a suspect in the area. So, using ‘he fit the description’ as their only means of justification, multiple officers attacked this innocent man.
    “They didn’t have a good description of who they were looking for. That doesn’t give you the right to go into a store and grab the first black person you see and throw them to the ground,” said Brewington. “The fact that he happened to be a black male in the store does not make him a culprit, it does not make him a suspect.”

    After finding himself on the receiving end of police brutality, Lanier wants these cops stripped of their badges. If history is any indicator, however, that is a mere pipe dream.

    “I’m tired of hearing officers constantly talking about we have to retrain. We don’t have to retrain, we got to let them be held accountable for their actions,” Lanier said. “Imagine if I had my gun at that time. It could have went either way.”

    When CBS2 reached out to the Garden City Police Department, they explained that they were chasing a fleeing shoplifting suspect who fled into a supermarket and provided no other details about the alleged assault.
    “We are hoping Garden City Police Department will come forward with respect, identifying their officers, disciplining their officers,” said Dennis Jones, with the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives.

    According to Brewington, after Lanier was beaten, he was then thrown in the back of a squad car for 20 minutes before being let go with zero apology.
    “The sergeant, without any apology or any other way of making it clear that they were acknowledging the mistake that they had made, just said cut him loose,” Brewington said.
    When cops are beating fellow cops, there might be a problem in the system.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/treated-like-slave-innocent-cop-mistaken-criminal/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2016, 03:19:11 PM
    I was a reading an interesting post at thetruthaboutguns.com, which discusses the mindset and attitude some cops have that they are somehow "better" and "above" the rest of society:

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2016/12/robert-farago/post-policing-thats-not-really-gun-related-kinda/

    After finishing the article and looking through the comments I saw this comment which I think makes excellent points:

    Here are some solutions to reign in the “bad apples” of the “thin blue line”:
    1. Eliminate both “absolute” and “qualified” immunity for all public officials–not just police and firefighters. Include prosecutors, judges, other court officials, CPS and building code enforcers.
    2. Eliminate all public-sector unions. Especially police and firefighter unions. Unions are not needed in the public sector, as WE, the taxpayers pay their salaries and benefits.
    3. Require all public officials to be “bonded” and carry “malpractice insurance” as a condition of employment. No bond or malpractice insurance–no job.
    4. Prohibit “internal affairs” investigations for all cases but those involving disputes between police officers. All investigations should be handled at the state level.
    5. Prosecutors must be subordinate to the grand jury. Withholding evidence that could prove or disprove misconduct by public officials should be a prosecuted as a felony.
    6. Any awards to citizens as a result of “official misconduct” should be paid out of the offending department’s pension funds. You can be sure that if police pension funds were threatened, you would see a “clean-up” in a hurry.
    7. Require body and dash cams to be used at all times. No citizen interaction permitted without functioning equipment. Obtain equipment that cannot be turned off. All interactions between officials and citizens must be put on the internet “cloud” and must be publicly accessible. Tampering with equipment should result in permanent dismissal.
    8. Establish a 50-state publicly-searchable database of police, fire and public officials who should NEVER hold a position requiring the “public trust”.
    9. Police must be restricted to the types of firearms that the citizenry is “allowed” to possess. This would help “encourage” anti-gun states (New York, New Jersey, California) to “loosen up” their restrictions on civilian firearms ownership–magazine capacity limits, etc. Citizens deserve the same (or even better) firepower than police…
    These solutions would go a long way in curbing the abuses that presently exist.



    This comment was also quite good:

    Ever notice that police unions are “fraternal”? This should tell you something. The “thin-blue-line” is a gang, little different than street gangs–at least when it comes to “covering-up” questionable behavior by police. In today’s day and age, “officer safety” trumps de-escalation of force. This, in part, is due to the militarization of the police along with training in Israeli police tactics. This becomes a problem, with the “us vs. them” attitude that is fosters, along with the fact that Israel is a very different place, being on a constant “war footing”, and by necessity, its police tactics are very different. There are too many instances of police being “given a pass”, even when incontrovertible video and audio evidence is presented. Grand juries, guided by police-friendly prosecutors, quite often refuse to charge those police officers who abuse their authority. Police officers, who want to do the right thing, are quite often marginalized and put into harms way, by their own brethren…When a police officer is beating on someone that is already restrained while yelling, “stop resisting” THAT is but one reason police have a “bad name” in many instances…
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 05, 2016, 12:04:01 AM
    I was a reading an interesting post at thetruthaboutguns.com, which discusses the mindset and attitude some cops have that they are somehow "better" and "above" the rest of society:

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2016/12/robert-farago/post-policing-thats-not-really-gun-related-kinda/

    After finishing the article and looking through the comments I saw this comment which I think makes excellent points:

    Here are some solutions to reign in the “bad apples” of the “thin blue line”:
    1. Eliminate both “absolute” and “qualified” immunity for all public officials–not just police and firefighters. Include prosecutors, judges, other court officials, CPS and building code enforcers.
    2. Eliminate all public-sector unions. Especially police and firefighter unions. Unions are not needed in the public sector, as WE, the taxpayers pay their salaries and benefits.
    3. Require all public officials to be “bonded” and carry “malpractice insurance” as a condition of employment. No bond or malpractice insurance–no job.
    4. Prohibit “internal affairs” investigations for all cases but those involving disputes between police officers. All investigations should be handled at the state level.
    5. Prosecutors must be subordinate to the grand jury. Withholding evidence that could prove or disprove misconduct by public officials should be a prosecuted as a felony.
    6. Any awards to citizens as a result of “official misconduct” should be paid out of the offending department’s pension funds. You can be sure that if police pension funds were threatened, you would see a “clean-up” in a hurry.
    7. Require body and dash cams to be used at all times. No citizen interaction permitted without functioning equipment. Obtain equipment that cannot be turned off. All interactions between officials and citizens must be put on the internet “cloud” and must be publicly accessible. Tampering with equipment should result in permanent dismissal.
    8. Establish a 50-state publicly-searchable database of police, fire and public officials who should NEVER hold a position requiring the “public trust”.
    9. Police must be restricted to the types of firearms that the citizenry is “allowed” to possess. This would help “encourage” anti-gun states (New York, New Jersey, California) to “loosen up” their restrictions on civilian firearms ownership–magazine capacity limits, etc. Citizens deserve the same (or even better) firepower than police…
    These solutions would go a long way in curbing the abuses that presently exist.



    This comment was also quite good:

    Ever notice that police unions are “fraternal”? This should tell you something. The “thin-blue-line” is a gang, little different than street gangs–at least when it comes to “covering-up” questionable behavior by police. In today’s day and age, “officer safety” trumps de-escalation of force. This, in part, is due to the militarization of the police along with training in Israeli police tactics. This becomes a problem, with the “us vs. them” attitude that is fosters, along with the fact that Israel is a very different place, being on a constant “war footing”, and by necessity, its police tactics are very different. There are too many instances of police being “given a pass”, even when incontrovertible video and audio evidence is presented. Grand juries, guided by police-friendly prosecutors, quite often refuse to charge those police officers who abuse their authority. Police officers, who want to do the right thing, are quite often marginalized and put into harms way, by their own brethren…When a police officer is beating on someone that is already restrained while yelling, “stop resisting” THAT is but one reason police have a “bad name” in many instances…



    Totally agree - makes Good sense.
    What is there not to agree with in those proposed guidelines.

    Would make for better policing & public officials.

    We can only work towards & put pressure on for such honest
    Basic things to be put in place.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2016, 01:21:45 PM
    South Carolina Judge Declares Mistrial in Police Shooting Death of Walter Scott

    One juror refused to convict the South Carolina police officer who shot and killed Walter Scott as he ran away – even though the incident was captured on video – resulting in a mistrial Monday afternoon.

    “I cannot and will not change my mind,” the lone juror was quoted as saying last week, even after the judge insisted the 12-person jury continue deliberating until reaching a decision.

    But Judge Clifton Newman declared a mistrial today, allowing North Charleston police officer Michael Slager to possibly walk free.

    “We as the jury regret to inform the court that despite the best efforts of all members, we are unable to come to a unanimous decision,” Clifton read from a note written by the jury, according to the Washington Post.

    It is now up to prosecutors to determine if they want to retry Slager on manslaughter or murder for the April 4, 2105 incident.

    But Slager was unaware that a witness named Feiden Santana was recording the incident, which is what led to him being charged in Scott’s death. He was also fired shortly after the video surfaced.

    Slager, 35, had pulled over Scott, 50, for a broken taillight, but Scott fled, apparently to avoid going to jail for unpaid child support.

    Slager chased him, then shot him five times in the back, then threw down a taser near his body in what appeared to be an attempt to make it seem as if Scott was trying to take it away from him – which would have justified the shooting.

    “Shots fired and the subject is down. He took my taser.”

    A police report stated that police officers attempted to administer CPR on Scott, but that is not evident on the video.

    The trial lasted five weeks and the jury consisted of 11 white people and one black person.

    This is breaking story which we will be updating.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/05/south-carolina-judge-declares-mistrial-police-shooting-death-walter-scott/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2016, 01:37:15 PM
    If the rape accusations are true, the cops that ignored them should be charged as accessories to rape.

    15yo Girl Reports Rape to School Police — They Ignored Her, Didn’t Even Tell Her Parents

    Fort Worth, TX — A 15-year-old high school student was forced to ask for help on Facebook after she reported her rape to police, only to be completely ignored. After being exposed for ignoring the girl, police then blamed her for their mistakes.

    The alleged attack happened in December 2015, right near the school. Because the child felt ashamed and guilty after the attack, she was scared to tell her parents. After hearing that her attacker had done the same thing to several other girls, she finally broke her silence and told the school police.
    Her reports of rape, however, fell on deaf ears as police took no action.

    According to FOX 4 News, Fort Worth ISD filed a report with police, but the detective assigned to the case did nothing with it from there.

    In July of 2016, that detective, Dennis Hutchins, was fired for mishandling multiple child abuse cases just like this one.
    “We’ve discovered there were several cases where the detective dropped the ball,” said Sgt. Marc Povero, Fort Worth Police Dept. “We’ve done our due diligence to go back through all the cases not properly handled or mishandled and we’re re-investigating those cases, this was one of them.”

    Not only was this case entirely ignored by a grossly incompetent detective, but the school police failed to notify the child’s parents as well. No one, during the entirely botched process, ever thought to contact the girl’s parents.

    “I have a minor child who was sexually assaulted and I was not told,” the mother said. “She made a report and as a parent I could have provided her some emotional support, therapy, guidance to get through it, rather than watch her decline academically and not know what was going on.”

    Only because of the diligence of FOX4 News calling the police department did this girl’s parents learn that their daughter had been raped.
    “It’s heartbreaking to me that my daughter went through this alone,” the mom said.

    After being ignored by police for months, the girl finally stopped pursuing the case as she simply wanted to be through with the whole thing.
    “I was trying to forget about it,” the girl said.

    When asked why they didn’t call the parents, police, who have access to databases with everyone’s private information, claimed they didn’t have the mother’s phone number. Then they went on to blame the 15-year-old girl for their inaction.

    “We didn’t have contact information for the mother, that’s not to say we couldn’t find it, but at that time we had a victim who was not cooperating with the investigation,” Sgt. Povero said.

    The actions, or rather, inaction by the police in this matter are infuriating — yet par for the course.

    The rate at which police ignore rape is nothing short of criminal.

    According to the Department of Justice, there are currently over 400,000 untested rape kits collecting dust in police evidence rooms nationwide, and many other estimates suggest that this number could be as high as one million.

    As a result of this horrific negligence, roughly 3% of rape cases in America are actually solved. This is in spite of the fact that many rape kits have a high chance of leading to an arrest since most rapists are career criminals who have their DNA on file.

    In some cases, the victims even know who their attackers were, but they cannot prosecute these criminals because the evidence has yet to be processed by police.
    Arresting rapists and murderers simply falls short in the two areas police are worried about — revenue collection and keeping their inflated drug war budgets flowing.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/school-cops-ignore-rape-15yo-girl-refused-notify-parents

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 06, 2016, 07:07:06 PM
    Was the cop a getbigger?

    Alabama Cop Forced Man to Perform Oral Sex While Holding Gun to his Head

    An Alabama cop was indicted on first degree sodomy charges after he detained a man in the back of his patrol car for an hour before letting him go – only to later show up at the man’s house where he held a gun to his head and forced him to perform oral sex.

    Montgomery police officer Deonte Lawrence Hamner was arrested back in June, but he did not get indicted until recently, according to WSFA, which reported the news last week, but did not specify when he was indicted.

    On June 9, 2015 between 8:00 p.m. and 10 p.m. officer Hamner stopped and detained the victim in the parking lot of his apartment complex, the Meadows in Montgomery . The victim went home when Hamner told him to go home after he’d been detained.

    A couple minutes after the victim returned to his apartment, Hamner entered without a warrant or probable cause for arrest and began threatening the man, pulled his gun on him, intimidated him and held the man at gun point while he sexually assaulted him.

    Investigators said Hamner was on-duty when he pulled over the victim and made a deal he wouldn’t shoot the man in the head if he agreed to perform oral sex on the demented cop.

    Hamner had been with the department for two years before became the target of a sexual assault investigation after the victim made allegations against him in mid-June.

    Initial reports stated Hamner pulled the victim over as part of a sound ordinance investigation, but the Montgomery Police Department refused to verify if there was even a noise complaint called in.

    The unnamed victim filed a civil rights lawsuit on October 6, 2016 under the name John Doe for anonymity purposes, claiming Hamner’s actions against the victim “shocks the conscience, and it offense the community’s sense of fair play and decency.”

    Hamner responded with a hand-written denial, which can be read below.

    The 27-year-old cop, who remains on paid administrative leave, faces up to ten years in prison.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/06/alabama-cop-forced-man-to-perform-oral-sex-while-holding-gun-to-his-head-on-duty/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 10, 2016, 08:49:11 PM
    Remember this case? The man was shot and the cops didn't believe him when he told them. He was paralyzed from the shot and yet the cops insisted he was just being difficult. And the shooter tried to cover up his crime. For all this, 180 days. It pays to be a member of the largest violent criminal gang.

    California Cop Sentenced to 180 Days for Killing DUI Suspect After Rollover Crash

    The California cop convicted of manslaughter for shooting and killing a DUI suspect in a rollover crash was sentenced to 180 days in jail Friday.

    Former Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster, who was also sentenced to 36 months probation, was facing up to five years in prison for the involuntary manslaughter conviction.

    Feaster, who was fired from the Paradise Police Department, is also apparently still facing charges from being arrested with his brother on drunk and disorderly charges in March.

    Prosecutors were asking for a three-year sentence, but Judge James F. Reilley reasoned Feaster had obeyed the terms of his bond and probation, which is why he allowed Feaster to serve the majority of his sentence on probation.

    The victim, Andrew Thomas, had left a bar without his headlights on at a high rate of speed, hitting a median rolling the SUV. The crash ejected Thomas’ wife and died at the scene. Thomas began to exit the vehicle, which was on its side, through the driver’s side window.

    As Thomas tried climbing out of the car, Feaster fired his service weapon, striking Thomas in the neck, causing him to fall back into his vehicle where he was left paralyzed.

    Feaster then came to the side of the vehicle telling Thomas to exit, but Thomas responded that he was unable to after being shot. Feaster radioed for help asking for medical assistance and stating Thomas was being difficult and refusing to exit the vehicle.

    Feaster was then seen searching on the ground, possibly for shell casings prior to the arrival of assistance.

    As other officers arrived, they also tried to coax Thomas out of the vehicle, but Thomas told them he had been shot by Feaster.

    However, the cops did not believe him, telling him he had not been shot.

    It was only after eleven minutes had passed that police realized he had been shot, prompting a supervising officer instructed officers to return to the bar to find the shooter, which was when Feaster admitted to the shooting.

    Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey initially announced he would file no charges against the cop because the shooting was an “accident.”

    But then Thomas died, sparking a huge national outcry, resulting in Ramsey filing charges against Feaster.

    The light sentence should not surprise anyone after New York Police Office Peter Liang was sentenced to zero jailtime in the shooting of Akai Gurley. Gurley who was unarmed man who happened to enter the dark stairwell, which startled Liang, who then fired his weapon once striking Gurley in the chest. Gurley died from his injuries leaving behind a fiancee and two-year-old daughter.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/10/california-cop-sentenced-to-180-days-for-killing-dui-suspect-after-rollover-crash/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2016, 10:53:45 AM
    Nine Texas Cops Fired for Claiming to Make Traffic Stops They Never Made

    Nine Texas cops were fired after a routine audit earlier this year exposed they lied about the number of traffic stops they made in order to boost the results of their performance on their department’s annual racial-profiling report.

    The Arlington Police Department made the announcement late Friday, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

    An attorney for two of the fired cops say they were merely trying to meet the department’s quota for writing tickets, which would be illegal under state law.


    Discrepancies in their reports came to the attention of department officials after they attempted to view dash cam footage of the stops, which they later found did not exist.

    That’s because they never happened.

    In May, fifteen officers were placed on paid leave as the department conducted an internal affairs investigation into the revelation; an additional officer joined the accused shortly after.

    The internal affairs investigation started in May this year after Arlington police officials detected suspicious reporting of traffic stops as they conducted routine supervisory audits of its patrol divisions’ traffic stops.

    It concluded the officers – all who were assigned to the patrol division – reported they had made traffic stops that were actually never conducted.

    Officers made the false reports on their in-car computers entering traffic stops at a particular address that never took place.

    Supervisors were tipped off after the same vehicle was used for several stops.

    The terminated officers were found guilty by department officials of  conduct unbecoming of a police officer for tampering with government records and lying about traffic stop reports, although they have the right to appeal the decision.

    A Tarrant County District Attorney will decide if future criminal charges will be filed against the nine fired officers.

    Two of the fired cops are accused of lying to internal affairs investigators about tampering with the traffic stop reports.

    Three officers resigned before results of the investigation were completed while four others remain under investigation.

    Randy Moore, an attorney who represents two of the fired cops, said his clients were pressured to makes stops and write tickets for the Arlington Police Department’s traffic ticket quota.

    All nine of the fired cops are members of the police union Arlington Municipal Patrolman’s Association.

    Officers are required to include in their report driver demographics, the reason behind the traffic stop, whether an arrest was made and whether a search was conducted during the stop.

    That data is compiled for the department’s annual racial-profiling report.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/11/nine-texas-cops-fired-for-claiming-to-make-traffic-stops-they-never-made/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2016, 03:19:39 PM
    Another innocent man executed by the largest and most violent criminal gang in the nation. These criminals should have been sent to the electric chair. Citizens can stay asleep thinking laws apply equally and that "the system works".

    Cop Goes to Wrong House and Kills Innocent Father of 3 — Will Not Face Charges

    Stockbridge, GA – In a travesty of justice, a Henry County grand jury decided that a cop who went to the wrong house responding to a 911 call and killed the homeowner, an innocent father of three, will not be charged.

    According to CBS 46:
    A grand jury review determined that Sergeant Patrick Snook will not face charged and found the shooting to be justified.
    William David Powell was shot by officers who thought they were responding to a home on the 600 block of Swan Lake Road in Stockbridge where shots had been fired. The incident happened during the early morning hours of June 9.

    Responding to a 911 call in June, Henry County police arrived at the wrong house and shot the innocent homeowner in the neck. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) is investigating the incident due to the fact that the Henry County police shot a man who had committed no crime and who had no involvement with the initial 911 call.

    According to the GBI, a 911 dispatcher received a call reporting gunshots and a woman screaming for help at 11:54 p.m. Unable to obtain an exact address, the 911 operator dispatched three Henry County cops who arrived at the wrong house around 1:30 a.m. on Wednesday.

    Hearing his dogs barking around 1:30 a.m., Powell, 63, grabbed his gun and went outside to check their safety. According to his mother-in-law, Geraldine Huey, 85, Powell had gone outside to investigate a possible intruder.

    “He went to see what the dogs were carrying on about,” recalled Huey, who lives next door. “He (picked) up his gun and when he got to the gate, they shot him.”

    Although officers told GBI investigators that Powell refused to drop his gun, neighbors assert that the cops failed to identify themselves before suddenly shooting Powell in the neck. Shot in his driveway, Powell was taken to Atlanta Medical Center where he would die.

    After eventually locating the correct house, Henry County police discovered that no shots had been fired and no one inside the residence confirmed accusations of a woman screaming.
    “There was an argument there, however, they indicated that there was no screaming for help or shots fired,” GBI spokesman Scott Dutton told WGCL.

    According to the GBI, Henry County PD arrived at the wrong house and shot a man who had nothing to do with the initial 911 call. An Air Force veteran and father of three, Powell had no reason to interact with police according to GBI investigators.

    “He worked all his life. Went to school,” Huey described her wounded son-in-law back in June. “Just somebody you’d really like to know. He’s right here for me any time.”
    “The officers were at the wrong location,” Dutton admitted. “Something got lost in communication.”

    In May, Henry County police SWAT officers killed a man who had attempted to shoot his father earlier that evening. His father had fled the house unharmed before the militarized cops killed his son.
    Dispatched to the wrong house on a burglary call less than a year ago, a DeKalb County officer shot a homeowner and a fellow officer. A dog was also killed in the needless shooting.
    Once again, police in America prove they can negligently kill innocent people and face no consequences.

    Please share this story so that others may see that being innocent is no protection from being killed by police.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-goes-wrong-house-kills-innocent-father-3-will-not-face-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2016, 03:23:17 PM
    Once again the citizens have to pay for the violent acts of criminal gangs:

    3 Officers Beat Mentally Ill Dad to Death — Taxpayers Shell Out $3.6 Million to Pay for Bad Cops

    Much like the city of Baltimore, MD did, when faced with a lawsuit from the Freddy Gray family, Santa Clara County, CA, opted to preemptively pay the family of Michael Tyree $3.6 million dollars, before the case went to trial. Tyree, a mentally-ill inmate, was beaten to death last year, allegedly by three correctional deputies.
    Settling the case early, before going to trial, means the bulk of the payment (85 percent) will be given to Tyree’s daughter, a seven-year-old, without the typical court costs, lawyer’s fees, and the suffering that often goes along with a drawn-out trial. Shannon Tyree and Elizabeth Ott (Tyree’s sisters) will receive the remaining 15 percent.

    County Counsel James R. Williams, said there were 13 pending lawsuits and three pending claims still unresolved regarding the use of force in the Santa Clara County jails. According to The Mercury News, three corrections officers, “Jereh Lubrin, Matthew Farris and Rafael Rodriguez — were charged with murder about a week after Tyree’s battered (and lifeless) body was discovered,” on August 27th, 2015. All attempts to resuscitate him failed and he was declared dead at the scene. From the beginning, Tyree’s death was investigated as a homicide, with the correctional deputies being the prime suspects. The trio is also facing assault charges for beating up yet another mentally ill inmate, Juan Villa.

    According to the report, “Tyree, 31, had been beaten so badly that his spleen burst, causing him to bleed to death internally, according to a medical examiner’s report cited in the claim. His disfigurement — including deep bruising and abrasions from his head to his ankles — forced the family to hold a closed-casket funeral service, the claim said.”
    Credibility was added to the charges when, about a month before Tyree was allegedly murdered, text messages confirmed the guards’ abusive habits. In one instance, when it was found Villa had defecated in his jail cell, Lubrin entered the cell and rubbed Villa’s face in the excrement. It’s unclear if all three guards will be tried at the same time. Lubrin’s lawyer is invoking his right to a speedy trial, which could come as early as March 2017.

    What is clear, in the opinion of some, is that the treatment both Tyree and Villa received is more reminiscent of the kind of treatment prisoners at the infamous Abu Ghraib, Iraq prison, than it is the type that all incarcerated Americans should receive and are entitled to. No prisoner, mentally ill or otherwise, should be subjected to beatings, humiliation, and murder, especially in the land of the free. But who are we kidding! After all, America incarcerates more people at a higher rate than any other country in the world.

    According to Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky) and the introduction of his so-called REDEEM Act, “Though only five percent of the world’s population lives in the United States, it is home to 25 percent of the world’s prison population. This phenomenon has rapidly increased in the years since 1980 and the federal prison population has grown by nearly ten-fold since. Not only does the current overpopulated, underfunded system hurt those incarcerated, it also digs deeper into the pockets of taxpaying Americans.”

    Paul proposed the REDEEM act to fix what he called “broken criminal justice system”. Paul, along with several other congressmen called for the age of criminal responsibility to be raised to 18, the sealing and expungement of juvenile records, the restriction of juvenile solitary confinement, sealed non-violent criminal records, and allowed for food stamps to be restored to low-level drug offenders.
    But any serious attempt at fixing the broken system must go after the industrial prison complex. According to Public Eye, “’Prison Industrial Complex’ (PIC) is a term we use to describe the overlapping interests of government and industry that use surveillance, policing, and imprisonment as solutions to what are, in actuality, economic, social, and political ‘problems.’” In other words, the establishment of an entire industry surrounding the incarceration of inmates exists as an oxymoron to reforming inmates. As one ex-prisoner stated, the system isn’t working on reforming individuals and is having the opposite effect. “I wasn’t a bad guy when I went to prison, but while in prison, I learned how to be a bad guy. And when I got out, that’s exactly what I did, bad things to people,” he told The Free Thought Project.

    The mentally ill, like Tyree and Villa, often find their way into prison. Since 1980, when President Jimmy Carter signed the Mental Health Systems Act, followed by Ronald Reagan’s administration’s significant defunding of mental institutions in 1981, the federal government has been pulling out of institutionalizing the mentally ill in facilities designated for the mentally ill. Those hospitals, often called “The Funny Farm” are no longer operating as they once were. With modern medicine’s invention of antipsychotics, the thought has been that they could be medicated to live a somewhat normal life (example: John Hinckley, Jr who famously shot President Reagan was recently released back into the general population). In reality, many mentally ill find themselves institutionalized inside prisons instead of hospitals.


    According to one advocacy group, “Deinstitutionalization, outdated treatment laws demanding a person become violent before intervention, discriminatory federal Medicaid funding practices and the prolonged failure by states to fund their mental health systems drive those in need of care into the criminal justice and corrections systems, rather than into the public health system where they belong.” It’s estimated that there are, “383,000 inmates with mental illness in jails and prisons.”
    However valiant advocating for the mentally ill is, no amount of prison reform, legislation, mental health programs, and medicinal treatment can bring back Mr. Tyree. Likewise, no amount of training can remove the evil that must have surely found its way into the hearts of those jailhouse guards who allegedly murdered the man.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/mentally-ill-inmate-beaten-death-three-guards-family-receives-3-6-million/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 12, 2016, 12:11:12 PM
    Texas Cop who Attacked White Homeless Man While Searching for Black Female Suspect Sued for Excessive Force

    A Texas cop who attacked a white homeless man while responding to a call about a black female burglar was sued for excessive force last week.

    The lawsuit alleges that on February 20, 2015, Austin Police Sergeant Gregory White struck the homeless man without provocation, which can be confirmed in the video below.

    White says he only cold-cocked 25-year-old Justin Scott and beat him down on the ground because Scott was going to run, although the video shows Scott never attempted to run.

    But he did ask the cop why he was ordering him to put his hands behind his back.

    It was after Scott asked, “why?”, several times when White unexpectedly attacks him.

    Apparently upset about having his authority questioned, White slugs Scott in the back of the head without warning, forcefully takes him to the ground and proceeds to beat him even more, wailing violently and proceeding to repeatedly punch, elbow, taser and knee him.

    During the struggle, White tasers Scott.

    After being tasered, Scott wrestles the taser from the angry cop bullying him.

    Shortly after, back up arrives, and White regains control of the taser.

    Scott spent 176 days in jail after White blamed the incident on him, charging him with taking or attempting to take a weapon from a police officer.

    A half-year passed before Travis County prosecutors finally dropped all criminal charges against Scott.


    Sergeant White claims he had detained Scott because he “thought he saw him talking to somebody” in the area of the burglary, according to the Austin American Statesman.

    Scott’s attorney, however, says his client did nothing wrong and the attack on his client was unwarranted and undeserved.

    “This was an attack on a homeless citizen — an American citizen,” Scott’s attorney, Scott Vasquez told the Statesman. “This was nothing that was deserved, and it came as a total surprise.”

    Dash cam video of the assault can be seen below the lawsuit copy, which was obtained by KVUE Austin.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/12/watch-texas-cop-who-attacked-white-homeless-man-while-searching-for-black-female-suspect-sued-for-excessive-force/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2016, 08:40:40 AM
    Once again the largest criminal gang executes an innocent elderly man. When will these hitmen and ruffians pay for their hideous crimes?

    Police Kill 73yo Unarmed Grandpa with Dementia Then Lied About Him Having a Gun

    Bakersfield, CA — At 12:30 am on Monday morning, Bakersfield police shot and killed 73-year-old Francisco Serna as he stood in his driveway. Immediately following the shooting, police released details noting that Serna was killed for ‘brandishing a gun.’ However, early Tuesday morning, we’ve now learned that there was never a gun and police fabricated that vital piece of information.
    When police arrived on scene, they fired multiple shots at Serna, hitting and killing him.

    According to Serna’s family, he was in the beginning stages of dementia and occasionally experienced delusions. Serna’s oldest son told the LA Times that Serna had difficulty sleeping and frequently went on late-night walks to tire himself out before bed.

    Police were called to his home at least two times before because Serna had accidentally activated his medical alarm, Rogelia Serna said. However, those incidents were resolved without the need for any violence or charges.

    Bakersfield police Sgt. Gary Carruesco did not confirm if police had ever responded to Serna’s residence before.
    Police are remaining tight-lipped in this incident releasing very few details, including the actual reason for the call. It is not known whether police were responding to the medical alarm or not as the Bakersfield police have changed their story about the gun.

    Originally, police claimed that the call was prompted by a report of a man with a firearm. However, much to the police department’s chagrin, investigators canvased the area and found no such weapon.
    When police initially claimed Serna brandished a firearm, his family was quick to negate this falsehood.

    “My dad did not own a gun. He was a 73-year-old retired grandpa, just living life,” Rogelio Serna said. “He should have been surrounded by family at old age, not surrounded by bullets.”
    Police also searched inside Serna’s home and found no evidence of a firearm.

    The LA Times reported that when police arrived, a witness pointed to a man in the driveway of a residence. An officer fired several rounds at the man, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
    However, this detail suggests no reason for the officer to have discharged his weapon a whopping 9 times, according to the family.

    Bakersfield police have been hinting at the implementation of body cameras for well over a year now. However, they have yet to make the purchase, because they say the cost is too high. Aside from the high cost it also makes it easier to exonerate cops who kill mentally ill grandpas in the middle of the night.

    The officer who killed this innocent grandpa is now on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

    Bakersfield police also have a tainted and violent history.

    In November 2014, 22-year-old Ramiro James Villegas, who went by the name James De La Rosa, was killed by jumpy police in Bakersfield after allegedly “reaching for his waistband.” He was unarmed.

    In June of this year, video surfaced of multiple Bakersfield Police Department officers using batons and tasers to bring down a mentally ill man for the heinous crime of jaywalking. For crossing the road in a manner unfit for the police state, an unarmed mentally ill man who had harmed no one was hospitalized after being severely beaten by cops — who were ruled justified in their actions for enforcing jaywalking laws.

    In October of this year, a high school student filed a lawsuit claiming a Bakersfield school police officer tasered him twice for being late to class after having an anxiety attack.

    Tyson Reed and his mother, Linda Reed, sued Kern High School District, KHSD Officer Luis Pena, and teacher Brett Bonetti on Sept. 22 in Kern County Superior Court, alleging disability discrimination and civil rights violations.

    And the list goes on.

    Francisco Serna is a retired father of five children and beloved grandpa and because of trigger happy police, his life was stolen.

    On Monday night, Serna’s son Roy broadcast on Facebook live decrying the police killing his dad. “We want the truth to be told,” said Roy. “My father was murdered by Bakersfield Police Department.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-kill-73yo-unarmed-grandpa-dementia-lied-gun/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 13, 2016, 08:45:44 AM
    just read about this one

    Once again the largest criminal gang executes an innocent elderly man. When will these hitmen and ruffians pay for their hideous crimes?

    Police Kill 73yo Unarmed Grandpa with Dementia Then Lied About Him Having a Gun

    Bakersfield, CA — At 12:30 am on Monday morning, Bakersfield police shot and killed 73-year-old Francisco Serna as he stood in his driveway. Immediately following the shooting, police released details noting that Serna was killed for ‘brandishing a gun.’ However, early Tuesday morning, we’ve now learned that there was never a gun and police fabricated that vital piece of information.
    When police arrived on scene, they fired multiple shots at Serna, hitting and killing him.

    According to Serna’s family, he was in the beginning stages of dementia and occasionally experienced delusions. Serna’s oldest son told the LA Times that Serna had difficulty sleeping and frequently went on late-night walks to tire himself out before bed.

    Police were called to his home at least two times before because Serna had accidentally activated his medical alarm, Rogelia Serna said. However, those incidents were resolved without the need for any violence or charges.

    Bakersfield police Sgt. Gary Carruesco did not confirm if police had ever responded to Serna’s residence before.
    Police are remaining tight-lipped in this incident releasing very few details, including the actual reason for the call. It is not known whether police were responding to the medical alarm or not as the Bakersfield police have changed their story about the gun.

    Originally, police claimed that the call was prompted by a report of a man with a firearm. However, much to the police department’s chagrin, investigators canvased the area and found no such weapon.
    When police initially claimed Serna brandished a firearm, his family was quick to negate this falsehood.

    “My dad did not own a gun. He was a 73-year-old retired grandpa, just living life,” Rogelio Serna said. “He should have been surrounded by family at old age, not surrounded by bullets.”
    Police also searched inside Serna’s home and found no evidence of a firearm.

    The LA Times reported that when police arrived, a witness pointed to a man in the driveway of a residence. An officer fired several rounds at the man, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
    However, this detail suggests no reason for the officer to have discharged his weapon a whopping 9 times, according to the family.

    Bakersfield police have been hinting at the implementation of body cameras for well over a year now. However, they have yet to make the purchase, because they say the cost is too high. Aside from the high cost it also makes it easier to exonerate cops who kill mentally ill grandpas in the middle of the night.

    The officer who killed this innocent grandpa is now on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

    Bakersfield police also have a tainted and violent history.

    In November 2014, 22-year-old Ramiro James Villegas, who went by the name James De La Rosa, was killed by jumpy police in Bakersfield after allegedly “reaching for his waistband.” He was unarmed.

    In June of this year, video surfaced of multiple Bakersfield Police Department officers using batons and tasers to bring down a mentally ill man for the heinous crime of jaywalking. For crossing the road in a manner unfit for the police state, an unarmed mentally ill man who had harmed no one was hospitalized after being severely beaten by cops — who were ruled justified in their actions for enforcing jaywalking laws.

    In October of this year, a high school student filed a lawsuit claiming a Bakersfield school police officer tasered him twice for being late to class after having an anxiety attack.

    Tyson Reed and his mother, Linda Reed, sued Kern High School District, KHSD Officer Luis Pena, and teacher Brett Bonetti on Sept. 22 in Kern County Superior Court, alleging disability discrimination and civil rights violations.

    And the list goes on.

    Francisco Serna is a retired father of five children and beloved grandpa and because of trigger happy police, his life was stolen.

    On Monday night, Serna’s son Roy broadcast on Facebook live decrying the police killing his dad. “We want the truth to be told,” said Roy. “My father was murdered by Bakersfield Police Department.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-kill-73yo-unarmed-grandpa-dementia-lied-gun/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2016, 11:39:18 AM
    They should be prosecuted as a criminal organization and be made to pay everything (with interest) out of their pockets.

    VICTORY! State Disbands Cops Who Robbed Innocent People’s Life Savings, Victims Reimbursed

    One of the worst states engaging in civil asset forfeiture, better known as “policing for profit,” suffered a blow in its campaign to rob innocent people of their cash and assets. After withering criticism and a lawsuit it couldn’t win, Iowa’s “Drug Interdiction Team” was disbanded on December 6.

    “The so-called “interdiction” unit’s key focus was to stop vehicles traveling along Interstate Highway 80 suspected of being involved in drugs or other crimes. It was a part of the Iowa Department of Public Safety and had become a target in recent years from critics who alleged the team used unconstitutional practices to seize private property for law enforcement profits.”

    This special group of State Troopers used every trick in the book to engage in warrantless searches of people’s vehicles, after pulling them over for minor “offenses” like failure to use a turn signal. Using flimsy excuses such as a dirty car, the odor of air freshener, or fidgeting, the cops would ransack vehicles in hopes of finding any amount of suspected drugs or paraphernalia.

    The cops would then make up suspicions about “criminal activity” and use Iowa’s broad civil asset forfeiture laws to seize cash, assets and vehicles of the occupants – with no charge or proof of a crime. Even if no charges are filed or the person is found innocent, he or she must prove to a court they obtained their cash or property legally, incurring attorney and court fees.

    Using these devious methods, Iowa law enforcement has raked in more than $55 million in cash since 1985 and 4,200 vehicles since 1991. It’s entirely unknown how much the cops took in other valuables such as guns, jewelry, furniture and artwork, as no records are kept for those items.

    The Des Moines Register began exposing Iowa’s egregious use of civil asset forfeiture after a 2013 incident. Two California gamblers were traveling through Iowa with $100,000 in cash, and were pulled over for allegedly not using a turn signal. Having a California license plate, this was a golden opportunity for the “interdiction” team.

    The cops used alleged “fidgeting and nervousness” to justify their search, which found a small bit of cannabis. It didn’t matter than both the men had California medical cannabis cards. After arguing the search was illegal, $90,000 was returned to the men, who filed a federal civil lawsuit in 2014 for damages, stating “the troopers had no probable cause to detain the men for a search of their vehicle and that officers had been taught improper techniques for justifying the search.”

    Iowa settled the case by awarding the men an additional $60,000, on the same day it disbanded the Drug Interdiction Team.
    “The true importance of this lawsuit was that it forced the state of Iowa to re-examine its decades-long practice of pushing the constitutional boundaries of the state’s civil asset forfeiture law and to disband the Iowa Drug Interdiction Team,” said Glen Downey, attorney for the gamblers.

    Four days after the announcement that the “interdiction” team was disbanded, Iowa’s policing for profit was struck another blow. The state’s Supreme Court ruled that cops wrongly detained a driver in a case that “will restrict the ability of state patrol troopers and deputies to do the type of warrantless vehicle searches…using controversial civil forfeiture laws.”

    “Friday’s ruling came in the case of Robert Pardee, who’s fighting to get back $33,100 that a trooper seized after stopping a vehicle he was riding in and finding a small amount of marijuana during a search. The trooper called for a drug dog and searched the vehicle, partly because he believed the car had a “lived-in” look that could indicate cross-country drug trafficking.

    But Justice Edward Mansfield in his opinion for the majority dismissed that evidence as “unremarkable” and clearly not evidence of criminal activity.

    “There were water bottles, an energy drink, a metal coffee cup, chips and dip, apples and bananas, a trash bag with some trash, a sleeping bag draped on the rear seat and a guitar case,” Mansfield wrote. “Many vehicles are more lived-in than that.”

    Pardee, a California resident, was acquitted of the drug charge, but even after the court ruling in his favor, he still has to convince the Poweshiek County District Court to give him his money back.
    The insidious nature of civil asset forfeiture is being exposed across the country. In the last two years, 18 states have reformed their forfeiture laws, in some cases requiring a criminal conviction to seize assets. With these two cases being highlighted and the disbanding of Iowa’s “interdiction” unit, that state may be joining the list soon.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/state-disbands-forfeiture-team-of-cops-robbing-motorists-reimburses-innocent-victims/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 13, 2016, 01:17:29 PM
    They should be prosecuted as a criminal organization and be made to pay everything (with interest) out of their pockets.



    That is exactly what should happen.

    They are the organised crime gang.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2016, 06:22:36 PM
    Too bad he wasn't a good shoot so he could effectively protect himself from the armed intruders.

    Texas Man Found Not Guilty for Shooting Three Cops During No-Knock Raid

    A Texas man who shot three cops breaking into his home during a no-knock raid last year was found not guilty Tuesday.

    Ray Rosas said he did not know the armed intruders were cops because his sight and hearing was affected by the flash grenade they tossed into his bedroom window.

    After two hours of deliberations, the jury found him not guilty, according to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times.

    The incident took place on February 19, 2015 as a Corpus Christi SWAT team was serving a search warrant on his home to arrest his nephew, who was suspected of selling drugs.

    His nephew, Santiago Garcia, was not home during the raid, but police did find a small amount of drugs in the home, according to KZTV.

    However, his mother and brother were home, the latter who suffers from dementia.

    Rosas, whose home had been shot at in the past during drive-by shootings, believed he was being robbed, so he pulled out his gun and fired 15 times, striking three officers, all whom survived the shooting.

    Rosas, who has been in jail since the incident, was charged with three counts of attempted capital murder, which could have sent him to prison for life.

    But those charges were reduced during the trial to three counts of aggravated assault on a public official.

    Prosecutors argued that Rosas was well aware they were cops because they yelled “police” at some point during the raid.

    They also argued that Rosas should have known they were cops because he had a surveillance camera that allowed him to view outside him home from his bedroom.

    But Rosas had always maintained he did not know they were cops, telling cops as he was being arrested that he did not know they were cops. He also told jailers the same thing that night as they were booking him.

    His mugshot shows him with a black eye, indicating cops punched him during his arrest.

    Rosas’ attorneys argued that he had been wary of attacks from gang members since testifying against one in 2001 for a violent crime committed on his home, resulting in him receiving death threats since then.

    The three cops who were shot, Steven Reubelmann, Andrew Jordan and Steven Brown, all sustained minor injuries. They were treated at a local hospital and released a short time later, according to KRIS-TV.

    The surveillance video that supposedly captured the raid has not been released.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/13/texas-man-found-not-guilty-for-shooting-three-cops-during-no-knock-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 15, 2016, 09:28:59 AM
    First Ever Police Victim Memorial to be Erected in the U.S. and Cops are Furious

    San Francisco, CA — When police officers die while doing their job, the community comes out en masse to pay their respects. Roads are closed, miles-long processions fill the streets, and the entire community mourns the loss of life.

    However, when we compare that treatment to how a person who is killed by police is treated, a glaring difference arises. The victims of police violence, even when entirely innocent, have their pasts dragged through the media to shame them, the absolute worst pictures of them plastered across the web, and they receive little to no sympathy from their community — who is always quick to claim ‘they deserved it.’

    What happens when communities go against the paradigm of victim shaming and unquestioning support of police though? Well, people become less blinded by their apologist indoctrination, and they look at these killings with an objective mind. This is the case in San Francisco, who’s community members have just decided to erect the first ever government-sponsored memorial to a victim of police violence.

    Naturally, this choice to remember a victim of police, outside of the normal smear campaigns in the media, is causing quite the sh*t storm among cops.
    This week, according to CNS, the Board of Supervisors voted 9 to 1 to erect a memorial for Alejandro “Alex” Nieto, a 28-year-old Latino man, who was shot and killed by four police officers at Bernal Heights Park on March 21, 2014.

    Nieto was shot 14 times after police mistook the taser from his security job for a pistol.

    Lt. Jason Sawyer and Officers Roger Morse, Richard Schiff and Nathan Chew were cleared of any wrongdoing, despite the excessive amount of shots fired at this innocent man who posed no threat.

    Before being brutally executed, Nieto was a practicing pacifist and Buddhist. He was particularly active in trying to make his community a better place for everyone, as a member of the Mission Peace Collaborative.  He was attending college on a full scholarship while studying criminal justice and worked security at a night club to provide for his family.  His goal was to become a probation officer to help guide troubled youth in a positive direction.

    Nieto’s death and the officers’ exoneration sparked a massive outpouring of resistance during which citizens held mock trials to show what would have happened if these cops were actually held accountable.
    The death was divisive among police and the citizens, which is why District 2 Supervisor Mark Farrell, the single ‘No’ vote on the memorial, is so outspoken against it.

    Farrell says the memorial sends the wrong message to “the men and women of our police department who put their lives on the line every day.”

    However, according to Courthouse News, District 10 Supervisor Malia Cohen vehemently rejected Farrell’s insinuation that supervisors could not memorialize the tragic shooting death of Nieto while also recognizing the contributions and sacrifices of police officers.

    “If law enforcement wants to be recognized, all they have to do is ask, the same way the community has asked,” Cohen said.

    The police union is highly outspoken against memorials for their victims of any kind. Union president Martin Halloran voiced his objection to such things as “hurtful” to the families of law enforcement officers.
    However, one council member took that notion and blew it apart.

    “We specifically rejected that false choice,” District 9 Supervisor David Campos said. “We take the loss of life of one of our citizens as seriously as we take the loss of life of one of our officers.”
    With so much unaccountable killing and violence from police, this memorial will serve as a reminder to the community that police are not perfect, and blindly referring to them all as ‘heroes’ is a slippery slope down the path of tyranny.

    “This means everything,” Oscar Salinas, a member of the Justice for Alex Nieto coalition said. “But this is just the beginning. Parents and kids for generations can walk to that hill and talk about what happened to him.”

    With so many memorials devoted to those who’ve served their country, it is certainly heartening to begin memorializing those whose country destroyed them.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/first-police-victim-memorial-erected-cops-livid/#U5xOZkTI1vdyc1hy.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 15, 2016, 09:34:52 AM
    Graphic Video Shows Cops Use K9 to Torture Unarmed, Non-Violent Naked Man

    San Diego, CA — A gruesome body cam was just released this week showing cops needlessly and sadistically sic a K9 on an unarmed naked man who posed absolutely zero threat to the half-dozen cops who had him completely surrounded.

    The incident happened in August of 2015, however, the body camera footage was kept secret until now. If you have the strength to watch the entire video, you will know exactly why it was kept a secret.
    At 8:30 that August morning, police received a phone call about a naked man walking through a canyon. This man had not attempted to harm anyone and the only ‘crime’ he’d committed when police arrived was to simply be naked.

    The man, a 25-year-old businessman who was in San Diego for a convention, admitted that he ended up naked in the canyon after a particularly hard night of partying. However, when seeing how police reacted upon confronting the man, you would think he was a serial child murderer.

    When police found the man, who wishes to remain anonymous, they called for him to come up from the canyon and he quickly obeyed. When he got up to where the officers were, they asked him to turn around so they could place him in cuffs.

    “Turn around, turn around!” yell the officers at the obviously delusional man.
    “No!” angrily replies the man.

    Then, only seconds after the unarmed, nonviolent, and naked man had obeyed the officers’ instruction to walk toward them, the sadistic K9 cop gives his dog the command to attack — entirely unprovoked.

    The naked man is immediately brought to the ground as the other San Diego cops pile on top of him. By all definitions, this man was subdued. However, he continued to squirm as it is impossible to remain completely still as a vicious attack dog tears your flesh from your body.

    “Stop resisting!” the cop yells as his dog mutilates this man.

    For almost an entire minute, cops held the naked man down while allowing the K9 maul his legs to shreds.

    “It wasn’t necessary to use the dog to begin with and it sure as hell wasn’t necessary or needed or appropriate to let the dog continue to bite,” said noted civil rights attorney Donald W. Cook to NBC Los Angeles.
    “It’s barbaric,” he said, and he is correct.

    When NBC Los Angeles spoke to the victim, he admitted that he shouldn’t have been naked in a canyon, but the police had no reason to attack him like they did.
    “I take some responsibility because I was under the influence,” said the man. “But nothing justifies the cops use of such force,” he said.

    Sadly enough, San Diego police have justified the attack, claiming they believed the man “posed an immediate threat to officers due to the fact he was clinching his fists and walking towards them.”
    They also noted that the “subject was under the influence of a controlled substance and was very agitated with officers.”

    However, when watching the video it is clear that the naked man was not walking toward officers and he posed no threat to the multiple armed men in body armor who had him surrounded.
    The video also shows that police violated their own policy when deploying the K9.

    According to the San Diego Police Department’s own policy, officers “if possible, give at least two warnings in a loud and clear manner” before allowing a dog to bite. This did not happen — and it would have been entirely possible to do so.

    The victim has since sued the police department for excessive force and Cook, whose sued the city in multiple instances of police K9 attacks said the force is worse than excessive.
    “Not only excessive, but animalistic,” said Cook. “In this case, you had your subject, you had him surrounded. All you had to do was simply take him into custody.”

    In his legal complaint against the department, the man’s attorney says the officers “acted with unnecessary, cruel and despicable conduct and in wanton disregard for the civil rights, health and safety” of his client, according to NBC Los Angeles.

    After savagely allowing the K9 to maul this man, he wasn’t charged with any crimes. However, thanks to the officers’ sadistic nature, the taxpayers of San Diego have been charged with a hefty fine — a $385,000 settlement to be exact.

    That amount, however, is not nearly enough as the attack has left the now-26-year-old permanently disabled as he no longer has full use his right leg.
    “No dollar amount is worth having a disability for life,” he said.

    After this video became public, the San Diego police department released a callous and insulting statement to justify their actions:
    “This video shows the agitated and defiant demeanor of a man under the influence of LSD. When played in its entirety, the video shows our officers trying to gain his compliance before he became defiant. While the split second decisions of police officers are easy to second guess when you know the outcome, keep in mind the deployment of our K9 is intended to prevent the situation from escalating.”

    WARNING: The full video is extremely graphic and disturbing. It includes footage of a police dog biting a subject’s leg until blood and other injuries are visible.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/graphic-video-shows-cops-k9-torture-unarmed-non-violent-naked-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 15, 2016, 12:54:48 PM
    Graphic Video Shows Cops Use K9 to Torture Unarmed, Non-Violent Naked Man

    San Diego, CA — A gruesome body cam was just released this week showing cops needlessly and sadistically sic a K9 on an unarmed naked man who posed absolutely zero threat to the half-dozen cops who had him completely surrounded.

    The incident happened in August of 2015, however, the body camera footage was kept secret until now. If you have the strength to watch the entire video, you will know exactly why it was kept a secret.
    At 8:30 that August morning, police received a phone call about a naked man walking through a canyon. This man had not attempted to harm anyone and the only ‘crime’ he’d committed when police arrived was to simply be naked.

    The man, a 25-year-old businessman who was in San Diego for a convention, admitted that he ended up naked in the canyon after a particularly hard night of partying. However, when seeing how police reacted upon confronting the man, you would think he was a serial child murderer.

    When police found the man, who wishes to remain anonymous, they called for him to come up from the canyon and he quickly obeyed. When he got up to where the officers were, they asked him to turn around so they could place him in cuffs.

    “Turn around, turn around!” yell the officers at the obviously delusional man.
    “No!” angrily replies the man.

    Then, only seconds after the unarmed, nonviolent, and naked man had obeyed the officers’ instruction to walk toward them, the sadistic K9 cop gives his dog the command to attack — entirely unprovoked.

    The naked man is immediately brought to the ground as the other San Diego cops pile on top of him. By all definitions, this man was subdued. However, he continued to squirm as it is impossible to remain completely still as a vicious attack dog tears your flesh from your body.

    “Stop resisting!” the cop yells as his dog mutilates this man.

    For almost an entire minute, cops held the naked man down while allowing the K9 maul his legs to shreds.

    “It wasn’t necessary to use the dog to begin with and it sure as hell wasn’t necessary or needed or appropriate to let the dog continue to bite,” said noted civil rights attorney Donald W. Cook to NBC Los Angeles.
    “It’s barbaric,” he said, and he is correct.

    When NBC Los Angeles spoke to the victim, he admitted that he shouldn’t have been naked in a canyon, but the police had no reason to attack him like they did.
    “I take some responsibility because I was under the influence,” said the man. “But nothing justifies the cops use of such force,” he said.

    Sadly enough, San Diego police have justified the attack, claiming they believed the man “posed an immediate threat to officers due to the fact he was clinching his fists and walking towards them.”
    They also noted that the “subject was under the influence of a controlled substance and was very agitated with officers.”

    However, when watching the video it is clear that the naked man was not walking toward officers and he posed no threat to the multiple armed men in body armor who had him surrounded.
    The video also shows that police violated their own policy when deploying the K9.

    According to the San Diego Police Department’s own policy, officers “if possible, give at least two warnings in a loud and clear manner” before allowing a dog to bite. This did not happen — and it would have been entirely possible to do so.

    The victim has since sued the police department for excessive force and Cook, whose sued the city in multiple instances of police K9 attacks said the force is worse than excessive.
    “Not only excessive, but animalistic,” said Cook. “In this case, you had your subject, you had him surrounded. All you had to do was simply take him into custody.”

    In his legal complaint against the department, the man’s attorney says the officers “acted with unnecessary, cruel and despicable conduct and in wanton disregard for the civil rights, health and safety” of his client, according to NBC Los Angeles.

    After savagely allowing the K9 to maul this man, he wasn’t charged with any crimes. However, thanks to the officers’ sadistic nature, the taxpayers of San Diego have been charged with a hefty fine — a $385,000 settlement to be exact.

    That amount, however, is not nearly enough as the attack has left the now-26-year-old permanently disabled as he no longer has full use his right leg.
    “No dollar amount is worth having a disability for life,” he said.

    After this video became public, the San Diego police department released a callous and insulting statement to justify their actions:
    “This video shows the agitated and defiant demeanor of a man under the influence of LSD. When played in its entirety, the video shows our officers trying to gain his compliance before he became defiant. While the split second decisions of police officers are easy to second guess when you know the outcome, keep in mind the deployment of our K9 is intended to prevent the situation from escalating.”

    WARNING: The full video is extremely graphic and disturbing. It includes footage of a police dog biting a subject’s leg until blood and other injuries are visible.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/graphic-video-shows-cops-k9-torture-unarmed-non-violent-naked-man/






    Just What The Fcuk is Wrong with these Gangs of Thugs.
    And there Bosses trying to Justify what they are doing..!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 15, 2016, 09:51:03 PM

    Atlanta Cop Arrested on Home Invasion Charges After “Accidentally” Kicking Door Down and Threatening Occupants Inside

    An Atlanta cop who kicked down a door and entered a home with his hand on his gun to threaten his ex-fiancee said it was all an accident.

    But Atlanta police officer Phillip Barresi was arrested on home invasion charges anyway.

    Now the rookie cop, who was sworn in on March 17, is on paid administrative leave until further notice.

    Barresi was in uniform on November 28 when he drove to the home of his ex-fiancee’s parents and began repeatedly ringing the doorbell and kicking the door until it broke open.

    He then entered the home with his hand on his gun and began making threats, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    “Fuck the police,” Barresi said after his ex-fiancee’s father threatened to call police before running out the door he had kicked down.

    When police caught up to him, he told them he had “accidentally kicked the door open.”

    He also told them he “”regretted his actions” but was “extremely upset” because his ex-fiancee had broken into his home first.

    His ex-fiancee, who is not named in the news reports, said she did not break into his home, but had merely entered the home to retrieve some personal possessions after having moved out with her baby.

    Barresi was also charged with second degree criminal damage to property. He was released from jail Wednesday after posting $15,000 bond.

    He is due back in court on December 30 for his preliminary hearing.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/15/atlanta-cop-arrested-on-home-invasion-charges-after-accidentally-kicking-door-down-and-threatening-occupants-inside/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 15, 2016, 09:55:37 PM
    What a travesty; but not surprising anymore. Members of the largest criminal gang can get away with crimes that would have average citizens imprisoned for many years or even executed.

    Miami-Dade Cop Receives 10 Months Probation for Shooting Corrections Officer in Road Rage Incident, then Trying to Destroy Evidence

    Miami-Dade police officer Jonathan Lang could have received more than 20 years in prison for shooting at a car driven by a corrections officer in a 2014 road rage incident.

    Especially considering he was caught on camera tampering with evidence in the hours after the shooting.

    But he cried before the judge during his sentencing Thursday, blaming his actions on his “personal demons.”

    And that apparently was enough for the judge to spare him any prison time, sentencing him to 10 months probation instead.

    He must also forfeit his law enforcement certificate and his firearms, abstain from drugs and alcohol and perform 500 hours of community service, the latter which can be a cakewalk if you know the right people.

    And somebody with his Blue Privilege will always know the right people.

    Lang was riding in the passenger seat of a car driven by his wife in July 2014 when he became angry at the driver of another car driven by Miami-Dade Corrections Officer Georgina Illa.

    She said they cut her off. He says she cut them off. At one point, she flashed her high beams at them before trying to pass them on the Florida Turnpike.

    Lang, who was 42 at the time, rolled down his window and threw a plastic bottle at her car.

    He then pulled out his gun and fired, the bullet tearing through the rear of the car and ending up lodged in the passenger seat.

    Illa, who was not injured, flagged down a Miami-Dade cop, not realizing her attacker was also a Miami-Dade cop.

    A Florida state trooper then pulled Lang and his wife over and noticed a fuse panel behind the glove compartment appeared “to be disturbed,” which led him to be believe Lang had hidden the gun there.

    The car was impounded at a tow truck lot while the Florida Highway Patrol waited to obtain a search warrant from a judge.

    But before that could happen, Lang snuck into the tow truck lot, entered his car and appeared to be removing the gun, according to a surveillance video.

    By the time cops searched it, they found two loaded 9 mm magazine cartridges, including one with a single bullet missing – but they never found the gun.

    They did, however, find Lang’s DNA all over the area in the glove compartment where the gun was believed to be hidden, according to the Miami Herald.

    The passenger side also tested positive for gun residue.

    His wife, Christine Lang, also called a friend, Miami-Dade Sgt. Matthew Fryer, and told him her husband had been involved “a road rage incident.”

    Lang also called Fryer and told him, “I fucked up” and “I’m going to lose my job.”

    He was right about that as he will no longer be allowed to work as police officer in Florida.

    Lang pleaded guilty in October to charges of discharging a firearm from a moving vehicle, assault and tampering with evidence.

    “It’s true I had personal demons,” Lang told the judge during his sentencing Thursday.

    “I was fighting and I was using alcohol as my drug to cope with the pain I was feeling. I knew it was wrong, but it was the only way I knew how.”

    Lang also told the judge through tears that we will now wear a “badge of shame.”

    As for Illa, she will never forget his face.

    “I remember his face and I remember the hatred in his face as he was pointing his gun, and we were next to each other because he was on the passenger side and I was on the driver side,” Illa testified.

    Lang could have received a minimum sentence of 20 years for the charges, but prosecutors asked the judge to wave that standard, seeking five years in prison instead.

    But Miami-Dade County Judge Daryl Trawick found that too harsh of a sentence.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/15/miami-dade-cop-receives-ten-months-probation-shooting-corrections-officer-road-rage-incident/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2016, 08:40:31 PM
    Once again the criminal gang is exposed.

    Two Entire Police Depts Shut Down During FBI Raids Over Massive DEA Drug Ring Conspiracy

    “They’re basically treating these buildings like crime scenes.”

    Tangipahoa Parish, LA — A massive raid was carried out by the FBI on Thursday of  Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office and the Hammond Police Department. The raids were part of a year-long investigation into a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency task force accused of a massive conspiracy to rob drug dealers and profit from selling the stolen narcotics.

    According to the Advocate, two former members of the New Orleans-based task force — both of whom worked for the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office — are facing federal charges, and one pleaded guilty earlier this year to state drug conspiracy charges.

    During the raids on Thursday, both departments were completely shut down as FBI agents seized computers, cellphones and case files. The raids involved an earlier investigation the Free Thought Project reported on in March.

    After Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office Deputy and DEA task force member Johnny Domingue took a plea deal and began rolling over on his co-conspirators, the FBI has nabbed more crooked cops.
    Before he started selling out his fellow criminal DEA cops, Domingue acknowledged that drugs had been stolen “with the dual purpose of ingesting them and selling them for profit.” He also admitted to selling cocaine that had been stored in evidence bags at the DEA’s office in Metairie.

    During the raid on Dominque’s house in January, authorities found a whopping 300 grams of cocaine hydrochloride, oxycodone pills, methadone, Xanax and “a voluminous number of manila envelopes that contained additional prescription medications,” according to court documents.

    According to the Advocate, the materials taken during Thursday’s raids included a computer from the office of Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff Daniel Edwards, said one law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the operation. Edwards is the brother of Gov. John Bel Edwards.

    “They’re basically treating these buildings like crime scenes,” the official said.

    When multiple police departments are treated like crime scenes there might be a problem.

    “The investigation is ongoing, with many more investigative actions to take place,” Jeffrey Sallet, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s New Orleans office, told reporters.
    As the Advocate reports, Thursday’s searches marked an escalation of the misconduct investigation, which has been steeped in secrecy for months as investigators dug into the background of several task force members, including Chad Scott, a longtime DEA agent.

    The investigation into Scott goes back decades, as this corrupt cop, who’s since been stripped of his badge, is accused of manipulating witnesses in murder cases as well as leading the crooked drug task force who robbed people and sold drugs.

    In fact, as reported by the Advocate, Scott helped to create a pipeline of task force officers who began their careers in Tangipahoa Parish, having recruited Domingue and others to join the narcotics team.
    Scott was literally building his own gang of criminal cops.

    On Thursday, the FBI refused to elaborate on why they raided the Hammond Police Department. However, DEA task force member, Karl Newman worked for the department. In March, Newman was implicated in the drug and cash conspiracy and is currently facing charges, including robbery and possession with intent to distribute cocaine and Oxycodone.

    What this case illustrates is the criminal incentive created by the war on drugs and the monopoly of power granted specifically to those tasked with carrying it out. Making arbitrary substances illegal, and then tasking individuals with the control of those substances creates a temptation of easy money that is hard to pass up.

    This case is hardly isolated as this scenario is but a broken record of corruption, playing over and over again in departments across the country.

    As the Free Thought Project reported in January, a California police officer was busted after driving 247 pounds of marijuana all the way across the country. Yuba County Deputy Christopher M. Heath was caught in York, Pennsylvania with a shipment of marijuana that was worth over $2 million.

    This cases were similar as Heath was an officer on a narcotics task force, meaning that he was responsible for putting nonviolent people in prison for using and selling drugs as well. Meanwhile, he was selling drugs and taking part in the same actions that he was locking people up for. State hypocrisy at its worst.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/entire-police-dept-raid-fbi-massive-dea-drug-ring-conspiracy/#5ls2IL0ejwmrw8zp.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2016, 08:50:58 PM
    Once again violent goons exposed but not suffering any real consequences.

    Cop Pokes HIMSELF with a Syringe, So 2 Cops Beat a Handcuffed Man for 3 Minutes

    Evansville, IN — Three Evansville, Indiana, police officers won’t face any charges for beating a handcuffed man and lying about it in official reports — even though body cam footage proves their blatant lies.
    Nick Henderson, Mark DeCamps, and Marcus Craig said they confronted 36-year-old Mark Healy during an investigation of a garage burglary — but Healy, they claimed, resisted to the point a physical confrontation ensued. Healy then tried to flee — and stabbed one of the officers with a syringe of liquid methamphetamine — but the trio managed to restrain the man and place him under arrest.

    As Radley Balko reports for the Washington Post, those officers filed that report with Sergeant Kyle Kassel three hours afterward, who reviewed the information and deemed the use of force justified.

    And that account stood, according to local media citing the police use-of-force report  — until the Evansville Courier & Press obtained body camera footage of the incident disputing nearly every facet of the story. Balko explains:

    “In the footage, Healy doesn’t resist at all. And the officer who was stuck by the syringe wasn’t stabbed by Healy, he was pricked by the needle while Healy was handcuffed. Contrary to department procedure, the officer failed to ask Healy if he had anything in his pockets before searching him. As you can see in the video, as one of the officers searches Healy, he pricks himself on the syringe. He then calls Healy a ‘motherf—–’ and strikes him. As Healy lays on the ground, Henderson and another officer then spend about three minutes beating him, yelling at him and threatening to kill him. The third officer just watches.”

    Evansville Police Chief Billy Bolin reacted appropriately after viewing the footage, accusing the cops of multiple department violations, including official misconduct and excessive force. Bolin immediately suspended the three officers involved and the sergeant who signed off on their report. Further, he recommended Henderson, DeCamps, and Craig be fired and Kassel be demoted.

    But the cops beat the handcuffed man on October 29 — and they’re still on paid vacation otherwise known as administrative leave six weeks later.

    Indiana State Police investigated the incident and sent Vanderburgh County Prosecutor Nicholas Hermann — and last Thursday, Hermann dropped the ball, announcing no charges would be filed against any of the officers.

    “During the news conference,” the Courier & Press reports, “Hermann explained at length his reasoning behind the decision — without outright saying he wasn’t pressing charges until several minutes in. He said his office could not prove Henderson purposefully struck Healy in a malicious manner. According to talks with Henderson and his attorney, Hermann said the officer struck the suspect with his elbow after pricking his hand on a needle that was in Healy’s pocket.

    “He said there was no evidence Healy was ever punched. Hermann played a statement Healy gave to police immediately after the incident in which he said there were ‘no punches thrown.’”
    Whether or not punches, specifically, were thrown, Healy clearly was thrust to the ground after the officer exploded at having stuck his finger on the syringe. In fact, Hermann’s analysis of the body cam footage is disingenuous at best, as it ignores the officers attacked the man while he was in handcuffs, and fails to address that the cop who poked himself on the syringe did not follow proper search procedure.
    But it gets worse.

    Despite flagrant lies in the use-of-force report, the Courier & Press explains:
    “Hermann was also asked about possible perjury charges related to a section of the report that states Henderson, Craig and DeCamps were all working to handcuff Healy while he struggled to get away. That section directly contradicts the video, which shows one officer handcuffing Healy without incident.

    “Hermann acknowledged the contradiction but characterized it as a ‘discrepancy’ during the news conference, citing the three hours between the incident and the time the report was filed as a possible cause. He also speculated the officers who wrote and signed the probable cause affidavit under penalty of perjury, Craig and DeCamps, may not have watched the body camera footage before writing the affidavit.
    “Because of this, Hermann said it would be difficult to prove the officers intended to give false information.”

    Balko cautions the hasty charging of perjury would be remiss as actual discrepancies on police reports aren’t uncommon — eyewitness accounts are notoriously unreliable — and the trauma of an incident and memory colored by self-interest can worsen that effect. He continues:

    “But these aren’t discrepancies. They’re lies. The police claimed Healy resisted. He didn’t. They claimed he broke free and tried to flee. He didn’t. They claimed Henderson was struck by the syringe as Healy attempted to flee. He wasn’t. He was struck while searching Healy, while Healy was stationary and handcuffed.”

    Balko points out that, under Indiana law, “A person who makes a false, material statement under oath or affirmation, knowing the statement to be false or not believing it to be true commits perjury.”
    Henderson, DeCamps, Craig, and Kassel, all indisputably — even to the casual observer — committed perjury.

    Hermann went out of his way to, in essence, nullify the law in order to clear the four lying cops of all wrongdoing. By his particular interpretation of the law — or, more accurately, his gymnastics routine to thwart it — the officers would have had to view the body cam footage prior to writing their report in order to have committed perjury.

    As Balko notes, Evansville police procedure dictates officers must write reports prior to viewing any video of an incident — by definition that would mean Hermann’s strictures effectively render the law moot. Further,
    “Hermann’s interpretation would seem to suggest that no Evansville officer could ever be charged with perjury for mischaracterizing a use-of-force incident in a police report. And this case only underscores the point. If this isn’t perjury, there is no perjury.”

    Hermann asserted, “I have to show that they knowingly or intentionally lied for some reason. It’s common that they not watch the video prior to writing supplements. That’s an issue that we get all the time. And if we start going after police officers because there’s a line in a probable cause affidavit that contradicts what we see in the video, quite frankly we wouldn’t have any more Evansville police officers.”
    Evansville Police Department officials dispute Hermann’s creatively-interpreted narrative of the beating — as well as the suggestion there exists a stunningly high number of discrepancies between reports and video footage.

    But, for now, it seems Henderson, DeCamps, Craig, and Kassel, to varying degrees, will get away scot free for beating a handcuffed man and arrogantly lying about it in official reports. Following is the body cam video that should have given Healy a shot at justice — instead it serves as further reminder of the definitive American Police State:



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-syringe-beating-body-cam/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2016, 08:55:37 PM
    Violent killers who gloat about murdering people.

    Cop Kicked Man to Death Then Framed a Picture of News Article to Hang Over Bed as a Trophy

    MANHATTAN (CN) — A federal jury delivered a guilty-on-all-counts verdict Thursday against a former corrections officer who kicked an inmate at Rikers Island to death.
    Ronald Spear died on Dec. 19, 2012, in the infirmary at Rikers Island where he had sought treatment for his late-stage renal and kidney disease.

    Growing frustrated with his denial of care, Spear got into a heated altercation with corrections officer Brian Coll. It is undisputed that Spear started the fight, but also that the inmate was sickly and walked with a cane.

    Prosecutors say other Rikers guards had already de-escalated the situation – holding Spear face-down on the ground with his hands behind his back – when Coll started kicking the inmate in the face repeatedly.
    Just before the inmate died, Coll allegedly pulled up Spear’s head to deliver a chilling warning.

    “That’s what you get for fucking with me,” Coll has been quoted as saying. “Remember that I’m the one who did this to you.”


    In connection to Thursday’s verdict, the 42-year-old Coll could spend the rest of his life in prison.

    At summations Wednesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Brooke Cucinella told the court that, for years after the jailhouse killing, Coll kept a Village Voice newspaper article with a picture of his victim framed in his bedroom.

    “Let’s call it what it is: a trophy,” Cucinella said.

    Cucinella urged the jury to show no hesitation in convicting.

    “We’re here to finally, finally hold the defendant, that man, accountable,” she said, pointing at Coll.

    In addition to the newspaper article, Cucinella said the guard had joked to his colleagues that he should get a tear-drop tattoo, a well-known gang symbol to signify that one has killed someone.
    Coll’s attorney Sam Schmidt meanwhile spoke only of the “alleged” blows in his closing argument, though the jury heard from multiple eyewitnesses that Coll killed Spear.

    One key witness for the government, corrections officer Anthony Torres, wept on the witness stand for two days as he described Spear’s death and his own role in covering up what happened.
    Depicting a brutal assault, Torres said Coll had kicked Spear’s head as if trying to make a “field goal” with a football.

    But Schmidt insisted that the autopsy evidence proves otherwise.

    “These are not football kicks,” Schmidt said. “There is absolutely no proof of what Mr. Torres says.”

    Speaking of his client, Schmidt said: “We’re talking about a man who was attacked, who defended himself, and who was embarrassed and humiliated by a sick inmate putting him on the ground.”
    Among graphic autopsy photographs, the prosecution focused on images that showed Spear’s skin pulled down his face to expose his brain, which appeared to be dotted with bloody hemorrhages.
    New York City Medical Examiner Michael Greenberg had testified that those red spots showed Spear had been alive before the beating.

    Torres and fellow correction officer Byron Taylor both pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice trial kicked off on Dec. 2. They are awaiting sentencing for their charges.
    U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska presided over the trial.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kicked-death-picture-trophy/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2016, 12:02:42 PM
    Remember this case? Once again cops investigating and clearing themselves of murder. Even in castle law states, some home owners who shot more than once at armed intruders have been prosecuted for murder. But it seems like cops have free pass to kill anyone they want without consequences.

    Dyer: Noble shooting justified, but officer did not follow proper tactics before firing 4th shot

    http://www.fresnobee.com/news/local/crime/article119931858.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Nether Animal on December 18, 2016, 10:33:43 PM
    Remember this case? Once again cops investigating and clearing themselves of murder. Even in castle law states, some home owners who shot more than once at armed intruders have been prosecuted for murder. But it seems like cops have free pass to kill anyone they want without consequences.

    Dyer: Noble shooting justified, but officer did not follow proper tactics before firing 4th shot

    http://www.fresnobee.com/news/local/crime/article119931858.html

    I remember that one. Unbelievable. Fuck cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 19, 2016, 12:21:09 AM
    And yet some cops object to being filmed, especially when they're committing crimes, and will arrest people for doing so. How long will this criminal gang threaten, terrorize and abuse citizens?

    “We Take Your Picture or You Go To Jail!” Cops Caught on Video in Ominous New Practice

    Austin, TX — Police in Austin, Texas have been caught in an unscrupulous practice that looks more like something out of Nazi Germany than the supposed land of the free. In a video uploaded to Facebook this week, Austin cops are seen humiliating an innocent man in public as they poked and prodded his body to take photos of it for a database.

    Cody King was on his way to school earlier this month when he was targeted by Austin cops for the alleged ‘crime’ of not using his turn signal. Officers, apparently not having proof of the incident could not or chose not to issue King a ticket. However, the ticket would have been far better than what happened next.

    It is important to note that at the moment the officer told King that he was not being given a ticket, the remaining detainment became illegal.

    Instead of letting King go on his way, police told the innocent man that they were now going to take photographs of him. King promptly rejected the idea, noting that this is a clear violation of his rights as he had not committed, nor was he suspected of committing any crime.

    When King objected, the officer told him that he either lets him take pictures or King goes to jail. In no way is this threat just and it certainly is not standard procedure for traffic stops — at least for now.
    “If you don’t allow us to take your pictures down here, we’re gonna go to the jail to take your pictures,” says the tyrant officer.

    “Can I call my lawyer?” asks King.

    “No, you can’t call your lawyer right now,” replies the cop.

    Apparently, this officer forgot the part of the law which allows people, who are innocent until proven guilty, the right to have an attorney present during questioning. Photographing a man’s body is most certainly an instance in which an attorney should be present. However, this cop denied King his right to provide one.

    King, who is now under duress and threatened with being kidnapped, eventually concedes and allows these tyrants to take pictures of him.
    The officers surround King and begin lifting up his clothing to take pictures. The effect of such police action is nothing short of degrading and dehumanizing.


    King, according to the video has no criminal record and was simply on his way to school. He was then singled out, apparently for his appearance, and then photographed for some police database — a practice fit for 1930’s Germany.

    Please share this story so that this humiliating and tyrannical practice is exposed and immediately brought to a halt — before it becomes the norm.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-biker-pictures-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 19, 2016, 08:48:02 PM
    Cop Pulls Gun on Cashier and Customers in McDonald’s Because Food Took Too Long

    New York, NY — This weekend, US Marshal Charles Brown showed up drunk to a McDonald’s location in Brooklyn and then pointed his gun at the cashier and several customers because his food was not being prepared quickly enough. Brown was off-duty at the time.

    According to a report from the New York Post, Brown arrived at the McDonald’s after 1 A.M and was obviously drunk. Witnesses say that he was stumbling and slurring his words while making his order.

    At some point while waiting for his food, Brown became impatient and became belligerent with one of the employees. One report indicates that it was a 41-year-old female employee, while another report indicates that it was a 25-year-old male employee. It is possible that one of these accounts is incorrect, but it is also possible that two separate employees were threatened in the attack.
    According to witnesses, one of the customers attempted to intervene, and Brown quickly turned the gun on the customer as well.

    Brown quickly left the McDonald’s when employees threatened to call police, and was later found and arrested on the side of the road. Brown was charged with reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a firearm and menacing in the second degree.

    Despite the horrific scene caused by the officer, there were still witnesses who were attempting to make excuses for him.

    “[U.S. Marshals] are under a lot of pressure. They’re under a lot of stress. They risk their lives every day,” one customer told the post.

    In situations where government agents commit crimes, it is typical for them to avoid any type of serious legal penalties, and this situation will likely be no different. Despite the seriousness of his crimes, Brown was released from his holding cell without bail, showing that the officer is receiving special treatment before his court date even arrives.

    Police officers pulling guns on food workers in not uncommon. In fact, they happen so often, the Free Thought Project has reported on multiple instances captured on video.

    In July, a video was posted online showing a Santa Clara County Sheriff’s deputy involved in a standoff with police after he decided to pull his gun on a Jack in the Box employee.
    Officer Benjamin Lee, 33, was arrested about 2:40 a.m. earlier this year after he drunkenly drove into the Jack in the Box order line and apparently thought his status as a cop could speed up his service.

    In January,
    the Free Thought Project was given a video by a Pizza delivery driver who was held at gunpoint by a cop and nearly killed while delivering pizza.

    In 2014,
    officer Scott Biumi pleaded guilty to assault and was sentenced to 10 years probation for pointing a gun at teenagers in the drive-through line at yet another McDonald’s.

    Also in 2014, Tuscon Police Officer, Kyle James McCartin, was drunk and belligerent when he walked into a Giant Gas Station wearing his bulletproof vest and began pointing his pistol at the clerk.
    For assaulting innocent people with deadly weapons, none of the officers mentioned above spent a single day in jail.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-cashier-customers-pistol-mcdonalds/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 20, 2016, 01:48:54 AM
    Texas Judge Declares Mistrial in Case of Cop who Shot at Unarmed Man 41 Times, Despite Fellow Cops Testifying Against Him

    Once again, a jury found itself unable to convict a cop for killing an unarmed man – even with fellow cops testifying against the cop.

    This time, it was a Texas jury which ended up deadlocked Monday in the case of Garland police officer Patrick Tuter, who was charged with manslaughter for shooting and killing a man named Michael Allen after a high-speech pursuit in August 2012.

    Tuter rammed Allen’s truck with his patrol car, then fired 41 times – reloading twice – striking Allen three times, killing him.

    Tuter claimed he feared for his life because he saw Allen “reaching” for something, which is a standard excuse cops use to kill besides “lunging” and “charging.”

    But his fellow cops testified that they were the ones fearing for their lives because Tuter was shooting so recklessly.

    According to WFAA:

    Veteran Garland Officer William Norris says the only time he felt in fear for his life was when Officer Tuter was shooting more than 41 rounds into the truck.

    “I didn’t know where he was,” he said.

    Veteran Garland police officers took the stand Wednesday for the prosecution, testifying against their former fellow officer.

    “Tuter’s shooting was reckless,” Officer Mathew Perry testified.

    But that was not enough to persuade the jury to convict, leaving the judge no choice but to declare a mistrial.

    It was at least the third mistrial of a police officer in the shooting death of a citizen since October, including the mistrial of South Carolina police officer Michael Slager in the shooting death of Walter Scott, the mistrial of Albuquerque police officers Keith Sandy and Dominique Perez in the shooting death of James Boyd and the mistrial of Ohio cop Ray Tensing in the shooting death of Sam DuBose.

    So while we’re now seeing a higher rate of cops having to stand trial for killing citizens, we are seeing those juries unable to convict the cops, despite video evidence.

    Jurors in this case viewed a dash cam video of the shooting, which has not been released but we are working on obtaining it.

    Garland police say the video contradicts Tuter’s initial claims that Allen had rammed his truck into his patrol car, showing, instead, Tuter ramming his patrol car into Allen’s truck before opening fire, which is what led to him being fired and charged with manslaughter.

    But Tuter took the stand and stuck to his original story, telling the jury that Allen had rammed his patrol car with his truck, never mind whatever the video may show.

    According to WFAA:

    Patrick Tuter looked directly at the jury as he tried to convince them to find him not guilty of manslaughter Thursday in court.

    His attorneys showed video as Tuter pursued Michael Allen on Aug. 31, 2012. At times, they hit speeds of more than 120 miles per hour.

    “Mr. Allen was being extremely reckless and showing no sign of pulling over,” Tuter said.

    He eventually chased him eventually into a cul-de-sac in Mesquite.

    “I believed based on what I saw, and experience, that he was going to injure or kill someone,” Tuter said.

    Tuter said Allen drove recklessly into a yard and rammed his squad car. He thought Allen’s truck was a deadly weapon and he also thought he saw him reach for a gun.

    “I believed he was armed with a gun and was about to shoot me in the face so I drew my weapon,” he said.

    He fired 41 rounds at Allen, shooting him three times. On cross examination, prosecutors brought up the fact that Tuter testified he couldn’t see what was happening as he got out of car because there was too much smoke from Allen’s tires as he revved his truck.

    “How did you see Allen reach for an imaginary gun if there was so much smoke?,” Prosecutor Juan Sanchez asked Tuter. He also accused of Tuter of lying by claiming he thought he saw a gun.

    Three Garland officers testified they never felt their lives were in danger, and thus they didn’t fire their weapons.

    One man who witnessed the shooting and began recording said Mesquite police officers seized his camera and returned it four days later with the footage deleted as we reported at the time of the shooting.


    But Mesquite police, who took over the investigator, later said they only seized the camera, downloaded the video, then returned the camera without the video – which is still a violation of his rights, but they claim he gave them written consent, which is many obtained through police intimidation tactics.

    At this time, it is not even clear if that video was introduced as evidence, but a prosecutor accused the Mesquite Police Department of conducting a shoddy investigation.

    “That’s the shoddiest crummiest investigation. Rest assured, most of the time they’re a better department than that. But they have no problem covering for cops,” said Phillip Hayes, a special prosecutor, according to Fox 4.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/19/texas-judge-declares-mistrial-in-case-of-cop-who-shot-at-unarmed-man-41-times-despite-fellow-cops-testifying-against-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2016, 09:26:25 AM
    Innocent Mother Kidnapped by Cops, Jailed 7 Weeks, Because of 20yo Clerical Error

    Chicago, IL — A Chicago mother of a six-year-old boy found herself behind bars for 49 days, without bail or recourse — missing his birthday and Thanksgiving — because inept bureaucrats made an egregious clerical error.
    Indeed, Latasha Eatman might be lucky she didn’t have a lengthier stay in a cage — the error was only discovered when a Cook County Sheriff’s Official ordered an audit of first time offenders currently housed in the jail.

    More than two decades after a judge dismissed a community service order for minor marijuana possession, Eatman’s nightmarish captivity began, courtesy of a series of blunders that never should have happened.
    “I’m thinking in my mind, like, what have I done?” the mother told CBS Chicago in an interview, discussing a raid by two Chicago police officers on October 14, who were attempting to determine if the store where she’d worked for 15 years was selling illegal — read: untaxed — cigarettes.

    Officers wrote the store a ticket and placed Eatman in cuffs — but she had no idea they would be stealing the next seven weeks of her life without any conceivable just cause.

    CBS reports, “The officers had discovered a 1994 warrant that said Eatman was wanted for not completing the community service, which she was originally ordered to perform after a low-level 1993 marijuana arrest. Eatman had tried to perform the community service repeatedly at the time, but the organization she was supposed to work for was closed or had no room for her whenever she showed up. Her judge at the time acknowledged the effort she put in and terminated her probation, according to Cara Smith, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office’s chief police officer.

    “But somehow a warrant for Eatman’s arrest remained on file.”

    Smith told the outlet it took ten days before a judge even heard Eatman’s case — but that he seemed hostile and suspicious of her story — and even threatened to send her to prison. He denied bond, and she spent an additional 39 days locked up — missing her son’s sixth birthday and Thanksgiving.

    For seven weeks, Eatman desperately tried to prevent the child from finding out where she actually was.

    “I told my son I was at work, out of town for my boss,” Eatman explained to CBS. “I told him at first I was at school. And he was like, ‘You’re at big girl school?’ And I was like, ‘Yeah.’”

    Eatman had committed no crime — and the officers responsible for locking her up had merely been acting as armed tax enforcers and victimless crime investigators — “beat cops to ensure vice taxes are being adhered to,” as Reason describes.

    Cara Smith accidentally became Eatman’s savior after ordering an examination of instances in which women were behind bars for the first time — staff stumbled upon the innocent mother’s case.
    “We raised holy hell with the prosecutor’s office,” Smith told CBS.

    Eatman was freed the following day.

    “You wonder why these communities don’t trust law enforcement. Can you imagine a more thoughtless, cruel way to handle this? She was treated like a real criminal,” Smith noted of Eatman, who is African American.

    Eatman’s stay in jail tragically isn’t an aberration, Smith explained, as shoddy communication between police, sheriff’s departments, prosecutors offices, and other agencies isn’t infrequent.

    Add to that unfair laws, bias on every level, and a whopping number of people serving time for nonviolent offenses, and it’s readily apparent why a massive swath of the populace prefers the term ‘injustice system’ to characterize the incarceration-industrial complex.

    “This case terrifies me,” Smith added. “Let’s remember, her bills continued. Her rent and her heat, all those things continued to accrue despite the fact that she was in jail.”

    Eatman will probably never be recompensed for the time lost locked in a cage for literally no reason — but what is really appalling is how easily this happened to an innocent person. A shamefully voluminous number of federal, state, and local laws — and a callous court system, indifferent to much of anything but expedience — have crafted a juggernaut of a backlog and a swiss cheese complex of ways to fall through the holes in the barely-functioning system.

    “Without so much as an apology or an explanation, it took 49 days of her life away,” Smith said of the Eatman fiasco. “For no reason at all. And that included 49 days she wasn’t with her son. It included 49 days she wasn’t working. Without so much as an explanation of what happened to her.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-mother-jailed-7-weeks-error/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2016, 12:39:13 PM
    The same organization that takes kids away from parents and can destroy lives.

    North Carolina Foster Child Sues CPS Supervisor who Adopted Him, Only to Abuse Him

    A North Carolina foster child, who was discovered by a sheriff’s deputy cuffed to a front porch with a dead chicken tied around his neck, filed a lawsuit last month against the Child Protective Services worker who adopted him, only for her and her boyfriend to spend several years abusing him.

    “A lot of times I would bleed. Sometimes they wouldn’t clean it up. Sometimes, they didn’t care, they just left it bleeding,” the boy revealed in an interview with the Huffington Post, adding that his former foster parents never called for medical help despite enduring severe injuries like a broken wrist while attempting to escape the chains of the abusive home.

    Wanda Sue Larson was a Gaston County Social Services CPS Supervisor when she adopted the boy at the age of four in 2006. The boy, now 14, is referred to as “J.G.” in the lawsuit, which can be read the embed below.

    Larson’s boyfriend, Dorian Lee Harper, reportedly tied the dead bird around J.G.’s neck after he killed it at the 5-acre farm where they lived. J.G.’s lawsuit claims Larson never intervened and allowed it to happen.

    Investigators say Larson submitted false statements in order to manipulate the “process and substance” of the legal hearing determining J.G.’s custody, manipulating the juvenile courts into removing the child from his biological mother, Maria Harris, by deceiving the juvenile court judge overseeing the case.

    Harris regained custody of her son in 2015 after the information about Larson came to light.


    In 2006, Larson had used her position as a department supervisor to manipulate the courts to terminate Harris’ parental rights. She also required subordinates to conduct post-removal assessments to qualify the child’s status for funding as well her qualifications so she could adopt him.


    North Carolina pays foster parents at least $432 a month for each child, which increases with disabilities. Larson had five foster children in her custody.

    The end of J.G.’s abuse finally began in 2013 when Union County Sheriff Deputy Robert Rucker responded to a call about a hog that escaped a farm and had been running loose through the community.

    While searching for the hog running amok, Rucker approached Larson’s farm house where he found J.G. handcuffed to a railing on the porch. He also discovered the child would be regularly chained to a railroad tie in his room.

    And he discovered J.G., along with four other foster children, were living in “shocking conditions” inside the CPS supervisor’s home where she allowed her boyfriend free reign of abuse against the children.

    A further investigation revealed Harper would also starve “J.G.” and tie his ankle to a railroad tie, cut his face knife as well as burn his face with electric wire.

    Harper remains in prison after he pleaded guilty to being the primary abuser of J.G. and was sentenced to six to 10 years of hard time.

    In 2015, Larson was given time served for 17 months in prison after she pleaded guilty for her role in J.G.’s abuse, so she is no longer incarcerated.

    “I want to do whatever it takes to get her back in jail,” J.G. told WBTV. “Cause she deserves to be in jail for a long, long time.”

    Financial Incentives

    In addition to monetary assistance provided by the federal government for adoptive parents to assist with the costs raising adopted children, local CPS departments across the country receive thousands in federal funding.

    Each CPS department’s budget is based on how many children social workers remove from the custody of their families to place in foster care, which is viewed as a Fourth Amendment violation by most parents who have their children removed.

    The incentives increase significantly for foster parents and departments if a child is determined to have special needs through federal title IV-E adoption assistance.

    Others criticize removal-based incentives saying they corrupt departments by driving their focus towards the bottom line instead of protecting children, resulting in department supervisors driving subordinates initially drawn to the job to protect children to lie about abuse that’s not occurring, removing them from their families to generate money for the department instead.

    Others add the incentives provide no reason for departments to work to keep families together, but rather motivate supervisors to push for removals.

    The annual total of child removals is tallied up to determine the department’s budget for the following year as Orange County CPS Director Michael Riley explains to a civil rights attorney in the video deposition below regarding the case of former Miss California Deanna Fogarty, who had lost her parental rights in 2000 after social workers engaged in a”pervasive pattern of lies and extensive cover-up” to justify removing her daughters.

    Do Social Workers Have A Right to Lie?

    An Orange County jury found social workers Marcie Vreeken and Helen Dwojak were liable for the “unconstitutional removal and continued detention” ajnd warrantless removal of her daughters, who were nine and six at the time, awarding Fogarty $4.8 million for violating her right to parent her children.

    Attorneys for Orange County appealed the jury’s ruling.

    Although they did not contest to the jury’s finding the social workers had lied to remove Fogarty’s two daughters, attorneys argued the decision should be overturned because while the social worker’s deceptive statements to the court might have been ethically wrong, they were not illegal because no prior court ruling had been established against social workers lying to the court in order to remove children.

    They also argued that Vreeken and Dwojak were protected by qualified immunity from liability in federal court unless Fogarty could prove the social workers’ lies violated her Constitutional rights.


    But that argument fell flat with the judges hearing the case, who upheld the jury’s decision, boosting Orange County’s payout to $10.6 million after attorney’s fees for fighting the appeal were added up, which is the most expensive case ever paid by Orange County, according to the Orange County Register.

    “How in the world could a person in the shoes of your clients possibly believe that it was appropriate to use perjury and false evidence?” 9th Circuit of Appeals Judge Stephen Trott asked.

    “How could they possibly not be in notice that you can’t do that?  You mean due process is somehow consistent with a government worker introducing perjured testimony and false evidence? I can’t even believe for a microsecond that a caseworker wouldn’t understand you can’t lie and put in false evidence.”


    The $10.6 awarded in Fogarty-Hardwick also resulted in a steep increase in liability claims cost for Orange County.

    “It was pretty amazing. They succeed in taking a $5 million award and doubling it for us,” Shawn McMillan, the civil rights attorney who represented Fogarty, told the Register.

    “In my view, the taxpayers in Orange County should be pissed. This never should have gone this far.”

    In November, a jury awarded Lina Duval, who is also represented by McMillan, $3.1 million for “malice, oppression, and fraud” for the unwarranted removal of her 15-month old son, who was also taken without a warrant.

    “The law is very clear and the social workers get training on this, you can not seize a child from its parents unless there’s an emergency.”

    According to McMillan, an emergency would be exigent circumstances that pose a significant risk of death or serious bodily harm in the half hour or so it would take social workers to get a warrant from a judge in an abuse case that would warrant seizing a child.

    However, that fact isn’t widely known due to the secret nature of juvenile courts, which are not open to the public to protect the minors in involved.

    “The basic purpose espoused by the legislature, and the courts is protection of the child’s privacy,” McMillan told PINAC during an interview.

    “In the vast majority of the cases I review, secrecy only protects the workers from liability.”

    Marcie Vreeken, one of the two social workers named responsible for committing judicial deception, was promoted to a supervisor position.

    In 2013, Vreeken earned $103,441.48, according to the OC Register.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/21/north-carolina-foster-child-sues-cps-supervisor-who-adopted-him-only-to-abuse-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2016, 10:59:14 PM
    Those killers should've been sent to the electric chair.

    Georgia Cop Sentenced to Life in Prison for Tasering Handcuffed Man to Death

    In a judicial decision that is sure to send shock waves throughout the law enforcement community, a Georgia cop was sentenced to life in prison Wednesday for tasering a handcuffed man to death in 2014.

    On April 11, 2014, East Point Police Sergeant Marcus Eberhart was upset at having chased Gregory Towns through the woods after responding to a call of domestic violence.

    But Towns, 24, became winded and had given up by the time Eberhart and his partner, Corporal Howard Weems, caught up to him as we reported last year when the cops were indicted.

    The cops handcuffed him and ordered him to walk, but Towns said he was too tired to walk, so he asked the cops ten times for a few minutes to allow him to catch his breath.

    But the cops started tasering him in an attempt to get him walk, tasering him 10 times within a 30-minute period, including one point where he was in the water in a creek.

    He ended up dying on the scene.

    A witness photographed the above photo, which was used as evidence against the cops.

    Weems was sentenced to only five years in prison and will only have to serve 18 months because he was found not guilty of felony murder and aggravated assault, but guilty of involuntary manslaughter, reckless conduct and violation of oath of office.

    According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the judge did not have the leeway to offer Eberhart a lighter sentence because he was found guilty on all charges, including felony murder and aggravated assault.

    An autopsy determined that Towns suffered from heart disease, which was used as an excuse by the officers’ attorneys for his death, but the jury did not buy it.

    The defense attorneys also argued that police have the right to taser people when they are not complying, but the jury did not buy that excuse either, which is surprising considering how often juries succumb to the Blue Privilege theory.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/21/georgia-cop-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-for-tasering-handcuffed-man-to-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2016, 01:39:36 PM
    Cops Shoot Woman’s Dog Then Warrantlessly Ransack Her Home to Justify It

    New York, NY – Brooklyn resident Raven Garcia is filing a lawsuit against the NYPD after the police entered her house without a warrant, shot her dog and then ransacked her home in an attempt to find evidence to justify their intrusion. Police were called to Garcia’s house over an unpaid cab fee, but they had no warrant or justification to enter her home without permission.

    Garcia had been out drinking with her friends on that night, and when realizing that she was too drunk to drive home, she did the responsible thing and took a cab. Unfortunately, Garcia forgot to pay the cab driver when they arrived at her house, likely due to her intoxication. It is true that Garcia was in the wrong for stiffing the cab driver, but this hardly justifies a warrantless search and the shooting of an animal, this is a very simple matter that could have been resolved very quickly and easily if the police were not so quick to escalation and aggression.

    However, it is important to point out that all charges regarding the unpaid cab fare have since been dropped — making the dog shooting and subsequent raid — entirely unjust.

    According to witnesses, police arrived at Garcia’s apartment with large numbers in an extreme show of force. They let themselves into the home and carelessly allowed the dog to walk out of the house. Witness testimony has stated that the dog, named Macho, was calm and friendly while outside and was shot by one of the officers for no reason. When neighbors asked about the condition of the dog, the officers on the scene told the neighbors to call for help, because they hadn’t done so.

    Meanwhile, a gang of cops began ransacking the house in an attempt to find drugs which would justify their raid and the shooting of the dog. They even went on to search a neighbors apartment that was not even owned by Garcia. After a long search, police found absolutely nothing, but they still arrested Garcia.

    According to the lawsuit, “NYPD officers did unlawfully imprison Plaintiff as they ransacked her apartment and shot her companion animal with an unnecessary and gratuitous display of physical force, as they cordoned off the area and prevented witnesses from reporting the unjust nature of the shooting, despite witnesses’ attempts to do so.”

    The lawsuit also stated that the officer who shot Macho, Officer Abiola Enrico, was taunting Garcia about her weight, and was so aggressive with her that she was restrained by other officers at one point.
    Garcia was then taken jail, where she was deprived of food and water and shackled to a bench in a cold and empty room. The lawsuit states that the temperatures in the room were “frigid.”

    One of Garcia’s friends, whom she had been out drinking with that night, had even attempted to pay the cab fee and was told that it was too late, even when she showed up to the police department with the cab driver, who would have been willing to accept the late payment.

    Garcia has since retained an attorney and has filed a federal lawsuit against the department for the unlawful search and the shooting of her beloved dog.

    “This is a perfect example of the type of incident that has eroded the public’s faith in law enforcement,” said Matthew Albert, Garcia’s attorney. “The most benign of phone calls resulted in a dog being shot, and an entire platoon trying to cover up the brutal crime of a fellow Officer and then torturing an New York University Graduate student and artist. The NYPD, and too many law enforcement officials in general, have a unique ability to escalate events so that everything ends in bloodshed. It’s disgraceful.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-shoot-womans-dog-and-rip-apart-her-house-without-a-warrant-to-justify-it/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2016, 01:42:24 PM
    Can citizens also legally execute police dogs if they make any attempt to approach them, bark at them or attack them?

    Court Rules Police Can Legally Execute Your Dog if It Does Anything But Sit Silently

    The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit concluded Monday that police officers are justified in killing citizens’ pets — even if those animals are not attacking or attempting to attack them.
    Judges MOORE and CLAY (Circuit Judges), and HOOD (District Judge) heard an appeal from the plaintiffs Mark and Cheryl Brown, of Battle Creek, Michigan. The Browns filed a lawsuit against the BATTLE CREEK Police Department, the City of Battle Creek, and officers Jeffrey Case, Christof Klein, and Damon Young for the death of their beloved dogs at the hands of sadistic cops.

    The incident occurred on April 17th, 2013, when police were attempting to execute a search warrant on the home where the Browns were living because a police informant reported another man, Vincent Jones was distributing heroin, cocaine, and marijuana from the residence. Jones was apprehended before police arrived on the scene.

    Mark Brown, who was not a suspect in the search, had gone home on his lunch break to let out his two pit bulls. After doing so, he locked the door and headed back to work when police arrived and detained him. He told them he had a key, and that they didn’t need to destroy the front door to gain entry into the home. But destroy it they did.

    The Browns dispute the claims by police that the dogs were barking. Mark Brown even testified the smaller of the two dogs had “never barked a day in her life.” Officer Klein said the larger dog was barking and “lunged” at him, but later admitted the pet “had only moved a few inches.”

    Despite there being no attack, Klein fired a round at the dog. Both dogs ran away from the officers to the basement, obviously fleeing in fear. There, the two dogs were shot and killed by the officers who felt that they could not properly clear the room and effectively execute the search warrant on the home, explaining they “did not feel [the officers] could safely clear the basement with those dogs down there.”
    Going further, the officers stated the “basement was loaded. You’ve gotta look under beds, you’ve gotta do everything, and [the dogs] basically prevented us from doing that, and they were protecting that basement.” Klein testified the smaller pit bull was “just standing there” when it was shot and killed.

    In spite of these sadistic admissions, the appellate court ruled in favor of the officers, the police department, and the other defendants. They agreed with the lower court ruling that the police officers were covered under “doctrine of qualified immunity” and were therefore not liable for compensating the plaintiffs in the case.

    The precedent has now been set. Cops can legally kill your dogs for the sole act of being a dog. If your dog moves, it is dead. If your dog barks, it is dead. If your dog does anything but sit silently in the other room, it is dead. However, as the above case illustrates, even if they are silent in the other room, police can still kill them — just to make their search for arbitrary substances deemed illegal by the state — that much easier.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-can-now-kill-dog-barking-getting-way/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2016, 01:47:14 PM
    This mob boss is a dangerous and vindictive criminal. He should be in prison and also be held accountable for anything that happens to this woman from doxxing.

    Police Union Chief ‘Reprimanded’ for Doxxing Innocent Woman Who Made Video of Him Speeding

    Miami, FL — In late January, Claudia Castillo pulled over Miami Police Lieutenant Javier Ortiz and accused him of speeding. She filmed the encounter and posted it to YouTube, where it went viral.



    In response to being caught breaking the law, Ortiz, leader of the Miami FOP, used his police powers to access and post Castillo’s personal information and photo online. He had doxxed her.

    According to the Miami Herald‘s report in March, Castillo received so many calls at work that she became concerned about her job security. “They sent me home yesterday,” the project manager said.

    For ten months, not so much as an inquiry took place into Ortiz’s misconduct. This was in spite of the media coverage and a complaint filed by Claudia Castillo herself notifying the department that this tyrant officer had been doxxing her.

    This was also in spite of the fact that after he doxxed her, Ortiz continued to harass the innocent woman. In February, Ortiz went to Facebook with a photo of Castillo holding a Pepsi can and posted to his followers that they should  “call Claudia Castillo at her cell… and let her know drinking and driving on a boat isn’t safe.”

    Last Thursday, however, the department managed to wrap up their ‘investigation’ and noted that Javier Ortiz, president of the Miami Fraternal Order of Police, was ‘reprimanded’ for “discourtesy” and “improper procedure,” according to the internal affairs report, as reported by PINAC.

    In spite of the ‘investigation’ finding Ortiz was in the wrong, this problem cop will not be fired, demoted, or even suspended. In fact, the ‘reprimand’ consists of little more than a paper entry into his record.

    According to PINAC, Ortiz had no idea that he’d even been reprimanded. When the police accountability group contacted Ortiz, he replied with the following statement:
    The woman is a danger to my members and law enforcement as a whole. No regrets. She’s an officer safety risk pulling over a vehicle on the side of I-95. I’m in the process of appealing my write up as a violation of my first amendment rights.

    It is important to note that doxxing, an abbreviation for document tracing, the Internet-based practice of researching and publishing personally identifiable information about an individual — is illegal.

    However, this officer faced no legal repercussions. Instead of adhering to his public service and protecting the rights of citizens, this cop became the bully.

    When we look at his past, it becomes evident that Javier Ortiz was always a bully.

    In December of last year, this hero police officer made headlines when he took to his Twitter account and declared that Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old who was killed by Cleveland police for playing with a toy gun, was a thug.

    According to the Miami New Times, Ortiz criticized Marilyn Smith, a woman who posted a video of Miami police beating a man in handcuffs. Smith claims that police tried to knock her cellphone out of her hands and demanded that she delete the video. When he’s not attacking black people for protesting police killings of children, this stand-up officer is demonizing an entire religion.

    It seems that no matter what police do these days, they simply will not be held accountable. It is this very lack of accountability that is currently driving a wedge between the police and the policed. Until it is brought to an abrupt halt, we can only expect this divide to grow.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-doxxing-innocent-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2016, 01:52:33 PM
    This case has been mentioned before. 41 shots and no consequences. Meanwhile the criminals keep saying about #blueliesmatter and "war on cops".

    Police Testify Against Fellow Cop Who Killed Unarmed Father with 41 Shots, He Still May Get Job Back

    Garland, TX — In a travesty of justice, a mistrial was declared Monday in the latest trial of an officer who shot and killed an unarmed father — dumping 41 rounds into him, reloading twice.

    Late on August 31, 2012, Michael “Mookie” Allen, 25 was running from the police while driving his white pickup truck. “Michael was terrified of the police, first of all,” Randy Allen, Michael’s father, said reflecting on his son’s state of mind. Garland, Texas police officer Patrick Wayne Tuter was giving chase that night.

    The pursuit ended in a Mesquite, TX cul-de-sac when police cruisers had boxed Allen in, but Tuter opened fire on Allen who was still sitting inside the truck. In a hail of bullets, 41 in all, Tuter killed Allen, who was unarmed. Investigators said the officer reloaded at least twice during the shooting. Two other officers were on-scene. They did not fire their weapons, only Tuter did. Witnesses said the officer gave no time for Allen to exit the vehicle, opening fire three seconds after being told to “get out” of the truck.

    An investigation into the officer involved shooting revealed Tuter claimed he ‘feared for his life.’ But instead of getting a pass from the police department for murdering Allen, he was fired, and later a grand jury indicted him for Manslaughter. According to the Dallas News, it was the first time in 15 years a grand jury had indicted an officer involved in a fatal shooting.

    “He didn’t deserve the death sentence. Patrick Tuter was not judge and jury and that’s what he made himself out to be,” Stephanie Allen, Michael’s mom told reporters after learning he was fired in 2013.
    According to the Dallas News, “Tuter was later determined to have lied about the encounter, claiming Allen rammed his squad car twice, when in fact, Tuter had slammed into Allen’s truck at the end of the chase.”
    During the trial, which concluded last week, Tuter took the stand at his own defense and said, “It’s a very intense situation…Your adrenaline dumps, and you’re shaking, and you have to remain calm.” He defended his actions on the night in question saying, “Mr. Allen was being extremely reckless and showing no sign of pulling over…I believed based on what I saw, and experience, that he was going to injure or kill someone.”
    But fellow officers did not feel their lives were in danger and testified against him. “Tuter’s fellow officers told jurors they were more scared of him (Tuter) than of the man they were chasing that night,” the DN writes adding, “Prosecutors alleged that Tuter was a ‘rogue cop’ who ‘acted recklessly’ by firing 41 shots, three of which struck and killed Allen.” Prosecutor Juan Sanchez admitted Allen may have committed a felony by evading police but said in closing arguments, “The question here is, was it reasonable to kill him? That’s really what this case comes down to.”

    Toby Shook, Tuter’s attorney, stated in his closing statement, “Anyone with an ounce of common sense, one small ounce of common sense, knows Michael Allen was a danger to anyone he might have encountered — and he wasn’t going to stop for anyone.”

    The defense’s argument was enough to sway the jury. After deliberating five hours on Friday, and one hour Monday, the jury returned to inform the judge that they could not come to a unanimous decision as to whether or not they believed Tuter was guilty of manslaughter.

    “Special prosecutor Juan Sanchez said five jurors told him they wanted to convict Tuter. He said the jurors who sided with Tuter thought he had used reasonable force, but the ones who wanted a conviction believed he had the intention to harm Allen when they reached the cul-de-sac,” the DN reported. The prosecution will decide over the holidays whether or not to retry Tuter. If they decide not to conduct another trial, the former Garland, Texas police officer could conceivably be hired with another police department to continue his career in law enforcement.

    Randy Allen said he was hoping for closure but told reporters a mistrial was better news than a jury verdict of not guilty. “It’s been a nightmare for four and a half years…We were really hoping for some closure today…I wouldn’t wish this on anybody,” he said. Michael Allen’s granddaughter is now 8-years-old, remembers her daddy and prays to him every night, Allen told reporters. Tuter is also a father and his wife is expecting.

    America is quickly waking up to the reality their police force is not held to the same standards as the rest of the general population. While the populace cannot brandish weapons, point weapons at unarmed individuals’ heads, and execute people when and if they feel threatened, the police most certainly can, will, and do. All too often, as The Free Thought Project faithfully reports, when a brave district attorney files charges against a peace officer for his/her actions in officer-involved shootings, the police officer is exonerated and allowed to go back to work.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/mistrial-officer-may-return-work-killing-unarmed-father/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2016, 01:41:35 AM
    Award-Winning Florida Deputy Arrested for Identity Theft

    For $10,000-a-month, Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputy Frantz Felisma would obtain the personal information of luxury car owners through a law enforcement database, then hand it over to another man, who would then use that information to swindle the car owners out of money.

    But the scheme caught up to the 42-year-old deputy and he will now spend the Christmas weekend behind bars because he is considered a flight risk.

    His attorney, however, said nothing could be further from the truth because his client recently received the Deputy of the Quarter award.

    “Deputy Felisma contests the government’s allegations that he is a flight risk and a danger to the community,” Jason Kreiss said.

    “To the contrary, Deputy Felisma was awarded Deputy of the Quarter and has been a highly regard member of the Sheriff’s Office and the community.”

    But we all know law enforcement awards are nothing but participation awards for adults.

    According to the South Florida Sun Sentinel:

    An investigation found Felisma worked with a man, identified in documents as K.J., who went around looking for people driving high-end cars, court documents show. K.J. gave Felisma the vehicle’s license plate, make and model on a piece of paper, according to the documents.

    Felisma allegedly used his Palm Beach sheriff’s laptop to put that information into a law enforcement database to get a driver’s name, Social Security number and other personal information. He would then give it back to the man, according to court documents.

    K.J. created credit cards and bank accounts using that stolen personal information, investigators said. Information from more than a dozen people was used to steal about $197,000 from them, according to the documents.

    Investigators also found more than 200 text messages between the deputy and the other man from January 2013 to September 2014, with many of the messages confirming meeting locations, authorities said.

    Confronted Wednesday with the allegations against him, the deputy “gave about four hours of statements” to investigators, a prosecutor said.

    Felisma is believed to be a flight risk because he was born in Haiti and frequently travels there to visit friends and family, including his mother.

    In fact, last year he posted a photo on his Facebook page, showing him in full uniform posing with the police chief of Haiti.

    Felisma, who is currently on paid administrative leave, will remain incarcerated until at least Wednesday, when he will attend another hearing.

    Felisma, who joined the department in 2009, was charged with aggravated identity theft, access device fraud, access of a protected computer for furtherance of fraud, and conspiracy to commit identity theft.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/22/award-winning-florida-deputy-arrested-identity-theft/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2016, 01:49:27 AM
    These violent sadistic goons should be sent to the electric chair.

    Police Taser 91yo Alzheimer’s Patient for Not Going to the Doctor

    “…the State is a soulless machine, it can never be weaned from violence to which it owes its very existence.” — Mahatma Gandhi

    Minneapolis, KS — A hard to watch video of police tasering a 91-year-old man has just been released showing the nature of Gandhi’s quote above. For refusing to go to a doctor visit, an elderly Alzheimer’s patient was tasered and handcuffed — because police were worried about his well-being.

    The incident happened in March, however, the body camera footage was not released until Thursday. In the video, we see an undersheriff with the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Office deploy his taser on a 91-year-old man with Alzheimer’s at a Minneapolis nursing home because the man wouldn’t get in a car to go to the doctor.

    To get this man to a doctor for his health, police assaulted him, placed him in handcuffs, and he had to be carried out on a stretcher. This is why cops are not doctors.
    When the incident happened in March, police attempted to mislead the public claiming that the 91-year-old Alzheimer’s patient became violent with officers — so the taser was necessary. However, in the video below, we can clearly see that this is not the case.

    What the video does show is a stubborn elderly man who simply does not want to go the doctor. Instead of simply waiting him out, or letting him go to sleep, or employing any of the endless possibilities of non-violent solutions, cops waited only minutes before resulting to violence.

    In the video, the man’s only ‘violence’ was when he swatted at the officer hands as they attempt to grab him. When he gets up and tries to walk away, the hero cop deployed a taser to his back, immediately rendering him incapacitated.

    “It’s easy for us as citizens to sit back and watch that and be taken aback by that. It’s difficult to watch,” Joe Schillaci, a former law enforcement officer explained to KWCH before making an appalling attempt to justify such despicable actions against a 91-year-old man.

    When trying to justify the use of a taser, Schillaci noted that if the cops would have been more physical in their confrontation, the elderly man could have caused a more serious injury.
    “…It most definitely with his age, would have caused some pretty good injury,” Schillaci says. “They deploy a taser and incapacitate him immediately.”

    However, according to the man’s family, the use of a taser led to their beloved grandfather’s death just a short time later.

    According to KWCH, the 91-year-old man’s family say the handcuffs broke his wrist and they believe this incident weakened his heart and led to his death two months later.


    The Ottawa County Sheriff, according to KWCH, is out of the office this week and told us he was unavailable to speak on camera. He said he thinks the investigation is complete, but needs to check his reports.

    What this case illustrates is the misguided training police are receiving in modern day America. When your only tool is a hammer, everything, including 91-year-old Alzheimer’s patients, start to look like nails.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/alzheimers-patient-tasered-by-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2016, 01:00:31 PM
    UFC Fighter-Turned-Cop Fired For Reporting Fellow Cop for Rape

    UFC fighter turned police officer Sean Gannon has been fired and was asked to turn in his gun and badge after he blew the whistle on a dirty cop and turned him in to the FBI.
    Gannon conducted an AMA (Ask Me Anything) on Reddit recently, where he stated,

    “Hello, I’m UFC Vet Sean Gannon, the only guy to ever defeat Kimbo (RIP) bareknuckle. AMA. Actually ask me anything for the next 17 hours because after turning in a dirty cop to the FBI, I’ve been ordered to turn in my badge and gun at 7:00pm, and I’ll likely be ordered to not discuss my case further.”

    Gannon then linked to a page on mixmartialarts.com where the situation was already explained more in depth.

    Gannon says that Sgt. Detective Trent Holland was assigned to a gruesome murder case that took place in Boston, and instead of doing his job, he framed innocent black teens and fabricated evidence. Gannon also says that Holland is guilty of at least one case of sexual assault and that the department helped him cover it up. He had reportedly taken evidence of both of these transgressions to the FBI, and was quickly suspended and then fired as a result.

    Speaking in an interview with the site, Gannon said that “He was an epic piece of s***. If those words aren’t appropriate for him, they don’t belong in the English language. I’ll take my suspension and wear it as a badge of honor. Besides, after the things he’s done, and the things they covered up for him….they haven’t got the STONES to try and suspend me for that.

    He f***ed everything up. Instead of finding the bad guy, he invented one. He took three innocent black kids and threatened them with bogus 20-year cases if they didn’t help him fabricate a phony warrant for his fake murder suspect. Trent Holland was a little man, small in stature and spirit. He had a Napoleonic complex, and desperately wanted to be on even footing with better men than himself. To do this, he didn’t care what innocent lives he trampled, as long as he got his face on camera.”

    Coincidentally, it was Holland’s desire to get his face on camera that resulted in an old rape accusation surfacing.

    “He just had to get his face on camera. He just couldn’t get enough. And one day, a young woman watching TV said ‘That’s him! That’s the man that raped me!’ he had skated all those years, but finally his lust for the camera did him in. It was a cold case, 14 years ago, and she lived in Cape Cod, she would have never seen him again if he didn’t have to be on camera all the time. One of his detectives once said, ‘He was a Lieutenant Detective,’ all he had to do was stay in the office and make sure his men had the resources they needed to do the job. But he just couldn’t do that. There is one piece of DNA that doesn’t go away. She couldn’t give up the baby.”

    Gannon went on to say that since the girl was a child at the time, there is absolutely no way that the sexual encounter could have been consensual. He also said that the police department intentionally drug their feet on the investigation so the statute of limitations would pass.

    “They let him retire! With his pension! They let him retire without having to register as a Sex Offender, so nobody was ever warned there was a predator among their children! The media dropped the ball too, the only thing you’ll find on it is that one small article in that local paper in that link I sent you. Who knows how many children he has victimized since then? Last I heard, he was working as a Driver’s Ed instructor! What could possibly go wrong? How could their parents not be warned? That’s why I had to speak out. And by the way, those scumbags that did the cover up are the same scumbags that did Sean so I did it out of loyalty too,” Gannon said.

    The rest of the interview was extremely insightful, showing first hand the experience of a whistleblower cop. He even suggested that “the sociopaths are in charge.”
    “They promoted him! Lt. Detective Trent Holland. He had proven that not only would he do it, but that he also had what it took to get away with it. To the sociopaths in charge, that’s all that matters,” Gannon explained.

    He added, “If you get dangerous drug dealers off the streets, he’ll target soft non-violent pot dealers until he’s a hero and you’re the loser. In fact, you’re more than a loser, you’re one of the “bad cops” because you’re targeting the violent offenders and fights are frequent – they don’t like cops and don’t want to go back to jail. He’s targeting harmless college kids who won’t fight back, so his stats are pristine. You’re the one that looks like the violent a**hole that get’s targeted for “torment and termination” by their statisticians. Heck, the sociopaths are so slick at it, they’ve even convinced people that a MENSA member/UFC vet isn’t qualified to be a street cop. I guess I’m in pretty good company though, we actually had an ex-Navy SEAL turned away from our SWAT Team as underqualified. The current regime seems to hate veterans, hate martial artists, hate everyone that’s capable of taking care of business when things go South. The guys that actually care about the Mission, about helping people, and being physically prepared to do it are seriously handicapped against those that only care about how they look and getting ahead.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/ufc-fighter-turned-cop-fired-corrupt-rapist-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 24, 2016, 01:09:42 AM
    When will those violent armed intruders be sent to prison?

    NYPD Cops Raid Wrong Home, Posting Photo of Handcuffed Family to Snapchat

    New York City cops raided a family’s home in Brooklyn at the break of dawn Thursday, handcuffing every family member while searching the apartment unit for three hours before realizing they had the wrong home and leaving.

    Next thing the family knew, a photo showing them handcuffed while sitting on the couch appeared on Snapchat with the caption, “Merry Christmas it’s NYPD!”.

    Another photo also appeared on Snapchat with the caption “Warrant sweeps Its still a party smh.”

    Now internal affairs is investigating, but have refused to release the names of the officers involved.

    According to ABC 7, which interviewed the family:

    “The worst part was the Snapchats,” Kimberly Santiago said. “That’s what really got to me.”

    “The things that he wrote, it’s like, this what you all do?” Santiago said. “If he did that to, picture how many other families he’s done that to. And he was the only one standing there watching us.”

    “Ya’ll know that when you came to this house, looking for the wrong person that we don’t even know,” she said.

    “We thought he was texting on his phone,” she said. “Because the whole three hours we were sitting here, he was the one standing there. We saw him on his phone, but we didn’t think an officer would do that.”

    The photos appeared in the New York Story feed on Snapchat, which is a smartphone app where photos last 24 hours and receives more than a billion views a year, according to Wikipedia, which describes the app as focusing “on the ephemeral nature of fleeting encounters.”

    In 2013, Gizmodo reported that Snapchat regularly hands over unopened messages to police to assist them in investigations.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/23/nypd-cops-raid-wrong-home-posting-photo-of-handcuffed-family-to-snapchat/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 24, 2016, 01:54:39 PM
    While they try to limit the quantity and type of firearms law abiding citizens can possess, these people who are supposedly "highly trained" in firearm usage and have access to firearms citizens can't possess, exhibit lethal irresponsibility.

    Ohio Cop Not Charged After 2-Year-Old Son Fatally Shoots Himself in Head With Department-Issued Gun

    An Ohio cop has not been charged with a crime after his two-year-old son somehow got a hold of his department-issued gun and fatally shot himself in the head Thursday morning.

    Cleveland police have identified the cop as Jose “Tony” Pedro, a 54-year-old cop on the force since 1993, but have not stated how the shooting occurred.

    They are calling it an “accidental shooting” instead of an act of negligence by having left the gun within reach of the toddler.

    In October, a judge sentenced Cleveland resident Ricardo Sims, 27, to two-and-half years in prison after he left a gun in his son’s reach by hiding it underneath the couch where his girlfriend’s three-year-old son was able to grab it to shoot and kill his one-year-old brother, Braylon Robinson.

    Sims and his girlfriend Shanee Robinson were both charged with involuntary manslaughter, endangering children, reckless homicide and receiving stolen property.

    In that case, after Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams went to the home where Braylon was shot, he promised to hold Sims and Robinson accountable for the boy’s death.

    “It’s a sad day for Cleveland. A 1-year-old child lost his life,” Chief Williams told reporters outside of the home during a press conference where he described the gun at Robinson’s home as “untended” and stating charges would likely be brought against the couple.

    Chief Williams blasted gun culture during the press conference.

    “This is a senseless loss of life for this city again, and it’s directly related to guns,” Williams told reporters. “We need to really take a hard look at the things we’re doing out there on the state, local and the national level to get some of these guns out of our communities, because nothing good ever happens.”

    In a separate incident during the same month, a six-month-old girl was fatally shot in the chest from an apartment building as her mother was driving in the car with two other people.

    Chief Williams broke down in tears as he spoke out about the shooting and said enough was enough, according to Fox8.com.

    “We will stay on this as long as it takes. We want bodies in jail tonight for this crime.”

    In Thursday’s shooting, the toddler’s mother was home with the boy’s older brother, although it’s not clear where they were located inside the home or how the boy was able to get his hands on his dad’s pistol or why the mother did not call paramedics.

    Officers and emergency personnel responded to the boy’s home after his older brother alerted Sonya Hobbs, a neighbor, to call police.
    Hobbs called 911 after seeing the aftermath of the horrific scene, but did not witness the shooting.

    “I was leaving out my back door and I heard somebody saying somebody call the police. He was hollering ‘Call 911, my brother just shot himself.’ He was just screaming and hollering. I got my phone and called 911.”

    Hobbs, who was described as emotional when she reported the scene to dispatchers, said the child suffered a gunshot wound to the head.

    “When I went in there, I seen that baby. He was only two-years-old. I seen that baby laying on the floor,” Hobbs said.

    The toddler, who locals are calling Dominique, was rushed to a local hospital where doctors performed surgery, but later died.

    Although the department stated an investigation was ongoing, Chief Williams has not made any comments indicating he intends to pursue charges against the cop

    “Unfortunately it took the life of a beautiful two-year-old little boy, but all we can do is pray and support them and be there for them. He’s been a police officer since 1993 a very well respected police officer on the force. It’s fate I guess that’s all we can say,” Carlisha Conner a friend of the cop told Cleveland19.

    Negligence is nothing new when it comes to cops and their department-issued service weapons.

    In May, we reported about San Diego cop Neal “Nick” Browder who was searching the home of a probationer when he “accidentally” fired his gun, sending a bullet through a wall and into a baby’s crib.

    Fortunately, the crib was empty at the time.

    San Diego police placed Browder on a desk job after the incident.

    Last month, we reported about North Carolina cop Misty Michelle Flowers who negligently shot her daughter while showing her department-issued service weapon to friends at her home during a Halloween party, sending a bullet through a wall, striking her 11-year-old daughter in the next room.

    Flowers was fired.

    “I find gross negligence and the disregard for the safety of others was displayed in the incident Saturday night and therefore Officer Flowers was terminated today,” said Sheriff David Carpenter.

    In October, a Fresno police officer in California shot and killed a fellow officer in a negligent discharge while discussing gun safety inside a police building.

    Cleveland police have not indicated whether or not the unnamed cop will be fired or charged with negligence.

    But a reasonable person would say there’s not justifiable reason why a 2-year-old should be able to get a hold of a loaded gun.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 25, 2016, 12:00:59 PM
    Hero Cop Tells the Truth, Holding Police Accountable is Not Anti-Cop, It’s “Anti Bullshit”

    Hero cop Dominick Izzo witnessed such expansive corruption in his department, he shattered the notorious Blue Wall of Silence to blow the whistle, but — like nearly all officers who break ranks attempting to hold bad cops accountable — found himself the subject of false allegations and under suspension for the effort.

    Now — after earning the scorn of Round Lake Park, Illinois, Police Chief George Filenko and other officers stridently loyal to the Thin Blue Line — Izzo has come forward again to set the record straight about alternative media outlets who report on police misconduct.

    Naming The Free Thought Project, Police the Police, End the Drug War, and others in a recent live video on Facebook, Izzo emphatically asserted,
    “They’re not anti-cop. They are anti-bullshit — anti-illegal behavior.”

    Izzo’s followers, comprised primarily of current and former law enforcement officers — some supportive, some more loyal to the badge than the imperative to call out misbehavior lurking behind it — harbor misperceptions about factual reporting on incidents of police misconduct.

    While seemingly countless officers brutalize, shoot, and even kill with reckless indiscretion — and under near impunity, given the paltry rate of conviction for legitimate misconduct — accurate media coverage still comes under fire by cops who’d like to the the Boys In Blue can do no wrong.

    Izzo addresses fellow officers in the video — particularly those willing to step over the Thin Blue Line as he did — imploring them to understand so-called “anti-cop” forums like The Free Thought Project are simply mischaracterized and are supportive of anyone in law enforcement holding wrongdoers accountable.

    Izzo believes accurate reporting on police misconduct and the occupation of law enforcement are not mutually exclusive.

    “This is a chance for us to bridge the gap and show the great cops out there who can’t speak,” he said, referring to good cops unable to come forward for fear of reprisal. “And for those of you cops who are so frustrated, who have been emailing me about your frustrations, guys, I’m doing what I can for ya. I’m going to go to bat for you and I’m going to do what I can, when I can.
    “So, I appreciate your pain; trust me, I know it. I’m living it, and I know it.”

    After publicly condemning the Round Lake Park chief and department — and resisting intimidation and threats that followed — Izzo has become something of a police folk hero across the country, as officers in similar situations and those considering speaking out flooded him with correspondence.

    When a cop like Izzo has the courage to speak out — damn the consequences — the brave act can be contagious, encouraging more to do the same.

    But Izzo — who once earned an award for disarming a knife wielding, would-be attacker without firing a single shot — didn’t stop with truth-telling about alternative media. He addressed egregious law enforcement mishandling of an incident captured on video that went viral this week.

    On Wednesday, a Fort Worth mother called police after her seven-year-old son was allegedly assaulted by a neighbor who claimed the child had littered — but she wound up under arrest, along with two of her daughters, when the cop showed up and blatantly sided with the man who’d supposedly carried out the assault.

    Jacqueline Craig summoned the cops after the neighbor allegedly began choking her son for refusing to pick up a piece of trash he’d allegedly tossed on the ground. While, indeed, littering is wrong, assaulting a child is a violent crime.

    But that didn’t matter to the responding officer.

    In fact, the first words out of the callously indifferent cop’s mouth when he arrived on scene were, “Why don’t you teach your son not to litter?”

    “It doesn’t matter if he did or didn’t. It doesn’t give him the right to put his hands on him,” Craig replies.
    “Why not?” the officer indignantly asks.

    Infuriated at the notion littering is somehow a more abhorrent infraction than an adult choking her son, Craig begins yelling at the cop.

    But the officer, who seemingly never had any intention of investigating the actual possible crime that brought him to the scene, then worsens the situation, telling the mother, “if you keep yelling at me you’re going to piss me off and I’m going to take you to jail.”

    As one of Craig’s daughters tries to de-escalate the rapidly deteriorating situation, all hell abruptly breaks loose — and the cop apparently takes Craig to the ground, places her in cuffs, and eventually does the same with two of her daughters.

    That officer has now been placed on restricted duty while the department performs and investigation — and, as Izzo explains, the cop made one grievous error in handling the call.

    “Look, if you’re a cop — and I’ve done it, we’ve all done it — that famous line, ‘Your mouth is about to get you arrested,’” Izzo explains, “you cannot say that, or any variance of [it].

    “In the video — I don’t care how edited it was, I don’t care how non-edited it was. I don’t care how loud that woman is. I don’t care if she’s black and the other guy’s white and he’s chokin’ her kid out. I don’t care what it is.

    “That cop just lost every leg he wanted to stand on when he said that he’s about to bring her to jail because she’s yelling at him. It is a violation of her free speech. You can not take someone to jail for what they say.”

    As Izzo notes, there exists no legal grounds for arresting anyone for yelling at an officer — and the officer thus wholly violated a constitutionally-protected right by threatening and then arresting her for exactly that. Accordingly, Izzo pleads,

    “Please. Do not defend this cop. I don’t care how righteous his actions may have looked [on] unedited video … The moment he said ‘Your yelling is pissing me off’” and threatened to bring her to jail, he overstepped the line.

    “He’s not a professional,” Izzo says. “He does not deserve to do this job.”

    The whistle-blowing officer concludes his live video with a thank you to alternative media outlets who “support what we do. Because we’re going to bridge the gap between the public we serve and the amazing cops out there who do serve them — who aren’t getting recognized.”

    Such outlets, Izzo reiterates, “are here to help. And we can. We can do this together.”

    (https://s23.postimg.org/xqj23147f/15726426_Copy.jpg)

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-office-anticop-anti-bullsht/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 26, 2016, 12:51:15 PM
    California Man Arrested, Charged with Driving Under the Influence — Of Caffeine

    Solano County, CA — 38-year-old Joseph Schwab has been fighting a DUI for over a year, despite the fact that he was not under the influence of any illegal drugs at the time, he did, however, test positive for caffeine.
    The Guardian reported that Schwab was pulled over last August by an officer who accused him of driving erratically.

    Schwab was driving home from work when he was pulled over by an agent from the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, who was driving an unmarked vehicle. The agent said Schwab had cut her off and was driving erratically. The officer claims that Schwab cut her off and she gave him a breathalyzer which showed a blood alcohol content of 0.00%.

    Unfortunately, the officer was still not convinced. So, she arrested him and took him to jail so his blood could be drawn for other drugs. His blood tests came back negative for all illegal drugs. But he did test positive for caffeine. For some reason, this was enough to charge Schwab with a DUI.


    “I’ve never seen this before; I’ve never even heard of it.” Stacey Barrett, Schwab’s attorney said.

    “I have not been provided with any evidence to support a theory of prosecution for a substance other than caffeine at this time. Nor I have received any statements, reports, etc documenting any ongoing investigation since the [toxicology report] dated 18 November 2015,” she added.

    “No one believed me that I only had caffeine in my system until I showed them the lab results. I want the charges to be dismissed and my name to be cleared,” Schwab said.
    The California legal code specifies that a “drug” is any substance other than alcohol that could impair a person’s driving, but there is no precedent for caffeine negatively affecting a person’s ability to drive. In fact, it is quite the opposite as caffeine is marketed in gas stations across the country as increasing alertness while on the roadways.

    Jeffrey Zehnder, a forensic toxicologist interview by the Guardian, believes that the case against Schwab is extremely weak.
    “It’s really stupid, If that’s the case, then they better come and arrest me,” Zehnder joked, adding that, “There are no studies that demonstrate that driving is impaired by caffeine, and they don’t do the studies, because no one cares about caffeine.”

    What this case illustrates is the arbitrary nature of the state to use any reason possible to find a person guilty. The police state has claimed a right to search your most private property — your own blood. And, whatever they find inside it — can and will be used against you in a court of law.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-arrested-dui-charges-driving-under-influence-caffeine/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 27, 2016, 12:00:46 PM
    The criminal gang was quick to not only welcome him back to its ranks but also promote him.
    Why are such violent and dangerous abusers not punished adequately? Meanwhile the public keeps sleeping, muttering about the fictional "war on cops".

    Cop Admits to Throwing 4yo Child Against the Wall, Causing Serious Injury, Gets Slap on the Wrist

    Farmington, MO — In February of 2015, Leadwood Police Officer Jay R. Bellis, 38, picked up a 4-year-old child and smashed him into a wall causing him to crack his head on a kitchen cabinet. Only because a 3-year-old child witnessed the incident and reported it, did his fellow cops ever find out. Once they questioned him about the abuse, Bellis admitted to it and was charged with felony child abuse.

    Last week, Bellis was sentenced for admitting to the abuse. However, likely due to the fact that he was a police officer, he will not be required to serve his 7-year sentence — nor the 1-year minimum required for the Class C felony, to which he admitted.

    In October, Bellis pleaded guilty to endangering the welfare of a child in the first degree, a Class C felony. Circuit Court Judge Wendy Horn then sentenced him to serve seven years in the Missouri State Department of Corrections. However, Horn then suspended execution of the sentence and placed Bellis on probation for five years.

    Instead of the seven years he should be serving in prison for beating up a small child, Bellis was ordered to serve what is known as ‘Shock Time’ in the St. Francois County Jail and complete anger management.
    Shock time, according to Missouri law is a special program with a drastically reduced sentence for first-time offenders. The ‘shock’ is to put the person in jail for a minimum of 120 days to show them a glimpse of the potential consequences of their actions.

    However, showing the nature of blue privilege, Bellis won’t have to do the entire 120 days — only 60.

    This sentence should come as no surprise given the fact that after Bellis admitted to the felony, he was given a promotion within his department.


    Bellis was working for the Leadwood Police Department from 2011 until 2014.  The admitted child abuser then moved from the Leadwood PD to St. Francois County Sheriff’s Department, where he worked from March of 2014 to February 25 of 2015. He left the department one day after the abuse.  It is currently unclear why he left, if he was terminated, or if it was his choice.

    However, on March 12, Bellis returned to the Leadwood Police Department and despite his history of assaulting 4-year-olds, he was promoted to Sergeant shortly after his arrival.

    This cop admitted to throwing a 4-year-old boy against a wall so hard that he bounced off and smashed his head on a kitchen cabinet. He also admitted to pulling a 4-year-old’s ear so hard that it bled. He was charged and admitted to the “Class C” felony because it resulted in “serious emotional or physical injury” to the child. And, because of his blue privilege, he will not even face the 1-year required minimum sentence for his crime.

    Meanwhile, there are likely dozens of non-child-abusing fathers rotting in prison because Bellis arrested them for possessing cannabis. And politicians and the American public at large, have the audacity to refer to this process as ‘justice system.’

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-child-abuse-slap-wrist/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 28, 2016, 11:21:16 AM
    It's time to utilize the RICO act and finally starting prosecuting these criminal organizations for what they really are.

    Latest Police Extortion Racket — ‘Booking Fees’ for Arrests — Even When You Are INNOCENT

    As if getting arrested and taken to jail isn’t painful enough, residents in Ramsey County, MN are forced to pay “booking fees” whether or not they’re eventually found guilty of the crime for which they’re charged. One example of the latest, and some have said “outrageous,” revenue streams comes from the case involving Ramsey resident Corey Stratham.

    Arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, Stratham had in his possession a total of $46 dollars in cash. Released two days later, after having the charges dismissed, he attempted to reclaim his possessions, only to learn the jail had charged him $25 for “booking fees.” In place of the cash, which the cops took from him upon his arrest, the authorities returned to him a gift card for $21 — the remainder after the booking fees were withheld. Worse yet, the gift card came with a myriad of fees which made getting the $21 quite impossible.

    First, there was the $7.25 to withdraw the funds from an ATM, then there was the $1.50 maintenance fee per week, and a per occurrence of $2.50 to withdraw the funds at an ATM where Stratham didn’t have an account. All of which made it nearly impossible to get the $21 cash in hand. Stratham sued the county.

    According to the New York Times, the nation’s highest court is considering weighing in on the egregious practice of what some are calling government sponsored extortion, which all too often hits the poor the hardest.
    “The Supreme Court will soon consider whether to hear Mr. Statham’s challenge to Ramsey County’s fund-raising efforts, which are part of a national trend to extract fees and fines from people who find themselves enmeshed in the criminal justice system,” write the Times.

    And the extortive practices aren’t limited to small counties in MN either. In Kentucky, citizens are forced to pay for the time they spend in jail. In Colorado, after assets have been confiscated, citizens are required to file a separate lawsuit in order to reclaim their funds, even after they’ve been found not guilty. The major problem with filing a lawsuit in CO is that if you lose your court case, you’re then required by CO law to pay the court costs of the defendants.

    The Times reported Stratham’s case was, “argued last year before the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in St. Paul, a lawyer for the county acknowledged that its process was in tension with the presumption of innocence.” Oh yeah! There’s that famously quoted legal expression which appears to be largely overlooked in 21st century policing in the U.S. The idea of the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law seems to be overlooked as police departments seek to implement, develop and expand an ever-increasing source of revenue streams.

    As police departments seek to make up for budget shortfalls, instead of focusing on catching criminals, a conflict of interests arises. Just last year, a Justice Department report found the Ferguson, MO police department, along with the courts, worked to enforce the municipality’s penal code to supplement up to 30 percent of the police department’s budget.

    The report concluded, “Ferguson’s law enforcement practices are shaped by the City’s focus on revenue rather than by public safety needs. This emphasis on revenue has compromised the institutional character of Ferguson’s police department, contributing to a pattern of unconstitutional policing, and has also shaped its municipal court, leading to procedures that raise due process concerns and inflict unnecessary harm on members of the Ferguson community.”

    As The Free Thought Project has reported, many police officers are uncomfortable with their roles in generating revenue for their departments, instead of focusing on what led them into law enforcement in the first place; fighting crime. Left unchecked, the new sources of revenue streams can be as controversial a subject as unlawful arrests. Already, police departments are heavily involved with asset forfeiture, using speed cameras, and “tossing” cars while looking for crimes with which to charge people.

    One source even claims police are looking at an ever-expanding list of ways to charge people for their services. Here’s a list of the possible revenue streams police departments are encouraged to explore:

    1.fees for sex offenders registering in your jurisdiction

    2.tow companies and/or impound lots that are owned and operated by cities

    3.fine increases of 50 percent; substantially more fine increases for DUI offenses

    4.imposing a fine for repeat false burglary alarms, as done by Meridian township, Michigan (some communities, such as Fremont, California, have stopped responding to alarms altogether, citing a high false alarm rate)

    5. service fees for: jumpstart and vehicle lockout services; ride-a-longs for the public; fingerprinting for employment purposes; checking vacation houses when the owners are away (a truly ambitious police department could start its own in-house  security service that includes home checks and security for private businesses); security and clean-up for various special events, such as fireworks and marches; note, however, that you may open yourself up to challenges from residents who have limited tolerance for fees imposed for police services that are either “too high” or that some may claim are already paid for from taxes;

    6. designated business to clean biological material from serious crime scenes

    7.allowing advertising on agency website and/or squad cars or otherwise allowing agency name for advertising purposes (this is an idea that has been floated from time to time since earlier this decade in some communities)

    8. charging a resident fee similar to a utility franchise tax (a quarterly, stand-alone bill for law enforcement services)

    9. charging fees to non-residents who wreck in another town

    10. taxes/fees on all alcohol or ammunition sold in the city

    11. fee for public to use police firing range during certain hours

    12. public safety fee for all new developments in the city

    13. offering firearm safety classes to the public for a fee

    14. pay-per-call policing/charging a fee for each 911 call – though this may be possible only in unique situations as it may be particularly difficult to find public support for this option

    When police departments cease being a law enforcement agency, and begin to transform themselves into a business, which generates revenue, an interesting phenomenon occurs. The agents of the agency, the police officers themselves, become incentivized to generate more income for their employer, rather than do their jobs as crime fighters.

    As the Rand Corporation explains it, the practice of revenue generation by local government agents is rife with conflicts of interest. “But, the devil is always in the details. Having these assets go (in whole or in part) into the budget of the department that collected them creates an incentive for them to do more—to pursue more resources,” Rand writes.

    “If a department starts to plan on having seized resources available—and to rely on them—or if officers start getting rewarded for how much revenue they bring in, the concern becomes whether law enforcement action will become driven more by the goal of revenue and less by the goal of public safety,” the corporation concluded.

    As for Stratham, the county’s attorney Jason M Hiveley stated, “There is some legwork involved,” but he can get his money back. The county’s legal counsel continued, “They can do it as soon as they have the evidence that they haven’t been found guilty.”

    But the question still remains. If the case is dismissed, or if the courts rule someone is not guilty, why doesn’t the county feel compelled to return the money without forcing the exonerated individual to file any paperwork at all or requiring said individual to once again prove their innocence? The answer may simply be that the county wants to hold on to it.

    Stratham’s attorney Michael A. Carvin reportedly wrote in the Supreme Court brief he filed, “Revenue-starved local governments are increasingly turning toward fees like Ramsey County’s in order to bridge their budgetary gaps,” adding, “But the unilateral decision of a single police officer cannot possibly justify summarily confiscating money.” He said, “Providing a profit motive to make arrests…gives officers an incentive to make improper arrests.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/booking-fees-latest-example-extortion-police-revenue/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 28, 2016, 11:32:41 AM
    Police Shoot Innocent Man in the Back, Leaving Him Paralyzed — Charge HIM with Assault

    Fort Worth, TX — An innocent man was shot in the back by police, arrested, charged with assaulting THEM, is now paralyzed for the rest of his life — and police call this justice.

    After David Collie watched the video of a Fort Worth police officer assault and arrest an innocent mother and her children who called police after her 7-year-old son was choked by a neighbor, he decided to release the video of his encounter with Fort Worth cops.

    “Unfortunately, what we’ve seen from the Fort Worth police officer in that video is not an isolated incident. Many members of our community have been assaulted, handled roughly by Fort Worth police officers,” Collie’s attorney, Nate Washington said. “To be clear, we believe the vast majority of police officers are good and decent people.”

    The terrifying video shows police officers pull up to Collie’s apartment complex, get out of their cruiser, and immediately shoot him in the back. One officer is seen holding a blinding flashlight on Collie while another ‘fears for his life’ and squeezes off a round, severing Collie’s spine.

    Police were looking for two armed men that night, who allegedly robbed someone they met online to purchase an item. However, Collie did not fit the description, notes his attorney.

    According to police, Collie walked away from them and refused their commands to put his hands up. Officers then claim that Collie pulled out a silver box cutter and pointed it at them. Fearing for his life, the Fort Worth police officer shot him in the lower torso, according to the Fort Worth statement.

    The video does not show a box cutter.

    While Washington agrees that there was a box cutter discovered on the scene — over ten feet from where Collie was shot — he says the police account of Collie threatening cops with it, is fictitious. And, the video backs him up.

    When speaking of the video, “I wasn’t there that night. I do know what I saw. I know I never saw this man with a weapon. I never saw this man advance toward the officers. I know I saw him get shot in his back.”

    Collie would spend the next two months chained to a hospital bed fighting for his life after police arrested and charged him with aggravated assault on a public servant. When a grand jury heard his case and watched the video, they refused to indict him.

    Since the shooting, which happened in July, police haven’t released any of the records on a potential investigation of the officers involved and have kept Collie and his attorney in the dark.
    “The process that they ask us to trust is essentially, ‘Let us do what we want to do, we will not be transparent at all, and then we’ll tell you what we concluded,'” Washington said of the police response to an innocent man being paralyzed for the rest of his life after cops wrongly shot him in the back.


    “There are conflicting reports in the different city police reports they have written, they have various different narratives and they’re inconsistent,” Washington said.

    Collie has yet to file a lawsuit against the Fort Worth police department, but Washington noted they are considering one. He also noted that after they released this video, others began to come forward.
    “We’ve gotten calls from attorneys across the city, who said, ‘I have videos as well, I have photographs of what happened to my client,’ and so we’re investigating the culture and the practice of the City of Fort Worth,” Washington said.

    “We want justice for David. We want change,” Washington stated, adding, “but we also want peace and calm from the community after they see this video.”

    For the rest of his life, David Collie will be in a wheelchair. And, he will have to live with the fact that people who claim to ‘protect society’ put him there.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-shoot-innocent-man-back-paralyzed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 29, 2016, 09:54:41 PM
    Once again the cops investigated themselves and found nothing wrong...

    Hundreds of Drug Convictions Overturned After Corrupt Cops Caught Framing Innocent People

    Leroy Gonzalez says that he spent over two years in jail after he was framed by crooked cops and wrongfully convicted of a drug charge. While Gonzalez sat in jail, the officers that arrested him continued their spree of corruption until it eventually caught up with them, resulting in a corruption investigation.

    Unsurprisingly, after being investigated by their own agency, the officers were acquitted and allowed to return to their jobs in July of 2015. However, their luck ran out when one of the officers in question, Officer Jeffrey Walker ended up getting caught in a drug-related robbery. In court, Walker quickly turned on his partners, and admitted that officers Thomas Liciardello, Michael Spicer and Perry Betts regularly planted evidence and framed innocent people.

    When Gonzalez learned that the officers who framed him were under suspicion of corruption, he filed his own lawsuit in relation to his two years spent behind bars.

    In the lawsuit, Gonzalez says that the officers “unlawfully and maliciously planted numerous items of false evidence in [his] vicinity to create the illusion of probable cause [and] justify their grossly illegal police misconduct.”

    The lawsuit goes on to say that the officers participated in “concealment, fraud, and subterfuge to prevent the relevant and truthful facts of [his] arrest from being discovered until August 7, 2015.”

    Gonzalez says that he was sitting alone in his car one night when he was approached by the officers and accused of selling drugs. After searching his vehicle without probable cause or a warrant, the officers found nothing, but according to Gonzalez, they threw him to the ground and handcuffed him anyway, planting evidence in his vehicle to justify taking him in for an arrest.

    After Gonzalez spent two years in jail he filed an appeal and was able to get all of the charges against him dropped. The charges were dropped “due, in large part, to the admissions of police misconduct by former Police Officer Jeffrey Walker and [Pennsylvania’s] own investigation into the matter.”

    In the lawsuit, Gonzalez is seeking compensation for his time spent in jail as well as unspecified damages for the assault and violation of privacy that came from the false arrest and imprisonment.

    In addition to the case of Gonzalez, the revelations about these corrupt officers have prompted the overturn of nearly 450 drug convictions in the city of Philadelphia.
    After the rulings, U.S. District Judge Paul Diamond ordered the officers involved to stay away from the former defendants who have brought lawsuits against them.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/450-drug-convictions-overturned-after-cops-caught-framing-innocent-people/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 29, 2016, 10:02:03 PM
    This is what happens when you have dangerous and ignorant idiots with a badge and a gun who try to assert their "authority" where they are out of bounds. Those cops should have been thrown into the burning house.

    Indiana Police Arrest Fire Chief for Trying to Keep Cop from Escalating House Fire

    Cops and firefighters clashed after responding to a house fire in Indiana Tuesday, resulting in police arresting the fire chief as the house continued to go up in flames.

    Cannelton police say the city’s volunteer fire chief, Christopher Herzog, pushed and shoved one of their officers, which is why they arrested him for felony battery against a police officer.

    But fire fighters say Herzog was only trying to keep Cannelton police officer Ryen Foertsch from breaking a house window, which would have allowed more oxygen to enter the burning home, causing the fire to spread and the house to possibly explode.

    Also, Foertsch – an award-winning officer – was not even in uniform and it was very dark, so the chief may not have even realized he was a cop, according to John C. (Bull) Smith, district chairman of the Indiana Volunteer Firefighter’s Association.

    Foertsch, who was first to arrive on the scene, said he was trying to break the window to clear the room in case anybody was inside.

    But he obviously has not been trained in how to fight fires because that is a big no-no.

    Herzog was bailed out by Cannelton Mayor Mary Snyder, according to the Perry County News:

    Cannelton Police Officer Ryen Foertsch and Perry County Deputy Stephen Poehlein arrived at the scene, and immediately entered the burning residence to make sure nobody was inside. After clearing two rooms of the home, smoke became too overwhelming, forcing the officers from the fire.

    Once outside, Foertsch attempted to break the window of a room that he was unable to clear. Fire Chief Christopher Herzog approached Foertsch, pushed him hard enough to cause him to step back, and began shouting profanities at him, telling him to get off of his fire scene. Foertsch tried explained to Herzog what they were doing in clearing the burning home, at which point Herzog pushed Foertsch again, and again yelled profanities at Foertsch to get off of his scene.

    Both officers conveyed the situation to their superiors. At the request of Cannelton Police Chief Lee Hall, troopers with the Indiana State Police were contacted to investigate the complaint. After investigating, Troopers Jeremy Galloway and Nathaniel Kern arrived at the scene of the fire and placed Herzog, 51, into custody.

    Herzog was lodged in the Perry County Jail but was released in about half an hour after Cannelton Mayor Mary Snyder posted his $1,505 bond.

    Police not only arrested the fire chief, but ordered the rest of the fire crew out of the area, even though the home continued to burn.

    Homeowner Chris Zukeschwerdt could only watch in disbelief, according to Tristate Homepage.

    “I was in shock,” says Chris Zukeschwerdt, whose house was on fire.”When I saw the faces of those firefighters – to see their leader being pulled out of here while he was fighting a fire was just unreal.”

    Zukeschwerdt has spent 40 years as an EMT and says, “I’ve never seen anything like it in my life.”

    Humphery recorded the aftermath on her cell phone. She watched first responders in blue and red butt heads, while a fire burned in the background.

    “They pulled the fire chief out,” Zukeschwerdt said, while the fire was still smoldering. Humphrey saw him arrested and put in handcuffs.

    Neighbors there say police officers then told Cannelton firefighters to pack up. A firefighter can be heard on video telling his crew to pick up the hoses and leave.

    “We’re in charge of this scene now,” Zukeschwerdt says he heard a police officer say, “and a lot of the fire department guys started saying let’s grab out gear and go.”

    Zukeschwerdt says he heard the assistant fire chief tell his firefighters to stay put and “make sure this fire is out.”

    Well, it wasn’t.

    The house caught fire again, and torched the rest of the house.

    Even most cops commenting on the story on the Law Officer Facebook page believe the cop was out of line, saying that even though there are times when they arrive to a house fire before firefighters, they are quick to back off to let them take over once they do arrive.

    Also, the National Incident Management System, which sets national standards for first responders in emergency situations, states that the first fire unit arriving on the scene of a house fire are the ones to take command of the incident.

    Below is a local news report, which includes footage of the arrest and an interview with the homeowner.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/29/indiana-police-arrest-fire-chief-for-trying-to-keep-cop-from-escalating-house-fire/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 29, 2016, 10:16:41 PM
    Disgusting pig must've been in a hurry to get his doughnuts...

    A 1000hp Bugatti Veyron accelerates from 30-60 in about 1.3 seconds. The cop was doing 66 on a 35 mph zone and deployed his siren for 1.5 seconds. It must have been an insanely fast cop car...


    Oregon Cop Appealing Citation for Driving into Doughnut Shop

    An Oregon cop who ran a red light and struck a pedestrian before driving his patrol car into a doughnut shop earlier this year was found to have violated department policy and state law.

    But Bend Police Corporal Robert Emerson is an award-winning officer, which means he only had to pay a $260 fine for a traffic signal violation.

    And he is appealing that, according to KTAU:

    Data from Emerson’s squad car computer show he was traveling 66 mph in a 35 mph zone with lights and sirens on for 1.5 seconds before he T-boned a green 1997 Chevrolet truck.

    Porter said Emerson made a mistake, but he was an otherwise exemplary officer with eight citizen commendations and 10 internal commendations over his 13-year career. Porter said this is Emerson’s only violation.

    Emerson declined to comment. He was convicted of his traffic signal violation and has since filed an appeal of the decision.

    The incident took place on March 5, one hour into his shift, as he was trying to stop a suspected stolen car by speeding past the car to deploy spike strips.

    But he ended up T-boning the Chevy truck, which sent his patrol SUV skidding across the intersection, striking a pedestrian before crashing into the Dough Nut shop.

    Luckily, no employees or customers were injured and the pedestrian he struck suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

    “In his zeal to apprehend suspects he could have been more alert to his situation,” Porter said. “His intent was to try and arrest felons, not to try and better a personal agenda.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/29/oregon-cop-appealing-citation-for-driving-into-doughnut-shop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Yamcha on December 30, 2016, 03:02:00 AM
    The same organization that takes kids away from parents and can destroy lives.

    North Carolina Foster Child Sues CPS Supervisor who Adopted Him, Only to Abuse Him

    A North Carolina foster child, who was discovered by a sheriff’s deputy cuffed to a front porch with a dead chicken tied around his neck, filed a lawsuit last month against the Child Protective Services worker who adopted him, only for her and her boyfriend to spend several years abusing him.

    “A lot of times I would bleed. Sometimes they wouldn’t clean it up. Sometimes, they didn’t care, they just left it bleeding,” the boy revealed in an interview with the Huffington Post, adding that his former foster parents never called for medical help despite enduring severe injuries like a broken wrist while attempting to escape the chains of the abusive home.

    Wanda Sue Larson was a Gaston County Social Services CPS Supervisor when she adopted the boy at the age of four in 2006. The boy, now 14, is referred to as “J.G.” in the lawsuit, which can be read the embed below.

    Larson’s boyfriend, Dorian Lee Harper, reportedly tied the dead bird around J.G.’s neck after he killed it at the 5-acre farm where they lived. J.G.’s lawsuit claims Larson never intervened and allowed it to happen.

    Investigators say Larson submitted false statements in order to manipulate the “process and substance” of the legal hearing determining J.G.’s custody, manipulating the juvenile courts into removing the child from his biological mother, Maria Harris, by deceiving the juvenile court judge overseeing the case.

    Harris regained custody of her son in 2015 after the information about Larson came to light.


    In 2006, Larson had used her position as a department supervisor to manipulate the courts to terminate Harris’ parental rights. She also required subordinates to conduct post-removal assessments to qualify the child’s status for funding as well her qualifications so she could adopt him.


    North Carolina pays foster parents at least $432 a month for each child, which increases with disabilities. Larson had five foster children in her custody.

    The end of J.G.’s abuse finally began in 2013 when Union County Sheriff Deputy Robert Rucker responded to a call about a hog that escaped a farm and had been running loose through the community.

    While searching for the hog running amok, Rucker approached Larson’s farm house where he found J.G. handcuffed to a railing on the porch. He also discovered the child would be regularly chained to a railroad tie in his room.

    And he discovered J.G., along with four other foster children, were living in “shocking conditions” inside the CPS supervisor’s home where she allowed her boyfriend free reign of abuse against the children.

    A further investigation revealed Harper would also starve “J.G.” and tie his ankle to a railroad tie, cut his face knife as well as burn his face with electric wire.

    Harper remains in prison after he pleaded guilty to being the primary abuser of J.G. and was sentenced to six to 10 years of hard time.

    In 2015, Larson was given time served for 17 months in prison after she pleaded guilty for her role in J.G.’s abuse, so she is no longer incarcerated.

    “I want to do whatever it takes to get her back in jail,” J.G. told WBTV. “Cause she deserves to be in jail for a long, long time.”

    Financial Incentives

    In addition to monetary assistance provided by the federal government for adoptive parents to assist with the costs raising adopted children, local CPS departments across the country receive thousands in federal funding.

    Each CPS department’s budget is based on how many children social workers remove from the custody of their families to place in foster care, which is viewed as a Fourth Amendment violation by most parents who have their children removed.

    The incentives increase significantly for foster parents and departments if a child is determined to have special needs through federal title IV-E adoption assistance.

    Others criticize removal-based incentives saying they corrupt departments by driving their focus towards the bottom line instead of protecting children, resulting in department supervisors driving subordinates initially drawn to the job to protect children to lie about abuse that’s not occurring, removing them from their families to generate money for the department instead.

    Others add the incentives provide no reason for departments to work to keep families together, but rather motivate supervisors to push for removals.

    The annual total of child removals is tallied up to determine the department’s budget for the following year as Orange County CPS Director Michael Riley explains to a civil rights attorney in the video deposition below regarding the case of former Miss California Deanna Fogarty, who had lost her parental rights in 2000 after social workers engaged in a”pervasive pattern of lies and extensive cover-up” to justify removing her daughters.

    Do Social Workers Have A Right to Lie?

    An Orange County jury found social workers Marcie Vreeken and Helen Dwojak were liable for the “unconstitutional removal and continued detention” ajnd warrantless removal of her daughters, who were nine and six at the time, awarding Fogarty $4.8 million for violating her right to parent her children.

    Attorneys for Orange County appealed the jury’s ruling.

    Although they did not contest to the jury’s finding the social workers had lied to remove Fogarty’s two daughters, attorneys argued the decision should be overturned because while the social worker’s deceptive statements to the court might have been ethically wrong, they were not illegal because no prior court ruling had been established against social workers lying to the court in order to remove children.

    They also argued that Vreeken and Dwojak were protected by qualified immunity from liability in federal court unless Fogarty could prove the social workers’ lies violated her Constitutional rights.


    But that argument fell flat with the judges hearing the case, who upheld the jury’s decision, boosting Orange County’s payout to $10.6 million after attorney’s fees for fighting the appeal were added up, which is the most expensive case ever paid by Orange County, according to the Orange County Register.

    “How in the world could a person in the shoes of your clients possibly believe that it was appropriate to use perjury and false evidence?” 9th Circuit of Appeals Judge Stephen Trott asked.

    “How could they possibly not be in notice that you can’t do that?  You mean due process is somehow consistent with a government worker introducing perjured testimony and false evidence? I can’t even believe for a microsecond that a caseworker wouldn’t understand you can’t lie and put in false evidence.”


    The $10.6 awarded in Fogarty-Hardwick also resulted in a steep increase in liability claims cost for Orange County.

    “It was pretty amazing. They succeed in taking a $5 million award and doubling it for us,” Shawn McMillan, the civil rights attorney who represented Fogarty, told the Register.

    “In my view, the taxpayers in Orange County should be pissed. This never should have gone this far.”

    In November, a jury awarded Lina Duval, who is also represented by McMillan, $3.1 million for “malice, oppression, and fraud” for the unwarranted removal of her 15-month old son, who was also taken without a warrant.

    “The law is very clear and the social workers get training on this, you can not seize a child from its parents unless there’s an emergency.”

    According to McMillan, an emergency would be exigent circumstances that pose a significant risk of death or serious bodily harm in the half hour or so it would take social workers to get a warrant from a judge in an abuse case that would warrant seizing a child.

    However, that fact isn’t widely known due to the secret nature of juvenile courts, which are not open to the public to protect the minors in involved.

    “The basic purpose espoused by the legislature, and the courts is protection of the child’s privacy,” McMillan told PINAC during an interview.

    “In the vast majority of the cases I review, secrecy only protects the workers from liability.”

    Marcie Vreeken, one of the two social workers named responsible for committing judicial deception, was promoted to a supervisor position.

    In 2013, Vreeken earned $103,441.48, according to the OC Register.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/12/21/north-carolina-foster-child-sues-cps-supervisor-who-adopted-him-only-to-abuse-him/

    You know, a lot of people in the PizzaGate investigation have come to the conclusion that this is how the pedophiles in govt. get their prey.

    It's really hard to explore this lead though for online sleuths
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 01, 2017, 01:51:14 PM
    Please read the following, it is horrifying. These uniformed criminal goons covered up horrific child abuse (so brutal that the child died) and got away with no criminal charges.

    L.A. sheriff's deputies disciplined after horrific torture death of 8-year-old boy

    The death of 8-year-old Gabriel Fernandez became a grim symbol of the failure of Los Angeles County’s child welfare system, prompting criminal charges against four social workers and far-reaching reforms of how authorities oversee abused and neglected children. Gabriel’s mother and her boyfriend were charged with his murder.

    But far less public scrutiny has been given to the role of L.A. County sheriff’s deputies who investigated Gabriel’s situation in the months before his 2013 death.

    A Times review of grand jury testimony, child welfare records and recently filed court documents shows that deputies visited Gabriel’s home multiple times during the eight months prosecutors say he was being tortured and beaten. But the deputies found no signs of abuse and did not file paperwork that would have led specially trained detectives to do more investigating.

    One deputy went to the boy’s Palmdale home after his teacher said he had been beaten with a belt. Another deputy, responding to a report that Gabriel was suicidal, left the home without examining or interviewing him.

    When a security guard called to report that Gabriel had bruises on his face and what looked like cigarette burns all over his scalp, he was rebuffed by a sheriff’s deputy who screamed that a child being burned was not an emergency, according to court records. Another deputy who eventually went to check on the boy decided that the injuries were caused by a fall from a bicycle.

    The department’s final investigation came a week before Gabriel’s death. A sheriff's deputy tried to find him after school officials reported that he had been absent for a long period and might be a victim of abuse. Gabriel's mother said that her son had moved to Texas, and the deputy soon halted the inquiry. In fact, Gabriel was still in Palmdale, being beaten with a bat, shot with a BB gun, starved, locked in a small box and forced to eat cat feces, according to prosecutors.

    None of the nine deputies involved in Gabriel’s case have been criminally charged, and all still work for the Sheriff’s Department. But prosecutors said in court papers that some were disciplined internally.

    The Sheriff’s Department declined to provide specifics, citing state laws preventing the disclosure of peace officer discipline.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-ln-gabriel-fernandez-sheriffs-deputies-20161222-story.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on January 03, 2017, 02:09:25 PM
    Fuck... what a total failure to hold those people accountable. One officer missing the signs? Plausible. Two? Well, maybe. But when you have multiple people reporting things and multiple officers brushing it off, then something is fucking wrong.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 06, 2017, 10:34:20 AM
    How about the cops paying out of their pockets and spending a few years in prison instead of sending the bill to the taxpayers?

    Florida Cops Keep Innocent Man in Jail for Eight Months, Resulting in $150,000 Settlement

    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Fort-Lauderdale-1000x532.jpg)

    Dmitry Lyubimov, left, was jailed for 8 months because police said he looked like the man on the right, Justin White.

    The Fort Lauderdale police department got it wrong when they arrested the wrong man thinking he was a burglary suspect.

    But the Florida police department still kept him in jail for eight months for the crime he did not commit.

    Dmitry Lyubimov was not released until authorities finally acknowledged that they lacked physical and DNA evidence.

    Now the city has reached a wrongful arrest settlement of $150,000 with the 26-year-old man.

    Lyubimov was minding his own business on the streets of Fort Lauderdale when he was arrested by police in July 2011, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports.

    Police claimed Lyubimov matched the description of the real suspect, Justin White. Both are pictured above with Lyubimov on the left.

    A 911 call was made because White was walking on someone’s property with a gun. Officers Jesus Gonzalez and Felicia Barnwell responded to the scene and tried to stop White, who then fled on a stolen scooter.

    White ditched his scooter, then hopped over a fence, leaving only his hat behind.

    As the officers searched the streets for him, they came across Lyubimov, who was dressed in similar attire, mistaking him for White, and arresting him.

    Lyubimov denied the allegations. And his phone records even showed that he was on the phone with his girlfriend during the police chase.

    But authorities did not buy it.

    “So with cops still chasing me I am dialing my girlfriend and talking to her for 25 min instead of thinking how to escape police,” he wrote while in jail in 2011.

    “It don’t make no sense. I am just frustrated with all this. It all is like a bad dream or [something]. OK, hopefully it will end soon,”

    The scooter that the real suspect had left behind was tested for fingerprints days after the incident, but they did not match Lyubimov’s fingerprints.

    It was not until seven months after Lyubimov’s arrest that a DNA examination on the hat White left behind proved that Lyubimov was not the man who fled from them.

    Lyubimov’s attorney Hugh Koerner had this to say:

    “It’s their self-assuredness and their refusal to believe that they could be wrong that failed them. They have a responsibility not just to apprehend criminals, but to protect the innocent.”

    Lyubimov filed suit swiftly after being released from jail. The $150,000 settlement was reached this week.

    Even Fort Lauderdale Vice Mayor Dean Trantalis weighed in saying, “I think this is a terrible tragedy that was perpetrated on this individual [Dmitry Lyubimov], because of their incomplete investigation and their refusal to recognize basic facts.”

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/01/05/florida-cops-keep-innocent-man-in-jail-for-eight-months-resulting-in-150000-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 06, 2017, 10:39:41 AM
    Autistic Teen, Raided, Strip Searched, & Jailed for Drawing a Superhero with a Flaming Hand in Class

    MANHATTAN (CN) — For more than two years, a New Jersey high school has tried to fend off allegations that it overreacted to the doodle drawn by an autistic student days after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook.
    A new ruling guarantees that federal litigation over the episode will continue into 2017.

    The ordeal began, the Jones family says, at Cedar Creek High School in Egg Harbor City, N.J., on Dec. 14, 2012 – three days after America suffered the second deadliest shooting in modern history at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn.

    With tensions on high alert, Cedar Creek geometry teacher Megan Hallman sent Kevin Jones Jr. to the vice-principal’s office because out of concern over the “spaceman” she saw the 17-year-old drawing.
    Jones’ parents say that their son filled his sketchbook with drawings like these to help him cope with the symptoms of Asperger’s syndrome and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Moreover the school noted this in its individual education plan for Jones as a disabled student.

    After vice-principal Michael McGhee looked through Jones’ sketchbook, however, he called the police. The Jones say McGhee had been alarmed by a different doodle – this one depicting a superhero wearing a glove with a flame coming out of it.

    Jones wound up doing a 17-day stint in juvenile detention that Christmas.

    The family says a bomb squad that rummaged through their home mistook science-project materials for explosive-device components, and that the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office charged Jones with possession of a destruction device and attempting to possess a weapon.

    On his way to the Harborfield Juvenile Detention Center, Jones was strip- and cavity-searched.
    image: http://pixel.watch/qut7

    The family filed suit in 2014 after Jones was acquitted at a criminal trial.

    U.S. District Judge Robert Kugler ruled on Dec. 30 to the school’s representatives and the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office.
    The 22-page unpublished decision does, however, dismiss the New Jersey Department of Education and individual prosecutors from the case.
    Julie Warshaw, an attorney for the Jones family, declined to comment.

    The Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office and a lawyer for the school did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/autistic-teen-raided-strip-searched-jailed-drawing-superhero-flame-hands-class/

    http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/01/13/64455.htm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 08, 2017, 03:49:10 PM
    Shooting an innocent man 14 times? No problem!

    Accountability? Ha!

    Now pay up you filthy plebs, cops won't allow any money to be taken out of their pockets!


    Taxpayers Hit For $4.4mn After Cops Shot Innocent Food Delivery Man 14 Times — Cops NOT Fired

    Philadelphia, PA — (RT) The city of Philadelphia has reached a $4.4 million settlement with a black deliveryman which 2 officers say they mistakenly shot 14 times leaving him with permanent injuries and a seizure disorder.

    The settlement represents the largest in a police shooting incident  in the city’s history, Philly.com reports, citing Philadelphia Law Department records.

    The settlement dates back to an incident in 2014 when then 20-year-old Philippe Holland was working as food delivery man. He had just dropped off a hamburger at a house when he was confronted by two plainclothes police officers.

    During sworn testimony, Hollande said that when he saw the two officers, Mitchell Farrell and Kevin Hanvey approaching him, he thought he was about to get robbed. He got into his car on the passenger side to try and get away when one of the men shined a flashlight into the car while the other held a gun.

    Philly.com say that Farrell and Hanvey were investigating reports of gunshots in the area.

    Spotting the gun, Hollande panicked and attempted to drive away only for the cops to fire 14 bullets into his vehicle, wounding him in the head and chest. Hollande said Farrell and Hanvey never identified themselves as police officers. He has undergone extensive surgery and has been left with a permanent seizure disorder.

    “This settlement will not only compensate an innocent citizen who suffered devastating injuries but also served as a catalyst for significant reforms in the way our communities are policed by plainclothes officers,” Holland’s attorney Tom Kline told NBC 10.

    “We will strive to ensure that tragedies such as this do not happen again in our city,” Philadelphia City Solicitor Sozi Pedro Tulante said in a statement. Following the incident, the City said that plainclothes officers will undergo new training on identifying themselves and showing their badges.

    City prosecutors never filed charges against the two officers who have been on desk duty since the shooting.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/deliveryman-wrongly-shot-cops-settlement/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 08, 2017, 03:51:51 PM
    Man Kidnapped and Caged for Days After Cops Mistake Kitty Litter for Meth

    Houston, TX — Ross LeBeau, of Houston, was recently cleared of drug charges after he was arrested for possession of Methamphetamine. It turns out that LeBeau was actually in possession of kitty litter, not meth. However, this made no difference to the cops who kidnapped and caged him for it.

    Considering that there was nearly a half pound of the substance in his vehicle, the police thought that they had conducted the bust of the century. They even put out a press release with LeBeau’s mugshot to brag about the bust, after two faulty field tests determined that the substance was crystal meth. While LeBeau spent 3 days in jail, the kitty litter was sent to a forensics lab for further testing, and it was ultimately discovered that the substance was not meth.

    “They thought they had the biggest bust in Harris County. This was the bust of the year for them,” LeBeau said.
    “I was wrongly accused. I’m going to do everything in my power to clear my name,” he added.

    Attorney George Reul pointed out that the department’s entire field testing system may be compromised.

    “Ultimately it might be bad testing equipment that they need to re-evaluate,” attorney George Reul said.

    Cases like this are nothing new, in fact, we report on them on a regular basis.

    According to the national litigation and public policy organization, the Innocence Project, at any given time there are an estimated 40,000 to 100,000 innocent people currently locked in cages in U.S. prisons.
    Couple this staggering number with the number of people locked up for non-violent drug possession and the United States looks more like the Gulag of the 1930’s than the Land of the Free.

    But how can so many innocent people be locked up, how does the state present evidence, that it doesn’t have, to get a conviction? Well, the folks at the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the U.S., Marijuana Policy Project, made a short video that explains just how easy it is for police to turn an entirely innocent person into a criminal.

    During the short video below, the researchers demonstrate how easy it is for police to generate a false positive during a field test for drugs.

    The group tests over the counter Tylenol PM in a police test kit for cocaine — the test kit says the Tylenol is cocaine.

    The group also tests the most popular chocolate in the world, Hershey’s chocolate, for marijuana, it also tests positive.

    Perhaps the most disturbing test was when the group put absolutely nothing into the field test kit, and they received a positive result.

    The implications associated with wrongfully accusing and then claiming to have evidence of an individual in possession of an illegal substance are formidable — to say the least. Most people are simply unaware of the fact that police test kits are a crapshoot.

    According to Forensic Resources:
    The director of a lab recognized by the International Association of Chiefs of Police for forensic science excellence has called field drug testing kits “totally useless” due to the possibility of false positives. In laboratory experiments, at least two brands of field testing kits have been shown to produce false positives in tests of Mucinex, chocolate, aspirin, chocolate, and oregano.
    In spite of these recommendations and multiple examples of innocent people being incarcerated for their error, police departments across the country continue to employ the use of these “totally useless” kits.

    On May 8 of this year, Gale Griffin and her husband Wendall Harvey, who’ve been driving trucks together for the last seven years were wrongfully charged with possession of cocaine. They were targeted by incompetent cops who used criminally ineffective drug test kits on a white powdery substance found inside the couple’s truck. The kit identified the substance as cocaine. But it was not cocaine. It was baking soda Griffin used for stomach problems. However, they were caged for months while the reckless cops ignored their pleas of innocence.

    Also this year, Alexander Bernstein of Brooklyn was jailed and had his life ruined after cops mistook soap for cocaine.

    Wenonah resident John Cokos recently settled a lawsuit against the Gloucester County police department for $35,000. The lawsuit comes after an arrest for drug possession because the officer claimed that his crackers were crack rocks.

    In October, college student John Harrington was thrown in prison after police, with one of these field drug test kits, tested sugar, and came up with a false positive for cocaine.
    “Really, I’m really in jail right now for powdered sugar, ” John Harrington thought after it happened.

    We’ve also seen the case in which police mistook Jolly Ranchers for meth and jailed an innocent man. Love Olatunijojo, 25, and an unidentified friend purchased Jolly Ranchers at the It’Sugar candy emporium in Coney Island in June of 2013. Several blocks away, cops stopped and searched the friends and mistook the candies for crystal meth. Olatunijojo was then thrown in jail.

    In August, we reported on the story of a man who was held in prison for over four months because police falsely identified salt as crystal meth.
    And the list goes on…

    What does it say about police departments across the country who knowingly use test kits that will implicate innocent people in a crime that they did not commit that will land them in jail?

    It is bad enough that the state will kidnap, cage and kill people when they possess a substance deemed illegal by the state. But, when they kidnap, cage and kill people because of their own negligence involved in testing someone’s personal items — they stoop to an entirely new low.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-spends-3-days-in-jail-after-cops-mistake-kitty-litter-for-crystal-meth/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on January 08, 2017, 05:35:56 PM
    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Fort-Lauderdale-1000x532.jpg)

    Looks like Justin's GF forgot to tell him she was on her period before he went down on her.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 10, 2017, 11:08:02 AM
    Cop Arrested for Using Police PC to Post ‘Bestiality’ Video Of Himself Raping Small Dog

    Houston, TX — Harris County Sheriff’s deputy Andrew C. Sustaita Jr. is due in court this week to face some truly disturbing charges. The six-year veteran of the Harris County Sheriff’s Office is accused of raping a small dog, taking the video, and then posting the video online with a police department computer. So far, the only crime that Sustaita is charged with is obscenity, a felony. However, it is possible that he will receive more charges after appearing in court.

    Surprisingly, Sustaita was fired immediately after the arrest, so the evidence against him must be substantial. Otherwise, the department would have delayed his termination.

    The Sheriff’s Office High Tech Crime Unit was tipped off that video of a man raping a small dog was posted from a police department account. Eventually, Sustaita was named as the suspect, but the Harris County Sheriff’s Office has refused to release any details or comment further on the case.

    Sheriff Ed Gonzalez had only this to say on behalf of the department:
    “The possession of obscene and illicit material is made even more troubling when a Sheriff’s Office employee is found to be involved. Every resource of this office will be dedicated to protecting the public and holding our employees accountable for wrongdoing.”

    The deputy comes from a law enforcement family, and they say they are waiting for more information. His father says he is devastated to hear this allegation, and that his son is a hard worker and he is reacting like any father would.

    Despite the heinous crime of which he is allegedly responsible, many mainstream media sources felt the need to mention that they interviewed one of his friends who told them that he was “an honorable and committed family man.”

    Would a news source ever consider printing such a thing about a person filming themselves having sex with a dog if the suspect did not work for the government in the capacity of a police officer?

    When cops kill innocent people, local news stations, with the help of police, are quick to dredge up whatever mistakes they’ve made in the past to assassinate that person’s character in an attempt to downplay the killing. The glaring difference is insulting, to say the least.

    Oddly enough, this is not an isolated incident. Robert Melia Jr. was sworn to protect and serve, but a Burlington County jury found he abandoned that oath when he and his former girlfriend filmed themselves repeatedly molesting teenagers. During the investigation, it was discovered that Melia had also filmed himself having sex with multiple cows.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-arrested-bestiality-video-raping-small-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 11, 2017, 01:13:28 AM
    South Florida Deputy Suspended for Leaking Video of Fort Lauderdale Airport Shooting to TMZ

    A Florida deputy was suspended Tuesday for allegedly leaking a video of the man opening fire at Fort Lauderdale airport last week to TMZ, a news site known to pay big money for videos that will go viral.

    Broward County sheriff’s deputy Michael Dingman is believed to have used his cell phone to record an airport security monitor showing shooter Esteban Santiago opening fire inside the airport terminal.

    His own reflection from the airport monitor that ended up on the leaked video is what gave him away.

    According to the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

    Dingman surrendered his badge and patrol car as part of his suspension. He’s alleged to have disclosed or used confidential criminal justice information, according to an internal affairs memo. The memo also alleges Dingman did not use proper discretion and that his conduct was unbecoming of a deputy.

    Officials think someone used a cellphone to tape the footage of shooting suspect Esteban Santiago as he pulled a gun from his waistband at the Terminal 2 baggage carousel and began firing on Friday. Five people died in the ambush and six were wounded.

    FBI and county investigators have been enhancing the video because they were seeing a person’s image reflected in the glass of the security monitor, Broward Mayor Barbara Sharief said.

    The TMZ website is known to pay thousands to sources for videos of high-interest topics.

    Dingman, 46, who has worked for the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for 21 years, works out of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.

    In 2015, he had an annual salary of $72,735, but made $117,280 with overtime and special detail payments.

    He was also reprimanded last year for using a law enforcement database to access the personal information of Florida State Trooper Donna “Jane” Watts in 2011.

    Watts was the trooper who earned the ire of cops throughout the state after having the gall to pull over a speeding Miami police officer in 2011 in an incident recorded on her dash cam.

    Watts ended up suing several agencies, including the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, which paid her a $6,000 settlement.

    The leaked video is included in the news report below. Here is a list of videos and the amount TMZ paid for them compiled by Business Insider.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/01/10/south-florida-deputy-suspended-for-leaking-video-of-fort-lauderdale-airport-shooting-to-tmz/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 12, 2017, 11:37:50 AM
    Some taste of justice: the little pussy fainted when his assets were seized after refusing to pay.. Still was not punished sufficiently. They should've gone after the Sheriff too.

    South Florida Deputy Faints Upon Reading Court Order Seizing Personal Assets After Sheriff Refuses to Pay Settlement to Man Left Paralyzed

    A South Florida deputy who left a man paralyzed after confusing a cell phone for a gun had his personal items seized Saturday, including his car, clothes, television, furniture, golf clubs, fishing rods and computer, after his agency refused to pay the victim $200,000 – a fraction of the $22.4 million a federal jury awarded him last year.

    Federal marshalls seized Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputy Adams Lin under court order after Sheriff Ric Bradshaw refused to pay a dime towards the settlement.

    According to the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

    Lin read the court order, became visibly shaken, and fainted, collapsing to the ground, Scarola said.

    Paramedics were called and when Lin recovered, he sat on a sheriff’s squad car and watched movers load up his belongings and “empty out virtually everything,” Scarola said.

    Left behind: anything obviously belonging to his daughter, Scarola said.

    Among the items taken: his car, couch, coffee tables, end tables, lamps, his collection of Samurai swords, flatscreen TV, iron, ironing board, computer, golf clubs, bicycle, tools, and almost all of his non-Sheriff’s Office clothing, Scarola said.[

    “I don’t think we took any shoes and I don’t think we took any underwear,” Scarola said. But “shirts and pants and shorts are all gone, jackets.”

    “We left behind cups and saucers and dishes,” he said. “There’s nothing of any significant value in those.”

    The shooting took place on September 13, 2013 after Lin spotted 19-year-old Dontrell Stephens riding his bicycle in what he described as a “high-crime area,” which was Stephen’s poverty-stricken neighborhood.

    Lin also said Stephens rode his bike from the left side of a residential street to the right side of the street without using a marked crosswalk, which made him even more suspicious.

    Dash cam video from Lin’s patrol car shows Stephens step off his bicycle with a cell phone in his hand after the deputy pulled up behind him.

    Stephens then steps out of frame for a few seconds, which was when Lin opened fire on him, shooting him four times, claiming he was in fear for his life because the teen was “reaching for his waistband.”

    “There’s nothing in the rules of engagement that says we have to put our lives in jeopardy to wait and find out what this is and get killed,” Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw told reporters the day of the shooting.

    But that was before the video was released, which showed the only person whose life was in jeopardy was Stephens.

    Lin, of course, was cleared of any wrongdoing, and was promoted to sergeant after the shooting. And Stephens, who was then confined to a wheelchair, filed a federal lawsuit.

    In February 2016, a federal jury watched the video and deliberated for three-and-a-half hours before awarding Stephens $22.4 million.

    However, because Florida law places a $200,000 cap on such settlements, the matter needed to go before the legislature before Stephens could be awarded the full amount.

    But because that may never happen, Stephen’s attorneys asked Sheriff Bradshaw to pay $200,000 towards the settlement, but the sheriff refused, filing an appeal.


    A magistrate judge upheld the verdict in May 2016, but the sheriff only vowed to appeal the verdict to a higher court, according to the Palm Beach Post.

    A federal magistrate on Wednesday upheld a $22.4 million verdict against the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office in a 2013 shooting that left a 22-year-old West Palm Beach man paralyzed from the waist down.
    In a 40-page opinion, U.S. Magistrate Barry Seltzer rejected claims by the sheriff’s office that the February verdict was so excessive that it “shocked the conscience of the court.”

    Comparing it to other jury verdicts in cases where people were left paralyzed by the fault of the others, Seltzer found that the amount was reasonable.

    “Stephens lost use of his lower extremities, lost control of his bowel, lost control of his bladder, lost his sexual function and suffers constant and severe pain,” Seltzer wrote. Further, given his young age and his life expectancy, Stephens will have to live in that condition for more than 50 years.

    Quoting a decision in another case, Seltzer wrote: “Put simply, the enormity of the award is matched by the enormity of the plaintiff’s damages.”

    In addition to refusing to award Stephens less money, Seltzer turned down the sheriff’s request for a new trial.

    Because the sheriff did not want to pay Stephens anything, the judge allowed federal marshals to seize his personal belongings to auction them off to help pay for the victim’s medical and living expenses.

    Stephens’ attorney tried to garner the deputy’s wages, but because more than 50 percent of his salary goes towards his daughter, he is exempt from having his salary garnished.




    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/01/11/federal-marshals-seize-florida-deputys-personal-assets-after-sheriff-refuses-to-pay-settlement-for-man-left-paralyzed-in-wrongful-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 12, 2017, 11:07:54 PM
    FL Firefighter Who Answered Door With Gun Cleared Under ‘Stand Your Ground’ Law

    In March of last year, Miami-Dade Fire Captain Nick Marian of Miami Shores, Florida, answered a knock at his door and the ringing of his doorbell. He lives in a rough part of town, and came to the door with a shotgun in hand. Police say they saw him pick up a shotgun from his couch and answer the door.

    Prosecutors contended that he pointed the shotgun at the police officers for “more than a second” and that he knew that it was police officers at his door. His defense was that he had the right to protect himself, his actions were reasonable and prudent, and he had immunity under Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law. Captain Marian’s arguments won the day.

    From nbcmiami.com:

    A judge dropped charges Wednesday against a Miam-Dade Fire captain who was arrested for pointing a gun at a police officer.

    Nicholas Marian, 55, was granted Stand Your Ground immunity in a bizarre encounter with a Miami Shores police officer. Fellow firefighters who had been rallying behind Marian were at the courthouse celebrating the ruling.

    The entire process, from the incident to the judge dismissing the charges took nine months. Prosecutors had charged the fire captain with aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer. The judge ruled otherwise.

    Bringing a gun to the door is prudent in numerous circumstances. It’s difficult to know if someone at your door is a police officer or not. Many criminals facilitate their crimes by yelling “Police!” during home invasions.


    In this case, it only took a few seconds for the fire captain to determine that the people at his door were police officers. When he did, he cooperated.

    The idea that citizens have to disarm themselves because someone at the door might be a police officer is repugnant to the rule of law.

    This incident had a better outcome than the Gabriel Mobley case. Mobley was in the courts for six years before he was finally cleared.  That case went all the way to the Florida Supreme Court before Mobley was finally vindicated in 2014.

    Perhaps the judge hearing the case against Marian referenced the supreme court ruling in favor of Mobley.

    ©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2017/01/dean-weingarten/stand-ground-immunity-firefighter-answered-door-gun-hand/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 13, 2017, 11:15:23 PM
    FL Firefighter Who Answered Door With Gun Cleared Under ‘Stand Your Ground’ Law

    In March of last year, Miami-Dade Fire Captain Nick Marian of Miami Shores, Florida, answered a knock at his door and the ringing of his doorbell. He lives in a rough part of town, and came to the door with a shotgun in hand. Police say they saw him pick up a shotgun from his couch and answer the door.

    Prosecutors contended that he pointed the shotgun at the police officers for “more than a second” and that he knew that it was police officers at his door. His defense was that he had the right to protect himself, his actions were reasonable and prudent, and he had immunity under Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law. Captain Marian’s arguments won the day.

    From nbcmiami.com:

    A judge dropped charges Wednesday against a Miam-Dade Fire captain who was arrested for pointing a gun at a police officer.

    Nicholas Marian, 55, was granted Stand Your Ground immunity in a bizarre encounter with a Miami Shores police officer. Fellow firefighters who had been rallying behind Marian were at the courthouse celebrating the ruling.

    The entire process, from the incident to the judge dismissing the charges took nine months. Prosecutors had charged the fire captain with aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer. The judge ruled otherwise.

    Bringing a gun to the door is prudent in numerous circumstances. It’s difficult to know if someone at your door is a police officer or not. Many criminals facilitate their crimes by yelling “Police!” during home invasions.


    In this case, it only took a few seconds for the fire captain to determine that the people at his door were police officers. When he did, he cooperated.

    The idea that citizens have to disarm themselves because someone at the door might be a police officer is repugnant to the rule of law.

    This incident had a better outcome than the Gabriel Mobley case. Mobley was in the courts for six years before he was finally cleared.  That case went all the way to the Florida Supreme Court before Mobley was finally vindicated in 2014.

    Perhaps the judge hearing the case against Marian referenced the supreme court ruling in favor of Mobley.

    ©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2017/01/dean-weingarten/stand-ground-immunity-firefighter-answered-door-gun-hand/



     ;) Hooray at last a bit of sensible thinking by that judge!!
    Great News.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 14, 2017, 05:09:47 AM
    It seems like violent and dangerous goons can get away with anything these days.

    Video of Cops Beating this Man Was So Bad, All the Officers Were Fired

    Agawam, MA — Three police officers so horrifically beat a man in custody, all of them — a sergeant and two veteran patrolmen — were fired. Now, Police Chief Eric Gillis has released video footage of the brutal attack — and what it shows makes shockingly clear why they lost their jobs.

    On June 19, 2016, David Desjardins, Jr., became too inebriated at a bar in the Six Flags New England amusement park; but when a bartender cut him off, he acted belligerently and began arguing. Park security called the police, MassLive reports, who confronted Desjardins and had to use pepper spray several times before they were able to make the arrest.
    Agawam Police Officers John P. Moccio and Edward B. Connor, and Sergeant Anthony Grasso, then dealt with Desjardins during the booking process, but claimed in reports the man was drunk and unruly — thus their use of force had been justified. Desjardins was charged with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and assault and battery on a police officer.

    “Under the policies and procedures, the use of the force was authorized,” said Attorney John Connor, who represents the officers, reports 22News, “They may disagree with that, but that doesn’t mean that these officer didn’t act in accordance with the policies and their training.”

    However, video shows Desjardins stripped down to his underwear and seemingly — despite the lack of audio recording — only vaguely disruptive and certainly not deserving of the beating he then receives.
    As footage begins, the man sits on a bench in the station and appears to receive a stern talking-to by one officer. Suddenly the officer gestures to another and the pair, along with two others, violently grab Desjardins and force him into a holding cell, containing the typical metal toilet and a concrete slab without any padding.

    Desjardins weakly attempts to wriggle free from one officer’s grip and is then roughly forced down onto the concrete slab with three of the four officers holding him down — as one of them uses a baton to beat his back. When that seems not to satisfy the officer, he takes a step back and — as the other two lie on top of the drunken man, holding him down — begins pummeling Desjardins’ kneecaps and ankles with the baton.

    Video shows the cops clearly have control of the situation and resistance from Desjardins, if any, is both minimal and likely in self-defense.
    As the two officers grip the man’s wrists and head, the third then proceeds to smash the baton against Desjardins’ shins — worse, footage seems to show the tip of the baton being used to jab him in the abdomen or groin.

    In obvious pain from this, Desjardins smacks his foot against the concrete slab.
    When the officers seem to relent to leave the cell, it becomes apparent one had been using two hands to press the man’s face onto the slab — but even as they move to leave, and he slowly sits up, one officer still casually hits him with the baton.

    As Desjardins stands, the verbal altercation continues — but one of the officers then shoves him into the corner of the slab, smashing his head on the concrete and cinder block wall. One officer puts his hands on Desjardins face as if to poke him in the eye or smother him — and though it looks like the beating will begin again, officers cuff his wrists and ankles.

    Fully two minutes elapse from the time Moccio, Connor, and Grasso forced Desjardins into the cell until they finally stopped the brutal assault.
    Chief Gillis has come under fire for his decision to terminate the officers’ employment — but he has no doubt the firings were justified.

    “When I saw the video I was shocked by it,” he told MassLive. “I knew that it was very serious and as the investigation proceeded it became more and more clear to me how serious it really was.
    “As chief of police it’s my job to make sure that our officers conduct themselves appropriately at all times and deal with the people we come into contact with appropriately at all times.”

    Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni informed Gillis recently there would be no charges filed against any of the officers over the barbarous beating.
    Moccio, Connor, and Grasso have all appealed their terminations.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-beating-man-officers-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 15, 2017, 12:11:49 AM
    Funny how the criminal try to justify their crimes by charging people with any bogus crime they can think of. He also conveniently left the job after the investigation started, maybe another gypsy cop.

    Cop Charged With Felony Assault After Breaking into Bedroom, Repeatedly Tasing and Beating Victim

    Sonoma, AZ – A former sheriff’s deputy was jailed and charged with felony assault after using excessive force against a 37-year-old man sitting in his own bed in his home. Scott Thorne, 40, turned himself in after a warrant was issued for his arrest, and was released two hours later on $10,000 bail.

    The charge came after a 3-month investigation by the Sonoma County Sheriff’s office and the District Attorney. The victim, a 37-year-old Marine Corps veteran and former police officer, is still recovering from injuries sustained during the Sept. 24, 2016, incident, where he was beaten with a baton and repeatedly tased.

    A neighbor called 911 after hearing a “heated argument” next door, which prompted a domestic disturbance call to the victim’s house. A woman answered the door, and one cop stayed with her while two others went to the back of the house. The victim was locked in his bedroom and refused to come out.

    “Thorne forced his way into the bedroom where the man lay on the bed. Thorne grabbed the man’s arm when he refused to get up, according to the Sheriff’s Office. The man pulled away, and Thorne shocked him with a stun gun, but it had little effect on the man, who sat up and pulled out the Taser wires, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    Thorne then used his baton and hit the man in the leg, officials said. Thorne and [Officer Beau] Zastrow tried to physically restrain the man on the bed and the third deputy, [Officer Anthony] Diehm, came to the room to assist.

    Thorne swung his baton several times, striking the man in the back after he broke free from his grasp and ran toward the door, officials said. He fell to the ground and a struggle continued. Diehm fired his Taser at the man, and they were able to handcuff him.”

    It’s not clear whether the cops were invited into the home or not, but even though they broke through the bedroom door and violently subdued the man, he was arrested for “threatening an officer, battery and obstructing an officer.” The charges were later dropped when prosecutors reviewed body cam footage. The Sheriff’s Office then reviewed footage and launched an investigation.

    Thorne left the job soon after the investigation started, although “state law prevents the county from saying whether he resigned or was fired.” The two other officers are still on duty and their actions are being reviewed for excessive force and integrity of written reports.

    The victim managed to get some video footage which he gave to the Santa Rosa police and DA investigators. His injuries included bruises, injuries and welts

    “The man is still recovering from injuries sustained when he was beaten and repeatedly shocked with a stun gun, according to [Attorney Izaak] Schwaiger.

    “There’s also the psychological trauma when someone comes into your own home, into your bedroom and commits this kind of violence,” Schwaiger said.”

    The county’s Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach will be reviewing the case when the Sheriff’s Office has completed their review. The case has already led to changes at the department, including the requirement that supervisors “review all incidents when deputies report force was used or a person resisted arrest.”

    Perhaps the victim’s cell phone footage and/or body cam footage will be released in the future, which will show us how bad this beating was that it would change department policy and actually bring the arrest of at least one officer.

    Hopefully the neighbor realizes now that calling the cops can put people in far more danger than the alternatives.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-charged-felony-assault-breaking-bedroom-repeatedly-tasing-beating-victim/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 15, 2017, 01:29:55 AM
    Once again the cops attacked and arrested an innocent man on bogus charges to cover up their crimes. Of course the charges were later dropped by a judge but the cops cleared themselves of any wrongdoing.

    DASHCAM: Cops beat, arrest innocent man after accusing him of stealing his own car

    Evanston, IL — All too often, those who blindly support authority without question will say,  ‘If you don’t want to get beat up by police, don’t break the law.’ However, time after time after time, they are proven wrong — often in the worst way. Lawrence Crosby is the latest proof that not breaking the law is no protection against getting hurt by police as he was beaten and arrested by cops who thought he’d stolen his own car.
    Although this scenario unfolded on October 10, 2015, the infuriating and brutal dashcam video wasn’t released until this week. What it shows is nothing short of incompetence, brutality, and the viciousness of more than a half-dozen of Evanston’s finest.

    Crosby is not a criminal. In fact, he’s an upstanding citizen and accomplished engineering student who was on his way to night school to complete his doctorate at Northwestern University that night. However, in today’s see something, say something society, not even innocent doctoral candidates are safe from police abuse.

    At around 7:00 pm that night, Crosby was working on his car when a woman drove by. Seeing a black man working on his car was enough to trigger this do-gooder into calling the cops and then apparently following him.

    “Hi somebody’s trying to break into, somebody’s trying to break into a car,” the woman told the dispatcher. ”I think the person just got into the car.”

    Not knowing that he’d just been reported for stealing his own car, Crosby began his drive to campus from his apartment. However, as his own private dashcam shows, Crosby quickly noticed something fishy and he began heading to the police station to report the fact that someone, most likely the woman who reported him, was following him.

    However, he did not make it to the station. Cops pulled Crosby over in a church parking lot and all hell broke loose.

    “On the ground… on the ground… down on the ground… down on the ground…turn around,” the cops yelled.

    Confused and afraid, Crosby did not immediately fall to the ground, so almost as soon as cops gave the command, they pounced on him.
    “I’m cooperating…sir, you’re on video… that’s an FYI,” Crosby said to the abusive cops.

    Believing they had a car thief, cops held no punches as the blue gang swarmed the innocent man doling out blow after blow. During the melee, Crosby can be heard telling police that he had only moved and hesitated so he could get in front of his own cameras.

    Crosby, knowing he did absolutely nothing wrong, tells the officers that he is the owner of the car. Within less than a minute after they beat him, cops were entirely aware that Crosby was indeed the owner of the car and they had no reason to stop him. However, they weren’t about to let this stop go to waste.

    Knowing they had no legitimate crime to charge him with, officers began telling Crosby that he resisted and did not cooperate.

    Instead of an apology, Crosby was kidnapped and charged with resisting arrest and disobeying officers.

    “I understand being a police officer is a tough job, but we need them to exercise judgment in their day to day operations. And in this situation, within ten seconds of Mr. Crosby getting out of his car with his hands in the air, he was tackled, he was kneed while he was standing up, then he was punched repeatedly by multiple officers, for allegedly stealing his own car. Our police officers need to be better than that,” Alderman Brian Miller said.

    Luckily for Crosby, after reviewing the video, a judge threw out the charges. However, not one of the cops who savagely beat an innocent man that night has faced any discipline. In fact, Evanston Police found the use of force justified.

    Want to know why there is so much divide in America today between the police and the policed? Watch the video below.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dashcam-cops-stealing-own-car-beating/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2017, 11:37:22 AM
    Good Cop Leaks Video of Bad Cop Shooting Inmate in Chest with Tear Gas — Guess Who’s Facing Jail

    Houston, TX — In May of 2015, Lt. Cody Waller sent a nonviolent inmate to the hospital after firing a tear gas canister at close range, into the center of his chest. Waller will not be fired and faced no charges. However, the Free Thought Project has just learned that the good cop who filmed the abuse and leaked the video of it is facing two to 10 years in prison for blowing the whistle.
    In a clear case of retaliation for exposing violence in his department, Elderick Brass, the officer who filmed the abuse, was indicted late last month and appeared in court last week to face felony charges for “misuse of official information.”
    “You have right and you have wrong, and this is definitely wrong,” Brass told ABC13’s Ted Oberg in August 2015. “This type of behavior is unacceptable. It wasn’t warranted. You clearly see the offenders are not being aggressive; they’re not cursing at staff, they’re not doing any of that.”

    The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) also admitted to ‘several mistakes’ they made that night:

    However, in spite of all those mistakes, the only person being charged with a crime is the one who exposed it.

    In the video taken in 2015, on May 19th, Waller walks up to a group of “largely motionless inmates” and fires the canister, striking an inmate in the chest at close range.
    The searing projectile, slightly larger than a stick of butter, appears to burn a hole in the inmate as it sparks for a few seconds.  He suffered burns and other injuries and was subsequently hospitalized.
    Initially, Waller was placed on probation and still served in the same prison unit at Pam Lynchner State Prison. However, he is now back on full duty.  Incredibly, the TDCJ says that pulling the trigger was not wrong, only that mistakes were made.

    Lt. Waller displays a shocking level of savagery as he fires the canister at head level into the group of standing inmates at close range.  It could have easily struck someone in the face, which would have killed or severely maimed the inmate.

    The incident was prompted by a racial dispute between Hispanic and African-American inmates.  The TDCJ says the latter group threatened to jump the former once the lights were out.  The Hispanics then refused to “rack up” and go to bed as ordered.  They did comply with orders to move away from the door and allowed staffers to walk freely.  They were then cornered by Lt. Waller who shot the tear gas canister.

    What this incident shows is why the proverbial ‘good cop’ is so rare. When good cops do come forward, as in the case of Brass, they are retaliated against.
    Brass’ only ‘crime’ was exposing brutality within his ranks — brutality that the public has every right to know exists. However, instead LT. Waller, the perpetrator of the crimes being charged, it’s the man who documented them.

    In case after bloody case, cops can kill unarmed and even innocent people, on video, and never see the inside of a jail cell — often times even keeping their jobs.
    Sadly, with departments across the nation upholding their reputation of vilifying anyone who dares to cross the thin blue line, it’s no wonder there is such a shortage of police willing to speak out against the atrocities we have been witnessing.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/leaks-video-cop-shooting-tear-gas/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 18, 2017, 11:06:11 AM
    Once again the brave heroes violent criminals still roam the streets, their crimes unpunished.

    Elderly Deaf Man Beaten by Cops for 7 Minutes for Not Responding to Their Yelling

    Oklahoma City, OK — Police officers assaulting or even killing deaf people for being unable to hear their commands is a tragic reality. Pearl Pearson Jr. has learned that reality the hard way. For nearly seven minutes, Pearson, 64-years-old at the time and diabetic was beaten and arrested by police officers as they yelled at him to stop resisting.

    Oklahoma Highway Patrol officers, Eric Foster and Kelton Hayes were the two officers that were involved in what an affidavit claims was a 7-minute altercation.

    When the original incident happened on January 3, 2014, police refused to release the video. However, weeks later, after the media frenzy died down, police quietly released the dashcam. The disturbing video shows troopers yelling at Pearson and drag him from the vehicle.

    He was dragged from the vehicle in spite of the fact that he did everything he was supposed to as a deaf driver, according to his family.
    According to Pearson’s family, Pearl pulled over and rolled down his window expecting an officer to ask for this identification. An officer struck him in the face before Pearl had the chance to do anything.
    The photos of his swollen and bruised face clearly show the result of the police action.

    After Pearson was beaten by police, he was arrested and charged with resisting arrest. He was thrown in jail, and, according to his family, an interpreter was never provided while Pearl was under the care of law enforcement — not during the booking, hospital, or time at the jail was an interpreter provided — even though Pearl requested one.

    Pearson was sitting in a jail cell, battered and bruised, and had no idea ‘why.’

    Pearson has no criminal record, and in fact is a father to a police officer, his son-in-law is also a cop. In 2015, Pearson was given an award for his amazing service to the community for working with people with disabilities.

    Finally, after 3 years of holding it over his head, the District Attorney’s office decided to drop the charges. However, they dropped the charges, not because they thought the cops were in the wrong, and not because they thought Pearson was innocent. In fact, neither of the cops involved in beating a deaf man for being unable to understand them has faced any discipline at all. The sole reason the case was dropped was because the trial cost was too high.

    Pearson, who learned sign language during segregation, learned a different way of communicating other than the traditional American Sign Language (ASL). He needs a translator for court officials to understand him. Because the cost of translators was so high, the DA decided to toss the case out.

    The DA announced this week, that Pearson would no longer face the charges.

    “It is the District Attorney’s responsibility to be a good steward of the taxpayer’s money,” District Attorney David Prater wrote. “Though it is important to prosecute matters to promote public safety and assure that the State of Oklahoma’s laws are enforced, the financial burden placed on the State to prosecute a matter is a legitimate consideration; especially as in this case, the matter is a misdemeanor.”

    Below is the video of this glaring incompetence.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/elderly-deaf-man-beaten-charges-dropped/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 18, 2017, 11:17:08 AM
    He kept evidence from a murder case in a storage unit? Maybe he was involved in that murder?

    Cop’s Unpaid Storage Unit Auctioned Off — Full of Evidence from Unsolved Child Murder

    When child prodigy Candace Hiltz was found murdered in her home on August 15th, 2006, her family immediately called the Fremont County Sherriff’s Office. When investigators arrived, they conducted what the family believed was a shoddy investigation, leaving key pieces of evidence behind. Police, however, believed they’d identified their prime suspect, Candace’s brother James. James was mentally ill, lived in the woods by himself, and often came to the house for food.

    But Delores Hiltz says the police failed to do their jobs and remove key pieces of evidence from the home which indicated there was more than one person involved. The family, who had no real training in crime scene investigative work, decided to gather the evidence on their own and submit it to the police. One of the things they found, while going through the home, was an empty shotgun shell, found in Candace’s daughter’s crib. They also located rope and an ax that they said someone had used to kill their dog, just days before Candace was killed.

    The family also found, away from the home, bloody towels they believed the attackers used to wipe off Candace’s blood. The DNA on the towels didn’t match any of the family members according to Delores. Also, a bloody blanket which was used to wrap Candace was also gathered. After she had gathered all the evidence they could find, she called the FCSO and asked that they come get it. They did. And that was the last Delores saw of the evidence she says proves more than one person was involved in her daughter’s killing.

    But it wouldn’t be the last time the evidence was ever seen. That’s because it all turned up in a storage locker that Lieutenant Robert Dodd had rented but failed to keep up the payments on. The contents of the storage unit were sold at auction to Mr. Rick Ratzlaff. After the purchase, he began to look through the storage locker he’d just purchased and realized it belonged to Dodd when he found a lot of Dodd’s old uniforms inside the unit. But after digging a bit deeper into his unit, he then realized the deputy had kept evidence from Candace’s Hiltz’ unsolved murder case inside his storage unit. Ratzlaff did the only thing he felt like he should and that was to contact the FCSO to let them know he’d found something he believed should be locked away in an evidence room somewhere.

    Ratzlaff described what he found to reporters, “When I opened it, I knew it was a sheriff’s officer’s because there were uniforms and sirens and lights off of cop cars.” Then he described the moment he knew he’d gotten more than he bargained for. “There were manila envelopes that had evidence across them in big black letters and a stamp for a case number, but there was no case number. The big one had a bloody rope; the smaller manila envelope had two female blood-soaked socks; and the medium one had a weapon fall out the bottom of it. It was a chrome ax that also had blood on it,” Ratzlaff said. Ratzlaff said he also found a brown paper bag containing a single bullet casing inside, and a blanket with blood on it. These were the precisely the items Delores Hiltz says she delivered into police custody. “I knew it was Robbie Dodd’s unit because his uniforms had name badges on them and there were pictures of him in the unit,” Ratzlaff said.

    Ratzlaff told reporters someone in Dodd’s family sent him a message through Facebook offering to buy back all of the contents inside the locker because it contained “childhood memories” but since Ratzlaff said he doesn’t check FB that often he didn’t get the message until much later. In the meantime, he asked Sherriff Beicker to come over and look at what he had in his possession. “He says, ‘I hear you have a storage unit that used to be an officer’s.’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘Can I get it?’ and I said, ‘I don’t know.’ He said, ‘Well, your life could be in danger here.’ “It was like a threat,” Ratzlaff told reporters but agreed to meet the sheriff to discuss a possible handover.

    When Beicker arrived at the storage unit with FCSO Cmdr. Jeff Worley Ratzlaff’s wife, Arin Reed, recorded the entire conversation on her cell phone. In the encounter, Beicker appeared amazed one of his deputies had so much evidence in his possession. He told Ratzlaff he would contact the CBI, but then as the pair of deputies were leaving, they asked Ratzlaff for his help in getting out of the gate at the storage facility. When Ratzlaff went to help them leave, he said he came back to his storage locker to find that all the evidence had been removed in the time it took for him to drive down to the gate and let out Beicker and Worley.
    Later, in a statement, Beicker admitted to taking the items. He said he and Worley, “briefly look(ed) at the evidence in the storage locker and immediately contacted CBI regarding the matter. With their consultation, we cataloged, photographed, collected and secured the items, moving them into the Fremont County evidence storage…On Jan. 3, the CBI sent two agents to meet me and they took over all the evidence. Because it’s an active investigation, until it is complete I will be unable to give any further information.”

    Since the news broke, a detective had maintained a storage locker with evidence from an 10-year-old unsolved murder case inside, the Colorado State Bureau of Investigations has opened its own investigation of Dodd’s use of the storage locker and the reasons behind why he kept the evidence hidden away. Dodd has since been relieved of his duties (supposedly still receiving his salary) pending the outcome of the investigation.

    Delores Hiltz maintains her belief that sheriff’s deputies may have killed her daughter. She said the fact that they did such a botched job of investigating the crime was proof enough for her that they knew more than what they were telling. Also, the fact that she and her relative had to gather up more of the crime scene evidence to take to police lets her know they were not doing their jobs.

    Now, after all these years, it seems a mother’s cries for help will finally be heard. But it took the discovery that one of the detectives had been hoarding evidence of her daughter’s death in his possession to allow the case to come back to life.

    Candace was a child prodigy. Her mother said she was doing Calculus by age 11, had enrolled in Brigham Young University and by age 17 was enrolled in her third year of college. She had wanted to become a lawyer with the dream of becoming a Supreme Court justice. She was looking to get into Stanford Law School and by her past achievements would most certainly have gotten accepted. But she was cut down in her prime when she became pregnant. Candace’s daughter Paige was less than a year old when Candace was murdered. It is unclear who the father of the baby was. Paige, who was born with hydrocephaly, only lived until the age of 7 before she, too, passed away.

    Whether or not Dodd had anything to do with Hiltz’ murder is anyone’s guess but serious questions are being raised as to why he had the evidence in his possession in the first place. He now is the suspect of a CBI investigation, and the right thing to do would be to reopen Hiltz’ murder investigation at the state level. As a result of her death, her brother James has been locked away in a mental hospital since her death.
    The simple discovery of towels with unknown DNA being located away from the property is reason enough to keep the investigation open and get to the bottom of the unsolved murder. One way to start the investigation is to determine if the DNA belongs to anyone on the FCSO police force, especially now that one of the lead investigators on the case chose to keep the murder evidence locked away like a trophy in his own storage unit. How disgusting! “These deputies (need to be) held accountable for what they did. The family’s been wronged and it’s been a long time for her death to be unsolved,” Ratzlaff said.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sheriffs-deputy-caught-unsolved-murder-evidence/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 21, 2017, 01:54:53 AM
    It should be investigated if the police or the prosecutors knew about this practice or if they encouraged it.

    Tens of Thousands of Drug Convictions to be Overturned After State Caught Falsifying Lab Tests

    After years of injustice, thousands of people wrongfully convicted on drug charges in Massachusetts will finally have their convictions overturned. The ruling centers on drug lab tests that were falsified by a state-employed chemist named Annie Dookhan.

    “The state’s highest court on Wednesday ordered prosecutors to drop a large portion of the more than 24,000 drug convictions affected by the misconduct of former state drug lab chemist Annie Dookhan, issuing an urgent call to resolve a scandal that has plagued the legal system since 2012.”

    Dookhan was imprisoned in 2013 after being charged with a suite of crimes relating to her years-long career of deceit, where she falsified tens of thousands of reports to jail innocent people. She would mark results as ‘positive’ for illegal substances without actually testing them, even adding cocaine to samples when no cocaine was present.

    At sentencing, Judge Carol S. Ball stated, “Innocent persons were incarcerated, guilty persons have been released to further endanger the public, millions and millions of public dollars are being expended to deal with the chaos Ms. Dookhan created, and the integrity of the criminal justice system has been shaken to the core.”

    After the shocking revelations, some of the ‘Dookhan-tainted’ convictions were overturned, but when 2017 came around, 24,391 of those convictions still remained. Most of these people were poor and charged simply with possession. Many remained in prison or on parole, and many more were denied jobs and housing due to their criminal records.

    The Massachusetts high court ruled that each defendant had a right to a hearing, but the cost and logistics of doing so would be unfeasible. Prosecutors sent cryptic, confusing letters to the defendants to supposedly inform defendants of their rights, which prompted the ACLU to get involved.

    Incredibly, state prosecutors were fighting to keep the convictions in place, despite justices saying these cases involved “egregious government misconduct.” Despite being victimized by a serial liar under an immoral war on drugs, each defendant had to appeal their case individually.

    “It’s as though the state is almost addicted to prosecuting its way out of the problem of drug abuse,” said Mathew Segal, legal director at the ACLU of Massachusetts. “The addiction is so strong that the state won’t even walk away from convictions tainted by fraud. And they could walk away. Prosecutors could walk away from these cases right now.”

    But prosecutors didn’t walk away, and the state’s high court finally put an end to most of the injustice.

    “The court said district attorneys across the state must “exercise their prosecutorial discretion and reduce the number of relevant Dookhan defendants by moving to vacate and dismiss with prejudice all drug cases the district attorneys would not or could not reprosecute if a new trial were ordered.” The cases affected by the ruling include people who pleaded guilty, were convicted, or admitted that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict them. By vacating the cases, the convictions would effectively be erased…

    The court said defendants whose cases aren’t dismissed should receive a notice that their cases had been affected by Dookhan’s misconduct. Then, any indigent defendants would receive public counsel to explore requests to vacate their pleas or get new trials.”

    Almost all of the defendants convicted of simple possession have already served their jail sentence. Being locked in a cage for a non-crime is enough to scar a person for life, but at least they will not be hindered the rest of their life by a conviction.

    This scandal demonstrates one way in which the war on drugs provides opportunity for the State to ruin lives for the victimless behavior of possessing a substance deemed illegal by arbitrary, baseless means. When control of the drug lab was transferred to the Massachusetts State Police, several red flags on Dookhan were ignored by superiors, and the lab silenced whistleblowers who reported Dookhan.

    It all points to an insidious obsession by government to attack citizens – especially the less fortunate who have no means to fight the system – by treating drug use as criminal behavior instead of a health issue. It’s past time to end the war on drugs, which will prevent the kind of abuse carried out by Dookhan and her superiors.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/drug-convictions-overturned-false-tests/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 21, 2017, 08:27:59 PM
    This deranged pig should be sent straight to an isolation cell for at least 10 years.

    Man Kidnapped, Strip-Searched, Jailed After Cops Mistook Sports Soak for Drugs

    The quota and points driven drug bust culture that exists in many police departments around the country has seen its fair share of scandals as of late. But one man was able to cash in on the mistreatment he received at the hands of one hysteria-driven police force.

    Bronx native Anthony Small was traveling as a passenger with his two brothers in a car going through Fort Lee, NJ on October 28th, 2013. The trio had just met with VH1 producers who were interested in featuring Small’s line of clothing.

    Officer Richard Hernandez pulled the car over for a minor moving violation but noticed a bag of bath salts in the car. Believing the substance to be illegal bath salts and not the kind in which an athlete soaks, everyone in the car was arrested.

    The arrests were made in spite of the fact the salts were properly labeled as a muscle relief product and in their original packaging. Small tried telling Hernandez the product was given to his girlfriend at an NFL promotion. The substance was a muscle relieving bath treatment called “Soak,” which is a brand endorsed by many professional sports teams. Hernandez didn’t believe the story and the three were hauled off to jail.
    Hernandez didn’t believe the story and the three were hauled off to jail.

    Small was charged with distribution of a controlled dangerous substance and possession of narcotic paraphernalia. Unable to make bail immediately, he spent the next four days in jail. Hernandez sent off the salts for narcotics testing, only to find out the substance was legal bath salts and not narcotics.

    According to NJ.com, a judge set Small’s bail at $25,000 with no option to pay 10 percent cash. Police strip-searched him and sent him to Bergen County Jail when he couldn’t make bail immediately. He spent the next several days in a cage because of incompetent cops waging an immoral war on arbitrary substances.

    As a result of the substance being a legal one, all charges were dropped against Small, but only after months of undue suffering, on March 20, 2014.

    Small sued in court, alleging the police officer, the department and the Fort Lee, NJ borough had violated his fourth amendment rights by performing an unreasonable search and seizure. The rights violating police incompetence resulted in the subsequent and significant loss of income from his VH1 deal. He did, indeed, make a deal with VH1, but had he not been in jail, his clothing line would have been promoted in at least 5 more episodes. The borough settled out of court by paying Small 75,000 for his unlawful arrest, strip searching, unlawful imprisonment, loss of income, and other unspecified damages.

    Luckily, Small did, indeed, make a deal with VH1, but had he not been in jail, his clothing line would have been promoted in at least 5 more episodes. The borough settled out of court by paying Small $75,000 for his unlawful arrest, strip searching, unlawful imprisonment, loss of income, and other unspecified damages.

    As The Free Thought Project has reported on several occasions, there is a need for the federal government to end the drug war, which is only still continuing because locking people up is big business for cities across the country who balance their police departments’ budgets by citation writing, jail fees, court costs, and plea deals.

    The steady stream of inmates going into the corrections system feeds the prison industrial complex with fresh meat. But when individuals like Small are arrested, while not being guilty of any crimes, the costs to cities and boroughs from lawsuits and settlements is quite astounding.

    Cases like this are nothing new, in fact, we report on them on a regular basis.

    Earlier this month, Ross LeBeau, of Houston, was cleared of drug charges after he was arrested for possession of Methamphetamine. It turns out that LeBeau was actually in possession of kitty litter, not meth. However, this made no difference to the cops who kidnapped and caged him for it.

    On May 8 of last year, Gale Griffin and her husband Wendall Harvey, who’ve been driving trucks together for the last seven years were wrongfully charged with possession of cocaine. They were targeted by incompetent cops who used criminally ineffective drug test kits on a white powdery substance found inside the couple’s truck. The kit identified the substance as cocaine. But it was not cocaine. It was baking soda Griffin used for stomach problems. However, they were caged for months while the reckless cops ignored their pleas of innocence.

    Also this year, Alexander Bernstein of Brooklyn was jailed and had his life ruined after cops mistook soap for cocaine.

    Wenonah resident John Cokos recently settled a lawsuit against the Gloucester County police department for $35,000. The lawsuit comes after an arrest for drug possession because the officer claimed that his crackers were crack rocks.

    In October, college student John Harrington was thrown in prison after police, with one of these field drug test kits, tested sugar, and came up with a false positive for cocaine.

    “Really, I’m really in jail right now for powdered sugar, ” John Harrington thought after it happened.

    We’ve also seen the case in which police mistook Jolly Ranchers for meth and jailed an innocent man. Love Olatunijojo, 25, and an unidentified friend purchased Jolly Ranchers at the It’Sugar candy emporium in Coney Island in June of 2013. Several blocks away, cops stopped and searched the friends and mistook the candies for crystal meth. Olatunijojo was then thrown in jail.

    In August, we reported on the story of a man who was held in prison for over four months because police falsely identified salt as crystal meth.
    And the list goes on….

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-kidnapped-strip-searched-caged-cops-mistake-epsom-salt-original-package-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2017, 12:20:55 PM
    ‘They Killed the Wrong Guy’ – Cops Respond to Home Invasion, Kill Homeowner

    Pittsburgh, PA — A family is now grieving after a home invasion left their beloved Christopher Mark Thompkins dead. The burglar, however, was not the one to kill Thompkins — the police who responded to the 9-1-1 call did.

    “They shot the wrong guy,” said Brenda Thompkins, 51, of Penn Hills.

    Early Sunday morning, Brenda and Christopher Thompkins were asleep in bed when they awoke to the sound of an intruder. Brenda, who is a licensed gun owner, handed over her pistol to Thompkins who pursued the would-be attacker through the house.

    The couple was upstairs and all Christopher could think about, according to Brenda, was to get downstairs to save his mother.
    “He was just saying, ‘My mom, my mom,’” Brenda Thompkins said. “That’s all he was worrying about.”

    When Christopher got downstairs, he encountered Juan Brian Jetter-Clark, 23, who had broken into their home. Fearing for he and his mother’s safety, Thompkins opened fire on Jetter-Clark. He missed.
    Just as Thompkins was opening fire, however, two patrol officers showed up responding to the family’s burglar alarm. Thinking Thompkins was shooting at them, police opened fire on Thompkins, killing him.
    Meanwhile, Brenda was on the phone with 9-1-1, and hiding onto a roof behind the home.

    After hearing the gunshots, Brenda said police came up and got her off the roof.

    “I heard ‘boom, boom, boom,’ I didn’t know it was the cops,” she said. “I turned around and ran away, and I jumped out the window on the roof. When the police came in, I was gonna jump [from the roof], but the police told me, ‘Don’t jump.’ I was screaming, ‘I’m a victim. Don’t shoot me. I’m on the phone with 911.’ ”

    When she came downstairs, she saw Christopher dead under a blanket and Jetter-Clark in handcuffs on the sofa. Police had killed the wrong person.

    Police claimed they thought Thompkins was shooting at them. However, Brenda refutes that story, noting that she saw where Thompkins was shooting.

    “I could see Mark shoot down the stairs at the guy. The cops came, and they shot through the door. Mark was shooting at the robber, not the cops,” she said.
    “He didn’t want to hurt no cops. He was trying to save his mother,” Brenda said.

    Jetter-Clark was arrested and charged with criminal trespass.

    As per police protocol, both of the officers involved in the shooting were placed on administrative leave. They will also be given 48 hours before they are asked any questions by investigators — also part of protocol.
    “There is an ongoing investigation with oversight of the Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office,” Public Safety spokeswoman Sonya Toler said. “Additional information will be released by the Bureau at the appropriate time.”

    Adding suspicion to the events that unfolded that night, police removed Thompkins’ screen door as supposed evidence.
    According to TribLive, Police removed for evidence a front screen door that had six to eight holes in it. It was unclear whether the holes were the result of the shooting. There were no holes in the front door, which remained attached to the house after police removed the screen door.


    Instead of simply photographing the door and moving on, the entire door was removed and taken by police. What was so important on the door that it had to be taken? Did it show all the bullets fired were from the police weapons or the same caliber as the police weapons?

    Sadly, police officers, in the heat of the moment, often shoot the wrong person.

    Indianapolis Metropolitan police responded to a 9-1-1 call about an armed robbery early last August. When IMPD officers showed up, however, they shot the first person they saw — the innocent homeowner.
    In only a matter of minutes, a woman went from being in shock after being robbed at gunpoint, to praying that her husband survives the holes put in him by police bullets.
    Dispatched to the wrong house on a burglary call less than a year ago, a DeKalb County officer shot a homeowner and a fellow officer. A dog was also killed in the needless shooting.

    Responding to a 911 call in June, Henry County, GA police arrived at the wrong house and shot the innocent homeowner in the neck.
    In a travesty of justice, a Henry County grand jury decided that the cop who went to the wrong house responding to a 911 call and killed the homeowner, an innocent father of three, will not be charged.
    Unfortunately, Christopher Thompkins is now on that list.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-fends-off-home-invasion-cops-show-kill-homeowner/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2017, 10:34:58 AM
    Funny how the cop/cock lovers say that cops don't wake up and decide to commit crimes, especially this career criminal.

    Florida Deputy Befriends Elderly Woman, Prays with Her, then Tries to Kill Her

    The Florida deputy met the elderly lady back in October when she called the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office for help.

    Sarasota sheriff’s deputy Frankie Eugene Bybee, 46, transported her to the hospital and prayed with the 79-year-old woman, gaining her trust and confidence.

    He also agreed to care for her Yorkshire in exchange for $1,000, even texting her a photo of himself with the dog to show that it was safe.

    But then it appears he sold the dog on Craig’s List.

    He then spent the next few weeks visiting her at her home while on on-duty and off-duty, introducing her to his three children.

    But within two months, the woman called the sheriff’s office to report that he had become too controlling.

    Sarasota sheriff’s investigators then learned that he likely wrote checks from the woman’s account to himself and children for $65,000 after the woman denied ever writing them and his fingerprints were found on at least one check.

    The 18-year veteran with a history of disciplinary action against him was then placed on administrative leave.

    Three days later on January 12, the deputy donned dark clothes and latex gloves and entered her home through an unlocked door, grabbing her face and forcing a pill down her throat.

    He then turned her car on, leaving the door open from the garage to the kitchen in an attempt to fill the home with carbon monoxide to kill her
    , according to the arrest affidavit.

    According to the  Sarasota Herald-Tribune:

    An examination found lacerations, abrasions and bruises to her face and body. The Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant that obtained cell phone data, photographs, security video and latex gloves.

    Knight said the investigation concluded Bybee attempted to kill the woman and stage a suicide. Bybee was arrested at 7 a.m. Monday and paperwork initiated to terminate his employment.

    Knight called Bybee’s alleged actions a disgrace to the agency and policing.

    “It is beyond unacceptable that an individual who works in a position of trust and guardianship to their community, is capable of such heinous crimes. His actions are a disgrace not only to our agency but to law enforcement professionals everywhere. Now that he is off our streets and behind bars, we will let the criminal justice system will take its course,” Knight said.

    Bybee was charged with attempted murder; battery of a victim 65 and older; burglary of an occupied dwelling; exploitation of the elderly; two counts of grand theft; forgery and petit theft.

    He is being held on a bond of more than $1 million, and had an annual salary of $66,406 with an additional $1,560 in incentives.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/01/24/florida-deputy-befriends-elderly-woman-prays-with-her-then-tries-to-kill-her/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2017, 01:07:22 PM
    Remember this case? This same scumbag didn't learn and continued with this disgusting antics.

    Cop Who Gave Homeless Man a Shit Sandwich, Fired AGAIN for 2nd Poop Prank

    San Antonio, TX — In November, the Free Thought Project brought you the disgusting story of a San Antonio cop defecating on a piece of bread and giving it to a homeless man as food. For making a literal sh*t sandwich, San Antonio police officer Matthew Lockhurst was fired. However, the Free Thought Project has just learned that Lockhurst was involved in yet another feces related ‘prank’ — after the sh*t sandwich.

    “It was a disgusting, vile act — that, there is no excuse; there is no explaining it; there is no justification,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus told KOMO News after the termination of an officer for, quite literally, giving a homeless man a sh*t sandwich.

    “It’s a disgrace to the department, it’s a disgrace to the badge,” McManus continued.

    In May, Officer Matthew Luckhurst inexplicably thought it would be humorous to place feces in between two slices of bread and offer it to a likely-starving homeless person in a styrofoam takeout box, and then boast of this ‘prank’ to his partner.

    His partner, however, didn’t share the sentiment — and the pair of cops returned to the scene, where Luckhurst ostensibly disposed of the sickening, cruel offering.

    Only a month after being caught in this sick and twisted ‘prank’ on an innocent homeless man — before he was fired — Lockhurst pulled another sh*t prank.  This time, his shitty shenanigans would be on his fellow cops.

    Luckhurst and a second officer, Steve Albart, carried out the incident together in June after a female officer asked that the women’s restroom at a bike-patrol office remain clean, KSAT-TV reports.

    To get back at the officer for asking that the women’s bathroom remain clean, Albart and Lockhurst then defecated in the toilet and then Lockhurst smeared a feces-like substance all over the seat.
    For not flushing the toilet, Albart was suspended for 30 days, which he’s already served.

    You cannot make this up.

    Apparently, Lockhurst’s infatuation with shitty ‘pranks’ was so strong that he was unable to control himself — even after it threatened his job when he was caught the first time.

    Naturally, Lockhurst’s attorney, Ben Sifuentes, said Luckhurst had only been joking about the poop sandwich and is fighting the suspensions claiming that the allegations are unfounded. This is, quite laughably, in spite of the fact that Lockhurst himself admitted to the prank in November.

    “This has taught me to stop acting childish and making stupid baseless jokes,” Luckhurst wrote in a statement to investigators. “I need to stop the pranks and juvenile jokes to get arise (sic) or reaction from fellow officers and friends.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-fired-sht-sandwich-fired-poop-prank
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2017, 01:14:16 PM
    Another "isolated incident". Why are they not prosecuted like a criminal organization? The RICO act is used even for minor cases, why not here?
    Where are the cop apologists who say the saintly cops don't wake up every day and go about committing crimes?

    Isolated Incident? Half of ENTIRE Police Dept Fired, Quit Amid Corruption Probe

    Willow Springs, IL — It’s become apparent that there is a systemic problem in policing, yet many Americans continue to be willfully ignorant of the dark reality transpiring outside of their front doors. Often people will claim “it’s just a few bad apples,” but the truth is that problem is much more deeply ingrained. The following example is evidence of the previous claim.

    In Willow Springs, Illinois, a three-year long internal investigation is coming to fruition and the rats are scurrying for the exits. After hundreds of pages of depositions and many hours of investigations, half of the Willow Springs department has now been fired or forced to quit.

    Isolated? No.

    “The residents needed to know,” Mayor Alan Nowacyzyk told NBC 5 of the massive corruption from within.

    According to a recent press release, the investigation is still ongoing, so there could be even more cops ousted from the department in the coming months.

    As NBC 5 reports, Nowacyzyk said it all began with a former officer, Michael Giorgetti, in 2013. Giorgetti got in an accident driving his squad car while doing private business in Wisconsin, Nowacyzyk said. The village said Giorgetti was working for a former village contractor and had traveled with another village official to retrieve equipment they planned to store in a village-owned public works garage.
    “That police officer attempted to cover up certain facts, lied through an investigation, was terminated, turned around (and) sued the village for wrongful termination,” he said.

    All too often, police officers, even if they are entirely in the wrong, will use the power of police unions to turn around and sue their departments for their jobs back and back pay. We’ve covered cases of this on the Free Thought Project that involved cops caught on video beating handcuffed victims getting fired — only to turn around and get their jobs and lost pay back.

    During the investigation into Giorgetti, it was discovered that another officer falsified police documents, so he was fired too. A third officer then retired immediately after the investigation began — another tactic corrupt police officers use to avoid prosecution for their crimes while on the force.

    The resultant investigation has turned into a calamity as Giorgetti is now claiming this retaliation for a whistleblower case he had against Nowacyzyk.
    “It’s troubling,” Nowacyzyk said.

    What Giorgetti is saying is entirely plausible and, indeed, likely, as cops who try to expose corruption from within are all too often fired, threatened, or worse. However, these individual cops are usually ousted by the department as a whole and rarely blow the whistle in groups.

    When looking into Giorgetti’s past, the story gets even more ominous.

    During an independent investigation last year, Giorgetti, who’s spent a decade working undercover for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, on loan from Willow Springs, was involved in a massive drug war asset scandal.

    According to a statement from the Justice Department, Giorgetti was ‘trusted too much.’

    Willow Springs trusted the decisions made by now-former police personnel. Unfortunately, they were trusted too much.
    Mr. Georgetti, who a judge determined repeatedly lied under oath amid an investigation into his misuse of taxpayer resources, personally oversaw this fund and often used his home address to secure bids for purchases. An investigation determined Mr. Georgetti and other officers used village resources for personal gain and falsified reports, leading to their resignations, terminations and retirements.
    Some of the assets Giorgetti helped confiscate from people accused of possessing certain substances deemed illegal by the state were used to buy extravagant items for the department.


    A 2013 Firehawk 26-foot boat with a water cannon and a Ford F-250 towing it are just two of the purchases made with drug money seized by former Willow Springs Police Sgt. Mike Giorgetti, reported NBC 5 back in November.

    When a DOJ audit exposed corruption in the use of funds, the case was blown wide open.

    According to NBC 5, the mayor said although nearly half the force was affected, they’ve been hiring full and part-time staff that more than compensate for the officers no longer on the street—and residents need not worry about safety.

    Given the fact that Willow Springs is only 17 miles from downtown Chicago, it is entirely likely that everyone is corrupt considering the recent light being shed on Chicago’s finest.

    After the DOJ investigation came to a close last year, the corruption was so rampant that the federal government removed the department’s ability to seize people’s belongings.

    Because of the egregious nature of the audit’s findings and the agency’s inability to remedy those findings as part of our compliance review, the Justice Department has found the agency to be ineligible to participate in the Equitable Sharing Program. They are required to return any equitable sharing funds on hand.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/isolated-incident-half-entire-police-dept-fired-resign-amid-corruption-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Super Natural on January 30, 2017, 05:43:15 AM
    Scott Adams

    "As a trained persuader, I’m seeing a dangerous situation forming that I assume is invisible to most of you. The setup is that during the presidential campaign Trump’s critics accused him of being Hitler(ish) and they were sure other citizens would see it too, thus preventing this alleged monster from taking office. They were wrong. The alleged monster took office. Now you have literally millions of citizens in the United States who were either right about Trump being the next Hitler, and we will see that behavior emerge from him soon, or they are complete morons. That’s a trigger for cognitive dissonance. The science says these frightened folks will start interpreting all they see as Hitler behavior no matter how ridiculous it might seem to the objective observer. And sure enough, we are seeing that. To be fair, Trump made it easy this week with his temporary immigration ban. If you assume Trump is Hitler, that fits with your hypothesis. But of course it also fits the hypothesis that he’s just doing his job. We’re all seeing what we expect to see.
     But lately I get the feeling that Trump’s critics have evolved from expecting Trump to be Hitler to preferring it. Obviously they don’t prefer it in a conscious way. But the alternative to Trump becoming Hitler is that they have to live out the rest of their lives as confirmed morons. No one wants to be a confirmed moron. And certainly not after announcing their Trump opinions in public and demonstrating in the streets. It would be a total embarrassment for the anti-Trumpers to learn that Trump is just trying to do a good job for America. It’s a threat to their egos. A big one. And this gets me to my point. When millions of Americans want the same thing, and they want it badly, the odds of it happening go way up. You can call it the power of positive thinking. It is also the principle behind affirmations. When humans focus on a desired future, events start to conspire to make it happen. I’m not talking about any new-age magic. I’m talking about ordinary people doing ordinary things to turn Trump into an actual Hitler. For example, if protesters start getting violent, you could expect forceful reactions eventually. And that makes Trump look more like Hitler. I can think of dozens of ways the protesters could cause the thing they are trying to prevent. In other words, they can wish it into reality even though it is the very thing they are protesting. In the 3rd dimension of persuasion, the protesters need to be proven right, and they will do whatever it takes to make that happen. So you might see the protesters inadvertently create the police state they fear. If you are looking for the tells that this dangerous situation is developing, notice how excited/happy the Trump critics seem to be – while angry at the same time – that Trump’s immigration ban fits their belief system. If you see people who are simply afraid of Trump, they are probably harmless. But the people who are excited about any Hitler-analogy-behavior by Trump might be leading the country to a police state without knowing it. So watch for that." -
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: mazrim on January 30, 2017, 05:45:56 AM
    Scott Adams

    "As a trained persuader, I’m seeing a dangerous situation forming that I assume is invisible to most of you. The setup is that during the presidential campaign Trump’s critics accused him of being Hitler(ish) and they were sure other citizens would see it too, thus preventing this alleged monster from taking office. They were wrong. The alleged monster took office. Now you have literally millions of citizens in the United States who were either right about Trump being the next Hitler, and we will see that behavior emerge from him soon, or they are complete morons. That’s a trigger for cognitive dissonance. The science says these frightened folks will start interpreting all they see as Hitler behavior no matter how ridiculous it might seem to the objective observer. And sure enough, we are seeing that. To be fair, Trump made it easy this week with his temporary immigration ban. If you assume Trump is Hitler, that fits with your hypothesis. But of course it also fits the hypothesis that he’s just doing his job. We’re all seeing what we expect to see.
     But lately I get the feeling that Trump’s critics have evolved from expecting Trump to be Hitler to preferring it. Obviously they don’t prefer it in a conscious way. But the alternative to Trump becoming Hitler is that they have to live out the rest of their lives as confirmed morons. No one wants to be a confirmed moron. And certainly not after announcing their Trump opinions in public and demonstrating in the streets. It would be a total embarrassment for the anti-Trumpers to learn that Trump is just trying to do a good job for America. It’s a threat to their egos. A big one. And this gets me to my point. When millions of Americans want the same thing, and they want it badly, the odds of it happening go way up. You can call it the power of positive thinking. It is also the principle behind affirmations. When humans focus on a desired future, events start to conspire to make it happen. I’m not talking about any new-age magic. I’m talking about ordinary people doing ordinary things to turn Trump into an actual Hitler. For example, if protesters start getting violent, you could expect forceful reactions eventually. And that makes Trump look more like Hitler. I can think of dozens of ways the protesters could cause the thing they are trying to prevent. In other words, they can wish it into reality even though it is the very thing they are protesting. In the 3rd dimension of persuasion, the protesters need to be proven right, and they will do whatever it takes to make that happen. So you might see the protesters inadvertently create the police state they fear. If you are looking for the tells that this dangerous situation is developing, notice how excited/happy the Trump critics seem to be – while angry at the same time – that Trump’s immigration ban fits their belief system. If you see people who are simply afraid of Trump, they are probably harmless. But the people who are excited about any Hitler-analogy-behavior by Trump might be leading the country to a police state without knowing it. So watch for that." -

    Well written/said.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 30, 2017, 06:18:05 PM
    Another "officer" protecting the public. Of course he resigned before termination and moved on to a different gang.

    Cop Arrested for Pulling Woman Over, Kidnapping, then Raping Her

    Fort Pierce, FL — For the majority of people who see those red and blue lights turn on behind them as they drive down the highway, your adrenaline spikes, your heart races, and the last thing going through your mind is, “I am being protected right now.” While most of these stops end with a promissory note of extortion for a victimless crime, sometimes, especially for women, things can get quite dangerous.

    As the Free Thought Project has reported countless times, all too often, police officers will abuse their authority to force unwilling victims into performing sexual favors in exchange for leniency. Also, many times, there is no quid pro quo and police officers will simply rape people they pull over — case in point, Daniel Holtzclaw.

    A young Florida woman has learned the hard way about police rape last week when she was stopped by St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Deputy, Evan Cramer, 28.

    According to Sheriff Ken Mascara, Cramer pulled over his latest victim last Tuesday night for a minor traffic violation. However, instead of simply writing a ticket and moving on, Cramer proceeded to use his authority to rape this woman.

    Cramer is accused of telling the victim she had multiple warrants out for her arrest and said she could avoid jail time if she granted sexual favors, Mascara said.

    According to police, Cramer then kidnapped his victim, threw her in the back of his cruiser, drove her to a vacant car lot, and raped her.

    Immediately after it happened, his frightened victim then went to the local hospital to report she’d been raped.

    “She was terrified,” said Sheriff Ken Mascara. “You could hear it in her voice. You could see it. It was palpable.”

    Cramer was arrested the next morning after a brief investigation. He was charged with sexual assault/battery and unlawful compensation, the sheriff’s department said. He is currently being held on a $850,000 bond.
    Mascara told the media last week that it is, indeed, likely, that Cramer had done this before and urged any potential victims to come forward.

    “He made comments to this victim that support that he’s done this in the past,” the sheriff said. “He actually compared her to other victims. It’s apparent there are some other victims out there, based on his own statements.”

    “During a time in our nation when respect for law enforcement is at an all-time high, incidents such as this quickly erode that trust and respect,” Mascara said. “I want to apologize to our community and other members of the law enforcement family for the dishonorable actions of this one person.”

    While this apology sounds okay, perhaps Mascara should apologize for hiring this officer with such a troubled past in the first place. After the arrest, WPBF looked into Cramer’s past — what they found was trouble.
    As WPFB reports:

    We’ve obtained Cramer’s personnel file for when he worked for the Sandford Police Department. He started there in March of 2015 and in January of 2016, three of his superiors recommended to the chief that Cramer be fired.
     
    A Lieutenant in the department cited multiple reasons for the recommendation, including “using inappropriate language in public” and “using his authority to gain compliance.”
     
    Cramer resigned from the department in January before he was fired.

    Less than four months later, he was hired at the St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-raped-woman-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2017, 09:52:29 AM
    Mom Assaulted & Arrested for Stopping Cop From Killing Her Dog on Video Files Lawsuit

    Parkersburg, WV — In 2015, the Free Thought Project broke the story and the video of a courageous mother, Tiffanie Hupp who stepped in front of an officer who was about to shoot her dog.
    For stopping the trooper from killing her dog and getting slammed to the ground in front of her 4-year-old son, Tiffanie was charged with misdemeanor obstruction.

    Of course, Hupp pleaded not guilty, as the video clearly showed that she was the victim. However, the city railroaded Tiffanie by forcing her to use their public appointed defender, with obvious conflicts of interest.
    She was given a public defender who was married to a state trooper. She was told she had no legal grounds for a lawsuit because she lacked serious bodily harm and she was well on her way to being declared guilty for a crime she clearly did not commit.

    However, thanks to a selfless attorney who saw Hupp’s story, Tiffanie was able to fight back. Charleston Attorney, David Schles took her case pro bono.

    “I was shown the video of the incident last August and I found it unjustifiable for Tiffanie to be charged with any crime for her reasonable, non-forcible,  actions to defend Buddy the dog. When I was told the lawyer appointed to represent Tiffanie was married to a state trooper and did not inform Tiffanie of this  relationship, I decided I would represent Tiffanie pro bono if she wanted my services,” Schles told The Free Thought Project.

    And, in 2016, Hupp was found not guilty.

    Now, after that good news in 2016, Hupp has taken the fight back to the city in 2017. A national group advocating for the humane treatment of animals has filed a lawsuit on behalf Hupp.

    In a release last week, the Animal Legal Defense Fund announced the suit.

    As the News and Sentinel reports:
    According to the release, Hupp is one of three plaintiffs and the other defendants in the case are the West Virginia State Police and Col. C.R. “Jay” Smithers, who was State Police superintendent at the time.
     
    The complaint alleges excessive force, unlawful arrest and unlawful search and seizure, as well as malicious prosecution, negligent training of a police officer and the intentional infliction of emotional distress, battery and slander.

    The incident began after a neighborhood argument escalated to the point of a man calling the police to prevent further turmoil. The homeowner, Cliff, called the police after his neighbor allegedly threatened him. However, when the police showed up, they were more interested in Cliff’s dog than preventing any disturbance.

    Randall Hupp, Tiffanie’s father, who gave us the video, explains that after the cops had arrived, the situation was calm, but then they quickly got out of control.

    Things were going fine and my son decided to film for posterity sake in case anything should happen. There were two dogs present in the area at the time of the video, a black dog which was the neighbors dog that was running loose…and Cliffs dog, which was chained up.

    Cliff’s dog, which was on a chain, merely barked as the officer walked up to the home. His tail was still wagging, and he seemed to calm down immediately. However, the fact that this dog was on a chain, not growling, nor posing any threat whatsoever, was of no consequence to the state trooper who quickly pulled out his service pistol, took aim, and almost killed the dog.

    Before the state trooper could shoot the dog, however, Tiffanie courageously stepped in between the dog and the officer to prevent the puppycide.
    The state trooper, seemingly offended by Hupp’s attempt to thwart his dog killing, then proceeded to attack her. Hupp explained to the Free Thought Project, last year, what happened next,
    The trooper approached with gun in hand, grabbed her by the arm and slammed her to the ground. After the troopers realized that they had been filmed, they entered the home illegally without warrant or probable cause and confiscated all digital devices including my 4-year-old grandson’s tablet. We only recently received the devices back and released the video.

    During the trial, Hupp told the Free Thought Project that she had a hard time not bursting out in court when Trooper Cook, who assaulted her, took the stand.

    “When the trooper was on the stand, it was hard to keep my mouth shut…lie after lie after lie. He told them I had a crossbow in my hand, that I stepped up to him, not in between (him and the dog), that I raised my hands at him first,” explained Tiffanie.

    But the video proved these were all lies, illustrating the importance of filming police encounters. Had Tiffanie’s husband decided not to pull out his camera that fateful day, an innocent woman would have been found guilty of a crime she did not commit.

    Now, it is time for the police, who tried to railroad Hupp, to be held accountable.

    Hupp and the other plaintiffs are seeking restitution, including funds so her son can be treated by a mental health professional, which they have not been able to afford, the release says. The child suffers from anxiety and emotional distress when in the presence of police officers, the release says, as reported by the News and Sentinel.

    “It shocks the conscience that police would arrest and prosecutors would seek to incarcerate a woman who did nothing other than protect a dog from being illegally shot,” one of Hupp’s lawyers, John Campbell, says in the release.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/mom-sues-arrested-stopping-cop-killing-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2017, 10:03:38 AM
    These violent criminals are ruthless and dangerous, they don't even respect the EMTs.

    Video Shows Cop Choking EMT for Advising Against Him Tasering Injured Man

    Portsmouth, OH — An intense video uploaded to Facebook this week is beginning to go viral as it shows a Portsmouth police officer choking an EMT.

    The video, which was taken Saturday night outside of a Portsmouth bar, shows what happens when a police officer has his authority questioned. Predictably, the police department is claiming that the video doesn’t show everything that happened. However, multiple eye-witnesses have come forward and have told their versions — they are all the same.

    The video, like most videos, actually does not show 100 percent of what happened. However, according to those who watched the situation unfold, in person, there is no question as to what happened.
    According to police and witnesses, a fight had broken out in front of a bar in downtown Portsmouth last Saturday night. Police and EMS responded and the EMT began treating a man who’d been bleeding and knocked unconscious.

    While the EMT was prepping the man for a trip in the ambulance, the man regained consciousness and was naturally startled.
    “He just woke up from being knocked out, and he’s got guys all around him grabbing a hold of him,” Trevor Conley, one of many witnesses said. “You’re going to freak out.”

    Instead of calming the man down, as the EMT was trying to do, police rushed over and began tasering the man. At this point, acting out of concern for the man’s life, the EMT questioned the officer’s choice to taser a man who was bleeding and unconscious and tried to prevent it. However, he was swiftly met with police violence of his own.

    “The EMT said, ‘You can’t be tasing this guy, he’s bleeding, got head problems,’ ” Josh Journey, another witness said. “Then after that, he grabbed the EMT, took him across the street, and I saw him have his hand on his throat all the way across the road and had him up against that cruiser.”

    “When the EMT was telling him ‘you can’t do that, you can’t do that, he’s got head trauma,’ he grabbed him up here,” Chad Bennett said, who also witnessed the incident first hand, as he gestured around his neck.

    At this point, Journey says that’s when he started recording. Journey’s video is clear and shows the officer holding the EMT by his throat against the police cruiser — allegedly for the act of questioning his authority.
    But this cop’s anger wasn’t over yet. After he attacked the EMT, he turned his attention to the people who just documented the attack.

    “He saw us with our phones out,” Journey said. “That’s when he came across the street at us and was pretty hostile.”

    In an apparent fit of rage, the officer verbally berates the witnesses and attempted to confiscate their phones. However, he was unsuccessful.
    “I think they realized that they’d messed up,” Journey said.

    “He could’ve handled it a little better,” Conley said. “I know the situation was crazy.”

    According to the Portsmouth police chief, the case is under administrative review which is expected to be completed by Wednesday.

    Oddly enough, this is not the first time we’ve reported on a cop choking an EMT.

    Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper Daniel Martin decided that it would be a good idea to pull over an ambulance for failing to yield to his squad car — never mind the fact that the ambulance had a sick woman in the back, bringing her to the hospital.

    Martin became belligerent at the scene when the ambulance drivers wanted to continue on to the hospital and ended up assaulting and arresting driver Maurice White.
    Charges were eventually dropped against White, and Martin went on an all expense paid, taxpayer funded vacation.
    He was never fired.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-shokes-emt-taser-man
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2017, 11:43:26 AM
    This sounds horrific.

    Epileptic Woman Writes ‘God Help Me’ in Her Own Blood As She’s Gang Raped by Officers — Lawsuit

    Cincinnati, OH — An Ohio woman has filed a federal lawsuit after she says she was brutally raped at the Warren County, Ohio jail, and claims the jail withheld her seizure medicines as well. The woman, who’ll remain unidentified, accuses at least three men of brutally raping her, forced her to go without clothes, and made her drink from her own cell toilet.

    Her attorney Jennifer Branch filed a federal lawsuit, in Cincinnati’s federal court, against several unidentified alleged assailants and nursing staff. Because no charges have yet to be filed, their identities are also confidential.

    The woman turned herself in on a 4-year-old warrant for deception to obtain drugs on May 3, 2013. Once in jail, she was denied her epilepsy medication, according to the suit, which left her in a vulnerable state. On May 14, after a horrifying 11-day torture session, the woman was “found naked in her cell, crying and mumbling,” and was sent to a psychiatric hospital, Summit Behavioral Center, the suit says. She was diagnosed with “psychosis induced by the trauma of the sexual assault” at the jail, the suit claims.

    “In her cell she’s put on her stomach. Three different officers in uniform are present,” Branch told WCPO on Monday. “She can see parts of them and can hear their voices and she knows what they did to her.”
    “They kept her naked in her cell. She was on the floor on top of a garbage bag,” Branch said of the treatment she received. Afterward, the jail sent the woman to the hospital for treatment of her epilepsy. While there, her attorney said semen was found in her urine, “The only way she would have had that (semen presence) was if it happened at the jail.”

    Chief Deputy Barry Riley issued a statement which read in part, “None of the citizens of Warren County should take our silence about the lawsuit filed by one of our former inmates as an indication that there is any truth to her allegations.”

    Strange as it may seem, Deputy Riley’s statement implied the accuser is making up the incident. But police departments have a moral obligation to investigate such claims. After all, being in jail is scary enough, why should the general population fear sexual assault while being helplessly caged like animals for drugs?

    As WCPO reported, saying she was “tortured,” the 38-year-old woman claims the jailers shattered bones in her shoulder during the rapes, used a stun gun on her more than once, took away her clothing, left her covered in her own blood and feces, shut off water to her cell and forced her to drink from a toilet.

    “She was so desperate for help she attempted to write on the cell wall, in her own blood, ‘God, please help me,’” according to the federal lawsuit.

    If the semen has been preserved, it won’t take long for investigators, should they choose to investigate one of their own, to arrive at a conclusion about to whom the semen belongs. But from the way the statement reads, there may be little to no investigating of the woman’s incomprehensible and shocking claims.

    The lawsuit also alleges the jail disposed of the woman’s plastic mattress that would have contained DNA and other forensic evidence.


    Claims involving alleged rapes should be taken very seriously by law enforcement. If an inmate comes forward with such claims, they must be taken seriously and investigated thoroughly. For the meanwhile, the criminal complaint will be presented to the suspected guards involved in the alleged incident. They’ll have 30 days to respond.


    As The Free Thought Project has faithfully reported, when a citizen is captured, kidnapped, and caged for drugs there are no longer any family and friends to protect them. They’re at the mercy of those who are being paid to maintain law and order in the jail. But as we’ve reported, several people have endured a lot of trauma at the hands of police officials.

    One man was forcefully penetrated by an officer who was doing a cavity search for drugs. And another inmate was brutally killed by corrections officers. The truth is the badge abuse knows no bounds. Often times, as TFTP has reported, the victims are mentally ill patients and are often deprived of their medicines while in police custody — just like this case illustrates.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/epileptic-woman-gang-raped-jailers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2017, 01:37:23 PM
    Another "honorable hero" gang member caught stealing by his own bodycam. In typical gang member tradition, he resigned before being fired so he can join another department gang later. Funny how when a cop is accused of a crime the investigation takes a long time (if the cop is not cleared by his buddies that is) but when it comes to mere citizens they are summarily investigated and arrested. How many other criminals like him have taken advantage of people and stole their money or abused them?

    Sheriff: Video shows 'thieving idiot' Volusia deputy stealing cash

    A body camera video released Monday shows a deputy taking two $100 bills from a man's wallet and tossing the money in the patrol car's trunk before arresting him and charging him with DUI.

    http://www.news-journalonline.com/news/20170130/sheriff-video-shows-thieving-idiot-volusia-deputy-stealing-cash
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 31, 2017, 01:48:10 PM
    You do a great job posting this information up.
    It just gets harder & harder to keep reading.

    Your use of the term "Gang Members"  is so apt.

    They resign before being sacked & join another Gang & just carry on as before.

    It's sickening.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2017, 12:42:51 PM
    The "highly trained" police dogs.. Why are there no charges and why is this dangerous beast - or maybe both beasts, the dog and its owner- put down? Is not the death of a man and the serious injury of an elderly woman enough?

    Cop’s Former Police Dog Let Loose, Mauls Woman & Kills a Man — No Charges

    Grover Beach, CA — No charges have yet been levied against a Grover Beach Police officer whose former law enforcement K-9s ran loose from his yard, mauled an 85-year-old woman, and killed a 64-year-old man.
    On December 13, Betty Long took her small dog on a walk, when witnesses say a Belgian Malinois and a German shepherd — running loose in the neighborhood — viciously attacked.

    Neighbor David Fear rushed to assist the elderly woman, and was, himself, besieged by the violent dogs.

    Long and Fear were transported to the hospital with critical injuries, but Fear had lost so much blood, he later died after organ failure.

    Long, reports The Tribune, “sustained a broken pelvis and shoulder and will require four to six weeks of treatment, according to her family.”

    A man was killed and an elderly woman mauled because someone didn’t bother with responsibility for their animals — but this someone happens to be a Grover Beach Police officer. So, instead of facing charges of negligent homicide, leash violations — or anything at all — the officer has been given the customary paid vacation, administrative leave, all cops suspected of wrongdoing receive.

    Fear has been hailed as a hero for selflessly protecting his neighbor — and paying the ultimate price — but blind worship for a uniform and the myth of selfless service in law enforcement grants the officer ultimately responsible for the killing, an expected shield of impunity, with pay.


    Worse, reports the Tribune, the Belgian Malinois “had bitten a trainer on the hand during a bite suit exercise six months before his officer owner moved to Grover Beach and took the dog with him as a personal pet, records show.

    “The dog — a 2 1/2 -year-old Belgian Malinois named Neo — was not taken out of service at the Exeter Police Department after the training incident. When the dog’s handler, Officer Alex Geiger, resigned and bought the the fully certified police K-9 from the city of Exeter for $5,287 in late August, Geiger signed a waiver relieving Exeter of any future liability, records provided to The Tribune show.”

    Geiger worked for the Exeter Police Department as a provisional and then K-9 officer before his employment with Grover Beach. While at Exeter, Geiger handled, trained, and patrolled with Neo.

    Exeter police Chief Cliff Bush and Exeter Deputy City Attorney Matt Pearce refused to elaborate to the Tribune on the extent of injury in the training incident, and whether the dog or the trainer had been at fault — so the outlet filed a public records request, and received nearly 90 pages from the City of Exeter.

    Weekly bite training sessions with Neo and other K-9s were being conducted when the Belgian Malinois was commanded to ‘engage’ with an officer named ‘Hayes,’ who was wearing a protective bite suit.
    “Neo engaged like he was supposed to, however he accidentally grabbed ahold of the part of the suit near the right hand and partially Hayes’ right hand,” Geiger wrote in a report of the incident, cited by the Tribune.

    According to the records, the bite Hayes endured was relatively minor — around a half-inch that drew blood.

    Police K-9 trainers insist the dog behaved as would be expected, and if a “hand is dangling out of the suit, they will get them,” retired Modesto Police Lt. Ron Cloward, who trains law enforcement dogs, told the Tribune. “I wouldn’t take a dog out of service because it bit a decoy in the hand.”

    After moving to Grover Beach for the new job, Geiger attempted to start a K-9 program for the department, but a $30,000 proposal to Police Chief John Peters was refused.

    Following the attack on Betty Long and David Fear, Neo was euthanized and the German shepherd quarantined — the latter was found not responsible in the attack by investigators.

    By all appearances, it seems Geiger will not be held responsible in any manner for the mauling of an 85-year-old woman and the death of her neighbor. Grover Beach police initially refused even to identify the officer responsible and have guarded as much information in the case as they’re able — but the families of the two victims deserve some semblance of justice for Geiger’s utter irresponsibility.

    Arteries in Fear’s arms were torn to shreds, and he suffered severe loss of blood which ultimately caused organs to shut down.

    Daughter, Sarah Fear, still in shock soon after the attack, lamented her father would not be able to walk her down the aisle as planned in her upcoming wedding.
    “It was just a completely disgusting, irresponsible act.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-former-k9-escapes-kills-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2017, 12:49:55 PM
    Unbelievable. Not even fellow "officers" are safe from other violent gang members. As expected, the violent and deranged criminal got a sweet deal and resigned and he can go on and join another criminal gang.

    Cop Charged with Beating Fellow Officer, Locking Her in Dog Kennel — Not Fired

    Lawrence, KS — In an infuriating case of blue privilege, a cop, with mountains of evidence against him committing unspeakable crimes, will get to remain a cop — in spite of being arrested. To add insult to injury, this abusive cop is now suing the city for the unlawful search and seizure which was allegedly used to collect all the evidence against him.
    The Lawrence Police Department, in February of 2015, gathered enough evidence against Officer William Jacob Burke, 34, to arrest him on felony charges of aggravated battery, criminal threat, aggravated assault, domestic battery, and kidnapping.
    The evidence showed that Burke had beaten a fellow officer, choked her until she blacked out, and then chained her, naked, inside of a dog kennel.
    Among the evidence collected were text messages from Burke to the female officer which read, “I’ve never hit a girl before. I beat you.”
    “I’m not sure next time it won’t keep going,” read another.
    Lawrence Journal-World published the findings from the city’s January 17th filing which detail the events as they unfolded. They are nothing short of horrifying.

    During the incident, Burke slapped the woman harder than ever before and began choking her, she told investigators.
     
    “When she started to see spots, she told Burke, ‘Stop’ as best she could,” the report says. “She reached up and tried to pull Burke’s arms away but she couldn’t and she blacked out.”
     
    Having never been “strangled to unconsciousness” before, the woman told investigators she was scared. Shortly afterwards, Burke told her to join him downstairs, where he demanded she undress and get inside a dog kennel.

    Burke then demanded the woman drink a beer and hand over her cell phone and password, she told investigators. He then “took a thick chain and wrapped it around the dog kennel to prevent her from leaving” and left her downstairs for several minutes.
     
    When Burke returned he gave the woman another beer, told her he had looked through her phone and left again, she reported.
     
    At this point the woman told investigators she was “shivering and tried to wrap herself in the towel at the bottom of the dog crate.”
     
    Once more Burke returned, the report says. He lectured the woman “about how she should learn to keep her mouth shut and that she should not talk to anyone about their relationship.”
     
    “Burke took a mallet and started swinging at the dog kennel,” the report says. “He hit the kennel numerous times and she was scared of the plastic cover breaking and the mallet striking her head.”


    The next day, the female officer took pictures of her injuries which included hemorrhaging to her face and swelling. However, she told investigators that she “she was hesitant to report the incident” and that “Burke owned several firearms and had told her several times that he could kill her and that he knew people who could make her body disappear,” according to the report.

    However, after another officer noticed her injuries, he reported it to a supervisor which led to the subsequent investigation and arrest.

    Seems cut and dry, right? Officer Burke is probably sitting in a jail cell where he belongs, right?

    Wrong.

    Shortly after his arrest, the city, for unknown reasons and in spite of the evidence, decided not to file charges against Burke.


    As Journal-World reported, Burke claims he resigned from his position as an officer after a Lawrence police captain called his attorney and said he would be given a “favorable disposition” regarding criminal charges if he were to step down.

    Naturally, the city and Douglas County District Attorney, Charles Branson deny the allegations of giving Burke favorable disposition.
    “We were never a party to any agreement or offer to that extent whatsoever,” Branson said.

    However, as the Free Thought Project has reported numerous times, police officers accused of crimes are frequently allowed to quietly resign to avoid serious charges down the road. Months or weeks later, they are the rehired by other departments only to be caught committing more crimes. Case in point, Timothy Loehmann, the cop who killed Tamir Rice. Loehmann was let go from his previous job for being mentally unfit for duty. He was then quietly rehired months later at the department where he would go on to kill a child.
     
    When asked why the city accepted Burke’s resignation in light of the probable cause leading to his arrest, Lawrence City Attorney Toni Wheeler declined to comment on the case, citing the pending litigation, according to Journal-World. Burke’s attorney, Theodore Lickteig, also declined to comment.

    Aside from failing to comment, both the department and the city have refused to release the arrest affidavit in spite of the fact that Burke is a public servant.

    Now, instead of rotting in jail for his horrific abuse, Burke is suing the city for $525,000, claiming that he was illegally searched and defamed. On top of the lawsuit, Burke also keeps his police officer’s license and can still work as a cop.

    And so it continues — the brutal and corrupt cycle of blue privilege and unaccountability.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beat-fellow-officer-locked-dog-kennel/



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2017, 03:51:07 PM
    The criminal gang covered up for this dangerous criminal and yet the citizens have to pay the bill once again.

    Woman Calls 911 for Help, Serial Rapist Cop Shows Up, Violently Raped Her

    MILWAUKEE (CN) – Milwaukee’s failure to remove a rapist from its police force will cost the city $2.5 million in a civil settlement, according to a letter from the city attorney.
    Iema Lemons sued the city, the police chief and Ladmarald Cates, a former officer who is now serving a 24-year federal prison term for violently raping her after she called to report vandalism to her home, the 2013 complaint states.

    Although Cates was the subject of multiple complaints regarding his on- and off-duty behavior, prior to July 16, 2010, the date of Lemons’ rape, he was not removed from the force and remained in daily contact with the public while performing his duties.

    Complaints against Cates included a domestic violence arrest for choking and pushing his girlfriend, who was also a police officer, and accusations of sexual misconduct made in 2005 against Cates by a female inmate.

    Cates was again accused of sexual misconduct in 2007 after a woman arrested for theft claimed he had sex with her in a jail cell after promising he would get her released if she complied. Her case was eventually closed without proper investigation, Lemons claims in her suit.

    Lemons asserts in her lawsuit that Cates qualified as a sexual predator, since the first allegation involved a female inmate who was severely intoxicated and the second involved one who was clearly mentally ill, and that “Sex with a prisoner constitutes criminal sexual assault.”

    Also in 2007, Cates was accused of sexual misconduct while on duty, this time with a minor, but again the witness was considered unreliable. Police Chief Edward Flynn, who had by then replaced the former chief, admitted while being deposed that the allegations against Cates were “disturbing,” but did nothing to discipline him.

    When officers responded to Lemons’ call in 2010, they did not address her complaints of bricks being thrown through her window, the complaint states. Instead, they arrested her brother, and while he and Cates’ partner was in the squad car, Cates cornered Lemons in her bathroom.

    Cates was armed when he repeatedly ordered Lemons to perform oral sex on him.

    “She was afraid he would kill her if she did not comply with his demand and that, as a police officer any story he invented to cover such use of force would be believed,” the complaint states.
    While he forced Lemons to perform oral sex, Cates “shov[ed] his fingers into her vagina,” then strangled her as he forced his penis inside her vagina, according to the complaint.

    After she collapsed on the porch following the rape, the officers arrested her, falsely claiming she had assaulted Cates’ partner. On the way to the police station, officers ignored her repeated requests for help and claims she had been raped.

    When she arrived, Lemons was handcuffed to a table, and Cates was allowed to enter the room, according to the complaint.

    “Cates threatened Iema that other police officers would attack her if she continued to claim she had been raped,” the complaint states. “He also told her that, if she withdrew her claim, she would only get a ticket for her alleged criminal conduct…Cates told her that, even if she continued to say he raped her, he would only get suspended.”

    Though that had been the case in the past, this time Flynn fired Cates for his sexual misconduct, albeit five months after the rape.

    During an internal affairs investigation that followed Lemons’ rape accusation, Cates lied and said he had no sexual contact with Lemons, but later changed his story and admitted to on-duty sexual contact, claiming it was consensual.

    Though the Milwaukee County district attorney declined to pursue charges, the U.S. Department of Justice took up the case, resulting in a 24-year prison sentence for Cates in 2012.


    Deputy City Attorney Miriam Horwitz, who frequently handles police misconduct claims against the city, has asked the Milwaukee Common Council to approve a $2.5 million settlement in Lemons’ civil suit, which will absolve all parties in the case.

    “As the matter proceeded to the January 9, 2017 trial date, mediation resulted in a proposed settlement of 2.5 million dollars, inclusive of all claims for damages against all parties, and inclusive of attorney fees and costs,” Horwitz’ Jan. 13 letter states. “The City Attorney now recommends settlement of this matter for the total sum of $2.5 million as recommended by the magistrate judge.”

    A voicemail left with the Office of the City Attorney before business hours Tuesday was not immediately returned.
    Lemons’ attorneys declined to comment.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/woman-calls-911-cop-raped-her/#8qwDUV2ITkEqPshv.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2017, 10:04:11 AM
    More information on a previously reported case.
    This is the problem with these criminals who think they have "authoritay". Maybe the EMTs should not respond to incidents involving cops out of the reasonable fear that they will not be allowed to perform their duties or even get attacked by these violent criminals.

    New Bodycam Shows Hero EMT Stand Up to Bully Cop Before Being Choked

    Portsmouth, OH — As the Free Thought Project previously reported, an intense video uploaded to Facebook this week is beginning to go viral as it shows a Portsmouth police officer choking an EMT. However, on Friday, body camera footage from an officer on scene was also released.
    The original video, which was taken Saturday night outside of a Portsmouth bar, shows what happens when a police officer has his authority questioned. Originally, the police department claimed that the video doesn’t show everything that happened. However, multiple eye-witnesses have come forward and have told their versions — they are all the same. And now, we have the body camera footage to back it up as well.
    According to police and witnesses, a fight had broken out in front of a bar in downtown Portsmouth last Saturday night. Police and EMS responded and the EMT began treating a man who’d been bleeding and knocked unconscious.

    As the newly released body camera footage shows, the victim of the alleged fight was laid out on the curb, unconscious and bleeding from the head.

    While the EMT and firefighters were prepping the man for a trip in the ambulance, the man regained consciousness and was naturally startled.

    “He just woke up from being knocked out, and he’s got guys all around him grabbing a hold of him,” Trevor Conley, one of many witnesses said. “You’re going to freak out.”

    Instead of calming the man down, as the EMT and other first responders were trying to do, Portsmouth Police Sergeant Joel Robinson rushed over and began tasering the man. At this point, acting out of concern for the man’s life, the EMT questioned Robinson’s choice to taser a man who was bleeding and unconscious and tried to prevent it. However, he was swiftly met with police violence of his own for daring to touch the officer on the shoulder.



    The EMT told Robinson that he cannot taser the guy as he has a massive wound to the back of his head.

    Josh Journey, another witness, explained,  “Then after that, he grabbed the EMT, took him across the street, and I saw him have his hand on his throat all the way across the road and had him up against that cruiser.”

    “When the EMT was telling him ‘you can’t do that, you can’t do that, he’s got head trauma,’ he grabbed him up here,” Chad Bennett said, who also witnessed the incident first hand, as he gestured around his neck.
    At this point, Journey says that’s when he started recording. Journey’s video is clear and shows the officer holding the EMT by his throat against the police cruiser — allegedly for the act of questioning his authority.
    But this cop’s anger wasn’t over yet. After he attacked the EMT, he turned his attention to the people who just documented the attack.

    “He saw us with our phones out,” Journey said. “That’s when he came across the street at us and was pretty hostile.”

    In an apparent fit of rage, the officer verbally berates the witnesses, threatens them all with jail, and attempted to confiscate their phones. However, he was unsuccessful.
    “I think they realized that they’d messed up,” Journey said.

    “He could’ve handled it a little better,” Conley said. “I know the situation was crazy.”

    In a press conference on Thursday, Portsmouth Police Chief Robert Ware noted that the officer’s actions were justified and Robinson would not receive any punishment.

    “Oftentimes we look at video in a vacuum,” Ware said. “We take what we see in one angle and we form an opinion based on that angle. Sometimes, subconsciously we add our own filler to figure out what happened.”

    Police claim that Robinson only grabbed the paramedic under the arm and never put his hand around his throat. However, it is entirely clear, even from far away, on the body camera footage, that Robinson had his hand around the EMT’s neck.

    On Friday, the Portsmouth Daily-Times put out a ridiculous cover piece for the police almost making it seem like Robinson was some hero:

    (http://Robinson, who knew the crowd was closing in on him, did not know who touched him and responded by hooking his arm and pushing him back. Robinson eventually guided the paramedic across the street and, according to Ware, pushed the paramedic’s clavicle. It was that action that appeared on the short video to be grabbing of the throat, but that does not appear in the full video.)

    However, as you can clearly see in the video above, that is a lie.

    https://www.facebook.com/policethepoliceACP/videos/1639550822728574/

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-body-cam-shows-raging-cop-berate-citizens-and-choke-out-emt/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 05, 2017, 10:58:02 AM
    Handcuffed Woman Who Fell Out of Moving Police Car Fending Off Rapist Cop Gets $3.5 Million

    Los Angeles, CA — Taxpayers of Los Angeles will have to pay for their police department’s misconduct yet again, as a woman who fell out of a squad car in 2013 has been granted a $3.5 million settlement.

    Kim Nguyen had been arrested for alleged public drunkenness, handcuffed, and put in the back of a Los Angeles Police Department patrol car. At speeds of around 30 mph, Nguyen leaned against one of the back doors — which turned out to be unlocked — in an attempt to escape a sexual assault by one of the officers, according to her lawsuit.

    Reports My News LA:
    “Officers David Shin and Jin Oh arrested Nguyen for public intoxication after they saw her run across the street about 3 a.m. on March 17, 2013. At the time, Nguyen was a graduate student in her last semester at Loyola Marymount University’s MBA program.

    “Nguyen was handcuffed and put in the back seat of a squad car off Sixth Street between Oxford and Serrano avenues, according to her court papers, which state that she ‘was not seatbelted into the car and the manual door lock was not engaged.’

    “The officers chose not to arrest a male companion who also was drunk, according to Nguyen’s lawyers, who also alleged that one of the officers got into the back seat with their client and inappropriately touched her.”

    A deposition from 2013, paraphrased by CBS News, states:

    “A male officer sat with her in the back of the car, where he started to open her legs and grab her inner thigh, Nguyen stated in a deposition taped in December. She alleged that the officer pulled her ears and touched her chest to make her get closer.”

    Nguyen had to undergo “extensive and painful surgeries” — including having her jaw wired shut — for the injuries sustained in the fall, and was hospitalized for 17 days. Nguyen also lost all of her teeth from the impact of the pavement.

    According to the lawsuit, the officers involved failed to follow several standard procedures — including seatbelting Nguyen properly and securely locking the patrol car’s doors.
    “No female officer was called … to pat her down for possible dangerous weapons,” court documents cited by My News LA state. “She was not seatbelted into the car and the manual door lock was not engaged.”

    Although defense attorneys claimed Nguyen had been trying to escape, the lawsuit states the handcuffed woman had merely been huddled against the door — to be as far away from the inappropriate contact of the officer in the back seat as possible — when it swung open, causing her to fall out.

    CCTV captured Nguyen falling from the LAPD patrol car, with her dress ‘removed’ from the waist down, lending a great deal of credence to her claims of being groped by the cop.

    Court documents also note video footage reveals the perpetrator cop “nonchalantly standing over plaintiff who lies bloodied, with her face swollen, in the middle of the street.”

    Nguyen will now receive at least the semblance of justice for the ordeal she endured.

    But, like nearly all settlements and judgments concerning police abuse, misconduct, excessive force, and more, the cops responsible for this gross negligence and sexual assault won’t have to pay a dime — the city’s ‘settlement’ comes straight from the taxpayers.

    This isn’t some fault of Nguyen’s or of other victims, but until errant police officers and departments are forced to feel the sting of punishment where it really hurts — their wallets — cops have no tangible fear of consequence for bad behavior.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lapd-sexual-assault-police-car-fell/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on February 05, 2017, 03:14:13 PM
    I'm telling you, there will be a day when attacking cops and police stations will be the norm.

    These pigs have no common sense.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gothorium on February 06, 2017, 09:18:35 AM
    privatize police
    end pensions they were not earned
    no pay increase due to inflation
    pay far far less
    encourage citizens to comply or be shot in back if run
    everythign should be police and academic
    recording 100% ok
    cosp shoudl eb drug tested so not on roids and roid raging
    a bad cop should not be abel to work again
    cops not tax payer liabel for recompense fo crazy behavior
    no more jewbag lawyer suign for stupid shit
    no more talk of race or sex
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 06, 2017, 12:22:03 PM
    I'm telling you, there will be a day when attacking cops and police stations will be the norm.

    These pigs have no common sense.


    Not that I am for that happening-- you are likely correct.
    Unless there is some Drastic changes in the way they Behave
    & them walking away from there terrible deads.

    There is clearly a lot of them out of control on a power trip & seamimgly
    Being backed up by their bosses.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2017, 09:58:55 AM
    Nurse Calls 911 for Help, Police Show Up, Beat & Arrest Her In Front of Her Child

    Buffalo, NY — When Christine Townsend, a registered nurse in Buffalo, found her neighbor’s pit bulls jumping at her windows and doors, frightening her dog and her 9-year-old daughter, she called 9-1-1 for help. However, when police finally showed up, more than an hour later, after multiple calls, they did anything but help her.

    Because of the harassment, threats, and eventual brutality and deprivation of rights Townsend experienced at the hands of police that night, she has since filed a lawsuit against the City of Buffalo, the Buffalo Police Department, Police Commissioner Daniel Derenda and two Police Officers, Mark Vara and Kelly Craig, for violating her civil rights under 42 U.S.C § 1983, known as ‘Section 1983’.

    The 9-1-1 calls that Townsend made that night, she now regrets as she was the one who ended up in jail. On May 9, 2014, Townsend called police for help because two pit bulls, known to cause trouble in her neighborhood, were tearing into her front door and windows.

    However, after the first call to 9-1-1, police never showed.

    A little frustrated that police never showed up, and worried that one of the pit bulls was about to break through her window, Townsend called 9-1-1 again. This time, as the pit bulls continued to prowl her front porch, Townsend saw a police officer drive by — but fail to stop.

    Townsend, now upset that police would drive by and do nothing, called dispatch once again told them that she may need to report the officer who did not stop to a supervisor. It was after she threatened to file a complaint that police finally showed up but refused to get out of their cruiser, according to the lawsuit.

    Townsend said Officers Mark Vara and Kelly Craig were yelling at her at the same time and she was yelling back.

    Vara asked her, “If we shot the dogs would that make you happy?”

    According to the lawsuit, yelling and swearing was rife all around with officer Craig repeating herself, “Where do the dogs live?  Where do the dogs live?”
    “Three doors down,” Townsend said.

    Craig then said, “Come out and show me.”

    As Townsend walked out to the sidewalk and pointed to the house, Vara berated her according to the lawsuit. “Go back in the house and shut the door and mind your own ‘fucking business,’” he shouted.

    At this point, neighbors had come out after thinking a domestic incident was unfolded. However, when they walked out of their homes, they saw Buffalo police officer Vara stalking Townsend back into her home.
    When Townsend asked for Vara’s name, Vara lunged and opened the door, grabbed Townsend’s left arm, pulling her out onto her porch. He turned her around, pushed her against the house, pulled her arms behind her back and handcuffed her, according to the lawsuit, as reported by Art Voice.

    Townsend’s neighbor Wilfredo Pena watched as the situation went from bad to worse.

    Pena said, “[Townsend’s] daughter starts yelling and crying and he actually pulled her and yanked her out of the house… The door to the house was open.  The screen door was like she’s like holding it from inside her house.  That’s when he grabbed her… she’s saying ‘my daughter, my daughter,’ because he’s pulling. As soon as I get to the porch he’s grabbing her and pulling her.  She was going back, he’s going forward. And he eventually stronger, he pulled her out of the house.”

    According to the lawsuit, Vara then yanked Townsend down the stairs of her porch, causing her to fall head first onto the ground.

    The entire time, Townsend is deathly afraid of being separated from her daughter. “My daughter! my daughter!” Townsend cried.

    According to the suit, Vara denies being rough and instead says Townsend was being uncooperative.

    Pena, who was watching said, “He’s pulling her, he’s dragging her… She’s like resisting to come down, he’s pulling her, she falls. She’s just trying to stay with her daughter.  She was saying ‘my daughter’, because she didn’t have no one.  He’s pulling her, she’s trying to go back, ‘my daughter, my daughter.’  She’s – ‘I got no one there.’  She comes and goes down the steps.”

    This time, Townsend was thrown to the ground with such force that she was injured.

    “It was the left side of my body.  My leg… the left knee because that’s where I felt pain on the left side of my body,” Townsend recalled to Art Voice. “My ankle had a lot of pain at that point.  It felt like it had twisted, like it had rotated some unnatural motion into that leg, but the fall to the ground was so fast.  I don’t really know certainly what position I landed but I do recall I landed forward.”

    Vara claims that Townsend fell and that he did not push her.

    Townsend’s attorney, Matt Albert, asked Vara in a deposition “It’s your testimony that my client threw herself onto the ground?”

    To which Vara replied, “That’s exactly what I’m saying.”

    However, yet another witness, Patricia Barclay, who also watched the events unfold described the same thing as Pena.
    “I saw as I was going across the street the police officers pulling her down the stairs… It was all very quick.  She — basically, he pulled her down the porch,” Barclay said. “By the time I got there she was on the ground and I asked what was going on.  They said they were there because for the dogs. Chris [Townsend] was worried about her daughter.

    “When she was telling me that Cassandra was in the house, said — she was like ‘my daughter’s in the house,’ [Ofc. Vara] said ‘you should have thought about that, shut the fuck up.”
    Vara and Craig then dragged Townsend and put her in the car.

    Barclay recalls, “They put her in the car and closed the door so I couldn’t talk to her. I spoke to the male officer [Vara].  I asked him what was going on, and he said it was about that they had gotten a phone call about the dogs.  And I believe I said, ‘Well, then why is Chris in trouble?’  And he said she had sworn at them.  He wanted identification for Chris, and Cassandra got the wallet for him and I asked him if this was really all necessary.  I said she’s a good person, she’s an RN.  He said ‘Well, then she must be on drugs then the way she acted.’  I said ‘Well, that’s not true.’

    “And then he got her identification. He was about to leave and I said ‘Could I follow you down there and bail her out.’  And he said no, she would have to spend the night.”

    Instead of taking Townsend to jail, however, the officers drove her to the parking lot of Tim Hortons and began yelling at her demanding to know why she would try to get them in trouble, according to the lawsuit.
    “Without us, your daughter, mother, and you would be victims of gang rape,” the officers said.

    At this point, Townsend began to fear for her safety and quieted down. She was brought to jail where Vara and Craig would stack up a long list of bogus charges against her including disorderly conduct, as well as resisting arrest and obstruction of governmental administration.

    However, all of the charges would quickly be dropped in the days following the arrest.


    Townsend, who has never been involved with police before in her life is now taking legal action to ensure that this doesn’t happen again.

    The lawsuit alleges unlawful seizure, unlawful arrest, unlawful imprisonment, trespass, excessive force, battery, slander, malicious prosecution, negligence, and intentional infliction of emotional distress arising from events that began at Townsend’s residence on May 9th, 2014 which she alleges violated her constitutional rights as established in the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.

    “This failure of the Department to adequately train its officers resulted in the Defendants’ actions that caused the Plaintiff harm, and will result in more unnecessary brutality unless corrective measures are taken by the City of Buffalo Police Department,” said Albert.

    “Such arrest and prosecution was done without probable cause, where circumstances ended in favor of the complainant, and the circumstances in their totality, as set forth in this complaint, clearly are indicative of malice and bad faith undertaken by Defendants Vara and Craig, as would be found by any reasonable person viewing these facts objectively.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/nurse-calls-911-police-beat-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2017, 10:51:13 AM
    Rights And Reality: Georgia Cop Jails Ex-Wife For Facebook Gripe
    FEBRUARY 6, 2017 By Ken White

    If a tree falls in the forest, does it make sound? If a right goes unrecognized and defied by the people charged with enforcing it, is it a right at all?

    It's not always a philosophical question.

    Anne King of Washington County, Georgia griped on Facebook that her ex-husband, Corey King, wouldn't go pick up some medicine for their sick child.

    One of Ms. King's friends, Susan Hines, responded "POS — give me an hour and check your mailbox. I'll be GLAD to pick up the slack."

    Anne King probably believed she had the perfect right to do that — or perhaps, privileged as she is to live in a country with broad free speech rights, she didn't think about it at all. She unquestionably had the legal right. But did she have a right that anyone in Washington County, Georgia was bound to respect? That question isn't as easily answered. That's because I've left out a crucial piece of information: Anne King's ex-husband is not just Corey King. He's Captain Corey King of the Washington County Sheriff's Department. And when it comes to American law enforcement, your right to free speech is more theoretical than actual.

    In her federal lawsuit, Anne King contends that her husband, a friend in the Sheriff's Department, and a county "magistrate" put her in jail for her Facebook comment. According to her, Captain King filed a police report with his friend, Washington County Sheriff's Investigator Trey Burgamy. Washington County magistrate Ralph O. Todd — who is not a lawyer, and who ran unopposed last year — issued a warrant requiring Anne King and Susan Hines (who had responded on Facebook by suggesting Captain King is a "POS") to appear at a hearing. After a hearing at which Captain King was the only witness, Magistrate Todd caused a warrant to issue charging Anne King with criminal defamation: "SUBJECT DID, WITHOUT A PRIVILEGE TO DO SO AND WITH INTENT TO DEFAME ANOTHER, COMMUNICATE FALSE MATTER WHICH TENDS TO EXPOSE ONE WHO IS ALIVE TO HATRED, CONTEMPT, OR RIDICULE, AND WHICH TENDS TO PROVOKE A BREACH OF THE PEACE, SPECIFICALLY, SUBJECT DID MAKE DEROGATORY AND DEGRADING COMMENTS DIRECTLY AT AND ABOUT COREY KING, FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING A BREACH OF THE PEACE. Anne King also contends that Magistrate Todd threatened to "ban her from Facebook." King claims that Magistrate Todd undertook to explain his view of First Amendment law to the two women:

    Hines asked the magistrate about her First Amendment rights. "You can call Mr. King a piece of shit to his face," the magistrate said. "You can even tell someone else you think he is a piece of shit. But you can't post it out for the public to see. That's defamation of character."

    Of course that's not the law. Calling someone a piece of shit is a hyperbolic insult, not a provable statement of fact, and therefore can't be defamatory. In fact, directing it to someone's face is one of the few times it could possibly be illegal — such an insult, directed face to face to the person, is a rare possible example of "fighting words" that might be punished as a breach of the peace. (Amusingly, some courts would say such an insult cannot be fighting words if directed to Captain King because Captain King is a police officer and we presume police officers will not react violently to insults. That is the difference between a presumption and a fact.)

    The warrant ordered by "Magistrate" Todd charged King for something that, on its face, is not and cannot be a crime. Georgia used to have a criminal defamation statute, and it appears that Magistrate Todd was trying to track its language. But the Georgia Supreme Court found the statute unconstitutional in 1982, and Georgia took the dead-letter law off the books in 2015. Even if the statute survived, Anne King's Facebook post could not constitutionally be prosecuted under it. This was a lawless charge. This is not a close call.

    At the end of the hearing, sheriff's deputies arrested Ms. King and Ms. Hines. Ms. Hines was allowed to drive herself to jail, but deputies handcuffed Ms. King and transported her to jail. At the County Jail — of which, by the way, Captain King is the Commander — the women were fingerprinted and booked. The deputies struggled in vain to find a provision of the Georgia criminal code in their system to describe the arrest; there was none. Ms. King bonded out after about four hours. A few days later, Ms. King returned to court before — and I use this disparaging term very deliberately — a real judge. "I don't even know why we're here," that judge said before the state attorney dismissed the charge. Ms. King has not been formally charged or arrested again — though Captain King has told her "don't make the mistake of going to Facebook with your little shit you found to fuss about" and has suggested she could face "willful contempt" if she does so.

    Anne King has sued Captain King, Investigator Burgamy, and Washington County for civil rights violations and various state torts. She can't sue "Magistrate" Ralph Todd because, despite the fact he's not a lawyer, he's cloaked by absolute judicial immunity. The statements above are merely her contentions. Moreover, the law governing suing state actors in federal court is complex, and the defendants will have many defenses to liability.

    Anne King's story is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a rare one. Particularly with the rise of social media, law enforcement officers across the country have been abusing the legal system to retaliate against insults: from the police supporting Jim Ardis' petty and petulant revenge in Peoria, the Renton PD investigated satirical videos, and the Parma PD prosecuted a man through trial for a satirical account.

    Anne King has First Amendment rights, in theory. Their nature and extent are well defined by the courts. It's straightforward to respect them. But what does it mean to say she has those rights? In Washington County, Georgia — population approximately 21,000 — with a hostile ex-husband a Captain of the Sheriff's Department, and with Ralph Todd as a magistrate, does she really have them in any meaningful way? What is a right, when the state defies it?

    https://www.popehat.com/2017/02/06/rights-and-reality-georgia-cop-jails-ex-wife-for-facebook-gripe/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2017, 10:52:24 PM
    Mom Forced to Give Birth to Baby On Jail Cell Floor Over an Unpaid Traffic Ticket

    Macomb County, MI — In Police State USA, a minor traffic violation can land you in a dangerous and, as in the case of Sandra Bland, deadly position. A Detroit mother just learned the hard way how far the police state will go to punish and extract revenue from its citizens — as she was forced to give birth to her baby on the disgusting floor of a Macomb County Jail cell.

    Jessica Preston was not wanted for murder, or for human trafficking, or for any act in which there was an actual victim, when she was kidnapped by police while 8-months pregnant and thrown in a cage.
    What did Preston do to be kidnapped by armed agents of the state and be locked away, you ask? She was unable to afford the fines levied against her by the state for driving infractions, so her license was suspended. When she was ‘caught’ driving with a suspended license — her first offense — Preston was locked in a cage.

    Unable to pay her ridiculously high bail of $10,000, Preston, who was beginning to go into labor, was forced to rot in a cage for 5 days before she’d get a court date. However, she wouldn’t make it to day five.
    While in a cell for being financially unable to pay the state for her privilege to drive, Preston went into labor — a month early.

    Once Preston realized she was going into labor, she begged officers for help. Every time she cried for help, however, those calls would fall on deaf ears.

    “They didn’t believe her,” Linda Preston, Jessica’s mother said. “They just left her (to) lay there. They didn’t care. They just kept saying she wasn’t having the baby, and I don’t know how anybody could say when she was bleeding, ‘You’re not having a baby,’ and that they didn’t send her to the hospital. Who makes that call?

    Eventually, Preston could no longer prevent her labor and began birthing her baby boy, Elijha, on a mat that laid on the floor of the dirty cell. This disgusting mistreatment of Jessica Preston was captured on the jail’s surveillance video.
     
    Elijha’s father, Thomas Chastain, says he is upset that he missed the birth of his son.

    “I didn’t get to cut the cord,” Chastain said. “(I) didn’t get to hold him.”

    Not only did Chastain not get to see the birth of his son, but officers and jail staff put both Preston and Elijha’s lives at risk by failing to take any medical precautions — even after the baby was born. Preston’s first baby was born via an emergency cesarean section. For Preston’s safety, her son Elijha was going to be born via a cesarean section, too. But since the birth happened behind bars, that didn’t happen, and he was born prematurely.

    “You can’t do that to a human being,” Tina Chastain, Thomas’ mother said. “You can’t. It’s not right. It’s inhumane. How’s it going to affect them to grow up to be an adult, knowing that (he) was born on the floor of a jail cell and wrapped up in a dirty sheet?”

    Well, the answer to that question is easy — especially when we consider the history of this jail.

    As the Free Thought Project reported last November, this jail has an ominous track record. When she was thrown in jail, just like Preston, 37-year-old Jennifer Meyers hadn’t physically hurt anyone. Meyers had fallen behind on her child support payments and instead of allowing this mother to keep working to actually help her children, a judge threw her in a cage for 30 days. She would only last 12 of those days.

    The investigation into the death of Meyers has uncovered disturbing details and exposes, at best, criminal negligence, and, at worst, deliberate torture.

    But Meyers and Preston aren’t the only recent victims of officers in the Macomb County Jail. When David Stojcevski, 32, was given a ticket for careless driving in 2014, he never expected it to be a death sentence. However, thanks to modern-day debtor’s prisons in police state USA, a traffic ticket did, in fact, lead to the death of this man.

    After the state disapproved of Stojcevski’s driving, they subsequently levied a $772.00 fine against him. Unable to meet the extortion demands of the Macomb County Police, Stojcevski was kidnapped and locked in a cage for failure to pay his debt to the state.

    He was sentenced to 30 days. He would only last 17.

    During those 17 days, Stojcevski would dwindle away. Under the grim neon lights of a prison cell, Stojcevski would lose a quarter of his body weight as he broke down due to unchecked benzodiazepine withdrawal. Guards watched on surveillance video as Stojcevski died a slow and agonizing death — offering him no help at all.

    When asked about the two recent deaths and a mother forced to give birth to her son on the floor of a jail cell, Sheriff Tony Wickersham, who is in charge of the Macomb County Jail, had these encouraging words.
    “We have not identified any prosecutable violations of federal criminal law, therefore our investigation is closed,” Wickersham said.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/mom-give-birth-jail-cell-ticket/

    http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/defenders/woman-describes-being-forced-to-give-birth-on-filthy-cell-floor-at-macomb-county-jail
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 08, 2017, 02:00:58 PM
    These violent criminals and their dog should be boiled alive.

    Cops Mistake 81yo Grandma in Her Backyard for a ‘Suspect’ Have K9 Maul Her

    Coon Rapids, MN — An 81-year-old grandma was hospitalized this week after she was attacked by a police K9 while cleaning her shed in her own backyard. Police are now claiming that they ‘acted appropriately’ when they unleashed their dog on this innocent woman.

    Choua Xiong got up early Sunday morning to clean out her shed in her backyard. She had done nothing wrong and posed no threat, when police, looking for a ‘suspect’, entered her backyard without a warrant and unleashed their K9 on her.

    According to police, a neighbor called 9-1-1 after she saw a suspicious person in a black coat in her backyard. The caller said she heard a loud noise outside but couldn’t tell where it came from. As police investigated, they entered Xiong’s yard and saw a person in her shed. That person was Xiong.

    Xiong, who is hard of hearing, did not hear the officers calling for her to come out of the shed. According to police, they yelled for the ‘suspect’ to come out of the shed 10-15 times, however, no one emerged — so they unleashed the dog.

    Instead of entering the shed to see if it could’ve been a child with headphones on — or an innocent old woman who was hard of hearing — police sent in their K9 to tear apart whoever it was that couldn’t hear their demands to come out.

    The officers could’ve simply waited for the ‘suspect’ to come out of the shed as well. However, they chose to rush to violent escalation. From the time police entered Xiong’s back yard to the time they unleashed the K9 was less than 10 minutes.

    “They didn’t see her in the storage. They just see the flashlight. That’s what they told us,” WaamXee Xiong, Xiong’s grandson said. “If you don’t see nothing and you just see some people inside, why did you let your K-9 go in there?”

    To add insult to injury, after siccing the K9 on the 81-year-old grandma, they continued to treat her as a suspect. As she is bleeding profusely from the attack, Xiong was then dragged across the yard with so much force and violence that her knees were bruised and her ankle was sprained.

    After they had captured their ‘suspect’, it took police nearly 30 minutes to realize that Xiong lived at the house. Thankfully, her grandson WaamXee showed up to tell the officer she’d been cleaning her shed. Forty minutes after being viciously attacked by a police dog and assaulted by police, Xiong was finally brought the hospital.

    When news of the story was posted on social media, naturally, the residents of Coon Rapids expressed their outrage. However, the department responded by calling the incident unfortunate but quickly noted that the officers did everything right.

    The department understands there is public concern on social media about the way this incident appears at first glance. However, with the facts the officers were dealing with at the time, including dispatch information and assessment of the scene, they responded to the incident in an appropriate manner. Officers are trained to speak clear, simple commands in the hopes that officers can be understood when they are dealing with people on calls. It is always our goal to have a safe outcome for all citizens and officers, no matter the circumstances….
    The Coon Rapids Police Department takes reports of suspicious activity very seriously and appreciates the public’s help in alerting officers to suspicious situations. In this case, officers responded to the suspicious person report that occurred at a time of day and under circumstances that led officers to believe they were interrupting a burglary in progress. In this context, officers acted appropriately. Witness reports state K-9 warnings and yelling could be heard loudly in the area as several neighbors woke up to the noise and began turning lights on.


    The family has not yet decided if they’ll file a lawsuit or a complaint. However, it is clear that the police will not be held accountable and the only ones who will suffer for this irresponsible act will be the taxpayers and the victim.

    In the video below, WaamXee is seen confronting one of the officers involved in releasing the K9. He asks a pertinent question, “what would happen to me if I sicced a dog on your grandma?”



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-k9-grandma-cleaning/#i5I9PpjcTxLr1p5o.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 08, 2017, 08:12:36 PM
    Even if Trump might have joked about "destroying" the Senator, as it is now, civil asset forfeiture is armed robbery pure and simple enacted by the State. No surprise that the head of a crime syndicate like that Sheriff supports civil asset forfeiture, many criminal organizations like his steal money from people to sustain their colossal donut consumption, fat wages and paid vacations. In just over a decade, Texas criminal gangs law enforcement collected more than half a billion dollars in cash and personal property.

    Trump Threatens to ‘Destroy’ Senator for Bill Making it Harder for Cops to Steal From You

    Over the past couple of years, great progress has been made in reforming the insidious practice of civil asset forfeiture (CAF), better known as policing for profit. CAF is one of the biggest threats to property rights employed by government — and Trump apparently wants to keep it.

    Using CAF, local police departments and federal government seize cash and assets from innocent people who are never charged with a crime, on the mere suspicion (often fabricated) that the cash or assets were involved in criminal activity.

    Even when a person is cleared of wrongdoing, in most states that person must incur legal fees and court costs to get their property back – creating a severe disincentive to even try.
    Originally set up in the 1980s to drain resources from criminal organization, CAF is now used by police to rake in millions from innocent people – mostly under the guise of war on drugs – so they can buy militarized police gear and further train themselves in the art of oppression.

    As the Institute for Justice points out, several states have made significant improvements, effectively abolishing CAF by requiring a criminal conviction for government to keep cash and assets. These laudable reforms have, of course, been heavily criticized by law enforcement, who only sees a threat to their profits.

    But now, it appears civil asset forfeiture reform has encountered a major obstacle in the form of President Trump.

    On Tuesday, Trump met with sheriffs from around the country to hear their concerns, as the president has vowed to pursue a “law and order” agenda. There, Texas Sheriff Harold Eavenson complained about efforts in his state to end policing for profit.

    “There’s a state senator in Texas that was talking about legislation to require conviction before we could receive that forfeiture money,” said Eavenson.

    “Can you believe that?” Trump said in response. “Who is the state senator? Do you want to give his name? We’ll destroy his career.“

    This shocking statement was met with laughter from the crowd of cops, but Trump’s face remained dead serious. Eavenson even seemed taken aback, and did not offer the name of the state senator who dares to suggest requiring a criminal conviction before seizing someone’s property.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trump-threatens-destroy-senator-caf/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2017, 09:44:41 AM
    It seems like cops have a problem obeying the laws. Moreover, this practice appears to have not been an isolated incident. 

    NYPD Investigated For Using Illegal License Plate Covers To Avoid Tolls: Report

    Wouldn’t you love to skip out on tolls? Some cops in New York City apparently sure do! A new investigation by Inside Edition found officers were avoiding toll and traffic cameras using illegal flash-reflective plastic covers on their personal license plates, according to a summary of the probe by the New York Post.

    The Post received a copy of the investigation before it aired, and Inside Edition apparently found the illegal plates were installed on more than 100 cars displaying NYPD placards. From the Post:

    The covers, which can be purchased online for as little as $6, ­allow the plates to remain visible but hide plate numbers on pics taken by toll and red-light cameras.

    NYPD officials admitted the covers have been an issue and said they’re “working to address” it.

    “The department has instructed precinct commanders to ensure officers in their commands are complying with traffic laws and internal guidelines on license-plate covers,” NYPD spokesman Peter Donald said.
    How swell.

    The spokesperson went on to say that roughly a dozen cops have been ticketed for their use of the plates, and when Inside Edition approached a couple of the officers, the interactions were apparently quite comical:

    An “Inside Edition” reporter confronted one driver whose car was parked outside 1 Police Plaza and had an NYPD placard in his window and covers on his front and rear plates.

    When asked if he knew he was breaking the law with the covers, the driver essentially conceded he’d been caught red-handed, saying, “I’m going to take them off.”

    He then used a screwdriver to remove them on camera.

    I guess you have to give him credit for allowing such a remarkable self-own to happen on-camera.

    http://jalopnik.com/nypd-investigated-for-using-illegal-license-plate-cover-1792217351


    And since cop cock lovers apologists often talk about "a single isolated incident", guess what?

    Investigation Finds Police Personnel Covering Their License Plates; Are They Trying to Avoid Paying Tolls?

    http://www.insideedition.com/investigative/21559-investigation-finds-police-personnel-in-2-states-cover-their-license-plates-are-they-trying-to
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2017, 09:58:51 AM
    Instead of these ruthless criminals being executed, the criminal gang is covering up for them.

    Cops “Justified” for Going to Wrong House and Shooting Innocent Grandpa

    Cumberland County, NJ — Gerald Sykes, 76, and his wife woke up Friday night to their dogs barking and flashlights shining through their windows. Sykes immediately grabbed his shotgun and proceeded to the living room to defend his home. Sykes was ultimately shot by these intruders and was in critical condition.

    Luckily Sykes pulled through. However, he will never see justice carried out against the intruders who shot him.
    The intruders were cops.

    On Friday, after the the state’s investigation into themselves concluded, they ruled that the troopers who went to Sykes’ home that night and shot him were justified — in spite of the fact that they had no reason to be there.

    According to Philly.com Sykes’ attorney, Rich Kaser, said Friday that the family was considering a lawsuit. He said the state’s decision was disappointing but not surprising.
    “The state was investigating themselves,” he said.

    Sykes had done nothing wrong that night and was shot because of police incompetence. According to police, two state troopers were investigating a 9-1-1 hang-up call when they responded to Sykes’ residence. However, after police put the innocent man in the hospital, the attorney general’s office said it was discovered later that cops went to the wrong house.
    Sykes never made a 9-1-1 call — until after he was shot by cops.

    According to the police report, Sykes fired a single round through the sliding glass door to his home thinking he was the victim of a home invasion. He was correct, unfortunately.

    During the incident, police officers fired four rounds. Three of those rounds struck Sykes.

    Sykes was then airlifted to Cooper University Hospital in Camden.

    He ‘felt intruders were trying to get in and he was yelling to his wife to call 911,’  Rich Kaser, longtime family friend, and attorney told NJ.com.
    Sykes “thought there were bad people out there,” the friend added.

    The police report originally stated that Sykes fired first. However, Kaser said the family told him it was one of the two state troopers who fired first at the elderly man after seeing him standing in the living room with a shotgun.

    It would also come out in the investigation that Sykes only fired after the two intruders shot him.
    As NJ.com reported last July,

    According to Kaser, Sykes himself, despite being seriously wounded, also called 911 for help.

    Kaser said Sykes was ordered to come out of the house. His shirt now soaked in blood, his attorney said, he was helped out by his wife and then ordered to lay face-down on the ground and was handcuffed.
    Sykes’ family was told Sykes was under arrest, according to Kaser, and the elderly man was then taken in handcuffs to be treated.

    According to the report, one of the troopers was hit with broken glass or by a portion of the shotgun round. He was treated and immediately released.
    Sykes, on the other hand, was not so lucky.

    Now, unfortunately, if there is anyone punished for going to the home of an innocent man and shooting him, it will be the taxpayers.

    Sadly, police responding to the wrong home and hurting or killing innocent people and their pets is common. In June, Georgia cops went to the wrong home and killed William Powell.

    Last year, in two separate incidents, cops responded to the wrong home and shot two dogs. One of the dogs was killed in front of multiple children at a 5-year-old boy’s birthday party.

    Last September, Georgia cops broke into an innocent couple’s home as they watched a movie on the sofa. During the gross act of negligence, the officers shot the homeowner, killed his dog, and then shot each other!

    The list goes on.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-justified-wrong-house-intruders/#udFtUc1zHAyx63cG.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2017, 10:05:17 AM
    Cop Admits to Sex with Underage Teen, Giving Her Booze, Has Charges Erased

    Livermore, CA — In America, it has become quite clear over the years that there are two very different justice systems — one for the political and ruling class, and one for everyone else. Politicians, government employees, and police officers are, all too often, given special treatment because of their connection to the ruling class — allowing them to escape accountability for even the most heinous of crimes. A Livermore cop is the latest example of this flawed system of ‘justice’ in America.

    Last week, an officer who admitted to multiple crimes, including paying for sex with a teenager, was given one of these special deals and will now have all of his charges simply vanish.

    According to SF Gate,
    Daniel Black agreed to plead no contest to one misdemeanor count of lewd conduct in public. Prosecutors said that while off duty as a police officer in April, Black and a teenager engaged in sexual acts in his motor home on two occasions and that he paid for her dinners and gave her alcohol in exchange.
    Five other misdemeanor charges against Black — including lewd conduct, engaging in prostitution and giving alcohol to a minor — were dismissed with the deal.


    The now 19-year-old girl has been the center of controversy involving dozens of cops who were sexually exploiting the underage child for years.
    The abused little girl was only 12-years-old when she was forced into the sex trade, forever altering the course of her life. For years, this little girl was “exploited by pimps” until she finally broke away and made it to an Oakland police officer. For a brief moment, she thought she was safe but — as more information comes out from the countless investigations — it appears she was wrong.

    Insanely enough, Black’s attorney is claiming that his client was singled out because he was a cop. Instead of noting that this officer will escape any accountability for his crimes, his attorney claims that Black’s badge makes him the victim!

    “They didn’t go after any of her clients who were non-police officers,” said Michael Cardoza, one of the defense attorneys.

    Now, according to SF Gate, if Black obeys the law and terms of the plea bargain, the single charge against him will be dismissed in May 2018. The conditions include taking an HIV test, watching an AIDS educational film, staying away from the young woman and steering clear of any areas where prostitution is known to occur.

    As the Free Thought Project has reported numerous times in the past, this scandal involving dozens of other cops — not just Black — began to unfold after a police officer killed himself.

    In September of 2015, Officer Brendan O’Brien killed himself a little more than a year after police say his wife, Irma Huerta-Lopez, also took her life. Although police have still not revealed the reason why, immediately after O’Brien’s suicide, an internal affairs probe found that he was the officer who met the underage sex slave, Celeste Guap.

    It has now been revealed through a lawsuit, that instead of helping the distraught sex-trafficked child, O’Brien and more than 30 other law enforcement officers, apparently including Black, “continued to traffic, rape, victimize and exploit a teenage girl who needed to be rescued,” according to a legal claim filed with the Oakland city attorney’s office. “Instead of helping [the teen] find a way out of exploitation, they furthered and deepened her spiral down into the sex trade,” the claim adds, according to the Post.

    Now, no justice will be served — in spite of the prosecutor, Deputy District Attorney Sabrina Farrell, saying they had a massive case against Black.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-admits-sex-teen-justice/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2017, 06:00:34 PM
    Hold the criminals personally responsible and take everything from them. It's the only way they will learn.
    The cops have no problem seizing assets from citizens without warrant and without a court decision and even when the citizen is proven not guilty. Why do they have a problem is their assets are seized when they commit crimes?

    Sheriff Must Pay $100K of Own His Money for Brutality Case or Head to Debtors Court

    Los Angeles, CA — As the Free Thought Project has reported extensively, police officers, even when found at fault for their abusive actions, are almost never held personally liable. It is the taxpayers who foot the bill. However, a new trend in accountability seems to be on the rise, and will be massively more effective at curbing police brutality than any system in place right now.

    The most recent case of a police officer being held personally liable comes out of Los Angeles, where former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca must decide within a week whether to pay $100,000 in damages — stemming from a civil lawsuit involving an inmate abuse case — or face liens on his assets, an attorney for the inmate said Friday, according to the LA Times.

    The damages are from a 2013 judgment against Baca, three other deputies, and a captain. In that case, inmate Tyler Willis proved to a jury that he was punched and kicked repeatedly, shot with a Taser multiple times and struck “numerous times” in the ankle with a heavy metal flashlight, causing fractures and head injuries.

    After a brief trial, the jury returned a verdict in Willis’ favor and held Baca personally liable. However, Baca, with the power of the police union, fought the ruling for the last 4 years, calling the idea of a police officer being held personally liable a “huge mistake.”

    We disagree.

    When police officers actually fear the loss of their own money, they may think twice before savagely beating a handcuffed woman or breaking into the wrong house and killing the innocent owner.


    In spite of never winning an appeal, Baca has refused to pay and now Willis’ attorney is going one step further.

    “Baca has to pay up or we will proceed to collect in debtors court,” Samuel Paz, an attorney for Willis said. “If necessary we will go forward with proceedings to identify his assets and place liens to collect on the debt.”

    For those unfamiliar with the former sheriff, he was forced to resign in 2014 amid a massive scandal involving the horrendous abuse of inmates in his jail. While Baca quietly retired and skated out on punishment, more than two dozen of his underlings were convicted on criminal charges for their role in the abuse. Baca claims he had no idea that dozens of his employees were carrying out the abuse right under his nose for more than a decade.

    Baca wasn’t the only officer held personally responsible in the 2013 lawsuit either. Anthony Vasquez, Mark Farino and Pedro Guerrero, and Daniel Cruz were found to be “malicious, oppressive or [act] in reckless disregard” of Willis’ rights.
    Last week, all four of the officers agreed to pay $65,000 — their portion of the $165,000 lawsuit. However, Baca has continued to refuse.

    It seems that Baca, who is currently drawing a $328,000 annual pension for the rest of his life — in spite of being a terrible cop — is holding out for the county to use taxpayer money.
    However, in court documents, the county has noted that they have no intention of paying for Baca’s abuse.

    This is the second such case in only weeks, in which cops are being forced to come out of pocket after being found at fault in a lawsuit. Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Deputy Adam Lin’s case was a bit more extreme than Baca’s, however.

    In 2013, Lin spotted 19-year-old Dontrell Stephens in a “high-crime area” — the man’s own low-income neighborhood — riding a bicycle in a manner the deputy found suspicious.

    Lin stopped the youth, who dismounted the bike with a cell phone in his hand and slowly approached the officer. Just outside the range of dash cam video, the officer shot Stephens four times — claiming he was in fear for his life — but footage and evidence clearly showed the claim to be baseless.

    Three of the bullets remain lodged in Stephens’ body, according to the Sun Sentinel — two in his arm and one in his spine, which left him paralyzed and dependent on a wheelchair for mobility.

    Stephens won a massive $22.4 million settlement and U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Seltzer ruled that Lin should foot at least a portion of the bill. Last month, nearly everything this officer owned was seized to pay back Stephens — including everything from his furniture to his clothing.

    Lin will most assuredly think twice before shooting another unarmed teen.

    As for Baca, however, it appears he has yet to learn his lesson and will have to be forced by the court to pay.

    Imagine, for a moment, the result of all police officers being held personally liable for their actions. In nearly every other profession on the planet, if someone hurts someone else while on the job, they are held liable — personally. Why can’t cops carry personal liability insurance just like doctors?

    As instances of police brutality and police killings continue to be exposed, there is no doubt that the US is in dire need of reform. The simple requirement for police to be insured for personal liability is an easy fix — especially to remove repeat offenders from the force.

    All too often, when a tragic death such as Tamir Rice occurs, months later we find out that the officer should have never been given a badge and a gun in the first place because of their past. However, insurance companies, who can’t fleece the taxpayers to pay for problem cops, would have to come out of pocket to pay for them and would make sure that these officers are uninsurable.

    If the officer becomes uninsurable, the officer becomes unhirable — simple as that.

    There are likely many cops out there right now who would be denied insurance coverage by any company, due to their track records. A requirement for personal liability insurance would, quite literally, weed out problem officers — almost overnight.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/la-sheriff-personally-liable-brutality/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2017, 06:08:29 PM
    This is insane. Soon they will make it mandatory. Say goodbye to your privacy.

    US-Born NASA Scientist Detained at Border, Forced to Unlock Phone for Freedom

    Sidd Bikkannavar should not have raised any red flags with Customs and Border Patrol, much less should the U.S.-born scientist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab have been forced to fork over phone and social media passwords in order to return to the country after a trip to Chile.

    But thanks to an abrupt, uncoordinated, and overly-broad travel ban implemented with an executive order from President Donald Trump, that’s exactly what happened — and Bikkannavar feels unsettled by the incident.
    “I don’t know what to think about this,” the scientist with 10 years at JPL told The Verge by phone. “…  I was caught a little off-guard by the whole thing.”

    Bikkannavar traveled to South America on a multi-week vacation to pursue a personal hobby of racing solar-powered cars, and attended a race in Patagonia with a Chilean team he’d recently joined.
    Departing under the Obama administration, the scientist faced a strikingly different atmosphere upon return to the administration of Trump and the chaos unfolding in the wake of tight restrictions on travel from certain predominantly Muslim nations.

    Obviously, Chile didn’t make Trump’s ban list — but confusion among alphabet agencies suddenly tasked with interpreting the new law led to questionable detainments, the revocation of some 60,000 visas, and tragic splitting apart of families — even in cases where the long and complex visa screening procedure had been approved.

    Enrolled in Global Entry, Bikkannavar — having undergone extensive background checks — should have been given expedited entry upon return from Santiago.
    “He hasn’t visited the countries listed in the immigration ban and he has worked at JPL — a major center at a US federal agency — for 10 years,” reports the Verge. “There, he works on ‘wavefront sensing and control,’ a type of optics technology that will be used on the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope.”

    Even credentials from the federal government weren’t enough to prevent harassment by border patrol
    , however, and after his passport was scanned, Bikkannavar was ushered into a back room where five others seemingly affected by the ban slept on cots. Forty minutes elapsed before an officer came to speak with the NASA scientist, and as he explained,

    “He takes me into an interview room and sort of explains that I’m entering the country and they need to search my possessions to make sure I’m not bringing in anything dangerous.”
    Answers to the questions asked by the officer would have been readily available via Bikkannavar’s Global Entry information — job title, place of residence, where he’d traveled — but no further explanation was provided for the detainment.

    “I asked a question, ‘Why was I chosen?’ And he wouldn’t tell me,” Bikkannavar explained.
    A document titled Inspection of Electronic Devices was the only justification proffered for the search of the scientist’s phone and accounts, and when Bikkannavar tried to politely explain his device was considered property of NASA and should not be searched, his words fell on deaf ears.

    According to the Verge, Bikkannavar showed the officer the phone’s JPL barcode — but that wasn’t sufficient and authorities insisted he give them the phone with its PIN code.
    “I was cautiously telling him I wasn’t allowed to give it out, because I didn’t want to seem like I was not cooperating,” Bikkannavar told the Verge. “I told him I’m not really allowed to give the passcode; I have to protect access. But he insisted they had the authority to search it.”

    In actuality, however, CBP agents don’t retain that broad an authority — and can only detain individuals who refuse for lengthy periods — though it appears officers have been using a bit of hollow trickery to obtain international travelers’ electronic devices and passwords.

    “In each incident that I’ve seen, the subjects have been shown a Blue Paper that says CBP has legal authority to search phones at the border, which gives them the impression that they’re obligated to unlock the phone, which isn’t true,” Hassan Shibly, chief executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) told the Verge. “They’re not obligated to unlock the phone.”

    Nonetheless, Bikkannavar says the officer — who brought out a document naming potential consequences for refusal — simply would not allow him to leave without giving the PIN and handing over the phone.
    So he caved, and the CBP officer vanished for over half an hour with the NASA phone.

    Bikkannavar has no idea what information officers might have kept or what was done with the phone during the inspection, but immediately shut it off, and — upon his eventual release — brought the device straight to JPL’s IT department.

    Without going into detail about whether or not sensitive information could have been divulged to officers, Bikkannavar explained the cybersecurity team at JPL was none-too pleased about the incident, as ‘NASA employees are obligated to protect work-related information, no matter how minuscule.’

    Beyond concerns about having his work information surveilled, Bikkannavar told the Verge he worries for the privacy of friends, family, and coworkers listed in the phone’s contact section. He has since procured a new phone and number for his work with NASA.

    Incidentally, CBP agents altogether failed to inspect the scientist’s bags — bringing into question the true motive for detaining a NASA employee and U.S. citizen with the foreign-sounding name and holding his PIN as the ransom for freedom to return home.

    “It was not that they were concerned with me bringing something dangerous in, because they didn’t even touch the bags,” Bikkannavar explained. “They had no way of knowing I could have had something in there.
    “You can say, ‘Okay well maybe it’s about making sure I’m not a dangerous person,’ but they have all the information to verify that.”

    Supporters of travel restrictions insist they don’t intentionally target Muslims; however, anecdotal tales following its implementation evince nefarious underpinnings with far worse implications.

    Authorities rushing to comply with the strict yet vague executive order proved, in the case of Bikkannavar and others, that fear of misunderstanding the letter of the law — and repercussions for not acting strictly enough — leads to overcompensation in the detention of scores of wholly innocent, legal travelers due to their ethnicity or religion.

    It’s profiling at its worst — and that makes the semantic argument the order somehow wasn’t a ban, utterly moot.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/nasa-scientist-border-phone/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2017, 06:18:09 PM
    The politicians who were bribed and implemented this should go to prison and pay from their pockets.

    Court Finds Speed Cameras ‘Unconstitutional’ — Forces City to Repay ALL Tickets

    New Miami, OH — Take away the political corruption, bribery scandals, increased accidents, and police state issues with Red Light Cameras and we are still left with a system that is rooted in the removal of due process. After the corporatist red light camera industry spread through the nation like a cancer for more than a decade, people are finally beginning to realize their inherently despotic nature.

    After they woke up to the fact that their due process had been entirely removed by Optotraffic — a private vendor allowed to extort citizens with the blessing of New Miami politicians — the people fought back in the form of a class action lawsuit.

    As the Newspaper reports, a group of three lawyers had filed suit in 2013, arguing that New Miami’s automated ticketing ordinance gave vehicle owners no realistic opportunity to defend themselves against the demand for a payment of up to $180 that arrived in the mail. Optotraffic, a private vendor, sent the tickets to motorists passing through the less-than-one-square-mile town on US 127, a major highway that links Cincinnati with points north.

    During that period of Optotraffic extortion, the city robbed drivers of $3,066,523.00. Now, after Butler County Court of Common Pleas Judge Michael A. Oster Jr.’s ruling, the city must pay back all of it.
    “If the government has created an unconstitutional law/ordinance that has taken people’s money without affording them the necessary due process protections, should not justice demand, and the law require, restitution of that money to the people?” Oster asked at the opening of his ruling. “Once the complexities of the law are analyzed, the answer is simple: Yes.”

    The city attempted to fight the ruling of the state’s second highest court for more than a year. However, the case was so cut and dry that the Ohio Supreme Court chose not to intervene.

    New Miami officials attempted to claim sovereign immunity to protect itself from monetary damages. However, the court failed to grant them immunity since they had violated the constitutional rights of its citizens.

    “Ohio law is clear that the reimbursement of monies collected pursuant to an unconstitutional enactment or invalid rule is equitable relief, not monetary damages, and is consequently not barred by sovereign immunity,” Judge Oster concluded. “No later than thirty days after the filing of this order, plaintiff is to file with the court and affidavit evincing monies paid under the invalidated ordinance, along with an Excel spreadsheet, so that the court can set the proper amount of restitution/refund as determined under the laws of equity.”


    This ruling set by the court is a precedent that should be used by towns across the United States to give people their money back who’ve been extorted by these due process-removing companies.
    If you are one of those people who couldn’t care less about the removal of due process, perhaps the sheer corruption of these companies would be enough to deter your support.

    After being found guilty of bribing politicians to implement her due process-removing products, Karen Finley, former CEO of the red light company Redflex, was sentenced last year to 14 months in prison. Her crimes spanned across multiple states and are so extensive that she is still facing future trials.

    In April, the Free Thought Project conducted an exclusive interview with New York resident Stephen Ruth — aka Red Light Robin Hood.

    Ruth has recently become targeted by local politicians in his community who are ‘addicted’ to the funds from these red light cameras.

    Unwilling to sacrifice innocent lives for millions of dollars in gross revenue, this nonviolent vigilante admittedly sabotaged traffic cameras in order to call attention to drastically shortened yellow lights endangering lives in his community. He now faces arrest, threats, break-ins, and more.

    While Ruth is not a politician, his sentiment toward unconstitutional red light cameras represents a growing resistance in this country — just as the case in New Miami illustrates. As with any tyrannical or fascist regime, these private red light camera companies rely on your compliance for their very existence.

    As more people refuse to comply, these companies, who rely on corrupt and greedy politicians willing to sell out their citizens for a buck, will begin to fail. And, when they lose — freedom wins.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/speed-cameras-unconstitutional-tickets/#GgOCzAzJ4Xh2TXqj.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 20, 2017, 02:38:52 PM
    Those criminals have no problem destroying the lives of innocent people but when it comes to exposing the true criminals all of a sudden they worry about hiding the crimes "mistakes". To use their perverted "logic": if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?

    Sheriff Tries to Expose List of 300 Bad Cops, Courts & Union Promptly Block Him

    Los Angeles, CA — Domestic violence, bribery, theft, excessive force, brutality — these are just a few of the crimes committed by active duty sheriff’s deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. In total, there are 300 deputies with a history of misconduct whom Sheriff Jim McDonnell thinks the public should know about. However, thanks to a protectionist court system and a powerful police union, the crimes of these cops may remain secret.
    Having taken over one of the most corrupt sheriff’s departments in the country, McDonnell appears to be taking steps to increase transparency and foster public trust. But these steps are being met with heavy resistance along the way.

    In 2014, McDonnell inherited a department in chaos.
    In April of last year, former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Undersheriff Paul Tanaka was convicted in connection with a sweeping, federal civil rights investigation of corruption and deputy-on-inmate abuse inside the jail system.

    Tanaka, along with former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca and dozens of other deputies, were exposed in a horrific abuse scandal that shocked LA County. In fact, Baca’s crimes were proven so grave in a civil suit, that he was found personally liable for $100,000, which he is to pay the victim directly out of his own pocket.

    After seeing the breeding ground for corruption that McDonnell took over, it is no surprise his move to increase transparency is being met with such resistance. The years of corruption that festered under Baca did not happen in a vacuum. It was allowed to grow out of control by a union and a system that helped cover it up.

    To promote a more transparent and fair system of justice, McDonnell wanted to turn over the names and crimes of hundreds of problem cops to prosecutors, who can then add them to a database that tracks problem cops. This information can then be disclosed to defendants who may have been unjustly targeted by these cops.

    After all, if a cop has been caught stealing from the department, beating an innocent person, or accepting bribes, then their honesty on the stand should certainly come under question — especially considering the fact that their tainted testimony could decide whether or not an innocent person gets thrown in a cage.

    However, according to the LA Times, the union that represents rank-and-file deputies strongly opposes providing the names to prosecutors and has taken the department to court. The Assn. for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs (ALADS) argues that the disclosure would violate state laws protecting officer personnel files and draw unfair scrutiny on deputies whose mistakes might have happened long ago.
    Shortly after the Union noted their opposition, an appeals court sided with them by blocking the sheriff from sending the list of problem cops to the DA.

    To be clear here, this list would not be a matter of public record, although it undoubtedly should be. It would only come up when the officer is set to testify against someone they accused of a crime.
    As the Times points out, departments in at least a dozen counties, such as San Francisco and Sacramento, regularly send prosecutors the names of problem officers. Some, including agencies in San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura have done so for well over a decade.

    This process only helps to further the cause of transparency — but not in LA.
    In 1963, the U.S. Supreme court ruled, in Brady vs. Maryland, prosecutors must turn over exculpatory, or favorable evidence to the defense to lessen the instance of faulty convictions. However, if this precedent in LA takes hold, the rights of the accused will suffer a dangerous blow.

    Jerry Coleman, a special assistant district attorney in San Francisco County who teaches prosecutorial ethics at the University of San Francisco School of Law, told the Times that the ripple effects of such a failure can spread well beyond the courtroom.

    “They affect not just our relations with police but our relations with victims, and the integrity of the criminal justice system entirely, and the public’s sense of honesty in the proceedings,” he said.
    As for the court’s reasoning for keeping the criminal records of police officers secret — it could “create a negative stigma for the deputy.”

    “The disclosure of a deputy’s name in conjunction with this list will create a negative stigma for the deputy,” Superior Court Judge James Chalfant wrote in his decision last month.

    If the cop is accused of beating a handcuffed suspect, shouldn’t his ‘stigma’ be ‘negative’, especially given the fact that he was obviously allowed to keep his badge and gun?

    “We’re not trying to hide anything that’s gone on in the past. The fact of the matter is, nobody wants to be wrongly accused of anything. That applies to everyone else in the world, so it should apply to deputies too,” ALADS’ president, Det. Ron Hernandez said.

    However, if these officers were wrongly accused, then their records should not have any marks on them.

    To highlight the glaring double standard of cops and the people they police, consider what happens after a police-involved shooting. Immediately after a cop shoots someone, their previous criminal record is not only released but it is published by news outlets in an attempt to assassinate the victim’s character publicly, and without due process exonerate the officer.

    At least in the case of prosecutors maintaining the list, these matters would be resolved in a courtroom instead of the comment sections of local news affiliates.

    Just as police accountability attempts to take a half step forward, the blue wall of protection comes crashing down and sets it two steps back.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sheriff-tries-expose-300-problem-cops/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2017, 01:30:13 PM
    Laws apply equally to everyone? Not quite. It seems that the ticket to molesting a child and not getting prison time and get paid is to be a cop. So long for the cop lovers who worship their "honorable heroes". They must feel safe knowing that vile molesters with a badge such as this one are out there.

    Cop Admits to Sex with a Child, Escapes Jail AND Gets $15K in Severance Pay

    Ely, MN — On October 14, 2015, Sgt. Jason Allen Carlson, with the Ely police department, was indicted on charges of third-degree criminal sexual conduct for admitting to having sexual relations with an underage girl. It took over two years, but in January, the officer pleaded guilty. However, because of his blue privilege, Carlson will not see a single day in jail — and, as we’ve just learned, he’ll receive severance pay from the department.

    Carlson, who was described in court as an acquaintance to the girl’s parents, admitted to breaking the law. He admitted to taking the girl, against all department policy, on ride alongs with him. She wasn’t even old enough to drive yet.

    During the indictment, Carlson also admitted to having sex with the child.
    “I engaged in sexual contact with an individual who was at least 16 but had not reached the age of 18,” Carlson stated in a plea petition. “I knew I could not do so.”

    Because Carlson was in a position of authority, his acts with this child were that much worse, as she could’ve been intimidated into the relationship. According to the Duluth News Tribune, a St. Louis County grand jury in October 2015 indicted Carlson on a felony third-degree criminal sexual conduct charge, alleging that he was in a “position of authority” over the victim.

    Carlson’s case was set for trial in January. However, due to the fact that cops across the country, who admit to vile acts, even with children, are given special privileges by the court system, Carlson entered into a plea deal. St. Louis County prosecutor Gary Bjorklund then reduced the charge to misconduct of a public officer.

    Instead of spending time in jail, now Carlson will most likely even escape probation. But it gets worse.

    Carlson, who’s been on paid vacation for over two years since admitting to having sex with a minor — was not even fired.

    Earlier this month, the Ely police department, with the blessing of the city council, allowed Carlson to quietly resign — and agreed to pay him $15,000 as part of the resignation deal.


    Imagine for a moment that a person works in the civilian sector and is arrested and charged for having sex with a minor. Of course, everyone is innocent until proven guilty — so, they may not be fired right away. However, once they were indicted after admitting to the charge, what are the odds that a private company would allow an admitted child sex offender to collect a paycheck — for two more years — and then receive severance pay?

    Not only would that person have been immediately fired, but they would have been convicted much faster, and they would be in jail right now.

    However, because Carlson wears a badge, this 11-year veteran of the Ely police department will likely use his newfound windfall of cash to relocate to another department — and do the same thing all over again. After all, he gets to act out his sexual desires with high school freshmen and then gets insanely long paid vacations.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-admits-to-sex-with-a-child-wont-go-to-jail-and-gets-15k-in-severance-pay/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2017, 01:36:05 PM
    Let's see if these criminals will end up in prison or if they'll get a promotion and a hefty bonus.

    Florida Cop and Police Chief Both Charged in Shooting Death of Elderly Woman During Training Exercise

    Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel was finally charged in the shooting death of Mary Knowlton, the 73-year-old retired librarian who was shot and killed during a citizens academy last year.

    Punta Gordo Police Chief Tom Lewis, who has defended Coel throughout his troubled career, was also charged, State Attorney Steve Russell announced during a press conference Wednesday.

    Coel, who shot and killed Knowlton during an exercise in which he was supposed to use blanks last August, was charged with manslaughter, which is a first degree felony. He is facing up to 30 years in prison.

    Lewis was charged with culpable negligence, which is a misdemeanor. He faces up to 60 days in jail, according to a press release from the state attorney’s office.

    Coel turned himself in earlier today but was quickly released after posting a $5,000 bond. Lewis was issued a summons to appear in court, according to WINK News.

    Coel, who has been on paid administrative leave since August 9, 2016 incident, has a long history of abuse as we pointed out last year.

    He is the same cop who allowed his police dog to maul a man for riding a bicycle at night without lights.

    “I’ve been saying for months that this guy was going to kill somebody and now he has killed somebody,” attorney Scott Weinberg said during a telephone interview with Photography is Not a Crime last year.

    “Everybody had been put on notice that he was a loose cannon, that he should not have had a badge and a gun. The city, the state attorney and the police department knew he was not mentally fit to serve the public.”

    But Chief Lewis continued to defend Coel, even after the cop fired a gun with live ammunition during a “shoot, don’t shoot” exercise, celebrating the fact that Coel was an award-winning officer, even if he did have a history of disciplinary actions against him, including a forced resignation from another law enforcement agency.

    Knowlton had signed up for the citizens academy class because she wanted to show her support for police during a time when police were being criticized nationwide for their abusive tactics.

    The incident led to a $2 million settlement for her family in November.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/02/22/florida-cop-and-police-chief-both-charged-in-shooting-death-of-elderly-woman-during-training-exercise/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 28, 2017, 05:51:35 PM
    Bad Cop Arrested After Good Cop Filmed Him Stomp Innocent Man’s Head In

    Conway, AR — Faulkner County Sheriff’s deputy, Eugene Watlington, 43, went to trial last week for excessive force after stomping on the head of Harvey Martin. The entire assault was captured on video by Mayflower police officer Dalton Elliott.

    The violent arrest happened during a botched police chase in 2015, during which Martin was working undercover for Conway police. When Faulkner County deputies attempted to pull over a Mustang carrying Martin and the man who he was supposed to be surveilling, Christopher Cummings, all hell broke loose.

    As the chase began, Cummings held a gun to Martin’s head and forced him to speed away from police, according to authorities. The chase only ended once the Mustang ran out of gas. When the chase ended, however, the violent excessive force began.

    According to Elliot, he and two deputies had their guns drawn when they arrived at the site in Conway where the chase ended once the Mustang ran out of gas. Elliott said they told Martin to put his hands up, which he did. Elliott said Martin did not resist arrest.

    When police moved in to make the arrest, Cummings ran, but Martin immediately complied.

    Naturally, Watlington’s fellow officers claimed that Martin was not cooperating and continued to “reach for his waistband.” But, the video does not show this. Also, Martin would not have any reason to reach for his waistband as he was working for the police at the time.

    During the trial, Elliot testified that he counted “nine to 10 times” that the 6-foot-1 Watlington, who weighed 310 pounds according to his arrest warrant, kicked Martin with his boot.

    Watlington was not participating in the arrest and was only standing there — just waiting to inflict violence.

    According to Arkansas Online, Conway Police Department officer Glen Cooper testified that Martin was trying to help Conway police locate Cummings that night. Cooper said Watlington asked him to question Martin later because Watlington said Martin wouldn’t want to talk with him. Watlington then smiled and shined a flashlight on one of his boots, the officer said.

    “Help me! Help me! I’m not resisting,” Martin can be heard screaming in the video as officers stomp, punch and kick him. The sound of the beating was so overwhelming in the courtroom that Martin’s mother broke down into tears and had to cover her ears.

    “I think the best piece of evidence was … the video” filmed by Mayflower police officer Dalton Elliott with a body camera, Special Prosecutor Tom Tatum said, according to Arkansas Online. “There’s no bias” with the video. “It … shows what it shows.”

    Martin, who was actually helping police before being assaulted, was then rushed to the emergency room after the beating.

    “I was beat down, tased, everything. I wasn’t putting up no fight,” Martin told authorities in an interview after his arrest.

    Once the smoke and the blood cleared, all charges against Martin were dropped, and the attention was focused on Watlington. The Faulkner County Sheriff then fired Watlington after an investigation concluded that he’d used “excessive force.” He was charged a short time after being fired.

    As the Free Thought Project frequently points out, violent and dangerous cops are allowed to continue to prey on society because their fellow cops remain silent in the face of excessive force. Fortunately, however, that was not the case this time around.

    In spite of the fact that Watlington’s fellow corrupt cops attempted to cover for the officer, Elliot’s video and testimony were able to bring this bad cop to justice.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-excessive-force-filmed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 01, 2017, 02:13:11 PM
    Look at the honorable heroes criminal scum.

    7 Baltimore officers federally indicted for racketeering, including robbing victims

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C527TggXEA0xSKx.jpg)

    Seven Baltimore City Police officers are being federally indicted for a racketeering conspiracy, according to the Justice Department, in an investigative case that was secretly conducted and kept quiet about even from the city's State's Attorney.

    The arrests of the officers allegedly involved in racketeering were announced in the U.S. Attorney’s Office on Wednesday morning. The accused officers were reportedly robbing victims ranging from $200,000 to a 'couple hundred dollars,' filing false affidavits, and making fraudulent overtime claims while officers vacationed in Myrtle Beach and gambled at casinos.

    One officer is also charged in a separate drug distribution indictment. Sometimes, narcotics and weapons were seized in addition to money and, "in several instances, the defendants did not file any police reports," the indictment alleges.

    "These seven police officers betrayed the trust" of not only the police department but also the public, said Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, during a time when the city was "under scrutiny" and trying to heal in a post-Freddie Gray climate.

    According to a handout by the U.S. Attorney's Office, the involved officers have been identified as Momodu Bondeva Kenton Gondo a/k/a 'GMoney' and 'Mike,' Wayne Earl Jenkins, Evodio Calles Hendrix, Maurice Kilpatrick Ward, Jemell Lamar Rayam, Daniel Thomas Hersl and Marcus Roosevelt Taylor. All have been suspended without pay and are in custody of the FBI as police are search for more victims who may have interacted with any of these officers under suspicious circumstances.

    The Baltimore DEA’s Assistant Special Agent in Charge Don Hibbert explained that the DEA was conducting a probe when they "discovered information in the course of our drug investigation and we were able to work with our partners at Baltimore PD and the FBI and passed the information along and it worked the way it should” have been.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/03/01/7-baltimore-officers-federally-indicted-for-racketeering-including-robbing-victims.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2017, 12:19:15 AM
    Michigan Cops Can Legally Have Sex with Human Trafficking Victims During Investigations

    Michigan — As 14 states draft up bills to grant privileged status to police officers with Blue Lives Matter laws, one state, in particular, is magnitudes worse in regards to the atrocities their cops can legally commit. In Michigan, police are granted immunity from prosecution if they have sex with a prostitute or a sex trafficking victim during an investigation. Seriously.

    As the Free Thought Project previously reported in 2014, Honolulu police officers urged lawmakers to keep an exemption in state law that allows undercover officers to have sex with prostitutes during investigations. For years, these two states allowed their cops to have sex with prostitutes and victims of human trafficking while at the same time arresting these women.

    Hawaii has since gotten rid of their law and, thanks to Bridgette Carr, a director of the Human Trafficking Clinic at the University of Michigan Law School, Michigan is on the chopping block next.
    Carr told Michigan Radio she became aware of the exemption a couple of years ago when Hawaii was “phasing out their exemption.”
    “And a number of folks in the human trafficking community were upset that Michigan retained the exemption,” she told the station.

    Cops who abuse this ridiculous law say they need the legal protection to catch lawbreakers. Critics, however, including human trafficking experts and other police, say it’s unnecessary and can further victimize sex workers, many of whom have been forced into the trade.

    “The reason the law is structured the way it is is because of the way the prostitution laws are written,” Carr said. “So for law enforcement to have any power to investigate with immunity, they got all the power. And no one thought to go back and carve out a prohibition against sexual intercourse.”

    According to Carr, some police claim they know about this law while others do not.
    “No police officer or prosecutor that I spoke with said, ‘That’s a tool that we use in our training or that’s what we expect our law enforcement to be doing,’” she said.
    However, according to Carr, some victims of police persecution say that cops use this law to threaten prostitutes and human trafficking victims.

    “What I do know from my own clients is that people who either say they are cops, who are cops or who are impersonating cops, know about this exemption and threaten my clients with it sometimes,” she said. “It’s not rampant, but it happens. And I think it says something about us as a community that we would allow this type of exemption for law enforcement, whether it’s used very often or not.”

    In the Land of the Free, it is against the law to get paid to have sex, unless that sex is filmed, distributed on DVD, and taxed. One of the least talked about systems of oppression in the US is that of persecuting prostitutes. Think about it. The group prosecuting sex workers are allowed to engage in sex with that person and then arrest them for it. It is brutal hypocrisy.

    It is important to note when referencing prostitution, we are talking about the mutually beneficial exchange of sexual favors for money by two or more consenting partners — not forced human trafficking.
    It’s called the “oldest profession in the world” for a reason. Sex is a basic human need. One need only observe the explosive population growth of humans in the last 10,000 years to see that desire to mate is inherent in each and every one one of us.

    When one takes this into consideration, the notion of outlawing consensual sex is seen for what it is — sheer insanity. And, it leads to situations like we see in Michigan, where cops grant themselves special privileges to engage in it.

    Just like the war on drugs creates crime by pushing the constant demand for illicit substances into the black market, the war on the sex trade creates crime in the same manner. It is time to end both of them.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-sex-human-trafficking-victims/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 03, 2017, 04:36:47 AM
    http://www.lohud.com/story/news/politics/politics-on-the-hudson/2017/03/02/ny-rape-kit-deadline/98657960


    Typical Govt incompetence.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2017, 12:07:46 PM
    Award-Winning Kentucky Cop Shoots Unarmed Man Suspected of Using Drugs

    Kentucky cops entered an abandoned home looking for a man who had been accused of using drugs outside the home Wednesday, shooting the man within a second of ordering him to show his hands.

    The incident was captured on the officer’s body cam and released Thursday.

    “Show your hands,” Louisville Metro police officer Sarah Stumler yells after discovering the man hiding behind a mattress leaning against the wall.

    Then she fired her gun before even giving him a chance to show his hands, shooting Bruce Warrick once in the abdomen.

    “Shit,” she says as the mattress and Warrick fall to the floor.

    She then begins to administer first aid to the 38-year-old victim.

    “You’re okay, just hold on,” Stumler says, who has received several awards and commendations over the years.

    Now Warrick is listed in critical condition at a local hospital.

    According to WDRB:

    It happened in the 2600 block of Magazine Street near 26th Street. Chief Steve Conrad said First Division officers responded to a complaint just after 11:30 a.m. of a man doing drugs next to an abandoned house.

    When officers arrived, they were told the man had gone into that house. More officers arrived, and three of them entered the house and announced their presence, Conrad said.

    They searched the house, and upon leaving, Officer Sarah Stumler saw Bruce Warrick hiding behind a mattress in one of the rooms. She ordered Warrick, a black male, to show his hands.

    Stumler then fired one shot, striking Warrick in the abdomen. Conrad said the officers called EMS and provided first aid while they waited for EMS to arrive. He explained why a taser was not used.

    “When officers are going into a situation where they don’t know what sort of force they may encounter, it is not unusual to see officers with their weapons out,” Chief Conrad said.

    Chief Conrad said he has not formed a conclusion about whether the shooting was justified or not, but that it is being investigated by the department’s internal affairs department.

    Carrick still has not been charged with any crimes, according to WLKY.

    Unlike many chiefs from other departments in the United States, Conrad does not waste any time in releasing body cam footage of police shooting suspects as he did last year on the same day of another questionable shooting in which the officers’ narrative contradicted what was seen on the video.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/03/watch-kentucky-cop-shoots-unarmed-man-suspected-using-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2017, 12:10:48 PM
    Connecticut State Troopers Charged with Kidnapping for Beating and Torturing Man at Party

    Two Connecticut state troopers were arrested Tuesday for nearly beating a man to death while they were off-duty after a night of heavy drinking and nightclubbing.

    The troopers were angry that the man grabbed a woman’s butt at an after-party in one of the trooper’s home.

    In classic mob style, the troopers even took pictures of the man’s drivers license in an attempt to dissuade him from telling the police.

    Now, both troopers have been suspended and a judge has put them both on house arrest until their day in court.

    WFSB reports that on February 18, Connecticut state troopers Xavier Cruz and Rupert Laird were out partying and drinking with friends at Club Karma in Hartford.

    After the club closed, the group all went to Cruz’s house in Wethersfield to keep partying and drinking. But things got out of control once the drinks began to settle in.

    Feeling extra flirtatious from the alcohol, Felipe Figueroa-Garcia grabbed a female guest by the butt. The woman told the troopers and that is when the torture-style beat-down took place.

    The troopers forced Garcia to strip down to bare underwear, all while punching and kicking him more than 50 times.

    At one point the troopers whipped out a police baton and began beating Garcia, splattering blood on the refrigerator, walls and floor.

    Garcia was even made to stand on a metal cheese grater while on his knees.

    “You know I can kill you right? If I was going to kill you no one would find your body,” Laird told Garcia while standing over him, pointing a gun, according to court documents.

    Eventually the troopers ordered Garcia to clean up his own blood, but when did not do a good enough job for them, they beat him again.

    When the troopers finally stopped, they took pictures of Garcia’s drivers license and bruised body as a way to keep him from going to police.

    But when Garcia drove himself to the hospital, a nurse contacted police after seeing his injuries and suspecting foul play. The police report notes there were dark purple bruises on Garcia’s chest, back, thighs, stomach and buttocks.

    State police released this statement concerning the matter:

    “The Connecticut State Police is committed to serving all of Connecticut’s residents while embodying our core values of professionalism, respect, and integrity. We hold accountable all members of the agency, emphasizing their obligation to uphold these values and our standard of conduct, whether on-duty or off-duty.

    Immediately upon learning of the egregious conduct of two off-duty state troopers, Tpr. Rupert Laird, Troop C-Tolland, and Tpr. Xavier Cruz, Troop K-Colchester, the Connecticut State Police suspended their police powers, confiscated their weapons, badges and patrol vehicles, and opened its own administrative inquiry. Both troopers are suspended pending the outcome of the proceedings.”

    When police went to Cruz’s house to investigate, they found blood on the floor and wall in the basement where Garcia was beaten.

    The troopers are charged with first-degree kidnapping with a firearm, second-degree assault with a firearm and deprivation of rights by force or threat.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/02/connecticut-state-troopers-charged-with-kidnapping-for-beating-and-torturing-man-at-party/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 04, 2017, 11:11:52 PM
    Cop Directing Traffic Opens Fire on Innocent Family in Van, Shooting the Dad

    Atlanta, GA — A North Carolina family narrowly escaped with their lives when an off-duty Atlanta police supervisor opened fire at their vehicle while directing traffic — because they made a wrong turn.
    Forty-six-year-old Noel Hall, his wife, sons, grandson, and another passenger were leaving a motocross event at the Georgia Dome, where, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation told 11Alive Sergeant Mathieu Cadeau “was conducting traffic and ordered Hall to go one direction down Northside Drive, but reportedly, Hall wanted to go another direction. The GBI, which has taken over the investigation, said Hall then drove toward the officer, at which point Cadeau opened fire, injuring Hall.”

    Hall disputes GBI’s claims he drove at Cadeau, saying “at no point did we realize this man was a police officer.”

    “First thing we want to make very clear is, that at no point did we realize this man was a police officer, he never presented hisself [sic] in any such way,” Hall wrote in a statement on the inexplicable shooting. “Yes, he had a vest on, however, from our point of view there was nothing on it to indicate or state who he was, he never identified himself, we did not see a badge and most certainly did not see his weapon. We were already in the turn lane and in the process of turning when he approached us by walking in front of our van, we did not drive toward him as been stated.”

    Hall continued, “We came to a complete stop and at the point when we did start moving, we made a turn to the right, around and away from the officer. It is unclear to us as of why he chose to shoot, as we had already moved past him, when he fired at us, but it was absolutely unjustified.”

    Further, even the Atlanta Police Department remains skeptical, reiterating Wednesday their office has never claimed Hall targeted Cadeau with the van.
    Initial reports said Hall drove toward the supervisor, who “was wearing his uniform and reflective vest,” after being directed to a different route. Cadeau then opened fire without warning, hitting and injuring Hall — who then drove several blocks until a family member on board managed to reach emergency services.

    Hall’s injuries weren’t serious, but the shaken up family has grave concerns about Cadeau’s indiscriminate and gratuitous firing of a deadly weapon into their Ford F350 van — particularly with the number of children inside. He stated,

    “We are very fortunate and thankful that I (Noel) did not sustain any life threatening injuries from the gunshot wound, as we are also very fortunate and thankful that none of the other family members were hit. The officer shot at me through the drivers window, the bullet entering and exiting me twice, then through and out the passenger window, just missing my wife’s head, who was seated in the passenger seat by only inches. Also in the van were 2 of our sons, one sons girlfriend and our 2 year old grandson, so it could have very easily went through the passenger area of the van, hitting any of them.”

    Considering Cadeau fired on the van while directing overflow traffic from a popular event, bystanders on foot and in other vehicles were also fortunate to be spared.

    Notably, neither the Atlanta Police Department nor the Georgia Bureau of Investigation have accused Hall of accelerating toward the supervisor or targeting him maliciously with the vehicle — simply that he began driving toward Cadeau.

    Indeed, Atlanta police haven’t indicated the supervisor cop felt threatened during the incident, at all.

    Hall lamented the allegations he drove toward Cadeau, asserting never, at any point, “would I have done anything to put them in harms way, just as I would never had intentionally made a move to cause harm or possibly take another’s life.”

    GBI is now handling the investigation into why an officer in a supervisory position on the job fired his service weapon into a family vehicle when the driver didn’t opt for the officially-sanctioned route — but didn’t put anyone in danger.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-directing-traffic-opens-fire-on-innocent-family-in-van-shooting-the-dad/#EzvQz4RobpYhH60r.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 04, 2017, 11:15:42 PM
    This dangerous criminal needs to spend the rest of his pathetic life in prison.

    Woman Run Over by Her Car As Crazed Cop Drags Her Out at Gunpoint for No Reason

    Lee County, FL — Lee County Deputy Raymond Gallagher is a bad cop. It is cops like him that add to the fear people feel when they see those red and blue lights in their rearview mirrors as they are targeted for extortion for some arbitrary traffic violation. However, thanks to the power of video and a cop watching citizen, Deputy Raymond Gallagher is a cop no more.

    In October, Gallagher pulled a woman over for speeding. It was a routine stop and it appeared that the woman wanted to get off the road, so she pulled into a parking lot at a nearby shopping mall. Never did the woman try to flee or resist or otherwise pose any threat to Gallagher. However, that did not stop him from creating the violent scene that unfolded next.

    For pulling over into a parking lot — for a minor speeding violation — Gallagher rushed her vehicle with his weapon drawn and proceeded to drag her from the car. Clearly in shock and frightened as a crazed screaming man is running toward her with a weapon pointed at her head, the woman either forgot or did not have time to put the vehicle in park. However, it was not moving at all — until Gallagher dragged her out of the car.

    In the officer’s dashcam video, we see him rush the car and proceed to drag the woman from the car. As she falls to the concrete with her seatbelt still attached, her foot slips off the brake causing the car to start rolling forward. Because the crazed cop didn’t allow her to remove her seatbelt — or put the car in park — she was dragged along the side of her moving vehicle.

    Luckily, she was not run directly over by the back tire and killed. But she was hurt.
    After the stop, Gallagher arrested the woman and fabricated an entire story to back up his reasons for the use of force and never once mentioned that she was pulled from the vehicle and dragged.
    As NBC 2 reports, an internal affairs investigation also discovered Gallagher lied on the arrest report, stating the female tried to avoid him when he first made contact with her, something the video proved never occurred.


    Instead of the truth, contained within the officer’s fictional report was a statement about how he “helped” the woman from her vehicle. In their investigation, the department used the Merriam-Webster dictionary to define ‘help’.

    Merriam-Webster defines the work help as follow(s): to give assistance or support to; to make more pleasant or bearable; to be of use to, to change for the better. In the video, Deputy Gallagher did not appear to assist, support, please, be of use to, or change the situation for the better.

    The investigation substantiated the following four charges:
    • Improper Conduct- Excessive or Unnecessary Force
    • Improper Conduct- Untruthfulness in Proceedings or Reports
    • Job Knowledge and Performance- Knowledge of Rules and Procedures
    • Improper Conduct- Conduct Unbecoming Officer/Member

    “Mr. Gallagher fell far short of our expectations, training, and policy, and we dealt with him swiftly and surely,” Sheriff Mike Scott said. “I will not tolerate behavior like that.”

    Thankfully, a vigilant citizen decided to stick around and act as a witness after he suspected Gallagher was going to escalate the situation or this cop may have never been exposed. The Witness, Kevin Noell then called the Lee County Sheriff’s Office to report Gallagher.

    Now, nearly 5 months after the incident, Gallagher is no longer a cop, and, hopefully, it stays that way.
    Below is the dramatic video showing this deputy’s aggressive and dangerous behavior.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-woman-dragged-speeding-stop/#7eEUFCQ5ZILTgDHj.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 06, 2017, 01:37:49 AM
    This dangerous criminal needs to spend the rest of his pathetic life in prison.

    Woman Run Over by Her Car As Crazed Cop Drags Her Out at Gunpoint for No Reason

    Lee County, FL — Lee County Deputy Raymond Gallagher is a bad cop. It is cops like him that add to the fear people feel when they see those red and blue lights in their rearview mirrors as they are targeted for extortion for some arbitrary traffic violation. However, thanks to the power of video and a cop watching citizen, Deputy Raymond Gallagher is a cop no more.

    In October, Gallagher pulled a woman over for speeding. It was a routine stop and it appeared that the woman wanted to get off the road, so she pulled into a parking lot at a nearby shopping mall. Never did the woman try to flee or resist or otherwise pose any threat to Gallagher. However, that did not stop him from creating the violent scene that unfolded next.

    For pulling over into a parking lot — for a minor speeding violation — Gallagher rushed her vehicle with his weapon drawn and proceeded to drag her from the car. Clearly in shock and frightened as a crazed screaming man is running toward her with a weapon pointed at her head, the woman either forgot or did not have time to put the vehicle in park. However, it was not moving at all — until Gallagher dragged her out of the car.

    In the officer’s dashcam video, we see him rush the car and proceed to drag the woman from the car. As she falls to the concrete with her seatbelt still attached, her foot slips off the brake causing the car to start rolling forward. Because the crazed cop didn’t allow her to remove her seatbelt — or put the car in park — she was dragged along the side of her moving vehicle.

    Luckily, she was not run directly over by the back tire and killed. But she was hurt.
    After the stop, Gallagher arrested the woman and fabricated an entire story to back up his reasons for the use of force and never once mentioned that she was pulled from the vehicle and dragged.
    As NBC 2 reports, an internal affairs investigation also discovered Gallagher lied on the arrest report, stating the female tried to avoid him when he first made contact with her, something the video proved never occurred.


    Instead of the truth, contained within the officer’s fictional report was a statement about how he “helped” the woman from her vehicle. In their investigation, the department used the Merriam-Webster dictionary to define ‘help’.

    Merriam-Webster defines the work help as follow(s): to give assistance or support to; to make more pleasant or bearable; to be of use to, to change for the better. In the video, Deputy Gallagher did not appear to assist, support, please, be of use to, or change the situation for the better.

    The investigation substantiated the following four charges:
    • Improper Conduct- Excessive or Unnecessary Force
    • Improper Conduct- Untruthfulness in Proceedings or Reports
    • Job Knowledge and Performance- Knowledge of Rules and Procedures
    • Improper Conduct- Conduct Unbecoming Officer/Member

    “Mr. Gallagher fell far short of our expectations, training, and policy, and we dealt with him swiftly and surely,” Sheriff Mike Scott said. “I will not tolerate behavior like that.”

    Thankfully, a vigilant citizen decided to stick around and act as a witness after he suspected Gallagher was going to escalate the situation or this cop may have never been exposed. The Witness, Kevin Noell then called the Lee County Sheriff’s Office to report Gallagher.

    Now, nearly 5 months after the incident, Gallagher is no longer a cop, and, hopefully, it stays that way.
    Below is the dramatic video showing this deputy’s aggressive and dangerous behavior.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-woman-dragged-speeding-stop/#7eEUFCQ5ZILTgDHj.99



    Great they got rid of him
    Now he needs a lengthy jail sentence & plenty of rough treatment.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2017, 03:51:58 PM
    Land of the Free? Man Facing Jail for Bumper Sticker of Stick Figures Having Sex

    (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/making-family.jpg)

    Nashville, TN — Last Month, Nashville resident Dustin Owens was pulled over by police who were protecting society from the likes of a bumper sticker of two poorly drawn stick figures, with the caption ‘Making my family.’ Owens was ticketed and given 45 days to comply with the citation and remove the sticker. However, Owens refused and could now face jail.

    Citing Tennessee Code Annotated 55-8-187, police claim that Owen’s stick figure sticker is patently offensive.

    To avoid distracting other drivers and thereby reduce the likelihood of accidents arising from lack of attention or concentration, the display of obscene and patently offensive movies, bumper stickers, window signs or other markings on or in a motor vehicle that are visible to other drivers is prohibited and display of such materials shall subject the owner of the vehicle on which they are displayed, upon conviction, to a fine of not less than two dollars ($2.00) nor more than fifty dollars ($50.00).

    On Thursday, Owens filed a countering lawsuit in Davidson County Chancery Court claiming the police were wrong to ticket him for the bumper sticker.

    “The primary question presented in this case is whether the following sticker qualifies as an ‘obscenity’ – a narrow, unprotected category of speech reserved for hardcore pornography – thereby causing it to lose the broad presumption of free-expression protection guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,” according to the complaint against the Metro Nashville Police Department.

    “Because this stick-figure cartoon does not come anywhere close to satisfying the applicable constitutional standard for obscenity, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department should be enjoined from punishing the plaintiff for displaying it,” the lawsuit states.

    According to Owens, he was pulled over by police and ticketed by the officer who ordered him to remove the stick figures from his car and “demonstrate full compliance” within 45 days.

    “To date, Mr. Owens has not complied,” his lawsuit states. “Consequently, Mr. Owens is currently living under the pain of a pending censorship order from the MNPD, and he is subject to being punished and prosecuted under penalty of law if he does not comply with it.”

    For refusing to remove this harmless bumper sticker, Owens faces the very real possibility of being kidnapped by police and thrown in a cage. This stand by Owens, although it may seem humorous because of the content, is a very real and powerful one.

    “The average person applying contemporary community standards would not find that Mr. Owens’ stick-figure cartoon appeals predominantly to the prurient interest in sex. Mr. Owens’ stick-figure cartoon does not depict or describe, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct as defined by Tennessee law,” the complaint states. “Taken as whole, Mr. Owens’ stick-figure cartoon does not lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.”

    When police can claim the legal authority to pull someone over and demand money from that person, because of a drawing on a sticker, something is very wrong. When a man is facing the possibility of losing his freedom for a bumper sticker that harms no one, the very notion of the land of the free is seen for the farce that it is.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-facing-jail-bumper-sticker/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2017, 12:21:38 AM
    "New York's finest".

    Put them in prison and throw away the key.

    Two NYPD Cops Indicted Twice in Two Months for Falsely Jailing Two Innocent Men

    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/NYPD-cops-1000x532.jpg)
    Two NYPD cops thought they had an open-and-shut case when they arrested a man on drug charges, claiming he had seven grams of cocaine in his waistband, which could easily have sent him to prison for several years.

    But now they are the ones facing a prison sentence after a surveillance camera proved they made the charges up.

    The two New York City police detectives, Kevin Desormeau and Sasha Cordoba, both 33, were indicted Tuesday by the Queens District Attorney after a grand jury found enough evidence that they committed perjury and wrote false reports.

    The same two cops – one who is an award winner – were also arrested last month after it was revealed they fabricated charges on another man, which resulted in him remaining in jail for eight months.

    Both incidents took place three years ago, so there’s no telling how many other innocent people they arrested over the years.

    The first arrest took place on August 28, 2014 after the detectives claimed Roosevelt McCoy, 47, had been standing in front of a restaurant dealing drugs, but the surveillance video shows he was inside the restaurant the entire time playing pool.

    The cops transported him to the station where they strip searched him but found nothing.

    The video also shows Cordoba taking McCoy’s bag that contained $300, which ended up disappearing.

    McCoy ended up spending more than six weeks in Rikers  Island before he was released.

    According to the New York Daily News:

    Charges against McCoy were ultimately dismissed in March 2016, when his attorney Gabriel Harvis showed the DA’s office a video surveillance feed from inside a restaurant that showed McCoy playing pool the entire time the detectives said he was outside selling drugs.

    The surveillance video also showed the two detectives enter the restaurant and bar while McCoy is playing pool and then escort him outside.

    “He was lucky,” Harvis said about the video surveillance that exonerated his client last month, which the Daily News exclusively reported. “But I can’t imagine how many New Yorkers were not so lucky and they are sitting in jail.”

    McCoy sued and settled with the city in November for $575,500.

    On November 6, 2014, the two cops arrested a man named Jamal Choice, accusing him of threatening another man with a gun, but that turned out to be a lie.

    And again, it was surveillance video that exposed their lies, according to the New York Daily News.

    But Choice ended up spending eight months in Riker Island before he was released.

    Cordoba’s attorney claimed they are not being treated fairly.

    “These detectives are entitled to the same presumption of innocence that we all afforded,”  James Moschella told the Daily News.

    “They look forward to fighting the charges in court — not in the press — and, ultimately, being vindicated.”

    The Daily News also reported that Desormeau was awarded the NYPD’s Combat Cross, one of the department’s highest honors, in 2011 for his role in a Queens gunfight.

    But there is still no word on whether he fabricated that incident as well.

    As of now, Desormeau is facing seven years in prison and Cordoba is facing four years.

    The video that led to their indictment is not available online but below is a screen grab posted by the Daily News.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/07/two-nypd-cops-indicted-twice-in-two-months-for-falsely-jailing-two-innocent-men/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2017, 09:31:39 AM
    As always, no consequences for the gang members.

    Lying Cops Get Owned as They Try to Intimidate Rights-Flexing Attorney

    Wilmington, NC — A powerful video, taken by an attorney while being harassed by police, illustrates the power of filming — and why cops will lie through their teeth, apply intimidation tactics, and threaten you to get you to stop it.

    Attorney Jesse Bright, who works as an Uber driver in his spare time, was on a round trip drive, bringing a man who works as a pet groomer to pick up his paycheck on Feb 26. During the first Uber stop, police suddenly surrounded the vehicle and forced the passenger to submit to a search because they were near a known “drug house.”

    For his safety and to account for the officers’ actions, Bright began filming. When Sergeant Kenneth Becker saw that he was recording, that’s when the lies, threats, and intimidation began.

    Officer: Hey bud, turn that off, OK?

    Bright: No, I’ll keep recording. Thank you. It’s my right.

    Officer: Don’t record me. You got me?

    Bright: Look, you’re a police officer on duty. I can record you.

    Becker then walks to driver’s side of vehicle to escalate the level of intimidation.

    Officer: Be careful because there is a new law. Turn it off or I’ll take you to jail.

    Bright: For recording you? What is the law?

    Officer: Step out of the car.

    Bright: What are you arresting me for? I’m sitting here in my car. I’m just recording in case anything happens. I’m surrounded by five police officers.

    Officer: You’re being a jerk.

    Bright: I’m scared right now. I’m not being a jerk. I’m recording in case anything happens.

    Officer: You better hope we don’t find something in your car?

    Bright: You’re not searching my car?

    Officer: I’m going to search your car.

    Bright: You’re not searching my car.

    To apply yet another level of intimidation on a man for the sole reason that he was asserting his rights, this belligerent cops then calls for a K-9 unit.

    Bright: Bring the K-9s. I don’t care. I know my rights.

    Officer: I hope so. I know what the law is.

    Bright: I know the law. I’m an attorney, so I would hope I know what the law is.

    Officer: And an Uber driver?

    The cops couldn’t believe that an attorney could also work in his spare time to earn extra money.
    For the next several minutes, the cops teamed up on Bright and continued their intimidation. However, Bright did not back down.

    While the video was rolling, Bright held all the power and the cops knew this — thus, the reason for them trying to force him to stop filming. Finally, the cops, without Bright’s consent, intimidated him to the point where he was unlawfully coerced into conceding to a search. According to Bright, they falsely claimed their K9 alerted to the car and proceeded to get back at him for asserting his right and embarrassing them. The video also confirms this as the dog never stopped or ‘alerted’ to anything.

    As the Free Thought Project has pointed out many times before, cops falsely claim their dogs alert to substances all the time. After they claimed the dog ‘alerted’, the belligerent cop then made a snide remark about the false alert.

    “Funny how he’s real interested in your car, huh?” says the cop as the dog seems to only be interested in the toy his handler has.
    “How’s that funny?” asks Bright as he points out this unprofessional officer’s conduct.

    On Wednesday, Bright sent an email to WECT, explaining the situation.

    At that time, the K-9 unit arrived at scene. I repeatedly asked the Sergeant and the K-9 what the dog’s indicator was, to indicate that he smelled narcotics in the vehicle. They refused to tell me. The K-9 lead the dog around my car 1 time, in which the dog did nothing but sniff the vehicle. He didn’t seem to make any indication at all towards the vehicle, besides sniffing in the places that the K-9 told him to sniff. After the sniff was done, the Sgt immediately went into my vehicle without my permission, and did a full search, checking all areas of the car, and pulling everything out of the center console and glove box. During the search, I was told I had to let them search my body as well, which they did. He found absolutely nothing illegal in my vehicle, or my person, and eventually walked back to his car. Another officer told me that me and my Uber passenger were free to go.

    Chief Ralph Evangelous issued the following statement Wednesday in response to the videos:

    “Taking photographs and videos of people that are in plain sight including the police is your legal right. As a matter of fact we invite citizens to do so when they believe it is necessary. We believe that public videos help to protect the police as well as our citizens and provide critical information during police and citizen interaction.”

    However, as the video below shows, his officers apparently do not feel the same way.
    The office then released another statement noting that the lying and bullying cops were wrong, but will not be punished and, instead, received ‘counseling’ — for being utterly derelict and oppressive.


    According to WECT, Lt. Jerry Brewer with the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Office said there is no internal investigation in that department because their deputy did not violate anything.

    Sheriff McMahon has viewed the Uber driver’s video and believes it is clear that Officers were incorrect in stating that it was illegal to record the encounter. Not only does the Sheriff agree that it is legal to record encounters, he invites citizens to do so. As a result, the Deputy involved has been counseled.
     
    Additionally, in keeping with Sheriff McMahon’s practice of openness and transparency with the citizens that we serve, he has instructed his Staff to ensure that each Deputy has been provided with information about the citizen’s right to record encounters with law enforcement officers.

    And just like that, cops can be filmed in a blatant act of intimidation and oppression, caught lying through their teeth — and nothing happens. Sadly, people still wonder why there are protests. Had Bright not pulled out his camera and filmed, this situation could have gone far worse.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lying-police-intimidation-search-rights/#SpQSAGmFtWHBLiYO.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 10, 2017, 10:19:55 AM
    Cowardly Cop Mistakes Wallet for a Gun and Shoots Innocent Airman

    Lee County, AL — Fear, cowardice, dread, hate — training — one or more of these traits are present more often than not when a police officer shoots an unarmed person. And, in the dashcam video below, that assertion becomes apparent as Opelika police officer Phillip Hancock shot Airman Michael Davidson for no reason other than fear.

    The incident happened on March 6, 2014, however, the dashcam was kept secret until a little more than three years to the date after the shooting. Hancock was responding to a minor accident in which Davidson had swiped the back of a tractor trailer and both parties were waiting for police to arrive after they had exchanged information.

    When Hancock arrives on the scene, he immediately becomes aggressive with Davidson who was merely trying to get out of his car. Because Davidson was parked on a slope, opening his door was particularly difficult as it was much heavier at this angle. Instead of realizing this was a factor, Hancock, applying his training while experiencing high levels of fear and cowardice, escalated the situation to violence.
    “Show me your hands,” screams Hancock as Davidson frantically tries to comply.

    Davidson’s attorney’s, Brian Mosholder explains, as reported by WRBL, that Davidson’s wallet was in his left hand while pushing against the door to get it open, and then he reached back with his right hand. Soon after, Ofc. Hancock asks Davidson to show him his hands. Davidson brings his right hand through and up to his left hand, turned and got out of the vehicle as quickly as he could and put his hands out in front of him with his wallet in both hands and began to raise his hands. Soon after, the first shot is fired, which hits the ground. Then, Mosholder said Davidson’s hands went up and the second shot was fired, which hit Davidson.

    “It’s very obvious from that part of the video that Officer Hancock is creating a situation that he wished had happened that would have justified this shooting,” Mosholder said. “When you look at the video, none of that happened. When you look at the video, in less than six seconds, from the time Michael Davidson opens his door, Officer Hancock shoots him, and he shoots him for absolutely no reason.”
    After he was shot, the Airmen was seen writhing in pain on the ground — as the blood spot in the back of his jeans grew increasingly larger. Davidson was shot in the abdomen and suffered severe artery damage and “extensive internal bleeding,” according to the suit.

    During the melee, the innocent truck driver was also in danger from this irresponsible cop’s fear as he fired rounds in his direction as well.

    For the last three years, Davidson was hoping to seek justice against the man who shot him for no reason. However, as is the case in so many other police shootings, the shooting was found to be justified — because the cop expressed a justifiable reason to fear for his life.
    “The City, the Chief of Police and its officer have always denied any wrongdoing,” a statement from the City of Opelika in response to the most recent court ruling read. “This case has now been analyzed by two federal courts … The judges have unanimously determined after a review of the evidence, which includes the dash cam video, there was no wrongdoing on behalf of the City, the Chief, or the involved officer. In reaching their respective decisions, these Federal Courts reviewed all of the evidence. Their opinions are clearly supported by all evidence.”

    In affirming the district court’s ruling, according to oanow.com, the three-judge panel said it had reviewed the evidence, including dash cam video, and provided the following summary statement: “After careful consideration and review of a video recording of the shooting, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Davidson, we conclude that a reasonable officer in Hancock’s position would have feared for his life. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment based on qualified immunity in favor of Hancock on all claims.”

    Below is the end result of too much fear pumped into cops during their training. Thankfully, Davidson lived, no thanks to the cops who let him bleed out for more than 5 minutes before providing any life saving methods — but he will never be the same again.

    Video: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x5egb21_dashcam-footage-released-in-opelika-police-officer-involved-shooting_news

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/fear-shooting-cop-wallet-gun
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on March 10, 2017, 07:02:56 PM
    Cowardly Cop Mistakes Wallet for a Gun and Shoots Innocent Airman

    Lee County, AL — Fear, cowardice, dread, hate — training — one or more of these traits are present more often than not when a police officer shoots an unarmed person. And, in the dashcam video below, that assertion becomes apparent as Opelika police officer Phillip Hancock shot Airman Michael Davidson for no reason other than fear.

    The incident happened on March 6, 2014, however, the dashcam was kept secret until a little more than three years to the date after the shooting. Hancock was responding to a minor accident in which Davidson had swiped the back of a tractor trailer and both parties were waiting for police to arrive after they had exchanged information.

    When Hancock arrives on the scene, he immediately becomes aggressive with Davidson who was merely trying to get out of his car. Because Davidson was parked on a slope, opening his door was particularly difficult as it was much heavier at this angle. Instead of realizing this was a factor, Hancock, applying his training while experiencing high levels of fear and cowardice, escalated the situation to violence.
    “Show me your hands,” screams Hancock as Davidson frantically tries to comply.

    Davidson’s attorney’s, Brian Mosholder explains, as reported by WRBL, that Davidson’s wallet was in his left hand while pushing against the door to get it open, and then he reached back with his right hand. Soon after, Ofc. Hancock asks Davidson to show him his hands. Davidson brings his right hand through and up to his left hand, turned and got out of the vehicle as quickly as he could and put his hands out in front of him with his wallet in both hands and began to raise his hands. Soon after, the first shot is fired, which hits the ground. Then, Mosholder said Davidson’s hands went up and the second shot was fired, which hit Davidson.

    “It’s very obvious from that part of the video that Officer Hancock is creating a situation that he wished had happened that would have justified this shooting,” Mosholder said. “When you look at the video, none of that happened. When you look at the video, in less than six seconds, from the time Michael Davidson opens his door, Officer Hancock shoots him, and he shoots him for absolutely no reason.”
    After he was shot, the Airmen was seen writhing in pain on the ground — as the blood spot in the back of his jeans grew increasingly larger. Davidson was shot in the abdomen and suffered severe artery damage and “extensive internal bleeding,” according to the suit.

    During the melee, the innocent truck driver was also in danger from this irresponsible cop’s fear as he fired rounds in his direction as well.

    For the last three years, Davidson was hoping to seek justice against the man who shot him for no reason. However, as is the case in so many other police shootings, the shooting was found to be justified — because the cop expressed a justifiable reason to fear for his life.
    “The City, the Chief of Police and its officer have always denied any wrongdoing,” a statement from the City of Opelika in response to the most recent court ruling read. “This case has now been analyzed by two federal courts … The judges have unanimously determined after a review of the evidence, which includes the dash cam video, there was no wrongdoing on behalf of the City, the Chief, or the involved officer. In reaching their respective decisions, these Federal Courts reviewed all of the evidence. Their opinions are clearly supported by all evidence.”

    In affirming the district court’s ruling, according to oanow.com, the three-judge panel said it had reviewed the evidence, including dash cam video, and provided the following summary statement: “After careful consideration and review of a video recording of the shooting, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Davidson, we conclude that a reasonable officer in Hancock’s position would have feared for his life. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment based on qualified immunity in favor of Hancock on all claims.”

    Below is the end result of too much fear pumped into cops during their training. Thankfully, Davidson lived, no thanks to the cops who let him bleed out for more than 5 minutes before providing any life saving methods — but he will never be the same again.

    Video: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x5egb21_dashcam-footage-released-in-opelika-police-officer-involved-shooting_news

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/fear-shooting-cop-wallet-gun

    Wait a second... this is from 2014 and is coming out now???

    Sounds like:

    (https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/dd20ad47cb1ec084ccf84c7fef05e740c28de85e21f28800e9d1e5a792de30b2.jpg?w=800&h=254)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2017, 10:59:42 AM
    Horrifying Precedent — Court Rules Cops Can Allow Dogs to Maul Innocent People

    A disturbing and reckless precedent was just set by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, which held that the U.S. Constitution does not necessarily require cops to stop a K9 from tearing an innocent person to shreds. Seriously.

    According to the ruling in the case of an innocent homeless man being mauled nearly to death by a K9, police officers who deliberately allow their K9 to maul innocent people will be immune from liability and victims will have zero recourse.

    As Slate reports:
    The grisly facts of the case are uncontested. One night in 2010, Officer Terence Garrison and his police dog, Bikkel, were tracking a robbery suspect in High Point, North Carolina. Bikkel led Garrison to an abandoned house, then attacked a man crouched behind a bush near the front stoop. Garrison quickly realized that the man did not match the physical description of the suspect. (In fact, he was Christopher Maney, a homeless man accused of no crime.) But Garrison decided that the man might still be dangerous, so he demanded that Maney show his hands before calling off Bikkel. But Maney was using his hands to try to protect himself against the dog and pleaded with Garrison to stop Bikkel’s attack, insisting that he had done nothing wrong. After allowing the mauling to continue for 10 seconds, Garrison finally told Bikkel to stop. He then put Maney in handcuffs and called medical support.

    Because Garrison allowed his K9 to continue mauling Maney, the innocent homeless man suffered severe injuries. By the time he was brought to the hospital, Maney was in critical condition. Bikkel had torn apart the top of Maney’s head, removing an entire two-square-inch section of hair, skin, and tissue — which would later require a 16-inch skin graft. The dog also bit Maney’s arms and legs so severely that it led to a brachial artery blood clot with massive blood loss, bruising, and swelling.

    After making a long and painful recovery, Maney attempted to hold the officer accountable for his sadistic and torturous act. He then sued Garrison for violating his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures.

    As it stands, a dog bite qualifies as a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. So, Maney argued that the time Garrison allowed the K9 to rip him apart was unreasonable.
    However, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit did not agree. Insanely enough, the court concluded that Garrison was shielded from liability because he did not violate a  “clearly established” constitutional right.


    According to the majority, as Slate reports, Fourth Amendment precedents do not unambiguously prohibit officers from “prolong[ing] a dog bite seizure until a subject complies with orders to surrender.” The majority analogized the mauling to a “Terry stop,” during which an officer may briefly stop and frisk individuals on the basis of “reasonable suspicion.” Garrison, the majority concluded, had really just engaged in a type of Terry stop in which “the classic Terry tableau is replaced by something more dynamic.”

    Simply put, the court ruled that Garrison’s use of his K9 to maul a man nearly to death, was reasonable because it is no different than a stop and frisk.

    Judge Pamela Harris, the only judge with enough humanity left in her to dissent, explained why this ruling is nonsensical and disturbing.

    Maney was not himself suspected of any crime, armed or not, and he did not attempt to flee or to resist. Nevertheless, Officer Garrison deliberately subjected him to a canine attack in order to rule out any possibility that he might pose a threat. Whether or not a more customary Terry stop might have been authorized, I think it is clear enough that the circumstances did not justify the sustained mauling of Maney. Clear enough, that is, to warrant denial of qualified immunity to Garrison on Maney’s excessive force claim.

    Harris noted that justifying the mauling by comparing it to a Terry stop was particularly ludicrous because “there was not reasonable suspicion sufficient to support a Terry stop” in the first place.

    He (Garrison) was aware that there was a perfectly innocent explanation for Maney’s presence near the abandoned house. And I would not count against Maney his failure to stand and identify himself, which Maney—quite reasonably, in hindsight—attributes to his fear that a sudden movement might prompt a dog attack. Citizens are under no free-standing obligation to identify themselves to the police.

    While Harris disagreed, the rest of the court believed Garrison “intentionally prolong(ing) a violent assault on Maney to determine whether he might pose a threat,” is entirely just.

    It is likely that Maney will appeal this ruling. However, the mere fact that a court would rule in such a manner illustrates a much larger problem in America. Because Americans support a system that continuously refuses to hold police accountable while simultaneously granting them special privileges, cops can quite literally get away with murder.

    http://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/Opinions/Unpublished/147791.U.pdf

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/court-rules-cops-dont-stop-k9s-mauling-innocent-people/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 15, 2017, 11:38:44 PM
    These uniformed criminals should be imprisoned for life doing hard labor and have all their possessions confiscated.

    Town Busted Running “Debtor’s Prison” Must Pay $680K, Sheriff Told to Resign

    Alexander, AL — The Southern Poverty Law Center has reached a $680,000 settlement in its lawsuit against the Alabama city of Alexander and its police chief Willie Robinson. The settlement was for depriving 190 of its residents their rights to due process (6th Amendment) and the unlawful seizure of their property (4th Amendment). Sheriff Robinson has even been asked to resign by lawyers representing their client.

    Each one of the 190 individuals will receive $500 cash from the city for jailing them for being too poor to pay the fines imposed on them by the town. As reported by AL.com, “Hundreds of impoverished residents have faced unconstitutional and unjust treatment in Alexander City simply because they were too poor to pay fines and fees,” said Sam Brooke, in a press release. Brooke is the SPLC’s deputy legal director. He added, “The shuttering of this modern-day debtors’ prison, along with the monetary award, brings justice to many of the people who were unfairly targeted for being poor.”

    The way the injustice flourished was as follows. A resident would receive a speeding ticket, for example. If they were unable to pay, they were arrested, taken to jail, and forced to remain there. While in jail, they would earn $20 a day for just being in jail, and $40 a day for doing laundry, cleaning, or washing police cruisers, until the total sum of the fine was paid in full. Each person was not allowed to go before a judge, nor to have a lawyer present to help in aid in their defense.

    “Around 30 percent of Alexander inhabitants live below the poverty line. Plaintiff Amanda Underwood is one such person, who was jailed twice for not being able to pay her fines. Underwood previously earned $8 an hour and has two young children, according to the SPLC release. After not being able to pay a fine of $205 for a traffic violation, Underwood had to borrow money to secure her release. On a separate occasion, Underwood was fined $250 for driving without a license. She spent five days in jail working off her debt.”

    What may have seemed like a quick way for the town to punish offenders — and settle long-standing fines, fees, and court costs — turned out to be a complete violation of Alexander’s residents’ civil rights. Underwood reveled in the victory saying, “I am glad the city is going to pay everyone who they jailed, to try to undo some of the harm they caused…I am so proud that this lawsuit has made a difference. I hope it will help many others, especially those like me who have been unfairly punished for being poor.”

    Brooke said Alexander’s settlement out of court is just the latest in a string of successful lawsuits in Alabama which have made a positive impact on civil rights. “Courts are being sued and forced to change their procedures, and judges have been censured and suspended,” Brooke said. “And now a municipality has been forced to pay those it illegally jailed. We hope and believe all courts are now getting the message: It is unacceptable to punish the poor just because of their poverty.”

    There’s very little difference between jailing someone to work off a fine, and selling one’s property to pay for such fines. One is a debtor’s prison and the other results in a debtor’s auction. In both cases, the police benefit from free labor and free revenue generation. Civil Asset Forfeiture (CAF) has been used for years to punish citizens accused of crimes such as drunk driving, driving with too much cash on hand, or being in possession of marijuana. Hopefully, with wins such as what the SPLC has been able to achieve in Alabama, more progress can likewise be made in CAF cases across the country as well.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sheriff-town-pay-debtors-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Nether Animal on March 16, 2017, 12:53:32 AM
    Fuck cops. I have a friend from New Zealand who moved over here for an extended period, and he said he was shocked and appalled at how police act here. He was actually scared to go out of the house sometimes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2017, 02:37:52 AM
    Murder Trial Opens for Cop Who Killed 6-Year-Old Jeremy Mardis on Video

    Marksville, LA — Sixteen months ago, one of the worst police killings ever to be recorded on video rocked the country. Jeremy Mardis, a 6-year-old boy, was gunned down in cold blood by two bad Louisiana cops — Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. Now, one of those officers is finally being tried for this horrific act which was caught on a body camera.

    In what the head of Louisiana State police called ‘the most disturbing thing he’s ever seen,’ Mardis was murdered as he rode with his father, Chris Few, as he sat strapped into the front seat of the car.
    “He didn’t deserve to die like that,” State Police Col. Mike Edmonson said as he announced the deputies’ arrests, less than a week after the shooting.

    For almost a year, body camera footage from that fateful night was kept hidden from the public. However, last September it was released showing these two officers murder a boy and attempt to murder his father.
    Jury selection for Derrick Stafford’s trial began Monday and is expected to last several days.

    Prosecutors are going to make the case that the bodycam video proves Few did not pose a threat and was, in fact, surrendering with his hands up when police opened fire.
    Defense attorneys, however, will attempt to convince a jury that Stafford and Greenhouse Jr. acted in self-defense — in spite of the fact they had no justification for the stop in the first place — and contradictory to the video evidence.

    Despite the testimony to the contrary from a State Police detective, defense attorneys are going to try to convince a jury that Few was attempting to ram Greenhouse’s vehicle.

    One of Stafford’s attorneys, Jonathon Goins, said his client “feared for his life” when he opened fired on a 6-year-old boy and his surrendering dad.
    “My client wanted to go home and be with his family that night, just like any officer wants to go home and be with their family,” Goins said.
    Members of Mardis’ family have since filed a federal lawsuit against several Louisiana law enforcement agencies.

    An exact motive for the original traffic stop — given the fictitious claim of a warrant and that Few did not have a weapon — has yet to be publicly released by officials. Attorneys for Greenhouse and Stafford stated during court proceedings Few had been standing in the road, blocking traffic, ignored officers’ commands, and then fled the scene.

    But the lawsuit contends there had been no clear reason for police to pursue the vehicle Few was driving, and when he ultimately did pull over, the vehicle, “even if it were moving forward or backwards — did not and could not have presented an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm to any of the officers at the scene or innocent bystanders.”

    Police had claimed Few was armed and posed an imminent deadly threat — so Officers Greenhouse and Stafford opened fire — emptying 18 rounds at the vehicle, critically injuring Few and killing the 6-year-old, who had autism.

    In actuality, no warrant had been issued for Few, and both father and son were unarmed — indeed, as video evidence shows, Few had his hands in the air when he received “two or three” bullets to the head and chest, while Jeremy suffered “four or five” shots to the head and neck.


    Appallingly, Jeremy languished in agony, still holding onto life for over five minutes after being shot multiple times — but officers failed to even check for a pulse or render assistance.
    “During this time, Jeremy was bleeding profusely and suffered immensely due to the gunshot wounds,” the lawsuit states.

    “It was not until approximately some seven and one-half to eight minutes or so after the hail of gunfire, that an officer at the scene, believed to be Parnell, finally checked Jeremy for a pulse and discovered that he was still alive, despite having been shot multiple times including in the head and neck,” it reads.

    “However, none of the officers at the scene, including Stafford, Greenhouse, Brouillette and Parnell initiated or rendered any form of first aid, nor did they undertake any other measures in an attempt to stop Jeremy’s bleeding or otherwise alleviate or mitigate Jeremy’s suffering, or made any attempts to save his life.

    “Sadly, Jeremy was left to suffer — and die — while the officers casually searched for ‘gloves.’”

    Both Stafford and Greenhouse, likely due to their connected statuses and blue privilege, were allowed to remain officers in spite of their past atrocities — which allowed them to be in those patrol cars that night.
    As WCBI reported, before the shooting, Stafford and Greenhouse both had been sued over claims they had used excessive force or neglected their duties as police officers. The Marksville Police Department suspended Stafford after his indictment on rape charges in 2011, but reinstated him after prosecutors dismissed the charges.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/murder-trial-opens-cop-killed-6-year-old-jeremy-mardis-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2017, 12:07:33 PM
    Criminal organization.

    National Sheriff of the Year Convicted in Massive Conspiracy — Facing 20 Years

    Los Angeles, CA — It’s often been said (so much so it’s now become cliche’) there are only a few bad apples in the police force. Well, if that’s true, this next story serves to illustrate the entire apple tree is corrupt. Los Angeles county is the most populated county in the U.S., with over 10,000,000 citizens calling LA their home. And on Wednesday, their former sheriff was found guilty of three different felonies for his role in a corruption cover-up.

    According to the LA Daily News, “Once the head of the largest law enforcement agency of its kind in the nation, former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca was found guilty by a federal jury Wednesday of obstruction of justice, conspiracy to obstruct justice and giving false statements in connection with an investigation into corruption and excessive use of force inside the Men’s Central Jail.”
    The 74-year-old former sheriff was convicted by a jury consisting of eight men and four women, after two weeks of testimony and evidence presented. Baca may spend the next 20 years of his life behind bars, and at age 74, it’s likely he’ll never see daylight outside of prison.

    The former sheriff was charged and found guilty for his role in obstructing justice. In 2011, the FBI was investigating reports of inmate abuse and cover-ups within the LA County Jail known as the “Men’s Central Jail.”
    As the Daily reported, “prosecutors set out to prove that Baca led efforts to thwart the investigation by hiding an inmate-turned-informant named Anthony Brown within the jail system, so the FBI could no longer interview him.” Yes. You read that right. He was accused and found guilty of taking a whistleblower, a jailhouse snitch, and moving him around the numerous city detention facilities so the FBI could not interview him. The Daily also reported prosecutors accused the former sheriff of allowing, “two sheriff’s sergeants to threaten the lead FBI agent with arrest in front of her home,” the same FBI agent who was attempting to interview Mr. Brown.

    Baca’s guilty verdict, possibly the highest-profile conviction of its kind, may stand as evidence in a larger trial going on in the court of public opinion as to whether or not the United States has a systemic problem of corruption. After all, LA is the nation’s most populated county, and what happens in LA, may be happening throughout the country.

    We, at The Free Thought Project, harp on police abuses, the planting of evidence, and subsequent cover-ups all the time. Not even we could have predicted our concerns would be validated by the arrest, trial, and conviction of the former sheriff of the nation’s largest police force. But it proves our point. We have a problem in this country we feel will only be solved with higher levels of accountability and transparency being put in place, and true penalties being implemented against officers found guilty of such crimes.

    Baca makes the 10th person convicted in the abuse and cover-up investigation which has now endured for nearly six years. And while the national stage is still shaken from FBI director James Comey’s decision not to indict former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for her mishandling of classified information, the case also serves to prove the FBI still has the tenacity it takes to root out corruption and bring criminals to trial.
    Jones has told the press he has no regrets for his decision to become an informant for the FBI. The convicted armed robber, who’ll never get out of jail (still serving over 400 years in prison), was asked to snitch on the abuses taking place at the Men’s jail.

    “The episode was life-changing for Brown. His cover as an informant was blown in August of 2011 when jail guards found Brown’s contraband cellphone stashed in a bag of Dorito’s during a routine search,” writes ABC News 7.

    The phone was a given to Jones by the FBI, who were also on speed dial, in the event he was able to gather any leads in jailer abuses against inmates. “Brown’s phone calls from jail were traced by LASD investigators to a civil rights squad of the FBI – a squad that investigates potential corruption in local law enforcement,” according to the report. And the scandal could have stopped there, but LAPD decided they’d obstruct justice and attempt to prevent the FBI from making contact with Jones. “Soon after, Brown’s name was changed in the LASD computer system, he was moved repeatedly, and discouraged from further cooperating with the FBI,” writes the LA news affiliate.

    Jones told Eyewitness News, “The whole ordeal of assisting the FBI was a living hell…I knew at any time I could be killed — disappear without a trace — if the LASD deputies found out I was assisting the FBI by reporting corrupt deputies.”

    Baca is now facing 20 years in prison, but in 2016 attempted to reach a plea deal, agreeing to serve 6-months in jail. However, U.S. District Court Judge Percy Anderson believed the plea deal to be too lenient and denied it, paving the way for a jury trial. The first jury trial ended in an 11-1 mistrial. Prosecutors took another shot at a conviction, believing they could prove Baca knew about the abuse, cover-up, and the threatening of a federal agent. The plaintiffs won.

    Now the former sheriff of one of the nation’s largest police forces is headed to prison. And it all could have been prevented if the police had allowed the FBI to do their jobs and root out those bad apples. So much for that theory!

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/former-national-sheriff-of-the-year-found-guilty-of-corruption/#pJjD56gQPO9IfICW.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2017, 11:03:32 AM
    Wow.

    For the First Time, Police Ask for Entire City’s Google Searches and the Court Says Yes

    Edina, MN — An Orwellian precedent is underway just outside of Minneapolis, Minnesota, which could be the downfall of internet freedom as we know it. Police in Edina, MN, have been granted a warrant requiring Google to determine everyone in an entire city who has used its search engine to look up a specific term and identify them to authorities.

    The case doesn’t involve some massive terror plot to destroy an entire city or a high-level child trafficking ring. It is for a wire-fraud crime — worth less than $30,000. However, if Google caves to the warrant, it could set off a precedent that will undoubtedly be used by police across the country.

    According to Ars Technica, investigators are focusing their probe on an online photo of someone with the same name of a local financial fraud victim. The image turned up on a fake passport used to trick a credit union to fraudulently transfer $28,500 out of an Edina man’s account, police said. The bogus passport was faxed to the credit union using a spoofed phone number to mimic the victim’s phone, according to the warrant application.

    According to the warrant, Google must help police determine who searched for variations of the victim’s name between December 1 of last year through January 7, 2017.
    The ominously worded warrant makes some chilling demands — all over a small fraud case.

    A Google search, the warrant application says, as reported by Ars Technica, reveals the photo used on the bogus passport. The image was not rendered on Yahoo or Bing, according to the documents. The warrant commands Google to divulge “any/all user or subscriber information”—including e-mail addresses, payment information, MAC addresses, social security numbers, dates of birth, and IP addresses—of anybody who conducted a search for the victim’s name.

    Independent journalist and public records activist, Tony Webster discovered the warrant and posted photos of it online. He has also expressed the grave reality surrounding such broad and sweeping dragnets — and their ability to sweep up innocent people in the process.

    According to Webster:
    But search warrants require supporting probable cause, not just mere suspicion or theory. For that reason, “anyone-who-accessed” search warrants like Detective Lindman’s can be risky to execute, as evidence could potentially be thrown out in a pretrial motion. Moreover, it’s possible that such a wide net could catch completely routine and non-criminal searches of the victim’s name by neighbors, prospective employers or business associates, journalists, or friends.
     
    Could this type of search warrant be used to wrongly ensnare innocent people? If Google were to provide personal information on anyone who Googled the victim’s name, would Edina Police raid their homes, or would they first do further investigative work? The question is: what comes next? If you bought a pressure cooker on Amazon a month before the Boston bombing, do police get to know about it?


    Prior to the actual warrant, Edina police sent Google an administrative subpoena “requesting subscriber information for anyone who had performed a Google search” for the victim’s name. However, according to the documents posted by Webster, Google easily refused to comply with that order as it does not have a judge’s signature.
    However, after Google balked at complying, authorities pushed back even harder.

    “Though Google’s rejection of the administrative subpoena is arguable, your affiant is applying for this warrant so that the investigation of this case does not stall,” officer David Lindman wrote the judge in the warrant application.
    The good news is that Google, while they declined to specifically address the warrant, appears to be fighting it.

    “We aren’t able to comment on specific cases, but we will always push back when we receive excessively broad requests for data about our users,” Google said in an e-mail to Ars.

    If Google does comply with this order, the implications for what comes next are shocking, to say the least. Political activists, peaceful anti-establishment folks, and any generally but peaceful subversive individual could be identified and rounded up through this process. If ever there was a time to change your habits and begin using startpage.com, it is now.

    As the Free Thought Project has previously reported, Google maintains a record of not only your entire search history but also your browsing history and voice recordings of all sounds associated before and after you say the words, “Okay Google.”
    If you would like to know how to find out what Google has on you, how to stop it, and how to clear all of your data from their database, you can do so by clicking this link.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/first-time-court-orders-google-turn-everyone-searched-term/

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/03/judge-oks-warrant-to-reveal-who-searched-a-fraud-victims-name-on-google/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2017, 11:07:24 AM
    Cops Who Stalked and Severely Beat Innocent Postal Worker, On Video, Cleared of Charges

    New York, NY — A dangerous precedent has been set in New York this week after two NYPD officers who stalked and beat an innocent postal worker — to the point of hospitalization, leaving him disabled — were let off with zero consequences.

    Angelo Pampena, 32, and Robert Carbone, 30, faced up to seven years in prison on charges that they violently assaulted postal worker Karim Baker on Oct. 21, 2015. On Thursday, Queens Supreme Court Justice Michael Aloise cleared both of these cops — in spite of the overwhelming evidence against them — including video. Both of their cases were sealed and dismissed.

    Baker had done nothing wrong and was being actively stalked by multiple NYPD cops for simply giving a man, who he did not know, directions.

    On Dec. 20, 2014, a deranged lunatic would ask Baker for directions to the Marcy Houses in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Baker did not know this lunatic and had no idea of his intentions. However, he was seen on video giving him those directions. That demented madman was Ismaaiyl Brinsley, who went on to murder two NYPD cops in cold blood — Officers Rafael Ramos, 40, and Wenjian Liu, 32 — before killing himself.
    For the next ten months, NYPD officers allegedly set out to make Baker’s life a living hell after they found out he gave Brinsley those directions. Baker was stopped around 20 times by NYPD cops, before the final stop, in which they nearly killed him.

    “I was being harassed, like cops outside by door and my family members’ doors, friends’ doors, just everybody. I felt just some type of way,” Baker said last year of the stalking.

    “Mr. Baker began to be systematically harassed. He was pulled over by the police for various minor traffic infractions approximately 20 times in the span of nine months,” said Eric Subin, Baker’s attorney.
    This final stop was caught on video.

    On that fateful October night in 2015, Baker had just finished his shift when officers Pampena and Carbone moved in. Still in his uniform, the officers rolled up on Baker and began demanding he show them his ID. Baker, knowing he had done nothing wrong, refused to give his ID unless the officers could tell him why they needed it.

    According to Subin, the officers claimed Baker was too close to a fire hydrant and then they began their attack. According to Subin, Baker, and surveillance footage of the incident, Pampena and Carbone, who were in plainclothes at the time, began striking Baker in the face and body multiple times before dragging him out of the car where they continued to beat him.
    “He was a mess,” Subin said. “He got the hell beaten out of him.”

    Baker suffered bruises to his face, tears to ligaments in his knees, and injuries to his spine and has been unable to return to work as a result of these injuries.

    Baker was then arrested and charged with resisting arrest and criminal possession of a controlled substance. All charges would later be dismissed as they were baseless.
    “We are gratified by the judge’s decision,” Pampena’s attorney, James Moschella, said of Thursday’s ruling. “These officers went out there in good faith and we feel the verdict is not only a vindication of their acts, but the brave actions of all New York City police officers day in and day out.”

    “From the beginning, this appeared to be an overzealous prosecution not supported by the facts, so I appreciate the verdict,” Palladino said.
    “I took the stand against the officers. I’m definitely worried. I still don’t feel comfortable,” said Baker of the verdict. “I feel I have to watch over my shoulder, watch my back. I just don’t feel secure. I’m just living life like under a rock, trying to be safe and secure.”

    “It is pretty outrageous,” Subin said. “This beating is caught on video. There’s audio. The audio has him begging for his life and screaming for help. To have a complete acquittal, even of perjury, it just seems to me to be outrageous. It’s a bad day for victims, for justice.”
    Baker is currently suing the NYPD for $100 million.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/nypd-cops-beating-baker-postal/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2017, 09:00:08 PM
    Mayor Calls in FBI After Multiple Cops in Dept Accused of Raping Children

    Louisville, KY — Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer called allegations of sexual abuse and rape by police officers of children in the department’s Youth Explorer program “our worst nightmare” — and has now appealed to the FBI to open an investigation.

    “If there has been an injustice,” asserted the mayor, “it will be remedied.”

    A previous probe into the accusations by the Louisville Metro Police will also be subject to inquiry by former U.S. Attorney Kerry Harvey, whom Fischer hired to determine whether “errors were made” — including by top cop, Police Chief Steve Conrad.

    “The allegations surrounding the Explorer program, if true, represent unacceptable conduct involving children, and the citizens of Louisville deserve to know what happened,” Harvey avowed.

    Saying the FBI would have to determine whether or not to answer the call to investigate, Harvey surmised from news reports the allegations might constitute a federal violation of civil rights.

    According to local NBC affiliate LEX18, “A lawsuit filed on behalf of a participant in the Youth Explorer program charges that his alleged rape by Officers Kenneth Betts and Brandon Wood was ‘concealed’ by department officials. Betts and Wood are accused of sexually assaulting the participant from 2011 through 2013 and recording the incidents to make pornography.”

    David Yates, an attorney for the victim, noted the allegations — the now-22-year-old victim says officers used their position of authority to engage him in sexual acts when he was under the age of 18 — constitute third-degree statutory rape.

    Betts had also been under investigation for alleged “improper contact” with a teenaged girl in the Explorer program — until Conrad ended it upon the officer’s resignation in 2014. Alarmingly, given the nature of the allegations, Wood remains active on the force, albeit in a limited, administrative capacity.

    Conrad reportedly said he’s “dying” to discuss the case publicly, but has been barred from doing so by a court order sealing the lawsuit. Both the City of Louisville and the Courier-Journal have filed requests to unseal the case, which Fischer predicts will occur next week.

    “Obviously I called for all the case to be unsealed so all the facts can be known on this,” said the mayor, who also termed the allegations “appalling.” “So to me it’s all about transparency and accountability. So I’m looking at all kind of options here.”

    Unsealing the lawsuit, in this case, comes with mitigating circumstances — particularly given the age of the victim at the time of the alleged rapes.

    “Yates said he doesn’t oppose unsealing the lawsuit as long as anything that identifies the victim is blacked out,” WAVE3 reports. “But Yates also said unsealing the lawsuit is not a simple process because all parties need to agree to it being unsealed, including LMPD Major Curtis Flaherty, who is being accused of failing to prevent the abuse from happening.”

    With heightened attention given to the multi-pronged Youth Explorer investigation, the mayor faltered a bit when asked whether he retained confidence in the police chief, saying, “what is important is to get to the truth, and I think he agrees with that” — but ultimately backed Conrad.

    David James, James Peden, and nine other council members had called for an outside agency to take up the investigation. James contended the probe must expand far beyond law enforcement, particularly as former police commanders now populate Fischer’s administration.

    “It’s important we not just limit it to the police department, but knowing who knew what when, and wherever that goes is important,” James asserted, according to the Courier-Journal.

    Pleased Fischer had turned to the FBI for assistance, Peden nonetheless expressed ambivalence toward Harvey’s involvement — and questioned the cost of bringing on board a former U.S. Attorney.

    “I’ve been doing this long enough to know if you hire someone to do studies or investigate, they come up with results you wanted them to find in the first place,” the councilman remarked. “I think that’s a waste of money.”

    According to the Courier-Journal, both James and Peden discussed the Youth Explorer program with Chief Conrad weeks before the filing of the lawsuit, and — based on information from within the police department — further allegations are likely.

    In the meantime, one former officer accused of raping a minor boy walks completely free of punishment — as if rescinding the uniform, badge, and gun of the State absolves an individual of responsibility for any abhorrent behavior occurring on the taxpayer’s dime.

    Worse, the second cop remains a paid and active employee — again, thanks to the taxpayers — though, granted, whatever the desk work, it likely won’t put him in direct contact with children.

    The FBI has not yet given a statement in answer to the mayor’s request.

    With the unsealing of the lawsuit anticipated as early as next week, this explosive case appears poised to bring the Louisville Metro Police under a piercing microscope. Peden noted,

    “If anything, [Mayor Fischer] finally realizes this has now extended beyond the boundaries of just a bad police officer.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-child-rape-fbi/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 20, 2017, 11:34:01 AM
    If this type of security theater can happen to a former police chief, what about the "plain" US citizens?

    Fmr Police Chief Gets a Dose of the Police State as He’s Detained at Airport ‘Because of His Name’

    New York, NY — (RT) A retired police chief who served in US law enforcement for nearly 30 years says he was detained at JFK airport because his name, Hassan Aden, had reportedly been used as an alias by a person on “some watch list.”

    After a joyful weekend celebrating his mother’s 80th birthday in Paris, Aden “happily” boarded his return flight to the US on March 13, a country he has been a citizen of for more than four decades.

    When it was his turn to speak to the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer, Aden says he was asked if he was traveling alone.

    “I knew this was a sign of trouble, I answered ‘yes,’ then he said, ‘Let’s take a walk,’” he wrote on Facebook.

    That walk led Aden to what he described as a “re-purposed storage facility with three desks.” Signs were posted throughout the room, warning people to stay seated and informing them that using mobile phones was “strictly prohibited.”

    Aden says he attempted to explain that he was a retired police chief, but the immigration officer said that he had “no control” and couldn’t release him, despite his long career in law enforcement.

    A second officer provided a bit more information, explaining to Aden that his name “was used as an alias by someone on some watch list.” The 52-year-old was told that his information had been sent to another agency to “de-conflict and clear me so I could gain passage into the United States… my own country!!!”

    While Aden waited, he noticed that he was being held longer than anyone else, despite having been a US citizen for 42 years. While the citizens of other countries spent five minutes in the room, Aden says he was stuck there for 1.5 hours.

    Despite being trapped with no means of communicating with his wife or family, he was told by the original CBP officer that he was not being detained.

    “But I’m not free to leave – how is that not a detention?” he replied.

    “My movements were restricted to a chair and they had my passport… and he had the audacity to tell me I was not being detained,” the retired police chief said.


    As he waited, Aden said he recalled the “numerous trips abroad” when he had had “no problems” upon returning and was greeted by CBP officers with a “welcome home.”

        Thanks for the support I’ve received since detailing my CBP detention.I’m fortunate to be able to give this problem a voice and a platform.

        — Hassan Aden (@chiefaden) March 20, 2017


    He was eventually cleared and made his connecting flight to Washington DC “by minutes.”

    Aden wrote that, despite being cleared, he now feels “vulnerable and unsure of the future of a country that was once great and that I proudly called my own.”

    “This experience makes me question if this is indeed home. My freedoms were restricted, and I cannot be sure it won’t happen again, and that it won’t happen to my family, my children, the next time we travel abroad. This country now feels cold, unwelcoming, and in the beginning stages of a country that is isolating itself from the rest of the world – and its own people – in an unprecedented fashion. High levels of hate and injustice have been felt in vulnerable communities for decades – it is now hitting the rest of America,” he wrote.

    Hassan, who worked in law enforcement for 30 years, grew up in France and Italy. He spent 26 years serving on the police force in Alexandria, Virginia, and most recently served as the chief of police in Greenville, North Carolina. The father of two now runs a law enforcement-focused consulting business.

    His detention came just two weeks after President Trump rolled out a new travel ban, which has since been blocked by a federal judge in Hawaii. The executive order would bar the citizens of six countries from entering the United States. Trump has described it as a “watered down” version of the first ban, which sparked protests around the globe when the restrictions were chaotically implemented in airports across the US.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-chief-detained-airport-name/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2017, 11:31:36 AM
    Once again, the citizens footing the bill for the violent criminals. When will these goons be held personally accountable, pay out of their pocket, have their assets confiscated and thrown in prison?

    Cop’s Violent Power Trip Costs Taxpayers $1.3 Million

    A South Carolina state trooper’s conduct has led to a $1.3 million judgment awarded to a couple who accused the officer of excessive force during what originated as a simple traffic stop nearly four years ago.

    The incident, which occurred in October 2012, began when Trooper James Enzor pulled over Catherine and Jerome Newkirk while they were driving on Interstate 95 in South Carolina. According to CBS North Carolina, “the complaint says the two were driving through a construction zone as part of a line of cars all traveling the same speed when the couple noticed they were being followed by a South Carolina Highway Patrol car with its blue lights on.”

    During the stop, Enzo reportedly informed Catherine Newkirk that she was driving 77 mph in a 55 mph construction zone. While Enzor offered to issue her a ticket for driving 64 mph, Newkirk disagreed with receiving a ticket at all and maintained she had not been exceeding the speed limit.

    Court documents stated that Newkirk told Enzor that she believed “there is a bit of discrimination going on here.” According to WIS-TV, once Newkirk suggested to Enzor that the traffic stop was based on discrimination, she said, “he snatched the ticket back and he told me to step out of the vehicle and I did.”

    Video of the altercation is below. While much of the audio is difficult to hear, Enzo is seen and heard on video directing Newkirk to exit her vehicle and proceeding to place her under arrest, becoming increasingly agitated in his physical handling of her. Newkirk is also seen visibly resisting the unlawful arrest at first before allowing herself to be transported.

    The Newkirks were both ultimately arrested and spent a day in prison following the arrest. Catherine was imprisoned for resisting arrest and assault, and Jerome was also imprisoned for a charge of “hindering a police officer,” as Enzo claimed that Jerome “did verbally and repeatedly instruct and coerce the driver of the vehicle to disregard any instructions” that he was giving to Catherine.

    The Newkirks spent the next few years pursuing their case, first in state court and then in federal court. Enzo filed a request to dismiss the case based on qualified immunity. That request was denied and a jury was eventually able to see video of what transpired on the day of the Newkirk’s arrest.

    Joe McCulloch, an attorney representing the Newkirks, noted that this video was “invaluable for the jury to see.”

    The jury awarded $325,000 to Jerome Newkirk and $1 million to Catherine Newkirk. The couple is seeking an additional $500,000 in legal fees. They were previously awarded $100,000 in a settlement with the South Carolina Department of Public Safety.

    Enzor has since lost his job; he was fired in an unrelated incident in which he made unspecified comments about a superior.

    Just like that, taxpayers are hit for more than a million because of this officer’s inability to remain professional.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/south-carolina-cops-power-trip-costs-taxpayers-1-3-million/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2017, 03:52:22 PM
    The other cops who didn't arrest the violent criminal cop on the spot should be sent to prison.

    Minneapolis Cop Charged for Kicking Man in Face and Lying About It

    These days it is not uncommon for cops to get arrested for assault.

    But Officer Christopher Reiter, 36, of the Minneapolis Police Department took things way too far when he kicked Mohamed Osman while he was already down on the ground.

    Osman suffered severe brain injuries, brain bleeding and ended up with fractures in his face, including sinus fractures in his nose.

    Because of the injuries, Osman is unable to work.


    The on-duty assault occurred in Spring 2016, but Reiter was not arrested until March 15, 2017 after he and fellow officers lied about what had taken place that night – only for a surveillance video to expose their lies.

    According to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:

    In reports they filed after the incident, Domek wrote that as he approached Osman, he ordered him to get on the ground. Domek then wrote that he moved toward Osman “in an effort to push him to the ground to get him in handcuff position. While doing so, I felt resistance from the male, causing me to believe that he was going to attempt to fight as he had just been involved in a violent assault.”

    In his report, Reiter said when the other officers ordered Osman out of the vehicle, “I could see [Osman] pushing off the ground.

    “I made a split second decision and kicked [Osman] in the face one time with the top flat part of my boot.”

    Reiter is charged with third-degree assault, but prosecutors plan to raise the charge to first-degree assault. The Minneapolis Police Department fired Reiter in Janurary 2017.

    It all started in May 2016 when officers responded to a domestic violence call involving Osman and his girlfriend. The two were having dinner and an argument ensued about Osman’s wife.

    Osman then hit his girlfriend several times and she called police. When police arrived to the couple’s apartment, they were told that Osman was sitting in his vehicle outside.

    Officers approached Osman demanding that he get on his hands and knees and he complied.

    It was then that Reiter dressed in an all black uniform came over to Osman and kicked him in the face while Osman was already on his hands and knees showing no resistance whatsoever.


    But unbeknownst to Reiter, a nearby security camera was recording his every move.

    Osman was taken to the hospital and staff determined he was suffering from a displaced nasal bone, nasal septal fractures and a mild traumatic brain injury. He was eventually arrested for the assault on his girlfriend.

    When the other officers were questioned about what happened, they even stated that Reiter kicked Osman for no reason.

    And it was nothing new for Reiter who kicked another man in the face while he was down in 2014. That case is now the subject of a police brutality lawsuit.

    Additionally, in February of 2017 a $25,000 lawsuit was settled that involved Reiter and another officer violently arresting a man in 2015.

    Overall, Reiter has been involved in eight excessive force complaints, two remain open.

    However, Reiter portrayed himself to be a calm person in his job application with the police department saying:

    “I am detailed oriented, do very well with hostile people, stay calm in tense situations.”

    Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau had this to say concerning the case:

    “I have dealt with this matter internally, and we remain committed to creating a culture of accountability within the MPD. These actions are not consistent with our core values and we take that very seriously. Unfortunately, this incident takes away from the great strides we make daily to build public trust. It also takes attention away from the professional service our officers routinely provide while responding to more than 450,000 calls for service annually.”

    Reiter is the second officer this year to be arrested for assault. In January, Officer Efrem Hamilton was arrested for felony second degree assault after he shot at a car full of people during a disturbance.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/21/watch-minneapolis-cop-charged-for-kicking-man-in-face-and-lying-about-it/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2017, 04:18:51 PM
    “They Kept Shooting”: Father of 6yo Boy Killed by Cops Speaks Out for First Time

    Marksville, LA — It is now day three of the trial for Derrick Stafford, one of two officers charged with the 2015 murder of six-year-old Jeremy Mardis. Jeremy’s father, Chris Few, who was also shot that fateful night, took the stand Tuesday and spoke about the murder of his son for the first time in public.

    During his heartbreaking testimony, Few noted that officers Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. immediately started firing — with no warning.
    “The only thing I heard was gunshots. Then I heard verbal commands after they were through firing,” Few said. “I stuck my hands out the window. They kept firing.”

    After he was shot, Few lost consciousness and didn’t know his son died until he woke up in a hospital six days later — the day of Jeremy’s funeral.
    Matthew Derbes, a prosecutor in the case asked Few if he regrets not immediately stopping his car that night.
    “Most definitely,” Few said. “Every day.”

    However, Few noted that he was merely trying to catch up with the car in front of him, driven by his then girlfriend, so he could give Mardis to her in case he was arrested.
    “The whole reason there was even a chase was for his well-being,” he said.
    Few said his son remained calm as they drove after his girlfriend. “He always liked going on rides,” Few said of his son who was diagnosed with autism at age two.

    According to the Greenhouse and Stafford, the officers decided to conduct a traffic stop because Few had an outstanding warrant. However, the Clerk of Court, the District Attorney’s Office, Marksville Police Department, and City Court noted that they did not have any warrants against him. The officers also claimed Few had a weapon, that was also a lie.

    Prior to the shooting, Greenhouse reported that Few had rammed his SUV into the officer’s patrol car. But State Police detective Rodney Owens testified that no physical evidence exists suggesting Few’s vehicle had collided with Greenhouse’s patrol car.


    Despite this lack of physical evidence, Stafford’s attorneys are trying to pin the blame for the deadly confrontation on Few.
    “Innocent people do not run from the police. Innocent people stop their vehicles, surrender to the police,” defense attorney Jonathan Goins said as he called Few “the author of that child’s fate.”

    However, since there was no warrant, no gun, and no subsequent charges, the implication that Few was not innocent, is another falsehood.

    Even the other officer, Jason Brouillett, testified that he did not feel Few was a threat that night — which is why he did not fire.

    “That car was not being used as a deadly weapon at that time,” District Court Judge William Bennett declared after viewing the body cam footage. “I daresay it was not even close to being used as a deadly weapon at that time.”

    The horrifying body cam, released last September shows the disturbing scene that unfolded down that dark Marksville road.

    During his testimony, Few kept his composure and even smiled when the prosecutor showed him a photo of little Jeremy celebrating the boy’s first Christmas. The jury, however, was unable to do the same.
    KATC reports, jurors saw crime scene photos, and several members of the jury were visibly upset, even crying, when shown pictures of the 6-year-old. Images of Few’s gunshot wounds were also shown.

    As the Free Thought Project has previously reported, this entire scenario could’ve been over a relationship. In November 2015, Few’s fiancée came forward about her relationship to one of the murdering cops, Norris Greenhouse, Jr.

    According to the Advocate, Megan Dixon, Few’s fiancée at the time, said Few had a previous run-in with Greenhouse. A former high school classmate of Dixon, Greenhouse had started messaging her on Facebook and had come by the house Few and Dixon were sharing at the time.

    “I told Chris, and Chris confronted him about it and told him, ‘Next time you come to my house I’m going to hurt you,’” Dixon said.

    Sadly, for Jeremy Mardis, who will never see another Christmas or Birthday or throw the ball with his dad, and his family, the outcome of this trial is the only thing his heartbroken parents can hope for.
    If convicted, Stafford faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole, probation or suspension of sentence.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/kept-shooting-father-6yo-boy-killed-cops-speaks-first-time/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2017, 10:32:21 AM
    Disturbing precedent and outrageous decision. Civil liberties eroded every day. Criminals allowed to indiscriminately kill with the approval of big government.

    A Federal Court Just Ruled Cops Can Go to Wrong House, Kill Innocent Homeowner and Walk Free

    Lake County, FL — A disturbing precedent has just been set in a federal appeals court which ruled in favor of police who knocked on the wrong door at 1:30 am, failed to identify themselves, and then repeatedly shot the innocent homeowner until he died.

    The homeowner, 26-year-old Andrew Scott had committed no crime when officers came to his home that night on July 15, 2012. Police were actually in search of a person they witnessed speeding on a motorcycle when they began banging on Scott’s door.

    Deputy Richard Sylvester was the officer who saw the speeding motorcycle while on patrol. Sylvester initiated a pursuit but lost sight of it after the motorcycle sped off. For some reason, Sylvester believed the motorcycle driver was armed, might be wanted by another police department, and had been spotted at a nearby apartment complex, according to the police reports.

    Sylvester, along with three other deputies, arrived at the apartment complex and began knocking on doors close to where the motorcycle was parked. They started with apartment 114 which was occupied by Scott and his girlfriend Amy Young who were playing video games and had zero connection to the motorcycle, the driver, or any illegal activity at all.

    According to a press release from the Rutherford Institute, assuming tactical positions surrounding the door to Apartment 114, the deputies had their guns drawn and ready to shoot. Sylvester, without announcing he was a police officer, then banged loudly and repeatedly on the door, causing a neighbor to open his door. When questioned by a deputy, the neighbor explained that the motorcycle’s owner did not live in Apartment 114. This information was not relayed to Sylvester.

    Clearly troubled by someone pounding on his door at 1:30 am Scott grabbed his legally owned pistol and went to open the door. When he opened the door, he was immediately startled by the shadowy figures aiming guns at him and retreated into the apartment. At this point, Sylvester immediately opened fire on the retreating man, firing six shots, three of which struck Scott, killing him.
    “Drew and I loved each other and he died protecting me,” said Young.

    A lower court ruled in favor of Sylvester and blamed Scott for legally protecting his own home with a pistol against overzealous and apparently trigger-happy cops who failed to identify themselves as such.

    Scott’s family appealed the lower court’s ruling only to be shut down again. The US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled in favor of the police, yet again, that Sylvester was protected by “qualified immunity,” reasoning that the use of excessive force did not violate “clearly established law.”

    The decision was split, with four judges dissenting with the majority’s ruling. In a strongly worded dissent from the judges, they noted the dangerous nature of this precedent.

    First, under no standard was it reasonable for the police to kill Mr. Scott when he answered the knock at the door to his home. He was not suspected of any crime (much less a violent crime) and he was standing inside his own house without threatening them. Second, the police were not engaged in a permissible “knock and talk” when they killed Mr. Scott. Their aggressive tactics crossed far over the line from a consensual visit into a warrantless raid. When it upheld these rulings by the District Court, the panel (and now a majority of this Court) gave a pass to dangerous, unconstitutional police actions in a way that makes it more likely that tragic police shootings will continue to occur.


    “Government officials insist that there is nothing unlawful, unreasonable or threatening about the prospect of armed police dressed in SWAT gear knocking on doors in the middle of night and ‘asking’ homeowners to engage in warrantless ‘knock-and-talk’ sessions,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “However, as Andrew Scott learned, there’s always a price to pay for saying no to such heavy-handed requests by police. If the courts continue to sanction such aggressive, excessive, coercive ‘knock-and-shoot’ tactics, it will give police further incentive to terrorize and kill American citizens without fear of repercussion.”

    In the land of the free, those who claim they have sworn to protect you, can come to your house and kill you, and face no consequences. This is why police in America kill more citizens than anywhere in the rest of the world. This is why people protest. This is why people are angry.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/federal-court-just-ruled-cops-can-go-wrong-house-kill-innocent-homeowner-walk-free/#hx3GQDxS51wtmt6Q.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2017, 10:40:25 AM
    SWAT Raids Man’s Home over $100 in Pot, Shoot Him 57 Times, Paralyze Him, Then Lie About It

    Radley Balko, of the Washington Post, writes a regular column for the newspaper called “The Watch.” Author of Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America’s Police Forces,” Balko blogs about criminal justice, the drug war, and civil liberties. In one of his latest pieces on badge abuses, the author addressed, once again, the near homicide of a low-level Myrtle Beach, South Carolina drug dealer (Julian Betton) at the hands of police. Here’s his summary of the incident:

    Julian Betton’s offense was to sell $100 worth of pot to a friend. For that, South Carolina police battered down his door, fired 57 shots at him and hit him nine times, leaving him paralyzed and without the use of several major body organs. The cops then lied about the circumstances of the raid to make it seem as if Betton deserved every bullet. When Betton awoke from a coma, his leg was shackled to the hospital bed. Prosecutors then charged him with several felonies — enough of them to put him in prison for the rest of his life, should he survive his injuries. For those two sales of pot totaling $100, Betton will not only be saddled with paralysis and debilitating injury, he’ll also have a felony record. The cops who broke down his door, filled him with bullets and then lied about what had happened will suffer no punishment at all.

    What Balko’s synopsis doesn’t reveal, is that there were a series of cover-ups the police raid team engaged in, and what might seem like a team effort to coordinate their stories in the aftermath of the planned conflict. First, the team did not seek after, nor secure a no-knock raid warrant. Betton’s high-definition security footage reveals the police officers made no such effort to knock on the door, which is required by law, even though their police reports stated they did knock and announce their presence.

    Secondly, the footage also reveals the team was not dressed as SWAT team members are typically dressed, used unmarked cars, and moved so swiftly in an effort to breach the door with a battery ram, that Betton’s neighbor actually thought a robbery was taking place. The confusion over the identity of the intruders, their no-knock breach of the front door, and the swiftness at which they moved, may have given Benton cause to arm himself, something for which Balko says he would have been justified.

    At any rate, the attempt to coordinate a cover-up appears to have continued, with each officer on the scene turning on their body cameras only after they shot the marijuana dealer 57 times. Betton’s wounds were described by Balko.
    He ended up losing his gallbladder and parts of his bowel, colon and rectum. The bullets also damaged his liver, small intestine and pancreas. His lung partially collapsed. His left leg was broken. One of his vertebrae was partially destroyed; two others were fractured. He’ll never walk again or be able to have kids of his own. He’ll also need to use a colostomy bag for the rest of his life.

    No one disputes the shooting took place, but because each member of the team turned on their body cameras at the same time, no footage of the actual shooting exists, only the aftermath has been recorded. That may mean the officers later had someone delete the footage, or it may mean they simply forgot to turn on their cameras and only did so after the shooting occurred. The latter is not very likely. After all, why would each member of the team decide to turn on their cameras only after the shooting happened? The answer may also mean they were instructed to do so.

    Police say Betton fired at the police raid team as they penetrated his home, which gave them just cause to engage the cannabis dealer with their deadly fire. But ballistics tests later confirmed Betton had not fired his handgun at all, a conclusion which means the police either lied about him firing his sidearm or believing that he had. Balko theorized Betton would have been a fool to have even pointed his small handgun at the direction of the intruders, given the overwhelming firepower with which the team was equipped. He wrote that in taking the evidence against the department’s official position in the shooting — that they lied about knocking, were dressed as criminals would, used unmarked vehicles, and then conveniently turned on their body cameras only after the event took place — the police must be lying about the entire incident.

    Betton pleaded guilty this week to possession and distribution of 100 dollars worth of marijuana. And in what could be an indictment on the official police narrative, the prosecutor dropped all gun charges against the now handicapped man. As a result, the low-level weed dealer will likely win his civil suit against the MBPD, causing the taxpayers to saddle the costs associated with the near fatal assassination of a pot dealer. The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) investigated the shooting and, predictably, cleared all the officers involved in the shooting.

    As The Free Thought Project has observed on multiple occasions, police often lie when raids go bad, often meaning when the mark doesn’t die. The subsequent investigations almost always occur internally, meaning the police actually investigate themselves and are almost always cleared of any wrongdoing. The resulting lawsuits end up costing the citizenry millions in tax dollars and the cycle of police on citizen violence continues when it could all be prevented.

    The raids over an innocuous plant should never occur. Marijuana needs to be legalized throughout the country, police need never to conduct a no-knock raid, and body cameras should run 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and all court cases judgements for victims of police brutality be paid for out of police officer pension funds. Only then will there be less police involved shootings.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/100-worth-pot-leaves-man-paralyzed-life-shot-57-times-victim-police-raid/#OGsSJ2TS7iWZIW54.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2017, 10:25:13 PM
    Blue Privilege: Cop Gets Speeding Ticket After Running Over Innocent Man, Killing Him

    York County, VA – Blue Privilege is rearing its head again in the case of a homeless man struck and killed when an on-duty cop unnecessarily sped through a 35 mph zone on a rainy night. For a normal citizen, this would likely bring a charge of involuntary manslaughter or vehicular homicide. But for Officer Scott George, it means nothing more than a speeding ticket.

    York Daily Record reports that George was doing 13 miles over the speed limit, in dark, rainy conditions that would normally call for reducing one’s speed. He was on a non-emergency call to investigate a retail theft, when he struck 74-year-old Raymond Updegraff, a homeless man known as “Rayme” around the area.

    A state police investigation concluded that Officer George’s actions only violated traffic rules – not the safety of pedestrians. George promptly pleaded guilty to speeding and has since returned to duty.

    In the 14-page rationalization, District Attorney Thomas Kearney wrote:
    “Using the definition of ‘probable cause,’ one must ask the question as to whether it is ‘more likely than not’ that the act of travelling 13 miles per hour over the speed limit on a rainy night was a direct or likely cause of the death. In other words, was the death the predictable, expected, likely result of the speeding? The author (Kearney) concludes in the negative believing the requirement for causation cannot be established beyond a reasonable doubt. Traveling 13 miles per hour at night time, in the rain, is certainly not a prudent course of action. However, neither does it fit the definition of ‘reckless’ or ‘grossly negligent’ conduct beyond a reasonable doubt. While there exists a deviation from the standard of conduct society expects (traveling at or below the speed limit), the deviation is not a gross deviation.”

    Had roles been reversed, it’s safe to assume the average person would easily be charged with manslaughter, vehicular homicide or worse for running over a police officer, even off-duty. The “justice” system far too often proves to be arbitrary, with one’s status being the deciding factor in handing down punishment.

    Blue privilege is becoming so pervasive that states, with the backing of the Trump administration intent on a “law and order” crusade, are enacting ‘Blue Lives Matter’ laws that make yelling at cops or resisting arrest hate crimes.

    When cops kill unarmed homeless people – who are often mentally ill – these deaths are routinely treated as “justifiable.” We have documented numerous cases of cops being let off the hook for attacks on homeless people that would be considered barbaric by any rational standard.

    Updegraff’s family said they have not received so much as an apology from Officer George. He declined to be interviewed by investigators if state troopers were going to read Miranda rights, and instead provided a written statement.

    In the statement, George said he was “not in any hurry” when he killed Updegraff, and said, “The first and only time I saw the pedestrian was immediately before impact with the corner of my car.”
    George’s attorney stated that George “has expressed his deepest sympathy for the loss of Mr. Updegraff’s life. He insisted they could have contested the traffic ticket, but by pleading guilty George is “accepting responsibility and providing legal closure for Mr. Updegraff’s family.”

    In a final insult, the attorney wrote, “People generally don’t want to accept responsibility for their own actions in today’s society; he did.”
    DA Kearney characterized George’s actions as “slight negligence” and there was no reckless conduct in speeding down a dark road on a rainy night. It will be interesting to see if the same rationale is applied in future cases where the perpetrator is a non-cop.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-homeless-man-ticket/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2017, 12:04:40 PM
    83-year-old Grandpa Forgot to Use His Blinker, So Cops Put Him in the Hospital

    Antrim County, MI  — Failing to use a blinker for a u-turn has ended with a stay in the hospital for an 83-year-old business owner in Antrim County. Bar owner, Larry Sevenski found out the hard way that police in America can and will escalate violence when it is entirely unnecessary — even against the elderly.

    Last week, Sevenski got a call from customers informing him that state troopers were parked outside of his pub, Larry’s Seven-Ski Inn. So, this business owner of 50 years decided to go talk to the police. He had no idea that this decision would end up with charges and a stay in the hospital.

    Sevenski only wanted to ask the police if there was a problem. However, as he drove over to the two police vehicles, he failed to use his turn signal — a move which apparently angered the cops — so they pulled him over.

    When Sevenski got out of his vehicle to talk to the police, he was immediately met with force.
    “They said I couldn’t talk to them. I was breaking some kind of law, I don’t know. It got crazy, all at once,” says Sevenski.

    According to police, Sevenski didn’t comply with their commands fast enough and got out of his vehicle. So, they put him in the hospital.
    According to the Michigan State police, the 83-year-old grandpa was a threat to officers.

    “The subject then grabbed ahold of the trooper’s wrist and proceeded to make a fist in an assaultive motion. At that point, the trooper initiated his defensive tactics techniques and brought the subject to the ground,” says 1st Lt. Mark Harris, Michigan State Police Gaylord Post.

    However, according to Sevenski, he says he just wanted to talk to the troopers.
    “They handcuffed me, and they hurt very bad because I have a reversed shoulder and I can’t put my arm behind my body,” explains Sevenski. “Everybody’s worried about me. I’ve been worried about me, too. Just don’t know what I did wrong.”

    Naturally, police have justified the violence against the elderly man because he did not immediately curtsey and obey every command given by the officers — who Sevenski only wanted to engage in conversation.

    Lt. Harris says, “If he would have complied with the orders of the trooper, got back in the car and not become aggressive and assaultive, he would not have ended up on the ground.”
    The 83-year-old man, for allegedly failing to obey every single command given by the officers, was assaulted to the point of needing surgery on his arm and had a broken nose.

    According to FOX 32, the Antrim County prosecutor is reviewing a report for charges of assault and resisting and obstructing a police officer.
    Sevenski was given a traffic ticket for not using his turn signal.

    In the land of the free, 83-year-old grandpas can and will be beaten by police and hospitalized for trying to have a conversation.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/83yo-grandpa-hospital-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2017, 12:11:37 PM
    A pervert from "New York's finest", who would've guessed?

    NYPD Detective Arrested for Masturbating While Peering into Child’s Window

    Members of the Thin Blue Line were forced to arrest one of their own after he was busted masturbating while peering into a child’s window.

    New York City Police Detective Robert Francis, 46, was in Rockville Centre police custody charged with public lewdness and endangering the welfare of a child after he was arrested him at 2:30 a.m. on Sunday, according to Pix11.

    He has since been released on a desk appearance ticket, which means he did not have to post a bond and was freed from jail with a mere promise to appear in court at a later date to face the charges against him.

    Francis’ arrest comes shortly after a rash of reports from several Rockville Center residents reporting a naked man trolling through back yards, knocking on windows then using a flashlight or forehead light to expose himself to children.

    Callers reported the man was naked from the waist down. Police have not said whether he is linked to those previous incidents or specified how they determined the detective was the suspect reported.

    According to reports, shortly after highlighting his lewd acts, the man described as being 5-foot-10 and weighing about 220 pounds, took off running.

    Three incidents were reported in February between 8 and 9 p.m.

    Detective Francis was located shortly after the call and arrested just a few blocks away from the scene.

    Earlier this month, Charles Gennario, the Rockville Centre Police Commissioner, stated he believes reports of the man are connected.

    “This is raising our level  of concern now,” Genneario said on Sunday.

    A call from a Rockville Centre homeowner Sunday prompted Francis’ arrest.

    The caller told authorities a he could see a man masturbating in his backyard.

    NYPD confirmed Francis, who is employed by the 71st precinct in Brooklyn, has been suspended without pay.

    Police are now trying to determine if Francis is the suspect callers described in previous reports and are looking into whether they can add more charges to the list of charges he now faces.

    Police have not yet made that specific correlation, but are expected to release more details later today.

    Rockville Centre is a village in Nassau County about an hour’s drive from New York City.

    Anyone witnesses, or those with information regarding public lewdness in the area, are urged to call the Rockville Centre Police Department at 516-766-1500.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/27/nypd-detective-arrested-masturbating-peering-childs-window/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2017, 12:40:03 PM
    As is usual is such cases, the violent gang members faced no charges. But if the "good cop" saw the assault by these criminals why did he not arrest them on the spot (and use appropriate force if they resisted) instead of just testifying against them afterwards? Why did he allow the man to be assaulted and tortured by these violent criminals while he watched?

    Good Cop Quits, Crosses Blue Line After Video Shows Fellow Cops Allow K9 to Maul Innocent Man

    St. Paul, MN — On the night of June 24, 2016, Frank Baker ‘fit the description’ of a ‘black man’ in the area, so he was attacked by police and their K9. For several minutes, Baker was beaten, tasered, and viciously mauled by their K9. Also at the scene that fateful night was officer Tony Spencer — whose dashcam recorded the violent assault on Baker, who was entirely innocent.

    That night, Spencer and his partner responded to a call, which ended up being fake, about a man with dreadlocks wearing a white t-shirt and armed with a gun.
    When they arrived on the scene, Spencer and his partner saw Baker and realized he did not look like a suspect.

    “There are about 50 people who would have matched that description that night,” Spencer said of Baker. “He is not acting agitated. To me, he does not appear to be engaged in a fight. He did not appear to have run from a fight … so we continue to roll through.”

    However, just after they passed Baker, two less experienced and far more violent cops showed up, pulled out their guns, and unleashed a dog.
    Because police said Baker was slow to respond when showing his hands, officer Brian Ficcandenti let loose the K9, ‘Falco.’

    “I’m thinking he (Ficcadenti) saw something we didn’t see or missed and is now performing a felony-style stop,” Spencer recalled. “As I turn the car and see the dog pulling out this man from the cars, I recognize it’s (Baker). I can clearly see there’s nothing in his hand as he comes between the cars.”

    While having his flesh literally torn from his body, Ficcandenti is heard encouraging the dog. “Get him, buddy. Good,” said the officer. “Get him.”

    The dashcam then captured the following beat down — after Baker had been mauled. When officer Brett Palkowitsch exited the vehicle, he ran over to the innocent man and began kicking and stomping Baker’s ribs.
    Baker’s legs were so severely injured during the attack that he spent weeks in the hospital recovering. He also suffered several broken ribs and collapsed lungs.


    According to his attorney Robert Bennett, the dog tore “hunks of flesh” as its teeth bit “down to the bone” of Baker’s legs.

    After watching his fellow officers do this to an innocent person, Spencer could no longer stand it and decided to become a good cop. He crossed the thin blue line and testified against the officers who nearly killed an innocent man.

    “It was very difficult because it was something I had been programmed throughout my career to never do,” Spencer, 46, told Ruben Rosario from Twin Cities.
    “But I decided that the right thing to do was tell Mr. Baker’s story,” he added as he looked away momentarily, tears starting to form in his eyes, explained Rosario. “I owed it to him. How do you explain to that guy what happened to him was justified?”

    Spencer, who felt horrible after watching his fellow officers do this to an innocent man, he visited Baker in the hospital.

    “He had these big tears in his eyes,” Spencer noticed. “He was still having trouble breathing. And then he tells me: ‘I know there are good cops and there are bad cops. The thing is I know what you guys are up against out there. I know what St. Paul cops deal with. I live in that area. I love my St. Paul cops. The dog thing I almost get because I did not come out as quick as I probably should have. But those kicks he did were bogus.’ ”

    Sadly, the officer who released the dog was not fired and remains on the force. As for officer Palkowitsch, who kicked the innocent Baker as he bled out, he will likely be getting his job back. Neither of the cops faced any charges.

    “We are the department that brought (cop killer) Guy Harvey Baker to jail alive,” Spencer said. “That’s what the community expects of us. The younger cops don’t understand the legacy of the department. In our darkest hour on our worst day, we brought in that guy alive. And he did not have seven broken ribs and two collapsed lungs, did he? And he killed two of our cops.”

    Because of Spencer’s testimony, which was described as the entire department against him and his partner, Baker received the largest settlement for police misconduct in the history of St. Paul. Attorneys for Frank Arnal Baker said Monday that they have a verbal agreement with the city for $2 million for the case. The agreement, they noted, has yet to be signed by all parties, reports the pioneer press.

    Officer Spencer is the epitome of a good cop as he was unafraid of pointing out the crimes of his fellow cops against an innocent member of society — whom they ostensibly protect.

    However, that good cop is now gone and he will, like he alluded to above, be replaced by “younger cops [who] don’t understand the legacy of the department” who are more prone to destroy first and attempt to justify later.

    Below is a video showing the type of legacy the new cops intend to leave for the St. Paul police department — and it is terrifying.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-quits-video-shows-fellow-cops-allow-k9-maul-innocent-man-nearly-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2017, 03:08:30 PM

    Cops Break into Wrong House, Arrest Innocent Children, Kill Their Dog — Taxpayers Held Liable

    Las Vegas, NV — Kenya and Henry Brian Rodriguez were playing video games and watching TV with their two friends Jordhy Leal and David Madueno when all of the sudden cops rushed into their home, held them all at gunpoint, killed the family dog, and unlawfully arrested them and their father. After going to the wrong home, murdering the family dog, and kidnapping and terrorizing innocent children, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department still maintains that they did everything by the book.

    Now, because of America’s cruel system of ‘justice,’ the officers responsible were never held accountable and it is the taxpayers who are taking responsibility. On Monday, in spite of saying they did everything by the book, the LVMPD Fiscal Affairs Committee approved a settlement to the family for the abuse.

    The incident happened on Oct. 24, 2009, and it has taken nearly 8 years for the family to receive even a drop of justice. According to the lawsuit and the arrest records, the children and family had done nothing wrong when police barged in that fateful day.

    Around 4:30 in the afternoon, police received a 911 call from a witness who claimed he saw two white males looking into the windows of homes in his neighborhood. The children and the adults in the home were all Hispanic — not white.

    Sgt Jay Roberts and officer Michael Dunn of the LVMPD responded first and were then followed by a slew of their colleagues who swarmed the residence of Jesus Sandoval and Adriana Rodriguez — the parents of the children.

    According to the lawsuit, what happened next was nothing short of negligent terrorism:

    Roberts looked through an open bedroom window and saw “three young males” who were “younger than 18 to 20,” and were “about 14, 15.” Roberts conceded that the boys—Henry, then 18, who lived at the house, and his two friends, David, then 15, and Jordhy, then 16—“did not match” two of the three metrics that Schouten had given him: the number of suspects or the age of the suspects.

    In spite of realizing that these young boys were not the suspects police were looking for, Roberts and his fellow officers escalated the situation anyway. According to the lawsuit:

    Roberts pointed his gun at the head of one of the boys through the bedroom window, and gave the boys conflicting commands, telling them “don’t move,” “[l]et me see your hands,” and “turn the music down.” Roberts told Jordhy to turn down the music, which Jordhy tried to do, and then told him, “I told you don’t move, I could shoot you” or “I’ll fucking shoot you.”

    According to the lawsuit, all the children did their best to comply with the crazed officer’s conflicting commands but admitted they may not have heard them all as the music was playing and he yelled so many of them.

    As Roberts was holding innocent children at gunpoint, his partner Dunn entered the room through a sliding glass door — also with his gun drawn. Both officers admitted in the lawsuit that their commands could have created confusion.

    After the situation briefly calmed down, Roberts ordered the children out of the bedroom. At this point, Henry asked police if he could put away the family dog, Hazel — before letting cops into the rest of the home — he was denied.

    What happened next is nothing short of terrifying, especially considering these were children, not some hardened criminals. According to the lawsuit:

    As the boys exited the bedroom, Hazel slipped in front of Henry and Jordhy, but continued to walk behind David, according to David’s testimony. Dunn shot Hazel in the face, twelve inches from David, and in the direction of Henry and Jordhy. The officers ordered David and Jordhy to the floor, handcuffed them, and brought them outside. Henry was ordered outside, but was not cuffed until later, as he was carrying Hazel, who was bleeding to death. The boys testified that the handcuffing and other treatment by the officers caused them pain.

    Not until they had arrested all the children and killed their dog did the officers even ask if the kids had a right to be in the home.
    After Henry called his father, Jesus Sandoval, he came rushing home to find his son covered in blood. He was horrified and thought police had shot his son. However, it was Hazel’s blood.

    Cops then attacked Sandoval, who’d just had back surgery and was in severe pain, and put him in handcuffs. After they slammed him into the cruiser, Sandoval was detained in the patrol car for 25 to 30 minutes, still “screaming in pain,” before officers responded to his requests for medication, according to the lawsuit.

    According to the court records, none of the family members or the boys were cited or charged with any crime, and Dunn testified that the boys committed no crime. The officers eventually “just left.” Dunn admitted that if he or Roberts had asked basic identifying questions, the entire incident would not have happened.

    None of the officers involved in the case were held liable for any of the damage they caused. However, the taxpayers will now be robbed of $200,000 — an insultingly low amount for the family — to pay for these incompetent and abusive officers.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-break-wrong-house-arrest-4-innocent-children-kill-family-dog-taxpayers-held-liable/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on March 29, 2017, 06:03:34 PM
    Did you guys hear of the new police tactic of telling people that it is illegal to record them or their activities?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 29, 2017, 08:01:27 PM
    Did you guys hear of the new police tactic of telling people that it is illegal to record them or their activities?

    Yeah, I noticed someone posted a tutorial (in this thread) on how to deal with it.  It begins by holding the camera at waist level to draw as little notice as possible, and to have the recording continuously fed to online storage in case anything goes wrong during the process.  It can all be accomplished for free.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2017, 08:53:55 PM
    Did you guys hear of the new police tactic of telling people that it is illegal to record them or their activities?

    The cops often make up their own laws, lie or charge people with non-existing "crimes" that they make up on the spot to justify the "arrest" and assert their "authority". It seems like they are trying to threaten, extort, intimidate and terrorize citizens and/or any witnesses to crimes committed by cops. However, there is the ruling in Glik v. Cunniffe (http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/10-1764P-01A.pdf) by the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals:

    "In line with these principles, we have previously recognized that the videotaping of public officials is an exercise of First Amendment liberties."

    "Our recognition that the First Amendment protects the filming of government officials in public spaces accords with the decisions of numerous circuit and district courts. See, e.g.,
    Smith v. City of Cumming, 212 F.3d 1332, 1333 (11th Cir. 2000) ("The First Amendment protects the right to gather information about what public officials do on public property, and specifically, a right to record matters of public interest.")"

    "In our society, police officers are expected to endure significant burdens caused by citizens' exercise of their First Amendment rights. See City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, 461 (1987) ("[T]he First Amendment protects a significant amount of verbal criticism and challenge directed at police officers.").

    Indeed, "[t]he freedom of individuals verbally to oppose or challenge police action without thereby risking arrest is one of the principal characteristics by which we distinguish a free nation from a police state."
    Id. at 462-63. The same restraint demanded of law enforcement officers in the face of "provocative and challenging" speech, id. at 461 (quoting Terminiello v. Chicago, -14-337 U.S. 1, 4 (1949)), must be expected when they are merely the subject of videotaping that memorializes, without impairing, their work in public spaces."

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 29, 2017, 09:53:36 PM
    The cops often make up their own laws, lie or charge people with non-existing "crimes" that they make up on the spot to justify the "arrest" and assert their "authority". It seems like they are trying to threaten, extort, intimidate and terrorize citizens and/or any witnesses to crimes committed by cops. However, there is the ruling in Glik v. Cunniffe (http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/10-1764P-01A.pdf) by the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals:

    "In line with these principles, we have previously recognized that the videotaping of public officials is an exercise of First Amendment liberties."

    "Our recognition that the First Amendment protects the filming of government officials in public spaces accords with the decisions of numerous circuit and district courts. See, e.g.,
    Smith v. City of Cumming, 212 F.3d 1332, 1333 (11th Cir. 2000) ("The First Amendment protects the right to gather information about what public officials do on public property, and specifically, a right to record matters of public interest.")"

    "In our society, police officers are expected to endure significant burdens caused by citizens' exercise of their First Amendment rights. See City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, 461 (1987) ("[T]he First Amendment protects a significant amount of verbal criticism and challenge directed at police officers.").

    Indeed, "[t]he freedom of individuals verbally to oppose or challenge police action without thereby risking arrest is one of the principal characteristics by which we distinguish a free nation from a police state."
    Id. at 462-63. The same restraint demanded of law enforcement officers in the face of "provocative and challenging" speech, id. at 461 (quoting Terminiello v. Chicago, -14-337 U.S. 1, 4 (1949)), must be expected when they are merely the subject of videotaping that memorializes, without impairing, their work in public spaces."



    Yes, person should be current and prepared to explain to officer in simplest terms (to get it out of the way as quickly as possible) and go from there.  If the officer wants to hang him/herself then there's nothing you can do except remain polite.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2017, 02:01:45 PM
    Gang of Thieves: DEA Stole $3.2 Billion in Cash From Innocent People in Only a Decade

    A bombshell report from the Inspector General (IG) at the Department of Justice has exposed the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) for the colossal thieves they are. According to the report, DEA seized more than $4 billion in cash from people since 2007, but $3.2 billion of the seizures were never connected to any criminal charges. That figure does not even include the seizure of cars and electronics.

    This thievery is possible through the insidious practice of civil asset forfeiture (CAF), where law enforcement can seize cash and property on the mere suspicion of being involved in criminal activity. Originally developed in the 1980s to go after organized crime, CAF has mushroomed into a source of revenue for cops across the country – from local to state to federal – in what’s become known as Policing for Profit.

    When an innocent person’s cash is stolen by DEA, that person must petition to get it back, meaning the burden of proof (and the burden of time and expense) is on the unlucky victim who never did anything wrong in the first place. In fact, “forfeiture proceedings start from the presumption of guilt.”

    It’s a clever scheme, and DEA knows it. The IG found that petitions were filed in only 20 percent of DEA cash seizures. As Reason Magazine points out, the IG report highlights just how arbitrary these seizures can be.

    “We found that different task force officers made different decisions in similar situations when deciding whether to seize all of the cash discovered,” the Inspector General wrote. “These differences demonstrate how seizure decisions can appear arbitrary, which should be a concern for the Department, both because of potentially improper conduct and because even the appearance of arbitrary decision-making in asset seizure can fuel public perception that law enforcement is not using this authority legitimately, thereby undermining public confidence in law enforcement.”

    The case of a man traveling at an airport with $27,000 is a prime example of how DEA can just take the cash on a whim, without even bothering to pretend it has to do with criminal activity.

    “When a task force officer explained that the U.S. currency in the bag was going to be seized pending further investigation, the passenger asked whether he could keep some of the currency to travel home. The passenger asserted that all of the currency in the bag was his, and the task force officers allowed him to retain $1,000. This seizure resulted in an administrative forfeiture of $27,000 to the U.S. government, and the DEA explained to the OIG that, other than the events surrounding the seizure, there was no subsequent investigative activity or additional law enforcement benefit.”

    Reason Magainze sums it up perfectly:

    “If the DEA task force agents thought that man’s cash was connected to drug activity, why allow him to keep some of it? If they weren’t sure, why take it in the first place? The answer, of course, is there is no logical or legal rationale for this sequence of events.”

    Indeed, most of the DEA’s cash seizures don’t relate to any criminal investigation, and 82 percent of the cases reviewed by the IG were settled without any judicial review. The DEA focuses on airports, train stations and bus terminals, relying on travel records and a host of confidential informants to target people they believe will have lots of cash.

    DEA gives itself wide latitude to pin you as a suspect for detainment and search. Woe to those “traveling to or from a known source city for drug trafficking, purchasing a ticket within 24 hours of travel, purchasing a ticket for a long flight with an immediate return, purchasing a one-way ticket, and traveling without checked luggage.”

    The IG concludes that DEA is posing great risks to civil liberties by continuing the practices highlighted in its report:

    ‘‘When seizure and administrative forfeitures do not ultimately advance an investigation or prosecution, law enforcement creates the appearance, and risks the reality, that it is more interested in seizing and forfeiting cash than advancing an investigation or prosecution.’’

    The IG states that “risks to civil liberties are particularly significant when seizures that do not advance or relate to an investigation are conducted without a court-issued seizure warrant, the presence of illicit narcotics, or subsequent judicial involvement prior to administrative forfeiture.”

    The threat to civil liberties posed by CAF is being recognized more and more, as states continue to abolish the practice by requiring a criminal conviction before cash and assets can be seized. But the federal government is a primary reason why CAF still runs rampant, through the euphemistically named Equitable Sharing Fund where the stolen loot (amounting to $28 billion over the last decade) is shared by federal and state drug task forces.

    “These findings fundamentally undercut law enforcement’s claim that civil forfeiture is a vital crime-fighting tool. Americans are already outraged at the Justice Department’s aggressive use of civil forfeiture, which has mushroomed into a multibillion dollar program in the last decade. This report only further confirms what we have been saying all along: Forfeiture laws create perverse financial incentives to seize property without judicial oversight and violate due process.

    This report is one more illustration that the only solution to resolving these issues is to end the use of civil forfeiture once and for all. – The Institute for Justice“


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/gang-of-thieves-dea-stole-3-2-billion-in-cash-from-innocent-people-over-the-past-decade/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on March 30, 2017, 05:58:40 PM
    I bet the mainstream media is going to be all over this!!!!!


    NOOOOOOT!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 31, 2017, 12:12:44 PM
    The cop should be in prison but the crime boss police chief should also be in prison: he did nothing up until the video was released online and became viral. Why didn't he act on it when it happened but he waited after the video was public?

    North Carolina Cop who Lied to Uber Driving Attorney about Recording Laws Demoted in Rank and Pay

    The North Carolina cop who became a viral sensation after telling an Uber driver that it was illegal to record him under a new law – only to learn the driver was also a lawyer – was demoted in rank and pay.

    Wilmington Police Sergeant Kenneth Becker is now a corporal whose hourly salary was reduced by $1.38, according to the News and Observer.

    The 17-year veteran was also assigned to the planning and research division, which appears to be more of an administrative position, meaning he will have less access to the public where he has proven to conduct unlawful searches.

    The fact that he did not hesitate to conduct an unlawful search knowing he was being recorded makes us wonder how he treats citizens when he is not aware he is being recorded.

    The incident took place on February 26 when Wilmington police pulled over Jesse Bright and his passenger after driving away from a house they had under surveillance.

    Police said it was a drug house and believed Bright and his passenger had just purchased drugs. But Bright said his passenger, a dog groomer, was only there to pick up a check, a fact that was confirmed by police when they searched the passenger with his consent.

    But Bright, a public defender who was driving for Uber to pay of school loans, did not consent to being searched. He also did not turn off his camera when ordered to do so.

    Not only did Becker tell Bright that a new law had just passed forbidding the recording of cops in public without their permission, a New Hanover County sheriff’s deputy also went along with the story, telling Bright the same thing.

    That was when Bright informed him he was an attorney who was certain there was no new law in the books forbidding the recording of cops.

    So they stopped harassing him about the recording, but then brought police dogs to sniff around his car after he made it clear he was not going to consent to any searches.

    The police dog made no indication that there were drugs in the car, but Becker acted as if the dog did, proceeding to search the car for drugs, finding only some over-the-counter melatonin that Bright’s mom had left in the car. The cops then allowed the two men to go.

    Bright was upset about what had taken place, so he reached out to the department and to Becker himself for an apology, but never received one.

    So he posted the video online where it quickly went viral, which is when the department decided to take action.

    Below is the video of the incident as well as a video interview we conducted with Bright through Skype.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/03/31/north-carolina-cop-who-lied-to-uber-driving-attorney-about-recording-laws-demoted-in-rank-and-pay/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 02, 2017, 08:57:38 AM
    That's the thing, I know some cops and they're cool people to deal with on a personal level.

    I have a feeling they turn into a-holes when wearing the badge because the police chiefs are the ones inciting all this criminal behavior.

    Case and point: All the towns around the interstates, parkways and highways that run out NYC through little hick towns whose only source of income is ticketing the heck out of unsuspecting drivers.

    There's a monetary incentive for cops to escalate every little encounter. It's paramount to the survival of their own system. Without people driving 15 miles over the speed limit, without the "suspicious" car, without the little whiff of marijuana/alcohol, their own jobs would be at risk.

    Hence we have what we have. They rather pay hundreds of millions in out-of-court settlements than discipline their cops.

    This will all come to a stop when people start assaulting the cops's family, the cop himself or even the police station. Not that I want it to happen, mind you, but if this is allowed to continue, it WILL happen.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on April 02, 2017, 02:36:09 PM
    Portland police don't have the best reputation. Wonder why. Fish has filed a civil suit. The incident is being investigated. The officers are still working.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 02, 2017, 02:51:02 PM
    That's the thing, I know some cops and they're cool people to deal with on a personal level.

    I have a feeling they turn into a-holes when wearing the badge because the police chiefs are the ones inciting all this criminal behavior.

    Case and point: All the towns around the interstates, parkways and highways that run out NYC through little hick towns whose only source of income is ticketing the heck out of unsuspecting drivers.

    There's a monetary incentive for cops to escalate every little encounter. It's paramount to the survival of their own system. Without people driving 15 miles over the speed limit, without the "suspicious" car, without the little whiff of marijuana/alcohol, their own jobs would be at risk.

    Hence we have what we have. They rather pay hundreds of millions in out-of-court settlements than discipline their cops.

    This will all come to a stop when people start assaulting the cops's family, the cop himself or even the police station. Not that I want it to happen, mind you, but if this is allowed to continue, it WILL happen.




    "This will all come to a stop when people start assaulting the cops's family, the cop himself or even the police station. Not that I want it to happen, mind you, but if this is allowed to continue, it WILL happen."

    It's definitely getting closer to going that way.
    Maybe it's part of the master plan from the TPTB.


    Here in the U.K. When the last riots occurred just a few years back - some police stations were attacked -
    The situation very nearly got out of control - and a whole new raft of laws brought in soon after to stop people being able to communicate via phones / messages / internet/ etc.
    I can't remember how many thousands were involved across several towns & cities - it was likely less than 1/10th of a percent of total uk population & the police / media / government Shit Themselves as they Very Nearly lost control - Had it involved 1% of population. - Who's knows what would've transpired & where or what life would be like today.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2017, 03:25:53 PM
    That's the thing, I know some cops and they're cool people to deal with on a personal level.

    I have a feeling they turn into a-holes when wearing the badge because the police chiefs are the ones inciting all this criminal behavior.

    Case and point: All the towns around the interstates, parkways and highways that run out NYC through little hick towns whose only source of income is ticketing the heck out of unsuspecting drivers.

    There's a monetary incentive for cops to escalate every little encounter. It's paramount to the survival of their own system. Without people driving 15 miles over the speed limit, without the "suspicious" car, without the little whiff of marijuana/alcohol, their own jobs would be at risk.

    Hence we have what we have. They rather pay hundreds of millions in out-of-court settlements than discipline their cops.

    This will all come to a stop when people start assaulting the cops's family, the cop himself or even the police station. Not that I want it to happen, mind you, but if this is allowed to continue, it WILL happen.

    Until cops must obey all the laws without exceptions, are held personally accountable for their crimes and any settlement comes out of their pockets, nothing will change. As it is now, the usual process is (if their crime gains some publicity): paid vacation, they investigate themselves and clear themselves of any wrongdoing, case gets settled using taxpayer money, so no real consequences for these criminals, sometimes they even get a promotion. In very serious cases, they usually quit before getting fired so they can work at a different department (gypsy cops).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2017, 01:35:23 PM
    Cops Call in Backup for Veteran Paying Ticket in Pennies

    Manchester, NH — Stories about citizens paying their taxes with pennies aren’t new. But how Billy Spaulding of Manchester paid his parking ticket with pennies might be a first, since he was packing a sidearm while doing so.

    As The Free Thought Project has stated before, “police need you to break traffic laws” because writing tickets and receiving funds from doing so is a considerable revenue generator for police departments. It’s how police states maintain their control over the citizenry.

    Manchester police didn’t take kindly to Spaulding’s form of payment, and according to reports, called in a SWAT officer to deal with him. At first, the police told Spaulding he should take his form of payment to the bank to get bills instead of pennies.

    “You don’t have a bank account?” one officer asked.

    Spaulding responded by saying he didn’t. Whether it’s true or not simply doesn’t matter. Spaulding had every right to pay his extortion fees in pennies. According to U.S. Law Code 31.5103, “United States coins and currency (including Federal reserve notes and circulating notes of Federal reserve banks and national banks) are legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues.”

    Spaulding had a friend record the scene. Although the recording does not start and stop at the beginning and the end of the encounter, it does show police intercepting Spaulding, asking him to find some other form of payment, and then telling his friend he has to stop recording because he didn’t announce he was going to do so.

    Refusing to allow the two citizens to record themselves paying a parking fee, is considered a violation of one’s First Amendment rights, so long as it does not interfere with the official duties of the officers. Spaulding may have recourse to file a lawsuit for both issues; refusing to receive his form of payment which resulted in his occurring additional expenditures, and his friend being forced to stop recording.

    Recently, an activist by the name of Phillip Turner won a judgment in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals who ruled he does (and so does every citizen) have a right to film police.

    Entering a court house or a police station while being armed is also not illegal in New Hampshire. Spaulding knew that as well, but he reportedly had to take his grievance to the Sheriff’s department before he was allowed to go back to the court house and pay his parking ticket in pennies.

    Spaulding may have, however, missed an opportunity to have his ticket nullified. Upon having presented his form of payment, and having witnessed his payment refused, he could have asked a judge to dismiss his $75 ticket. The judge would likely have done so, being fully aware that the Coinage Act of 1965 allows all forms of U.S. currency to be used for payment.

    After leaving the sheriff’s office, Spaulding once again presented his $75 worth of pennies as payment for his ticket at the county courthouse. The clerk, having been notified by the sheriff to receive the former Marine’s payment, didn’t seem all too pleased to be doing so. Nonetheless, Spaulding passed through the glass window separating the two individuals, a grand total of 7,500 pennies and a $5 bill just in case he or the clerk miscounted.

    Below is the video of this epic encounter.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/former-marine-asked-leave-courthouse-didnt-like-form-payment/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2017, 12:11:39 AM
    Mom Horrified After Finding Police Drone Watching Her Children — In Their Backyard

    Hurst, TX — For decades, in dystopian fictions, readers and watchers alike are very familiar with the idea of state-run drones spying on the entrapped population. Luckily, however, the scenes of drones chasing down or spying on those who dare dissent against authority have been restricted to fantasy — until now.

    When Texas resident Bobbie Sanchez walked out in her backyard last week, the last thing she thought she’d see was a drone — hovering — watching her kids.

    “Mommy there’s a drone over our roof,” said her children.

    According to Sanchez, the drone hovered there long enough for her to take multiple photos and to call the police for help.

    However, when Sanchez called the Hurst police department to inform them a drone was spying on her children, the Hurst police department said it was them.

    “They’re watching my children play in the backyard,” said Sanchez. “I called the Hurst Police Department and was pretty surprised to hear that it was them.”

    According to NBC DFW, Hurst police and fire started using drones earlier this year. They said the day they were over Sanchez’s yard was a training exercise.

    The department claimed that the day they were over Sanchez’s yard, they were conducting ‘a training exercise.’

    Training, in the land of the free, now involves police officers stripping citizens of their privacy and creepily watching their kids.

    Dystopian, indeed.

    After being caught spying on children, the department now promises that they will tighten down on when and where the drones will be deployed.

    “We will not be doing any type of training exercises over houses and things like that,” said Hurst Police Assistant Chief Steve Niekamp.

    According to Niekamp, the department’s drones will now only launch of crime scenes, accident scenes, to find a suspect, an active shooter, or a missing person. The fire department may also use them to strategize on fighting fires.

    “We’re working for our citizens, if they have concerns then we definitely need to address it,” said Niekamp in an obvious understatement.

    When Sanchez’ neighbors got news of the drone they were outraged, naturally.

    “It might be legal but it’s still creepy to think that police can be saying that they’re training or looking for a criminal and still be looking at you in your backyard,” said neighbor Casey Byrnes.

    Others told NBC DFW that they feel betrayed and that their trust in police is damaged.

    In a truly liberty-loving tone, Sanchez stated, “I am not a person who will give up privacy for safety.”

    The use of drones in policing is a slippery slope. While fears of active shooters and missing children will be used to justify them, if history is any indicator, these drones will ultimately be used to further deteriorate what little semblance of privacy left in America.

    Also, guns.

    As the Free Thought Project reported last week, Connecticut may be the first state in the country to allow police officers to put deadly weapons on drones. Some states have discussed equipping drones with tasers but this is the first proposal to arm them with deadly weapons. What could possibly go wrong?

    The good news is, in a recent ruling, a Kentucky man has prevailed in a lawsuit he faced over shooting down a drone that entered his property.

    William Meredith became known as the “drone slayer” in 2015, after he used a shotgun to dismantle a drone operated by David Boggs, that he says was flying over his property in front of himself and his daughter. Meredith initially faced felony charges of endangerment and criminal mischief for shooting down the drone. The criminal charges were dismissed by Judge Rebecca Ward in Bullitt County District Court, citing recollections from witnesses who said that the drone was flying under the tree line. Ward also said that Meredith was within his rights to shoot down the drone.

    According to Meredith, that drone, like the police drone in Hurst — was also watching his children.

    However, we shouldn’t rely on this case to hold up against the blue privilege associated with shooting down ‘official police property’ — even if it is watching your kids in your own backyard.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-drone-hovering-watching-kids/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 06, 2017, 12:13:57 AM
    Remember this case? If you don't, the man you see below lying on the ground with his hands up is the caretaker for the person next to him, an autistic man holding a toy truck. As you can tell, the cop "feared for his life" and shot the caretaker who was lying down with his hands up pleading not to shoot him. This deranged criminal has been enjoying 8 months of paid leave (so far) while his fellow "officers" are still "investigating".

    (http://www.advocate.com/sites/advocate.com/files/2016/07/21/charles-kinsey-shooting-x750.jpg)

    North Miami Police Chief Reveals Coverup and Lies in Last Year’s Controversial Shooting of Unarmed Caretaker

    The award-winning Florida cop who made international headlines last year after shooting an unarmed caretaker who had his arms in the air, then claiming he had feared for his life after confusing a toy truck for a loaded gun, was informed by another cop seconds before the shooting that the object was not a gun, but a toy.

    But North Miami police officer Jonathan Aledda fired anyway, not even striking the autistic man with the truck that he had confused for a gun, but his caretaker who had already told officers it was not a gun; the man they later claimed they were trying to protect from the toy-wielding autistic man they believed had a gun.

    However, not only did caretaker Charles Kinsey tell the cops it was not a gun before the shooting, but a North Miami police sergeant who viewed the object through binoculars also confirmed it was a toy truck, telling the other officers to hold their fire.

    And the officers did hold their fire, except for Aledda, who seconds earlier, had told fellow officers he had a clear shot on the subject, so apparently was not going to let that moment pass, even if had received a direct order not to shoot.

    What else can we expect from a cop who was hired by North Miami police in 2012, despite several warning signs that he could become a problem cop because he possesses a “lack of tolerance” and was also described as being “judgmental; argumentative; critical; challenging; rigid; stubborn”?

    Fortunately, Kinsey survived the shooting, and is now suing.

    The stunning but not surprising revelations surfaced this week after the Miami New Times obtained an audio recording of North Miami Police Chief Gary Eugene being interviewed by Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigators ten days after the July 18, 2016 shooting. The recording is posted below.

    Chief Eugene, who had been on the job only six days when the shooting took place, described an ensuing coverup between police and North Miami city officials to protect Aledda, who has no business carrying a badge and a gun.

    However, that interview was not enough for the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office to file charges against Aledda, who has been on paid administrative leave for more than eight months now (although they insist they are still investigating).

    And that is not surprising considering Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle has never filed charges against any cop for on-duty shootings since taking office in 1993.
    And there have been many.

    Her latest questionable decision was made last month when she declined to charge four prison guards who forced a mentally ill inmate into a hot shower for two hours, leaving him to die a slow, excruciating and scalding death, prompting renewed criticism from the New Times, who referred to her as a “disgrace” in a scathing article last month.

    So even though prosecutors are promising they will be arriving at a decision any day now, we can predict that they will not file charges against Aledda, who was deemed a potential problem cop when applying for the North Miami Police Department in 2012.

    He not only had a shoplifting conviction on his record when applying, he was determined to have a “lack of tolerance” and was also described as being  “judgmental; argumentative; critical; challenging; rigid; stubborn.”

    Just the kind of person who would shoot an unarmed man laying on his back with his hands in the air after being told by a commanding officer not to open fire.

    According to the Miami  New Times:

    After the shooting, union officials justified Aledda’s actions by saying he thought the autistic man with Kinsey had a gun, not a toy truck. But Eugene’s interview with FDLE contradicts that claim. (This past Tuesday, the North Miami Police public information officer declined to comment on behalf of the city manager, Spring.)

    “I heard the shooter, Officer Aledda, make a statement to the nature of ‘Be advised, I have clear shot [of] subject,'” Eugene said, describing the audio of the police radio just before the shooting. “Later on, a sergeant… got on the air and said, ‘I have a visual; it is a toy. Is it a toy? QRX.’ That means ‘Stand by; don’t do anything.’ Then there is a conversation back and forth. The next transmission was by [another officer saying] ‘Shot fired!'”

    Eugene’s description comes in an hourlong interview that centers on the bizarre aftermath of the case. He doesn’t pull punches about the state of the department. Eugene, a veteran City of Miami cop who had been sworn in as chief only six days before the Kinsey shooting, says training was lax and infighting rampant.

    “The scene was a mess, to be honest with you,” he tells investigators of the Kinsey shooting. “People were walking all over the place. Thank God [Kinsey] did not die. I realized I have a problem with the training of my staff. We’re talking about some 15- or 16-year veterans, but in North Miami, a 15- or 16-year veteran may have less experience than a two-year cop in Miami.”

    Fights in the department were so bad, Eugene said, that he worried his cops wouldn’t even be willing to protect one another, much less the community.

    “I’m afraid one of them will get shot, for God’s sake, and someone will call for backup and they’ll say, ‘I’m not going,’ just to tell you how much the animosity is,” he said.

    The chief is also saying there is another video, apparently confiscated by police, that has not been made public.

    In a previous cell-phone clip that was provided to the press, Kinsey was seen on tape lying on his back, repeatedly telling police that Rios was only holding a toy. Rios sat cross-legged next to him. While the video did not show the moment Aledda shot Kinsey, the video does show the cops handcuffing an injured Kinsey as he laid on the ground.

    In his FDLE interview, the chief said the second, unseen video was clear enough to show one cop, a rookie, resting with his finger off the trigger of his weapon. That cop was not the officer who shot Kinsey.

    “It’s was video taken pulled back from the second floor of an apartment,” Eugene said. “Because you could clearly see the officer leaning in the engine area, and the rookie officer, I was telling you, the black male, it was so clear you could see his finger outside trigger, behind a bush. You can see the black male [Kinsey] on his back with both hands in the air.”

    The news raises further questions about the controversial Kinsey shooting, which became a flashpoint in the anti-police-brutality movement sweeping the nation. Who took the clip? And why or how did the video not make its way to the press in the eight months since Kinsey was shot?

    The answer to those questions are obvious. The video was never released because it would contradict their narrative that the autistic man, Armando Rios Soto, appeared threatening and menacing, the way he waved his toy truck around to fool officers thinking it was a loaded gun.


    Instead, the video shows a rookie cop with his finger off the trigger, having made the determination that Kinsey was not carrying a gun.

    But as police are known to do, they quickly spun the story to make themselves look like the victim as we described last year.

    “The movement of the white individual looked like he was getting ready to discharge a firearm into Mr. Kinsey,” said Miami-Dade police union boss John Rivera in a press conference today, attended by WSVN.

    And the officer discharged trying to strike and stop the white male and unfortunately, he missed.”

    Rivera went on to slam the media for reporting on this story.

    “Be responsible in your reporting,” Rivera said in the press conference.

    But is it too much to ask cops to be responsible in their policing?

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/05/north-miami-police-chief-reveals-coverup-and-lies-in-last-years-controversial-shooting-of-unarmed-caretaker/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 06, 2017, 04:19:53 AM
    Remember this case? If you don't, the man you see below lying on the ground with his hands up is the caretaker for the person next to him, an autistic man holding a toy truck. As you can tell, the cop "feared for his life" and shot the caretaker who was lying down with his hands up pleading not to shoot him. This deranged criminal has been enjoying 8 months of paid leave (so far) while his fellow "officers" are still "investigating".

    (http://www.advocate.com/sites/advocate.com/files/2016/07/21/charles-kinsey-shooting-x750.jpg)

    North Miami Police Chief Reveals Coverup and Lies in Last Year’s Controversial Shooting of Unarmed Caretaker

    The award-winning Florida cop who made international headlines last year after shooting an unarmed caretaker who had his arms in the air, then claiming he had feared for his life after confusing a toy truck for a loaded gun, was informed by another cop seconds before the shooting that the object was not a gun, but a toy.

    But North Miami police officer Jonathan Aledda fired anyway, not even striking the autistic man with the truck that he had confused for a gun, but his caretaker who had already told officers it was not a gun; the man they later claimed they were trying to protect from the toy-wielding autistic man they believed had a gun.

    However, not only did caretaker Charles Kinsey tell the cops it was not a gun before the shooting, but a North Miami police sergeant who viewed the object through binoculars also confirmed it was a toy truck, telling the other officers to hold their fire.

    And the officers did hold their fire, except for Aledda, who seconds earlier, had told fellow officers he had a clear shot on the subject, so apparently was not going to let that moment pass, even if had received a direct order not to shoot.

    What else can we expect from a cop who was hired by North Miami police in 2012, despite several warning signs that he could become a problem cop because he possesses a “lack of tolerance” and was also described as being “judgmental; argumentative; critical; challenging; rigid; stubborn”?

    Fortunately, Kinsey survived the shooting, and is now suing.

    The stunning but not surprising revelations surfaced this week after the Miami New Times obtained an audio recording of North Miami Police Chief Gary Eugene being interviewed by Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigators ten days after the July 18, 2016 shooting. The recording is posted below.

    Chief Eugene, who had been on the job only six days when the shooting took place, described an ensuing coverup between police and North Miami city officials to protect Aledda, who has no business carrying a badge and a gun
    However, that interview was not enough for the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office to file charges against Aledda, who has been on paid administrative leave for more than eight months now (although they insist they are still investigating).

    And that is not surprising considering Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle has never filed charges against any cop for on-duty shootings since taking office in 1993.
    And there have been many.

    Her latest questionable decision was made last month when she declined to charge four prison guards who forced a mentally ill inmate into a hot shower for two hours, leaving him to die a slow, excruciating and scalding death, prompting renewed criticism from the New Times, who referred to her as a “disgrace” in a scathing article last month.

    So even though prosecutors are promising they will be arriving at a decision any day now, we can predict that they will not file charges against Aledda, who was deemed a potential problem cop when applying for the North Miami Police Department in 2012.

    He not only had a shoplifting conviction on his record when applying, he was determined to have a “lack of tolerance” and was also described as being  “judgmental; argumentative; critical; challenging; rigid; stubborn.”

    Just the kind of person who would shoot an unarmed man laying on his back with his hands in the air after being told by a commanding officer not to open fire.

    According to the Miami  New Times:

    After the shooting, union officials justified Aledda’s actions by saying he thought the autistic man with Kinsey had a gun, not a toy truck. But Eugene’s interview with FDLE contradicts that claim. (This past Tuesday, the North Miami Police public information officer declined to comment on behalf of the city manager, Spring.)

    “I heard the shooter, Officer Aledda, make a statement to the nature of ‘Be advised, I have clear shot [of] subject,'” Eugene said, describing the audio of the police radio just before the shooting. “Later on, a sergeant… got on the air and said, ‘I have a visual; it is a toy. Is it a toy? QRX.’ That means ‘Stand by; don’t do anything.’ Then there is a conversation back and forth. The next transmission was by [another officer saying] ‘Shot fired!'”

    Eugene’s description comes in an hourlong interview that centers on the bizarre aftermath of the case. He doesn’t pull punches about the state of the department. Eugene, a veteran City of Miami cop who had been sworn in as chief only six days before the Kinsey shooting, says training was lax and infighting rampant.

    “The scene was a mess, to be honest with you,” he tells investigators of the Kinsey shooting. “People were walking all over the place. Thank God [Kinsey] did not die. I realized I have a problem with the training of my staff. We’re talking about some 15- or 16-year veterans, but in North Miami, a 15- or 16-year veteran may have less experience than a two-year cop in Miami.”

    Fights in the department were so bad, Eugene said, that he worried his cops wouldn’t even be willing to protect one another, much less the community.

    “I’m afraid one of them will get shot, for God’s sake, and someone will call for backup and they’ll say, ‘I’m not going,’ just to tell you how much the animosity is,” he said.

    The chief is also saying there is another video, apparently confiscated by police, that has not been made public.

    In a previous cell-phone clip that was provided to the press, Kinsey was seen on tape lying on his back, repeatedly telling police that Rios was only holding a toy. Rios sat cross-legged next to him. While the video did not show the moment Aledda shot Kinsey, the video does show the cops handcuffing an injured Kinsey as he laid on the ground.

    In his FDLE interview, the chief said the second, unseen video was clear enough to show one cop, a rookie, resting with his finger off the trigger of his weapon. That cop was not the officer who shot Kinsey.

    “It’s was video taken pulled back from the second floor of an apartment,” Eugene said. “Because you could clearly see the officer leaning in the engine area, and the rookie officer, I was telling you, the black male, it was so clear you could see his finger outside trigger, behind a bush. You can see the black male [Kinsey] on his back with both hands in the air.”

    The news raises further questions about the controversial Kinsey shooting, which became a flashpoint in the anti-police-brutality movement sweeping the nation. Who took the clip? And why or how did the video not make its way to the press in the eight months since Kinsey was shot?

    The answer to those questions are obvious. The video was never released because it would contradict their narrative that the autistic man, Armando Rios Soto, appeared threatening and menacing, the way he waved his toy truck around to fool officers thinking it was a loaded gun.


    Instead, the video shows a rookie cop with his finger off the trigger, having made the determination that Kinsey was not carrying a gun.

    But as police are known to do, they quickly spun the story to make themselves look like the victim as we described last year.

    “The movement of the white individual looked like he was getting ready to discharge a firearm into Mr. Kinsey,” said Miami-Dade police union boss John Rivera in a press conference today, attended by WSVN.

    And the officer discharged trying to strike and stop the white male and unfortunately, he missed.”

    Rivera went on to slam the media for reporting on this story.

    “Be responsible in your reporting,” Rivera said in the press conference.

    But is it too much to ask cops to be responsible in their policing?

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/05/north-miami-police-chief-reveals-coverup-and-lies-in-last-years-controversial-shooting-of-unarmed-caretaker/
    [/quote









    Completely outrageous behaviour by that cop & those covering up
    As for the state prosecutor She Needs to be accidentally shoot by a cop
    See if she prosecutes then. Slag.

    Tick Tock - Tick Tock
    Time is running out on this Criminal Gang of bully's / liars / thugs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 06, 2017, 10:34:05 AM
    Another case of not just a "bad apple" (the cop trees seem to have a high rate of rotten fruit.. maybe the crop is bad). This is a criminal gang. Read below:

    “Sickening & Horrific”: Cop Repeatedly Raped Woman In Front of Her Disabled Child

    Bakersfield, CA — After enduring years of sexual assault and abuse — including at least one incident which took place in the presence of her disabled child — a mother of three filed a lawsuit against her former probation officer.

    Ben Meiselas, the unnamed woman’s attorney, told Courthouse News the repetitive assaults the victim endured were “sickening and horrific.”

    “We filed this lawsuit because [Doe] was brutally sexually assaulted over the course of several years by a now former-parole officer who held a position of trust and control and abused that authority,” Meiselas explained. “It’s clear to us that the parole office was complicit and turned a blind eye to the brutal sexual abuse.”

    Courthouse News reports former Kern County probation officer Reyes Soberon Jr. pled no contest to the sexual assaults of the mother, who will not be named in this report to protect the identity of her children, and two other victims, late last year.

    Soberon received six months in jail and three years probation “for touching a person intimately against their will for sexual arousal.”

    Court documents claim the former officer “brutally” and “methodically” assaulted the woman beginning around April 2012, and didn’t cease until June 2015.

    “Soberon would mislead [Doe] into coming into the probation office and would take [Doe] to a corner where he would digitally penetrate her vagina and anus while sticking his tongue down her throat, moaning: ‘I want you to make me cum in my pants,’” the woman’s 10-page complaint states.

    “In one horrific instance, Soberon sexually assaulted [Doe] in her home in front of her disabled son suffering from cerebral palsy as he lay helpless, crawling on the ground.”

    Soberon, the woman claims, threatened to “put her in jail for the rest of her life” if she rejected his unwanted advances — which caused her to fear for life and those of her three children.

    Assaults continued until one day in 2015, when the woman received an unexpected visit from a female probation officer who sought to arrest her for violating orders to perform community service — a violation which should not have occurred, as Soberon had vowed to allow an extension.

    Upon confiscating the woman’s phone, however, the officer discovered Soberon’s text messages calling her “sexy mamacita” and “baby doll” — and abruptly left without further comment, according to the complaint.

    “Soon afterward,” Courthouse News reports, “Soberon started calling the woman and threatening to kill her. Emboldened despite this escalation, she told the probation department what was going on. But instead of taking her seriously, she claims the department tried to dissuade her from reporting him and let Soberon continue supervising her probation though he was not officially assigned to her.

    “Worse yet, the department’s internal affairs officials told the woman she could not hire an attorney, talk to the media or contact the FBI about her report or the assaults, according to the complaint.”


    Throughout the duration of her ordeal, the woman says the now-former officer repeatedly invented excuses to be in her presence and continue the sexual assaults. Seemingly left without recourse to stop the ongoing abuse, she says she “lived in constant fear, believing that Soberon was free to continue molesting her.”

    It wasn’t until the woman was subpoenaed to appear at Soberon’s criminal case she learned he had been arrested months before in December 2015.

    As Meiselas described, simply attempting to bring the woman justice by filing appropriate documentation with the court exposed startling obstacles — in particular, the treatment of sexual assault victims and the rejection of the woman’s status as disabled from the trauma suffered.

    According to Courthouse News, Meiselas says his client “first filed a government late claim two months after the deadline. Though she has post-traumatic stress disorder from being raped, the county denied her petition for a late file though the Government Tort Claims Act states the county must permit a filing if the individual suffers a disability or did not file due to excusable neglect.”

    “One of the biggest scandals here is that a Kern Superior Court commissioner found that PTSD from rape does not equal a disability,” the attorney asserted. “Lawyers who file late can get a pass, but sexual assault victims get thrown in the gutter? That ruling shocks the conscience.”

    Kuge and other officials not only knew about Soberon’s wrongdoing, but tried to cover up the scandal by pressuring her not to tell anyone what was happening, the complaint states.

    Courthouse News notes that as of Monday, Kuge was no longer listed as the chief probation officer on the department’s webpage. Officials declined to comment, telling the outlet the woman’s complaint had not yet been reviewed.

    Kern County, the Kern County probation department, former officer Reyes Soberon, Jr., and Chief Probation Officer David M. Kuge are all named in the lawsuit.

    For this gross violation of her civil rights, the woman seeks general, special, and punitive damages through the lawsuit.

    This egregious case shows not only a horrendous violation of trust between law enforcement and the public, but, as described in the suit, an inexcusable attempt to cover up wrongdoing — while re-victimizing a mother of three, and potentially others, in the process.


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-arrested-lawsuit-rape/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2017, 12:37:00 AM
    Once again the roving gang of bandits attacks and tortures innocent people.

    Cops Force K9 to Maul 70-Year-Old Man’s Head Over a DOT Sticker

    Madison, WI — On the day Klyde J. Gebelein was viciously attacked by police and their K9 unit, he had no criminal record, had not caused harm to anyone, and, as the court records later showed, broke no law. However, that did not stop Marathon County Sheriff’s Deputy Troy Deiler from assaulting him and allowing his K9 to maul the head of this innocent 70-year-old man.

    Gebelein has since filed a lawsuit against the Marathon County Sheriff’s Deputy for the horrific assault he endured on August 6, 2015 — all of which was captured on police dashcam.

    On that fateful day, Deputy Deiler pulled over Mr. Gebelein because his trailer, for hauling his excavator, lacked the proper stickers from the Department of Transportation. Deiler claimed that because Gebelein was using this trailer and excavator to earn income that he was required to pay the DOT — for a sticker. But Gebelein was having nothing of it.

    Clearly agitated that Deiler kept pressing him over this extortion fee for a license, Gebelein had enough and left.

    If we look at this situation objectively — outside of the statist paradigm — we see a man driving away from an armed robber who detained him and demanded he pay protection money for the right to earn income.

    Sadly, however, as the police see it, this man was fleeing an officer, resisting an officer and operating commercial motor vehicle without a license — so they claimed the right to enact violence against Gebelein.

    After realizing that the officers weren’t going to stop chasing him, Gebelein finally stopped his vehicle. He then simply got out and walked up to the officers to talk to them like a human being. However, because they are police and perceived Gebelein’a actions as criminal activity, they did no talking — only violence.

    The scene that unfolded during the second stop, which was caught on dashcam, is nothing short of horrifying and tyrannical.

    Gebelein, who is 70-years-old, posed zero threat to the officers. He was not running, nor was he attempting to flee, nor did he have his hands in his pockets, or anything else that would’ve justified Deiler unleashing his K9, Leo. In fact, his actions were so non-threatening that the Leo did not even know who to attack once he was released.

    As the dog wanders aimlessly wondering who the cops are telling him to attack, a deputy then rushes the senior citizen, while yelling at him to “get on the ground!” Only seconds later, after he was already down, Deiler forces the K9 to attack Gebelein. As Leo tears into Gebelein’s thigh, police continue to order him to get his hands behind his back.

    As three cops attack an unarmed, non-violent, elderly man, Deiler then has the K9 sink his teeth into Gebelein’s head. The video of police attempting to pull Leo off of this poor man’s head was as gruesome as it was heartbreaking.

    Gebelein suffered a traumatic head injury as a result and was hospitalized. He is now permanently disfigured and injured.

    Battered and bloody, Gebelein was booked into jail for resisting arrest, fleeing an officer, and failure to obtain the proper licensing for a commercial vehicle — which Gebelein said he doesn’t even have.

    Gebelein suffered pain, permanent scarring to his head, medical expenses, and business loss, according to the lawsuit. He is asking the court to determine the amount of damage he should be awarded, according to the Daily Herald.

    As the Daily Herald reports, Jerome Tlusty, Gebelein’s attorney for his criminal case and one of the attorneys for his civil case, later argued in court documents both the stop and the search of the vehicle were illegal.

    Fortunately for Gebelein, the court agreed with Tlusty and all charges were thrown out. However, none of the officers involved in the assault were held liable for the injuries they caused this innocent man. In fact, Capt. Sean McCarthy said the department followed proper procedure when forcing their K9 to maul a non-threatening senior citizen.

    “It’s just an unfortunate situation all around,” he said. “But if they have to be used in that way, they are.”

    Now, it will be the Marathon County taxpayers who take responsibility for the stop.

    Below is a video that gives a graphic illustration of how the American Dream dies.

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x5hgu88_horrific-video-shows-cops-force-k9-to-maul-compliant-man-s-head-over-a-dot-sticker_news

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrific-video-cops-force-k9-maul-compliant-mans-head-dot-sticker/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2017, 12:45:11 AM
    While they're trying to take firearms from law abiding citizens, these "highly trained" dangerous and incompetent buffoons shoot other people and yet they get away with it.

    Oklahoma Security Guard Dressed as Cop Shoots Man, Claiming it was “an Accident”

    An Oklahoma security guard hired to keep patrons safe at a weekend gun show pulled out a loaded gun, pointed it towards people and fired, striking a former sheriff’s deputy, who was also working security that day.

    Brian Pounds, who pulled the trigger, is not a cop, but he is wearing a shirt that says “police” on the back.

    He did, however, once serve as a reserve deputy under Tulsa County Sheriff Stanley Glanz of “fuck your breath” fame.

    And like former reserve deputy Robert Gates who is currently imprisoned for killing a man by shooting him in the back, Pounds claimed it was an accident.

    But a surveillance video obtained by the Oklahoma news site, The Frontier, shows it more of an act of stupidity, ignorance and negligence.

    Firearms training is obviously not a priority at the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office. At least not for its reserve deputies.

    But he will not face criminal charges because the victim, former Tulsa County Sheriff’s Sergeant Rick Treadwell, did not want to file charges against him.

    The bullet struck Treadwell’s middle finger and remained lodged there, so he probably won’t be flipping anybody off with that hand for a while.

    According to The Frontier:

    Treadwell, Pounds and Skiatook Police Chief Pat Dean were working security at the Wanenmacher’s Tulsa Arms show over the weekend, Treadwell said. The show bills itself as the world’s largest gun show, but stresses that loaded firearms are not allowed inside the Expo Square arena where the show is held.

    The Frontier acquired surveillance footage of the shooting on Thursday which shows Pounds remove the handgun from a bag, and handle it for a few seconds before pointing it in the direction of Dean and Treadwell before pulling the trigger.

    A flash is visible from the handgun’s muzzle, and Treadwell, seated at a nearby table, immediately leaps from his seat and grabs his hand. Treadwell told The Frontier earlier this week that the bullet struck him in the middle finger, where it remains lodged. He said the bullet ricocheted off the wall before striking him.

    Pounds then places the handgun on the table and reaches for his walkie-talkie before other personnel arrive.

    Pounds, who does not appear to still be a reserve deputy, is an assessor for the Tulsa County Appraiser’s Office.

    He is also married to Tulsa County Sheriff’s Sergeant Judy Pounds, who was sued in 2015 by a former jail administrator who claimed she was the subject of harassment at the workplace.

    The former reserve deputy was also involved in a 2005 controversial shooting that is still raising concerns among citizens.

    Pounds is the wife of Brian Pounds, a former candidate for Tulsa County Commissioner who works for County Assessor Ken Yazel. Pounds was a reserve deputy for Glanz in 2005 when he and Yazel accompanied other deputies to serve a warrant in Okmulgee County.

    Yazel ended up shooting the man in the buttocks after he allegedly tried to grab Pounds’ gun. The 2005 shooting is among the issues a citizens group is asking a grand jury to investigate.

    Sheriff Glanz resigned in 2015 after he was indicted on corruption charges, including covering up for his buddy, Robert Bates, the reserve deputy who shot an unarmed man in the back.

    Like Pounds, Bates also claimed the shooting was accidental, but he ended up sentenced to four years in prison.

    Bates shot the suspect in the back while other deputies were holding him down on April 2, 2015.

    The suspect, Eric Harris, 44, ended up dying, gasping for air, telling deputies he was losing his breath.

    “Fuck your breath,” Tulsa County sheriff’s deputy Joseph Byars responded.

    Video: https://vimeo.com/212160186

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/06/watch-oklahoma-security-guard-dressed-as-cop-shoots-man-claiming-it-was-an-accident/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2017, 10:45:07 PM
    The "sheriff"... And he is still out there so that he can attack and abuse citizens... Put him in a prison isolation cell and throw away the key.

    Sheriff Arrested for Assaulting Innocent 77yo Woman, Using Stingray to Spy on Judge — Still Sheriff

    Mississippi County, MO — A Mississippi County, Missouri sheriff has been arrested following an investigation by the State Highway Patrol and the FBI. Attorney General Josh Hawley said the arrest of Corey Hutcheson, who authorities say is guilty of multiple felonies, is the result of two separate investigations.

    According to KVFS News, “In the first complaint, Hutcheson faces seven counts of forgery, seven counts of tampering with computer data, and one count of notary misconduct. Hawley said Hutcheson is accused of using his position to illegally ping the cell phone of several members of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, former Mississippi County Sheriff Keith Moore, and Circuit Judge David Dolan.”

    But Hutcheson’s crimes were not limited to spying on his colleagues. Apparently, the sheriff also used his position to bully other members of the community as retaliation for involving themselves with other members of his family.

    KVFS writes, “In the second complaint, Hutcheson is charged with second-degree assault, first-degree robbery, and false declaration. Hutcheson is accused of handcuffing a 77-year-old woman with enough force that she had a heart attack. Hawley said that the victim was in the hospital for three days. Investigators said Hutcheson arrested the woman because she was in a civil dispute with one of his family members.

    Bully cops, as The Free Thought Project has reported on numerous occasions, often take down senior citizens with the same use of force they would attempt to take down a 20-year-old. Many times the senior citizens are left with broken bones and bruises and treated with an overall lack of respect. It’s conceivable if the elderly woman Hutcheson allegedly manhandled had passed away, he could potentially have been charged with manslaughter or murder as well.

    As it stands, the now disgraced sheriff has been charged with: 2nd-degree assault, 1st-degree robbery, forgery, tampering with computer data, notary misconduct, and false declaration. He claimed the elderly woman had kidnapped one of his family members. He used those claims as the basis of his probable cause statement he later used to arrest the woman.

    Hutcheson is out on bond, awaiting a trial which prosecutors say will continue. Oddly enough, he remains the sheriff of Mississippi County and will continue to carry said title until such time as the Attorney General makes any changes. In the meanwhile, the coroner briefly served as acting sheriff, until it was determined the Deputy Chief would assume the position.

    Abuse of power is not uncommon within some sheriff’s offices across the country. As The Free Thought Project reported in late 2016, a police union president, Dominick Izzo, blew the whistle on his boss, Chief George Filenko of Round Lake Park, Illinois, for allegedly and knowingly helping to send and keep an innocent woman in prison, among many other charges.

    After the county coroner made an appearance on 48 Hours, where he emphatically declared Melissa Calusinski’s innocence in the daycare death of a young child, the county arrested Coroner Thomas Rudd on forgery charges. Those charges are bogus, according to many sources close to the case.

    It appears from our investigations into the case, anyone who dares to speak out against the authorities in Round Lake Park, Illinois immediately become the target of reprisals. In an April 2nd post, Izzo posted a picture of his former boss in an orange jumpsuit, shackled in chains. In the post, he said his motivations for doing so were, “to support good cops who are overshadowed by corrupt men who abuse their position and dishonor their oath to the pubic!” The Free Thought Project will continue to follow both cases closely and report on any new findings.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/missouri-sheriff-arrested-several-felony-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 08, 2017, 03:44:39 PM
    Unbelievable. All those involved should be sent to the electric chair.

    Hooded, Handcuffed, ‘Violated’: Cops Force Catheterize 3yo Boy, Man for Drug Urinalysis

    Pierre, SD — In all the years the Free Thought Project has been reporting on police misconduct and government corruption, we’ve seen some vile, horrific, and nightmarish acts committed by those sworn to protect. However, a recent case getting exposed by the ACLU of South Dakota may be one of the most insanely cruel and horrifying acts committed by police in the name of the drug war — and they’re doing it to children too.

    Forced catheterization.

    To find out if a person has traces of an arbitrary substance deemed illegal by the state, cops are torturing adults and children alike.

    Dirk Sparks recalls that horrid night that it happened to him. “It was degrading,” Sparks said. “I was angry. I felt like my civil rights were being violated.”

    The nightmare began when police responded to an incident, in which Sparks had done nothing wrong, at his home. However, one officer said he saw Sparks being “fidgety,” so police claimed the right to test his urine.

    Because Sparks refused to pee in a cup for cops, they arrested him and brought him to the hospital.

    “I didn’t actually think they were going to go through with it,” Sparks said of the event which left him in pain for weeks and an emotional toll which is still there today. “Even when we went to the hospital, I thought it was a threat.”

    But cops followed through with their threat.

    Once in the hospital room, four police officers held Sparks down while they placed a hood over his head. He was then chained to a bed with his pants around his ankles while a nurse at Avera St. Mary’s Hospital in Pierre forcefully inserted a pencil-sized tube into Sparks’ urethra to extract his urine involuntarily.

    Sparks recalls that through the mesh hood, he could see a fifth officer filming the sadistic torturous practice.

    In Sparks’ case, according to the Argus Leader, the doctor who oversaw the procedure, Peter Maningas, is also a reserve officer for the Pierre Police Department and is a member of the department’s SWAT team, according to court records. Maningas could not be reached for comment this week.

    Because police had stolen his urine, Sparks pleaded no contest to possession of marijuana and ingestion of a controlled substance and was released from jail on time served with a suspended sentence.

    Sparks told the Argus Leader that the pain lasted for weeks and every time he tried to go to the bathroom he was reminded of that torturous event. The kidnapping and forced catheterization were so traumatic for Sparks that he moved away because he now fears the Pierre police.

    According to the Argus Leader, the Pierre Police Department would not answer questions, and state court officials said they have no way of tracking how often catheters are used on suspects. After Argus Leader Media reported on the practice last summer, multiple people contacted the news organization to say police had threatened or put them through the practice.

    But it’s not just adults these sadistic cops torture either — it’s their children.

    Kristen Hunter’s boyfriend was on probation when he failed a routine urinalysis. So, multiple cops showed up at her house, along with a Department of Social Services employee and demanded her and her kids produce urine to see if they too had drugs in their system. Hunter’s children were 3 and 5-years-old at the time.

    Police told Hunter that if her kids couldn’t pee on demand that they would be taken from her. Luckily, Hunter and her 5-year-old daughter were able to produce a sample. However, the young boy, who wasn’t potty trained yet, was unable to go.

    Police and social workers then held down the child and sexually assaulted him via forced catheterization.


    “They just shoved it right up there, and he screamed so bad,” Hunter said.

    Because these sadistic cops and social worker were apparently filthy at the time, the poor young toddler contracted a staff infection from the process. “He’s still dealing with a staph infection, and we are still giving him medication,” said Hunter.

    “Quite frankly, it’s cruel and barbaric to forcibly catheterize anyone, let alone a 3-year-old child, and this process raises serious constitutional concerns,” said Heather Smith, executive director of the ACLU of South Dakota.

    According to the Argus Leader, the ACLU reviewed Hunter’s case and wrote a letter to the Department of Social Services condemning the incident. Smith said the state subjected a vulnerable child to trauma and injury to gather information to charge his parents. Her letter asked the department to stop catheterizing children and provide an explanation why procedure was permitted.

    “The process runs afoul of the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unlawful search and seizure where there are other, less intrusive means available to gather the information,” Smith said.

    Jason Riis, 34, also of Pierre, was subjected to similar treatment after being arrested for suspicion of a DUI. Riis refused a urinalysis citing lack of probable cause so cops through him in jail.

    “They put me in a holding cell for 15 minutes and kept asking me if I wanted to take a voluntary pee test,” Riis said in an interview. “I told them ‘no’ because they didn’t have probable cause.”

    The next day, cops came back with a warrant for Riis’ urine. By this time, however, Riis said he was ready to just get it over with and pee in a cup. But cops didn’t care, they told him it was now too late and apparently wanted to torture him to get his urine out.

    “One cop held my penis, and a doctor shoved a catheter in me,” Riis said. “It hurt for a week. I couldn’t pee.”

    Police found trace amounts of substances deemed illegal by the state and used this as justification for Riis’ torture and charges.

    Riis told the Argus Leader that he recalled telling his mother about what happened. They both held each other and cried, he said.

    Force catheterizing adults and children is the work of sick tyrants and has no place in the ostensible land of the free. Hitler, the Stasi, and their depraved scientists would be proud.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/forced-catheterization-boy-man-violated/#pCCkjoHGmIaHpmwy.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2017, 02:07:47 PM
    About time. Hopefully he will get many decades in prison.

    (http://www.advocate.com/sites/advocate.com/files/2016/07/21/charles-kinsey-shooting-x750.jpg)
    North Miami Cop Charged with Felony Attempted Manslaughter for Shooting Autistic Man’s Caretaker

    Despite the usual twisting of the truth from the Police PR Spin Machine, the North Miami cop who opened fire on an unarmed man with his hands in the air last year was arrested Wednesday and charged with felony attempted manslaughter.

    North Miami police officer Jonathan Aledda was also charged with a misdemeanor charge of culpable negligence.

    Although it should have been an obvious decision to charge the cop, especially since he was told to hold his fire before he fired his gun, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle has never charged a cop for an on-duty shooting in the 24 years she’s been running the prosecutor’s office.

    But by now, everybody is catching on to her police apologist ways, especially after the Miami New Times called her “a disgrace” last month when she refused to charge four prison guards for scalding a man to death in a hot shower.

    Apparently, even she could not claim the toy truck held by the autistic man could be perceived as a gun.

    Not after North Miami Police Chief Gary Eugene admitted to investigators that another sergeant on the scene had already confirmed through binoculars that it was a toy, not a gun, ordering the other cops not to fire.

    The rest of the cops held their fire, but not Aledda, who was hired in 2012 despite the fact police had determined he possessed a “lack of tolerance” as was described as “judgmental, argumentative, critical, challenging, rigid, stubborn.”

    According to the Miami Herald:

    A North Miami police officer will face criminal charges for shooting the unarmed caretaker of an autistic man last summer — one of a string of questionable police shootings of black men nationwide that sparked protests.

    Officer Jonathan Aledda was arrested and charged Wednesday with a felony count of attempted manslaughter, and a misdemeanor charge of culpable negligence.

    The arrest came nine months after Aledda shot and wounded Charles Kinsey, a behavioral therapist who was lying on his back on the ground, his hands up in the air, begging officers not to shoot — a confrontation partly captured on video from a bystander.

    The arrest marks the first time prosecutors under Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle have charged an officer for an on-duty shooting.

    The Kinsey case, which came amid protests in many cities over controversial police shootings, was being closely watched.

    On July 18, 2016, North Miami officers were summoned to the scene by a 911 caller who reported what appeared to be a disturbed man armed with a handgun.

    It was actually a silver toy truck. The man was 26-year-old Arnaldo Rios, a severely autistic man who had wandered away from a group home and sat down in the middle of the street. Kinsey was trying to coax him back to the facility when police arrived.

    After the July 18, 2016 shooting, Miami-Dade police union boss John Rivera held a press conference where he berated the media for not being responsible in their reporting, accusing them of not reporting the facts.

    But his “facts” were nothing but a laughable police narrative that the autistic man was going to shoot the caretaker with the truck that looked like a gun, which is why Aledda – a trained SWAT team member who has won awards– had to shoot the caretaker.

     A video of the incident is posted below. Another video has yet to be made public.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/12/north-miami-cop-charged-felony-attempted-manslaughter-shooting-autistic-mans-caretaker/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2017, 02:10:03 PM
    It seems that someone who needs help and calls 911 or the police can get hurt instead of receiving help.

    Wisconsin SWAT Team Attacks 65-Year-old Man with Parkinson’s Disease After he Called for Help

    A 65-year-old Wisconsin man with Parkinson’s Disease dialed 911 for a medical emergency Friday, only for a SWAT team to arrive at his home and slam him to the ground,  hospitalizing him for days.

    Thomas Smith’s family is outraged, saying their relative is unable to physically speak, so he had to resort to pushing buttons on the telephone to communicate with the dispatcher.

    And somehow, the dispatcher understood he was being held hostage by a man with guns and explosives, which is why Oneida County sheriff’s officials say they were only trying to keep the neighborhood safe.

    Plus, they added, he was not following directions, so he had to be “de-centralized,” which apparently is the police version of  “re-accommodated,” the term used by United Airlines to describe how they have passengers yanked from their seats and dragged down the aisle to make room for airline employees.

    But Smith’s family is not buying it.

    According to News Watch 12:

    “When a person cannot communicate, and he’s short of breath, you’re going to press every button on the phone to get help,” said Alan.
    The dispatch call ended abruptly. So when Smith exited his home, the Oneida County Special Response team detained him.
    The family says Smith was treated roughly.
    “He did say he was forced down, he was slammed to the ground,” said Alan.
    Hook says Smith was not following directions, so Smith was then “decentralized.”
    “We acted on the information that we had,” Hook said. “We couldn’t have acted any other way.”
    “We needed to keep the community safe as well as our officers safe, and we just did the best we could with the information that we had,” said Hook.
    Smith is currently in the hospital receiving the medical care he needed in addition to the care he needed after he was body slammed.

    Captain Hook suggests citizens with medical issues make prior arrangements with the sheriff’s office to inform them of their condition in order to prevent deputies from confusing them with armed kidnappers, according to WSAU.

    Call the sheriff’s office at (715) 361-5100 or comment on their Facebook page.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/12/wisconsin-swat-team-attacks-65-year-old-man-parkinsons-disease-called-help/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 14, 2017, 11:18:01 AM
    The cop cock worshippers who scream "support the police" and claim the cops don't just wake up deciding to commit crimes must be waving their "thin blue line" flags high.

    Florida Cop/Cub Scout Leader Arrested for Years of Sexually Abusing Young Boy, Almost Driving him to Suicide

    A Florida cop, who served as a Cub Scout leader, is on paid administrative leave after he was arrested for capital sexual battery of a child under 12 years old.

    Astatula Police Sergeant Timothy Alan Palinski, 43, was arrested Wednesday after a boy reported to a school resource officer he had been abused by Palinski since he was seven.

    The most recent molestation occurred on April 6, according to an arrest affidavit.

    Palinski took the victim to the bedroom and told him to get lubricant and pornographic materials from his gun safe, which also contained Palinski’s guns.

    Palinski molested the boy and forced the victim to touch him.

    The victim repeatedly objected and told Palinski he needed to stop the abuse. The boy told Sergeant Palinski he contemplated suicide using one of the guns from the safe.

    Sergeant Palanski said he would stop, but continued the abuse.

    After revealing the abuse to school officials, the boy shared details with authorities at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, including identifying marks and characteristics on Palinski’s body.

    Palinski’s wife confirmed the details were accurate, according to Lake County deputies.

    Deputies found pornography and lubricant beneath a false shelf in the gun safe when they executed a search warrant of Palinki’s residence.

    “It was really bothering him emotionally and it got to the point where he needed to tell someone and he wanted it to stop,”Lake County Sheriff’s Lieutenant John Herrell said.

    The victim, who is between 12 and 16, took a polygraph test. Deputies said he cried and was visibly shaken at times during the interview as he recalled the sexual abuse.

    “This victim has proven to be strictly credible, and the detectives have found no reason whatsoever to doubt his testimony,” Lt. Herrell said. “In fact, everything he provided to detectives they were able to somehow verify.”

    “It’s shocking and disappointing when you see a law enforcement officer breaking the very laws that they themselves are sworn to up hold.”

    Sergeant Palinski served in the Boy Scouts as a Cub master for Pack 254 in Astatula. But the Boy Scouts said once they heard about Palinksi’s arrest, he was removed from any upcoming events.

    During their search of his residence detectives found Cub Scout items.

    Sheriff deputies said they’re still investigating to determine if Palinski had more than one victim.

    “We would be interested in hearing from any parents whose children have spent time alone with him,” Herrell said.

    In addition to capital battery of a child charges, Sergeant Palinski is charged with charged with lewd and lascivious battery of a child from 12 years old to under 16.

    He is being held without bond at the Lake County Jail.

    Astatula Police Chief Walter A. Hoagland said Palinski, who worked at his department for 17 years, has been placed on unpaid administrative leave.

    According to his Facebook page, Timothy Palinski previously worked as a Correctional Officer at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/14/florida-cop-and-cub-scout-leader-arrested-for-years-of-sexually-abusing-young-boy-almost-driving-him-to-suicide/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 17, 2017, 12:00:18 PM
    Tiny yet symbolic semblance of justice. Shame about the deadlocked jury.

    Cop Ordered to Pay $415K of Own Money to Family of Unarmed Teen He Killed

    Little Rock, AR — An encouraging end to a tragic story comes out of Arkansas this week after a former Little Rock police officer was found liable in the shooting death of 15-year-old boy in 2012. What sets this case apart from the myriad of other civil cases in which police officers are found responsible for killing, beating, and depriving people of their rights, is that this cop was held personally responsible — and will have to pay the victim’s family using his own assets — not the taxpayers.

    On August 12, 2012, then-Little Rock Police Officer Josh Hastings, 31, and another officer were investigating a report of car break-ins. The officers attempted to box in a car occupied by the victim, Bobby Moore III, along with two other teens.

    Hastings fired 3 rounds into the vehicle of unarmed teens, striking Moore three times, killing him.

    As is the norm when police shoot into moving vehicles, Hastings claimed he feared for his life as the 15-year-old boy attempted to run over him.

    However, according to court records, the car was in reverse when Hastings fired. The other teens in the car also testified that they were trying to flee and they did not want to run the officer over.

    Before the civil case this month, Hasting was tried twice in criminal court — each time on charges of manslaughter — but the juries ended in deadlock both times. After two mistrials, the prosecutors declined to go after Hastings a third time.

    Naturally, after the deadlocked juries, the family of Moore was shaken, feeling like they’d never see justice for their lost child. However, last Thursday, all that changed and a heartening precedent was set.

    After two days of deliberation, the unanimous verdict was returned at 3:15 pm on Thursday.

    U.S. District Judge James Moody Jr., filling in for presiding Chief U.S. District Judge Brian Miller, read aloud the verdict that awarded Moore’s mother, Sylvia Perkins, and her family $415,000.

    As the Arkansas Democrat reported, Perkins cried so hard at the news of the verdict that she shook.

    The court threw out the case against two others involved in the lawsuit, and Perkins was told she could file an appeal that decision.

    “There are times when my faith in the judicial system has been weakened,” Austin Porter Jr., co-counsel for Perkins said. “There are times when my faith in the judicial system has been strengthened. This is one of those rare times when justice has prevailed.”

    Hastings, who is now a delivery driver, noted that he has no idea how he’ll pay the $415,000. However, it was not money that Perkins was after, it was justice.

    The case has never been about money, Perkins said, adding that she just wanted the truth to come out.

    “It’s been five years,” she said. “Ain’t nothing going to bring him back.”

    As the Free Thought Project has reported extensively, police officers, even when found at fault for their abusive actions, are almost never held personally liable. It is the taxpayers who foot the bill. However, this new trend in accountability seems to be on the rise, and will be massively more effective at curbing police brutality than any system in place right now.

    In February, former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca was told he must decide whether to pay $100,000 in damages, from his own pocket — stemming from a civil lawsuit involving an inmate abuse case — or face liens on his assets.

    Baca’s case was the second such case in only a short time, in which cops are being forced to come out of pocket after being found at fault in a lawsuit. Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Deputy Adam Lin’s case was similar but a bit more extreme than Baca’s, and Hastings, however.

    In 2013, Lin spotted 19-year-old Dontrell Stephens in a “high-crime area” — the man’s own low-income neighborhood — riding a bicycle in a manner the deputy found suspicious.

    Lin stopped the youth, who dismounted the bike with a cell phone in his hand and slowly approached the officer. Just outside the range of dash cam video, the officer shot Stephens four times — claiming he was in fear for his life — but footage and evidence clearly showed the claim to be baseless.

    Three of the bullets remain lodged in Stephens’ body, according to the Sun Sentinel — two in his arm and one in his spine, which left him paralyzed and dependent on a wheelchair for mobility.

    Stephens won a massive $22.4 million settlement and U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Seltzer ruled that Lin should foot at least a portion of the bill. Last month, nearly everything this officer owned was seized to pay back Stephens — including everything from his furniture to his clothing.

    Both Lin and Hastings will most assuredly think twice before shooting another unarmed teen.

    Imagine, for a moment, the result of all police officers being held personally liable for their actions. In nearly every other profession on the planet, if someone hurts someone else while on the job, they are held liable — personally. Why can’t cops carry personal liability insurance just like doctors?

    As instances of police brutality and police killings continue to be exposed, there is no doubt that the US is in dire need of reform. The simple requirement for police to be insured for personal liability is an easy fix — especially to remove repeat offenders from the force.

    All too often, when a tragic death such as Tamir Rice occurs, months later we find out that the officer should have never been given a badge and a gun in the first place because of their past. However, insurance companies, who can’t fleece the taxpayers to pay for problem cops, would have to come out of pocket to pay for them and would make sure that these officers are uninsurable.

    If the officer becomes uninsurable, the officer becomes unhirable — simple as that.

    There are likely many cops out there right now who would be denied insurance coverage by any company, due to their track records. A requirement for personal liability insurance would, quite literally, weed out problem officers — almost overnight.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/personally-liable-shooting-death-court/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2017, 10:28:44 AM
    Cops Gun Down Innocent 86yo Navy Vet as He Protected His Wife from Intruders

    Saratoga, CA — The widow of an 86-year-old Navy veteran who was gunned down by armed intruders in his own home, has filed a lawsuit against her husband’s killers — the Santa Clara County sheriff’s department.

    Eugene Craig was gunned down by police as he attempted to shield his wife from armed intruders who’d just broken into his home. The armed intruders were cops.

    On Sept. 12, 2016, according to Harue Craig’s attorneys, prior to the shooting, deputies kicked down two doors before opening fire inside the Craigs’ Saratoga home on Titus Avenue.

    As KTVU reports, attorneys said their client stated that both she and her late husband were “very scared” and did not know why their doors were being kicked down.

    The elderly couple thought they were victims of a home invasion, so Eugene grabbed his .38 caliber revolver and bravely stood in front of his wife as they listened to the intruders come into their home.

    When the intruders opened the bedroom door, they saw the elderly vet standing there with the revolver and one deputy opened fire. Although there were multiple deputies in the home, deputy Doug Ulrich was the only one who felt the need to begin shooting.

    Eugene died on the scene.

    According to police, they were at the home to conduct a welfare check. The sheriff’s office said that deputies clearly identified themselves, called the home phone, and tapped on windows repeatedly before entering.

    in spite of their alleged efforts to identify themselves, the couple still didn’t believe them. After all, they were both entirely innocent and cops coming into their home was a far-fetched idea. Any home invader could simply claim they’re the police to easily gain entry into someone’s home.

    The tragic irony of this situation is that police claim they were there to protect the couple, noting that they had gotten word that someone inside the home was in distress. Sadly, this is what happens when militarized police are sent into an innocent couple’s home to check on their wellbeing.

    After he killed the innocent elderly Navy veteran, Ulrich was placed on paid administrative leave, which is standard procedure in officer-involved shootings in the county.

    Naturally, after they killed the innocent man — while ‘protecting’ him — police immediately attempted to justify their actions.

    The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office said, “By law, officers are allowed to use deadly force when they or others are faced with imminent danger.”

    However, the only ones who created the threat of imminent danger were the police.

    According to the District Attorney’s Office, they are still reviewing the incident, noting their office “investigates all fatal law enforcement encounters to determine if the lethal force was legal.”

    Welfare checks, as they are known in the United States, are crap shoots that have the potential to explode into violence at any moment. The Free Thought Project has reported on numerous instances in which police have shown up to ‘protect’ someone who may be suicidal or in distress only to end up hurting or killing them.

    One such instance is Benjamin Burruss, 58, who narrowly escaped with his life after police targeted him for a welfare check.

    As we previously reported, Burruss had not threatened to harm anyone, was not suspected of any criminal activity, and was not mentally ill, when a police tactical team confronted him, surrounded his truck, deployed a “stinger” device behind the rear tires, launched a flash grenade, smashed the side window in order to drag him from the truck, handcuffed and searched him, and transported him to a local hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and mental health hold.

    There is also the story of Kayden Clarke, whose video about living with Asperger’s went viral and touched millions. However, when police were conducting a welfare check on him, after reports that he may be suicidal, they barged into his home and killed him.

    Nothing will bring back Harue Craig’s beloved husband. However, her lawsuit will serve as yet another reminder of the effect of police violence on situations that require no force at all. When law enforcement’s only tool is a hammer — everything begins to look like a nail.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-navy-vet-killed-cops-intruders/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2017, 11:31:28 AM
    9 to 22 months is not enough. If it was a citizen kicking a cop it would probably have been 9 to 22 years. Notice the pussy asking for leniency and saying this case has almost bankrupt him. I'm sure cops care when innocent citizens are deprived of their liberty and go bankrupt and lose their jobs for bogus made up charges while the cops are shielded with immunity and the blue wall. And of course the other cops who stood around and did nothing and only later decided to report him (amybe after realizing there were videos) are also culpable. Why didn't they arrest that cop on the spot?

    Justice! Cop Goes to Prison for Kicking Handcuffed Man Who Called Him ‘Stormtrooper’

    Mechanicsburg, PA — We’re just now learning the verdict in the case of ex-Pennsylvania state trooper Ryan Luckenbaugh (38) who kicked a man in the face who had already been beaten, teased, arrested, and handcuffed. Luckenbaugh kicked Christopher Siennick, who was handcuffed and seated on the sidewalk for flipping the bird to the pair of troopers.

    As The Free Thought Project reported, Luckenbaugh was convicted in February of the brutal attack. This week, he learned his fate as the judge sentenced the former state trooper for his crimes. Luckenbaugh will serve between 9 and 22 months in county prison for kicking the helpless man. Fellow troopers turned in their colleague after they realized he’d crossed the line. Siennick had called the troopers a bunch of “Storm Troopers” and it was apparently enough to set off the law enforcement officer who snapped and kicked him.

    At the sentencing, Luckenbaugh pleaded for leniency saying the whole ordeal and a related lawsuit had nearly bankrupted him. Pleading for leniency, he said not only did he lose his job as a state trooper but he said he’s now forced to wash dishes for a living and going to prison would be an unnecessary hardship on his family. Judge Scott A. Evans responded to Luckenbaugh’s pleas for leniency by saying, “I didn’t put them here today,” he said indicating the trooper’s actions that day resulted in the loss of his job and his prison sentence.

    According to Penn Live, “Luckenbaugh issued a ‘very sincere, heartfelt’ apology to Siennick “for failing to serve him in a respectful, dignified manner.'” Siennick passed when he was given an opportunity to speak his peace and address the former state trooper directly.

    However, Senior Deputy District Attorney Stephen Zawisky had a lot to say about Luckenbaugh’s actions. He said it wasn’t the kick to the face which was the most damaging. He said it was the fact, proven in court, that Luckenbaugh lied about the incident on his police report, an action which has undermined the overall trust in the justice system. The lie led to Siennick being unjustly jailed for 14 days.

    “This case is not about a kick. It’s about a lie…(which)…results in distrust of law enforcement in general,” he said. “That destroys the criminal justice system. Courts rely on honesty to work,” he added. Defense attorneys will no doubt be looking at Luckenbaugh’s prior cases to determine if proving he lied in those cases will help to free their clients.


    Zawisky addressed the media and made the following statement. “It’s bittersweet, the verdict,” he said. “It certainly is going to make my job…and the police officer out on the street, a lot harder…but it was a just verdict,” he concluded. Luckenbaugh seemed contrite when he made the following statement to the court. “I stand here as a much more humble, simple man,” he said. “I acknowledge my faults and failures,” he added accepting responsibility for his actions.

    Judge Evans, not wanting to neglect an excellent opportunity to praise law enforcement apparently, addressed Luckenbaugh’s fellow officers and extended his gratitude for coming forward to turn in one of their own. “Please take back to the Harrisburg Police Department not only my thanks, but my acknowledgment that the position they took in this case is commendable,” the judge said. “That took a great deal of fortitude.” Luckenbaugh begins serving his sentence on May 16.

    4:00



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/storm-trooper-gets-9-22-months-prison-kicking-unarmed-man-face/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2017, 11:38:54 AM
    Another lying cop. But nevertheless, since he was a cop, there was a huge operation to found the person who shot at "the officer". Would the response have been the same it was a citizen? Was the cop sent the bill for this operation? Was he held responsible for any action that occurred because of his lie?

    Cop Shoots Himself, Blames Meth Heads, Statewide ‘Blue Alert’ Manhunt Ensues — Based on Lies

    Newcomerstown, OH — On April 11, Newcomerstown police launched a massive statewide “Blue Alert” manhunt for two suspects who allegedly opened fire on officer Brian Eubanks. Departments statewide combed the streets looking for two men in a black Geo Tracker, one wearing a red sweatshirt and the other wearing a lime green shirt. One was in a tactical vest and they were armed with a shotgun and handguns, the attorney general’s office said. Authorities even had a suspect’s name, Chaz Gillilan.

    Social media took to sharing the story and prayers were sent the officer’s way. Local media kept the town updated on Eubanks’ status, and the town was relieved when they found out he would make a full recovery.



    But everyone — the police departments, the state politicians, the media, and the citizens — had all been duped.

    Chaz Gillilan never shot at Eubanks, nor did the other mythical suspect. No, Eubanks shot Eubanks. That’s right. The blue alert, the statewide manhunt, the deprivation of Chaz Gillilan’s rights, all of these happened because officer Eubanks shot himself — in an apparent failed suicide attempt — and then fabricated an elaborate story to cover it up.

    On Tuesday, Eubanks, 37, admitted to police that he lied about the shooting after they brought him in for further questioning about the incident, the Tuscarawas County Sheriff’s Office said.

    According to FOX 8, the sheriff’s office found Eubanks’ statements about the incident contradictory after speaking with witnesses. Investigators used an Automatic License Plate reader on Eubanks’ vehicle to track down witnesses that passed his car at the time he told police he was pursuing the gunmen, the station reported.

    READ MORE:  Good Cops Turn In Their Own Officer After He's Caught on Dashcam Beating Handcuffed Man
    One key component to Eubanks’ web of lies was that the Geo Tracker had no license plate. If it had a license plate, it would’ve been picked up by the ominous license plate scanners on his police vehicle.

    Not even Eubanks anticipated the police state power his vehicle possessed. Apparently, police cruisers scan and maintain a log of every single car’s license plate that passes it. Innocent or not, you are entered into a database for simply driving by a cop. But that’s another story altogether.

    When police began tracking down all the people who drove by Eubanks at the time he claimed two meth heads shot him, none of them could corroborate his fictional account.

    When police asked him why it was that none of the witnesses they tracked down saw anything remotely close to what he claimed happened, Eubanks was brought in and admitted to making up the lie.

    What happened to Eubanks for weaving a web of lies, falsifying police reports that sparked a statewide manhunt for two non-existent suspects, and tarnishing the name of an innocent man? Well, naturally, he was sent home to his family.



    As the Free Thought Project has previously reported, police officers shooting themselves and blaming others is not so rare. In fact, as we reported at the end of 2015, five cops in only a three-month period, in different departments across the country, all faked being shot and then blamed the shootings on non-existent assailants.

    Like Eubanks, their false stories were then picked up in the media, or by their own departments, and used to push the idea that cops in America are under attack. Not only were these stories used to propagandize consumers of mainstream media, but massive manhunts ensued and innocent people locked down as state resources were tyrannically squandered on a wild goose chase.

    One officer, in particular, Lt. Joe Gliniewicz, went to the ultimate length to make his fake shooting look like a war on cops when he actually killed himself in September 2015. An entire town was subsequently placed on lockdown and residents were subject to a brief period of martial law as Gliniewicz’s brothers in blue searched for three non-existent suspects. Gliniewicz was a criminal cop who was using the war on cops as a means of covering up his nefarious history.

    Only after he was publicly outed as a criminal cop did any of Gliniewicz’s fellow officers refer to him as something other than a ‘hero.’

    A month later, England Police Department Sgt. David Houser faked being shot during a traffic stop in Arkansas. Another statewide manhunt was launched for a non-existent “Hispanic man.” Two weeks later, Houser caved to pressure and confessed to shooting himself.

    Before that, it was reported that veteran police officer Terry Smith was shot in the back by an unknown assailant, and Black Lives Matter protesters were implicated. However, the Houston Police Department found that it was actually his partner, Gregory Hudson who shot Smith.

    In September 2015, Officer Bryan Johnson crashed his police cruiser into a tree. To cover up his terrible driving, Johnson then fired several shots into his wrecked car and then radioed into the station, claiming he’d been a victim of the war on cops.  Yet another massive manhunt was launched in search of a fake shooter.

    Commerce City Police Officer Kevin Lord was also arrested in 2015 after it was revealed he faked being shot at during a traffic stop. Lord claimed he was shot at close range while making a traffic stop in the 9700 block of Peoria Street. His bullet-proof vest was credited with saving his life.

    Whether or not Eubanks was actually suicidal remains a mystery. However, suicide is no joke among cops. The public must realize the dire situation and extreme scope of the mental health epidemic currently facing law enforcement. There’s an extremely high rate of suicide, a domestic violence crisis and much higher rates of addiction among police forces than the general public.

    That being said, however, there are also cops looking to get a paid vacation — and a superficial wound to the arm, while blaming it on some meth heads, is an easy way to get there.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/manhunt-cop-shoots-himself/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 20, 2017, 10:50:43 AM
    Cops Raid Innocent Marine Vet’s Home as He Slept, Beat Him in Bed

    Boyes Hot Springs, CA — Only in police state USA could an argument over a husband failing to notice his wife’s haircut end with police tasering and severely beating a man as he lays in bed. That is exactly what happened to Marine Corps veteran Fernando Del Valle — and he’s got the video to prove it.

    Although the incident occurred last September, the video was just released. It shows the horrifying nature of a problem cop who’s overly prone to violence.

    On the night of September 24, Del Valle, 38, and his wife had some drinks and got into an argument after he failed to notice her haircut. The argument became heated but never once turned physical.

    As Del Valle retreated into the bedroom and locked himself in, the couple’s screaming got the attention of the neighbors, who, in turn, called the police.

    Just as the argument begins to calm down, cops burst into the couple’s home. Del Valle, who is trying to go to sleep in bed is then woken up by the sound of Sonoma County sheriff’s deputies breaking down his bedroom door.

    Before the video begins, the deputies allegedly order Del Valle to stand up.

    That’s when Del Valle turns on his camera and warns the deputies, “I got you on video. Go ahead. Tase me.”

    Remember, Del Valle had committed no crime and had harmed no one. Yet, here he is with three armed men in his bedroom threatening to inflict bodily harm on him. And, within seconds, that just what Deputy Scott Thorne, 40, did.

    “Sir, I’m just laying here trying to sleep and you’re …,” Del Valle said. “I’m not standing up. I’m in my house. I’m sleeping.”

    As Thorne steps forward, he’s seen on the video aiming his taser at the bare chest of Del Valle who is wearing only gym shorts. He then fires.

    When the taser hits him, Del Valle can be heard screaming. At this point, the baton comes out, according to Del Valle’s attorney, and Thorne begins laying in to the defenseless man in his own bed.

    “He’s not doing anything!” his wife screams as the deputy continously beats her husband over and over with his baton and taser.

    The video then ends as Del Valle shouts repeatedly, “Call my lawyer!”

    Del Valle was not able to record the entire encounter, but the beating continued well after it stopped.

    According to the Press Democrat, a spokesman for Sheriff Steve Freitas could not comment on the cellphone video but agreed the deputies’ three videos raised concerns from the start about excessive force. After watching them, department brass immediately turned the case over to Santa Rosa police for criminal investigation, Sgt. Spencer Crum said.

    “We acted very swiftly and Scott Thorne was no longer employed by us,” Crum said. “We are very concerned this is an excessive force case. We acknowledged it from Day One.”

    As the Press Democrat revealed in their investigation, Thorne should’ve never been a cop as he’d been fired from previous jobs over his track record of excessive force.

    However, none of that matters to Thorne’s attorney who is naturally defending the actions of this brutal cop.

    “His position is he followed procedure,” Thorne’s lawyer Chris Andrian said, noting that he acted in accordance with his training.

    As for Del Valle, after he was severely beaten by Thorne — for no reason — he was then arrested and brought to jail. However, once police attempted to charge him with something, they realized they had no evidence of him committing a crime, so he was let go.

    Del Valle’s lawyer, Izaak Schwaiger, said, in all, Del Valle was tasered 2 to 3 times and suffered at least 15 baton blows, causing neurological damage and a separated shoulder.

    Del Valle has since filed a lawsuit against the department, seeking damages above $25,000.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/marine-veteran-beaten-tasered-bed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2017, 11:37:12 PM
    Texas Deputy Kills Unarmed Navy Vet; Sheriff Lies About “Gun Battle” That Never Took Place

    A Texas deputy shot and killed an unarmed Navy veteran during a traffic stop, then the sheriff in charge  lied about it, saying the deputy and the man were engaged in a shootout where the deputy was fired upon first, prompting him to fire his weapon eight times.

    But that never happened.

    Dash cam video released this week shows not only was there no shootout, Lyle P. Blanchard, 59, didn’t even have a gun when he exited his vehicle – only to be struck by four of eight rounds fired by Bell County Sheriff’s Corporal Shane Geers in Harker Heights, Texas.

    Police also claim Blanchard had anti-police literature, bomb materials and other weaponry stashed at his house.

    But that wasn’t true either.

    The video shows Geers approaches Blanchard’s body three minutes after shooting him, but does not attempt to render any aid.

    Beers was then cleared by a Bell County grand jury February 15 after Ranger Justin Duck conducted an investigation, according to the Killeen Daily Herald.

    After deputy Geer shot Blanchard, Bell County Sheriff Eddy Lange apparently lied  to reporters at the scene. You can hear Sheriff Lange state clearly to a news reporter Geers shot Blanchard during a “gun battle” in the video directly below.



    A Texas deputy shot and killed an unarmed Navy veteran during a traffic stop, then the sheriff in charge  lied about it, saying the deputy and the man were engaged in a shootout where the deputy was fired upon first, prompting him to fire his weapon eight times.

    But that never happened.

    Dash cam video released this week shows not only was there no shootout, Lyle P. Blanchard, 59, didn’t even have a gun when he exited his vehicle – only to be struck by four of eight rounds fired by Bell County Sheriff’s Corporal Shane Geers in Harker Heights, Texas.

    Police also claim Blanchard had anti-police literature, bomb materials and other weaponry stashed at his house.

    But that wasn’t true either.

    The video shows Geers approaches Blanchard’s body three minutes after shooting him, but does not attempt to render any aid.

    Geers was then cleared by a Bell County grand jury February 15 after Ranger Justin Duck conducted an investigation, according to the Killeen Daily Herald.

    After deputy Geer shot Blanchard, Bell County Sheriff Eddy Lange apparently lied  to reporters at the scene. You can hear Sheriff Lange state clearly to a news reporter Geers shot Blanchard during a “gun battle” in the video directly below.

    Lange’s statements to the press were not included in the Texas Ranger’s investigation, and Geer’s testimony to the rangers given several days after the shooting did not mention any exchange of gun fire.

    According to Geers’ testimony in the transcribed report, Geers stated Blanchard refused clearly-stated verbal commands after Blanchard stopped his SUV and yelled obscenities at Geers through his driver’s-side window, which was open.

    “I continued to loudly and clearly instruct him to show me his hands, as they were both not visible,” Geers stated. “Instead of complying, the driver yelled other obscenities at me during my approach.”

    But dash cam video shows Geers left his emergency sirens on throughout the incident, which might make his commands difficult to hear from 40-yards away.

    Nonetheless, Geer contends he could hear exactly what Blanchard yelled from approximately 40 yards away and that his commands were clear.

    “I yelled as loud as I could to show me his hands and I saw his arm coming forward from his lower back waist as if he were bringing a gun out and up,” Geers claimed in the report.

    “Although I did not clearly see his hand, I felt like he had to have a gun in it by the motion he made, and it appeared to me that he was pulling a gun on me.”

    Although Geers was wearing a body camera, he claims the camera did not activate or capture audio outside of his vehicle.

    According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, audio from Geer’s dash cam could not be enhanced due to limitation’s in the department’s software.

    Video of the shooting below.

    Below that includes footage of the Blanchard family’s civil rights attorney Robert Ranco discussing how police issued a warrant for Lyle Blanchard eight hours after his death in order to justify shooting him to death.

    According to Ranco, the Bell County Sheriff’s Department produced an affidavit containing make-believe reasons why it was necessary to shoot Mr. Blanchard dead even though he never had a gun including: claiming he had bomb materials, anti-police literature, ammunition and guns inside of his home, which is apparently not true.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/22/watch-texas-deputy-kills-unarmed-navy-vet-and-sheriff-lies-about-gun-battle-that-never-took-place/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 23, 2017, 01:09:53 AM
    You do a great job posting this info on here.

    Just sometimes I wish you wouldn't as it drives me to boiling point. (Ha)
    And hopefully many others also.

    It's outrageous that these so called "Police - Law Enforcement Officers" Can & Do Behave
    And get away with Murdering Innocent People on so many occasions & then they lie & fabricate
    Evidence to fit - backed up by the senior police. !!
    What Fucking chance is there against such a Criminal organisation.

    BASTARDS.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 23, 2017, 10:21:10 AM
    Fuck the police.

    And fuck their families too for putting up with these scum of the earth.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2017, 03:46:04 AM
    More torture and coverup by the violent criminal gang.
    Notice this part also:
    According to the ridiculous state law, police departments aren’t required to hand over records for any incidents that don’t result in a conviction. Since police killed Graham before he was able to stand trial for his alleged crimes, they were shielded from handing over the evidence.

    ‘Motherfuker! I’m Going to Kill You!’ Video Shows Cops Torture Teen to Death with Tasers

    Mesquite, TX — Kathy and Robert Dyer got a phone call one night that is every parent’s nightmare — their son, Graham, was in the hospital. The 18-year-old boy had been severely injured during a struggle with police and was fighting for his life — a fight he would lose.

    When Kathy and Robert got to the hospital that night, police refused to let them see their son. “They said he was in serious trouble — that he had felony charges for assaulting an officer,” Kathy recalled.

    Graham had taken LSD that night and his friends called police after he had a bad reaction to it. Police claimed Graham injured himself as they drove him to jail. While the video does show Graham flailing back and forth, police failed to mention to the parents that they’d tortured him, repeatedly, with a taser — including deploying it on his genitalia.

    This tragic incident happened on August 14, 2013, but Kathy and Robert are only now finding out what happened to their son. For more than two years, the Mesquite police department would keep the video of Graham — before he went to the hospital — a secret. Now, after watching the video, we know why.

    Thanks to the work of Eric Dexheimer at Austin’s MyStatesman, the Dyer’s story is now being told and the Mesquite police department is getting some much-deserved attention.

    As MyStatesman reports:

    It seemed improbable the five officers who’d brought him in couldn’t safely subdue Graham. The youngest of the Dyers’ three children was small and slight — 5-foot-4, 110 pounds. He was a skateboarder, not a linebacker.
    As the morning passed, a series of scans showed Graham’s brain activity slowing to a stop. “The worst day ever,” Kathy said. Their son’s autopsy said he died of self-inflicted head injuries — an accident, the medical examiner concluded.
    Even in the dark days following their son’s death, the Dyers tended to believe the police. Why wouldn’t they? Kathy, a civil engineer, and Robert, a teacher, were solid citizens.
    Even though they were originally inclined to believe police, they continued to ask more and more questions, like what were all those “chicken feet” scratches all over Graham’s body? Or, why did the emergency room doctor’s notes say Graham appeared to be a victim of assault?

    However, when Kathy and Robert went down to the Mesquite police department, they were not given answers to any of their questions — because police weren’t required to answer any of them.

    According to the ridiculous state law, police departments aren’t required to hand over records for any incidents that don’t result in a conviction. Since police killed Graham before he was able to stand trial for his alleged crimes, they were shielded from handing over the evidence.

    For years, the Dyers would fight to get this information from police. Finally, because of their persistence, the Dyers finally obtained the video footage from their son’s last hours alive. When they viewed it for the first time, they realized everything police said that happened that night was a lie.

    Those chicken feet scratches, they would learn, were from taser prongs.

    The family hired Susan Hutchison to build a civil rights case against the department. During her investigation, horrifying details emerged.

    As My Statesman reports, Hutchison said the additional information contained more troubling details about Graham’s interaction with the police. Taser records indicated four officers shocked him multiple times, she said. As Graham is being stunned with a Taser in the back seat of the cruiser, one can be heard saying: “Mother[expletive], I’m going to kill you.”

    And kill him they did.

    At one point in the horrifying video, an officer is seen sadistically deploying the taser directly on Graham’s penis. It’s as if these officers enjoyed causing harm to this clearly distressed boy.

    When asked about the use of the tasers, the department wrote it off as standard procedure.

    “A Taser was deployed in an effort to control decedent, prevent escape and prevent him from injuring himself,” the city stated in court documents, adding the officer had been aiming for Graham’s leg and it was dark.

    However, in the video, we can clearly see the cop hold the taser to Graham’s genitals.

    Thanks to the insane laws in Texas protecting police, the Dyers are having a hard time holding any of the cops involved in their son’s death accountable, even with the lawsuit.

    As Hutchison said, police departments “In effect, have complete immunity and no accountability—at least in Texas.”

    The Dyers aren’t even going after money. As My Statesman reports, Robert said his goal for the lawsuit is modest: “I just want them to say they fucked up.”

    “I’m not saying doing LSD wasn’t stupid,” Kathy said. “And things happen. But this should have never happened.”


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-taser-teen-boy-death-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2017, 04:46:09 PM
    Bravo to this young man for protecting his family and home from armed intruders. Let's hope that a jury of his peers will clear him of all the BS charges.

    Teen Charged After Defending Home from Intruders, Because the Intruders Were Cops

    Detroit, MI — 19-year-old, Juwan Alexander Plummer, who has never been in trouble with police, thought he was doing the right thing earlier this month when he grabbed a shotgun to protect his mom and little brother from the would-be robbers at his front door. While many will agree that he did, indeed, do the right thing, the court does not because the men Plummer thought were robbers — were actually cops.

    Plummer now faces charges of two counts each of Intentional Discharge of a Firearm in a Building Causing Serious Injury; Intentional Discharge of a Firearm in a Building Causing Injury, Felonious Assault. He has also been charged with four counts of Felony Firearm. He is looking at several decades behind bars — for protecting his family.

    The incident happened on April 16 as police were responding to several calls of burglaries in the area. The break-ins were reported across the street from the Plummers’ home. However, police decided to check the Plummers’ home as well, where the shooting would occur.

    After the shooting, media outlets across the country were laden with similar headlines of a 19-year-old man arrested for shooting two cops. None of the media took the time to bring up the nature of self-defense.

    Just two days prior to these cops showing up, the Plummers’ door had been kicked in by burglars. They had every reason in the world to be concerned.

    That night, Plummer, his mother, and his 14-year-old little brother did not see the police lights because the unit was parked down the road. When they heard people fumbling around on their porch, Plummer called 911 to report the burglars and then grabbed his Grandfather’s shotgun that was given to his mother for protection.

    When Plummer went to the door, the scared kid fired a warning shot to fend off the would-be burglars. However, the shotgun blast hit one officer in the arm and the other in the face.

    “Several calls of a burglary were made to the police department on this date,” said Chief James Craig. “In fact, three calls were made. One of the individuals in the house, who we believe to be the 19-year-old male, fearing for the safety of his family fired from inside the house, armed with a shotgun, striking both officers.”

    According to reports, the officers who were shot are even asking for leniency toward Plummer. According to the chief, the families of the officers also said they want to communicate their thoughts for the young man and the mother that was there.

    “This case is very unfortunate and could have been much worse. We simply cannot and will not ignore the alleged actions of the defendant in this case,” said Prosecutor Kym Worthy during Plummer’s arraignment last week.

    Worthy is right in one regard, it is very unfortunate that a young man protecting his family from intruders is facing decades behind bars.

    As one of the commenters pointed out on WXYZ’s Facebook page, had these intruders been anyone but cops, Plummer would not be facing charges. In fact, as the Free Thought Project reported a year ago, the Detroit police chief urged citizens to arm themselves to fight crime.

    Detroit Police Chief James Craig, who is already on record urging city residents to buy firearms and use them when threatened by criminal violence, reiterated that advice on multiple times.

    “If you’re a terrorist or a car-jacker, you want unarmed citizens,” Craig points out.

    For the estimated 30,000 Detroit citizens who legally carry firearms, “the same rules apply to terrorists as they do to some gun-toting thug,” Craig told Detroit’s CBS affiliate.

    Below is the heartbreaking video of Plummer’s arraignment. The young man pleads not guilty through tears as the prosecution attempts to paint him as a threat to society.

    “The lives of these officers, who were doing their jobs, will never be the same and we must hold people accountable for their actions,” said Worthy.

    A judge set bond at $25,000, 10 percent. The judge did not impose house arrest or a tether, much to the chagrin of Worthy.

    Plummer is due back in court on Wednesday for a probable cause hearing.

    Hopefully, this young man’s life is not ruined by this incident. Hopefully, if this case does go to trial, it will end up like Ray Rosas or Henry Goedrich Magee — and not like Marvin Luis Guy.

    Ray Rosas is was involved in a similar incident but was acquitted after a jury of his peers found him not guilty of shooting three Corpus Christi police officers on February 19, 2015. On that day, early in the morning, CCPD executed a no-knock search warrant, forcing entry into the home without first knocking and announcing they were the police.

    In December of 2013, in Somerville, Texas, Burleson County Sgt. Adam Sowders led a team in a no-knock marijuana raid on Henry Goedrich Magee’s home.  Magee, who was home with his pregnant girlfriend, believed that someone was breaking in. Concerned for his girlfriend and unborn child’s safety, Magee opened fire and killed Sowders.

    In February 2014, all charges against Magee were dropped when a Texas grand jury refused to indict, based on the belief that he feared for his safety and that this was a reasonable act of self-defense.

    Marvin Luis Guy, however, acted in nearly the exact same manner as Magee, Rosas, and Plummer — yet he is rotting behind bars this very minute. Hopefully, Plummer does not endure a similar fate.

    For now, Plummer just hopes that the two cops are going to be okay.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/teen-jail-defending-home-intruders-intruders-cops/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2017, 04:50:19 PM
    Remember this case? How convenient that when a camera contains evidence that could incriminate the cops, the camera is turned off or it "malfunctions" or the footage "mysteriously" disappears...

    Dashcam of Cops Beating 83yo Man Mysteriously Deleted Due to “Technical Failure”

    Warner Twp., Mich. – A community is outraged after “the grandpa that everyone loves” suffered a shattered elbow and bloody nose at the hands of State Police, and is now facing a felony charge of resisting and obstructing police. Cops are telling a different story than the account given by 83-year-old Larry Sevenski, and the truth could easily be known – except that the police cruiser dashcam had a mysterious “malfunction” during Sevenski’s arrest.

    Sevenski is the owner of the only bar in the town of Warner Township, population 410. Larry’s Seven-ski Inn was full on the night of St. Patrick’s Day, with happy customers enjoying Irish food and music. Someone informed Sevenski that State Police were parked on his property waiting to harass people leaving the bar in hopes of collecting some revenue, so Sevenski decided to have a word with them.

    After driving around and looking for the cops, Sevenski made a U-turn, and that’s when a patrol vehicle pulled him over. Sevenski acknowledges getting out of the car and approaching the cops, but Michigan State Trooper Brock Artfitch tells a tale of this 83-year-old man making threatening statements and attacking the officers.

    “Artfitch said Sevenski ignored shouted orders to return to his vehicle and instead walked directly at the trooper, reaching him near the front of the patrol car. Artfitch said he put out his hand to stop Sevenski’s advance and pushed on his chest to try to walk him backward toward Sevenski’s car. He asked if Sevenski was carrying any weapons.

    “His response was ‘I wish I had one,'” Artfitch said.
    Artfitch, 28, said he then grabbed Sevenski’s left hand to try to turn him around for a pat down.
    “He squeezed my hand very tightly and he took his right arm and cocked it back in a punching position and formed his right hand into a tight fist,” Artfitch said.

    Sevenski’s lawyer, Rick Steiger, asked if he was fearful of Sevenski at that point.
    “Yes,” Artfitch said.
    Artfitch said he used what’s known as a straight arm bar takedown to get Sevenski on the ground.

    When he did, Sevenski’s nose was bleeding, his glasses were chipped and he was screaming in pain, saying his arm was broken. Artfitch and his partner handcuffed Sevenski, called for an ambulance and began performing first aid on Sevenski’s nose.”

    Perhaps Sevenski was a bit angry that his patrons in the small town were being preyed upon by revenue collectors as they celebrated a holiday. However, the idea that 83-year-old Sevenski – known for being kind and gentle – would attack the cops and deserved to be brutally taken down defies belief.

    All of this could be cleared up, and the beloved grandpa could likely be free of charges, if only the police dashcam wouldn’t have experienced a “technical failure.” When the car’s overhead lights are activated it is supposed to automatically turn on the dashcam, but somehow that didn’t happen that night.

    “There was a technical failure with the video camera installed in the patrol vehicle involved in this incident,” 1st Lt. Mark Harris, commander of the Gaylord State Police Post, said in a statement. “While the camera log shows that the camera started recording when the patrol car’s lights were activated, the camera malfunctioned and did not write the incident to the memory card.“

    The camera did begin recording but only after paramedics had begun tending to Sevenski’s wounds. Despite clear grounds for skepticism, the District Judge went ahead and sided with the State Police trooper anyway, sending Sevenski to trial for resisting and obstructing police.

    District Judge Thomas Phillips apparently thinks slamming an 83-year-old man to the ground and causing severe injury is a natural and just outcome, saying, ”When you don’t obey lawful commands, often a physical confrontation results.”

    Sevenski has the full support of the community, who put together a benefit to help pay the medical bills caused by the cops’ brutality. Outside of the courtroom, local residents let their anger be known.

    “Shame on you, beating on that 83-year-old man,” shouted Don Koshmider, as he recorded Trooper Artfitch leaving a court hearing. “Why did you turn off your video camera?”

    Sadly, this is just one more example of how the American police state is poised to enact violence on the citizenry which it claims to “protect and serve.” De-escalation seems to be a vanishing practice, and instead, cops like Artfitch are eager to use their “takedown methods” even on the most vulnerable.

    When asked if he’s known for being strong by the Detroit Free Press, Sevenski said, “You should’ve seen me at the first trial. I was very sick, very tired. But, I stood up straight. I showed them that they ain’t puttin’ me down. They won’t put me down.”

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-lose-dashcam-video-beating-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2017, 04:54:38 PM
    Police state? You bet.

    Cops Detain Entire School, Illegally Search/Grope 900 Kids — Find NOTHING, Parents Furious

    Worth County, GA — Children feel violated, parents are furious, and a lawsuit is getting filed after the Worth County Sheriff’s office conducted an illegal search of 900 students — in the name of the war on drugs. The rights-violating intrusive and aggressive patdowns and drug dog searches yielded absolutely nothing.

    On April 14, when the students of Worth County High School returned from spring break, they arrived at school to find a police state had taken over. The sheriff and his deputies — with no probable cause — detained and illegally searched every single child in the school, all 900 of them.

    When kids went home that day to tell their parents what happened, naturally, they were furious as it is a gross violation of the children’s 4th Amendment rights.

    “It’s essentially a fourth amendment violation,” said attorney Mark Begnaud. “It’s 900 illegal searches, suspicion-less pat downs, suspicion-less searches.”

    Naturally, Sheriff Jeff Hobby is standing by this rights violation on a massive scale, noting that as long as a school administrator was present, the search of the children was legal.

    Apparently, in the sheriff’s mind, school administrators can usurp the constitutional rights of children in favor of unlawful police searches.

    But school officials and the student rule book disagree.

    In the student handbook, it says school officials may search a student only if there is reasonable suspicion the student has an illegal item.

    As WALB reports, Worth County Schools attorney Tommy Coleman said in order for the Sheriff’s office to search any students, they’d had to have reason to believe there was some kind of criminal activity or the student had possession of contraband or drugs.

    “If you don’t have that then this search would violate an individual’s rights,” said Coleman. “[It] violates the constitutional right and enforcing them the right against unreasonable search and seizures.”

    Interim Worth County Superintendent Lawrence Walters said he understands parents concerns about the drug search at Worth County High school on Friday, according to WALB.

    “I’ve never been involved with anything like that ever in the past 21 years and I don’t condone it,” said Walters.

    Walters said he was notified that there was be a search but pointed out that he did not give permission nor did he approve the mass groping of children.

    “We did not give permission but they didn’t ask for permission, he just said, the sheriff, that he was going to do it after spring break,” said Walters.

    “Under no circumstances did we approve touching any students,” explained Walters.

    Adding insult to injury, many students complained that they got far more than just a pat down.

    At least one deputy’s searches were found to be “too intrusive.”

    According to Hobby, it was later discovered that one of the deputies had exceeded instructions given by Hobby and conducted a pat down of some students that was considered to be too intrusive.

    When multiple students complained about being groped by the intrusive deputy, Sheriff Hobby ensured parents and school officials that “corrective action was taken to make sure the behavior will not be repeated.”

    Exactly who that cop was and what ‘corrective action’ was taken, remains a mystery.

    “I’m okay with them doing the search, if it was done appropriately like the school has done in the past,” said father of two Jonathan Luke. “But when they put their hands on my son, that’s crossing the line.”

    Aside from not finding a single bit of contraband, the sheriff’s search was also entirely uncalled for as the Sylvester Police Department did a search on March 17 — just a few weeks before — and found no drugs.

    But Hobby told reporters he didn’t think that search was thorough enough, so he decided to do his own. And, this time, he’d grope every student.

    Now, many of the parents are planning a lawsuit against the Sheriff’s office which will likely be the only means of holding this man and his department accountable.

    As for the 900 counts of deprivation of rights under the color of law that the sheriff should be facing, not a single charge has been levied against the department.

    This is what school has become in a police state.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-detain-entire-school-illegally-searchpat-down-900-kids-find-nothing-parents-furious/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 25, 2017, 10:37:16 AM


    CRIME AND COURTS
    CHIEF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER JONATHAN DIENST ON CRIME, CORRUPTION AND TERRORISM.
    Retired NYPD Lieutenant, Cops and Ex-Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Allegedly Traded Fast Gun Permits for Booze, Strippers, Trips

    Personnel in the NYPD's licensing division allegedly got incentives ranging from Broadway and sports tickets to expensive watches, booze, food and strippers to expedite the process for clients seeking gun permits

    By Joe Valiquette



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    "The behavior, as alleged in today’s charging documents, is intolerable," O'Neill said in a statement. "The charges reflect a serious violation of the oath these officers swore to uphold, eroding the trust the public has in this Department. The NYPD will continue to investigate alleged wrongdoing and root out corruption wherever it might be found."
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    Source: Retired NYPD Lieutenant, Cops and Ex-Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Allegedly Traded Fast Gun Permits for Booze, Strippers, Trips | NBC New York http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/NYPD-Officers-Arrest-Gun-License-Investigation-Criminal-Complaint-Southern-District-New-York-Federal-Court-Bribery-Conspiracy-John-Chambers-Paul-Dean-420349863.html#ixzz4fHuOZSW4
    Follow us: @nbcnewyork on Twitter | NBCNewYork on Facebook
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2017, 04:47:41 PM
    The violent criminal gang strikes again.

    SWAT Mistakes Prayer Group for Gun Thieves, Raid Wrong Home, Detain 14yo Girl in Bathroom

    Gaithersburg, MD — Guns Loaded? Check… Extra Ammunition? Check… Bullet-proof protective vests? Check… Right home address? Uh oh! In yet another SWAT Team flub, a home has been raided, and its occupants beaten. However, once again, the police went to the wrong address.

    The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office in Gaithersburg admits they got it all wrong when they burst into Israel Orellana’s home in Montgomery County. Orellana has the same name as the man police were searching for in a gun theft case. But still, incredibly, Carroll County got a warrant to search the wrong address. Worse yet, the group of people gathered in the home were church goers who were spending the night socializing and praying.

    Orellana told reporters, “I thought it was my mom’s friends because sometimes they pray and they start dancing.” But that night, it wasn’t dancing which was disturbing his peace, it was officers of the peace doing so.

    “So I get up from my bed and I start walking over to my door. And as I’m opening my door, I make eye contact with the SWAT officer and he pushes up against the door with his shield and he slams me against the wall.” Then, he describes what TFTP has all too often criticized, the charges of resisting arrest to free citizens who feel they’ve done nothing for which they should be arrested. “He starts screaming at me, ‘Stop resisting! Stop resisting!’” while the SWAT team raid continues to go down.


    Orellana showed FOX 5 a bruise on his face and scrapes on his arm. He said his hands were tied behind his back and he was taken upstairs to find that his family and his mother’s friends were also detained. He says officers barged in on his 14-year-old sister in the bathroom.
     
    “It was really horrific,” he said. “You feel really helpless during the whole situation. Like you know you’re innocent, you’re telling them you’re innocent, but they just see you as a criminal.”
    The raid consisted of two counties working together to effect an arrest of another “Israel Orellana,” who was wanted in the burglary of 20 guns and money stolen from a residence. The police acted on video surveillance they’d acquired from casing the home but even armed with video imagery, the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office still got it wrong. They got a judge to issue a search warrant for Orellana’s home and then requested that Montgomery County police execute it.


    Both Israel Orellanas live in Gaithersburg and share similar appearances as stated by police who used Orellana’s driver’s license to determine identity.

    Colonel Larry Suther told FOX 5 that an internal investigation will be conducted into the egregious error. “We’re going to take a hard look at how we got to that point,” Suther said.

    Orellana says he wants the police to be held accountable for their actions, especially since his mother had to be hospitalized for the subsequent panic attack. She’s also battling cancer and currently undergoing treatment.


    “She’s undergoing chemo, so her medicine puts her at high-risk of a heart attack…And when she had the panic attack, it was very serious to all of us,” he said. “This isn’t really about money to me. There needs to be action taken. People need to be held responsible, and they need to do a better job,” he emphasized again.

    “Like, it’s just that plain and simple. They can’t be breaking into people’s houses just because I have the same name and I look like someone,” he concluded.

    We at The Free Thought Project have been chronicling the actions of the Police State which acts with impunity and refuses to pay for damages for invalid incursions such as the one described in the aforementioned story.

    The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office issued the following statement, which, by the way, makes no mention of any promise to pay for any damages caused by the lawless home invasion.

    The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office, following investigative leads in a case where numerous guns had been stolen from a residence in Carroll County, obtained search warrants for a residence in Montgomery County. Unfortunately, the suspect shared the same name and general location as an unrelated person, and investigators initially went to the unrelated persons address.


    So, once again, as evidenced in the thoughtlessly prepared statement, the police are again blaming the victims, in no uncertain terms, that he was targeted because he had the same name, lived in the same general area as the suspect, and may have shared some type of similar appearance. Yes, that sounds a lot like racial profiling. Nice work men! Thank you for your service, now go fix Mr. Orellana’s home and pay for him and his mother’s medical bills.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/swat-raid-wrong-house-bust-prayer-group-beat-father/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2017, 05:47:12 PM
    This beast should be sent to the electric chair.

    Cop Punches, Arrests Innocent Paramedic for Trying to Save a Life – Keeps Job, No Apology

    St. Paul, MN — All she wanted was an apology from the police department for her unlawful and forceful arrest, and she would drop her lawsuit against the St. Paul Police Department and the city. But since she didn’t get a written apology, along with her requirement that the arresting officer be disciplined, she went ahead with her lawsuit. Now there’s late-breaking news the city has settled out of court.

    It all started in 2013 when Christie Jones, a former paramedic, stopped to help a man who was injured. According to the Duluth News Tribune:

    Jones was driving home from a physical therapy appointment on the afternoon of Oct. 9, 2013, when she saw a man dripping blood on Thomas Avenue, a few blocks from Marion Street.
    The man told Jones his girlfriend had stabbed him in the neck. Jones, who said she spent 20 years as a paramedic in Kentucky, Georgia and California, told the man she was a former paramedic and asked if she could help, according to her lawsuit. Jones noticed he had a severe cut on his elbow, but no stab wounds on his neck.
    When St. Paul officer Armando Abla-Reyes arrived, Jones said she told him what she knew of the man’s injuries. Jones, who wasn’t wearing protective gloves, said she had accidentally touched a blood-soaked area of the man’s shirt and she saw Abla-Reyes was about to do the same. The officer also wasn’t wearing gloves and Jones said she didn’t want him potentially exposed to an infectious disease.

    “I told him, ‘Watch it,’ and put my hand out,” she said. The simple act of advising the officer must have challenged his sense of bravado. Abla-Reyes then swung his arm and hit Jones in the chest, flailing her backward on her already damaged heel.

    She was wearing a walking cast (boot) for a ruptured Achilles’ tendon, and the punch by the officer didn’t help. Taken aback by the situation, apparently, Jones told the officer she was going to file a complaint against him and wanted to speak with his supervisor.

    She then began to do what we at The Free Thought Project encourage our readers to do. She began recording the scene with her cell phone camera standing some 30 feet away while doing so. Abla-Reyes approached Jones, asked her for her name and date of birth, and then arrested the former paramedic who’d already had a long career in emergency services. He put her in handcuffs and stuffed the Good Samaritan in the back of his squad car — an action which was certainly humiliating for her.

    Since the altercation with Jones, it appears Alba-Reyes has been reassigned. He’s no longer a patrolman but instead works in the department’s community engagement unit handling permit and event planning. We contacted the City of St. Paul and spoke with the town clerk who confirmed with us the city did indeed vote on Wednesday and approved a settlement to Jones in the amount of $23,500.

    But the St. Paul taxpayers did not have to shoulder the costs of the lawsuit if the police department had simply complied with Jones’ request to issue a written apology and discipline the police officer who she said was out of line.

    If you live in St. Paul, and you’re appalled that the police department was too prideful to apologize and correct their officer, you might want to give them a call and let them know you’re not happy you’ll be paying more taxes because they can’t swallow their pride.

    “All she was there to do was help and she ended up in the back of the squad [car] in handcuffs,” said Zorislav Leyderman, Jones’ attorney. Unfortunately, it appears the masses will once again be monetarily penalized for the reckless actions of an irritated police officer.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/no-apology-punching-woman-st-paul-minnesota-taxpayers-foot-bill-cowardly-cops-actions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2017, 05:54:50 PM
    Cop Charged for Punching Elderly Bathroom Attendant Because “The Water Was Too Cold”

    Pawtucket, RI — You know those bathroom attendants, the men and women working in posh restaurants who hand you your paper towel after you’ve washed your hands, offer you mints, aftershave, mouthwash, and other services. They work mainly for tips as men and women file in and out of the sanitary services of high-end restaurants and clubs. Well, one Pawtucket Rhode Island police officer allegedly punched an elderly bathroom attendant because his water was too cold.

    According to the Providence Journal, Michael Tousignant, 36, was charged by Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Police with assaulting an elderly person, a class A misdemeanor. Tribal Police Chief William Dittman said the assault seemed to be unprovoked.

    The 73-year-old victim was working at the Foxwoods Resort Casino on April 1 when he was allegedly attacked by the officer who took umbrage with the water’s temperature.

    “He said the water was too cold, and then he turned around and smacked the guy,” Dittman told reporters.

    Apparently, Tousignant and his buddies attempted to make a quick exit from the scene but witnesses had other plans and called police after noticing the man had a bloody nose and suffered facial injuries.

    Tousignant, who’s a veteran police officer with 10 years of duty, and a previous career as a military police officer in the Army, told responding police officers that he, too, was a fellow boy in blue. Thankfully, the thin blue line of silence didn’t protect the officer and he was arrested. He was officially arraigned for the misdemeanor assault April 10.

    On Tuesday, Tousignant applied for a court program that would allow him to avoid a criminal conviction, according to the Providence Journal. Currently, he’s facing a Class A misdemeanor in Connecticut with a one-year prison sentence that cannot be reduced or suspended.

    If he’s accepted into the court’s alternative program, he can avoid a conviction altogether. According to the Providence Journal, the way the program works is, “the alleged victim is contacted and, if the court grants the application, the defendant is released on supervision for up to two years. If the defendant successfully completes the program, the charges are dismissed.”

    As it stands, Tousignant is on paid administrative duty. Yes. That’s right. He allegedly hit a 73-year-old senior citizen and he still has his salary as a public servant.

    As The Free Thought Project has reported time and time again, officers such as the one mentioned in the story are often granted paid administrative leave which amounts to a paid vacation. The salary can last years as the officer obtains representation through his police officer’s union, attends court hearings, and waits as appeals processes and hearings take place.

    We think the actions taken by Chief Dittman and his department are commendable in prosecuting a man who hit someone who’s old enough to be his own father.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-hits-73-year-old-bathroom-attendant-wants-leniency/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 27, 2017, 06:07:59 PM
    INSane
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2017, 06:27:24 PM
    Two Georgia Cops Criminally Charged for Punching, Stomping Head of Unarmed Man

    The two Georgia cops who were fired this month after they were caught on camera punching and stomping a non-resisting man have been criminally charged.

    Turns out, one of the cops had punched the man because the man had been trying to record the interaction, according to the victim’s attorney.

    But unknowing to Gwinnett County Police Sergeant Mike Bongiovanni, he was being recorded by another citizen witnessing the altercation from their car.

    Another witness then recorded Gwinnett County police officer Robert McDonald, who came running up and stomped on the head of Demetrius Hollins after he had been handcuffed and was laying facedown on the ground.

    The 21-year-old man had been pulled over for not using a turn signal.

    The incident took place on April 12 and both cops were fired the following day.

    Earlier today, they were each charged with one count of misdemeanor battery and one count of violation of oath, which is a felony, according to WSB-TV.

    The former cops have until Thursday evening to turn themselves in where they will likely bond out within minutes as cops tend to do on those rare occasions they get criminally charged.

    The decision to charge the cops was made by Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter, who said he was shocked by the two videos recorded by witnesses.

    “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a situation where both officers appeared to act without justification,” Porter told WSB-TV.

    Bongiovanni, who was on the force for nearly two decades, was accused of using excessive force 67 times, according to his personnel file.

    But he was cleared in every single one of them.

    Apparently, none of those previous incidents were captured on video.

    An attorney for Bongiovanni said his client never threw a punch, but only elbowed the man, which he says is more acceptable.

    “He (Bongiovannit) says, ‘I don’t recall throwing a punch.’ Because he didn’t throw a punch. It was an elbow strike, an FBI-taught defensive tactic,” attorney Mike Pugliese said, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Watch both incidents in the video below.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/04/26/two-georgia-cops-criminally-charged-for-punching-stomping-head-of-unarmed-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2017, 07:16:33 PM
    This violent criminal is still out there abusing elderly citizens? Why is he not frying on the electric chair?

    Cop Who Broke Elderly Vet’s Ribs, Caught on Video AGAIN, Attacking Innocent Grandpa

    Buda, TX — For the second time in less than a year, a police officer with the Buda Police Department is being sued for excessive force and violating the civil rights of two elderly citizens. The Free Thought Project brought you the story of 73-year-old veteran Juan Martinez, who was thrown to the ground in a Buda, TX by Officer Demerriel Young in the local Walmart for questioning his authority apparently.

    This time, he’s being sued for excessive use of force against a senior citizen, in his own home.

    Leonard Miguel Garcia, of Buda, was at his home when police arrived to remove his grandchildren from his home, an action which is likely to make anyone become anxious. Police officers DeMerriel Young and Kellie Metz were present and were invited into the home.

    Young begins to address the situation by advising the children were being removed, apparently taken from the custody of their mother, Mr. Garcia’s step-granddaughter. A family friend, asked the question if the children could be placed into her custody since she said the courts had already approved such an arrangement. Young implied it may be a possibility in the future but for the night the children would be remanded into the care of CPS.

    It was at that point in the meeting with police Mr. Garcia got up from his couch and removed his overcoat, apparently no longer needing it since the meeting moved from outdoors to indoors. Young demanded Garcia return to his couch, to which he responded, “This is my house!”

    From Young’s body camera footage it’s not so easily noticed that Garcia was complying with Young’s demands, but from Metz’ body camera angle, it can clearly be seen Garcia was walking back to the couch when Young applied a forearm, driving Garcia into his couch and injuring the man. They also nearly injured one of Garcia’s grandchildren in the process.

    At this point, Metz joined Young in subduing a man who was, arguably, not resisting arrest and was being fully compliant. The pair began to yell the all too often used, worn out expression, “stop resisting” to somehow imply the elderly gentleman was foolish enough to do so in light of the overwhelming police force and presence in his home.

    While being manhandled, Garcia began to demand the officers leave if they didn’t have a warrant to be in his home. Metz had been threatening to taser Garcia throughout what appears to be a one-sided physical altercation, with police doing all the physical harm.

    Apparently, Mr. Garcia’s squirming under the weight of two police officers was enough justification in her mind to go through with tasing Garcia. She deployed the taser, provoking the man to scream loudly as he was under intense pain. Now both officers, the police department, and the city are being sued for violating his Fourth Amendment rights.

    In an exclusive interview with Garcia’s attorney, Robert Ranco, The Free Thought Project was able to discover there’s much more to the story. We asked Ranco about his client’s state of mind. He said, “What we can glean…[was] he was agitated…but that is a difficult situation that’s a far cry from being somebody about to do something violent against the police officer.” Ranco maintains that while his client was agitated with the presence of police in his home, he wasn’t “ripping his tank top off” ready to fight.

    He simply stated, “If they’re going to demand entry into a home, they do (need to have a search warrant).” Ranco’s case against the officers is a federal civil rights case and he says, “The part that makes this more interesting it’s that this is the second federal lawsuit I’ve filed against him (officer Demario Young and the City of Buda police department). That fact, alone, ought to raise some red flags,” he suggested.

    Indeed it is the second time Ranco has sued Young. As we stated earlier, the first incident involved Juan Martinez being thrown to the ground by Young, an action which broke four of his ribs. Ranco elaborated on the first lawsuit.

    He responded to a call at the Walmart. We’re talking about a disabled man who just stepped out of his scooter. He too was agitated because it was a stressful situation. Officer young said get out of the office or I’ll put you out. Officer Young put his hands on mr. Martinez and slammed him to the ground breaking five ribs…All I know is this is the second civil rights/excessive use of force 4th amendment violation case that’s come across my desk in the last seven months involving the same officer and the same police department.

    When asked if the police department reprimanded or disciplined Young in either case, Ranco responded, “To the best of my knowledge, no one involved in either incident has been disciplined or reprimanded in any way.”

    As The Free Thought Project has reported continually, police officers all across the U.S. use excessive force on American citizens. Without video evidence, it’s almost always impossible to prove. Fortunately, there’s body camera footage from this case to help prove the prosecution’s contention a man’s civil rights were violated.

    “I think the common thread is, in a nutshell, excessive use of force. Neither man was suspected of breaking any law or crime. They were both present and displayed some level of non-compliance…but you can’t jump from there to…(physical takedowns and excessive force),” Ranco said.

    The lawyer stated there are three conditions which must be met before use of force can be used. The suspect either has to have committed a crime, been posing a threat or were attempting to flee. Ranco contends his client did not do any of those three things. “If somebody is not a threat to somebody, you can’t use that level of force…putting hands on someone without first trying to de-escalate is just wrong,” he said.

    Ranco defended his client’s demands for the law to be followed. He said the simple request his client made seemed legitimate. “Show me a warrant or get out of my house seems like a reasonable demand of any police officer,” he contended.

    The lawyer has some harsh criticisms for the officers’ claims his client was resisting arrest. “I think it’s falsifying a public record and charges should be brought against an officer who says ‘stop resisting’ when they’re obviously not resisting,” he charged. He then added, “Mr. Garcia was in fact on his way back to the couch when officer Young puts his forearm into the back of Mr. Garcia forcing him down to the couch.”

    Addressing the similarities in the cases involving both of his clients, Martinez and Garcia, Ranco said, “There were no crimes that they themselves were suspected of having committed. There was no reason to think they were a threat to anybody. They were not fleeing the scene.

    “What the officer should have done in each situation was to say, ‘I understand you’re upset, lets’ talk about it.’ When there are alternatives to using force police officers have to use those options before they go down the road of using force.”

    We discussed the unspoken rule that some officers seem to live by — all individuals must comply with police officer demands — 100 percent of the time. Ranco seems to understand, saying, “What we see too often and what it brings to mind is the caricature of Eric Cartman of Southpark Respect my authority’. It’s hilarious when you’re not on the other end of that. This is the mindset that actual police officers have on the street and utilize and that’s terrifying. It’s funny in a cartoon but not in the real world.”

    He added that he feels incredibly frustrated when the police simply won’t accept responsibility for their actions. The outspoken lawyer recently made headlines for offering to give up his six-figure fee for representing his client. All the authorities would have to do is simply apologize to his client. They couldn’t.

    So, he doesn’t let up. “How hard is it just to admit you make mistakes. How do you get better if you don’t admit what you did yesterday was wrong.”

    Well, Mr. Ranco, that would be a sign of weakness to police officers to admit they made a mistake. We see it in the case of Melissa Calusinski and others. They would rather send an innocent person to prison than admit they might have it all wrong.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/twice-one-year-cop-sued-abusing-elderly/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 30, 2017, 05:59:19 AM
    Seems as though the police aren't getting the point: There's been a police killing surge this year. I keep on hearing that Trump's stance is the main culprit, but I completely disagree with that.

    If multiple towns going into full riot mode does not make the point... how many more towns must burn before someones does something about this?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 30, 2017, 06:12:42 AM
    Here's a question for you: If any community disapproves of its police department, in which universal law can they base their legitimacy?

    Meaning, the only thing standing between a cop committing an illegal act (by their own standards!) on a community member and other members of the community asking them to stop and leave are outdated laws passed during the time of the Indian Raids.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2017, 11:15:10 AM
    This is the problem with the cops having absolute "authoritay" to do whatever they want without anyone being able to react. Firing is not enough, it is done mostly as an excuse for the department to avoid consequences. This criminal needs to be imprisoned for many decades and also pay the innocent a huge amount of compensation.

    Man Owns Cop During False Arrest, Predicts Cop Will Be Fired — He Was

    Chattanooga officer David Campbell was fired in February for unlawful arrest and driving recklessly while on duty. The Times Free Press took an in-depth look into Campbell’s driving habits, documenting several cases where Campbell chose to dangerously exceed the speed limits in order to arrive on the scene of calls for backup and other matters. But it’s the video of Campbell’s arrest of Hanson Melvin which caught our attention and serves as a sort of prophetic word for police officers who abuse their power to harass, intimidate, and arrest citizens unlawfully.

    Melvin was reportedly walking outside of the Northgate Crossing Apartments when Campbell approached him and seemingly sarcastically inquired about whether or not Melvin had gotten his driver’s license back or not. The tone and the comment provoked Melvin, who responded by telling Campbell it was “none of your business” and “you harass me every time you see me.” Campbell admitted to a fellow officer he was just “messing with him.”

    For no reason, Campbell had premeditated the fact that he would place Melvin under arrest and kidnap him. To be clear, Melvin had committed no crime. He had harmed no one and was minding his own business when this tyrant cop moved in to falsely arrest him.

    Melvin was sitting in the back of the car alone, reflecting on his encounter with Campbell and asked himself a few questions. “Why they gotta abuse us like this down here?…Why do they gotta treat us like this?…This ain’t right man!” He said to himself.

    Infuriated, apparently, by someone questioning his authority, the officer then demanded to see his license, telling Melvin he was on government property and a government official was demanding it. That’s when he was arrested for “disorderly conduct” and taken to jail, but the ride was anything but an easy one for the officer who got an earful from the overly frustrated, and some could say, targeted citizen.

    After begging Campbell to not arrest him, and telling him he should go after criminals, not guys like him who were trying their best to get by and provide for his family. He then told Campbell his harassment is ongoing and every time they see each other. “I go through so much getting a job as it is now. I can’t have that on my record,” he implored for leniency.

    It seems that then Melvin turned his eyes toward heaven and things of faith and addressed the officer’s perceived character flaws. “It’s wrong. It’s wrong that you abuse your power, sir. Yeah. I’m going to go to jail. But God gonna get me out he gonna take care of me. But what you do in the dark is going to come to light. And you know you’ve been bothering me. You know you’s abusing your power. You know you had no business asking me about my license,” he charged.

    Indeed, Melvin was correct. Campbell’s deeds did come to light and caught up with the officer in a very real way which ultimately ended the officer’s career.

    Melvin wasn’t done. He continued planting seeds into the heart of the hardened officer. He asked, “Is it because I’m Black…because you hate me?”

    Returning the mistreatment he’d received from the perpetrator, Melvin said, “Hey, I’m gonna pray for you brother cause you going through some things you don’t even realize. You got some hate in your heart, some negativity. You know what, God orchestrated this, God planned this out. You know what, I’m gonna be on your mind forever.”

    Indeed he probably will. Some religious folk might even be tempted to say, in a case such as Melvin’s and Campbell’s, that God is still intervening in the affairs of man because there’s one less crooked cop on the street.

    Melvin’s encounter serves as an indictment to modern policing whose street level officers still feel empowered to “toss” cars looking for plants, “stop and frisk” looking for drugs and weapons, and “check window tint” looking to extort people and separate them from their money. It’s tragic but is going on in Every Street, USA, on the daily.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aKvaNUuY_I

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-goes-off-cop-falsely-arresting-highlighting-everything-wrong-policing-today/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on May 07, 2017, 05:53:32 PM
    That cops deserved a stray bullet to the head.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 09, 2017, 11:58:20 AM
    These violent goons should be hanged with a short rope.

    Wife Calls 911 for Medical Help, Cops Come Instead, Beat Unarmed Husband to Death

    Galveston, TX — According to national mortality statistics, it’s fairly easy to get killed while operating heavy equipment or fishing. But while Jeronimo Zamora Junior of Galveston, TX enjoyed working in both fields, it was police who killed him, not his occupation. And now, the family wants answers.

    Zamora’s wife Carrasco called 911 because, as she told reporters, he was having some sort of panic attack. Instead of medics responding like she asked, nine Galveston County Sheriff’s deputies responded, and that’s where things took a turn for the worse.

    The family said when police arrived they beat, tased, punched, kicked and used their batons on Zamora, who was beaten so badly that he was hospitalized and later died from his injuries.

    According to reports, the Sheriff’s office said Zamora’s behavior was erratic, and that he was sweating profusely, combative, and began fighting with police. While dashcam footage was taken of the incident, none of the deputies were wearing body cameras.

    The family’s attorney, Randall Kallinen questioned the police narrative of the incident. Kallinen wants to know why none of the officers had any physical injuries from the incident.

    “They claim he was fighting with them but not one single sheriff’s deputy was injured.”

    Carrasco Zamora said her day started out pleasant but ended with his death. “No family should go through this at all. That was my heart, my best friend, the love of my life. My day started off picking flowers for my husband,” said Carrasco.

    Showing pictures of her husband’s smashed in face, she noted he had a broken nose. Zamora’s breathing mask also seems to be filled with blood in the pictures, indicating the internal injuries sustained in the brutal attack.

    Zamora’s brother, Juan Salinas said the siblings had plans to celebrate his birthday. However, now, funeral preparations are the only activities of the day.

    “He had a future and they took it from him. Tomorrow is my birthday and we had plans. Now I have to bury my brother on my birthday,” Salinas said as he choked back the tears.

    Zamora’s death is one of the latest officer-involved killings. As The Free Thought Project has recently reported, more people have reportedly been killed by police since 9/11/01 than soldiers killed in the subsequent wars, averaging over 1000 per year.

    And while the policing profession is a dangerous one, it’s more dangerous to be a heavy equipment operator or a fisherman than it is to be an officer. Zamora’s family is surely wishing he’d been working on the day of his death rather than suffering from a panic attack. Maybe then he’d still be alive.

    His death also serves to illustrate the need to further train officers to deal with the mentally ill, and those suffering from emotional crises.

    As TFTP has advocated, the profession of being a police officer is one of the easiest professions in which to be certified, requiring only a summer’s training in a police academy. By contrast, nurses require at least two years of training, and teachers four, yet neither profession gives its graduates a badge and a gun along with the full authority of the law, and justification to use deadly force.

    For their part, the Galveston County Sheriff’s department is conducting an internal investigation. For the moment, no charges have been filed against the officers. Yet, if Zamora’s neighbors had taken it upon themselves to conduct themselves in the same manner as the officers, no doubt murder charges would be filed against everyone involved.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/galveston-man-beat-death-police-panic-attack/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 09, 2017, 12:03:01 PM
    Look at what happens when you have crooks like this in the position of "Sheriff".

    Young Mom Dies in Jail Cell as Video Shows Officers Laugh & Gawk at Her — Lawsuit

    Mississippi County, MO — Somer Nunnally made a reckless decision to ingest multiple pills and then get behind the wheel of a car. She then wrecked the car and was arrested for DUI and brought to jail. While Nunnally certainly should’ve been held accountable in some fashion, these poor decisions were most assuredly not worthy of a death sentence. But, that’s what she got.

    Nunnally, a mother of two, was out with a friend one night in May of 2015 when she was involved in a single-car crash. When police showed up to the scene, Nunnally was arrested on suspicion of DUI.

    Police then brought Nunnally to the hospital after they found out she had taken the pills. However, they did not bring her there for help. According to a lawsuit recently filed on her behalf, Nunnally was only brought to the hospital for a blood test to gather evidence against her.

    Once police took her blood as evidence, she was booked into the Mississippi County jail where she would die a slow and humiliating death — all as guards watched and laughed for their own amusement, according to the suit.

    “This particular case, it really is a tragedy,” attorney Sam Wendt tells the Riverfront Times. “They had an awful lot of time to provide her with medical care.”

    As the Times reports, the complaint describes surveillance video of Nunnally’s final hours inside the jail. The footage reportedly shows the young woman unable to sit up straight, slumping forward during the initial booking before staff locked her in a cell at 9:41 p.m. During the next seven-plus hours, jail staffers walk in and out of the cell or peer in on her, according to the suit.

    For hours Nunnally drifts in and out of consciousness as the officers look on with seeming enjoyment.

    The complaint says that Nunnally “makes no apparent movements after 2:18 a.m.” In spite of her obvious distress, no officers call for help, check her vitals, or even go so far as to ask her if she is okay.

    At 4:43 a.m., according to the lawsuit, surveillance camera footage shows one of the guards looks in on her and “starts laughing and jumps back at what he sees.”

    The cop was laughing at the fact that Nunnally had urinated on herself. He then called in the other officers to gawk at the young mother — as she died. Despite seeing that she’d urinated on herself, the officers did nothing.

    When the ambulance was finally called — after the officers fulfilled their sadistic desire for horrific entertainment — it was too late. The Times reports that County Coroner Terry Parker pronounced Nunnally dead at 5 a.m. Parker noted the cause of death from a “mixed-drug intoxication.”

    Nunnally’s death was entirely preventable. However, because police chose to gawk and laugh at her as she died, instead of render aid, her children will now grow up without their mom.

    The lawsuit will now seek to hold those officers responsible.

    As the Times points out, the suit, brought by the father of Nunnally’s two young children on the kids’ behalf, bears troubling similarities to a previous suit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union. In that case, Hutcheson and his subordinates at the jail are accused of ignoring a pregnant inmate’s desperate pleas for medical help. The woman suffered for five days in 2014 before Hutcheson finally sent her across Missouri to a state women’s prison, the suit alleges. Her baby was stillborn.

    The jail administrator, two Charleston cops, two jailers, the county, and sheriff Cory Hutcheson — who presided over the jail when Nunnally died — are named as defendants in the lawsuit.

    As the Free Thought Project reported last month, Hutcheson is already in a world of hurt. On April 5, he was arrested following an investigation by the State Highway Patrol and the FBI. Attorney General Josh Hawley said the arrest of Hutcheson, who authorities say is guilty of multiple felonies, is the result of two separate investigations.

    According to KVFS News, “In the first complaint, Hutcheson faces seven counts of forgery, seven counts of tampering with computer data, and one count of notary misconduct. Hawley said Hutcheson is accused of using his position to illegally ping the cell phone of several members of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, former Mississippi County Sheriff Keith Moore, and Circuit Judge David Dolan.”

    But Hutcheson’s crimes were not limited to spying on his colleagues. Apparently, the sheriff also used his position to bully other members of the community as retaliation for involving themselves with other members of his family.

    KVFS writes, “In the second complaint, Hutcheson is charged with second-degree assault, first-degree robbery, and false declaration. Hutcheson is accused of handcuffing a 77-year-old woman with enough force that she had a heart attack. Hawley said that the victim was in the hospital for three days. Investigators said Hutcheson arrested the woman because she was in a civil dispute with one of his family members.”


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-officers-laugh-young-mom-died-jail-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 09, 2017, 12:07:08 PM
    A prosecutor texting a cop after his story doesn't line up? Is this how this criminal gang conspires to cover up crimes and fabricate evidence?

    Colorado Cop Stages Fake Drug Bust on Body Camera to Frame Man for Drugs

    Video footage released last week shows a Colorado cop framing a man for drugs and gun possession by staging a fake drug bust reenactment on his body cam in a tow yard after an initial search of the vehicle may have turned up nothing.

    Pueblo police officer Seth Jensen claimed he had his body camera turned off during the initial search, which is when he found the contraband, so then turned on his camera to conduct the search again under the guise that it was his first time searching the car.

    But for all we know, he may have planted the drugs and gun in the car prior to reenacting the search.

    The revelations led to charges being dismissed against Joseph Cajar, who Jensen claims was in possession of 6.8 grams of heroin, a Ruger .357 Magnum pistol, a scale and a pill bottle with amphetamine residue inside of his car, resulting in the 36-year-old man being charged with possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance and possession of a weapon by a previous offender.

    Jenson confessed to faking the footage after a prosecutor texted him to ask about discrepancies in his report after he was cross-examined during a preliminary hearing.

    After learning how Jenson defrauded the court by faking the footage and testifying, a Pueblo deputy district attorney dismissed the charges, conceding Jenson’s footage was staged.

    Jensen had pulled over for a traffic violation in November 2016. During the traffic stop, Jenson had Cajar’s car towed when he was unable to provide him with current insurance and registration, according to a police report.

    Cajar might still be facing charges if it weren’t for the text messages exchanged between Jenson and deputy district attorney Anne Mayer after Jenson was cross-examined during a preliminary hearing on March 22.

    Mayer texted Jenson about why statements in his report didn’t add up with what footage on his body cam showed.

    That’s when Jenson spilled the beans.

    “For the search, the body cam shows different than the report because it was,” he replied back to Mayer.

    “Prior to turning my body cam on, I conducted the search. Once I found the shit, I stepped back, called (a fellow officer), then activated my body cam and walked the courts through it.”

    “Was that in the report?” Mayer asked. “If not you’ve got to write a supplement explaining that your body cam was off during the search and that the body cam that does exist is a reenactment.”

    Mayer disclosed the information to the deputy district attorney in charge of the case, Michelle Chostner.

    Chostner then sent the text exchange to Cajar’s attorney, Joe Koncilja, who spoke out about Jenson’s actions after his clients case was dismissed.

    “Everyone is led to believe that the body camera footage actually represents in-time sequencing of events as they transpire,” Koncilja said.

    “This was concerning because all indications in the discovery and during his testimony at the preliminary hearing indicated that the body camera footage actually represented the sequence of events as they developed regarding the search.

    Furthermore, the staging was done in such a way to make it look like it was done in real-time.”

    The Pueblo Police Department stated Jenson could be disciplined internally after an investigation is completed.

    Koncilja, however, thinks charges should be filed.

    “It’s tampering with evidence,” he said.

    The text exchange as well as video of Jenson tampering with evidence is included below.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 10, 2017, 08:43:40 AM
    http://circa.com/politics/accountability/obama-administration-underreported-number-of-americans-who-were-unmasked-by-nsa-in-2016


    Obama = lying twink POS
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 10, 2017, 01:20:27 PM
    http://circa.com/politics/accountability/obama-administration-underreported-number-of-americans-who-were-unmasked-by-nsa-in-2016


    Obama = lying twink POS

    Notice how when the government is spying recklessly, misappropriating funds or violating laws it's always a "mistake", never a crime.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2017, 10:37:42 AM
    Exposing the true nature and intentions of the violent criminal organization:

    Police Dept Wanted a Cop to Kill a Suicidal Dad, He Chose Not To, So They Fired Him

    Weirton, WV — Former Weirton police officer Stephen Mader is suing the city after he was fired for not killing a suicidal man who needed help.

    As we reported last year, on May 6, 2016, Mader responded to a domestic call about a suicidal person. When he arrived on the scene, Mader confronted 23-year-old Ronald D. Williams who was armed and mentally distraught.

    Madar said that he began talking to the young man in his “calm voice.”

    “I told him, ‘Put down the gun,’ and he’s like, ‘Just shoot me.’ And I told him, ‘I’m not going to shoot you brother.’ Then he starts flicking his wrist to get me to react to it.

    “I thought I was going to be able to talk to him and de-escalate it. I knew it was a suicide-by-cop” situation,” Mader said, adding that, “He wasn’t screaming, yelling, he wasn’t angry. He just seemed distraught. Whenever he told me to shoot him it was as if he was pleading with me. At first, I’m thinking, ‘Do I really need to shoot this guy?’ But after hearing ‘just shoot me’ and his demeanor, it was, ‘I definitely can’t.'”

    Mader showed incredible restraint in the situation, even though Williams was attempting to provoke a suicide by cop.

    Sadly, as Mader began to reason with Williams and de-escalate the situation, backup arrived, and another officer immediately shot and killed Williams without a second of consideration.

    To add insult to injury, Mader was fired for his restraint, and the officer who murdered Williams was cleared of all wrongdoing, showing that the police department is explicitly encouraging indiscriminate killings.

    Now, Mader is understandably reconsidering his career choices and has filed a lawsuit against the city that employed him.

    “I loved being a police officer. And for them to say because of this incident you’re not going to continue here was heartbreaking. It had me questioning myself, should I be an officer,” Mader told NBC.

    West Virginia attorney and ACLU representative Timothy P. O’Brien is helping to bring the lawsuit against the city.

    “The City of Weirton’s decision to fire officer Mader because he chose not to shoot and kill a fellow citizen, when he believed that he should not use such force, not only violates the Constitution, common sense and public policy, but incredibly punishes restraint. When given the tragic, and, far too frequent unnecessary use of deadly force, such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer, when in doubt either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent,” O’Brien said.

    “There’s the thin blue line, and one of the ironies of this case is that as we’ve seen across the county how many instances police have used deadly force in circumstances where that force is questioned, but nothing is ever done. In most cases, you don’t see training or suspension. When you contrast with what Officer Mader did and how he’s been treated, and officers who’ve used deadly force and how they’ve been treated, it speaks volumes to why we have a problem with deadly force in this country,” O’Brien added.

    Mader has no regrets and still believes he did the right thing.

    “I wouldn’t change anything. Even after them saying that I failed to eliminate a threat and that it should have been handled differently, I still believe I did the right thing. And a lot of people think I did the right thing, too. I know it’s not just me,” he said.

    Shooting and killing suicidal or mentally distraught people sadly seems to be standard operating procedure for police across the country. We have covered countless cases over the years where officers have indiscriminately killed suicidal people instead of helping them out.

    Obviously, if a family member makes a phone call to police because a loved one is suicidal, the last thing they want is for someone to get hurt, but when police arrive the situation tends to escalate quickly and result in violence.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-fired-kill-suicidal-man-suing-city/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2017, 10:44:30 AM
    Armed gangs looting the populace.

    Good Cop Exposes ‘1 Ticket Per Hour’ Quota Scam After Being Fired for Refusing to Enforce It

    For years now, The Free Thought Project has reported on police departments all throughout the country of instituting a mandatory quota system for traffic tickets and criminal violations among other things. Now one fired police officer is echoing our reports.

    Dibble Oklahoma reserve police officer Richard Searcy says he was fired for not writing enough tickets. He posted to his Facebook of his devotion to his job, and knowledge of his profession;

    For the town of dibble citizens. I have been a police officer for 12 years i know my job.

    Complaining about his department’s one contact per hour mandatory quota (contact meaning ticket or otherwise warning to the public);

    I also know that sometimes you dont have any contacts on your shift or very few and other days you are very busy.

    Searcy says his problems started in April when he was written up for not writing enough tickets during one four-hour period on April 15 (mandatory one contact per hour):

    On april 15th i went on duty at 8am at 12noon i was with a comunity service worker till 330pm. I was called on a pursuit at around 332pm .
    The police chief brian murrel writes me up on april 21st for not having any contacts in that 4 hours.


    Searcy objected to being written up and told reporters that he signed the reprimand “under protest” writing, “I will not make up reasons to stop vehicles.” He described his frustration with his police chief Brian:

    Brian wants the police officers to have one stop every hour worked. I told him i would not make up reasons to stop vehicles. This comment made him mad or upset. So the next shift i worked he called me in to discuss the letter of reprimand. I told him that sometimes you just dont have anything to stop vehicles for. And that there is more to a officers job than just stopping vehicles.

    Addressing his part-time status on the police force, and his desire to serve his hometown full-time, Searcy wrote that the town’s police budget depends a lot on generating revenue from ticket writing:

    For the last year and four months i was just employed part time. Brian told me ” how can i justify putting you on full time untill the number of citations you write goes up.” I guess they expect a lot of the towns income to be from citations. I guess to be full time officer in the town of dibble you have to write a lot of citations.

    Echoing the frustrations of the public at large, who often feel they’re being targeted by police, harassed, and given tickets for frivolous reasons, he continued his statement siding with the public. Searcy wrote:

    I liked working for our town. But not everyone that gets stopped deserves a citation.

    He said his firing party in the little country town took place on May 2nd and that he had no idea he was going to be fired.

    May the second they had a council meeting. I wasnt there because i didnt know i was on the agenda. May the 3rd Brian came to my residence and told me i had been terminated due to his recommendations.

    Searcy said he was fired behind closed doors and then notified on the 3rd of May. He wasn’t given a chance to defend himself against the chief’s accusations.

    When the town fires someone they have a exsecutive session where the police chief and the council meet in private. The police chief can tell the council whatever he wants about the person he wants to fire without that person being there to defend their self. So who knows what is true and what is made up. He tells the council what he wants to get the council to vote the way he wants it to go.

    He ended his Facebook post with a warning to Dibble’s residents:

    So watch yourselves cause there will be a lot of citations given.

    It might not seem like a big deal to those living in metropolitan regions but in small towns with few residents, getting stopped by police once per hour is a very big deal and leads to the type of distrust the American public seems to be experiencing in general.

    As The Free Thought Project reported this week, one such frivolous traffic stop was caught on camera in North Enid, Oklahoma. There, an officer was confronted with a lady who’d stopped to say hello to a family friend and was cited for having parked her car. She never got out of her vehicle and seemed to only stay a few minutes before she was cited. The video has recently gone viral and can be seen by clicking here.

    It appears there’s a fiscal crisis in law enforcement driving many officers to compromise their integrity, and their commitment to protect and serve the community, all for the sake of revenue. There may be coming a time when law enforcement officers will simply have to revolt against mandatory one contact per hour quotas such as Dibble Oklahoma’s Police Department has enacted. Until then, the parasitic nature of police departments will continue to stoke more divide between the police and the policed.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-refuses-issue-citations-quota-immediately-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2017, 01:17:14 PM
    This is not the first time this violent scum has attacked people. Before that he attacked a 73 year old man who wanted to see his wife and the violent goon broke the elderly man's ribs.  These intruders should be hanged with a short rope.

    Texas Cops Tackle and Taser Man in Home Asking for Warrant

    Body cam footage obtained by PINAC shows two Texas cops enter a man’s home, apparently without a warrant, then tackle and taser the man while pinning him onto a couch.

    All because the 48-year-old man stood up from his recliner and remained standing after one of the cops ordered him to sit back down.

    “Have a seat for me,” said Buda police officer Demerriell Young, who has a history of abuse.

    Leonard Garcia paused, not taking another step, but reminded Young it was his house and that he had yet to see a warrant, stating he preferred to remain standing until the officer could produce one.

    But Young pounced on him and the second cop, Kellie Metz, then tasered him as you can see in the video below that contains footage from both body cams.

    That incident, which took place January 21, 2016, led to a lawsuit filed against both cops and the Buda Police Department last month.

    It is the second lawsuit filed against Young for excessive force within the past six months. Both acts of police brutality were caught on Young’s own body camera.

    The first lawsuit for excessive force lawsuit was filed by Juan Martinez – a 73-year-old Vietnam veteran who uses a motorized scooter to get around – after Young tackled him, breaking his ribs for simply wanting to check up on his wife, who had been falsely accused of shoplifting.

    As we wrote about here, that incident took place on October 3, 2014 and Martinez’s wife, who also uses a motorized scooter to get around, rode outside the store with items in her cart to look for her husband, whom she had lost.

    That lawsuit was filed in federal court by the Carlson Law Firm in October 2016 with an amended complaint filed a month later, which states that the Buda Police Department hired Young despite knowing he had a history of abusive behavior at other police departments.

    The second lawsuit stems from the January 16, 2016 incident when Young, Metz and Child Protective Services social workers arrived at Garcia’s home, claiming to have “paper work” to remove Garcia’s wife’s biological grandchildren from the home.

    The Garcias had had been caring for the two girls for several weeks while their mother dealt with CPS.

    The beginning of the video shows Young approaching the door of the home stating to people standing outside that CPS was there for a “visit.”

    After Young gained permission to enter the home, he revealed he and social workers had actually arrived to enforce an “emergency order,” but never states whether or not the order was an actual warrant.

    “Alright . . . uh. So,  CPS is here to removed two kids. Alright? Um, I guess, the little one and the other one.”

    “They have paper work from a judge to do a (sic) emergency removal.”

    A family friend objects, saying she was approved by the judge to be considered to care for the children.

    “I’m not here to debate it. They had a (sic) paper work. Um, so, they’re gonna remove the kids.”

    The family friend explains to Young she didn’t live there and was in the process of applying to gain custody of the girls.

    “Not tonight. That’s gonna have to–once they determine they can do that (sic) follow up later. As of tonight, uh, they do have a…”

    Young pauses the dialogue, which remained calm until this point, directing his attention towards Garcia, who slowly stood up from the recliner he sat on when the parties moved the initial conversation inside and began walking away from the conversation heading in a direction further away from officer Young.

    “Have a seat for me.”

    Garcia paused, not taking another step, but reminded Young it was his house and eventually that he hadn’t seen a warrant, stating he preferred to stand until the police produced an actual warrant he could actually see.

    In all likelihood, he never did see one.

    “This is my house,” he replied, before seeming to comply, turning back and taking steps towards the couch to sit down.

    Body cam footage from officer Metz’ camera shows officer Young moving closer towards Garcia, telling him to sit down, repeating several times to “have a seat.”

    Then, before giving him a chance to comply, Young suddenly tackles Garcia from behind onto the couch, pancaking him next to the youngest girl, who became visibly frightened from the ruckus that had landed right next to her.

    “This is my house,” Garcia replied. “Get out of my house unless you’ve got a warrant.”

    “You’re going to get tased!” Metz shouts at Garcia.

    “Taser! Taser! Taser! Taser!” Metz screams just before tasering Garcia.

    “Get out of my house unless you have a warrant,” repeated Garcia.

    “This is my house.”

    “Stop resisting before you get Tasered again!” she shouted before tasering Garcia once more.

    Young placed Garcia under arrest and charged him with interfering with public duties.

    Attorney Rob Ranco of the Carlson Law Firm in Austin told PINAC he agreed to represent Garcia after Juan Martinez learned of the incident and connected them though a referral.

    “If these actions are allowed to keep going unchecked without the department taking the initiative to try to improve them, we can expect that this will continue to happen,” he said.

    The video below includes footage from Young’s camera merged with footage from Metz’ body cam, as both excessive force lawsuits Ranco filed after viewing footage of the incident(s). Also below is the short clip from the Martinez incident in Walmart. The full video from that incident can be seen here.

    Both lawsuits can be read here and here.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/05/11/watch-texas-cops-tackle-taser-man-home-asking-warrant/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2017, 01:34:01 PM
    You think you have rights? Not any more, these "highly trained" "officers" have now become "experts" by completing “Drug Recognition Expert” training and they are so effective that they "identify" sober people as drunk and arrest the innocent.

    ‘Expert’ Cops Arrest Innocent, SOBER People for DUI, Based Only On A Hunch

    Cobb County, GA — Arguably nothing is more devastating for a motorist than to be arrested, charged, and convicted for Driving Under the Influence. But now some Georgia drivers are finding their lives turned upside down after getting DUI’s for being entirely sober.

    It may sound like something out of an Orwellian novel but Georgia law enforcement officers are now arresting people on the “suspicion” they’re impaired. Now, these new victims of badge abuse are speaking out and warning other drivers about what can happen when they’re being tested by officers with special “Drug Recognition Expert” training.

    Below is a video of Katelyn Ebner, one of the victims of this insane rights-violating program.

    Katelyn Ebner, the innocent victim in the video, was arrested by officer Tracy Carroll, spent the night in jail, and then spent thousands of dollars and many months trying to prove her innocence, even after all urine and blood tests proved she did not have any illegal or even legal substance in her system.

    Officer Carroll: “I’m going to ask you a question, okay? When was the last time you smoked marijuana?”
    Katelyn Ebner: “Oh, I don’t do that. I can give you a drug test right now.”
    Officer Carroll: “You don’t smoke marijuana?”
    Katelyn Ebner: “I do not, no.”
    Officer Carroll: “Okay. Well, you’re showing me indicators that you have been smoking marijuana, okay?”

    “I didn’t realize you could get arrested for something that you didn’t do, until it happened to me,” said Ebner to 11 Alive.

    Carroll is considered a “Drug Recognition Expert” by the International Association of the Chiefs of Police. In other words, he can simply look at a person and determine if they’re under the influence, and make an arrest based on that assumption. Absent from that determination is probable cause, according to many critics.

    Another such critic is Princess Mbamara. She, too, was arrested by Carroll. And like Ebner, she also tested negative for any illegal substances after being arrested and charged with DUI. She told reporters;

    I remember my lawyer trying to talk about a deal…I was like, ‘I’m not taking a deal. I didn’t do anything! I want more than just a deal — I want more than just dismissal; I want my life back. Can you reverse time? If you can go back in time, then that’s what I really want.’

    According to Mbamara, she spent the better part of 2016 fighting the charges in court. All the while, Carroll was racking up more DUI arrests, 90 in all.

    Watch the video below to get a glimpse of what it’s like to be kidnapped and caged for doing absolutely nothing wrong but being accused by an insane cop who thinks he can magically detect that people have done drugs.

    Princess Mbamara: “You’re arresting me because you think I smoke marijuana?”
    Officer Carroll: “I think you’re impaired by cannabis, yes, ma’am.”
    Princess Mbamara: “Sir, I don’t smoke weed! Is there a way you can test me right now?”

    While the Cobb County Georgia police officers are celebrating their achievements, arresting 1,690 people for DUI, lawyers are likely lining up to sue the county’s law enforcement agencies for unlawful arrests and convictions, records which have all but destroyed the lives of folks like Ebner and Mbamara.

    According to Georgia’s WXAI, Cobb County told reporters their officer’s training makes them more reliable than a scientific blood or urine test. We, at The Free Thought Project, beg to differ.

    We’ve been warning our readers that, as police departments’ budgets grow, amid budgetary deficits and cutbacks, law enforcement agencies will become more desperate to fill their arrest quotas, thereby bringing in more revenue.

    Now, it seems, these new “Drug Recognition Experts” are the latest iteration of such schemes, joining red light cameras, bogus field drug tests, nearly impossible to pass field sobriety tests, stop and frisk, car tossing, and sniff tests. Only now, it seems, they don’t have to go on the smell of marijuana, they can just listen to those voices bouncing around in their heads.

    And they’re not open to any criticisms at all. According to WXAI, reporters were prevented from interviewing officer Carroll about his expertise at “Drug Whispering.” Who knows how many innocent people, among the nearly 1700, took the easy way out and plead guilty to a DUI they know they did not commit?

    We encourage any and all persons who’ve been caught up in this latest Georgia DUI dragnet to get a lawyer and sue until the inhumane, unjust, violation of civil liberties comes to an end.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/drug-whisperer-doesnt-need-drug-test-give-dui-just-knows/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2017, 04:41:15 PM
    Of course they investigated themselves and found the murder "justified". Yet the jury didn't seem to agree. However, unless the money comes out of the pockets of the cops directly responsible, nothing will change. Imprison the murderer and take his money. Do the same for his buddies who covered up for him.

    Maryland Jury Awards $1.26 Million to Family after Cop Wrongly Shot their Dog

    A Maryland jury awarded a family $1.26 million Tuesday after deciding a cop wrongly shot and killed their dog, Vernon, on February 1, 2014 – the largest award in American history for such a case.

    “The verdict sends a strong message to the police about community expectations,” attorney Carl J. Hansel said after the verdict, according to the Capital Gazette.

    “The duty to serve and protect extends to our animal family members as well.”

    However, the Anne Arundel County Police Department had already determined the shooting was justified, claiming the dog was aggressive, which made the cop fear for his safety.

    But the evidence proved otherwise, which is why the jury ruled against the officer.

    Hansel called the shooting of Michael Reeves’ dog by Anne Arundel County cop Rodney Price “senseless, unnecessary and unconstitutional.”

    During the three-day trial, officer Price admitted the dog did not bite or injure him before he fired two shots, one entering the dog’s sternum and another shot through his side when the dog’s body was perpendicular to Price’s gun.

    Hansel stated a necropsy performed after the shooting contradicted Price’s testimony regarding how the shooting occurred.

    Price, a one-year veteran, was investigating a burglary at the time, canvassing the neighborhood looking for witnesses around 4 p.m., when a male Chesapeake Bay retriever “confronted” the officer in Reeve’s front yard,  according to police.

    Vern barked and ran towards Price.

    Price then fired two shots at Vernon, killing the dog.

    Officer Price visited the Reeve’s family a few days after the shooting to explain what happened.

    Former Anne Arundel County Police Chief Kevin Davis, met with the Reeves family,  promised a full investigation into the shooting and offered his condolences.

    The internal investigation exonerated officer Price, finding the dog was aggressive.

    During the trial, the jury was asked specifically if the dog attacked Price.

    The jury determined Price was not attacked by the dog and found the shooting was not only committed with gross negligence, but also violated Reeves’ constitutional rights.

    The $1.26 million verdict by the jury includes $500,000 in monetary damages for causing Reeves to miss a significant amount of time from his job as a defense contractor.

    In addition, Reeves was awarded $760,000 in damages for mental anguish.

    Anne Arundel County officials declined to comment on the verdict.

    Rodney Price is still an officer with the Anne Arundel Police Department.

    According to an estimate by the Department of Justice, police shoot about 10,000 dogs each year in the United States.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/05/13/maryland-jury-awards-1-26-million-family-cop-wrongly-shot-dog/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2017, 03:45:05 PM
    It's Mother's Day today. Here is what happened to a mom who thought she could call the police for help.
    Instead of frying in an electric chair, this criminal was not disciplined, still roaming the streets and ready to attach his next victim.

    Mom Calls Police for Help, Cop Shows Up and Beats Her In Front of Her Kids

    Harris County, TX — An innocent mother’s assault by a police officer highlights the risk people take when calling 911 for help. Angela Lopez needed the police for help but when they showed up, help was the last thing she got.

    The Free Thought Project spoke with Mrs. Lopez, who wants her story told so that others do not share her brutal fate.

    On August 16, 2014, Lopez had an altercation with her daughter. So, she called the cops to help her resolve this situation.

    “I was involved in a physical incident with my oldest daughter that turned out bad. I was really upset because she had hit me and bit me in the knee. I wanted her and ex-boyfriend out of my home. After they refused to leave, I called 911 to get someone to come out to help me remove or escort them out of my house,” Lopez explained.

    However, when police arrived, officer Francisco Salazar became instantly belligerent.

    As Lopez explains, “He entered into my front door which was open. The first thing I told him was if he could please talk to my daughter because she wouldn’t listen to me. His first reply was ‘Shut up and give me your ID!’ So I turned to my other daughter in the hallway and asked her to get my purse in my room. Then the officer took a step towards me, got in my face and raised his voice loudly, and told me, ‘Did I tell her to give it to me? No! I told you to give it to me!'”


    “Look, officer, you don’t have to yell at me. I’m not disrespecting you in any way,” Lopez told Salazar.

    But this seemingly made the officer even more aggressive.

    “Well, you don’t listen!” He pointed out his finger toward Lopez, saying, “Now step outside and let me talk to your daughter!”

    Lopez tells the Free Thought Project that she realized that calling the police may have been a bad idea after this cop began to escalate the situation.

    “At that point, I had a bad feeling this would not go good and that I could not trust him to help me resolve this, not with his aggressive attitude. I was upset, shocked and confused about why he was treating me that way, especially when I was the one who called the police for help,” Lopez said. “So at that point, after he told me that, I told him, ‘You no what, if you want to talk to my daughter, you and her can step out and you can talk to her out there. This is my house.'”

    Having been told what to do set this officer off. He then demanded her ID once more and when she asked why, he attacked.

    In the video, we see Salazar yank Lopez out of her house and slam her down in the front yard.

    “He grabbed me by my wrist twisted my arm slightly and yanked me out of my house. When I was on the ground he kept telling me to give him my arm, knowing darn well, I couldn’t because my arm was trapped under my body and he was on top of me. He even bent my arm all the way in half, behind my back applying his pressure against it, hurting my shoulder really bad,” she said.

    Salazar’s attack and subsequent ‘stop resisting’ remarks are typical in police takedowns. Salazar demanded Lopez give him her arms, while at the same time making it entirely impossible.

    After brutalizing her in front of her children, Salazar then put Lopez in handcuffs and shoved her in the back of his cruiser — with the car turned off.


    It was a hot day and Lopez recalls sitting in the back of the cruiser for a half an hour sweating before having an asthma attack.

    “I could not breathe because he had all his windows rolled up, and it was very hot that day,” Lopez recalls. “I threw up 5 times because I was feeling so sick cuz I couldn’t breathe. I was left there alone without my asthma meds. About 30 minutes later, he took me to jail and told me he was charging me with Failure to ID.”

    After sitting in the jail all day, Lopez was let go with no charges. She’d been assaulted, kidnapped, and caged, for doing nothing wrong.

    Naturally, Salazar was never held accountable for the attack and in October, Lopez filed a lawsuit. Lopez is now permanently injured from torn ligaments in her shoulder. All for calling the police.

    Video: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x5m8ty8_mom-attacked-by-cops-in-front-of-her-children_news

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-mom-calls-police-for-help-cop-shows-up-and-beats-her-in-front-of-her-kids/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2017, 06:51:22 PM
    After violently attacking this man, they tried to destroy him by charging him with anything they could imagine. Most of the dozens of charges filed against him by Beaver Police were dismissed by judges during pretrial hearings in the case, who found no evidence to sustain 50 felony counts of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance,  a felony count of aggravated assault against a law enforcement officer, DUI, felony fleeing and eluding, resisting arrest, and taunting a police dog.
    (Yes they had the gall to charge him with "taunting a police dog"...)

    Throw the pig in a pit with lions and let him rot.

    Disturbing Video Shows Cops Force K9 to Maul Man for Not Getting Out of Car Fast Enough

    Beaver, PA — For many years we, at The Free Thought Project, have published story after story of small-town police departments and officers allegedly terrorizing its residents with threats of being tasered, beatings, head-stomping, and arm breaking arrests at the hands of the very people who are sworn to protect and serve them. Unleashing attack dogs on compliant citizens is also, unfortunately, a very real part of that list.

    Beaver, Pennsylvania has a population of just over 4,000, with one of its residents being James Cicco (34). Cicco told his lawyers he has been harassed by police in the past, so when Beaver Police Officer Jeffrey Wijnen-Riems attempted to pull over Cicco for a traffic violation, the man decided the best place to pull over would be at his home.

    Cicco’s lawyer, Geraldo Benyo, told reporters it only took 13 seconds to pull over, and that his client was being compliant for the entire duration of the traffic stop which took a violent turn for the worst. Wijnen-Riems can be seen in the dash cam footage approaching Cicco’s car.

    “The video does depict Mr. Cicco getting out of his vehicle with both hands palms out and raised and then he only retreats into his vehicle as officer releases the K-9,” Benyo explained.

    He opened up Cicco’s car door and then began to attempt to extricate the man from his small SUV. However, we consulted with a close-quarters hand-to-hand combat expert who concluded Wijnen-Riems tactics were not standard procedure.

    The officer can be seen placing Cicco in a painful wrist-lock which has the potential to break the man’s wrist. The patrolman then began cranking his arm behind his back, another move intended to break either the man’s arm or dislocate his shoulder.

    According to our expert, at no time did the officer attempt to unbuckle Cicco’s seatbelt and drag him out of the car. It appears Cicco unbuckled his own seatbelt, at which time the officer then flung him to the ground.

    Instead of placing the man in handcuffs, he went back to his vehicle and released his attack dog, a German-Shepherd. As Cicco sees the dog approaching, he jumped back into his car and shut the door, as anyone afraid of police attack dogs may do.

    Once again, Officer Wijnen-Riems opened the car door, this time aided by his dog, who began to viciously attack him, biting him under the arm, in the armpit, exposing gaping wounds. He bit his back as well.

    The small-town police officer, who some are now calling a bully, then charged Cicco with multiple charges including fleeing and eluding and driving without a license. Cicco fought the charges and his case was brought to trial. The jury could not agree on a verdict, ending the court case in a mistrial.

    The district attorney reportedly said he would not retry Cicco, and now the man is suing for having his civil rights violated in an apparent excessive use of force.

    “This entire incident resulted over an aggressive police officer who was upset because on the way to non-emergency call Mr. Cicco didn’t get out of way fast enough,” Benyo said. The lawyer said his client’s fears of police brutality, “Turned out to be pretty accurate with having the fear.”

    After obtaining the dashcam footage, the Beaver Countian also obtained audio of the officer’s call. In the audio, the cop is heard joking about the damage his dog inflicted on Cicco.

    Disturbing indeed.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sics-k9-man-traffic-stop-not-getting-car-fast-enough/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2017, 04:40:28 PM
    This is what a police state looks like.

    7yo Autistic Boy Cuffed, Kidnapped By Police, Held for 6 Days – for Acting Out at School

    (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/autistic-boy-arrested-696x366.jpg)

    Dallas, TX — The family of a 7-year-old boy with autism is demanding answers after their son was handcuffed and essentially disappeared for 6 days for acting out during class.

    The boy’s arrest was captured on camera and has drawn much-needed attention as it circulates around social media. Police claim they handcuffed the boy for his own protection. However, several images of the incident show the boy standing there — entirely compliant.

    The incident happened last Tuesday at Gabe B. Allen Charter School in Dallas, Texas. The boy’s mother received a call from school — like she has plenty of times in the past — notifying her to come pick up her son for acting out.

    However, when she arrived at school last Tuesday, her son was not there.

    As FOX 4 reports, she says it had become a familiar routine as her son is a special needs student and often has episodes causing him to act out. But last week, she says administrators told her he’d been taken to a mental facility to prevent harm to himself and to others.

    “My son was acting up, which he does every other day. My son was running, which he does every other day. My son was saying absurdities, which he does every other day. And just like every other day, I was called to go and pick him up that morning on a Tuesday morning. When I got there, ‘Where’s my baby?’ ‘Oh, he’s not here.’”

    This poor family did not get their son back from the state facility until Monday — six days after police took him away. Naturally, police claim this was all done for the boy’s safety.

    The Dallas ISD police department noted that they cannot discuss specifics of the case because of the boy’s age. However, after the photo began to go viral on social media, they issued the following response.

    “The image you may have seen posted is of a student while he is being restrained to protect himself against any further harm,” the statement said. “We ask for your help during this period to not continue to spread misinformation.”

    Sharing a photo of a 7-year-old boy in handcuffs surrounded by massive police officers is hardly ‘spreading misinformation.’ These are the images society needs to see to help shake them out of this passive acceptance of the police state.

    In what world is it considered acceptable for police officers to handcuff a small child with autism at his school and then kidnap him for six days?

    Sadly, however, this country is beginning to accept more instances like this one as schools turn to police to solve everyday childhood problems.

    If teachers could not keep this little boy from hurting himself or others, then they have no business in that profession.

    According to an attorney for the family, they were told their little boy was held for this prolonged period of time until it was determined that he no longer presented a threat to himself after intervention efforts. Exactly what those ‘intervention efforts’ were, at the unknown facility, have yet to be determined. However, speculation, especially for those with children, is left to a nightmarish imagination.

    So far, the family has had to request a detailed account of why their son was handcuffed and kidnapped. They are also attempting to verify the training of the staff who allowed police to take a 7-year-old boy away from his family for nearly a week — to protect him.

    This is what public education looks like in a police state.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dallas-school-cops-handcuffing-7yo-boy-week/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2017, 11:36:25 AM
    Laws are only for plebs, not for cops.

    Cop ‘Un-Arrested’ for DUI in His COP CAR, Epitomizing Why People are Upset

    Sycamore, IL — The Sycamore Police Department and its Chief of Police, Glenn Theriault, are under the microscope today after dashcam footage was released showing how Elgin police officer Sgt. Mark T. Whaley was allegedly given special treatment during his DUI arrest proceedings.

    The incident happened April 8, when Sycamore officer Luke Kampmeier pulled Whaley over for driving erratically, even cutting off another driver without using his turn signal. In the video, Kampmeier asks Whaley if he’d been drinking.

    The 20-year veteran police officer admitted to only having drunk one beer, but his comportment gave the officer probable cause to issue a field sobriety test, which Whaley refused. According to reports, there was an unopened beer inside the vehicle, and Kampmeier said on video he could smell alcohol on the Elgin officer’s breath.

    Whaley refused any and all field sobriety tests offered to him, was handcuffed, placed in the back of Kampmeier’s patrol car, and taken to jail sometime after 2:00 am. Closer to 4:00 Whaley was allowed to walk out of jail without being charged with Driving Under The Influence (DUI).

    Records show Sycamore Chief Theriault made several calls to Elgin police commanders before he was released. Also, Whaley’s car, a police-issued pickup truck, was returned to the officer. Reports say Theriault used to be an officer with the Elgin Police Department, as a commander before he became Chief of Police for Sycamore.

    Whaley was released by police after they said they did not have enough evidence to charge the officer with driving under the influence of alcohol. But critics contend the whole incident is an example of blue privilege, whereby the officer was allowed to walk free after committing a crime the rest of us get charged for.

    The Elgin Police Department says the incident is between Whaley and Sycamore PD, and refuse to comment. However, the City of Sycamore seems to be taking the matter very seriously.

    According to the Daily Chronicle;

    Sycamore Police Chief Glenn Theriault has been on paid administrative leave since April 10 as the city investigates the decision to let Whaley go without charges early that morning. Theriault, who joined the Sycamore force as chief in January 2015, worked closely with Whaley on the Elgin police force for years, Elgin Police Chief Jeff Swoboda has said.
    In other words, it appears as though Chief Theriault and Sgt. Whaley are good buddies.

    The fact a police officer was allowed to walk free without being charged with DUI did not escape being noticed by followers of the story. Citizen Mark Wells voiced his opinion about the department’s decision to let the officer go with a slap on the wrist.

    Wells wrote, “These two police chiefs should both be fired and arrested for conspiring to release an officer who had been arrested and charged with DUI.” He described his own experiences being on the wrong side of the law. “I’ve been clean and sober for 23 years. Getting DUIs was absolutely horrible. It was the worst feeling you can possibly imagine.”

    ” I lost my license for 7 years the last time. I served 30 days in county jail and spent a year on home monitoring with an ankle bracelet.”

    The financial toll was back breaking Wells wrote, “I paid thousands of dollars in fines and spent several years on probation. I did a year of mandatory alcohol counseling, which is expensive. I carried the mandatory SR-22 insurance which is thousands of dollars a year for three years even though I couldn’t drive.”

    He also described the shame associated with being arrested and outed as someone who drank alcohol then chose to drive.

    In addition to getting in trouble, there is a lot of shame and humiliation that goes along with getting a DUI. Your name is published in the newspaper. All of your friends and everyone you know is aware that you got a DUI. Some people never speak to you again. Random people call you for weeks harassing you. It’s a serious offense and I’m not complaining, just listing the consequences.
    I quit drinking and changed my entire life to avoid it ever happening again. I did finally get my license back, which I am very grateful for. But if I ever got another one I would lose my license for the rest of my life and do some serious prison time. I would rather be arrested for robbing a bank, I’m not kidding.

    Why should citizens be crucified and the very people doing the enforcement just walk away?

    Many who are following this story share Wells’ frustration. Whether or not Whaley was actually drunk, perceived to be drunk, or was under the influence of some other substance, the people will never know. But if Whaley had been given the same type of treatment others have been subjected to, the issue would have been a matter of public record.

    As The Free Thought Project has reported, forced catheterizations by police are taking place in South Dakota, against a person’s will, to extract drug and alcohol evidence against suspects who’ve been accused of DUI.

    And according to the Brian Roberts Law firm, “Many Illinois police are beginning to apply for a warrant to draw your blood when you refuse the mandatory breath test.” All of this leads many to question why the Sycamore Police Department didn’t forcefully take a sample of Whaley’s blood as many IL departments are doing.

    The answer appears to be as disturbing as the incident. There’s blue privilege at work, and those who will kidnap, cage, and possibly kill you over a DUI, will give their buddies a free pass for doing the same thing.

    Worse still is the fact the officer has been allowed to return to duty, writing DUI tickets, making drug busts, and DUI arrests. In the eyes of many, the special treatment Whaley received reaches the absolute heights of hypocrisy.




    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-drunk-cop-driving-police-car-invokes-blue-privilege-colleagues-let-jail-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2017, 04:56:49 PM
    Pigs abusing the elderly should be sent straight to the electric chair. Of course the cops are now investigating themselves to clear themselves of any wrongdoing.

    Video shows deputies forcibly removing elderly woman from train station seat

    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/elderly-woman-says-deputies-forcibly-removed-her-from-reserved-train-station-seat/

    Quote
    In the video, she is heard asking for her cane. To which a sheriff's deputy responds, "I will give you your cane once you stand up," and the woman replies, "No, hand me my cane so I can stand up."

    When she didn't stand up, a sheriff's deputy pushed her head down.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 23, 2017, 11:02:58 AM
    “No, Stop! Please!”: Cop Empties Pistol into Car, Reloads as Teen Begs for Life, Opens Fire Again

    Columbus, AL – A graphic video, released as part of a report issued by the Alabama State Bureau of Investigation, shows officer Allan Brown firing eleven shots into the vehicle, after engaging in a high speed chase, pausing only to reload and fire another ten shots into the vehicle as the teens can be heard begging for their lives.

    Christian Redwine, 17, was killed in the shooting, and passengers Hunter Tillis and Hanna Wuenschel, both 19 at the time, suffered nonfatal gunshot wounds. It was the first volley, of the 21 total bullets, that struck Redwine in the head and heart that ended his young life, according to the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences.

    Brown claimed that Redwine tried to use the car to run him over, which caused him fear for his life, and prompted the fatal shots. An attorney representing Wuenschel said Redwine was trying only to back out of a hole. The attorney said Redwine was shot seven times, Wuenschel two or three times, and Tillis at least twice, according to the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.

    Despite the clearly desperate pleas of mercy from the teens, as Brown unloaded two magazines into their vehicle, a Russell County grand jury found that Brown committed no criminal wrongdoing in the November 6 incident.

    Brown can be seen on dashcam video trailing two other police cars also in pursuit of Christian Redwine after reports of a stolen vehicle in Columbus.

    Brown can be heard telling the other officers to “let me come around you.”

    He then narrates that speeds are approaching 100 miles per hour.

    “Dispatch speeds are 98 mph.”

    Only two minutes later, Brown again can be heard narrating the speed to dispatch as the Pontiac G-6 he is pursuing appears headed for the highway.

    “Advise speed 107 miles an hour.”


    As the teens attempt to take an exit at high speeds, Redwine loses control of the vehicle.

    “We’re gonna be on Riverchase Road dispatch. He has wrecked out. Wrecked out. He is spinning. Start uh rescue,” Brown reports to dispatch.

    With the wheels of the vehicle now spinning in reverse, Brown, who is now on foot, fires his weapon 11 times.

    The passengers can be heard pleading for the officer to stop firing.

    “No, stop! Please! I got shot!

    Please! Please! ”


    Brown, instead, paused only to reload his weapon and fire 10 more times.

    “Oh my God I‘m shot! My God. Please no. Please! Please!”

    By the time Brown had unloaded two magazines, Christian Redwine, 17, was dead, and the two others had both suffered gunshot wounds. In fact, later investigation would reveal that all three teens had been shot in the initial barrage of gunfire.

    According to the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, the incident began when:

    Columbus police said Redwine aroused suspicion when officers saw the Pontiac cruising around closed businesses around 4:30 a.m. near Columbus State University’s main campus on University Avenue.
    Checking the tag, they learned the car had been reported stolen by Fred Levins, a friend of Redwine’s grandmother who considered himself to be like a grandfather to the teen. Around 3:30 a.m. on Nov. 6, Levins noticed it was missing along with his car keys.

    When police tried to stop the car, Redwine sped away, initiating a chase that continued into downtown Columbus and crossed the 13th Street bridge into Alabama, where Phenix City police joined the pursuit.
    A WLTZ First News investigation revealed Brown was fresh off a suspension for violating pursuit policy last year when this deadly incident took place.

    The Russell County Grand Jury cleared Brown of any criminal wrongdoing just two weeks ago, and only days ago he submitted his resignation effective immediately.

    According to the Ledger-Enquirer:

    Russell County District Attorney Ken Davis said Brown waived his rights and volunteered to testify before the 18-member grand jury, which spent two days reviewing the evidence. Prosecutors did not recommend charges, but asked the grand jurors to determine whether the shooting was justified, Davis said.

    Among other witnesses testifying were two more Columbus officers experienced in the department’s training and procedures, and an Alabama Bureau of Investigation agent who probed the shooting, Davis said.
    In other words, they brought in a bunch of police apologist “experts” to justify and propagandize the jury into believing that unloading an entire magazine into a car full of teens, then pausing to reload and drop another ten shots as they beg for their lives, was justified.

    Perhaps had this officer taken the same training as the Salt Lake City Police Department, which emphasizes de-escalation, and has resulted in them not killing anyone since 2015, these type of incidents would not be accepted and protected as “just doing my job.”

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/dashcam-shows-cop-shot-teens-begging/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2017, 02:28:36 PM
    And yet there will still be people who believe "Blue lives matter" and that we should "support the police".
    Could the judge who helped clear this criminal be getting "endorsements" from police unions and other criminal gangs?

    Cop Admits to Raping 14yo Girl AT SCHOOL, No Jail, Won’t Register as Sex Offender

    Houston, TX — More trouble for the Houston Independent Schools District Wednesday after a former Houston police officer, a school resource officer, pleaded guilty to having an improper sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl. Once again, however, another officer got off with a slap on the wrist.

    Jacob Ryan Delgadillo, 30, was arrested in January for allegedly having carried out sex acts inside Cullen Middle School’s girl’s bathroom. Suspicions were raised by teachers when they observed the officer blowing kisses to the teen through a window to a classroom.

    Friends of the teen victim told the authorities the girl performed oral sex on him while on school property. Later, the victim confirmed she’d had oral sex with the officer, after confessing the act to a teacher. A subsequent investigation by police led to his arrest.

    He resigned in December once the allegations surfaced which also showed he had shown the girl pictures of his genitals. An internal investigation led authorities to locate the pictures in question on the officer’s cell phone. According to court documents obtained by the press, Delgadillo denied all the allegations.

    Delgadillo was charged with two felony counts of indecency with a child, but pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of having an inappropriate relationship with the child. As a result of the plea deal, the former officer will only spend five years on probation for what critics say a regular citizen would have done 20 years in a cage for having done.

    The verdict is seen by many as a slap on the wrist for pedophilia committed by a guy with a badge and a gun, who was entrusted with the care of the community’s most precious resources, its children.

    Worse still, the officer will not have to register as a sex offender, and will not have the criminal charge on his record once his five years of probation is complete. The legal agreement is known as deferred adjudication, and it simply means he can return to his law enforcement career after his sentencing is carried out.


    The sentencing is incredulous for many who believe police officers not only should be held to a higher standard but a stricter form of sentencing when they’re convicted of such crimes. After all, Delgadillo was a school resource officer, someone who is supposed to arrest others for the very same things he pleaded guilty for.

    Even though Delgadillo will have to surrender his law enforcement license, conceivably, once his probation is over, he may be able to re-apply for the state license, transfer to another state, and continue his career in law enforcement.

    District Judge Marc Carter, a Republican from District 228, presided over the case. He is up for re-election in Harris County in 2018. His email address is can be found by clicking here for any and all readers who may wish to opine about his decision.

    As part of the plea deal, prosecutor Jennifer Stabe told reporters the two felony counts against Delgadillo were dropped. Instead of prison time, Stabe accepted the deferred adjudication agreement, which allowed him to serve not one single day in prison. Instead of a guilty verdict in a trial by jury, the former officer would only have to admit to placing the girl’s hand on his genitals.

    The whole case serves to illustrate what The Free Thought Project has reported on numerous occasions. Police can get away with having sex with children without doing any real prison time.

    They’re known to TFTP as pedophile cops, and such cases involving police officers having sex with minors seems to be an epidemic. As TFTP has reported recently, officers have been arrested for having child porn, having sex with minors, impregnating teens, and being a part of pedophile rings which include high-ranking government officials.

    Just this week, TFTP’s Matt Agorist reported on the existence of an underground pedophile ring in Baltimore. The ring is the topic of a new Netflix documentary on the subject. “Netflix exposed a dark underground child sex ring involving the church, politicians, and cops,” writes Agorist. As a result of the film’s release, Baltimore police were forced to respond to numerous inquiries. “The series, titled, The Keepers, has forced the Baltimore police to set up an online submission form as people began to come forward after watching it,” he wrote.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/school-cop-admits-raping-studnet-no-jail-doesnt-register-sex-offender/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2017, 02:02:00 PM
    Once again the violent criminals attacking innocent people. These cops and their dogs should all be executed.

    Innocent Man Mauled Nearly to Death As Cops Sic K9 on Him with No Warning

    Harris County, TX — Don’t do anything wrong, some say, and you won’t have to worry about the police hurting you. While this seems logical enough, in police state USA, nothing could be further from the truth. Tim Young, an innocent AC repairman, who was so badly injured by police siccing their K9 on him that he had a prolonged stay in ICU, is just one recent example that blows that notion out of the water.

    On May 5, Tim and his dad Allen were repairing a customer’s air conditioner. They weren’t committing a crime, had never committed a crime, and, contrary to the apologist cliché, had done nothing wrong. However, that did nothing to stop the Harris County Sheriff’s Department from unleashing their deadly K9 on Tim.

    The department claims they were looking for a suspected car thief and when they saw a man under a modular home, this was grounds enough to unleash the deadly K9.
    “I didn’t hear [anything],” Young said. “I didn’t see [anything]. I just felt a real sharp pain and I look down and there is a dog.”

    As Tim worked under the home, he was shocked suddenly when a K9 began attacking him. Being the strong weightlifter that he is, however, Tim was able to hold the dog’s mouth shut and protect himself. But, under coercive threats of violence from the deputies, Tim was forced to obey their commands to let the dog go. As soon as he did, the K9 tore into his flesh.

    “As soon as I let go, the dog bit me,” Young said.

    The video begins as the dog is dragging Young out from under the home by the flesh of his arm.

    “It was the most horrible thing I’ve ever seen,” Tim’s father Allen Young said.

    A dispute arises, however, as to whether or not police gave a warning prior to releasing the K9. Both Tim, his father, and a third witness, Don Lorenz, were all there and all claim to have heard nothing before police unleashed their attack dog.

    “Nobody told us who they were,” Lorenz said. “We did not hear one word of warning.”

    Police, however, claim they did issue a warning and thus were entirely justified in releasing their dog on an innocent person.

    “I have to, at this point, believe the deputy did in their training what they thought was appropriate,” Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said of the incident. Despite apologizing, he is standing by his deputy’s decision to release a deadly animal on an innocent man.

    “It’s an unfortunate incident,” Gonzalez said. “It’s difficult for anyone to be bit. I am sorry for that.”

    “It could’ve been the suspect, it could’ve been kids, it could’ve been an air conditioning repairman. At that point, the handler had no idea,” ABC13 investigative reporter Ted Oberg asked.

    “Correct,” Gonzalez said.

    “No one ever asked, ‘are people working, are there children underneath there’,” Williams said. “Had it not been a 25-year-old weight-lifting, strong, healthy guy, it would’ve been a much different outcome.”

    “I felt like I went from being a help to being a burden,” Gonzalez said.

    “A police attack dog is a deadly weapon,” Williams said. “If you’re going to use a deadly weapon, you have to make sure you got the right guy.”

    “They got the wrong guy.”

    To add insult to injury, after their dog nearly tore Tim’s arm off, the cops refused to render any aid. Tim’s dad described through tears what happened after cops finally removed the dog from his son’s arm.

    To illustrate the sheer callous nature of the deputies, the father was attempting to put a tourniquet on his son’s arm to stop the bleeding, but couldn’t get it tight enough. So, he asked for help.

    “I asked him for help and I don’t know if he’s having a bad day, he just said, ‘Do it yourself,'” Allen said.


    More than a minute passes before any of the deputies does anything to help the innocent man their dog just tore to shreds.

    To highlight what a stand-up man Tim Young is, the family is not eager to sue — they are only asking for help with medical bills since Tim will be out of work for several months.

    As he stayed in intensive care for days, while doctors replaced missing chunks of his artery, Tim, a very religious man, said he prayed. When asked who he prayed for by ABC 13, his response speaks volumes.

    “I didn’t know what to pray about except for, it sounds kind of funny, but the officers,” Young said.

    To those who think police siccing their K9s on innocent people is an isolated incident, think again.

    Earlier this year, the Free Thought Project brought you the story of an 81-year-old grandma was hospitalized after she was attacked by a police K9 while cleaning her shed in her own backyard. Police are now claiming that they ‘acted appropriately’ when they unleashed their dog on this innocent woman.

    In 2014, the Free Thought Project reported on yet another grandma who was mauled by a police K9. Irene Collins, however, was not as lucky as the two attack stories above as she was mauled to death.

    It’s not just the elderly either. In 2015, we reported the story of an innocent father who was accused of being a robber. When cops saw him drive into a parking lot, without warning, they unleashed their K9 who jumped into the back seat of the man’s car and began mauling his infant daughter.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-innocent-man-admitted-to-icu-after-cops-sic-k9-on-him-with-no-warning/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2017, 08:07:44 PM
    Instead of frying in the electric chair, not only did this criminal get away with invading and brutally attacking this old woman (ultimately killing her) but he "remains on the force".

    Cop Attacks Elderly Woman for Asking for a Warrant, Breaking Her Hip Causing Her Death

    Modesto, CA — He could have called a female officer to speak with the elderly woman. He could have asked to speak with her over a cup of coffee. He could even have taken a walk to think about his next move. But, instead, Modesto officer John C. Lee pushed 67-year-old Patricia Mugraue to the floor, breaking her hip.

    The incident happened in January of 2015 when police were called to Mugraue’s home by a tenant who said her landlord would not let her into the home to retrieve her belongings.

    The elderly Mugraue, who spent her working years in the Hershey chocolate factory, suffered from osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoporosis. She told Lee she was “sick” when he asked her how she was doing.

    Mugruaue proceeded to explain to Lee why she wouldn’t let the woman into her home. She said she felt like the right thing to do would be for the officer to go to the man’s place of work, just around the corner, and ask him to come home, so he could be there while the woman retrieved her belongings from the room they were renting together.

    Lee insisted, even though he isn’t a lawyer, the woman had the legal right to enter the home and retrieve her belongings. But lawyers who spoke with the Sacramento Bee disagree. The SACBEE wrote:

    In this instance, Mugrauer’s property rights were greater than the young woman’s, said Raquel Aldana, a professor and associate dean for faculty scholarship at the McGeorge School of Law. “This is a close case, but the entry is likely illegal,” she said in an email. “… The issue is not whether the tenant has a right to her property but under what circumstances she can have access.

    Seems reasonable enough right? Get the man, let the woman in, wait while she gets her things, and then let the man go back to his place of work. After all, it was Mugraue’s home, a fact which she conveyed to Lee, and insisted he should have a warrant before he or the woman be allowed to enter.

    Not getting anywhere with the elderly woman, Lee then seemed to snap, threw open the door with his left arm, and pushed down the frail, elderly woman with his right arm, her head slamming to the ground.

    The fall took its toll on Mugraue, who had to be hospitalized, undergo several surgeries, and eventually decided to sue. She won her case in January of this year, settling with the City of Modesto for $750,000, but she never saw a penny of the funds. Patricia Mugraue died a week after the settlement at the age of 69.

    Her sister LeAnne Stoops says being pushed by Lee, a fall which broke her hip, was what sent her on the steep hill of decline to her death. “She never fully recovered,” Stoops said. “I think this is what helped her pass. It was like a domino effect when she got injured from the officer.”

    Stoops relayed her grief saying, “I’m brokenhearted…I’m sick to my stomach because she was getting her food from the food banks. She was getting her clothes from the clothes closet. She was so excited, (saying) ‘I think I’m going to get some money.’ The first thing she was going to do was buy some new clothes. And she never had a chance. It’s incredibly sad.”

    Mugraue was not at fault, according to lawyers who spoke with SACBEE. The newspaper wrote:

    UC Davis School of Law professor Floyd Feeney – who reviewed the body camera footage at The Bee’s request – said the officers should not have entered the home unless they had a warrant or there was an emergency. He said Patricia Mugrauer was calm and reasonable and simply setting the circumstances under which the young woman could retrieve her belongings. But it would not have mattered if she had been rude and slammed the door on the officers.

    Officer Lee is still on the Modesto police force, and was not arrested for assaulting the elderly woman. In fact, not only did Lee push a woman down, causing her to break her hip, an injury her family says ultimately led to her death, he arrested her son, Wade Mugraue, even putting a gun/taser to his head during the arrest.

    Wade Mugraue has not settled with Modesto and is still pursuing a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city and Lee for illegally arresting him, and violating his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights in the process. As one headline put it, “One Push, One Million Dollar Settlement”. But it should probably read, “Cop’s Actions Leads To Elderly Woman’s Death.”



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-pushes-sick-elderly-woman-breaking-hip-led-eventual-death-family-claims/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2017, 01:32:57 PM
    When will these violent pigs be treated and charged like the violent criminal gang they are?

    Cops Torture Innocent Disabled Man with a Taser, Break His Hip

    A severely disabled Syracuse man was tased, tackled, and badly injured by police for wanting to stand on the bus because sitting caused him pain.

    Syracuse, NY — Brad Hulett (39) is arguably one of the unluckiest men who’s ever lived. When he was 12, he was hit by two trains, and permanently disabled, and a portion of his brain was removed. At 27, he was run over by a truck.

    Both accidents left him permanently disabled. The train accident left his left side practically useless, and his brain injury left him with a dented skull when half of his brain was removed. The man vs. truck incident left him with constant back pain, aggravated by standing.

    But it wasn’t until he had a run-in with Syracuse police officers that his luck, once again, took a turn for the worse. Officers were called to the bus where Hubert was a rider on May 3, 2013.

    Hulett refused to sit down, preferring to stand while holding the pole, reportedly because sitting hurt his back. When Syracuse’s finest arrived, instead of noticing he is obviously disabled, and employing de-escalation techniques, the officers went straight to their tasers.

    The disabled man was tased and dragged out of the bus. As a result of the officers’ actions, he broke his hip in the process and had to have surgery, which left a seven-inch scar. The disabled man sued the officers, the police department, and the ambulatory services after charges against him were dismissed.

    Instead of being transported to the hospital to receive proper medical care for his injuries, the frail handicapped man, with obvious special needs was taken to jail.

    However, it’s what the judge in his case has noticed which is making news today. U.S. District Judge David Hurd uncovered a pattern of misconduct, cover-up, abuse, and misstatements which he says is reason enough for Hulett’s case to go forward.

    Judge Hurd pointed to Syracuse PD’s lackadaisical approach to use of force incidents as a cause for concern. As The Free Thought Project has advocated, the city has an effective Citizens Review Board (CRB) which independently determines whether or not an officer should be disciplined when he or she is accused of an excessive use of force.

    But Chief Frank Fowler only disciplined 3 of 18 officers in 2013 whom the CRB recommended be disciplined for their actions. Citing the Chief’s own words, Hurd stated officers are rarely if ever disciplined for an improper use of a taser.

    Judge Hurd also noticed the use of force incident report was not filed until newspapers covered the story about police using a taser on a disabled man. He also noted an internal investigation was not launched until reporters began to ask questions about the incident involving Hubert.

    Syracuse.com wrote Hulett’s lawyers have uncovered an apparent cover-up:

    Hulett’s lawsuit claims not only that police used excessive force, but that they tried to cover it up by falsifying reports and destroying other videos that Centro surveillance cameras captured outside the bus.
    Video filmed by Syracuse Metro, which could have served as evidence in the case against the officers, was destroyed. Hulett’s lawyers also claim he was not told he was under arrest prior to being tased and drug out of the bus. Audio from the bus surveillance camera seems to indicate the officers never told the man he was under arrest before they deployed their tasers.

    Judge Hurd is allowing the case to proceed. “A jury could conclude that, as a result of SPD leadership’s well-known permissive attitude toward compelled compliance with authority…, (the officers) knew they would not be critically investigated, much less disciplined, for using force on citizens,” Hurd wrote, before adding, “Consequently, these subordinate officers felt empowered to use force with relative impunity and that, as a result, used excessive force on (Hulett).”

    Rick Guy, Hulett’s lawyer had harsh words for the officers and the police department. “The video evidence in my client’s case shows a brutal and unnecessary abuse of power against one of the least of us,” he said. The lawyer added, “The integrity of the police department and the safety of the community depend on unbiased and honest investigation of uses of force and the appropriate disciplining of abusive officers.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/disabled-man-missing-brain-tasered-syracuse-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2017, 01:39:40 PM
    Notice the goons who immediately try to block the camera and threatening and intimidating the person filming. They should be tried as accomplices to murder.

    Cop Watches Her Husband Choke Man to Death, No Charges, Still on Duty

    A Harris County, Texas sheriff's deputy and her husband are at the center of a controversy after the deputy's husband injured a man so severely in a fight, he later passed away. Dramatic cell phone footage has now been released, showing the end of the fight which took his life.

    Harris County, TX — Terry Thompson, a 41-year-old Harris County man choked another man to death at a local Denny’s Sunday night. But Thompson, the husband of a Harris County Sheriff’s Deputy, has still not been charged with any crime. Now, dramatic footage of the fight has emerged, and we must warn you, it is extremely graphic.

    John Hernandez, 24, was drunk when he went to the restaurant Sunday night, his family told reporters. From the surveillance video, a wobbly Hernandez can be seen entering the restaurant. He sat down but got up to leave the establishment, over the objections of his wife who pleaded for him to stay.

    The drunken man then reportedly relieved himself outside the front entrance, apparently in front of the deputy and her husband. Taking umbrage with the grown man peeing in the parking lot, the deputy’s husband confronted Hernandez about his actions.

    According to the Thompson, he claims the drunken Hernandez struck him and started a fight which ended when the deputy’s husband reportedly choked the man unconscious. The off-duty deputy helped restrain Hernandez and noticed he wasn’t breathing.

    She started CPR and waited for paramedics to arrive. After on-duty police arrived, surprisingly, the deputy’s husband was not charged with assault, involuntary manslaughter, manslaughter, or even murder.

    Hernandez was transported to the hospital by ambulance, was placed into intensive care, but was taken off of life support. He later died.

    Following Hernandez’ death, Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez asked for the Texas Rangers and the Department of Justice to become involved in the investigation. Since Hernandez’ passing, dramatic cell phone footage has emerged which appears to have recorded the moments leading up to his fatal injuries.

    From the video, the large man in a red tank top (deputy’s husband) can be seen seemingly choking Hernandez to the point which led to his demise. Bystanders, apparently realizing what was taking place, attempted to step in front of the camera as the man can be seen rendering Hernandez incapacitated.

    Thompson can be heard telling Hernandez, “Do you want me to hit you again?” Panic can be heard in the young lady’s voice standing nearby when she notices someone is recording the incident.

    Thompson does not appear to be attempting to kill Hernandez, only subdue him, but his weight, combined with the choke, likely contributed to Hernandez fatal injuries.

    One man, dressed in what appears to be biker attire, threatened the person recording the attack with going to jail and continued to step in front of the camera.

    No one, in the 52-second video, can be seen attempting to break up the fight, appearing to be more concerned with the fact someone was recording the encounter than fearful someone may be dying beneath Thompson’s weight.

    The biker declared the lady to Thompson’s side to be a Sheriff’s deputy and insisted recording was illegal and the videographer would go to jail if he/she continued.

    The video was presented to the Hernandez family’s attorney who is now demanding answers and accountability. “This clearly showed Terry Thompson choking and eventually killing John Hernandez,” said Randall Kallinen, the family’s attorney.

    While the deputy’s and her husband’s actions on the outside looking in seem justified, the question remains as to whether or not a double standard is at work.

    Was the knowledge Mr. Thompson is the spouse of a deputy a factor in the decision not to charge him with involuntary manslaughter? Would he have been arrested if she weren’t an officer of the law?

    These questions and more remain as the Harris County Sheriff’s office must now come face to face with the reality one of their own deputy’s relatives killed a drunk man at a Denny’s restaurant and has yet to be charged.

    The Free Thought Project will continue to follow this story and inform our readers as it unfolds.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-husband-kills-man-no-charges/#zTuQlA8mIZwM6GVh.99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 07, 2017, 02:07:42 PM
    I don't know sometimes wether to thank you or ask you to stop posting these endless ongoing unpunished
    Crimes by this seemingly untouchable criminal gang.

    It is just beyond comprehension what is happening & going unpunished.
    Even when there is video evidence it counts for little in most cases.

    Except of course if there is video evidence of someone doing something untoward to
    a member of The Criminal gang - Then its all the proof they need to bang them up..!!

    Thank you - for posting.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2017, 09:29:42 PM
    Notice the goons who immediately try to block the camera and threatening and intimidating the person filming. They should be tried as accomplices to murder.

    Cop Watches Her Husband Choke Man to Death, No Charges, Still on Duty

    A Harris County, Texas sheriff's deputy and her husband are at the center of a controversy after the deputy's husband injured a man so severely in a fight, he later passed away. Dramatic cell phone footage has now been released, showing the end of the fight which took his life.

    Harris County, TX — Terry Thompson, a 41-year-old Harris County man choked another man to death at a local Denny’s Sunday night. But Thompson, the husband of a Harris County Sheriff’s Deputy, has still not been charged with any crime. Now, dramatic footage of the fight has emerged, and we must warn you, it is extremely graphic.

    John Hernandez, 24, was drunk when he went to the restaurant Sunday night, his family told reporters. From the surveillance video, a wobbly Hernandez can be seen entering the restaurant. He sat down but got up to leave the establishment, over the objections of his wife who pleaded for him to stay.

    The drunken man then reportedly relieved himself outside the front entrance, apparently in front of the deputy and her husband. Taking umbrage with the grown man peeing in the parking lot, the deputy’s husband confronted Hernandez about his actions.

    According to the Thompson, he claims the drunken Hernandez struck him and started a fight which ended when the deputy’s husband reportedly choked the man unconscious. The off-duty deputy helped restrain Hernandez and noticed he wasn’t breathing.

    She started CPR and waited for paramedics to arrive. After on-duty police arrived, surprisingly, the deputy’s husband was not charged with assault, involuntary manslaughter, manslaughter, or even murder.

    Hernandez was transported to the hospital by ambulance, was placed into intensive care, but was taken off of life support. He later died.

    Following Hernandez’ death, Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez asked for the Texas Rangers and the Department of Justice to become involved in the investigation. Since Hernandez’ passing, dramatic cell phone footage has emerged which appears to have recorded the moments leading up to his fatal injuries.

    From the video, the large man in a red tank top (deputy’s husband) can be seen seemingly choking Hernandez to the point which led to his demise. Bystanders, apparently realizing what was taking place, attempted to step in front of the camera as the man can be seen rendering Hernandez incapacitated.

    Thompson can be heard telling Hernandez, “Do you want me to hit you again?” Panic can be heard in the young lady’s voice standing nearby when she notices someone is recording the incident.

    Thompson does not appear to be attempting to kill Hernandez, only subdue him, but his weight, combined with the choke, likely contributed to Hernandez fatal injuries.

    One man, dressed in what appears to be biker attire, threatened the person recording the attack with going to jail and continued to step in front of the camera.

    No one, in the 52-second video, can be seen attempting to break up the fight, appearing to be more concerned with the fact someone was recording the encounter than fearful someone may be dying beneath Thompson’s weight.

    The biker declared the lady to Thompson’s side to be a Sheriff’s deputy and insisted recording was illegal and the videographer would go to jail if he/she continued.

    The video was presented to the Hernandez family’s attorney who is now demanding answers and accountability. “This clearly showed Terry Thompson choking and eventually killing John Hernandez,” said Randall Kallinen, the family’s attorney.

    While the deputy’s and her husband’s actions on the outside looking in seem justified, the question remains as to whether or not a double standard is at work.

    Was the knowledge Mr. Thompson is the spouse of a deputy a factor in the decision not to charge him with involuntary manslaughter? Would he have been arrested if she weren’t an officer of the law?

    These questions and more remain as the Harris County Sheriff’s office must now come face to face with the reality one of their own deputy’s relatives killed a drunk man at a Denny’s restaurant and has yet to be charged.

    The Free Thought Project will continue to follow this story and inform our readers as it unfolds.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-husband-kills-man-no-charges/#zTuQlA8mIZwM6GVh.99

    The scumbags were indicted for murder, they face 5 years to life if convicted. Hopefully they'll get life in prison. The bystanders who were blocking the filming and intimidated the person filming should also have been indicted as accomplices.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on June 08, 2017, 11:02:45 PM
    Ever jack off while you're taking a shit?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2017, 12:50:10 AM
    Elderly Man Mauled As Police Sic K9 on Him for Rescuing His Neighbor’s Cat

    For helping his 73-year-old neighbor rescue her cat an innocent elderly man was mauled by a police K9 and treated like a trophy kill by cops.

    San Francisco, CA — While rescuing his neighbor’s cat from a construction area, retired sound engineer, Richard May, 64, was attacked, brought to the ground, viciously mauled by a k9, and then arrested by a sadistic officer who would photograph his kill. May is in court this week attempting to seek justice for that horrific evening involving a deputy and his dog with the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Department.

    On the night of January 1, 2015, May was conducting, what he thought to be, a good deed. He was helping his 73-year-old neighbor, Sharon Coster, rescue her cat, Domino who’d climbed up construction scaffolding on an unfinished building next door.

    As May was climbing up the scaffolding to retrieve the black and white cat, he recalls the K9 biting into his right leg. During this week’s trial, May recalled to the eight-member jury that the bite was “extremely painful.”

    After the initial bite, May was brought to the ground by the large dog who continued to maul him.

    “I was scratching and screaming. I was trying to escape in my mind. I couldn’t believe what was going on,” May recalled.

    Riggs, the mauling K9, belonged to Sheriff’s Deputy Chris Laughlin who, along with two other deputies, were responding to a call about an alleged burglary seen on surveillance video at the construction site.

    Both Laughlin and the county maintain they gave ample warning for May to respond to their commands before unleashing the deadly dog on the elderly man. Police claim the innocent, retired, elderly man — rescuing his neighbor’s cat — hid out in the shadows and refused to emerge and show his hands.

    The county claims the deputy’s actions were reasonable as he feared for his life and thought May could’ve had a weapon.

    As KTVU reports:

    May contends he posed no threat and didn’t hear any announcement from Laughlin until after Riggs started biting.
     
    His lawsuit is based on claims of unconstitutional use of excessive force, as well as negligence, assault and false arrest under California law. It seeks compensation from the county and the deputy for May’s costs and emotional distress as well as a punitive award from Laughlin.
     
    May testified today that he did “absolutely not” hear Laughlin’s alleged initial command to show his hands and drop to the ground.
     
    He said he saw the dark silhouettes of the deputies about 100 yards away, assumed they were security officers and stood still to await them.
    “I stayed right where I was because I was expecting a conversation,” May said. According to May, the only sound he heard was a “very loud guttural sound which I interpreted as an attack word,” he recalled.

    “The dog immediately at full speed was running my way,” and began biting his leg, May said. May said he was told to get on the ground and even after he immediately complied, the dog continued to bite him.

    After the dog mauled the innocent May, he was handcuffed and brought to the sheriff’s office — before the hospital. He was berated with questions until it was determined that he was rescuing a cat and not robbing the place.

    This is where the story takes an even more ominous turn.

    After realizing they had just allowed their K9 to maul an innocent man, the cops were not only unapologetic, but Laughlin celebrated the attack and even made a trophy out of their victim.

    Laughlin took May to the hospital where he tagged his prey with a sticker on May’s shirt that said, “I met Riggs,” before snapping a photo for his personal collection.

    He then dropped two tickets in May’s lap. They were notices to appear in court for the alleged misdemeanors of trespassing and resisting arrest.

    Luckily for May, both of those charges were thrown out by the District Attorney who clearly had no evidence of any crimes.


    The civil rights trial is currently underway in the Federal Building courtroom of U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler. Hopefully, the jury sees the sadistic nature of deputy Laughlin and awards May accordingly.

    As for Laughlin, however, he’s still a cop, and likely still tagging his victims for photos in his trophy book.

    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/elderly-man-mauled-as-police-sic-k9-on-him-for-rescuing-his-neighbors-cat/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2017, 02:33:43 PM
    Another horrific incident in the jail of "Sheriff Clarke". While this beast was facing 200 years in prison for 5 felony counts of sexual assault, he was given a plea deal (to which he plead no contest) and he will only serve 3 days and a $200 fine. Yes, the felony sexual assault counts were ignored and the 200 years became 3 days and $200... Of course the $6.7m bill gets sent to the taxpayer.

    Woman Gets $6.7mn After Being Raped by Police in Jail & Shackled as She Gave Birth

    After the cop who raped her got off with a slap on the wrist, a jury awarded a mother $6.7 million for enduring horrid torture in Sheriff David Clarke's jail.

    Milwaukee, WI — Milwaukee corrections officer Xavier Thicklen only spent three days in jail for allegedly raping a female inmate on numerous occasions which she says started when she was 19. The pregnant inmate, whose identity is being protected as she’s considered a victim of sexual assault, claims Thicklen raped her both before and after she gave birth.

    A jury of her peers believed her claims and awarded her a staggering $6.7 million in a civil suit she brought against the county. According to the Journal Sentinel;

    The guard, Xavier Thicklen, was acting under his scope of employment when the sexual assaults occurred and therefore Milwaukee County is liable for the damages amount, the jury determined.
    Adding insult to injury and possibly endangering both the life of her baby as well as herself, the woman was shackled during labor, a practice long criticized by midwives as being risky, writes the Sentinel.

    The jury agreed, and noted there was “no legitimate government purpose” in the restraints applied during childbirth.

    As the Free Thought Project previously reported, shackling women during pregnancy is a common practice in the Milwaukee jail — under the orders of ‘hero’ Sheriff David Clarke.

    According to a recent federal lawsuit, Melissa Hall, 27, underwent simliar torture when she “was forced to receive pre-natal care, labor, give birth, and undergo post-partum treatment while shackled, in accordance with the Jail’s policy, custom, and/or widespread practice of shackling all detainees during medical treatment.”

    Clarke, according to the lawsuit, “has had personal knowledge that the shackling practices challenged in this case were occurring at the jail.”

    When Hall was brought to the hospital to have her baby, she was made to wear a “belly-chain,” according to the lawsuit. This chain went “around her waist with her wrists attached to the waist and her legs attached to one another by leg-irons.”

    In spite of hospital staff asking for the chains to be removed, because of the health risks to the mother and child, deputies, under Clarke’s orders, refused, according to the suit.

    Thicklen, who resigned just before being charged with the rapes, successfully pleaded guilty to a lesser felony of “misconduct” for giving her candy according to his attorney. He was sentenced to three days and jail and a $200 fine, but in the minds of the civil suit jurors and alleged victim, he is a rapist.

    The scandal is the latest in a long list of alleged improprieties leveled at jail staff. As The Free Thought Project reported earlier this year, an inquest proceeding ended with jurors recommending criminal charges be filed against seven jailhouse employees in the dehydration death of Terrill Thomas. Thomas, whose family said suffered from mental illness, was allegedly deprived of water during his last days on earth spent inside the Milwaukee jail.

    Another mother was forced to give birth on the floor of a jail cell, resulting in the baby’s death. However, the outspoken Clarke defended the jail’s practice of shackling women in labor saying in a deposition it is done to ensure the safety of hospital staff.

    Clarke, who made a name for himself on the Fox News Channel as a Fox News contributor, is reportedly leaving town for a job within the U.S. Department of Homeland security under the Trump administration. But even his departure is of little comfort to the three families just mentioned in this story who entrusted the judicial/penal system with their loved ones, one of which was raped, and another who was likely murdered due to inexcusable negligence on the part of those sworn to protect and serve the community.

    As The Free Thought Project has recently reported, being an inmate in any jail in America is a dangerous place to be. It used to be that prisoners only had to worry about their fellow inmates. But given the rash of rapes, killings, beatings, and torture occurring on the inside, by the ones running the jail, they now have to worry about men and women with badges. Left to saddle the costs, are the American taxpayers whose tax bills are surging, due in part to the criminal activities of those in power.


    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/rapist-jailer-gets-3-days200-fine-victim-gets-6-7-million/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on June 10, 2017, 05:36:48 PM
    Quote
    Laughlin took May to the hospital where he tagged his prey with a sticker on May’s shirt that said, “I met Riggs,” before snapping a photo for his personal collection.

    I've never understood how someone, very clearly a twisted wacko judging by this piece of information alone, is allowed to do his thing as an officer. 

    Furthermore, how was he allowed into the position to begin with, since he didn't just fall from the sky yesterday? 

    HOW could it be true -- if not for some cultural "norm" within the PD -- that a person with such deeply disturbing tendencies is allowed to work for (against, really) us?

    And the saddest part (of course) is that it's relatively mild compared to many others.  If we can get rid of these wicked clowns when they pull shit like this right in front of everyone, maybe we wouldn't have all those other stories.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on June 10, 2017, 05:41:45 PM
    I understand he wants to have a picture as a hedge against future consequences.  But I absolutely cannot see how the mockery fits into a supposedly professional environment, and with the injuries.  Why isn't this viewed as a clear warning sign by the higher-ups?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2017, 11:28:17 PM
    The bouncer and cops need to be thrown in prison.

    Cops Mistake Innocent Man’s License for a Fake, So They Beat and Arrest Him

    Tempe, AZ — Jazmine Faye and her boyfriend Bryan Acosta were trying to have a night out on Tempe, Arizona’s famed Mill Avenue June 7th. They’d partied at the Zuma Grill before, and had a great time, so they thought they’d go back. Little did they know the night would end with Bryan getting a beatdown by the Tempe Police Department for mistaking his legitimate New York Driver’s License for a fake one.

    It all started when Acosta’s driver’s license was confiscated by the bar’s security guard because the Arizona bouncer said the New York drivers license looked fake to him. Instead of returning the questionable identification, he simply put it in his pocket and ignored his requests to get back his license.

    “If you want it back, you’ll have to call police,” he said, before informing Faye he’d keep it at the bar because it seemed fake to him. While the couple was trying to make sense of the situation, another security guard called the police.

    After Tempe Police bike patrol officers arrived, a brief discussion with the bouncers took place. They then called Acosta over, who explained the situation to the officers. After they ran his identification through their system, they then asked Acosta to confirm the last four digits of his social security number.

    Acosta told them the last four of his social, but that’s where things took a turn for the worse. He said one officer told him to put his hands behind his back, while the other officer told him to put his hands on the police cruiser.

    Not knowing which officer to obey, he just stood there. At that point, they said he was resisting arrest, and slammed him to the ground. Faye knew what to do. She started recording.

    From her video, Tempe officers can be seen applying painful arm bars and placing their knees on his neck. All the while, Acosta is screaming that he wasn’t resisting arrest. He even tried to reiterate his social security number to end the conflict, still thinking if he gave the right numbers they would release him.

    But this was to no avail. Police kidnapped her boyfriend and drove off.

    Faye asked one of the officers where she should go to bond him out of jail. He told her Acosta would be taken to the Tempe jail, but he never made it to jail.

    Faye tells the Free Thought Project what happened next. “I arrived at the police station at 1:55 and called to ask for him. They politely explained that no one has been brought in by that name yet and to call in 10 to 15 minutes,” she said. “Eleven minutes later I called and the man on the phone just rudely said no one was there named Bryan and hung up.”

    Instead of taking Acosta to jail, officers took him away from Mill Ave., returned his driver’s license, gave him a citation for “resisting arrest” and dropped him off at 6th Street. Acosta was never booked into jail, didn’t have to bond out, but suffered numerous injuries.

    Acosta got a black eye and now complains of constant back and neck pain. He has scabs from scrapes on his arms, elbows, and knees, all because a bouncer in Tempe, AZ thought his ID was fake and called the cops.

    No one ever read him his Miranda rights, there’s no proof he was taken to jail, yet now he has to show up for court June 20th. He says he’s being forced to get a lawyer to defend himself for doing nothing more than wanting to party at the club.

    Ironically, it was Acosta who wanted the bouncer to call the police. He wanted his identification back. He wanted to party. He didn’t want any trouble. But, apparently, providing the last four digits of one’s social security number for verifying his identity is a crime on Mill Ave.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/az-police-arrest-beat-license/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2017, 11:33:35 PM
    Crazed Sheriff Attacks Innocent College Kid, Then Threatens Cop Who Stopped It

    Ellis County, TX — In April, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey signed into law a “Blue Lives Matter” bill which bumps up the penalty for striking an off-duty police officer from a potential misdemeanor to a felony. But the following story coming out of Texas serves to illustrate just how awful the law will likely be for those who find themselves in a scuffle with a cop after hours.

    Ellis County Sheriff Johnny Brown, along with his brother Bobby, were celebrating his recent re-election this past New Years with a trip to a nearby Midlothian Whataburger. After allegedly pulling up too closely to another vehicle, words were exchanged with the driver and other occupants.

    The heated argument led into the burger joint and escalated to a point where Bobby, the Sheriff’s brother, decided he’d had enough jaw jacking, and took a swing at 21-year-old Caleb Tomgenovich, initiating an attack which appeared one-sided. The brothers were on a rampage.

    Seeing his brother Bobby hurting a fellow citizen, Sheriff Brown jumped right in, punching one of Tomgenovich’s friends in the face. After the melee, police arrived and broke it up, but not before Midlothian Police Officer Aaron Walters had a few critical words for the Sheriff.

    Walters commanded Sheriff Brown to leave the restaurant and to stop trying to intimidate a female witness by standing over her.

    Get out of the store right now! You don’t stand over her like that, and try to intimidate her!
    After Brown left the burger joint, he didn’t go quietly. As he walked passed Walters he threatened him by saying, “If you worked for me, you’d be fired.” To which Walters fired back, “I don’t care who you are!. Stop trying to intimidate me!”

    READ MORE:  ‘Drop that Slurpee!’: Parents Furious After They Say Cops Pulled Guns on Children for Playing
    When apparent intimidation tactics didn’t work, Sheriff Brown then turned to insults. “You’re an arrogant little f**k is what you are!” He added, “And I hope that camera’s on!” Walters confidently reassured him, “Oh it is! It is!”

    The attack, threats, intimidation, and insults all led the Midlothian Police Department to charge the two brothers with misdemeanor assault. In a plea deal with prosecutors, Sheriff Brown decided to resign and surrender his peace officer’s license, ending his law enforcement career.

    The whole caught-on-camera incidents serves to highlight potential problems states like Arizona will encounter when police officers get out of line while off-duty. Arguably, if it hadn’t been for the dashcam footage (which Sheriff Brown was so afraid of) the whole incident could have ended with the college students being charged with felony assault on a police officer.

    Laws such as the so-called “Blue Lives Matter” legislation, albeit well-intentioned, effectively create a new and protected class of citizens; law enforcement. In an era where police officers are seldom disciplined, hardly ever charged with criminal activity, and who rarely serve any jail or prison time (even in the most egregious of cases) what America needs is stricter accountability, not special protection under the law.

    From his perspective, Tomgenovich told reporters he’s pleased Sheriff Brown lost his job as Sheriff. He said not even his mother believed the Sheriff attacked him first, at least until she saw the footage for herself.

    Unfortunately, we see these types of incidents daily at The Free Thought Project. And we’ll continue to serve as a police accountability site. To you, Officer Walters, who didn’t let the Sheriff’s status prevent you from doing your job; We salute you.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-sheriff-attacks-college-student/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2017, 12:01:03 AM
    I've never understood how someone, very clearly a twisted wacko judging by this piece of information alone, is allowed to do his thing as an officer. 

    Furthermore, how was he allowed into the position to begin with, since he didn't just fall from the sky yesterday? 

    HOW could it be true -- if not for some cultural "norm" within the PD -- that a person with such deeply disturbing tendencies is allowed to work for (against, really) us?

    And the saddest part (of course) is that it's relatively mild compared to many others.  If we can get rid of these wicked clowns when they pull shit like this right in front of everyone, maybe we wouldn't have all those other stories.

    So many despicable crimes by out of control criminal gangs. This one also kept trophy photos.

    Sweetwater cops pummeled, water-boarded suspects for years, prosecutors allege

    Quote
    On one occasion, a group of Sweetwater cops ransacked a man’s home, stealing computers, iPads, TVs and even the man’s truck.

    Another day, the cops badly beat a suspected thief for hours inside the Sweetwater station, masking the sounds by blaring reggaeton music, all while taking “trophy” photos.

    Yet another suspect was pummeled and “water-boarded” – forced to swallow water, in a dark room, until he falsely confessed to a burglary. The man had to be hospitalized with broken bones in his face and a rib fracture.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article155949819.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2017, 01:53:57 PM
    Criminals like that should be executed. How many other people has this scumbag and his goons sent to prison or possibly even executed?

    Freed From Death Row, Man Sues His Texas Prosecutor

    JAMES PALMER June 13, 2017

    HOUSTON (CN) — A Houston prosecutor “went to unbelievable lengths to manipulate evidence,” including threatening and jailing witnesses and concealing exculpatory evidence, to send an innocent, mentally disabled man to prison for 12 years — 10 of them on death row — the exonerated man claims in court.

    Alfred Dewayne Brown “maintained his innocence despite being falsely arrested, charged, and erroneously convicted,” his attorneys say in the June 8 federal complaint. “Refusing to accept a generous plea bargain for a crime he did not commit, Mr. Brown risked separating from his family and friends and being put to death, in the hopes that justice would eventually prevail and that he would once again be a free man.”

    The 60-page lawsuit alleges a litany “woeful misconduct” by Houston police and Harris County prosecutors: exculpatory evidence languishing in a detective’s garage for more than 10 years; witnesses “badgered and threatened;” an exonerating witness falsely charged with perjury, jailed and taken away from her children.

    Brown sued Houston, Harris County, three Houston police officers, former Harris County Assistant District Attorney Daniel Rizzo, who prosecuted him, and the current District Attorney Kim Ogg for civil rights and due process violations.

    The abuse was so severe and long-lasting that even former Governor Rick Perry denounced it in a speech after Brown was released, saying Brown’s “life was almost ruined because of an overzealous prosecutor who concealed exonerating evidence,” and the children of his falsely jailed girlfriend, whose exonerating evidence was concealed, “were put in harm’s way because of a grand jury that acted as the arm of the prosecution, rather than as an independent check on government power.”

    Brown was wrongfully convicted of murdering two people, including a Houston police officer, during the robbery of a check-cashing outlet in 2003.

    His attorney Gwen Richard said in an interview Monday that the lawsuit is the “final chapter” of Brown’s search for justice after 12 years and 62 days in prison. Since he was released in 2015, he has been “living a peaceful, quiet life” as a construction and transportation worker.

    Brown, who has an IQ of 69, was swept up into the city’s investigation after defendant Rizzo threatened witnesses into implicating him in the robbery and double murder, according to the complaint.

    Three men killed a police officer and a store clerk while robbing an ACE Check Cashing store in Houston, in April 2003. “Within minutes, breaking news alerted Houston residents to the crime and indicated that police were searching for a white Pontiac Grand Am,” the complaint states.

    This report of that day comes from the lengthy lawsuit, which alleges conspiracy, multiple constitutional violations, fabrication of evidence and supervisory liability.

    On the day of the robbery and murders, witnesses LaTonya Hubbard and Letisha Price saw three men discussing their plan to rob the check cashing store, the complaint states. And the owner of a furniture store in the same strip mall as the ACE store saw two of the robbers preparing for the robbery.

    Hubbard’s sister, Alisha “Lisa” Hubbard, who lived in the same apartment complex as the robbers, saw one of them loading a gun next to the getaway vehicle identified in breaking news reports. She testified that she spoke with another resident at Villa Americana apartments, who identified the robbers as Shawn, Ghetto and Deuce.

    But Lisa Hubbard changed her story after Rizzo pressured her to name Brown as one of the robbers discussing their plans.

    “Mr. Rizzo told me that if I didn’t stick to my statements, they could charge me with perjury,” according to Lisa Hubbard’s testimony, cited in the complaint. “The female with Mr. Rizzo then told me that not only would they charge me with perjury but that they would also charge me with theft of the $10,000 that Crime Stoppers gave me [for identifying the men].”

    Lisa said she substituted Brown for Deuce “because I thought that is what Mr. Rizzo wanted me to do.”

    LaTonya Hubbard also said she changed her story because of Rizzo’s persuasion about Brown.

    Brown, who lived with his girlfriend, Ericka Dockery, her children and Dockery’s cousin, was asleep on the couch in Dockery’s apartment on the morning of the robbery. Later that morning, Brown called Dockery while she was at a medical client’s home.

    Dockery testified that the caller ID on the client’s phone was her home number.

    “Despite this initial testimony, Defendant Rizzo refused to accept the truth. He badgered, harassed, and intimidated Ms. Dockery to change her testimony regarding Mr. Brown’s alibi,” the complaint states.

    Rizzo threatened Dockery with aggravated perjury charges and said she would lose custody of her children if she did not retract Brown’s alibi, and used a grand juror to threaten her, according to the complaint.

    “One grand juror told her she seemed like a ‘good, nice young lady’ and ‘a hard-working young lady,’ but ‘if we find out that you’re not telling the truth, we’re coming after you,’” according to excerpts from grand jury testimony cited in the complaint.

    Dockery refused to change her testimony, so Rizzo followed through on his threats.

    “Defendant Rizzo charged Ms. Dockery with three counts of aggravated perjury. She was arrested at her home, and her bond was set at $5,000 for each charge, which defendant Rizzo knew she could not afford.”

    After Dockery was jailed she did change her testimony, but she testified in 2011 that she corroborated Rizzo’s story only because she was locked in a room with him and under duress.

    Dockery’s original testimony was vindicated in 2013 when defendant Houston police Det. Breck McDaniel found telephone records from the case in an evidence box in his garage. The records were notated to show that Brown had made the phone call to Dockery’s client’s house at the time she mentioned.

    Rizzo had subpoenaed the telephone records during court proceeding but they were not presented at Brown’s trial.

    “The defendants’ failures to turn over this critical evidence, subsequent concealment of the records, and false testimony regarding the existence of the records constitute willful and malicious violations of Mr. Brown’s constitutional rights,” the complaint states.

    The Harris County District Attorney’s Office and Houston police did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday. Courthouse News will add their comments when and if they respond.

    Brown seeks punitive damages. He is represented by Gwen Richard with LeClairRyan in Houston.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2017, 01:57:16 PM
    Finally, a cop who arrested a criminal cop on the spot. Why was this criminal employed as a cop after so many incidents?

    In 3 Months, a Cop Killed Someone, Punched a Child, Spat on Mentally Ill Man & He’s Still a Cop

    By Jack Burns -  June 14, 2017

    Picture this. A sergeant with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office (JSO) calls another police officer to a local gas station because his vehicle is big enough to transport two brothers who’d just been arrested. When officer Timothy James arrived to lend a helping hand to his fellow boy in blue, he decided he’d give a knuckle sandwich to one of the teenaged suspects in the back of his squad car.

    He repeatedly punched one of the arrested and handcuffed teens, a 17-year-old child, in the face. According to the reports, James climbed into the back seat of his patrol car, where the teens were waiting and handcuffed, and began punching one of the brothers in the face. The sergeant saw it all from his own patrol car and then, like a good cop is supposed to do, he arrested James.

    Jesus Campos, the eldest brother, said, “I hope my brother’s all right,” and added, “I never thought this would happen to my brothers.” As of this story’s publication, he still did not know how his brother was doing, following the reported attack.

    The damning part of this story is that it’s not the first time James has been arrested by his own police force. It’s the second time — inside a month. But that’s not all. In fact, this model cop has already killed a pedestrian with his squad car too. And while JCSO is prohibited from discussing his priors, investigative reporters with First Coast News uncovered his personnel file, which reveal the officer’s sordid work history.

    On at least 10 different occasions, James has been in violation of departmental policy. Killing pedestrians and beating handcuffed kids is not the upper limit of this cop’s corrupt ability. In April, he’s alleged to have spit on and abused a mentally ill man at UF Health, the University of Florida hospital.

    Undersheriff Pat Ivey, all but confirmed James to be at the center of the investigation which occured at the hospital by discussing the incident which took place at the hospital in the same press conference as the one which addressed James’ arrest.

    In May, James hit and killed a pedestrian and was ordered to undergo counseling. Attorney John Phillip is representing the victim’s family and openly wondered when informed of James’ arrest if he was “psychologically cleared” to return to duty.

    Officer Timothy James has been charged with “Battery” in the beating incident, but has not been fired, which would be standard procedure for most occupations and professions wherein an employee assaulted someone while on the job. Instead, he’s on paid administrative leave, stripped of his officer’s privileges, and has been relegated to desk duty should he desire to work while the investigation takes place.

    In all, James has been involved in disciplinary actions on at least 10 separate occasions from violations of the department’s social media rules to a firearms violation. It’s unclear if the latest abuse of power/excessive force battery charge will be enough to end his career or if he’ll be allowed return to the profession which has, so far, permitted him to abuse the citizenry with impunity.

    James’ case highlights what we at TFTP have concluded. Police officers routinely abuse their authority, often kidnapping, caging, and killing innocent civilians in the line of duty. Rarely do they see prosecution.

    Instead, like James, they’re given “administrative leave” which simply allows them to have a paid vacation long enough to be hired at another department or retire before facing consequences. We call these officers “Gypsy Cops.”

    They travel from one department to the other abusing people, never answering for their crimes. To the sergeant who arrested James, we salute you.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/jacksonville-officer-arrested-battery-charges-thats-half/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on June 14, 2017, 03:30:08 PM
    So many despicable crimes by out of control criminal gangs. This one also kept trophy photos.

    Sweetwater cops pummeled, water-boarded suspects for years, prosecutors allege

    http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article155949819.html

    Reggaeton?  Pure insanity.  Immediately upon reading that, I knew these guys must be Cubans and/or from Central America. 

    So, they're running their show like they did back home: with no law and no rules for themselves. 

    The problem is going to get worse in this country, unless we immediately toughen up on all bad cops.  We must crack down on misconduct of all types, including warning signs, right away.  With 3rd-Worlders flooding in, many are going to look to be cops, and many will be the terrible sort they remember from their own countries.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 15, 2017, 09:48:10 PM
    Innocent Grandpa Face-Stomped by Cops for Asking for Help With His Granddaughter

    A 66-year-old grandpa was beaten, stomped on, and maliciously prosecuted after he walked into a police department to ask them for help in protecting his daughter.

    By Matt Agorist -  June 15, 2017

    Hamilton, NJ — Nicholas Cecala, a 66-year-old grandpa, learned the hard way what happens when police and those they are ostensibly serving have a disagreement. While trying to seek out the supposed service of the Hamilton police department, in protecting his daughter and granddaughter, Cecala was beaten, stomped on, and maliciously prosecuted, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed this week.

    Cecala suffered broken ribs, lacerations, and head and neck injuries at the hands of the Hamilton police department, and is now seeking punitive and injunctive relief. According to the lawsuit, the incident left the innocent grandpa “humiliated” and “disgraced.”

    Cecala’s run-in with the cops was not because he broke the law, or got caught with an ‘illegal’ plant — he was actually seeking out their help. On September 23, 2014, Cecala walked into the Hamilton police department to speak with officers about the safety of his daughter and granddaughter.

    According to the lawsuit, Cecala feared that his daughter was at risk of being harmed by her ex-boyfriend.

    As the Trentonian reports:

    Cecala “informed the officers he feared for his family’s safety and asked why the police were not doing anything to help,” according to his complaint. Cecala alleges that Hamilton Police Lt. Joseph Mastropolo then “became enraged” and forced him out of a meeting room and into a smaller room, where the policeman allegedly attacked him.
     
    Hamilton Police Officer Fredrick C. Dumont allegedly joined Mastropolo in the melee, according to Cecala’s federal lawsuit. He accuses Dumont of throwing him to the ground and stomping on his body. Cecala further alleges that other cops on the Hamilton Police force had witnessed Mastropolo’s and Dumont’s “savage conduct” but did nothing to intervene.
    After beating him senseless — to the point of leaving a boot imprint on his face — officers then arrested Cecala and charged him with resisting arrest, two disorderly persons offenses, disorderly conduct, and obstructing the administration of the law.

    Instead of bringing him to the hospital, he was thrown in a jail cell on a $7,500 bond.

    “After Plaintiff was processed on the bogus charges and posted bail his daughters, who were waiting for him in the parking lot, rushed Plaintiff to the hospital where he was admitted,” the complaint reads.

    All the charges were eventually dismissed.

    “Mr. Cecala’s case presents a horrific case of police brutality,”  Joel Silberman, Cecala’s attorney alleged Tuesday evening in a statement. “Mr. Cecala responded to the Hamilton Police Department as a concerned citizen looking for assistance regarding a personal matter. When Mr. Cecala expressed a difference of opinion with that of the officers, they threw him inside storage room where he was accosted and beaten.”

    After being beaten so badly, according to the lawsuit, Cecala now suffers permanent loss of hearing.

    “The fact something like this can take place within a police headquarters raises many serious questions about the culture that exists in the Hamilton Police Department,” Silberman said. Indeed, it does.

    The lawsuit names Hamilton Township, Hamilton Township Police Department and five Hamilton cops as defendants. Naturally, the township is denying any and all wrongdoing.

    Attorneys for the township are demanding the lawsuit be dismissed with prejudice.

    “The allegations contained in the Plaintiffs’ complaint and any amended complaint are frivolous, groundless, and without merit,” Hamilton Township’s legal team said.

    As the Trentonian reports, the response includes the following defenses:

    • Defendants were not negligent.

    • Injuries complained of are the result of plaintiff’s own negligence.

    • These defendants did not act in any conspiracy against the plaintiff.

    • Plaintiff’s civil rights were not violated.

    • These defendants acted in good faith and their actions were based on reasonable cause.

    While the township denies responsibility for the mistreatment and assault of Cecala, however, they will have a hard time proving their case considering the extent of his injuries and the fact that not a single one of the bogus charges held up.

    Sadly, in the Land of the Free, being an innocent grandpa is no protection from police abuse.

    Grandpas in the United States have been hospitalized after being beaten by cops over the use of a blinker.

    Grandpas in the United States Have been shot in their own homes by negligent cops going to the wrong house.

    Grandpas in the United States have been killed in their own front yards for holding a crucifix.

    Grandpas have been paralyzed by brutal cops for taking an afternoon stroll and the cop who beat the innocent grandpa got off scot free.

    The list goes on.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandpa-face-stomped-cops-asking-help-granddaughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 15, 2017, 09:52:58 PM
    Cops Get Jobs Back After Executing Unarmed Couple with 137 Shots Over a Traffic Violation

    The five Cleveland cops who took part in the 137-shot, execution-style fusillade that killed an unarmed couple over a traffic violation will all get their jobs back.

    By Matt Agorist -  June 15, 2017

    Cleveland, OH — In what can only be referred to as a travesty of justice and a disgrace to the integrity of police departments nationwide, five officers who took part in the 137-shot, execution-style fusillade that killed an unarmed couple — will get their jobs back.

    The sixth cop, Michael Brelo will remain free from jail but has been fired. He has since become a gypsy cop, scrounging for a job at any department that will hire him.

    The shooting came at the end of a November 12, 2012 high-speed chase involving more than 100 officers and 62 police vehicles to go after Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams. The pursuit began when officers standing outside police headquarters mistook the sound of Russell’s backfiring Chevy Malibu for gunfire. When the car stopped outside city limits, officers opened fire, perforating Russell with 24 shots and Williams with 23.

    The shooting lasted 19.3 seconds. For anyone who’s ever been to a shooting range or is familiar with firing weapons, 19.3 seconds would seem like an eternity as all those rounds were flying down range. To discount the malicious intent of these officers continuing to fire after the first few seconds is outright criminal.

    Neither of the victims were armed, or suspected of anything more serious than traffic violations resulting from the pursuit. A search of the vehicle following the double homicide revealed a crack pipe. Both Russell and Williams had been diagnosed as mentally ill.

    The city has since paid $3 million each to the families of Russell and Williams to settle a lawsuit.

    Brelo, the ring-leading murderer, fired 49 rounds, including the last 15 after he jumped up on the hood of the car in a wild west fashion. In spite of this horrifying display of aggression, a judge acquitted him of manslaughter charges at trial.

    Officers Wilfredo Diaz, Brian Sabolik and Michael Farley and detectives Christopher Ereg and Erin O’Donnell fired the remaining shots in a gross display of excessive deadly force. They were also all acquitted.

    Brelo was acquitted in a bench trial after W. Ken Katsaris, a retired sheriff and “expert witness” specializing in testimony tailored to exonerate police officers, testified that Brelo’s only mistake was to expose himself to potential danger, thereby potentially inhibiting his colleagues as they unleashed gunfire in the direction of the vehicle.

    By leaping on top of the hood of the car, Brelo was “taking action that is not trained, not recognized, not safe, and put all of the other officers in the vicinity of his becoming a victim and their [the other officers] having to attempt to now engage to save his life,” Katsaris testified before trial judge John P. O’Donnell, who in predictable fashion exonerated the officer.

    “We believe that the City’s decision to terminate the other five officers was justified and should have been upheld,” Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson said in a statement this week. “We acknowledge that the arbitrator concluded that those officers committed serious policy violations; however, we are reviewing our options regarding the officers whose terminations were not upheld.”

    Naturally, the police funded defense attorney is defending the decision and disgustingly referring to the officers — who murdered an unarmed couple over a traffic violation — as exemplary.

    “It was a difficult case for both sides and a gratifying outcome,” defense attorney, Patrick D’Angelo, who represents the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association, the union of rank-and-file officers, said. “We realize we didn’t prevail in everything that we were seeking but we saved the career of five fine officers.”

    In the eyes of the police union, six cops dumping 137 rounds into an unarmed couple is ‘fine’ work.

    “Hopefully after further deliberations by both parties, this should be the end of this saga,” D’Angelo said. “Hopefully there will be no appeal and we can go forward.”

    As for Brelo, he is still eligible to be hired by other departments. For unloading 49 rounds into an unarmed couple, 15 of which a court, the department, and the arbitrator all agreed were ‘egregious’ in nature, Brelo could very well be back on the street in no time.

    “Indeed Officer Brelo never offered a reason or an explanation for these actions,” Arbitrator William Heekin wrote in his ruling. “Accordingly and upon finding that this clearly constituted an excessive use of deadly force, the contention of the City that it amounted to egregious misconduct where as a result the City no longer has trust and confidence in his ability to carry out the duties and responsibilities of a police officer is accepted.”

    For clearly using excessive deadly force, however, Brelo and his murderous accomplices will face no consequences.

    “It’s tragic that it went down this way, but at the end of the day, two people high on crack cocaine, high on marijuana, one of them intoxicated, made the decisions that they made and we responded to them,” union spokesman Steve Loomis said after the officers were acquitted. “And we responded within our training.”

    As the late William Grigg noted in his coverage of this case for the Free Thought Project last year:

    This is precisely the problem: Cleveland police, like their comrades nation-wide, are trained to kill people for reasons that will not withstand rational scrutiny — and they are expected to be rewarded for doing so.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/72981-2/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2017, 08:17:01 AM
    https://www.forbes.com/forbes/welcome/?toURL=https://www.forbes.com/sites/janetwburns/2017/06/18/new-wikileaks-docs-show-the-cia-has-been-hacking-wifi-routers-for-years/&refURL=https://www.facebook.com/&referrer=https://www.facebook.com/#2ee0ca126602
     

     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on July 19, 2017, 04:45:33 PM
    Looks like a nice little fuckjob was in progress. What a display of true priorities.  Video: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-ci-body-camera-footage-20170719-story.html#

    Police Officer Appears to Plant Drugs for Bust

    (Baltimore Sun) Baltimore police and prosecutors have launched investigations after being alerted to body camera footage that the public defender’s office says shows an officer planting drugs.

    The footage is from a January drug arrest. It shows an officer placing a soup can, which holds a plastic bag, into a trash-strewn lot. The officer can then be seen walking to the street, where he flips on his body camera.

    “I’m gonna go check here,” the officer says. He returns to the lot and picks up the soup can, removing a plastic bag filled with white capsules.

    Police cameras have a feature that saves the 30 seconds of video before activation, but without audio. When the officer is first in the alley, there is no audio until 30 seconds later.

    The public defender’s office identified the officer as Officer Richard Pinheiro.

    Neither police nor prosecutors immediately responded Wednesday to questions about Pinheiro or the other two officers seen in the video. They also did not immediately respond to a range of other questions about the incident.

    “We take allegations like this very seriously and that’s why we launched an internal investigation into the accusations,” said Police Department spokesman T.J. Smith. “We are fortunate to have body-worn cameras which provide a perspective of the event.”

    Police said they will discuss the video — and release more video from the same incident — at a news conference on Wednesday afternoon.

    The public defender’s office flagged the video recently, prompting prosecutors to drop charges against the man arrested and charged for the drugs. He had been in jail since January on a $50,000 bail he was unable to pay, according to attorney Deborah Levi, who is leading a new effort to track police misconduct cases for the public defender’s office.

    Levi said prosecutors called the officer just days later as a witness in another case, without disclosing the allegations to the defense attorney in that case.

    “You can’t try a case with that guy and not tell anyone about it,” Levi said.

    Melba Saunders, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore State’s Attorney's Office, said prosecutors are looking into the video, which she called “troubling.”

    Saunders said the prosecutor on the case “took immediate and appropriate actions by dropping the case and alerting his supervisor.”

    “Currently this case is under investigation and has been referred to internal affairs of the Baltimore Police Department,” Saunders said.

    In a statement issued Wednesday, the public defender’s office said the state’s attorney’s office needs to do more in response to the discovery of the video. It said the officer seen handling the plastic bag in the video is a witness in 53 other active cases. The other two officers in the video also are listed as witnesses in pending cases, it said.

    Levi said in the statement that officers should not be able to turn their cameras on and off.

    “Officer misconduct has been a pervasive issue at the Baltimore Police Department, which is exacerbated by the lack of accountability.” Levi said. “We have long supported the use of police body cameras to help identify police misconduct, but such footage is meaningless if prosecutors continue to rely on these officers, especially if they do so without disclosing their bad acts.”

    Last year, the police department conducted more than 250 inspections of body camera videos to assess compliance by officers with the rules governing the technology, according to records obtained by The Baltimore Sun under a Public Information Act request.

    The inspectors found many officers were using the devices appropriately, but other officers were found in violation of the rules — often because they failed to record. Officers saved 3,290 recordings from arrests, car stops, field interviews and other incidents, out of 3,441 incidents in which recordings were mandatory, the inspections found.

    Inspectors forwarded 47 videos to internal affairs for further review of possible officer misconduct, according to the records. Those incidents were not described but included relatively minor infractions — such as an officer cursing at a person on the street, officials said.

    Officers are supposed to start recording “at the initiation of a call for service or other activity or encounter that is investigative or enforcement-related in nature,” and during any other confrontational encounters. They can also stop recording under certain circumstances, such as when civilians request to not be recorded in a voluntary encounter with officers and during exchanges with confidential informants.

    (Baltimore Sun)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2017, 10:04:12 AM
    The armed and violent criminal gangs keep attacking and abusing people. From a "heroic" cop violently attack and kidnapping a nurse who was perfectly justified and law abiding in her behavior to arresting people for refusing to speak, the uniformed thugs enjoy a level of immunity that ordinary law abiding freedom loving citizens could never dream of.

    But these criminal gangs don't operate alone. They collaborate with prosecutors to provide them with "cases" so the prosecutors can build a record of convictions and plea deals. The prosecutors help the criminal cops and they also receive preferential treatment when they commit crimes. Take a look at this example:

    A drunk prosecutor drives the wrong way in a one way street and crashes into another car, injuring the driver and causing heavy damage to the vehicle. When a cop arrives, he notices the prosecutor is drunk and contacts his watch commander.  Suspiciously enough, the watch commanders orders the cop to use line 3407 which was marked “not recorded”.  When the watch commander asks how the drunk prosecutor would do in a field sobriety test, the cop responds: "probably not amazing".
    If you think it is suspicious that there is so much interest in what the result of the sobriety test would be, it will become more obvious now.
    The watch commander says:
    "Let’s pass him if we can. If we can’t, we can’t, Adam. We’re not going to get fucked. I’d love to pass him on sobriety if we could.”

    To which the cop replies:
    “Alright, I’ll do what I can,”


    The story gets even uglier with the watch commander and other cops who arrive at the scene trying to shift the blame from the prosecutor and cover up the crime. It should be noted here that the supervisor's wife "just happens" to also be a prosecutor that also "just happens" to be working with the drunk prosecutor involved in the accident. In fact it appears that his wife would be doing some investigations into the case and the watch commander says that he would tell his wife not to pull any bodycam footage that shows the prosecutor:
    “I’ll take care of that part. She will be smart enough not to dig into it”

    Do you think the conspiracy by this criminal gang would result in prison time? Think again.

    GRPD Chief David Rahinsky and Grand Rapids City Manager Greg Sundstrom agreed to termination hearings for all three officers.

    Of course you'd expect the cop union a criminal gang to step in and protect its goons:

    However, the city reached agreements with the police union for a lighter punishment for two of them. Officer Adam Ickes was suspended for 30 days without pay; Warwick was suspended for 160 hours, demoted from sergeant to officer, and placed on a two-year probation. Janiskee was fired from his job. He is suing, claiming his rights were violated and he’s also seeking to get his job back.

    There is a lot to this story that shows how these criminals collaborate to commit crimes and also cover up crimes for "special" persons, perpetuating a culture of corruption and abuse.

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/13/grpd-phone-line-recordings-of-ex-prosecutors-crash-released/

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/14/calls-for-public-apology-after-grpd-calls-released/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 20, 2017, 12:11:49 PM
    The armed and violent criminal gangs keep attacking and abusing people. From a "heroic" cop violently attack and kidnapping a nurse who was perfectly justified and law abiding in her behavior to arresting people for refusing to speak, the uniformed thugs enjoy a level of immunity that ordinary law abiding freedom loving citizens could never dream of.

    But these criminal gangs don't operate alone. They collaborate with prosecutors to provide them with "cases" so the prosecutors can build a record of convictions and plea deals. The prosecutors help the criminal cops and they also receive preferential treatment when they commit crimes. Take a look at this example:

    A drunk prosecutor drives the wrong way in a one way street and crashes into another car, injuring the driver and causing heavy damage to the vehicle. When a cop arrives, he notices the prosecutor is drunk and contacts his watch commander.  Suspiciously enough, the watch commanders orders the cop to use line 3407 which was marked “not recorded”.  When the watch commander asks how the drunk prosecutor would do in a field sobriety test, the cop responds: "probably not amazing".
    If you think it is suspicious that there is so much interest in what the result of the sobriety test would be, it will become more obvious now.
    The watch commander says:
    "Let’s pass him if we can. If we can’t, we can’t, Adam. We’re not going to get fucked. I’d love to pass him on sobriety if we could.”

    To which the cop replies:
    “Alright, I’ll do what I can,”


    The story gets even uglier with the watch commander and other cops who arrive at the scene trying to shift the blame from the prosecutor and cover up the crime. It should be noted here that the supervisor's wife "just happens" to also be a prosecutor that also "just happens" to be working with the drunk prosecutor involved in the accident. In fact it appears that his wife would be doing some investigations into the case and the watch commander says that he would tell his wife not to pull any bodycam footage that shows the prosecutor:
    “I’ll take care of that part. She will be smart enough not to dig into it”

    Do you think the conspiracy by this criminal gang would result in prison time? Think again.

    GRPD Chief David Rahinsky and Grand Rapids City Manager Greg Sundstrom agreed to termination hearings for all three officers.

    Of course you'd expect the cop union a criminal gang to step in and protect its goons:

    However, the city reached agreements with the police union for a lighter punishment for two of them. Officer Adam Ickes was suspended for 30 days without pay; Warwick was suspended for 160 hours, demoted from sergeant to officer, and placed on a two-year probation. Janiskee was fired from his job. He is suing, claiming his rights were violated and he’s also seeking to get his job back.

    There is a lot to this story that shows how these criminals collaborate to commit crimes and also cover up crimes for "special" persons, perpetuating a culture of corruption and abuse.

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/13/grpd-phone-line-recordings-of-ex-prosecutors-crash-released/

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/14/calls-for-public-apology-after-grpd-calls-released/



    It is kinda sad that there is no morals in this gang & they Pontificate on how people should behave & respect them because they do such a difficult & dangerous job.
    The only Difficult bit for them is keeping a straight face when they hound & harass people.
    Cops must piss themselves laughing at what they cover up for their friends.

    Jeez it is clearly a well rehearsed routine - switch to a unrecorded line -Body cam footage - wife not digging or doing her job properly -- FFS  they are probably more rotten & corrupt than I even think.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 20, 2017, 08:20:06 PM


    It is kinda sad that there is no morals in this gang & they Pontificate on how people should behave & respect them because they do such a difficult & dangerous job.
    The only Difficult bit for them is keeping a straight face when they hound & harass people.
    Cops must piss themselves laughing at what they cover up for their friends.

    Jeez it is clearly a well rehearsed routine - switch to a unrecorded line -Body cam footage - wife not digging or doing her job properly -- FFS  they are probably more rotten & corrupt than I even think.

    I've arrested, and observed arrested many a high profile personality. No leniency given. I've even witnessed off duty officers who if regular citizens, wouldn't have been taken down to the station and asked for a breath sample, just because they didn't want the perception of any favoritism. Part of the reason this happens is knowing any cover up is a fire able offense. It's been demonstrated that it will happen. The officers involved in this, specifically that Lieutenant and officer need to be fired to send the message this crap won't be tolerated. They are living in the 70's   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 20, 2017, 11:25:17 PM
    I've arrested, and observed arrested many a high profile personality. No leniency given. I've even witnessed off duty officers who if regular citizens, wouldn't have been taken down to the station and asked for a breath sample, just because they didn't want the perception of any favoritism. Part of the reason this happens is knowing any cover up is a fire able offense. It's been demonstrated that it will happen. The officers involved in this, specifically that Lieutenant and officer need to be fired to send the message this crap won't be tolerated. They are living in the 70's   



    Hello - your back here on Getbig.

    Look forward to the discussions as generally our views differ greatly

    "This Kind of Crap is Tolerated & Routinely Covered up"  as is constantly being shown
    When they are caught out - as in this one.

    Sack them.. ha .. so they can just go sign up elsewhere as a cop.
    The minimum they should be imprisoned.

    See how you cover for them & go lenient on them.
    It's institutionalised behaviour.

    Joe public lying & trying to pervert the course of justice- oh just give them a slap on the wrist.. Yeah Right.

    And this incident was a one off behaviour from them at that station
    Do you think.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 12:13:05 PM
    Another (http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/deaf-man-fatally-shot-n-afraid-police-article-1.2764759) deaf man killed by cops. How ironic that the cops "didn't hear" the neighbors shouting that the deaf man couldn't hear them. As expected, the cops will investigate themselves and the killer is on paid vacation.

    US police shoot deaf man 'ignoring commands'

    A deaf man has been shot and killed by Oklahoma City police officers as he approached them holding a metal pipe.
    The two officers did not hear neighbours shouting "he can't hear you", before opening fire, police captain Bo Mathews said.
    Magdiel Sanchez, 35, was fatally shot on Tuesday evening as police were investigating a hit and run.
    The shooting is being investigated by city homicide detectives to determine if it was legally justified.

    "In those situations, very volatile situations, you have a weapon out, you can get what they call tunnel vision," Cpt Mathews said, adding that Sanchez was about 15 ft (4.5m) away when both officers fired their weapons simultaneously.

    Eight-year veteran Sgt Christopher Barnes fired his handgun at the same exact moment Lt Matthew Lindsey fired a Taser, witnesses told police.
    "You can really lock in to just the person that has the weapon that'd be the threat against you," Cpt Mathews added, explaining why officers did not respond to the shouts of about a half dozen bystanders screaming that Sanchez was deaf.

    The 2ft (0.6m) pipe that Sanchez was holding as he sat on his porch was initially described to officers as a stick.

    Neighbours say that Sanchez, who was non-verbal, would use the pipe and his hands to communicate and also to protect against stray dogs near his home where he lived with his father.
    Sanchez's father, who drove the hit and run vehicle, later confirmed that his son was deaf.
    Police say the victim had no known criminal history.

    Sgt Barnes, who fired his handgun, has been placed on administrative leave, pending an investigation. The first officer on scene, Lt Lindsey, will remain on active duty. Neither officer was wearing a body camera.
    This is not the first shooting to draw attention to Oklahoma police in recent years.

    In a 2015 a Tulsa volunteer deputy shot a man who had already been subdued. The officer, who received a four-year sentence, claimed that he attempted to fire his Taser but mistakenly used his pistol.
    In May a white policewoman was acquitted of shooting an unarmed black man whose hands were raised in the air at the time.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-41351249
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 12:22:55 PM
    Good Cop Crosses Thin Blue Line, Helps Family Bring Officer Who Killed Their Son to Justice

    Versailles, MO — On Friday, special prosecutor William Camm Seay announced that Trooper Anthony Piercy is being charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,
    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.

    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.


    The stiff arm of blue justice was moving in.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    But as a true servant to the public, Henry remained resilient and refused to be bullied.

    His and the family’s efforts led to the case being reopened and taken over by Seay.

    “It was an investigation not concluded at that time,” Seay said. “She [Grellner] didn’t have it. We, my people, completed the investigation. There was additional investigation after Ms. Grellner stepped down.”

    When Seay was asked about the concerns of the law enforcement agency investigating themselves, he said, “That’s what I’m for. I don’t have any concerns.”

    On Friday, Seay announced the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree against Trooper Anthony Piercy outside the Morgan County Justice Center. The charge is a Class C felony carrying a punishment of up to seven years in prison, up to a year in the county jail, a $5,000 fine or a combination.

    The Highway Patrol said in a statement that it had placed Piercy, 44, on leave without pay. He is expected to turn himself in on Friday.

    Craig Ellingson, father of Brandon, announced they were pleased with the news but noted how long it took.

    “But it should have been a lot earlier,” he said. “I think it has been a cover-up from the beginning. They had everything. They knew what Piercy did to my son.”

    For 18 months, this family, along with the now retired Henry, have fought for Piercy to be held accountable in the death of Brandon Ellingson.

    “I never imagined something like that happening to Brandon. … I think he felt like he was safe with Piercy, because he’s a cop. But he wasn’t,” said Ellingson.

    “There’s been a cover-up from the beginning,” Henry recently told The Star. “They wanted to protect the governor and the merger and protect Piercy from criminal charges because criminal charges would be a black eye for the patrol.”

    While this news of Piercy’s charges is great for the family, Craig Ellingson insists that the fight is not yet over.

    “I feel some relief, but I still want to get to the people who have covered this up,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-refused-silenced-fellow-officer-charged-teens-death/

    Remember this case? This scumbag only got 10 days in jail (2 days x 5 times, won't even do 10 days straight) for the death of that young man.

    Cop Who Threw Handcuffed Man Into Lake and Watched Him Drown, Gets on 10 Days in Jail

    Versailles, MO — Nearly two years after Trooper Anthony Piercy was charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back, the case has been closed. Predictably, the offending officer is getting off with less than a slap on the wrist.

    For handcuffing a college student, negligently casting him into a lake, and watching as he drowned, Trooper Piercy avoided an involuntary manslaughter trial after pleaded guilty to a simple boating violation in June.

    This week, Piercy was sentenced for his role in Ellingson’s death and he received just 10 days in jail. The judge referred to this insultingly low sentence of only 10 days as “shock time.”

    According to the Kansas City Star, in addition to the “shock time” in the Morgan County jail, Judge Roger Prokes sentenced Trooper Anthony Piercy to two years of supervised probation and ordered him to complete 50 hours of community service. Piercy will serve time in jail in five, two-day increments with his first stint scheduled to begin Friday.

    To Ellingson family and those who’ve been following this case, it is a kick in the teeth.

    “Ten days is like a vacation,” Craig Ellingson said. “It’s a joke. … He knows he’s guilty and he’s damn lucky to get what he got.”

    As the Star reports, Special Prosecutor William Camm Seay requested Piercy receive 30 days in jail and have his law enforcement certification revoked for life. Prokes, however, said the decision on Piercy’s certification was for the state, not him.

    Seay is a standup attorney, however, and vowed to follow up to make sure this cop loses his license for the death of this beloved young man.

    “I wished we would have gotten what we asked for,” Seay told The Star after the hearing. “It’s my hope he (Piercy) never ever serves as a law enforcement officer again. I’ve fulfilled my obligation but I feel like I have an obligation to the Ellingson family to see this out.”

    However, the patrol noted that Piercy is still a cop and is merely on unpaid leave. What happens now with Piercy’s employment “is a personnel issue,” said Lt. Paul Reinsch, the Star reported.

    During the proceedings, Craig Ellingson finally got to address the man responsible for taking the only thing in the world that mattered, his son. Almost immediately, he began to cry as he read through a three-page statement.

    “Anthony Piercy, it has been almost 3 1/2 years that I’ve waited to tell you face to face that you’re the reason why my son Brandon is dead,” Ellingson said.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs while Piercy callously watched on.

    “He’s an evil person,” Ellingson’s father Craig told The Daily Beast on Wednesday. “The reason we decided to go to the plea deal was it was tainted down there,” in Morgan County, Missouri’s court system.

    During the investigation, it was determined that Piercy did little to nothing as he watched Ellingson drown.

    As the Beast reported:

    Piercy did not jump in to save him.
    When a bachelorette party passed on a nearby boat, the passengers threw Ellingson a life ring “but they didn’t know my son was handcuffed,” Craig said. “Piercy didn’t say he was handcuffed.”
    The women told investigators that they screamed at Piercy to extend a pole to Ellingson, which he did “but he knew he was handcuffed,” Craig said.
    Piercy did not call a supervisor for help until an hour after Ellingson drowned. Footage from his boat shows Piercy having a chillingly casual conversation with his colleague, referring to Ellingson in profane terms.
    “I’m banged up a little bit, but I’m alright. I don’t know if I’m sore from treading water with the bastard,” Piercy told a supervisor of the dead 20-year-old.


    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    Last September, a circuit court judge found that the state had “knowingly and purposefully” covered up the crimes of Piercy, violating the state’s Sunshine Law in the act.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,

    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.


    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.

    The stiff arm of blue justice moved in and now we are seeing the results.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    Now, the man responsible for the death of a star college student is getting off with a 10-day sentence and can remain a cop!


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-launched-handcuffed-ellingson-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 21, 2017, 12:31:11 PM
    Remember this case? This scumbag only got 10 days in jail (2 days x 5 times, won't even do 10 days straight) for the death of that young man.

    Cop Who Threw Handcuffed Man Into Lake and Watched Him Drown, Gets on 10 Days in Jail

    Versailles, MO — Nearly two years after Trooper Anthony Piercy was charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back, the case has been closed. Predictably, the offending officer is getting off with less than a slap on the wrist.

    For handcuffing a college student, negligently casting him into a lake, and watching as he drowned, Trooper Piercy avoided an involuntary manslaughter trial after pleaded guilty to a simple boating violation in June.

    This week, Piercy was sentenced for his role in Ellingson’s death and he received just 10 days in jail. The judge referred to this insultingly low sentence of only 10 days as “shock time.”

    According to the Kansas City Star, in addition to the “shock time” in the Morgan County jail, Judge Roger Prokes sentenced Trooper Anthony Piercy to two years of supervised probation and ordered him to complete 50 hours of community service. Piercy will serve time in jail in five, two-day increments with his first stint scheduled to begin Friday.

    To Ellingson family and those who’ve been following this case, it is a kick in the teeth.

    “Ten days is like a vacation,” Craig Ellingson said. “It’s a joke. … He knows he’s guilty and he’s damn lucky to get what he got.”

    As the Star reports, Special Prosecutor William Camm Seay requested Piercy receive 30 days in jail and have his law enforcement certification revoked for life. Prokes, however, said the decision on Piercy’s certification was for the state, not him.

    Seay is a standup attorney, however, and vowed to follow up to make sure this cop loses his license for the death of this beloved young man.

    “I wished we would have gotten what we asked for,” Seay told The Star after the hearing. “It’s my hope he (Piercy) never ever serves as a law enforcement officer again. I’ve fulfilled my obligation but I feel like I have an obligation to the Ellingson family to see this out.”

    However, the patrol noted that Piercy is still a cop and is merely on unpaid leave. What happens now with Piercy’s employment “is a personnel issue,” said Lt. Paul Reinsch, the Star reported.

    During the proceedings, Craig Ellingson finally got to address the man responsible for taking the only thing in the world that mattered, his son. Almost immediately, he began to cry as he read through a three-page statement.

    “Anthony Piercy, it has been almost 3 1/2 years that I’ve waited to tell you face to face that you’re the reason why my son Brandon is dead,” Ellingson said.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs while Piercy callously watched on.

    “He’s an evil person,” Ellingson’s father Craig told The Daily Beast on Wednesday. “The reason we decided to go to the plea deal was it was tainted down there,” in Morgan County, Missouri’s court system.

    During the investigation, it was determined that Piercy did little to nothing as he watched Ellingson drown.

    As the Beast reported:

    Piercy did not jump in to save him.
    When a bachelorette party passed on a nearby boat, the passengers threw Ellingson a life ring “but they didn’t know my son was handcuffed,” Craig said. “Piercy didn’t say he was handcuffed.”
    The women told investigators that they screamed at Piercy to extend a pole to Ellingson, which he did “but he knew he was handcuffed,” Craig said.
    Piercy did not call a supervisor for help until an hour after Ellingson drowned. Footage from his boat shows Piercy having a chillingly casual conversation with his colleague, referring to Ellingson in profane terms.
    “I’m banged up a little bit, but I’m alright. I don’t know if I’m sore from treading water with the bastard,” Piercy told a supervisor of the dead 20-year-old.


    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    Last September, a circuit court judge found that the state had “knowingly and purposefully” covered up the crimes of Piercy, violating the state’s Sunshine Law in the act.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,

    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.


    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.

    The stiff arm of blue justice moved in and now we are seeing the results.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    Now, the man responsible for the death of a star college student is getting off with a 10-day sentence and can remain a cop!


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-launched-handcuffed-ellingson-jail/



    FFS -- That bastard cop needs the exact same thing doing to him.

    If you're reading this agnostic & you can in any way try to defend that cop and his action and the punishment given to him - What very little Faith in Cops I have left will be Completely Gone.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 01:09:44 PM
    The recent horrific attack on the brave nurse in Utah by a violent uniformed criminal gained some nationwide coverage. However this only one of several incidents where these violent criminals attack those who, with great care and without violence, serve the citizens and the community. All these people should be commended for putting the lives and welfare of their fellow citizens above all and risking their lives standing against the violent criminal gang.

    The Utah Nurse is Not Alone — Police Have a History of Abusing Professionals Rendering Aid

    The Body Cam footage of a nurse being violently arrested by a police officer in Salt Lake City while other officers on the scene watched and aided the arrest went viral on Friday. The internet watched in horror as a nurse followed the orders from her supervisors and refused to break the law—and a police officer responded by throwing a temper tantrum because he was told “No.”

    However, while this incident was caught on video and spread like wildfire when it was released, it is not uncommon, and it does not apply solely to medical professionals. Police officers also have a history of targeting and abusing first responders rendering aid to citizens in life-threatening situations.

    Firefighters

    When Capt. David Wilson, a veteran firefighter with 27 years of experience, arrived at the scene of a nasty car accident in Hazelwood, Missouri, in May 2003, he parked his truck and went to work. As he was attending to the victim, he was approached by a police officer who seemed to care more about the position of the truck, than about the survivors of the crash.

    When Wilson ignored orders from Officer Todd Greeves to move his vehicle, Greeves became agitated, and decided to take matters into his own hands. Greeves arrested the firefighter, and kept him detained by a patrol car for 23 minutes until a supervisor told him to let Wilson go. Wilson filed a civil rights lawsuit, and received $17,500 in damages.



    A similar instance occurred in March 2014 when a volunteer fireman in New Roads, Louisiana, was rendering aid to a woman who passed out in her home. He was the first one on the scene, and when police arrived, instead of asking about the state of the patient, they demanded that the fireman move his truck. When he did not comply, the officer arrested and detained him for nearly 15 minutes.

    In February 2014, when Jacob Gregoire, a veteran firefighter with 12 years of experience, was responding to the scene of an accident in Chula Vista, California, he was also ordered to move his truck. Gregoire ignored the commands from a California Highway Patrolman, and he was arrested and detained on the side of the highway for 30 minutes.

    In response to the incident, Chula Vista Fire Chief Dave Hanneman called CHP’s behavior “ridiculous” and the firefighters’ union president John Hess praised Gregoire’s actions. “He made all firefighters look good. He was there to protect the citizens and he was willing to take a stand to do that,” Hess said.



    EMTs and Paramedics

    In the same way that power-hungry police officers have gone after firefighters rendering aid to the victims of car accidents, they have also gone after paramedics and emergency medical technicians who did not follow their orders.

    In 2009, Oklahoma State Patrolman Daniel Martin pulled over an ambulance for failing to yield to his patrol car. The ambulance was in the midst of rushing to a hospital with a sick woman in its care.

    When the driver of the ambulance, Maurice White, stood up to Martin, the patrolman responding by assaulting, choking and then arresting White, while a sick patient waited in the back of the ambulance, in need of emergency medical care.



    Another police officer used the chokehold method when he got into a confrontation with an EMT in Portsmouth, Ohio, in February 2017. While the emergency medical technicians were preparing to move a man into an ambulance, after he was knocked unconscious during a fight outside of a bar, he suddenly regained consciousness.

    Police on the scene responded by intervening and deploying a taser on the startled man, and when one of the EMTs stood up the police sergeant, he assaulted the technician, putting him in a chokehold.



    A sheriff’s deputy also decided to interfere with an ambulance rushing a patient to a hospital Jackson, Kentucky, in June 2016. The ambulance driver claimed the deputy gave no reason for the stop, and the only reason the driver could come up with as to why the deputy would interfere was because he was the owner of a competing ambulance company.

    When a police officer in San Diego, California, decided to go after an EMT and a paramedic at a 7-11 convenience store in April 2014, the surveillance tape was their saving grace.

    Officer Anibal Solis claimed he heard EMT Derek Shubin call him a “F—king Nazi,” and he naturally grabbed Shubin and punched him. Paramedic Steve Cogle then intervened and put Solis in a chokehold. After Cogle let Solis out of the chokehold and tried to diffuse the situation, the officer proceeded to attack him.



    A former paramedic in St. Paul, Minnesota, found herself on the receiving end of similar treatment in April 2017, when she stopped to render aid to a man who was bleeding on the street. As soon as an officer arrived, the paramedic cautioned him not to touch a portion of the man’s shirt that was soaked with blood. The officer responded by punching and later arresting the paramedic for attempting to help.

    One of the most commonly used arguments for supporting police officers is that they risk their lives daily in order to save the lives of others. This same description can be used for firefighters, doctors, nurses, paramedics and emergency medical technicians.

    However, when police officers adopt an “It’s my way or the highway” mentality, and they abuse medical professionals and first responders who do not listen to their commands, they not only take away from their own credibility, they also risk the lives of individuals who are already in an emergency situation.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/nurse-not-alone-police-history-abusing-professionals/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 01:43:53 PM
    Those violent criminals should be locked up for life. The tragic irony is that the victim claims he had been a supporter of police his whole life but after this horrific event he feels like he has to speak up against this violence.

    Cops Attack Innocent 72yo Man, Leave Him Bleeding Out—For Breaking Up a Fight

    White Plains, NY – Critics are saying police have reached a new behavioral low with the way they dealt with a 72-year-old man who is now suing the White Plains Police Department for unnecessary and excessive force, and has the injuries to prove it.

    Charles Pateman was trying to intervene in a domestic dispute between his fiance’ and her daughter. The residential surveillance camera shows the elderly man attempting to get into the elevator to go up to his apartment when police grabbed the well-known businessman and developer, slamming him into the wall and then the floor. After several moments of rough handling, they then placed him in handcuffs.

    The officers involved demanded Pateman “stand up or we’ll drag you out,” a command which arguably could be difficult for a person over the age of 70 to comply with.

    After he got to his feet, and was taken to the squad car, Mr. Pateman asked the arresting officer to loosen his handcuffs. The reasonable request was answered rather sarcastically as the officer replied, “they’re not built for comfort, sir.”

    Even though Pateman politely asked repeatedly for the officers to loosen his cuffs, they refused. The mild-mannered businessman was reportedly respectful throughout the arrest but even asking nicely wasn’t enough to get the officers to release the compression on the cuffs.

    As a result, the elderly man’s wrists began to bleed, saturating his clothes with blood, his lawyer said recounting the arrest. Randolph McLaughlin Esq. of Newman Ferrara LLP is representing Pateman in a federal civil rights lawsuit against the police department and the city. He addressed reporters saying:

    “The officers viciously and brutally slammed him against the wall and then handcuffed him in such a tight fashion that when you see the video, you’ll see pools of blood dripping around his hands. His clothes were filled with blood.”
    McLaughlin criticized the officers’ handling of his client. “They were cavalier. They were brutal and they were indifferent to this man’s medical needs,” he charged.

    “Twelve times throughout the incident, I asked them to loosen the cuffs,” Pateman said. “I could feel the blood running down my hands. It was unbelievable to me.”

    Pateman also said he had to wait several hours before receiving medical attention, and he defended his actions on that fateful night. He said:

    “I’m 72, two officers with guns? I’m a threat to them? Please! You know…just unbelievable…I’m a very respectful man, have been my entire life…I’ve been a supporter of police my entire life and never had any problems whatsoever…Born and raised in Westchester County.”

    Pateman said he fears that if he doesn’t speak up and speak out the police will continue hurting the elderly. “If this could happen to me it could happen to anyone and obviously the White Plains police are not trained appropriately or this would not happen,” he said.

    The well-known real estate developer described how traumatic his rough handling and injuries have been to his emotional state of mind. “This has been a very traumatic event in my life, something I could not believe could happen,” he said.

    As The Free Thought Project has reported, interactions with the elderly must be taken very seriously. Senior citizens are even more susceptible to suffering from both fractures and broken bones—injuries that could greatly impact their quality of life.

    A California woman suffered a broken hip when a police officer ignored her demands for a search warrant before forcibly entering her home and knocking the woman to the floor. The injury led to her physical demise. Even though she won a nearly million-dollar lawsuit—paid for by taxpayers—she died before she was ever able to spend a dime.

    Predictably, the White Plains leadership, instead of issuing an apology, vowed to vehemently defend the charges of police brutality. Karen Pasquale, Senior Advisor to the White Plains Mayor, issued the following statement:

    “In matters of litigation it is our policy to not comment while litigation is pending. We have not yet received the papers in the lawsuit, but we are aware of the case and intend to vigorously defend it in court.”
    An apology could possibly avoid litigation and a costly settlement with the city that will potentially cost taxpayers millions. But that will probably never happen, leaving many scratching their heads in disbelief as it remains to be seen whether the officers who arrested Charles Pateman will be held accountable for their actions.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-nearly-slit-elderly-mans-wrists-abusive-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2017, 09:54:54 PM


    Hello - your back here on Getbig.

    Look forward to the discussions as generally our views differ greatly

    "This Kind of Crap is Tolerated & Routinely Covered up"  as is constantly being shown
    When they are caught out - as in this one.

    Sack them.. ha .. so they can just go sign up elsewhere as a cop.
    The minimum they should be imprisoned.

    See how you cover for them & go lenient on them.
    It's institutionalised behaviour.

    Joe public lying & trying to pervert the course of justice- oh just give them a slap on the wrist.. Yeah Right.

    And this incident was a one off behaviour from them at that station
    Do you think.


    You have a valid point. Firing them isn't enough. I forgot who I was dealing with. I should have been more specific. Fire them, then seek any charges that apply, and the Chief should be an advocate with the Prosecution to go for the fullest sentence. Until that happens, not a lot will change. As Ive stated in the past, integrity comes from the Chief down. I ran a division of 274 cops, I had zero tolerance for bad policing, lying or harassment. My team knew that I didn't tolerate it and they had no problems working under that system. Catching the bad guys is great, not becoming the bad guys while trying to catch them is even better
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 21, 2017, 10:01:31 PM


    FFS -- That bastard cop needs the exact same thing doing to him.

    If you're reading this agnostic & you can in any way try to defend that cop and his action and the punishment given to him - What very little Faith in Cops I have left will be Completely Gone.

    The officers negligence with a citizen in his custody and completely helpless is inexcusable and a person died. 10 days is an abomination. I;m guessing that guy wont be a cop again because of the plea deal and the level of charge but still, we have one chance to do things right... lives depend on it. We are the professionals.. There is no reason the officer couldn't have followed procedure and not caused the death of that person. A travesty
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 10:33:20 PM
    It took 10 years and once again the taxpayers have to pay for the actions of violent criminals instead of pulling that money straight from the pockets of the those thugs and the coffers of their gang.

    $1.25 Million Settlement For Body Slam Caught on Video Surveillance System

    by Felipe Hemming

    March 3, 2007 at the La Fonda Resturant in Yonkers, New York, Irma Marquez suffered injuries when Yonkers police officer Wayne Simoes picked her up in a restaurant and appeared to slam her face-first into the restaurant’s floor.

    As reported by News 12 :

    “A decade after the incident, the city, and the victim have agreed to settle a related lawsuit.

    Video of the encounter made national headlines. It showed officer Wayne Simoes slam Irma Marquez to the ground — knocking her out outside what was then the La Fonda Restaurant at 57 Palisades Ave. Marquez has maintained that she was trying to break up a fight involving her niece, but police were already there when she stepped in.

    Simoes faced federal charges of violating her civil rights. Marquez faced local charges of disorderly conduct and interfering with police. Both of them were acquitted.

    In May 2008, Marquez filed an $11.3 million lawsuit against Simoes and the Yonkers Police Department. Sources say the settlement was for $1 million, but officials would not comment on the record until City Council has a chance to evaluate the settlement. That will likely happen in August, according to Michael Curti, a lawyer for the city.”

    The local version of the USA Today reported :

    “Yonkers’ attorney Michael Curti said the city admitted no wrongdoing by the police officer. Curti said the settlement was less than the $11 million initially sought by Marquez.

    “The final amount of the settlement, which is the culmination of close to a decade of litigation, is similar to an amount the city’s legal team was prepared to recommend many years ago to avoid the uncertainties of trial and the substantial cost of litigation,” Curti wrote in an email.

    Marquez filed her civil lawsuit against the city and Simoes in 2008 and the case was closed on July 10 because of the settlement, according to court records.

    The incident, which was captured on video, led to a criminal prosecution of Simoes, now a Yonkers police sergeant. Simoes was acquitted of a charge of violating Marquez’s civil rights in 2009 after federal prosecutors failed to prove to a jury that he intended to hurt her.

    In that trial, Simoes’ defense contended that he did not throw Marquez to the ground, but that he slipped on the wet barroom floor. After the trial, jurors said a frame-by-frame version of the video showed that Simoes didn’t throw or drop Marquez because he never released her on the way to the floor.” The video show otherwise.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/08/10/watch-1-25-million-settlement-body-slam-caught-video-surveillance-system/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2017, 10:38:50 PM
    As seen in previous posts, the cops protect the prosecutors and the prosecutors return the favor, perpetuating a cycle of abuse and corruption.

    Mississippi Prosecutors Defend Cops Who Killed Innocent Man In Wrong House Raid

    Mississippi cops killed a totally innocent person while serving a warrant on the wrong house, but the DeSoto County District Attorney John Champion is already lobbying public opinion in favor of the police officers who made a fatal mistake.

    He’s saying that officers shot at a dog and killed Ismael Lopez.

    Lopez and his wife Claudia Linares were sleeping peacefully at home when the officers arrived.

    Ismael Lopez went to answer the door and shortly thereafter fell to the bullets fired by an officer from the Southaven Police Department at the age of 41, right at the front door of his mobile home.

    Police bullets pierced his front door.

    He died.

    The Lopez family retained lawyer Murray Wells who firmly says that the police shot an unarmed man, and that the cops have a strong incentive to lie in order to avoid prosecution.

    DeSoto County District Attorney John Champion wouldn’t even admit that officers went to the wrong house, but he did claim that Ismael Lopez was armed, according to The Commercial Appeal:

    The statement that the officers went to the wrong address echoed a similar comment the day before from a local prosecutor, John Champion, who said the officers may very well have been at the wrong house. Champion said Monday that two officers were at the scene and that a pit bull dog burst out of the house, prompting one of the officers to shoot at it. Then a man pointed a gun at officers through an open door, Champion said. The officers repeatedly warned him to put the gun down before one of them opened fire. The attorney representing the family said Lopez, a gun owner, did not have a gun in his hand when he was shot, and that the law firm would do its own investigation to learn what happened.

    Now that DA Champion is finished defending the officers, it will be his government job to prosecute the cops once the family’s criminal complaint is initiated.

    Southaven officers had the right address on their warrants and both houses had visible address markers, when they made their raid in the exurban area just south of Memphis, Tennesee.

    The Southaven officers went to the wrong house anyhow and killed the innocent auto mechanic, leaving his family saying that they will pursue Lopez’s killer to the fullest extent of the law.

    They were searching for Samuel Pearman who posted a video claiming innocence onto Facebook which was broadcast on the local news, which you can see below.

    Instead, they killed an unarmed man.

    The Lopez family’s lawyer Murray Wells was unequivocal in condemning the cops incompetence, and putting key facts on the record in an interview with WMAC:

    “Someone didn’t take the time to analyze the address. This is incredibly tragic and embarrassing to this police department that they can’t read house numbers.”

    He also said that Claudia, who was the only one on the property who could not be held responsible for shooting Lopez, did not hear any commands or instructions being given. In addition, Wells said Lopez never pointed a gun at the officers. “There was a gun on the premises, but the man did not have the gun with him when police shot him,” he said.

    “They’ve been in that home for 13 years. The only time the police had ever been there was when they had been robbed,” Wells said. “No criminal history whatsoever. A long-standing employee of the city of Bartlett, mechanic. Loved in the neighborhood.”

    Ismael Lopez can’t be brought back, and his widow Claudia Linares is going to face an uphill climb seeking justice since the initial remarks portend a fight with the Desoto County District Attorney as he plays criminal defense lawyer for the Mississippi cops who shot and killed her spouse.

    It’s unknown if there are meaningful police recordings of the encounter yet, and the officers’ identities remain secret.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/07/26/mississippi-cops-kill-innocent-man-in-wrong-house-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 23, 2017, 12:10:39 AM
    It took 10 years and once again the taxpayers have to pay for the actions of violent criminals instead of pulling that money straight from the pockets of the those thugs and the coffers of their gang.

    $1.25 Million Settlement For Body Slam Caught on Video Surveillance System

    by Felipe Hemming

    March 3, 2007 at the La Fonda Resturant in Yonkers, New York, Irma Marquez suffered injuries when Yonkers police officer Wayne Simoes picked her up in a restaurant and appeared to slam her face-first into the restaurant’s floor.

    As reported by News 12 :

    “A decade after the incident, the city, and the victim have agreed to settle a related lawsuit.

    Video of the encounter made national headlines. It showed officer Wayne Simoes slam Irma Marquez to the ground — knocking her out outside what was then the La Fonda Restaurant at 57 Palisades Ave. Marquez has maintained that she was trying to break up a fight involving her niece, but police were already there when she stepped in.

    Simoes faced federal charges of violating her civil rights. Marquez faced local charges of disorderly conduct and interfering with police. Both of them were acquitted.

    In May 2008, Marquez filed an $11.3 million lawsuit against Simoes and the Yonkers Police Department. Sources say the settlement was for $1 million, but officials would not comment on the record until City Council has a chance to evaluate the settlement. That will likely happen in August, according to Michael Curti, a lawyer for the city.”

    The local version of the USA Today reported :

    “Yonkers’ attorney Michael Curti said the city admitted no wrongdoing by the police officer. Curti said the settlement was less than the $11 million initially sought by Marquez.

    “The final amount of the settlement, which is the culmination of close to a decade of litigation, is similar to an amount the city’s legal team was prepared to recommend many years ago to avoid the uncertainties of trial and the substantial cost of litigation,” Curti wrote in an email.

    Marquez filed her civil lawsuit against the city and Simoes in 2008 and the case was closed on July 10 because of the settlement, according to court records.

    The incident, which was captured on video, led to a criminal prosecution of Simoes, now a Yonkers police sergeant. Simoes was acquitted of a charge of violating Marquez’s civil rights in 2009 after federal prosecutors failed to prove to a jury that he intended to hurt her.

    In that trial, Simoes’ defense contended that he did not throw Marquez to the ground, but that he slipped on the wet barroom floor. After the trial, jurors said a frame-by-frame version of the video showed that Simoes didn’t throw or drop Marquez because he never released her on the way to the floor.” The video show otherwise.



    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/08/10/watch-1-25-million-settlement-body-slam-caught-video-surveillance-system/

    If you're going to resist the police doing their job, and you get taken to the floor, you might get injured. On the other hand, you might get a cool payday because it's cheaper to pay you off then prove you are being an ass in court. I wish departments would STOP settling out of court.. it gives the wrong impression. Go through the process and let a judge or jury decide
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2017, 12:43:43 AM
    Cop Blows a Fuse, Shoves Handcuffed Man into Concrete Wall, Breaking His Vertebrae

    Milton-Freewater, OR — In the land of the free, you are ostensibly presumed innocent until proven guilty. Even when in jail for an alleged crime, you still ostensibly have your Eighth Amendment right, declaring that “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment inflicted.” However, as the case in the video below illustrates, an Oregon man learned the hard way that many cops couldn’t care less about the constitution or your rights.

    Surveillance footage has just been released in a police misconduct case involving a Milton-Freewater cop and a man who had yet to be convicted of a crime. KEPR news obtained the footage which shows a cop severely injure a defenseless handcuffed man by shoving him face first into a concrete wall.

    KEPR said a citizen came across the video and shared it with them to get this information out. The video shows Officer Brian Scott, who had just arrested 46-year-old Jeffery Allen Fields for theft, and was taking him to the Milton-Freewater police station for processing Sept. 26, 2016.

    As the video begins, we can see that Fields is entirely compliant. He is on his knees, complying with the officer’s commands, and then stands up and walks into the jail — just like he was told.

    As they are walking into the jail, Scott and Fields exchange a few words, however, it does not appear that Fields is attempting to be combative in any way. Once they reach the bottom of the stairs, Scott proceeds in break his oath to the constitution and enact cruel and unusual punishment against a defenseless handcuffed man.

    The officer, apparently angered at the fact that Fields is now bleeding all over their jail, then drags the severely injured man into another room. In this room, he bleeds out for several moments before Scott comes back in to hold paper towels against his head.

    When paramedics arrived, Fields was rushed to the hospital because of the severity of his injuries. He had massive lacerations on his scalp and broken vertebrae.

    The assault was so bad that Scott was actually arrested shortly after. He was held on a $55,000 bond for second-degree assault and official misconduct but quickly released.

    The video was kept secret for a year after Scott first appeared in court. To make matters even more insidious, the details of Scott’s case were kept secret and the proceedings were held behind closed doors.

    In April, two days after pleading not guilty, Scott pleaded guilty but arranged a deal with the court that made sure he will not spend a single day in jail.

    As the East Oregonian reports:

    Umatilla County Circuit Court records show Scott, 38, pleaded guilty to one count each of third-degree assault and first-degree official misconduct. The plea came after a settlement conference in Hermiston circuit court.
    Misconduct is a misdemeanor, but the assault conviction is a Class C felony in Oregon.

    Circuit Judge Eva Temple presided over the closed-door conference and sentenced Scott to three years of probation, which bans him from possessing weapons, firearms or dangerous animals and mandates he must not have any contact with Fields.
    Scott also will have to undergo an anger management evaluation and complete any treatment through a court-approved provider, complete 100 hours of community service and pay a fine of $500.

    The only good thing to come out of this case is the fact that after he pleaded guilty, Scott was given 30 days to relinquish his police certification from the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training. At least, in Oregon, this man won’t be able to wear a badge and victimize other defenseless people.

    Below is the graphic video of what it looks like when angry maniacs are given badges and guns.

    The walk into the jail starts about the 1:45 mark.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-shoves-man-wall-injured/

    The mugshot of the violent criminal:

    (https://kobi5.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/0929-Brian-Scott.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2017, 12:54:14 AM
    The "heroes" who "serve and protect". Stealing Christmas gift money from the pocket of a dying elderly man...

    Cop Caught on Own Body Cam Stealing Dying Elderly Man’s Christmas Money

    TEXAS CITY, Texas (CN) – A widow claims in court that a former Texas City police officer found her husband unconscious on the side of the road with more than $2,000 in cash meant for Christmas gifts and stole the money, just before the man died.

    Linda Mabe sued Texas City and former police officer Linnard Crouch Jr. in Galveston federal court Wednesday, claiming Crouch stole $2,400 in cash from her husband, James Mabe, while he was incapacitated on the side of the road.

    Instead of returning the full amount, Crouch gave Mabe less than $300 in a “stack of $1.00 bills that James kept in the center console of the truck he drove,” according to the complaint.

    “Some people would call that theft,” Linda’s attorney Randall Kallinen said during a press conference Thursday. “Many would call that theft.”

    Linda’s husband was robbed by Crouch, victimized by someone who was supposed to protect and serve the public, she said during the press conference.

    Crouch resigned from his position as a Texas City police officer on Jan. 30, according to a press release issued by the police department on Thursday.

    “Mr. Crouch is facing criminal charges of theft and possession of a controlled substance,” the press release states. “These charges have been presented to the Galveston County District Attorney’s Office and will be presented to a grand jury upon completion of the investigation.”

    The police department declined to give any additional details in the press release, citing the ongoing investigation.

    Kallinen said that if the Texas City Police Department had taken more decisive action after several infractions, the incident involving Mabe and Crouch would not have occurred.

    He also suggested that the Texas City District Attorney’s Office could face repercussions for corruption if they had failed to correct Crouch’s actions after repeated infractions.

    On Dec. 19, 2016, Linda gave her husband the money to buy Christmas presents for the family, according to the complaint.

    “Linda and James loved the Christmas Season with the family tradition for more than 45 years being that Linda and James would host a huge Christmas meal followed by the exchange and opening of Christmas gifts,” the lawsuit states.

    Mabe didn’t complete the trip and stopped on the side of the road when he “felt that something was wrong physically,” according to the complaint.

    Texas City police received a call about the vehicle and sent Crouch to investigate.

    “After opening James’ locked truck door, Officer Crouch then reached into James’ right front pocket and removed James’ $2,400 in Christmas present money and other money,” the complaint states. “Officer Crouch never reported the $2,400 and other money [and] instead gave back less than $300.”

    A police department memo from January corroborates Linda’s allegations.

    “I have reviewed Officer Crouch’s body camera video and have observed Officer Crouch to have removed money from Mr. Mabe’s right front pocket he appears not to have reported,” according to the memo written by Assistant Chief Joe Stanton to Police Chief Robert Burby.

    Crouch was suspended last year prior to the incident described in the lawsuit after several complaints were filed against him, dating back to 2011.

    The former officer failed to complete incident reports, left information out of other completed reports and failed to wear his body camera at all times while on duty, according to a 68-page notice of suspension and a list of official complaints included as an exhibit with the plaintiff’s lawsuit.

    Notices from the list characterized Crouch pattern of actions as “dereliction” and “neglect of duty,” but he didn’t resign until after the Mabe incident.

    After emergency services were called, Mabe was taken to a local emergency room where he died later that evening, according to the complaint. His family says his heart failed.

    Crouch met with Linda and her son, Michael Mabe, at the emergency room to return James’ personal belongings, the complaint states.

    He handed them a baggie with a few hundred dollars inside and allegedly told them that the money was the only personal possession he had found on James.

    According to the complaint, Crouch had also breached protocol by giving Linda and Michael the money directly instead of the usual documenting of property by the police department’s inventory process.

    Michael said during Thursday’s press conference that the police department and district attorney did not believe that Crouch had taken his family’s money.

    He said he didn’t find out about the department’s memo acknowledging the video proof of theft until he requested documents from the department.

    When asked who he blames for the incident, Michael said there was “more than enough anger to go around.”

    He said that in addition to seeking justice for his mother, he wants to help ensure that “this doesn’t happen to someone else” after seeing his mother’s “day-to-day struggle” since the incident in December.

    Michael also indicated that his mother’s lawsuit was filed to focus on the alleged crimes committed, rather than reimbursement of the $2,400.

    “The Mabe family’s Christmas, made so sad by James’ death, was shocking and appalling due to the theft or taking by a police officer of the Mabe’s Christmas money,” the lawsuit states.

    Linda Mabe seeks punitive damages against Texas City and Crouch for alleged Fourth Amendment and due-process violations. Her attorney, Kallinen, is based in Houston.

    Crouch could not be reached for comment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-caught-body-cam-stealing-dying-elderly-mans-christmas-money/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 23, 2017, 03:36:49 AM

    You have a valid point. Firing them isn't enough. I forgot who I was dealing with. I should have been more specific. Fire them, then seek any charges that apply, and the Chief should be an advocate with the Prosecution to go for the fullest sentence. Until that happens, not a lot will change. As Ive stated in the past, integrity comes from the Chief down. I ran a division of 274 cops, I had zero tolerance for bad policing, lying or harassment. My team knew that I didn't tolerate it and they had no problems working under that system. Catching the bad guys is great, not becoming the bad guys while trying to catch them is even better


    Thank you for a very decent upfront honest reply.
    Good man.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 23, 2017, 03:39:12 AM
    The officers negligence with a citizen in his custody and completely helpless is inexcusable and a person died. 10 days is an abomination. I;m guessing that guy wont be a cop again because of the plea deal and the level of charge but still, we have one chance to do things right... lives depend on it. We are the professionals.. There is no reason the officer couldn't have followed procedure and not caused the death of that person. A travesty


    Thanks Again.
    if Only more cops were as you are.
    it appears that the likes of you are very much in the minority.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2017, 11:12:05 AM
    Texas Judge Grants Qualified Immunity to Cop who Shot Innocent Man’s Dog before Detaining him at Gunpoint

    A Texas judge granted qualified immunity to a cop who shot and killed a man’s dog for barking at him, meaning the cop cannot be held liable in civil court.

    A Texas judge issued an order this month granting a cop who shot a man’s dog for barking and allegedly showing his teeth at him qualified immunity, meaning he can’t be held liable in civil court.

    “[The dog} was just kinda walking at me, he wasn’t, he didn’t, I mean . . .” Austin cop Daniel Walsh could be heard saying before cutting off the end of his sentence, according to the lawsuit.

    United States District Court Judge Robert Pitman ruled officer Walsh could possibly be held liable for detaining Julian Reyes,49, for a lengthy period of time, initially at gunpoint.

    Several more officers drew their guns on Reyes after Walsh cuffed him face down and began conducting an investigation even though Reyes was at his own storage unit.

    ‘They had me laying on my face,” Reyes recalled.

    The order was issued earlier this month, over a year after April 24, 2016 when we reported about Judge Robert Pitman allowing Reyes’ pro se civil claim against Austin officers Walsh, Christopher Anderson, former Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo and the City of Austin to move forward.

    It was around midnight on April 24, 2013 when officer Walsh shot Reyes’ dog Shiner Bock then handcuffed and detained him for over 15-minutes for suspicion of burglarizing the facility.

    Reyes, however, had a key to a unit at the facility where he stored his art.

    According to records, before admitting on dash cam Shiner Bock never posed a threat, Walsh arrived at a storage unit to investigate a call about a banging noise, which was later determined to be a piece of tin blowing in the wind outside of  Reyes’ warehouse where he stored art for an after party for Eeyore’s Birthday, an annual Austin festival.

    But rather than wait outside for the other responding officers, Walsh drove his vehicle past a marked property line, which extended a distance from the storage unit, and exited and approached Reyes’ vehicle on foot.

    When he got close to Reyes’ unit, Shiner Bock barked as Walsh spotted the dog.

    “Don’t move! Get back!” Walsh commanded.

    Shiner barked again just before Walsh fatally shot him in the chest.

    Reyes was forced to lay face down while handcuffed and watch his dog bleed to death.

    “Your dog is dead,” Walsh told Reyes after inquiring about his dog during his detainment.

    “I had him nine years,” Reyes described, recalling the friendly nature of his dog.

    “I never had an incident.”

    Reyes, who runs the youtube channel Lizzardo Gitanticus and Facebook page Support for Shiner Bock,  said despite ruling against him, he still thinks Judge Pitman is a good judge whose hands are unfortunately tied by bad case law.

    But said he’s looking forward to his day in court to prove his case about the illegal detainment, which he explains in the videos below.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/08/31/texas-judge-grants-qualified-immunity-cop-shot-innocent-mans-dog-detaining-gunpoint/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 23, 2017, 12:32:08 PM

    Thanks Again.
    if Only more cops were as you are.
    it appears that the likes of you are very much in the minority.

    It just appears that way
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2017, 01:17:55 PM
    The armed and violent criminal gangs keep attacking and abusing people. From a "heroic" cop violently attack and kidnapping a nurse who was perfectly justified and law abiding in her behavior to arresting people for refusing to speak, the uniformed thugs enjoy a level of immunity that ordinary law abiding freedom loving citizens could never dream of.

    But these criminal gangs don't operate alone. They collaborate with prosecutors to provide them with "cases" so the prosecutors can build a record of convictions and plea deals. The prosecutors help the criminal cops and they also receive preferential treatment when they commit crimes. Take a look at this example:

    A drunk prosecutor drives the wrong way in a one way street and crashes into another car, injuring the driver and causing heavy damage to the vehicle. When a cop arrives, he notices the prosecutor is drunk and contacts his watch commander.  Suspiciously enough, the watch commanders orders the cop to use line 3407 which was marked “not recorded”.  When the watch commander asks how the drunk prosecutor would do in a field sobriety test, the cop responds: "probably not amazing".
    If you think it is suspicious that there is so much interest in what the result of the sobriety test would be, it will become more obvious now.
    The watch commander says:
    "Let’s pass him if we can. If we can’t, we can’t, Adam. We’re not going to get fucked. I’d love to pass him on sobriety if we could.”

    To which the cop replies:
    “Alright, I’ll do what I can,”


    The story gets even uglier with the watch commander and other cops who arrive at the scene trying to shift the blame from the prosecutor and cover up the crime. It should be noted here that the supervisor's wife "just happens" to also be a prosecutor that also "just happens" to be working with the drunk prosecutor involved in the accident. In fact it appears that his wife would be doing some investigations into the case and the watch commander says that he would tell his wife not to pull any bodycam footage that shows the prosecutor:
    “I’ll take care of that part. She will be smart enough not to dig into it”

    Do you think the conspiracy by this criminal gang would result in prison time? Think again.

    GRPD Chief David Rahinsky and Grand Rapids City Manager Greg Sundstrom agreed to termination hearings for all three officers.

    Of course you'd expect the cop union a criminal gang to step in and protect its goons:

    However, the city reached agreements with the police union for a lighter punishment for two of them. Officer Adam Ickes was suspended for 30 days without pay; Warwick was suspended for 160 hours, demoted from sergeant to officer, and placed on a two-year probation. Janiskee was fired from his job. He is suing, claiming his rights were violated and he’s also seeking to get his job back.

    There is a lot to this story that shows how these criminals collaborate to commit crimes and also cover up crimes for "special" persons, perpetuating a culture of corruption and abuse.

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/13/grpd-phone-line-recordings-of-ex-prosecutors-crash-released/

    http://woodtv.com/2017/09/14/calls-for-public-apology-after-grpd-calls-released/

    Another incident:

    Cop Lets Wasted Politician Go on DUI—He Gets Drunk Again, Smashes into Car Head On

    Tom Bean, TX — In America, there are two sets of laws — one for the government class of police, politicians and well-connected elite — and one for everybody else. This corrupt system punishes the citizens for crimes the elite commit with impunity. The recent DUI stop of City Councilman Benjamin Vincent in Tom Bean, Texas, illustrates this corruption and shows how it can be detrimental to the safety and well-being of citizens.

    Last Sunday, Vincent was pulled over by Whitewright police officer Andrew LeFevre after he was seen swerving all over the road, driving into oncoming traffic, and sliding through intersections.

    When the officer initiated conversation with Vincent, it was obvious from the start that he was highly intoxicated. He thought it was October and couldn’t complete a sentence or answer any of the questions without blurting out utter slurred nonsense.

    After the city councilman admitted to drinking and was seen breaking numerous laws, the officers decided to let him go.

    “My suggestion is that you call a sober licensed family member to come get you,” LeFevre said. And just like that, this man who should’ve been arrested for driving dangerously drunk was let off with no consequences.

    “Now Mr. Vincent, I want you to understand how big of a deal I’m cutting you here,” LeFevre said in the body camera video taken by Officer Mark Munt. “Between attorney fees, court fees, posting bond, insurance hikes, drivers license surcharges, DWIs can cost north of $20,000. Not to mention the stigma associated with it, the headache and hassle associated with it, having a criminal record. I’m really not trying to jam you up, but what I need you to understand and grasp from all of this is the seriousness of it.”

    But Vincent did not grasp the ‘seriousness of it.’

    On Tuesday, Whitewright Police Chief, Beau Heistand made an ominously predictive statement to the press after acknowledging his officer let a dangerous drunk driver back out on the road.

    “There are a lot of fatalities that are caused by that and allowing someone to get a slap on the wrist and call someone to come take them home isn’t going to get anywhere,” said Chief Heistand.

    He was right.

    Only a few days later, after he’d been let off for putting the public at risk by driving while highly intoxicated, Vincent was right back at it. This time, however, the cops wouldn’t find him before he hurt someone.

    As the Herald Democrat reports, the two-vehicle wreck involving Vincent and Elmer Stuckey, the driver of a Tom Bean Independent School District vehicle, caused injuries to both drivers, and both were transported to the hospital. In the early afternoon, Vincent was released from the hospital and arrested by a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper. Vincent was booked into the Grayson County Jail for intoxicated assault with a vehicle causing serious bodily injury.

    “Today about 10 a.m., officers with our agency and the Tom Bean Fire Department responded to a call of a major accident at the intersection of State Highway 11 and Britton Street,” Tom Bean Police Chief Tim Green said. “Upon initial observations, it was determined the accident involved a member of Tom Bean City Council and an employee of the Tom Bean Independent School District.”

    Because police chose not to arrest a man because he was a city councilman, an innocent man was severely injured. Their corruption led to the suffering of others and it could’ve been far worse.

    For his actions, LeFevre was fired.

    As innocent citizens are given DUIs for being completely sober, wasted politicians are granted get out of jail free cards and allowed to hurt other people. While many people will claim these are signs of a broken system, those who pay attention know it was, in fact, intentionally set up this way.

    As you watch the video below, put yourself in Vincent’s shoes. Do you think cops would’ve treated you the same way if you did what he did?



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-lets-wasted-politician-go-on-dui-he-gets-drunk-again-smashes-into-car-head-on/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 23, 2017, 02:05:34 PM
    Fired is the right answer. What an idiot.. did he think this was the 60's?  Failure on his entire chain of command to allow an atmosphere where that decision is even considered. I know of many instances where off duty cops were arrested and as I said, because they were off duty cops they were scrutinized even more, or at least a couple I have personal knowledge were. So this kind of crap is unethical and unnecessary. I made it clear as did many others, if you put me in a position where I could lose my job because you made bad choices, you're going to jail, I'm not going to think twice about it 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2017, 07:35:31 PM
    Remember this case?

    Cop Fired for Attacking Innocent Elderly Vet Gets Termination Reversed & Back Pay

    Seattle, WA — An overzealous cop was fired in 2015 after the officer was caught falsely accusing a 69-year-old man of swinging a golf club at her patrol car. Accused by the police chief of acting with racial bias in an unnecessarily aggressive manner, Officer Cynthia Whitlatch wrongfully arrested an Air Force veteran walking down the street using a golf club as a cane. Although Whitlatch argued that her dash cam video recorded the elderly man swinging at her, the video does not support any of her allegations. Now, two years later, this cop is having her termination reversed and receiving two years of back pay.

    As KIRO 7 reports:

    The back pay is more than $105,000 in two lump payments, paying her for 90 hours a month for the time since she was fired. All sustained findings by the Office of Professional Accountability about Whitlatch’s conduct will remain in place.
    The agreement, signed Saturday by Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole, also is expected to give Whitlatch her full pension for her 18 years as an officer and the two additional years after her firing.
    “Her not being on the force, that’s a good thing, regardless of how it is done,” Wingate said. “I wish nothing bad on nobody. I’m not here to hate on anybody. … That’s not me.”

    At 1:06 p.m. on July 9, 2014, while collecting her near $50 per hour salary, the dash cam video from Whitlatch’s patrol car captured footage of the officer harassing 69-year-old William Wingate, who appears standing on the corner and using a golf club to support himself. After stepping out of her patrol car, Whitlatch immediately orders the elderly man to drop his golf club even though he is not using it in a threatening manner. Unable to hear the officer at first, Wingate removes an earbud from his left ear and repeatedly asks the antagonistic cop: “What’s going on?”

    As Whitlatch continues ordering him to put down the golf club, Wingate tells her to call someone because he’s been walking in Seattle with that golf club for 20 years. After she informs Wingate that he’s being audio and videotaped, the apparently delusional officer accuses the elderly gentleman of swinging his golf club at her.

    “I ain’t done nothing to nobody,” Wingate explains to her.

    In response, Whitlatch says, “You just swang that golf club at me.”

    “I did not!” Wingate defended.

    “Yes, you did. Right back there. It was on audio and videotape,” Whitlatch lied.

    While Whitlatch can be heard requesting for backup on her radio, Wingate begins explaining to a bystander that he’s being harassed for no good reason. After Whitlatch threatens to arrest him, Wingate tells her, “My church is up there, and everybody knows me.”

    As Officer Chris Cole approaches the scene, Whitlatch can briefly be seen brandishing a nightstick while following Wingate. After the frightened senior hands over his golf club, Whitlatch digs through his pockets but finds nothing illegal. The rest of the video depicts Wingate being loaded into the back of a transport van and sent to jail for committing no crime. (The abuse starts at 1:45)



    Falsely accused of swinging his golf club at a patrol car, Wingate spent over 25 hours in jail after being booked for obstruction and harassment. Although Whitlatch pushed the Seattle City Attorney’s Office to charge the elderly veteran with obstructing a police officer, an assistant city attorney declined to charge him with obstruction but decided instead to charge Wingate with unlawful use of a weapon to intimidate.

    Unable to afford decent legal representation, Wingate pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor charge under an agreement in which the case would be expunged after two years if he complied with all conditions ordered by the judge. But after reviewing the dash cam footage, the Seattle City Attorney’s Office dismissed the charge, and the police chief formally apologized to Wingate nearly eight months after his arrest.

    After the dash cam video was released to the public in January of 2015, Mayor Ed Murray ordered Whitlatch to be removed from public patrol duties. In a disciplinary action report filed last year, Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole accused Whitlatch of being inappropriately aggressive while unnecessarily escalating the situation.

    “You never asked the individual any questions during the Terry stop to determine if he had, in fact, swung the golf club towards you and/or into a stop sign,” wrote Chief O’Toole. “Despite that, and despite never actually seeing him swing a golf club toward your car or hitting a stop sign, you actively participated in moving forward with an arrest for obstruction and even called the prosecutor days later to push for prosecution of the individual.”

    In April of 2015, Wingate filed a lawsuit against Whitlatch for race discrimination, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violation of his civil rights. His lawsuit also accused her of making racially derogatory comments on her personal Facebook page after Wingate’s arrest and the Ferguson riots. In her report, Chief O’Toole noted that Whitlatch also made disturbing comments about the race of a judge and deputy chief involved in expunging Wingate’s criminal record related to his wrongful arrest.

    “You expressed a strong belief that these actions were taken because the judge and deputy chief are black, and that race drove the decision-making of a high-ranking Department official and a long-serving Municipal Court Judge, not the legitimate factual and legal analysis by thoughtful and dedicated public servants,” O’Toole wrote. “Such statements further indicate that your biased views prevent you from being able to honestly reflect on your own job performance and successfully receive constructive criticism of your policing techniques because you view the critiques as racially motivated.”

    Unwilling to admit any fault, Whitlatch claims that she was being targeted due to the fact that she is white. In her report, O’Toole wrote, “I was disappointed by your failure…to take any responsibility, or show any understanding that your conduct at issue here was inappropriate.”

    “Your inability to understand, even in hindsight, that your behavior was unnecessarily aggressive, an abuse of discretion, and negatively impacted the community’s confidence in this police service, offers me no pathway to understand how you can improve and do better,” O’Toole concluded. “For the reasons summarized above, and while giving careful consideration to your full employment history as well as the facts of this case, your employment is terminated.”

    Now, however, all that sentiment has apparently changed and O’Toole signed the grievance resolution on Saturday to show that Witlatch retired instead of being fired. An innocent elderly man was assaulted, kidnapped, and falsely charged. The cop who did this to him was rewarded with a $50 per hour salary for two years of not working. And, Americans have the audacity to call this ‘justice.’

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/elderly-veteran-abused-officer-back-pay/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2017, 04:14:54 PM
    More crimes and corruption by the armed violent criminal gang and once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill.

    Innocent Man Get $1.6M After Surveillance Video Proved Cops Beat and Framed Him

    Caldwell County, TX — An innocent man has received over $1.6 million from a civil lawsuit because he was beaten and framed by cops for being 100 percent compliant and never committing a crime.

    “Our client feels vindicated,” said attorney Karl Seelbach, of Doyle & Seelbach PLLC. “If there’s one thing about Larry Faulkenberry, is his story is consistent from day one.”

    As KXAN reports:

    A federal jury awarded a Central Texas man more than $1.3 million in response to a civil lawsuit against Caldwell County deputies who arrested him on charges that were never prosecuted by the district attorney’s office.
    Lawrence Faulkenberry was also awarded $350,000 in punitive damages related to a deputy who initiated a leg sweep, his attorney said.


    This infuriating story began back in January of 2015 when Faulkenberry’s 16-year-old son decided that he would play a trick on his dad for grounding him. So, he called the Caldwell County Sheriff’s Department and claimed his dad was drunk and waving a gun.

    This 16-year-old’s prank nearly got his father killed.

    Deputies responding to the call arrived to find Faulkenberry entirely compliant—not drunk— and unarmed. He does not even own a gun.

    These facts, however, were of no concern to the cops who arrived only to assault, injure, arrest, and lie about Faulkenberry attacking them.

    “They yelled ‘sheriff’s department.’ What do you need? I put my hands up. ‘Turn around and walk backwards.’ I’ll stand here, you come here and put handcuffs on me,” Faulkenberry said.

    “Why the fuck y’all here?” Faulkenberry recounted himself saying. “Before I could finish the sentence, I got slammed to the ground.”

    While on the ground, deputies rubbed his head into the gravel and punched Faulkenberry in the face, leaving his face covered in abrasions.

    “They left me laying on the ground for about 15 minutes, face down,” he said.

    According to the police report, by Deputy Michael Taylor, Faulkenberry attacked the cops, and they were forced to beat him in an act of self-defense.

    “I observed Lawrence Faulkenberry push Sergeant Yost with the left side of his body and elbow into a tree causing him to fall and injure his left shin and right knee cap. I observed Lawrence Faulkenberry to forcefully resist Deputies while attempting to lawfully detain him for officer safety. Deputies detained Lawrence Faulkenberry using the least amount of force necessary to gain compliance from Lawrence Faulkenberry.”
    “If you watch the video, absolutely none of that occurred,” he said. “I never touched the guy. That was a complete fabrication.”


    After spending ten days in jail on felony charges of assaulting an officer and resisting arrest, prosecutors finally got around to viewing the surveillance footage that proved their cops were lying thugs. After they had viewed the footage, all charges were dropped.

    However, in spite of the video clearing Faulkenberry and proving the cops lied to set him up, not one of the three deputies involved has ever faced discipline. Caldwell County Sheriff’s Office deputies Dustin M. Yost, Michael Taylor, and Houseton (whose first name was not mentioned in the lawsuit), all named in the lawsuit, were never fired for nearly killing and innocent man and lying to frame him and put him in jail.

    Faulkenberry, who owns a motorcycle parts shop, was facing several years in prison. This innocent man could have been locked in a cage and deprived of freedom because of these lying cops, and yet it was the taxpayer forced to pay for the police officers’ negligence—to the tune of $1.6 million.

    “Without the video, I would be in prison. There is no doubt about that,” Faulkenberry said.

    Despite dropping the charges, the sheriff’s department stuck by their story. In response to Faulkenberry’s lawsuit, the department issued the following statement last year.

    Defendants specifically deny that they violated Plaintiff’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights or any other rights under the United States Constitution or the laws of the State of Texas. Specifically, Defendants deny that they used excessive force and unreasonable seizure, fabricated criminal charges, unreasonable search—warrantless search of property as alleged in paragraphs 29 through 32.

    The video below illustrates two powerful points. The first point is that filming the cops saves lives. The second point is that cops will lie to protect themselves and couldn’t care less about ruining the lives of innocent people in the process.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-police-1-6m-framed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2017, 04:19:11 PM
    This career criminal should have been sent to the electric chair. At least this time it's the violent criminal, and not the taxpayers, that must foot the bill for this poor man's death.

    Cop Forced to Pay $6.3M of Own Money to Family of Innocent 70yo Man He Cuffed and Watched Die

    Malakoff, TX — As TFTP has frequently reported, if police officers are not held accountable for their actions in one department, they will simply change departments and continue abusing citizens. We call them gypsy cops. One such gypsy cop is Ernesto Fierro, whose time has finally come.

    In 2005, Fierro was allowed to resign from the Dallas Police Department after he was involved in two hit-and-runs in which he fled the scene. That would be a felony conviction for the average citizen, but police officers are often given a pass for their crimes, allowed to resign and be employed elsewhere at another LEA (law enforcement agency).

    Later, Fierro was employed in 2011 with the Ferris, Texas, Police Department when he was involved in the death of a motorcyclist during a high-speed chase. Had Fierro been held accountable for his actions in Dallas and later in Ferris, he might not have allegedly killed William Livezey Jr. (70), of New Sharon, Iowa. But, he was not held accountable and was therefore allowed to strike again.

    Fierro, the gypsy cop, left Ferris and was employed in Malakoff, Texas in April 2014 where he was a police officer. While riding his own personal motorcycle, Fierro was involved in a road-rage incident with Livezey, who was driving a tractor-trailer load of reclaimed barn lumber from his business in Taintor, Iowa, to a client in Houston.

    The incident began when Fierro perceived Livezey to be trying to kill him with his truck. According to the DesMoines Register:

    Fierro claimed in testimony that Livezey, who lived in New Sharon, Iowa, had “homicidal intent with his attacks of road rage” and came close to killing him while he was on his motorcycle.
    But Fierro’s claims Livezey was trying to kill him were disputed by more than one witness who saw the gypsy cop driving erratically.

    But witnesses said they saw the motorcycle weave from side-to-side and dart in front of Livezey’s truck at least 15 times, forcing it onto the shoulder. At one point, Fierro allegedly kicked the truck’s tire, witnesses told police.

    Fierro then arrested Livezey for “aggravated assault” and placed the elderly man in handcuffs. That’s when the truck driver said he wasn’t feeling well. He told the other officers he was afraid Fierro was going to kill him. Fierro claimed he was faking his illness.

    When backup officers arrived, Livezey said his chest was hurting “and he thought the other man was going to hurt him,” the lawsuit says. Fierro claimed Livezey was “faking” and just “putting on a show” to avoid going to jail.

    The other officers who were on-duty, apparently realizing the man’s health condition was grave, took him out of handcuffs and placed him into his vehicle, where he turned purple and stopped breathing. Shortly after, he was declared dead of a cardiac arrest. The family sued the city of Malakoff, the police department, and officer Fierro.

    A judge removed the city and the police department from the lawsuit and allowed the suit to proceed against Fierro as the solely responsible individual for Livezey’s death. A jury found him guilty and awarded the family $6.3 million dollars as a civil penalty for causing the elderly Iowa man’s death. Fierro will be solely responsible for paying the judgment.

    The Livezey family’s attorneys claimed Fierro “wrongfully and illegally handcuffed, arrested, assaulted, and detained which ultimately caused his death at the scene.” The jury agreed. Finally, after two hit-and-run incidents, and the deaths of two citizens, Fierro was forced to surrender his Texas peace officer’s license.

    Finally, after two hit-and-run incidents, and the deaths of two citizens, Fierro was forced to surrender his Texas peace officer’s license. If Fierro had been held accountable for his actions when he was in Dallas, and been charged with felony hit-and-run, for example, maybe the two other individuals would still be alive today.

    Fierro’s story is precisely why we at TFTP do what we do, to expose the double standard, and hold police officers to the same standard to which the rest of society is held.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/gypsy-cop-kills-two-finally-forced-answer-actions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 26, 2017, 06:18:34 PM
    good!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 26, 2017, 07:33:50 PM
    More crimes and corruption by the armed violent criminal gang and once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill.

    Innocent Man Get $1.6M After Surveillance Video Proved Cops Beat and Framed Him

    Caldwell County, TX — An innocent man has received over $1.6 million from a civil lawsuit because he was beaten and framed by cops for being 100 percent compliant and never committing a crime.

    “Our client feels vindicated,” said attorney Karl Seelbach, of Doyle & Seelbach PLLC. “If there’s one thing about Larry Faulkenberry, is his story is consistent from day one.”

    As KXAN reports:

    A federal jury awarded a Central Texas man more than $1.3 million in response to a civil lawsuit against Caldwell County deputies who arrested him on charges that were never prosecuted by the district attorney’s office.
    Lawrence Faulkenberry was also awarded $350,000 in punitive damages related to a deputy who initiated a leg sweep, his attorney said.


    This infuriating story began back in January of 2015 when Faulkenberry’s 16-year-old son decided that he would play a trick on his dad for grounding him. So, he called the Caldwell County Sheriff’s Department and claimed his dad was drunk and waving a gun.

    This 16-year-old’s prank nearly got his father killed.

    Deputies responding to the call arrived to find Faulkenberry entirely compliant—not drunk— and unarmed. He does not even own a gun.

    These facts, however, were of no concern to the cops who arrived only to assault, injure, arrest, and lie about Faulkenberry attacking them.

    “They yelled ‘sheriff’s department.’ What do you need? I put my hands up. ‘Turn around and walk backwards.’ I’ll stand here, you come here and put handcuffs on me,” Faulkenberry said.

    “Why the fuck y’all here?” Faulkenberry recounted himself saying. “Before I could finish the sentence, I got slammed to the ground.”

    While on the ground, deputies rubbed his head into the gravel and punched Faulkenberry in the face, leaving his face covered in abrasions.

    “They left me laying on the ground for about 15 minutes, face down,” he said.

    According to the police report, by Deputy Michael Taylor, Faulkenberry attacked the cops, and they were forced to beat him in an act of self-defense.

    “I observed Lawrence Faulkenberry push Sergeant Yost with the left side of his body and elbow into a tree causing him to fall and injure his left shin and right knee cap. I observed Lawrence Faulkenberry to forcefully resist Deputies while attempting to lawfully detain him for officer safety. Deputies detained Lawrence Faulkenberry using the least amount of force necessary to gain compliance from Lawrence Faulkenberry.”
    “If you watch the video, absolutely none of that occurred,” he said. “I never touched the guy. That was a complete fabrication.”


    After spending ten days in jail on felony charges of assaulting an officer and resisting arrest, prosecutors finally got around to viewing the surveillance footage that proved their cops were lying thugs. After they had viewed the footage, all charges were dropped.

    However, in spite of the video clearing Faulkenberry and proving the cops lied to set him up, not one of the three deputies involved has ever faced discipline. Caldwell County Sheriff’s Office deputies Dustin M. Yost, Michael Taylor, and Houseton (whose first name was not mentioned in the lawsuit), all named in the lawsuit, were never fired for nearly killing and innocent man and lying to frame him and put him in jail.

    Faulkenberry, who owns a motorcycle parts shop, was facing several years in prison. This innocent man could have been locked in a cage and deprived of freedom because of these lying cops, and yet it was the taxpayer forced to pay for the police officers’ negligence—to the tune of $1.6 million.

    “Without the video, I would be in prison. There is no doubt about that,” Faulkenberry said.

    Despite dropping the charges, the sheriff’s department stuck by their story. In response to Faulkenberry’s lawsuit, the department issued the following statement last year.

    Defendants specifically deny that they violated Plaintiff’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights or any other rights under the United States Constitution or the laws of the State of Texas. Specifically, Defendants deny that they used excessive force and unreasonable seizure, fabricated criminal charges, unreasonable search—warrantless search of property as alleged in paragraphs 29 through 32.

    The video below illustrates two powerful points. The first point is that filming the cops saves lives. The second point is that cops will lie to protect themselves and couldn’t care less about ruining the lives of innocent people in the process.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-police-1-6m-framed/


    It should be the criminal thugs ( cops ) who should be forced to pay the $ compensation
    Out of there savings / pension etc - also prosecuted to the max.

    Video evidence is only ever Real evedince when it is cops using it as evidence
    Otherwise it doesn't tell the whole story .....  ::)
    FFS who much longer is this Bullshit going to go on for.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 26, 2017, 07:40:19 PM
     >:(

    [

    quote author=Skeletor link=topic=329944.msg8883630#msg8883630 date=1506467951]
    This career criminal should have been sent to the electric chair. At least this time it's the violent criminal, and not the taxpayers, that must foot the bill for this poor man's death.

    Cop Forced to Pay $6.3M of Own Money to Family of Innocent 70yo Man He Cuffed and Watched Die

    Malakoff, TX — As TFTP has frequently reported, if police officers are not held accountable for their actions in one department, they will simply change departments and continue abusing citizens. We call them gypsy cops. One such gypsy cop is Ernesto Fierro, whose time has finally come.

    In 2005, Fierro was allowed to resign from the Dallas Police Department after he was involved in two hit-and-runs in which he fled the scene. That would be a felony conviction for the average citizen, but police officers are often given a pass for their crimes, allowed to resign and be employed elsewhere at another LEA (law enforcement agency).

    Later, Fierro was employed in 2011 with the Ferris, Texas, Police Department when he was involved in the death of a motorcyclist during a high-speed chase. Had Fierro been held accountable for his actions in Dallas and later in Ferris, he might not have allegedly killed William Livezey Jr. (70), of New Sharon, Iowa. But, he was not held accountable and was therefore allowed to strike again.

    Fierro, the gypsy cop, left Ferris and was employed in Malakoff, Texas in April 2014 where he was a police officer. While riding his own personal motorcycle, Fierro was involved in a road-rage incident with Livezey, who was driving a tractor-trailer load of reclaimed barn lumber from his business in Taintor, Iowa, to a client in Houston.

    The incident began when Fierro perceived Livezey to be trying to kill him with his truck. According to the DesMoines Register:

    Fierro claimed in testimony that Livezey, who lived in New Sharon, Iowa, had “homicidal intent with his attacks of road rage” and came close to killing him while he was on his motorcycle.
    But Fierro’s claims Livezey was trying to kill him were disputed by more than one witness who saw the gypsy cop driving erratically.

    But witnesses said they saw the motorcycle weave from side-to-side and dart in front of Livezey’s truck at least 15 times, forcing it onto the shoulder. At one point, Fierro allegedly kicked the truck’s tire, witnesses told police.

    Fierro then arrested Livezey for “aggravated assault” and placed the elderly man in handcuffs. That’s when the truck driver said he wasn’t feeling well. He told the other officers he was afraid Fierro was going to kill him. Fierro claimed he was faking his illness.

    When backup officers arrived, Livezey said his chest was hurting “and he thought the other man was going to hurt him,” the lawsuit says. Fierro claimed Livezey was “faking” and just “putting on a show” to avoid going to jail.

    The other officers who were on-duty, apparently realizing the man’s health condition was grave, took him out of handcuffs and placed him into his vehicle, where he turned purple and stopped breathing. Shortly after, he was declared dead of a cardiac arrest. The family sued the city of Malakoff, the police department, and officer Fierro.

    A judge removed the city and the police department from the lawsuit and allowed the suit to proceed against Fierro as the solely responsible individual for Livezey’s death. A jury found him guilty and awarded the family $6.3 million dollars as a civil penalty for causing the elderly Iowa man’s death. Fierro will be solely responsible for paying the judgment.

    The Livezey family’s attorneys claimed Fierro “wrongfully and illegally handcuffed, arrested, assaulted, and detained which ultimately caused his death at the scene.” The jury agreed. Finally, after two hit-and-run incidents, and the deaths of two citizens, Fierro was forced to surrender his Texas peace officer’s license.

    Finally, after two hit-and-run incidents, and the deaths of two citizens, Fierro was forced to surrender his Texas peace officer’s license. If Fierro had been held accountable for his actions when he was in Dallas, and been charged with felony hit-and-run, for example, maybe the two other individuals would still be alive today.

    Fierro’s story is precisely why we at TFTP do what we do, to expose the double standard, and hold police officers to the same standard to which the rest of society is held.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/gypsy-cop-kills-two-finally-forced-answer-actions/
    [/quote]
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 27, 2017, 12:13:11 PM
    Good job from those workers in subduing this violent thug, they might even have done a better job than the cops since no one got shot or killed or left paralyzed. Hopefully we will see more instances like that where citizens can be active against the abuse and crimes. Let's see now if this violent thug will face charges.

    Cop Attacks Road Workers So They Take Him Down in Citizen’s Arrest

    Louisville, KY — A Kentucky State Trooper on a power trip allegedly got violent with a road construction crew over the weekend. However, as the video of incident shows, unlike most scenarios with cops on power trips, it was the Trooper who got taken down, not the citizens.

    According to video and the witness accounts from the road crew, Trooper Anthony Harrison punched a worker and put them all in danger as he drove through a construction site Sunday night.

    According to the crew, Harrison drove too fast toward their work zone near Fort Knox about 11:30 p.m. Sunday, adding that he stopped his personal car abruptly, confronted the workers and started arguing.

    Two of the workers told WDRB that Harrison was angry about not seeing the crew and their equipment in a closed-off and marked traffic lane.

    In the video, Harrison is seen yelling at one of the workers over their disagreement and gets belligerent with the woman who asks him not to yell at her.

    “Don’t yell at me,” the woman says.

    “I will yell at you!” Harrison barks back as he tries to intimidate her. “Or what!?”

    Harrison flashed his badge and let it be known that he was a trooper, however, he still got unnecessarily violent.

    When Harrison noticed that he was being recorded, he became even more enraged. He then appears to attack the man filming and at this point, all hell breaks loose.

    “Me pulling the phone and filming him, that just sent him over the top,” said Joey Gaddis, who shot the video. “He lunged at me for the phone. I felt like he was trying to grab at my neck.”

    At this point, the crew takes Harrison down and disarms him in a citizen’s arrest as they called the police. The crew’s level of force appeared to be entirely justified and kept to a minimum, only using enough force to hold Harrison down. Unlike many police officers would’ve done in this scenario, no head strikes, baton blows, or tasers were used to subdue the officer.

    “That badge doesn’t give the right to get in someone’s face like that,” the woman said as they held down Harrison.

    The crew then continued to hold Harrison down, without incident, until police officers arrived. However, once police arrived everything changed — they let him go.

    Gaddis explained that once the other troopers showed up, they immediately moved to protect their brother in blue by treating the road workers as the criminals.

    “It seemed like we were in the wrong. That’s the way we felt,” he said. “They lined us all up in a row to take pictures of us like we jumped out of the car on him.”

    According to WDRB, KSP said they’ve started an internal affairs investigation and that what’s on the video does not reflect the image the department strives for with the public.

    “Obviously, it is concerning what we see on the video,” said Lt. Michael Webb, a spokesperson for KSP. “However, I would caution any of the viewers who see that video to allow us to conduct our internal investigation to its final stages and follow the facts to where they will take us.”

    The most disconcerting aspect of this scenario is that had Harrison been a regular citizen and not a cop the result would’ve played out much differently.

    If a regular citizen would’ve just gotten out of their car they would’ve been subject to police force and arrest. However, if that regular citizen then became violent with the crew, like Harrison was seen doing, they most assuredly would’ve been arrested. But not if you are a police officer.


    The videos below make two powerful points. The first point is that police officers are not magically protected from citizens they abuse. This cop appeared to be entirely in the wrong and the citizens acted to stop it and did so with minimal force, providing an excellent example of how police should do it.

    The second point is that even though there was video evidence of Harrison losing it and assaulting a person for filming, most likely due to the fact that he is a cop, Harrison was not arrested and will likely face no punishment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-citizens-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 27, 2017, 09:54:44 PM
    http://photoblog.statesman.com/austin-police-officer-awarded-congressional-medal-for-bravery

    Cops should be fired for killing
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 27, 2017, 10:19:47 PM
    Quote from: Coach is Back! on Today at 09:52:24 PM
    This being said. Are you on the side of them kneeling or standing. The kneeling part comes from the left screaming racial equality. IMO, this is BS. They do it during the anthem. Villanueva stood for the flag because he served. I respect your service 100000% but because you served shouldn't dismiss my views.

    As a cop from a major city.. and being privy to statistics and news media I feel the cops and the courts have dropped the ball in some cases. Enough to bolster their claim of inequality. I don't agree with the percentage, but I acknowledge there is room for improvement. I fought for my county, but I also believe strongly in the constitution and 1st amendment rights. It's not contingent on whether  I agree with their views or not. I'd much rather they peacefully protest than riot in the streets. Now the player that was making a show of stretching during the anthem, pure disrespect. Those quietly taking a knee? I think our country is strong enough to withstand a little kneeling during the anthem. I've protected the KKK  while they  spewed horrific rhetoric. I've protected Black Lives Matter while they insulted me and my co-workers. I look at the big picture. What makes America great in my opinion, is the ability to voice an unpopular view



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 27, 2017, 10:49:31 PM
    Good job from those workers in subduing this violent thug, they might even have done a better job than the cops since no one got shot or killed or left paralyzed. Hopefully we will see more instances like that where citizens can be active against the abuse and crimes. Let's see now if this violent thug will face charges.

    Cop Attacks Road Workers So They Take Him Down in Citizen’s Arrest

    Louisville, KY — A Kentucky State Trooper on a power trip allegedly got violent with a road construction crew over the weekend. However, as the video of incident shows, unlike most scenarios with cops on power trips, it was the Trooper who got taken down, not the citizens.

    According to video and the witness accounts from the road crew, Trooper Anthony Harrison punched a worker and put them all in danger as he drove through a construction site Sunday night.

    According to the crew, Harrison drove too fast toward their work zone near Fort Knox about 11:30 p.m. Sunday, adding that he stopped his personal car abruptly, confronted the workers and started arguing.

    Two of the workers told WDRB that Harrison was angry about not seeing the crew and their equipment in a closed-off and marked traffic lane.

    In the video, Harrison is seen yelling at one of the workers over their disagreement and gets belligerent with the woman who asks him not to yell at her.

    “Don’t yell at me,” the woman says.

    “I will yell at you!” Harrison barks back as he tries to intimidate her. “Or what!?”

    Harrison flashed his badge and let it be known that he was a trooper, however, he still got unnecessarily violent.

    When Harrison noticed that he was being recorded, he became even more enraged. He then appears to attack the man filming and at this point, all hell breaks loose.

    “Me pulling the phone and filming him, that just sent him over the top,” said Joey Gaddis, who shot the video. “He lunged at me for the phone. I felt like he was trying to grab at my neck.”

    At this point, the crew takes Harrison down and disarms him in a citizen’s arrest as they called the police. The crew’s level of force appeared to be entirely justified and kept to a minimum, only using enough force to hold Harrison down. Unlike many police officers would’ve done in this scenario, no head strikes, baton blows, or tasers were used to subdue the officer.

    “That badge doesn’t give the right to get in someone’s face like that,” the woman said as they held down Harrison.

    The crew then continued to hold Harrison down, without incident, until police officers arrived. However, once police arrived everything changed — they let him go.

    Gaddis explained that once the other troopers showed up, they immediately moved to protect their brother in blue by treating the road workers as the criminals.

    “It seemed like we were in the wrong. That’s the way we felt,” he said. “They lined us all up in a row to take pictures of us like we jumped out of the car on him.”

    According to WDRB, KSP said they’ve started an internal affairs investigation and that what’s on the video does not reflect the image the department strives for with the public.

    “Obviously, it is concerning what we see on the video,” said Lt. Michael Webb, a spokesperson for KSP. “However, I would caution any of the viewers who see that video to allow us to conduct our internal investigation to its final stages and follow the facts to where they will take us.”

    The most disconcerting aspect of this scenario is that had Harrison been a regular citizen and not a cop the result would’ve played out much differently.

    If a regular citizen would’ve just gotten out of their car they would’ve been subject to police force and arrest. However, if that regular citizen then became violent with the crew, like Harrison was seen doing, they most assuredly would’ve been arrested. But not if you are a police officer.


    The videos below make two powerful points. The first point is that police officers are not magically protected from citizens they abuse. This cop appeared to be entirely in the wrong and the citizens acted to stop it and did so with minimal force, providing an excellent example of how police should do it.

    The second point is that even though there was video evidence of Harrison losing it and assaulting a person for filming, most likely due to the fact that he is a cop, Harrison was not arrested and will likely face no punishment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-citizens-arrest/




    Video evidence is only ever Real evedince when it is cops using it as evidence
    Otherwise it doesn't tell the whole story .....  Roll Eyes
    FFS who much longer is this Bullshit going to go on for.

    Arsewipes in uniform
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2017, 02:56:57 PM
    Once again the taxpayers will have to foot the bill for the actions of those thugs.

    Woman Prevents Cops from Entering Home With No Warrant, So They Break Her Leg

    Santa Clara, CA — The taxpayers of Santa Clara will be shelling out a massive $6.7 million to settle a federal civil-rights lawsuit that was entirely preventable had a rogue cops not decided to violate their oaths and kick down the door of a family’s home—with no warrant.

    On April 12, 2016, Danielle Burfine was in her home when multiple Santa Clara officers came to her door and demanded entry into her home to arrest Burfine’s 15-year-old daughter. They had no warrant.

    Instead of simply going back to a judge and obtaining a warrant to constitutionally arrest the young woman, Sergeant Gregory Hill took it upon himself to kick down their front door. Because Burfine was attempting to prevent the officers from entering her home without a warrant, she was thrown down, causing her to hit a stone pillar which broke her leg, according to the lawsuit.

    “This shocking video shows obvious excessive force, wrongful entry without a warrant, and extreme callousness as Danielle broke her ankle and cried in pain,” attorney Michael Haddad said.

    As the video begins, Hill and Burfine are involved in a standoff as the mother refuses to allow the officers in her home until she sees a warrant. Santa Clara police claimed they had a right to enter the home of the teen on the basis of “on-view charges.” This term typically refers to a crime or evidence that an officer witnesses directly. However, the alleged crime was over a week old by this time, so it did not apply in this instance.

    “This is not like they were in hot pursuit of a suspect running from a crime,” Haddad said. “They were clearly in a zone where they now required a warrant.”

    But these officers felt no warrant was needed, so now the taxpayers are shelling out millions to pay for their careless mistake and brutality.

    The officers tried to be polite even as they began kicking at her door. However, the fact that they were nice to her while violating her rights does not dismiss the outcome of this scenario.

    “We’re going to arrest her. That’s going to happen,” Hill says before breaking into the woman’s home. “You’re going to want to stand back, because I don’t want you to get hit by the door when I kick it.”

    Burfine replies, “No I’m not moving, and you do not have permission to kick down my door.”

    Instead of listening to reason, Hill kicks down the door, Burfine is assaulted and then the mother can be heard yelling “No you are not allowed to come into my house!” before she falls and screams, “My ankle just broke! My leg just broke!” In the video, we can see the bone pushing outward on Burfine’s pant leg—a horrific sight indeed.

    The city asserts that Burfine “lost her footing, tripped off the front porch and fractured her ankle.” However, even with body camera footage of the incident, they chose not to contest the lawsuit and settle for this record amount.

    “Although there was significant disagreement about the extent of the injury, there was no dispute that the plaintiff sustained a broken ankle in the course of the entry to the plaintiff’s home without a warrant,’’ City Attorney Brian Doyle said in a statement. “The city’s insurer determined that the most prudent course of action was for it to pay an amount that would result in settlement.”

    As Mercury News reports, Haddad contends the aggressive confrontation was retaliation against Burfine for not allowing police to fully interrogate her daughter in the days after the fire and refusing on multiple occasions to discuss the case without their attorney present.

    After her injury, Burfine can be heard saying, “I was simply doing what my attorney asked me.”

    This should have been a cut and dry arrest as no one disputes that Burfine’s 15-year-old daughter is innocent of the crime of arson for setting a snack shack on fire at Santa Clara High School—because, after this incident, she was found guilty of arson. However, because police chose to use force instead of the law, the taxpayers are now giving $6.7 million to this woman.

    According to Haddad, Burfine developed Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, a chronic pain condition he said “is likely to be permanently disabling.”

    As Mercury News reports, Haddad was also the attorney in a civil-rights case that ended last year with Santa Clara reaching a nearly $500,000 settlement with a family who sued claiming that police illegally searched their home multiple times in 2014, based on theft suspicions that never materialized.

    “Now they’ve catastrophically injured an innocent mom,” Haddad said. “Will they finally fix their training and procedures?”

    Below is the infuriating and hard to watch video illustrating what can happen when cops choose to go rogue instead of following the law.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-woman-prevents-cops-warrant-leg/

    http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/09/27/santa-clara-pays-6-7-million-to-woman-injured-resisting-warrantless-police-entry/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2017, 02:10:07 AM
    Another dangerous and violent uniformed criminal who abused people and yet the prison time he will serve will be just 1 year (or maybe even less).

    Video shows convicted ex-cop slamming woman's face into car hood

    One day after a former police officer pleaded guilty to using excessive force, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department released body camera footage that shows the ex-cop slamming a woman’s face into the hood of his patrol car.

    Former Officer Richard Scavone pleaded guilty Thursday to using excessive force in the January 2015 case, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. He also falsified his statement relating to the case, an indictment said.

    In a plea deal, Scavone, 50, admitted shoving the woman to the ground, grabbing her by the neck, slapping her head with his hand, then slamming her face twice into the hood of the car, FOX5 in Las Vegas reported.

    He also slammed her into one of the car’s doors, the report said.

    The woman suffered unspecified “bodily injury,” the indictment said.

    The officer had become angry when the woman tossed her coffee at him after he told her to leave the area, FOX5 reported.

    Scavone admitted knowing that what he did was against the law, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. He faces a maximum sentence of up to one year in prison and a fine of up to $100,000.

    Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 11, 2018.

    “Misconduct such as this will not be tolerated and those who break the law will be held accountable for their actions,” acting U.S. Attorney Steven Myhre said.

    “As Mr. Scavone realized today, no one is above the law,” Special Agent in Charge Aaron Rouse said.  “Law enforcement takes an oath to protect and serve our communities. We are, and rightfully should be, held to a higher standard.”

    The profanity-laden video released Friday, running 3 minutes and 23 seconds, appears to show Scavone assaulting the woman near Tropicana Avenue and Interstate 15, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.

    As part of his plea deal, Scavone – who was fired following an internal police investigation -- can no longer work as a police officer.

    The woman in the video was charged with littering and loitering, but the charges were dismissed, police said.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/09/30/video-shows-convicted-ex-cop-slamming-womans-face-into-car-hood.html

    Video here: http://www.fox5vegas.com/story/36489339/metro-released-video-of-former-officer-slamming-woman-into-squad-cars-hood
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2017, 12:01:52 PM
    Two Louisiana city marshals are charged with shooting dead a six-year-old autistic boy when they fired 18 bullets at the car his father was driving

    •     Jeremy Mardis, six, was shot dead by state marshals on Tuesday night
    •     Autistic boy was in the passenger seat of his father Chris Few's vehicle
    •     Cops were believed to be trying to issue a warrant when they opened fire
    •     As many as 18 bullets were fired, with five hitting Jeremy
    •     One of the officers was wearing a body camera and captured the shooting and horrific aftermath
    •     'That little boy was buckled in the front seat of that vehicle and that is how he died,' Col. Mike Edmonson said. 'He didn't deserve to die like that'
    •     Few is heavily sedated, unable to talk and has bullet fragments lodged in his brain and lung

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3308046/Two-Louisiana-city-marshals-charged-fatally-shooting-six-old-autistic-boy.html



    After Reviewing Body Cam, 2 Cops Charged with Murder in Killing of 6-yo Jeremy Mardis

    Marksville, LA – On Tuesday, November 3rd, 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis was tragically gunned down by Louisiana police during a pursuit.

    In a press conference late Friday night, authorities announced that two of the four officers involved in the stop have been arrested.

    Three of the men, Lt. Jason Brouillette, Sgt., Kenneth Parnell, and Lt. Derrick Stafford, worked for the Marksville City Police Department. The fourth, Norris Greenhouse Jr., was a marshal for the Alexandria City Office.

    Lt. Stafford, 32, and Norris Greenhouse Jr., 23, are the local deputy marshals who fired at least 18 rounds at an unarmed man and his son, killing a 6-year-old boy.

    According to the Advocate,

        Stafford, Brouillette and Greenhouse were moonlighting for the local marshal’s office at the time of the shooting, Smith said.

        No use-of-force policy exists for the Marksville Police Department, said Smith, nor are there guidelines on shooting at vehicles, a practice frowned upon by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, an umbrella agency for law enforcement groups.

        The shooting laid bare tensions between the city of Marksville and a local marshal agency led by a school bus driver who lacks basic law enforcement certification. Marksville Mayor John Lemoine previously told The Advocate that Ward 2 Marshal Floyd Voinche Sr. recently began recruiting part-time officers and obtaining squad cars to issue tickets, without permission from city officials.

    Initial reports claimed that Jeremy’s father, 25-year-old Chris Few, was being served a warrant by Ward 2 City Marshals. However, police now admit that Few was not only unarmed when officers opened fire, there wasn’t a warrant at all.

    It was originally reported that Few was cornered in a dead end drive, however, the initial reports were incorrect. Through traffic was indeed allowed at the intersection.

    At least one of the officers were wearing a body camera which was on at the time of the shooting. While police have yet to release the footage, the arrests were made shortly after the Louisiana State Police reviewed the video, according to KLFY.
    When asked about the body camera footage during the press conference, State Police Col. Mike Edmonson told reporters, “It is the most disturbing thing I’ve seen, and I will leave it at that.”

    “That little boy was buckled in the front seat of that vehicle,” Edmonson told reporters. “That is how he died.”

    At approximately 10:00 pm, Friday night, authorities announced that Norris Greenhouse Jr. & Derrick Stafford were charged with 2nd-degree murder of 6-year-old and attempted 2nd-degree murder of Chris Few.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/reviewing-body-cam-2-cops-charged-murder-killing-6-yo-jeremy-mardis/

    Remember this case?

    No Justice: Cop Gets Slap on Wrist for Murder of 6yo Boy—His Dad’s the Asst. DA

    Marksville, LA — Norris Greenhouse Jr. has reached a plea deal with Louisiana Attorney General’s Office.  For this cop’s role in murdering 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis, an innocent young boy, and shooting his father, he will only be receiving a sentence of seven and a half years.

    The plea was offered in exchange for Greenhouse’ guilty plea, who, along with fellow officer Derrick Stafford, killed Mardis and attempted to kill Christopher Few, Mardis’ father, in a hail of gunfire following a low-speed vehicular chase. Given that Greenhouse initiated the chase and shooting, the fact that he is getting off with such a slap on the wrist is an insult to justice.

    Stafford was convicted in March following a jury trial and was given 40 years in prison. Greenhouse, whose father is the assistant DA in Avoyelles Parish, LA, is obviously tapping into the special privilege of being so well-connected. As TFTP recently reported, Greenhouse came under fire for being allowed to leave the country to take a Caribbean vacation to St. Thomas while awaiting trial and out on bail—a privilege only well-connected children of government officials enjoy.

    Infuriatingly enough, the person who seemed to have caused most of the conflict was Greenhouse, yet he was the one who got the more lenient sentence. It’s unclear why. Many believe it’s because his father is a member of the local district attorney’s office, and was somehow given a sweeter deal than Stafford. At any rate, Greenhouse will only have to serve a maximum sentence of 7.5 years according to the Avoyellestoday.com.

    Greenhouse, at the time of the November 2015 killing, was not even allowed to be a police officer, but was with Stafford, an Avoyelles Parish officer. Greenhouse had reportedly been fired for having an inappropriate relationship with a 14-year-old. He was also accused of attempting to get a 16-year-old girl to sext him by sending him nude photos of her breasts. With respect to Jeremy Mardis, Greenhouse was reportedly obsessed with Few’s girlfriend, Megan Dixon.

    When Few discovered Greenhouse had made more than a few unwanted sexual advances toward Dixon, Few reportedly told Greenhouse to stay away as any man would do. Greenhouse may have taken the threat so literally that he attempted to carry out his assassination on Few in an effort to clear the way for him and Dixon to have a relationship.

    When the facts came out that there was no reason for the stop—at all—the above scenario makes perfect sense.

    According to the Greenhouse and Stafford, the officers decided to conduct a traffic stop that night because Few had an outstanding warrant. However, the Clerk of Court, the District Attorney’s Office, Marksville Police Department, and City Court noted that they did not have any warrants against him. The officers also claimed Few had a weapon, that was also a lie.

    The only reason Few ran from Greenhouse that night was to catch up with Dixon so he could give her Jeremy in case he was arrested.

    “The whole reason there was even a chase was for his well-being,” he said.

    The sick and twisted way Greenhouse not only supposedly led his life, but hid behind his badge in order to do it, ended in a hail of bullets which left Mardis dead, Few wounded, and two former officers charged in connection with the child’s death. How Greenhouse was even allowed to bail out was a mystery to many. His lenient treatment coupled with the confirmation the out of control former cop had been allowed to enjoy a vacation in the Caribbean, led many to predict this son of an assistant DA would enjoy a bit of immunity. You can’t make this up.

    Greenhouse was charged with 2nd-degree murder and 2nd degree attempted murder in the death of Jeremy Mardis and the attempted murder of Christopher Few. His trial was previously scheduled for October 2nd, but with Greenhouse accepting the plea deal, he will avoid trial, do his time, and then be released sometime within the next 7.5 years.

    While we at TFTP are happy the seemingly deranged and child sex-obsessed former police officer will do time behind bars for Mardis’ killing, many questions still remain. If the judicial system is so effective in the U.S., how is it the person with the most number of sins in the case the one who gets out first? Stafford received 40 years for his trigger work that fateful evening, but Greenhouse, who arguably bore most of the moral burden for the crimes, only got 7.5 years. How in the world is that fair?

    The case further illustrates the justice system in the United States is flawed, irreparable, and favors the well-connected with financial resources.

    Greenhouse should never have been allowed into the police cruiser that evening. How was he allowed to make bail? Why did the court allow him to go on a vacation to the Caribbean? These questions, if they remain unanswered, will lead many to believe true justice is dead in the United States.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/greenhouse-killer-cop-jeremy-mardis/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2017, 02:37:23 PM
    It seems they arrested the wrong person. Why didn't the "good" cops arrest on the spot the deranged uniformed thug who was holding the rifle to that poor man's head?

    Cops Mistake Man for Suspect, Grind Muzzle of Rifle Into His Head

    Grand Rapids, MI — Dramatic body camera footage released this week shows a Grand Rapids Police Officer holding the muzzle of his AR-15 rifle to the head of an unarmed man who was subdued, in a seeming attempt to torment him. On Tuesday, after they investigated themselves, Kent County Prosecutor Chris Becker said—in spite of the glaring violation of rights caught on video—no charges will be filed against the officer.

    “Placing the barrel of a gun on the head of a suspect being arrested is completely inappropriate, offensive, and against any training protocol put out by the Grand Rapids Police Department or any other department in Kent County,” Becker said in a statement on Tuesday, Oct. 3.

    However, despite the officer’s actions being all those things, he will not face any legal consequences.

    The incident happened on August 19 and appeared to be a case of mistaken identity. That night, officers were responding to a call of an alleged armed robbery and when they showed up they saw a 28-year-old homeless man who fit the description.

    According to the report, the man was drunk and refused to cooperate by lowering and raising his hands. So, Sgt. Neil Gomez then deployed his taser and the man was immediately brought to the ground.

    From this point forward, it should’ve been a simple procedure: place him and handcuffs and determine that he is not the man they are looking for.

    However, that is not what happened. Instead, Officer Kevin Penn—seemingly drunk on his sadistic authority—began digging the muzzle of his rifle into the suspects head, tormenting him physically and verbally.

    “Former Officer Penn took it one step further,” Becker wrote. “He put the barrel of his gun to the suspect’s head. … He indicated to investigators when interviewed he felt he had to place the gun there for fear of possibly hitting the other officers due to close proximity if he did have to fire, and to try and control the individual’s head as he was not complying with commands. This once again is nothing police are trained in, nor something that an officer is supposed to do, but the behavior does not rise to the level of a criminal offense under this set of facts.”

    When watching the video, the idea that this officer’s behavior does not rise to a criminal offense is as insulting as it is asinine.

    “The suspect makes a crying noise, and states, ‘That hurts bro,’ and Officer Penn immediately responds with, ‘Yes it does,'” according to an Internal Affairs report, obtained by MLive under a Freedom of Information request.

    “The muzzle is still pressed against the suspect’s head and Officer (James) Smith tells Officer Penn, ‘All right Kevin’ and pushes the rifle away from the suspect’s head with his head,” an Internal Affairs report said.

    “As Officer Penn moves back, the suspect continues asking what he did and states, ‘Man, that hurted man. …'”

    The report stated and the video confirmed that the muzzle of the rifle was used to force the suspect’s head down. Luckily Penn did not kill the otherwise entirely innocent man.

    The suspect was then arrested on the standard ‘resisting arrest’ charges and later released on his own recognizance. Because he was drunk, the suspect did not remember the incident, which is likely the reason he never filed a complaint. However, after the release of this video, all that may change once an attorney sees the possibility of such an open and shut case.

    “We do not condone the behavior of the officer, nor should this been seen as approval for this technique in the future,” Becker wrote. “It is simply under these specific facts we are not charging the former officer … .”

    The silver lining to this incident is, although Penn was allowed to resign without charges, he was at least caught because good cops saw his actions and reported him.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-muzzle-head-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 03, 2017, 06:04:33 PM
    "The silver lining to this incident is, although Penn was allowed to resign without charges, he was at least caught because good cops saw his actions and reported him."

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on October 03, 2017, 07:42:36 PM
    "The silver lining to this incident is, although Penn was allowed to resign without charges, he was at least caught because good cops saw his actions and reported him."

    Quite the silver lining...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 04, 2017, 04:32:27 AM
    Quite the silver lining...

    Sadly he cant help it - he always sides with the cops
    Just hasn't got it in him to do otherwise.

    Cant call A fcuking scumbag arsewipe a scumbag arsewipe if its a cop,
    always has to be some veiled excuse.

    Though to be fair to 007 he strikes me as one of the more decent honest cops
    & i've told him this - Dosent stop Me crossing verbal swords with him.. ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on October 04, 2017, 09:45:51 AM
    Sadly he cant help it - he always sides with the cops
    Just hasn't got it in him to do otherwise.

    Cant call A fcuking scumbag arsewipe a scumbag arsewipe if its a cop,
    always has to be some veiled excuse.

    Though to be fair to 007 he strikes me as one of the more decent honest cops
    & i've told him this - Dosent stop Me crossing verbal swords with him.. ;)

    I don’t doubt that he’s both an decent person and a good cop. I am sure he wants these bad apples gone. I just suspect he doesn’t realize how pervasive the rot is and how we, as a society, can’t afford to have laws that give extra rights to cops or to allow unions to dictate the hiring decisions to or block/reverse the firing decisions of police departments.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2017, 11:48:52 AM
    Louisiana Cop who Fatally Struck Pedestrian back on the job after 5-day Suspension and a Ticket

    A Louisiana cop  is back on the job after receiving a five-day suspension and a speeding ticket for striking and killing a pedestrian in his unmarked patrol back in late June.

    Baton Rouge officer Frederick Thorton is now working with the Street Crimes Unit after serving the suspension.

    Thorton fatally struck 42-year-old Phillip Clark, of Meridian, at about 5:40 p.m.  on June 27.

    Baton Rough police Sgt. L’Jean McKneely refused to say how fast Thorton was going at the time of the incident.

    However, Thorton received a speeding ticket after the incident, which indicates he was traveling over the speed limit when he attempted to drive around an ambulance crossing in front of him at an intersection and hit Clark, who was crossing the street.

    A man who witnessed the incident stated the patrol car was traveling “very fast” at the time of incident.

    “He was going too fast to think about what he was going to do. He couldn’t stop and so it looked like he went even faster to try to beat the ambulance because there was no way he was going to stop for the ambulance,”
    the witness told WAFB.

    Clark, an eight-year veteran of the department, was on-duty at the time he caused the fatality.

    Sgt. McKneely stated Thorton was not responding to an emergency call at the time,  but he was actually headed to an assignment for the Street Crimes Unit.

    The unit is not dispatched on emergency calls.

    But McKneely said they do get put on assignments, which are not necessarily time-sensitive, but depending on circumstances, they could be.

    However, McKneely refused to indicate what assignment Thorton was on or whether or not the particular assignment was time-sensitive.

    Although the Baton Rouge Police Department concluded their internal affairs investigation about two weeks ago, which cleared Thorton, District Attorney Hillar C. Moore says a separate investigation by his office is still ongoing “to determine if any formal charges will be filed.”

    Baton Rouge police initially waited about 48 hours to release Thorton’s name.

    Thorton formally worked in the Uniform Patrol Unit.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/09/louisiana-cop-fatally-struck-pedestrian-back-job-5-day-suspension-ticket/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2017, 11:52:59 AM
    The irony would have been so rich if it wasn't for an innocent family being burned alive beyond recognition because of this uniformed murderer. As expected, the killer gets paid vacation.

    LAPD Cop Posts ‘Don’t Drink and Drive’ Video to Instagram hours before Killing Family of 3 in DWI Crash

    Three hours before an intoxicated off-duty LAPD cop crashed into two cars in Los Angeles–killing a family of three–he posted an Instagram video warning people about the dangers of drinking and driving.

    LAPD officer Edgar Verduzco posted a 10-second animated clip to his account at around 7 p.m. on Tuesday showing an avatar appearing frustrated and wearing a Los Angeles Dodgers shirt driving a car inside of a bar and honking the horn along with the hash tag #dontdrinkanddrive.

    A beer glass can be seen in the background.

    LAPD officials wouldn’t confirm if the the Instagram account belonged to Verduzco, but another video posted to the same account hours later shows a group of people playing Jenga, apparently at the same bar, according to KTLA.

    It’s not clear how fast Verduzco was driving at the time he plowed his Camero into a 2014 Nissan, killing Mario and Maribel Davila and their 19-year old son Oscar Davila.

    The impact of crash caused the Davila’s Nissan to burst into flames, trapping all three of them inside.

    Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics arrived at the scene and pronounced all three occupants inside the car dead shortly after.

    Verduzco was not seriously injured, but suffered a broken nose in the collision.

    His victims were burned beyond recognition.

    Another driver,31-year-old Berly Alvarado was also struck by Verduzco, but she was taken to the hospital and released after suffering minor injuries.

    The Davila’s, who were both in their 50’s, are survived by their three son’s who’ve launched a GoFundMe campaign to help raise money for their family’s funeral.

    Siblings described Oscar, the couple’s youngest child, as a bright, lighthearted and musically talented individual who served with his parents at church, according to the DailyMail.

    LAPD Chief Charlie Beck issued condolences to the Davila family in a written statement.

    “The Department has no tolerance for for driving under the influence and holds its officers to to the highest standards of professionalism both on and off-duty,” he wrote before addressing the press on video.

    “My heart goes out to the victims and their families and I cannot tell you how angry and disappointed I am that a Los Angeles police officer would disregard the law and cause an accident with such awful, awful consequences,” Beck stated.

    “This is an awful thing.”

    Verduzco was placed on paid leave after being released on $100,000 bail from the Men’s Central Jail in Los Angels.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/09/lapd-cop-posts-dont-drink-drive-video-instagram-hours-killing-family-3-dwi-crash/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2017, 01:21:54 PM
    Remember this case? Talk about police state.

    All those perverted criminals involved should be hit with criminal charges for sexual battery, false imprisonment, and violation of oath of office for each and every student they attacked.

    Georgia sheriff, deputies indicted after body searches of 900 high school students

    The sound system squawked at 8 a.m., just as the school day was revving up at Worth County High School. The campus was now on lockdown, the announcement said. Neither the teachers nor students at the south Georgia school knew what was going on.

    For the next four hours, 40 uniformed officers — the entire staff of the Worth County Sheriff’s Office — fanned through the school in Sylvester, ordering students against the walls of classrooms and hallways, demanding the students hand over their cellphones.

    All 900 students were searched, part of a drug sweep ordered by Sheriff Jeff Hobby, according to court documents.

    He did not have a warrant. He had a “target list” of 12 suspected drug users. Only three of the names were in school that day, April 14.

    By noon, when cellphones were handed back and classes resumed, no drugs had been found.

    The sheriff’s full-court press, however, would yield legal consequences — for Hobby and his office. In the days following the sweep, students came forward charging they had been inappropriately groped and manhandled by deputies. A class-action federal civil suit followed.

    And now, this week a grand jury indicted Hobby and two deputies for their part in the high school raid. Hobby faces charges of sexual battery, false imprisonment, and violation of oath of office, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2017/10/06/georgia-sheriff-deputies-indicted-after-body-searches-of-900-high-school-students
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 06, 2017, 04:13:27 PM
    Ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum Hi Ho
    I can here 007 on his high horse on route to defend the above 2 post about cops.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2017, 01:45:04 PM
    Incompetent buffoons. Why should the taxpayers pay once again for those bunglers' nincompoopery?

    Grossly Incompetent Cops Arrest Hero Who Stopped a Robbery, Instead of the Robber

    A heroic employee became the suspect after he risked his life to stop two robbers, and the same people who were supposed to protect him, did the opposite.

    Dekalb County, GA — The three days Omar Malcolm spent in the DeKalb County Jail could pay off in a sum of up to $1.5 million, pending a settlement with the former police investigator who arrested him. Alexander Vots, the detective who was working a shoplifting case at a Verizon store, arrested Malcolm in what has proved to be a painful incident of incompetence.

    In January 2016, Malcolm was one of two employees at a Verizon store who took down two would-be shoplifters and recovered a swiped IPad. Nearly a full year later, Vots was done with his investigation and was sure he had identified his robber.

    After lifting fingerprints from the iPad, the detective had a suspect, none other than Malcolm himself. Yes, that’s right. The detective lifted the employee’s fingerprints and came to the conclusion he was the thief, in spite of surveillance video that proved otherwise.

    Adding insult to injury, Vots convinced Judge Lindsey Jones to sign an arrest warrant for Malcolm, who was subsequently arrested on Dec. 10, 2016. He spent the next three days in jail for a crime he did not commit but actually prevented.

    In January 2017, after Malcolm’s attorney came into possession of the security footage that showed his client was telling the truth, the young man’s criminal case was dismissed.

    Judge Jones was the first to apologize. He told Malcolm, “Mr. Omar, I’m going to apologize to you…I’m the judge who signed the warrant to have you arrested.” He explained to Malcolm that a simple phone call to the store could have ruled out the young man as a suspect. But that call was never made.

    Now, Vots is in the hot seat for violating Malcolm’s civil rights. He has since left the police department and cannot be reached for comment. But the former detective is the only defendant listed on Malcolm’s newly filed federal civil rights lawsuit for $1.5 million.

    Robert James is one of Malcolm’s civil attorneys. James used to be DeKalb County’s district attorney. “Imagine spending days in jail for a crime, not only that you did not commit, but risked your life to prevent,” said James, adding, “It’s a miscarriage of justice. This should not have happened under any circumstance.”

    J. Max Davis, Malcolm’s other attorney discovered why he thinks Vots made such a life-changing mistake. Davis asked Vots to provide video footage from the attempted robbery, and the detective sent him a video from the week prior to the one with which Malcolm was in the middle.

    “It was time-date stamped the 16th of January,” Davis said. “It showed two different employees, a different situation. It was the same store, but it was clear in the corner that is was from 1-16-2016.” The actual attempted shoplifting crime which Malcolm prevented took place on 1-23-2016.

    “I realized everything Omar had told me was absolutely true, and my heart sank,” Davis said. “It’s been a very tough ordeal for Mr. Malcolm. He’s handled it with dignity.”

    In other words, the detective arrested a store employee based on video footage from a crime which took place a full week before the one which Malcolm prevented. Instead of receiving a commendation from the police department, he was arrested.

    Davis now intends to hold the former police officer accountable for his actions. He described the interaction he had with Vots when he discovered the truth. “When I asked him if he ever verified that Omar was an employee of Verizon, he said, ‘Let me call you back.'” Davis said. “Just a little more work, just one phone call, and this wouldn’t have happened.”

    “I spent 20 years working with police, and I have a lot of respect for law enforcement,” James said. “Our job is to hold someone accountable when they do not act as they should, law enforcement or otherwise.”

    Malcolm spoke with an 11Alive reporter and commented about his time in jail and the ordeal of being accused of a crime he not only didn’t commit but one he actually prevented.

    “This is a horrible experience all around,” Malcolm said. “I never want anyone to go through this torture.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/hero-employee-robbery-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 08, 2017, 09:26:56 PM
    Ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum ta-dum Hi Ho
    I can here 007 on his high horse on route to defend the above 2 post about cops.  ::)

    Here I am.. my ears were burning.

    Cop driving drunk killing people.. what ever the maximum sentence is, and using any available legal premise to stack sentences.. this monster should serve it.

    Search of students.. indictments are appropriate and consequences should be severe.

    Again, I am pro cop. But I'm pro cop catching the bad guys within the parameters of the law. I'm also a strong proponent as are the vast majority of my co workers and being pro active in helping citizens. I understand this page is solely to point out what you guys believe to be examples of bad cops. A lot, a vast majority of them over the years have been spot on.  Some, that I have spoke up on, weren't in my opinion in the wrong, or the actions were within reason. I suppose I could start a threat that highlights the good things cops do but like you, I agree, they get paid to do those things. Obviously some cops stand out.. active shootings, raising money to feed a family, etc etc. In Austin we recently recognized a young ze icer that took out an active shooter in a hotel. But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 09, 2017, 11:17:22 AM
    Here I am.. my ears were burning.

    Cop driving drunk killing people.. what ever the maximum sentence is, and using any available legal premise to stack sentences.. this monster should serve it.

    Search of students.. indictments are appropriate and consequences should be severe.

    Again, I am pro cop. But I'm pro cop catching the bad guys within the parameters of the law. I'm also a strong proponent as are the vast majority of my co workers and being pro active in helping citizens. I understand this page is solely to point out what you guys believe to be examples of bad cops. A lot, a vast majority of them over the years have been spot on.  Some, that I have spoke up on, weren't in my opinion in the wrong, or the actions were within reason. I suppose I could start a threat that highlights the good things cops do but like you, I agree, they get paid to do those things. Obviously some cops stand out.. active shootings, raising money to feed a family, etc etc. In Austin we recently recognized a young ze icer that took out an active shooter in a hotel. But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem



    Thanks - Thats about as straight a reply as we'll get from you.

    "But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem"
    On this matter You stated previously that you thought between 5 & 10% of cops were bad apples....
    out of what approximately 1,000,000 cops That makes for between 50,00 to 100,000 Scumbags
    That are armed & have the right to shoot / kill & the law on their side Plus how many others to cover up for them / not report them.!!!

    As for the size of the problem I'd say that was A BIg Fcuking Problem.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2017, 03:12:17 PM
    Horrifying Video Shows Cops Torture Innocent Man With Taser Until He Defecated Himself

    Knoxville, TN — Paul Edward Branch had just watched his apartment burn to the ground and, as he sat on the fire truck, shirtless, shoeless, and dazed, several Knox County Sheriff’s Office deputies approached him. Within seconds, Branch went from contemplating replacing his belongings to being assaulted and tortured by men who claim they protect society.

    Body camera footage from KCSO Deputy Paul Saah shows Branch’s nightmare unfold as he was shocked with 50,000 volts, repeatedly, in such a torturous and unnecessary manner that his bowels released. Ten times in just 64 seconds, the sadistic deputy fired his taser as his fellow deputies piled on top of the man.

    As the footage shows, Branch was complying with every command given to him by the deputies. However, because he was moving slower than they liked, the situation quickly escalated.

    A KNOX News review of court records and the video shows the following:

    “Why are you soaking wet?” Saah asked Branch as Branch had his back turned to the deputy with his hands still behind his back. “Can you relax a little bit, dude?”

    Saah struggled with one of the handcuffs and began saying, “Quit.” A second unidentified deputy pushed Branch’s head against the truck.

    “You’re going to get (stunned) right now,” Saah said.

    Saah then fired his Taser into Branch’s neck. Branch fell face down on the pavement. Saah then said, “Get your Taser out, Gomez.”

    As the footage shows, Branch complied with the deputies as leaned up against the truck and sat there with his hands behind his back. However, seemingly unable to control his urge to inflict senseless pain and suffering, Saah told Deputy Christian L. Gomez to “shoot him,” so he fired his taser at the man as well.

    Reeling from the agony of the repeated taser shocks, Branch began clutching his chest instead of complying with orders to get his hands behind his back. As he writhed in agony on the pavement, Gomez and Saah continued firing their tasers.

    After Branch appears to go into some sort of seizure state, the taser is deployed once more before Saah says, “Kill it,” indicating that they should stop tasing him.

    Clearly dazed and confused from being repeatedly shocked by the tasers, Branch’s body locked up. After they had tasered him ten times in a minute, four deputies then piled on top of the man to handcuff him.

    “He’s strong as an ox,” Saah said as the deputies put him in handcuffs.

    As Knox News reports, Branch was arrested, charged with public intoxication and resisting arrest. The language in the two warrants is identical. Saah’s basis for the public intoxication charge was Branch’s speech “was rapid” and his answers to Saah’s questions were “incoherent.” The charges are pending.

    Remember as you watch the video below that Branch had committed no crime when police approached him. He was simply sitting there, barefoot and shirtless watching his apartment smolder—innocent.

    As the Sentinel reports, KCSO’s policy treats stun gun usage much the same as the use of deadly force in that a deputy’s decision to deploy a Taser must be “objectively reasonable” under the circumstances. KCSO specifically limits Taser use to situations in which a deputy is in a “physical confrontation” with a suspect or is trying to protect either another deputy or another person who is in a “physical confrontation” with a suspect. It bars deputies from deploying a Taser as “punishment.”

    Clearly, these deputies violated that policy.

    Branch is now suing the KCSO for $3 million. Rest assured, that the taxpayers will be held accountable and not the deputies.

    Neither Gomez nor Saah was fired and both of them remain on regular duty. The department launched an internal investigation, however, the results of that investigation and what action, if any, was taken to discipline the officers is unknown.

    “The excessive force used against Mr. Branch including the electrical impulses from the Tasers caused (Branch) confusion as to where he was for the next several days, and the Taser weapons caused him to defecate and urinate himself, which caused (Branch) severe psychological harm,” the lawsuit stated.

    Below is what it looks like when an innocent man crosses paths with the wrong cops.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-police-taser-bowels/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 11, 2017, 08:11:23 PM
    Up the the 1st deployment of the taser, depending on what information they officers had, it could have been warranted. He didn't seem to be cooperative and they seemed like they needed him in handcuffs. After the initial deployment, our department trains that officers use that 5 seconds the taser is delivering the charge, to move in and handcuff the subject. We are trained NOT to continually use the taser for compliance.

    At this point it becomes irrelevant what the officers original concern or reason was, they are now in the realm of excessive force. He will likely win.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 12, 2017, 12:28:21 PM
    Even this horrific abuse, attack and kidnapping of a nurse who was following the law and serving her community and the flagrant and purposeful disregard for the laws and the courts was not enough it seems to make citizens fully realize the abusive nature of these violent criminals.
    Firing and/or demotion is not enough. Until now, these violent criminals were on paid vacation. It is likely that Payne will appeal, the cop union will get involved and enforce their own rules and he won't suffer any actual consequences. He along with his supervisor should rot in prison as should any other cops that might have been present but did not subdue and arrest Payne.

    Utah Cop who Forcibly Arrested Nurse for Refusing Blood Draw Fired

    The Utah cop video recorded roughly handcuffing a nurse after she refused to allow a blood draw on an unconscious patient has been fired.

    Salt Lake Police Chief Mike Brown relieved detective Jeff Payne of his duties for violating department policies when he arrested Alex Wubbels and dragged the screaming nurse out of the hospital.

    Chief Brown demoted Payne’s supervisor, watch commander Lt. James Tracey, to the rank of officer after viewing the video, which was recorded on police body cams on July 26.

    The decision to fire Payne comes after an internal affairs report released Sept. 13 found both officers violated department policy by failing to uphold the department’s requirement to treat all citizens “equally with courtesy, consideration and dignity.”

    “You demonstrated extremely poor professional judgment (especially for an officer with 27 years of experience), which calls into question your ability to effectively serve the public and the department,” Brown wrote in a termination letter to Payne, which can be read below.

    “In examining your conduct, I am deeply troubled by your lack of sound professional judgment and your discourteous, disrespectful, and unwarranted behavior, which unnecessarily escalated a situation that could and should have been resolved in a manner far different from the course of action you chose to pursue.”

    “You inappropriately acted against Ms. Wubbels,” Brown added.

    Payne’s attorney Greg Skordas argued firing Payne was excessive and said his client served the department well for nearly three decades.

    “I‘m really frustrated by the way this case has been processed,
    Skordas told the Salt Lake Tribune.

    “I do think that Salt Lake City did a fair job of doing the investigation, and I think that their findings are, by and large, accurate. But I think the chief reacted to a lot of public pressure and scrutiny in making a decision that doesn’t fit the conduct.”

    Payne was previously disciplined in 2013 after an internal affairs investigation confirmed he sexually harassed a female co-worker.

    The former officer worked part-time as a paramedic, but was fired from that job on September 5 after fallout from his arrest of Wubbels continued.

    During the incident, Payne threatened to punish the hospital as well as Wubbels by bringing “all the transients” to the hospital and taking the “good patients” elsewhere.

    “I’ll bring them all the transients and take good patients elsewhere,”  Payne says in the video.

    Body cam footage of the incident, which sparked a nationwide conversation on the level of force used by police, can be seen below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/10/utah-cop-forcibly-arrested-nurse-refusing-blood-draw-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on October 12, 2017, 12:39:13 PM
    Quote
    ...unnecessarily escalated a situation that could and should have been resolved in a manner far different from the course of action you chose to pursue.

    Yeah, that's what he did.  You guys who put an officer on a pedestal have yourselves to blame for guys like this.  Certain personalities in PD take it to mean they have a special license to do what they want, when they want, no matter what. 

    They don't.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 12, 2017, 01:34:13 PM
    Even this horrific abuse, attack and kidnapping of a nurse who was following the law and serving her community and the flagrant and purposeful disregard for the laws and the courts was not enough it seems to make citizens fully realize the abusive nature of these violent criminals.
    Firing and/or demotion is not enough. Until now, these violent criminals were on paid vacation. It is likely that Payne will appeal, the cop union will get involved and enforce their own rules and he won't suffer any actual consequences. He along with his supervisor should rot in prison as should any other cops that might have been present but did not subdue and arrest Payne.

    Utah Cop who Forcibly Arrested Nurse for Refusing Blood Draw Fired

    The Utah cop video recorded roughly handcuffing a nurse after she refused to allow a blood draw on an unconscious patient has been fired.

    Salt Lake Police Chief Mike Brown relieved detective Jeff Payne of his duties for violating department policies when he arrested Alex Wubbels and dragged the screaming nurse out of the hospital.

    Chief Brown demoted Payne’s supervisor, watch commander Lt. James Tracey, to the rank of officer after viewing the video, which was recorded on police body cams on July 26.

    The decision to fire Payne comes after an internal affairs report released Sept. 13 found both officers violated department policy by failing to uphold the department’s requirement to treat all citizens “equally with courtesy, consideration and dignity.”

    “You demonstrated extremely poor professional judgment (especially for an officer with 27 years of experience), which calls into question your ability to effectively serve the public and the department,” Brown wrote in a termination letter to Payne, which can be read below.

    “In examining your conduct, I am deeply troubled by your lack of sound professional judgment and your discourteous, disrespectful, and unwarranted behavior, which unnecessarily escalated a situation that could and should have been resolved in a manner far different from the course of action you chose to pursue.”

    “You inappropriately acted against Ms. Wubbels,” Brown added.

    Payne’s attorney Greg Skordas argued firing Payne was excessive and said his client served the department well for nearly three decades.

    “I‘m really frustrated by the way this case has been processed,
    Skordas told the Salt Lake Tribune.

    “I do think that Salt Lake City did a fair job of doing the investigation, and I think that their findings are, by and large, accurate. But I think the chief reacted to a lot of public pressure and scrutiny in making a decision that doesn’t fit the conduct.”

    Payne was previously disciplined in 2013 after an internal affairs investigation confirmed he sexually harassed a female co-worker.

    The former officer worked part-time as a paramedic, but was fired from that job on September 5 after fallout from his arrest of Wubbels continued.

    During the incident, Payne threatened to punish the hospital as well as Wubbels by bringing “all the transients” to the hospital and taking the “good patients” elsewhere.

    “I’ll bring them all the transients and take good patients elsewhere,”  Payne says in the video.

    Body cam footage of the incident, which sparked a nationwide conversation on the level of force used by police, can be seen below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/10/utah-cop-forcibly-arrested-nurse-refusing-blood-draw-fired/



    Fucking big tough cop - only wish somebody would poleaxed & Trodden on that Pig piece of Crap.


    Tadum Tadum Tadum
    Hi Ho 
    I can hear his on his way to defend that cop
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 12, 2017, 02:41:17 PM


    Fucking big tough cop - only wish somebody would poleaxed & Trodden on that Pig piece of Crap.


    Tadum Tadum Tadum
    Hi Ho 
    I can hear his on his way to defend that cop
     ;)

    Cop was/is an embarrassment to other cops. Doesn't belong in the career field.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on October 12, 2017, 02:48:18 PM
    Cop was/is an embarrassment to other cops. Doesn't belong in the career field.

    Maybe he made it to that age without ever hearing NO, and he really can't be blamed.  He was a great cop, I'm sure.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 12, 2017, 04:26:30 PM
    Cop was/is an embarrassment to other cops. Doesn't belong in the career field.


    No jail time  / no deserves a good beating / no he's power crazed bully ??
    He's Just an embarrassment & shouldn't be a cop.  !!
    That's all.  ::)


    Also Did you miss this or just avoid it because of the Size of the Problem..??


    "But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem"
    On this matter You stated previously that you thought between 5 & 10% of cops were bad apples....
    out of what approximately 1,000,000 cops That makes for between 50,00 to 100,000 Scumbags
    That are armed & have the right to shoot / kill & the law on their side Plus how many others to cover up for them / not report them.!!!

    As for the size of the problem I'd say that was A BIg Fcuking Problem.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 12, 2017, 06:20:42 PM

    No jail time  / no deserves a good beating / no he's power crazed bully ??
    He's Just an embarrassment & shouldn't be a cop.  !!
    That's all.  ::)


    Dude... you have a retired cop here who dislikes bad cops more than you do. Ive spent more than 2 decades in the streets and I am pro take a knee, I acknowledge police can do better. We should do better... and yet you still have a hard on for me.... He is a power crazed bully. He let his ego control his actions, he let us all down. He needs to be shown the door. IF there is a lawsuit against him, he needs to pay the price...   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 12, 2017, 11:50:33 PM
    Dude... you have a retired cop here who dislikes bad cops more than you do. Ive spent more than 2 decades in the streets and I am pro take a knee, I acknowledge police can do better. We should do better... and yet you still have a hard on for me.... He is a power crazed bully. He let his ego control his actions, he let us all down. He needs to be shown the door. IF there is a lawsuit against him, he needs to pay the price...    
    ?


    I doubt very much you dislike them more than Me
    I & my family have sufferd Because of some of them
    Also a young man lost his Life.
    How Fcuking Wrong are you.

    You come on here with your holier than thou attitude your PC answers
    & General waffle trying to sugar coat the actions of these Arsewipes.
    Jeez They often kill / Cripple / Destroy People's Lives !!!!!!
    Wake The Fcuk Up & Smell The Coffee.

    Tough if you don't like me pointing out the Reality's



    Yet again you Managed to Miss This Part Below.  ::)
    Are you having problems dealing with the Reality of You own Estimation

    Fcuk Sake that's a Good sized Army in Many Countries
    And you Down play it.

     

    "But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem"
    On this matter You stated previously that you thought between 5 & 10% of cops were bad apples....
    out of what approximately 1,000,000 cops That makes for between 50,00 to 100,000 Scumbags
    That are armed & have the right to shoot / kill & the law on their side Plus how many others to cover up for them / not report them.!!!

    As for the size of the problem I'd say that was A BIg Fcuking Problem.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 13, 2017, 04:47:06 AM
    Cool
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 13, 2017, 02:02:37 PM
    Crazed Cop Beats Innocent Man With a Baton, Forces Him Onto Electric Train Tracks

    Cherry Hill, DE — Ryan Patterson of Philadelphia was visiting a friend last year when he got off on the wrong train stop. As he sat and waited for the next train, however, he was approached by a tyrant cop who began beating him with a baton and pepper spraying him. Eventually, the violent cop would force Patterson onto the electric train tracks almost killing him.

    The entire incident was started because Patterson accidentally got off at the wrong train stop. Patterson had bought a round-trip ticket to Haddonfield and was returning to Philadelphia but had gotten on a train going in the wrong direction. He had committed no crime and had harmed no one when a cop with a short fuse decided to make his life a living hell.

    According to Police documents, Port Authority Transit Corp. Officer Michael Fiocca followed Patterson to the westbound platform about 7:45 p.m. and asked for his ticket. Patterson responded angrily, according to the report, but showed the officer his ticket, which was not for Woodcrest Station, and then showed him identification.

    At this point, Fiocca should have let Patterson go about his business. However, he decided to try to arrest him for no reason instead. Patterson, not wanting to be unlawfully kidnapped by this crazed officer, remained seated, noting that he wanted to simply get back on the correct train and continue to his destination.

    Again, at this point, the officer — who had no legal basis for arrest — should’ve walked away. Instead, he chose to pepper spray Patterson in the face.

    After he was hit with a chemical agent for refusing to be unlawfully kidnapped, he stood up and backed away with his hands up. At no time, during the entire interaction, did Patterson ever pose a threat or try to harm the officer.

    However, the officer, who described Patterson as “much larger than me in stature and weight,” escalated force once again and began beating Patterson with his baton. Again, Patterson remained calm and simply stated that he is not under arrest.

    Patterson then sat down again, at which point the officer began hitting him. This time, however, having been beaten about his legs and lower body—and, after being pepper sprayed a second time—Patterson lost his balance and fell onto the electric tracks below.

    Had Patterson landed on the actual tracks, and made contact with the rail’s electrical current, he would have been fried instantly.

    Seemingly realizing he’d messed up big time, Fiocca went from hurting Patterson to helping him and called in other officers to hoist him up back onto the platform.

    Patterson was taken to Kennedy-Stratford Hospital and was released with a citation for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. Both of these charges would be dismissed once authorities saw the video. And instead of Patterson getting in trouble, the Delaware River Port Authority fired the PATCO transit officer in September 2016 after initially suspending him.

    “We have made a determination that the incident reflects actions inconsistent with our organizational core values and in direct conflict with the high standard of conduct we demand from our law enforcement officials,” DRPA CEO and PATCO President John Hanson said in a statement last year about the decision to fire Fiocca.

    This week, Ryan Patterson filed a lawsuit against the former police officer in the Court of Common Pleas.

    “Unfortunately this type of officer misconduct reaches all of our communities with increasing regularity,” said Thomas Fitzpatrick, an attorney representing Patterson. “We will fight for justice for Mr. Patterson and others like him who have their rights violated by those that swear to protect them.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/train-station-cop-baton-tracks/

    Video:

    http://www.courierpostonline.com/story/news/local/2017/10/12/patco-officer-michael-fiocca-lawsuit-ryan-patterson/756203001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 13, 2017, 02:06:41 PM
    Cop Pummels Surrendering Man As Fellow Cops Hold Him Lying Face Down—Not Guilty

    A Massachusetts State Police trooper was found not guilty Thursday of simple assault after police violently arrested a non-violent man who’d surrendered after a chase and was lying face down on the ground.

    As news crews filmed from helicopters hovering above, Richard Simone exited his truck, kneeled, and lay prone on his stomach on the asphalt — but several officers rushed the man and initiated a savage attack in what appeared to be retaliation for having led them on an hour-long pursuit through the two states.

    After the violent beating went viral, New Hampshire Attorney General Joseph Foster announced that Joseph Flynn of the Massachusetts State Police and Andrew Monaco of the New Hampshire State Police were charged with several counts of simple assault for excessive use of force.

    Flynn was charged with two counts of simple assault, while Monaco received three simple assault charges. But, as Foster’s office advised at the time, the Washington Post paraphrased, “because the two troopers were on-duty law enforcement officers during the incident, their charges could see an enhanced penalty.”

    However, no enhanced penalty ever came, and in fact, it seems there will be no penalty for Flynn.

    WMUR 9 reports a jury in Hillsborough County Superior Court found Flynn, 32, of Tewksbury, not guilty on two counts of simple assault by an on-duty officer.

    Despite video evidence to the contrary, Flynn claimed he threw punches at Simone when the chase ended only as submission blows. And, somehow, the jury bought it.

    Monaco, however, was not so lucky. He pleaded guilty to his charges and was sentenced to a year in jail with the sentence suspended with conditions. He was ordered to never pursue a job in law enforcement again.

    Flynn, however, will be able to get right back to the job after enjoying his 14 months long paid vacation at the expense of Hillsborough taxpayers.

    As TFTP reported last year, on May 11, police in Holden, Massachusetts, attempted to stop Simone’s pickup truck when they discovered an advisory from another department that the man had outstanding warrants for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, larceny, and failure to stop for law enforcement, according to the State Police.

    When Simone failed to pull over, Holden Police were joined in their pursuit by Massachusetts state troopers. As Simone crossed into Hudson in neighboring New Hampshire, that state’s police and local forces also joined the pursuit. As The Free Thought Project previously described:

    “Simone weaved through traffic — at one point hitting a utility pole — as law enforcement officers from both states repeatedly tried to pull him over without success. At some point during the pursuit, Simone’s gray pickup lost two of its tires; but as sparks flew, he continued driving.”

    Around an hour after Massachusetts officers initiated the chase, Simone stopped his vehicle in Nashua, New Hampshire, lowering himself face first onto the asphalt with his arms extended in surrender. But more than half a dozen police from the various departments — apparently enraged over the chase that occasionally reached speeds of 90 mph — descended on the now-prone man, beating him relentlessly as neighbors and children watched in horror.

    “He was surrendering, you know, he gave up — but I was like, ‘Oh my god, they’re really attacking him,’” Simone’s stunned sister told 7 News at the time, in a report which has since been removed. “It was very shocking, to say the least. Disturbing to see that and to see when someone willingly gets out of the vehicle, goes to their knees, flat out on their stomach, their hands out — very shocking.”

    Below is an example of what a cop can do on video and still get off scot-free.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-repeatedly-smashed-surrendering-mans-face-found-not-guilty/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 15, 2017, 04:57:59 PM
    One would expect that these criminals would, of all things, recognize the remnants of a donut..

    Cops Mistake Krispy Kreme Donuts for Meth, Throw Innocent 64-yo Man in Jail, Strip Search Him

    Orlando, FL — Thanks to the highly flawed means of testing for drugs and incompetent armed agents of the state enforcing immoral drug laws, a man’s donut got him arrested, strip searched, thrown in a cage and drug charges.

    Tens of thousands have been convicted and served time — even earning the black mark of a felony — for crimes they likely didn’t commit, a recent report found, because the cases against them relied on horribly unreliable field drug test kits.

    So prone to errors are the tests, courts won’t allow their submission as evidence. However, their continued use by law enforcement — coupled with a 90 percent rate at which drug cases are resolved through equally dubious plea deals — needlessly ruins thousands of lives.

    Daniel Rushing, of Orlando, is one of these people.

    Last December, Rushing, 64, was bringing his friend to his weekly chemotherapy session when he was stopped by police for the alleged ‘crime’ of not stopping all the way before pulling out of a gas station.

    This routine revenue generating stop would quickly descend into a nightmare after this highly trained police officer would see the crumbs of a Krispy Kreme donut on Rushing’s floor board.

    The officer, Cpl. Shelby Riggs-Hopkins spotted “a rock like substance on the floor board where his feet were,” she wrote, according to a report in the Orlando Sentinel.

    Her ‘professional’ training that has taught her how to identify all the substances deemed illegal by the state immediately set off alarms.

    “I recognized through my eleven years of training and experience as a law enforcement officer the substance to be some sort of narcotic,” she wrote.


    Rushing, who is a concealed carry permit holder, told the officer that there was a weapon in the car. Luckily he was not shot. However, he was asked to step out of the car and then the officer asked to search his vehicle.

    Rushing, knowing that he had nothing to hide, agreed to the search. Even though Rushing had nothing to hide, he should have never agreed to a search as this is rule number one when dealing with police during a traffic stop.

    After the fact, however, Rushing realized his mistake in allowing the officer to rummage through his car. “I didn’t have anything to hide,” he said. “I’ll never let anyone search my car again.”

    Riggs-Hopkins and other officers spotted three other pieces of the suspicious substance in his car, according to the report.

    “I kept telling them, ‘That’s … glaze from a doughnut. … They tried to say it was crack cocaine at first, then they said, ‘No, it’s meth, crystal meth.'”

    The arrest report even noted Rushing pleaded with officers to tell them it was donut crumbs. However, they just knew that this 64-year-old man, with no criminal record, was some drug kingpin transporting meth by dropping tiny bits of it on his carpet.

    “Rushing stated that the substance is sugar from a Krispie Kreme Donut that he ate,” Riggs-Hopkins wrote.

    Officers then tested the Krispy Kreme crumbs with their criminally unreliable field test kits and received not one but two positive results.

    As the Free Thought Project has previously reported, the director of a lab recognized by the International Association of Chiefs of Police for forensic science excellence has called field drug testing kits “totally useless” due to the possibility of false positives. In laboratory experiments, at least two brands of field testing kits have been shown to produce false positives in tests of Mucinex, chocolate, aspirin, chocolate, and oregano. Some of these kits even return a positive when completely empty.

    According to the Orlando Sentinel, Riggs-Hopkins booked him into the county jail on a charge of possession of methamphetamine with a firearm. He was locked up for about 10 hours before his release on $2,500 bond, he said.

    “I got arrested for no reason at all,” he said.

    After being kidnapped and caged because of the incompetence of police officers and the brutal drug war, Rushing has decided to sue. He will undoubtedly win and the taxpayers will be held accountable — not the police officers.

    When asked how many other road-side drug tests have produced false positive results by the Orlando Sentinel, an OPD spokeswoman wrote, “At this time, we have no responsive records. … There is no mechanism in place for easily tracking the number of, or results of, field drug testing.

    As police across the US scramble to push the war on cops narrative and note that only criminals dislike the police, thousands of cases like this one play out every year. Instead of rectifying a broken system, the overwhelming majority of police and politicians ignore the problems created by the war on drugs and choose to increase force instead.

    Until we bring an end to the war on drugs, innocent people like Bernstein and Cruz will continue to be targetted and continue to be kidnapped, caged, or killed — for no other reason than cops looking for arbitrary substances.

    Next time someone says, “if you don’t break the law, you have nothing to fear,” show them this incident which completely destroys that dangerously ignorant narrative.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/krispy-kreme-mistake-police-meth/

    Remember this case? This man got a tiny amount for what this man suffered and of course it's not coming out of the criminals' pockets. The irony is quite rich though: you'd expect the cops, out of everyone, to know a thing or two about donuts..
    Here is what the "trained" and "experienced" "officer" wrote in her report:

    "I recognized through my eleven years of training and experience as a law enforcement officer the substance to be some sort of narcotic"

    This is the type of "trained" bozos that oppress and harass innocent people, yet they don't suffer any real consequences for their crimes.

    Man arrested after cops mistook doughnut glaze for meth gets $37,500 from Orlando

    The City of Orlando paid $37,500 to a man to settle a lawsuit after police officers arrested him for what they thought was meth but was actually tiny flakes of glaze from a Krispy Kreme doughnut.

    Daniel Rushing sued the city after a field test incorrectly showed he had drugs and he was arrested and taken to jail.

    He received the check in the mail last week, he said.

    Rushing said he was pleased with the outcome and hopes he can get his record expunged.

    He said he’s been trying to start a security business, but to no avail.

    “I haven’t been able to work,” Rushing said. “People go online and see that you’ve been arrested.”

    http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-krispy-kreme-glaze-orlando-police-20171012-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 16, 2017, 09:43:07 AM
    Cool

    Is That supposed to be an answer to me.?

    Really If so you've gone dropped in my estimation of you.
    Another one who cant handle the truth.

    You claimed a x % of cops were Bad - Now it appears your running away from it. ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2017, 03:47:59 PM
    Cops Respond to Bank Robber by Shooting His Hostage 9 Times

    Eufaula, OK — A woman who was shot 9 times by police while she was being held as a hostage at a bank in Eufaula, Oklahoma, is now seeking compensation for the horrific attack that left her disabled.

    Julie Huff was a customer at the Bank of Eufaula on Jan. 21, 2016, when a robber entered and took her hostage. Within 63 seconds of entering the building, Cedric Norris shot and killed Randy Peterson the bank’s president, and shot and wounded a bank teller who refused to go with him as his hostage.

    Norris then turned to Huff and took her as a hostage. He forced her into an SUV, which police pursued in a chase. After police “disabled the vehicle,” Huff exited the car and ran into a nearby field, while Norris chased her and exchanged gunfire with officers, according to a report from Chickasha News.

    While some police officers are cautious about firing at a suspect who is near an innocent hostage, the Oklahoma officers continued to fire bullets in Norris’ direction, even when he caught up to Huff, grabbed her around the neck, and used her as a human shield.

    In a statement, Huff’s attorneys noted that even though police knew Huff was an innocent hostage, they shot intentionally and shot her numerous times with multiple weapons.

    “The Law Enforcement officers knew Ms. Huff was an innocent hostage yet they deliberately shot her nine times. Not one of the nine bullets which hit Ms. Huff came from the kidnapper. All the bullets came from the law enforcement officers—one of whom shot her with an AR-15.”

    The statement also criticized the Bank of Eufaula for failing “to have an armed security guard, which is in violation of proper banking standards.” It claimed that the bank “had multiple, unmonitored entrances and exits, which encouraged this armed robbery.”

    The statement from Huff’s attorney’s concluded that she “was severely injured and has undergone many surgeries.” As a result, “Ms. Huff feels very lucky to be alive, but she has been permanently scarred and injured as a result of the failures of the Bank of Eufaula and the reckless and careless actions of law enforcement.”

    Not only did law enforcement blatantly choose not to protect Huff during the incident, they also failed to protect the public from the threat posed by Cedric Norris. According to a report from the Associated Press, Norris had an extensive history of carrying out armed robberies, and he “had been released from a Texas prison despite having a 60-year sentence to serve in Oklahoma for robbery convictions in Tulsa and Creek counties.”

    According to prosecutors in Creek County, Norris’ early release was a mistake that resulted from “miscommunication between Texas and Oklahoma.”
    However, his newfound freedom did not stop his robbery streak, and the getaway car he used to kidnap Huff was reportedly one he stole during another “violent robbery in Texas.”

    While Norris was killed in the shootout with police, it remains to be seen whether any of the officers who were responsible for the horrific shooting that left Julie Huff disabled for the rest of her life will ever be held accountable for their actions.

    This is not the first time police officers in Oklahoma have been featured for their blatant misconduct. In a recent case, officers in Tulsa were caught on video commending each other on their use of force in the arrest of a suspect—even though the person they put in handcuffs was an innocent man they beat to a bloody pulp, after trespassing on his property.

    It is also not the first time police have shot an innocent hostage.

    As TFTP reported, On Feb 7, 2014, Matthew Serbus led police on a dangerous high-speed chase before crashing his car and taking Dawn Pfister as a hostage. Police would shoot Serbus as he held a knife to Pfister, then, walk up to Pfister and kill her too. The entire incident was recorded on a police dashcam.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/robbery-hostage-shot-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2017, 03:52:59 PM
    Look at that brave "officer"...

    Cop Attacks 60yo Woman, Slams Her to the Ground After She Asked for Milk

    Montgomery, OH — In September of 2015, Marsha Pate-Strickland, 60, was wrongfully accused of assault and jailed as a result. As she sat in jail waiting for the charges to be dropped, however, Pate-Strickland was brutally assaulted by an officer after she simply asked for milk instead of juice. Now, the taxpayers of Montgomery County will be the ones held liable for the attack.

    On September 8, 2015, surveillance video showed officer David Stemp and Pate-Strickland exchange a few words after she had asked for milk instead of juice. According to the video and the lawsuit, Stemp ordered Pate-Strickland to then stand up, then he forcefully grabbed her and “violently swung” her around before her right shoulder and arm were slammed to the floor.

    When Pate-Strickland pulls her arm away, the officer is shown grabbing her by her left arm, pulling her, spinning her and taking her down to the floor.

    “There’s just no reason for this kid — well, I call him a kid, the CO — to grab onto this 60-year-old woman and fling her around,” Pate-Strickland’s attorney, Douglas Brannon said.

    Prior to being attacked by the officer, Pate-Strickland had been peacefully sitting in the women’s waiting area. However, all that peace would come to a brutal end once Stemp entered the equation, and now, the taxpayers are paying for it.

    “The case has been settled. There’s a signed agreement,” Brannon said. “The matter was settled amicably and Ms. Pate-Strickland is going to be moving forward with her life and is glad to have this matter resolved.”

    A Montgomery County Prosecutor’s Office spokesman confirmed that terms have been reached and eventually will be filed in federal court, according to Dayton Daily News.

    “A settlement, approved by Sheriff Plummer, between him, Montgomery County, and the plaintiffs has been reached,” said Greg Flannagan. “However, the necessary documents have not been signed by the Sheriff or the plaintiff or filed with the court.”

    The lawsuit claimed that Stemp’s actions were  “brutal and excessive force” and “cruel and unusual.”

    Because of these brutal and cruel actions, Pate-Strickland suffered a non-displaced fracture in her shoulder and had to seek medical care, according to the lawsuit.

    Two years later, Brannon now reports that Pate-Strickland is, fortunately, “doing fine” and made a “good recovery from her non-displaced fracture. It healed.”

    For his brutality captured on video, officer Stemp was allowed to resign quietly and quickly hired on with another agency — where he was promoted.

    As Dayton Daily News reports,

    Stemp resigned May 31, 2016, to take a full-time job with the village of Camden. Village Chief Matt Spurlock said in September that Stemp has been promoted to the department’s senior patrol officer and is in charge of the property room. Spurlock said Stemp, who started as part-time in late 2014, always has showed professionalism.

    There you have it. As you watch the video below, remember that this is the officer who, according to his supervisor, has always shown professionalism.

    Apparently, tossing around elderly women like rag dolls who have done nothing to you is professionalism in the land of the free.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/60yo-woman-suing-video-shows-cop-slam-ground-asking-milk/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 18, 2017, 01:50:15 PM
    Is That supposed to be an answer to me.?

    Really If so you've gone dropped in my estimation of you.
    Another one who cant handle the truth.

    You claimed a x % of cops were Bad - Now it appears your running away from it. ::)

    Yes sir... my estimate was probably high
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 18, 2017, 09:24:21 PM
    Yes sir... my estimate was probably high



    Of course it was..... ::)
    Deal with it -- Your as Much A Part of The Problem.

    See No Evil
    Hear No Evil
    Speak No Evil
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 19, 2017, 08:05:58 AM


    Of course it was..... ::)
    Deal with it -- Your as Much A Part of The Problem.

    See No Evil
    Hear No Evil
    Speak No Evil

    To be fair, we probably both are
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 19, 2017, 09:02:15 AM
    Remember this case?

    Cop Who Killed Unarmed Dad Begging for His Life Claims Showing Jury Body Cam is “Unfair”

    Phoenix, AZ —  In March of 2016, Mesa Police Officer Philip Brailsford was charged with second-degree murder for gunning down Daniel Shaver, an innocent husband, and father of two. The shooting was captured on his body cam, part of which was released the following May.

    Now, however, Brailsford’s defense is claiming that the prosecution showing the jury the body cam during opening statements would be unfair to the killer cop.

    According to AZ Central, Brailsford, 26, is scheduled to stand trial starting Oct. 23 on a charge of second-degree murder. The trial is expected to last 16 days. In a memorandum filed in Maricopa County Superior Court on Monday, attorney Michael Piccarreta says prosecutor Susie Charbel plans to show an 18-minute police body- camera recording during her opening statement, scheduled for Oct. 25.

    Piccarreta says in the memo “that it is extremely unfair to the defense” to show the video during the opening statement because that wouldn’t allow the defense lawyer to immediately cross-examine any witnesses about the footage.

    However, the playing of the video is in line with standards of opening statements allowing the prosecution to establish their credibility in this case. The video of Brailsford killing Shaver will undoubtedly be at the very center of the case so the defense’s claim of not being allowed to cross-examine any witness about the footage is unfounded.

    Regardless of when the body camera video is shown, it will be the first time the full, unedited version will be played.

    Last year, an Arizona judge announced that they would be releasing the body camera footage showing Brailsford murder Shaver. When they did release it, however, the city released two videos, both of which were clearly edited and portions redacted.

    Police said Shaver, a 26-year-old from Texas staying at the La Quinta Inn & Suites on a business trip on Jan. 18, 2016, had invited a couple he met to his room for drinks. No one was in any danger and the entire incident was a misunderstanding. For the majority of the video, police appear to be in a standoff with people who simply can’t hear them.

    “Occupants of room 5-0-2, this is the Mesa Police,” the officer is heard yelling on the video, to which he receives no response.

    “Listen to my instructions or it’s going to become very uncomfortable for you,” the officer said. “The female is to step outside the room.”

    When ‘the female’ does step out the room, she is escorted away by an officer as she tells him how scared she is.

    “I’m so scared,” she told the officer, clearly in shock with the multiple officers in the hallway responding to a hotel in which no crime had been committed and innocent people were simply sharing drinks.

    Below are the redacted versions of the police body cameras.



    The videos above clearly illustrate the intentions behind only releasing a portion of the body camera footage. It is made to look like it was an intense standoff as well as make the police look like heroes as they comforted the woman.

    However, as we pointed out, it was likely that there was no standoff and they simply did not hear the officers. Also, the woman was most likely not scared of the man who she voluntarily consented to have drinks with — she was scared of the multiple armed men pointing AR-15s at them. This will likely come out when the defense is allowed to cross-examine her.

    When Laney Sweet, Shaver’s wife originally asked to see the footage, she was told that if she watched it, she would be forced to remain completely silent about its contents.

    During an interview with Maricopa County attorney, Bill Montgomery, Sweet was given the ultimatum — watch the disturbing video and never speak of it, or don’t. The widow of an innocent man, killed by the government, was told that the video proves her husband did not deserve to die. However, Sweet will now have to wait until the city decides to release the unedited version of the video to get closure—this would have been over a year.

    In a statement to the press, the county stated that Daniel Shaver was complying with officers, crawling on his hands and knees and begged not to be shot, just before Brailsford opened fire.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver is quoted in the police report.

    However, last year, Brailsford’s attorney denied Shaver begged not to shoot him while at the same time thanking Superior Court Judge Sam Myers for not releasing the entire video.

    On January 18, Brailsford, along with several other officers, responded to a call about a suspect with a rifle in a hotel room. The ‘rifle’ was nothing more than a pellet gun that was used in Shaver’s business of pest control, and Shaver was not in possession of the pellet gun when he was murdered in cold blood by officer Brailsford.

    According to KTAR, Brailsford told investigators that Shaver was ordered to crawl toward officers with his hands on the ground, but the officer believed Shaver’s move forward was an attempt to get “a better firing position on us.”

    The officer said he could no longer see Shaver’s right hand and worried that Shaver could have easily drawn on officers, who were just feet away in a hallway outside his room. However, none of the other officers fired, illustrating the lack of danger.

    “So that’s when I assessed the threat. I fired my weapon, uh, five times,” Brailsford said, adding that it was terrifying the first time Shaver reached back.

    Charging an officer with murder in Arizona is an exceptionally rare incident, which speaks to the severity of what must be shown on the body camera. It also means that this coward officer was in no danger when he decided to pull the trigger — 5 times.

    Brailsford was fired from the department in March of 2016 for multiple policy violations not associated with the murder of Shaver. After he was fired, we learned that he should have never had a badge that night he killed an innocent man.

    Aside from his unsatisfactory performance, records released by Mesa Police revealed that Brailsford was accused of beating three people a few months before he killed Shaver. He also etched “You’re Fucked” into his AR-15 police rifle — illustrating his disregard for human life.

    Two children and a wife will now live the rest of their lives without their loving father because of the actions of this public servant. The one thing that could help get this family closure is to see the man who stole the life of their dad and husband put behind bars. Hopefully, this case ends differently than the countless cases before which ended with killer cops walking free for needlessly killing other human beings.

    The Free Thought Project will continue to cover the trial as it unfolds next week.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-killed-unarmed-dad-begged-life-claims-showing-jury-body-cam-unfair/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 19, 2017, 10:25:40 AM
    To be fair, we probably both are


    Really -- And just how do you reach that conclusion...????
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 19, 2017, 05:16:46 PM

    Really -- And just how do you reach that conclusion...????

    You say I am part of the problem because I minimize, justify, cover for bad cops. I say you are part of the problem, you and similar causes like Black Lives Matter because you cry wolf when there is no wolf, it takes the focus off the real incidents and waters down your position. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on October 19, 2017, 06:47:40 PM
    You say I am part of the problem because I minimize, justify, cover for bad cops. I say you are part of the problem, you and similar causes like Black Lives Matter because you cry wolf when there is no wolf, it takes the focus off the real incidents and waters down your position. 

    The problem isn't the 1% or less than 1% of bad cops who do atrocious things.  It's the other 99+% of cops who blindly defend anything and everything cop.  Regarding BLM?  Give me a break, there most certainly is a wolf.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 20, 2017, 07:46:21 AM
    You say I am part of the problem because I minimize, justify, cover for bad cops. I say you are part of the problem, you and similar causes like Black Lives Matter because you cry wolf when there is no wolf, it takes the focus off the real incidents and waters down your position. 

    The problem is the 5-10% out there doing horrendous things & the likes of you trying to minimize & justify it all.

    How many pages is this thread & its ongoing. 50,000 to 100,000 Armed and dangerous cops out there & then countless others trying to cover for them That's The Problem
    That A Huge Fcuking Wolf Out There.

    Also to fcuk with BLM. fcucking Nonsense

    See No Evil
    Hear No evil
    Speak No Evil
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 20, 2017, 07:48:07 AM
    The problem isn't the 10% or less than 10% of bad cops who do atrocious things.  It's the other 99+% of cops who blindly defend anything and everything cop.  Regarding BLM?  Give me a break, there most certainly is a wolf.

    Yes sir well said.

    Not That He is Ever going to be able to comprehend this or admit it.

    He cant see the Wood for The Trees.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2017, 10:40:36 AM
    "There were 280 Formal complaints filed in 2015 – 64 External Formal complaints and 216 Internal Formal complaints.  In aggregate, this was a total increase of less than 1% (3 cases) from the number filed in 2014.   There were 3 fewer External Formal complaints (↓ 1%) and 6 more Internal Formal complaints (↑ 3%).  "

    This is from the latest posted Office of the Police Monitor report for the Austin police Department. Notice the ratio of cops reporting on cops verses citizens reporting on cops is about 4 to 1. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2017, 10:43:26 AM
    http://www.austintexas.gov/sites/default/files/files/OPM_Annual_Report_2015_FINAL2.pdf

    This is the link for the entire report.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2017, 10:47:31 AM
    Son of Sheriff—Who Locked Down Entire School to Look for Drugs—Busted for Drugs

    Worth County, GA — In June, violated children and furious parents filed a massive lawsuit after the Worth County Sheriff’s office conducted an illegal search of 900 students in a fruitless effort looking for non-existent drugs, sexually abusing multiple children in the process.

    Earlier this month, Worth County Sheriff Jeff Hobby was indicted over this search for sexual battery, false imprisonment and violation of oath of office after he ordered a school-wide search of hundreds of high school students to look for drugs. Deputies allegedly touched girls vaginas and breasts and groped boys in their groin area during the search at the Worth County High School April 14, reports RARE.

    Now, we are learning that last week, after this sheriff violated the rights of 900 innocent kids and was arrested for it, his own son was busted for drugs.

    As the AJC reports, the drug arrest of Zachary Lewis Hobby last week has renewed speculation that Worth County Sheriff Jeff Hobby’s decision to search the entire local high school last April was somehow linked to his son’s troubles.

    “It’s a raw issue,” said Tommy Coleman, attorney for the Worth County Board of Education.

    Coleman said anytime there’s a development in the story it fuels community discussion. He said the arrest last week of the sheriff’s son reignited speculation, according to AJC.

    “My sense is this was common knowledge and it didn’t really surprise anyone in the community,” Coleman said.

    Coleman told the paper that Zachary was a student at Worth County High School last year when the Sheriff ordered the raid. However, he was not there that day.

    Agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation were called in last week to investigate a drug case involving the sheriff’s son. The younger Hobby, age 17, was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and criminal trespass for an incident that occurred in Poulan on Oct. 9, according to the GBI.
     
    The son allegedly handed the drugs to another person, Aaron Ray Short, 20, according to GBI. Short was also charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
    Naturally, Sheriff Hobby is standing by this rights violation on a massive scale, according to his attorney, noting that as long as a school administrator was present, the search of the children was legal. But this was not the case.

    As WALB reported at that time, Worth County Schools attorney Tommy Coleman said in order for the Sheriff’s office to search any students, they’d had to have reason to believe there was some kind of criminal activity or the student had possession of contraband or drugs.

    “If you don’t have that then this search would violate an individual’s rights,” said Coleman. “[It] violates the constitutional right and enforcing them the right against unreasonable search and seizures.”

    Interim Worth County Superintendent Lawrence Walters said he understands parents concerns about the drug search at Worth County High school on Friday, according to WALB.

    “I’ve never been involved with anything like that ever in the past 21 years and I don’t condone it,” said Walters.

    While pot possession is certainly no danger to society, the irony of this rights-violating tyrant having to watch his own son get caught up inside a system that the sheriff perpetuates is incredible.


    Perhaps, if this sheriff beats these charges—which, if history is any indicator, he most certainly will—he will choose to promote freedom instead of waging an oppressive drug war that does nothing to stop addiction and abuse but does everything to foster crime and ruin lives.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/son-sheriff-illegally-searched-800-kids-find-drugs-busted-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on October 20, 2017, 11:12:45 AM
    Haha, what a story.  So, since they say it was "common knowledge" and, basically, everyone knew the guy was on a power trip due to his son smoking pot, you really have to wonder about this guy.

    Oh, yeah.  Let's make him our Sheriff.  Just the sort we need.  It will be so wonderful, and what could go wrong.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 20, 2017, 11:28:29 AM
    Son of Sheriff—Who Locked Down Entire School to Look for Drugs—Busted for Drugs

    Worth County, GA — In June, violated children and furious parents filed a massive lawsuit after the Worth County Sheriff’s office conducted an illegal search of 900 students in a fruitless effort looking for non-existent drugs, sexually abusing multiple children in the process.

    Earlier this month, Worth County Sheriff Jeff Hobby was indicted over this search for sexual battery, false imprisonment and violation of oath of office after he ordered a school-wide search of hundreds of high school students to look for drugs. Deputies allegedly touched girls vaginas and breasts and groped boys in their groin area during the search at the Worth County High School April 14, reports RARE.

    Now, we are learning that last week, after this sheriff violated the rights of 900 innocent kids and was arrested for it, his own son was busted for drugs.

    As the AJC reports, the drug arrest of Zachary Lewis Hobby last week has renewed speculation that Worth County Sheriff Jeff Hobby’s decision to search the entire local high school last April was somehow linked to his son’s troubles.

    “It’s a raw issue,” said Tommy Coleman, attorney for the Worth County Board of Education.

    Coleman said anytime there’s a development in the story it fuels community discussion. He said the arrest last week of the sheriff’s son reignited speculation, according to AJC.

    “My sense is this was common knowledge and it didn’t really surprise anyone in the community,” Coleman said.

    Coleman told the paper that Zachary was a student at Worth County High School last year when the Sheriff ordered the raid. However, he was not there that day.

    Agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation were called in last week to investigate a drug case involving the sheriff’s son. The younger Hobby, age 17, was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and criminal trespass for an incident that occurred in Poulan on Oct. 9, according to the GBI.
     
    The son allegedly handed the drugs to another person, Aaron Ray Short, 20, according to GBI. Short was also charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
    Naturally, Sheriff Hobby is standing by this rights violation on a massive scale, according to his attorney, noting that as long as a school administrator was present, the search of the children was legal. But this was not the case.

    As WALB reported at that time, Worth County Schools attorney Tommy Coleman said in order for the Sheriff’s office to search any students, they’d had to have reason to believe there was some kind of criminal activity or the student had possession of contraband or drugs.

    “If you don’t have that then this search would violate an individual’s rights,” said Coleman. “[It] violates the constitutional right and enforcing them the right against unreasonable search and seizures.”

    Interim Worth County Superintendent Lawrence Walters said he understands parents concerns about the drug search at Worth County High school on Friday, according to WALB.

    “I’ve never been involved with anything like that ever in the past 21 years and I don’t condone it,” said Walters.

    While pot possession is certainly no danger to society, the irony of this rights-violating tyrant having to watch his own son get caught up inside a system that the sheriff perpetuates is incredible.


    Perhaps, if this sheriff beats these charges—which, if history is any indicator, he most certainly will—he will choose to promote freedom instead of waging an oppressive drug war that does nothing to stop addiction and abuse but does everything to foster crime and ruin lives.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/son-sheriff-illegally-searched-800-kids-find-drugs-busted-drugs/



    TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum
    Hi Ho I can hear 007 Tonto on his way to Defend Him...... ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2017, 12:32:33 PM


    Thanks - Thats about as straight a reply as we'll get from you.

    "But yeah, we agree some cops are screwed up, or do screwed up things, we just disagree on the size of the problem"
    On this matter You stated previously that you thought between 5 & 10% of cops were bad apples....
    out of what approximately 1,000,000 cops That makes for between 50,00 to 100,000 Scumbags
    That are armed & have the right to shoot / kill & the law on their side Plus how many others to cover up for them / not report them.!!!

    As for the size of the problem I'd say that was A BIg Fcuking Problem.

    Instead of the "very very few - hell, even hardly existent- bad apples", we should be talking about the few good apples: those who go above and beyond what their job description/union contract requires, actually serve and help their community instead of tyrannizing it, respect the Constitution and act fairly and impartially, regardless of who the criminal is. The problem is not only the cops committing those horrific crimes but also the other cops who might be present on the scene and participate in these crimes either by actively supporting the criminal cop or by corroborating the story afterwards or by intimidating/arresting/coercing witnesses or stealing their recording equipment or by not enforcing the law and arresting on the spot whoever (cop or otherwise) commits the crimes. When was the last time you saw a cop arresting another criminal cop on the spot (in the same way they'd arrest a normal citizen) but instead they just blindly help him abuse and attack and violate other people's rights? And you are talking about people who work in this system and know its intricacies, technicalities and back doors quite well.

    Even a tiny percentage of these criminals is still a huge number, made even more terrifying by the power and special protections they have. Certainly there are so many cases of abuse that go unreported by so called "good cops" who do not want to "snitch" on another cop and break the blue wall of silence or by citizens who are intimidated, extorted or coerced or cases where evidence is magically lost (bodycams that are switched off, turned away or have footage deleted or not released etc). All this, and much more, perpetuates a culture of abuse and lack of accountability and punishment for the not so "very very few bad apples".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 20, 2017, 05:54:19 PM


    TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum TaDum
    Hi Ho I can hear 007 Tonto on his way to Defend Him...... ::)


    What's to defend?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2017, 09:32:35 AM
    Another criminal caught in the act. Of course he gets paid vacation for his "bad decision" (as his employer puts it).

    Cop Caught on Video Breaking into Elderly Man’s Home, Stealing Cash & Prescription Drugs

    Boyton Beach, FL — A Palm Beach County deputy was arrested this month after he was captured on surveillance footage breaking into an 85-year-old man’s home in Boyton Beach and stealing his property. The cop was on duty at the time.

    During Hurricane Irma’s havoc last month, Moe Rosoff, the elderly victim of the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Department, was riding out the storm in his home alone. However, when the power went out, Rosoff fell down and hit his head. When his family hadn’t heard from him, they called the police to conduct a welfare check.

    Three deputies responded to Rosoff’s home and found him on the floor in his master bedroom. He was taken to a local hospital, however, he would succumb to his injuries later that day and pass away.

    During the welfare check, Deputy Jason Cooke would receive Rosoff’s garage code over the radio. Knowing that no one would be home, Cooke decided to burglarize the home. Little did he know, however, that there was a nest surveillance camera watching his every move.

    Cooke was seen on video stealing money, jewelry, and several prescription medications from Rosoff’s home. When the family saw the video on September 20, they went directly to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. Naturally, Cooke denied the allegations against him. However, once he was shown the video, he was quickly caught in a lie.

    The family was shocked to find out that Cooke was not immediately placed under arrest. In fact, the sheriff’s office would wait five weeks before charging Cooke—in spite of video evidence of him committing felony burglary. Because of his blue privilege, Cooke was allowed to enter a 30-day drug rehabilitation program before they charged him.

    “We were told that Officer Cooke denied the crime at first, but after he was shown the video, he admitted the crimes,” the family said. “Found in Mr. Cooke’s patrol car was a 2016 prescription bottle containing Vyvanse, a central nervous system stimulant, 47 pills of Tramadol Hydrochloride, a strong pain killer (with 3 different markings), Proclorperazine Maleate an anti-psychotic drug and Carisoprodol (Soma) a muscle relaxant. Not all of these medications we think were taken from our father, leading us to believe that this was not Officer Cooke’s first crime.”

    Aside from the shock of watching a cop burglarize their father and not get immediately arrested, the family was also outraged to learn that Cooke was working in full capacity under the influence of multiple narcotics.

    “If Officer Cooke was operating in his official capacity under these medications, it is our belief that he may have posed a significant threat to the public’s safety since just a few of the noted side effects of these medications include confusion, impaired thinking, impaired reactions, abnormal behavior, tremors, drowsiness, altered state of consciousness and anger,” the family said.

    Indeed, this officer has a problem and he used his badge to feed that problem at the expense of his victims. Finally, after five weeks of remaining free—despite video evidence showing he is a criminal—Cooke was arrested last week and charged with burglary and grand theft with a firearm.

    When asked why the deputy was allowed to remain free, the department chose to remain silent, releasing only the following statement.

    “Unfortunately, sometimes an employee makes a bad decision which leads to misconduct,” a statement from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office said. “This misconduct was reported, investigated and subsequently determined to be criminal in nature, resulting in the charges.”

    Cooke is currently on paid vacation pending the outcome of his trial.

    In America, police will legally break into your home and steal your property even if you are innocent. This practice is known as civil asset forfeiture. However, in the video below, a cop was arrested because he did not receive the approval from his superiors before stealing from an innocent person.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-caught-video-breaking-elderly-mans-home-stealing-cash-prescription-drugs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 26, 2017, 01:25:59 PM
    Judge Removes Fatal Shooting of Black Man From Ex-Tulsa Officer’s Record

    The first-degree manslaughter case brought against a white former Oklahoma police officer who was acquitted in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man will be removed from her record after she asked to have it expunged, a judge ruled Wednesday.
    But that doesn't mean no one will ever be able to read the case again.

    District Judge William LaFortune also ordered all documents involving former Tulsa officer Betty Jo Shelby's case sealed and kept with the court. The case will only be accessible through a court order and can be destroyed after 10 years, according to state law.

    Excluding government and law enforcement, which would have access to the record because Shelby would likely disclose it on job applications, agencies won't be able to find the case in a background search, said Shelby's defense attorney, Shannon McMurray.

    https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/national-international/Judge-Removes-Fatal-Shooting-of-Black-Man-From-Ex-Tulsa-Officers-Record--453182613.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on October 26, 2017, 01:47:55 PM
    As for the other prescription meds he had in his possession: makes ya wonder if they bothered to track down how he came about them.  Are they linked with stops he'd made in the past?  Citizens he'd detained?  Are the prescriptions associated with names on any reports?  Robberies, burglaries?  If they didn't investigate all that, and much more, just as they'd do against any of us, then they're trying to protect themselves just as much as him.  They deserve their asses kicked for that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2017, 03:32:45 PM
    Let's see if these armed and violent criminals will get at least 35 years for their crimes.

    Feds Indict 3 Cops for Savagely Beating 16yo Boy After Video Exposed Them as Lying Tyrants

    Los Angeles, CA — A visit to the LA county fair turned into a police brutality nightmare for Christian Aguilar, who was beaten and tased for doing nothing other than filming the police. Now, because someone bravely decided to film that nightmare, the police who caused it are being held responsible.

    Three officers with the Pomona Police Department were indicted Thursday for alleged civil rights violations that occurred during the arrest of then-16-year-old Christian Aguilar.

    According to CBS LA, Sgt. Michael Neaderbaomer, Officer Chad Jensen and Officer Prince Hutchinson pleaded not guilty to multiple counts, including use of force, witness tampering, and falsifying records, all stemming from the September 16, 2015, incident.

    The officers allegedly wrote a false police report to “justify the use of force” against Aguilar, who was not named in the federal indictment. The report claims the teen came within arm’s length of another officer who was arresting a suspect and then attempted to punch Jensen in the face, while trying to “incite unrest,” reports CBS.

    However, none of the alleged incitement of unrest was apparent in the video, thus the indictment of three cops.

    In 2015, after the Pomona Police officers beat the teen, they maliciously charged him, his parents, and the uninvolved man who filmed the boy’s assault.

    According to the man who filmed the beating, Robert Hansen, police confiscated his camera, arrested him, and edited the video before submitting it for the investigation.

    Eventually, all charges against Hansen, Aguilar, and Aguilar’s parents were dropped — but not before cops lied to cover the incident up. The video below, however, does not lie.


    As he watched his parents get arrested, Aguilar merely attempted to film the interaction. His freedom of speech was then met with heavy police violence.

    According to a report by Photography is Not a Crime at the time,

    Quote
    As is clear in the video, Aguilar didn’t ever challenge the first officer on the scene’s use of inappropriate force, when Officer Jensen smashed his head into a fence  – instead putting his hands at his sides and thrusting his chin forward in a posture of frustrated readiness.
     
    Officer Jensen thrust his forearm into Aguilar’s face twice at maximum thrust, before Pomona Officers Hutchinson and Correa arrived.
     
    Hutchinson thoughtfully held the teenager along with Jensen, and that’s when Pomona Officer landed a devastating blow, with his long black baton to Christian Aguilar’s knee, sending the teenager to the ground.
     
    As the three grown men beat the teenager, another Pomona Officer came over an discharged his taser near the teen to strike terror.

    “In the criminal trial, after watching the officers’ explanations of the discrepancies between the full video and their police reports unravel during cross examination,” said the family lawyer David Gammill, of the Los Angeles based Geragos Law Firm, and that, “The judge dismissed Christian’s criminal case before the defense ever had to call a single witness.”

    “It’s heartbreaking to see your kid suffer like that,” said Aguilar. “And then to know that these guys swore an oath are (are) deliberately lying to cover it up.”

    According to the Geragos firm, Ignacio Aguilar was a highly regarded cardiac nurse and was forced out of his job by the slanderous allegations. Christian Aguilar’s mother Eraine Aguilar has been in law enforcement since 2001 and was sickened by the conduct of Pomona PD.

    When Eraine Aguilar went to the Pomona police department to file a complaint, she says she was intimidated as well.

    The family filed a lawsuit against the Pomona police department and the city has paid out $500,000 to settle it.

    “If convicted, the charges of excessive force carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, the charges of witness tampering and falsifying records carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, and the charges of false statements to federal agents carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison,” the indictment reads.

    “I’m glad the FBI flashed their light down our road to brighten it up,” Ignacio Aguilar said.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lying-cops-beat-teen-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 28, 2017, 01:09:40 PM
    Cleveland Police Disciplining 75 Cops After An Unarmed Couple Was Shot 137 Times

    Pamela Engel      Aug. 2, 2013, 5:40 PM       4,219  23 

    Cleveland police officials said Friday they're disciplining 75 of officers for their involvement in a police chase that ended in the shooting deaths of an unarmed man and woman, The Plain Dealer reports.

    The pair were shot 137 times while in their car, parked in a middle school parking lot. No officers were injured in what police called a "full blown-out" firefight.

    Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine told reporters in February that "there is nothing normal about this case. ... This is a tragedy."

    In November, about 60 police vehicles pursued the two suspects in a 25-minute chase spanning three cities. One suspect, 30-year-old Malissa Williams, was shot 24 times, and the other, 43-year-old Timothy Russell, was shot 23 times.

    At the time, police said the suspects fired shots at them near Cleveland's downtown Justice Center, according to The Plain Dealer. And a police dispatcher said that shots were fired at officers during the chase.

    But after the chase ended in a gunfight near Heritage Middle School, police checked the car and realized neither Williams nor Russell was armed.

    It isn't clear whether a shot was actually fired at the officer who initiated the chase. Some speculate the Malibu driven by Russell may have backfired.

    A report from the state's attorney general shows the officers likely believe the suspects were armed based on erroneous information broadcast over the police radio. Officers told investigators they saw the suspects in the car with what looked like a gun.

    Russell might have fled from police initially, fueling the massive chase, because he was high and driving on a suspended license. Toxicology results show that Russell was under the influence of cocaine and alcohol at the time of his death. Williams was also high on cocaine and had marijuana in her system.

    The officers being disciplined for violating police protocol won't lose their jobs and did not partake in the gunfight at the end of the chase, but they did have a role in the pursuit. More than 100 police officers were involved in the chase in some way.

    Nineteen of the 75 officers facing discipline for offenses ranging from engaging in a chase without permission to providing false information on police reports will have disciplinary hearings and might be suspended temporarily, according to The Plain Dealer.

    In 2011, the newspaper published an investigation of reports of excessive use of nondeadly force by Cleveland police officers. The newspaper found that the police chief often overlooked inconsistencies with police officers' stories when investigating use of force incidents.

    Many of the officers faced accusations of brutality on the force.


    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/cleveland-police-disciplined-in-deadly-chase-2013-8#ixzz2arxiczbm

    Remember this case? More than 100 cops, 62 police vehicles, 137 shots fired (of which the 2 victims received 23 and 24).

    5 Cops Back On the Job After Executing Unarmed Couple, Shooting them 137 Times for a Traffic Stop

    Cleveland, OH — In what can only be referred to as a travesty of justice and a disgrace to the integrity of police departments nationwide, five officers who took part in the 137-shot, execution-style fusillade that killed an unarmed couple — are now all back on the job.

    According to WOIO, this month, the city of Cleveland released the following statement and confirms that the following five police officers were reinstated to full-time duty.

    “The officers were reinstated as required by the arbitrator’s decision.”
    Michael Farley              #409
    Erin O’Donnell              #1027
    Christopher Ereg          #767
    Wilfredo Diaz                #350
    Brian Sabolik                #1021

    The sixth cop, Michael Brelo will remain free from jail but has been fired. He has since become a gypsy cop, scrounging for a job at any department that will hire him.

    The shooting came at the end of a November 12, 2012 high-speed chase involving more than 100 officers and 62 police vehicles to go after Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams. The pursuit began when officers standing outside police headquarters mistook the sound of Russell’s backfiring Chevy Malibu for gunfire. When the car stopped outside city limits, officers opened fire, perforating Russell with 24 shots and Williams with 23.

    The shooting lasted 19.3 seconds. For anyone who’s ever been to a shooting range or is familiar with firing weapons, 19.3 seconds would seem like an eternity as all those rounds were flying down range. To discount the malicious intent of these officers continuing to fire after the first few seconds is outright criminal.

    Neither of the victims were armed, or suspected of anything more serious than traffic violations resulting from the pursuit. A search of the vehicle following the double homicide revealed a crack pipe. Both Russell and Williams had been diagnosed as mentally ill.

    The city has since paid $3 million each to the families of Russell and Williams to settle a lawsuit.

    Brelo, the ring-leading murderer, fired 49 rounds, including the last 15 after he jumped up on the hood of the car in a wild west fashion. In spite of this horrifying display of aggression, a judge acquitted him of manslaughter charges at trial.

    Officers Wilfredo Diaz, Brian Sabolik and Michael Farley and detectives Christopher Ereg and Erin O’Donnell fired the remaining shots in a gross display of excessive deadly force. They were also all acquitted.

    Brelo was acquitted in a bench trial after W. Ken Katsaris, a retired sheriff and “expert witness” specializing in testimony tailored to exonerate police officers, testified that Brelo’s only mistake was to expose himself to potential danger, thereby potentially inhibiting his colleagues as they unleashed gunfire in the direction of the vehicle.

    By leaping on top of the hood of the car, Brelo was “taking action that is not trained, not recognized, not safe, and put all of the other officers in the vicinity of his becoming a victim and their [the other officers] having to attempt to now engage to save his life,” Katsaris testified before trial judge John P. O’Donnell, who in predictable fashion exonerated the officer.

    “We believe that the City’s decision to terminate the other five officers was justified and should have been upheld,” Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson said in a statement this week. “We acknowledge that the arbitrator concluded that those officers committed serious policy violations; however, we are reviewing our options regarding the officers whose terminations were not upheld.”

    Naturally, the police funded defense attorney is defending the decision and disgustingly referring to the officers — who murdered an unarmed couple over a traffic violation — as exemplary.

    “It was a difficult case for both sides and a gratifying outcome,” defense attorney, Patrick D’Angelo, who represents the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association, the union of rank-and-file officers, said. “We realize we didn’t prevail in everything that we were seeking but we saved the career of five fine officers.”

    In the eyes of the police union, six cops dumping 137 rounds into an unarmed couple is ‘fine’ work.

    “Hopefully after further deliberations by both parties, this should be the end of this saga,” D’Angelo said. “Hopefully there will be no appeal and we can go forward.”

    As for Brelo, he is still eligible to be hired by other departments. For unloading 49 rounds into an unarmed couple, 15 of which a court, the department, and the arbitrator all agreed were ‘egregious’ in nature, Brelo could very well be back on the street in no time.

    “Indeed Officer Brelo never offered a reason or an explanation for these actions,” Arbitrator William Heekin wrote in his ruling. “Accordingly and upon finding that this clearly constituted an excessive use of deadly force, the contention of the City that it amounted to egregious misconduct where as a result the City no longer has trust and confidence in his ability to carry out the duties and responsibilities of a police officer is accepted.”

    For clearly using excessive deadly force, however, Brelo and his murderous accomplices faced no consequences and are now back on the job.

    “It’s tragic that it went down this way, but at the end of the day, two people high on crack cocaine, high on marijuana, one of them intoxicated, made the decisions that they made and we responded to them,” union spokesman Steve Loomis said after the officers were acquitted. “And we responded within our training.”

    As the late William Grigg noted in his coverage of this case for the Free Thought Project last year:

    This is precisely the problem: Cleveland police, like their comrades nation-wide, are trained to kill people for reasons that will not withstand rational scrutiny — and they are expected to be rewarded for doing so.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-137-rounds-into-unarmed-couple-killing/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 30, 2017, 10:37:08 PM
    Man Loses Truck For Two Years Over A Few Bullets; Civil Asset Forfeiture Abuses Rage On

    In September of 2015, Gerardo Serrano was driving from his home in Kentucky to visit relatives in Mexico. When he stopped at the border in Texas, Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) officers searched his truck and found five bullets in the center console. While Serrano has a concealed carry permit, he did not have any weapon in the vehicle. He had simply forgotten about the bullets he’d left in the console.

    Always eager to pounce on any excuse to grab property (which often helps pad the budget of the law enforcement agency involved), the Border Patrol officers declared that Serrano was transporting “munitions of war” and therefore they were taking his vehicle from him. Customs did not attempt to bring any criminal action against him, but impounded his truck under civil asset forfeiture. Under that law, government officials can take a person’s property on the theory that the property itself is guilty of some wrongdoing.

    Once the property has been forfeited, the owner has to undertake a lengthy and difficult legal battle to get it back. Many unfortunate people can’t do that and just give up.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/georgeleef/2017/10/27/man-loses-truck-for-two-years-over-a-few-bullets-civil-asset-forfeiture-abuses-rage-on/#7f5dfd597265
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2017, 10:10:47 AM
    Not nearly enough. The violent uniformed criminals involved with this should spend a few decades in prison and should also pay out of their own pocket but since they're part of the uniformed criminal gang the bill gets sent to the taxpayers.

    Utah nurse reaches $500,000 settlement in dispute over her arrest for blocking cop from drawing blood from patient

    University Hospital nurse Alex Wubbels has agreed to a $500,000 payment to settle a dispute over her arrest by a Salt Lake City police officer after she barred him from drawing blood from an unconscious patient, her attorney said Tuesday.

    Wubbels will use a portion of the money to help people get body camera footage, at no cost, of incidents involving themselves, she said at the news conference. In addition, Porter’s law firm, Christensen & Jensen, will provide for free any legal services necessary to obtain the video.

    “We all deserve to know the truth and the truth comes when you see the actual raw footage and that’s what happened in my case,” Wubbels said. “No matter how truthful I was in telling my story, it was nothing compared to what people saw and the visceral reaction people experienced when watching the footage of the experience that I went through.”

    http://www.sltrib.com/news/2017/10/31/utah-nurse-arrested-for-blocking-cop-from-drawing-blood-from-patient-receives-500000-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2017, 04:44:33 PM
    A tiny dog made the "brave" cop fear for his life... Not particularly surprising that then he's in a department that also just happens to engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.

    Cop Fears For His Life, Kills Family’s Tiny 12lb Dog, Exploded Her Head in Front of Kids

    Ville Platte, LA — Kelli Sullivan and family are grieving the loss of their pet terrier mix. But their beloved dog didn’t die of natural causes as one might expect. Instead, the family says an Evangeline Parish Sheriff’s deputy shot and killed the tiniest member of their family, all because the dog was barking.

    Quote
    I know in my heart he didn’t have to shoot her. He didn’t have to shoot that dog in front of my kids. He just didn’t.

    In fact, the officer’s business had already been conducted at the home, after police were called to assist with a harassing neighbor. It was toward the end of the contact with police that the dog got out of the house and ran towards the officer. The dog is just above ankle height on most people. Sullivan says the dog was just doing what it always does when strangers come to the home.

    Quote
    The dog got out. I walked to the end of the driveway to try to catch her.

    Sullivan said her daughter was also trying to help her mother corral the dog and get it back inside the house.

    Quote
    My daughter was running around trying to catch her. I thought we were going to go back in the house.

    She says just when she thought the dog had been caught, that’s when the puppycide happened.

    Quote
    I walked back to the house opened the door, turned around, (and) boom, he shot her.

    The young mother then described the horror the entire family, including young children, were exposed to. The dog literally exploded with the force of the handgun’s projectile.

    Quote
    It was a horrific event. He shot the dog up close and blew her skull apart in front of my children. Like her eyeballs were out of her head.

    She said the officer’s cold-hearted insensitivity was on full display with the snarky comment he made after he’d just killed who they considered a member of their family. She said the unnamed officer was upset that he had to waste such an expensive hollow-point bullet on the dog. Unapologetically she says the deputy remarked:

    Quote
    ‘I had to shoot her she came at me’. Then, he said, ‘It’s really a shame I had to waste that bullet because it’s a really expensive bullet’.

    While civilians are attempting to document the number of people killed by police officers per year (which tops around 1,200 annually), there’s no official number of family pets killed per year and it’s assumed that the number may be astronomical. After all, just as the Evangeline Parish officer claimed, the police only have to claim they were in fear and they can be legally justified in killing a family pet, regardless if the animal is being aggressive or not.

    Rarely if ever do families sue, and even rarer still did they win in court when they try to receive compensation for emotional or actual damages when police kill family pets. Complicating matters for dog owners, as TFTP has reported, courts in the United States have sided with law enforcement on the issue of law enforcement’s right to kill animals in the line of duty.

    In the land of the free, police can come onto your private property, gun your tiny dog down in broad daylight, and this is called ‘standard procedure.’ Well, it’s a damn good thing that postal workers, delivery truck drivers, pizza delivery drivers — and all the other jobs that require people to go to someone’s home and NOT KILL THEIR DOG — don’t claim the same rights as cops, or family pets would probably be extinct.

    Sadly, this trend shows no signs of slowing.

    According to some estimates, as John Whitehead points out, a dog is shot by a police officer “every 98 minutes.”

    The Department of Justice estimates that at least 25 dogs are killed by police every day.

    The Puppycide Database Project estimates the number of dogs being killed by police to be upwards of 500 dogs a day (which translates to 182,000 dogs a year).

    Because not all police departments keep track of canine shootings, these numbers vary widely. However, whatever the final body count, what we’re dealing with is an epidemic of vast proportions.

    Incredibly, in 1 out of 5 cases involving police shooting a family pet, a child was either in the police line of fire or in the immediate area of a shooting.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-familys-pet-dog-head-explode-front-family/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 02, 2017, 08:03:29 PM
    Man Loses Truck For Two Years Over A Few Bullets; Civil Asset Forfeiture Abuses Rage On

    In September of 2015, Gerardo Serrano was driving from his home in Kentucky to visit relatives in Mexico. When he stopped at the border in Texas, Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) officers searched his truck and found five bullets in the center console. While Serrano has a concealed carry permit, he did not have any weapon in the vehicle. He had simply forgotten about the bullets he’d left in the console.

    Always eager to pounce on any excuse to grab property (which often helps pad the budget of the law enforcement agency involved), the Border Patrol officers declared that Serrano was transporting “munitions of war” and therefore they were taking his vehicle from him. Customs did not attempt to bring any criminal action against him, but impounded his truck under civil asset forfeiture. Under that law, government officials can take a person’s property on the theory that the property itself is guilty of some wrongdoing.

    Once the property has been forfeited, the owner has to undertake a lengthy and difficult legal battle to get it back. Many unfortunate people can’t do that and just give up.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/georgeleef/2017/10/27/man-loses-truck-for-two-years-over-a-few-bullets-civil-asset-forfeiture-abuses-rage-on/#7f5dfd597265

    This is nothing short of government theft.. sickening
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 02, 2017, 08:04:36 PM
    There are court cases that this state is ignoring. So it is an unconstitutional act for them to retain this truck. but yet....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 03, 2017, 11:09:09 AM
    Some "brave" and "honorable" "heroes"... As expected their union goon squad came out to support them.

    Cops Indicted As Video Shows Innocent Man Set On Fire, Brutally Beaten By Police

    Jersey City, NJ — A high-speed chase in Jersey City ended when the car police were chasing crashed, turned another man’s car into a ball of flames. But it’s the chaotic insanity which followed the crash and the fire that has now resulted in the indictment of several Jersey City police officers.

    According to a report by PIX11, a group of New Jersey police officers have been indicted, including two for attempted murder, after they were caught on camera kicking a bystander as he crawled from the burning wreckage of a crash involving a pursuit suspect, the Hudson County prosecutor announced Thursday.

    The officers face a slew of charges each:

    Lt. Leith Ludwig has been charged with two counts of aggravated assault and one count of official misconduct.
    MD Khan has been charged with 13 counts, including attempted murder, aggravated assault, official misconduct and possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose.
    Officer Eric Kosinski has been charged with five counts, including attempted murder, aggravated assault and official misconduct.
    Officer Francisco Rodriguez has been charged with four counts, including aggravated assault, official misconduct and possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose.
    Jersey City police were pursuing Leo Pinkston, 48, and had attempted to kill him by firing rounds into his vehicle. He fled, but crashed into another car which was pushed into a telephone pole.

    The car Pinkston crashed into then caught on fire. The innocent man inside the car was able to escape the flames, but not without injury. His clothes and skin were burning.

    As the man scrambles to take off his burning clothes as he gets out of the fire, a bystander named Erik Roberto was filming the scene. Roberto screamed to the police, “Oh no…no…Help him out! Help him out!”

    But they did the exact opposite.

    “They didn’t help him. They just started kicking him and dragging him…I don’t think they treated him in the right way and that’s not how you treat any human being in this world,” Roberto lamented to reporters.

    After police rapidly approached the man, with guns drawn, they began kicking him in the ribs and head, apparently mistaking him for the fleeing driver. It was only after kicking and beating him that they then decided to drag him away from the flames of the burning vehicle.

    The actions of the officers are considered abhorrent by Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop who told reporters at the time, “I don’t think there’s any explanation that would justify their actions…The entire pursuit that was previous to that fiery crash had questionable judgment calls by the officers, from the shootings to continuing to pursue the car…”

    On Thursday, Fulop released this statement:

    “As we stated at the outset, the actions taken that night required serious investigation. We took immediate and appropriate action and will now abide the judicial process. Our internal investigation will now begin into all the actions or inactions of department members that night. We want the community to continue to have full confidence in the Jersey City Police Department and its officers.”

    Laughably and predictably, the Jersey City Police Officers Benevolent Association (JCPOBA) president Carmine Disbrow issued a statement defending the actions of its officers that day.

    "This video clearly shows that the officers acted quickly to extinguish the flames and pull this man out of harm’s way."

    We at The Free Thought Project beg to differ. The video clearly shows officers, who would have to have been blind not to see a burning man, go up and kick him like a junkyard dog and drag his body like a dead corpse across the pavement.

    The whole incident leaves many people scratching their heads in disbelief incredulously wondering not only why the officers would choose to assault a burning man, but also how any police officers union would dare to defend their actions.

    The unidentified innocent man lives in West NY. His father said he suffered severe burns and spent many days in the burn unit in the hospital. He also has fractured ribs.

    His father called the actions of the officers an attempted “massacre” and said he’d just left home to go to work when the accident and beating took place.


    The entire incident serves to illustrate how police officers treat individuals they suspect as having committed crimes. No longer are suspects innocent until proven guilty. All too often, as TFTP has tirelessly reported, cops comport themselves as judge, jury, and executioners.

    Hopefully, these cops are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. However, if history is any indicator, a jury of apologists will likely look past a severely burned innocent victim and justify the police behavior—as they were just doing their job.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-indicted-video-shows-innocent-man-set-fire-stomped-police/

    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/national-international/Burning-Man-Beaten-Police-Officers-Jersey-City-Chase-Was-Innocent-Bystander-427098313.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 04, 2017, 06:55:35 PM
    Here's a picture of the man that was attacked by the violent criminals:

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/11/04/18/4602B2C200000578-5044083-image-a-1_1509821280384.jpg)

    He spent 1 month in hospital with burns on 30% of his body.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 05, 2017, 05:51:12 AM
    Here's a picture of the man that was attacked by the violent criminals:

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/11/04/18/4602B2C200000578-5044083-image-a-1_1509821280384.jpg)

    He spent 1 month in hospital with burns on 30% of his body.


    The Brave Fuckers who did that should Rot in Prison
    The Cowardly Bastards.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 09, 2017, 08:54:56 AM
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/09/us/politics/fbi-stolen-gun-stolen-charlotte.html



     >:(  >:(  >:(  :(  :( :o  :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 09, 2017, 10:14:51 AM
    Security theater as always. Alas, their incompetence will mean they will implement even more invasive and dystopian procedures that are unlikely to detect or prevent anything.

    TSA fails most tests in latest undercover operation at US airports

    In recent undercover tests of multiple airport security checkpoints by the Department of Homeland Security, inspectors said screeners, their equipment or their procedures failed more than half of the time, according to a source familiar with the classified report.

    When ABC News asked the source familiar with the report if the failure rate was 80 percent, the response was, “You are in the ballpark.”

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/tsa-fails-tests-latest-undercover-operation-us-airports/story?id=51022188
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 09, 2017, 02:01:34 PM
    http://nypost.com/2017/11/09/cop-probed-over-claims-he-let-domestic-violence-suspect-walk-for-being-black/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook


     :(  :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 09, 2017, 05:21:20 PM
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/09/us/politics/fbi-stolen-gun-stolen-charlotte.html



     >:(  >:(  >:(  :(  :( :o  :o

    A unit chief in the FBI's international terrorism sector having his expensive watch and firearm stolen by "exotic dancers" while being so incapacitated from drinking that he couldn't even make a phone call or file a report... All this while on a "training" trip.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 09, 2017, 05:40:19 PM
    barek Hussein Obama the son of 1000 whores ruined the west socially and culturally... as simple as that,,

    he created a surveilance police state that ruined America,, he should be standing trial in the highest court of the people,, he is immuned.. but other are not and they will eventualy will stand trials like they are being kicked out of office as im writing this little posting,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 09, 2017, 05:45:04 PM
    A unit chief in the FBI's international terrorism sector having his expensive watch and firearm stolen by "exotic dancers" while being so incapacitated from drinking that he couldn't even make a phone call or file a report... All this while on a "training" trip.

    I've been on many a training trip. When it is classroom or seminar training it's not unusual for attendees to have a good time, have some drinks, and if lucky, find a good Karaoke bar with a great sound system. however, if I or one of my colleagues, did what this person did, it would likely cost our job as well it should. A huge demonstration of lack of good judgement, ethics, etc. Now a FBI gun is on the street.. he also placed himself in a position of being blackmailed if he were married. It's crap like this that pisses me off. Agencies need to do a better job policing themselves.. I'll bet this aint his first rodeo
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 10, 2017, 12:14:17 PM
    Cop Road Rages on Innocent Man for Honking at Him, Calls In Backup to Punish Him

    St. Louis, MO — When normal citizens lose their cool in an act of road rage, they either let it go and move on or face the consequences of their actions. However, if a police officer flips out in a fit of road rage, they can claim legal authority to ticket, kidnap, cage, or kill you. An incident involving Detective Steve Burle, from the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, just so happens to illustrate this predicament quite well.

    Last week, computer programmer Scott Smith was sitting at a red light. When it turned green, the person in front of him refused to move forward. Doing what anyone in his situation would’ve done—given a reasonable amount of time to move—Smith politely honked his horn to alert the man in front of him that the light was green.

    As the man in front of him refused to move his vehicle, the honking became more progressive.

    “The light turned green and the car in front of me just sat there,” Smith says. “So I honked once and he started to scoot forward, then just like hit his brakes real hard. So I honked again and he started to go forward and kinda threw his arms up, but wasn’t really moving, still just blocking the way. So then I just laid on the horn for a minute as he slowly crept forward, and then right as he got through the intersection he kinda pulled into the far left lane of Tucker.”

    The cop then pulled Smith over.

    “Is your fucking horn stuck, smartass?” detective Burle asks Smith in the video.

    “Is your brake stuck?” Smith replies.

    “Let me see your drivers’ license.”

    “For what?” Smith asks. “For honking at someone who’s sitting at a green light. This is fucking ridiculous.”

    “I’m sorry, what’d you just say?” demands Burle as he seemingly takes issue with Smith’s choice of vocabulary.

    “I said this is fucking ridiculous,” Smith repeats.

    “Well, you know what, maybe you shouldn’t be a fucking asshole,”
    Burle says.

    “You’re sitting at a green light. I have to go back to work.”

    “Really,” Burle answers. “I hope you’re not in a hurry. You’re going to be late for a little while, fucking jackoff,” responds this public servant.

    A second cop then shows up and Smith recalls hearing them talk about trying to find something wrong with Smith’s actions so they could ticket the innocent motorist.

    “You could tell he was just trying to find something wrong — he wanted a reason to be able to do something, ticket, get me out of the car,” Smith says.

    A third cop then showed up to back up this officer’s fit of road rage. All three officers—on the taxpayers’ dime—then proceed to hold Smith on the side of the road for over 45 minutes until Burle walked back to the car and told Smith he’d be getting a ticket in the mail.

    “A traffic violation shouldn’t end up with 40 minutes on the side of the road with you being an angry prick yelling at me through the window,” Smith says. “If I violated some violation, just give me my ticket and send me on my way.

    “I really was on my way back to work,” Smith continues. “I was already late; I had two co-workers with me. It was just like, ‘Dude, whoever you are, just get the hell out of the way. Quit being an asshole just because I honked at you.'”

    As Patch.com reports, the department has launched an Internal Affairs investigation related to the incident, and Smith has said he plans to file a formal complaint.

    However, we won’t be holding our breath to see if this cop is held accountable.

    Burle has a history of abuse and has been sued at least three times for excessive use of force, and he reportedly liked a racist Facebook post in July 2016 that cost a Fox 2 reporter his job and led to calls for the firing of Police Lt. Jerry Foster, who originally wrote the post, according to Patch.

    Ironically—and, frankly, quite frighteningly— Burle is part of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department’s Force Investigation Unit, which was created after the death of Michael Brown. This cop who called in backup and ticketed a man for honking at him while calling him a “fucking jackoff” is responsible for investigating police officer-involved shootings in the city. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a prime example of the corruption and tyranny of the thin blue line.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/road-raging-cop-loses-honking-green-light/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 10, 2017, 08:28:13 PM
    Nevada Pardons Wrongfully Convicted Man Featured in Our Story

    Quote
    Steese, a young, poorly educated drifter, was arrested in 1992 for the grisly murder of Gerard Soules, a Las Vegas performer with a costumed poodle act at the Circus Circus casino. At the time of Soules’ death, Steese was several states away. But prosecutors didn’t reveal that they had evidence that Steese was telling the truth, instead telling jurors that Steese had fabricated his alibi with the help of his look-alike brother. During the trial, the prosecutors also concealed the nature of several photo lineups pointing to Steese’s innocence and accused the defense of manufacturing evidence.

    Steese was convicted in 1995 and sentenced to two life sentences. The men who prosecuted him, Bill Kephart and Doug Herndon, are now district court judges in Las Vegas.


    https://www.propublica.org/article/fred-steese-nevada-pardons-wrongfully-convicted-man-featured-in-our-story

    More detailed article:
    https://www.propublica.org/article/alford-pleas-fred-steese-conviction-without-admitting-guilt/

    More information about the prosecutor/judge:
    https://www.propublica.org/article/las-vegas-judge-bill-kephart-history-of-prosecutorial-misconduct
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2017, 01:34:55 PM
    Rival gangs fighting?

    Detroit police officers fight each other in undercover operation gone wrong

    Quote
    Sources say it started when two special ops officers from the 12th Precinct were operating a "push off" on Andover near Seven Mile. That is when two undercover officers pretend to be dope dealers, waiting for eager customers to approach, arresting potential buyers and seizing their vehicles.

    But this time instead of customers - special ops officers from the 11th Precinct showed up. Not realizing they were fellow officers, they ordered the other undercover officers to the ground.

    FOX 2 is told the rest of the special ops team from the 12th Precinct showed up, and officers began raiding the drug house in the 19300 block of Andover. But instead of fighting crime, officers from both precincts began fighting with each other.

    Sources say guns were drawn and punches were thrown while the homeowner stood and watched. The department's top cops were notified along with Internal Affairs. One officer was taken to the hospital.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/11/12/detroit-police-officers-fight-each-other-in-undercover-operation-gone-wrong.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2017, 05:23:55 PM
    Is there freedom of speech in the US?

    A "sheriff" in Texas posted a picture on Facebook of a truck that has a sticker saying "Fuck Trump and fuck you for voting for him".

    (https://scontent.flas1-2.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t31.0-8/23551026_1954765468109541_7014063934255907560_o.jpg?oh=dc35c1b58bff73b1b8fe86c5809dedd7&oe=5A629BCD)

    He then added the following:
    Quote
    I have received numerous calls regarding the offensive display on this truck as it is often seen along FM 359. If you know who owns this truck or it is yours, I would like to discuss it with you. Our Prosecutor has informed us she would accept Disorderly Conduct charges regarding it, but I feel we could come to an agreement regarding a modification to it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2017, 05:27:39 PM
    Why are the taxpayers paying for the crimes of this violent serial abuser?

    Cop Caught on Video THREE Times Killing & Beating Unarmed & Innocent People—Still has Job

    Austin, TX — Last week, the taxpayers of Austin, Texas were forced—for their third time—to pay for the violent actions of officer Eric Copeland of the APD. City council members approved a six-figure settlement to be given to one of many of Copeland’s victims.

    This officer’s abuse is so rampant that it has been captured on video a whopping three times. The latest case, which cost the taxpayers $150,000, stems from the arrest of Adrian Aguado, 20, who Copeland tasered for no reason and broke his nose.

    [...]

    For needlessly tasering a man who had committed no crime Copeland was not fired. Instead, he was given a 90-day vacation and was allowed back on the force.

    [...]

    In 2012, Copeland pulled over Bradley who then made the unwise decision to flee in his vehicle. After he stopped, a brief foot chase ensued before Copeland “intentionally struck Bradley in the face, head and body at a time when Bradley had not assaulted Copeland,” according to a lawsuit filed by Bradley’s family.

    Copeland then shot Bradley in the chest three times, killing him. Bradley was unarmed. A judge later awarded Bradley’s family $1,000,000 for the death.

    “I’m gonna fucking shoot you,” Copeland is heard saying on the video multiple times before three shots were fired, killing Bradley. Copeland was subsequently cleared of any wrongdoing.

    [...]

    It’s not only suspects who Copeland has abused or killed either. In 2011, a federal jury awarded Carlos Chacon $1,000,000 after Copeland and another officer, Russell Rose, beat and tasered him. Chacon had called 911 to report suspicious activity at a Motel 6, he had done nothing wrong.

    While he was still on the phone with 911, Chacon approached the officers to assist them in their investigation. Instead of talking to Chacon, however, Copeland and another officer drew their weapons and pointed them at Chacon.

    “Their guns were drawn, pointed at me. They were shouting at me. They were cursing at me. I was trying to identify myself as a person that called the police. They did not listen or engage in the conversation,” Chacon told Fox7 at the time.

    Officers then proceeded to beat, taser, and then arrest Chacon for resisting arrest.

    “What I did is, as a good citizen, is I called the police and I reported it. I identified myself fully with a description of my vehicle and myself. I stayed on the phone the whole time with the operator and I waited for the police to arrive,” he explained.

    In spite of the jury awarding him $1 million, the judge, likely sympathetic to brutal cops, reduced the amount to $60,000. Austin City Council members then increased it and the taxpayers shelled out $154,000.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-caught-video-job/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2017, 05:44:29 PM
    Why aren't the prosecutors and the cops sent to prison for at least 29 years?

    Man in prison for 29 years freed after Cook County prosecutors drop charges

    Last month Judge Joseph Claps tossed out Brown’s conviction and ordered a retrial after concluding that prosecutors at a second trial in 2008 had made multiple false arguments to the jury and that Brown’s lawyer later failed to raise those issues on appeal.

    [..]

    Prosecutors repeatedly told the jury that Chicago police found the gas can used in the arson after speaking to Brown, strongly implying that only Brown’s confession could have led them to the discovery.

    But a Chicago police detective testified at the first trial that the gas can had been discovered near the video store that had been torched — well before the detective had spoken to Brown, Claps noted in his ruling.

    [..]

    At his first court appearance, a judge ordered him held without bail after prosecutors announced they would seek the death penalty. Brown collapsed in the middle of the courtroom, according to a Tribune story at the time.

    Brown, who did odd jobs and maintenance work for stores around the neighborhood, testified at his first trial in 1990 that he got a call the night of the fire about the video store being burglarized. Brown, who had installed front and back doors with burglar bars at the video store, testified that he went to secure a door of the building and then left, court documents show.

    Brown was arrested a short time later, and police beat him into confessing, he testified at his first trial.

    Based largely on his alleged confession, Brown was convicted and given the life sentence.

    Years later, another man, James Bell, confessed to the arson, leading to Brown being granted a second trial. At the 2008 retrial, Bell, testifying for the defense, said Brown owed him money, so he decided to break into the video store, thinking Brown owned it. But he found only a few dollars in change.

    Bell testified he decided to torch the store in retribution, according to court documents.

    But a jury found Bell’s testimony unconvincing. Prosecutors had alleged that the two colluded to fabricate the story while both were in prison together. Brown was again convicted of the double murder and sentenced to life in prison.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-convicted-murderer-free-charges-dropped-20171113-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 16, 2017, 08:23:53 PM
    Why aren't the prosecutors and the cops sent to prison for at least 29 years?

    Man in prison for 29 years freed after Cook County prosecutors drop charges

    Last month Judge Joseph Claps tossed out Brown’s conviction and ordered a retrial after concluding that prosecutors at a second trial in 2008 had made multiple false arguments to the jury and that Brown’s lawyer later failed to raise those issues on appeal.

    [..]

    Prosecutors repeatedly told the jury that Chicago police found the gas can used in the arson after speaking to Brown, strongly implying that only Brown’s confession could have led them to the discovery.

    But a Chicago police detective testified at the first trial that the gas can had been discovered near the video store that had been torched — well before the detective had spoken to Brown, Claps noted in his ruling.

    [..]

    At his first court appearance, a judge ordered him held without bail after prosecutors announced they would seek the death penalty. Brown collapsed in the middle of the courtroom, according to a Tribune story at the time.

    Brown, who did odd jobs and maintenance work for stores around the neighborhood, testified at his first trial in 1990 that he got a call the night of the fire about the video store being burglarized. Brown, who had installed front and back doors with burglar bars at the video store, testified that he went to secure a door of the building and then left, court documents show.

    Brown was arrested a short time later, and police beat him into confessing, he testified at his first trial.

    Based largely on his alleged confession, Brown was convicted and given the life sentence.

    Years later, another man, James Bell, confessed to the arson, leading to Brown being granted a second trial. At the 2008 retrial, Bell, testifying for the defense, said Brown owed him money, so he decided to break into the video store, thinking Brown owned it. But he found only a few dollars in change.

    Bell testified he decided to torch the store in retribution, according to court documents.

    But a jury found Bell’s testimony unconvincing. Prosecutors had alleged that the two colluded to fabricate the story while both were in prison together. Brown was again convicted of the double murder and sentenced to life in prison.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-convicted-murderer-free-charges-dropped-20171113-story.html

    But a jury found Bell’s testimony unconvincing
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 16, 2017, 09:14:14 PM
    Just 27 months does not seem enough for such a deranged and violent criminal.

    Cop Sentenced to Prison, Forced to Pay Victim for Savagely Beating a Teen on Video

    Pittsburgh, PA — A belligerent and violent cop was recently convicted of violating the civil rights of a teenager by savagely beating him at a high school football game. The entire incident, which looks like a giant bullying a small child, was captured on video and led to the initial firing of officer Stephen Matakovich, 48, and the subsequent charges.

    Matakovich “was an annoyed bully who beat the crap out of a drunk kid,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Gilson told jurors earlier this year after his conviction. “This was an officer abusing his power.”

    Wednesday, the officer received an unprecedented 27-month sentence and will also be forced to pay restitution to his victim from his own pocket.

    Matakovich’s defense attorneys had argued against imprisonment, saying he had led an “honorable and lawful life,” according to KDKA.

    But the pre-sentence report detailed a pattern of questionable arrests involving Matakovich over several years, and states that he “never used the lowest amount of force available.”

    The victim’s mother took the stand during the hearing and told the court how she hopes Matakovich will be sent to prison.

    “It’s hard watching your son being beaten like that. We teach our children to respect police officers then this happens and I think it’s just a blemish on the Pittsburgh police, on all police,” Sherry Despres said.

    Matakovich was on trial for two charges, the first being the violation of Gabriel Despres’ civil rights and the second accusing him of falsifying the police report on the incident. Somehow he was acquitted on the second charge, convincing the jury that he did not lie about or exaggerate Despres’ actions which caused the officer to push and hit him.

    Matakovich said he had to beat the small teenager at that time because he felt threatened. After watching the video, this claim becomes utterly hysterical. However, somehow a jury bought it.

    Naturally, the violent officer’s defense team painted him as the victim, claiming that Despres’ posture and demeanor at that time were threatening to Matakovich, who was surrounded by five security guards and in spite of the teen being unarmed and inebriated.

    According to WTAE, lead defense attorney Tina Miller, a former federal prosecutor, told the jury that dissecting the 29-second encounter in a one-week trial was unfair to Matakovich, who could be trusted for the “split-second” judgment he made.

    “Nobody is going to say to a police officer, ‘I’m going to assault you,'” Miller told the jury. “You’re not going to advertise what you’re going to do. Your actions are going to be subtle. It’s not going to be like some poster or (TV commercial).”

    She defended Matakovich as “one of those guys on that thin blue line between chaos and order” before asking the jury, “Do we really want to second-guess?”

    The prosecution even responded in jest at the outright silly claims of the defense in trying to justify this crazed cop’s violence.

    As the video shows, Despres calmly stood with his arms down at his sides when Matakovich suddenly shoved the teen to the ground and began punching him in the head. Although Despres did not provoke the attack and did not appear to fight back, the off-duty cop repeatedly struck him while several other security guards watched.

    Treated for a bloody nose, Despres eventually pleaded guilty to trespassing and public drunkenness. After watching the video of the incident, Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay fired Matakovich and opened an investigation that led to his state trial.

    In an attempt to establish the ex-cop’s history of violence, county prosecutors introduced a motion during the proceedings detailing Matakovich’s use of unnecessary force against 56 other people and another case in which he assaulted a security guard then arrested him on false charges.

    Out of those 56 reports, 20 cases involved strikes to the face and head, with 17 of those resulting in injuries including broken noses, broken jaws and loss of consciousness.

    According to the prosecution and video footage, Matakovich brutalized innocent people and arrested them on false charges in order to cover up his own violent provocations. Luckily, video evidence of this cop’s rage finally put an end to his rash of belligerence.

    Matakovich’s sentence should be held as the standard for cops who abuse their authority and attack innocent people. If enough cops are sent to jail and forced to pay for their own crimes themselves, rest assured police brutality would be far less common.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bully-cop-sentenced-prison-pay-victim/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 16, 2017, 09:48:47 PM
    “Nobody is going to say to a police officer, ‘I’m going to assault you,'” Miller told the jury.

    Sorry to disagree on such a page where disagreement is viewed so harshly but yeah, I'm here to say based on personal experience that there are people who gladly tell you they are about to kick your ass. However, verbal threats are in my opinion, red flags that should be used to increase your awareness and allow you to anticipate physical violence, it is not a reason to initiate physical violence. And according to the article this officer had a history of over reacting. Based on that, the sentence sounds fair, but Miller is an idiot if he or she thinks people truly don't verbalize what they are about to do. It happens, more often than not    
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 16, 2017, 11:38:05 PM
    Out of those 56 reports, 20 cases involved strikes to the face and head, with 17 of those resulting in injuries including broken noses, broken jaws and loss of consciousness.

    According to the prosecution and video footage, Matakovich brutalized innocent people and arrested them on false charges in order to cover up his own violent provocations. Luckily, video evidence of this cop’s rage finally put an end to his rash of belligerence.



    Sadly it appears he got away with at least 56 violent attacks

    He'd likely still be a public threat if not for that video
    It's unfortunate that so many had to suffer before he was stopped

    Yet again proves there is something amiss with vetting & scrutiny of cop conduct
    It doesn't instill confidence in the police service
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 16, 2017, 11:44:31 PM
    Just 27 months does not seem enough for such a deranged and violent criminal.

    Cop Sentenced to Prison, Forced to Pay Victim for Savagely Beating a Teen on Video

    Pittsburgh, PA — A belligerent and violent cop was recently convicted of violating the civil rights of a teenager by savagely beating him at a high school football game. The entire incident, which looks like a giant bullying a small child, was captured on video and led to the initial firing of officer Stephen Matakovich, 48, and the subsequent charges.

    Matakovich “was an annoyed bully who beat the crap out of a drunk kid,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Gilson told jurors earlier this year after his conviction. “This was an officer abusing his power.”

    Wednesday, the officer received an unprecedented 27-month sentence and will also be forced to pay restitution to his victim from his own pocket.

    Matakovich’s defense attorneys had argued against imprisonment, saying he had led an “honorable and lawful life,” according to KDKA.

    But the pre-sentence report detailed a pattern of questionable arrests involving Matakovich over several years, and states that he “never used the lowest amount of force available.”

    The victim’s mother took the stand during the hearing and told the court how she hopes Matakovich will be sent to prison.

    “It’s hard watching your son being beaten like that. We teach our children to respect police officers then this happens and I think it’s just a blemish on the Pittsburgh police, on all police,” Sherry Despres said.

    Matakovich was on trial for two charges, the first being the violation of Gabriel Despres’ civil rights and the second accusing him of falsifying the police report on the incident. Somehow he was acquitted on the second charge, convincing the jury that he did not lie about or exaggerate Despres’ actions which caused the officer to push and hit him.

    Matakovich said he had to beat the small teenager at that time because he felt threatened. After watching the video, this claim becomes utterly hysterical. However, somehow a jury bought it.

    Naturally, the violent officer’s defense team painted him as the victim, claiming that Despres’ posture and demeanor at that time were threatening to Matakovich, who was surrounded by five security guards and in spite of the teen being unarmed and inebriated.

    According to WTAE, lead defense attorney Tina Miller, a former federal prosecutor, told the jury that dissecting the 29-second encounter in a one-week trial was unfair to Matakovich, who could be trusted for the “split-second” judgment he made.

    “Nobody is going to say to a police officer, ‘I’m going to assault you,'” Miller told the jury. “You’re not going to advertise what you’re going to do. Your actions are going to be subtle. It’s not going to be like some poster or (TV commercial).”

    She defended Matakovich as “one of those guys on that thin blue line between chaos and order” before asking the jury, “Do we really want to second-guess?”

    The prosecution even responded in jest at the outright silly claims of the defense in trying to justify this crazed cop’s violence.

    As the video shows, Despres calmly stood with his arms down at his sides when Matakovich suddenly shoved the teen to the ground and began punching him in the head. Although Despres did not provoke the attack and did not appear to fight back, the off-duty cop repeatedly struck him while several other security guards watched.

    Treated for a bloody nose, Despres eventually pleaded guilty to trespassing and public drunkenness. After watching the video of the incident, Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay fired Matakovich and opened an investigation that led to his state trial.

    In an attempt to establish the ex-cop’s history of violence, county prosecutors introduced a motion during the proceedings detailing Matakovich’s use of unnecessary force against 56 other people and another case in which he assaulted a security guard then arrested him on false charges.

    Out of those 56 reports, 20 cases involved strikes to the face and head, with 17 of those resulting in injuries including broken noses, broken jaws and loss of consciousness.

    According to the prosecution and video footage, Matakovich brutalized innocent people and arrested them on false charges in order to cover up his own violent provocations. Luckily, video evidence of this cop’s rage finally put an end to his rash of belligerence.

    Matakovich’s sentence should be held as the standard for cops who abuse their authority and attack innocent people. If enough cops are sent to jail and forced to pay for their own crimes themselves, rest assured police brutality would be far less common.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bully-cop-sentenced-prison-pay-victim/



    Matakovich said he had to beat the small teenager at that time because he felt threatened. After watching the video, this claim becomes utterly hysterical. However, Somehow A JURY Bought It.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2017, 12:31:39 AM


    Matakovich said he had to beat the small teenager at that time because he felt threatened. After watching the video, this claim becomes utterly hysterical. However, Somehow A JURY Bought It.

    Indeed, and had that young man pushed the cop in a similar fashion he'd end up in prison for way more than just 27 months.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2017, 02:39:09 AM
    Indeed, and had that young man pushed the cop in a similar fashion he'd end up in prison for way more than just 27 months.


    Correct - Had a similar kind of thing happen to me
    My son was knocked over by a car not far from where we live
    when i got to the scene I was confronted with an asshole cop
    demanding i be calm & he ran at me & tried to shove me in the chest  ::)
    So I shoved Him back only he landed on his arse then I was CS gas Sprayed
    & attacked by Him & his 4 other Girlfriends - They were unable to hold or handcuff me
    Situation was escalating Thankfully my wife arrived & calmed them & me down.
    Then I was handcuffed & arrested.
    We later put a formal complaint in against the cop & his sergeant who tried to dismiss us when we
    1st went to make a complaint- Due to the number of witness's they were disciplined & sent for further training.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 17, 2017, 03:58:12 AM
    ^should hve beat you and your son up real good for all the lies you spit local,,

    so now the truth comes out.. that you are the one to be arrested and being a little filt felon,,

    funny how I always end up being right,,

    if it was me I would beat you and your son up infront of the mama just for your lies


    it is people lke you! who bring a very bad name to bodybuild and fitness!
    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Howard on November 17, 2017, 05:34:01 AM
    barek Hussein Obama the son of 1000 whores* ruined the west socially and culturally... as simple as that,,

    he created a surveilance police state that ruined America,, he should be standing trial in the highest court of the people,, he is immuned.. but other are not and they will eventualy will stand trials like they are being kicked out of office as im writing this little posting,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah

    Son of 1000 whores*? Really?
    We might know IF his mom, grandma and (maybe) great grand ma were ho's but beyond that, who knows?
    I don't find this claim credible. :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2017, 09:45:53 AM
    ^should hve beat you and your son up real good for all the lies you spit local,,

    so now the truth comes out.. that you are the one to be arrested and being a little filt felon,,

    funny how I always end up being right,,

    if it was me I would beat you and your son up infront of the mama just for your lies


    it is people lke you! who bring a very bad name to bodybuild and fitness!
    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah




    More honesty than You are ever capable of

    Like I Keep saying Stop Hiding Behind Your Screen
    & Meet Up - OH NO YOU only Want TO BEAT UP WOMEN

    Then You Can Have Your Chance Big Mouth
    Either Put Up Or Shut Up homo Boy

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2017, 12:25:10 PM
    Once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill for the actions of violent thugs.

    Disturbing Video Shows Cops Taser 86-year-old Man With Dementia for Walking Backward

    Kingstree, SC — After a month of seeking justice for 86-year-old Albert Chatfield—who was needlessly tasered by cops to the point of being hospitalized in ICU for weeks—the family and the elderly man with dementia finally have some closure. On Friday, the city noted that Chatfield will receive a $900,000 payout—one of the largest settlements in the history of South Carolina related to a police taser—and the video showing the unnecessary assault was finally released.

    The incident happened on the morning of October 16 after Chatfield had an apparent episode due to his dementia and led police on a brief low-speed chase. After Chatfield stopped, he got out of his car and put his hands above his head. However, the 86-year-old man then began to back up—a move police seemingly feared—so a taser was deployed.

    Chatfield immediately collapsed as the jolt from the taser completely incapacitated the 86-year-old man. When he fell, he smashed his head on to the pavement, broke his nose and began to experience life-threatening bleeding on his brain. He was rushed to the hospital where he would spend weeks in the ICU.

    “He wouldn’t hurt anybody,” said his daughter, Jodi Mack of North Carolina. “He would only make you hurt laughing.”

    After the incident, agents with the State Law Enforcement Division were asked to step in and conduct a criminal probe.

    “Because the Kingstree Police Department and the town of Kingstree are not trying to hide anything,” Police Chief James Barr said Monday, “I asked SLED to come in and give a full report about what happened, detail by detail.”

    Laughably, after claiming they had nothing to hide, Barr refused to release the body camera and dashcam footage.

    As the Post and Courier noted, his reasoning behind refusing to release the video was inconsistent at best and at worst, a deliberate cover-up.

    Cameras worn by officers and mounted in their cars captured the episode, Barr said, but he declined to release the video because of the state inquiry. The Post and Courier submitted a written request for the footage Oct. 17, two days before Barr requested the probe.

    Police claimed in their reports that Chatfield “took up a fighting stance” against Officer Stephen Sweikata. But the policeman didn’t fire his Taser until after Chatfield “started jogging/walking backwards in the lanes of traffic.” The alleged fighting stance is not seen in the video.

    Sweikata claimed that he had to taser the 86-year-old man to protect him. He wrote that had he not tasered Chatfield, the elderly man would’ve been struck by a car. However, as is clearly evident in the video, Chatfield was not at risk of being hit by a car at all and the only car in the shot is actually backing away from them.

    Instead of surrounding the elderly man, the three large cops resorted to a move that nearly killed Chatfield.

    As the Post and Courier reports, Justin Bamberg, the Orangeburg lawyer and state lawmaker representing Chatfield’s family, said Chatfield was clearly suffering some mental impairment at the time, was outnumbered and was not violent.

    “They merely wanted to restrain him, but those officers used unreasonable force,” Bamberg said. “In our opinion, based on the law, this is a perfect example where there is no debate on whether the use of force violated Mr. Chatfield’s constitutional rights.”

    After staying in intensive care in a medically induced coma, Chatfield finally woke up this week. However, his family says that he cannot talk very well and all he does is cry. He has since been transferred to a long-term care facility where his family hopes he can recover some of his speech and motor skills.

    “He’s better than he had been, but he still has a long way to go,” his daughter said Friday at a news conference. “I don’t have the same person I had a month ago.”

    “Not everyone who doesn’t listen to a directive from law enforcement has an intent to hurt somebody,” Bamberg said. “You have to talk to these folks. You can’t just tase people to gain compliance. That’s a change we need to see.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/86-year-old-man-needlessly-tasered/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 17, 2017, 12:30:23 PM

    More honesty than You are ever capable of

    Like I Keep saying Stop Hiding Behind Your Screen
    & Meet Up - OH NO YOU only Want TO BEAT UP WOMEN

    Then You Can Have Your Chance Big Mouth
    Either Put Up Or Shut Up homo Boy



    you are a felon,, pm me on gh15 and yo uwill see how you disappear into the prison you belong in,,

    I dare you to pm me on gh15.. on here I cant talk bad with you on there I can,,

    gh15 approved
    lion! of! Judah!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2017, 01:06:01 PM
    you are a felon,, pm me on gh15 and yo uwill see how you disappear into the prison you belong in,,

    I dare you to pm me on gh15.. on here I cant talk bad with you on there I can,,

    gh15 approved
    lion! of! Judah!


    Hey Faggott Read Below Again


    More honesty than You are ever capable of

    Like I Keep saying Stop Hiding Behind Your Screen
    & Meet Up - OH NO YOU only Want TO BEAT UP WOMEN

    Then You Can Have Your Chance Big Mouth
    Either Put Up Or Shut Up homo Boy


    Grow some Balls Wife Beater
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 17, 2017, 01:35:49 PM
    just a simple pm on gh15,, very simple to do,, very easy and simple to do felon

    gh15 approved
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2017, 01:41:17 PM
    just a simple pm on gh15,, very simple to do,, very easy and simple to do felon

    gh15 approved



    Idiot Brains
    Let me help You some more here As You Are So Simple

    I was arrested Not Charged No Conviction + No Felon  ::)

    Oh & Your Psychological Profile Isn't Good
    Free Advice.


    Hey Faggott Read Below Again


    More honesty than You are ever capable of

    Like I Keep saying Stop Hiding Behind Your Screen
    & Meet Up - OH NO YOU only Want TO BEAT UP WOMEN

    Then You Can Have Your Chance Big Mouth
    Either Put Up Or Shut Up homo Boy


    Grow some Balls Wife Beater
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 17, 2017, 02:07:45 PM
    tell you what.. due to your lies about me.. and because you hv e a son,, if you pm me on gh15 I will show you how I break your family by throwing you in prison where you belong,,

    pm me.. im telling you if you want to test it pm me,,

    felon

    local! felon!

    you do know by now i am what and who i say i am.. any sane individual would understand it by now,, pm me felon,, notice how i sign this one so you understand its serious in my eyes,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 17, 2017, 02:11:31 PM
    tell you what.. due to your lies about me.. and because you hv e a son,, if you pm me on gh15 I will show you how I break your family by throwing you in prison where you belong,,

    pm me.. im telling you if you want to test it pm me,,

    felon

    local! felon!

    you do know by now i am what and who i say i am.. any sane individual would understand it by now,, pm me felon,, notice how i sign this one so you understand its serious in my eyes,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah


    Go Away Boy

    You Do know By Now We All Know You're Imbecilic

    Idiot Brains
    Let me help You some more here As You Are So Simple

    I was arrested Not Charged No Conviction + No Felon   ::)

    Oh & Your Psychological Profile Isn't Good
    Free Advice.


    Hey Faggott Read Below Again


    More honesty than You are ever capable of

    Like I Keep saying Stop Hiding Behind Your Screen
    & Meet Up - OH NO YOU only Want TO BEAT UP WOMEN

    Then You Can Have Your Chance Big Mouth
    Either Put Up Or Shut Up homo Boy


    Grow some Balls Wife Beater
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 17, 2017, 06:20:10 PM
    ^the more I write respond to you the more I realize you may be an infantile older fella tht truly don't realize how wrong he is on so many levels,,

    I do know few legit things about you though

    you are a local!
    you are a wanna be!
    you are a felon! arrested for me = problematic individual since it wasn't yoru first time and first time is enough for me..

    in any case as I said gh15 site.. pm me my love,,

    gh15 approved
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2017, 06:29:36 PM
    Another "trained" "officer" who has "expertise" in identifying marijuana plants...

    Pennsylvania Cops Terrorize Elderly Couple After Confusing Hibiscus Plants for Marijuana

    Armed with assault rifles, Pennsylvania cops forced a 66-year-old woman out of her home, handcuffing her in her underwear while ransacking her home, looking for marijuana.

    They ended up finding only hibiscus plants.

    Buffalo Township police also handcuffed her 69-year-old husband at  gunpoint after he arrived home and finding a dozen cops rummaging through their home, looking for the non-existing marijuana plants.

    Edward and Audrey Cramer tried to explain to the cops that they were only hibiscus plants, but Buffalo Township Police Sergeant Scott Hess refused to believe them, informing them he had “expertise” in identifying marijuana plants.

    Buffalo Township police officer Jeffrey Sneddon also claimed to have expertise in identifying marijuana when he obtained the search warrant last month, according to the Tribune-Review.

    Now the couple is suing the police department along with Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., whose representative took photos of the hibiscus plants and sent them to police, informing them that they were marijuana plants.

    It all started on October 5 when insurance agent Jonathan Yeamans entered the Cramer property to investigate a claim that a neighbor’s tree fell on their property in September.

    While investigating the claim, Yeamans spotted the hibiscus plants and surreptitiously photographed them, sending the photos to police, claiming the Cramers were involved in an illegal marijuana growing operation.

    Two days later, a dozen cops arrived at the home, banging on the door, pointing their assault rifles at Audrey Cramer who answered the door wearing only underwear, a bra and a t-shirt.

    The cops claimed they had a search warrant, but refused to show it to her. They also refused to allow her to put on shoes or pants.

    According to the Tribune-Review:

    The suit claims Cramer asked if she could put on a pair of pants next to her, and was told “in no uncertain terms” that she could not.
     
    She was placed under arrest and read her rights.
     
    The complaint alleges that she was walked outside and made to stand — handcuffed, in her underwear and without shoes — for 10 minutes.
     
    The suit claims that Hess refused her request to get sandals. Police walked her down the gravel driveway, barefoot, to a police car.
     
    The complaint alleges that she was left in the “very hot” patrol car, with her hands cuffed behind her, for four-and-a-half hours.

    The high temperature that day was 82, according to the Accuweather company.
     
    When Cramer asked Hess, “What on earth is going on,” she was informed of the police’s search for marijuana.
     
    The suit says she explained that the plants were flowering hibiscus plants, but Hess, claiming expertise, insisted that they were marijuana.
    Her husband arrived 30 minutes later and was also placed in the back of the police car in handcuffs while the cops ransacked their home.

    They were released four hours later with no charges after the cops determined the plants were not marijuana. Police, nevertheless, confiscated the hibiscus plants, describing them as “tall, green, leafy, suspected marijuana plants.”

    Despite the fact that no marijuana was found on the property, Nationwide Mutual Insurance sent them a letter on October 26, threatening to cancel their policy if they failed to remove the marijuana plants.


    The complaint states that Yeaman  “intentionally photographed the flowering hibiscus plants in such a manner as not to reveal that they had flowers on them so that they would appear to resemble marijuana plants.”

    Meanwhile, the couple have lost faith in police.

    “I’m starting to understand why a lot of the public do not trust the police officers,” Audrey Cramer told KDKA.

    “I’m starting to see a lot on TV where I thought, ‘No, you have to be wrong because the police wouldn’t make such a bad mistake.’ Yeah, they would.”


    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/11/pennsylvania-cops-terrorize-elderly-couple-after-confusing-hibiscus-plants-for-marijuana/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 21, 2017, 05:14:48 PM
    It took this incompetent buffoon 4 days to realize his firearm was missing.. And this guy is supposed to be the "chief".

    Prescott Valley police chief's gun missing after he left it in library bathroom

    Quote
    The Prescott Valley Police Department issued a bulletin Monday about Police Chief Bryan Jarrell's firearm, which he inadvertently left in a bathroom stall while changing there following a town council meeting at about 6 p.m. Nov. 9.

    Jarrell apparently didn't realize the firearm was missing until four days later, on Nov. 13.

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-breaking/2017/11/20/prescott-police-chiefs-gun-missing-after-he-left-library-bathroom/882646001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 22, 2017, 08:14:47 AM
    It took this incompetent buffoon 4 days to realize his firearm was missing.. And this guy is supposed to be the "chief".

    Prescott Valley police chief's gun missing after he left it in library bathroom

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-breaking/2017/11/20/prescott-police-chiefs-gun-missing-after-he-left-library-bathroom/882646001/


    FFS - No Doubt he'll get a promotion   ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on November 22, 2017, 09:01:02 AM
    Cops didn't even let the Hibiscus lady get her sandals despite the gravel, ffs.  Any little thing they can do.  I suppose they figure she should count herself lucky they didn't beat her senseless for daring to have a plant which could be stupidly mistaken for another (as they scream "STOP RESISTING" over and over).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 22, 2017, 01:11:07 PM
    Cops didn't even let the Hibiscus lady get her sandals despite the gravel, ffs.  Any little thing they can do.  I suppose they figure she should count herself lucky they didn't beat her senseless for daring to have a plant which could be stupidly mistaken for another (as they scream "STOP RESISTING" over and over).


    Ta Dum  Ta Dum  Ta Dum
    I can hear 007 on his way to defend the cops
    Who no Doubt were afraid for there Lives
    With dealing with her.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2017, 01:48:05 PM
    Cops didn't even let the Hibiscus lady get her sandals despite the gravel, ffs.  Any little thing they can do.  I suppose they figure she should count herself lucky they didn't beat her senseless for daring to have a plant which could be stupidly mistaken for another (as they scream "STOP RESISTING" over and over).

    This shows just how these criminals view and treat citizens like subhuman scum that they can freely abuse. And we are talking about an "officer" with "expertise" in identifying marijuana plants... Imagine if they didn't have this "expertise", they might have identified lettuce as marijuana and sugar as meth (it has happened before, where a "trained" cop with "eleven years of training and experience" identified donut glaze as meth (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8544402#msg8544402)).  Unfortunately, as it often happens in these cases, the criminals probably won't face any prison time or pay out of their pockets. The insurance company also shares blame for this abuse as well as whoever signed the warrant (if a warrant was actually issued, since according to the lawsuit a warrant was not produced when asked).

    Here is another tidbit from this story:

    Quote
    To add insult to injury, the Cramers got an October 26 letter from Nationwide informing them that marijuana had been found on their property and if they failed to remove the plants, Nationwide would cancel their insurance policy.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 22, 2017, 01:52:17 PM
    This shows just how these criminals view and treat citizens like subhuman scum that they can freely abuse. And we are talking about an "officer" with "expertise" in identifying marijuana plants... Imagine if they didn't have this "expertise", they might have identified lettuce as marijuana and sugar as meth (it has happened before, where a "trained" cop with "eleven years of training and experience" identified donut glaze as meth (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8544402#msg8544402)).  Unfortunately, as it often happens in these cases, the criminals probably won't face any prison time or pay out of their pockets. The insurance company also shares blame for this abuse as well as whoever signed the warrant (if a warrant was actually issued, since according to the lawsuit a warrant was not produced when asked).

    Here is another tidbit from this story:


    Seriously it would be hard to believe this sort of stuff isn't made up.

    Yet it just keeps continuing to happen.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2017, 06:34:59 PM
    Owner of house blown apart by SWAT says: 'This is an abomination. This is an atrocity'

    http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/front-range/greenwood-village/owner-of-greenwood-village-house-blown-apart-by-swat-says-this-is-an-abomination-this-is-an-atrocity

    Remember this outrageous case?

    Cops Thought a Man Shoplifted a Shirt, So 50 SWAT Cops Tore Down an Innocent Man’s House

    (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/home-696x366.jpg)

    Greenwood Village, CO – An innocent man’s home was destroyed by police after 50 SWAT officers responded to reports of a man shoplifting a shirt and two belts from a store. Even though the city declared the man’s house a complete loss, he was given just $5,000 in compensation, and he is now filing a lawsuit for “just compensation.”

    Leo Lech lost his home in June 2015, after police launched a 19-hour standoff that included the use of armored vehicles, breaching rams, high-caliber rifles, chemical agents, flash-bang grenades and remote-controlled robots. While his home became “collateral damage,” neither Lech nor his family had any ties to the target the officers were pursuing.

    It all started when a 30-year-old man was accused of shoplifting a shirt and two belts from a local Walmart. Police claim that when they approached Robert Jonathan Seacat, he fled the scene and officers followed him. After he drove to a nearby light rail stop, he abandoned the car he was driving and took shelter in a random house.

    According to a report from the Denver Post, officers claimed that when they entered the home, “Seacat, who was on an upper floor, fired four or five shots through the floor at officers below.” Police decided to respond to one man barricaded in a home and armed with a handgun by employing 50 SWAT officers and a host of expensive technology, destroying the majority of the home, before they found their suspect in a bathroom and arrested him.

    The "National Tactical Officers Association" (NTOA) described the strategy used by the SWAT officers as “calculated destruction,” in which they launched explosives throughout the house, room-by-room, in order to isolate Seacat. A report from Reason described the standoff:

    Quote
    “Though accounts of Seacat’s weaponry differ, court documents provide a startling summary of the police arsenal: 50 SWAT officers bombarded Lech’s property with 40 mm rounds, tear gas, flashbang grenades, two armored Bearcats, and breaching rams. A total of ‘68 cold chemical munitions and four hot gas munitions’ were detonated inside the Greenwood Village home.

    Remote-controlled robots were also used during the raid. The first robot was deployed to track Seacat’s whereabouts inside the house and attempt to deliver a phone to Seacat so that he could directly communicate with police. However, the robot could not maneuver through the debris inside the home, and eventually got stuck.

    To retrieve the robot, an officer attempted to throw a flashbang grenade upstairs toward Seacat to create a diversion. However, the grenade bounced back downstairs toward the team of officers, forcing them to scatter and retreat. The official report states that the grenade ‘failed to land in its desired location.’ Eventually, a second robot was used to retrieve the first one.”

    While one may wonder why Seacat continued to stay in the house, even after police spent several hours using extreme methods to get him out, a review from the NTOA reported by the Denver Post, claimed that, “Seacat was not only actively using methamphetamine, but he had also swallowed containers of the substance, which were now leaking into his system.”

    As a result of Seacat’s impaired state, the review concluded that the chemical agents used by the officers likely did not affect him, noting, “One can only speculate as to the effect this had on Seacat’s ability to think rationally, and to what degree the drug minimized the effects of any chemical munitions, which were later introduced.”

    The amount of force and technology police used, in order to arrest a man who was suspected of shoplifting clothes from Walmart is bizarre, but the fact that they seemed intent on practically destroying an innocent man’s home is even worse.

    According to the report from Reason, the commanding officer during the raid, Dustin Varney, instructed his team to “take as much of the building as needed, without making the roof fall,” and that is exactly what they did.

    “They came and they destroyed the house. It was condemned, it had to be torn down, and they offered me $5,000,” Lech told the Denver Post, noting that his son’s family, who was renting the house from him, had all of their personal belongings destroyed, and were never compensated.

    Although Lech’s house was declared “a complete loss” following the raid, the City of Greenwood Village offered him just $5,000 for temporary living arrangements. In response, he filed a federal lawsuit, claiming civil rights violations, and unjust compensation from the government. Lech told CBS Denver that he expects his case to be heard in federal court in January 2018.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/fifty-swat-cops-tore-down-house-shoplifting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 24, 2017, 08:22:41 PM
    17 Cops Caught Cheating On Police Exam, Group Sleeping at Work—Nobody Fired

    Atlanta, GA — You really cannot make this stuff up, folks! Nearly 20 employees were caught cheating—on an open-book test—that is used to certify Georgia law enforcement personnel on how to properly use their Criminal Justice Information System (CJIS).

    Around 100,000 employees take the exam every two years. This year, 17 officers who work at Atlanta Public Schools as school resource officers and one police dispatcher were caught cheating, which is considered a crime in the State of Georgia.

    The cheating scandal came to the surface after it was discovered that several police dispatchers were sleeping on duty while they were supposed to be answering 911 calls on their 3rd shift duty schedule. The allegations of sleeping on the job then led to a broader investigation whereby it was discovered that a police dispatcher had helped 17 police officers pass the biannual exam.

    Police Chief Ronald Applin told the press:

    “I won’t try to get around it or try to come up with another word to make it sound pretty. That’s what it is. It’s cheating. Why someone would cheat I Can’t explain that, But I know it’s a crime.”
    Vernon Keenan, director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, said that he agrees. He explained that the CJIS involves criminal records, jail occupancies, and inmate information and that properly using the system is required by law:

    “If you’re cheating, you’re violating the law…Misuse of that network is a crime. So we want the operators, the persons who are going to use the criminal information system network to know what they’re doing and not misuse the system.”

    Even though both the chief and the director agree that what the 18 law enforcement officials did was illegal, Applin made no indication whether any of the officers would be charged with a criminal offense. Instead, he said all 18 would be disciplined, which usually means—as The Free Thought Project has documented on numerous occasions—they will be placed on paid administrative leave while the investigation takes place. In other words, they get a paid vacation for cheating.

    Applin said he still believes in his school resource officers, who are supposed to set a high standard of excellence in modeling integrity and honesty for the children they work with day in and day out. He told the interviewing reporter:

    “These are good officers who have had some positive impact on their schools, on the kids that they work with and they made a decision that I think was not a good decision.”

    Therein lies the problem we at TFTP have with the way law enforcement officers are treated by their own. In the real world, if someone is caught cheating on a test, there are often serious consequences which accompany such an action.

    We are aware of one student who was caught cheating on an online assignment at a major university. The professor turned in the student to the office of academic integrity, who then conducted an investigation. Upon conclusion of the investigation, it was discovered that the student had cheated on nearly all of the assignments given. The credits issued to the student were rescinded, the student was kicked out of the university, and the student must still repay the student loans taken out to attend the university.

    Cheating is a serious offense, but it seems in Atlanta, if you are a police officer at a public school, you can get away with cheating on your tests—even if it is an open book exam.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-caught-cheating-open-book-exam-not-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 25, 2017, 03:08:49 PM
    This man spent 20 years in prison before he was exonerated. The criminals who framed him should have been in prison already serving a minimum of 40 years.

    Jury awards $15 million to Baltimore man exonerated of murder

    After more than two decades, Sabein Burgess said, he finally has closure.

    Burgess, 47, was charged with murdering his girlfriend in 1994 and sentenced to life plus 20 years in prison. He was freed in 2015 after the state conceded he did not commit the crime.

    On Tuesday, a federal jury awarded him $15 million for the wrongful conviction in his suit against the Baltimore Police Department and two police detectives, Gerald Goldstein and Steven Lehman.

    [...]

    Years after Burgess was convicted, an FBI memo surfaced that showed agents investigating a hit man named Howard Bernard Rice had contacted the lead detective in the Dyson case and said she had been killed over a botched drug package delivery by two men and possibly a woman. The name of one suspect was provided, and it was not Burgess.

    Loevy accused Goldstein during opening arguments of “keeping that information to himself.”

    At the time of Rice’s death in 1999, police said he was a suspect in as many as seven killings. Then years later, a man named Charles Dorsey wrote a letter to Burgess’ mother and attorney, saying he and Rice had killed Dyson in a home invasion. Dorsey knew Burgess during childhood and was serving 45 years for attempted murder.

    Lehmann, the other detective, was accused of taking a call from Dyson’s father, who told him that Dyson had been scared in the days leading up to her death and that someone nicknamed “Little Man” had killed her. Loevy argued that “Little Man” was a nickname for Rice, and said detectives failed to consider the tip.

    Burgess also contends police were told at the time of the killing that Dyson’s 6-year-old son was home when she was killed and said he did not see Burgess.

    [...]

    These kinds of trials are unusual in Maryland. Plaintiffs must overcome immunity that police and prosecutors have from lawsuits, and lawyers typically are reluctant to take these cases, said Michele Nethercott, director of the University of Baltimore’s Innocence Project.

    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-burgess-verdict-20171121-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 25, 2017, 09:50:20 PM

    Ta Dum  Ta Dum  Ta Dum
    I can hear 007 on his way to defend the cops
    Who no Doubt were afraid for there Lives
    With dealing with her.

    really?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 26, 2017, 12:05:49 AM
    really?


    Yes.
    You mean you're not going to jump to defence ?
    Really ?

    I don't see you condemning any cops in the above posts either.
    Why is That.?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 26, 2017, 12:27:56 AM

    Yes.
    You mean you're not going to jump to defence ?
    Really ?

    I don't see you condemning any cops in the above posts either.
    Why is That.?

    Because I have a life and spending it addressing every post on this page is not my idea of fun. While many of the articles are obviously anti police, I don't have a lot to say about the cops because in many cases they and their  chain of command are screwed up. I'm not  gonna live for ever.. so my suggestion is.. whenever you read an article that uses the terms "pig". "thief", murderer etc when referring to a cop... google other sources and read them. I'm not suggesting that you discount your original source, but if the truth is important to you as it is to me, you can look at the information available about the incident and come to a more informed conclusion. If that conclusion is that the cop and his or her department is screwed up/criminal/etc then so be it. View the information with a critical eye.. and if at the end of it you deem the cop a criminal, murderer or part of a larger conspiracy of criminals the go with it. I know there are some messed up cops out there, I read about it often and I see the articles posted here. Some of the articles here are a tad biased, some are spot on. If I were the Police Chief of all departments I would hire you and some like you to help me oversee the nations departments and provide the intel and training that is needed to bring them up to the level both you and I can be proud of. But that's not going to happen.
    Last word.. if all you see are nails, then of course the solution is a hammer. I was reading 2 days ago about a cop that gave up an organ for a guy he arrested. while that won't make this page, it underscores what I've been trying to say.. yeah, there are problems and cops aren't perfect and lord knows when some cops screw up they need to be hammered but by and large.. the police are trying to do a good job. I know we'll disagree on that and that's fine.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 26, 2017, 12:34:37 AM

    Yes.
    You mean you're not going to jump to defence ?
    Really ?

    I don't see you condemning any cops in the above posts either.
    Why is That.?

    I'm serous when I say I would ask you to be on the board. While we disagree on many things, I believe you are open to opposing views, not that you are swayed by them, but at least you consider them and as  upper management Po Po guy, I would want that perspective
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 26, 2017, 02:28:38 PM
    Because I have a life and spending it addressing every post on this page is not my idea of fun. While many of the articles are obviously anti police, I don't have a lot to say about the cops because in many cases they and their  chain of command are screwed up. I'm not  gonna live for ever.. so my suggestion is.. whenever you read an article that uses the terms "pig". "thief", murderer etc when referring to a cop... google other sources and read them. I'm not suggesting that you discount your original source, but if the truth is important to you as it is to me, you can look at the information available about the incident and come to a more informed conclusion. If that conclusion is that the cop and his or her department is screwed up/criminal/etc then so be it. View the information with a critical eye.. and if at the end of it you deem the cop a criminal, murderer or part of a larger conspiracy of criminals the go with it. I know there are some messed up cops out there, I read about it often and I see the articles posted here. Some of the articles here are a tad biased, some are spot on. If I were the Police Chief of all departments I would hire you and some like you to help me oversee the nations departments and provide the intel and training that is needed to bring them up to the level both you and I can be proud of. But that's not going to happen.
    Last word.. if all you see are nails, then of course the solution is a hammer. I was reading 2 days ago about a cop that gave up an organ for a guy he arrested. while that won't make this page, it underscores what I've been trying to say.. yeah, there are problems and cops aren't perfect and lord knows when some cops screw up they need to be hammered but by and large.. the police are trying to do a good job. I know we'll disagree on that and that's fine.


    Correct there are always 3sides to a story the police version the accused / defendant version
    And somewhere in between is the truth.

    You make a good point about the reviewing of offencs / articles & seeking further clarifications

    Like you I have a life & generally replying to posts or investigating / researching them isn't
    A priority to me.

    Am I caught out / wrong sometimes no doubt I am
    Just like many others on here.

    Probably the majority of police just as the majority of non police Are doing a good job
    And are law abiding - Very Clearly there are a Significant minority of police and non police
    Who don't give a damn.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 26, 2017, 02:34:49 PM
    I'm serous when I say I would ask you to be on the board. While we disagree on many things, I believe you are open to opposing views, not that you are swayed by them, but at least you consider them and as  upper management Po Po guy, I would want that perspective

    You lost me - on what board ?

    True we do have different views & yes I am open to differing views
    And I can & am able to take on board & change my view if It is clear I'm wrong
    Or Ill informed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 26, 2017, 02:51:25 PM
    Is there freedom of speech in the US?

    A "sheriff" in Texas posted a picture on Facebook of a truck that has a sticker saying "Fuck Trump and fuck you for voting for him".

    (https://scontent.flas1-2.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t31.0-8/23551026_1954765468109541_7014063934255907560_o.jpg?oh=dc35c1b58bff73b1b8fe86c5809dedd7&oe=5A629BCD)

    He then added the following:

    It seems that this "sheriff" is a real crook.

    Texas Sheriff Troy Nehls Lied about Arrest on Job Application; Fired from Previous Job for Destroying Evidence

    The Texas sheriff who threatened disorderly conduct charges against a woman with a “Fuck Trump” sticker on her truck apparently committed fraud by lying on his job application for a previous job about a past arrest, according to records.

    Records found on Keep USA Honest reveal Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy E. Nehls lied during his employment process in a signed, sworn and notarized affidavit that states he’d never been arrested while applying for a job as a police officer with the Fort Bend County Independent School District before becoming sheriff.

    However, Nehls was arrested in Wisconsin by Horicon police for underage drinking in 1988 at the age of 20 and obstructing an officer by lying about his age.

    Nehls admitted to his arrest on his application to the Richmond Police Department.

    Additionally, records reveal Nehls was terminated from the Richmond Police Department for a total of 19 violations committed in a one year span.

    “Your repeated violations of the policies and procedures of this department, as well as your continuing disregard for orders issued to you by your supervisors, has resulted in this termination which is based on Richmond Police Department’s General Orders 300.08,” his termination notice, which can  be seen below, reads.

    Violations listed by the department include destruction of evidence, improper arrests, misleading superiors, failure to contact a victim, failure to return property, dining at restaurants without notifying dispatch and several counts of improper handling of evidence.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/11/texas-sheriff-troy-nehls-lied-arrest-job-application-fired-previous-job-destroying-evidence/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 26, 2017, 10:53:58 PM
    You lost me - on what board ?

    True we do have different views & yes I am open to differing views
    And I can & am able to take on board & change my view if It is clear I'm wrong
    Or Ill informed.

    "If I were the Police Chief of all departments I would hire you and some like you to help me oversee the nations departments and provide the intel and training that is needed to bring them up to the level both you and I can be proud of. But that's not going to happen."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 27, 2017, 12:18:10 AM
    "If I were the Police Chief of all departments I would hire you and some like you to help me oversee the nations departments and provide the intel and training that is needed to bring them up to the level both you and I can be proud of. But that's not going to happen."
    [/quote ]



    Thank You for your hypothetical vote
    Working on such a project would be tough & demanding no doubt
    And extremely rewarding & interesting.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: gh15 on November 27, 2017, 03:25:28 AM
    "If I were the Police Chief of all departments I would hire you and some like you to help me oversee the nations departments and provide the intel and training that is needed to bring them up to the level both you and I can be proud of. But that's not going to happen."

    ofcourse not.. he is british felon who got arrested the law pee on him,, notice how i sign this one,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 27, 2017, 11:50:15 AM
    ofcourse not.. he is british felon who got arrested the law pee on him,, notice how i sign this one,,

    gh15 approved
    lion of Judah



    To be honest, most of the time I don't read your posts, much less notice how you sign it. No offense.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 27, 2017, 12:57:37 PM
    To be honest, most of the time I don't read your posts, much less notice how you sign it. No offense.


    A friendly warning to you
    He will likely verbally attack you in badly spelt English
    Accuse you of all sorts of things
    Tell you he knows who you are & where you are
    Threaten you with the CIA FBI Trump Putin & uncle Tom Cobbley

    Please Be Warned. He's Dangerous --- ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 27, 2017, 01:31:10 PM

    A friendly warning to you
    He will likely verbally attack you in badly spelt English
    Accuse you of all sorts of things
    Tell you he knows who you are & where you are
    Threaten you with the CIA FBI Trump Putin & uncle Tom Cobbley

    Please Be Warned. He's Dangerous --- ::)

    Duly noted

    I've got nothing against him, It's probably more me than him. I have a hard time reading his posts, much of what he says I don't agree with once I figure out what he's saying. So I usually skim past his posts
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 28, 2017, 09:29:41 AM
    https://nypost.com/2017/11/27/nypd-detective-arrested-for-flashing-gun-during-restaurant-fight/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on November 28, 2017, 02:25:42 PM

    Ta Dum Ta Dum Ta Dum
    I can hear 007 on his way to defend the cops
    Who no Doubt were afraid for there Lives
    With dealing with her.

    Yes, but I must admit, Agnostic reps well.  Imo, most cops probably don't have the attention span necessary to communicate with others (at least with those of the non-cop variety) and judging by the disaster policing has become in this society, the intelligence level has sunk through the floor.

    But, in all fairness, the good ones really do tend to be positive individuals.  Agnostic should post those good stories when he sees them, since it would give some balance.  (Although, imo, the truly good stuff from those officers is what goes untold for the most part.  It's the true line of separation between the heart and the mind.  Because most individual officers are, of course, willing to trick it up for mass coverage while they may well continue to offend out of camera view.)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on November 28, 2017, 02:54:13 PM
    This shows just how these criminals view and treat citizens like subhuman scum that they can freely abuse. And we are talking about an "officer" with "expertise" in identifying marijuana plants... Imagine if they didn't have this "expertise", they might have identified lettuce as marijuana and sugar as meth (it has happened before, where a "trained" cop with "eleven years of training and experience" identified donut glaze as meth (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8544402#msg8544402)).  Unfortunately, as it often happens in these cases, the criminals probably won't face any prison time or pay out of their pockets. The insurance company also shares blame for this abuse as well as whoever signed the warrant (if a warrant was actually issued, since according to the lawsuit a warrant was not produced when asked).

    Here is another tidbit from this story:


    It seems there are far too many individual cops who want to "make it personal" as it's the "big chance" to do that, or whatever's going on in their alleged thoughts, when it's the absolute LAST thing in the world they should want to do.  Is it mental illness on their parts?  Is it extreme immaturity?  Is it a rush from acting out on a mean-spirited streak?  WTF is wrong with them?  I really don't know.  But no one can tell me that a culture built around it, in our own PDs, is acceptable.

    Let the woman have her sandals.  Get them yourselves, even, and give them to her, as I'm sure would be done if it was the only way to search that area where the sandals were located.  In this case, though, they'd already searched, and there was nothing for them to gain by going for her sandals -- so they figured they'd take a personal dig at her by making her hurt her feet on the gravel.

    As for those field tests which would be better used as practical-joke gifts than police tools, someone needs to be held to account.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2017, 02:58:02 PM
    Yes, but I must admit, Agnostic reps well.  Imo, most cops probably don't have the attention span necessary to communicate with others (at least with those of the non-cop variety) and judging by the disaster policing has become in this society, the intelligence level has sunk through the floor.

    But, in all fairness, the good ones really do tend to be positive individuals.  Agnostic should post those good stories when he sees them, since it would give some balance.  (Although, imo, the truly good stuff from those officers is what goes untold for the most part.  It's the true line of separation between the heart and the mind.  Because most individual officers are, of course, willing to trick it up for mass coverage while they may well continue to offend out of camera view.)

    There is a thread about law enforcement appreciation:
    http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=201048.0


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on November 28, 2017, 03:09:36 PM
    There is a thread about law enforcement appreciation:
    http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=201048.0




    Yes, you're right.  I thought maybe Agnostic could give us some relief with genuine stories of good cops, on here, but unfortunately it may be of the comedic type in most cases.  The really good stuff isn't widely known.  Anyone can play it up for the camera, reporter, etc.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2017, 03:40:14 PM
    Yes, you're right.  I thought maybe Agnostic could give us some relief with genuine stories of good cops, on here, but unfortunately it may be of the comedic type in most cases.  The really good stuff isn't widely known.  Anyone can play it up for the camera, reporter, etc.

    There might be a few stories of good cops doing things beyond their job description/union contract or exposing corruption within their departments (and not being retaliated against) which would be commendable but, alas, many times they get called "heroes" for just doing their job adequately. Probably most such stories would receive a lot of publicity anyway as the media often parrot the cops' side of the story, unlike several cases of abuse and brutality (and not just BLM stuff that is usually exaggerated and heavily politicized) that hardly ever make the news.

    More body cams seem to be a positive step that would help show the actions of criminals (uniformed or not) or the actions of good people (uniformed or not) but again you have instances of selective or edited footage, cameras that just happen to "malfunction" or are "accidentally" turned off or their footage is not available or cases where citizens who record get their recording equipment confiscated (and in some cases when they retrieve it the content has been altered or erased).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on November 28, 2017, 04:29:40 PM
    There might be a few stories of good cops doing things beyond their job description/union contract or exposing corruption within their departments (and not being retaliated against) which would be commendable but, alas, many times they get called "heroes" for just doing their job adequately. Probably most such stories would receive a lot of publicity anyway as the media often parrot the cops' side of the story, unlike several cases of abuse and brutality (and not just BLM stuff that is usually exaggerated and heavily politicized) that hardly ever make the news.

    More body cams seem to be a positive step that would help show the actions of criminals (uniformed or not) or the actions of good people (uniformed or not) but again you have instances of selective or edited footage, cameras that just happen to "malfunction" or are "accidentally" turned off or their footage is not available or cases where citizens who record get their recording equipment confiscated (and in some cases when they retrieve it the content has been altered or erased).

    Yeah, sorry to have to say it, but you make the case right there.  Plus, the resistance to cams has been strong.  Lack of accountability seems to be inescapable.  "Oh, my.  The camera malfunctioned!  Must've shut off on its own!  Haha."

    But I'll never forget watching an old Cops episode, in which two cops responded to a possible child-neglect situation.  They found some guy who was surrounded by a good half-dozen kids, all of them clearly screwed up and unfed, filthy even by kid standards, and doing dangerous things in some cases from what I recall.  Not a woman to be found anywhere.  No way this guy was capable of taking care of himself, let alone a houseful of little kids, all probably under the age of ten.

    Because of the cameras, I'm certain, the cops (one was obviously the alpha of the two, maybe from seniority or whatever) went to the grocery store and bought food and set the dude up for a little while.  But the one cop didn't want to even make the slightest move which wasn't clearly covered by the camera.  He wanted this shit on his record.  That's the typical "Good Cop" story IMO.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 28, 2017, 10:33:41 PM
    Yes, you're right.  I thought maybe Agnostic could give us some relief with genuine stories of good cops, on here, but unfortunately it may be of the comedic type in most cases.  The really good stuff isn't widely known.  Anyone can play it up for the camera, reporter, etc.

    True any one can... But I've seen cops do a lot of things off the record for folks. I've done a lot of things off the record for families. And I'll go as far as to say I cringe a little when I scroll down my social media page and see one of my counterparts posting a good deed on social media. It goes against the grain for me. But I understand why some of them do it. The anti cop push where every mistake or bad action is posted all over social media if not evened out would make it appear every cop is a dirtbag. So some have taken to posting things to say "We do care, here are some of the things we do" but I never was one to seek attention for doing things like that and it bothers me still. Again, I understand in this day and age why it is done, but I don't care for it. I much prefer posts from citizens capturing cops doing cool things unexpectedly.. it takes away that "Its only for the cameras" mentality
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 28, 2017, 10:36:17 PM
    There might be a few stories of good cops doing things beyond their job description/union contract or exposing corruption within their departments (and not being retaliated against) which would be commendable but, alas, many times they get called "heroes" for just doing their job adequately. Probably most such stories would receive a lot of publicity anyway as the media often parrot the cops' side of the story, unlike several cases of abuse and brutality (and not just BLM stuff that is usually exaggerated and heavily politicized) that hardly ever make the news.

    More body cams seem to be a positive step that would help show the actions of criminals (uniformed or not) or the actions of good people (uniformed or not) but again you have instances of selective or edited footage, cameras that just happen to "malfunction" or are "accidentally" turned off or their footage is not available or cases where citizens who record get their recording equipment confiscated (and in some cases when they retrieve it the content has been altered or erased).

    I'm with you on the body cams. I'm with you on the car cams. I was involved in helping to create our policy on cameras years ago and I think we did a good job. There are specific times when a camera can't be on.. and if a camera is turned off or not turned on in any event where it violates the policy, it is looked at in favor of the person complaining. The assumption is, if you were following policy and protocol, you would have the camera on.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 29, 2017, 11:41:36 AM
    Talk about a racket.. The violent criminal gang at it again.

    Man Tries to Pay $10 Fine in Pennies, So Cops Beat Him Until He Defecated Himself

    Royal Oaks, MI – A young man was recently attacked by court officers after attempting to pay a parking fee of $10. After the court refused to accept his payment they allegedly asked him to leave, and on security camera footage you can see him turn to walk away just before he is attacked. The video shows the guards grabbing him and choking him out, then slamming him to the ground. The attack knocked the man unconscious, and when he awoke moments later he had found that he soiled himself.

    To add insult to injury, the victim, Anthony Sevy, was then charged with Disturbing the Peace and assault, and while the assault charge was dropped, he was forced to plead no contest to the other charge, fearing that it would be his only chance of escaping a 2 year prison sentence for assaulting a court officer.

    Now, Sevy plans on filing a lawsuit against Royal Oak and the guards involved.

    “He wasn’t happy about [the fee] so, in symbolic protest, he brought back penny rolls to pay for his ticket. The clerk wasn’t too happy about that, they refused to allow him to pay with penny rolls. As he was leaving the courthouse with his back to the officer, the court officer began to choke him out, grabbing him, brought him to the ground. Mr. Sevy passed out and defecated himself,” his attorney Jonathan Marco said.

    “I don’t think anyone paying in penny rolls, whether it’s a preferred thing to do for a court clerk, warrants this type of this assaultive behavior and violation of constitutional rights. I think the more profound and long-lasting injury is the psychological injuries he’s suffering as a result of this. He’s supposed to be in a safe place. I don’t think that in everyday course of business, we poop our pants or go around defecating ourselves,” Marco added.

    It was not just the $10 or the principle of the parking ticket that had Sevy mad enough to go to the courthouse with pennies, it was also the fact that he would have been charged $1.75 to pay the fee online with a credit card, essentially tacking another 20% onto his fee.

    Royal Oaks is fairly notorious for their predatory revenue collection schemes in regards to parking fees and fines. Back in 2012, there was a huge local debate when Royal Oaks took advantage of a new state law that allowed them to revoke the driver’s license of anyone with 3 or more unpaid parking tickets. It was widely reported that this change could bring in nearly a million dollars in additional revenue each year. Prior to that, the city issued roughly 100,000 tickets each year, raking in millions.

    “Our downtown parking system does generate about $2.15 million in revenue per year for the general fund; in turn, about 70 percent of that fund pays for police and fire, including paramedics. If you want to avoid getting a ticket, then just check out the map on the city website and park in one of our three structures for a flat fee,” City Commissioner Jim Rasor told The Patch at the time of the controversy.

    Over the years it has become a popular form of peaceful protest to walk into a courthouse and pay a ridiculous fee in pennies. However, as the trend has become more popular, frustrated authoritarians have begun using the only tool they know or understand, violence. Earlier this year, police were called on a veteran attempting to pay a ticket in pennies.

    As The Free Thought Project has stated before, “police need you to break traffic laws” because writing tickets and receiving funds from doing so is a considerable revenue generator for police departments. It’s how police states maintain their control over the citizenry.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-beaten-10-fine-pennies/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2017, 11:59:52 AM
    Something seems very fishy in this case. Could it be that cops conspired to kill him so he couldn't testify against them?

    Baltimore Police Now Blocking FBI from Investigating Murder of Cop Set to Testify Against Fellow Cops

    Baltimore, MD — In recent weeks, The Free Thought Project has been keeping a close eye on the developing case of a whistleblower with the Baltimore Police Department named Sean Suiter who was shot with his own gun the day before he was set to testify against corrupt cops within his own department.

    Unlike most other shootings where police are the victims, no one has been arrested and there is no suspect to speak of. In fact, this is the only time in the history of Baltimore that a suspect in the shooting of a police officer has gone this long uncaptured.

    With each day that passes, more suspicious details are uncovered which cast doubt on the official narrative that has been given by the police department since the shooting and brings suspicion upon the department itself.

    Not only was Suiter set to testify in a massive corruptions case the day after his shooting but his partner was off work that day and the commissioner lied about this important detail in a press conference where he revealed the details of the case to the media. The man who filled in as Suiter’s partner on the day of his death is Facebook friends with one of the officers who is facing conviction.

    On Wednesday, Congressman Elijah E. Cummings asked the director of the FBI to make the Suiter investigation one of their top priorities.

    “I asked him that they use every resource available and do everything in their power to assist the Baltimore police in this investigation and make it a top priority,” Cummings said.

    With the killer of a police officer on the loose for weeks and a population beginning to doubt the official word from the police department, you would think that they would be happy to bring in other agencies to help them wrap up the case, or at least prove that their hands are clean and that there is no cover-up.

    However, as reported by WBAL-TV, the Baltimore Police department is not allowing the FBI to assist them in the investigation.

    Department spokesman T.J. Smith said they will not be allowing any other agencies to interfere with their investigation.

    “The Baltimore Police Department handles murder investigations, and the Baltimore Police Department will continue to handle this investigation,” Smith said.

    The department’s refusal to allow another set of eyes on the case has even drawn criticism from the state’s governor, Larry Hogan, who told reporters that, “I have a lot of confidence in the Police Commissioner Kevin Davis in Baltimore, but at some point, the more eyes we have on this, the better.”

    Read more at: http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-police-fbi-investigate-whitleblower-cops-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2017, 04:39:22 PM
    Throw them in prison for 20 years and maybe they'll be rehabilitated and learn to behave like normal human beings.

    Cops Mistake Innocent Man’s Colostomy Bag for a Gun—Beat, Taser, Mace Him

    Euclid, OH — Tensions among police and citizens in Euclid, Ohio have come to a head recently after police killed an unarmed 23-year-old man over a marijuana roach and officers were seen on video pulverizing another man over a suspended license. Now, the Euclid police department is sure to become infamous after body camera footage was released as part of a lawsuit against cops who mistook a colostomy bag for a gun and severely beat an innocent man.

    Lamar Wright had recently undergone a surgery last year when he was driving home and stopped to use the phone. According to a federal lawsuit filed against the Euclid Police Department on Thursday, Wright had simply pulled over to safely use his phone and was subsequently attacked, assaulted, and arrested by belligerent cops for no reason.

    According to the civil complaint, Wright pulled into a driveway on East 212th Street “to safely use his cell phone” on Nov. 4, 2016. Two armed men approached his vehicle, and, realizing they were police officers, Wright placed his car in park and held his hands up.

    Officer Kyle Flagg’s gun “was raised and pointed toward Wright,” as he stood next to the driver’s door. Office Vashon Williams stood behind Flagg, his gun raised as well, reports the Cleveland Scene.

    Flagg ordered Wright from the vehicle, but before he could even comply, the cops started forcefully prying the recovering surgical patient from the car.

    “Flagg yanked on Wright’s left arm,” the lawsuit reads. “Wright was still seated in the car at this time, and had staples in his stomach and a new colostomy bag. This, in combination with Flagg yanking on his left arm, prevented Wright from extending his right arm toward Flagg. … Flagg’s conduct caused Wright extreme pain. Wright cried out to Flagg several times that he was hurting his arm, but Flagg ignored him.”

    Clearly in agony from the brute force of the cops attacking the post-op patient, Wright grabbed at his colostomy bag, crying out in pain, all the while attempting to explain to the cops what was going on. They wanted nothing to do with hearing his problems, however, and proceeded to taser, pepper spray, and slam Wright to the ground before he could get a word in edgewise.

    The lawsuit notes that both cops “had the duty and opportunity to intervene to protect Wright, and to prevent the unconstitutional use of force against Wright. Neither Flagg nor Williams did anything to prevent this unlawful attack.”

    “I got a shit bag!” Wright yells as the cops forced him to the ground causing him excruciating pain. Again, the cops proved they couldn’t care less about the pain and suffering—caused by their fear, ignorance, and violence—of an innocent man.

    As the body camera continues to roll after Wright is taken out by the officers, we can hear them claiming they thought the colostomy bag was a gun. Even after Wright explains to them what it was, they were still seemingly oblivious.

    “Dude, I thought he had a gun,” Flagg says.

    “He started reaching,” Williams says.

    “Why the fuck are you reaching like that?” Flagg asks Wright.

    “I told you I got a bag!”

    “No, dude, you were reaching with your right hand.”

    “I got a bag!”

    “What’s a bag?” Williams asks.

    “A shit bag, man!”

    “OK, but what are you doing reaching for it?” Williams asks.

    “I don’t know if you’re getting ready to shoot me or what, man,” Flagg says.

    For committing absolutely no crime, Wright was charged with obstructing official business, resisting arrest, and criminal trespass — all fabricated, according to the lawsuit, to justify the horrific abuse.

    The suit also alleges that the officers “mocked” Wright for his pain upon taking him to the hospital, and that although he made his nearly $900 bond, “he was subjected to a search via a full-body x-ray scanner. … Only after this scanning was complete, approximately four to five hours after bond had been posted, was Wright finally permitted to walk free.”

    Wright says in the suit that he was forced to pay $1,000 for the damage the pepper spray caused to the rental car and he’s since been put on a “do not rent” list as a result.

    In spite of all the egregious charges being dropped and video showing the unnecessary and brutal escalation of force, neither of the officers were disciplined and, in fact, chief Scott Meyer announced last week that the Department had been awarded the AAA Platinum Award for community traffic safety. You cannot make this stuff up.

    “I filed this case to stand up against police brutality, and to stand with other victims of senseless attacks by officers from the Euclid Police Department. These officers’ illegal treatment of people in the city must stop,” Wright said in a public statement. “We need justice for all the victims of the EPD.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-mistake-colostomy-bag-gun/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 30, 2017, 04:54:45 PM

    Baltimore is a complete cesspool


    Something seems very fishy in this case. Could it be that cops conspired to kill him so he couldn't testify against them?

    Baltimore Police Now Blocking FBI from Investigating Murder of Cop Set to Testify Against Fellow Cops

    Baltimore, MD — In recent weeks, The Free Thought Project has been keeping a close eye on the developing case of a whistleblower with the Baltimore Police Department named Sean Suiter who was shot with his own gun the day before he was set to testify against corrupt cops within his own department.

    Unlike most other shootings where police are the victims, no one has been arrested and there is no suspect to speak of. In fact, this is the only time in the history of Baltimore that a suspect in the shooting of a police officer has gone this long uncaptured.

    With each day that passes, more suspicious details are uncovered which cast doubt on the official narrative that has been given by the police department since the shooting and brings suspicion upon the department itself.

    Not only was Suiter set to testify in a massive corruptions case the day after his shooting but his partner was off work that day and the commissioner lied about this important detail in a press conference where he revealed the details of the case to the media. The man who filled in as Suiter’s partner on the day of his death is Facebook friends with one of the officers who is facing conviction.

    On Wednesday, Congressman Elijah E. Cummings asked the director of the FBI to make the Suiter investigation one of their top priorities.

    “I asked him that they use every resource available and do everything in their power to assist the Baltimore police in this investigation and make it a top priority,” Cummings said.

    With the killer of a police officer on the loose for weeks and a population beginning to doubt the official word from the police department, you would think that they would be happy to bring in other agencies to help them wrap up the case, or at least prove that their hands are clean and that there is no cover-up.

    However, as reported by WBAL-TV, the Baltimore Police department is not allowing the FBI to assist them in the investigation.

    Department spokesman T.J. Smith said they will not be allowing any other agencies to interfere with their investigation.

    “The Baltimore Police Department handles murder investigations, and the Baltimore Police Department will continue to handle this investigation,” Smith said.

    The department’s refusal to allow another set of eyes on the case has even drawn criticism from the state’s governor, Larry Hogan, who told reporters that, “I have a lot of confidence in the Police Commissioner Kevin Davis in Baltimore, but at some point, the more eyes we have on this, the better.”

    Read more at: http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-police-fbi-investigate-whitleblower-cops-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2017, 05:46:26 PM
    Remember this case? Now the killer is suing to get disability pension, claiming he has PTSD and "total and permanent disabilities".

    Officer involved in fatal shooting suing for disability pension

    PUNTA GORDA — The former Punta Gorda police officer who shot and killed a retired librarian during a training exercise last August is suing his department’s pension board for refusing to grant him a disability pension for post-traumatic stress he claims to suffer as a result of the killing.

    http://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20171129/officer-involved-in-fatal-shooting-suing-for-disability-pension
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 30, 2017, 06:51:44 PM
    Yes, you're right.  I thought maybe Agnostic could give us some relief with genuine stories of good cops, on here, but unfortunately it may be of the comedic type in most cases.  The really good stuff isn't widely known.  Anyone can play it up for the camera, reporter, etc.

    The thing is, and it's been said by the anti police segment and I happen to agree with it.. there are a lot of positive stories available, but in my opinion, those are things good people are supposed to do. But I also know that some news media outfits don't like to run positive stories about police so departments push trying to make their own news and for most of us it just feels wrong. But without it.. all people see are the bad stories so it's damned if you do.

       
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 01, 2017, 11:11:55 AM
    No protests for this young man. So much for his "white privilege" we keep hearing about. The killer should've been executed but of course his killing was deemed "justifiable".

    Parents Get $2.4 Million After Cop Killed Their Unarmed Child on Video For Flexing His Rights

    Eaton County, MI — It was announced in 2015 that the officer who shot and killed 17-year-old Deven Guilford for flexing his rights, would not be charged with any crimes. His family was devastated. However, after a long fight in the courts, a judge ruled in August that the federal lawsuit against his killer, Sgt. Jonathan Frost, could proceed to trial on two claims of excessive force. And, this week, the family finally has closure after reaching a $2.4 million settlement.

    Deven’s father said the decision to settle was “emotional” and “difficult.” He said the family acted on the advice of their attorneys, but still struggles with finding closure over the death of their son, the Lansing State Journal reported.

    “The life we had is no more,” Brian Guilford said Thursday. “I don’t think it’s something people can understand unless they’ve lost a child.”

    Although the family agreed in January not to pursue Eaton County in the lawsuit, they have still been footing the bill for Frost’s legal expenses, as well as any settlement or judgment if the case went to trial.

    “Ending this matter will hopefully allow the family to mourn their loss privately and not continue to be faced with their pain publicly through the course of a protracted legal battle,” Eaton County Controller John Fuentes said in a statement.

    According to the Journal, the settlement requires that the lawsuit be dismissed “with prejudice” and that the Guilford family sign a general release of liability preventing any further claims, James Dyer, an attorney for Eaton County and Frost said in a statement after the settlement was announced.

    “We know no settlement amount will bring back their son, but like the Guilford family, Jon thinks about and prays for Deven Guilford every day,” Dyer said. “This settlement will at least help avoid a long, protracted and painful legal battle for everyone involved.”

    “I think we did the right thing,” Guilford said through tears. “We do feel some closure, but it’s hard to say how much closure you feel, because today is so emotional. I just pray somehow law enforcement will take a different approach.”

    That fateful night in 2015, Deven was traveling along the road and flashed his lights at an officer because his headlights were so bright that they nearly made Deven run off the road. He was then pulled over by Sgt. Frost of the Eaton County Sheriff’s Office, who stopped the young man for no other reason than the fact that he flashed his lights.

    When Frost approached the car, Guilford explained that he was simply flashing his lights to be a polite driver, and let the officer know that his high beams were on so he didn’t cause an accident.

    The officer began to get aggressive with Guilford when he attempted to flex his rights during the traffic stop. Guilford refused to show the officer his license and registration because he had broken no laws and the officer had no reason to stop him.

    Guilford also began recording the encounter with his cell phone and let the officer know that he was filming for his own safety. He then asked the officer if he was being detained and for what reason. He was told that he was being detained because he refused to comply with Frost and show him his ID. However, not showing his ID is a secondary offense, meaning the officer would actually need a real reason to pull him over to begin with.

    On a power trip, Frost violently ripped Guilford out of the vehicle and forced him down to the ground. Guilford attempted to remain filming while he complied with the officer’s orders and moved to the ground. Sadly, Guilford was not moving fast enough for Frost, so he tased the young boy. At this time, both the body camera and the cell phone footage cut out.

    Off camera, Frost shot and killed the young boy. The known details are sparse because the killing happened out of the view of the dash-cam, and the body camera was turned off at that point. However, the officer claims that the young boy attacked him, so he “feared for his life” and killed him, firing 7 shots from his weapon.


    Photos later surfaced of Frost bleeding from the face at the hospital. However, as the judge in the case stated, it was “inconceivable” for Guilford to have inflicted this damage.

    “For someone who claims he was being ‘pummeled’ while lying on the ground, it remains curious that there were relatively few injuries to his face and almost no injuries to the back of his head,” federal Judge Paul Maloney, who allowed the lawsuit to continue, wrote. “…Moreover, Guilford had not a single bruise or cut to his hands — almost inconceivable, a jury could conclude, if he was ‘pummeling’ Frost to the point where he feared he would lose consciousness.”


    Brian Guilford said the family was thankful for Maloney’s ruling.

    “Ultimately, (Frost) knows he killed a very innocent, fun-loving, non-threatening teenage boy. He got killed because he made a police officer mad. No one will ever convince me Frost was afraid when he pulled Deven out of his car. What we really hold on to is Judge Maloney’s ruling and his opinion.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-devon-guilford-family-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 01, 2017, 07:41:38 PM
    The thing is, and it's been said by the anti police segment and I happen to agree with it.. there are a lot of positive stories available, but in my opinion, those are things good people are supposed to do. But I also know that some news media outfits don't like to run positive stories about police so departments push trying to make their own news and for most of us it just feels wrong. But without it.. all people see are the bad stories so it's damned if you do.

       

    The positive stories should be listed
    If what they do goes above & beyond what is there normal
    Police role. They Should be Celebrated.
    I would acknowledge & praise them.

    This is the case with what you call negative stories
    They are negative because the cops don't act properly
    And act like organised armed thugs & fall way below
    Any level of acceptable policing or decent behaviour.
    They Should be Held Accountable.
    Likewise I  see them as Thugs Arsewipes & Criminals.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 01, 2017, 08:06:01 PM
    The positive stories should be listed
    If what they do goes above & beyond what is there normal
    Police role. They Should be Celebrated.
    I would acknowledge & praise them.

    This is the case with what you call negative stories
    They are negative because the cops don't act properly
    And act like organised armed thugs & fall way below
    Any level of acceptable policing or decent behaviour.
    They Should be Held Accountable.
    Likewise I  see them as Thugs Arsewipes & Criminals.

    https://www.amazon.com/Police-Ethics-Corruption-Noble-Cause/dp/1437744559/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1512187460&sr=1-2&keywords=the+corruption+of+noble+cause

    Don't know if you enjoy nonfiction but this is a good read about police behavior and how some of the things that happen happen.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 01, 2017, 10:30:26 PM
    http://www.kvue.com/news/investigations/defenders/what-we-know-about-the-off-duty-austin-detective-who-shot-down-road-rage-suspect/496179486

    One of my former co workers managed to do something good..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 02, 2017, 12:31:25 AM
    https://www.amazon.com/Police-Ethics-Corruption-Noble-Cause/dp/1437744559/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1512187460&sr=1-2&keywords=the+corruption+of+noble+cause

    Don't know if you enjoy nonfiction but this is a good read about police behavior and how some of the things that happen happen.

    I tend to only read nonfiction books.
    That I would dare say is a book I'd enjoy reading
    & No doubt give me knowledge & insight.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 02, 2017, 12:37:32 AM
    http://www.kvue.com/news/investigations/defenders/what-we-know-about-the-off-duty-austin-detective-who-shot-down-road-rage-suspect/496179486

    One of my former co workers managed to do something good..


    Good Man.
    Likely saved a victim of 2
    And didn't Kill the shooter - though had he died the cop would still
    Of been a good cop doing the right thing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 02, 2017, 01:06:13 AM
    Baltimore is a complete cesspool



    Indeed. This is worse than Serpico.

    Officials: Indicted ex-Baltimore cop set up slain officer to find drugs in 2010

    BALTIMORE — An indicted member of a disbanded Baltimore police unit allegedly duped a fellow officer into discovering a cache of heroin he planted in a car during a 2010 arrest, authorities alleged in a new indictment announced Thursday.

    Police Commissioner Kevin Davis later identified the betrayed officer — dubbed "Officer No. 1" in the indictment — as Detective Sean Suiter, who was fatally shot in the head with his own gun just over two weeks ago while probing a triple homicide in a particularly rough West Baltimore neighborhood. He was killed the day before he was set to testify in an ongoing probe of the specialized gun recovery unit.

    During a Thursday press conference, Davis told reporters that, back in 2010, Suiter was "set up" by indicted former officer Wayne Earl Jenkins to discover planted narcotics. He said Suiter was "not involved in any way, shape or form" in the deception.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/officials-indicted-ex-baltimore-cop-set-up-slain-officer-to-find-drugs-in-2010/

    Here are the faces of the scumbags:

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/12/01/21/46D8D7DE00000578-5137515-image-m-67_1512162567156.jpg) (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/12/01/21/46D0F5A700000578-5137515-image-m-77_1512162990560.jpg)

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/12/01/21/46D0F5A700000578-5137515-image-m-81_1512163056988.jpg) (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/12/01/21/46D0F5A700000578-5137515-image-m-79_1512163029922.jpg)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 02, 2017, 10:36:20 AM
    I tend to only read nonfiction books.
    That I would dare say is a book I'd enjoy reading
    & No doubt give me knowledge & insight.


    When I first started reading it, he kind of pissed me off. Some of the conclusions he came to I felt was not accurate. He is not pro or anti police as far as I could tell. But he was writing from a different perspective. As I got further in the book I came to realize his overall view was probably accurate, it was a view I hadn't considered for a good 15 years of being in law enforcement. I submitted the book to the committee that selects books for promotional testing with the suggestion this book be included at the Detective level (our lowest testing rank) because it was that valuable to young officers in opening their eyes to the very real danger of the corruption of the noble cause
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 02, 2017, 02:28:55 PM
    District Attorney charged with felony perjury, official misconduct

    TROY — Rensselaer County District Attorney Joel E. Abelove was charged with felony perjury and two misdemeanor counts of official misconduct on Friday following a grand jury investigation into his controversial handling of the fatal police shooting of a DWI suspect.

    The extraordinary prosecution of Abelove is the culmination of a year-long investigation by the office of Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.
    The indictment unsealed Friday charges Abelove with withholding evidence from the grand jury that investigated the fatal shooting. The Times Union reported last year that Abelove did not subpoena two civilian witnesses who were at the scene of the shooting and told investigators they did not believe the officer was in imminent danger when he opened fire on the motorist.

    The second misconduct count accuses Abelove of unlawfully allowing the officer who fired the fatal shots to testify with immunity from prosecution when he appeared before the grand jury that cleared him. The perjury charge alleges that Abelove lied in front a special grand jury investigating his conduct when he testified that another Troy police officer was given immunity when that officer testified in front of a grand jury in an unrelated fatal police shooting.

    http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Watch-live-Abelove-expected-in-court-at-1-p-m-12398227.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 02, 2017, 07:52:12 PM
    When I first started reading it, he kind of pissed me off. Some of the conclusions he came to I felt was not accurate. He is not pro or anti police as far as I could tell. But he was writing from a different perspective. As I got further in the book I came to realize his overall view was probably accurate, it was a view I hadn't considered for a good 15 years of being in law enforcement. I submitted the book to the committee that selects books for promotional testing with the suggestion this book be included at the Detective level (our lowest testing rank) because it was that valuable to young officers in opening their eyes to the very real danger of the corruption of the noble cause


    It does sound a interesting read
    I will look for 2nd hand copy.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 04, 2017, 08:28:42 AM
    http://dailycaller.com/2017/12/04/navy-commander-sent-to-jail-for-18-months-over-services-largest-fraud-scheme


    YIKES!!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2017, 12:39:27 PM
    A man is shot in the face by cops and each and every camera just happened to malfunction..

    Sheriff Shoots Unarmed Man in the Face With a Shotgun, All 7 Dashcams ‘Malfunction’

    Baxley, GA — Police work has long been a cat and mouse game, but for one Georgia man, his decision to run from the police on his motorcycle quickly turned into a fight for his life. It all began when police attempted to pull 23-year-old Mathew Jared Schantz over for driving without a license plate.

    The chase ended at a roadblock on Hwy. 341 when then Appling Co. Sheriff “Mr. Benny” Deloach (below) shot Schantz in the face with 12-gauge buckshot.

    In an exclusive interview, Schantz told The Free Thought Project that while he now regrets running from police, when the encounter occurred on June 17, 2016, he had just bought the bike and “didn’t want to be hassled” because he did not have a license plate.

    He took off quickly to get away from pursuing officers, and thought he had lost them—but they quickly tailed him. Schantz said he lost them again, but the chase continued for quite some time. In a written statement he told TFTP:

    “It was roughly 30 miles but I wasn’t actively being pursued the whole time. I lightly ran for about 2 miles then tried to slow down (thinking they quit chasing me) but took off when I noticed they were still chasing. Lost them. Then came up on a road block about 25 miles down the road.”

    High-speed police chases can be deadly, especially for motorcyclists. Giving chase can be equally deadly for police officers and innocent bystanders as well. The number one killer of police officers while on duty is car accidents—not shootings, as many believe. According to the Times-Herald:
    “In the State of Georgia, approximately 585 people have been killed in high-speed chases since 1979, the report indicated. Of that total, 342 were fleeing drivers, 239 were non-violators and four were law enforcement employees.”

    Schantz said he knew police officers in Appling County were not supposed to give chase, as he said it is against their official police policy. But, nevertheless, they followed him, even though he was only a suspect in the victim-less crime of driving without a license plate.

    Even though Schantz said he believed the officers were not supposed to give chase, they did, and when they finally got him to stop at a roadblock, Sheriff Deloach shot him in the face with buckshot.
    “They violated their own no-chase policy by pursuing me. They set up a road block. When I stopped, they shot me in the face with a shotgun. (12 gauge buckshot, not a beanbag).”

    Schantz said after they realized the Sheriff may have committed a possible attempted murder, all of the deputies erased their dash camera footage. He said the proof is found in the Georgia State Bureau of Investigations’ own report. He also doubts the deputies’ contention that each and every one of their cameras only malfunctioned on the video which would have shown the sheriff shooting an unarmed man in the face.

    “Per the GBI report, 7 cars had running dash cams. EVERY single one stated their cams ‘malfunctioned.’ The truck that would have captured the shooting on video was supposed to have 8 segments of video but only 7 were recovered. They have before the shooting and after. They deleted the video of the shooting.”

    The young man, who admits he made a mistake when he ran, says the FBI has now taken over the investigation after the GBI predictably failed to recommend charges be filed against Sheriff Deloach. He also says police stole his iPhone and his Apple Watch.

    “They kept my Apple Watch & iPhone out of fear that I was recording. (they said they lost my property).”

    Schantz contends the police were criminal in their behavior—first in attempting to murder him, and second in stealing evidence related to the crime. He is now suing. When asked how difficult his recovery was he said:
    “Pretty rough to be honest. I developed severe post traumatic stress disorder. My jaw had to be reconstructed. (I had) 3 teeth implanted. Plus I still have 3 pellets in me.”

    The young man said he was unarmed, had no warrants for his arrest, and believes Sheriff Deloach abused his badge when he attempted to kill him for fleeing from the officers. Adding insult to serious injuries, Schantz was charged with felony eluding, posted $17,000  bail, and is due in court on December 5.

    After getting shot in the face, Schantz crashed his motorcycle and was airlifted to a hospital. He said his recovery has been difficult but now he has recovered enough to hold his assailant accountable. Unfortunately, the sheriff won’t see any repercussions unless the FBI sees the cover-up.

    “I certainly realize I shouldn’t have ran. It was stupid. My problem is them shooting me for running away. Then covering it up by lying and deleting videos.”

    Sheriff Benny left office in January after serving Baxley for 20 years—the maximum number of years under Georgia state law that a sheriff can hold the position. It is highly unlikely such a popular sheriff will ever see a day behind bars for shooting Schantz in the face, but at least the record will show—if the young man’s allegations are proven true in a court of law—he nearly killed a kid for running from Johnny Law.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/sheriff-shoots-unarmed-man-face/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 04, 2017, 04:28:03 PM
    GBI investigates officer involved shooting in Wayne
    Posted by Staff Writer in Headlines, News
    Wednesday, June 22. 2016
    Comments (0)
    On Friday, June 17, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) was requested by the Appling County Sheriff’s Office to investigate an officer involved shooting that occurred on Hwy 341, just inside Wayne County at the Appling County line.

    At approximately 2:05 p.m., Appling County Deputies were in pursuit of a motorcycle driven by Mathew Jared Schantz, 23, of Perry, for a traffic violation. Schantz was pursued, traveling at a high rate of speed into Wayne County, at which point Wayne County authorities and a Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Ranger took over the chase. Schantz continued to evade authorities and began traveling back in the direction of Appling County. While traveling on U.S. Highway 341, Appling County Sheriff Benny Deloach encountered Schantz who was speeding toward him and discharged his weapon striking Schantz. As a result, Schantz crashed the motorcycle. Schantz was air lifted to an area hospital where he is in stable condition.

    The GBI will conduct an independent investigation to determine what occurred during the incident. When the investigation is complete, it will be turned over to the District Attorney’s Office for review.


    Don't have a lot of sympathy for the dude, but if the investigation reveals officers did in fact erase video then heads should roll. The 23 year old already had a record for Statutory rape, a prior Reckless driving, no DL and possession to distribute marijuana. He also had a prior Evading so it really wasn't that he didn't want the hassle, he made a habit of doing it. as far as being unarmed.. a 500 lbs motorcycle coming towards you and not stopping could certainly be argued to be a deadly weapon same as a vehicle. He played the game, it didn't end well. Having said all that, if the FBI determines that they did erase tapes then tampering with evidence and a few other charges should be brought on those officers. The article for some reason didn't supply a link to the report they reference so I have no way of knowing.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2017, 01:50:08 PM
    What the hell is going on in Baltimore? How long has this criminal organization been running?

    Cops Praised for Confiscating Guns, Busted Robbing Innocent Citizens of Cash and Guns

    Several of the police officers who were once praised for protecting citizens by “getting guns off of the streets” in Baltimore are now facing federal charges after it was revealed they were stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and firearms from innocent citizens.

    Baltimore’s Gun Trace Task Force was once considered an elite group of officers who raided homes across the city, in search of illegal firearms. Now, Sgt. Thomas Allers has become the ninth officer to face charges in relation to his work with the group.

    Allers was the supervisor of the task force, and he is charged with stealing more than $100,000 during a three-year period. He is expected to plead guilty to one count of racketeering, according to a report from the Baltimore Sun.

    While Allers is facing charges of racketeering conspiracy and robbery, the other seven members of the task force are facing charges of robbery, filing false paperwork and overtime fraud. Allers would be the fifth officer to plead guilty, and as the report noted, none of the officers who have pleaded guilty have been sentenced and “at least two are cooperating with authorities against their former colleagues.”

    Allers is accused of participating in nine robberies between 2014 and 2016. Although he is not a police officer and has not been charged, Allers’ adult son was mentioned in the indictment as having helped his father and two other detectives steal $66,000 during a raid.

    The Drug Enforcement Administration began investigating the task force after Detective Momodu Gondo was caught on a wiretap discussing drug trafficking with a drug dealer who was being investigated. Gondo has since pleaded guilty and is now “cooperating with authorities,” and disclosing details to the FBI about the members involved in the illegal activities. It was tips from Gondo and other officers that led the FBI to investigate Allers.

    The stories of the damage caused by Baltimore’s Gun Trace Task Force are chilling. In one case reported by WBAL-TV, Allers stole more than $10,000 in cash from a house during a raid. The man who owned the money was preparing to repay a drug debt, and when he could not deliver after police stole his money, he was shot and killed.

    Another report from the Baltimore Sun described a classic raid in which the officers went from pursuing a suspect to stealing any cash or drugs they could find:

    “In a typical example, an alleged robbery in August 2016, federal prosecutors say Clewell, Jenkins and Hersl conducted surveillance of a suspect leaving a storage facility. The three officers pursued the suspect and arrested him, then brought him back to the storage facility.
     
    Prosecutors accuse Hersl and Jenkins of taking at least $7,000 from the man’s vehicle, but do not mention Clewell in the alleged theft. Prosecutors say Clewell left the scene to prepare a search warrant, and accuse Jenkins of stealing two kilograms of cocaine while he was gone.”

    As The Free Thought Project reported, the Baltimore Police Department has come under fire in recent months after Body Camera footage was made public that showed an officer planting drugs on an innocent man while his fellow officers watched, and a group of officers working together to manufacture evidence.

    The Baltimore state’s attorney announced on Monday that out of the 277 cases the Gun Trace Task Force officers were involved in, 125 of the cases have been dropped and 71 are still under review. Sgt. Thomas Allers is expected to plead guilty when he appears in court on Wednesday.

    Given these revelations about such a large group of corrupt and thieving cops within the Baltimore police department the idea that Sean Suiter who was shot with his own gun the day before he was set to testify against corrupt cops within his own department becomes that much more ominous.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-praised-confiscating-guns-busted-robbing-innocent-citizens-cash-guns/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2017, 05:22:48 PM
    The "experienced" "professionals" who are "trained" with firearms, unlike the citizens plebs... 55 rounds fired, none hit the woman, but they struck a nearby police car 28 times... Interesting that the cops claimed they only fired after the woman shot at them, despite the fact that no weapons were found in the car and the cops later claimed that this description was not "specifically accurate"... Maybe that's cop-speak for "we lied".

    New Details Emerge From Bizarre Police Shooting

    Quote
    After about 15 minutes, believing Johnson had pointed a gun at them, officers unleashed a volley of shots into her car.

    When nothing happened after the first round of shots, officers continued shouting commands at Johnson to get out of the car.

    When they again thought they saw a gun, more shots were fired into her car.

    “Those deputies and troopers showed a lot of restraint in not causing a further confrontation,” said Walcher.

    In about 30 minutes, from approximately 75 feet away, deputies and troopers fired 55 rounds at Johnson’s car from AR-15 rifles, .40 caliber pistols, and a shotgun. Not a single round hit her.

    [...]

    Although no weapons were found in her car, a Colorado State Patrol spokesperson apparently told multiple media outlets the next morning that officers only fired at Johnson after she shot at them. CSP Chief Scott Hernandez now acknowledges that was not true. “Unfortunately sometimes things are said that’s not specifically accurate”, said Hernandez. “I don’t think it was intentional to go out that way”. He said somehow incorrect information about Johnson being armed was repeated and shared with law enforcement and the public. “As we know the facts now, that’s not the case.”

    Photos of the crime scene obtained by CBS4 also show that in the bursts of gunfire, an Arapahoe County deputy accidentally shot up a state patrol cruiser. Reports suggest the patrol vehicle was struck 28 times. The deputy was standing immediately behind the car but was apparently unaware that many of his shots intended for Johnson were actually hitting the patrol car. Arapahoe County Sheriff Dave Walcher said,”With all the distractions and lights I don’t think our deputy realized he was hitting the top of the car”. He said his department is doing additional training to address the misfires.

    http://denver.cbslocal.com/2017/11/29/new-details-bizarre-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 05, 2017, 05:52:31 PM
    The "experienced" "professionals" who are "trained" with firearms, unlike the citizens plebs... 55 rounds fired, none hit the woman, but they struck a nearby police car 28 times... Interesting that the cops claimed they only fired after the woman shot at them, despite the fact that no weapons were found in the car and the cops later claimed that this description was not "specifically accurate"... Maybe that's cop-speak for "we lied".

    New Details Emerge From Bizarre Police Shooting

    http://denver.cbslocal.com/2017/11/29/new-details-bizarre-shooting/

    They probably get an award.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2017, 12:44:35 PM
    Should've been executed.

    Quote
    Experts say that without a video of the shooting, the former officer probably would not have been fired from the force nor have faced murder charges.

    How many cases are there where there is no video or the cameras "just happen" to malfunction and the cops get away with abuse or murder?

    Ex-policeman Michael Slager jailed for shooting Walter Scott

    A former South Carolina police officer has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for fatally shooting an unarmed African-American motorist. Michael Slager committed second-degree murder when he shot Walter Scott, 50, in the back as he fled arrest after a traffic stop, a judge ruled.
    "I forgive you," relatives of Scott told Slager, 36, in court, as they spoke about the death's impact on them.
    A bystander recorded mobile phone video of the April 2015 shooting. Experts say that without a video of the shooting, the former officer probably would not have been fired from the force nor have faced murder charges.


    Judge David Norton told the court that Slager, who is white, had "lived a spotless life" before the shooting. "Regardless, this is a tragedy that shouldn't have happened," he added.
    Lawyers for Slager had argued in court that he opened fire on Scott because he thought he had taken his police-issued stun gun during their scuffle. The case ended in a mistrial in 2016, and rather than face another jury, the former North Charleston officer pleaded guilty in May to a federal charge of violating the victim's civil rights. In Thursday's sentencing, the judge ruled that Slager had acted with malice and "willful intent to provide false testimony". The judge also had the option of sentencing him for a lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter, which would have carried a sentence of 12 to 15 years.

    The dead man's mother, Judy Scott, told Slager in court on Thursday that she forgave him. She said she hoped he would repent and allow Jesus into his heart.
    Scott's brother, Anthony, said it had taken him a long time to overcome his depression and forgive Slager. "I'm not angry at you, Michael," he told Slager. "I pray for you."
    Members of the family thanked onlooker Feidin Santana for filming the encounter. The City of North Charleston paid a $6.5m (£4.8m) settlement to the Scotts. Slager told the court on Thursday: "I wish this never would have happened. "I wish I could go back and change events, but I can't and I am very sorry for that."

    Slager chased Scott after pulling him over for a broken brake light. Scott, who was wanted for unpaid child support, fled the vehicle, police dashcam footage shows.

    A bystander's video captured Scott breaking free from Slager's grasp and running directly away from him, with his back to the officer. Slager draws his pistol and fires from about 15ft (4.5m) away, hitting Scott five times.
    The death took place amid US media scrutiny of police treatment of African Americans, and provoked protests by the Black Lives Matter movement. US Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement: "Officers who violate anyone's rights also violate their oaths of honour. "And they tarnish the names of the vast majority of officers, who do incredible work."

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42259256
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2017, 02:05:05 PM
    State board concedes it violated free speech rights of red-light camera critic

    A state panel violated a Beaverton man's free speech rights by claiming he had unlawfully used the title "engineer'' and by fining him when he repeatedly challenged Oregon's traffic-signal timing before local media and policymakers, Oregon's attorney general has ruled.

    Oregon's Board of Examiners for Engineering and Land Surveying unconstitutionally applied state law governing engineering practice to Mats Järlström when he exercised his free speech about traffic lights and described himself as an engineer since he was doing so "in a noncommercial'' setting and not soliciting professional business, the state Department of Justice has conceded.

    [..]

    Jarlstrom has a bachelor of science degree in engineering and has repeatedly challenged the state's timing of yellow traffic lights as too short. The state board had fined him $500 for "unlicensed practice of engineering.'' Järlström identified himself as an engineer in emails he sent to city officials and the Washington County sheriff challenging the traffic light signal timing.

    Järlström's interest in the matter stemmed from a red-light-running ticket that his wife received in the mail in 2013. Since then, Järlström has conducted his own studies, presented his findings to local media and "60 Minutes" and even to the annual meeting last summer of the Institute of Transportation Engineers.

    Read more at: http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2017/12/state_board_concedes_it_violat.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2017, 04:35:18 PM
    Arizona Cop Killed Man with AR-15 Rifle Inscribed with the Words “You’re Fucked” as Man Pleaded for His Life

    Daniel Shaver may have had a few drinks in him when he was ordered out of his Arizona hotel room at gunpoint by a group of six screaming police officers last January.

    The Mesa police officers were barking all kinds of orders; each one with a different demand, telling him to get down on his hands and knees and crawl towards them, to place his hands over his head, to sit on the floor and cross his legs in front of him.

    The traveling businessman was trying to comply, but he was confused by their contradictory demands. The fact that he had been drinking with friends that evening did not help.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver reportedly pleaded as he lifted his hands up, then down again.

    But then one cop did, shooting him five times with an AR-15 rifle inscribed with the  words “You’re Fucked.”

    It was Philip “Mitch” Braisford’s personal gun, which he had personally inscribed, and it offered a glimpse into his personality.

    Naturally, the 25-year-old Mesa police officer claimed he was in fear for his life, which was enough for internal affairs to find no wrongdoing on his part; the same investigative unit where his father had recently retired from as a lieutenant after working 19 years in the department.

    But the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office charged him with second-degree murder several weeks later after reviewing footage from his body cam, a decision that left him “stunned” and “shocked,” especially considering the charge carries a minimum sentence of ten years in prison.

    However, now he is being offered a plea deal of negligent homicide, which carries a minimum sentence of probation, a judicial “get out of jail, free” card that he would be stupid not to accept, according to Shaver’s wife, Laney Sweet, who is posting information on a Facebook page she created in support of her husband.

    Braisford, who has not spent a minute in jail, has until May 16 to decide whether to accept the deal offered to him on Tuesday, said Sweet, who is already sensing that he will never spend a day in jail.

    Especially considering he has not spent a minute in jail since he was charged with second-degree murder, the judge apparently believing his lawyer who said that he “honorably served his community as a Mesa police officer.”

    But now the department is taking the steps to terminate him, not over the shooting, but because he had inscribed the profane phrase on his personal gun, which he was allowed to use over any department-issued gun.

    Meanwhile, Shaver’s wife has already filed a $35 million wrongful death lawsuit.

    And the body cam footage of Shaver’s killing has already been viewed by her attorney, even though it has not been released to the public.

    Sweet posted the following on the Facebook page:

    I was told Daniel’s hand never even touched his side or waistband. They said that while he was up on his knees with his hands above his head that he went to all four and it appeared that he could have lost balance. His right arm brushed beside his body. The officer shot him five times and Daniel fell forward and died instantly. Daniel had a few drinks with the two guests he was eating pizza with in his room, who were co-workers there for a conference.

    Shaver was 26 and lived in Texas with his wife and children. He worked in pest control and was traveling for business with two pellet guns he routinely traveled with for his job.

    He had dinner and drinks with a man and a woman and invited them back to his La Quinta hotel room on the fifth floor. At one point, he was showing them the pellet guns.

    Meanwhile, two people sitting by the pool looked up and saw a man pointing a gun out the window, so they became alarmed and called police.

    The two pellet guns were found inside his room after he had been killed outside his room.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/17/arizona-cop-killed-man-with-ar-15-rifle-inscribed-with-the-words-youre-fucked-as-man-pleaded-for-his-life/

    http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2016/03/16/report-man-fatally-shot-mesa-officer-may-have-been-drunk-and-confused-police-commands/81879134/

    http://www.wfaa.com/news/crime/mesa-ariz-officer-heads-to-court-for-murder-of-n-texas-man/82912536

    Remember this disgusting case?

    (http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2648637.1464122836!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_750/mesa25n-3-web.jpg) (http://content.wfaa.com/photo/2016/01/22/635890481863153935-daniel-shaver_144061_ver1.0.JPG)

    What a travesty..

     Former Mesa Officer Philip Brailsford found not guilty of murder in shooting of unarmed man

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa-breaking/2017/12/07/philip-brailsford-verdict-daniel-shaver-killing/927052001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2017, 04:49:36 PM
    Will these cops along with the "drug recognition expert" be imprisoned, lose their jobs and their vehicles and a substantial amount of their money? Rhetorical question.

    Innocent, Sober Man Jailed for 5 Months Because Negligent Cops Thought He Was Drunk

    Macungie Township, PA — Imagine being imprisoned for being completely innocent and one hundred percent free of drugs and alcohol in one’s system. While there are many who may be tempted to think it could never happen to them, to Wilfredo Ramos Jr., the possibility quickly became a reality. Ramos was arrested and spent five months behind bars for being completely sober.

    Problems with law enforcement agents started for Ramos when he was stopped by Pennsylvania State Highway Trooper Justin M. Summa and Kevin Vanfleet on June 16, 2014. He was on his way to visit his mother when he was pulled over near Schantz Road in Upper Macungie Township.

    Summa believed he smelled alcohol on Ramos’ breath. But when he conducted a field sobriety test and administered a breathalyzer test, the results were immediately clear. Ramos was stone-cold sober. Not only did he blow .00 on the breath test, but his balance and coordination were without question.

    Still, the troopers insisted Ramos was under the influence of some substance. He arrested the motorist from New York, contending, “Oh you are from New York…You must have guns or drugs? We know you have drugs, just tell us where they are.” Even after an exhaustive search of the vehicle turned up no drugs, alcohol, or guns, the man was still taken into custody. This time, Summa believed if he could do a blood test, the man’s blood would surely convict him of driving under the influence.

    A drug recognition expert (DRE) was called in to evaluate Ramos. As TFTP has previously reported, the fake title is given to officers to further enable them to violate motorists’ rights by placing more value and weight into the title than the breathalyzer tests, field sobriety tests, and blood tests can demonstrate. In other words, a DRE has more power to convict someone than science does.

    Based on the DRE’s reported evaluation, who concluded the suspect was probably on “depressants,” Lehigh County Magisterial District Judge David M. Howells, Jr. set bail at $10,000, Ramos had his blood drawn, and then he waited in his jail cell for eleven days while the results of the drug test were being processed. Predictably, the drug tests came back negative for any drugs or alcohol.


    However, Trooper Summa insisted the samples be re-tested. As a result, Ramos was not free to leave. Instead, he was transferred to the Lehigh County prison where he remained for another 147 days.

    While in prison, because he could not work, Ramos lost his apartment as well as all of his belongings including his vehicle which was impounded at the time of his arrest. Because he could not retrieve his vehicle, it was confiscated and sold at auction. The proceeds of such sales usually go to the police department which made the arrest.


    Adding insult to injury, the false imprisonment also led to the man losing his job because he failed to report to work. Even after an exhaustive attempt by police to extort Ramos for bail money, a failed attempt to find him in possession of drugs or alcohol, and a tortuous ordeal being locked up in prison, Ramos was finally released.

    On November 12, 2014, Judge James T. Anthony found Ramos not guilty of DUI and ordered his release. But instead of immediately returning home to NY, Ramos contracted with attorney Josh Karoly, who filed a lawsuit against the officers and the PA State Highway Patrol. According to McAll, the lawsuit alleged the officers schemed to falsely arrest Ramos:

    Ramos’ lawsuit alleged Troopers Justin M. Summa and Kevin Vanfleet, assigned to the Fogelsville barracks, conspired to falsely arrest him after finding no evidence that he was intoxicated or that he had drugs or guns in his car.

    The suit also named top brass in the PA Highway Patrol:

    The suit also claimed five state police supervisors, ranging from the troop commander to former state police Commissioner Francis Noonan, were liable for racially motivated misconduct, unlawful seizure, due process of law violations, denial of equal rights, conspiracy to interfere with civil rights and other Civil Rights Act violations.

    Ramos won his lawsuit and was given $150,000 in compensatory damages for having been deprived of his civil rights. Karoly said of the settlement:

    It was a mistake that this happened and this resolution is going to go a long way toward getting his life back on track to where it was before this happened…It makes mistakes like that much less likely when they’re brought to the public’s attention.

    Here at TFTP, we cannot think of another more appropriate example of how Civil Asset Forfeiture (CAF), Drug Recognition Experts, the practice of forcible blood drawing, ineptitude on behalf of the officers involved as well as unscrupulous judges, all work together to abuse our citizens’ civil liberties. Maybe Mr. Ramos’ story of false arrest/imprisonment is necessary to force others, who are still blinded by their undying loyalty to the boys in blue, to realize what’s really going on out there in our nation’s streets.

    It really should come as no surprise the incident took place in Pennsylvania. For the better part of two years, the highway patrol there has been embroiled in a wide-spread cheating scandal. Apparently, they’re so desperate to fill the ranks of state troopers they’re willing to hire individuals with broken moral compasses—the results of which can be seen in Mr. Ramos’ story.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/stone-cold-sober-man-held-prison-five-months-sober/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Nether Animal on December 08, 2017, 05:22:03 AM
    Remember this disgusting case?

    (http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2648637.1464122836!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_750/mesa25n-3-web.jpg) (http://content.wfaa.com/photo/2016/01/22/635890481863153935-daniel-shaver_144061_ver1.0.JPG)

    What a travesty..

     Former Mesa Officer Philip Brailsford found not guilty of murder in shooting of unarmed man

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa-breaking/2017/12/07/philip-brailsford-verdict-daniel-shaver-killing/927052001/


    That cop looks like such a shithead.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 08, 2017, 05:40:27 AM
    Nothing else - this thread delivers.    It does.  Thanks skeletor!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: loco on December 08, 2017, 06:50:59 AM
    Remember this disgusting case?

    (http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2648637.1464122836!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_750/mesa25n-3-web.jpg) (http://content.wfaa.com/photo/2016/01/22/635890481863153935-daniel-shaver_144061_ver1.0.JPG)

    What a travesty..

     Former Mesa Officer Philip Brailsford found not guilty of murder in shooting of unarmed man

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa-breaking/2017/12/07/philip-brailsford-verdict-daniel-shaver-killing/927052001/


    BODY CAM SHOWS 'EXECUTION' OF DANIEL SHAVER

    http://www.tmz.com/2017/12/07/mesa-police-involved-shooting-bodycam-philip-brailsford-not-guilty-daniel-shaver/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 08, 2017, 07:01:51 AM
    Police department at the end of the day are an arm of the govt enforcing its values .  When the values are state and govt over all - it reflects itself in how officers treat citizens
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 08, 2017, 11:00:49 AM
    This is the weapon of Daniel Shaver's killer:

    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/AR-15-1024x768.jpg)

    (yes, it says "You're fucked")

    Unfortunately this case didn't gain much publicity and of course there were hardly any riots or outrage over this horrible murder. Michael Slager got 20 years for shooting an unarmed fleeing man in the back and yet this killer got away with it...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 08, 2017, 05:12:35 PM
    There seems to be no end to the brutality. Unsurprisingly enough, cops kill dogs of citizens for little or no reason, even when the dog is not attacking. Why not in this case? (rhetorical question) The dog and its handler should be destroyed.

    52yo Woman Torn to Shreds by K9 as Cops Admit She’s Innocent

    St. Paul, MN — On September 23rd, Desiree Collins, a 52-year-old St. Paul resident, learned the hard way what can happen when a K9 officer loses control of his dog. St. Paul police officer Thaddeus P. Schmidt claims he lost control of his K-9, Gabe, when it attacked Collins, ripping her arm into shreds. The entire incident was caught on the body cameras of the officers involved.

    Collins was attacked by Gabe near a dumpster along the 600 block of Van Buren Avenue. The woman can be heard in a long and sustained scream. “Ow!…Oh!”, she shouted. The pain must have been intense as her eyes seemed to show the fear and horror she was experiencing.

    The attack knocked her out of her shoes and onto the ground where Gabe had latched onto her arm. She screamed, he pulled, and then the St. Paul officers reached down to take control of her, helping her and attempting to get the dog off of her arm.

    “Please, help me, oh!” Collins screamed in fear. “We’re trying to get your arm,” they responded. After they broke the dog’s grip on her arm, they told her to stand up and they would get her some medical care for her injuries.

    Obviously shocked at the horrific attack, Collins asked, “What did I do to him?” The officers then responded saying “Nothing, it’s not your fault.” “You were just at the wrong place at the wrong time,” they told her. They then promised the medics were on their way.

    Collins, understandably, is suing the city and the police department. Andrew Noel, one of her attorneys said:

    The entire incident is shocking and unacceptable…The video speaks for itself–she was terrified.

    St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell responded to the incident with apparent empathy. He said in a statement:
    My heart breaks when I watch this video…What we can do is apologize and take responsibility, offer support and compassion, and learn from the incident so we can continue to work to prevent it from happening to anyone else.

    Collins and her attorneys want to make sure the same thing doesn’t happen again to an unsuspecting citizen. Not only do they want full compensation for Collins’ pain and suffering but they want to see the dog and handler be retrained. Apparently not waiting around for a certain judgment by the courts, Police spokesperson Steve Linders confirmed Thursday that both the officer and his K9 were sent back to training, disallowed from returning to work until the month-long retraining takes place.

    As TFTP has reported on numerous occasions, the use of canines in police work is highly controversial. Not only are the dogs unpredictable but handlers can easily claim the dogs have “cued” in on drugs all in an effort to infringe on citizens’ civil liberties in order to force convictions in situations where probable cause would be difficult to obtain.

    In a recent study, researchers determined the connection between dog and handler is so close that even an officer’s emotions can affect the way a dog reacts. In the case of Ms. Collins, the police were investigating a possible robbery, indicating the officer was likely running on adrenalin. The dog may have sensed as much and attacked Collins the minute he saw her. At any rate, the taxpayer, not the unscrupulous dog handler, will foot the bill when Ms. Collins wins her court case and receives her payout.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-k9-attacks-innocent-woman/

    Video (might be graphic to some): https://www.facebook.com/fox9kmsp/videos/10155976512509138/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 08, 2017, 07:24:16 PM
    This is the weapon of Daniel Shaver's killer:

    (https://photographyisnotacrime.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/AR-15-1024x768.jpg)

    (yes, it says "You're fucked")

    Unfortunately this case didn't gain much publicity and of course there were hardly any riots or outrage over this horrible murder. Michael Slager got 20 years for shooting an unarmed fleeing man in the back and yet this killer got away with it...



    Is that the cops gun ?

    I've just clicked on to thread & not yet read the article on this shooting.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 08, 2017, 07:28:08 PM

    Is that the cops gun ?

    I've just clicked on to thread & not yet read the article on this shooting.

    Yes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 11, 2017, 12:02:11 PM
    Remember this story?

    Officer Loses It, Goes ‘Robocop’ and Breaks an Innocent Elderly Man’s Leg Over a Tomato

    They should break his legs and lock him up for 20 years, maybe then he -and others like him- will learn to behave.

    Guilty: Cop Breaks Innocent Man’s Leg, Lies About Him Stealing a Tomato to Cover It Up

    Atlanta, GA — An innocent Atlanta man spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought. Tyrone Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail. Now, the cop responsible for this gross violation of Carnegay’s rights is finally being held accountable.

    Former Police Sergeant Trevor King of Stockbridge, Georgia was convicted by a federal jury on Friday of using excessive force on Tyrone Carnegay and breaking two bones in his leg with a baton.

    “Law enforcement officers all over the country work tirelessly every day to protect the public from violence,” said Acting Attorney General John Gore of the Civil Rights Department. “This defendant violated the law and his oath as a police officer when he unjustifiably beat a man with a baton, breaking the man’s leg, because he wrongly believed that the man had stolen a tomato.  The Department of Justice will continue to protect all citizens from violations of their constitutional right to safety and security.”

    The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera. However, that didn’t stop King from claiming it was all true in his report.

    “I was chained to my bed in Grady. They said I assaulted him and obstructed him from doing his job,” Carnegay told the local news. None of this was true.

    Carnegay explained to WSB-TV that he was walking out of the store after purchasing his groceries when an off-duty Atlanta cop, working security at the store, walked up to him without warning and began beating him.

    According to the Department of Justice report, as the victim lay on the Walmart floor bleeding from his injuries, King searched the victim and found a receipt for the tomato in the victim’s bag. The receipt showed that the victim paid for the tomato only minutes before King’s attack. King then wrote a false report to cover up his unjustified assault.  Additionally, King charged the victim with obstructing a shoplifting investigation and with assaulting a police officer.

    “He’s giving me a verbal command. As he’s grabbing me, he’s beating me at the same time. ‘Get on ground.’ Beating me at the same time,” Carnegay said.

    In the video, we can see Carnegay get struck by the raging cop at least seven times before he is unable to walk.

    “My leg started giving out,” Carnegay said.

    Carnegay didn’t resist, obstruct, or assault the officer; he merely tried to protect himself, unsuccessfully, against the cop’s unnecessary baton blows.

    Carnegay said that the officer never asked for the receipt prior to unleashing his ‘robocop’ fury. However, after he laid on the ground in handcuffs, his leg broken in two places, and bleeding internally, the cop reached into his pocket and found the receipt — showing he paid for the tomato.

    “Somebody could have come up to him and said, ‘Excuse me sir, do you have (a) receipt for that tomato?’ and he would’ve shown him the receipt,” said attorney Craig Jones. “The officer went into Robocop mode and beat the crap out of him.”

    “He found the receipt and money, and stood there like he hadn’t done nothing,” Carnegay said.

    Carnegay has since filed a lawsuit over the incident which happened in October 2014. In the lawsuit, he names King, Walmart, as well as the Walmart manager, because he told the officer Carnegay had stolen the tomato just before the beating.

    Because of the lying cop, Carnegay was forced to fight the charges for an entire year before they were dropped. Now, hopefully, this officer will get what is coming and do his time in jail. As for Carnegay, however, he walks with a limp thanks to the titanium rod in his leg.

    Below is a video, once again, blowing away the fallacy that police only hurt those who break the law. Next time someone says “if you don’t want to get beat up by police, don’t break the law,” show them this article.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-convicted-claiming-innocent-man-stole-tomato-breaking-leg-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2017, 03:37:51 PM
    How ironic that the judge who sentenced Shaneen Allen seems to have a concealed carry permit (along with cops, from what the prosecutor says), unlike all the other citizens mere plebs.

    Some background on Shaneen Allen:
    Quote
    Shaneen Allen, 27, was pulled over in Atlantic County, N.J. The officer who pulled her over says she made an unsafe lane change. During the stop, Allen informed the officer that she was a resident of Pennsylvania and had a conceal carry permit in her home state. She also had a handgun in her car. Had she been in Pennsylvania, having the gun in the car would have been perfectly legal. But Allen was pulled over in New Jersey, home to some of the strictest gun control laws in the United States.

    Allen is a black single mother. She has two kids. She has no prior criminal record. Before her arrest, she worked as a phlebobotomist. After she was robbed two times in the span of about a year, she purchased the gun to protect herself and her family. There is zero evidence that Allen intended to use the gun for any other purpose. Yet Allen was arrested. She spent 40 days in jail before she was released on bail. She’s now facing a felony charge that, if convicted, would bring a three-year mandatory minimum prison term.

    Shaneen Allen’s Judge, Michael Donio, Has Only Non-LEO Atlantic City Concealed Carry Permit

    Alexander Roubian of the New Jersey Second Amendment Society writes [exposé video below]:



    For years we have stated that only politicians, judges and their friends can obtain conceal carry permits in New Jersey… and for years we have been told we are “paranoid” and only “specially trained” individuals like law enforcement officers are allowed that privilege.

    Politicians like Loretta Weinberg have fought hard to keep permit holder information exempt from public records requests, probably to protect the identity of her friends, and maybe herself?

    Though we do not know who exactly the 1,274 that have received a conceal carry permit are, the admission of a prosecutor that Judge Michael Donio was the only non-police officer in Atlantic City to receive a conceal carry permit (ccw) is further evidence that we are, in fact, not paranoid nor wrong.

    [ED: Judge Donio was the presiding judge in the case of Shaneen Allen, a Pennsylvania woman nabbed by NJ police for carrying a firearm without a Garden State carry permit. She was prosecuted, convicted and sentenced to a pretrial intervention program.]

    For over two years we have scoured through public records and went undercover to identify, document, and now expose those who are quick to deny us our constitutional right (while they simultaneously enjoy that same right). This elitist “good for thee, but not for me” mentality must end NOW!

    To make matters worse, Judge Michael Donio didn’t find it “egregious” that prosecutors thought a single mother from crime-ridden Philadelphia, a victim of violence herself, would be a prime candidate to put in prison and made an example of.

    The hypocrisy and double standard is disgusting, and the snippet at the end of the video above speaks for itself.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2017/12/robert-farago/shaneen-allens-judge-michael-donio-has-only-non-leo-atlantic-city-concealed-carry-permit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on December 13, 2017, 05:22:55 PM
    How ironic that the judge who sentenced Shaneen Allen seems to have a concealed carry permit (along with cops, from what the prosecutor says), unlike all the other citizens mere plebs.

    Some background on Shaneen Allen:
    Shaneen Allen’s Judge, Michael Donio, Has Only Non-LEO Atlantic City Concealed Carry Permit

    Alexander Roubian of the New Jersey Second Amendment Society writes [exposé video below]:



    For years we have stated that only politicians, judges and their friends can obtain conceal carry permits in New Jersey… and for years we have been told we are “paranoid” and only “specially trained” individuals like law enforcement officers are allowed that privilege.

    Politicians like Loretta Weinberg have fought hard to keep permit holder information exempt from public records requests, probably to protect the identity of her friends, and maybe herself?

    Though we do not know who exactly the 1,274 that have received a conceal carry permit are, the admission of a prosecutor that Judge Michael Donio was the only non-police officer in Atlantic City to receive a conceal carry permit (ccw) is further evidence that we are, in fact, not paranoid nor wrong.

    [ED: Judge Donio was the presiding judge in the case of Shaneen Allen, a Pennsylvania woman nabbed by NJ police for carrying a firearm without a Garden State carry permit. She was prosecuted, convicted and sentenced to a pretrial intervention program.]

    For over two years we have scoured through public records and went undercover to identify, document, and now expose those who are quick to deny us our constitutional right (while they simultaneously enjoy that same right). This elitist “good for thee, but not for me” mentality must end NOW!

    To make matters worse, Judge Michael Donio didn’t find it “egregious” that prosecutors thought a single mother from crime-ridden Philadelphia, a victim of violence herself, would be a prime candidate to put in prison and made an example of.

    The hypocrisy and double standard is disgusting, and the snippet at the end of the video above speaks for itself.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2017/12/robert-farago/shaneen-allens-judge-michael-donio-has-only-non-leo-atlantic-city-concealed-carry-permit/

    I'll probably jack off to her before bed tonight.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 13, 2017, 07:06:25 PM
    Corrupt cops? In Detroit?

    6 Detroit cops charged in extortion scheme

    Six Detroit police officers have been charged with extortion after receiving bribes from the owners of automobile collision shops in the latest corruption scandal to hit the department in recent months.

    Two officers were indicted Wednesday and four retired officers have pleaded guilty to committing extortion, according to federal court records.

    Those charged are:

    Officer Deonne Dotson, 45, who was indicted on six extortion counts.

    Officer Charles Wills, 52, who was indicted on four extortion counts. He is accused of pocketing $5,600.

    Lawyers for both officers could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

    Retired officer James Robertson, 45. He pleaded guilty earlier this year to two extortion counts, according to court records unsealed Wednesday. He received $2,000 in fall 2014 from the owner of a Detroit collision shop in exchange for sending an abandoned vehicle to the business for repairs. His lawyer declined comment.

    Retired officer Jamil Martin, 46. He received $500 from the owner of a Detroit collision shop in 2014 in exchange for sending vehicles to the shop for repairs. Martin could spend up to 30 months in federal prison, according to his plea deal. His lawyer could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

    Retired officer Martin Tutt, 29. Tutt’s plea deal covers two counts of extortion and he has admitted receiving $1,000 from a Detroit collision shop in summer 2014 in exchange for referring an abandoned vehicle to that shop for repairs. He could get sentenced to 30 months in federal prison. His lawyer could not be reached for comment.

    Retired officer Anthony Careathers, 52. He struck a plea deal and admitted pocketing $1,500 from a collision shop owner. He could spend up to 24 months in federal prison, according to his plea deal. His lawyer declined comment.

    The extortion charges are 20-year felonies and include $250,000 fines.

    Last year, a police source told The News the scheme started with officers whose job is to hunt for stolen and abandoned vehicles. After they found one, this is what would happen, according to the source:

    Officers are supposed to alert dispatch, which assigns one of 23 authorized tow companies to pick it up, depending on where the vehicle was found and which of multiple firms were next on the rotation list.

    But they didn’t alert dispatch; instead, they were calling one tow company to pick up the vehicles. The tow company usually paid the officers between $50 and $100 for each car towed.

    http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2017/12/13/detroit-police-officers-extortion-plea-deals/108572174/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2017, 03:56:56 PM
    The innocent man was attacked, arrested and kidnapped by these scumbags and yet he was cleared of the BS charges. What about the cops then? Of course they investigated themselves and naturally they cleared themselves of any wrongdoing.

    Innocent Elderly Man’s Cat Gets Out, So Cops Attack & Arrest Him

    Aurora, CO — The ACLU of Colorado has recently filed a lawsuit against two Aurora police officers after they assaulted and kidnapped an innocent man. The federal lawsuit follows the release of the body camera footage which prompted the legal action.

    Dwight Crews is an innocent 60-year-old man who never had so much as a speeding ticket before police came to his door that night. Ironically, it was an act of heroism that prompted the police response that night. Instead of praising the 60-year-old, however, police proceeded to violate his rights.

    Earlier in the night, Crews stepped in as his daughter’s husband attempted to physically abuse her in front of him. The husband, who happens to be white, called the police who seemingly sided with him and went after Crews, who is black.

    Aurora police officers Steven Gerdjikian and Ryan Marker—the defendants in the ACLU lawsuit—showed up at Crews’ house at 2 a.m., and began banging on the door, demanding the 60-year-old man come outside.

    “You’re going to get a warrant for your arrest if you don’t come down here to resolve this,” one officer said.

    Crews, who did not immediately hear police knocking, took several minutes to open the door because he was upstairs on the third floor watching television. As he walked out of the door, he was immediately accosted by police who grabbed his arm and began searching him.

    Not knowing why police were at his house, Crews asked the cops what they were doing there, but the officers refused to tell him. However, because the innocent man was pulled from his home immediately upon making contact with police, his door was left ajar. That’s when his cat walked out.

    “My cat’s outside,” said Crews.

    “Your cat’s been outside the whole time,” responds the cop.

    “Archie! No, he has not,” Crews says with clear concern in his voice.

    Crews then tries to pick his cat up and put him back inside, which provoked the cops to attack him. The officers then jumped on the 60-year-old man’s back and he was taken to the ground and injured by cops in the process.

    He would then be arrested on charges of resisting arrest and suspicion of assault. However, neither of these charges would hold up.

    As Westword notes, a judge didn’t see enough evidence to support the resisting-arrest accusation, and a jury subsequently found him not guilty of assaulting his son-in-law because he had been acting to defend his stepdaughter.

    In spite of the fact that the assault of an innocent elderly man was captured on the officer’s own body camera, neither of the officers were disciplined. After the police investigated themselves, they found that the officers acted properly
    and released the following statement after they were presented with the lawsuit, reading in part:

    With regard to this incident, which was captured on a body-worn camera, a use-of-force investigation was conducted by a supervisor, pursuant to the policy in effect two years ago, and the officers were found to have acted appropriately.

    Due to active civil litigation, the Aurora Police Department is unable to comment any further on the matter at this time.
    Below is what can happen to innocent people who try to stop their cats from running away while being harassed by cops at 2 a.m.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-innocent-mans-cat-gets-cops-taser-back-arrest/

    http://denver.cbslocal.com/2017/11/13/aclu-aurora-police-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 20, 2017, 04:46:47 PM
    NJ Sentences PA Resident Meg Fellenbaum to A Year in Jail for Simple Possession

    The New Jersey Second Amendment Society writes (http://www.nj2as.org/?e=6b2ca806c512ce21c50cd23562ac8c16&utm_source=nj2as&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=meg&n=4): Meg Fellenbaum – apparently a danger to society in New Jersey, but not Pennsylvania – allegedly committed the horrific crime of having her firearms locked in the truck of her car while driving to pick up her girlfriend. [Click here to read the full background to her arrest.]
    However shocking this may be to gun control advocates, no one was victimized by Meg’s actions.

    After a year of terror inflicted upon her by New Jersey’s (in)justice system, despite not posing any threat to public safety, NJ prosecutors successfully broke Meg down. They frightened her into accepting a plea deal of one year in prison (instead of facing trial and up to 13+ years in prison if she did not accept the plea deal).
    I wish we were making this up, but this is New Jersey.

    We’ve gotten to know Meg Fellenbaum over the past year and we cannot think of a better example of someone who has been entrapped by New Jersey’s ridiculous laws that seek to criminalize honest Americans. [ED: or better reason to pass H.R.38 – Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act of 2017]

    We’re asking 2A supporters to call Governor Christie on 609-292-6000 and urge him to pardon Ms. Fallenbaum before he leaves office.
    If you would like to donate to Meg’s legal defense fund please click here to donate so we can assist with her legal expenses. As many of you know, the State of New Jersey fights innocent people with endless taxpayer funds while we have to get second mortgages on our homes to defend ourselves. So even if you win, you still lose.
    This madness needs to stop!

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2017/12/robert-farago/nj-sentences-pa-resident-meg-fellenbaum-year-jail-simple-possession/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 22, 2017, 03:05:34 PM
    An innocent 6 year old child shot dead by cops...

    2 dead after BCSO deputy-involved shooting, manhunt through San Antonio suburb

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/crime/article/2-dead-after-BCSO-deputy-involved-shooting-manhunt-12448095.php#photo-14739076
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2018, 07:16:59 PM
    To employ the "logic" often used by government against citizens, if they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?

    DOJ official urges Nunes not to release memo on surveillance abuses

    The four-page memo is being described by lawmakers as “shocking,” “troubling” and “alarming,” with one congressman likening the details to KGB activity in Russia.

    It is believed to include information about government surveillance conducted during the Obama administration.

    Speaking with Fox News last week, Republican lawmakers said they could not yet discuss the contents of the memo they reviewed on Thursday, after it was released to members by the House Intelligence Committee. But they say the memo should be immediately made public.

    “It is so alarming, the American people have to see this,” Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan said.

    “It's troubling; it is shocking,” North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows said. “Part of me wishes that I didn't read it because I don’t want to believe that those kinds of things could be happening in this country that I call home and love so much.”

    Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz said he believed people could lose their jobs once the memo is released.

    “I believe the consequence of its release will be major changes in people currently working at the FBI and the Department of Justice,” he said, referencing DOJ officials Rod Rosenstein, deputy attorney general, and Bruce Ohr.

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/01/24/doj-official-urges-nunes-not-to-release-memo-on-surveillance-abuses.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 01, 2018, 08:32:28 AM
    https://www.vice.com/amp/en_us/article/8xvzwp/baltimore-cops-carried-toy-guns-to-plant-on-people-they-shot-trial-reveals-vgtrn?utm_source=vicefbus&__twitter_impression=true
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 07, 2018, 08:55:17 AM
    https://guy-is-stuffed-animal-after-45-minute-standoff/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=site%20buttons&utm_campaign=site%20buttons
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 07, 2018, 01:20:49 PM
    https://www.vice.com/amp/en_us/article/8xvzwp/baltimore-cops-carried-toy-guns-to-plant-on-people-they-shot-trial-reveals-vgtrn?utm_source=vicefbus&__twitter_impression=true


    From the above.

    “But the BB gun testimony is particularly disturbing in light of 12-year-old Tamir Rice's death in 2014, the 13-year-old in Baltimore who was shot twice by cops in 2016 after he allegedly sprinted from them with a replica gun in his hand, and the 86 people fatally shot by police in 2015 and 2016 who were spotted carrying toy guns.”

    This behaviour from cops !!  Fcuking cops - more like organised death squad.
    Bastards involved all need shooting.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 15, 2018, 04:25:29 AM
    The FBI Was Warned About A School Shooting Threat From A YouTube User Named Nikolas Cruz
    Buzzfeed.com ^ | 2/15/18 | Brianna Sacks
    Posted on 2/15/2018, 7:17:18 AM by GrandJediMasterYoda

    The FBI Was Warned About A School Shooting Threat From A YouTube User Named Nikolas Cruz In September

    In September, a YouTube user named Nikolas Cruz left a comment on a video stating: "I'm going to be a professional school shooter." The video's creator alerted both the FBI and YouTube.

    Last fall, a Mississippi bail bondsman and frequent YouTube vlogger noticed an alarming comment left on one of his videos. "I'm going to be a professional school shooter," said a user named Nikolas Cruz.

    The YouTuber, 36-year-old Ben Bennight, alerted the FBI, emailing a screenshot of the comment to the bureau's tips account. He also flagged the comment to YouTube, which removed it from the video.

    Agents with the bureau's Mississippi field office got back to him "immediately," Bennight said, and conducted an in-person interview the following day, on Sept. 25.

    "They came to my office the next morning and asked me if I knew anything about the person," Bennight told BuzzFeed News. "I didn't. They took a copy of the screenshot and that was the last I heard from them."

    (Excerpt) Read more at buzzfeed.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2018, 03:52:28 PM
    “To serve and protect”...

    Cop assigned to Florida school 'never went in' amid shooting, sheriff says

    The police officer who was on patrol at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Feb. 14 resigned Thursday after video surveillance showed he never entered the school, even though he "clearly" knew there was a shooting taking place.

    Deputy Scott Peterson, of the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, was stationed on the school’s campus when Nikolas Cruz opened fire with an AR-15 rifle, leaving 17 people dead and others wounded.

    Sheriff Scott Israel during a press conference Thursday said video showed Peterson arriving at the west side of the building where the shooting took place. Peterson, Israel said, took up a position but "never went in."

    Peterson was armed and in uniform during the shooting, but never entered the building despite "clearly" knowing a shooting was happening, Israel said.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/02/22/cop-assigned-to-florida-school-never-went-in-amid-shooting-sheriff-says.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Pray_4_War on February 22, 2018, 04:02:30 PM
    “To serve and protect”...

    Cop assigned to Florida school 'never went in' amid shooting, sheriff says

    The police officer who was on patrol at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Feb. 14 resigned Thursday after video surveillance showed he never entered the school, even though he "clearly" knew there was a shooting taking place.

    Deputy Scott Peterson, of the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, was stationed on the school’s campus when Nikolas Cruz opened fire with an AR-15 rifle, leaving 17 people dead and others wounded.

    Sheriff Scott Israel during a press conference Thursday said video showed Peterson arriving at the west side of the building where the shooting took place. Peterson, Israel said, took up a position but "never went in."

    Peterson was armed and in uniform during the shooting, but never entered the building despite "clearly" knowing a shooting was happening, Israel said.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/02/22/cop-assigned-to-florida-school-never-went-in-amid-shooting-sheriff-says.html

    Fire him immediately.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on February 22, 2018, 04:18:32 PM
    Fire him immediately.

    resigned before he could be fired. His resignation keeps him eligible for other agencies. What I hope happens is this follows him throughout his life so that he can never be responsible for others lives. I also hope the commissioning body in that state revoke his license. There is a time for tactics and waiting for backup. There is a time when you risk all to save others who are being gunned down. This was clearly the latter option. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Pray_4_War on February 23, 2018, 11:33:54 AM
    resigned before he could be fired. His resignation keeps him eligible for other agencies. What I hope happens is this follows him throughout his life so that he can never be responsible for others lives. I also hope the commissioning body in that state revoke his license. There is a time for tactics and waiting for backup. There is a time when you risk all to save others who are being gunned down. This was clearly the latter option. 

    I feel like these situations should be proving to people that the police can't (and sometimes just won't) protect you.

    Police are good at coming in after people are dead and figuring out what happened and who to blame.  They are not able to do much to help you in the moment when your life hangs in the balance....even if they wanted to.

    That's why I stay strapped up.  Every time I walk out my front door I have my Glock and some medical gear on my person.  At least 1 tourniquet, some compression bandages.  Every day, all day.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: mazrim on February 23, 2018, 02:59:54 PM
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/27523/breaking-cnn-reports-four-broward-county-deputies-ben-shapiro

    BREAKING: CNN Reports FOUR Broward County Deputies Waited Outside School As Children Were Massacred

    "On Friday, CNN issued a shock report finding that earlier reports regarding Broward County Sheriff’s Deputy Scot Peterson — the armed school safety officer who apparently cowered outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School while a mass shooter slaughtered 17 people inside — were accurate, but that Peterson wasn’t the only officer waiting outside. According to CNN:

    When Coral Springs police officers arrived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14 in the midst of the school shooting crisis, many officers were surprised to find not only that Broward County Sheriff's Deputy Scot Peterson, the armed school resource officer, had not entered the building, but that three other Broward County Sheriff's deputies were also outside the school and had not entered, Coral Springs sources tell CNN. The deputies had their pistols drawn and were behind their vehicles, the sources said, and not one of them had gone into the school...."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on February 23, 2018, 03:32:04 PM
    I feel like these situations should be proving to people that the police can't (and sometimes just won't) protect you.

    Police are good at coming in after people are dead and figuring out what happened and who to blame.  They are not able to do much to help you in the moment when your life hangs in the balance....even if they wanted to.

    That's why I stay strapped up.  Every time I walk out my front door I have my Glock and some medical gear on my person.  At least 1 tourniquet, some compression bandages.  Every day, all day.

    I can see how this might make someone feel that, but then there are the instances where police have run into the thick of it as they should. That doesn't mean you shouldn't be prepared to protect yourself, as it does take time for police to respond. That officers inaction makes me sick. As a police officer, those type incidents are ones you train for, hope they never happen but if they do, you respond. You do your best to save lives and stop the shooter. It should be ingrained in him. It's sad it took 17 deaths for us to find out he was in the wrong business.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 23, 2018, 05:32:11 PM
    I can see how this might make someone feel that, but then there are the instances where police have run into the thick of it as they should. That doesn't mean you shouldn't be prepared to protect yourself, as it does take time for police to respond. That officers inaction makes me sick. As a police officer, those type incidents are ones you train for, hope they never happen but if they do, you respond. You do your best to save lives and stop the shooter. It should be ingrained in him. It's sad it took 17 deaths for us to find out he was in the wrong business.

    Question- And He is free to go and work as a cop in some other State
    Because he resigned ?

    Although I totally condemn his inaction & inability to respond Sadly it happens as He may very well of been Scared Stif & Fearing for his own life -
    With all his training when it came time to get his hands dirty / earn his pay
    He couldn’t do it.. it happens.

    The reality of him being able to go elsewhere & work as a cop is beyond ridiculous.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on February 23, 2018, 06:55:09 PM
    I feel like these situations should be proving to people that the police can't (and sometimes just won't) protect you.

    Police are good at coming in after people are dead and figuring out what happened and who to blame.  They are not able to do much to help you in the moment when your life hangs in the balance....even if they wanted to.

    That's why I stay strapped up.  Every time I walk out my front door I have my Glock and some medical gear on my person.  At least 1 tourniquet, some compression bandages.  Every day, all day.

    That the officers failed to act is utterly reprehensible, but it’s not unique to this tragedy.

    At the beginning of the LA riots in ’92, officers retreated in the early going, ostensibly to regroup and reengage.  But it didn’t happen, so armed business owners were left to protect their properties. 

    Stay strapped up and safe, my man. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on February 23, 2018, 09:54:06 PM
    Question- And He is free to go and work as a cop in some other State
    Because he resigned ?

    Although I totally condemn his inaction & inability to respond Sadly it happens as He may very well of been Scared Stif & Fearing for his own life -
    With all his training when it came time to get his hands dirty / earn his pay
    He couldn’t do it.. it happens.

    The reality of him being able to go elsewhere & work as a cop is beyond ridiculous.

    From my experience, his resignation allows him the opportunity to apply elsewhere. However the commissioning body of that state can revoke his license. I would hope they do that. If not, hopefully his application at any department will raise flags and he will be denied. Police departments have routinely fired officers for cowardice and you can't find a better example of cowardice than this
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 27, 2018, 05:46:40 AM
    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/bronx/bronx-da-office-overrun-sex-booze-fights-crime-analyst-article-1.3843273


     :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on February 27, 2018, 02:44:43 PM
    Question- And He is free to go and work as a cop in some other State
    Because he resigned ?

    Although I totally condemn his inaction & inability to respond Sadly it happens as He may very well of been Scared Stif & Fearing for his own life -
    With all his training when it came time to get his hands dirty / earn his pay
    He couldn’t do it.. it happens.

    The reality of him being able to go elsewhere & work as a cop is beyond ridiculous.


    I read his account of what he said happened. It went something like this "At first I thought it was fireworks coming from inside. Then when it was clear it wasn't fireworks but gunfire a call came out about a wounded person on the football field. That led me to believe the shooter was already outside the school and I took up a tactical position towards the football field until his location could be determined." paraphrased.

    All that could be true, but even saying it is what he thought... the firing went on for 6 minutes. If he thought a student was exploding fireworks inside the school for several minutes, who does he think is supposed to confront that student? It doesn't add up
     

      
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 27, 2018, 02:51:53 PM

    I read his account of what he said happened. It went something like this "At first I thought it was fireworks coming from inside. Then when it was clear it wasn't fireworks but gunfire a call came out about a wounded person on the football field. That led me to believe the shooter was already outside the school and I took up a tactical position towards the football field until his location could be determined." paraphrased.

    All that could be true, but even saying it is what he thought... the firing went on for 6 minutes. If he thought a student was exploding fireworks inside the school for several minutes, who does he think is supposed to confront that student? It doesn't add up
      

    Nope It doesn’t make sense.
    He was Scared & Froze - it happens

    Likely had he had 5/7/10 of his buddies he’d of been a regular John Wayne type hero
    And pumped the shooter full with 97 bullets

    He’s No Donald Trump - That cop wouldn’t of got out of his car That’s a Definite.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on February 27, 2018, 02:52:42 PM
    Nope It doesn’t make sense.
    He was Scared & Froze - it happens

    Likely had he had 5/7/10 of his buddies he’d of been a regular John Wayne type hero
    And pumped the shooter full with 97 bullets

    He’s No Donald Trump - That cop wouldn’t of got out of his car That’s a Definite.


     :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2018, 01:35:18 PM
    Man disarms would-be church shooter, gets shot by police

    A man disarmed a would-be hostage shooter at a church in Amarillo, Texas, but when officers arrived, he was shot twice.

    On Feb. 14, the same day the Florida school shooter killed 17 people, a gunman barged into the Faith City Mission during morning church service.

    Police said the initial call just before 9 a.m. referenced an armed suspect holding approximately 100 people hostage in the chapel.

    Just before police arrived, Tony Garces, a student at the city mission, snatched the handgun away from the would-be killer after others wrestled him to the ground.

    “I took the gun away from a man who attempted to take others in the church hostage,” Garces told Fox News. “He already fired off one shot and I wasn’t going to let him fire again.”

    But when Amarillo police officers arrived through two locations, Garces’ heroic move put him in unexpected danger.

    “I thought it was over, but they – the cops – shot me,” Garces told the local news. “The good guys shot me.”

    When officers told Garces to throw the gun down, he hesitated for fear that the gun would discharge and harm someone. Instead, he tried to put the gun on the floor – that’s when he said he was shot twice.

    Garces was rushed to the hospital and the man who was the actual gunman, Joshua Len Jones, was arrested. Jones is facing six charges of aggravated kidnapping.

    Today, Garces is out and back on his feet after spending time at Northwest Texas Hospital for a blood clot in his lung and now faces steep medical bills, probably a lot of long-term physical problems, and a possible legal battle with the city of Amarillo, according to his lawyer, Jeff Blackburn.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/02/man-disarms-would-be-church-shooter-gets-shot-by-police.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2018, 04:06:56 AM
    Police officer bypassed laws to resell dozens of guns, prosecutors say

    A California police officer and spokesman used his job to bypass the state’s strict gun laws in order to resell dozens of weapons without a license, federal prosecutors said Friday.

    Pasadena police Lt. Vasken Gourdikian was arrested Friday morning and charged with illegally selling more than 100 firearms between 2014 and 2017.

    The weapons included some that are outlawed in California, the Pasadena Star-News reported.

    Gourdikian, 48, was released on a $100,000 bond after pleading not guilty Friday in federal court in Los Angeles. His attorney, Mark Geragos, said the charges were "misguided and truly an abuse of the supposed discretion of the government."

    He has been placed on unpaid leave, the Star-News reported.

    As a police officer, Gourdikian was able to purchase so-called "off-roster" handguns, which aren't available to the public and aren't listed in a catalog of certified handguns maintained by the state, authorities said.

    Pasadena's Police Department issued seven waivers to the officer, allowing him to bypass 10-day waiting periods on purchases of six pistols and an assault rifle at gun shops in Los Angeles and Orange counties, the Star-News reported.

    Gourdikian posted on online gun message boards that he had weapons that were brand new and still in the box, court documents said.
    The indictment alleges Gourdikian sometimes sold weapons in bulk across Southern California and advertised on the website Calguns.net, the Star-News reported.

    The investigation against Gourdikian began during a routine analysis of sales and trace reports by agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, according to Bill McMullan, special agent in charge of the ATF field office in Los Angeles.

    ATF agents raided Gourdikian's home last year and seized 62 firearms, including an unregistered short-barreled rifle, officials said.

    He was also charged with possessing an unregistered gun and falsely claiming on federal firearms forms that he was buying a gun for himself, even though he had already agreed to sell the weapon to someone else, prosecutors said.

    Gourdikian, who had been on paid leave for about a year, will no longer be paid by the police department, officials said. An internal review is now "on hold pending the outcome of the criminal investigation," police said in a statement.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/03/police-officer-bypassed-laws-to-resell-dozens-guns-prosecutors-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 04, 2018, 01:35:10 PM
    Throw the former prosectuor in death row.

    DA: Former prosecutor withheld key email in death row case

    A former Harris County prosecutor withheld a key email that helped establish a clear alibi for Alfred Dewayne Brown in the high-profile murder case that eventually sent him to death row, District Attorney Kim Ogg said late Friday.

    Brown, now 36, spent nearly 10 years awaiting execution before his case was dismissed and he was freed in 2015. He later sued Harris County, the DA's office, the prosecutor and police officer who handled the murder case, among others.

    The explosive revelation raises new questions about Brown's wrongful conviction and the conduct of Dan Rizzo, the prosecutor who put him on death row.

    Brown was convicted in October 2005 in a brazen slaying of Houston Police Officer Charles L. Clark and store clerk Alfredia Jones — who had just returned from maternity leave — during a robbery at a check-cashing store in southeast Houston.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/DA-Former-prosecutor-lied-about-exculpatory-12724038.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 04, 2018, 06:19:04 PM
    Throw the former prosectuor in death row.

    DA: Former prosecutor withheld key email in death row case

    A former Harris County prosecutor withheld a key email that helped establish a clear alibi for Alfred Dewayne Brown in the high-profile murder case that eventually sent him to death row, District Attorney Kim Ogg said late Friday.

    Brown, now 36, spent nearly 10 years awaiting execution before his case was dismissed and he was freed in 2015. He later sued Harris County, the DA's office, the prosecutor and police officer who handled the murder case, among others.

    The explosive revelation raises new questions about Brown's wrongful conviction and the conduct of Dan Rizzo, the prosecutor who put him on death row.

    Brown was convicted in October 2005 in a brazen slaying of Houston Police Officer Charles L. Clark and store clerk Alfredia Jones — who had just returned from maternity leave — during a robbery at a check-cashing store in southeast Houston.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/DA-Former-prosecutor-lied-about-exculpatory-12724038.php

    I think 10 years on Death Row would be fair, if you could instill in him the same fear Brown had thinking at any time he would be put to death. What a horrible existence. 15 years on Death Row would be a little more fair, even knowing he wouldn't be executed, it's a pretty horrid existence   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 04, 2018, 06:41:30 PM
    Throw the former prosectuor in death row.

    DA: Former prosecutor withheld key email in death row case

    A former Harris County prosecutor withheld a key email that helped establish a clear alibi for Alfred Dewayne Brown in the high-profile murder case that eventually sent him to death row, District Attorney Kim Ogg said late Friday.

    Brown, now 36, spent nearly 10 years awaiting execution before his case was dismissed and he was freed in 2015. He later sued Harris County, the DA's office, the prosecutor and police officer who handled the murder case, among others.

    The explosive revelation raises new questions about Brown's wrongful conviction and the conduct of Dan Rizzo, the prosecutor who put him on death row.

    Brown was convicted in October 2005 in a brazen slaying of Houston Police Officer Charles L. Clark and store clerk Alfredia Jones — who had just returned from maternity leave — during a robbery at a check-cashing store in southeast Houston.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/DA-Former-prosecutor-lied-about-exculpatory-12724038.php

    And we are meant to be living in a civilised society  ::)
    No such thing.

    As agnostic has stated all those involved in the deception/ lying/ framing
    Should be sent to death row for a minimum 15yrs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 04, 2018, 06:57:16 PM
    Days after testifying against officer, deputies beat woman

    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - The cellphone video of a Fort Lauderdale police officer pushing down a homeless man and then slapping him while the man sat harmlessly on the pavement at the central bus terminal spread around the world like wildfire.

    It also led to criminal charges and a highly publicized trial for Officer Victor Ramirez. At the heart of both the video and trial was a 24-year-old woman named Jessica Mooney. She can be seen in the video, which was shot by her boyfriend at the time, later reached out to the victim, Bruce LeClair, and then testified against Ramirez at his trial with the hope that it would help to stop any similar abuse from happening again.

    But just eight days after the trial ended with the officer's acquittal in March, it happened to her. She was badly beaten by Broward sheriff’s deputies at the jail after she was arrested by Fort Lauderdale police. The photos of the aftermath show Mooney -- a 5-foot, two-inch, 120-pound woman –- with a grotesquely swollen face, a gash over her eye, and bruising all over her arms, torso and legs.

    https://www.local10.com/news/bob-norman/days-after-testifying-against-officer-woman-says-deputies-beat-her
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2018, 11:37:52 AM
    Secret NYPD Files: Officers Can Lie And Brutally Beat People — And Still Keep Their Jobs

    Secret files obtained by BuzzFeed News reveal that from 2011 to 2015 at least 319 New York Police Department employees who committed offenses serious enough to merit firing were allowed to keep their jobs.

    Many of the officers lied, cheated, stole, or assaulted New York City residents. At least fifty employees lied on official reports, under oath, or during an internal affairs investigation. Thirty-eight were found guilty by a police tribunal of excessive force, getting into a fight, or firing their gun unnecessarily. Fifty-seven were guilty of driving under the influence. Seventy-one were guilty of ticket-fixing. One officer, Jarrett Dill, threatened to kill someone. Another, Roberson Tunis, sexually harassed and inappropriately touched a fellow officer. Some were guilty of lesser offenses, like mouthing off to a supervisor.

    At least two dozen of these employees worked in schools. Andrew Bailey was found guilty of touching a female student on the thigh and kissing her on the cheek while she was sitting in his car. In a school parking lot, while he was supposed to be on duty, Lester Robinson kissed a woman, removed his shirt, and began to remove his pants. And Juan Garcia, while off duty, illegally sold prescription medication to an undercover officer.

    In every instance, the police commissioner, who has final authority in disciplinary decisions, assigned these officers to “dismissal probation,” a penalty with few practical consequences. The officer continues to do their job at their usual salary. They may get less overtime and won’t be promoted during that period, which usually lasts a year. When the year is over, so is the probation.

    Today many continue to patrol the streets, arrest people, put them in jail, and testify in criminal prosecutions. But the people they arrest have little way to find out about the officer's record. So they are forced to make life-changing decisions — such as whether to fight their charges in court or take a guilty plea — without knowing, for example, if the officer who arrested them is a convicted liar, information that a jury might find directly relevant.

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/kendalltaggart/secret-nypd-files-hundreds-of-officers-committed-serious
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2018, 01:42:59 PM
    Funny how right after the shooting it was claimed that the shot was because the cop "perceived a threat" but later it was claimed to be "accidental".

    North Las Vegas officer who shot man in foot won’t face charges

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/north-las-vegas-officer-who-shot-man-in-foot-wont-face-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2018, 03:36:30 PM
    NYPD ripped for abusing facial-recognition tool

    The NYPD uses sophisticated facial-recognition technology that likely affects anyone who recently had a mugshot taken, new court papers reveal, in a case that raises questions about oversight of the program.

    Edited documents released through a lawsuit seeking information on the NYPD’s “Forensic Imaging System” hint at the vast scope of the searchable database that’s still shrouded in secrecy.

    “NYPD’s face-recognition system appears to include data for every NYPD arrestee, meaning that each arrestee is subjected to face-recognition searches,” said papers filed by Georgetown University’s Center on Privacy and Technology.

    Center attorney Stephanie Glaberson wrote there is “substantial evidence that face recognition is widely used by the department, and likely is used in every arrest.”

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-ripped-abusing-facial-recognition-tool-article-1.3847796
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 05, 2018, 05:32:54 PM
    Funny how right after the shooting it was claimed that the shot was because the cop "perceived a threat" but later it was claimed to be "accidental".

    North Las Vegas officer who shot man in foot won’t face charges

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/north-las-vegas-officer-who-shot-man-in-foot-wont-face-charges/

    Sometimes its as simple as the press wanting info and the chaos surrounding the incident is still unfolding. I've been involved in shootings where initial information gathered was incorrect and had to be corrected. You would think it would be as simple as asking the officer what happened but there are civil service issues, 30 people on scene asking questions and information can get misconstrued in the initial moments. It's a balance of getting the info out as soon as possible because the people want to know right now, or waiting until the investigation is complete so there are no mistakes. For me, I'm good with "tell me what you know right now" and then if it changes, deal with it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2018, 05:57:07 PM
    “Thieving Idiot” Cop Gets No Jail In Spite of His Own Body Cam Catching Him Rob a Man

    Volusia County, FL — Body cams, according to some studies, may serve to reduce corruption and violence from certain police officers. However, as a body cam video out of Florida illustrates, a camera on this cop didn’t even deter his desire to commit theft. Now, we know why he felt like he could record himself stealing—he would get away with it.

    Deputy John Braman, formerly with the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, was charged last year after he was caught stealing money from a man he arrested.

    According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal, the 35-year-old former deputy recently entered no contest pleas to petty theft, official misconduct and grand theft for the crimes he recorded himself committing. He will get no jail time.

    What’s more, as the Chron reports, Braman was also sentenced to time served for misdemeanor charges, though computer records don’t show Braman spent any time jailed on the charges, and ordered to pay restitution to victims.

    When he was arrested last year, Braman had a history of complaints filed by people he’d arrested — who all claimed he robbed them. However, not until this theft was caught on video did his department do anything about it.


    After he was caught, Braman turned in his resignation after body camera footage — from his own body camera — showed him going through a man’s wallet, take out money, and throw it into the trunk.

    The incident took place back on August 1, 2016. However, the body camera video wasn’t released until February of last year by the State Attorney’s Office.

    The State Attorney’s Office, for unknown reasons, held the video for months as the deputy went on with his regular duties. Not until the video was released this week, 6 months after it was taken, was the investigation launched.

    It took a Daytona Beach attorney, who specializes in defending DUI cases to bring the video to the attention of investigators. The attorney, Flem Whited said the original video surfaced in 2016 during another case for one of his clients.

    “We get the video in discovery and he’s leaning over in the trunk of the car and pulls out the guy’s wallet and pulls out two one-hundred-dollar bills. Throws those in the trunk of his car. He puts the wallet back in and closes the trunk,” Whited said.

    “He represents an infinitesimal number of bad cops around the country but when this gets played in the news it makes everyone who wears the badge have to defend themselves against the actions of this idiot. And that’s what he is, a thieving idiot,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said Monday in a phone interview with the News Journal.

    As the Sun-Sentinal reported, Chitwood says they’ve had several complaints about Braman stealing money from the wallets of people he arrested. But the department never acted on them.

    Perhaps that is the reason this ‘thieving idiot’ refused to go to court to face those he arrested. According to the News Journal, when investigators started looking into the April 2016 case, they discovered that Braman had previously been reprimanded for not showing up to traffic court hearings, documents show.

    When watching the video below, it appears this deputy was so accustomed to stealing people’s money after arresting them that he clearly forgot he was doing it — while recording it. Now, this former cop will not spend a single day behind bars for betraying the public’s trust and doing the exact thing he was supposed to be fighting.



    Not surprisingly, Braman’s theft caught on body camera is fairly common for other cops too.

    In November 2016, a Denver cop was arrested and suspended without pay after his own body camera footage caught him stealing $1,200 in cash from a crash victim.

    Instead of helping an unconscious crash victim, officer Julian Archuleta took advantage of the situation for his own personal gain by going through the man’s clothing and robbing him. Archuleta now faces charges of misdemeanor theft, 1st-degree official misconduct and tampering with physical evidence.

    Grants Police Department Sgt. Roshern C. McKinney, 33, was arrested in August 2016 after an investigation found that he’d stolen both money and marijuana from the police department. McKinney has since been charged with marijuana distribution, conspiracy, and felony embezzlement — after he recorded himself on his body camera stealing from the evidence locker.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2018, 06:15:13 PM
    Another case where people learn the hard way not to call the police unless they want violence and brutality. These violent criminals don't care about innocent and frail elderly women, their violent nature emerges with every chance they get. Interesting how the released video is very blurry. Must be similar to how bodycams happen to "malfunction" or "miraculously" turn off when they happen to capture police brutality.

    Police Release Body Cam, Showing Officers Brutally Assault 84yo Grandmother

    Mesa, AZ — An Arizona family has learned the hard way what calling the police to help a relative can often look like as their grandmother was hospitalized after a welfare check. Showing their incompetence, the welfare check was for another family member but the police assaulted the innocent grandmother anyway.

    The Free Thought Project reported on the incident when it happened last week and this week, body camera footage was released.

    Although they released the video, the Mesa police department deliberately blurred the entire clip. However, even low resolution can’t hide the sadistic act of abusing an innocent grandmother.

    As we previously reported, Ashlee Hahn detailed the assault in a dramatic Facebook post which showed the extent of her grandmother’s injuries. Hahn’s grandmother was hurt so bad during the check that she had to be hospitalized.

    According to Hahn, her grandmother “is recovering from her fourth stroke and is confused, cognitively impaired & barely physically able to stand on her own because of uncontrollable shaking.”

    Hahn’s mother had called in a welfare check for her son who lives on his grandmother’s property. She told police her son was suicidal. Police were even given specific instructions not to disturb the 84-year-old because she is easily confused and fragile.

    “The police were called to her residence for a wellness check for a close family member who lives on her property,” explained Hahn. “They were specifically asked not to bother or question my grandmother because of her present and very fragile state.”


    In spite of telling them to steer clear, however, police did the exact opposite.


    “They forced her out of her home into the street, holding her arms tight enough to leave bruises and bleeding,” wrote Hahn. “Her inability to hold still (because of her previous strokes, as seen in uploaded videos) inclined them to slam her down, head first on the asphalt. They handcuffed her after she woke from her unconscious state.”

    Indeed, the video shows this exact scenario. Officers forced the woman from her home by repeatedly telling her to come toward them. When she gets by them, she was clearly confused and had no idea what was going on.

    Illustrating just how out of it she was, she starts referencing officers being behind the cars like a movie. As she turned around, the officers grabbed her and then surrounded her.

    “You are not following my directions,” says a cop to the severely frail innocent elderly woman. Moments later, the innocent grandmother is slammed to the ground as cops jump on top of her and put her in handcuffs.

    When Hahn’s grandmother woke up, she was in the hospital, bloodied and bruised. Police then immediately began conducting damage control.

    “After seeing the damage they had done & sending my Grandmother off in an ambulance, they called my Mother (who made the original wellness check call) and told her that my Grandmother “slipped,” Hahn explained.

    To try and alleviate their liability, an officer was sent, not to check on an elderly grandmother who’d just been the subject of a savage attack, but, instead, to defend their fellow cop and his choice to inflict harm on an innocent old lady.

    “The officer who came down to the hospital only seemed to care about deflecting & defending the officers involved. No accountability. No apologies,” Hahn wrote.

    What’s more, to try to legitimize the attack on an innocent grandmother, police then charged her with obstruction.

    Hahn filmed part of the interaction with the officer in the hospital as he defended his fellow cop’s decision to needlessly confront her (against the family’s wishes) and then violently throw her to the ground.

    “Why did he put me down on the asphalt?” asked the innocent elderly woman.

    “It is my understanding when I spoke to the officer, that you pulled away from him a little bit and he took action like that, okay?” the officer callously explains of how his fellow officer could somehow rationalize assaulting an innocent grandmother.

    Pulling away from an officer “a little bit” in the land of the free will now apparently result in innocent elderly women being thrown to the ground.

    “I said don’t treat me like this. I don’t want to have a stroke,” the innocent grandmother says as she shakes in her hospital bed. “I don’t want to have a heart attack. Don’t treat me this way.”

    According to Hahn, her grandmother is “traumatized & feels untrusting of the people who she thought would protect her.”

    Hahn has a message for the Mesa Police Department as well.

    “If this was your grandmother, what would you do? Mesa police department needs to be held accountable.”

    Indeed, they do.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/grandmother-body-camera-abused-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 05, 2018, 07:29:55 PM
    Sometimes its as simple as the press wanting info and the chaos surrounding the incident is still unfolding. I've been involved in shootings where initial information gathered was incorrect and had to be corrected. You would think it would be as simple as asking the officer what happened but there are civil service issues, 30 people on scene asking questions and information can get misconstrued in the initial moments. It's a balance of getting the info out as soon as possible because the people want to know right now, or waiting until the investigation is complete so there are no mistakes. For me, I'm good with "tell me what you know right now" and then if it changes, deal with it.

    no response from skeletor?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 05, 2018, 07:31:40 PM
    I have noticed that i have responded to many skeletors posts.. with no response. If this thread is just gonna be Skeletor posting his anti  police posts, thats cool, just let me know and I will stop responding
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2018, 03:03:06 PM
    Cop Smashes Handcuffed Woman’s Head In, Photographs Her Injuries And Brags to His Friends

    Schenectady, NY — A Schenectady police lieutenant — who should’ve been fired and arrested multiple times — is still on the job in spite of brutally attacking an innocent handcuffed woman, smashing in her head, and then lying on a report, claiming she attacked him. What’s more, after he split her head wide open, he took a picture of it so he could brag about it to his friends and fellow cops.

    “This is what happens when someone hits one of my men,” Lt. Mark McCracken would say as he showed off his trophy photo, bragging about severely injuring an innocent handcuffed woman in the midst of an emotional breakdown.

    The victim, then 39-year-old Nicola Cottone had been picked up by police because she had been staying with a friend overnight and the person called city police because he wanted her to leave and she allegedly refused. Cottone had not been charged with a crime by Schenectady police.

    Two officers, McCracken and Andrew MacDonald were identified in court filings for their role in the attack. Surveillance video in the room in which the assault took place captured the officers in their most heinous act. Cottone’s hands were cuffed behind her back when the attack happened.

    As the Times Union reports:

    Two cameras that captured footage of the incident did not have an audio feed. One of the tapes showed her acting agitated and talking constantly to officers who were in and out of the room where she was sitting on a bench.
    That video also showed two officers rush toward Cottone who stood up as the officers grabbed her, lifted her up and then slammed her onto the bench. Blood streamed down the bench and onto the floor of the room as the officers quickly lifted Cottone and dragged her to the doorway, where she was placed on the floor of a hallway for more than 20 minutes. Several officers looked on as the incident unfolded.


    After the officer was seen on video savagely slamming the woman down, police then accused Cottone of kicking them and charged her with harassment “as a means to conceal the actions of the police officers,” said attorney Kevin Luibrand.

    Once prosecutors viewed the footage, the egregious harassment charge was dropped.

    “We didn’t think there was any cause to charge her in the first place,” Schenectady County District Attorney Robert Carney said. “I reviewed the videotape … and I believe there was no cause to believe that she had committed the charge of harassment by kicking an officer.”


    For viciously attacking an innocent handcuffed woman and then fabricating a story to justify their brutality, McCracken was given a five-day vacation in the form of unpaid leave. It’s unclear whether MacDonald had faced any discipline at all.

    The internal affairs report summarized the encounter as follows: “(McCracken) pulling and swinging the feet out from (Cottone) while she was handcuffed caused (Cottone) to sustain the laceration to her head. … After the initial altercation (McCracken) hoists (Cottone) off of the bench and into the air by only her arms, which are still cuffed behind her back. He then carries her in this position out of the muster room and drops her onto her feet in the hallway in front of the Sergeants desk. These actions are egregious and placed (Cottone) at risk of injury. These techniques are not taught in training. A common technique used in this type of circumstance is a bar hammer or something similar. This use of force was excessive.”

    Instead of being fired or charged for the incident described by police above, McCracken continued on at the department only to break the law again and receive yet another vacation.

    In February, according to the Times-Union, McCracken was charged with intentionally violating an unrelated order of protection by approaching his estranged wife at the Union College hockey rink.


    It appears that this problem cop has an affinity for targeting and harassing women and, instead of holding him accountable, the department he works for simply gives him time off. It is no wonder police in America cost taxpayers hundreds of millions in lawsuits while killing more than a thousand citizens every year—nearly all of which is done with impunity.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-handcuffed-woman-head-brags/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2018, 03:04:14 PM
    I have noticed that i have responded to many skeletors posts.. with no response. If this thread is just gonna be Skeletor posting his anti  police posts, thats cool, just let me know and I will stop responding

    You can post whatever you want, I am not a moderator and do not control the posts in this thread.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2018, 03:05:23 PM
    Cop on Trial After Video Showed Him Break Into Innocent Man’s Home, Taser, Beat Him in Bed

    Boyes Hot Springs, CA — Only in police state USA could an argument over a husband failing to notice his wife’s haircut end with police tasering and severely beating a man as he lies in bed. That is exactly what happened to Marine Corps veteran Fernando Del Valle — and he’s got the video to prove it. What is different about this case, however, is that the cop responsible for this bad behavior is now on trial.

    This week, the trial for Deputy Scott Thorne begins. Thorne is charged with assaulting without lawful necessity during an alleged domestic violence incident at a Sonoma Valley residence in 2016.

    According to Patch.com, during testimony in Sonoma County Superior Court this morning, a next-door neighbor said she called 911 about yelling and a commotion between Fernando Del Valle and his wife Kirsten Del Valle around 10:30 p.m. She said Kirsten sounded intoxicated and appeared to be the aggressor in the argument.

    Aside from police being told that the female was the aggressor, they still entered the home and went after Del Valle—who was lying on a bed—when he was savagely attacked.

    “He was beaten, Tased and subjected to a humiliating arrest in view of his neighbors,” the prosecutor said.

    Thorne had a gun, Taser, baton, handcuffs and tear gas, “but he didn’t have the soft skills of patience and restraint,” and he used force without lawful necessity, Deputy District Attorney Robert Waner said, according to Patch.

    On the night of September 24, Del Valle, 38, and Kirsten had some drinks and got into an argument after he failed to notice her haircut. The argument became heated but never once turned physical.

    As Del Valle retreated into the bedroom and locked himself in, the couple’s screaming got the attention of the neighbors, who, in turn, called the police.

    Just as the argument begins to calm down, cops burst into the couple’s home. Del Valle, who is trying to go to sleep in bed, is then woken up by the sound of Sonoma County sheriff’s deputies breaking down his bedroom door.

    Before the video begins, the deputies allegedly order Del Valle to stand up.

    That’s when Del Valle turns on his camera and warns the deputies, “I got you on video. Go ahead. Tase me.”

    Remember, Del Valle had committed no crime and had harmed no one. Yet, here he is with three armed men in his bedroom threatening to inflict bodily harm on him. And, within seconds, that just what Deputy Scott Thorne, 40, did.


    “Sir, I’m just laying here trying to sleep and you’re …,” Del Valle said. “I’m not standing up. I’m in my house. I’m sleeping.”

    As Thorne steps forward, he’s seen on the video aiming his taser at the bare chest of Del Valle who is wearing only gym shorts. He then fires.

    When the taser hits him, Del Valle can be heard screaming. At this point, the baton comes out, according to Del Valle’s attorney, and Thorne begins laying into the defenseless man in his own bed.

    “He’s not doing anything!” his wife screams as the deputy continuously beats her husband over and over with his baton and taser.

    The video then ends as Del Valle shouts repeatedly, “Call my lawyer!”

    Del Valle was not able to record the entire encounter, but the beating continued well after it stopped.

    According to the Press Democrat, a spokesman for Sheriff Steve Freitas at the time agreed the deputies’ three videos raised concerns from the start about excessive force.

    Naturally, Thorne’s defense team is claiming that Thorne acted the way he did because he was in danger.

    By not complying with the deputy’s commands to open the bedroom door and get out of the bed, Del Valle forfeited his right to privacy and staying in the room because of the potential for violence, Thorne’s attorney Chris Andrian said.

    However, it is clear in the video that at no time did this half-naked man pose a threat to the cops who broke into his house.

    As the Press Democrat revealed in their investigation, Thorne should’ve never been a cop as he’d been fired from previous jobs over his track record of excessive force.

    However, none of that matters to Thorne’s attorney who is naturally defending the actions of this brutal cop.

    “His position is he followed procedure,” Andrian said, noting that he acted in accordance with his training.

    As for Del Valle, after he was severely beaten by Thorne — for no reason — he was then arrested and brought to jail. However, once police attempted to charge him with something, they realized they had no evidence of him committing a crime, so he was let go.

    Del Valle’s lawyer, Izaak Schwaiger, said, in all, Del Valle was tasered 2 to 3 times and suffered at least 15 baton blows, causing neurological damage and a separated shoulder.

    The Del Valles are set to give their side of the story later this week. Below is the disturbing video.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-trial-beating-veteran-bed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2018, 03:16:20 PM
    Another deaf man beaten and once again the tax payers have to pay the bill.

    Taxpayers Held Liable After Cops Beat Elderly Deaf Man Because He Couldn’t Hear Them

    Oklahoma City, OK — Police officers assaulting or even killing deaf people for being unable to hear their commands is a tragic reality. Pearl Pearson Jr. learned that reality the hard way. For nearly seven minutes, Pearson, 64-years-old at the time and diabetic, was beaten and arrested by police officers as they yelled at him to stop resisting.

    Now, the taxpayers of Oklahoma are being forced to pay the brutal incompetence of two Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers. It was announced this week that Pearson has received a settlement in the amount of $175,000 in taxpayer funds to settle the claims of his abuse.

    As the Times-Record reports, Pearson, now 68, of Edmond, Okla., claimed three troopers “used unnecessary, unprovoked and excessive force” when he was unable to communicate or follow verbal commands, according to the lawsuit.

    “Pearl was very pleased with the results,” his attorney, Derek Burch, told The Oklahoman.

    Oklahoma Highway Patrol officers, Eric Foster and Kelton Hayes were the two officers that were involved in what an affidavit claims was a 7-minute altercation. Naturally, since the incident, Oklahoma County District Attorney David Prater cleared Foster and Hayes of all wrongdoing.

    “Excessive force was used for a very minor matter that could have been handled very easily with these three troopers,” Burch said. “It ultimately resulted in him having facial injuries, and the worst injury was a completely separated shoulder.”

    When the original incident happened on January 3, 2014, police refused to release the video. However, weeks later, after the media frenzy died down, police quietly released the dashcam. The disturbing video shows troopers yelling at Pearson and dragging him from the vehicle.

    He was dragged from the vehicle in spite of the fact that he did everything he was supposed to as a deaf driver, according to his family.

    According to Pearson’s family, Pearl pulled over and rolled down his window expecting an officer to ask for this identification. An officer struck him in the face before Pearl had the chance to do anything.

    The photos of his swollen and bruised face clearly show the result of the police action.

    After Pearson was beaten by police, he was arrested and charged with resisting arrest. He was thrown in jail, and, according to his family, an interpreter was never provided while Pearl was under the care of law enforcement — not during the booking, hospital, or time at the jail was an interpreter provided — even though Pearl requested one.

    Pearson was sitting in a jail cell, battered and bruised, and had no idea ‘why.’

    Pearson has no criminal record, and in fact is a father to a police officer. His son-in-law is also a cop. In 2015, Pearson was given an award for his amazing service to the community for working with people with disabilities.

    Finally, after 3 years of holding it over his head, the District Attorney’s office decided to drop the charges. However, they dropped the charges, not because they thought the cops were in the wrong, and not because they thought Pearson was innocent. In fact, neither of the cops involved in beating a deaf man for being unable to understand them has faced any discipline at all. The sole reason the case was dropped was that the trial cost was too high.


    Pearson, who learned sign language during segregation, learned a different way of communicating other than the traditional American Sign Language (ASL). He needs a translator for court officials to understand him. Because the cost of translators was so high, the DA decided to toss the case out.

    Pearson also won a second lawsuit against the hospital as they failed to provide a translator while police had him in custody at the hospital which resulted in the missed diagnois of his separated shoulder.

    Below is the video of this glaring incompetence which the taxpayers of Oklahoma have now been extorted to pay for.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/elderly-deaf-man-beaten-police-taxpayers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2018, 12:18:38 PM
    No charges for the armed intruder that killed this brave old man defending his home and family. And another person who learns the hard way that calling the police to "check" on people can result in beatings or death.

    Cops Kill Innocent 86yo Navy Vet as He Protected His Wife from Intruders, No Charges

    Saratoga, CA — Last year, the widow of an 86-year-old Navy veteran who was gunned down by armed intruders in his own home, filed a lawsuit against her husband’s killers — the Santa Clara County sheriff’s department. Now, the person who murdered this innocent man will not be held accountable as the killing of Eugene Craig has been ruled justified by the Santa Clara County district attorney’s office.

    Craig was gunned down by police as he attempted to shield his wife from armed intruders who’d just broken into his home. The armed intruders were cops.


    On Sept. 12, 2016, according to Harue Craig’s attorneys, prior to the shooting, deputies kicked down two doors before opening fire inside the Craigs’ Saratoga home on Titus Avenue.

    As KTVU reported at the time, attorneys said their client stated that both she and her late husband were “very scared” and did not know why their doors were being kicked down.

    The elderly couple thought they were victims of a home invasion, so Eugene grabbed his .38 caliber revolver and bravely stood in front of his wife as they listened to the intruders come into their home.

    When the intruders opened the bedroom door, they saw the elderly vet standing there with the revolver and one deputy opened fire. Although there were multiple deputies in the home, deputy Doug Ulrich was the only one who felt the need to begin shooting.

    Eugene died on the scene.

    According to police, they were at the home to conduct a welfare check. Craig’s granddaughter called police the night of the shooting because she hadn’t heard from her grandparents in a week, according to prosecutors.

    The sheriff’s office said that deputies clearly identified themselves, called the home phone, and tapped on windows repeatedly before entering.

    In spite of their alleged efforts to identify themselves, the couple still didn’t believe them. After all, they were both entirely innocent and cops coming into their home was a far-fetched idea. Any home invader could simply claim they’re the police to easily gain entry into someone’s home.

    The tragic irony of this situation is that police claim they were there to protect the couple, noting that they had gotten word that someone inside the home was in distress. Sadly, this is what happens when militarized police are sent into an innocent couple’s home to check on their well-being.

    Naturally, after they killed the innocent man — while ‘protecting’ him — police immediately attempted to justify their actions and as this ruling by the DA illustrates, it worked.

    “The law allows Deputy (Douglas) Ulrich to fire his weapon in defense of others (and himself) until Craig no longer posed an imminent threat,” wrote Stacey Capps, a supervisor in the district attorney’s homicide unit. “In short, Deputy Ulrich genuinely believed that Craig presented an imminent threat of death or great bodily injury to others or himself when he discharged his duty weapon.”

    However, the only ones who created the threat of imminent danger were the police. Craig had harmed no one.

    As NBC Bay Area reported at the time, the attorney for Craig’s 90-year-old widow, Dennis Luca, a long-time retired San Jose Police officer, turned civil attorney, was originally hired by Craig’s 90-year-old widow after the shooting last fall.

    “Simply put, they did not follow established policy and procedure that virtually all police departments, sheriff’s office follow regarding the escalation of force,” said Luca.

    “If you’re there at someone’s house to check on their welfare, why do you kick two doors down at night time when my client is 86 years old, his wife is 90, and they live alone at that house and they have for years?” asked Luca.

    “They (deputies) didn’t progress through the steps necessary, and that’s why I say they created the deadly force event. Not Mr. Craig, who has a right to be in his house. He hadn’t committed a crime,” said attorney Luca. “He has a right to be safe in his house like all of us do. The police just can’t kick doors, come into the house and start shooting.”

    Welfare checks, as they are known in the United States, are crap shoots that have the potential to explode into violence at any moment. The Free Thought Project has reported on numerous instances in which police have shown up to ‘protect’ someone who may be suicidal or in distress only to end up hurting or killing them.

    Sadly, Craig is now one of these statistics and the people who did it to him will not be held responsible for taking an innocent man’s life.

    Nothing will bring back Harue Craig’s beloved husband. However, her lawsuit will serve as yet another reminder of the effect of police violence on situations that require no force at all. When law enforcement’s only tool is a hammer — everything begins to look like a nail.

    “It didn’t have to happen. It shouldn’t have happened,” said Luca. “And now I have a 90-year-old woman who is alone, who was married for many years to a war veteran, a pilot, and now she has no one. That’s not a tragedy. That is horrific.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-gun-innocent-86yo-navy-vet-protected-wife-intruders-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2018, 01:04:17 PM
    ‘Barbarism’: Texas judge ordered electric shocks to silence man on trial. Conviction thrown out.

    In Tarrant County, Tex., defendants are sometimes strapped with a stun belt around their legs. The devices are used to deliver a shock in the event the person gets violent or attempts to escape.

    But in the case of Terry Lee Morris, the device was used as punishment for refusing to answer a judge’s questions properly during his 2014 trial on charges of soliciting sexual performance from a 15-year-old girl, according to an appeals court. In fact, the judge shocked Morris three times, sending thousands of volts coursing through his body. It scared him so much that Morris never returned for the remainder of his trial and almost all of his sentencing hearing.

    The action stunned the Texas Eighth Court of Appeals in El Paso, too. It has now thrown out Morris’s conviction on the grounds that the shocks, and Morris’s subsequent removal from the courtroom, violated his constitutional rights. Since he was too scared to come back to the courtroom, the court held that the shocks effectively barred him from attending his own trial, in violation of the Constitution’s Sixth Amendment, which guarantees a defendant’s right to be present and confront witnesses during a trial.

    [...]

    The discord between Morris and Gallagher arose after Gallagher asked Morris how he would plead: guilty or not guilty?

    “Sir, before I say that, I have the right to make a defense,” Morris responded.

    He had recently filed a federal lawsuit against his defense attorney and against Gallagher, whom he wanted recused from the case. As Morris continued talking, Gallagher warned him to stop making “outbursts.”

    “Mr. Morris, I am giving you one warning,” Gallagher said outside the presence of the jury, according to the appeals court. “You will not make any additional outbursts like that, because two things will happen. No. 1, I will either remove you from the courtroom or I will use the shock belt on you.”

    “All right, sir,”
    Morris said.

    The judge continued: “Now, are you going to follow the rules?”

    “Sir, I’ve asked you to recuse yourself,”
    said Morris.

    Gallagher asked again: “Are you going to follow the rules?”

    “I have a lawsuit pending against you,” responded Morris.

    “Hit him,” Gallagher said to the bailiff.

    The bailiff pressed the button that shocks Morris, and then Gallagher asked him again whether he is going to behave. Morris told Gallagher he had a history of mental illness.

    “Hit him again,” the judge ordered.

    Morris protested that he was being “tortured” just for seeking the recusal.

    Gallagher asked the bailiff, “Would you hit him again?”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/03/07/barbarism-texas-judge-ordered-electric-shocks-to-man-during-trial-conviction-thrown-out/?utm_term=.d5a30f109077
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 07, 2018, 01:24:07 PM
    ‘Barbarism’: Texas judge ordered electric shocks to silence man on trial. Conviction thrown out.

    In Tarrant County, Tex., defendants are sometimes strapped with a stun belt around their legs. The devices are used to deliver a shock in the event the person gets violent or attempts to escape.

    But in the case of Terry Lee Morris, the device was used as punishment for refusing to answer a judge’s questions properly during his 2014 trial on charges of soliciting sexual performance from a 15-year-old girl, according to an appeals court. In fact, the judge shocked Morris three times, sending thousands of volts coursing through his body. It scared him so much that Morris never returned for the remainder of his trial and almost all of his sentencing hearing.

    The action stunned the Texas Eighth Court of Appeals in El Paso, too. It has now thrown out Morris’s conviction on the grounds that the shocks, and Morris’s subsequent removal from the courtroom, violated his constitutional rights. Since he was too scared to come back to the courtroom, the court held that the shocks effectively barred him from attending his own trial, in violation of the Constitution’s Sixth Amendment, which guarantees a defendant’s right to be present and confront witnesses during a trial.

    [...]

    The discord between Morris and Gallagher arose after Gallagher asked Morris how he would plead: guilty or not guilty?

    “Sir, before I say that, I have the right to make a defense,” Morris responded.

    He had recently filed a federal lawsuit against his defense attorney and against Gallagher, whom he wanted recused from the case. As Morris continued talking, Gallagher warned him to stop making “outbursts.”

    “Mr. Morris, I am giving you one warning,” Gallagher said outside the presence of the jury, according to the appeals court. “You will not make any additional outbursts like that, because two things will happen. No. 1, I will either remove you from the courtroom or I will use the shock belt on you.”

    “All right, sir,”
    Morris said.

    The judge continued: “Now, are you going to follow the rules?”

    “Sir, I’ve asked you to recuse yourself,”
    said Morris.

    Gallagher asked again: “Are you going to follow the rules?”

    “I have a lawsuit pending against you,” responded Morris.

    “Hit him,” Gallagher said to the bailiff.

    The bailiff pressed the button that shocks Morris, and then Gallagher asked him again whether he is going to behave. Morris told Gallagher he had a history of mental illness.

    “Hit him again,” the judge ordered.

    Morris protested that he was being “tortured” just for seeking the recusal.

    Gallagher asked the bailiff, “Would you hit him again?”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/03/07/barbarism-texas-judge-ordered-electric-shocks-to-man-during-trial-conviction-thrown-out/?utm_term=.d5a30f109077


    I’d so dearly like to truss that bastard judge up with that electric shock belt
    & ask him dumb questions & zap him for the fun of it.
    The cowardly bastard is a prime example of a jumped up bully
    Who likely would cower in fear if confronted but is the big tough guy
    In the court. I wish him a long slow painful illness.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 07, 2018, 02:27:55 PM

    I’d so dearly like to truss that bastard judge up with that electric shock belt
    & ask him dumb questions & zap him for the fun of it.
    The cowardly bastard is a prime example of a jumped up bully
    Who likely would cower in fear if confronted but is the big tough guy
    In the court. I wish him a long slow painful illness.

    Agree
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2018, 02:50:54 PM
    Brownsville police officer accused of human smuggling

    A Brownsville police officer is on paid administrated leave after facing federal charges of human smuggling, according to a criminal complaint obtained by CBS 4 News and federal court records.
    Documents state on Feb. 26, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine Operations agents came into contact with Brownsville Police officer Valerie Rivas in the sand dunes on Padre Island National Seashore, according to the criminal complaint.

    Rivas told immigration officials that she was in the area searching for her boyfriend of 12 years, an undocumented immigrant identified as Alfredo Salazar-Hernandez. Rivas said she made arrangements to pick Salazar-Hernandez up in Victoria after he was illegally smuggled into the U.S. When she didn't hear from him, though, she drove to Padre Island National Seashore and began searching for him in the dunes, an area where an "unnamed coconspirator" told her he was supposed to be, according to the criminal complaint.

    http://valleycentral.com/news/local/brownsville-police-officer-accused-of-human-smuggling
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2018, 03:56:03 PM

    I’d so dearly like to truss that bastard judge up with that electric shock belt
    & ask him dumb questions & zap him for the fun of it.
    The cowardly bastard is a prime example of a jumped up bully
    Who likely would cower in fear if confronted but is the big tough guy
    In the court. I wish him a long slow painful illness.

    Not just the judge but the bailiff as well.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 07, 2018, 08:27:53 PM
    Not just the judge but the bailiff as well.

     ;D  yes
    I’d forgotten about him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 07, 2018, 09:24:12 PM
    Not just the judge but the bailiff as well.

    absolutely
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 08, 2018, 02:38:49 PM
    7 years in prison...

    Mom convicted in salt poisoning death to get nearly $600K for wrongful incarceration

    Hannah Overton, a south Texas mother of five whose wrongful conviction for the 2006 death of her foster son was overturned last year, is expected to receive over $500,000 in compensation from the state for the years she spent in jail.

    “I’m very thankful that this compensation is finally coming through,” Overton told ABC News. “No amount of money will ever bring back the years that were taken away, and the seven years of freedom I lost. I could never thank my attorneys enough for fighting endlessly to prove my innocence and bring me home.”

    Overton, who has long maintained her innocence, spent seven years in prison for the young child’s death. The salt poisoning case earned international attention because many believed she was wrongfully convicted and her story was featured in the 2017 documentary, “Until Proven Innocent.”

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/texas-mother-murder-conviction-overturned-receive-500k-state/story?id=53578422
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2018, 12:58:18 PM
    Man removes feds’ spy cam, they demand it back, he refuses and sues

    Last November, a 74-year-old rancher and attorney was walking around his ranch just south of Encinal, Texas, when he happened upon a small portable camera strapped approximately eight feet high onto a mesquite tree near his son's home. The camera was encased in green plastic and had a transmitting antenna. Not knowing what it was or how it got there, Ricardo Palacios removed it.

    Soon after, Palacios received phone calls from Customs and Border Protection officials and the Texas Rangers. Each agency claimed the camera as its own and demanded that it be returned. Palacios refused, and they threatened him with arrest.

    Palacios, who had run-ins with local CBP agents going back several years, took the camera as the last straw. He was tired of agents routinely trespassing on his land, and, even after complaining several times, he was frustrated that his grievances were not being heard.

    As a possible way to ward off the threat of arrest, he sued the two agencies, along with a named CPB agent, Mario Martinez. Palacios accused them of trespass and of violating his constitutional rights.

    [...]

    Palacios' ranch is situated at the 35-mile marker due north from Laredo, along Interstate 35, just three miles south of the small town of Encinal. The nearest US-Mexico border crossing is at Laredo. The precise distance between the border and Palacios' ranch matters: under federal law, agents can go onto private property that is within 25 miles of the border "for the purpose of patrolling the border to prevent the illegal entry of aliens into the United States."

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/02/rancher-finds-creepy-and-un-american-spy-cam-tied-to-his-tree-sues-feds/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2018, 03:40:50 PM
    Of course the prosecutor and the cops will not pay a dime out of their own pockets, let alone to spend even a minute in prison.

    Arizona Man Sues Prosecutor for Wrongful Arrest that Kept him in Jail for Two Months

    Imagine spending two months in jail for a robbery that you didn’t commit. Well, that is exactly what happened to an Iowa man after he was falsely charged with first-degree robbery.

    Now he is suing the prosecutor that threw him in jail.

    Joseph McBride, 23, was arrested for his assumed role in a January 2017 home invasion robbery in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

    McBride was in Phoenix at the time of his August 2017 arrest, several months after the original crime was committed.

    And he showed authorities a time-stamped cell phone selfie proving he was in Arizona at the time of the Iowa home invasion, but they remained steadfast that they had the right guy.

    McBride is from Cedar Rapids but he moved to Phoenix in November 2015.


    He was one of three people arrested for the crime.

    Linn County Attorney Jerry Vander Sanden is the prosecutor that brought charges on McBride. Sanden alleged in court documents that social media posts and phone records suggested that McBride was involved in the home invasion robbery.

    Sanden says the charge was based on a, “good-faith belief that the victim was correct in the identification.”

    But as it turns out, the only evidence Sanden and police relied on was the victim pointing to a facebook photo of McBride, claiming he was involved in the crime.

    The victim, identified as 27-year-old Tristan Hermann, told police that an acquaintance he knew as Elizabeth came to his apartment. Two men then forced their way in Hermann’s apartment, beating him with a handgun, and stealing his money and cellphone.

    Hermann identified the woman as 22-year-old Elizabeth Navarro and said she set him up.

    Hermann, who is bipolar, told police days later that he “had done his own investigation” and concluded the men involved were Navarro’s boyfriend, Austin Foster, and a man with the Facebook name “Jody Holliday.”

    Police used photos and a birthdate to link the facebook account to McBride. Navarro was Facebook friends with McBride during the investigation, but nothing more.

    The Cedar Rapids Police Department gathered Navarro’s phone records, which showed communications with Foster and another man around the time of the robbery but none of those records were connected to McBride.

    McBride’s attorney, Tom Frerichs, filed an alibi motion defense on October 9. Soon after, Navarro identified another man as the third suspect.

    But that man hasn’t been charged yet.

    The charge against McBride was dropped on October 31.

    McBride is seeking compensatory and punitive damages for violations of his Constitutional rights. The lawsuit was filed on Thursday.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2018/01/arizona-man-sues-prosecutor-for-wrongful-arrest-that-kept-him-in-jail-for-two-months/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2018, 12:55:16 PM
    Grind them to the ground and take back everything they have.

    Ohio town must pay back millions of fines collected from speed cameras, court rules

    A small Ohio town that lived by the red light camera could soon die by it, after a federal court ruled the speed trap has to pay back more than $3 million in automated speeding tickets.

    The case of New Miami, population 2,321, highlights the controversy behind the tickets, which make stoplight-running motorists see red, but help keep the budgets of cities and towns in the black. New Miami will almost certainly go bankrupt if the Supreme Court doesn’t reverse a lower court’s ruling and spare it from refunding tens of thousands of tickets at $180 apiece plus interest.

    “The village enacted this unconstitutional scheme primarily as a money making venture,” Josh Engel, the lawyer representing the plaintiffs in the New Miami case, told Fox News. “They increased their spending significantly after the scheme was put in place and it was basically used to fill holes in their budget that would traditionally have come from raising taxes.”

    The case of New Miami is seen by many drivers across the country – including numerous lawmakers and lawyers – as the epitome of municipalities abusing their power by setting up speed traps and red light cameras in an attempt, not to make roadways safer, but to line their coffers.

    “As with most issues there are elements of truth on both sides,” Bill Seitz, a Republican state representative from Ohio, told Fox News. “But many of these jurisdictions are using these tickets as revenue enhancements that ticket people for only minor infractions.”

    Seitz is currently working to push a bill through the Ohio statehouse that would require cities to file all traffic camera cases in municipal court and would reduce state funding to cities by the same amount cities collect in traffic camera revenue.

    The Ohio representative, who himself was caught on camera rolling through a red light in Columbus, added that in 2006 and 2014 lawmakers approved restrictions on photo enforcement cameras and that limits or bands on the devices enjoy wide support in cities like Cincinnati and Cleveland.

    The current animosity directed at the cameras marks a shift in public sentiment toward the cameras.

    While it is tough to pinpoint the national pulse as most studies are conducted at a state and regional level, but it appears that there are a growing number of areas who are starting to question whether the speed camera programs are effective or even constitutional.

    Seven states are currently considering legislation to prohibit red light and speed camera use amid concerns that they are ripe for abuse and IIHS study found that the number of red light cameras in the U.S. dropped to 467 in 2015 from its peak of 553 in 2012.

    “It’s really a money making venture,” Israel Klein, a lawyer in New York City, told Fox News. “They’re raking in the dollars and it’s an extreme abuse of power.”

    Klein earlier this year filed a class action lawsuit against the city that argues that speed camera tickets are invalid and violate New York state law as the city failed to file all of the required paperwork with the court before allowing a private contractor to drop the photo ticket in the mail. New York City’s 2018 budget expects to haul in $119 million in photo enforcement fines.

    “City officials don’t care about the law as long as they’re making money,” Klein added.

    Proponents of the cameras, however, argue that they significantly lower the number of accidents on the road as both speeding and going through red lights are two of the biggest causes of car crashes in the country, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation.

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/03/14/ohio-town-must-pay-back-millions-fines-collected-from-speed-cameras-court-rules.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2018, 01:21:11 PM
    They "reported the incident" but they sat idly and did not stop the violent attack as it was happening. They are accomplices to the assault.

    Cop Smashes Handcuffed, Hooded Man’s Face In As Fellow Officers Watch

    San Joaguin, CA — Surveillance footage has been released that shows a correctional officer at the San Joaquin County Jail striking the head of a handcuffed man who posed no threat, while multiple officers witnessed the assault.

    The arrested man was sitting on the floor with his hands secured behind his back and a spit hood covering his head. Not only was it impossible for him to have posed a serious threat to the officers, but he appeared to be sitting calmly and was not struggling to free himself from the restraints.

    The man was arrested for “intoxication,” and while it is unclear how long he had been detained, there are two Manteca Police officers standing nearby, watching him when the video began. Correctional Officer Matthew Mettler entered the room, walked over to the man who could not see him coming and hit the side of his head so hard that the man lost his balance and fell to the side.

    A fourth officer entered the room and Mettler quickly pulled the man’s body back into a sitting position and then left the room. The two Manteca Police officers who watched the scene unfold appear to do nothing to stop or to criticize Mettler’s actions at the time. However, they proceeded to report the incident, and Mettler was suspended as a result.

    In a statement, the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office responded to the video of the incident, which occurred on Aug. 24, 2017. It revealed that the man, who was significantly intoxicated, was wearing a spit hood to cover his head because the officers claimed that he tried to spit on them.

    The statement acknowledged that the arrested man was “apparently posing no threat” when Officer Mettler walked up to him and struck him in the head. It also noted that the two Manteca Police officers who witnessed that assault “immediately reported the matter up the chain of command,” and action was taken accordingly.

    After the incident was reported, Mettler was placed on administrative leave. The San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office launched internal affairs and criminal investigations, and the statement noted that the evidence gathered from the surveillance footage was crucial in its determination that Mettler’s actions qualified as assault.

    After the Sheriff’s Office turned the evidence from its investigation over to the District Attorney’s office for prosecution, Mettler was charged with a misdemeanor count of “Assault by a Public Officer.”

    In response to the incident, Sheriff Steve Moore condemned Mettler’s actions and insisted that his conduct does not reflect on the expectations for his fellow officers.

    “As Sheriff, I don’t condone the actions as portrayed on this video by our jail staff,” Moore said. “It is inconsistent with the professionalism of San Joaquin County Correctional Officers, and of this department. The action taken by the DA’s office is appropriate and we support their position.”

    This incident is notable because it shows a rare example of a police department openly condemning the wrongful actions of one of its officers after he is caught on camera abusing his power. In contrast, when two police officers in Coeymans, New York, were caught racing each other to see who could run over a scared raccoon in an open parking lot, their department took a different approach.

    The Coeymans Police Department refused to admit that their officers had done anything wrong, and instead said that they handled the situation “as quickly and humanely as possible,” even when cell phone camera footage proved otherwise.

    Watch the surveillance footage of the assault at the San Joaquin County Jail:



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-strikes-handcuffed-hooded-man-while-fellow-officers-watch/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 14, 2018, 02:19:02 PM
    https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime--law/breaking-feds-planned-charge-gardens-teen-for-international-school-threats/0oRF1KCDKL4BWqB7Kgg0zO


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2018, 02:24:15 PM
    https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime--law/breaking-feds-planned-charge-gardens-teen-for-international-school-threats/0oRF1KCDKL4BWqB7Kgg0zO


     >:(

     :-X

    Quote
    Initially, the FBI did not want to charge Johnson because he was a juvenile and “believed a redirection approach would be the most beneficial regarding his conduct.” So in March 2017, the FBI got consent to “mirror” Johnson’s computer activity.

    Additionally, they spoke with the teen —who denied any affiliation with ISIS — and told him “to cease all social media activities related to ISIS and any other terrorist organization” and have no further contact with the Catholic high school in England, the report said.

    By the summer of 2017, the FBI said Johnson was back to making more online posts and that they were working to bring official charges against him, according to the police report.

    In February, the FBI said it had all the evidence it needed and that an assistant U.S. attorney had probable cause to charge Johnson.

    On March 5, Jupiter police checked in with the FBI to see where they were with the federal charges and the agent said the affidavits would be “coming in the next several weeks.”

    A week later, Johnson was in jail for the fatal stabbing in Palm Beach Gardens.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 14, 2018, 04:38:53 PM
    Sheriff who pocketed $750G from inmate food fund bought beach house for $740G

    An Alabama sheriff who pocketed $750,000 from funds meant to feed inmates is coming under fresh scrutiny for the purchase of a beach house that cost nearly the same amount of money.

    AL.com reported Etowah County Sheriff Todd Entrekin received $750,000 of “compensation” from a source he called “food provisions” during a three-year period. When AL.com contacted Entrekin about the money he did not deny he received it despite the money being “allocated by federal, state and municipal governments to feed inmates in the Etowah County Jail.”

    Entrekin like other Alabama sheriffs believe a pre-World War II state law allows them to keep any “excess inmate-feeding funds” for themselves. However, in counties such as Jefferson and Montgomery, any excess money is supposed to be given to the county government.

    In forms filed with the Alabama Ethics Commission, Entrekin reported he made “more than $250,000 each of the past three years via the inmate-feeding funds.”

    "In regards to feeding of inmates, we utilize a registered dietitian to ensure adequate meals are provided daily," Entrekin told AL.com in an email. "As you should be aware, Alabama law is clear as to my personal financial responsibilities in the feeding of inmates. Regardless of one's opinion of this statute, until the legislature acts otherwise, the Sheriff must follow the current law."

    Entrekin’s annual salary is $93,178.80, AL.com reported. However, Entrekin was able to purchase a four-bedroom beach pad with a built-in pool for $740,000. Entrekin and his wife Karen also own a two-story home in Orange Beach worth about $200,900.

    Some residents questioned Entrekin’s purchase, including one, Matthew Qualls, who was arrested on drug charges earlier this month just days after he publicly criticized Entrekin for keeping the fund surplus.

    Qualls who was paid to mow Entrekins’s lawn told AL.com in an article published in February he questioned why he was receiving checks for his services via a “Sheriff Todd Entrekin Food Provision Account,” when he knew of individuals in jail who had gone without meals.

    "I saw that in the corner of the checks it said 'Food Provision,' and a couple people I knew came through the jail, and they say they got meat maybe once a month and every other day it was just beans and vegetables," Qualls told AL.com.

    Qualls was arrested after police responded to an “anonymous tip” about a marijuana odor coming from an apartment where he and a friend were found inside. He was released from custody after taking a plea deal prompted by public outcry after his arrest. The deal requires Qualls to participate in the Etowah County Drug Court program, where he will be subject to random drug screenings, and must complete substance abuse classes instead of facing prison time, his attorney Sam Bone told AL.com.     

    Entrekin is also being challenged for his job this year by Rainbow City Police Chief Jonathon Horton. Horton has pledged not to pocket any excess money from the inmate-feeding funds.

    "I believe the funds belong to the taxpayers and any excess funds should go toward things that benefit the taxpayer," Horton told AL.com. "There's been a tremendous amount of money left over that shouldn't be used as a bonus check."

    Entrekin declined to respond to AL.com about his finances and multiple homes.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/14/sheriff-who-pocketed-750g-from-inmate-food-fund-bought-beach-house-for-740g.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 15, 2018, 03:23:39 PM
    Jury awards $33.5 million to parents of 29-year-old man killed by San Bernardino County deputy

    Nathanael Pickett had recently moved into the El Rancho Motel in Barstow when he was approached by a San Bernardino County deputy who suspected him of trespassing.
    A confrontation between the two escalated and Pickett, 29, was fatally shot. On Wednesday, a federal jury awarded Pickett's parents $33.5 million in damages, finding that the deputy had detained their son unreasonably, delayed medical aid and was negligent when he used deadly force, according to federal court records.

    The jury deliberated about two hours in the civil case, weighing conflicting versions of the November 2015 encounter, before returning the verdict. The sum, which experts say is among the largest in police shooting cases, includes $15.5 million in compensatory damages and $18 million in punitive damages.

    The county "tried to sell a story to the jury about how the incident happened that the jury realized, through the presentation of evidence, was not true," said Dale K. Galipo, an attorney representing Pickett's parents. The large award, he said, is "a signal that members of our community are no longer willing to tolerate these unjustified police shootings."

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-san-bernardino-county-verdict-20180314-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 15, 2018, 04:01:33 PM
    It seems that he chooses not to pursue the people he knows. Does he afford the same level of protection to others as well?

    Clark County DA Steve Wolfson kept quiet about aide’s theft

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/news/investigations/clark-county-da-steve-wolfson-kept-quiet-about-aides-theft/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on March 15, 2018, 04:04:47 PM
    Why does the law abiding general public need an AR15?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 15, 2018, 04:33:07 PM
    Sheriff who pocketed $750G from inmate food fund bought beach house for $740G

    An Alabama sheriff who pocketed $750,000 from funds meant to feed inmates is coming under fresh scrutiny for the purchase of a beach house that cost nearly the same amount of money.

    AL.com reported Etowah County Sheriff Todd Entrekin received $750,000 of “compensation” from a source he called “food provisions” during a three-year period. When AL.com contacted Entrekin about the money he did not deny he received it despite the money being “allocated by federal, state and municipal governments to feed inmates in the Etowah County Jail.”

    Entrekin like other Alabama sheriffs believe a pre-World War II state law allows them to keep any “excess inmate-feeding funds” for themselves. However, in counties such as Jefferson and Montgomery, any excess money is supposed to be given to the county government.

    In forms filed with the Alabama Ethics Commission, Entrekin reported he made “more than $250,000 each of the past three years via the inmate-feeding funds.”

    "In regards to feeding of inmates, we utilize a registered dietitian to ensure adequate meals are provided daily," Entrekin told AL.com in an email. "As you should be aware, Alabama law is clear as to my personal financial responsibilities in the feeding of inmates. Regardless of one's opinion of this statute, until the legislature acts otherwise, the Sheriff must follow the current law."

    Entrekin’s annual salary is $93,178.80, AL.com reported. However, Entrekin was able to purchase a four-bedroom beach pad with a built-in pool for $740,000. Entrekin and his wife Karen also own a two-story home in Orange Beach worth about $200,900.

    Some residents questioned Entrekin’s purchase, including one, Matthew Qualls, who was arrested on drug charges earlier this month just days after he publicly criticized Entrekin for keeping the fund surplus.

    Qualls who was paid to mow Entrekins’s lawn told AL.com in an article published in February he questioned why he was receiving checks for his services via a “Sheriff Todd Entrekin Food Provision Account,” when he knew of individuals in jail who had gone without meals.

    "I saw that in the corner of the checks it said 'Food Provision,' and a couple people I knew came through the jail, and they say they got meat maybe once a month and every other day it was just beans and vegetables," Qualls told AL.com.

    Qualls was arrested after police responded to an “anonymous tip” about a marijuana odor coming from an apartment where he and a friend were found inside. He was released from custody after taking a plea deal prompted by public outcry after his arrest. The deal requires Qualls to participate in the Etowah County Drug Court program, where he will be subject to random drug screenings, and must complete substance abuse classes instead of facing prison time, his attorney Sam Bone told AL.com.     

    Entrekin is also being challenged for his job this year by Rainbow City Police Chief Jonathon Horton. Horton has pledged not to pocket any excess money from the inmate-feeding funds.

    "I believe the funds belong to the taxpayers and any excess funds should go toward things that benefit the taxpayer," Horton told AL.com. "There's been a tremendous amount of money left over that shouldn't be used as a bonus check."

    Entrekin declined to respond to AL.com about his finances and multiple homes.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/14/sheriff-who-pocketed-750g-from-inmate-food-fund-bought-beach-house-for-740g.html

    holy crap!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2018, 12:37:48 PM
    Of course the killers were cleared, a pregnant teenager was killed and the taxpayers will have to foot the bill once again.

    Cops Murder Innocent 16yo Teen and Her Unborn Baby—No Charges, Taxpayers Held Liable

    Hayward, California – A family is suing the city of Fremont and its police department one year after their 16-year-old daughter was shot and killed by police when officers opened fire on the car she was riding in, and the department blamed her death on the driver.

    Elena Mondragon, who was pregnant and unarmed, was sitting in the passenger seat of the car with her cousin and two of their friends when they were followed by two undercover police officers dressed in plain clothes.

    The officers, who were also driving an unmarked car, claimed that one of the boys in the group, Rico Tiger, 19, was a suspect in multiple armed robberies and the BMW they were in was a stolen car. While the officers were already conducting surveillance around the apartment complex and they claimed they intended to confront their target before he left the area, their plan failed.

    Because the officers were in plainclothes and they were driving what appeared to be a regular car, the driver of the car Mondragon was in claimed the group thought they were being followed or robbed, so they began to accelerate to get away from the other car.

    Fremont Sgt. Jeremy Miskella and Detective Joel Hernandez responded by opening fire on the vehicle, and they used their AR-15’s to fire a multitude of bullets at the vehicle. While they did not strike their intended target, they did hit Mondragon. In a statement reported by NBC Bay Area, John Burris, an attorney for the family, criticized the fatal decisions made by the officers.

    “Shockingly, officers engaged in a series of egregious tactical errors and contravened their training and basic common sense, which resulted in an outrageous loss of innocent life,” Burris said.

    He also called out the Alameda County District Attorney for charging Tiger with Mondragon’s murder—while refusing to file charges against the two officers who actually killed her and who “acted with reckless disregard for department policy, safe tactics and human life.”

    In response to the shooting, Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Robert Graff acknowledged that Mondragon’s death was “unintended and tragic,” but insisted that Hernandez and Miskella acted lawfully and successfully defended themselves when they opened fire on Tiger—even though they executed Mondragon and her unborn child instead.

    Burris questioned why the officers conveniently failed to turn on their Body Cameras, even though they had been conducting surveillance around the area and were planning on confronting and arresting Tiger. In addition to the lack of footage from police, there were no cell phone videos recorded by anyone who witnessed the shooting, and Mondragon’s family believes that the lack of footage resulted in a lack of media coverage.

    “When there’s no video, that’s a battle for us. People just tend to believe what is reported by the police. The public just takes it at face value, and it just sort of disappears,” Melissa Nold, another attorney for Mondragon’s family, told the Guardian.

    In the year that has passed since Elena Mondragon and her unborn child were murdered on March 14, 2017, Sgt. Miskella and Detective Hernandez have returned to their jobs and are now free to carry out similar atrocities, forever influencing the lives of innocent citizens.

    As Burris announced the lawsuit, surrounded by nearly two dozen relatives who gathered to remember Mondragon, he said, “It is unconscionable. What has happened here is a cover-up for that botched police work.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-files-lawsuit-cops-daughter-car/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 16, 2018, 03:12:36 PM
    Of course the killers were cleared, a pregnant teenager was killed and the taxpayers will have to foot the bill once again.

    Cops Murder Innocent 16yo Teen and Her Unborn Baby—No Charges, Taxpayers Held Liable

    Hayward, California – A family is suing the city of Fremont and its police department one year after their 16-year-old daughter was shot and killed by police when officers opened fire on the car she was riding in, and the department blamed her death on the driver.

    Elena Mondragon, who was pregnant and unarmed, was sitting in the passenger seat of the car with her cousin and two of their friends when they were followed by two undercover police officers dressed in plain clothes.

    The officers, who were also driving an unmarked car, claimed that one of the boys in the group, Rico Tiger, 19, was a suspect in multiple armed robberies and the BMW they were in was a stolen car. While the officers were already conducting surveillance around the apartment complex and they claimed they intended to confront their target before he left the area, their plan failed.

    Because the officers were in plainclothes and they were driving what appeared to be a regular car, the driver of the car Mondragon was in claimed the group thought they were being followed or robbed, so they began to accelerate to get away from the other car.

    Fremont Sgt. Jeremy Miskella and Detective Joel Hernandez responded by opening fire on the vehicle, and they used their AR-15’s to fire a multitude of bullets at the vehicle. While they did not strike their intended target, they did hit Mondragon. In a statement reported by NBC Bay Area, John Burris, an attorney for the family, criticized the fatal decisions made by the officers.

    “Shockingly, officers engaged in a series of egregious tactical errors and contravened their training and basic common sense, which resulted in an outrageous loss of innocent life,” Burris said.

    He also called out the Alameda County District Attorney for charging Tiger with Mondragon’s murder—while refusing to file charges against the two officers who actually killed her and who “acted with reckless disregard for department policy, safe tactics and human life.”

    In response to the shooting, Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Robert Graff acknowledged that Mondragon’s death was “unintended and tragic,” but insisted that Hernandez and Miskella acted lawfully and successfully defended themselves when they opened fire on Tiger—even though they executed Mondragon and her unborn child instead.

    Burris questioned why the officers conveniently failed to turn on their Body Cameras, even though they had been conducting surveillance around the area and were planning on confronting and arresting Tiger. In addition to the lack of footage from police, there were no cell phone videos recorded by anyone who witnessed the shooting, and Mondragon’s family believes that the lack of footage resulted in a lack of media coverage.

    “When there’s no video, that’s a battle for us. People just tend to believe what is reported by the police. The public just takes it at face value, and it just sort of disappears,” Melissa Nold, another attorney for Mondragon’s family, told the Guardian.

    In the year that has passed since Elena Mondragon and her unborn child were murdered on March 14, 2017, Sgt. Miskella and Detective Hernandez have returned to their jobs and are now free to carry out similar atrocities, forever influencing the lives of innocent citizens.

    As Burris announced the lawsuit, surrounded by nearly two dozen relatives who gathered to remember Mondragon, he said, “It is unconscionable. What has happened here is a cover-up for that botched police work.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-files-lawsuit-cops-daughter-car/


    I can only think there is more to this story
    As how were they found not to be culpable
    As it makes zero sense for the cops to randomly open fire

    As for not having body cameras on & recording
    Why isn’t that a surprise to hear


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2018, 03:19:52 PM
    The cops were quick to proclaim this was a hoax kidnapping, meanwhile in other (actual hoax) cases were cops falsely claimed to have been attacked there were big and expensive operations to find the imaginary attackers.

    US couple accused of hoax kidnap win $2.5m settlement

    A US couple wrongly accused of staging a real kidnapping have reached a $2.5m (£1.8m) defamation settlement with the city of Vallejo in California. Denise Huskins was taken from a home she shared with boyfriend Aaron Quinn by a masked intruder in 2015. After she was found safe 400 miles away, a police spokesperson described the investigation a "wild goose chase" and the abduction a "hoax".
    Matthew Muller, a former lawyer, was convicted in 2017 for the kidnapping.

    The police eventually apologised but the couple's lawsuit accused the city and two police officers of defamation and inflicting emotional distress, US media report. The couple's lawyer said in a statement: "One can only hope that the message of this settlement will be that victims are to be believed and that the police will accept a woman's highly credible report that she was kidnapped and raped." The City of Vallejo admitted no wrongdoing in the settlement.

    After police did not believe Mr Quinn's story of his then girlfriend's abduction, the case drew comparison to the film Gone Girl, in which a woman goes missing in mysterious circumstances and her partner is placed under suspicion.

    Muller, who also served as a US marine, suffers from Gulf War Syndrome and is bipolar. He was arrested six months after the kidnapping for another home invasion, leading the federal investigators to identify him in this case. He is serving a 40-year sentence for drugging the couple in their home near San Francisco and kidnapping Ms Huskins for a ransom of $8,500, according to the SF Gate news website.
    She was released in Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles, after two days, but no ransom was paid.
    According to media reports, Muller even came to the defence of the victim when police first discredited the couple's claims, writing emails to local journalists describing what he had done.
    Ms Huskins and Mr Quinn, both 32, have since got engaged and plan to get married in September.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-43429346
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 16, 2018, 05:08:02 PM
    The cops were quick to proclaim this was a hoax kidnapping, meanwhile in other (actual hoax) cases were cops falsely claimed to have been attacked there were big and expensive operations to find the imaginary attackers.

    US couple accused of hoax kidnap win $2.5m settlement

    A US couple wrongly accused of staging a real kidnapping have reached a $2.5m (£1.8m) defamation settlement with the city of Vallejo in California. Denise Huskins was taken from a home she shared with boyfriend Aaron Quinn by a masked intruder in 2015. After she was found safe 400 miles away, a police spokesperson described the investigation a "wild goose chase" and the abduction a "hoax".
    Matthew Muller, a former lawyer, was convicted in 2017 for the kidnapping.

    The police eventually apologised but the couple's lawsuit accused the city and two police officers of defamation and inflicting emotional distress, US media report. The couple's lawyer said in a statement: "One can only hope that the message of this settlement will be that victims are to be believed and that the police will accept a woman's highly credible report that she was kidnapped and raped." The City of Vallejo admitted no wrongdoing in the settlement.

    After police did not believe Mr Quinn's story of his then girlfriend's abduction, the case drew comparison to the film Gone Girl, in which a woman goes missing in mysterious circumstances and her partner is placed under suspicion.

    Muller, who also served as a US marine, suffers from Gulf War Syndrome and is bipolar. He was arrested six months after the kidnapping for another home invasion, leading the federal investigators to identify him in this case. He is serving a 40-year sentence for drugging the couple in their home near San Francisco and kidnapping Ms Huskins for a ransom of $8,500, according to the SF Gate news website.
    She was released in Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles, after two days, but no ransom was paid.
    According to media reports, Muller even came to the defence of the victim when police first discredited the couple's claims, writing emails to local journalists describing what he had done.
    Ms Huskins and Mr Quinn, both 32, have since got engaged and plan to get married in September.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-43429346
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2018, 08:57:11 AM
    Laughing when the man was dying and then the video exposed their lies. Will they be held accountable?

    SLO County Jail inmate died naked on the floor as deputies watched, chilling video shows

    After releasing an inmate who'd been bound naked in a restraint chair for 46 hours, sheriff's deputies at the San Luis Obispo County Jail watched as the man writhed on the floor, lost consciousness and later died, video obtained by The Tribune shows.

    The footage contradicts county officials’ version of events leading to the death of inmate Andrew Holland in January 2017.

    [...]

    The video from that day shows deputies watching from outside the cell as Holland writhes on the floor, struggles to breathe and loses consciousness. Some deputies are captured laughing at several points throughout the footage.

    Contrary to the county's account of the incident, the video shows that Holland wasn’t “found unconscious and unresponsive” and was not “under the continual care of a physician” at the time.

    http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/investigations/article205363229.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 18, 2018, 01:42:34 PM
    Maybe his crime spree would've stopped if they threw him in prison for a few decades and took all of his money to pay his victims. But it seems that not only are his actions covered up but he is actually rewarded and promoted.

    NYPD cop known for bursting into homes sued 23 times costing city $280G

    The NYPD’s secretive disciplinary system for its officers has always been the subject of great criticism. In this series, the Daily News profiles the system through four cases that mostly played out behind closed doors, with the department hiding behind a controversial legal interpretation it believes precludes public disclosure.

    Quote
    They came before the sun rose, about a dozen cops in plainclothes who broke down the door to an East New York building and burst into a first-floor apartment. Inside — sound asleep — were Luis Vargas, 54, his sister, Lillian Vargas, 53, their elderly mom and a 5-year-old niece.

    They were jolted awake as cops tore through their apartment, breaking two TVs, emptying containers of rice and pulling clothes out of closets, the family said. Victims of ‘Bullethead’ cop recount shaky busts, traffic stops. One of the men — who the family later found out was Detective David Grieco — began barking questions at them.

    “Where’s the guns?” he demanded, according to Luis Vargas. “Where’s the drugs?”

    Ultimately, the cops — who did not have a search warrant — found nothing more than two bottles of sedatives for Lillian Vargas, who said she tried without luck to show police the paperwork from her doctor to prove the pills were legally prescribed.

    But it made no difference to the officers, who handcuffed her and dragged her into the January cold dressed only in a robe.

    Quote
    Meanwhile, a dozen lawsuits naming Grieco have been filed or settled since the 12-year veteran was first profiled by The News.

    Quote
    Despite the legal tangles in his past, Grieco’s career has advanced. Since 2013, he was promoted twice — first to detective, then last summer to sergeant, at which point he was transferred to the 67th Precinct.

    Quote
    Two years ago, the NYPD started shielding officers’ disciplinary records from public scrutiny, claiming any disclosure would violate Section 50-a of the 1976 state civil rights code.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nypd-bullethead-detective-sued-23-times-costing-city-280g-article-1.3881366
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 18, 2018, 03:34:55 PM

    I can only think there is more to this story
    As how were they found not to be culpable
    As it makes zero sense for the cops to randomly open fire

    As for not having body cameras on & recording
    Why isn’t that a surprise to hear




    http://abc7chicago.com/news/family-ids-girl-16-fatally-shot-by-police-after-stolen-car-rammed-squad-cops-say/1803628/

    Here is the news story from a more centered source. The one posted failed to mention any details like the suspects ramming into vehicles before shots were fired
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 18, 2018, 07:29:22 PM
    http://abc7chicago.com/news/family-ids-girl-16-fatally-shot-by-police-after-stolen-car-rammed-squad-cops-say/1803628/

    Here is the news story from a more centered source. The one posted failed to mention any details like the suspects ramming into vehicles before shots were fired

    Yes a Better account of the incident

    It still doesn’t justify unloading there guns into back of car & killing the young girl
    Clearly they wouldn’t of expected to be able to shoot the driver without causing injury
    To others.

    Sadly the gun culture
    Makes shooting the 1st priority
    It should be the last option a cop should use in most instances

    other countries don’t have this huge death toll racked up by cops
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 18, 2018, 09:40:03 PM
    Yes a Better account of the incident

    It still doesn’t justify unloading there guns into back of car & killing the young girl
    Clearly they wouldn’t of expected to be able to shoot the driver without causing injury
    To others.

    Sadly the gun culture
    Makes shooting the 1st priority
    It should be the last option a cop should use in most instances

    other countries don’t have this huge death toll racked up by cops

    I certainly can agree with your statement deadly force should be a last resort. I would say in all cases. I don't have any specifics on that particular shooting so I can't really critique it. It is a damn shame someone other than the driver was killed. I spent my youth staying out of stolen cars and hanging with people who did that kind of thing because it reduced the risk of me getting shot by accident.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2018, 12:49:05 PM

    I can only think there is more to this story
    As how were they found not to be culpable
    As it makes zero sense for the cops to randomly open fire

    As for not having body cameras on & recording
    Why isn’t that a surprise to hear




    There seem to be some additional facts to this story. It appears that one of the the persons who killed the 16 year old girl is the president of a police union and also he made a "donation" of $10000 to the campaign of the District Attorney who later cleared him. But this is just fine print and it is unlikely that anything will be done to the cops or the DA. Corruption at its finest.

    DA O’Malley Took $10K From Fremont Police Union Before Clearing Fremont Cops in Killing of Pregnant Teen

    Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley accepted a $10,000 campaign donation from the Fremont police union just months before her office cleared Fremont police officers of any wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of pregnant teen, Elena Mondragon. In addition, the president of the Fremont police union — Sgt. Jeremy Miskella — is one of the cops that shot Mondragon to death one year ago and was subsequently cleared by O’Malley’s office.

    https://www.eastbayexpress.com/SevenDays/archives/2018/03/16/da-omalley-took-10k-from-fremont-police-union-before-clearing-fremont-cops-in-killing-of-pregnant-teen
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 19, 2018, 12:55:18 PM
    There seem to be some additional facts to this story. It appears that one of the the persons who killed the 16 year old girl is the president of a police union and also he made a "donation" of $10000 to the campaign of the District Attorney who later cleared him. But this is just fine print, nothing to see here folks.

    DA O’Malley Took $10K From Fremont Police Union Before Clearing Fremont Cops in Killing of Pregnant Teen

    Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley accepted a $10,000 campaign donation from the Fremont police union just months before her office cleared Fremont police officers of any wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of pregnant teen, Elena Mondragon. In addition, the president of the Fremont police union — Sgt. Jeremy Miskella — is one of the cops that shot Mondragon to death one year ago and was subsequently cleared by O’Malley’s office.

    https://www.eastbayexpress.com/SevenDays/archives/2018/03/16/da-omalley-took-10k-from-fremont-police-union-before-clearing-fremont-cops-in-killing-of-pregnant-teen


    Hmmmm
    That is certainly shady business in my book.

    No she didn’t know when taking that $ they would be up in front of her
    Down the line, an educated gues would say that there was going to be
    Some cops up before her.

    That alone should raise questions about impartiality.

    No the young girl shouldn’t of been in a stolen vehicle
    And No she didn’t deserve to be shot dead by 2 gun wielding idiots
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2018, 01:00:31 PM

    Hmmmm
    That is certainly shady business in my book.

    No she didn’t know when taking that $ they would be up in front of her
    Down the line, an educated gues would say that there was going to be
    Some cops up before her.

    That alone should raise questions about impartiality.

    No the young girl shouldn’t of been in a stolen vehicle
    And No she didn’t deserve to be shot dead by 2 gun wielding idiots

    Indeed. So often we hear "wait to get all the facts", usually in the vain hope that police will be vindicated, but it so happens that in many cases when the facts come out they might not favorable to the police. The problem is that at that point nothing is done and it swept under the rug; no transparency, no accountability, no laws that apply equally to everyone.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 19, 2018, 01:04:33 PM
    Indeed. So often we hear "wait to get all the facts", usually in the vain hope that police will be vindicated, but it so happens that in many cases when the facts come out they might not favorable to the police. The problem is that at that point nothing is done and it swept under the rug; no transparency, no accountability, no laws that apply equally to everyone.


    Right - sadly very little accountability or transparency when it comes the police
    Right again - the laws clearly do not apply equally to everyone

    Police ethics still have a very long way to go.
    It is very wrong that they act like a big mafia at times to protect their own.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 19, 2018, 02:41:50 PM

    Right - sadly very little accountability or transparency when it comes the police
    Right again - the laws clearly do not apply equally to everyone

    Police ethics still have a very long way to go.
    It is very wrong that they act like a big mafia at times to protect their own.

    I suppose it depends on where you live as to the accountability or transparency. It's been my experience there was a high amount of accountability and the transparency allowed by law. But I certainly concede there are cases around the country where that isn't the case.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2018, 02:45:54 PM
    Transparency and accountability...

    Four billboards in Wichita, Kansas. They want justice for Andrew Finch.

    Four billboards in Wichita, Kansas.

    “Andy Finch is dead. If you believe in justice, it’s time to file charges.”

    The billboards refer to the fatal shooting of Finch, 28, who was killed by a Wichita police officer on Dec. 28 after being victim to a “swatting” call, allegedly placed by a man in Los Angeles.

    Wichita police haven’t released the name of the officer who fired the shot, and have only said that he’s a 7 ½ year veteran of the department.

    While Kansas law and written city policy don’t prevent the Wichita Police Department from releasing the officer’s name, the city has no intention of doing so, following an unwritten rule that the names of officers involved in shootings are not released unless the officer is charged with a crime.

    The officer hasn’t been charged.

    http://www.kansas.com/news/local/article205493299.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 19, 2018, 03:40:07 PM
    I suppose it depends on where you live as to the accountability or transparency. It's been my experience there was a high amount of accountability and the transparency allowed by law. But I certainly concede there are cases around the country where that isn't the case.


    That’s good of you as a retired cop to acknowledge that.
    Thanks.

    Then how do the public go about changing that if you have any ideas / thoughts
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 19, 2018, 05:16:57 PM

    That’s good of you as a retired cop to acknowledge that.
    Thanks.

    Then how do the public go about changing that if you have any ideas / thoughts

    I don't have all the answers, but I have an opinion. It takes a holistic or comprehensive solution, some of which is already in play in many departments but still has a ways to go in many others.

    The public should continue to put pressure on as far as accountability and transparency. But that also means the public needs to be fair minded as well. For example, we have a group in Austin that is anti police. Peaceful Streets Project is anything but peaceful. They wish all cops dead and no cop is good. Everything is criticized and so they have lost any credibility. No one listens to them. Be a critique but have an open mind. Attend some of the Forums the departments have where back and forth civil discussions can be heard from both sides.

    The police from the Top down, especially from the top down needs to demand from their officers or deputies professionalism. Lying even a little bit in a report should be grounds for termination. From the bottom up, the academies should be teaching Corruption of the Nobel Cause, the book I mentioned. Field Training officers should be compensated for their training of rookies, and held accountable. Any FTO found telling an officer to "Forget what you learned in the Academy, I'm going to show you how it's done" should be fired.

    Just from my observation, as people my age retire, and a new generation comes on board, it is a great opportunity to instill in them what should have been the back bone of policing from the start, to protect and to serve, emphasis on the serving part. Police should have a community mindset.. how can I help the community be better. Not just catching bad guys. You can catch bad guys all day but if the nieghborhood has no hope, blight sets in, and communities fall apart. Learn to work with community leaders to help improve the area. It lowers crime and makes to police job easier in the long run.

    When a cop screws up or commits a crime, make it clear where we stand. Police Unions need to get their act together and stop the politics. Call and duck a duck. The career isn't for everyone, and not everyone should be in the career. If someone demonstrates they don't belong, help them out the door to where they can be successful doing something else BEFORE they hurt someone or diminish public trust. And cops who clearly break the law should serve the maximum sentence. They had a badge, public trust and were expected to honor it. No backdoor deals or soft sentences for corruption or illegal activity.

    Just a few ideas on what needs to happen and I believe it will as I have seen progress in my time..   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 20, 2018, 11:49:04 AM
    Let's see if the killer will go to prison. Not holding my breath though. It is possible that they could overcharge him to trick the family and the public to a faint hope of justice, only for him to be found not guilty because of overcharging or a jury that is reluctant to sentence a cop.

    Officer who fatally shot Justine Damond charged with murder, turns himself in

    The Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot an Australian woman in July was charged with murder Tuesday after he turned himself in when a warrant was issued for his arrest.

    Officer Mohamed Noor turned himself in on Tuesday in connection to the 2017 death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. his attorney confirmed.

    The criminal complaint remained sealed by midday Tuesday, but according to the jail roster Noor was booked on a third-degree murder charge for perpetrating an eminently dangerous act while showing a "depraved mind." The second-degree manslaughter charge alleges he acted with "culpable negligence creating unreasonable risk."

    Damond was shot July 15, minutes after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her home. The 40-year-old life coach’s death drew international attention, cost the police chief her job and forced major revisions to the department’s policy on body cameras.

    Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was scheduled to discuss charges Tuesday afternoon.

    Noor, a 32-year-old Somali-American, has not talked publicly about the case and declined to be interviewed by state investigators.

    In a statement Tuesday, Damond's family praised the charges, calling them "one step toward justice."

    "No charges can bring our Justine back. However, justice demands accountability for those responsible for recklessly killing the fellow citizens they are sworn to protect, and today's actions reflect that," the statement said.

    A policeman who was with Noor at the time of the shooting, Matthew Harrity, told investigators that he was startled by a loud noise right before Damond approached the driver's side window of their police SUV. Harrity, who was driving, said Noor then fired his weapon from the passenger seat. Damond died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

    The officers did not turn on their body cameras until after the shooting, and there was no squad camera video of the incident.

    The lack of video was widely criticized, and Damond's family members were among the many people who called for changes in procedure, including how often officers are required to turn on their cameras.

    The shooting also prompted questions about the training of Noor, a two-year veteran and Somali-American whose arrival on the force had been celebrated by city leaders and Minnesota's large Somali community. Noor, 32, had trained in business and economics and worked in property management before becoming an officer.

    Then-Chief Janee Harteau defended Noor's training and said he was suited to be on the street, even as she criticized the shooting itself. But Harteau — who was on vacation when the shooting happened and didn't make her first public appearance until several days after the shooting — was forced out soon after by Mayor Betsy Hodges, who said she had lost confidence in the chief.

    Harteau's replacement, Medaria Arradondo, quickly announced a policy change requiring officers to turn on their body cameras in responding to any call or traffic stop.

    If convicted of third-degree murder, Noor could face a maximum of 25 years in prison, though the presumptive sentence is 12 ½ years. A judge could issue a sentence ranging from about 10 ½ to 15 years.

    The second-degree manslaughter charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, but the presumptive sentence is four years.

    Jail records show he’s being held on $500,000 bail.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/20/officer-who-fatally-shot-justine-damond-turns-himself-in-charges-pending.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 20, 2018, 04:26:28 PM
    In this incredibly rare case, even the police chief is calling for the killer to be prosecuted but the DA chooses not to. Even the killer's partner does not appear to think that the (now dead) man was trying to grab his firearm.

    D.A. declines to charge former LAPD officer in fatal shooting of homeless man near Venice boardwalk

    Prosecutors won't criminally charge a now-former Los Angeles police officer in the fatal shooting of a man near the Venice boardwalk — a decision that bucks an unprecedented call by Chief Charlie Beck to prosecute one of his own for a deadly, on-duty shooting.

    Quote
    "Having analyzed the evidence as part of our administrative review, I am in agreement with Chief Beck that Officer Proctor should have been charged with manslaughter," he said.
    I respect our D.A. very much. She is a personal friend. But I disagree with her on this decision.”
     
    Lacey's office said Thursday that she did not consider the Police Commission's decision, nor a $4-million settlement the city of L.A. awarded to Glenn's mother and young son, when weighing the case. The district attorney said she also did not factor in Beck's opinion.

    Quote
    Glenn was fatally shot May 5, 2015, as police tried to detain the 29-year-old after he fought with a bouncer outside a Windward Avenue bar. Proctor and his partner intervened, and a struggle began.
    Proctor told investigators that he opened fire because he saw Glenn's hand on his partner's holster and thought Glenn was trying to grab the officer's gun, according to an LAPD report made public in 2016.
    But video from the bar and statements from Proctor's partner disputed that account, according to the report. Glenn's hand was never seen "on or near any portion" of the holster, the report said, and his partner never made "any statements or actions" suggesting Glenn was trying to take the gun.
    Beck said Thursday that the footage showed that Proctor's belief "was not only incorrect, it was also very difficult to tell why somebody would come to that conclusion."

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-shooting-glenn-20180307-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 20, 2018, 04:53:13 PM
    In this incredibly rare case, even the police chief is calling for the killer to be prosecuted but the DA chooses not to. Even the killer's partner does not appear to think that the (now dead) man was trying to grab his firearm.

    D.A. declines to charge former LAPD officer in fatal shooting of homeless man near Venice boardwalk

    Prosecutors won't criminally charge a now-former Los Angeles police officer in the fatal shooting of a man near the Venice boardwalk — a decision that bucks an unprecedented call by Chief Charlie Beck to prosecute one of his own for a deadly, on-duty shooting.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-shooting-glenn-20180307-story.html

    Couple observations. Cops are not lawyers. The Chief could very well believe and KNOW that the officer violated department policy regarding use of force. He may NOT know all the criteria that goes into making a prosecutable  case like this one. For example, it's not enough that it is clear to those watching the video that the victim was not going for the officers gun. It is what could the officer see at the time and was it reasonable or unreasonable to believe he was going for the officers gun at the time. It must be looked at without the benefit of hindsight.

    Having said that, this case bothers me on a couple levels. Did the partner every communicate to the officer that fired the shot, that the victim was going for his gun? In my experience, when someone is trying to take your gun, you absolutely know it. and you absolutely announce it to your partner(s).  If I was in that exact same instance, and I have been in similar (I can't attest to the man's strength, what was being said at the time, nor what transpired prior to the video) before it ever crossed my mind to step back and shoot with my firearm I would first trap the mans hand that I thought was going for the gun, (which at that time I would have realized he wasnt) and used leverage to get him on the ground. Or would have deployed my taser.

    I think the officer thought the man was going for his partners gun. That wouldn't be unreasonable given the position of everyone. But I don't believe it reached the level of deadly force. I think the problem with the D.A. declining to prosecute does a disservice to the accused and the public. If in fact the D.A. thought it wasn't winnable then it would clear the officer at least in court and people would at least have had their day in court.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2018, 10:49:30 AM
    $1m is a joke for the 31 years this man lost. Moreover, 115 years for rape and burglary? Insane.

    Tennessee grants $1 million to wrongly convicted man

    A man jailed for 31 years for a crime he did not commit has won $1 million compensation.

    The Tennessee Board of Claims unanimously voted to compensate Lawrence McKinney, 61, on Wednesday.

    Imprisoned in 1978 for rape and burglary, Mr McKinney was freed in 2009 and formally exonerated in December.

    His compensation award is the maximum the state can grant him, after providing just $75 on his initial release.

    It is the highest amount Tennessee has ever granted.

    "We thank the governor, and we thank the board," said David Raybin, a lawyer for Mr McKinney.

    "Highest amount ever paid, but then again, no one was ever incarcerated for this long."
    In October 1977, Mr McKinney was arrested in Memphis after a woman claimed he was one of two men who raped her in her apartment.

    He was charged with rape and first degree burglary, and following his conviction in June 1978 he was sentenced to 115 years in prison.

    He was 22 years old.

    Thirty years later, in August 2008, a DNA test of the victim's bedding identified three people, none of whom were Mr McKinney.

    His conviction was vacated (or set aside) and he was released in July 2009.

    Mr McKinney says he was in prison for 31 years, 9 months, 18 days, and 12 hours.

    On his initial release, Mr McKinney reportedly received just $75 after three decades behind bars.

    "Because I had no ID it took me three months before I was able to cash it," McKinney told CNN.


    After he was freed, Mr McKinney sought a full exoneration - in other words formally declared not guilty.

    But in 2016, a parole board unanimously voted against him.

    One board member defended their decision not to exonerate him, writing in a local newspaper, "The victim's descriptions to police matched McKinney's description, to a tee."

    However, Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam went against the parole board's verdict and unilaterally exonerated him in December 2017.

    The exoneration meant Mr McKinney could apply for compensation. His lawyers, David Raybin and Jack Lowery, decided to push for the maximum allowed sum, $1m.

    "A person is deprived of their life and freedom," Mr Raybin said at the time of the filing. "In my view Mr McKinney is entitled to far more than $1m based on what's happened to him."

    Mr McKinney will not receive the amount as a lump sum.

    He will received $353,000 upfront to pay his lawyers and his debts, but the rest of the amount will be spread out in monthly payments of $3,350 over a minimum of ten years.

    The money will go to his wife or his estate if he dies in that time.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-43496741
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2018, 12:48:20 PM
    Good Cop Crosses Thin Blue Line, Helps Family Bring Officer Who Killed Their Son to Justice

    Versailles, MO — On Friday, special prosecutor William Camm Seay announced that Trooper Anthony Piercy is being charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,
    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”

    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.

    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.


    The stiff arm of blue justice was moving in.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    But as a true servant to the public, Henry remained resilient and refused to be bullied.

    His and the family’s efforts led to the case being reopened and taken over by Seay.

    “It was an investigation not concluded at that time,” Seay said. “She [Grellner] didn’t have it. We, my people, completed the investigation. There was additional investigation after Ms. Grellner stepped down.”

    When Seay was asked about the concerns of the law enforcement agency investigating themselves, he said, “That’s what I’m for. I don’t have any concerns.”

    On Friday, Seay announced the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree against Trooper Anthony Piercy outside the Morgan County Justice Center. The charge is a Class C felony carrying a punishment of up to seven years in prison, up to a year in the county jail, a $5,000 fine or a combination.

    The Highway Patrol said in a statement that it had placed Piercy, 44, on leave without pay. He is expected to turn himself in on Friday.

    Craig Ellingson, father of Brandon, announced they were pleased with the news but noted how long it took.

    “But it should have been a lot earlier,” he said. “I think it has been a cover-up from the beginning. They had everything. They knew what Piercy did to my son.”

    For 18 months, this family, along with the now retired Henry, have fought for Piercy to be held accountable in the death of Brandon Ellingson.

    “I never imagined something like that happening to Brandon. … I think he felt like he was safe with Piercy, because he’s a cop. But he wasn’t,” said Ellingson.

    “There’s been a cover-up from the beginning,” Henry recently told The Star. “They wanted to protect the governor and the merger and protect Piercy from criminal charges because criminal charges would be a black eye for the patrol.”

    While this news of Piercy’s charges is great for the family, Craig Ellingson insists that the fight is not yet over.

    “I feel some relief, but I still want to get to the people who have covered this up,” he said.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-refused-silenced-fellow-officer-charged-teens-death/

    A young man is dead and this is the "harsh" sentence that the man responsible for his death gets.. And it seems like he can still work as a cop. Of course, the cop who questioned this incident and filed a report was demoted and forced to retire. One of the few good apples helps to actually hold one of the (far too) many bad apples accountable but instead it is he who gets punished. Another example of the thin blue line. What a travesty.

    Cop Who Threw Handcuffed Man Into Lake and Watched Him Drown, Sentenced to Act in a Musical


    Versailles, MO — Nearly two years after Trooper Anthony Piercy was charged in the death of Brandon Ellingson, who drowned in the Lake of the Ozarks with his hands cuffed behind his back, the case was closed. Predictably, the offending officer got off with less than a slap on the wrist—just 10 days in jail and 50 hours of community service.

    For handcuffing a college student, negligently casting him into a lake, and watching as he drowned, Trooper Piercy avoided an involuntary manslaughter trial after he pleaded guilty to a simple boating violation in June of 2017.

    Last year, Piercy was sentenced for his role in Ellingson’s death and he received just 10 days in jail and 50 hours of community service. The judge referred to this insultingly low sentence of only 10 days as “shock time.”


    To Ellingson family and those who’ve been following this case, it was a kick in the teeth.

    “Ten days is like a vacation,” Craig Ellingson said. “It’s a joke. … He knows he’s guilty and he’s damn lucky to get what he got.”

    That kick in the teeth has become far worse now, however, as the family has just found out that this killer cop’s “community service” was spent working in a community theater—of which he was a part of before he killed their son.

    As the Star reported at the time, Special Prosecutor William Camm Seay requested Piercy receive 30 days in jail and have his law enforcement certification revoked for life. But that did not happen.


    “I wished we would have gotten what we asked for,” Seay told The Star after the hearing, and now he’s speaking out again.

    According to the Star, records show that Piercy helped create the set of the musical “Moses and the Burning Within” for the Royal Theatre in Versailles, Mo. He did some acting. And the trooper who had dabbled in the town’s community theater before Ellingson’s death also helped tear down the set after the musical’s run.

    “I thought it was a joke,” said Craig Ellingson, whose 20-year-old son died nearly four years ago in Piercy’s custody at the Lake of the Ozarks. “He had been in plays before, that was his hobby. That would be like me working at my company for community service. … Basically, it was a picnic for him.”

    “What good is that?” Seay said. “I think it’s totally inappropriate. He shouldn’t be given credit for something that he’s a part of anyway. I don’t think that’s what is intended.”

    What’s more, after the trial, the patrol noted that Piercy is still a cop and is merely on unpaid leave. What happens now with Piercy’s employment “is a personnel issue,” said Lt. Paul Reinsch, the Star reported.

    No one involved in allowing Piercy to achieve his community service for the killing of an innocent young man by acting in a musical has responded to the incident. Calls to the theater and calls to Piercy went unanswered.

    On May 31, 2014. Trooper Piercy arrested Ellingson under suspicion of OWI and negligently placed the wrong life jacket over the handcuffed 20-year-old’s torso. Piercy then drove his patrol boat away from the scene at a high rate of speed. Ellingson was thrown from the craft when it struck a sizeable wake, the life jacket came off, and he drowned with his hands still in cuffs while Piercy callously watched on.

    During the investigation, it was determined that Piercy did little to nothing as he watched Ellingson drown.

    As the Beast reported:

    Piercy did not jump in to save him.

    When a bachelorette party passed on a nearby boat, the passengers threw Ellingson a life ring “but they didn’t know my son was handcuffed,” Craig said. “Piercy didn’t say he was handcuffed.”

    The women told investigators that they screamed at Piercy to extend a pole to Ellingson, which he did “but he knew he was handcuffed,” Craig said.

    Piercy did not call a supervisor for help until an hour after Ellingson drowned. Footage from his boat shows Piercy having a chillingly casual conversation with his colleague, referring to Ellingson in profane terms.

    “I’m banged up a little bit, but I’m alright. I don’t know if I’m sore from treading water with the bastard,” Piercy told a supervisor of the dead 20-year-old.

    As The Free Thought Project previously reported, following the familiar full-court press to prevent officer accountability, the jury in a Coroner’s Inquest ruled Ellingson’s death to be accidental. It was subsequently revealed that Amanda Grellner, the prosecutor who declined to file charges against Piercy, had received a personal favor from the MHP three years earlier when the department declined to charge her then-18-year-old son with DUI.

    In September of 2016, a circuit court judge found that the state had “knowingly and purposefully” covered up the crimes of Piercy, violating the state’s Sunshine Law in the act.

    After seeing that they were getting zero help from the perpetrator and his subsequent conspirators, the family of Ellingson launched a campaign for justice. During this campaign, they were joined by Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant, Randy Henry.

    Henry witnessed first hand, the incompetence, negligence, and cover-up and took to exposing it.

    “We killed Brandon Ellingson,” Henry bluntly told the Lake Expo newspaper, following it with the question of “Why are we investigating ourselves?”

    In a conversation with Piercy the day following Ellingson’s death, Henry expressed concerns about how the arresting officer had conducted himself. Piercy himself seemed remorseful, telling Henry,

    “I feel like I drowned that kid…. I should have done more for him.”
    In any other context, that comment would be treated as a confession to second-degree murder.


    Henry then filed a report on the drowning and testified about the inadequate training Piercy and other water patrol officers received.

    During an interview with patrol investigators following the drowning, Henry mentioned a state law dealing with the safety of people in custody and how the police are responsible for the lives of those they detain. An investigator interrupted Henry and insisted that the recorder be turned off, to deliberately prevent an official record of his disclosures.

    The stiff arm of blue justice moved in and now we are seeing the results.

    Instead of Piercy being held accountable for his negligence, it was Henry who was then run through the gamut of the thin blue line. He was cast out by his department, demoted to corporal, and forced to retire.

    Now, the man responsible for the death of a star college student got off by acting in a play and can remain a cop!


    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-community-service-killing-brandon/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2018, 03:27:07 PM
    This is outrageous. Of course it was shoved in a 2000+ page "must pass" omnibus bill and unfortunately it was approved by the House on a 256-167 vote. The Senate has to vote by Friday.

    The Cloud Act Is a Dangerous Piece of Legislation

    The bill starts by giving the executive branch dramatically more power than it has today. It would allow Attorney General Sessions to enter into agreements with foreign governments that bypass current law, without any approval from Congress. Under these agreements, foreign governments would be able to get emails and other electronic information without any additional scrutiny by a U.S. judge or official. And, while the attorney general would need to consider a country’s human rights record, he is not prohibited from entering into an agreement with a country that has committed human rights abuses.

    That level of discretion alone is concerning. Even more, however, the bill would for the first time allow these foreign governments to wiretap in the U.S. — even in cases where they do not meet Wiretap Act standards. Paradoxically, that would give foreign governments the power to engage in surveillance — which could sweep in the information of Americans communicating with foreigners — that the U.S. itself would not be able to engage in. The bill also provides broad discretion to funnel this information back to the U.S., circumventing the Fourth Amendment. This information could potentially be used by the U.S. to engage in a variety of law enforcement actions.

    On top of this, the bill does not require that the Department of Justice or any U.S. government entity review individual requests for information made by foreign governments to ensure that human rights are not being violated.

    https://www.aclu.org/blog/privacy-technology/internet-privacy/cloud-act-dangerous-piece-legislation

    Statement by Rand Paul:

    Quote
    “Congress should reject the CLOUD Act because it fails to protect human rights or Americans’ privacy...gives up their constitutional role, and gives far too much power to the attorney general, the secretary of state, the president and foreign governments.”

    Quote
    But guess what? Congress can’t vote to reject the CLOUD Act, because it just got stuck onto the Omnibus, with no prior legislative action or review.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 22, 2018, 04:04:23 PM
    Not just the judge but the bailiff as well.

    Yes, exactly.  The one person who succeeded in outdoing the judge.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 22, 2018, 04:07:06 PM
    This is outrageous. Of course it was shoved in a 2000+ page "must pass" omnibus bill and unfortunately it was approved by the House on a 256-167 vote. The Senate has to vote by Friday.

    The Cloud Act Is a Dangerous Piece of Legislation

    The bill starts by giving the executive branch dramatically more power than it has today. It would allow Attorney General Sessions to enter into agreements with foreign governments that bypass current law, without any approval from Congress. Under these agreements, foreign governments would be able to get emails and other electronic information without any additional scrutiny by a U.S. judge or official. And, while the attorney general would need to consider a country’s human rights record, he is not prohibited from entering into an agreement with a country that has committed human rights abuses.

    That level of discretion alone is concerning. Even more, however, the bill would for the first time allow these foreign governments to wiretap in the U.S. — even in cases where they do not meet Wiretap Act standards. Paradoxically, that would give foreign governments the power to engage in surveillance — which could sweep in the information of Americans communicating with foreigners — that the U.S. itself would not be able to engage in. The bill also provides broad discretion to funnel this information back to the U.S., circumventing the Fourth Amendment. This information could potentially be used by the U.S. to engage in a variety of law enforcement actions.

    On top of this, the bill does not require that the Department of Justice or any U.S. government entity review individual requests for information made by foreign governments to ensure that human rights are not being violated.

    https://www.aclu.org/blog/privacy-technology/internet-privacy/cloud-act-dangerous-piece-legislation

    Statement by Rand Paul:


    The noose tightens.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 22, 2018, 04:23:10 PM
    Something is Very Very wrong with The DA's
    and Crime & punishment/ sentences being given out
    to cops Time and again.

    Its sad reading this continual on going thread
    Yes some of it my be biased reporting against cops
    Then there is the endless pitiful excuses made for them
    if this was a thread about Lowlife scumbags & there was
    never ending pitiful excuses being trotted out for them like
    the ones for cops we'd all be falling around laughing
    & the scumbags would be banged up.

    DA & others supposedly 'policing the police' might help if
    they treated all equally - This is Not Happening.

    Is it any wonder more & more people are fearful & anti police.

    Time to restore some Faith & justice.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 22, 2018, 05:48:57 PM
    Something is Very Very wrong with The DA's
    and Crime & punishment/ sentences being given out
    to cops Time and again.

    Its sad reading this continual on going thread
    Yes some of it my be biased reporting against cops
    Then there is the endless pitiful excuses made for them
    if this was a thread about Lowlife scumbags & there was
    never ending pitiful excuses being trotted out for them like
    the ones for cops we'd all be falling around laughing
    & the scumbags would be banged up.

    DA & others supposedly 'policing the police' might help if
    they treated all equally - This is Not Happening.

    Is it any wonder more & more people are fearful & anti police.

    Time to restore some Faith & justice.

    Yes, and it will only get worse as the middle class disappears.  Pure brutalization is in store for this world.  And it is rapidly becoming, simply, "this world" as seen in Skeletor's most recent post.  I really can't see how anyone finds this acceptable. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 22, 2018, 06:03:47 PM
    (http://s9.postimg.org/o5zxthpj3/evil_obama_1.jpg)
    "Join me as I help engineer mass migration, for corporate profit and cruel fun."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2018, 12:40:44 PM
    Unfortunately the CLOUD Act has been passed through the treasonous method of shoving it in a 2000+ page omnibus bill. It seems, however, that few care about this monstrous piece of legislation and its implications. Enjoy foreign police wiretapping on your communications with little or no control.

    Responsibility Deflected, the CLOUD Act Passes

    As we wrote before, the CLOUD Act is a far-reaching, privacy-upending piece of legislation that will:


    And, as we wrote before, this is how the CLOUD Act could work in practice:

    London investigators want the private Slack messages of a Londoner they suspect of bank fraud. The London police could go directly to Slack, a U.S. company, to request and collect those messages. The London police would not necessarily need prior judicial review for this request. The London police would not be required to notify U.S. law enforcement about this request. The London police would not need a probable cause warrant for this collection.

    Predictably, in this request, the London police might also collect Slack messages written by U.S. persons communicating with the Londoner suspected of bank fraud. Those messages could be read, stored, and potentially shared, all without the U.S. person knowing about it. Those messages, if shared with U.S. law enforcement, could be used to criminally charge the U.S. person in a U.S. court, even though a warrant was never issued.

    This bill has large privacy implications both in the U.S. and abroad. It was never given the attention it deserved in Congress.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/03/responsibility-deflected-cloud-act-passes
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 23, 2018, 01:06:03 PM
    The bad guys' prints are all over this.  This is a major, major hit from globalism.  It's a way to take information, to use the information, to advance with the information, that completely disregards the entire meaning of America.  It laughs in the face of America, and it spits in the eye of freedom.  And those who'd dismiss the idea of losing the 2nd Amendment, meaning they haven't been paying attention to what's already happened to the 4th, are now officially full of shit from this moment forward.  Not that it's any consolation or even revelation.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 23, 2018, 03:02:14 PM
    One thing I've noticed in articles from nearly every source, written about something like CLOUD or the many insults and assaults before it, is that the idea in question is always put in the least offensive way possible (no small feat in most cases) and, really, it forces me to recognize the power of The Gateway more than ever.  The chokepoint, sort of, between reality and the awareness of it, as seen by the masses of society.  I now believe that chokepoint is much more tightly controlled than any of us could've ever imagined.  To the point it seems there may be almost no honest information being presented for mass consumption, and that the most important things are the least likely ones we'll ever know the truth about.

    What Skeletor posted is from Electronic Frontier.  An outfit that by all means should be on our side and claims to be on our side, and yet it appears they'd gladly leave a person thinking only "oh wow, so a bank fraudster may get busted...  big deal!" when that's hardly what it's about.  I understand trying to use a hypothetical in a news story might get tricky, but that's exactly what they did (used a hypothetical), so....

    Doesn't add up.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2018, 03:50:02 PM
    No charges in case of news photographer shot by deputy

    SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - Investigators say no charges will be filed against an Ohio sheriff's deputy who shot a news photographer setting up to photograph a traffic stop.

    Clark County Deputy Jacob Shaw said he mistook photographer Andrew Grimm's camera for a gun when he shot him twice, once in the side and once in the shoulder, last year in New Carlisle, about 60 miles (97 kilometers) west of Columbus.

    http://www.wtol.com/story/37797566/no-charges-in-case-of-news-photographer-shot-by-deputy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 23, 2018, 05:51:38 PM
    No charges in case of news photographer shot by deputy

    SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - Investigators say no charges will be filed against an Ohio sheriff's deputy who shot a news photographer setting up to photograph a traffic stop.

    Clark County Deputy Jacob Shaw said he mistook photographer Andrew Grimm's camera for a gun when he shot him twice, once in the side and once in the shoulder, last year in New Carlisle, about 60 miles (97 kilometers) west of Columbus.

    http://www.wtol.com/story/37797566/no-charges-in-case-of-news-photographer-shot-by-deputy

    would love to hear the story on that one
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2018, 10:48:41 PM
    Innocent Mom Jailed for 5 Months As Cops Mistake Vitamins for Opioids

    Tampa, FL — Rebecca Shaw, a mother of four who has never been in trouble with the law before, ended up spending five months in jail because a field drug test falsely identified her vitamins as opiates.

    One night, Rebecca’s car ran out of gas and she was stranded on the side of the road. When an officer pulled up behind her she was hoping that she would get some help. However, instead, he asked to search her car.

    Not thinking that she was doing anything wrong, Rebecca allowed him to search her car, and when he did, he found vitamins and accused her of having oxycodone.

    “He said, ‘They don’t look like vitamins. They look like oxycodone,’” Rebecca told Fox13.

    The officer immediately ran a field drug test on the pills that he found and got a positive reading for opiates.

    Rebecca became one of many women and men to suffer horrific fates at the hands of negligent cops and their continued use of faulty field drug test kits.

    In fact, tens of thousands have been convicted and served time — even earning the black mark of a felony — for crimes they likely didn’t commit, according to a report, because the cases against them relied on horribly unreliable field drug test kits.

    So prone to errors are the tests, courts won’t allow their submission as evidence. However, their continued use by law enforcement — coupled with a 90 percent rate at which drug cases are resolved through equally dubious plea deals — needlessly ruins thousands of lives.

    Rebecca Shaw is one of these people.

    “My heart just sank. I said, ‘That’s wrong!’ It felt like my whole life was over. It was terrible,” she said.

    Rebecca was arrested and charged with trafficking oxycodone, and since she was unable to pay the $5,000 bond she was forced to sit in jail for months.

    “My kids were devastated. I was away for five months. I cried constantly. It was scary being in there and having a public defender that didn’t believe me,” Rebecca said.

    After Rebecca’s husband was able to raise the funds to bail her out, she had to wait another seven months for the official test results to come back from the lab, which ultimately determined that the pills were vitamins and not oxycodone.

    “They’re putting innocent people in jail and ruining people’s lives,” Rebecca said, adding that she was considering a lawsuit.



    Had Rebecca been falsely accused of trafficking these vitamins mistaken as opioids today, she could very well be executed for it.

    Sadly, Rebecca’s story is extremely common and happens every day throughout the US. The standard $2 field drug test, manufactured by The Safariland Group, have been proven to be unreliable. And according to the manufacturer, should not be used as a stand-alone test for convictions related to drug possession.

    Studies have shown how everyday foods, spices, and medicine tested positive in field drug tests. In one experiment, scientists even discovered that air could set off false positive for these tests.

    According to Forensic Resources:

    “The director of a lab recognized by the International Association of Chiefs of Police for forensic science excellence has called field drug testing kits “totally useless” due to the possibility of false positives. In laboratory experiments, at least two brands of field testing kits have been shown to produce false positives in tests of Mucinex, chocolate, aspirin, chocolate, and oregano.”

    Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, a Ph.D. chemist and former FBI lab supervisor, has also voiced objections, saying that he has “no confidence at all in those test kits.”

    According to the national litigation and public policy organization, the Innocence Project, at any given time there are an estimated 40,000 to 100,000 innocent people currently locked in a cage in U.S. prisons.

    Over the years, The Free Thought Project has reported on countless stories of odd things creating false positives in field drug tests. We have seen people put behind bars for possession of things like drywall, glazed donuts, crackers, kitty litter and baking soda.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-mom-jailed-for-5-months-as-cops-mistake-vitamins-for-opioids/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 26, 2018, 11:41:55 AM
    Of course he later tried to shrug it off as a "joke", but nevertheless people like him are candidates to lead "law enforcement". He also happens to be a "law enforcement training director" for a Community College.

    NC Sheriff Candidate: Kill Gun Owners Who Won’t Give Up Their Guns

    On March 7th, Democrat Sheriff candidate R. Daryl Fisher appeared in front of a Moms Demand Action meeting at the West Asheville, North Carolina public libary.  At the meeting, he professed support of “common sense” gun control laws. And now we find out he went much further.

    By common sense legislation, he means that he wants to see bans on full-capacity magazines for both rifles and handguns, bans on any weapon used by the military, and upping the purchase age for all guns to 21. And he endorsed a whole slew of new restrictions and regulations on concealed carry.

    And what would he do if gun owners don’t comply with the laws he’d like to see enacted? He advocated killing anyone who refuses to surrender their guns. “You’ve heard people say you have to pry my gun from my cold dead hands.” He then shrugged his shoulders, shook his head back and forth, and then continued:  “Okay…”


    The approving Moms Demand Action crowd erupted in laughter and applause. Of course. Meanwhile, would-be Sheriff Fisher just grinned.

    Here it is on video, which has gone viral:

    [ Invalid YouTube link ]

    (around 2:43 mark)

    As more and more Americans see the video of this would-be tyrant’s remarks, the outrage has only grown. First he released one statement in response, and then a second criticizing those spreading “false information and propaganda”.

    In the second statement, released on Facebook, he addressed his “cold, dead hands” remarks, claiming the statement was a “joke”.

    "I admit the joke was a mistake and I should not have joked."


    At the same time, he failed to apologize or even acknowledge the horrific nature of his remarks.

    Judging by the hundreds of caustic comments on his campaign’s Facebook page, his murderous fantasies don’t sit well with most Americans.

    The fact that Robert Fisher’s day job is as the Asheville-Buncombe Technical College’s law enforcement training director should cause even greater concern. Is he teaching young police recruits that it’s okay to shoot gun owners who bitterly cling to their Constitutional rights?

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/03/john-boch/nc-sheriff-candidate-kill-gun-owners-who-wont-give-up-their-guns/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 26, 2018, 11:43:57 AM
    Of course he later tried to shrug it off as a "joke", but nevertheless people like him are candidates to lead "law enforcement". He also happens to be a "law enforcement training director" for a Community College.

    NC Sheriff Candidate: Kill Gun Owners Who Won’t Give Up Their Guns

    On March 7th, Democrat Sheriff candidate R. Daryl Fisher appeared in front of a Moms Demand Action meeting at the West Asheville, North Carolina public libary.  At the meeting, he professed support of “common sense” gun control laws. And now we find out he went much further.

    By common sense legislation, he means that he wants to see bans on full-capacity magazines for both rifles and handguns, bans on any weapon used by the military, and upping the purchase age for all guns to 21. And he endorsed a whole slew of new restrictions and regulations on concealed carry.

    And what would he do if gun owners don’t comply with the laws he’d like to see enacted? He advocated killing anyone who refuses to surrender their guns. “You’ve heard people say you have to pry my gun from my cold dead hands.” He then shrugged his shoulders, shook his head back and forth, and then continued:  “Okay…”


    The approving Moms Demand Action crowd erupted in laughter and applause. Of course. Meanwhile, would-be Sheriff Fisher just grinned.

    Here it is on video, which has gone viral:

    [ Invalid YouTube link ]

    (around 2:43 mark)

    As more and more Americans see the video of this would-be tyrant’s remarks, the outrage has only grown. First he released one statement in response, and then a second criticizing those spreading “false information and propaganda”.

    In the second statement, released on Facebook, he addressed his “cold, dead hands” remarks, claiming the statement was a “joke”.

    "I admit the joke was a mistake and I should not have joked."


    At the same time, he failed to apologize or even acknowledge the horrific nature of his remarks.

    Judging by the hundreds of caustic comments on his campaign’s Facebook page, his murderous fantasies don’t sit well with most Americans.

    The fact that Robert Fisher’s day job is as the Asheville-Buncombe Technical College’s law enforcement training director should cause even greater concern. Is he teaching young police recruits that it’s okay to shoot gun owners who bitterly cling to their Constitutional rights?

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/03/john-boch/nc-sheriff-candidate-kill-gun-owners-who-wont-give-up-their-guns/

    Of course- like most statist tyrants. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 26, 2018, 11:58:05 AM
    Pulse club gunman's dad was an FBI informant, lawyers for shooter's widow say
    Lawyers for the Pulse nightclub shooter's widow said Monday that the government has revealed that his father had been an FBI informant for 11 years before the attack.
    Prosecutors told them in an email that the government found evidence on the day of the attack that Omar Mateen's father, Seddique Mateen, had been sending money to Afghanistan and Turkey, possibly to fund violent insurrection against the government of Pakistan.
    Salman, now 31 and the mother of a small child, is being tried in federal court in Orlando. It's unclear when the judge will rule on the motion to dismiss.
    Published 1 Hour Ago
    The Associated Press
    In this June 15, 2016 file photo, Seddique Mir Mateen, father of Omar Mateen, who died in a gun battle with a SWAT team after he opened fire at the gay nightclub Pulse early Sunday, talks to reporters, across the street of a residence owned by the family, in Fort Pierce, Fla.
    Alan Diaz | AP
    In this June 15, 2016 file photo, Seddique Mir Mateen, father of Omar Mateen, who died in a gun battle with a SWAT team after he opened fire at the gay nightclub Pulse early Sunday, talks to reporters, across the street of a residence owned by the family, in Fort Pierce, Fla.
    Lawyers for the Pulse nightclub shooter's widow said Monday that the government has revealed that his father had been an FBI informant for 11 years before the attack.

    They said prosecutors also told them in an email Saturday that the government found evidence on the day of the attack that Omar Mateen's father, Seddique Mateen, had been sending money to Afghanistan and Turkey, possibly to fund violent insurrection against the government of Pakistan.

    Noor Salman's lawyers say this new information — shared only after prosecutors rested their case — should result in a mistrial or an outright dismissal of the charges against her. Salman is accused of helping her husband plan the June 2016 attack at the gay nightclub in Orlando, where he killed 49 people.

    Her lawyers say the government's belated disclosure prevented them from exploring the possibilities that Seddique Mateen was more directly involved, and that Salman may have been framed to hide the government's mistakes.

    What is clear is that the federal government's failure to disclose these details have prevented Salman from getting a fair trial, her attorneys said.

    The government's "violations in this case have placed Ms. Salman, the jury, and this Court in a dark wood where the search for truth has been thwarted," they wrote, paraphrasing and citing 15th Century Italian poet Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy.

    Her lawyers' federal court motion filed Monday says U.S. Attorney Sara Sweeney sent them an email Saturday revealing some details of the FBI's involvement with and knowledge of Seddique Mateen's activities leading up to the Pulse attack.

    "I have just received authorization to disclose the following information about Seddique Mateen," her email said. "Seddique Mateen was a FBI confidential human source at various points in time between January 2005 and June 2016."

    This email was sent after jurors heard Shahla Mateen deny during cross-examination that her husband had any relationship with the FBI.

    The email also revealed other details the prosecution didn't tell jurors before resting its case against Salman, including the discovery in the hours after the shooting that "receipts for money transfers to Turkey and Afghanistan" made in the days and weeks before the shooting were found at Seddique Mateen's home, and that in 2012, an anonymous tipster had accused Seddique Mateen of "seeking to raise $50,000 - $100,000 via a donation drive to contribute towards an attack against the government of Pakistan."

    Defense attorneys say the failure to share this information in advance of her trial violates Salman's Fifth Amendment right to due process and Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial, because her defense would have investigated "whether Mateen's father was involved in or had foreknowledge of the Pulse attack," they wrote.

    Prosecutors told the jury that Salman knew Omar Mateen was buying rounds of ammunition for his AR-15, helped him spend thousands of dollars before the attack and knew about his plan when he left their home in the hours before the shooting. They also say she lied, tried to mislead FBI agents and had knowledge of her husband's sick fascination with violent jihadist videos and terrorism.

    But defense attorneys describe Salman as a simple woman with a low IQ, who was abused emotionally, mentally and physically by her husband. This latest evidence, they say, points instead to Mateen's father as a potential accomplice.

    "There are two viable theories of defense that could have been developed . First, Omar Mateen conspired with his father, rather than Noor Salman, to commit the acts," the defense wrote.

    "Alternatively, the FBI's purported interviews with Ms. Salman were directed to evading the negligence they exercised with their own informant," the motion says, and "to finding an additional culprit rather than their own informant."

    Former federal prosecutor David S. Weinstein agreed that if the defense had this information about Mateen's father before trial, they could have planted doubt in the minds of jurors that Salman was ever involved.

    At this point, he said, it's likely the judge will have the defense continue presenting its case to the jury while he evaluates the motion for a mistrial.

    "The judge has to digest everything that's in there and give the government chance to respond. He doesn't want to lose days of trial," said Weinstein.

    Ahmed Bedier, president of the civil rights advocacy group United Voices, has been attending the trial in support of Salman. He said Salman's family had voiced suspicions previously that Omar Mateen's father had a possible relationship with the FBI, but they lacked evidence to support this. Bedier also noted that when Omar Mateen was interviewed by the FBI in 2013 and not charged with false statements or any other crime, it enabled him to legally secure the firearms he used in the Pulse attack.

    "We always felt that there were huge problems with this case and suspicious motivations on behalf of the government to prosecute Noor on such little evidence. This new discovery is very revealing and raises a lot of questions about the FBI and the Department of Justice's actions in investigating the mass shooting," Bedier said.

    "They chose to protect their own informant and their own connection to Omar Mateen," Bedier said. "The fact that Omar Mateen's father was an informant for 11 years, and the FBI interviewed Omar Mateen himself in 2013, there's suspicion now that it's because of this father that the government closed that case."

    Salman, now 31 and the mother of a small child, is being tried in federal court in Orlando. It's unclear when the judge will rule on the motion to dismiss.

    As for Seddique Mateen, the government had listed him as a potential witness in February, but did not make him testify before resting its case. The wording of the Saturday email, cited by the defense in its motion, suggests the government still doesn't want him to talk too much in front of the jury: "If you should call S. Mateen to the stand, the government will not seek to elicit any of this information from him," Sweeney wrote.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2018, 12:15:55 PM
    Unhinged..

    Former Supreme Court Justice: Repeal the Second Amendment!

    “Rarely in my lifetime have I seen the type of civic engagement schoolchildren and their supporters demonstrated in Washington and other major cities throughout the country this past Saturday,” retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens writes in a nytimes.com editorial. “These demonstrations demand our respect. They reveal the broad public support for legislation to minimize the risk of mass killings of schoolchildren and others in our society.” And so . . .

    That support is a clear sign to lawmakers to enact legislation prohibiting civilian ownership of semiautomatic weapons, increasing the minimum age to buy a gun from 18 to 21 years old, and establishing more comprehensive background checks on all purchasers of firearms. But the demonstrators should seek more effective and more lasting reform. They should demand a repeal of the Second Amendment.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/03/robert-farago/supreme-court-judge-repeal-the-second-amendment/



    Democrats Introduce Ammunition Background Check Bill in House, Senate

    They’re either feeling their oats after the media gun control love fest this past weekend, or they just know that their increasingly left-leaning voter bases expect this kind of futile legislative gesture, no matter the chances of passage.

    “You do not have the right to bear bullets,” said Congresswoman and former Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz at a press conference Monday announcing the introduction of a bill that would require instant background checks to purchase ammunition.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/03/daniel-zimmerman/democrats-introduce-ammunition-background-check-bill-in-house-senate/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 27, 2018, 02:50:29 PM
    Of course- like most statist tyrants. 

    I wonder just by the comments and the fact this video went viral.. how many people just read the misleading headlines and went on a rant or how many actually saw the video where he went on to say immediately after "When you pass away, we'll come get it" THEN went on to say if a law was passed today banning guns, it would be UNCONSTITUTIONAL to take guns that are already legally purchased. I do hope you put more effort in reviewing your cases than you did on this one...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2018, 02:36:43 PM
    Cop Charged for Shooting 9yo Girl in the Head As He Tried to Kill Her Tiny Dog in Room Full of Kids

    Wichita, KS — Earlier this year, a cop was fired after he shot a little girl inside her own home. Showing that they are willing to hold their own accountable, the officer was charged with felony aggravated battery this week.

    In January, a Witchita cop was placed on administrative leave after discharging his firearm inside a family’s home—in a cowardly attempt to kill a dog—and hitting a little girl instead. Then, in an actual moment of accountability, Officer Dexter Betts was fired and he’s now been charged.

    The officer was hired last January and barely made it a year before being fired.

    According to Kansas.com, Betts becomes the first cop in decades to be charged in an on-duty shooting that resulted in an injury or death.

    According to the family’s attorney, the girl, hit by bullet fragments, was so directly in the line of fire when the officer shot at her dog that the flashlight he shined from above his gun barrel illuminated her face right before he fired.

    According to the charge against him, Betts “did … unlawfully and recklessly cause bodily harm to another person … (the child) in a manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death could have been inflicted, to wit: firing a handgun at a dog while a child was in the room.”

    Naturally, Betts’ attorney, Jess Hoeme says her client did nothing wrong and was totally in the right when he nearly killed a little girl to prevent the possibility of her small dog biting him.

    “I expect that this will be litigated at length because I firmly believe that Mr. Betts did not act recklessly under the circumstances, and we look forward to presenting our defense in court,” she said.

    As Kansas.com reports, Charley O’Hara, attorney for the girl’s family, said the child’s mother is pleased.

    “She said she was happy with the charge that was filed, and it was the correct thing to do.” Still, because of the shooting, “the girl is still struggling,” O’Hara said, without elaborating.

    According to the report, O’Hara praised District Attorney Marc Bennett, whose office filed the charge: “I think it is a big deal. I think there’s a tendency of certain government officials to treat law enforcement officers differently than the regular public for the same acts, and it appears that Mr. Bennett is treating everyone equally, which is very admirable.”

    Betts is now due in court on April 11.

    As KAKE reports, officers were called at around 6:15 p.m. to the report of a domestic disturbance and suicidal person in the 1500 block of North Gentry, near 13th and Hillside. Officer Paul Cruz said in a news release that officers were told a 33-year-old man in the home had held a gun in his mouth and choked a dog.

    When officers arrived at the home, instead of getting the woman and four children to safety, they went in guns blazing after learning that the gun the man had held in his mouth was under a pillow in a bedroom.

    “While the officers were retrieving the gun, a mid-sized mixed breed dog charged at one of the officers,” the release said.” The officer pulled his service weapon and shot at the dog, missing it.”

    The dog is described as a small 35-pound miniature English bull terrier name Chevy.

    The poorly aimed shot then ricocheted off the floor and a fragment of the bullet struck the innocent 9-year-old girl in the forehead just above her right eye. Had the bullet struck just an inch lower, the poor girl could’ve been permanently blinded or worse.

    Danielle Maples, the girl’s mother recounted the horrifying experience to the press noting that her daughter was sitting down on the couch when she was struck in the head. Also, her 6-year-old son was standing right next to the officer when he fired not one but two shots.

    The little girl was brought to the hospital and treated for her injuries. Luckily, Maples’ three other children were not physically injured. However, the emotional scarring left by this experience could last a lifetime.

    Maples explained how at the hospital doctors removed three fragments of the bullet from her daughter’s head showing just how close she’d come to being blinded.

    Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay reportedly told Maples that he watched the body camera from the officers in the room when Betts opened fire.

    As Kansas.com reports, she said Ramsay told her in a phone conversation “that what he witnessed was not only morally wrong but against their protocols and training.” He didn’t say why, she said.

    As for the suicidal man in the home, luckily he was not killed and completely cooperated with police. He was also brought to a hospital where he was given a mental health exam, according to the police statement.

    According to the Wichita Eagle, the case will be reviewed by the District Attorney’s Office in addition to an internal review to determine if department policies were followed.

    Sadly, police officers attempting to kill dogs and hitting innocent people in the process is an all too common occurrence.

    As TFTP previously reported, responding to the house of a woman requesting medical treatment, a Columbus police officer arrived at the front door and immediately shot her 4-year-old daughter when attempting to kill their dog. Fearing that a jury would award the family substantially more money, the Columbus City Council unanimously approved a $780,000 settlement with the innocent girl’s family.

    Prior to shooting the little girl, a police officer in Iowa shot and killed an innocent woman while attempting to kill her dog. The cop was not charged.


    While tasked with the authority to carry a deadly weapon in all situations, this heavy responsibility is often disregarded, with innocent civilians — as well as other officers — becoming victims in the process.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-charged-with-felony-after-shooting-at-family-dog-and-hitting-9yo-instead/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2018, 09:35:20 PM
    Outrage grows over police killing of Stephon Clark in Sacramento: '20 shots over a cellphone'

    Outrage is building over the deadly police shooting of an 22-year-old black man who was in his grandparents’ backyard, unarmed, earlier this month. Police had said officers were fearing for their safety, but critics have questioned why they chose not to resolve the situation with something significantly less lethal than a barrage of 20 bullets.

    Stephon Clark was shot and killed March 18 after two Sacramento police officers were responding to a report of somebody breaking car windows. Police said they believed Clark was the suspect and he ran when a police helicopter responded, then failed to obey officers’ orders.

    Police said they thought Clark was holding a gun when he moved toward them, but he was found only with a cellphone.

    The shooting has moved the Black Lives Matter movement back into the forefront. Two of the officers have been identified in media reports, which say one is white and one is black.

    Sgt. Vance Chandler of the Sacramento Police Department told Fox News, “At this point, the investigation is ongoing. Our department is committed to providing the facts of this case and conducting a thorough, comprehensive and fair investigation. We will continue to be transparent and update our community as we have updated information.”

    It is rare for police officers to be charged following a shooting and rarer still for them to be convicted. Oftentimes it’s because of the doctrine of reasonable fear: if prosecutors or jurors believe that officers have a reason to fear for their safety, they can use force up to and including lethal force.

    Clark’s relatives have said they're not expecting a resolution in their favor.

    “…We appreciate the conversation, but conversation without implementation of some true reformation means nothing,” Clark’s uncle, Curtis Gordon, told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday. “It brought us to this moment, but what about tomorrow? What about next week?

    He added, “You know, sadly, I have no confidence in America and the fact that I will probably hear another story sometime this year of an innocent life lost over excessive police force. It’s so common, you’re numb to it.”

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/28/outrage-grows-over-police-killing-stephon-clark-in-sacramento-20-shots-over-cellphone.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 29, 2018, 12:34:22 PM
    “(I was thinking) What can I do?,” Kirolos said. “He’s a police officer. I can’t do anything back.”
    Good thinking since if the "officers" were just barely touched, that person might have ended up dead with the cops claiming they "feared for their lives".
    Had this been a doughnut shop most likely we would've seen a SWAT raid with multiple employee casualties.

    Cops Angry Over Late Pizza, Storm Domino’s and Attack the Manager

    Jersey City, NJ — Two New Jersey police officers have been suspended without pay after multiple videos showed them attacking a Domino’s manager while on Duty. Surprisingly, both of them have also been charged with multiple crimes.

    Rodney Clark and Courtney Solomon are both charged with disorderly conduct, harassment and making terroristic threats after they stormed into a Domino’s pizza restaurant and began shaking down the manager.

    Marina Elsamina, an employee at the Communipaw Avenue pizza shop, told The Jersey Journal in an interview that workers there received an online complaint on Tuesday evening by one of the police officers, apparently over a delivery issue, according to NJ.com.

    Shortly after receiving the complaint, the officers showed up at the store and began attacking the manager, Mena Kirolos. The initial confrontation was captured on employee cellphones as well as surveillance video.

    After the officers threw the innocent man up against the wall, they then demanded he go outside. According to the video, Kirolos, and multiple witnesses, cops made several threats toward him while physically assaulting him and saying they were going to lock him up—over pizza.

    As NBC New York reports, Kirolos said at that point, the more irate of the two officers told him “I’ll lock you up,” and the cellphone footage then shows the manager holding his hands out as if they were cuffed as he says “please do it!”

    “(I was thinking) What can I do?,” Kirolos said. “He’s a police officer. I can’t do anything back.”


    During the attack, the manager called 911 and the officers then left.

    The dispute happened after cops claimed that the driver never showed up with their pizza. However, according to the Domino’s employees, the driver went to the address and knocked for several minutes but nobody answered the door nor the repeated calls back to the number.

    Instead of simply asking for a refund, these officers used their police powers to assault an innocent man and threaten him with kidnapping.



    “We confront customers every day who fight with us, but he’s using his police powers,” Elsamina said.

    “The prosecutor’s office will fully investigate the allegations against these officers and prosecute in accordance with the law to ensure that justice is served,” Hudson County Prosecutor Esther Suarez said in a statement. “Officers who abuse their power and break the law must be held accountable for their actions.”

    As NJ.com reports, the cops in New Jersey are on a seeming rampage lately as they’ve been the subject of repeated stories of violence and corruption.

    “Eleven cops, including the former police chief, have pleaded guilty in federal court to collecting pay for off-duty jobs they did not perform. Earlier this month, another officer was sentenced for striking a man with his police car during an arrest. Four others face charges related to a scheme to falsify timesheets. Four additional cops were indicted last year on charges related to a high-speed police pursuit that ended in a fiery crash on Tonnelle Avenue,” reports NJ.com.


    Both of the officers seen in the video below have been on the force since 2015 and they are now due in court on April 11.

    As for Kirolos, he just wants an apology—one that will likely never come.

    “I don’t like being cursed at, being touched,” he said. “I only demanded an apology. That’s it.”

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-thug-cops-suspended-for-attacking-dominos-employees-over-pizza-complaint/

    http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/2018/03/on-duty_cops_charged_in_altercation_at_pizzeria.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on March 29, 2018, 05:40:16 PM
    I wonder just by the comments and the fact this video went viral.. how many people just read the misleading headlines and went on a rant or how many actually saw the video where he went on to say immediately after "When you pass away, we'll come get it" THEN went on to say if a law was passed today banning guns, it would be UNCONSTITUTIONAL to take guns that are already legally purchased. I do hope you put more effort in reviewing your cases than you did on this one...

    No one ever said Soul Crusher is a good lawyer, if in fact, he passed the bar.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 29, 2018, 06:56:37 PM
    No one ever said Soul Crusher is a good lawyer, if in fact, he passed the bar.

    Im not one to judge too much on Getbig personas but having worked with many lawyers, I can't think of one that came close to what I see here.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2018, 02:49:33 PM
    Insane..

    City Forces Elderly Homeowner To Replace Garden with Grass Lawn Even Though She’s Allergic To It

    A couple in St. Peters, Missouri, learned the hard way that even though they are listed as the owners of their home, the city they live in still has the ability to dictate what is and is not on their property—even if they are allergic to it.

    Carl and Janice Duffner purchased their house in 2002, and they opted to plant a flower garden because Janice, 69, is allergic to turf grass.

    Then in 2008, the city of St. Peters passed an ordinance stating that homeowners must plant at least 50 percent turf grass on their property.

    The Duffners kept their garden and found themselves embroiled in a legal conflict when they were reported to the city in 2014.
    The City of St. Peters Board of Zoning Adjustment granted a variance that reduced the amount of turf grass required from 50 percent to 5 percent for the Duffners’ property.

    In response, the Duffners filed a lawsuit arguing that the 5 percent requirement was still not right, based on the fact that Mrs. Duffner is still allergic. After their case was repeatedly returned to the lower court, the Duffners filed a federal lawsuit in December 2016.

    The lawsuit stated that the Duffners believed the city ordinance is “unnecessary for the advancement of any compelling or permissible state objective” and that it “imposes a permanent obligation on the owner to cultivate and maintain that unwanted physical presence on their property for no reason other than that the government commands it.”

    The Duffners’ neighbor, Mark Letko, told King5 News that the people in their neighborhood love the garden and enjoy visiting it.

    “All of our friends want to walk through it,” Letko said. “I don’t know why anyone would want to take this pleasure away from her.”

    Letko also said that he does not understand why the city is putting up such a big fight against the presence of the garden when it is not causing harm to anyone—however, the forced creation of turf grass in the yard would harm Mrs. Duffner.

    “If it was there to harm people or something like that but it’s not that way,” Letko said. “St. Peter’s have just gone too far. It’s not drugs or anything like that. We are talking about grass.”

    This week, U.S. District Judge John Ross issued a 17-page ruling, which stated that the Duffners can be forced to plant turf grass in their own yard. He stated that the couple “failed to identify a fundamental right that is restricted by the Turf Grass Ordinance.”

    The Duffners’ attorney, David Roland, said in a statement that he believes this case could set a dangerous precedent because it proves that the local government has the power to threaten a family with thousands of dollars in fines and decades in prison because they refuse to add something to their property that will cause them physical harm.

    “The court’s ruling is bad for anyone who thinks they have a constitutional right to use their own private property in lawful, harmless ways, or to decide for themselves who and what they will allow on their private property. If the government can force the Duffners to plant grass instead of the flowers they prefer, there is nothing that would prevent a local government from forcing property owners—at their own expense!—to put in and maintain a fence or a swimming pool or holiday lights. And it is utterly absurd that the government can threaten its citizens with hundreds of thousands of dollars and twenty years in prison simply because they would rather have lawful, harmless flowers on their property rather than a plant that makes them sick.”

    The next step in this case is to file an appeal with the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. Roland said he is committed to continuing to appeal the case, even if it takes them all the way to the Supreme Court.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/city-forces-homeowner-to-grow-grass-lawn-even-though-shes-allergic-to-it/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 30, 2018, 02:56:58 PM
    SC is realer than Real Deal Holyfield.  You guys must've altogether missed the action from a few years back.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2018, 04:08:14 PM
    Outrage grows over police killing of Stephon Clark in Sacramento: '20 shots over a cellphone'

    Outrage is building over the deadly police shooting of an 22-year-old black man who was in his grandparents’ backyard, unarmed, earlier this month. Police had said officers were fearing for their safety, but critics have questioned why they chose not to resolve the situation with something significantly less lethal than a barrage of 20 bullets.

    Stephon Clark was shot and killed March 18 after two Sacramento police officers were responding to a report of somebody breaking car windows. Police said they believed Clark was the suspect and he ran when a police helicopter responded, then failed to obey officers’ orders.

    Police said they thought Clark was holding a gun when he moved toward them, but he was found only with a cellphone.

    The shooting has moved the Black Lives Matter movement back into the forefront. Two of the officers have been identified in media reports, which say one is white and one is black.

    Sgt. Vance Chandler of the Sacramento Police Department told Fox News, “At this point, the investigation is ongoing. Our department is committed to providing the facts of this case and conducting a thorough, comprehensive and fair investigation. We will continue to be transparent and update our community as we have updated information.”

    It is rare for police officers to be charged following a shooting and rarer still for them to be convicted. Oftentimes it’s because of the doctrine of reasonable fear: if prosecutors or jurors believe that officers have a reason to fear for their safety, they can use force up to and including lethal force.

    Clark’s relatives have said they're not expecting a resolution in their favor.

    “…We appreciate the conversation, but conversation without implementation of some true reformation means nothing,” Clark’s uncle, Curtis Gordon, told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday. “It brought us to this moment, but what about tomorrow? What about next week?

    He added, “You know, sadly, I have no confidence in America and the fact that I will probably hear another story sometime this year of an innocent life lost over excessive police force. It’s so common, you’re numb to it.”

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/28/outrage-grows-over-police-killing-stephon-clark-in-sacramento-20-shots-over-cellphone.html

    Meanwhile it was claimed he "charged towards" the cops.

    Stephon Clark shot 8 times, mostly in back, independent autopsy finds

    Quote
    "The entire interaction, he had his back to the officers," said Omalu, a pioneer and leading researcher on the affects concussions have on the brains of athletes.

    The first bullet hit him in the side with his back "slightly facing the officers," Omalu said, which caused his body to turn. His back was facing officers when a barrage of six bullets hit him. One hit his neck, the others hit his back and shoulder.

    The last gunshot hit his thigh, Omalu said, explaining Clark was either shot while on the ground or as he was falling.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/03/30/stephon-clark-independent-autopsy-results-announced-friday/472507002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 30, 2018, 04:23:21 PM
    Autopsy on Stephon Clark released.  Will be used against the cops, possibly resulting in serious destruction to them.

    A little aside, and probably unfair of me: Has anyone seen the clips involving Stephon's brother?  The dude is nuts.  He's the guy who grabbed tight hold of Sharpton on stage, and held a very uncomfortable looking bearhug on him throughout Sharpton's speech. 

    Every other time that he's been on camera, usually standing beside someone who's making statements about his brother and the cops, he becomes really animated with bizarre movements in his face and body.  He looks to be making expressions of hostility against someone in the crowd, doing it silently, and with the strangest effect I've ever seen.

    You'd imagine they'd learn to keep this kid somewhere else until the shit's handled.  It can't be helpful to put him on stage, certainly.  He's representing his brother, whether he realizes it or not.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on March 30, 2018, 04:24:11 PM
    Thank you, Skeletor.  Sorry  :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2018, 04:36:38 PM
    Autopsy on Stephon Clark released.  Will be used against the cops, possibly resulting in serious destruction to them.

    A little aside, and probably unfair of me: Has anyone seen the clips involving Stephon's brother?  The dude is nuts.  He's the guy who grabbed tight hold of Sharpton on stage, and held a very uncomfortable looking bearhug on him throughout Sharpton's speech.  

    Every other time that he's been on camera, usually standing beside someone who's making statements about his brother and the cops, he becomes really animated with bizarre movements in his face and body.  He looks to be making expressions of hostility against someone in the crowd, doing it silently, and with the strangest effect I've ever seen.

    You'd imagine they'd learn to keep this kid somewhere else until the shit's handled.  It can't be helpful to put him on stage, certainly.  He's representing his brother, whether he realizes it or not.

    I didn't see much of his brother but I'd imagine he'd be in a really bad condition if his brother was murdered like that by those violent criminals and may be overreacting I can't really blame the family in their grief since losing such a close family member is a shock and people react to death in different ways. It is not surprising that worms like $harpton show up in any case they can, he will do anything for fame and to stay relevant. I can't speak for the deceased's family but my opinion is that someone like $harpton getting involved just adds an unnecessary political dimension in cases of police brutality/murder and undermines their legitimacy, i.e. people and the media will focus more on a charlatan like $harpton and his politics instead of the deceased person and his killers.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 31, 2018, 01:59:59 AM
    Ex-cop worked with drug dealers, 'seized' cash from their rivals, authorities say

    (http://a57.foxnews.com/images.foxnews.com/content/fox-news/us/2018/03/31/ex-cop-worked-with-drug-dealers-seized-cash-from-their-rivals-authorities-say/_jcr_content/par/featured_image/media-0.img.jpg/931/524/1522480706877.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    A former Atlanta-area police officer has been indicted for allegedly stealing cash that she would split with local drug dealers.

    Lori Monique Johnson, 33, is accused of taking the money during phony traffic stops targeting the rivals of her associates, the DeKalb County District Attorney’s Office said, according to Fox 5 Atlanta.

    Johnson was charged with violating the Georgia RICO act and 14 counts of violation of oath by a public officer, the station reported.

    The former officer stole a total of more than $150,000 during three staged traffic stops beginning in March 2015, authorities said. They added that Johnson targeted drug dealers because they were unlikely to report the robberies to police.

    After each traffic stop, Johnson would share money with her associates and then receive a cut for herself. Johnson made various deposits into a local bank, according to the indictment.


    “The reprehensible actions of Ms. Johnson are unacceptable and do not reflect the high standards of the DeKalb County Police Department,” Chief James Conroy told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Her actions tarnish the reputations and service which is demonstrated by our honorable law enforcement officers each and every day.”

    The FBI was asked to assist in the investigation, Fox 5 reported.

    Johnson was released on bond Friday, the Journal-Constitution reported.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/31/ex-cop-worked-with-drug-dealers-seized-cash-from-their-rivals-authorities-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 31, 2018, 06:25:24 PM
    After 2 Years And No Charges, Video Released of Cop Threatening, Then Killing Alton Sterling

    Baton Rouge, LA — After the state of Louisiana announced that they would not be charging the officers responsible for ending the life of a man who had caused harm to no one, body camera footage was released showing the travesty that was the seeming premeditated murder of Alton Sterling.

    It took only 90 seconds for Baton Rouge police officer Blane Salamoni to threaten to kill and then kill Sterling that fateful night. However, it took nearly two years for the body camera footage to be released and for Salamoni to be fired.

    Now, for the first time since police killed Sterling, the public and the family can see the graphic videos that led to his death.

    What is particularly troublesome about the release of this video is the fact that Salamoni wasn’t fired until it was released — two years later.

    Police and investigators had this video evidence the same night Sterling was killed yet they did nothing with it and waited until their officers were cleared in his death before releasing it.
    Suspicious indeed.

    As the newly released body camera footage shows, officer Howie Lake II was already on the scene when Salamoni showed up. Sterling was not being combative and had simply been picking up his sales table for his CDs which he had permission from the owner to sell in front of the store.

    Police were responding to a call from a homeless man who some claim was disgruntled after Sterling refused to give him money and ran him off from the store. The homeless man reportedly told police that Sterling was armed.

    When Salamoni arrived, within a few seconds, he had his pistol trained on Sterling and was immediately threatening to kill him.

    As Sterling asks police why he’s being harassed and subsequently held at gunpoint for selling CDs, Salamoni threatens to kill him.

    “Don’t f—– move or I’ll shoot your f—- a–. Put your f—— hands on the car,” Salamoni shouts.

    When the officers attempt to get Sterling to put his hands on the hood of the car, a struggle ensues and the officers bring Sterling to the ground. One of the officers shouts, “He’s got a gun!” and gunshots then ring out.

    When the officers stand up, Sterling is in a pool of his own blood, the gun that he never went for remained in his pocket.

    “Today was a troubling day, it was a sad day, but it was a day for truth,” L. Chris Stewart, an attorney for the Sterling family told reporters after the release of the video and the news of Salamoni’s firing. “Truth that we don’t really see too often.”

    An internal police investigation into Sterling’s actions determined the officers’ actions “were not minor deviations from policy” Chief Murphy Paul said.

    Paul cited “fear” as the factor that determined why the officer was fired. Salamoni created a situation in fear and hostility and violence were used instead of de-escalation.

    “Our police officers are held to a higher standard,” Chief Paul said. “Fear cannot be a driver for an officer’s response to every incident. Unreasonable fear in an officer is dangerous.”

    Indeed, unreasonable fear is the reason cops in America kill more citizens than any other country in the world.

    “Today you saw that Alton Sterling was not some wild, deranged? Cocaine-filled, high, big black man who was out of control. The person who was out of control was Blane Salamoni,” Michael Adams, another lawyer for the Sterling family said.

    “Never once pushed an officer, touched an officer, kicked an officer, did anything,” Stewart said. “But yet he ended up dead.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/body-camera-footage-released-alton-sterling/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 31, 2018, 06:32:32 PM
    After 2 Years And No Charges, Video Released of Cop Threatening, Then Killing Alton Sterling

    Baton Rouge, LA — After the state of Louisiana announced that they would not be charging the officers responsible for ending the life of a man who had caused harm to no one, body camera footage was released showing the travesty that was the seeming premeditated murder of Alton Sterling.

    It took only 90 seconds for Baton Rouge police officer Blane Salamoni to threaten to kill and then kill Sterling that fateful night. However, it took nearly two years for the body camera footage to be released and for Salamoni to be fired.

    Now, for the first time since police killed Sterling, the public and the family can see the graphic videos that led to his death.

    What is particularly troublesome about the release of this video is the fact that Salamoni wasn’t fired until it was released — two years later.

    Police and investigators had this video evidence the same night Sterling was killed yet they did nothing with it and waited until their officers were cleared in his death before releasing it.
    Suspicious indeed.

    As the newly released body camera footage shows, officer Howie Lake II was already on the scene when Salamoni showed up. Sterling was not being combative and had simply been picking up his sales table for his CDs which he had permission from the owner to sell in front of the store.

    Police were responding to a call from a homeless man who some claim was disgruntled after Sterling refused to give him money and ran him off from the store. The homeless man reportedly told police that Sterling was armed.

    When Salamoni arrived, within a few seconds, he had his pistol trained on Sterling and was immediately threatening to kill him.

    As Sterling asks police why he’s being harassed and subsequently held at gunpoint for selling CDs, Salamoni threatens to kill him.

    “Don’t f—– move or I’ll shoot your f—- a–. Put your f—— hands on the car,” Salamoni shouts.

    When the officers attempt to get Sterling to put his hands on the hood of the car, a struggle ensues and the officers bring Sterling to the ground. One of the officers shouts, “He’s got a gun!” and gunshots then ring out.

    When the officers stand up, Sterling is in a pool of his own blood, the gun that he never went for remained in his pocket.

    “Today was a troubling day, it was a sad day, but it was a day for truth,” L. Chris Stewart, an attorney for the Sterling family told reporters after the release of the video and the news of Salamoni’s firing. “Truth that we don’t really see too often.”

    An internal police investigation into Sterling’s actions determined the officers’ actions “were not minor deviations from policy” Chief Murphy Paul said.

    Paul cited “fear” as the factor that determined why the officer was fired. Salamoni created a situation in fear and hostility and violence were used instead of de-escalation.

    “Our police officers are held to a higher standard,” Chief Paul said. “Fear cannot be a driver for an officer’s response to every incident. Unreasonable fear in an officer is dangerous.”

    Indeed, unreasonable fear is the reason cops in America kill more citizens than any other country in the world.

    “Today you saw that Alton Sterling was not some wild, deranged? Cocaine-filled, high, big black man who was out of control. The person who was out of control was Blane Salamoni,” Michael Adams, another lawyer for the Sterling family said.

    “Never once pushed an officer, touched an officer, kicked an officer, did anything,” Stewart said. “But yet he ended up dead.”



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/body-camera-footage-released-alton-sterling/


    WTF kind of Police / Justice is going on

    Why just why would the cops sit on that video for 2yrs !!

    Nope nothing remotely fcuking dodgy about that .... ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on April 02, 2018, 07:19:36 AM
    Total bunk move by me to comment on the Clark brother like that, when he may have been breaking down during his worst moment.  Not my own finest moment, either, but (unlike him) without excuse.  I can't even claim absent-mindedness, since I admitted at the time to realizing it was unfair. 

    Not right.  I regret it, and learned from it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on April 02, 2018, 03:58:13 PM
    I didn't see much of his brother but I'd imagine he'd be in a really bad condition if his brother was murdered like that by those violent criminals and may be overreacting I can't really blame the family in their grief since losing such a close family member is a shock and people react to death in different ways.

    You are so right.  If there were ever a time a person may snap, it'd be then.  If there were ever a time we could find sensitivity, it'd be then.  Everyone gets tested, then.

    Thanks for that, Skeletor.  I appreciate the reminder.  It's way too easy to become desensitized these days, and it shouldn't be like that.

    Quote
    It is not surprising that worms like $harpton show up in any case they can, he will do anything for fame and to stay relevant. I can't speak for the deceased's family but my opinion is that someone like $harpton getting involved just adds an unnecessary political dimension in cases of police brutality/murder and undermines their legitimacy, i.e. people and the media will focus more on a charlatan like $harpton and his politics instead of the deceased person and his killers.

    He's always on the prowl, looking to make contact with families as quickly as possible after reports start to surface.  No doubt he has a big book of tricks to take every imaginable advantage of that moment.  His motivation for doing what he does would probably blow our minds if we knew the full extent of it.  He isn't holding that position for reasons that are as clear and obvious as he'd like us to think, that's for sure.

    To the family, the advantage may be the focus he brings to their tragedy.  Knowing (or believing) his presence will make it less likely they'll be swept aside.  But on many occasions, too, he's been told to stfu and get lost.  He isn't a stranger to hearing that.  IMO it's because someone may have beaten him to the punch.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2018, 04:21:46 PM
    He's always on the prowl, looking to make contact with families as quickly as possible after reports start to surface.  No doubt he has a big book of tricks to take every imaginable advantage of that moment.  His motivation for doing what he does would probably blow our minds if we knew the full extent of it.  He isn't holding that position for reasons that are as clear and obvious as he'd like us to think, that's for sure.

    To the family, the advantage may be the focus he brings to their tragedy.  Knowing (or believing) his presence will make it less likely they'll be swept aside.  But on many occasions, too, he's been told to stfu and get lost.  He isn't a stranger to hearing that.  IMO it's because someone may have beaten him to the punch.

    Indeed, there must've been some cases where he's been told by families to GTFO but he probably still lingers around if there are people or cameras around so he can do his thing. He's a race pimp taking advantage of grieving families. He is a piece of shit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on April 02, 2018, 04:47:58 PM
    Indeed, there must've been some cases where he's been told by families to GTFO but he probably still lingers around if there are people or cameras around so he can do his thing. He's a race pimp taking advantage of grieving families. He is a piece of shit.

    Oh, yeah.  Nothing can stop him from (at least) appearing to represent something important in every attention-grabbing case he sees fit to place himself into.  What a joke, and how interesting MSM allows him to do it with blessings.  The hilarious situations are the ones in which the family does their best to make sure everyone understands he is NOT speaking for them and that they've told him to buzz off.

    Maybe he'd learn to quit being so insincere, since zero doubt in my mind he is NOT a slow learner (of all the things to be said about him).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2018, 11:37:32 PM
    A long but interesting read from the BBC (you know, one of those extremist, cop hating websites).

    When cops become robbers
    Inside one of America's most corrupt police squads


    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-sh/when_cops_become_robbers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2018, 05:40:26 AM
    https://nypost.com/2018/04/02/prosecutor-caught-having-intimate-relationship-with-cop-accused-of-raping-teen


    Unreal 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2018, 01:36:59 PM
    Will these perverted and violent uniformed criminals end up in prison?

    Cops Sexually Assault Innocent Man in Broad Daylight Because They “Smell Weed”

    South Hampton, NJ — One of the most disturbing videos illustrating the horrors of marijuana prohibition was released this week showing police officers handcuff an innocent man and publicly grope his genitals and probe his anus. The lengths the police state will go to prosecute otherwise innocent people for this plant were on full display as two New Jersey state troopers detained a man then humiliated and sexually assaulted him for nearly ten minutes in broad daylight.

    Highlighting the gross negligence associated with such a tyrannical and vile act — the public sexual assault of this innocent man turned up nothing. What’s more, the footage of the attack was hidden from public view and only discovered by accident.

    The traffic stop took place on March 8, 2017, after police allegedly saw the driver of a vehicle, Jack Levine tailgating another vehicle. When the officers pulled him over, they claimed to have smelled marijuana and then used this as justification for the disgusting and horrific act that followed.

    According to NJ 101.5, who first reported the video, it was published by open government advocate John Paff. He came across the case through happenstance — filing random public records requests, as he does across the state.

    Paff told New Jersey 101.5 he became aware of the search after the driver filed a motion to extend the 90-day deadline for a tort notice — the notification a person must give a government agency before suing it in New Jersey Superior Court. He then filed records requests for dashcam and body cam videos, according to the report.

    In the video published by Paff — from the perspective of Trooper Andrew Whitmore — Levine’s passenger, a coworker, is seen in the back of one troop car, and Levine in the other. Whitmore tells the passenger that “it’s not like TV” — that marijuana possession isn’t an offense that will land him in jail — and urges him to disclose where the pot the troopers say they smelled might be. But the passenger says it’s not his car, and he doesn’t have any marijuana.
    As the video shows, once cops claimed to smell the weed, they used this as probable cause to detain Levine and his passenger and search the vehicle with no warrant.

    After finding nothing in Levine’s pockets and the vehicle turning up empty as well, trooper Whitmore urged trooper Joseph Drew to turn their attention on this innocent man’s most private parts.

    “He might have stashed it somewhere …” Whitmore says.

    “That’s what I’m thinking,” Drew responds.

    “… stashed it somewhere where we can’t just … physically can’t … it’s not in his pockets,” Whitmore says.

    As we see in the video, this is when the nightmare begins.

    “Am I free to go?” Levine asks before the sexual assault.

    “Not at this point, no”
    Whitmore tells him.

    “Am I under arrest?”

    “Yes. you are.”

    “For what?”

    “You’re under arrest for the odor of marijuana.”

    “So now you can get arrested for somebody smelling something? What is that all about?”
    Levine says.

    The officers tell Levine they might bring him back to their station for a strip search.

    “If that’s you guys trying to scare me into telling on myself for something I didn’t even do wrong, then it’s not going to work,” he says.

    Later in the video, Drew then pulls Levine aside and begins the search.

    “If you think this is the worst thing I’m going to do to you right now, you have another think coming my friend,” trooper Drew says as he searches the outside of Levine’s pants, premeditating the public sexual assault.

    “Try not to rape me, already,” Levine says, halfway joking, not knowing that this was actually about to happen.

    For several minutes, Drew proceeds to savagely poke, prod, and molest this innocent man as he finds nothing.

    “Whoa, whoa, whoa,” screams Levine as the the trooper physically grabs his penis while violently ramming his fingers into the innocent man’s anus.

    Drew then yells at Levine to stop squirming as he sexually assaults him — as if it is easy to sit passively by as an armed man who has kidnapped you on the side of the road attempts to sexually assault you in search of a plant.

    At the end of the assault, the troopers then let Levine and his passenger go but not before they gave him a ticket for following too close.

    The Free Thought Project contacted the New Jersey State Police who said they were aware of the video and were going to release a statement. TFTP has also confirmed that both troopers are currently on active duty.

    “It was the most humiliating experience I’ve ever been through, also due to the fact people were driving by very slowly (sic), watching him with his hand down my pants,” Levine said.

    Below is this graphic footage. Warning, it may be extremely disturbing to some viewers. When watching the video below, ask yourself who the real criminals are.

    If you’d like to express your peaceful protest about this incident to the New Jersey State Police their information is below:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewJerseyStatePolice/
    Twitter: https://twitter.com/NJSP
    Trooper Joseph Drew
    Trooper Andrew Whitmore
    Phone number: 609-882-2000
    Email: http://www.nj.gov/lps/formmail.htm



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cops-assault-innocent-man-in-broad-daylight-because-they-smelled-weed/


    Cops searched man's anus on road — never found pot

    http://nj1015.com/cops-searched-mans-anus-along-road-for-mystery-pot-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2018, 02:24:44 PM
    Feds: There are hostile stingrays in DC, but we don’t know how to find them
    There’s also “anomalous activity”—probably stingrays—in other US cities, too.


    The federal government has formally acknowledged for the first time that it has located suspected and unauthorized cell-site simulators in various parts of Washington, DC.
    The revelation, which was reported for the first time on Tuesday by the Associated Press, was described in a letter recently released from the Department of Homeland Security to the offices of Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon).

    "Overall, [DHS' National Protection and Programs Directorate] believes the malicious use of IMSI catchers is a real and growing risk," wrote Christopher Krebs, DHS' acting undersecretary, in a March 26, 2018 letter to Wyden.

    The letter and attached questionnaire say that DHS had not determined who is operating the simulators, how many it found, or where they were located.

    DHS also said that its NPPD is "not aware of any current DHS technical capability to detect IMSI catchers." The agency did not explain precisely how it was able to observe "anomalous activity" that "appears to be consistent" with cell-site simulators.

    The devices, which are also known as stingrays or IMSI catchers, are commonly used by domestic law enforcement nationwide to locate a particular phone. Sometimes, they can also be used to intercept text messages and phone calls. Stingrays act as a fake cell tower and effectively trick a cell phone into transmitting to it, which gives up the phone’s location.

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/04/dhs-to-senator-malicious-use-of-stingrays-is-a-real-and-growing-risk/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2018, 03:26:57 PM
    Supreme Court shields a police officer from being sued for shooting a woman in her front yard

    The Supreme Court on Monday shielded a police officer from being sued for shooting an Arizona woman in her front yard, once again making it harder to bring legal action against officers who use excessive force, even against an innocent person.

    With two dissents, the high court tossed out a lawsuit by a Tucson woman who was shot four times outside her home because she was seen carrying a large knife.
    The ruling — which comes at a time of growing controversy over police shootings nationwide — effectively advises courts to rely more heavily on the officer's view of such incidents, rather than the victim's.

    http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-supreme-court-police-shooting-20180402-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2018, 05:51:01 PM
    Graphic New Videos Show a Cop Try to Kill A Man for Improperly Crossing the Street

    Asheville, NC – Crossing the street in a manner deemed “illegal” by the state can and will get you beaten, shot, kidnapped, caged, and even killed. Body Camera footage was released last month illustrating this dangerous reality. The video shows one police officer restraining a man down while another officer repeatedly punches him in the head after they confronted him for the “crime” of jaywalking. Last month, in an extremely rare move by the District Attorney, the cop who was recorded doing the beating has been criminally charged and arrested.

    Now, this week, the department has released all the video from the attack which provides new insight into the nature of this most brutal encounter and illustrates why the officer was charged.

    District Attorney Todd Williams announced early last month that former officer Chris Hickman, 31, is facing charges of felony assault by strangulation, and misdemeanor assault inflicting serious injury and communicating threats, according to the Citizen-Times.

    Hickman then posted $10,000 bail and was released.

    The department attempted to keep the video below from the public eye, however, the city of Asheville petitioned the courts to release all the footage related to the incident. On March 26th, a judge ruled that they were to be released, and this week, nine videos were published online.

    As TFTP reported last month, Johnnie Jermaine Rush, 33, had just finished a 13-hour shift at a local Cracker Barrel restaurant and was leaving a store on his way home when he was approached by Verino Ruggiero, an officer in training. In the Body Cam footage published by the Citizen-Times, Ruggiero claimed he had warned Rush about jaywalking.

    “All I’m trying to do is go home, man. I‘m tired. I just got off work,” Rush replied.

    The originally relased footage was from a camera worn by Hickman, who was in the patrol car with Ruggiero. While Ruggiero was the one directly confronting Rush, Hickman stood on the other side of the vehicle.

    “I’ve got two options: I can either arrest you or write you a ticket,” Ruggiero told Rush.

    “It doesn’t matter to me, man. Do what you have got to do, besides keep harassing me,” Rush replied.

    “I’m not harassing you,” Ruggiero insisted.

    “That’s all in your mind, man,” Hickman interjected. He then directed his attention towards his fellow officer and said, “Just write him a ticket. He wants to act like a punk.”

    It is clear from the Body Cam footage that traffic was light at that time of night, and the Citizen-Times noted that the confrontation happened near a corner were hundreds of pedestrians typically cross without using a crosswalk before and after games at a nearby baseball field.

    When Rush let out an exasperated string of obscenities, Hickman apparently decided that a ticket was not enough. He began marching towards Rush, pointing his finger at him and yelling, “Put your hands behind your back! Don’t! Don’t! Do NOT! Stop, drop the bag. Put your hands behind your back.”

    “OK, OK,” Rush responded before he slipped from the officer’s grasp and started running in the opposite direction.

    “Motherf—ker … thinks it’s funny. You know what’s funny is that you’re going to get f—ked up hardcore!” Hickman yelled as he pulled out his Taser and chased after Rush.

    Rush stopped running and both officers forced him to the ground and piled on top of him. While both Hickman and Ruggiero restrained Rush on the ground, Hickman is seen on the Body Cam footage punching him in the head several times.

    “I can’t breathe!” Rush cried out multiple times as he was punched repeatedly and hit with the officer’s Taser twice. He was taken to the hospital after the incident, and he told the Citizen-Times that while he was there, “Hickman was abusive to him and used a racial slur.”

    Rush was initially charged with assault on a government official; resisting, delaying and obstructing an officer; trespass and traffic offenses. However, those charges have all been dismissed.

    After watching the videos below, it becomes entirely clear as to why the charges against Rush were dropped and charges against Hickman were brought. (videos available on article below)

    According to the Citizen Times, in response Monday to questions about the videos, including the portions that appear to show Rush being strangled, Hickman’s attorney Thomas Amburgey said, “nothing is clear cut.”

    He gave no further comment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/crossing-street-body-camera-footage-beating/


    It is extremely rare that we see cops charged when they become violent and attack people - in this case one of them is charged with 1 felony and 2 misdemeanors. Now the "Sheriff" is whining about "anti-law enforcement agenda" even though the calls were mostly about "reviewing policies", funding "training" and establishing independent bodies that will investigate abuse and use of force incidents. Training is not enough. Criminals must be punished, and those of the badge holding variety who violently attack and abuse others should be punished extremely harshly.

    Sheriff slams county's call for more police training as a 'slap in the face,' says it drives 'anti-law enforcement agenda'

    Calls for training by officials in North Carolina after police released video of an officer punching and choking a black pedestrian have angered the county’s sheriff, who says doing so drives “anti-law enforcement agenda.”

    Three Democratic Buncombe commissioners issued a statement on Tuesday asking to fund training for all law enforcement within the county, the Asheville Citizen-Times reported.

    This comes just one day after officials released a video from 2017 showing Officer Christopher Hickman subduing and punching Johnnie Jermaine Rush, 33, for allegedly jaywalking.

    Rush can also be seen screaming in pain after being shocked with a stun gun.

    Hickman is facing a felony assault charge.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/03/sheriff-slams-countys-call-for-more-police-training-as-slap-in-face-says-it-drives-anti-law-enforcement-agenda.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2018, 12:05:00 PM
    "No one wants to take away your guns".  ::)
    Except, they do. Of course cops, even retired ones, are exempt from this "ordinance".

    Town Bypasses Constitution, US Citizens Given 60 Days to Turn in Guns Or Become Criminals

    As the state promises gun rights activists they’re not coming for their guns, behind the scences they’re pleading for it to happen. And now the feared gun grab is occurring. Residents in Deerfield, Illinois have 60 days to surrender their “assault weapons” or face fines of $1000 per day per gun.

    The gun ban ordinance was passed on April 2nd with residents left with few choices of how to dispose of their valuable “assault weapons.” Upon careful reading of the ordinance, residents will be left with revolvers, .22 caliber “plinking” rifles, and double barrel shotguns to defend their homes and families from criminals who could care less about the law.

    Fines for not disposing of the weapons range from $250 to $1000 per day per gun for those who choose not to comply with the city’s ordinance. While a fine may seem reasonable to some, as TFTP has reported on multiple occasions, failure to pay fines always results in police action. It is not far-fetched to predict major turmoil and arrests in the event of non-compliance.

    One example of the so-called “assault weapon” is the Ruger 10/22 which can accept magazines that hold more than 10 rounds. Even though the 10/22 is not listed in the list of guns the village wants to see banned, the gun cannot legally be possessed in the village.

    Residents have been instructed to either sell their guns, transfer the ownership to someone who lives outside the village, surrender their guns to Deerfield’s sheriff, or begin paying the fines.

    Deerfield mentioned a number of cities where mass shootings took place, including Sutherland Springs, TX where 26 people were killed in the First Baptist Church. That shooting was actually stopped by a man who used the very gun Deerfield voted to ban. No mention was made of that fact in the ordinance.

    Also included in the gun ban were semi-automatic pistols which can accept higher than 10 round magazines. That’s virtually all full size semi-automatic pistols.

    Even though the village trustees ignored the pleas of residents to leave their guns alone, and passed the ordinance anyway, many residents were encouraged to ignore the gun ban and engage in civil disobedience.

    Joel Siegel, a resident of Lincolnwood, warned the village’s residents that governments all across the world have moved to confiscate guns then turned around and ran roughshod over the people. He said, “There’s an ancient and honored American tradition called disobeying an unjust law…I have urged (people) to listen to their conscience and if so moved do not obey this law.”

    Deerfield Mayor Harriet Rosenthal implied the students from the local high school helped sway her decision to bring about the ordinance. “Enough is enough,” Rosenthal said adding, “Those students are so articulate just like our students. There is no place here for assault weapons.”

    The statement mirrors the knee jerk reaction to ban guns following a nationwide public outcry of students who supposedly feared for their own lives following the recent mass shooting in Florida.

    Opponents of the gun grab vow to fight the action in court while others praised the trustees decision to ban semiautomatic rifles, pistols and shotguns. Ariella Kharasch, a Deerfield High School senior said she wants more action to be taken on both a local and national level.

    “This is our fight…This is our generation’s fight. We’re going to keep fighting and this is part of it. Change happens gradually step by step. The fight does not end at the borders of our village.,” Kharasch said.

    Predictably, law enforcement and retired law enforcement members of the community are exempted from the ban. Currently, in the U.S., law enforcement kills around 1,200 citizens per year. Ironically, that number is actually four times higher than those who die from rifles.

    As TFTP has reported, cops have killed 450 percent more people than have died in the past forty years of mass shootings.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/illinois-town-residents-turn-guns/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 08, 2018, 07:43:03 PM
    NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

    A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

    The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

    Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

    New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

    Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

    But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

    “Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 08, 2018, 07:54:55 PM
    NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

    A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

    The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

    Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

    New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

    Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

    But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

    “Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217


    That’s the way to in still a sense of confidence & honesty into the public

    1 rule for them - and a different rule for public

    Not good not good at all.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 08, 2018, 07:59:22 PM

    That’s the way to in still a sense of confidence & honesty into the public

    1 rule for them - and a different rule for public

    Not good not good at all.

    A felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct downgraded to a "health code violation"..

    More from the article:

    Quote
    The NYPD did not publicize his arrest. For reasons not clear, the department only releases the names of officers arrested within the five boroughs.

    Deputy Commissioner Phil Walzak, the NYPD’s top spokesman, did not address the question about alleged special treatment.

    “The case was thoroughly reviewed and the officer in question was severely punished for his violation, in full accordance with department guidelines and regulations,” Walzak said in a statement.

    Walzak wouldn’t say what the penalty was or where the officer is now assigned.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 08, 2018, 08:09:24 PM
    A felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct downgraded to a "health code violation"..

    More from the article:




    Quote
    The NYPD did not publicize his arrest. For reasons not clear, the department only releases the names of officers arrested within the five boroughs.

    Deputy Commissioner Phil Walzak, the NYPD’s top spokesman, did not address the question about alleged special treatment.

    “The case was thoroughly reviewed and the officer in question was severely punished for his violation, in full accordance with department guidelines and regulations,” Walzak said in a statement.

    Walzak wouldn’t say what the penalty was or where the officer is now assigned.



    How the police chiefs can behave like this is staggering
    Theyre A bunch of Criminals

    Double standards & hypocrisy
    If this is happening on a regular & large scale
    ( Witch it appears to be )
    Is it any wonder society is crumbling

    Those charged with LE enforcement
    Are flouting it  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2018, 11:28:58 AM
    Not surprising but of course it's ironic that cop unions criticize this statement but there are elections coming up and they want their own goon to win. Also this statement would've made more sense if cops actually paid out of their pockets (or the union coffers who usually support cops when they shoot or kill someone) instead of the bill being sent to the taxpayers.

    Sheriff: It's 'financially better' for cops to kill suspects than injure them

    A California sheriff who's trying to beat his chief deputy and win re-election is fighting back after the release of a 2006 video in which he says it's "financially better” for cops to kill suspects than injure them.

    Sheriff Donny Youngblood, of the Kern County Sheriff’s Office, told KBFX Eyewitness News Monday the 12-year-old statements were misquoted.

    "I stand by the intent of what I was trying to get across -- that just because someone doesn't die doesn't mean we escape with less money or unharmed," Youngblood said. "Do I wish I would've said it differently? Absolutely. When you listen to the verbiage, it doesn't sound good. But I think the people of this county know that's not what I mean."

    He went on to say the department’s officers are trained “to shoot to stop the threat -- not to kill.”

    The video was recently discovered by the Kern County Detention Officers Association and was posted to Facebook. The union said in the post the department “was in desperate need of positive changes” and urged people to vote for a different sheriff.

    The video shows Youngblood, who was a challenger for the office then, sitting at a table during an interview with the Kern County Detention Officers Association, arguing it was financially better for the department to kill a suspect rather than injure them.

    “You know what happens when a guy makes a bad shooting on somebody and kills them? Three million bucks and the family goes away after a long back and forth,” Youngblood said.

    “Which way do you think is better financially – to cripple them or kill them – for the county?” he asked. A person, who was not seen, replied “kill them.”

    “Absolutely,” Youngblood replied. “Because, if they’re crippled, we get to take care of them for life. And that cost goes way up.”

    Youngblood is being challenged by his chief deputy, Justin Fleeman, who has been endorsed by all three unions at the Kern County Sheriff’s Department.

    Chris Ashley, the director of Kern County Detention Officers Association which posted the video, told The Guardian the group was “disgusted” by Youngblood’s comments.

    “But we have been disgusted with Donny Youngblood’s leadership for more than a decade,” Ashley said. “Our personal feeling is that [Youngblood] doesn’t care about our families, and it has taken a toll on all of us...We’re exhausted. We can’t take it anymore.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2018, 11:35:15 AM
    Let's see if this criminal will face any real consequences or if he will be cleared as it usually happens. However, why didn't the other cops who were present actively restrain him or arrest him when he attacked the kid instead of letting him abuse her and only report him after he attacked? They should be treated as accomplices.

    Video of Cop Beating 13-Year-Old Girl So Horrific, His Own Cops Turned Him In

    Gloucester Township, PA — Body camera footage of a Gloucester Township police officer was recently released which captured the disturbing assault of a small 13-year-old girl by a massive cop. The attack was so deeply troubling that the officer has actually been suspended and subsequently charged—after his own cops turned on him.

    The incident began on March 8 and was captured on another officer’s body camera. It shows Gloucester Township police officer John Flinn repeatedly punching and attempting to choke a small 13-year-old girl as he places her in handcuffs.

    According to prosecutors the attack was entirely unprovoked as the girl was complying with the officer, yet he began attacking her anyway. Camden County prosecutors said the juvenile followed police instructions and allowed Flinn to handcuff her, but the crazed cop “struck her twice on the side of the face, causing her to cry out in pain.”

    Police originally said they were responding to a disturbance call in the Camdem County township. However, no more details on why they contacted the 13-year-old girl have been released.

    As the video shows, when the police are attempting to apprehend the young girl, she originally tells them to get off of her. However, she then quickly complies and lays down on her stomach.

    As the girl calmly lays there, allowing Flinn to place her in cuffs, for no reason, he yells at her to stop resisting and begins punching the 13-year-old in the face. He then grabs her by the neck, doles out multiple knee strikes before shoving his 250-pound knee in the back of her neck. All the while, the girl is screaming in agony.

    After the brutal beating caught on Flinn’s fellow officer’s body camera, the girl was taken to an area hospital to be evaluated and treated for injuries sustained during the attack. Not that there would be justification for a grown man to ever savagely beat a non-violent 13-year-old girl, however, to illustrate just how unnecessary the attack was—the girl was not charged with any crime.

    What stands out about this case—aside from the obvious child-beating cop—is the fact that his conduct was reported, not by the victim, but by a fellow officer.

    According to a statement obtained by the Free Thought Project, the Gloucester Township Police chief, Harry Earle explained that it was the officer’s supervisor who turned him in for the beating first, not the 13-year-old girl.

    The incident occurred on March 8th, and it was initially investigated that evening by the officer’s supervisor who immediately recognized as what he believed behavior that was inconsistent with the training and values of the Gloucester Township Police Department. The supervisor contacted higher level police command who initiated a full internal affairs investigation under my authority. It is important to know that the initial supervisory review and subsequent internal affairs investigation were generated by the officer’s supervisor and not as a result of any civilian complaints.

    Chief Earle went on to to explain that the subsequent investigation led to the officer being suspended on March 15 and finally to charges last week.

    “I am proud that any employee of the Gloucester Township Police Department well understands that they must report any improper conduct. It is clear that all members of the department have the confidence that allegations of conduct that are improper, unlawful, or that do not meet the standards of our guiding principles of Honor, Integrity, Compassion, Respect, Fairness, and Courage will be thoroughly investigated and dealt with swiftly,” said the chief.

    Chief Earle then went a step further and posted two email addresses at which citizens can follow up with complaints about any other officers or give the department feedback.

    “Anyone who has a concern about an officer’s performance or actions may report that issue to Internal Affairs at professionalstandards@gtpolice.com. Officers also greatly appreciate positive feedback regarding their every day hard work and dedication and such messages may be sent to police@gtpolice.com,” read the statement.

    As TFTP has reported countless times, police officers protecting their own by refusing to charge abusive and corrupt cops is what leads to the problem with policing we see today. The proactive nature of the Gloucester Township police department is what fixes this problem.

    Normally, TFTP would ask our readers to contact the department and demand the officer be held accountable. However, that appears to be unnecessary this time and it is a positive sign. Now, if we can just figure out a way to stop cops from brutally attacking small girls—before it happens.

    Below is the video that is so horrendous, cops crossed the thin blue line to go after one of their own. Warning, it contains graphic content.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-good-cop-crosses-blue-line-to-report-fellow-cop-who-savagely-beat-13-year-old-girl/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2018, 01:15:29 PM
    Maybe the judge should start punishing this gang for contempt of court instead of tolerating this BS.

    Judge says police stalling in release of Las Vegas shooting records

    “I’m very frustrated, because I think that gamesmanship is going on here,” District Judge Stefany Miley said in the contentious hearing. “It’s now months since the shooting occurred, and it’s still the same: delay, delay, delay. If one technique doesn’t work, then you switch to another one. That’s very concerning for the court.”

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/judge-says-police-stalling-in-release-of-las-vegas-shooting-records/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2018, 01:39:31 PM
    How did the student die? Aside from the seat crushing him, maybe it also has to do with the incompetence of 911 dispatchers and cops who went there twice and claimed they couldn't find anyone in a van.

    How did student die in Seven Hills parking lot? Prosecutor Joe Deters launches full investigation

    Quote
    Just after 3 p.m. Tuesday, 16-year-old Kyle Jacob Plush called 911 panicking. Over the course of a three-minute call in which he gasped, cried repeatedly for help and struggled to communicate with the operator, he relayed that he was trapped inside his car in the parking lot of Seven Hills School.

    "I probably don't have much time left, so tell my mom I love her if I die," he said.

    The call ended; when officers checking out the scene attempted to call back, it went to voicemail.

    A deputy sent to the scene soon after called in to report that he couldn't find anyone trapped in a van. He questioned if the call had been a prank.

    Plush was there. He called again.

    "This is not a joke," he said. "I am trapped inside a gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of Seven Hills. ... Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead."

    https://www.wcpo.com/guy-found-dead-on-seven-hills-campus

    Here's a timeline of what unfolded:

    3:16 p.m. Plush calls 911
    3:23 p.m. Call ends, and dispatcher assigns first unit to respond
    3:26 p.m. First unit arrives on scene
    3:37 p.m. Officers call back Plush’s phone and got voicemail; their assignment is marked complete
    3:48 p.m. Deputy checks again
    8:56  p.m. Passerby calls 911
    8:58  p.m. Duplicate calls come in*
    8:59 p.m. Dispatch advises a missing child was found in a vehicle -- Police and ambulance requested
    9:11 p.m. Hamilton County officials put up crime scene tape
    9:42 p.m. Officials direct traffic away from scene
    11:55 p.m. Cincinnati Police Department closes incident
    12:19 a.m. Criminal Investigations Section clears scene
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2018, 10:04:49 AM
    Police state in the UK? The surprise...

    Police use Experian Marketing Data for AI Custody Decisions

    https://bigbrotherwatch.org.uk/all-media/police-use-experian-marketing-data-for-ai-custody-decisions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2018, 01:10:07 PM
    This cop and the others who conspired to cover this up need to rot in prison. Or maybe, per the cop's suggestion, ride the lightning. But as usual, if anything happens, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill.

    Worker claims he was ‘railroaded’ by Walnut Ridge police

    WALNUT RIDGE, Ark. – A railroad worker claims in a lawsuit he was physically assaulted by a police officer in Walnut Ridge for simply doing his job – and when he tried to file a complaint, he was charged with two crimes.

    Now, the man is suing the City of Walnut Ridge, its police chief, mayor, and two officers involved. Meanwhile, city officials are unable to respond to requests by NEA Report for comment until discussions with legal counsel can take place.

    [...]

    At the intersection of Highway 63 and Highway 91 in Walnut Ridge, Finley was stopped by WRPD officer Matthew Mercado. Mercado asked Finley why he was working on the railroad crossing. Finley was in an unmarked white work truck but had all of his work equipment on including an orange work coat and badge. The BNSF employee explained he worked for the railroad. This is when the lawsuit says Mercado took issue with Finley’s attitude and asked him to step out of the vehicle.

    Mercado then allegedly pushed Finley into the door, handcuffed him, and did so while cursing at him. He was eventually un-cuffed and released but not before Mercado told him he would “ride the lightning,” next time.

    Finley went to Walnut Ridge Police Department to file a complaint right after this but that’s when he claims he was once again treated unfairly. He said he was interrogated by Chief of Police Chris Kirksey and Officer Matt Cook and following that, cited by Cook for refusal to submit and obstructing governmental operations.

    The lawsuit calls this an attempted by the three law enforcement officers to “cover their actions” by charging Finley with two misdemeanor offenses.

    Mercado left the department on Feb. 7, 2017.

    On April 3, 2018, Finley was acquitted of all charges in Lawrence County District Court.



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2018, 04:58:34 PM
    Just 10 days in prison? How many people were endangered or maybe even injured/killed because she hung up?

    911 operator who hung up on emergency calls is sentenced to jail

    (http://a57.foxnews.com/images.foxnews.com/content/fox-news/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail/_jcr_content/par/featured_image/media-0.img.jpg/931/524/1524088682039.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    A former 911 operator who hung up the phone "thousands" of times on people attempting to call in emergencies in Harris County, Texas has been sentenced to jail time.

    Crenshanda Williams, 44, was found guilty of interference with emergency telephone calls Wednesday after "systematically" hanging up the phone on residents of Harris County, KTRK reported.

    She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and 18 months probation.

    Williams reportedly had an unusual number of "short calls," which were no longer than 20 seconds. Prosecutors, according to the Houston Chronicle, determined she hung up on "thousands" of calls.

    In one instance, emergency caller Jim Moten told KTRK he called 911 in 2016 after he spotted two vehicles speeding on a highway where people had been killed from speeding weeks earlier and thought his call had dropped after a few seconds.

    Court documents, according to the news station, stated that Williams had taken Moten's call and, before he could finish explaining his emergency, she reportedly said: "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real."

    The dispatcher also hung up on a caller who tried to report a violent robbery, according to the Chronicle.

    Williams reportedly spent a year and a half at the Houston Emergency Center taking 911 calls. She was caught in August 2016 and fired.

    "The citizens of Harris County rely on 911 operators to dispatch help in their time of need," Assistant District Attorney Lauren Reeder said in a statement. "When a public servant betrays the community's trust and breaks the law, we have a responsibility to hold them criminally accountable."

    Williams' attorney, Franklin Bynum, argued that his client "was going through a hard time in her life" when she hung up on the emergency calls, and said "punishing her doesn't do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center."

    It's unclear what problems at the center Bynum was referring to.

    The "state-of-the-art" center was opened in 2003 as a consolidation of Houston's three emergency communication centers.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 19, 2018, 05:22:54 AM
    My fng lord 

    Just 10 days in prison? How many people were endangered or maybe even injured/killed because she hung up?

    911 operator who hung up on emergency calls is sentenced to jail

    (http://a57.foxnews.com/images.foxnews.com/content/fox-news/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail/_jcr_content/par/featured_image/media-0.img.jpg/931/524/1524088682039.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    A former 911 operator who hung up the phone "thousands" of times on people attempting to call in emergencies in Harris County, Texas has been sentenced to jail time.

    Crenshanda Williams, 44, was found guilty of interference with emergency telephone calls Wednesday after "systematically" hanging up the phone on residents of Harris County, KTRK reported.

    She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and 18 months probation.

    Williams reportedly had an unusual number of "short calls," which were no longer than 20 seconds. Prosecutors, according to the Houston Chronicle, determined she hung up on "thousands" of calls.

    In one instance, emergency caller Jim Moten told KTRK he called 911 in 2016 after he spotted two vehicles speeding on a highway where people had been killed from speeding weeks earlier and thought his call had dropped after a few seconds.

    Court documents, according to the news station, stated that Williams had taken Moten's call and, before he could finish explaining his emergency, she reportedly said: "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real."

    The dispatcher also hung up on a caller who tried to report a violent robbery, according to the Chronicle.

    Williams reportedly spent a year and a half at the Houston Emergency Center taking 911 calls. She was caught in August 2016 and fired.

    "The citizens of Harris County rely on 911 operators to dispatch help in their time of need," Assistant District Attorney Lauren Reeder said in a statement. "When a public servant betrays the community's trust and breaks the law, we have a responsibility to hold them criminally accountable."

    Williams' attorney, Franklin Bynum, argued that his client "was going through a hard time in her life" when she hung up on the emergency calls, and said "punishing her doesn't do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center."

    It's unclear what problems at the center Bynum was referring to.

    The "state-of-the-art" center was opened in 2003 as a consolidation of Houston's three emergency communication centers.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2018, 01:17:58 PM
    Just 5 days in prison. The man they killed spent 4 times that before he died and he wasn't even tried or convicted.

    Officers sentenced to only 5 days in jail for dehydrating man to death and covering it up

    Island County, WA — In 2015, Keaton Farris, 25, was accused of trying to cash a $355 check that wasn’t written out him. After failing to appear for his court date, he was arrested on March 20. He would not leave the jail alive.

    Now, after three years of trying to hold the officers responsible for his death accountable, Washington state’s version of “justice” has been served. The officers responsible for his death have been sentenced for their crimes. However, it is a kick in the teeth to Farris’ family.

    As HeraldNet.com reports:

    On Tuesday, two former Island County jail guards were sentenced for forging safety logs to make it seem like they’d been checking on Farris more often than they did.

    David Wayne Lind, 55, and Mark Edward Moffit, 61, pleaded guilty to false reporting by a public officer, a gross misdemeanor. They were sentenced to a year in jail with all but three months suspended, a Whatcom County Superior Court judge ruled. Five days must be served behind bars. The remainder can be community service, outside of a jail.

    For causing the death of a presumed innocent man—in one of the most horrifying ways possible—these two former jail officers will only spend five nights in jail.

    “If we were outside of the jail, and we cut off somebody’s access to water, and we were in control of their environment, and we didn’t feed them enough — there’s no question that’s going to be a serious crime,” Fred Farris, Keaton’s father said.

    “It was many people,” Whatcom County prosecutor, Dave McEachran said in court Tuesday. “It was the whole system that just wasn’t working. … It was a total failure by the entire staff, by people who should have known better.”

    Indeed, as the story below points out, everything that could’ve been done wrong, was.

    As TFTP reported at the time, Farris had no prior criminal record but had struggled with a history of mental illness. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2013, but had improved with medication, according to family members.

    20 days after being taken into custody, on April 8, Farris was found dead in his cell.

    After his death, Island County Sheriff Mark Brown released a report apologizing for dehydrating and starving this young man to death.

    “I am truly sorry for this tragic death,” Brown wrote in the report. “Our highest priority is the safety and well-being of our inmates and staff and this report describes a systematic breakdown of policies, procedures and communication that led to this tragedy.”

    “We are determined to do everything possible to minimize the chances of this kind of a tragedy from occurring in our jail ever again,” Brown said, adding he had met with Fred Farris, to express his condolences.

    However, no apology will ever bring Fred Farris back his son.

    What’s more, the “breakdown of policy” was actually a deliberate cover up of a man’s death in the custody of law enforcement.

    In the days leading up Farris’ death, an incompetent system of brutality and neglect would come together to facilitate the killing of this young man.

    Upon arriving at the Lynnwood jail, Farris pleaded with officers. He tried to tell them that he was off of his medication. His father even called in and told jail officials the same. However, these requests were ignored.

    Instead of treating the obviously mentally ill and distressed man, Farris was met with force, tasers, and restraints. He would be transferred to multiple prisons as law enforcement officers refused to render aid.

    He was moved to the Snohomish County Jail where staff made notes that Farris appeared “gravely disabled” and was displaying symptoms of psychosis, according to the Daily Herald.

    The Herald reported at the time:

    He arrived in Skagit County in a restraint chair and refused to speak. Jail staff were advised that he had been shocked with an electric stun gun while at the jail in Everett.

    Skagit County corrections officers restrained him and requested he be seen by a designated mental health professional. That never happened because the request was too vague and there was a question about who had jurisdiction over the man.

    He ended up at the jail in Coupeville because San Juan County doesn’t have a jail and uses Island County’s under a contract. When San Juan County deputies arrived in Skagit County to take custody of Farris he refused their commands to stand up, and he began to ramble.

    During his stay at Coupeville, Farris had completely broken down. He then flooded his jail cell after putting his pillow in the toilet.

    Instead of seeing this as the obvious mental condition that it was, officers simply cut the water off to his cell.

    Jail policy is to check on an inmate in Farris’ condition once an hour, and according to their logs, jail officials did check on Farris. However, according to the surveillance footage, which doesn’t lie, they never checked on him.


    Two days later, Farris would be found dead in his cell at 12:40 AM on April 8, 2015.

    After his death, the system attempted to reform itself by hiring a new jail chief, Jose Briones, who has expertise in dealing with the mentally ill. Also, mental health professionals are now required to assess inmates daily and document their interactions.

    After the sentencing, both officers expressed their remorse, but stopped short of taking the entirety of the blame and passed onto the culture of the jail at the time.

    “I am so, so sorry for everything that happened here,” Lind said. “It’s unbelievable. When I found Mr. Farris deceased, I was stunned, I was shocked, I was in disbelief.”

    “I agree with Mr. Lind. I was caught in the same trap that he was, in that jail,” said Moffit. He then turned to Keaton’s family and said through tears, “Most of all I want to apologize the family. To the mother, the father. I can’t even imagine. I accept whatever punishment they give me.”

    As the Herald points out, Fred Farris has had a voice in the reforms at the jail. Yet he fears there will never be real justice for Keaton.

    “At this point, if I had any control over this never happening to anybody again,” he said, “I’d do whatever it took to get there.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-measly-5-day-jail-sentence-for-dehydrating-innocent-man-to-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 19, 2018, 01:43:51 PM
    Crazy

    Just 5 days in prison. The man they killed spent 4 times that before he died and he wasn't even tried or convicted.

    Officers sentenced to only 5 days in jail for dehydrating man to death and covering it up

    Island County, WA — In 2015, Keaton Farris, 25, was accused of trying to cash a $355 check that wasn’t written out him. After failing to appear for his court date, he was arrested on March 20. He would not leave the jail alive.

    Now, after three years of trying to hold the officers responsible for his death accountable, Washington state’s version of “justice” has been served. The officers responsible for his death have been sentenced for their crimes. However, it is a kick in the teeth to Farris’ family.

    As HeraldNet.com reports:

    On Tuesday, two former Island County jail guards were sentenced for forging safety logs to make it seem like they’d been checking on Farris more often than they did.

    David Wayne Lind, 55, and Mark Edward Moffit, 61, pleaded guilty to false reporting by a public officer, a gross misdemeanor. They were sentenced to a year in jail with all but three months suspended, a Whatcom County Superior Court judge ruled. Five days must be served behind bars. The remainder can be community service, outside of a jail.

    For causing the death of a presumed innocent man—in one of the most horrifying ways possible—these two former jail officers will only spend five nights in jail.

    “If we were outside of the jail, and we cut off somebody’s access to water, and we were in control of their environment, and we didn’t feed them enough — there’s no question that’s going to be a serious crime,” Fred Farris, Keaton’s father said.

    “It was many people,” Whatcom County prosecutor, Dave McEachran said in court Tuesday. “It was the whole system that just wasn’t working. … It was a total failure by the entire staff, by people who should have known better.”

    Indeed, as the story below points out, everything that could’ve been done wrong, was.

    As TFTP reported at the time, Farris had no prior criminal record but had struggled with a history of mental illness. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2013, but had improved with medication, according to family members.

    20 days after being taken into custody, on April 8, Farris was found dead in his cell.

    After his death, Island County Sheriff Mark Brown released a report apologizing for dehydrating and starving this young man to death.

    “I am truly sorry for this tragic death,” Brown wrote in the report. “Our highest priority is the safety and well-being of our inmates and staff and this report describes a systematic breakdown of policies, procedures and communication that led to this tragedy.”

    “We are determined to do everything possible to minimize the chances of this kind of a tragedy from occurring in our jail ever again,” Brown said, adding he had met with Fred Farris, to express his condolences.

    However, no apology will ever bring Fred Farris back his son.

    What’s more, the “breakdown of policy” was actually a deliberate cover up of a man’s death in the custody of law enforcement.

    In the days leading up Farris’ death, an incompetent system of brutality and neglect would come together to facilitate the killing of this young man.

    Upon arriving at the Lynnwood jail, Farris pleaded with officers. He tried to tell them that he was off of his medication. His father even called in and told jail officials the same. However, these requests were ignored.

    Instead of treating the obviously mentally ill and distressed man, Farris was met with force, tasers, and restraints. He would be transferred to multiple prisons as law enforcement officers refused to render aid.

    He was moved to the Snohomish County Jail where staff made notes that Farris appeared “gravely disabled” and was displaying symptoms of psychosis, according to the Daily Herald.

    The Herald reported at the time:

    He arrived in Skagit County in a restraint chair and refused to speak. Jail staff were advised that he had been shocked with an electric stun gun while at the jail in Everett.

    Skagit County corrections officers restrained him and requested he be seen by a designated mental health professional. That never happened because the request was too vague and there was a question about who had jurisdiction over the man.

    He ended up at the jail in Coupeville because San Juan County doesn’t have a jail and uses Island County’s under a contract. When San Juan County deputies arrived in Skagit County to take custody of Farris he refused their commands to stand up, and he began to ramble.

    During his stay at Coupeville, Farris had completely broken down. He then flooded his jail cell after putting his pillow in the toilet.

    Instead of seeing this as the obvious mental condition that it was, officers simply cut the water off to his cell.

    Jail policy is to check on an inmate in Farris’ condition once an hour, and according to their logs, jail officials did check on Farris. However, according to the surveillance footage, which doesn’t lie, they never checked on him.


    Two days later, Farris would be found dead in his cell at 12:40 AM on April 8, 2015.

    After his death, the system attempted to reform itself by hiring a new jail chief, Jose Briones, who has expertise in dealing with the mentally ill. Also, mental health professionals are now required to assess inmates daily and document their interactions.

    After the sentencing, both officers expressed their remorse, but stopped short of taking the entirety of the blame and passed onto the culture of the jail at the time.

    “I am so, so sorry for everything that happened here,” Lind said. “It’s unbelievable. When I found Mr. Farris deceased, I was stunned, I was shocked, I was in disbelief.”

    “I agree with Mr. Lind. I was caught in the same trap that he was, in that jail,” said Moffit. He then turned to Keaton’s family and said through tears, “Most of all I want to apologize the family. To the mother, the father. I can’t even imagine. I accept whatever punishment they give me.”

    As the Herald points out, Fred Farris has had a voice in the reforms at the jail. Yet he fears there will never be real justice for Keaton.

    “At this point, if I had any control over this never happening to anybody again,” he said, “I’d do whatever it took to get there.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-measly-5-day-jail-sentence-for-dehydrating-innocent-man-to-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2018, 02:03:33 PM
    Police state UK... Wait till they hear about the mugshot industry in the US...

    'Too expensive' to delete millions of police mugshots of innocent people, minister claims

    Millions of police mugshots of innocent people cannot be deleted because it would be too expensive, a government minister has claimed – despite a High Court ruling that the practice is unlawful.

    The work would have to be “done manually” by local forces, making the costs “difficult to justify”, a committee of MPs investigating the controversy has been told.

    The Home Office has also admitted it has no idea how many people have successfully asked for their mugshots to be deleted – amid suspicions that the figure is very low.

    The revelations were quickly attacked by Norman Lamb, the chairman of the science and technology committee, who has warned the mass retention of facial images raises “fundamental civil liberty issues”.

    They come just days after it was revealed the Home Office destroyed landing cards which could have helped Windrush arrivals prove their right to stay in the UK - allegedly to comply with data protection laws.

    “Innocent people should rightly expect that images gathered of them in relation to a crime will be removed if they are not convicted,” Mr Lamb, a Liberal Democrat, said.

    “This is increasingly important as police forces step up the use of facial recognition at high profile events – including the Notting Hill Carnival for the past two years.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/police-mugshots-innocent-people-cant-delete-expensive-mp-committee-high-court-ruling-a8310896.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2018, 03:20:54 PM
    Criminal gang. How many others like them that are not caught and extort, terrorize, steal, abuse of kill?

    Affidavit: Police officers tried to sneak drugs into Memphis, caught during undercover sting

    (https://media.myfoxmemphiscom.cmgdigital.com/photo/2018/04/13/Terrion%20Bryson%20and%20Kevin%20Coleman_1523633974826.jpg_11352394_ver1.0_640_360.jpg)

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Two Memphis police officers are facing felony drugs charges after they were busted during an elaborate undercover sting, according to documents obtained by FOX13.

    Kevin Coleman and Terrion Bryson are charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to manufacture, deliver, and sell – along with criminal attempt felony and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

    In February, the Memphis Police Department’s Organized Crime Unit received information that officers Coleman and Bryson were stealing money and drugs during traffic stops, according to an affidavit of complaint.

    Investigators said the officers conducted two traffics stops while on duty as MPD officers in which they stole money from an undercover officer.

    https://www.fox13memphis.com/top-stories/affidavit-police-officers-tried-to-sneak-drugs-into-memphis-caught-during-undercover-sting/731754901
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 19, 2018, 07:49:55 PM
    NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

    A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

    The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

    Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

    New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

    Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

    But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

    “Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217

    This is exactly what I talk about when I say there needs to be zero tolerance for this kind of behavior. And the fact he is related to an asst chief just smells of favoritism. This is a clear sign this guy is a problem and will continue to be a problem. I have been intoxicated many times and easliy avoided groping strange females. This is a guy who will be a cancer to the department. and it certainly points out the police department isn't where it needs to be. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 21, 2018, 04:29:07 AM
    This cop and the others who conspired to cover this up need to rot in prison. Or maybe, per the cop's suggestion, ride the lightning. But as usual, if anything happens, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill.

    Worker claims he was ‘railroaded’ by Walnut Ridge police

    WALNUT RIDGE, Ark. – A railroad worker claims in a lawsuit he was physically assaulted by a police officer in Walnut Ridge for simply doing his job – and when he tried to file a complaint, he was charged with two crimes.

    Now, the man is suing the City of Walnut Ridge, its police chief, mayor, and two officers involved. Meanwhile, city officials are unable to respond to requests by NEA Report for comment until discussions with legal counsel can take place.

    [...]

    At the intersection of Highway 63 and Highway 91 in Walnut Ridge, Finley was stopped by WRPD officer Matthew Mercado. Mercado asked Finley why he was working on the railroad crossing. Finley was in an unmarked white work truck but had all of his work equipment on including an orange work coat and badge. The BNSF employee explained he worked for the railroad. This is when the lawsuit says Mercado took issue with Finley’s attitude and asked him to step out of the vehicle.

    Mercado then allegedly pushed Finley into the door, handcuffed him, and did so while cursing at him. He was eventually un-cuffed and released but not before Mercado told him he would “ride the lightning,” next time.

    Finley went to Walnut Ridge Police Department to file a complaint right after this but that’s when he claims he was once again treated unfairly. He said he was interrogated by Chief of Police Chris Kirksey and Officer Matt Cook and following that, cited by Cook for refusal to submit and obstructing governmental operations.

    The lawsuit calls this an attempted by the three law enforcement officers to “cover their actions” by charging Finley with two misdemeanor offenses.

    Mercado left the department on Feb. 7, 2017.

    On April 3, 2018, Finley was acquitted of all charges in Lawrence County District Court.





    I fucking HATE cops dude.

    There's a reason people lose faith in our government, and these pigs are the main culprit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 21, 2018, 04:40:24 AM
    If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

    If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 21, 2018, 12:22:44 PM
    If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

    If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.


    Jeezus that a huge sum of money !!
    You would’ve thought something would be done about that
    More than likely that $ amount is paid out of the public / taxpayers pot
    Not the Brutal Thugs pockets who should be paying
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2018, 01:09:29 PM
    If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

    If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.

    Until these sums are paid by the cops themselves or the union nothing will change
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 21, 2018, 01:13:03 PM
    If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

    If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.

    The usual excuse for criminal cops and their apologists is that greedy people abuse the system with baseless lawsuits and that nothing really happened (after all the cops “investigated” themselves and consequently cleared themselves of any wrongdoing) but they deem it’s cheaper for the city to pay the “greedy” victims to shut up while of course not admitting any wrongdoing or accepting responsibility. Maybe things would be different if those involved in the abuse pay out of their pockets and actually get punished instead of getting paid vacation and sending the bill to the taxpayers. Start paying all these abuse cases with money from the pockets of the cops involved or from the police department’s payroll or pension fund or from the union coffers and maybe then things will change, a little.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 21, 2018, 01:18:55 PM
    The lazy bums didn't even get out of their car yet still claim they "investigated". They must be held responsible for this kid's death.

    Body camera footage shows police never got out of cruiser to check for Ohio teen crushed by minivan seat

    Body camera footage from two Cincinnati officers showed they never left their patrol car to investigate the 911 calls about a teen being stuck in a minivan last week.

    Kyle Plush, 16, called 911 twice on April 10, 2018, from inside a minivan begging for help and providing a dispatcher with a description and location of the vehicle in a school parking lot. Plush suffocated after he became trapped under the third-row seat that flipped and pinned him while he was trying to reach his tennis equipment. Police said Amber Smith, the 911 operator who answered Plush’s second call, failed to relay information to the additional officers who were at the scene.

    During the call, Plush explained to Smith the call was not a joke.

    "I am trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of the Seven Hills...Send officers immediately," Plush pleaded. "I’m almost dead.”

    Smith, who has been a 911 operator for four years, returned to work this week after being put on administrative leave. She told supervisors her computer froze and she was unable to put information into the system. She also told her supervisors she didn't hear the teenager, according to a police quality review report obtained by FOX19.  

    The footage showed Officers Edsel Osborne and Brian Brazile driving their cruiser around the parking lot but not leaving the vehicle, WCPO reported. Music appeared to be playing in the background.

    "I don't see nobody, which I didn't imagine I would,” one of the officers was heard saying.

    “I’m going to shut this off,” one of the officers was heard saying.




    Records showed officers were at the school for about 11 minutes.

    The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the footage also shows the officers did not check all the school's parking lots.

    Osborne and Brazile were not placed on administrative leave, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

    Tiffany Hardy, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati Police Department, said the footage was “the entirety of what was recorded.”

    A Hamilton County deputy who was directing traffic also looked for the teen but did not find anything.

    Another officer was told to respond to the scene later in the day but thought the call was a joke.

    "I think somebody's playing pranks. It was something about they were locked in a vehicle across from the school, we never found anything. But we'll respond and see what else we can find," an officer was heard saying in the radio transmission.

    Plush was found dead hours later by his father.

    Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has called for an internal investigation into the teen’s death and why first responders failed to help him.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/21/body-camera-footage-shows-police-never-got-out-cruiser-to-check-for-ohio-teen-crushed-by-minivan-seat.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 21, 2018, 04:05:57 PM
    Sickenimg.    Tha poor father.

    The lazy bums didn't even get out of their car yet still claim they "investigated". They must be held responsible for this kid's death.

    Body camera footage shows police never got out of cruiser to check for Ohio teen crushed by minivan seat

    Body camera footage from two Cincinnati officers showed they never left their patrol car to investigate the 911 calls about a teen being stuck in a minivan last week.

    Kyle Plush, 16, called 911 twice on April 10, 2018, from inside a minivan begging for help and providing a dispatcher with a description and location of the vehicle in a school parking lot. Plush suffocated after he became trapped under the third-row seat that flipped and pinned him while he was trying to reach his tennis equipment. Police said Amber Smith, the 911 operator who answered Plush’s second call, failed to relay information to the additional officers who were at the scene.

    During the call, Plush explained to Smith the call was not a joke.

    "I am trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of the Seven Hills...Send officers immediately," Plush pleaded. "I’m almost dead.”

    Smith, who has been a 911 operator for four years, returned to work this week after being put on administrative leave. She told supervisors her computer froze and she was unable to put information into the system. She also told her supervisors she didn't hear the teenager, according to a police quality review report obtained by FOX19.  

    The footage showed Officers Edsel Osborne and Brian Brazile driving their cruiser around the parking lot but not leaving the vehicle, WCPO reported. Music appeared to be playing in the background.

    "I don't see nobody, which I didn't imagine I would,” one of the officers was heard saying.

    “I’m going to shut this off,” one of the officers was heard saying.




    Records showed officers were at the school for about 11 minutes.

    The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the footage also shows the officers did not check all the school's parking lots.

    Osborne and Brazile were not placed on administrative leave, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

    Tiffany Hardy, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati Police Department, said the footage was “the entirety of what was recorded.”

    A Hamilton County deputy who was directing traffic also looked for the teen but did not find anything.

    Another officer was told to respond to the scene later in the day but thought the call was a joke.

    "I think somebody's playing pranks. It was something about they were locked in a vehicle across from the school, we never found anything. But we'll respond and see what else we can find," an officer was heard saying in the radio transmission.

    Plush was found dead hours later by his father.

    Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has called for an internal investigation into the teen’s death and why first responders failed to help him.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/21/body-camera-footage-shows-police-never-got-out-cruiser-to-check-for-ohio-teen-crushed-by-minivan-seat.html


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2018, 02:18:45 AM
    Listen to that scumbag... This is a "judge".. Would be better if she was locked up in a white padded room with a straitjacket. It happened in Broward County, that place must be a cesspit.

    Wheelchair user dies days after 'tyrannical' judge ignores request for breathing treatment
    Judge Merrilee Ehrlich resigns from current post after outcry


    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Days after Broward County Circuit Judge Merrilee Ehrlich told an inmate her request for medical care was irrelevant, the woman died at home, relatives said Friday.

    Ehrlich resigned late Friday from her current position after some in the legal community criticized the judge for her behavior that day.

    Sandra Faye Twiggs, a 59-year-old wheelchair user with a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma, was arrested for domestic violence in Lauderhill April 13, according to the arrest report.



    https://www.local10.com/news/florida/broward/wheelchair-user-dies-after-tyrannical-judge-ignores-request-for-breathing-treatment
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 22, 2018, 01:46:41 PM
    Listen to that scumbag... This is a "judge".. Would be better if she was locked up in a white padded room with a straitjacket. It happened in Broward County, that place must be a cesspit.

    Wheelchair user dies days after 'tyrannical' judge ignores request for breathing treatment
    Judge Merrilee Ehrlich resigns from current post after outcry


    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Days after Broward County Circuit Judge Merrilee Ehrlich told an inmate her request for medical care was irrelevant, the woman died at home, relatives said Friday.

    Ehrlich resigned late Friday from her current position after some in the legal community criticized the judge for her behavior that day.

    Sandra Faye Twiggs, a 59-year-old wheelchair user with a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma, was arrested for domestic violence in Lauderhill April 13, according to the arrest report.



    https://www.local10.com/news/florida/broward/wheelchair-user-dies-after-tyrannical-judge-ignores-request-for-breathing-treatment


    That’s outrageous behaviour by the judge
    She needed punching from one end of America
    To the other & back again.

    Abhorrent power crazy bitch.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2018, 07:28:49 PM
    "His conduct is the result of circumstances that are unlikely to recur"
    Exactly which circumstances are "unlikely to recur"? Probably the fact that the girl will not be 15 again. But some other circumstances might recur, like him approaching another young girl like her. Odd how some people like him get away with such crimes.

    No jail for police officer who had child with 15-year-old

    Rafael Martinez Jr., the now-former Camden County cop who had a sexual relationship and fathered a child with a girl when she was 15, was quiet at his sentencing Friday.

    Judge Edward McBride accepted a negotiated plea to sentence Martinez to five years probation. As part of the agreement, Martinez pleaded to endangering the welfare of a child.

    In sentencing Martinez, McBride noted that "his conduct is the result of circumstances that are unlikely to recur" and that the cop had no prior contact with the criminal justice system (besides being part of it).

    http://www.nj.com/camden/index.ssf/2018/04/no_jail_for_cop_who_had_kid_with_15-year-old.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2018, 06:51:54 PM
    Kyle Kashuv Interrogated By Broward County Deputies After Range Trip

    Kyle Kashuv is a Parkland student who, just like Emma Gonzalez and David Hogg, was at Douglas High School the day Nikolas Cruz murdered 17 of his classmates. Unlike Gonzalez and Hogg and many other Douglas survivors, Kashuv has been a lone, persistent student voice in favor of gun rights and the Second Amendment.

    Despite his support for the right to keep and bear arms, Kashuv didn’t own a firearm and had never fired one. That changed over the weekend when he went to a range with his father. He tweeted stills and video of the range session.

    As night follows day, he was attacked on line for daring to fire an AR in a safe and controlled manner. Kashuv no doubt expected the reaction and shrugged it off.

    But today, as the Daily Wire reports, when he returned to class, he was informed by Douglas High’s principal that his range trip tweets had traumatized some of his fellow students. And the reaction didn’t end there.

    Kashuv was later pulled out of class and interrogated by two school resource officers, Broward County deputies.

    Near the end of third period, my teacher got a call from the office saying I need to go down and see a Mr. Greenleaf. I didn’t know Mr. Greenleaf, but it turned out that he was an armed school resource officer. I went down and found him, and he escorted me to his office. Then a second security officer walked in and sat behind me. Both began questioning me intensely. First, they began berating my tweet, although neither of them had read it; then they began aggressively asking questions about who I went to the range with, whose gun we used, about my father, etc. They were incredibly condescending and rude.

    Then a third officer from the Broward County Sheriff’s Office walked in, and began asking me the same questions again. At that point, I asked whether I could record the interview. They said no. I asked if I had done anything wrong. Again, they answered no. I asked why I was there. One said, “Don’t get snappy with me, do you not remember what happened here a few months ago?”


    They continued to question me aggressively, though they could cite nothing I had done wrong. They kept calling me “the pro-Second Amendment kid.” I was shocked and honestly, scared. It definitely felt like they were attempting to intimidate me.

    I was treated like a criminal for no reason other than having gone to the gun range and posted on social media about it.


    Kashuv has criticized the Broward County Sheriff and his band of incompetent men on Face the Nation for their lack of action regarding Cruz leading up to his attack and the school resource officer’s cowardly behavior during the shooting. Observers of the Broward deputies’ interrogation of Kashuv today might conclude that sweating him was simply retaliation for his nationally broadcast statements, but we couldn’t possibly comment.

    If any of Sheriff Scott Israel’s disinterested deputies had spent half as much time investigating Nikolas Cruz’s extra-curricular activities — a student with a long and demonstrated history of violence and criminal behavior on the Douglas High campus — who knows how many lives might have been saved?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2018, 10:50:05 AM
    While a 2nd Amendment supporting student was questioned for going to the shooting range with his father, here is a report about the "brave" "officers", also known as "Broward's cowards"...

    Broward sheriff's deputies cowered behind cars, tree with Parkland shooter believed in school, report says

    The deputies who were among the first to arrive to the scene of the Florida school massacre were found cowering behind their cars and a nearby tree and had no idea where the gunman was, according to an official report released Tuesday.

    The report from Coral Springs Officer Bryan Wilkins details how he arrived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School within minutes of the active shooter alert -- only to find Broward County Sheriff's Officers hadn't entered the school, but were instead taking cover.

    "I saw approximately four Broward County Sheriff's Office vehicles parked in the west bound lane with their personnel taking up exterior positions behind their vehicles," Wilkins wrote. "I drove up just west of the campus building 1200, exited my vehicle, grabbed my AR-15 rifle and donned on my tactical/medical gear. As I was advancing on foot through the chain-link fence, I was advised by an unknown BSO Deputy taking cover behind a tree, 'he is on the third floor.'"

    Wilkins added he was joined by two others officers to enter the building, where he saw the dead and wounded. The police officer's report was first revealed by the Miami Herald.

    Seventeen people were killed in the Valentine’s Day shooting, during which alleged gunman Nicholas Cruz opened fire and then fled five minutes before officers went into the building.

    In the wake of the shooting, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office received heavy criticism for its handling of the situation, including the actions of Scot Peterson, the school’s resource officer, who stood outside the building as the attack unfolded.

    The former deputy denied wrongdoing and retired from the office before an investigation was launched. The Broward County Sheriff’s Office released footage of the shooting that showed Peterson spending most of the time during the shooting standing outside the school with his gun drawn.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/24/broward-sheriffs-deputies-cowered-behind-cars-tree-with-parkland-shooter-believed-in-school-report-says.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 24, 2018, 01:14:18 PM
    While a 2nd Amendment supporting student was questioned for going to the shooting range with his father, here is a report about the "brave" "officers", also known as "Broward's cowards"...

    Broward sheriff's deputies cowered behind cars, tree with Parkland shooter believed in school, report says

    The deputies who were among the first to arrive to the scene of the Florida school massacre were found cowering behind their cars and a nearby tree and had no idea where the gunman was, according to an official report released Tuesday.

    The report from Coral Springs Officer Bryan Wilkins details how he arrived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School within minutes of the active shooter alert -- only to find Broward County Sheriff's Officers hadn't entered the school, but were instead taking cover.

    "I saw approximately four Broward County Sheriff's Office vehicles parked in the west bound lane with their personnel taking up exterior positions behind their vehicles," Wilkins wrote. "I drove up just west of the campus building 1200, exited my vehicle, grabbed my AR-15 rifle and donned on my tactical/medical gear. As I was advancing on foot through the chain-link fence, I was advised by an unknown BSO Deputy taking cover behind a tree, 'he is on the third floor.'"

    Wilkins added he was joined by two others officers to enter the building, where he saw the dead and wounded. The police officer's report was first revealed by the Miami Herald.

    Seventeen people were killed in the Valentine’s Day shooting, during which alleged gunman Nicholas Cruz opened fire and then fled five minutes before officers went into the building.

    In the wake of the shooting, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office received heavy criticism for its handling of the situation, including the actions of Scot Peterson, the school’s resource officer, who stood outside the building as the attack unfolded.

    The former deputy denied wrongdoing and retired from the office before an investigation was launched. The Broward County Sheriff’s Office released footage of the shooting that showed Peterson spending most of the time during the shooting standing outside the school with his gun drawn.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/24/broward-sheriffs-deputies-cowered-behind-cars-tree-with-parkland-shooter-believed-in-school-report-says.html


    Should be charged with dereliction of duty
    Aiding a shooter / being a bunch of pussies etc
    Permanently Dye the cowards yellow & sack them.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 24, 2018, 05:22:00 PM
    ity cites 'profoundly disturbing' conduct in resignation of commissioner (Democrat)
    Nj.com ^ | 04/23/2018 | Ted Sherman
    Posted on 4/24/2018, 5:21:57 PM by TexasGurl24

    Caren Z. Turner, a Democratic lobbyist from Tenafly, has resigned as a commissioner from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, after an investigation was opened into what agency officials would only describe as "profoundly disturbing conduct."

    Officials would not disclose the circumstances, but two sources with knowledge of the investigation said it involved her intervention in a recent traffic stop in connection with her daughter. Both said Turner apparently flashed her Port Authority badge in an effort to intercede with police officers on the scene.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...

    TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: New Jersey
    KEYWORDS: co
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2018, 05:34:24 PM
    It seems that he was a cop when several of these horrific crimes are alleged to have occurred...

    Golden State Killer suspect arrested in California

    The suspect believed to be the notorious Golden State Killer — who was wanted in a dozen murders and nearly 50 rapes from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s — was arrested in California, officials said Wednesday.

    Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, was arrested Tuesday afternoon at his Citrus Heights home, located 16 miles northeast of Sacramento, after a DNA sample matched that of the Golden State Killer, officials said at a news conference.

    The Golden State Killer, who was arrested on suspicion of committing eight killings in Sacramento and Ventura counties, is believed to be responsible for at least 12 murders, 45 rapes and 120 home burglaries throughout California.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/25/golden-state-killer-suspect-arrested-in-california-reports-say.html


    Sick:
    Quote
    During that time, he developed one of his most sadistic signatures. If he chose a home with a couple living inside, he would sometimes incapacitate the man first, binding him with strips of towels or shoelaces and putting him face-down on the ground. He would get a stack of dishes from the kitchen, carefully balancing them on the man’s back. The killer would warn the couple that if he heard a plate drop — or even rattle — he’d kill them both. Then, he'd start raping the woman.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Las Vegas on April 26, 2018, 05:47:37 PM
    From Post 3777:

    Quote
    First, they began berating my tweet, although neither of them had read it; then they began aggressively asking questions about who I went to the range with, whose gun we used, about my father, etc. They were incredibly condescending and rude.

    I wonder how he knows that, or what caused him to say it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 26, 2018, 08:20:47 PM

    Should be charged with dereliction of duty
    Aiding a shooter / being a bunch of pussies etc
    Permanently Dye the cowards yellow & sack them.



    the training I was involved with was simple. IN an active shooting situation, the 1st 4 officers on scene enter the facility. If you have 5 thats even better but if there is more than a minute between 4 officers arriving and the 5th, the 4 go in. If there were 4 officers on scene they should have been forming up at an entrance and if the 5th was not immediately available they should have went in. IN addition. If one of my officers or I were actually assigned to the building and an active shooter was broadcast, we would have immediately entered the building to seek out the shooter. That was understood.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 26, 2018, 10:42:37 PM
    the training I was involved with was simple. IN an active shooting situation, the 1st 4 officers on scene enter the facility. If you have 5 thats even better but if there is more than a minute between 4 officers arriving and the 5th, the 4 go in. If there were 4 officers on scene they should have been forming up at an entrance and if the 5th was not immediately available they should have went in. IN addition. If one of my officers or I were actually assigned to the building and an active shooter was broadcast, we would have immediately entered the building to seek out the shooter. That was understood.

    It’s disgusting reading the report on those cops
    They knew what floor he was on & did FA except hide.

    Very clearly it was a extremely dangerous situation for all in the building
    & for the cops to enter -
    Your Simple training sounds good & pro active
    What do you think went wrong with those cops involved
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 26, 2018, 10:56:29 PM
    It’s disgusting reading the report on those cops
    They knew what floor he was on & did FA except hide.

    Very clearly it was a extremely dangerous situation for all in the building
    & for the cops to enter -
    Your Simple training sounds good & pro active
    What do you think went wrong with those cops involved

    Ok, basing it on the news article and taking that as factual, it was one of 2 things. Lack of training or lack of courage. I tend to compare my dept to others thinking we all have the same training and that might not be the case. If that had happened in Austin, if 4 officers were found to be hiding or tactically taking cover behind a vehicle while an active shooting or Homicide in progress HIP was taking place, there would be no doubt in my mind that they were cowards and dealt with accordingly. But and I say this with distaste, if an agency hadn't had the training, which I think they should have had  by this time, and were operating on old tactics from 2000, there may have been reason in their minds, they were following dept policy and setting up a perimeter and waiting for a swat unit. If that is the case, the head of the department should be taken to task as to why they were behind on HIP protocol. Barring that, if they had any HIP training, then it was simply incompetence and cowardliness, I have personally went in to situations I didn't think I would survive. But that is what I was paid to do and expected others to do as well
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 26, 2018, 11:07:32 PM
    Ok, basing it on the news article and taking that as factual, it was one of 2 things. Lack of training or lack of courage. I tend to compare my dept to others thinking we all have the same training and that might not be the case. If that had happened in Austin, if 4 officers were found to be hiding or tactically taking cover behind a vehicle while an active shooting or Homicide in progress HIP was taking place, there would be no doubt in my mind that they were cowards and dealt with accordingly. But and I say this with distaste, if an agency hadn't had the training, which I think they should have had  by this time, and were operating on old tactics from 2000, there may have been reason in their minds, they were following dept policy and setting up a perimeter and waiting for a swat unit. If that is the case, the head of the department should be taken to task as to why they were behind on HIP protocol. Barring that, if they had any HIP training, then it was simply incompetence and cowardliness, I have personally went in to situations I didn't think I would survive. But that is what I was paid to do and expected others to do as well


    Thank you.
    Excellent reply.

    Sadly like you say
    Like it or not they are paid to deal / get involved with very dangerous
    Potentially life threatening situations - As other professionals are.
    And they didn’t - Answers should be demanded from them & their chain of command.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 26, 2018, 11:10:51 PM

    Thank you.
    Excellent reply.

    Sadly like you say
    Like it or not they are paid to deal / get involved with very dangerous
    Potentially life threatening situations - As other professionals are.
    And they didn’t - Answers should be demanded from them & their chain of command.

    No doubt
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2018, 06:05:39 PM
    Police state. No surprise it comes from the same company that markets the Taser.

    Facial recognition may be coming to a police body camera near you

    The country's biggest seller of police body cameras on Thursday convened a corporate board devoted to the ethics and expansion of artificial intelligence, a major new step toward offering controversial facial-recognition technology to police forces nationwide.

    Axon, the maker of Taser electroshock weapons and the wearable body cameras now used by most major American city police departments, has voiced interest in pursuing face recognition for its body-worn cameras. The technology could allow officers to scan and recognize the faces of potentially everyone they see while on patrol. A growing number of surveillance firms and tech start-ups are racing to integrate face recognition and other AI capabilities into real-time video.

    The board's first meeting will likely presage an imminent showdown over the rapidly developing technology. Shortly after the board was announced, a group of 30 civil rights, technology and privacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the NAACP, sent members a letter voicing "serious concerns with the current direction of Axon's product development."

    https://www.lmtonline.com/business/article/Facial-recognition-may-be-coming-to-a-police-body-12866541.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2018, 02:14:06 PM
    For all these people who have been wrongly accused, imprisoned, executed or had their name and reputation destroyed, how many of the people, especially "sworn" "officers" and prosecutors, who contributed to this injustice have been imprisoned or executed?

    How US police line-ups jail the innocent

    British police have long dropped so-called identity parades but in the US the police line-up is still used, despite its obvious flaws. Campaigners want stricter rules to prevent more miscarriages of justice.

    (video in link below)

    http://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-us-canada-43900546/how-us-police-line-ups-jail-the-innocent
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2018, 12:06:24 AM
    Maybe the judge should start punishing this gang for contempt of court instead of tolerating this BS.

    Judge says police stalling in release of Las Vegas shooting records

    “I’m very frustrated, because I think that gamesmanship is going on here,” District Judge Stefany Miley said in the contentious hearing. “It’s now months since the shooting occurred, and it’s still the same: delay, delay, delay. If one technique doesn’t work, then you switch to another one. That’s very concerning for the court.”

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/judge-says-police-stalling-in-release-of-las-vegas-shooting-records/

    Despite the stalling tactics, the Supreme Court of Nevada ruled that the cops must release the audio and video. Why are the cops disobeying court orders and violating law after purposely stalling the release for months?

    Supreme Court of Nevada orders release of audio, video from Las Vegas shooting

    The Friday ruling means the department is compelled to begin releasing the footage and audio. No records were released Friday.

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/courts/supreme-court-orders-release-of-audio-video-from-las-vegas-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 30, 2018, 04:08:13 PM
    Attacked while he was in the shower... Once again the violent criminals are cleared. No doubt they'll blame the death on "excited delirium", Taser International's favorite excuse.

    A mentally ill man died after being hit 18 times with a Taser in his home. The police officers weren't charged.

    Two West Milwaukee police officers who broke down a mentally ill man’s door and tased him in the shower 18 times before he died will not be criminally charged, Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm has decided.

    More than 30 minutes elapsed between the first time the officers deployed their Tasers and the time Adam Trammell lost consciousness in the hallway of his apartment building, known to officers as a place that housed people with mental illnesses, according to police reports.

    In between, Trammell suffered a black eye, a broken rib and more than two dozen cuts and bruises, according to the medical examiner's report.

    https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/local/milwaukee/2018/04/27/no-charges-against-west-milwaukee-officers-death-mentally-ill-man-hit-18-times-taser/552071002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 30, 2018, 05:02:17 PM
    A police chief running an operation to give his buddies power and privileges not afforded to citizens lowly plebs?

    Lake Arthur, NM Chief of Police Resigns Amid Pay-For-Play Reserve Program

    The Lake Arthur, New Mexico Police Department is on the hot seat. To many, Lake Arthur is a small town in the middle of nowhere with a population of about 430 residents. It’s 33 miles south of Roswell, smack dab between Lubbock and El Paso.

    But the Lake Arthur PD has an unusually large reserve police force with more than 100 “officers” on its roster. As krqe.com reports,

    “We started it out as a way to have more law enforcement here in the town,” Lake Arthur’s long-time Mayor Ysidro Salazar said. “Our community is so small that we can’t afford to pay a police officer a lot of money.”

    (Police Chief) Will Norwood came up with a suggestion to help the village with a no-cost law enforcement solution. Norwood submitted his proposal to the Lake Arthur Town Council. “He came up with the idea that maybe we can have some reserves and they’ll help us out,” Mayor Salazar recollected.

    Norwood proposed forming a Lake Arthur posse of sorts, a group of volunteers called Reserve Officers who could help keep the village safe. Because reservists are not certified police officers, under New Mexico law they do not have law enforcement powers to act on their own and they cannot make arrests.

    But 80% of them live outside New Mexico.


    The Lake Arthur Reserve Police Program was launched in 2005. But instead of recruiting local residents, the “Chief” rounded up a posse from across the country. There were ex-military buddies, gun enthusiasts and a handful of celebrities.

    Some of them are prominent names in the firearms industry while others are prominent politically. These people “joined” the force to get a badge and the attendant 50-state concealed carry privileges that go with it under the Law Enforcement Officer Safety Act.

    Names you might recognize include like Duane Liptak (a director of Magpul ), Mark LaRue (LaRue Tactical), Jon Canipe (also with Magpul Dynamics), Charles Pressburg (Presscheck Consulting) just to name a few.

    The conservative billionaire Koch Brothers also had their bodyguards armed and authorized through Lake Arthur PD. Other big names are US Navy SEALs Marcus Luttrell of Lone Survivor fame and Rob O’Neil, the SEAL who claimed to kill Osama Bin Laden along with Andrew Arrabito, former SEAL and now part time movie actor.

    KRQE News 13 discovered that the Lake Arthur Police Chief, Will Norwood abused his authority by passing out legitimate police credentials.

    …Lake Arthur’s “Chief” abused his authority by passing out legitimate police credentials. In exchange for a $400 annual fee paid to the private Lake Arthur Reserve Police Officer Association, the credentials Will Norwood issued gave his friends full police powers with statewide authority. A Lake Arthur commission card allows an individual to wear badges, carry concealed weapons, bypass accredited training and play cop.


    Chief Norwood has since resigned.

    Mayor Ysidro Salazar now says he is “bothered” by Norwood handing police commissions to his out-of-state friends. Did the village law enforcement chief mislead the Town Council? “Yeah, he probably did,” Mayor Salazar said.

    “Because of you asking for the names (on the Lake Arthur police roster) to be released, a lot of the Reserve Unit resigned,” Mayor Salazar said. “When (the officers) resigned I dismantled the Reserve Unit.” He said all the Lake Arthur police credentials issued by Will Norwood have been recalled and will be destroyed.

    Most amazing is that under the law, Lake Arthur’s Reserve Program didn’t qualify for LEOSA carry privileges due to New Mexico’s low police standards. In New Mexico, reserve officers only have authority when working with a full-time sworn officer. Off duty, they carry no weight. But Chief Norwood apparently didn’t tell his reserve officers that.

    The danger of a program like this comes when out-of-state law enforcement encounter one of these badge-holders. LEOSA states that someone can carry if they’re issued photo ID and credentials and have the authority under law and agency policy to carry off duty and make arrests.

    But your average beat cop in, say, Florida isn’t going to call the Lake Arthur PD and ask for a copy of their policy. Nor is he going to call the New Mexico State Police Standards Board. He’s going to see a badge and ID and go on what his own agency has told him. Cops can carry off duty across the country if they can carry off duty at home. And the vast majority of agencies have their cops carry off duty.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/04/luis-valdes/leosa-pay-to-play-scheme-some-big-names-involved/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2018, 11:29:13 AM
    Constitution? 1st Amendment? Free speech? Silly plebs! Cops don''t give a crap about that.

    Crimes like this committed by cops should be punishable by public hanging.

    Activist Holds Up Sign Saying Police Hate Free Speech, So they Arrest Him to Prove Him Right

    Stamford, CT — Free speech and liberty activist, Michael Picard had harmed no one, had not committed a crime, and was merely expressing his right to free speech by claiming the Stamford PD dislikes free speech. Indeed, within just a few minutes, the chief of police himself came out to prove Picard right.

    Last Thursday, Picard held a sign that said, “Fuck Free Speech —Stamford PD,” merely attempting to point out the gross violations of the First Amendment committed by the department after they arrested another activist, Michael Friend, for holding up a different sign warning drivers of a distracted driving checkpoint ahead.

    Friend was appearing before a judge last week after being charged with allegedly interfering in police duties by warning drivers of a checkpoint ahead. Because Friend was arrested for merely expressing his free speech by holding up a sign that said “Cops Ahead” to warn drivers, Picard went to the courthouse to voice his concern.

    Picard had on his GoPro camera which filmed the entire interaction, however, police confiscated it as evidence after his arrest. Luckily, Picard’s friend, Dawud Talib was also at the courthouse to film the interaction.

    After a few minutes in front of the courthouse, Picard was confronted by Police Chief Jon Fontneau, who warned the free speech activist to stop expressing himself, or go to jail.

    Picard, knowing he was well within his rights to hold this sign up in front of a courthouse, refused. In response to Picard’s refusal to censor himself, Fontneau had him arrested and handcuffed. Picard was subsequently charged with breach of peace.

    “I found the sign to be offensive in front of police headquarters as people are coming in and out,” Fontneau said. “I don’t think our day-to-day residents should have to put up with something like that.”

    That decision, however, it not up to Fontneau. Indeed, this precedent has already been established in the United States Supreme Court case, Cohen v. California. The Court overturned a man’s conviction for the “crime” of disturbing the peace for wearing a jacket in the courthouse that displayed the phrase, “Fuck the Draft.”

    Picard could not comment specifically on the case, however, he did note that “They have a checkpoint for everything nowadays,” adding, “They can’t stop infringing on your rights.”

    TFTP spoke with Picard’s attorney, Joseph R. Sastre who explained how unjust this charge against his client is.

    Connecticut’s breach of peace statute reads as follows:

    “A person is guilty of breach of the peace in the second degree when, with intent to cause inconvenience, annoyance or alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof, such person: (1) Engages in fighting or in violent, tumultuous or threatening behavior in a public place; or (2) assaults or strikes another; or (3) threatens to commit any crime against another person or such other person’s property; or (4) publicly exhibits, distributes, posts up or advertises any offensive, indecent or abusive matter concerning any person; or (5) in a public place, uses abusive or obscene language or makes an obscene gesture; or (6) creates a public and hazardous or physically offensive condition by any act which such person is not licensed or privileged to do. For purposes of this section, “public place” means any area that is used or held out for use by the public whether owned or operated by public or private interests.”

    “I think the first sentence says it all,” Sastre told TFTP. “A person is acting like a mere fool when he sets out with intent to cause inconvenience, annoyance or alarm. Charging protesters with this statute section, or another like it, sends a message that the police don’t think you have an opinion on anything. No, to them, a guy holding a sign is just an attention seeker, out to make a spectacle of himself. It is the equivalent of the abusive husband who tells his wife to ‘stop acting so hysterical’ when she tries to get him to consider her feelings, or to treat her better.”

    For those who follow TFTP closely, you’ve probably seen our reports on Picard before, which is why the police department may have it out for him.

    In 2015, Picard was also arrested for his free speech. This time, however, police confiscated his phone and then proceeded to record themselves trying to fabricate ways to charge this innocent man.

    “To me, Michael Picard’s case, and Michael Friend’s for that matter, makes it clear that the Stamford Police Department needs new leadership.” Sastre noted. “But what is even more distressing to me about this case is that the Stamford Police seem to have reached out to a prosecutor in the courthouse to ask how to deal with a man holding a sign, and that the prosecutor suggested that he be arrested. Proving once again that freedom of speech really only means that you have the right to say, as loudly as you want, that you agree with the police state.”



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/activist-holds-up-sign-saying-police-hate-free-speech-so-they-arrest-him-to-prove-him-right/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2018, 12:15:26 PM
    No amount of money will be enough to give this man these 21 years back. Why don't they send the cops and the prosecutors who suppressed evidence to serve the life sentence this poor man would've served?

    Man set to get $9M settlement from Baltimore for wrongful murder conviction

    BALTIMORE (WBFF) - Baltimore City is set to pay $9 million to a man who spent two decades in prison for a murder he did not commit.

    DNA evidence cleared James Owens 10 years ago. He could now get a big payout, one of the largest in city history.

    FOX45 cameras were there when Owens, who was wrongfully convicted of a 1987 murder, walked out of prison. He spent 21 years behind bars. DNA evidence freed him in October 2008.

    Three years later, Owens sued, alleging police and prosecutors intentionally suppressed evidence that could’ve cleared him.

    http://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/man-set-to-get-9m-settlement-from-baltimore-for-wrongful-murder-conviction

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 01, 2018, 01:29:25 PM
    No amount of money will be enough to give this man these 21 years back. Why don't they send the cops and the prosecutors who suppressed evidence to serve the life sentence this poor man would've served?

    Man set to get $9M settlement from Baltimore for wrongful murder conviction

    BALTIMORE (WBFF) - Baltimore City is set to pay $9 million to a man who spent two decades in prison for a murder he did not commit.

    DNA evidence cleared James Owens 10 years ago. He could now get a big payout, one of the largest in city history.

    FOX45 cameras were there when Owens, who was wrongfully convicted of a 1987 murder, walked out of prison. He spent 21 years behind bars. DNA evidence freed him in October 2008.

    Three years later, Owens sued, alleging police and prosecutors intentionally suppressed evidence that could’ve cleared him.

    http://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/man-set-to-get-9m-settlement-from-baltimore-for-wrongful-murder-conviction




    Exactly - No ifs or buts The Fcukers that withheld evidence should do a minimum of 21yrs
    Locked up. If they’ve done to him just how many others have they done the same.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 01, 2018, 01:36:06 PM
    No amount of money will be enough to give this man these 21 years back. Why don't they send the cops and the prosecutors who suppressed evidence to serve the life sentence this poor man would've served?

    Man set to get $9M settlement from Baltimore for wrongful murder conviction

    BALTIMORE (WBFF) - Baltimore City is set to pay $9 million to a man who spent two decades in prison for a murder he did not commit.

    DNA evidence cleared James Owens 10 years ago. He could now get a big payout, one of the largest in city history.

    FOX45 cameras were there when Owens, who was wrongfully convicted of a 1987 murder, walked out of prison. He spent 21 years behind bars. DNA evidence freed him in October 2008.

    Three years later, Owens sued, alleging police and prosecutors intentionally suppressed evidence that could’ve cleared him.

    http://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/man-set-to-get-9m-settlement-from-baltimore-for-wrongful-murder-conviction



    Ridiculous.  What a waste of tax dollars all around.  Think how much we spent jailing this guy, the cops and da salaries, not the settlement.   Disgraceful.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 02, 2018, 04:58:59 PM
    Lying, cowardly scumbags. They hid the video for a year. Funny how they (and their minions) often say "wait until you get all the facts" -as if that will somehow vindicate them- but when the facts prove they lied, they have already completed their coverup, as seen in this instance. It's just a way for them to buy time so they can cover up their crimes and clear themselves of any wrongdoing. The bystanders should have stormed those fuckers and curb stomped them.

    Disturbing Body Cam Video Shows Cop Smash Tiny Woman Face-First Into the Pavement

    Ft. Collins, CO — Last April, as TFTP reported, bystanders at a sports bar near Colorado State University watched in horror as a Ft. Collins cop proceeded to attack a young woman, sending her flying face first into the pavement. Now, one year later, police have finally released the body camera footage showing how entirely unnecessary and outright abusive this officer’s actions were that night.

    The officer’s victim was a tiny Colorado State University student, Michaella Surat. As the body camera footage shows, the interaction, detainment, and subsequent use of force were all uncalled for.

    According to the footage, officer Randall Klamser tells Surat that she was of no interest to police and asked her to leave. Surat then tells the officer that she is going to stay there to make sure her friend was okay. However, Klamser wanted nothing of it, so he began grabbing and shoving the 22-year-old college student.

    Surat, having done nothing wrong, tells the officer to get his hands off her and begins asking what she had done wrong. Without answering the young woman’s question, Klamser then threatens the woman, telling her that he is going to slam her to the ground.

    Seconds later, dozens of bystanders witnessed the officer fulfill his promise and smash Surat’s face into the pavement.

    “He doesn’t have a right to grab her, and she has a right to resist under Colorado law,” said civil rights attorney David Lane, who is now representing Surat. “He has no legal right to use that force, and she has a legal right to refuse that force.”

    In his report, Klamser claimed that Surat attacked him and was choking him. However, the video clearly shows this did not happen, proving that the cop was lying. The officer even went so far as to claim Surat dug her nails into his neck and left marks, but there was absolutely no evidence of this at all, and, as the video shows, it never happened.

    “Did he produce any evidence of those scars? Not one shred. They had pictures of everything. He said she dug her nails in his neck and there’s not a mark on him. Not one shred of proof,” Lane said.


    Of course, the Ft. Collins Police Department is standing by their boy in blue. According to CBS 4 Denver, Klamser was originally placed on administrative leave, but was eventually cleared by the department of wrongdoing. He is still on active service.

    We at The Free Thought Project believe if that take down move, which appears to be premeditated, is standard procedure, then all of Ft. Collins’ police officers need retraining.

    “If that was not a cop, and he did that he would be facing felony assault charges, but it’s a cop so now she’s the defendant,” Lane pointed out.

    Surat will now have to defend herself in court in August on a resisting arrest charge.




    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/body-camera-ft-collins-police-slam-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 02, 2018, 05:04:39 PM
    No surprise they show no empathy or respect for a family whose child is dying.

    Cops Arrest Grieving Mother, Keep Her from Seeing Her Dying Son in the Hospital

    When a mother received the call that her teenage son had been shot and rushed to the hospital, she dropped everything and went to see him. When she arrived, hospital personnel refused to let her see her dying son and when she begged in protest, she was arrested and taken away by police.

    Nylik Moore was just 18 years old when he was shot in the back and the arm, causing injuries that took his life. When his father called his mother, Cheirha Rankins, and told her the news, she rushed to York Hospital, just a few blocks from their home.

    Instead of cordially allowing Rankins to see her son, hospital personnel refused to allow the grieving mother to enter his room. Worse still, the denial of entry allegedly led the family to cause such a disturbance that Mrs. Rankins was eventually arrested.

    Moore’s family simply wanted to see his body and to be allowed to grieve, but the hospital had been placed on emergency lockdown, which is standard procedure when shootings occur. Understandably, anger is present when a loved one is gunned down. Equally concerning is the safety of hospital personnel who often times get caught in the middle of revenge shootings inside medical facilities. Even with those considerations in mind, the family claims more could have been done to allow them to see Moore’s body.

    The young man was pronounced dead about 30 minutes after he was shot, and taken to the hospital for treatment. But not only was the mother not allowed to see her son, she was arrested for “causing a disturbance.”

    Three days passed before the family was allowed to see Moore’s body, and to properly say “goodbye” to him. The mother told WMAZ that she would have given anything to be able to see her son before he died, and that is why she put up such a fight when hospital security and police officers tried to keep her away.

    Following Moore’s death, the coroner conducted an examination. The body, which usually is then seen by the family, was sent to the morgue where an autopsy was conducted.

    The mayor, the chief of police, and hospital administrators are now investigating the incident. Coroner Pam Gay said it is normally routine procedure for the family to be allowed to see the body, but Rankins had already been arrested and cited for “disorderly conduct.” That charge was later rescinded but the damage was done and the grieving mother was prevented from viewing her son’s body.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/hospital-refuses-allow-grieving-mother-dying-son-police-arrest-her/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 06:13:49 PM
    No surprise they show no empathy or respect for a family whose child is dying.

    Cops Arrest Grieving Mother, Keep Her from Seeing Her Dying Son in the Hospital

    When a mother received the call that her teenage son had been shot and rushed to the hospital, she dropped everything and went to see him. When she arrived, hospital personnel refused to let her see her dying son and when she begged in protest, she was arrested and taken away by police.

    Nylik Moore was just 18 years old when he was shot in the back and the arm, causing injuries that took his life. When his father called his mother, Cheirha Rankins, and told her the news, she rushed to York Hospital, just a few blocks from their home.

    Instead of cordially allowing Rankins to see her son, hospital personnel refused to allow the grieving mother to enter his room. Worse still, the denial of entry allegedly led the family to cause such a disturbance that Mrs. Rankins was eventually arrested.

    Moore’s family simply wanted to see his body and to be allowed to grieve, but the hospital had been placed on emergency lockdown, which is standard procedure when shootings occur. Understandably, anger is present when a loved one is gunned down. Equally concerning is the safety of hospital personnel who often times get caught in the middle of revenge shootings inside medical facilities. Even with those considerations in mind, the family claims more could have been done to allow them to see Moore’s body.

    The young man was pronounced dead about 30 minutes after he was shot, and taken to the hospital for treatment. But not only was the mother not allowed to see her son, she was arrested for “causing a disturbance.”

    Three days passed before the family was allowed to see Moore’s body, and to properly say “goodbye” to him. The mother told WMAZ that she would have given anything to be able to see her son before he died, and that is why she put up such a fight when hospital security and police officers tried to keep her away.

    Following Moore’s death, the coroner conducted an examination. The body, which usually is then seen by the family, was sent to the morgue where an autopsy was conducted.

    The mayor, the chief of police, and hospital administrators are now investigating the incident. Coroner Pam Gay said it is normally routine procedure for the family to be allowed to see the body, but Rankins had already been arrested and cited for “disorderly conduct.” That charge was later rescinded but the damage was done and the grieving mother was prevented from viewing her son’s body.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/hospital-refuses-allow-grieving-mother-dying-son-police-arrest-her/

    This is a toughie from personal experience. I've been involved in crime scenes where someone was shot or seriously injured and it becomes a crime scene. This means limited access to decrease contamination of the scene while homicide is responding.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 02, 2018, 06:42:59 PM
    This is a toughie from personal experience. I've been involved in crime scenes where someone was shot or seriously injured and it becomes a crime scene. This means limited access to decrease contamination of the scene while homicide is responding.


    He was in the hospital
    How is that a crime scene & even if it was what with all the different doctors & nurses
    Just how is his mother going to be the “straw that broke the camels back” as far as
    Contamination & the crime scene...??

    Kid my well of been a scumbag - his mother Just wanted to be with him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 06:43:50 PM

    He was in the hospital
    How is that a crime scene & even if it was what with all the different doctors & nurses
    Just how is his mother going to be the “straw that broke the camels back” as far as
    Contamination & the crime scene...??

    Kid my well of been a scumbag - his mother Just wanted to be with him.


    I read that he was shot in the hospital. If that isn't correct, then all bets are off
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 06:45:06 PM
    Ok, I re-read it.. yeah, that sucks
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 02, 2018, 07:13:56 PM

    He was in the hospital
    How is that a crime scene & even if it was what with all the different doctors & nurses
    Just how is his mother going to be the “straw that broke the camels back” as far as
    Contamination & the crime scene...??

    Kid my well of been a scumbag - his mother Just wanted to be with him.


    Exactly. I don't know how and why the kid was shot, but to prevent his mother from seeing him in his final moments or just when he died is beyond inhuman and shows that these people have no empathy and don't care about the consequences of their actions. Most likely the cops knew the BS charges they slapped on the mother wouldn't stand but they must've also known that just this BS arrest would mean that in these crucial moments she would be away from her son.
    Remember the other case where a nurse in a hospital objected to a cop's illegal demands to draw blood from a person they brought, because she actually knew the law, and the cop assaulted her and kidnapped her?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 07:35:13 PM
    Exactly. I don't know how and why the kid was shot, but to prevent his mother from seeing him in his final moments or just when he died is beyond inhuman and shows that these people have no empathy and don't care about the consequences of their actions. Most likely the cops knew the BS charges they slapped on the mother wouldn't stand but they must've also known that just this BS arrest would mean that in these crucial moments she would be away from her son.
    Remember the other case where a nurse in a hospital objected to a cop's illegal demands to draw blood from a person they brought, because she actually knew the law, and the cop assaulted her and kidnapped her?

    Hold on...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 07:42:28 PM
    https://www.ydr.com/story/news/2018/05/01/york-hospital-explains-complex-situation-mother-body-slain-son-nylik-moore-cheirha-rankins/570687002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 02, 2018, 08:14:06 PM
    https://www.ydr.com/story/news/2018/05/01/york-hospital-explains-complex-situation-mother-body-slain-son-nylik-moore-cheirha-rankins/570687002/

    That link won’t work for me.

    Complex Situation  ::) Load of Bollocks.

    Other report says he was shot & taken to hospital
    Died there 30mins later.

    Mother was arrested  ::) Fcuk sake understandably so for kicking off at not being allowed to see her son
    What the Fcuk is wrong with these power fcuking crazy retard cops,
    Really 2 of them couldn’t of escorted her in even if she had to be patted down 1st
    What the Fcuk did they think she was going to do in there..??

    Her charges then rescinded  ::) obviously as they were Wrong to arrest her.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 08:23:56 PM
    That link won’t work for me.

    Complex Situation  ::) Load of Bollocks.

    Other report says he was shot & taken to hospital
    Died there 30mins later.

    Mother was arrested  ::) Fcuk sake understandably so for kicking off at not being allowed to see her son
    What the Fcuk is wrong with these power fcuking crazy retard cops,
    Really 2 of them couldn’t of escorted her in even if she had to be patted down 1st
    What the Fcuk did they think she was going to do in there..??

    Her charges then rescinded  ::) obviously as they were Wrong to arrest her.


    I understand you can't read it. The article says the hospital, not the cops, shut it down per normal procedures, it was in lockdown the same as they do for rape victims, there were 3 people being worked on at one time, an unusual instance. The charges were later dropped against the mother.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 02, 2018, 08:26:56 PM
    I understand you can't read it. The article says the hospital, not the cops, shut it down per normal procedures, it was in lockdown the same as they do for rape victims, there were 3 people being worked on at one time, an unusual instance. The charges were later dropped against the mother.

    Weak excuses
    That still doesn’t make it Right.

    Even scumbags have mothers / fathers that love & care and may not be scumbags.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 08:33:27 PM
    Weak excuses
    That still doesn’t make it Right.

    Even scumbags have mothers / fathers that love & care and may not be scumbags.

    Ok, let me put you in this scenario. Car wreck. Fatalities from 3 different vehicles.. you have the traffic investigators coming out to investigate the crash to determine who is at fault, if charges can be filed, and you have family members that are wanting to go into the scene and it is your job to keep them out so the evidence isn't destroyed. What do you do?

    You are called to a disturbance where a shooting victim is being treated. It might be gang related. The hospital has shut down that section because they are treating several patients in critical condition and can't be distracted by family members entering the area. What do you do?

    I agree, the arrest should have been avoided if possible. But what if she clawed an officer keeping her back? Do we pretend it didnt happen? 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 02, 2018, 08:50:50 PM
    Ok, let me put you in this scenario. Car wreck. Fatalities from 3 different vehicles.. you have the traffic investigators coming out to investigate the crash to determine who is at fault, if charges can be filed, and you have family members that are wanting to go into the scene and it is your job to keep them out so the evidence isn't destroyed. What do you do?

    1, Sadly in that scenario they would have to be kept away.

    You are called to a disturbance where a shooting victim is being treated. It might be gang related. The hospital has shut down that section because they are treating several patients in critical condition and can't be distracted by family members entering the area. What do you do?

    2, in this scenario Escort the Mother in to see her dying son.. He’s dying they know that what exactly are they going to be distracted from - Digging his grave. Ha.


    I agree, the arrest should have been avoided if possible.
    But what if she clawed an officer keeping her back? Do we pretend it didnt happen?  


    3, If they escorted her in then situation wouldn’t of arisen.
    Situation handled Wrongly.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 02, 2018, 09:30:43 PM


    Your number 3 wasn't an option. It's like saying "had they held hands and prayed together it would have all worked out"
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 02, 2018, 11:29:44 PM
    Your number 3 wasn't an option. It's like saying "had they held hands and prayed together it would have all worked out"

    No it wasn’t
    Only it should’ve Been had any of them had a modicum of sense / or compassion
    I can only hope all their loved ones pass & they can’t be with for some
    Pitiful excuse or another

    And no amount of praying hands held or not would’ve “worked out”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2018, 02:04:07 AM
    Another young man killed by cops. 17 years old. 13 shots. No violent protests or looting for him of course. Naturally the cops were cleared because they "feared for their lives". Once again, some people learn through the worst possible way that calling 911 on someone might not always bring help in the form of trained and compassionate professionals, in some cases it can bring a death squad.

    (http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/e7ylsd/picture201230364/alternates/FREE_1140/John%20Albers)

    Parents of OP teen killed by police decry 'shameful' treatment by police, prosecutors

    The parents of Overland Park teenager John Albers went on Facebook Monday to decry the "shameful" treatment they say was dealt them by police and prosecutors after their son was shot and killed by an officer.

    http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article210169054.html

    Police shooting of Overland Park teen ruled justified, but video raises questions

    The Overland Park police officer who fired into a moving van and killed suicidal teenager John Albers reasonably feared his life was in danger, Johnson County Prosecutor Steve Howe said in a press conference Tuesday.

    But the prosecutor’s decision did not quiet public reaction as debate persisted questioning if the officer was in enough danger to warrant firing into the moving van.

    http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article201060959.html

    Video of the kill:
    http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/article201229459.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 04, 2018, 10:38:41 AM
    Notice how the one cop calmly handcuffs the person who is on the ground and then comes the "heroic" cop who kicks the man in the head. Of course they "forgot" to mention the kick in their reports. If it wasn't for the person recording this, none of this would have been known. Will this cop be prosecuted for the attack?

    Cop Fired After Video Shows Him Kick Handcuffed Man’s Head Like a Soccer Ball

    Miami, FL – A police officer was relieved of duty on Thursday, hours after a disturbing video was posted on Facebook that showed him running up to a man who was handcuffed and restrained on the ground, and kicking his head like a soccer ball for no apparent reason.

    The video was posted by Facebook user Lisa Harrell, and it showed a man lying on the grass in the yard outside of a house with his hands behind his back. A police officer was standing a few feet away, and he pulled out a pair of handcuffs from his belt and skipped over to the man who was already in full surrender position. The officer locked the man’s hands in the handcuffs, and the man did not appear to resist arrest in any way.

    As the first officer finished putting on the handcuffs, a second officer came running up and he forcefully and intentionally kicked the man’s head as if it was a soccer ball, all while the man lay on the ground with his hands restrained, an officer sitting on his back, and no possible way to pose a threat to the officer who assaulted him, or to defend himself.

    The officer who kicked the man then turned around, knelt down, and slammed the man’s head into the ground, assaulting him a second time as three other officers approached the scene, and the video ended.

    “You didn’t have to do all that, buddy. You tripping,” Harrell remarked after she recorded the encounter. In her Facebook post, she noted that the suspect “was down already” and that the officer “didn’t have to kick him.”

    “He was already in handcuffs, he was not resisting or anything,” Harrell told Local 10 News. “He was already in handcuffs and the other one came running out of nowhere and kicked him like a football and basically jumped on him.”

    What’s more, none of the other police officers mentioned the kick in the police report. The report only noted that “while placing the defendant into the back of the police vehicle, the defendant started to tense up his body to avoid being placed in the vehicle.” What measures the officers took to get him inside the vehicle weren’t in the report either.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-fired-video-shows-him-run-handcuffed-man-kick-head-like-a-soccer-ball/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 04, 2018, 10:46:03 AM
    And another similar incident. What is it with cops kicking handcuffed people to the head? Is it the infamous "training" they receive? Why can they not follow the laws and not assault a person who has been handcuffed and is lying on the ground (with another cop on top)? Will the cop go to prison for this assault? Or will the bill be sent to the taxpayers once again?

    Cop Holds Down Handcuffed Teen as Fellow Cop Kicks His Face In

    Franklin Township, OH — Dramatic video has surfaced which will undoubtedly end up with taxpayers shelling out hundreds of thousands of dollars to an 18-year-old kid who ran from police. In spite of teen being handcuffed, face-down on the ground, with another officer on top of him, a Franklin Township police officer is seen punting his face like a football.

    The suspect—turned victim, Anthony Foster Junior, allegedly made the terrible and dangerous decision to run from police earlier this week. According to police, Foster rammed a police car, drove 90 miles per hour through residential neighborhoods, and tried to make police officers crash.

    He was accused of breaking several laws and deserved to be given due process. However, thanks to an officer who couldn’t control himself, the taxpayers will now be held accountable.

    According to police, the pursuit began after police pulled over Foster for having no registration on his vehicle. Instead of stopping, however, Foster allegedly led police on a high speed chase. The incident report says Foster “drove through several yards, jumping a driveway and attempted to make it back on the street where the suspect’s vehicle struck and officers vehicle.”

    Once the chase came to an end, that’s when police pulled him out of the vehicle without incident and had him in handcuffs.

    As the video shows, Foster was on the ground, in handcuffs, when the unnamed police officer runs up to him and kicks him right in the face.

    Naturally, Foster has already retained an attorney, Joe Landusky, who will likely sue and win.

    “When I look at the video when I see a kid lying in the street motionless and another individual coming around wearing a police uniform nonchalantly kicking in the head like a football it’s not something that’s nice to watch. I don’t know what happened leading up to this, he’s charged with certain things I don’t know whether he was involved with those things are not and he’s presumed innocent,” he said, according to 10TV.

    The officer responsible for the brutal act caught on film is now on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation.

    Video: https://twitter.com/nbc4i/status/992061593272881152

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-holds-down-handcuffed-man-as-fellow-cop-punt-kicks-his-face/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 07, 2018, 02:15:57 PM
    This thug pulled a gun on someone who actually bought a $1.19 pack of Mentos because he somehow decided the man stole the mints.

    For a $1.19 pack of mints (that was already paid for)

    Because he somehow thought the man stole them.

    What would happen if a citizen believed a "cop" was acting suspiciously and pulled a gun on him?

    What if there was another armed citizen behind the "cop" (at that point anyone can claim he is a "cop" for any nefarious purpose) and shot him when he saw him pulling out the gun because he feared for his life?

    Why is this cop not in prison?

    Will the taxpayers have to foot the bill once again?


    Video shows off-duty officer pulling gun on man mistakenly suspected of stealing Mentos

    One minute, Jose Arreola was buying a pack of Mentos at an Orange County service station.

    The next minute, he was at the business end of a gun drawn by an off-duty Buena Park police officer who thought Arreola had stolen the $1.19 roll of mints.

    The 49-year-old printer from Bellflower says he was both scared and angry that the officer had pulled a gun March 16 on someone he wrongly suspected of stealing candy.

    “It’s been a month and I still can’t shake it,” Arreola said. “It was traumatic, the whole incident. (And) I grew up in Santa Ana. I’ve been shot at before.”

    Buena Park Sgt. Mike Lovchik declined to comment on the incident, saying an internal investigation is underway.




    https://www.ocregister.com/2018/05/04/video-shows-off-duty-officer-pulling-gun-on-man-mistakenly-suspected-of-stealing-mentos/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 08, 2018, 01:51:13 PM
    Pedophile christian priests? Nothing surprising about this.
    A cop trying to expose pedophile christian priests and having his life and career destroyed by religious cops who wanted to protect catholic christian priests?  Nothing surprising about this as well.

    This happened in Australia more than 40 years ago. Still, it shows the problem of gangs that operate under the guise of police officer, the powers they possess, how they can destroy someone's life or career and not being held accountable. These people can investigate themselves, cover up for someone they want and destroy those who are deemed hostile to them or their supporters. What is even more shameful is that this man's story was ignored for more than 40 years and had it not been mentioned on TV it might have been unknown forever. As it usually happens in these cases the cops just apologize for the mistake and throw a bunch of money (usually from the taxpayers' pockets) as if this settles the issue.

    Ex-detective Denis Ryan wins compensation decades after being pushed out of Victoria Police

    A former detective, who was financially and professionally ruined by his own superiors for trying to bring a paedophile priest to justice, will receive compensation almost 50 years after he was pushed out of Victoria Police.

    Denis Ryan gave up his police pension when he chose to resign from the force after being ordered to drop his investigation into Monsignor John Day, a Catholic paedophile priest who preyed on children in the Mallee.

    The decision had a profound impact on his life, costing him a marriage and the prospect of a comfortable retirement. Until now, he has lived in a rented unit on the proceeds of an aged pension.

    But a month after his plight was revealed by the ABC, the Victorian Government has reached a confidential settlement with the 86-year-old.

    Quote
    "Their allegiance was towards a cathedral and not to the people of Victoria that they'd sworn an oath to protect. They did not protect them."

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-05-07/denis-ryan-victorian-detective-police-pension-booted-force/9645982

    Quote
    In 2017, the final report of Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse opened them back up. It found a much broader “national tragedy.” “Tens of thousands of children have been sexually abused,” it said, in “almost every type of institution where children reside or attend for educational recreational, sporting, religious or cultural activities. … It is not a case of a few ‘rotten apples.’ Society’s major institutions have seriously failed.

    Quote
    He also apologized for the actions of the police decades ago and said the government would take care of him financially for his remaining years with a “substantial payment.”

    The Victorian police have since apologized to Ryan for ousting him, as well, and the Royal Commission found Ryan’s claims credible that he had been forced out of his job because of his investigation into Day.

    “We do not doubt,” the commission said, “that Victoria Police transferred Detective Ryan … for investigating allegations that Monsignor Day had sexually abused children in Mildura.”

    The commission heard evidence that “everyone in the chain of command” of the police “appears to have fallen into line” against Ryan’s investigation.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/05/07/nearly-50-years-after-losing-his-job-for-investigating-a-priest-an-australian-detective-stands-vindicated
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 08, 2018, 09:37:43 PM
    Pedophile christian priests? Nothing surprising about this.
    A cop trying to expose pedophile christian priests and having his life and career destroyed by religious cops who wanted to protect catholic christian priests?  Nothing surprising about this as well.

    This happened in Australia more than 40 years ago. Still, it shows the problem of gangs that operate under the guise of police officer, the powers they possess, how they can destroy someone's life or career and not being held accountable. These people can investigate themselves, cover up for someone they want and destroy those who are deemed hostile to them or their supporters. What is even more shameful is that this man's story was ignored for more than 40 years and had it not been mentioned on TV it might have been unknown forever. As it usually happens in these cases the cops just apologize for the mistake and throw a bunch of money (usually from the taxpayers' pockets) as if this settles the issue.

    Ex-detective Denis Ryan wins compensation decades after being pushed out of Victoria Police

    A former detective, who was financially and professionally ruined by his own superiors for trying to bring a paedophile priest to justice, will receive compensation almost 50 years after he was pushed out of Victoria Police.

    Denis Ryan gave up his police pension when he chose to resign from the force after being ordered to drop his investigation into Monsignor John Day, a Catholic paedophile priest who preyed on children in the Mallee.

    The decision had a profound impact on his life, costing him a marriage and the prospect of a comfortable retirement. Until now, he has lived in a rented unit on the proceeds of an aged pension.

    But a month after his plight was revealed by the ABC, the Victorian Government has reached a confidential settlement with the 86-year-old.

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-05-07/denis-ryan-victorian-detective-police-pension-booted-force/9645982

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/05/07/nearly-50-years-after-losing-his-job-for-investigating-a-priest-an-australian-detective-stands-vindicated


    A True Decent Cop.

    A story about a cop doing what he should be doing
    And The Gang Don’t like it & turn on him.

    Finally He has been vindicated & compensated
    And apologies issued.
    Though I doubt any of those involved or responsible that are still
    Alive will be Brought To Justice for what they Did.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 09, 2018, 08:07:34 PM
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/she-saved-thousands-to-open-a-medical-clinic-in-nigeria-us-customs-took-all-of-it-at-the-airport/ar-AAwZJxU?ocid=spartandhp
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 10, 2018, 12:20:15 PM
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/she-saved-thousands-to-open-a-medical-clinic-in-nigeria-us-customs-took-all-of-it-at-the-airport/ar-AAwZJxU?ocid=spartandhp

    Oh dear will she get that money back.?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 10, 2018, 12:41:37 PM
    Oh dear will she get that money back.?

    Eventually, but it pisses me off she has to fight for her own money. I was a fan of the seizure laws when they first were written. The spirit behind it was to be a tool used against obvious and clear drug dealers. At first it was. Then it evolved into this nightmare where small texas towns and many large cities supplement their tax base with seized funds. In the best cases, it is narco money, but in too many cases it is people being railroaded regardless of the intent of the money. This is one of those cases that make me want the whole law discarded
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 10, 2018, 01:14:29 PM
    Oh dear will she get that money back.?

    It is CBP (US Customs and Border Protection) in this particular case so they might operate under a different legal framework (they also have the BS 100 mile rule etc) but still civil asset forfeiture is pure theft that is legalized only because it is done by the government. Your money can be confiscated even if you are not charged with anything and then you have to go to court to get your money back - which is a very significant expense in itself as well as a huge time loss - and that is if you are lucky to get your money back. In several cases jut having some cash on you (say you won $2000 at a casino or the lottery or sold something) is enough for cops to confiscate them, claiming all sorts of things like you might be Pablo Escobar, that the money comes from crime or that the road you are driving on is a drug corridor or -the classic excuse- that generally you/your car/ the whole situation is "suspicious". Or they can claim nothing at all. All this without the cops having to prove anything or even charge you with anything, let alone be convicted in court. Because rights and due process don't apply when it's inconvenient or unprofitable to the government.

    Notice this part from the article, this is just a racket, the government steals your money and they claim they'll return them to you if you don't sue them:

    Quote
    The agency told her in April it would give back her money under one condition: that she give up her right to sue the federal government. It’s called a “hold-harmless agreement.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2018, 02:20:59 PM
    Once again the taxpayers are robbed because one cop destroyed a man's life and reputation - and he had to suffer the loss of his mother and sister while he was unjustly in prison. Instead of taking every last penny the cop has and then locking him up for life, the taxpayers have to foot the bill. Meanwhile the cop is still employed.

    Philadelphia Jury Awards $10 Million In Wrongful Arrest, Imprisonment Of Khanefah Boozer

    PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A man accused of shooting at a Philadelphia police officer will receive $10 million after being wrongfully arrested and imprisoned for more than three years.

    The Philadelphia native was outside with friends in January 2011 on Abbotsford Road in Germantown. Boozer says a friend took out a gun and fired a shot into the air. A nearby police officer named Ryan Waltman arrested Boozer as the shooter, claiming Boozer pointed a gun at him.

    Boozer says he told detectives it was his friend who fired the shot in the air but he says Officer Waltman never investigated that claim.

    Boozer went to jail for almost four years. He couldn’t post his half-a-million-dollars bail.

    Boozer was released from prison in 2014 but sued Officer Waltman for his false testimony. Officer Waltman, who is still on the force, was represented by a city solicitor. Ultimately, a jury decided to pay Boozer $10 million for being wrongfully accused and imprisoned. Boozer lost his mother and sister while sitting behind bars.

    http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/05/10/jury-10-million-arrest-khanefah-boozer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2018, 01:41:02 PM
    Now those "brave heroes" are going after people who eat mushrooms... He must be one of those "drug recognition experts" who receive the title after years of study a few hours sitting on a chair and munching on donuts. The couple shouldn't have let that thug in, it could have cost them their lives. What is more troubling though is how the whole situation went from a couple posting on Facebook about foraging edible mushrooms to the cop finding them and entering their home.

    Innocent Couple Raided by Cops for Facebook Post of LEGAL Morel Mushrooms

    Darlington, MD — It is a travesty enough when the drug war lays waste to the rights and lives of entirely decent people who’ve harmed no one simply because they choose to ingest a substance deemed illegal by the state. However, because the drug war is such an immoral and barbaric practice, entirely innocent people are also swept up in the dragnet of tyranny and ignorance. Case in point: a couple in Maryland were raided by cops for posting photos of legal morel mushrooms they picked and ate.

    On Friday, John Garrison and his girlfriend Hope went foraging the mountains for some morel mushrooms. Morels are known to those in the region as being the safest mushroom to hunt for as they are very easily identified due to their unique look. From mid April to mid May, lovers of nature and good food, like John and Hope will find them growing near trees or where there used to be trees.

    Garrison was so excited that they had found a bunch of them, that he posted a photo on Facebook of he and Hope’s bounty along with his plans to “sautee them with brown sugar and cinnamon and see how that turns out.”

    A great night of good food was set to follow an awesome day of hiking and foraging. That is, however, until the wheels of the police state drug war caught a whiff of the mushrooms.

    Garrison made the post that they were about to saute the mushrooms at 9:09 pm. Only hours later as he and Hope sat back with full bellies, police showed up.

    “We had just finished eating the Morels we found today and heard a knock on the door. A police officer and an RA were standing outside. We let them in and as soon as the police officer walked in he asked us why we were eating mushrooms and posting about it online. He thought he was on the biggest bust of his career thinking we were having a magic mushroom party before I explained to him that Morels are a native choice edible mushroom similar to truffles,” explained Garrison.

    However, this cop—clearly unaware of the tasty morel and hell bent on busting kids for eating mushrooms—just knew he had caught himself a pair of hardened criminals who’d dare to expand their consciousness in the sanctity of their own home.

    (https://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Layer-402.png)

    “He wasn’t convinced. So I rummaged through the trash to find a peice (sic) of a Morel so that he would have evidence that we weren’t taking psychedelic mushrooms. I showed him and he still wasn’t convinced that they weren’t magic mushrooms, Which was shocking to me because morels look nothing like a psychedelic psilocybin (sic) mushrooms and I figured a police officer would know what illegal drugs looked like. A second police officer showed up and I showed her the Morel and she immediately knew it was a Morel which was a relief. They processed our ID’s and eventually left. What an experience,” Garrison wrote on Facebook.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/couple-raided-police-mushrooms/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2018, 10:14:50 PM
    Not nearly enough years for this criminal. He should have been imprisoned for life or executed. Baltimore seems like a cesspool of uniformed gangs.

    Baltimore Cop who Robbed Citizens Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison

    (https://mediaassets.abc2news.com/photo/2017/08/30/thomas_allers_1504124464080_65296315_ver1.0_640_480.jpg)

    A former supervisor for a corrupt Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task force has been sentenced for robbing people. In some of the cases, his victims were restrained.

    Baltimore police Sgt. Thomas Allers referred to it as "taking lunch money."

    Allers, 49, was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison on Friday, according to WBAL. He admitted to participating in at least nine robberies between 2014 and 2016 that yielded more than $100,000 in cash, prosecutors say. In one incident, Allers arrested robbed a man named Davon Robinson for $10,000. After robbing his home, Allers released Robinson. Prosecutors say Robinson was killed after he was unable to pay back a drug debt.

    "Allers released detainees and chose not to charge them criminally when he stole cash from them," prosecutors wrote in Allers' indictment.

    In another incident, Allers' adult son, who is not a police officer, participated in a raid in which $66,000 was taken by Allers, his son and two other detectives.

    Authorities have not named the son or charged him, according to court papers.

    https://www.themaven.net/pinacnews/courtroom-files/baltimore-cop-who-robbed-citizens-sentenced-to-15-years-in-prison-9KhBc1-dZEOSNs3GXqamow/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2018, 01:55:05 PM
    Too bad he couldn't defend his family properly and neutralize the armed intruders. Now he is sent to prison from a jury that succumbed to the crocodile tears of an armed thug and the intimidation of the rest of his gang who were at the court room.

    Teen Sent to Prison for Defending Home from Intruders—Because The Intruders Were Cops

    Austin, TX – When a SWAT team initiated a no-knock raid in search of cannabis, they were met with gunfire, and while the resident surrendered as soon as he realized his home was being raided by police, the fact that he opened fire on the intruders and shot one of them in the leg has resulted in a 13-year prison sentence.

    When a SWAT team broke down the door and charged into the Harrell family’s house in the early morning hours of April 14, 2016, they claimed that the intrusive operation was justified, because they believed 18-year-old Tyler Harrell was running a drug ring out of his parents’ home.

    When Tyler Harrell was woken up by what he believed were burglars breaking into his home, he did what many gun owners would do, and he grabbed his firearm and confronted the intruders. He used his legally-owned AK-47, and while he did not kill any of the officers, he did wound one officer by shooting him in the knee.

    Lisa Harrell told KVUE News that she believes her son only opened fire because he thought his family was being robbed. “[Tyler] came running out with his gun, thinking someone was intruding in our house, and he started shooting down the stairs,” she said. “I know my son thought there was an intruder in the house.”

    Hours after the shooting, police confirmed that “another SWAT team member returned fire, but did not hit Harrell, who surrendered to police within minutes,” indicating that as soon as Harrell realized he was firing at police officers, he stopped and let them arrest him without a fight.

    When officers searched the home, they found one ounce of cannabis, which would justify a misdemeanor charge against Harrell. However, because the officers initiated a no-knock raid before dawn, and Harrell attempted to protect his family from the intruders, he was charged with attempted capital murder.

    During the trial, Harrell’s psychiatrist testified that at the time of the shooting, he was “suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after an incident four months earlier in which he and his friends were robbed by a masked gunman,” and the gunman shot Harrell, before Harrell “wrested the gun away from the man and chased him out the door of his friend’s apartment,” according to a report from the Austin Statesman.

    However, it was the testimony from Officer James Pittman that apparently pulled at the heartstrings of jury members. He was the only person injured by Harrell’s gunfire, and he said the bullet wound in his leg kept him from playing with his kids now and would force him to get knee replacement surgery one day.

    Pittman also criticized the “Not Guilty” verdict from another Texas case in which a homeowner shot and wounded three police officers when they initiated a no-knock raid on his house. Ray Rosas spent nearly two years in jail awaiting his trial, and his actions were ruled justified based on the fact that he was acting in self-defense and did not know the intruders he was shooting were police officers.

    Rosas was acquitted, despite the fact that 11 police officers testified against him. However, in the case of Tyler Harrell, his lawyer argued that the 18 SWAT team members who attended court in tactical gear to show their support for Officer Pittman, further demonized Harrell in the eyes of the jury.

    “Look at this gallery. You don’t think this is a lot of political pressure for these people?” Lawyer Michael Chandler told the jury.

    The pressure worked, and while the jury determined that Tyler Harrell was not guilty of attempted capital murder or aggravated assault on a public servant, he was found guilty of aggravated assault and sentenced to 13 years and six months in prison, and a fine of $7,000.


    When the trial shifted to a debate over whether Harrell acted in self-defense, it served as a distraction from the fact that the drug raid on his home was an absolute failure, and officers were never able to prove that Harrell was a “large drug dealer” of marijuana and cocaine, which was the claim they used to justify obtaining a search warrant for the raid in the first place.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-sentenced-shooting-cop-no-knock-raid-over-weed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2018, 07:40:10 PM
    The Coward of Broward retired on a monthly pension of $8702...

    Scot Peterson, disgraced Parkland school cop, starts getting $8,702-a-month pension

    Scot Peterson, a former deputy with the Broward County Sheriff's Office, has reportedly started to receive a hefty pension — three months after he retired amid the aftermath of the mass shooting in Parkland, Florida.

    Peterson, a 33-year law enforcement veteran, was the resource deputy stationed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14 when 17 people were killed by gunfire.

    As one of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history unfolded, Peterson never entered the building where alleged gunman Nikolas Cruz was opening fire and instead took up a position outside the building that was under attack.

    Peterson, 55, was widely criticized for his actions and Broward Sheriff Scott Israel opened an internal investigation. The deputy resigned and retired on Feb. 23, "rather than face possible termination."

    Peterson, the Sun-Sentinel reported, has received a monthly state pension of $8,702.35 since April. He was paid $101,879.03 last year, according to the news outlet, which cited sheriff's office records.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/15/scot-peterson-disgraced-parkland-school-cop-starts-getting-8702-month-pension.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2018, 08:13:09 PM
    Another man who was unjustly imprisoned by the notorious police hero career criminal Louis Scarcella. Yet, despite all his crimes and the suffering of his many victims, this man was neither imprisoned nor exectued. He was rewarded with a comfortable pension and he was then hired again by the New York City Department of Education.

    Man put in jail for 24 years by disgraced detective walks free

    A man who was put away for 24 years by shady ex-NYPD Detective Louis Scarcella stepped out of a courtroom Monday a free man – after the Brooklyn DA’s Office announced it wouldn’t retry him for the decades-old murder.

    Rosean Hargrave, 44, heaved with emotion and burst into sobs in Brooklyn Supreme Court, where he learned he was at long last cleared of murdering off-duty corrections officer Rolando Neischer in 1991.

    “It’s been 27 years,” Hargrave said outside the courtroom. “There were times I saw death — that is how badly corrections officers beat me for a crime I did not commit.”

    Hargrave was just 17 years old when he and co-defendant John Bunn, who was 14, were found guilty of Neischer’s death.

    Fingerprints found at the scene didn’t match either teen — and the lone witness gave conflicting descriptions of the suspects, saying they were light-skinned and in their 20s.

    Both Hargrave and Bunn are dark-skinned.


    In 2015, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice ShawnDya Simpson vacated Hargrave’s conviction and granted him a new trial – saying he was convicted “based solely on identification of evidence” brought by Scarcella, then a star detective, and his partner.

    He was released from prison after serving more than two decades behind bars.

    “The revelation of Detective Scarcella’s malfeasance in fabricating false-identification evidence gravely undermines the evidence that convicted the defendant in this case,” Simpson wrote in her decision.

    https://nypost.com/2018/05/14/man-put-in-jail-for-24-years-by-disgraced-detective-walks-free/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2018, 05:58:30 AM
    Unreal.   Taxpayer theft of madoffian levels

    The Coward of Broward retired on a monthly pension of $8702...

    Scot Peterson, disgraced Parkland school cop, starts getting $8,702-a-month pension

    Scot Peterson, a former deputy with the Broward County Sheriff's Office, has reportedly started to receive a hefty pension — three months after he retired amid the aftermath of the mass shooting in Parkland, Florida.

    Peterson, a 33-year law enforcement veteran, was the resource deputy stationed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14 when 17 people were killed by gunfire.

    As one of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history unfolded, Peterson never entered the building where alleged gunman Nikolas Cruz was opening fire and instead took up a position outside the building that was under attack.

    Peterson, 55, was widely criticized for his actions and Broward Sheriff Scott Israel opened an internal investigation. The deputy resigned and retired on Feb. 23, "rather than face possible termination."

    Peterson, the Sun-Sentinel reported, has received a monthly state pension of $8,702.35 since April. He was paid $101,879.03 last year, according to the news outlet, which cited sheriff's office records.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/15/scot-peterson-disgraced-parkland-school-cop-starts-getting-8702-month-pension.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2018, 05:41:44 AM
    https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-05-17/big-brother-police-raid-home-man-who-posted-pictures-his-mushroom-dinner-facebook



     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2018, 08:33:17 AM
    Man checks security system, discovers police officers conducted training in his house

    http://www.wxii12.com/article/homeowner-says-officers-conduct-training-in-home-without-permission/20731382
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2018, 09:18:23 AM
    Here we have a habitual and recidivist offender that cannot be rehabilitated. Break all his bones and lock him up for life.

    Cop Arrested for Shoving Innocent Elderly Man into Concrete Wall, Breaking His Face and Hip

    Cincinnati, OH — A Cincinnati cop is actually being held accountable this week after a disturbing video showed him shove an elderly man so hard that he smashed his face on a concrete bench and broke his hip.

    On Thursday, former Hamilton County sheriff’s deputy Jason Mize was arrested after he was federally indicted on a charge of deprivation of rights under the color of law. The now-former deputy was seen on video attacking 61-year-old Mark Myers, who was only in jail after being falsely accused of a crime.

    According to Cincinnati.com, Myers was arrested Aug. 20, 2016 after being accused of walking out of a Columbia Township Home Depot without paying for $120 in lighting and electrical equipment – a charge that ultimately resulted in an acquittal. He said there had been a computer error related to an online payment he’d already made.

    In the video, Mize is seen throwing the elderly man into a holding cell so hard that he went flying into the concrete bench, suffering multiple lacerations to his head and a broken hip.

    The incident happened in August of 2016 at the Hamilton County Justice Center. It was captured on the jail’s extremely low quality surveillance video. However, it is clear enough to see a crime take place.

    One year ago, Myers sued both Mize and Sheriff Jim Neil, claiming he suffered severe injuries after hitting his head on the concrete wall. Last week, the lawsuit was settled and the taxpayers of Cincinnati shelled out $500,000 to pay for Mize’s crimes.

    According to the lawsuit, an internal affairs report said that Mize’s direct supervisor claimed that shoving the elderly man into a concrete wall and bench, causing him to break his hip, did not go against the policy of the jail.

    The prosecution agreed and they declined to press charges. However, all that appears to be changing now.

    This overt use of excessive force and subsequent cover ups seems to be an ongoing problem in Hamilton County. Even a former jailer has spoken out in the form of a lawsuit against Sheriff Neil and the county, claiming that she was fired for exposing their use of excessive force.

    Former major Charmaine McGuffey actually tried to get Mize held accountable for his attack on Myers, but this was to no avail.

    In the internal affairs report, former Maj. McGuffey is quoted as saying, “Mize should be arrested or fired for his actions.”

    The report concluded Mize “violated our standards which rise to the level of dishonesty and excessive force, along with other internal violations, and disciplinary action is required.”

    McGuffey took over the jail when it was the worst in the state. However, in just three years she turned it into one of the best. She was named Law Enforcement Officer and Public Citizen of the Year for her efforts. However, when she tried to expose the jail’s extensive record of excessive force, that’s when they took her out.

    It appears that although the state prosecution allowed Mize to escape any accountability, his case was turned over to the FBI who actually charged him. During a hearing on Thursday, federal prosecutors told a judge there were multiple incidents in which he’d used excessive force on inmates. Each time, Mize was disciplined, but he was never fired.

    Mize’s attorney told the judge that his client worked in a tough environment which required tough decisions. Apparently, shoving an elderly man into a concrete wall and breaking his hip is one of those tough decisions Mize had to make to keep the citizens of Cincinnati safe.

    FBI agents arrested Mize on Thursday and he was released on his own recognizance shortly thereafter, with the judge saying he did not see Mize as a threat to the public. Mize will have to meet several conditions, however, including drug and alcohol testing and a mental evaluation.

    If Mize is convicted, he faces up to ten years in prison.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-cop-arrested-for-shoving-innocent-elderly-man-into-concrete-wall-breaking-his-face-and-hip/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2018, 03:20:23 PM
    Why was this cop not arrested or shot on the spot?

    Citizen Blows Up on Cops After Officer Threatens to Kill Him for Filming

    Mesa, CA — Filming the police is entirely legal in every state. However, all too often, we will see police officers overstep their authority and arrest, attack, and assault innocent people for the constitutionally protected act of documenting their behavior in public. A video shared with the Free Thought Project this week shows just how dangerous a cop’s ignorance of the law can be.

    In the video below, an entirely innocent man, doing nothing other than practicing his first amendment right to film in public, was assaulted with a deadly weapon. Because a police officer feared for his life over a camera, he chose to pull his weapon and threaten an innocent man’s life.

    The man filming was simply walking down the street with a camera when he came upon the officer identified as officer Everett with the Mesa College Police Department. As was his constitutional right to do so, the man filming stopped on the public sidewalk and video recorded the officer in his official duties.

    “What are you filming for?” asks the cop, clearly acknowledging that the man was holding a camera and not some other object that he was going to use to cause him harm. However, when the man filming exercised his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, the officer escalated the situation and began to claim he feared for his life.

    As illustrated by his original question, the officer knew that this man was holding a camera. However, after the man attempted to assert his rights, the officer then claimed he did not know what the object was being pointed at him.

    As the man kept filming, the officer then put his hand on his pistol, causing the man to have a legitimate reason to fear for his own life.

    “Do not unholster your weapon!” he screams at the officer. But the officer did not listen.

    Seconds later, the officer unholsters his pistol and points it at the innocent man. The man filming becomes heavily distressed and subsequently begins yelling—a move that could’ve likely gotten him killed.

    As officer Everett holds the man at gunpoint for filming, backup arrives as the man demands to see a sergeant—but, not before the other officer grabs his pistol as well.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-citizen-blows-up-on-cops-after-officer-threatens-to-kill-him-for-filming/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 22, 2018, 02:37:33 PM
    They should imprisoned for life and subjected to daily beatings "behavioral correction procedures while being administered head strikes".
    Not only was the fatso not arrested but he was promoted to "sergeant" and the other thug is still employed as a "deputy".

    (https://imageproxy.themaven.net/https%3A%2F%2Fs3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com%2Fmaven-user-photos%2Fpinacnews%2Fcourtroom-files%2F5IUNYQ7dqUi_fQ5XJlDRow%2F6XfDe8rebkqv5Rihq5HVOw?w=228&q=75&h=466.6875&auto=format&fit=crop) (https://imageproxy.themaven.net/https%3A%2F%2Fs3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com%2Fmaven-user-photos%2Fpinacnews%2Fcourtroom-files%2F5IUNYQ7dqUi_fQ5XJlDRow%2F8xEDRLMAXEmqRDYa-eRZwg?w=228&q=75&h=494.4691358024691&auto=format&fit=crop)

    Of course, they accused the man of attacking them in order to justify their violent criminal behavior. However, he was found not guilty and the charges were dropped, an all too common occurrence: the cops attacking someone, then claim they were attacked and pile the charges on the victim and yet the charges are later dropped.

    Link to graphic image below, since this board doesn't allow direct display of graphic images:
    Image (http://www.baynews9.com/content/dam/News/static/514_BN9_michael_bratt_injury.jpg)

    Trial Begins Against Deputies who Beat Man so Badly, his Eye Fell out of Socket

    https://www.themaven.net/pinacnews/courtroom-files/trial-begins-against-deputies-who-beat-man-so-badly-his-eye-fell-out-of-socket-Jyd3mGV61EWBaEGIhMEvBg/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 22, 2018, 04:00:58 PM
    They should imprisoned for life and subjected to daily beatings "behavioral correction procedures while being administered head strikes".
    Not only was the fatso not arrested but he was promoted to "sergeant" and the other thug is still employed as a "deputy".

    (https://imageproxy.themaven.net/https%3A%2F%2Fs3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com%2Fmaven-user-photos%2Fpinacnews%2Fcourtroom-files%2F5IUNYQ7dqUi_fQ5XJlDRow%2F6XfDe8rebkqv5Rihq5HVOw?w=228&q=75&h=466.6875&auto=format&fit=crop) (https://imageproxy.themaven.net/https%3A%2F%2Fs3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com%2Fmaven-user-photos%2Fpinacnews%2Fcourtroom-files%2F5IUNYQ7dqUi_fQ5XJlDRow%2F8xEDRLMAXEmqRDYa-eRZwg?w=228&q=75&h=494.4691358024691&auto=format&fit=crop)

    Of course, they accused the man of attacking them in order to justify their violent criminal behavior. However, he was found not guilty and the charges were dropped, an all too common occurrence: the cops attacking someone, then claim they were attacked and pile the charges on the victim and yet the charges are later dropped.

    Link to graphic image below, since this board doesn't allow direct display of graphic images:
    Image (http://www.baynews9.com/content/dam/News/static/514_BN9_michael_bratt_injury.jpg)

    Trial Begins Against Deputies who Beat Man so Badly, his Eye Fell out of Socket

    https://www.themaven.net/pinacnews/courtroom-files/trial-begins-against-deputies-who-beat-man-so-badly-his-eye-fell-out-of-socket-Jyd3mGV61EWBaEGIhMEvBg/


    Let’s hope that Fat Bastard cop has a heart attack
    And the thin one continues on his hunger strike
    So they both die very soon.

    Typical Bullies take there guns / batons / uniform etc off them and they’re
    Useless insignificant nothings - They need their aforementioned equipment to
    Be Somebody  ::)  - Pathetic excuse for men.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2018, 12:26:54 PM
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5762577/Bodycam-reveals-activist-lied-raped-cop-pulled-DUI.html


    This is FD up - good thing for the body camera.  Activist - uh huh . . . . . .  >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 23, 2018, 01:35:42 PM
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5762577/Bodycam-reveals-activist-lied-raped-cop-pulled-DUI.html


    This is FD up - good thing for the body camera.  Activist - uh huh . . . . . .  >:(

    Cameras should be on all cops/dogs and their vehicles. Unfortunately, even then they still find ways to cover up by turning the camera off or claiming the camera "malfunctioned" just when they happened to rough up someone while screaming "stop resisting". Of course immediate access should be given to all involved parties. In this case, the cops were all too quick to show the bodycam footage; they should do it for all cases, not just the ones that vindicate them, like this one. Having said that, this woman should face the maximum sentence and consequences that the falsely accused cop would have gotten if found guilty. As for Talcum-X/Shaun King, this guy is a professional race baiting charlatan, who gives a shit about what he says.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 23, 2018, 01:49:08 PM
    Line up all the criminals who broke in to mouse house and attacked the innocent family and hang them all with a short rope.

    SWAT Team Raids WRONG House, Nearly Kills Dad, Injures 6yo Boy With Flash Grenade

    Chattanooga, TN – Young children were traumatized and injured by flash-bang grenades, an innocent father was terrorized and arrested by police, and their home was damaged, after a SWAT team carried out an early morning no-knock raid on the wrong house.

    The ordeal began at 5:50 a.m. on Tuesday when the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office teamed up with federal agents to conduct a raid on a house where they claimed a suspect in a murder case was staying. However, they actually terrorized an innocent family in a careless raid that should never have happened.

    Spencer Renck shared the story in a Facebook status, noting that he had just gotten out of bed and was preparing to get ready for work when he heard loud noises and immediately thought his home was being burglarized.

    “I heard loud banging noises upstairs so I grab my gun and try to run upstairs to protect my family from whatever was happening. I thought someone had broken in,” Renck said. “But no it was the Bradley County and Hamilton County SWAT team RAIDING my house.”

    The homeowner said the officers launched flash-bang grenades throughout his house, including into a bedroom where his 6-year-old son was sleeping. He said the grenade “blinded and deafened” his son, who was one of four young children in the home with Renck and his wife.

    “I had my gun drawn and they opened [the] basement door with several SWAT team members pointing their MP5’s and AR’s at me so first thing I think is to run so I don’t get shot since I’m holding a gun,” Renck said. “They flash-banged me downstairs then threw me to the ground and proceeded to hold me down with someone’s foot and aggressively cuff me and I told them I had a gun in my pocket loaded and he rolled me over and yanked it out and said ‘Of course you do because you are wanted for murder, you piece of shit’ then I proceeded to tell them they got the wrong person and they kept telling me to ‘shut the fuck up.’”

    After officers violently arrested Renck, they finally took the time to check his ID and realized that he was not the murder suspect they were looking for, and they were in the wrong home.
    According to a report from NewsChannel 9, Johnson City Police admitted in a press release that the search warrant was for 4030 Lynncrest Drive. The Renck family lives next door at 4040 Lynncrest Drive.

    Renck said that even when the officers realized he was innocent and they were at the wrong house, they just rushed to the house next door to find the suspect they were actually targeting. When asked for a statement on the botched raid, the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office ignored the egregious actions of its officers and focused on the fact that they eventually arrested Monte Lamar Brewer Jr, a suspect in the 2017 murder of a pregnant woman.

    “Earlier this morning, the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office assisted a federal agency with executing a federal search warrant which led to the arrest of a male who was wanted for murder in Washington County, Tennessee,” spokesman James Bradford said in a statement.

    The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has announced that it is launching an investigation into the SWAT Team’s abhorrent actions, and the Drug Enforcement Agency released a statement responding to the botched raid:

    “On May 22, 2018, agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Louisville Division Office and the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office served a federal search warrant at an address associated with an individual wanted for murder, who was also a target in an ongoing heroin investigation. This operation was part of a larger ongoing investigation. Unfortunately, this search warrant was initially served on the wrong residence. DEA leadership immediately responded to the scene and met with the family. Fortunately, there were no injuries and DEA will continue to work with the family to ensure their wellbeing. Situations such as these are tragic and DEA takes them very seriously. We intend to look into this matter further and take steps to ensure situations such as this never occur again.”

    Unfortunately, the trend of SWAT teams terrorizing innocent families and damaging property in early morning no-knock raids that are carried out at the wrong addresses is not uncommon. In December 2017, a SWAT team in Chicago raided the wrong house and were reprimanded by the homeowner who demanded an apology, while recording the incident on Facebook Live.

    “Next thing you know, when I’m looking there’s guns in my face. Just guns drawn out, ‘Get outta here, who’s in here with you?’ Just a bunch of questions,” Homeowner Shanae Cross said, describing the scene when SWAT team members first broke into her house. “I’m like, ‘What the hell is you doing in my house? Who are you, why are you in my house?‘ Then I realize when I see the vests and all, this is the police.”

    Officers began to arrest Cross’s 17-year-old brother, and she said she immediately demanded to see a search warrant for the residence where the officers were initiating the “no-knock” raid. When an officer told her the street address was “8203,” she informed them that they were at the wrong house.

    “I’m like ‘This is 8209, you f—king idiot. You’re in the wrong house!’”
    Spencer Renck and his family are now left to live with the trauma from the horrific raid, all because police failed to confirm the correct address on the search warrant. In addition to rushing to the hospital for a check-up for his young son, who was impacted by the flash-bang grenade that detonated in his room, Renck wrote on Facebook that his house was left damaged from the raid.

    “They destroyed my door, door frame, carpet on my stairs blew my ceiling out and burned my living room floor and hallway,” Renck said. “All because someone got the wrong house. I am okay and could have easily been killed just thankful to be alive and my family okay. I still don’t understand how you get the wrong damn house.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/swat-team-raids-wrong-house-throws-flash-bang-grenade-6-year-olds-room/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 23, 2018, 06:53:54 PM
    Cameras should be on all cops/dogs and their vehicles. Unfortunately, even then they still find ways to cover up by turning the camera off or claiming the camera "malfunctioned" just when they happened to rough up someone while screaming "stop resisting". Of course immediate access should be given to all involved parties. In this case, the cops were all too quick to show the bodycam footage; they should do it for all cases, not just the ones that vindicate them, like this one. Having said that, this woman should face the maximum sentence and consequences that the falsely accused cop would have gotten if found guilty. As for Talcum-X/Shaun King, this guy is a professional race baiting charlatan, who gives a shit about what he says.

    Interesting.. the activists were calling for his officers murder. he was tried and convicted by hundreds of thousands.... then the video was released..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on May 23, 2018, 10:16:09 PM
    Too bad he couldn't defend his family properly and neutralize the armed intruders. Now he is sent to prison from a jury that succumbed to the crocodile tears of an armed thug and the intimidation of the rest of his gang who were at the court room.

    Teen Sent to Prison for Defending Home from Intruders—Because The Intruders Were Cops

    Austin, TX – When a SWAT team initiated a no-knock raid in search of cannabis, they were met with gunfire, and while the resident surrendered as soon as he realized his home was being raided by police, the fact that he opened fire on the intruders and shot one of them in the leg has resulted in a 13-year prison sentence.

    When a SWAT team broke down the door and charged into the Harrell family’s house in the early morning hours of April 14, 2016, they claimed that the intrusive operation was justified, because they believed 18-year-old Tyler Harrell was running a drug ring out of his parents’ home.

    When Tyler Harrell was woken up by what he believed were burglars breaking into his home, he did what many gun owners would do, and he grabbed his firearm and confronted the intruders. He used his legally-owned AK-47, and while he did not kill any of the officers, he did wound one officer by shooting him in the knee.

    Lisa Harrell told KVUE News that she believes her son only opened fire because he thought his family was being robbed. “[Tyler] came running out with his gun, thinking someone was intruding in our house, and he started shooting down the stairs,” she said. “I know my son thought there was an intruder in the house.”

    Hours after the shooting, police confirmed that “another SWAT team member returned fire, but did not hit Harrell, who surrendered to police within minutes,” indicating that as soon as Harrell realized he was firing at police officers, he stopped and let them arrest him without a fight.

    When officers searched the home, they found one ounce of cannabis, which would justify a misdemeanor charge against Harrell. However, because the officers initiated a no-knock raid before dawn, and Harrell attempted to protect his family from the intruders, he was charged with attempted capital murder.

    During the trial, Harrell’s psychiatrist testified that at the time of the shooting, he was “suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after an incident four months earlier in which he and his friends were robbed by a masked gunman,” and the gunman shot Harrell, before Harrell “wrested the gun away from the man and chased him out the door of his friend’s apartment,” according to a report from the Austin Statesman.

    However, it was the testimony from Officer James Pittman that apparently pulled at the heartstrings of jury members. He was the only person injured by Harrell’s gunfire, and he said the bullet wound in his leg kept him from playing with his kids now and would force him to get knee replacement surgery one day.

    Pittman also criticized the “Not Guilty” verdict from another Texas case in which a homeowner shot and wounded three police officers when they initiated a no-knock raid on his house. Ray Rosas spent nearly two years in jail awaiting his trial, and his actions were ruled justified based on the fact that he was acting in self-defense and did not know the intruders he was shooting were police officers.

    Rosas was acquitted, despite the fact that 11 police officers testified against him. However, in the case of Tyler Harrell, his lawyer argued that the 18 SWAT team members who attended court in tactical gear to show their support for Officer Pittman, further demonized Harrell in the eyes of the jury.

    “Look at this gallery. You don’t think this is a lot of political pressure for these people?” Lawyer Michael Chandler told the jury.

    The pressure worked, and while the jury determined that Tyler Harrell was not guilty of attempted capital murder or aggravated assault on a public servant, he was found guilty of aggravated assault and sentenced to 13 years and six months in prison, and a fine of $7,000.


    When the trial shifted to a debate over whether Harrell acted in self-defense, it served as a distraction from the fact that the drug raid on his home was an absolute failure, and officers were never able to prove that Harrell was a “large drug dealer” of marijuana and cocaine, which was the claim they used to justify obtaining a search warrant for the raid in the first place.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-sentenced-shooting-cop-no-knock-raid-over-weed/

    Tyler Harrell must've had the greatest position to fire on police and not be shot 47 times. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2018, 04:56:10 PM
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5762577/Bodycam-reveals-activist-lied-raped-cop-pulled-DUI.html


    This is FD up - good thing for the body camera.  Activist - uh huh . . . . . .  >:(

    The SJWs were quick to react here but they vented their social media wrath on the wrong person. Good to see this guy and his family putting up a fight. I'm not expecting much but it would be nice if they can actually hold the race baiting Talcum X and some of his followers accountable.

    Trooper with same name as officer falsely accused of sexual assault fights Shaun King's posts

    A Texas state trooper has received thousands of death threats, his father tells Fox News, after a woman accused a different trooper with the same last name of sexually assaulting her during a traffic stop, only to be contradicted by video evidence.

    The threats poured in after columnist and activist Shaun King brought attention to the accusations on Twitter, but before body cam video contradicted those allegations. King and civil rights attorney Lee Merritt identified the accused trooper as “Officer Hubbard” or “Hubbard,” without revealing his first name.

    The trooper accused by the woman is named Daniel Hubbard. Now, the trooper with the same surname, Jarrod K. Hubbard, is fighting back.

    Sherita Dixon-Cole accused Daniel Hubbard of sexual assaulting her during a traffic stop on Sunday. Body camera footage released Wednesday did not appear to corroborate her claims, and lawyer Merritt apologized to the trooper.

    Meanwhile, critics of law enforcement shared Officer Jarrod K. Hubbard's pictures and social media accounts thousands of times over Facebook and Twitter within 24 hours of the alleged crime, likely because they did not have his first name, his father said.

    “His picture was the first thing that came up,” said Jarrod Hubbard's dad, Chief Deputy Norman Hubbard of the Bell County Sheriff’s Office. “One person posted on Twitter my name and date of birth, my wife’s name and date of birth and my son’s name and date of birth.”

    The 37-year-old trooper, who's been with the force for 13 years, was placed under protection of the Texas Rangers on Monday, his father said. The Rangers did not immediately confirm it to Fox News.

    On Monday an attorney hired by the Hubbards sent a letter to King and Merritt asking that they “minimize the harm that has been and is being caused” by “disclosing that my client is not and has been erroneously identified as the Officer Daniel Hubbard involved in the event.”  

    “The identification error has defamed and is defaming my client and his family resulting in substantial harassment and threats necessitating his discontinuation of his Facebook page and need and request for protection for himself and his family from appropriate law enforcement agencies,” said the letter from the Hubbards' lawyer, Vance Dunnam Jr.

    The letter referred to the now-deleted posts, which never fully provided Daniel Hubbard’s name.

    Jarrod Hubbard’s father told Fox News that he has yet to hear from either King or Merritt. He said they'd done nothing to clear his son’s name.

    King and Merritt did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.

    Jarrod Hubbard returned to work Wednesday, but his father said they’re keeping up the fight: “We’re going after them.”

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/24/trooper-with-same-name-as-officer-falsely-accused-sexual-assault-fights-shaun-kings-posts.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Yamcha on May 25, 2018, 07:39:03 AM
    Thank God we don't live in the UK... oh wait, this happened in NYC? Shit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 25, 2018, 12:22:33 PM
    Even though firefighters risk their lives and serve the community this is just insane. How many others work the system like this?

    Firefighter has become master of maxing out overtime pay

    A Los Angeles firefighter received $300,000 in overtime pay in one year by working more hours than actually exist in a single year.

    Donn Thompson augmented his $92,000 salary by more than a quarter of a million dollars in 2017, Reason magazine reported, citing data from Transparent California, a project of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

    It wasn’t a one-off payout, as Thompson earned over $1 million in overtime pay over the last four years.

    But the math behind the pay doesn’t add up. It would have required the firefighter to work 9,280 hours in a year, despite there being 8,760 hours in a single year.

    The magazine crunched the numbers and claimed that the firefighter earned his base salary of $92,000 by working 2,912 hours at an hourly rate of $31.60. For overtime hourly rate, Thompson would earn $47.40, meaning that in order to receive $300,000 in overtime pay for the whole year, he would have had to work 6,370 hours – bringing the total hours worked to 9,280.

    Robert Fellner, director of the institute, said the firefighter’s ability to work that many hours “boggles the mind” and said that Thompson was likely taking advantage of generous contract provisions that boost overtime pay above the typical rate.

    Thompson is reportedly known for mastering the way to max out overtime pay. Between 1993 and 1995 he earned nearly $220,000 in overtime, a 1996 Los Angeles Times article reported. Thompson said at the time that most overtime hours are linked to covering for other workers at the stations and not to “fires or other emergencies.”

    In 2008, Thompson earned nearly $180,000 in overtime pay, the Los Angeles Daily News reported, noting that the L.A. fire department's overtime budget skyrocketed by over 60 percent in a decade.

    Thompson justified his pay a few years ago, saying he "basically lived at the station” and worked hard to earn it.

    "The first thing [people] think of is firefighters sitting around at the station, but they're not just handing out free money over here," Thompson told the San Diego Union-Tribune. "I'm working hard."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 25, 2018, 02:07:52 PM
    Even though firefighters risk their lives and serve the community this is just insane. How many others work the system like this?

    Firefighter has become master of maxing out overtime pay

    A Los Angeles firefighter received $300,000 in overtime pay in one year by working more hours than actually exist in a single year.

    Donn Thompson augmented his $92,000 salary by more than a quarter of a million dollars in 2017, Reason magazine reported, citing data from Transparent California, a project of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

    It wasn’t a one-off payout, as Thompson earned over $1 million in overtime pay over the last four years.

    But the math behind the pay doesn’t add up. It would have required the firefighter to work 9,280 hours in a year, despite there being 8,760 hours in a single year.

    The magazine crunched the numbers and claimed that the firefighter earned his base salary of $92,000 by working 2,912 hours at an hourly rate of $31.60. For overtime hourly rate, Thompson would earn $47.40, meaning that in order to receive $300,000 in overtime pay for the whole year, he would have had to work 6,370 hours – bringing the total hours worked to 9,280.

    Robert Fellner, director of the institute, said the firefighter’s ability to work that many hours “boggles the mind” and said that Thompson was likely taking advantage of generous contract provisions that boost overtime pay above the typical rate.

    Thompson is reportedly known for mastering the way to max out overtime pay. Between 1993 and 1995 he earned nearly $220,000 in overtime, a 1996 Los Angeles Times article reported. Thompson said at the time that most overtime hours are linked to covering for other workers at the stations and not to “fires or other emergencies.”

    In 2008, Thompson earned nearly $180,000 in overtime pay, the Los Angeles Daily News reported, noting that the L.A. fire department's overtime budget skyrocketed by over 60 percent in a decade.

    Thompson justified his pay a few years ago, saying he "basically lived at the station” and worked hard to earn it.

    "The first thing [people] think of is firefighters sitting around at the station, but they're not just handing out free money over here," Thompson told the San Diego Union-Tribune. "I'm working hard."

    Happens in policing as well. Overtime hounds will take advantage of the system. They stay within the rules, but in my opinion it is unethical and the taxpayers are the ones who pay for it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 25, 2018, 07:13:58 PM
    It’s outrageous.


    Even though firefighters risk their lives and serve the community this is just insane. How many others work the system like this?

    Firefighter has become master of maxing out overtime pay

    A Los Angeles firefighter received $300,000 in overtime pay in one year by working more hours than actually exist in a single year.

    Donn Thompson augmented his $92,000 salary by more than a quarter of a million dollars in 2017, Reason magazine reported, citing data from Transparent California, a project of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

    It wasn’t a one-off payout, as Thompson earned over $1 million in overtime pay over the last four years.

    But the math behind the pay doesn’t add up. It would have required the firefighter to work 9,280 hours in a year, despite there being 8,760 hours in a single year.

    The magazine crunched the numbers and claimed that the firefighter earned his base salary of $92,000 by working 2,912 hours at an hourly rate of $31.60. For overtime hourly rate, Thompson would earn $47.40, meaning that in order to receive $300,000 in overtime pay for the whole year, he would have had to work 6,370 hours – bringing the total hours worked to 9,280.

    Robert Fellner, director of the institute, said the firefighter’s ability to work that many hours “boggles the mind” and said that Thompson was likely taking advantage of generous contract provisions that boost overtime pay above the typical rate.

    Thompson is reportedly known for mastering the way to max out overtime pay. Between 1993 and 1995 he earned nearly $220,000 in overtime, a 1996 Los Angeles Times article reported. Thompson said at the time that most overtime hours are linked to covering for other workers at the stations and not to “fires or other emergencies.”

    In 2008, Thompson earned nearly $180,000 in overtime pay, the Los Angeles Daily News reported, noting that the L.A. fire department's overtime budget skyrocketed by over 60 percent in a decade.

    Thompson justified his pay a few years ago, saying he "basically lived at the station” and worked hard to earn it.

    "The first thing [people] think of is firefighters sitting around at the station, but they're not just handing out free money over here," Thompson told the San Diego Union-Tribune. "I'm working hard."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 26, 2018, 07:45:28 AM
    Happens in policing as well. Overtime hounds will take advantage of the system. They stay within the rules, but in my opinion it is unethical and the taxpayers are the ones who pay for it.

    From reading the article & what you say
    It’s been going on for many many years

    Have to ask why hasn’t anything been done about it
    Another case of turning a blind eye..??

    The hrs that man put in “worked” when did he eat & sleep.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2018, 12:09:16 PM
    From reading the article & what you say
    It’s been going on for many many years

    Have to ask why hasn’t anything been done about it
    Another case of turning a blind eye..??

    The hrs that man put in “worked” when did he eat & sleep.

    One of my last assignments I was over several departments, one of the was managing court overtime. The contract the police department had, stipulated certain criteria to be eligible for normal departmental overtime. For example, if you were on normal duty and got a late arrest, you only got overtime for the actual number of hours you worked over your normal hours. This was pretty simple. But, if you were called in and it was so many hours after your duty ended, or so many hours before your shift started, you would get a minimum of 4 hrs overtime. This was to compensate for the time it takes to get from where you are to your home to put on a uniform, drive in etc . It was an agreed upon or bargained for agreement. Then you add court Overtime which is from a different pot of money with different rules. There is regular court, then there is STEP court which is a government grant for enforcing traffic laws and or DWI. Officers had no control over when they would be scheduled for court, though it was supposed to mainly be during their duty hours to cut down on overtime. But when cops work evenings and nights and courts are 9 to 5 it is almost impossible. Cops show up for court, sign in, the citizen pleads guilty, the cop may have spent 30 minutes there, but gets 4 hours minimum. Where the ethical crap comes in, officers would get a court assignment and then schedule vacation on that day or part of that day in order to get overtime. That was stopped but the fact they would do that is sad. I remember one instance when a cop put in for court overtime and adjusted his normal hours to make it to where it wasn't continous and he wanted overtime. It got to my desk and I denied it. It was obvious what he was doing. He got the Police Association involved and we actually had to make our case for not paying. Pissed me off. I have always kept in mind that taxpayers are paying us, and we owe it to them to be frugal with their money and the blatant abuse was in my mind unethical even if they were not violating rules. For me, it would be an easy identifier for getting rid of potentially bad cops. If you were willing to bilk the system knowing the spirit of the policy was not to line your pockets but to be fair compensation, what else are you willing to do?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 26, 2018, 12:16:33 PM
    One of my last assignments I was over several departments, one of the was managing court overtime. The contract the police department had, stipulated certain criteria to be eligible for normal departmental overtime. For example, if you were on normal duty and got a late arrest, you only got overtime for the actual number of hours you worked over your normal hours. This was pretty simple. But, if you were called in and it was so many hours after your duty ended, or so many hours before your shift started, you would get a minimum of 4 hrs overtime. This was to compensate for the time it takes to get from where you are to your home to put on a uniform, drive in etc . It was an agreed upon or bargained for agreement. Then you add court Overtime which is from a different pot of money with different rules. There is regular court, then there is STEP court which is a government grant for enforcing traffic laws and or DWI. Officers had no control over when they would be scheduled for court, though it was supposed to mainly be during their duty hours to cut down on overtime. But when cops work evenings and nights and courts are 9 to 5 it is almost impossible. Cops show up for court, sign in, the citizen pleads guilty, the cop may have spent 30 minutes there, but gets 4 hours minimum. Where the ethical crap comes in, officers would get a court assignment and then schedule vacation on that day or part of that day in order to get overtime. That was stopped but the fact they would do that is sad. I remember one instance when a cop put in for court overtime and adjusted his normal hours to make it to where it wasn't continous and he wanted overtime. It got to my desk and I denied it. It was obvious what he was doing. He got the Police Association involved and we actually had to make our case for not paying. Pissed me off. I have always kept in mind that taxpayers are paying us, and we owe it to them to be frugal with their money and the blatant abuse was in my mind unethical even if they were not violating rules. For me, it would be an easy identifier for getting rid of potentially bad cops. If you were willing to bilk the system knowing the spirit of the policy was not to line your pockets but to be fair compensation, what else are you willing to do?


    For me, it would be an easy identifier for getting rid of potentially bad cops. If you were willing to bilk the system knowing the spirit of the policy was not to line your pockets but to be fair compensation, what else are you willing to do?


    Exactly right.
    Again it raises the question why aren’t they being got rid of.

    Thanks for your reply.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2018, 04:16:45 PM

    For me, it would be an easy identifier for getting rid of potentially bad cops. If you were willing to bilk the system knowing the spirit of the policy was not to line your pockets but to be fair compensation, what else are you willing to do?


    Exactly right.
    Again it raises the question why aren’t they being got rid of.

    Thanks for your reply.

    The reason is, it's similar to people using tax loopholes to avoid paying taxes. While it is unethical in my opinion, a person who "rents" a bedroom from a friend in Texas where there is no state tax but lives in Arkansas where there is, and walks the tightrope to meet the bare minimum of considering yourself a resident of Texas..it's wrong, but it isn't violating any rules.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Yamcha on May 26, 2018, 04:19:29 PM
    The reason is, it's similar to people using tax loopholes to avoid paying taxes. While it is unethical in my opinion, a person who "rents" a bedroom from a friend in Texas where there is no state tax but lives in Arkansas where there is, and walks the tightrope to meet the bare minimum of considering yourself a resident of Texas..it's wrong, but it isn't violating any rules.

    Yup, I see the same issues for students applying to be granted TX residency for in-state tuition.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2018, 04:25:53 PM
    Yup, I see the same issues for students applying to be granted TX residency for in-state tuition.



    if there is a way to work a system, there will always be people willing to do it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 26, 2018, 06:06:09 PM
    The reason is, it's similar to people using tax loopholes to avoid paying taxes. While it is unethical in my opinion, a person who "rents" a bedroom from a friend in Texas where there is no state tax but lives in Arkansas where there is, and walks the tightrope to meet the bare minimum of considering yourself a resident of Texas..it's wrong, but it isn't violating any rules.

    Okay It isn’t violating any rules.
    As you stated though it’s a good indicator as to what that person may do,
    And as the very many many reports on this thread indicate just
    How many of them walk a tightrope on moral & ethical responsibilities
    And fall off.

    More attention should be paid to these indicators & not just accepted or turn a blind eye.
    A zero tolerance approach might just raise the general standard of policing & prevent
    Much of what we read in this thread.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2018, 07:05:21 PM
    Okay It isn’t violating any rules.
    As you stated though it’s a good indicator as to what that person may do,
    And as the very many many reports on this thread indicate just
    How many of them walk a tightrope on moral & ethical responsibilities
    And fall off.

    More attention should be paid to these indicators & not just accepted or turn a blind eye.
    A zero tolerance approach might just raise the general standard of policing & prevent
    Much of what we read in this thread.


    I can't argue that, I can only say that in most policing or first responder jobs there are civil service guidelines that have to be followed. Also if you have a contract it has to be followed. What I think is wrong or unethical isn't the measurement the management has to use when it comes to issues that are addressed in either of those. What happens in our case is we make a note of the vague or questionable section and when we go back to the bargaining table, we try and close it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2018, 07:17:45 PM
    5 months

    Maybe that's what police state supporters think justice should be, but only for cops, not for others.

    Former Woodburn cop gets 5 months in jail for sexually abusing child

    (http://media.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/photo/daniel-kerbsjpg-f69141e32be35210.jpg)

    A Woodburn police officer who quit his job after admitting to sexually abusing a child was sentenced Wednesday to five months in jail.

    Washington County Circuit Judge D. Charles Bailey ordered Daniel Kerbs, 29, to also serve five years of probation, to have no contact with the female victim, and to register as a sex offender, as well as other restrictions. He pleaded guilty in March to first-degree online sexual corruption of a child and second-degree sexual abuse.

    According to Tigard police, an 18-year-old contacted the agency last summer reporting she'd been abused by Kerbs in Tigard years earlier. Kerbs was a family friend, police said.

    An indictment in the case said the abuse occurred between September 2013 and November 2014, and it included Kerbs soliciting the girl online for sex and taking steps to meet her.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2018/05/former_woodburn_cop_gets_5_mon.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 26, 2018, 08:40:43 PM
    I looked up more info thinking that often times plea deals are made at the request of the victim or family in order to avoid a trial and have the victim testify and be re victimized. I couldn't find that to be the case here and it looks like a lame ass judge did the sentencing. 5 months.. who gives a crap about probation and registering.. 5 months for doing that is ridiculous.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 27, 2018, 01:22:19 AM
    I looked up more info thinking that often times plea deals are made at the request of the victim or family in order to avoid a trial and have the victim testify and be re victimized. I couldn't find that to be the case here and it looks like a lame ass judge did the sentencing. 5 months.. who gives a crap about probation and registering.. 5 months for doing that is ridiculous.


    Is good to hear you agree
    His sentence is laughably ridiculous for such a crime
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2018, 01:20:29 PM
    The standard charge when they overcharge someone but can't get something to stick is "lying to the FBI". When the FBI lies, nothing happens.

    FBI Admits It Inflated Number of Supposedly Unhackable Devices

    We’ve learned that the FBI has been misinforming Congress and the public as part of its call for backdoor access to encrypted devices. For months, the Bureau has claimed that encryption prevented it from legally searching the contents of nearly 7,800 devices in 2017, but today the Washington Post reports that the actual number is far lower due to "programming errors" by the FBI.

    Frankly, we’re not surprised. FBI Director Christopher Wray and others argue that law enforcement needs some sort of backdoor “exceptional access” in order to deal with the increased adoption of encryption, particularly on mobile devices. And the 7,775 supposedly unhackable phones encountered by the FBI in 2017 have been central to Wray’s claim that their investigations are “Going Dark.” But the scope of this problem is called into doubt by services offered by third-party vendors like Cellebrite and Grayshift, which can reportedly bypass encryption on even the newest phones. The Bureau’s credibility on this issue was also undercut by a recent DOJ Office of the Inspector General report, which found that internal failures of communication caused the government to make false statements about its need for Apple to assist in unlocking a seized iPhone as part of the San Bernardino case.

    Given the availability of these third-party solutions, we’ve questioned how and why the FBI finds itself thwarted by so many locked phones. That’s why last week, EFF submitted a FOIA request for records related to Wray’s talking points about the 7,800 unhackable phones and the FBI’s use of outside vendors to bypass encryption.

    The stakes here are high. Imposing an exceptional access mandate on encryption providers would be extraordinarily dangerous from a security perspective, but the government has never provided details about the scope of the supposed Going Dark problem. The latest revision to Director Wray’s favorite talking point demonstrates that the case for legislation is even weaker than we thought. We hope that the government is suitably forthcoming to our FOIA request so that we can get to the bottom of this issue.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/05/fbi-admits-it-inflated-number-supposedly-unhackable-devices

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on May 30, 2018, 12:24:07 AM
    This is not in keeping with previous posts, but I did not want to start a new thread.

    LA County deputy kills a cyclist while typing.

    Deputy Andrew Wood, then a 16-year department veteran, was returning from a fire call at Calabasas High School at the time of the collision. Los Angeles County prosecutors, who declined to press criminal charges in the case, said Wood entered the bicycle lane “as a result of inattention caused by typing” on his in-car computer.

    “Since Wood was acting within the course and scope of his duties when he began to type his response, under Vehicle Code section 23123.5, he acted lawfully,” according to the declination letter from the L.A. County District Attorney’s office.

    https://www.dailynews.com/2018/05/29/family-of-cyclist-killed-by-distracted-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-gets-12-million-settlement/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 30, 2018, 05:14:05 AM
    This is not in keeping with previous posts, but I did not want to start a new thread.

    LA County deputy kills a cyclist while typing.

    Deputy Andrew Wood, then a 16-year department veteran, was returning from a fire call at Calabasas High School at the time of the collision. Los Angeles County prosecutors, who declined to press criminal charges in the case, said Wood entered the bicycle lane “as a result of inattention caused by typing” on his in-car computer.

    “Since Wood was acting within the course and scope of his duties when he began to type his response, under Vehicle Code section 23123.5, he acted lawfully,” according to the declination letter from the L.A. County District Attorney’s office.

    https://www.dailynews.com/2018/05/29/family-of-cyclist-killed-by-distracted-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-gets-12-million-settlement/


     ::) FFS More one rule for them one rule for others

    He a cyclists & it’s ok - Not if it was one of my family that’s for sure.

    More Police Bollocks.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 30, 2018, 05:36:32 AM
    This is not in keeping with previous posts, but I did not want to start a new thread.

    LA County deputy kills a cyclist while typing.

    Deputy Andrew Wood, then a 16-year department veteran, was returning from a fire call at Calabasas High School at the time of the collision. Los Angeles County prosecutors, who declined to press criminal charges in the case, said Wood entered the bicycle lane “as a result of inattention caused by typing” on his in-car computer.

    “Since Wood was acting within the course and scope of his duties when he began to type his response, under Vehicle Code section 23123.5, he acted lawfully,” according to the declination letter from the L.A. County District Attorney’s office.

    https://www.dailynews.com/2018/05/29/family-of-cyclist-killed-by-distracted-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-gets-12-million-settlement/

    Horrible. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2018, 09:35:26 AM
    4th arrest in 2 months. More than an "isolated incident", this shows a pattern of criminal activity. It's time for the feds to treat this gang as they are: a criminal organization.

    Cop Arrested for Recording Himself and Fellow Cop Horrifically Beating Innocent Man in Wheelchair

    Paterson, NJ — The Patterson Police Department in New Jersey is making headlines this week after their fourth officer in only two months has been arrested by federal agents. Officer Roger Then, 29, was arrested on Wednesday for participating in the beating of a mentally ill man in a wheelchair — and making a video to remember it.

    The person in the wheelchair was a patient at a hospital. He had committed no crime and had called authorities for help because he felt suicidal. However, once he got to the hospital, help was the last thing he received. Instead, he received a horrific beating at the hands of the two responding officers.

    Officer Then and his partner, known only as Police Officer 1 in the complaint, proceeded to beat their wheelchair-bound victim so horrifically that he required surgery to save his eyeball.

    The incident was captured on hospital surveillance footage as well as Then’s own cellphone. According to prosecutors, Then is accused of making a video of the beating with his phone and hiding it from the report and the department.

    According to the complaint:

    On March 5, 2018, Then and another Paterson police officer – identified in the complaint as “Police Officer 1” – responded to a call from an attempted suicide victim. Then and Police Officer 1 met the victim at St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Paterson.

    In the hospital surveillance footage, the victim, while in a wheelchair, appears to throw an object down the hall. Afterwards, Police Officer 1 pushes the wheelchair and punches the victim in the face. As the victim falls, Then grabs him by the back of the neck and pushes him to the ground.

    In the second video, which was allegedly taken by Then using his cellphone, the victim is on his back in a hospital bed. After the victim verbally insults Police Officer 1, Police Officer 1 puts on a pair of hospital gloves and violently strikes the victim twice across the face. Police Officer 1 then stands over the victim and says, “I ain’t fucking playing with you.”

    Then and Police Officer 1 filed a police report in connection with the events of March 5, 2018. The police report did not mention that Police Officer 1 punched the victim or that Then grabbed the victim by the neck and pushed him towards the ground, as captured in the first video. The police report also did not mention that Police Officer 1 violently struck the victim in a hospital room, as depicted in the second video.


    As a result of these assaults, the victim suffered multiple injuries to his face, including the eye injury that required surgery.

    After Then’s arrest, the department issued a statement noting that most of their cops are good and that this officer’s behavior was an isolated incident. However, the four arrests in two months indicate otherwise.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-arrested-for-recording-himself-and-fellow-cop-horrifically-beating-innocent-man-in-wheelchair/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 01, 2018, 07:25:48 AM
    Skip to comments.

    Jury Awards $4 to Family of Man Fatally Shot by Sheriff's Deputy in His Own Garage
    Yahoo ^ | Thu, May 31 5:24 AM PDT . | Chantal Da Silva, Newsweek
    Posted on 6/1/2018, 9:50:33 AM by BenLurkin

    Newman and his partner, Deputy Edward Lopez, had reportedly knocked on Hill's garage door to investigate the noise complaint. When the garage door eventually opened, Hill was standing by it with his left hand on the door and his right hand by his side.

    It is still unclear what exactly happened in the seconds that unfolded, as Newman drew his gun and fired four times toward Hill as the garage door started to go down.

    However, when a SWAT team arrived, they found Hill dead. He had been shot three times, including once in the head.

    Toxicology reports had shown Hill had been intoxicated at the time of the incident and the SWAT team found a gun in the 30-year-old's back pocket, but it was not loaded, TCPalm reported.

    On the second anniversary of Hill's death, the 30-year-old's mother, Viola Bryant, launched a lawsuit for wrongful death.

    Her battle for justice ended last Thursday, when the jury came to the conclusion that Newman had not used excessive force in the incident following 10 hours of deliberation.

    The jury did find that St. Lucie County Sheriff Ken Mascara had been negligent in his role, but determined him to be liable by just 1 percent...

    (Excerpt) Read more at yahoo.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 01, 2018, 07:37:20 AM
    Skip to comments.

    Jury Awards $4 to Family of Man Fatally Shot by Sheriff's Deputy in His Own Garage
    Yahoo ^ | Thu, May 31 5:24 AM PDT . | Chantal Da Silva, Newsweek
    Posted on 6/1/2018, 9:50:33 AM by BenLurkin

    Newman and his partner, Deputy Edward Lopez, had reportedly knocked on Hill's garage door to investigate the noise complaint. When the garage door eventually opened, Hill was standing by it with his left hand on the door and his right hand by his side.

    It is still unclear what exactly happened in the seconds that unfolded, as Newman drew his gun and fired four times toward Hill as the garage door started to go down.

    However, when a SWAT team arrived, they found Hill dead. He had been shot three times, including once in the head.

    Toxicology reports had shown Hill had been intoxicated at the time of the incident and the SWAT team found a gun in the 30-year-old's back pocket, but it was not loaded, TCPalm reported.

    On the second anniversary of Hill's death, the 30-year-old's mother, Viola Bryant, launched a lawsuit for wrongful death.

    Her battle for justice ended last Thursday, when the jury came to the conclusion that Newman had not used excessive force in the incident following 10 hours of deliberation.

    The jury did find that St. Lucie County Sheriff Ken Mascara had been negligent in his role, but determined him to be liable by just 1 percent...

    (Excerpt) Read more at yahoo.com ...


    Outrageous.

    So "he was intoxicated" but he was in his own house and garage, "he had a gun"  but it was discovered later in his back pocket and it was not loaded, when he was shot the garage door was closing and it seems some bullets even went through the garage door. And all this is somehow completely justified and the dead man is 99% responsible for his death so his family gets $1 for the funeral and $1 for each of his daughters? Talk about adding insult to injury.

    Edit: from reading a Fox article (http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/06/01/jury-awards-4-cents-to-estate-black-man-killed-by-florida-deputy.html) it appears the family estate will not actually receive $4 but 4 cents... Insane...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 01, 2018, 10:49:43 AM
    Must be one of the very few good apples.

    Iowa sheriff pleads guilty to traffic violation after telling deputy to give him ticket for illegally riding ATV

    An Iowa sheriff who asked one of his deputies to write him a ticket for illegally riding his ATV on a highway pleaded guilty to the traffic violation Thursday.

    Webster County Sheriff Jim Stubbs was riding his ATV to look at some family property a few weeks ago when he turned onto U.S. Highway 169 for a short period of time and he realized he was breaking the law by being on that road, according to The Messenger.

    “I did it and I hold myself responsible,” Stubbs said.

    Stubbs found a deputy who was on the side of U.S. 169 and asked the deputy to write him a ticket for breaking the law. He said if he had not gotten a ticket it would have made him a hypocrite.

    “If I’m going to have people out giving citations, then I need to hold myself to that higher standard as well,” he said. “And nobody’s above the law."

    Webster County had passed an ordinance on May 8 that allows ATV travel on county roads, but U.S. Highway 169 isn’t under Webster County jurisdiction, according to The Messenger.

    Stubbs pleaded guilty to one count of operating an ATV on a roadway or highway. Webster County Court Magistrate William Thatcher commended him for his honesty and ordered Stubbs to pay a $132.50.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/06/01/iowa-sheriff-pleads-guilty-to-traffic-violation-after-telling-deputy-to-give-him-ticket-for-illegally-riding-atv.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2018, 01:26:37 PM
    Must be one of the very few good apples.

    Iowa sheriff pleads guilty to traffic violation after telling deputy to give him ticket for illegally riding ATV

    An Iowa sheriff who asked one of his deputies to write him a ticket for illegally riding his ATV on a highway pleaded guilty to the traffic violation Thursday.

    Webster County Sheriff Jim Stubbs was riding his ATV to look at some family property a few weeks ago when he turned onto U.S. Highway 169 for a short period of time and he realized he was breaking the law by being on that road, according to The Messenger.

    “I did it and I hold myself responsible,” Stubbs said.

    Stubbs found a deputy who was on the side of U.S. 169 and asked the deputy to write him a ticket for breaking the law. He said if he had not gotten a ticket it would have made him a hypocrite.

    “If I’m going to have people out giving citations, then I need to hold myself to that higher standard as well,” he said. “And nobody’s above the law."

    Webster County had passed an ordinance on May 8 that allows ATV travel on county roads, but U.S. Highway 169 isn’t under Webster County jurisdiction, according to The Messenger.

    Stubbs pleaded guilty to one count of operating an ATV on a roadway or highway. Webster County Court Magistrate William Thatcher commended him for his honesty and ordered Stubbs to pay a $132.50.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/06/01/iowa-sheriff-pleads-guilty-to-traffic-violation-after-telling-deputy-to-give-him-ticket-for-illegally-riding-atv.html



    That’s a fine upstanding cop
    It’s good to hear there are a few still about.

    He’s exactly right about holding himself to that higher standard & that he is not above the law.
    That’s polar opposite to many many other cops & there cohorts.

    I wonder if he will get promotion.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 01, 2018, 01:56:12 PM
    When will this crime syndicate be disbanded, its leaders and henchmen sent to prison and all their crime proceeds be returned to their rightful owners?

    A 64-year-old put his life savings in his carry-on. U.S. Customs took it without charging him with a crime.

    A 64-year-old Cleveland man is suing U.S. Customs and Border Protection after agents strip-searched him at an airport in October and took more than $58,000 in cash from him without charging him with any crime, according to a federal lawsuit filed this week in Ohio.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2018/05/31/a-64-year-old-put-his-life-savings-in-his-carry-on-u-s-customs-took-it-without-charging-him-with-a-crime/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 01, 2018, 05:01:45 PM
    This is not in keeping with previous posts, but I did not want to start a new thread.

    LA County deputy kills a cyclist while typing.

    Deputy Andrew Wood, then a 16-year department veteran, was returning from a fire call at Calabasas High School at the time of the collision. Los Angeles County prosecutors, who declined to press criminal charges in the case, said Wood entered the bicycle lane “as a result of inattention caused by typing” on his in-car computer.

    “Since Wood was acting within the course and scope of his duties when he began to type his response, under Vehicle Code section 23123.5, he acted lawfully,” according to the declination letter from the L.A. County District Attorney’s office.

    https://www.dailynews.com/2018/05/29/family-of-cyclist-killed-by-distracted-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-gets-12-million-settlement/

    Officers typing while driving or reading calls while driving has been a huge safety issue. Some are just stupidity. Typing while driving as you are leaving a call is plain irresponsible. But another scenario is an officer responding to a disturbance with a gun, and getting updates as they are approaching the scene. It is very difficult not to glance over to see what the latest entry is when you hear the beep of a new entry.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2018, 05:12:43 PM
    Officers typing while driving or reading calls while driving has been a huge safety issue. Some are just stupidity. Typing while driving as you are leaving a call is plain irresponsible. But another scenario is an officer responding to a disturbance with a gun, and getting updates as they are approaching the scene. It is very difficult not to glance over to see what the latest entry is when you hear the beep of a new entry.


    Hmmmm yes - I think it’s the same kinda excuse used by many
    When their phone Beeps or Buzzes with a New Important Txt message or BookFace update
    That’s oh so Important.
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 01, 2018, 06:58:03 PM

    Hmmmm yes - I think it’s the same kinda excuse used by many
    When their phone Beeps or Buzzes with a New Important Txt message or BookFace update
    That’s oh so Important.
     ;)

    Well, lets look at it. A phone beeps... could be your girlfriend, a best buddy, maybe they want to meet up at the bar for a drink after work. Let's compare that to a guy driving to a disturbance with a gun, and there is an update that more than likely has information on where the guy with the gun might be. I can see where they are the same. Now I'm not saying either are excused from the damage they cause if they cause a crash, but like Chris Rock says, I don't condone it, but I understand it.... 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2018, 08:37:37 PM
    Well, lets look at it. A phone beeps... could be your girlfriend, a best buddy, maybe they want to meet up at the bar for a drink after work. Let's compare that to a guy driving to a disturbance with a gun, and there is an update that more than likely has information on where the guy with the gun might be. I can see where they are the same. Now I'm not saying either are excused from the damage they cause if they cause a crash, but like Chris Rock says, I don't condone it, but I understand it....  

    My comments were semi tongue in cheek,
    Yes there are similarities.
    The cop has a radio & that important info should be sent via that to keep him updated
    If it isn’t then that’s damn dangerous for him & other road users .

    Sounds like your trying to excuse them of the damage.

    Seriously reading & or typing on a screen while driving & killing an innocent
    Cyclist - then being let off.
    You’d maybe think differently if it was a close family member of yours that had been
    Killed.

    Oh & if a member of the public did as I stated and used that as a defence
    he’d be let off then by using that Woefully lame excuse. Of Course They’re Not.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 01, 2018, 08:45:05 PM
    Here is an older case that was posted on this topic. A Navy veteran is dead because this criminal was speeding and not paying attention to the road. If you're a citizen you get fines and prison and everyone gets a lecture on how bad they are and how dangerous this behavior is and possibly new harsher legislation is introduced. If you're a cop, you simply ignore all of the above and get away with killing an innocent person. This particular case is pretty outrageous, worth a read to remember it:

    http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8118862#msg8118862


    Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges

    Port Orange, FL — On December 21, Port Orange Police Officer Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car at 15 mph above the posted speed limit when he struck and killed a motorcyclist.

    Father of two and Navy Veteran, Andrew McIlvain, 39, was riding his motorcycle as Officer Portillo was looking down at his laptop on the way to a “non-priority” noise complaint. When Portillo looked up, it was too late, he was driving over this unsuspecting man.

    Two weeks later, McIlvain succumbed to his severe injuries, and he died on January 4. The police even had the audacity to attempt to justify this officer’s reckless driving by releasing a statement that McIlvain didn’t have his driver’s license at the time of the crash — as if that is worthy of a death sentence.

    All of this information was obtained by the Port Orange police during the process of their internal investigation. It is a matter of police record that Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car, was speeding, was distracted, and killed an innocent man. He was then suspended for ten days and ordered to attend an emergency vehicle operation course.

    However, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, they could not legally prove those facts during Portillo’s hearing last week.

    The debacle began as Portillo conveniently did not show up to his own hearing for the careless driving charge. This was likely an attempt to avoid a perjury charge if he was asked about driving the car that killed a man.

    According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal:

        Portillo did not appear for the hearing before County Judge Angela Dempsey at the Courthouse Annex in Daytona Beach. Portillo’s attorney Martin White argued successfully that the police officer had not been identified as the driver of the squad car that struck McIlvain.

    The FHP was responsible for an independent investigation of Portillo. Former FHP Trooper Robert Asbill interview him after the accident, however, he was conveniently absent that day as well. Even so, the FHP’s own report, prepared by Trooper Kurt Glaenzer listed Portillo as the driver of the patrol car!

    “Because the defendant is not required to file an affidavit there is no evidence on the record to identify my client as the operator of that vehicle,” White said in a glaring misrepresentation of the truth.

    “Your Honor, we move for a judgment of acquittal at this junction,” White said. “There’s been no identification that my client was driving behind the wheel. The state did not establish venue.”

    “Judgment of acquittal is granted,” Dempsey said.

    This entire dog and pony show wasn’t about whether or not to charge Portillo with manslaughter; it was only about a $166 careless driving ticket. Had Portillo received that ticket for careless driving, however, he could have been subject Florida state law 782.071 for vehicular homicide.

    Instead, Portillo will escape all accountability.

    Because of his negligence, Silvio Portillo killed an innocent man. And, because of the corruption and unwillingness of the supposed “justice” system to prosecute their own, no one will be held responsible for this loss of life.

    Talking to the Journal, White said that while the argument that it could not be proven that Portillo was driving the patrol car might seem “counterintuitive” it was based on the law. He declined further comment.

    “It bothers me to see a mother that’s heartbroken, and I have to explain the law to her,” Glaenzer said as McIlvain’s elderly mother sat silently stunned in the back of the courtroom; wondering how a cop can kill her son and face no repercussions.

    Those who are tasked with upholding the law should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us, or at the very least, the same standard. However, as is the case the majority of the time, the blue line conceals a much lower set of standards.

    All hope is not lost for McIlvain’s mother though, her attorney Michael Politis, said they have already begun the process for a civil lawsuit in this case. However, the unfortunate reality of the civil lawsuit is that the taxpayers will be held liable and not the man who killed her son.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-man-patrol-car-speeding-laptop-flexes-blue-privilege-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2018, 08:54:41 PM
    Here is an older case that was posted on this topic. A Navy veteran is dead because this criminal was speeding and not paying attention to the road. If you're a citizen you get fines and prison and everyone gets a lecture on how bad they are and how dangerous this behavior is and possibly new harsher legislation is introduced. If you're a cop, you simply ignore all of the above and get away with killing an innocent person. This particular case is pretty outrageous, worth a read to remember it:

    http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8118862#msg8118862


    Cop Kills Man with Patrol Car While Speeding & Looking at Laptop, Flexes Blue Privilege – No Charges

    Port Orange, FL — On December 21, Port Orange Police Officer Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car at 15 mph above the posted speed limit when he struck and killed a motorcyclist.

    Father of two and Navy Veteran, Andrew McIlvain, 39, was riding his motorcycle as Officer Portillo was looking down at his laptop on the way to a “non-priority” noise complaint. When Portillo looked up, it was too late, he was driving over this unsuspecting man.

    Two weeks later, McIlvain succumbed to his severe injuries, and he died on January 4. The police even had the audacity to attempt to justify this officer’s reckless driving by releasing a statement that McIlvain didn’t have his driver’s license at the time of the crash — as if that is worthy of a death sentence.

    All of this information was obtained by the Port Orange police during the process of their internal investigation. It is a matter of police record that Silvio Portillo was driving his patrol car, was speeding, was distracted, and killed an innocent man. He was then suspended for ten days and ordered to attend an emergency vehicle operation course.

    However, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, they could not legally prove those facts during Portillo’s hearing last week.

    The debacle began as Portillo conveniently did not show up to his own hearing for the careless driving charge. This was likely an attempt to avoid a perjury charge if he was asked about driving the car that killed a man.

    According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal:

        Portillo did not appear for the hearing before County Judge Angela Dempsey at the Courthouse Annex in Daytona Beach. Portillo’s attorney Martin White argued successfully that the police officer had not been identified as the driver of the squad car that struck McIlvain.

    The FHP was responsible for an independent investigation of Portillo. Former FHP Trooper Robert Asbill interview him after the accident, however, he was conveniently absent that day as well. Even so, the FHP’s own report, prepared by Trooper Kurt Glaenzer listed Portillo as the driver of the patrol car!

    “Because the defendant is not required to file an affidavit there is no evidence on the record to identify my client as the operator of that vehicle,” White said in a glaring misrepresentation of the truth.

    “Your Honor, we move for a judgment of acquittal at this junction,” White said. “There’s been no identification that my client was driving behind the wheel. The state did not establish venue.”

    “Judgment of acquittal is granted,” Dempsey said.

    This entire dog and pony show wasn’t about whether or not to charge Portillo with manslaughter; it was only about a $166 careless driving ticket. Had Portillo received that ticket for careless driving, however, he could have been subject Florida state law 782.071 for vehicular homicide.

    Instead, Portillo will escape all accountability.

    Because of his negligence, Silvio Portillo killed an innocent man. And, because of the corruption and unwillingness of the supposed “justice” system to prosecute their own, no one will be held responsible for this loss of life.

    Talking to the Journal, White said that while the argument that it could not be proven that Portillo was driving the patrol car might seem “counterintuitive” it was based on the law. He declined further comment.

    “It bothers me to see a mother that’s heartbroken, and I have to explain the law to her,” Glaenzer said as McIlvain’s elderly mother sat silently stunned in the back of the courtroom; wondering how a cop can kill her son and face no repercussions.

    Those who are tasked with upholding the law should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us, or at the very least, the same standard. However, as is the case the majority of the time, the blue line conceals a much lower set of standards.

    All hope is not lost for McIlvain’s mother though, her attorney Michael Politis, said they have already begun the process for a civil lawsuit in this case. However, the unfortunate reality of the civil lawsuit is that the taxpayers will be held liable and not the man who killed her son.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-man-patrol-car-speeding-laptop-flexes-blue-privilege-charges/


    Another Beyond fooking ridiculous
    Agnostic are you going to understand / make excuses for this one also.

    In case you only want to answer to one of my posts.
    My comments were semi tongue in cheek,
    Yes there are similarities.
    The cop has a radio & that important info should be sent via that to keep him updated
    If it isn’t then that’s damn dangerous for him & other road users .

    Sounds like your trying to excuse them of the damage.

    Seriously reading & or typing on a screen while driving & killing an innocent
    Cyclist - then being let off.
    You’d maybe think differently if it was a close family member of yours that had been
    Killed.

    Oh & if a member of the public did as I stated and used that as a defence
    he’d be let off then by using that Woefully lame excuse. Of Course They’re Not.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 01, 2018, 10:16:34 PM
    My comments were semi tongue in cheek,
    Yes there are similarities.
    The cop has a radio & that important info should be sent via that to keep him updated
    If it isn’t then that’s damn dangerous for him & other road users .

    Sounds like your trying to excuse them of the damage.

    Seriously reading & or typing on a screen while driving & killing an innocent
    Cyclist - then being let off.
    You’d maybe think differently if it was a close family member of yours that had been
    Killed.

    Oh & if a member of the public did as I stated and used that as a defence
    he’d be let of

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 01, 2018, 10:17:26 PM
    My comments were semi tongue in cheek,
    Yes there are similarities.
    The cop has a radio & that important info should be sent via that to keep him updated
    If it isn’t then that’s damn dangerous for him & other road users .

    Sounds like your trying to excuse them of the damage.

    Seriously reading & or typing on a screen while driving & killing an innocent
    Cyclist - then being let off.
    You’d maybe think differently if it was a close family member of yours that had been
    Killed.

    Oh & if a member of the public did as I stated and used that as a defence
    he’d be let of



    vaild points. I think both are liable for any damage they cause. no letting off.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on June 01, 2018, 10:17:55 PM
    Officers typing while driving or reading calls while driving has been a huge safety issue. Some are just stupidity. Typing while driving as you are leaving a call is plain irresponsible. But another scenario is an officer responding to a disturbance with a gun, and getting updates as they are approaching the scene. It is very difficult not to glance over to see what the latest entry is when you hear the beep of a new entry.

    I would draw a distinction between reading an update and typing a message.  Don't all drivers look at the dash, radio display, side and rear-view mirrors, passenger, etc?  The annoying low gas alert draws my attention for a second or so.  It's taking the time to type that's hazardous.  
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 02, 2018, 11:59:34 AM
    The Broward County cesspit... These scumbags must be held accountable.

    Report: Broward County Sheriff Capt. Kept EMTs Out of Stoneman Douglas High After Shooting

    And you thought the details of what happened in Parkland couldn’t have made the Broward County Sheriff’s Department look any worse. First we learned that the BCSD had 39 prior encounters with the shooter before he opened fire in the school. Then it was disclosed that school resource officer Scot Peterson, and then some of his fellow deputies, stayed outside while the shooting was going on, listening to the sounds of students and teachers being murdered.

    Peterson, it seems, had earlier done Sheriff Scott Israel a solid by allegedly covering up a sexual assault charge against Israel’s son, an assault that happened at Marjory Stoneman Douglass High.

    When backup arrived outside the school, rather than enter and engage the shooter — something that had been standard law enforcement tactics ever since Columbine — they were instead ordered to remain outside the building and form a perimeter, a delay that no doubt cost more lives inside.

    Now, according to the Miami Herald, not only did Sheriff’s Israel’s finest fail to enter the school and challenge the shooter, but the captain in charge that day — the one who ordered the perimeter — also prevented EMTs from going in, letting victims bleed to death.

    During the chaos of the Parkland school shooting, paramedics from Coral Springs-Parkland Fire Department were desperate to go inside the building where students were wounded and dying.

    Michael McNally, deputy chief for Coral Springs fire-rescue, asked six times for permission to send in specialized teams of police officers and paramedics, according to an incident report he filed after the Feb. 14 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that left 17 people dead.

    But every time McNally asked to deploy the two Rescue Task Force teams — each made up of three paramedics and three to four law enforcement officers — the Broward Sheriff’s Office captain in charge of the scene, Jan Jordan, said no.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/06/daniel-zimmerman/report-broward-county-sheriff-capt-kept-emts-out-of-stoneman-douglas-high-after-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 02, 2018, 02:02:57 PM
    The Broward County cesspit... These scumbags must be held accountable.

    Report: Broward County Sheriff Capt. Kept EMTs Out of Stoneman Douglas High After Shooting

    And you thought the details of what happened in Parkland couldn’t have made the Broward County Sheriff’s Department look any worse. First we learned that the BCSD had 39 prior encounters with the shooter before he opened fire in the school. Then it was disclosed that school resource officer Scot Peterson, and then some of his fellow deputies, stayed outside while the shooting was going on, listening to the sounds of students and teachers being murdered.

    Peterson, it seems, had earlier done Sheriff Scott Israel a solid by allegedly covering up a sexual assault charge against Israel’s son, an assault that happened at Marjory Stoneman Douglass High.

    When backup arrived outside the school, rather than enter and engage the shooter — something that had been standard law enforcement tactics ever since Columbine — they were instead ordered to remain outside the building and form a perimeter, a delay that no doubt cost more lives inside.

    Now, according to the Miami Herald, not only did Sheriff’s Israel’s finest fail to enter the school and challenge the shooter, but the captain in charge that day — the one who ordered the perimeter — also prevented EMTs from going in, letting victims bleed to death.

    During the chaos of the Parkland school shooting, paramedics from Coral Springs-Parkland Fire Department were desperate to go inside the building where students were wounded and dying.

    Michael McNally, deputy chief for Coral Springs fire-rescue, asked six times for permission to send in specialized teams of police officers and paramedics, according to an incident report he filed after the Feb. 14 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that left 17 people dead.

    But every time McNally asked to deploy the two Rescue Task Force teams — each made up of three paramedics and three to four law enforcement officers — the Broward Sheriff’s Office captain in charge of the scene, Jan Jordan, said no.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/06/daniel-zimmerman/report-broward-county-sheriff-capt-kept-emts-out-of-stoneman-douglas-high-after-shooting/


    Just how can any right minded person make any kind of excuse for those miserable fooking
    Jelly spined cops & as for that sheriff is better to not talk about him.

    Now these are Truley Poor Excuses For Humans.

    Let’s hear anyone say they’re not.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 02, 2018, 02:04:06 PM
    vaild points. I think both are liable for any damage they cause. no letting off.

    Both those cops are Very Poor Excuses For Humans wouldn’t you say. ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 02, 2018, 10:24:49 PM

    Sickening.    Bitches w badges

    The Broward County cesspit... These scumbags must be held accountable.

    Report: Broward County Sheriff Capt. Kept EMTs Out of Stoneman Douglas High After Shooting

    And you thought the details of what happened in Parkland couldn’t have made the Broward County Sheriff’s Department look any worse. First we learned that the BCSD had 39 prior encounters with the shooter before he opened fire in the school. Then it was disclosed that school resource officer Scot Peterson, and then some of his fellow deputies, stayed outside while the shooting was going on, listening to the sounds of students and teachers being murdered.

    Peterson, it seems, had earlier done Sheriff Scott Israel a solid by allegedly covering up a sexual assault charge against Israel’s son, an assault that happened at Marjory Stoneman Douglass High.

    When backup arrived outside the school, rather than enter and engage the shooter — something that had been standard law enforcement tactics ever since Columbine — they were instead ordered to remain outside the building and form a perimeter, a delay that no doubt cost more lives inside.

    Now, according to the Miami Herald, not only did Sheriff’s Israel’s finest fail to enter the school and challenge the shooter, but the captain in charge that day — the one who ordered the perimeter — also prevented EMTs from going in, letting victims bleed to death.

    During the chaos of the Parkland school shooting, paramedics from Coral Springs-Parkland Fire Department were desperate to go inside the building where students were wounded and dying.

    Michael McNally, deputy chief for Coral Springs fire-rescue, asked six times for permission to send in specialized teams of police officers and paramedics, according to an incident report he filed after the Feb. 14 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that left 17 people dead.

    But every time McNally asked to deploy the two Rescue Task Force teams — each made up of three paramedics and three to four law enforcement officers — the Broward Sheriff’s Office captain in charge of the scene, Jan Jordan, said no.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/06/daniel-zimmerman/report-broward-county-sheriff-capt-kept-emts-out-of-stoneman-douglas-high-after-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 02, 2018, 10:56:42 PM
    These are the agents of the state who, unlike the mere civilians plebs, are supposedly "highly trained" and "proficient" in the use of firearms. 

    FBI agent allegedly drops gun at Denver night club, shooting one person in the leg

    DENVER -- An FBI agent allegedly dropped his gun at a bar and another patron was shot in the leg early Saturday. Investigators said it appeared to be an accidental shooting.

    Denver police said they were called to a report of a shooting at 2201 Lawrence Street at 12:45 a.m.

    A woman who said she witnessed and recorded the shooting with her cell phone said it happened at Mile High Spirits Distillery and Tasting Bar.

    In the video, a man can be seen doing a back flip, during which a gun falls out of the back of his waistband. The gun appears to fire when the man picks up the weapon.

    "It appears an off-duty Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) agent was dancing at a night club when his firearm became dislodged from its waistband holster and fell onto the floor.  When the agent retrieved his handgun an unintended discharge occurred, another patron was struck by a bullet in the lower leg," a statement from Denver police said.

    The FBI agent was taken to Denver Police Headquarters and later released to an FBI supervisor.

    http://kdvr.com/2018/06/02/fbi-agent-allegedly-drops-his-gun-at-denver-night-club-another-patron-shot-in-leg/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 03, 2018, 12:06:27 AM
    These are the agents of the state who, unlike the mere civilians plebs, are supposedly "highly trained" and "proficient" in the use of firearms. 

    FBI agent allegedly drops gun at Denver night club, shooting one person in the leg

    DENVER -- An FBI agent allegedly dropped his gun at a bar and another patron was shot in the leg early Saturday. Investigators said it appeared to be an accidental shooting.

    Denver police said they were called to a report of a shooting at 2201 Lawrence Street at 12:45 a.m.

    A woman who said she witnessed and recorded the shooting with her cell phone said it happened at Mile High Spirits Distillery and Tasting Bar.

    In the video, a man can be seen doing a back flip, during which a gun falls out of the back of his waistband. The gun appears to fire when the man picks up the weapon.

    "It appears an off-duty Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) agent was dancing at a night club when his firearm became dislodged from its waistband holster and fell onto the floor.  When the agent retrieved his handgun an unintended discharge occurred, another patron was struck by a bullet in the lower leg," a statement from Denver police said.

    The FBI agent was taken to Denver Police Headquarters and later released to an FBI supervisor.

    http://kdvr.com/2018/06/02/fbi-agent-allegedly-drops-his-gun-at-denver-night-club-another-patron-shot-in-leg/

    I've been legally able to carry a gun for 34 years. Not one  single time did I carry it if there was a chance I would be drinking alcohol. Not one single time. This is just stupid. A guy with a weapon not only drinking, but doing a back flip on the dance floor carrying.... makes the rest of us look stupid
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 03, 2018, 03:48:53 AM
    I've been legally able to carry a gun for 34 years. Not one  single time did I carry it if there was a chance I would be drinking alcohol. Not one single time. This is just stupid. A guy with a weapon not only drinking, but doing a back flip on the dance floor carrying.... makes the rest of us look stupid

    Should be jailed.   And fired.   And pay for the injuries
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 04, 2018, 05:46:23 AM
    https://nypost.com/2018/06/02/ex-nypd-sergeant-vows-ex-wife-will-never-get-my-pension/?utm_source=facebook_sitebuttons&utm_medium=site%20buttons&utm_campaign=site%20buttons


    Seems like a real dirtbag
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2018, 05:06:04 AM
    Not So Honorable: Docs Show Mueller’s FBI Denied Justice To Four Innocent Men
    The Daily Caller ^ | 06/05/2018 | Howie Carr
    Posted on 6/6/2018, 7:38:48 AM by Prolixus

    Not So Honorable: Docs Show Mueller’s FBI Denied Justice To Four Innocent Men

    4:18 AM 06/05/2018 Howie Carr | Host, 'The Howie Carr Show'

    As FBI director in 2002, Special Counsel Robert Mueller directed his agents to oppose the pardons of four wrongfully imprisoned men because exculpatory evidence was merely “fodder for cross-examination,” newly revealed FBI documents show.

    Four years later, the four men, or their estates, were awarded $102 million by a federal judge in Boston for their wrongful decades-long imprisonment due to FBI misconduct.

    Mueller ordered the Boston FBI office to answer a request to him from the Massachusetts Advisory Board of Pardons for an “official version” of the imprisonment of the four men for a gangland murder in Chelsea MA in March 1965.

    The four men – Louie Greco, Henry Tameleo, Peter Limone and Joe Salvati – were convicted in state court in Boston of murdering Edward “Teddy” Deegan, a small-time hoodlum, in an alley during a bank burglary. Teddy Deegan's murder scene (courtesy of Howie Carr)

    Teddy Deegan’s murder scene (courtesy of Howie Carr)

    Within days of the murder, Boston FBI agents knew the identities of the actual murderers, and reported the information to J. Edgar Hoover in Washington. But they allowed a Mob hitman they had flipped, Joseph Barboza, to settle some old scores by falsely testifying that the four men had taken part in the gangland murder he had helped arrange with others.

    In 2002, lawyers for one of the innocent men, Louie Greco, were seeking a posthumous pardon for him from the state of Massachusetts. Greco, a decorated World War II veteran, had been living in Florida at the time of the murder, but was nevertheless convicted on Barboza’s perjured testimony. Lou Greco in uniform (courtesy of Howie Carr)

    Lou Greco in uniform (courtesy of Howie Carr)

    Greco died in 1995 after serving 28 years in prison for a crime he did not commit.

    Another Boston gangster later testified to a Congressional committee that after the 1967 trial, one of the FBI agents bragged about framing Greco and said, “How does Louie Greco like going from Miami to Death Row? He wasn’t even there!”

    For 35 years, the FBI refused to release the evidence exonerating the wrongfully imprisoned men on the grounds of “national security.” It was finally released in 2000 as part of an investigation into corruption in the Boston office of the FBI.

    After the state pardons board asked Mueller for the Bureau’s version of its actions, a Boston FBI agent, Charles Prouty, wrote back on May 9, 2002 that “FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C. has directed the office to respond.”

    Mueller directs response to Greco’s posthumous pardon

    While conceding that the damning FBI reports contained “impeachment material,” Mueller’s FBI still contended that the innocent men might in fact be guilty, despite the FBI’s own reports to the contrary.

    “This does not necessarily mean, however, that Limone or any of the other defendants is innocent – it merely means that they are entitled to a new trial.”

    Deegan was murdered on March 12, and the FBI office sent memos to Bureau headquarters in Washington on March 15 and March 19 identifying the real killers – and with no mention of the four men who later won the $102 million judgment.

    Mueller, however, tried to convince the Massachusetts authorities that his own Bureau’s documents did not mean that the four men had been railroaded.

    “Much of the FBI confidential source information relates to the individuals who were involved in the Deegan murder as principals,” Mueller’s deputy said, underlining the word. “This information is not necessarily inconsistent with the crimes for which the defendants were convicted.”

    Prouty did not mention the fact that Greco had moved from Boston to Florida before the murder. Mueller’s agent also did not point out that the siblings of victim Deegan, who had grown up in Boston’s West End with Limone, had earlier written the state parole board in support of Limone’s release. The Deegan siblings told the Parole Board that Limone had warned his childhood friend Deegan to be careful because of the murder contract out on him.

    Michael Albano, a former member of the MA parole board and one-time mayor of Springfield, worked for years to free the innocent men.

    “Even after the facts of the FBI cover up were revealed,” he said last week on “The Howie Carr Show” after reading the letter, “the FBI continued the cover up with the approval and authorization of Director Robert Mueller III.”

    This newly rediscovered letter is the latest indication of Mueller’s role in what may have been the FBI’s greatest scandal ever, at least until the current Spygate controversy which has led to Mueller’s ongoing “investigation” of President Trump.

    John Cavicchi, the Greco attorney who found Mueller’s FBI letter in his case files last week, said it had “outraged” him all over again.

    “After all those years,” Cavicchi said Sunday, “the feds still couldn’t admit that they had engineered this gross miscarriage of justice. Why couldn’t Mueller, who was in Boston while this frame up was going on, admit the Bureau’s culpability, then apologize and just settle the civil suit?”

    In Boston, the four men were always widely known to be innocent. As early as 1973, a Mafia turncoat wrote in a local best-selling book how they were framed by the FBI and its star Mob informant, hitman Joe “the Animal” Barboza, one of the actual killers of Deegan. Joe "The Animal" Barbazo through the years (Massachusetts State Prison)

    Joe “The Animal” Barbazo through the years (Massachusetts State Prison)

    Barboza had turned against the local Mafia, and decided to put several of their members and associates into the Deegan murder plot, while protecting a friend of his, another serial killer named Jimmy “the Bear” Flemmi.

    One of the men Barboza fingered, Joe Salvati, had drawn the wrath of the Animal by refusing to contribute $300 to his bail fund. So Barboza testified that Salvati was in the front seat of the car the killers used on the hit.

    The problem was, witnesses had seen the man in the front seat – he was bald, like Jimmy Flemmi. So Barboza said that Salvati had been wearing a “bald wig” that night.

    Mueller was an assistant US attorney in Boston in the 1980’s as the imprisoned men futilely tried to get their convictions overturned. Greco passed a lie detector test on live national TV.

    But the FBI was adamant that they should remain behind bars. Mueller served briefly as US attorney in Boston in 1986-87. Both his predecessor and his successor as US attorney wrote letters to state authorities demanding that the innocent men not be released.

    Albano, the former parole board member, has said that he has seen a similar letter written by Mueller during his brief stint as US attorney. But that letter, if it ever existed, appears to have disappeared from state files.

    Still, Alan Dershowitz, the retired Harvard Law School professor, recently described Mueller as “the guy who kept four innocent people in prison for many years… right at the center of it.” (RELATED: Dershowitz Dukes It Out On MSNBC Over Mueller)

    Nancy Gertner, the now-retired federal judge who presided over the civil case for damages that ended with the $102 million award, then wrote an op-ed piece in The New York Times accusing Dershowitz and Fox News host Sean Hannity, among others, of “smearing” Mueller.

    Gertner, who was appointed to the bench by her Yale Law School classmate Bill Clinton, claimed Mueller “had no involvement in that case.”

    However, in December 2006, during the civil trial, Judge Gertner wrote a show-cause order accusing Mueller of stonewalling production of exculpatory evidence – “a serious problem,” she wrote.

    Gertner Mueller Order to FBI show cause

    “This is a case about, inter alia, informant abuse, about the failure to disclose exculpatory evidence bearing on the innocence of the four plaintiffs, about FBI agents allegedly ‘hiding the ball,’ not disclosing critical information that would have exonerated the plaintiff… and not doing so for nearly 40 years.”

    She continued, “Given those accusations, the position the FBI is taking is chilling… This Court is not remotely satisfied.”

    Gertner said she had been asked by the innocent men to hold the FBI in contempt of court and that she had taken their motion “under advisement.”

    “In order to make that decision,” she wrote, “the Court ORDERS that this matter be brought to the personal attention of the Director of the FBI.”

    In other words, Robert Mueller III.

    Six days later, attorneys for the Justice Department filed a notice of compliance, saying, “This matter has been brought to the personal attention of the Director of the FBI; counsel for the United States have been provided with unredacted copies of the FBI documents on plaintiffs’ trial exhibit list….”

    And so Mueller avoided being cited for contempt for court.

    During the 1980’s, in addition to the annual letters from the US attorney in Boston, local FBI agents lobbied state authorities to keep the innocent men behind bars. According to Albano and others, two local G-men would go directly to the State House to lobby members of the Governor’s Council, which considered commutations and pardons.

    Another former member of the Governor’s Council recalled how the two agents liked to speak directly to the politicians, rather than leave behind a paper trail.

    The two FBI agents were John Morris and John “Zip” Connolly. Morris has since admitted taking $7,000 in payoffs from gangster Whitey Bulger and his partner Stevie Flemmi, the younger brother of “the Bear,” who actually murdered Deegan in 1965.

    Both Flemmi and Bulger, whose brother was the Democrat president of the Massachusetts state Senate, were longtime “top-echelon” informants of the FBI. Flemmi has testified to the Drug Enforcement Administration that he and Bulger at one time had six Boston G-men on their underworld payroll. Both Flemmi and Bulger are serving life sentences in federal prison; Bulger was convicted of 11 murders and Flemmi of five.

    At Bulger’s 2013 trial, Morris admitted telling Connolly about a gangster who was about to flip and testify against Bulger in 1981. Connolly, despite being a mid-life student at Harvard at the time, got the message to Bulger, and the gangland chieftain gunned down the informant and another man in South Boston.

    Connolly, the Harvard man, is currently serving a 40-year sentence in a Florida prison after being convicted of orchestrating a different gangland hit in Miami, to cover up still another organized-crime murder, at a golf course in Tulsa OK.

    That Oklahoma murder was set up by a third corrupt Boston FBI agent, H. Paul Rico, who was one of the two agents who engineered the frame up of the four innocent men back in 1965. Rico died in a prison hospital in Tulsa in 2003 after being arrested in Florida and brought back to the Sooner state to stand trial on murder charges.

    Asked for a statement about the 2002 letter Mueller authorized to be sent to the Advisory Board of Pardons, Mueller’s office on Friday declined comment.

    In the Greco family’s 2002 plea for a posthumous pardon, their lawyer wrote:

    “Louie Greco died an innocent man, despite numerous unheeded pleas of innocence. His innocence was known prior to trial, yet he was tried, convicted and sentenced to death. Now, the truth is being revealed and those responsible are facing a Congressional and Justice Department investigation. It is time for Massachusetts to officially acknowledge the wrong done to Mr. Greco and his family and remove this blot from his name.”

    But after receiving the letter from Mueller, the Board rejected the family’s petition in July 2003.

    Finally, in the waning days of his administration in December 2014, Gov. Deval Patrick issued a proclamation laying out the facts of the corrupt frame up by the FBI and Greco’s innocence.

    “Any stigma and disgrace,” the governor wrote, “is hereby removed.”

    Globe-Walker-Proclamation

    Greco had been dead 19 years. He spent the last 28 years of his life in prison for a crime he did not commit – a fact Robert Mueller knew but adamantly refused to acknowledge even after Greco’s death behind bars.

    “Even the dead,” Michael Albano said, “can’t rest in peace with this FBI memo.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2018, 09:05:35 AM
    DOJ watchdog finds James Comey defied authority as FBI director, sources say
    ABC News ^ | Mike Levine
    Posted on 6/6/2018, 11:52:24 AM by RoosterRedux

    The Justice Department's internal watchdog has concluded that James Comey defied authority at times during his tenure as FBI director, according to sources familiar with a draft report on the matter.

    One source told ABC News that the draft report explicitly used the word "insubordinate" to describe Comey's behavior. Another source agreed with that characterization but could not confirm the use of the term.

    In the draft report, Inspector General Michael Horowitz also rebuked former Attorney General Loretta Lynch for her handling of the federal investigation into Hillary Clinton's personal email server, the sources said.

    On Tuesday morning, President Donald Trump complained of "numerous delays" in the release of Horowitz's final report, which is expected to run several hundred pages long and be released in the coming days. The sources who spoke to ABC News were willing or able to address only a portion of the draft report's complete findings.

    "What is taking so long with the Inspector General's Report on Crooked Hillary and Slippery James Comey," Trump said on Twitter. "Hope report is not being changed and made weaker!"

    There is no indication the president has seen – or will see – a draft of the report before its release. Horowitz, however, could revise the draft report now that current and former officials mentioned in it have offered their responses to the inspector general's conclusions, according to the sources.

    (Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2018, 01:12:10 PM
    Out of control gangs. When are these animals going to be locked up? This is the same gang that executed Daniel Shaver. (read more: http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8440709#msg8440709)

    Notice how they all participate in the violent attack (even the limp bald guy) and how violent the black cop is. Where were all those "good apples" we keep hearing about to arrest these animals on the spot?

    Graphic Video Shows Cops Savagely Beat Unarmed Man, Keep Hitting Him After He’s Knocked Out

    Mesa, AZ — A shocking video has surfaced out of Mesa, Arizona this week showing a half-dozen cops jump an unarmed and non-violent man—punching him in the head until he falls unconscious to the floor. Despite several cops participating in the beating, not one word of it was mentioned in a report and the chief claims he had no idea it even happened.

    The video is of an incident from May 23, in which police were responding to a call at an apartment complex. The Mesa Police department says they received a call from a woman stating that 20-year-old Erick Reyes was trying to get into the apartment of his ex-girlfriend.

    When police arrived on the scene, Reyes and another man, 33-year-old Robert Johnson were leaving the complex. When police told Reyes to sit down on the ground, he reportedly complied with their order. Johnson was given the same order as he walked to the elevator.

    Instead of sitting on the ground, Johnson, likely knowing he had done nothing wrong, simply sat against the wall. Apparently, this was not enough to appease the officers who then swarmed the unarmed and seemingly innocent man.

    Cops are then seen on video brutally punching the non-violent man in the face and kneeing him in the stomach. Even after he’s knocked unconscious, the massive cop in front of him pummels his face as he falls to the ground.

    In a statement this week, Mesa police chief Ramon Batista claimed he had no idea that this video existed nor did he know his officers savagely beat a man for no reason. Once it was publicly released, four of the officers involved in the incident were placed on administrative leave.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/mesa-police-beat-unarmed-nonviolent-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 06, 2018, 03:09:37 PM
    Out of control gangs. When are these animals going to be locked up? This is the same gang that executed Daniel Shaver. (read more: http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8440709#msg8440709)

    Notice how they all participate in the violent attack (even the limp bald guy) and how violent the black cop is. Where were all those "good apples" we keep hearing about to arrest these animals on the spot?

    Graphic Video Shows Cops Savagely Beat Unarmed Man, Keep Hitting Him After He’s Knocked Out

    Mesa, AZ — A shocking video has surfaced out of Mesa, Arizona this week showing a half-dozen cops jump an unarmed and non-violent man—punching him in the head until he falls unconscious to the floor. Despite several cops participating in the beating, not one word of it was mentioned in a report and the chief claims he had no idea it even happened.

    The video is of an incident from May 23, in which police were responding to a call at an apartment complex. The Mesa Police department says they received a call from a woman stating that 20-year-old Erick Reyes was trying to get into the apartment of his ex-girlfriend.

    When police arrived on the scene, Reyes and another man, 33-year-old Robert Johnson were leaving the complex. When police told Reyes to sit down on the ground, he reportedly complied with their order. Johnson was given the same order as he walked to the elevator.

    Instead of sitting on the ground, Johnson, likely knowing he had done nothing wrong, simply sat against the wall. Apparently, this was not enough to appease the officers who then swarmed the unarmed and seemingly innocent man.

    Cops are then seen on video brutally punching the non-violent man in the face and kneeing him in the stomach. Even after he’s knocked unconscious, the massive cop in front of him pummels his face as he falls to the ground.

    In a statement this week, Mesa police chief Ramon Batista claimed he had no idea that this video existed nor did he know his officers savagely beat a man for no reason. Once it was publicly released, four of the officers involved in the incident were placed on administrative leave.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/mesa-police-beat-unarmed-nonviolent-man/


    Seriously WTF is going on in the minds of these cops & their bosses
    To continually allow them to get away with this & even try to offer
    Pathetic excuses.

    WTF wrong was that man doing to justify that attack.  Absolutely Fuck All.

    I hate scumbags & I hate scumbag cops even more - abusing their powers. Scumbags & Cowards.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2018, 12:40:30 PM
    I've said it before that these are criminal gangs. Here is a prime example.
    25 years is not enough. This career criminal and the rest of his criminal gang should have been executed. Slowly.

    Rogue Baltimore police unit ringleader Wayne Jenkins sentenced

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/44D6/production/_101922671_jenkins-bp-photos.jpg)

    The leader of a rogue Baltimore police unit sobbed as he was sentenced to 25 years in prison in a corruption scandal prosecutors called "breathtaking". Ex-police sergeant Wayne Earl Jenkins apologised in court for the crimes he committed while heading an elite squad called the Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF).

    "I'm wrong, God knows I'm wrong," the 37-year-old said. "I'm so sorry to the citizens of Baltimore."

    He was arrested along with almost every member of the unit in March 2017. Jenkins must serve three years of supervised release after his custodial sentence.

    He was convicted on multiple counts including racketeering, robbery and falsification of records.

    Jenkins pleaded guilty in January and admitted taking part in at least 10 robberies of Baltimore citizens, planting drugs on innocent people and re-selling drugs he stole from suspects on an almost daily basis, including heroin, cocaine and prescription painkillers.

    He walked into the court wearing a maroon prison uniform. It was his first public appearance since he was arrested along with six other officers last year.

    Prosecutors urged the judge to sentence him to the maximum 30 years, adding that the unit's corruption resulted in 1,700 criminal cases being thrown out.

    "The largest share of the blame, the largest share of those crimes belongs to him," US attorney Leo Wise told the court.

    "He perverted the criminal justice system."

    The GTTF was made up of eight officers, all but one of whom were indicted.

    Detectives Maurice Ward, Evodio Hendrix, Momodu Gondo and Jemell Rayam all pleaded guilty.

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/8DF6/production/_101924363_threeupone.png)

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/66E6/production/_101924362_threeuptwo.png)

    Detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor went forward to trial and a jury found them guilty of robbery, extortion and fraud in February.

    A former member of the unit, Sergeant Thomas Allers, also pleaded guilty.

    Although the indicted officers committed many robberies individually before joining the Gun Trace Task Force, prosecutors charge that they grew bolder and more prolific after Jenkins took over the unit in June 2016.

    According to testimony from Ward and Hendrix, Jenkins played an outsized role in the schemes.

    They said he prepared an arsenal of weapons and tools to begin carrying out burglaries.

    The jury was shown axes, machetes and pry bars, as well as black masks that were found in Jenkins' van after his arrest.


    Prosecutors pointed to the fact that Jenkins fabricated evidence, like producing a bogus iPhone video of his officers cracking a drug dealer's safe, when they had in fact already broken into it and stolen $200,000 in cash.

    "It shows what a committed, sophisticated, devious person can do," Mr Wise said. "What chance do we have when you have people like Jenkins and his co-defendants fabricating evidence?"


    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-44402948
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 07, 2018, 03:20:05 PM
    I've said it before that these are criminal gangs. Here is a prime example.
    25 years is not enough. This career criminal and the rest of his criminal gang should have been executed. Slowly.

    Rogue Baltimore police unit ringleader Wayne Jenkins sentenced

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/44D6/production/_101922671_jenkins-bp-photos.jpg)

    The leader of a rogue Baltimore police unit sobbed as he was sentenced to 25 years in prison in a corruption scandal prosecutors called "breathtaking". Ex-police sergeant Wayne Earl Jenkins apologised in court for the crimes he committed while heading an elite squad called the Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF).

    "I'm wrong, God knows I'm wrong," the 37-year-old said. "I'm so sorry to the citizens of Baltimore."

    He was arrested along with almost every member of the unit in March 2017. Jenkins must serve three years of supervised release after his custodial sentence.

    He was convicted on multiple counts including racketeering, robbery and falsification of records.

    Jenkins pleaded guilty in January and admitted taking part in at least 10 robberies of Baltimore citizens, planting drugs on innocent people and re-selling drugs he stole from suspects on an almost daily basis, including heroin, cocaine and prescription painkillers.

    He walked into the court wearing a maroon prison uniform. It was his first public appearance since he was arrested along with six other officers last year.

    Prosecutors urged the judge to sentence him to the maximum 30 years, adding that the unit's corruption resulted in 1,700 criminal cases being thrown out.

    "The largest share of the blame, the largest share of those crimes belongs to him," US attorney Leo Wise told the court.

    "He perverted the criminal justice system."

    The GTTF was made up of eight officers, all but one of whom were indicted.

    Detectives Maurice Ward, Evodio Hendrix, Momodu Gondo and Jemell Rayam all pleaded guilty.

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/8DF6/production/_101924363_threeupone.png)

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/66E6/production/_101924362_threeuptwo.png)

    Detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor went forward to trial and a jury found them guilty of robbery, extortion and fraud in February.

    A former member of the unit, Sergeant Thomas Allers, also pleaded guilty.

    Although the indicted officers committed many robberies individually before joining the Gun Trace Task Force, prosecutors charge that they grew bolder and more prolific after Jenkins took over the unit in June 2016.

    According to testimony from Ward and Hendrix, Jenkins played an outsized role in the schemes.

    They said he prepared an arsenal of weapons and tools to begin carrying out burglaries.

    The jury was shown axes, machetes and pry bars, as well as black masks that were found in Jenkins' van after his arrest.


    Prosecutors pointed to the fact that Jenkins fabricated evidence, like producing a bogus iPhone video of his officers cracking a drug dealer's safe, when they had in fact already broken into it and stolen $200,000 in cash.

    "It shows what a committed, sophisticated, devious person can do," Mr Wise said. "What chance do we have when you have people like Jenkins and his co-defendants fabricating evidence?"


    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-44402948


    Hooray at last -Some of the criminal gang have been banged up for a good few years.

    Now for them to deal with other 50-100 thousand of them
    That’s on the estimate of Agnostic of between 5&10% bad apples.

    That’s a hole freaking army needs banging up.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2018, 03:55:22 PM
    Terrorizing a 10 year old boy... That's a new low, even for a criminal gang.
    And how about the ridiculous excuse "Keep in mind, this is difficult for an officer to tell right off the bat if you’re 10-years-old, 12-years-old [or] 14…"

    10yo Boy Scared to Tears as Cops Mistake Him for Escaped Criminal and Handcuff Him

    Chicago, IL — The parents of a 10-year-old boy are demanding answers after he was detained and placed in handcuffs for no reason. The interaction was captured on video and has since sparked outrage in the community.

    Police, however, are saying they “followed all of the rules and protocols” when they handcuffed the innocent little boy after mistaking him for a criminal.

    According to police, they received a call that a boy in the area was carrying a gun and was also wearing blue. When the officers arrived on scene, they stopped the first boy they saw wearing blue.

    The boy they were looking for had just escaped from jail, according to 10-year-old Michael Thomas Jr. However, until that moment, the very frightened Michael had never so much as talked to the police before.

    Cellphone footage captured the terrified child as cops treated him like a criminal. Thomas was so scared during the incident that this poor child wet his pants.

    “They’re telling them that someone called them saying that there is a 12-year-old black kid on a bike with all blue on had a gun,” the uncle is heard saying in the video. “There was about five little black boys with all blue on.”

    As the little boy sits there in horror, his grandmother expresses her outrage.

    “You can see that he doesn’t have any weapons on him,” Michael’s grandmother said in the footage. “I raised up my grandbaby’s shirt. He don’t have anything on him. Take those handcuffs off of him.”

    “I want answers,” said Michael’s mother Starr Ramsey. “You can look at him and tell he no teenager. Ten year’s old you get handcuffed? You scarred him for life.”

    “They need to apologize. He’s gonna be scarred for the rest of his life now,” the mother told NBC-5.

    But police are standing by their decision to detain and handcuff the child. Police Supt. Eddie Johnson said in a press conference on Wednesday that his officers acted appropriately.

    “The call came out as a young man 10-to 12 years old that was passing out a gun and the description fully matched the individual that they stopped,” Johnson said.

    “Keep in mind, this is difficult for an officer to tell right off the bat if you’re 10-years-old, 12-years-old [or] 14…So, they handcuffed the kid for safety reasons because he did match that description. They followed all the rules and protocols that we have in place. So, I’m not concerned about that at all.”

    After he justified the stop, Johnson did say that he has ordered an internal investigation into the incident to make certain that the officers followed all protocols.

    “I can only imagine the mother’s and grandmother’s anguish that that child had to go through that situation. So, we’re investigating it, just to ensure that everything was done properly,” the superintendent said.

    Police also claimed that Thomas ran from them when they pulled up, which they said justified this treatment. According to his family, however, the reason Thomas ran is due to the fact that he’s terrified of police because they killed his father.

    “Anything can happen. We might need him to call the police. And he’s gonna be too afraid to even call,” said Ramsey of how this incident has left her son traumatized.

    “They put me in handcuffs. I was scared. I was crying,” Thomas told NBC-5.

    “They told me I escaped from juvenile and I had a gun. I said I didn’t escape from juvenile and I don’t have a gun…They handcuffed the wrong person.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/boy-traumatized-handcuffed-police-mistake/

    https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Video-Shows-Chicago-Police-Handcuffing-10-Year-Old-Boy-484629641.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2018, 01:47:56 AM
    mments.

    Man beaten by Arizona officers wants police held accountable
    nbcnews.com ^ | June 8, 2018 | Phil Helsel
    Posted on 6/7/2018, 10:44:40 PM by lowbridge

    An unarmed man who was beaten by Arizona police officers last month said Thursday that he wants changes in the Mesa Police Department so that it doesn’t happen to anyone else.

    "I am a family man and a God-fearing person," Robert Johnson, 33, said at a news conference at a Mesa church, occasionally becoming emotional. "I want Mesa to be held accountable for what, what they have done."

    A police officer claimed in an arrest report that Johnson refused a request to sit down and looked ready to fight. That's why the officer tried to detain him, the report said, and the officer struck him several times after he resisted.

    Four police officers had been placed on administrative leave, and a fifth officer was placed on leave Wednesday night, police said Thursday.

    This week the police department released surveillance and body-camera video of the incident. The video does not appear to show Johnson, who is black, try to attack officers before police strike him with their hands.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...

    TOPICS: Crime/Corrup
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2018, 12:40:19 PM
    Leader of corrupt Baltimore police gun task force sentenced to 25 years
    MSN ^ | 6/7/2018 | Justin Fenton
    Posted on 6/7/2018, 4:53:44 PM by Mr.Unique

    BALTIMORE — Former Gun Trace Task Force Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, perhaps the most corrupt officer uncovered in Baltimore Police Department history, was sentenced Thursday to 25 years in federal prison for his role in a stunning range of crimes.

    The sentence handed down by U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake was five years below the maximum possible term under his plea agreement. Prosecutors had asked that Jenkins receive the maximum sentence.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Leo Wise said the harm inflicted by Jenkins was “immeasurable,” walking through how he stole drugs on a “near-daily basis” for years and encouraged and helped his squad carry out robberies while bilking taxpayers for unworked overtime pay.

    (Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 08, 2018, 01:32:18 PM
    There seems to be no end in the violence perpetrated by these criminals. Once again the taxpayers, instead of the criminals, have to foot the bill.

    Taxpayers Held Liable After Cops Beat Handcuffed Man So Badly He Lost His Leg

    Albany, NY — The citizens of the village of Green Island have been held liable for $375,000 to settle a federal lawsuit after police arrested a man so violently that he lost his leg.

    Kevin T. Kavanaugh filed a civil rights lawsuit after a violent arrest that started when state troopers smelled marijuana. After police smelled the plant, Kavanaugh made the poor decision of fleeing in his vehicle and led police on a high speed chase.

    According to the lawsuit, after Kavanaugh finally surrendered, he was brutally beaten for no reason, handcuffed and then an officer violently and unnecessarily began twisting his lower leg until the bones snapped apart.

    “This wasn’t just a broken ankle. Kevin had pins and screws in his ankle (from a prior injury) and they basically twisted his ankle until they popped out of the bone,” said his attorney, Lee Kindlon. “They actually killed his leg, and it was dying from the toe up.”

    After the violent arrest, Kavanaugh was denied proper medical care leading to severe complications. Multiple other parties outside of the arresting officers were complicit in his abuse, according to the suit.


    As the Times Union reports, last year, several other police agencies that were involved in the arrest — or with Kavanaugh’s custody and treatment following his arrest — also reached settlements in the case. Correctional Medical Care, Inc., a Pennsylvania company which had previously provided medical services at the Albany County jail, agreed to pay $84,000. The other police agencies, including the State Police and Watervliet Police Department, paid smaller amounts that totaled roughly $13,000.

    After Kavanaugh finally stopped his car, according to the lawsuit, he climbed out of the vehicle and surrendered. At this point, according to the suit, police officers threw him to the ground, beat him with a club, and began kicking him in the head.

    According to police, they used the force necessary to subdue Kavanaugh. However, as TFTP has reported on numerous occasions, when people run from police, even after surrendering, police will kick, punch, or stomp a non-violent and totally compliant person.

    After he was beaten and placed in handcuffs, according to the lawsuit, a Green Island police officer—who Kavanaugh could not specifically identify—grabbed his foot and began violently twisting it, causing the severe damage.

    Even one of the Green Island officers, Paul Johnson, testified in a pre-trial deposition that when they were processing Kavanaugh at their station, he complained of extreme pain in his lower leg that the officer said “just looked like a dead leg, grayish white, like a wax museum leg or something.”

    In spite of the severe injuries Kavanaugh suffered during the arrest, he was denied the proper care and his injuries got worse. According to Kindlon, this was standard procedure for the jail’s medical provider as a way to maintain their profit margin.

    “CMC’s actions always bothered me the most,” Kindlon said. “The way Correctional Medical Care worked is they got money if they didn’t send people to the hospital, if they didn’t refer people out. It’s grotesque the way their contract with the county operated.”

    Instead of receiving the surgery he needed to save his leg, Kavanaugh was sent to Albany County Jail where he was unable to walk and begged officials for days to help him.

    Days after begging and being unable to walk, Kavanaugh was finally brought to the hospital where his leg had to be amputated.

    As the Times Union reports, the jail has a history of neglect leading to severe consequences.

    Last year, in an unrelated case, Correctional Medical Care and Albany County agreed to pay nearly $1.1 million to the estate of a Troy man who died when nurses waited more than 12 hours to call an ambulance after he suffered a stroke while being held at the county jail in August 2014.

    A report issued by the Commission of Correction in 2016 determined that the care given to 24-year-old Mark Cannon was “so grossly inadequate … it shocks the conscience.”

    Indeed, a man having his leg amputated is also quite shocking. Kavanaugh is set to be released at the end of next month after serving five years for the 2013 incident. Although he had ketamine in his possession as well, had Kavanaugh lived in another state with legal marijuana, he would still be free and would still have his leg.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/taxpayers-held-liable-leg-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2018, 02:26:35 PM
    Prosecutors: Trooper's actions 'unacceptable' and 'questionable,' toss out dozens of criminal cases

    ST. LOUIS (KMOV.com) -- Dozens of suspected criminal cases have been dropped and hundreds of traffic tickets are now under review, after prosecutors say they became concerned about the conduct of a Missouri Highway Patrol Trooper.

    In a letter to Highway Patrol, the Chief Warrant Officer for the St. Louis Circuit Attorney’s Office wrote:

    “The trooper’s conduct came under scrutiny after several prosecuting attorneys expressed legal and ethical concerns about his conduct during their case assessment and review of dash-cam footage. The review of the officer revealed a pattern of unacceptable practices and questionable behavior.

    Prosecutors additionally informed the City Counselor’s office in a separate letter that they had found “repeated instances of undue pressure, factual exaggerations or misstatements of the law, seemingly all aimed at securing admissions or consents-to-search.”  The exact details of the trooper’s actions have not been released.   

    http://www.kmov.com/story/38375357/prosecutors-throw-out-hundreds-of-criminal-cases-due-to-troopers-actions
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2018, 03:34:04 PM
    Remember again why some laws apply only to everyone except the cops. Because obviously only non-cops can be distracted while driving and endangering everyone in their path.

    Video released of South Carolina deputy grazing student boarding school bus

    ANDERSON COUNTY, S.C. - Video has been released of a distracted deputy nearly running over a student who was about to board a school bus two weeks ago in South Carolina.

    In the video, a girl waited at a bus stop, and when the bus stopped, the deputy blew between them and struck the student.

    https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/video-released-of-south-carolina-deputy-grazing-student-boarding-school-bus/766984206
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2018, 03:40:03 PM
    Another crime boss and his gang... How many others are there that make false arrests and terrorize or kidnap people for their own gain?

    Former Biscayne Park police chief, 2 officers accused of intentionally making false arrest
    Report: Chief wanted to maintain fake clearance rate of reported burglaries


    BISCAYNE PARK, Fla. - Former Biscayne Park Police Chief Raimundo Atesiano and two former patrol officers have been indicted for conspiring to violate a juvenile's civil rights by intentionally making a false arrest, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday in a news release.

    According to the indictment, Atesiano ordered former officers Charlie Dayoub and Raul Fernandez to falsely arrest a 16-year-old, identified only as T.D., in 2013 in connection with four unsolved burglaries.

    Prosecutors said the police chief wanted the teen arrested, although there was no legitimate basis to arrest the teen, "in order to maintain a fictitious 100 percent clearance rate of reported burglaries."

    https://www.local10.com/news/florida/miami-dade/former-biscayne-park-police-chief-2-officers-accused-of-intentionally-making-false-arrests
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2018, 10:16:33 AM
    A state sanctioned gang that is harassing, intimidating, terrorizing and attacking people. And let's not forget that since "dashcam footage clears cops", why did they cops fight its release for 2 years but when the footage is supposed to vindicate them they release it within hours? This incident happened in 2012...

    Taxpayers Held Liable After Cops Beat Dad for Telling Them to Stop Stalking His Daughter

    Raritan Township, NJ — Taxpayers of Raritan Township have been forced to shell out $200,000 in a settlement after dashcam video showed a police officer unnecessarily attack and arrest a father for trying to protect his daughter from police harassment.

    The alleged victim, Dennis Shuman filed a federal lawsuit alleging excessive force after he tried to help his daughter during a traffic stop. The entire incident was captured on officer David Carson’s dashcam and shows exactly how unnecessary the attack and subsequent beating was.

    According to a site dedicated to tracking settlements paid by New Jersey government agencies, NJ Civil Settlements, in his lawsuit, Dennis Shuman claimed that on August 5, 2012, after he came to the scene of his daugther Alexa’s traffic stop, Officer David Carson “threw him with great force against the hood of his patrol car” when Shuman tried to call the police chief about Raritan Police allegedly harassing and intimidating Alexa. He said that Carson then “threw him to the ground and continued to beat and attack him” while other officers joined in or failed to intervene.

    For months, according to Shuman, police had been gangstalking his daughter, following her repeatedly while harassing and intimidating her.

    Shuman noted in the lawsuit that officers Carson and Aaron Roth would “make U-turns and follow Alexa Shuman without stopping her and that on six occasions the officers passed the driveway of Alexa Shuman’s home with flashing lights and sirens activated after which they were deactivated.”

    According to Shuman, the officers would constantly pull over his daughter for petty “offenses” like making a right turn “too quickly,” “touching the white line,” and “turning without the appropriate signal.” All of these stops were documented, according to the lawsuit.

    That night, Alexa was once again targeted by the same officer for the alleged crime of not properly using her turn signal. After being pulled over by this same officer multiple times in the months prior, fearing for her safety, Alexa called her father for help.

    Although the entire stop was captured on dashcam footage, police fought its release for two years. Courier News had to file an Open Public Records Act request and finally, after protesting the release of the video—saying it would have a “chilling effect” on internal police investigations—it was released.

    In the video, Dennis is calm and merely wanting to know why his daughter is being constantly stalked by the officer. When the officer has enough, he tells Dennis to return to his car and the father complies after several requests from the officer.

    However, as Dennis walks back to the car, he tells the officer, “you are harassing my daughter.” This was enough to set the cop off and instead allowing the protective father to continue walking back to his car, the officer attacks him. He does not tell him to put his hands behind his back to arrest him. Instead, the officer immediately resorts to violence.

    As the video shows, Carson puts his arm across Shuman’s neck, twice sends him onto the hood of the police car, then takes him to the ground, where Shuman’s head smashes into the concrete curb.


    Although the pair falls out of the view of the camera, you can hear Shuman tell the officer that he cannot breathe—repeatedly.

    During the chaos, the officer is heard yelling, “Stop resisting arrest! Stop resisting arrest!” as Shuman replies “I’m not resisting you,” and “you are hurting me.”

    As the officer attacked her father, Alexa got out of the car and watched in horror. However, according to the video, Carson told her to “get back in the car, or you’re next.” Moments later, Roth and Sergeant Scott Lessig arrived at the scene and continued the assault.

    “Please get off my back,” he says, amid sobs. “I can’t breathe!”

    “Nobody is getting off your back,” the officer responds.

    “If you keep moving, you’re going to get sprayed and then you’re not going to be able to breathe, you got it?” a third officer shouts.

    According to Shuman, who was now bleeding from the head, Lessig applied the handcuffs too tightly and refused to loosen them, causing injury. He also said that his encounter with police caused several tears in the left retina, a chipped fracture of the left elbow and nerve damage to his left hand and arm.

    For complying with orders and walking back to his car only to be attacked, Shuman was charged with interfering with a traffic stop. In spite of the unnecessary attack caught on video, an internal investigation cleared all the officers of any wrongdoing.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-taxpayers-held-liable-after-cops-beat-dad-for-telling-them-to-stop-stalking-his-daughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2018, 02:01:41 PM
    Notice this phrase from a District Attorney:
    Quote
    he served 11 days in jail and received national ridicule and condemnation for intentionally breaking a woman’s wrist – charges that are now being dismissed. This is more than enough punishment.

    This scumbag thinks that despite the weak credibility of the accusers and their claims, it's ok to kidnap and imprison someone who has not even been convicted and the charges later collapsed as well as the public humiliation. This mentality is sick.

    Charges dropped in road rage case for victims' 'lack of credibility'

    Charges were dropped against a man accused of hurting two women in a horrific road-rage attack after Oregon prosecutors found too many holes in the victims’ stories — and that they had a history of apparently faking injuries in other vehicular incidents.

    Jay Allen Barbeau, 49, was arrested June 1 after Megan Stackhouse, 34, and her fiancée, Lucinda Mann, 26, told officers in Bend that he attacked them after their Kia Soul cut him off in traffic. Stackhouse had claimed that she pulled over to let Barbeau pass them, but the imposing, 5-foot-8, 245-pound man instead smashed their rear window before breaking Stackhouse’s arm and knocking Mann unconscious.

    But Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel said most of the allegations could not be proved — and that Barbeau’s 11-day stint in jail and the “national ridicule he endured for the road-rage attack was a just punishment.

    “I have no confidence in the credibility of Mann and Stackhouse,” Hummel said in a statement. “Mann’s claimed injuries in the Barbeau case were debunked by the medical records. While Stackhouse did suffer a broken bone in her wrist, there are competing claims as to how her injury occurred and based on her lack of credibility, I cannot stand by her version of events.

    Here’s what is clear, according to Hummel: Stackhouse, who was leaving a carnival with Mann, pulled her car in front of Barbeau’s in a “dangerous manner,” he said. Barbeau then started aggressively following Stackhouse for more than a mile, eventually exiting his car and punching Stackhouse’s rear window, shattering it, Hummel said.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/06/12/charges-dropped-in-road-rage-case-for-victims-lack-credibility.html

    Looks like we have serial offenders here, why are they not in prison? This man would have faced 20+ years if convicted.

    Quote
    Investigation into Mann and Stackhouse’s background and credibility returned significant and troubling results:

    ·         On June 7, 2018, Mann and Stackhouse were drinking at 10 Barrel brewery.  When they left, Mann intentionally threw herself onto the hood of a car in the road and then flopped to the ground.

    ·         On May 13, 2018, Stackhouse struck another car and then punched the driver, a 55-year-old Bend woman. Stackhouse was charged with this assault and the matter is pending.

    ·         On November 26, 2017, Stackhouse and Mann reported to police that Mann was struck by a van while she was walking in the parking lot of Timbers Tavern.

    ·         On October 31, 2016, Mann and Stackhouse were passengers in a car that was involved in a single-vehicle, low-speed crash.  When police arrived, Mann was found lying on the road with shallow breathing and acting unconscious.  The police determined her actions were not consistent with injuries she would have received in the crash.

    http://www.ktvz.com/news/da-charges-dropped-in-bend-road-rage-incident/751786474
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 12, 2018, 02:29:50 PM
    FBI agent whose gun went off while doing dance backflip taken into custody
    NBC News ^ | 12 June 2018 | Daniel Arkin
    Posted on 6/12/2018, 3:44:45 PM by DUMBGRUNT

    Chase Bishop, 29, was being held in a detention center in downtown Denver. He faces charges for second-degree assault but he has not been formally charged, according to NBC affiliate KUSA.

    Bishop is not assigned to the Denver office but works out of Washington, D.C., sources told KUSA.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2018, 11:10:29 AM
    This is why "punishment" such as paid vacation or desk duty is not enough for these violent criminals. They need to be made an example of or ideally, locked up for life so that they won't harm anyone again.

    Video of Cops Beating Man Was So Bad, They Were All Fired—But a Corrupt System Just Rehired Them

    Agawam, MA — Three police officers so horrifically beat a man in custody, all of them — a sergeant and two veteran patrolmen — were fired. Now, however, thanks to a corrupt system that fails to hold officers accountable, Mayor William P. Sapelli is rehiring them in spite of the gruesome video showing the abuse.

    “You bring them back. It’s that simple,” he said Tuesday, noting that one of the officers, John P. Moccio, has not returned to work. His case is still before the state Civil Service Commission, according to the mayor, who made resolving the issue a priority after taking office in January, according to Masslive.com.

    Two of the cops seen horrifically beating the man on video are back on the job and despite being demoted, one officer had his rank of sergeant reinstated.

    As TFTP reported at the time, then-Mayor Richard A. Cohen announced the termination of officers, John P. Moccio, Officer Edward B. Connor and Sgt. Anthony Grasso for their roles in the arrest and subsequent beat down of 27-year-old David Desjardins at Six Flags New England on June 19, 2016.

    Cohen also forwarded the findings of an internal investigation to the Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni, who declined to prosecute. However, the beating was so horrific that the FBI launched their own use of force investigation. After more than a year of “investigating,” the FBI concluded the officers acted appropriately when they beat the unarmed and half-naked man.

    As TFTP previously reported, that day, Desjardins became too inebriated at a bar in the Six Flags New England amusement park; but when a bartender cut him off, he acted belligerently and began arguing. Park security called the police, MassLive reported at the time, who confronted Desjardins and had to use pepper spray several times before they were able to make the arrest.

    Agawam Police Officers Moccio and Connor, and Grasso, then dealt with Desjardins during the booking process, but claimed in reports the man was drunk and unruly — thus their use of force had been justified. Desjardins was charged with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and assault and battery on a police officer.

    “Under the policies and procedures, the use of the force was authorized,” said Attorney John Connor, who represented the officers, reported 22News, “They may disagree with that, but that doesn’t mean that these officer didn’t act in accordance with the policies and their training.”

    However, video shows Desjardins stripped down to his underwear and seemingly — despite the lack of audio recording — only vaguely disruptive and certainly not deserving of the beating he then receives.

    As footage begins, the man sits on a bench in the station and appears to receive a stern talking-to by one officer. Suddenly the officer gestures to another and the pair, along with two others, violently grab Desjardins and force him into a holding cell, containing the typical metal toilet and a concrete slab without any padding.

    Desjardins weakly attempts to wriggle free from one officer’s grip and is then roughly forced down onto the concrete slab with three of the four officers holding him down — as one of them uses a baton to beat his back. When that seems not to satisfy the officer, he takes a step back and — as the other two lie on top of the drunken man, holding him down — begins pummeling Desjardins’ kneecaps and ankles with the baton.

    Video shows the cops clearly have control of the situation and resistance from Desjardins, if any, is both minimal and likely in self-defense.

    As the two officers grip the man’s wrists and head, the third then proceeds to smash the baton against Desjardins’ shins — worse, footage seems to show the tip of the baton being used to jab him in the abdomen or groin.

    In obvious pain from this, Desjardins smacks his foot against the concrete slab.

    When the officers seem to relent to leave the cell, it becomes apparent one had been using two hands to press the man’s face onto the slab — but even as they move to leave, and he slowly sits up, one officer still casually hits him with the baton.

    As Desjardins stands, the verbal altercation continues — but one of the officers then shoves him into the corner of the slab, smashing his head on the concrete and cinder block wall. One officer puts his hands on Desjardins face as if to poke him in the eye or smother him — and though it looks like the beating will begin again, officers cuff his wrists and ankles.

    Fully two minutes elapse from the time Moccio, Connor, and Grasso forced Desjardins into the cell until they finally stopped the brutal assault.

    Police Chief Eric Gillis was ridiculed for his decision after he fired the officers — but he had no doubt the firings were justified.

    “When I saw the video I was shocked by it,” he told MassLive. “I knew that it was very serious and as the investigation proceeded it became more and more clear to me how serious it really was.

    “As chief of police it’s my job to make sure that our officers conduct themselves appropriately at all times and deal with the people we come into contact with appropriately at all times.”

    Apparently, this has all changed now, and the officers have been rehired.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/fired-cops-rehired-beating-halfnaked-man/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 14, 2018, 11:54:25 AM
    Sickening 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 14, 2018, 12:59:44 PM
    This is why "punishment" such as paid vacation or desk duty is not enough for these violent criminals. They need to be made an example of or ideally, locked up for life so that they won't harm anyone again.

    Video of Cops Beating Man Was So Bad, They Were All Fired—But a Corrupt System Just Rehired Them

    Agawam, MA — Three police officers so horrifically beat a man in custody, all of them — a sergeant and two veteran patrolmen — were fired. Now, however, thanks to a corrupt system that fails to hold officers accountable, Mayor William P. Sapelli is rehiring them in spite of the gruesome video showing the abuse.

    “You bring them back. It’s that simple,” he said Tuesday, noting that one of the officers, John P. Moccio, has not returned to work. His case is still before the state Civil Service Commission, according to the mayor, who made resolving the issue a priority after taking office in January, according to Masslive.com.

    Two of the cops seen horrifically beating the man on video are back on the job and despite being demoted, one officer had his rank of sergeant reinstated.

    As TFTP reported at the time, then-Mayor Richard A. Cohen announced the termination of officers, John P. Moccio, Officer Edward B. Connor and Sgt. Anthony Grasso for their roles in the arrest and subsequent beat down of 27-year-old David Desjardins at Six Flags New England on June 19, 2016.

    Cohen also forwarded the findings of an internal investigation to the Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni, who declined to prosecute. However, the beating was so horrific that the FBI launched their own use of force investigation. After more than a year of “investigating,” the FBI concluded the officers acted appropriately when they beat the unarmed and half-naked man.

    As TFTP previously reported, that day, Desjardins became too inebriated at a bar in the Six Flags New England amusement park; but when a bartender cut him off, he acted belligerently and began arguing. Park security called the police, MassLive reported at the time, who confronted Desjardins and had to use pepper spray several times before they were able to make the arrest.

    Agawam Police Officers Moccio and Connor, and Grasso, then dealt with Desjardins during the booking process, but claimed in reports the man was drunk and unruly — thus their use of force had been justified. Desjardins was charged with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and assault and battery on a police officer.

    “Under the policies and procedures, the use of the force was authorized,” said Attorney John Connor, who represented the officers, reported 22News, “They may disagree with that, but that doesn’t mean that these officer didn’t act in accordance with the policies and their training.”

    However, video shows Desjardins stripped down to his underwear and seemingly — despite the lack of audio recording — only vaguely disruptive and certainly not deserving of the beating he then receives.

    As footage begins, the man sits on a bench in the station and appears to receive a stern talking-to by one officer. Suddenly the officer gestures to another and the pair, along with two others, violently grab Desjardins and force him into a holding cell, containing the typical metal toilet and a concrete slab without any padding.

    Desjardins weakly attempts to wriggle free from one officer’s grip and is then roughly forced down onto the concrete slab with three of the four officers holding him down — as one of them uses a baton to beat his back. When that seems not to satisfy the officer, he takes a step back and — as the other two lie on top of the drunken man, holding him down — begins pummeling Desjardins’ kneecaps and ankles with the baton.

    Video shows the cops clearly have control of the situation and resistance from Desjardins, if any, is both minimal and likely in self-defense.

    As the two officers grip the man’s wrists and head, the third then proceeds to smash the baton against Desjardins’ shins — worse, footage seems to show the tip of the baton being used to jab him in the abdomen or groin.

    In obvious pain from this, Desjardins smacks his foot against the concrete slab.

    When the officers seem to relent to leave the cell, it becomes apparent one had been using two hands to press the man’s face onto the slab — but even as they move to leave, and he slowly sits up, one officer still casually hits him with the baton.

    As Desjardins stands, the verbal altercation continues — but one of the officers then shoves him into the corner of the slab, smashing his head on the concrete and cinder block wall. One officer puts his hands on Desjardins face as if to poke him in the eye or smother him — and though it looks like the beating will begin again, officers cuff his wrists and ankles.

    Fully two minutes elapse from the time Moccio, Connor, and Grasso forced Desjardins into the cell until they finally stopped the brutal assault.

    Police Chief Eric Gillis was ridiculed for his decision after he fired the officers — but he had no doubt the firings were justified.

    “When I saw the video I was shocked by it,” he told MassLive. “I knew that it was very serious and as the investigation proceeded it became more and more clear to me how serious it really was.

    “As chief of police it’s my job to make sure that our officers conduct themselves appropriately at all times and deal with the people we come into contact with appropriately at all times.”

    Apparently, this has all changed now, and the officers have been rehired.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/fired-cops-rehired-beating-halfnaked-man/





    Video of Cops Beating Man Was So Bad, They Were All Fired—But a Corrupt System Just Rehired Them

    Seriously does any right minded person believe this is acceptable & the right thing to do.

    Agnostic- even you can’t possibly try to defend that ridiculous nonsense or can you ??
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 15, 2018, 05:07:23 AM
    IG REPORT: FBI AGENTS REGULARLY RECEIVED FREE HANDOUTS FROM JOURNALISTS
    Daily Caller ^ | 6/14/2018 | Joe Simonson
    Posted on 6/14/2018, 4:46:12 PM by bitt

    The Department of Justice inspector general identified a number of instances where FBI employees regularly spoke with members of the media and received a number of free perks from journalists including meals and tickets to various events.

    On page XII in the report, the IG says the department “identified numerous FBI employees, at all levels of the organization and with no official reason to be in contact with the media, who were nevertheless in frequent contact with reporters.”

    The IG expressed “profound concerns about the volume and extent of unauthorized media contacts by FBI personnel that we have uncovered our review.”

    The contact between FBI agents and the media extended to receiving “improperly receiving benefits from reporters, including tickets to sporting events, golfing outings, drinks and meals, and admittance to nonpublic social events.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 15, 2018, 11:28:43 AM
    Out of control gangs. When are these animals going to be locked up? This is the same gang that executed Daniel Shaver. (read more: http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8440709#msg8440709)

    Notice how they all participate in the violent attack (even the limp bald guy) and how violent the black cop is. Where were all those "good apples" we keep hearing about to arrest these animals on the spot?

    Graphic Video Shows Cops Savagely Beat Unarmed Man, Keep Hitting Him After He’s Knocked Out

    Mesa, AZ — A shocking video has surfaced out of Mesa, Arizona this week showing a half-dozen cops jump an unarmed and non-violent man—punching him in the head until he falls unconscious to the floor. Despite several cops participating in the beating, not one word of it was mentioned in a report and the chief claims he had no idea it even happened.

    The video is of an incident from May 23, in which police were responding to a call at an apartment complex. The Mesa Police department says they received a call from a woman stating that 20-year-old Erick Reyes was trying to get into the apartment of his ex-girlfriend.

    When police arrived on the scene, Reyes and another man, 33-year-old Robert Johnson were leaving the complex. When police told Reyes to sit down on the ground, he reportedly complied with their order. Johnson was given the same order as he walked to the elevator.

    Instead of sitting on the ground, Johnson, likely knowing he had done nothing wrong, simply sat against the wall. Apparently, this was not enough to appease the officers who then swarmed the unarmed and seemingly innocent man.

    Cops are then seen on video brutally punching the non-violent man in the face and kneeing him in the stomach. Even after he’s knocked unconscious, the massive cop in front of him pummels his face as he falls to the ground.

    In a statement this week, Mesa police chief Ramon Batista claimed he had no idea that this video existed nor did he know his officers savagely beat a man for no reason. Once it was publicly released, four of the officers involved in the incident were placed on administrative leave.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/mesa-police-beat-unarmed-nonviolent-man/

    As usual, this particularly violent criminal gang made up the charges in an attempt to justify the horrific attack.

    Charges dropped against Robert Johnson, man beaten by Mesa police

    A Mesa judge has dropped all charges against Robert Johnson, the 35-year-old Mesa man whose case received national attention after video surfaced of police officers beating him during an incident in May.

    Mesa city prosecutor John Belatti on June 13 filed the motion to dismiss the charges of disorderly conduct and hindering police without prejudice, meaning the case against Johnson can be refiled in court.

    The motion said the charges should be dropped "in the interest of justice." Municipal Judge Elizabeth P. Arriola granted it Thursday.

    "We are pleased to hear the false and drummed up charges against my client Mr. Johnson have been dropped," said Benjamin Taylor, a lawyer for Johnson.

    The motion was filed the same day The Arizona Republic reported on Mesa police body-cam videos from the January arrest of an unarmed man that show an officer repeatedly punching him and another police officer later mocking him as he lies on a hospital floor in a pool of blood.

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa-breaking/2018/06/14/mesa-judge-drops-charges-against-man-brutally-beaten-mesa-police/702453002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 15, 2018, 11:29:07 AM


    Video of Cops Beating Man Was So Bad, They Were All Fired—But a Corrupt System Just Rehired Them

    Seriously does any right minded person believe this is acceptable & the right thing to do.

    Agnostic- even you can’t possibly try to defend that ridiculous nonsense or can you ??

    Don't know about the "even you"... makes me feel like I make a habit of wrongly supporting officers who are doing abusive things. But no, even I can't defend that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 15, 2018, 11:29:39 AM
    IG REPORT: FBI AGENTS REGULARLY RECEIVED FREE HANDOUTS FROM JOURNALISTS
    Daily Caller ^ | 6/14/2018 | Joe Simonson
    Posted on 6/14/2018, 4:46:12 PM by bitt

    The Department of Justice inspector general identified a number of instances where FBI employees regularly spoke with members of the media and received a number of free perks from journalists including meals and tickets to various events.

    On page XII in the report, the IG says the department “identified numerous FBI employees, at all levels of the organization and with no official reason to be in contact with the media, who were nevertheless in frequent contact with reporters.”

    The IG expressed “profound concerns about the volume and extent of unauthorized media contacts by FBI personnel that we have uncovered our review.”

    The contact between FBI agents and the media extended to receiving “improperly receiving benefits from reporters, including tickets to sporting events, golfing outings, drinks and meals, and admittance to nonpublic social events.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...

    (https://78.media.tumblr.com/fe19cab34ea72069318856a9a3d663a9/tumblr_ozna6tmuPq1vg1enro1_500.gif)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 15, 2018, 11:45:34 AM
    Don't forget that according to Pence, "police officers are the best of us". And we're talking about a 21 year "veteran" cop.

    High Level Seattle Cop Found Guilty of Repeatedly Raping His Own Children

    Seattle, WA — In case after horrifying case, those in positions of power are exposed for their crimes, showing how these positions often attract society’s worse. One recent example of this is a police sergeant in Seattle being found guilty on Wednesday for the repeated rape and molestation of his own daughters.

    Daniel Amador, 46, had been free on bail as the trial progressed over the last several months. However, he was detained on Wednesday after a jury found him guilty of first-degree child molestation, second-degree child rape, third-degree child rape and first-degree incest.

    According to the court documents, this vile top cop routinely raped his older daughter, known in court papers as A.B., about five times a week and also molested his younger daughter, C.A.

    The abuse took place for more than a decade and the little girls were unable to tell anyone as their father was a cop. Both of the victims, now ages 24 and 19, described their horrifying childhood in which A.B. was Amador’s favorite one to rape while C.A. was regularly belittled.

    According to Seattle Pi, A.B. testified to undergoing regular “pinnings,” which involved Amador holding her down in his bed and talking with her extensively while either touching private body parts or raping her.

    “I wasn’t allowed to have secrets from him,” A.B. testified June 5.

    According to A.B. the rapes began when she was just 9 years old and persisted even after she had gone away to college.

    According to C.A., she testified that the “pinnings” were more of a punishment for her. This vile individual would lie on top of her and grope her while they were sometimes partially or fully naked.

    On multiple occasions, Amador would force C.A. to leave the room, then he would move the dresser in front of the door to his bedroom while A.B. was locked inside. He would abuse A.B. in his bedroom—for hours.

    Showing the power police have to sweep things under the rug, in 2013, a cousin of the girls called CPS to report C.A. because she began cutting herself around the age of 12 as a result of the “pinnings” and years of abuse.

    However, Amador was able to escape any accountability and told his family that if anyone found out about him raping them, they could lose everything they had if he was fired from being a cop.


    A.B. hadn’t told anyone about being raped as Amador had instilled so much fear in his own children that they were terrified of what might happen if anyone found out. During this time, Amador was being promoted within the department and used this to threaten his children even more.

    “If I helped keep CPS away, it would help keep us together,” A.B. said of that time, and keep them away they did. As Amador was an upstanding member of the Seattle Police Department, the claims against him were likely written off as they “must have been fabricated by some anti-police nut job.”

    Once she finally left the house and the control of her sadistic and horrifyingly abusive father, A.B. realized that remaining silent was not something she should continue to do. During that time, Amador had divorced the girls’ mother and remarried. Knowing that Amador’s new wife was pregnant with a baby girl, A.B. realized she had to say something to save her half-sister from a lifetime of abuse.

    In March of 2016, A.B. and C.A. came forward with their accusations. In a wise decision, they went to a neighboring police department to do so. As TFTP has reported on numerous occasions, often times, police departments will protect their own, even if they are abusive animals like Amador.

    In April of 2016, the Lake Forest Park Police Department arrested him. Likely due to his massive salary as a sergeant, Amador posted the $750,000 bail and quietly resigned from the police department after 21 years with them—likely keeping his taxpayer funded pention in the process.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/high-level-seattle-cop-found-guilty-of-repeatedly-raping-his-own-children/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 15, 2018, 11:47:51 AM
    Crazy. 

    Don't forget that according to Pence, "police officers are the best of us". And we're talking about a 21 year "veteran" cop.

    High Level Seattle Cop Found Guilty of Repeatedly Raping His Own Children

    Seattle, WA — In case after horrifying case, those in positions of power are exposed for their crimes, showing how these positions often attract society’s worse. One recent example of this is a police sergeant in Seattle being found guilty on Wednesday for the repeated rape and molestation of his own daughters.

    Daniel Amador, 46, had been free on bail as the trial progressed over the last several months. However, he was detained on Wednesday after a jury found him guilty of first-degree child molestation, second-degree child rape, third-degree child rape and first-degree incest.

    According to the court documents, this vile top cop routinely raped his older daughter, known in court papers as A.B., about five times a week and also molested his younger daughter, C.A.

    The abuse took place for more than a decade and the little girls were unable to tell anyone as their father was a cop. Both of the victims, now ages 24 and 19, described their horrifying childhood in which A.B. was Amador’s favorite one to rape while C.A. was regularly belittled.

    According to Seattle Pi, A.B. testified to undergoing regular “pinnings,” which involved Amador holding her down in his bed and talking with her extensively while either touching private body parts or raping her.

    “I wasn’t allowed to have secrets from him,” A.B. testified June 5.

    According to A.B. the rapes began when she was just 9 years old and persisted even after she had gone away to college.

    According to C.A., she testified that the “pinnings” were more of a punishment for her. This vile individual would lie on top of her and grope her while they were sometimes partially or fully naked.

    On multiple occasions, Amador would force C.A. to leave the room, then he would move the dresser in front of the door to his bedroom while A.B. was locked inside. He would abuse A.B. in his bedroom—for hours.

    Showing the power police have to sweep things under the rug, in 2013, a cousin of the girls called CPS to report C.A. because she began cutting herself around the age of 12 as a result of the “pinnings” and years of abuse.

    However, Amador was able to escape any accountability and told his family that if anyone found out about him raping them, they could lose everything they had if he was fired from being a cop.


    A.B. hadn’t told anyone about being raped as Amador had instilled so much fear in his own children that they were terrified of what might happen if anyone found out. During this time, Amador was being promoted within the department and used this to threaten his children even more.

    “If I helped keep CPS away, it would help keep us together,” A.B. said of that time, and keep them away they did. As Amador was an upstanding member of the Seattle Police Department, the claims against him were likely written off as they “must have been fabricated by some anti-police nut job.”

    Once she finally left the house and the control of her sadistic and horrifyingly abusive father, A.B. realized that remaining silent was not something she should continue to do. During that time, Amador had divorced the girls’ mother and remarried. Knowing that Amador’s new wife was pregnant with a baby girl, A.B. realized she had to say something to save her half-sister from a lifetime of abuse.

    In March of 2016, A.B. and C.A. came forward with their accusations. In a wise decision, they went to a neighboring police department to do so. As TFTP has reported on numerous occasions, often times, police departments will protect their own, even if they are abusive animals like Amador.

    In April of 2016, the Lake Forest Park Police Department arrested him. Likely due to his massive salary as a sergeant, Amador posted the $750,000 bail and quietly resigned from the police department after 21 years with them—likely keeping his taxpayer funded pention in the process.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/high-level-seattle-cop-found-guilty-of-repeatedly-raping-his-own-children/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 17, 2018, 11:45:48 AM
    Some officers turned off body cameras after Las Vegas shooting

    Quote
    In three videos, a female officer is visible walking down the staging rows. In the fourth she can only be heard.

    “Cameras are off? Cameras off? Cameras are off?” she says.

    An officer repeats “Camera is off,” and each video ends.

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/some-officers-turned-off-body-cameras-after-las-vegas-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 17, 2018, 01:28:08 PM
    Don't know about the "even you"... makes me feel like I make a habit of wrongly supporting officers who are doing abusive things. But no, even I can't defend that.

    Maybe The Even You was a bit harsh - Maybe not wrongly supporting them
    More like rose tinted glasses & generally accepting that what the cops say is the truth.
    Which quite often now we’re finding out is Not the case.

    Only let’s be honest you do tend to side with the cops a good proportion of the time

    Look at the story above - that horrible waste of breath needs killing only very slowly.
    Raping his own daughters FFS.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 17, 2018, 08:59:10 PM
    Maybe The Even You was a bit harsh - Maybe not wrongly supporting them
    More like rose tinted glasses & generally accepting that what the cops say is the truth.
    Which quite often now we’re finding out is Not the case.

    Only let’s be honest you do tend to side with the cops a good proportion of the time

    Look at the story above - that horrible waste of breath needs killing only very slowly.
    Raping his own daughters FFS.

    There are times where I can look at a video of a police incident alongside a civilian and come to a different conclusion.  Usually this is based on my past experience of possibly being in a similar situation and having insight that the civilian might not have. But I certainly acknowledge there is could possibility be that it is a bias that isn't fair. I don't think it is but I am certainly open to discussing any of those with an open mind.

    I read the above article, then went to a neutral website and read it again. Ultimately the bottom line is yes, the former cop is a waste of breath and needs killing slowly. I'd be happy to hold him down
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 17, 2018, 10:17:27 PM
    There are times where I can look at a video of a police incident alongside a civilian and come to a different conclusion.  Usually this is based on my past experience of possibly being in a similar situation and having insight that the civilian might not have. But I certainly acknowledge there is could possibility be that it is a bias that isn't fair. I don't think it is but I am certainly open to discussing any of those with an open mind.

    I read the above article, then went to a neutral website and read it again. Ultimately the bottom line is yes, the former cop is a waste of breath and needs killing slowly. I'd be happy to hold him down


    Very good that’s well said
    I respect your honesty in assessing yourself.

    Likelihood is we all can have bias or the rose tinted glasses effect
    I believe knowing & be aware of it helps us to avoid or lessen it happening.

    I’m glad we agree on the punishment for that cop.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 17, 2018, 10:26:13 PM

    Very good that’s well said
    I respect your honesty in assessing yourself.

    Likelihood is we all can have bias or the rose tinted glasses effect
    I believe knowing & be aware of it helps us to avoid or lessen it happening.

    I’m glad we agree on the punishment for that cop.


    Agree 100%
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 18, 2018, 01:06:15 PM
    So the cops themselves describe it as a "date rape drug" but seemingly only when others use it. Ketamine is supposed to have the effect of erasing or alter memory. Is there a  devious purpose behind this, i.e. the cops don't want the victim to remember something they did such as abuse or brutality? Then there is the issue of who the fuck are the cops to "suggest" or "urge" or "demand" that specific drugs,substances or procedures are used on people?

    At urging of Minneapolis police, Hennepin EMS workers subdued dozens with a powerful sedative.

    EMS workers used date rape drug ketamine, stopping some suspects' hearts or breathing.

    Minneapolis police officers have repeatedly requested over the past three years that Hennepin County medical responders sedate people using the powerful tranquilizer ketamine, at times over the protests of those being drugged, and in some cases when no apparent crime was committed, a city report shows.

    On multiple occasions, in the presence of police, Hennepin Healthcare EMS workers injected suspects of crimes and others who already appeared to be restrained, according to the report, and the ketamine caused heart or breathing failure, requiring them to be medically revived. Several people given ketamine had to be intubated.

    These are among the findings of an investigation conducted by the Office of Police Conduct Review, a division of the city’s Department of Civil Rights. The draft report has been circulated narrowly within City Hall but not disseminated to the public. The Star Tribune has obtained a copy.

    http://www.startribune.com/at-urging-of-police-hennepin-emts-subdued-dozens-with-powerful-sedative/485607381/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 18, 2018, 01:44:17 PM
    Another "brave hero" with a badge...

    Deputy accused of sexually assaulting girl, 4, threatening to have mother deported if she spoke up

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/06/18/deputy-accused-of-sexually-assaulting-girl-4-threatening-to-have-mother-deported-if-she-spoke-up/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.86a9db3020a5
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 18, 2018, 02:20:27 PM
    So the cops themselves describe it as a "date rape drug" but seemingly only when others use it. Ketamine is supposed to have the effect of erasing or alter memory. Is there a  devious purpose behind this, i.e. the cops don't want the victim to remember something they did such as abuse or brutality? Then there is the issue of who the fuck are the cops to "suggest" or "urge" or "demand" that specific drugs,substances or procedures are used on people?

    At urging of Minneapolis police, Hennepin EMS workers subdued dozens with a powerful sedative.

    EMS workers used date rape drug ketamine, stopping some suspects' hearts or breathing.

    Minneapolis police officers have repeatedly requested over the past three years that Hennepin County medical responders sedate people using the powerful tranquilizer ketamine, at times over the protests of those being drugged, and in some cases when no apparent crime was committed, a city report shows.

    On multiple occasions, in the presence of police, Hennepin Healthcare EMS workers injected suspects of crimes and others who already appeared to be restrained, according to the report, and the ketamine caused heart or breathing failure, requiring them to be medically revived. Several people given ketamine had to be intubated.

    These are among the findings of an investigation conducted by the Office of Police Conduct Review, a division of the city’s Department of Civil Rights. The draft report has been circulated narrowly within City Hall but not disseminated to the public. The Star Tribune has obtained a copy.

    http://www.startribune.com/at-urging-of-police-hennepin-emts-subdued-dozens-with-powerful-sedative/485607381/


    WTF !!!
    Wonder if this
    1, Legal
    2, common practice amongst police


    I will say though I’ve had the miss fortune of having to deal with a crazed man
    High on Weed / Cocaine / PCP - He was virtually unstoppable He made a mess of
    Me & Me Him if I’d not chocked him out ( it was that or take his knees out)
    & kept him out each time he started coming Round
    I have no doubt he’d of killed me.

    Wish somebody would of pinned him full of tranquilliser!!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 18, 2018, 03:34:48 PM
    So this criminal, while being "off duty" but on uniform and openly carrying a firearm, gets in his patrol car and goes to a store and threatens to kill someone and his mother, claiming "I know where you guys live". Such terroristic threats would've elicited a strong response had it been a normal civilian, let alone if these threats were directed at a cop. But when the violent offender is a cop, it's no big deal and brushed off as minor or a "mistake" or justa "bad decision". Even the statements he gave to his coworkers had inconsistencies... As expected, he was harshly "disciplined" with a four week leave. Let's see the next time an armed person terrorizes and threatens to kill others if they will just get similar treatment. "Biased" links below:

    PBSO deputy suspended after threatening to shoot his daughter’s boyfriend

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (CBS12) — A sheriff’s deputy suspended - after an internal affairs investigation concluded he threatened to shoot his daughter’s boyfriend.



    http://cbs12.com/news/local/pbso-deputy-suspended-after-threatening-to-shoot-his-daughters-boyfriend

    https://www.scribd.com/document/381816202/PBSO-Deputy-Suspended



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 18, 2018, 08:17:04 PM

    WTF !!!
    Wonder if this
    1, Legal
    2, common practice amongst police


    I will say though I’ve had the miss fortune of having to deal with a crazed man
    High on Weed / Cocaine / PCP - He was virtually unstoppable He made a mess of
    Me & Me Him if I’d not chocked him out ( it was that or take his knees out)
    & kept him out each time he started coming Round
    I have no doubt he’d of killed me.

    Wish somebody would of pinned him full of tranquilliser!!!

    http://www.fox9.com/news/hennepin-healthcare-minneapolis-police-respond-to-draft-report-on-ketamine-use-on-subjects

    Seems like the initial draft is being questioned by both the medical and police officials. We'll have to see what comes out

    I may have been on scene 1 time over a few decades of policing when a person was sedated by medical staff. Doesn't mean it probably wouldn't have been a good idea. People have died from over exhausting themselves when high on PCP or other drugs and that may have been a good option if you could hold them steady long enough. But the report says the number of times jumped from 3 the previous year to 60 the next which to me indicates a red flag.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 18, 2018, 11:08:11 PM
    http://www.fox9.com/news/hennepin-healthcare-minneapolis-police-respond-to-draft-report-on-ketamine-use-on-subjects

    Seems like the initial draft is being questioned by both the medical and police officials. We'll have to see what comes out

    I may have been on scene 1 time over a few decades of policing when a person was sedated by medical staff. Doesn't mean it probably wouldn't have been a good idea. People have died from over exhausting themselves when high on PCP or other drugs and that may have been a good option if you could hold them steady long enough. But the report says the number of times jumped from 3 the previous year to 60 the next which to me indicates a red flag.

    Good it’s being questioned - Going from 3 to 60 !!  ::)
    More than a little suspect.

    I’d of liked him to have died of over exhaustion.
    And the temptation to completely asphyxiate him was Very Tempting.
    If but for cctv & witness’s.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2018, 09:24:21 AM
    Lowly plebs and serfs get fines, prison sentences, violent beatings or even get executed. The government and its goons get immunity.

    U.S. judge dismisses Charleston shooting lawsuits, criticizes FBI

    (Reuters) - A federal judge has dismissed 16 lawsuits filed by survivors of a 2015 mass shooting at a South Carolina church who sued the government over the failure of an FBI-run background check system to prevent the purchase of the murder weapon.

    In his ruling released late Monday, Gergel said that the government had immunity from being sued for its policies, “even really bad policy choices.”

    The government’s argument in the case that it had to deny background check employees access to N-DEx, as it was restricted to law enforcement agencies, was “simple nonsense,” Gergel wrote.

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-south-carolina-shooting-roof/u-s-judge-dismisses-charleston-shooting-lawsuits-criticizes-fbi-idUSKBN1JG01O
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2018, 11:31:57 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 21, 2018, 01:26:29 PM
    “Have a seat in my car. We’ll make shit up as we go.”

    This mentality and also the fact that these criminals can indeed "make shit up as they go" to kidnap and abuse people is why accountability and harsh punishment are necessary for these scumbags. And of course the crime syndicate cop union is appealing the firing. This is why paid or unpaid vacation or firing is not enough, since with union machinations/extortion he could even get his job back or work in another PD. These criminals need to spend decades in prison or be executed to deter others from committing these crimes and prevent recidivism.

    Lorain police officer fired after stopping and detaining daughter and her boyfriend

    LORAIN – A Lorain police officer, John Kovach Jr, was fired after an internal investigation found he abused his authority by conducting a traffic stop on his daughter’s boyfriend without cause and temporarily detained his daughter and her boyfriend in the back of his squad car.

    He tells the driver, his daughter’s boyfriend Makai Coleman, 18, to get out because he’s “going to jail.” Coleman asks Kovach what for and Kovach responds: “Have a seat in my car. We’ll make shit up as we go.” Coleman goes and sits in Kovach’s cruiser.

    Kovach then addresses Gloria Morales, who comes out of her home nearby because her children are two of the three people in the car with Coleman. He tells Morales his daughter’s computer is inside her house and while she initially gives him permission to search the house, she later tells him to come back with a search warrant when he threatens to give her daughter a $300 ticket for not wearing her seatbelt.

    http://www.chroniclet.com/Local-News/2018/06/20/Lorain-police-officer-fire-following-incident-involving-daughter.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2018, 07:41:03 AM
    Remember this case? Of course at first the cop said the dog attacked him to justify the shooting.

    DA releases body-cam video in police shooting that hurt 9-year-old Wichita girl

    Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett on Thursday released body camera video that shows a police shooting that wounded a 9-year-old girl and led to a Wichita officer being fired in January.

    Dexter Betts was at the girl's home in response to a 911 call on Dec. 30 when he shot twice at her dog, a 35- to 40-pound English bull terrier named Chevy. The girl was sitting behind the dog on the floor in the living room. Three other children were also in the room.

    Betts' rounds missed their target. But bullet fragments that ricocheted off of the concrete floor under the carpet hit the 9-year-old's face above her eye, injuring her.

    Betts defense attorney has said the dog was attacking the officer.

    http://www.kansas.com/news/local/crime/article213609549.html

    Notice another tidbit from the article:

    Quote
    It's rare for body camera footage from Wichita police to be released. The Eagle sued the city after it denied requests to release body camera video that shows an Iraqi American family being detained at a Wichita bank in September and footage connected to a hit-and-run crash that allegedly involved an off-duty Wichita police officer who had been drinking.

    Don't forget how some cop lovers say "cameras vindicate cops". Only in this case it took over 6 months for the footage to be released and only after many requests and lawsuits. Had it been footage that vindicated the cop it probably would have been released within 6 hours (or minutes).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2018, 08:37:13 AM
    https://www.cnet.com/news/supreme-court-says-warrant-necessary-for-phone-location-data


    Good ruling. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2018, 09:45:21 AM
    https://www.cnet.com/news/supreme-court-says-warrant-necessary-for-phone-location-data


    Good ruling. 

    Generally speaking yes although the court declined to overturn the controversial "third-party doctrine," the 1970s-era legal precedent that found there was no "reasonable expectation of privacy" in data collected by a third party, like a phone company. The third-party doctrine, which was created by two cases known as Smith and Miller, was the underpinning for the National Security Agency’s Section 215 metadata program, which was exposed by former contractor Edward Snowden.

    In case someone is wondering about the particular case the Supreme Court ruled on:
    Quote
    The dispute dates back to a 2011 robbery in Detroit, after which police gathered months of phone location data from Timothy Carpenter's phone provider. They pulled together 12,898 different locations from Carpenter, over 127 days.

    The legal and privacy concern was that police gathered the four months' worth of Carpenter's digital footprints without a warrant. A Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals judge ruled that cellphone location data is not protected by the Fourth Amendment, which forbids unreasonable search and seizure, and therefore didn't require a warrant.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 25, 2018, 02:23:56 PM
    This is how you deal with criminal gangs.

    Entire Mexican police force arrested after mayoral candidate’s murder

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B470300000578-0-image-a-30_1529923069967.jpg)

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B46EC00000578-0-image-a-32_1529923135316.jpg)

    A Mexican town’s entire police force has been arrested in connection with the slaying of a mayoral candidate.

    The 28 officers from the town of Ocampo in the western state of Michoacan were arrested Sunday on suspicion of involvement in the murder of Fernando Angeles Juarez.

    Juarez, 64, was running as the candidate for the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution in Ocampo, before being shot dead June 21.

    State officials took the cops in for having alleged ties with criminal groups possibly involved in the candidate’s killing, El Universal reported.

    Public Security Director Venancio Colin was chased out by 16 Ocampo cops in a hail of bullets when he first tried to arrest them Saturday, sources told the paper.

    He came back Sunday with reinforcements and arrested the entire force, who were cuffed and taken to the state capital for questioning.


    https://nypost.com/2018/06/25/entire-mexican-police-force-arrested-after-mayoral-candidates-murder/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 25, 2018, 07:47:19 PM
    This is how you deal with criminal gangs.

    Entire Mexican police force arrested after mayoral candidate’s murder

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B470300000578-0-image-a-30_1529923069967.jpg)

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B46EC00000578-0-image-a-32_1529923135316.jpg)

    A Mexican town’s entire police force has been arrested in connection with the slaying of a mayoral candidate.

    The 28 officers from the town of Ocampo in the western state of Michoacan were arrested Sunday on suspicion of involvement in the murder of Fernando Angeles Juarez.

    Juarez, 64, was running as the candidate for the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution in Ocampo, before being shot dead June 21.

    State officials took the cops in for having alleged ties with criminal groups possibly involved in the candidate’s killing, El Universal reported.

    Public Security Director Venancio Colin was chased out by 16 Ocampo cops in a hail of bullets when he first tried to arrest them Saturday, sources told the paper.

    He came back Sunday with reinforcements and arrested the entire force, who were cuffed and taken to the state capital for questioning.


    https://nypost.com/2018/06/25/entire-mexican-police-force-arrested-after-mayoral-candidates-murder/




    Way to go.
    That should be happening more often
    It might help sort the criminals from the cops
    And leave the police service with the decent ones
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on June 25, 2018, 11:00:52 PM

    Way to go.
    That should be happening more often
    It might help sort the criminals from the cops
    And leave the police service with the decent ones

    Wow, that's amazing!!!  The rule of law to the fore.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 26, 2018, 01:35:07 PM
    Insane. Is this the US or Erdogan's Turkey?

    Police Chief Calls Press Conference and Then Arrests Everyone Who Showed Up

    Leon Valley, TX — Over the weekend, the chief of police for the Leon Valley Police Department called a late-afternoon press conference to address police accountability activists live-streaming officers. However, as soon as the conference began, chief Joseph Salvaggio began arresting people and then detained the entire crowd.

    Over the past two months, Salvaggio has been the subject of multiple videos and independent media articles for his alleged corruption. According to the group National Association for Individual Rights, the controversy began on May 2, when Jesus Padilla was arrested while filming inside Leon Valley City Hall.

    It continued into last week. As TFTP reported, multiple people were arrested for their freedom of speech last week as they desecrated a Thin Blue Line American flag.

    On June 18, the group started outside in front of city hall where they flew the thin blue line flag upside down and then painted it red and tore it. The protest then moved into the building where the protesters gathered in the lobby showing police what they had done to the flag. Within minutes they were all arrested and their phones confiscated.

    The press conference appears to be a likely attempt to suppress this rising but entirely legal opposition. As the conference began, Salvaggio announced the immediate arrest of one of the activists.

    “First and foremost,” said Salvaggio as he walked out of city hall and approached the crowd that gathered. “Bao come over here, you’re under arrest.”

    After arresting Nguyen, Salvaggio began to address the rest of the media, many of whom were credentialed reporters.

    “Thank you for coming to Leon Valley. I totally, totally support your right to put something online, your First Amendment right,” said Salvaggio before completely negating that statement. “Everybody else, you are not free to leave… you are witnesses, every one of y’all are witnesses to the crime. Every one of your cameras, your devices, every one of them are going to be taken, every one of y’all, sit down right here.”

    Salvaggio then ordered his officers to arrest every single other person in attendance, including those who tried to walk away.

    “Go back and get the rest of them, get every one of them,” he said.


    [ Invalid YouTube link ]

    17:20

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-police-chief-calls-press-conference-and-then-arrests-everyone-who-showed-up/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 26, 2018, 02:12:52 PM
    Insane. Is this the US or Erdogan's Turkey?

    Police Chief Calls Press Conference and Then Arrests Everyone Who Showed Up

    Leon Valley, TX — Over the weekend, the chief of police for the Leon Valley Police Department called a late-afternoon press conference to address police accountability activists live-streaming officers. However, as soon as the conference began, chief Joseph Salvaggio began arresting people and then detained the entire crowd.

    Over the past two months, Salvaggio has been the subject of multiple videos and independent media articles for his alleged corruption. According to the group National Association for Individual Rights, the controversy began on May 2, when Jesus Padilla was arrested while filming inside Leon Valley City Hall.

    It continued into last week. As TFTP reported, multiple people were arrested for their freedom of speech last week as they desecrated a Thin Blue Line American flag.

    On June 18, the group started outside in front of city hall where they flew the thin blue line flag upside down and then painted it red and tore it. The protest then moved into the building where the protesters gathered in the lobby showing police what they had done to the flag. Within minutes they were all arrested and their phones confiscated.

    The press conference appears to be a likely attempt to suppress this rising but entirely legal opposition. As the conference began, Salvaggio announced the immediate arrest of one of the activists.

    “First and foremost,” said Salvaggio as he walked out of city hall and approached the crowd that gathered. “Bao come over here, you’re under arrest.”

    After arresting Nguyen, Salvaggio began to address the rest of the media, many of whom were credentialed reporters.

    “Thank you for coming to Leon Valley. I totally, totally support your right to put something online, your First Amendment right,” said Salvaggio before completely negating that statement. “Everybody else, you are not free to leave… you are witnesses, every one of y’all are witnesses to the crime. Every one of your cameras, your devices, every one of them are going to be taken, every one of y’all, sit down right here.”

    Salvaggio then ordered his officers to arrest every single other person in attendance, including those who tried to walk away.

    “Go back and get the rest of them, get every one of them,” he said.


    [ Invalid YouTube link ]

    17:20

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-police-chief-calls-press-conference-and-then-arrests-everyone-who-showed-up/


    Agnostic
    Please clarify his actions
    And your views on this.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 27, 2018, 07:48:18 AM
    https://www.cnn.com/2018/06/27/us/michael-rosfeld-charged-criminal-homicide-antwon-rose-east-pittsburgh/index.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2018, 01:16:38 PM
    Hopefully these extremely violent criminals will be sentenced for many decades and will be subjected to daily torture and tasering. Also, notice the "sheriff's" involvement.

    Cops Arrested After Horrifying Video Showed Them Torture Teen in a Restraint Chair with a Taser

    Ashland City, TN — Two police officers who strapped an 18-year-old in a restraint chair and tortured him with a taser were arrested and charged with multiple crimes this week. The horrifying video was so damning that the normal process of sweeping it under the rug was not an option.

    Former Corporal Mark Bryant was charged with two counts of Excessive Force Under the Color of Law, and two counts of Destruction, Alteration or Falsification of Records in Federal Investigations. Sergeant Gary Ola was charged with two counts of making false statements to federal investigators for lying to them in August of 2017 and again in May of 2018.

    As News Channel 5 reports, if convicted, Bryant faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for the color of law charges and 20 years in prison for the obstruction charges, three years of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000. Ola faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison, three years of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000.

    Both officers pleaded not guilty on Tuesday and they were both released without having to pay any bail—a privilege that would most certainly not be granted to non-law enforcement officers.

    As TFTP reported, the nightmare for the victim, 18-year-old Jordan Norris began in November 2016, when a SWAT team raided his home because he was allegedly selling drugs. Selling willing people a substance they want to voluntarily ingest in no way justified the treatment Norris would receive.

    After Norris was arrested, he had somewhat of a mental breakdown and began banging his head against the cell door. So, police dragged him out of his cell and strapped him in a restraint chair.

    In the extremely disturbing video, Cheatham County Sheriff’s Deputies are seen holding Norris down with a gag while Bryant sadistically and repeatedly deploys the taser—at one point shocking Norris of nearly half a minute. Naturally, Norris squirmed as 50,000 volts ran through his body. His movement seemed to provoke the deputies who responded with more taser strikes.

    “Are you ready?” Bryant asked Norris, who appeared to ready himself for the surge of electricity.

    “Would you like to comply?” Bryant asked. Norris’s response was inaudible.

    “No you won’t,” Bryant said as sadistically tortured the teen.

    “Stop resisting!” one of the deputies yelled at Norris, who was strapped into restraints.

    “You don’t like it, do you?” a deputy asked.


    At one part in the video, you can hear Bryant tell Norris, “I’ll keep doing that until I run out of batteries.”

    Norris said he remembered deputies asking him, “Do you want me to do it again? We got a whole bunch of batteries we can drain into you pretty much. We will do it over and over until we have no more.”

    For three hours Norris remained in the chair.

    When Norris was released from prison, he was covered in burn marks from the taser. Somehow he made it through the torture without his heart stopping.

    Tony Chapman, Norris’ stepfather, said he gave the police the benefit of the doubt when he saw his stepson’s wounds. He thought Norris must’ve been resisting in some way. However, once they saw the video, it was entirely clear that Norris was in no way resisting — as he was buckled down in a restraint chair.

    “I said, ‘Jordan what is that?’ It looked like he had the measles. And he said, ‘That’s where they tased me.’ I could not wrap my head around that,” William Chapman said.

    Chapman told News Channel 5 that he counted more than forty burns.

    “I was actually giving the police benefit of the doubt over my own child because I was thinking he must have been fighting back, he must have been resisting,” Chapman said.

    He was not.

    “When I found that he was actually strapped to a restraint chair, it was even more mind boggling. It didn’t make any sense,” Chapman said.

    When you watch the video below, you will likely agree with Chapman. What the deputies were doing to Norris with the taser did not make any sense at all. Why on earth would they choose to torture this young man repeatedly with a taser?

    Thanks to a post on the sheriff’s department’s Facebook page, we now have a possible answer to that question. The sheriff had a personal vendetta against Norris and took to publicly taunting him.

    In the Facebook post, the sheriff called Norris “a drug dealer by trade and on the fast track to live the thug life.” The sheriff even noted that Norris “peed a little bit,” while being handled by SWAT.

    Sheriff Mike Breedlove even stood by his Facebook comments, claiming that they normally make humorous posts after busting people for selling substances deemed illegal by the state.

    After he refused to back down for taunting Norris, the sheriff went on to justify the sadistic actions of his deputies by stating that it was necessary. He said his deputies had to taser Norris over 40 times because he kept flinching.

    Sadly, Norris was found dead in March 2018 in his home. Agents with the TBI investigated his death but never released their findings. His family released the autopsy report to News 4 which said his death may have been an overdose, but they also believe the tasing incident played a role in his death.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-arrested-after-horrifying-video-showed-them-torture-teen-in-a-restraint-chair-with-a-taser/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 03, 2018, 02:05:26 PM
    Cowards. They're only brave when they abuse the elderly, molest children, attack the deaf or beat handcuffed and incapacitated people. But when they have to protect and serve the community, they shit their pants. This happened while Paddock was shooting so the coward's inaction might have caused the death of many innocent concert goers. All this is part of the information, documents and videos that the police wanted to keep and they were only released after months of delaying and stalling tactics by the police when a Court finally ordered them to release them immediately (ordinary people can be sent to prison for contempt of Court, the police of course get away with it).

    Las Vegas cop 'terrified with fear' as gunman murdered dozens, body camera footage shows

    An armed, veteran police officer stood idle for several minutes last October as the Las Vegas gunman slaughtered dozens of concertgoers from a perch one floor up, and now that cop's actions -- and inaction -- are being reviewed by the Metropolitan Police Department.

    The investigation into Cordell Hendrex, and the rest of the city’s police department, comes as Las Vegas prepares to release its ninth batch of footage and records related to the shooting, which left 58 dead and hundreds injured.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/03/las-vegas-cop-froze-with-fear-as-gunman-murdered-dozens-body-camera-footage-shows.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 03, 2018, 09:50:09 PM
    Cowards. They're only brave when they abuse the elderly, molest children, attack the deaf or beat handcuffed and incapacitated people. But when they have to protect and serve the community, they shit their pants. This happened while Paddock was shooting so the coward's inaction might have caused the death of many innocent concert goers. All this is part of the information, documents and videos that the police wanted to keep and they were only released after months of delaying and stalling tactics by the police when a Court finally ordered them to release them immediately (ordinary people can be sent to prison for contempt of Court, the police of course get away with it).

    Las Vegas cop 'terrified with fear' as gunman murdered dozens, body camera footage shows

    An armed, veteran police officer stood idle for several minutes last October as the Las Vegas gunman slaughtered dozens of concertgoers from a perch one floor up, and now that cop's actions -- and inaction -- are being reviewed by the Metropolitan Police Department.

    The investigation into Cordell Hendrex, and the rest of the city’s police department, comes as Las Vegas prepares to release its ninth batch of footage and records related to the shooting, which left 58 dead and hundreds injured.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/03/las-vegas-cop-froze-with-fear-as-gunman-murdered-dozens-body-camera-footage-shows.html


    Cowards. They're only brave when they abuse the elderly, molest children, attack the deaf or beat handcuffed and incapacitated people. But when they have to protect and serve the community, they shit their pants.

    Time & Time again we are seeing this,
    When actually confronted with a real ‘Feared for their life situation’ many of the shit themselves & freeze
    There all big & tough in the gangs or beating / shooting dead relatively easy harmless people
    Then claiming they “feared for their lives” - No being a cop isn’t an easy ride sometimes that’s No
    Excuse for the Thug Bullying lying Behaviour we often see & hear about.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 06, 2018, 02:04:07 PM
    De Blasio used a $3M counterterrorism plane to zip home from vacation

    The NYPD used a $3 million counterterrorism plane to shuttle Mayor Bill de Blasio back and forth from his Canada vacation to the Big Apple for an event Thursday, The Post has learned.

    Hizzoner, who is in Quebec on a weeklong respite, briefly flew back to the Bronx for a memorial for slain Detective Miosotis Familia.

    “NYPD is transporting him in their plane,” de Blasio spokesman Eric Phillips told The Post.

    “Their plane” is a Cessna 208 Caravan that cost roughly $3 million and was picked up by the department in 2017, sources said.

    The high-tech aircraft is outfitted with special sensors that can detect at a distance radioactive material used to make “dirty bombs.”

    https://nypost.com/2018/07/05/de-blasio-used-a-3m-counterterrorism-plane-to-zip-home-from-vacation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 06, 2018, 02:08:30 PM
    Why is the DA threatening this man with jail time? Because he gets the largest portion from the ridiculous fine. Talk about a racket...

    Police State Defined—Man Facing Jail Time For Overdue $5 Movie Rental

    Tulsa, OK – A man who never returned the copy of the movie “Ted” he rented for $5 from a local store in 2014 was contacted by police and threatened with jail time if he did not pay the hefty fine that has accumulated over the last four years.

    Lonnie Perry said he vaguely remembers renting the movie, watching it and then forgetting to return it—but he became homeless around that time, and he believes the DVD copy of “Ted” was just another one of the possessions he packed into a box when he moved to a neighboring town.

    The local store insisted that it tried to reach out to Perry multiple times, but when they could not contact him, they turned the case over to the Rogers County District Attorney’s Office and listed the DVD as “stolen property” that must be returned.

    The local news apparently had no trouble finding the man, and in an interview with ABC 8 in Tulsa, Perry said he was shocked when he received a letter from the DA notifying him that he could face jail time if he did not pay the $218.07 fee for the movie rental.

    The fact that is even more incredible is that out of the money Perry owes, the movie store will only receive a small portion—$19 for the movie and $25 for “lost profits”—while the DA will receive $174 as part of “a state statute that deals with unreturned movies,” according to the report.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-state-defined-man-facing-jail-time-for-overdue-5-movie-rental/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 06, 2018, 02:57:09 PM
    sands of Americans Will Be Denied a Passport Because of Unpaid Taxes
    The Wall Street Journal ^ | 06 July 2018 | Laura Saunders
    Posted on 7/6/2018, 5:55:43 PM by Theoria

    IRS officials provide new details on enforcement of law Congress passed in late 2015

    At least 362,000 Americans with overdue tax debts will be denied new or renewed passports if they don’t settle these debts, the Internal Revenue Service says.

    Recently IRS officials have provided new details on the enforcement of a law Congress passed in late 2015. It requires the IRS and State Department to deny passports or revoke them for taxpayers who have more than $51,000 of overdue tax debt. Enforcement began in February.

    An IRS spokesman says the 362,000 people are current tax debtors who are affected by the law. The IRS is sending their names in batches to the State Department, a process the tax agency aims to finish by year’s end. A State Department spokesman confirmed that it has already denied passports to some debtors.

    IRS Division Commissioner Mary Beth Murphy said in late June that for now U.S. authorities are denying passports rather than revoking them. So, many tax debtors with current passports should be able to travel abroad, but they won’t be able to renew their passports; those without passports will be denied them if they apply.

    (Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 11, 2018, 01:27:07 PM
    https://ca.news.yahoo.com/tsa-screeners-win-immunity-flier-abuse-claims-u-150740124.html


     :( >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 11, 2018, 01:49:22 PM
    https://ca.news.yahoo.com/tsa-screeners-win-immunity-flier-abuse-claims-u-150740124.html


     :( >:(

    Outrageous. This just gives them license to abuse without any consequences.

    Quote
    In a 2-1 vote, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia said Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screeners are shielded by government sovereign immunity from liability under the Federal Tort Claims Act because they do not function as "investigative or law enforcement officers."

    Once again immunity and special protections for the government goons. If they are not "investigative or law enforcement officers" and they are not enforcing any laws then what exactly do they do that people have to comply without question or face arrest and prison and entered into secret black lists?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 12, 2018, 09:16:37 PM
    This is how they operated: a coin toss decided your freedom (and in this case it didn't even seem to matter much). Speaks volumes on how they see the rest of us and how they can commit crimes undisturbed. This happened in April but of course nothing happened until the moment the 11Alive team discovered it. Let's see if the vermin will receive any actual punishment.

    'Coin-flip arrest' uncovered in 11Alive investigation | Officers placed on leave

    The case against the woman they arrested was dropped after the prosecutor watched the body camera footage of an arrest decision based on a coin-flip app.



    https://www.11alive.com/article/news/local/holding-powerful-accountable/coin-flip-arrest-uncovered-in-11alive-investigation-officers-placed-on-leave/85-573223680
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2018, 02:41:54 PM
    Once again we see that these criminals are ruthless and don't care about  truth, justice, laws or BS such as "noble causes". This happened a few years ago. Scum like this should be sent to the electric chair.

    The chief wanted perfect stats, so cops were told to pin crimes on black people, probe found

    The indictment was damning enough: A former police chief of Biscayne Park and two officers charged with falsely pinning four burglaries on a teenager just to impress village leaders with a perfect crime-solving record.

    But the accusations revealed in federal court last month left out far uglier details of past policing practices in tranquil Biscayne Park, a leafy wedge of suburbia just north of Miami Shores.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article213647764.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2018, 02:46:10 PM
    New Jersey cop and pal to face charge of assaulting BC hockey player at pizza joint

    An off-duty New Jersey police officer and his pal are being arraigned on assault charges for an early-morning brawl at a pizza place in the Fenway.

    Prosecutors said the assault occurred on the morning of Jan. 19 at Domino’s Pizza, where Daniel Hunt, 27, of Barrington, N.J. , and Ian Salerno, 29, of Philadelphia had a physical altercation with a 24-year-old living in Chestnut Hill at the time.

    http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_coverage/2018/07/new_jersey_cop_and_pal_to_face_charge_of_assaulting_bc_hockey_player_at
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2018, 03:29:01 PM
    Shithole.

    Chicago Police Routinely Trampled on Civil Rights, Justice Dept. Says

    CHICAGO — A blistering report by the Justice Department described far-reaching failures throughout the Chicago Police Department, saying excessive force was rampant, rarely challenged and chiefly aimed at African-Americans and Latinos.

    The report, unveiled on Friday after a 13-month investigation, forced a public reckoning for a police department with a legacy of corruption and abuse. It came as the department grapples with skyrocketing violence in Chicago, where murders are at a 20-year high, and a deep lack of trust among the city’s residents.

    Over 161 pages, the investigation laid out, in chilling detail, unchecked aggressions: an officer pointing a gun at teenagers on bicycles suspected of trespassing; officers using a Taser on an unarmed, naked 65-year-old woman with mental illness; officers purposely dropping off young gang members in rival territory.

    The department’s missteps go well beyond the officers on patrol, the report said. After officers used excessive force, their actions were practically condoned by supervisors, who rarely questioned their behavior. One commander interviewed by the Justice Department said that he could not recall ever suggesting that officers’ use of force be investigated further.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/13/us/chicago-police-justice-department-report.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 13, 2018, 03:54:37 PM
    Shithole.

    Chicago Police Routinely Trampled on Civil Rights, Justice Dept. Says

    CHICAGO — A blistering report by the Justice Department described far-reaching failures throughout the Chicago Police Department, saying excessive force was rampant, rarely challenged and chiefly aimed at African-Americans and Latinos.

    The report, unveiled on Friday after a 13-month investigation, forced a public reckoning for a police department with a legacy of corruption and abuse. It came as the department grapples with skyrocketing violence in Chicago, where murders are at a 20-year high, and a deep lack of trust among the city’s residents.

    Over 161 pages, the investigation laid out, in chilling detail, unchecked aggressions: an officer pointing a gun at teenagers on bicycles suspected of trespassing; officers using a Taser on an unarmed, naked 65-year-old woman with mental illness; officers purposely dropping off young gang members in rival territory.

    The department’s missteps go well beyond the officers on patrol, the report said. After officers used excessive force, their actions were practically condoned by supervisors, who rarely questioned their behavior. One commander interviewed by the Justice Department said that he could not recall ever suggesting that officers’ use of force be investigated further.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/13/us/chicago-police-justice-department-report.html


    None of that reading is Hardly very surprising.

    What is surprising is the report being published
    That’s a step forwards.

    Though wether it’s acted upon or anything changes is a different matter.

    Having just police policing police or any other service or profession policing
    Themselves is never going to work in the public interest.
    That really is so obvious it’s laughable.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2018, 06:14:11 PM
    Why are those prosecutors not in prison? And why are their wages/pensions/possessions not confiscated to pay for all the years these men suffered?

    ‘Completely free’: No retrial of ex-soldiers in 1992 killing

    Mark Jones says he and two of his Army buddies were out for an impromptu bachelor party when Savannah police arrested them in a drive-by slaying that would land them behind bars for more than 25 years. Now prosecutors are dropping the case for good, sparing the men from a new trial after Georgia's top court threw out their convictions.

    "We spent the better part of three decades in prison for something we didn't do," Jones told The Associated Press on Thursday from his home in Port Aransas, Texas. "We're finally completely free."

    The three men were released from prison in December after the Georgia Supreme Court threw out their murder convictions, saying in a unanimous ruling that prosecutors improperly withheld a police report that would have helped their defense.

    https://www.star-telegram.com/news/state/texas/article214816270.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2018, 02:35:17 PM
    Judge jails defendant for failing to unlock phones

    TAMPA (FOX 13) - It started out as a civil rights battle in a Tampa courtroom, and now a cell phone password might be a defendant’s key to freedom. 

    A judge threw William Montanez behind bars for failing to unlock his phones Thursday, which wasn’t how Montanez or his attorney expected their day in court to end.

    To understand how Montanez got here, we go back to June 21.  Montanez was on the road when suddenly he got pulled over for not properly yielding. 

    He wouldn’t allow cops to search his car, so a drug-sniffing dog was brought in. A small amount of marijuana was allegedly found, and cops asked to search his cell phones.

    Again, Montanez said no, so detectives got a warrant -- which brought us to this constitutional challenge in court.

    After several minutes of vigorous arguments, Judge Gregory Holder ruled cops could go through the cell phones.  So out came the phones from the evidence bag, but Montanez said the two phones are new and he couldn’t remember the passwords to unlock them.

    "I don't know the code, sir,” he stated.

    Judge Holder then had Montanez try to unlock the second cell phone, but it was the same result.
    So the judge found him in civil contempt and threw him in jail.

    http://www.fox13news.com/news/local-news/judge-jails-man-for-failing-to-unlock-phones
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 14, 2018, 05:47:33 PM
    Judge jails defendant for failing to unlock phones

    TAMPA (FOX 13) - It started out as a civil rights battle in a Tampa courtroom, and now a cell phone password might be a defendant’s key to freedom. 

    A judge threw William Montanez behind bars for failing to unlock his phones Thursday, which wasn’t how Montanez or his attorney expected their day in court to end.

    To understand how Montanez got here, we go back to June 21.  Montanez was on the road when suddenly he got pulled over for not properly yielding. 

    He wouldn’t allow cops to search his car, so a drug-sniffing dog was brought in. A small amount of marijuana was allegedly found, and cops asked to search his cell phones.

    Again, Montanez said no, so detectives got a warrant -- which brought us to this constitutional challenge in court.

    After several minutes of vigorous arguments, Judge Gregory Holder ruled cops could go through the cell phones.  So out came the phones from the evidence bag, but Montanez said the two phones are new and he couldn’t remember the passwords to unlock them.

    "I don't know the code, sir,” he stated.

    Judge Holder then had Montanez try to unlock the second cell phone, but it was the same result.
    So the judge found him in civil contempt and threw him in jail.

    http://www.fox13news.com/news/local-news/judge-jails-man-for-failing-to-unlock-phones

    Crazy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 23, 2018, 11:37:14 AM
    Pro-police group’s role questioned in prosecution of Las Vegas officer

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/courts/pro-police-groups-role-questioned-in-prosecution-of-las-vegas-officer/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 23, 2018, 02:24:16 PM
    Good Cop Films and Reports Bad Cop Abusing Innocent Man, So They Fired Her

    Deland, FL — Former DeLand Police Officer Allison Bainbridge is the epitome of a good cop. Bainbridge was so focused on stopping crime that she — unlike most police officers in America — crossed the thin blue line and reported one of her own. After this brave act of filming a fellow cop abusing an innocent citizen and then reporting it, Bainbridge was snubbed out and fired.

    The incident all started last month when Bainbridge and Cpl. Ken Ramkissoon were responding to a trespassing call at a 7-Eleven. When the officers arrived, the man who prompted the trespassing call was no longer around.

    However, there was an innocent man — uninvolved in the original incident — sitting on a bench near the 7-Eleven. After not finding the man reported for trespassing, the officers were about to leave. However, all of the sudden, Ramkissoon began walking toward the innocent man on the bench.

    At this point, Bainbridge turned on her body camera as is policy when engaging citizens. However, Ramkissoon conveniently left his off. And, when you watch the video below, you’ll know why.

    Although the first 30 seconds of the footage is silent because of the camera’s function, the audio picks up at just the right time to capture this public servant threaten and abuse an innocent citizen.

    “Do you want me to beat your fucking ass?” yells Ramkissoon as he threatens and intimidates a man for doing nothing other than sitting down on a bench. "Did I tell you to leave? Don’t raise your voice at me, because I’ll drop your ass.”

    The abuse was so bad that it prompted Bainbridge to report it that very night.

    “I’ve been in law enforcement for eight years, and I’ve never been in an incident like this before.  It shocked my conscience to see it,” Bainbridge said.

    After witnessing the abuse, Bainbridge immediately went to her supervisor, a sergeant, and filed a complaint. One week later—in what appears to be a completely retaliatory move— Ramkissoon also went to his supervisor and filed a complaint about Bainbridge, noting his “concerns about the manner in which Officer Bainbridge is performing her duties.”

    Bainbridge was then given a letter of counselling on July 11 related to an incident in which she forgot to turn on her body camera during a call. It happened in May and was of no consequence until she reported her fellow cop.

    “They didn’t say anything about my performance until I filed this complaint,” Bainbridge said, who was then fired days later.

    It is important to reiterate that Bainbridge was fired for an incident in which she allegedly forgot to turn on her body camera — the exact same thing she recorded happening with Ramkissoon, except that he threatened and intimidated an innocent man as well.

    Now, Bainbridge is fired and Ramkissoon is still on patrol epitomizing everything wrong with police in America.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-crosses-thin-blue-line-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 23, 2018, 09:18:29 PM
    Certainly seems to be a classic case of retaliation against a cop that spoke out against another officers conduct. I would hire her in a heartbeat if the article is accurate.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 24, 2018, 06:54:29 AM
    Certainly seems to be a classic case of retaliation against a cop that spoke out against another officers conduct. I would hire her in a heartbeat if the article is accurate.

    That's Good to hear.

    why are you one of the few.? Are you saying that now as you're retired
    or would you / did you do such when you were serving.?
    why would they of Fired her ?
    how does that instill confidence in the cops & their chain of command.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 24, 2018, 07:16:36 AM
    That's Good to hear.

    why are you one of the few.? Are you saying that now as you're retired
    or would you / did you do such when you were serving.?
    why would they of Fired her ?
    how does that instill confidence in the cops & their chain of command.



    I've always been this way and know a lot of officers that are the same. The majority really. I'm limited to the circle I worked with and our dept was about 2100 sworn officers.

    Why would they have fired her...having been involved personally with an officer that was fired for good cause, but claimed it was for a retaliation of sort, I am cautious to accept the reported information as totally factual. Our local liberal newspaper ran an article on the officer at APD and his interview without talking to anyone at the department and the article was full of misinformation which made anyone who was not aware of the facts think we were a bunch of assholes. But on the other hand, the information could just as well be pretty factual. They could have fired here because there is a good old boy system in place or she could have just not been cutting it as a probationary officer. I lean towards the former especially since it was the officer in question writing a complaint on her AFTER she filed a complaint.

    “We hold our officers to high standards. Ms. Bainbridge was a probationary employee and did not meet those standards and thus her services were no longer needed. We are aware of the allegation she has made against Corporal Ken Ramkissoon and an internal investigation was opened June 24 and has not been completed yet. Furthermore, her termination is not related to the ongoing investigation.”

    In our case, the fired (he actually resigned but it was that or be terminated) cop filed a lawsuit and it went to federal court and we got the opportunity to show the stacks of reports, both incident and field Training reports that showed he was a basket case and we easily won the case. Hopefully she will do the same, or when the internal investigation is complete, the department will show the evidence as to her performance. but it certainly seems fishy

    I noticed just as the sound came on another officer smiles and says "Watch Ken". If I were in that Chain of Command that officer would be facing disciplinary actions as well.  He was aware of the officers intentions and thought it would be entertaining to watch an officer berate and belittle a citizen for no apparent reason. That can't be tolerated and an example should be set. That officer rather than sit back and watch an abuse happen, should have intervened and didnt.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2018, 10:24:18 AM
    Trader Joe's employee, who died in hostage situation, killed by LAPD gunfire, chief says

    A bullet fired by the LAPD killed the Trader Joe’s employee who died during a hostage situation during the weekend, Chief Michael Moore said Tuesday at a news conference.

    Ballistics tests show that a Los Angeles police officer fired the shot that struck and killed Melyda Corado, 27, during a shootout with an alleged hostage taker at the Silver Lake supermarket Saturday, Moore said.

    Gene Evin Atkins, 28, was arrested on suspicion of murder after Corado died during the more than two-hour hostage situation before Moore revealed it was officer gunfire that killed Corado.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/24/trader-joes-employee-who-died-in-hostage-situation-killed-by-lapd-gunfire-chief-says.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 24, 2018, 10:40:34 AM
    Trader Joe's employee, who died in hostage situation, killed by LAPD gunfire, chief says
    Fox News ^ | 07/24/2018 | Ryan Gaydos   
    Posted on 7/24/2018, 12:13:26 PM by DFG

    A Trader Joe’s employee, who died during a hostage situation over the weekend, was killed by LAPD gunfire, Chief Michael Moore said Tuesday at a news conference.

    Ballistics tests show that a bullet fired from a Los Angeles police officer’s firearm struck and killed Melyda Corado, 27, during a shootout with the alleged hostage taker at the Silver Lake supermarket Saturday, Moore said.

    (Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2018, 01:40:31 PM
    This is the problem with requiring people to instantly drop all defenses, stay completely passive and comply to anything a "law enforcement officer" says. Criminals (with or without a badge) use it to their advantage, knowing how people have been conditioned to blindly obey "authority". At least in this case, these people were able to defend themselves with a firearm.

    Man Impersonating DEA Agent Shot and Killed During PA Home Invasion

    At about 1 a.m. last Wednesday, Brionna Hicks, of Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, stepped outside on the porch of her home to smoke a cigarette. Her mother was upstairs with three children. Her brother, Anthony Farley, lived in the other half of the duplex.

    Two men, wearing shirts with DEA printed on them, ran up to the porch yelling, “DEA!” and tried to handcuff Hicks. She fought them and started screaming.

    From post-gazzette.com, 18 July:

    Her mother came downstairs and was confronted by a tall man wearing something white on his head, according to the complaint. The man pointed a gun at the mother and told her to lay face down on the stairs.

    The two men then tried to drag Ms. Hicks out of the house, she said, at which point her brother, who lives in the adjoining half of the duplex, came to the front door.

    The unidentified man shot her brother, Anthony Farley, in the neck.

    Mr. Farley returned fire, striking the man, according to the complaint.

    While Hicks’s was wounded, he will recover. One of his assailants ended up dead, on the porch. The second attacker escaped.

    This incident illustrates a growing problem of criminals impersonating law enforcement officers to gain an advantage over their victims. It was less of a problem when most police officers were uniformed, used official vehicles and fewer “no-knock” raids were made.

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2018/07/dean-weingarten/man-impersonating-dea-agent-shot-and-killed-during-pa-home-invasion/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 24, 2018, 01:57:43 PM
    I've always been this way and know a lot of officers that are the same. The majority really. I'm limited to the circle I worked with and our dept was about 2100 sworn officers.

    Why would they have fired her...having been involved personally with an officer that was fired for good cause, but claimed it was for a retaliation of sort, I am cautious to accept the reported information as totally factual. Our local liberal newspaper ran an article on the officer at APD and his interview without talking to anyone at the department and the article was full of misinformation which made anyone who was not aware of the facts think we were a bunch of assholes. But on the other hand, the information could just as well be pretty factual. They could have fired here because there is a good old boy system in place or she could have just not been cutting it as a probationary officer. I lean towards the former especially since it was the officer in question writing a complaint on her AFTER she filed a complaint.

    “We hold our officers to high standards. Ms. Bainbridge was a probationary employee and did not meet those standards and thus her services were no longer needed. We are aware of the allegation she has made against Corporal Ken Ramkissoon and an internal investigation was opened June 24 and has not been completed yet. Furthermore, her termination is not related to the ongoing investigation.”

    In our case, the fired (he actually resigned but it was that or be terminated) cop filed a lawsuit and it went to federal court and we got the opportunity to show the stacks of reports, both incident and field Training reports that showed he was a basket case and we easily won the case. Hopefully she will do the same, or when the internal investigation is complete, the department will show the evidence as to her performance. but it certainly seems fishy

    I noticed just as the sound came on another officer smiles and says "Watch Ken". If I were in that Chain of Command that officer would be facing disciplinary actions as well.  He was aware of the officers intentions and thought it would be entertaining to watch an officer berate and belittle a citizen for no apparent reason. That can't be tolerated and an example should be set. That officer rather than sit back and watch an abuse happen, should have intervened and didnt.


    Again I have to say that’s good to hear.

    From what’s been written & the clip shown
    I fail to understand who that cop can keep his job Acting like a thug while in
    A police uniform- to keep him employed just condones that sort of behaviour.
    And clearly the other officers remark means he’s often behaving that way,
    The officer making the remark should be dismissed also for being a gutless
    Coward & doing nothing & letting it repeatedly happen.

    No excuses - just get rid of them.

    So they gang up & get rid of the decent cop with standards  ::)
    Really it shows what a corrupt bunch that area have as cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2018, 02:08:00 PM

    Again I have to say that’s good to hear.

    From what’s been written & the clip shown
    I fail to understand who that cop can keep his job Acting like a thug while in
    A police uniform- to keep him employed just condones that sort of behaviour.
    And clearly the other officers remark means he’s often behaving that way,
    The officer making the remark should be dismissed also for being a gutless
    Coward & doing nothing & letting it repeatedly happen.

    No excuses - just get rid of them.

    So they gang up & get rid of the decent cop with standards  ::)
    Really it shows what a corrupt bunch that area have as cops.

    It is interesting how you rarely see a cop intervening or arresting other cops the moment they commit a crime or abuse. In some rare cases they might later just file a report on the other cops but they rarely, if ever, do anything when the abuse happens, they just stand by idly and watch or sometimes they jump in and participate in the abuse. Perhaps expecting them to actually enforce the law regardless of who commits the crime, like "law enforcement officers" are supposed to do, might not be part of their job description or union contract. Of course this phenomenon is nothing new and unfortunately the blue wall of silence will persist as long as there are cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 24, 2018, 02:21:44 PM
    It is interesting how you rarely see a cop intervening or arresting other cops the moment they commit a crime or abuse. In some rare cases they might later just file a report on the other cops but they rarely, if ever, do anything when the abuse happens, they just stand by idly and watch or sometimes they jump in and participate in the abuse. Perhaps expecting them to actually enforce the law regardless of who commits the crime, like "law enforcement officers" are supposed to do, might not be part of their job description or union contract. Of course this phenomenon is nothing new and unfortunately the blue wall of silence will persist as long as there are cops.

    Yes - you’re right in what you say.
    It is a sad phenomenon amongst cops.
    Clearly The “Law Enforcement” part doesn’t apply to other cops
    When they’re on duty together.  ::)
    Double standards.

    It has persisted for far to long
    I’d like to think it may change if / when they are forced to wear
    And are unable to turn off body cams with audio & any interference
    With the body cams results in being fired & prosecuted.

    I don’t hate all cops - I recognise they are the biggest mafia and
    Generally they go out of there way to protect one of there own.

    That’s why they so dislike any other gang gaining members & strength
    They don’t want there position threatened or questioned.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2018, 11:36:59 PM
    FBI Agent Heads To Trial, Accused Of Lying About Deadly Malheur Shooting

    An FBI agent is facing trial on charges linked to a deadly incident in January 2016 during the armed occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon. Jury selection begins Tuesday at a federal court in Portland.

    W. Joseph Astarita was a member of the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team, which is described by the bureau as the "federal law enforcement's lead counterterrorism tactical team." According to federal prosecutors, he was trying to capture the leaders of the 41-day occupation organized by members of the Bundy family.

    An investigation by local officials into the death of Finicum deemed the fatal shooting by an Oregon State Police officer as "justified," as NPR reported, even as it suggested possible misconduct by the FBI team.

    https://www.npr.org/2018/07/24/631782390/indicted-fbi-agent-heads-to-trial-accused-of-lying-about-deadly-malheur-shooting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2018, 10:27:10 AM
    Taxpayers to Be Held Liable After Cops Mistake Vitamins for Opioids and Jail Innocent Mom for Months

    Tampa, FL — Rebecca Shaw, a mother of four who has never been in trouble with the law before, ended up spending five months in jail because a field drug test falsely identified her vitamins as opioids. Now, this innocent mom is making sure no one else suffers the same injustice.

    Three years ago, Rebecca’s car ran out of gas and she was stranded on the side of the road. When an officer pulled up behind her she was hoping that she would get some help. However, instead, she was wrongfully accused of a crime, kidnapped, and thrown in a cage away from her family for five months.

    So prone to errors are the tests, courts won’t allow their submission as evidence. However, their continued use by law enforcement — coupled with a 90 percent rate at which drug cases are resolved through equally dubious plea deals — needlessly ruins thousands of lives.

    Rebecca was arrested and charged with trafficking oxycodone, and since she was unable to pay the $5,000 bond she was forced to sit in jail for months.

    After Rebecca’s husband was able to raise the funds to bail her out, she had to wait another seven months for the official test results to come back from the lab, which ultimately determined that the pills were vitamins and not oxycodone.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-mistake-vitamins-drugs-jail-innocent-mom-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 25, 2018, 10:39:36 AM
    Taxpayers to Be Held Liable After Cops Mistake Vitamins for Opioids and Jail Innocent Mom for Months

    Tampa, FL — Rebecca Shaw, a mother of four who has never been in trouble with the law before, ended up spending five months in jail because a field drug test falsely identified her vitamins as opioids. Now, this innocent mom is making sure no one else suffers the same injustice.

    Three years ago, Rebecca’s car ran out of gas and she was stranded on the side of the road. When an officer pulled up behind her she was hoping that she would get some help. However, instead, she was wrongfully accused of a crime, kidnapped, and thrown in a cage away from her family for five months.

    So prone to errors are the tests, courts won’t allow their submission as evidence. However, their continued use by law enforcement — coupled with a 90 percent rate at which drug cases are resolved through equally dubious plea deals — needlessly ruins thousands of lives.

    Rebecca was arrested and charged with trafficking oxycodone, and since she was unable to pay the $5,000 bond she was forced to sit in jail for months.

    After Rebecca’s husband was able to raise the funds to bail her out, she had to wait another seven months for the official test results to come back from the lab, which ultimately determined that the pills were vitamins and not oxycodone.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-mistake-vitamins-drugs-jail-innocent-mom-lawsuit/


    Insane.  Govt at its finest. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2018, 12:39:27 PM
    Las Vegas police settle for $500K in fatal Taser case

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/local/local-las-vegas/las-vegas-police-settle-for-500k-in-fatal-taser-case/

    Quote
    According to police records, officer Mark Hatten told investigators that he stopped Jones as he was driving near J Street and Lake Mead Boulevard because Jones’ headlights were out. Video obtained by investigators showed Jones’ headlights were on at the time of the stop. According to Goldstein, Hatten later said during his deposition that he stopped Jones for failing to fully stop at a stop sign.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2018, 01:35:45 PM
    2 off-duty New Orleans cops arrested after fight outside bar, sending civilian to hospital

    https://www.theadvocate.com/new_orleans/news/crime_police/article_bcb4ac9c-8f62-11e8-bb20-77b29e6d15cf.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2018, 04:38:15 PM
    Finally, an apparently good cop executes a search warrant on his own boss and even his own department.

    Search warrant on New Holland PD sought forgery documents; executed by on of their own

    The Advocate has obtained a copy of the search warrant that was executed on the New Holland Police Department. In perhaps what might be a plot twist, the warrant was served by one of the department’s own.

    The warrant was executed on Saturday night with the help of the Ohio Highway Patrol and the Pickaway County Sheriff’s office.

    According to the warrant, one of the department’s own officers, Sergeant Brad Mick, requested the warrant after conducting an investigation on his own chief and mayor on allegations of forgery.

    “For an officer to investigate his own boss when he has probable cause and evidence of a crime being committed is perhaps the most commendable act of all,” said criminal defense attorney Brad Jones. “This officer clearly takes his oath of office seriously and any law enforcement officer who cannot respect that should not have a badge or gun.”[/size]

    http://thefayetteadvocate.com/2018/07/23/search-warrant-on-new-holland-pd-sought-forgery-documents-executed-by-one-of-their-own/


    What happened next? He got fired on the spot.


    Sergeant who charged Mayor, Police Chief and former Police Chief fired

    The New Holland Police Department has fired a police sergeant just mere seconds after he served charges on the mayor and police chief. A GoFundMe account has been set up as a result.

    Sergeant Brad Mick was handed a termination letter — without a cited cause — and his last paycheck shortly before 6:30 p.m.

    Before that happened, however, Mick walked into town hall where a meeting was about to get underway and handed a felony summons to Mayor Clair “Butch” Betzko and Police Chief David Conrad.

    http://thefayetteadvocate.com/2018/07/23/sergeant-who-charged-mayor-police-chief-and-former-chief-fired

    In a statement, Mick said:

    Quote
    “As I wrote in my affidavits, there is probable cause of criminal violations and I carried out my oath of office by investigating them. As a result, evidence was obtained that supported the complaint and charges were filed. I started this process and I will see it through to the end. My termination does not undo the criminal acts by others and it will not erase evidence or dismiss the charges. While it is disheartening and a violation of the law to be retaliated against and terminated for obeying the oath of office, it does not stop here. This is about the law and the law will be carried out. What is right is right, and what is wrong is wrong. It doesn’t matter who you are. No title or office should shield you with immunity.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 25, 2018, 05:19:53 PM
    Finally, an apparently good cop executes a search warrant on his own boss and even his own department.

    Search warrant on New Holland PD sought forgery documents; executed by on of their own

    The Advocate has obtained a copy of the search warrant that was executed on the New Holland Police Department. In perhaps what might be a plot twist, the warrant was served by one of the department’s own.

    The warrant was executed on Saturday night with the help of the Ohio Highway Patrol and the Pickaway County Sheriff’s office.

    According to the warrant, one of the department’s own officers, Sergeant Brad Mick, requested the warrant after conducting an investigation on his own chief and mayor on allegations of forgery.

    “For an officer to investigate his own boss when he has probable cause and evidence of a crime being committed is perhaps the most commendable act of all,” said criminal defense attorney Brad Jones. “This officer clearly takes his oath of office seriously and any law enforcement officer who cannot respect that should not have a badge or gun.”[/size]

    http://thefayetteadvocate.com/2018/07/23/search-warrant-on-new-holland-pd-sought-forgery-documents-executed-by-one-of-their-own/


    What happened next? He got fired on the spot.


    Sergeant who charged Mayor, Police Chief and former Police Chief fired

    The New Holland Police Department has fired a police sergeant just mere seconds after he served charges on the mayor and police chief. A GoFundMe account has been set up as a result.

    Sergeant Brad Mick was handed a termination letter — without a cited cause — and his last paycheck shortly before 6:30 p.m.

    Before that happened, however, Mick walked into town hall where a meeting was about to get underway and handed a felony summons to Mayor Clair “Butch” Betzko and Police Chief David Conrad.

    http://thefayetteadvocate.com/2018/07/23/sergeant-who-charged-mayor-police-chief-and-former-chief-fired

    In a statement, Mick said:




    Got to be truthful - this thread is pretty depressing and enlightening.    Insane what these govt employees get away with
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 25, 2018, 05:59:38 PM
    Got to be truthful - this thread is pretty depressing and enlightening.    Insane what these govt employees get away with

    Keep in mind there are 900K plus cops. The bad ones make the news.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 25, 2018, 07:01:02 PM
    Keep in mind there are 900K plus cops. The bad ones make the news.

    Yes there are around that No.
    by your own words you estimated between 5 - 10% were bad apples
    That’s 45-90 thousand !! Armed & Protected organised gang thugs
    Plus those cops that just watch & keep quiet or cover for what they do.

    If it was any other job you’d be up in arms about that kind of numbers
    Not doing your best to play the problem down.

    Your sounding like a black blaming everyone else.

    It a major dangerous problem that’s trying to be swept under the carpet
    America is meant to be the world leader - goes on about human rights
    Abuses & brutality- Yet the rogue cops get a free ride  ::)

    They need to Sort out & get their own house in order before throwing stones
    at other foreign Regimes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 25, 2018, 07:03:26 PM
    Yes there are around that No.
    by your own words you estimated between 5 - 10% were bad apples
    That’s 45-90 thousand !! Armed & Protected organised gang thugs
    Plus those cops that just watch & keep quiet or cover for what they do.

    If it was any other job you’d be up in arms about that kind of numbers
    Not doing your best to play the problem down.

    Your sounding like a black blaming everyone else.

    It a major dangerous problem that’s trying to be swept under the carpet
    America is meant to be the world leader - goes on about human rights
    Abuses & brutality- Yet the rogue cops get a free ride  ::)

    They need to Sort out & get their own house in order before throwing stones
    at other foreign Regimes.


    I can admit when I'm wrong. If I said 5-10% then I was off.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2018, 07:14:22 PM
    Yes there are around that No.
    by your own words you estimated between 5 - 10% were bad apples
    That’s 45-90 thousand !! Armed & Protected organised gang thugs
    Plus those cops that just watch & keep quiet or cover for what they do.

    If it was any other job you’d be up in arms about that kind of numbers
    Not doing your best to play the problem down.

    Your sounding like a black blaming everyone else.

    It a major dangerous problem that’s trying to be swept under the carpet
    America is meant to be the world leader - goes on about human rights
    Abuses & brutality- Yet the rogue cops get a free ride  ::)

    They need to Sort out & get their own house in order before throwing stones
    at other foreign Regimes.


    Exactly. This thread only contains a fraction of the cases that receive some publicity in the media.

    And of course not all cases get reported by the media.

    And even then, several other cases are just covered up by complicit cops and nothing gets done about it, let alone get media publicity. In addition to that, let's not forget the protections and immunities these criminals receive, the benefit of doubt, along with the few DAs who will take police corruption seriously and even a criminal justice system or in some cases, even juries that are in favor of cops just by virtue of having a badge.

    But even in spite of all the above, you also have many citizens who are either afraid to report police abuse for fear of retaliation or are tricked/coerced/intimidated/extorted into waiving their rights.

    So all the cases that get reported in this topic are only a small fraction of all the cases of abuse and crime committed by cops.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 25, 2018, 07:19:59 PM
    I can admit when I'm wrong. If I said 5-10% then I was off.


    That’s just a deflect comment / not addressing the problem.

    And You did estimate that in this very thread iirc.

    Still doesn’t alter the facts there’s a Huge problem running through law enforcement
    Whatever the percentage Numbers maybe.

    They should be held to the highest standards not continually made excuses for.
    Pathetic- Address & deal with the issue.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 25, 2018, 07:24:54 PM
    Exactly. This thread only contains a fraction of the cases that receive some publicity in the media.

    And of course not all cases get reported by the media.

    And even then, several other cases are just covered up by complicit cops and nothing gets done about it, let alone get media publicity. In addition to that, let's not forget the protections and immunities these criminals receive, the benefit of doubt, along with the few DAs who will take police corruption seriously and even a criminal justice system or in some cases, even juries that are in favor of cops just by virtue of having a badge.

    But even in spite of all the above, you also have many citizens who are either afraid to report police abuse for fear of retaliation or are tricked/coerced/intimidated/extorted into waiving their rights.

    So all the cases that get reported in this topic are only a small fraction of all the cases of abuse and crime committed by cops.



    Correct - I’d say the 5-10% rogue cops is a very minimum
    Plus all the others as you mentioned either deliberately or
    Inadvertently covering for them.

    As we constantly see in this microcosm of a thread It’s A Big Big Problem
    Constantly being played down / overlooked.

    That’s Not good enough & rightly so shouldn’t be accepted or excused.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 26, 2018, 02:17:49 PM
    As seen in previous posts, the cops protect the prosecutors and the prosecutors return the favor, perpetuating a cycle of abuse and corruption.

    Mississippi Prosecutors Defend Cops Who Killed Innocent Man In Wrong House Raid

    Mississippi cops killed a totally innocent person while serving a warrant on the wrong house, but the DeSoto County District Attorney John Champion is already lobbying public opinion in favor of the police officers who made a fatal mistake.

    He’s saying that officers shot at a dog and killed Ismael Lopez.

    Lopez and his wife Claudia Linares were sleeping peacefully at home when the officers arrived.

    Ismael Lopez went to answer the door and shortly thereafter fell to the bullets fired by an officer from the Southaven Police Department at the age of 41, right at the front door of his mobile home.

    Police bullets pierced his front door.

    He died.

    The Lopez family retained lawyer Murray Wells who firmly says that the police shot an unarmed man, and that the cops have a strong incentive to lie in order to avoid prosecution.

    DeSoto County District Attorney John Champion wouldn’t even admit that officers went to the wrong house, but he did claim that Ismael Lopez was armed, according to The Commercial Appeal:

    The statement that the officers went to the wrong address echoed a similar comment the day before from a local prosecutor, John Champion, who said the officers may very well have been at the wrong house. Champion said Monday that two officers were at the scene and that a pit bull dog burst out of the house, prompting one of the officers to shoot at it. Then a man pointed a gun at officers through an open door, Champion said. The officers repeatedly warned him to put the gun down before one of them opened fire. The attorney representing the family said Lopez, a gun owner, did not have a gun in his hand when he was shot, and that the law firm would do its own investigation to learn what happened.

    Now that DA Champion is finished defending the officers, it will be his government job to prosecute the cops once the family’s criminal complaint is initiated.

    Southaven officers had the right address on their warrants and both houses had visible address markers, when they made their raid in the exurban area just south of Memphis, Tennesee.

    The Southaven officers went to the wrong house anyhow and killed the innocent auto mechanic, leaving his family saying that they will pursue Lopez’s killer to the fullest extent of the law.

    They were searching for Samuel Pearman who posted a video claiming innocence onto Facebook which was broadcast on the local news, which you can see below.

    Instead, they killed an unarmed man.

    The Lopez family’s lawyer Murray Wells was unequivocal in condemning the cops incompetence, and putting key facts on the record in an interview with WMAC:

    “Someone didn’t take the time to analyze the address. This is incredibly tragic and embarrassing to this police department that they can’t read house numbers.”

    He also said that Claudia, who was the only one on the property who could not be held responsible for shooting Lopez, did not hear any commands or instructions being given. In addition, Wells said Lopez never pointed a gun at the officers. “There was a gun on the premises, but the man did not have the gun with him when police shot him,” he said.

    “They’ve been in that home for 13 years. The only time the police had ever been there was when they had been robbed,” Wells said. “No criminal history whatsoever. A long-standing employee of the city of Bartlett, mechanic. Loved in the neighborhood.”

    Ismael Lopez can’t be brought back, and his widow Claudia Linares is going to face an uphill climb seeking justice since the initial remarks portend a fight with the Desoto County District Attorney as he plays criminal defense lawyer for the Mississippi cops who shot and killed her spouse.

    It’s unknown if there are meaningful police recordings of the encounter yet, and the officers’ identities remain secret.

    http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/07/26/mississippi-cops-kill-innocent-man-in-wrong-house-raid/

    Remember this case?
    A bunch of armed and violent criminals invaded a home and killed an innocent man. Since they were cops though, the killers are free to walk the streets, one of them still working as a cop. No matter what someone does, crime or no crime, young or old, black or white, the cops will still find a way to justify the killing. You don't even have to do anything wrong to be killed. This man was at his house at night and had done nothing wrong and yet he was shot at the back of the head in his home from criminals who were not supposed to be there.

    Cops Go to Wrong Home, Execute Innocent Man With Bullet to Back of His Head—No Indictment

    Southaven, MS — One year ago, police responding to a call of domestic violence went to the wrong home and killed an innocent husband. Now, TFTP has just learned that the officers involved in the killing will not be charged.

    The officers were brought to a grand jury by District Attorney John Champion who attempted to get them indicted on charges of homicide. However, the grand jury irresponsibly failed to return an indictment.

    “The grand jury was given all of the evidence and they decided not to indict,” Champion said. “From my perspective, the case is closed at this point.”

    “Everything about this is wrong. I am outraged. Shame, shame on the police department, shame on the DA. Mr. Champion, shame on you. You need to retire,” Pastor Rolando Rostro, Lopez family advocate, said.

    In July of 2017, Ismael Lopez and his wife were the only ones home when Ismael heard his dogs barking, so he took a look outside to see what was going on. Seconds later, he would be shot and killed by people who claim to protect society. Police had no right to be there and had gone to the wrong address.

    The Southaven Police Department admitted officers went to the wrong house that fateful night. According to police, they were trying to serve a warrant for domestic assault to Samuel Pearman—who lives 36 feet away from Lopez’s home.

    Police claim that when Lopez came to the door, he pointed a gun at them. However, multiple bullets were fired through the closed door and Champion admitted that the autopsy showed Lopez died from a gunshot wound to the back of the head.

    According to WMC 5, three officers were at the scene, but only one of them opened fire. That officer fired six total shots—two at a dog that ran out of Lopez’s house toward the officers and four into the house. The bullets went through Lopez’s front door; one hit him in the back of the head. Lopez’s dog was grazed by a bullet.

    “I do not believe [the officers] identified themselves at the door,” Champion said.

    Champion said Lopez was pulling the gun away from the direction of the officers when the officers opened fire. He said he did not want to speculate about how it happened, but he thought Lopez could have been shot in the back of the head while he turned away from the officers, reports WMC 5.

    None of the officers were wearing a body camera nor was any of the incident recorded on dash camera.

    An attorney for the Lopez family says they are now planning to file a civil suit against the department.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/no-indictment-cops-wrong-home-kill-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 26, 2018, 05:53:25 PM
    So bad.

    Remember this case?
    A bunch of armed and violent criminals invaded a home and killed an innocent man. Since they were cops though, the killers are free to walk the streets, one of them still working as a cop. No matter what someone does, crime or no crime, young or old, black or white, the cops will still find a way to justify the killing. You don't even have to do anything wrong to be killed. This man was at his house at night and had done nothing wrong and yet he was shot at the back of the head in his home from criminals who were not supposed to be there.

    Cops Go to Wrong Home, Execute Innocent Man With Bullet to Back of His Head—No Indictment

    Southaven, MS — One year ago, police responding to a call of domestic violence went to the wrong home and killed an innocent husband. Now, TFTP has just learned that the officers involved in the killing will not be charged.

    The officers were brought to a grand jury by District Attorney John Champion who attempted to get them indicted on charges of homicide. However, the grand jury irresponsibly failed to return an indictment.

    “The grand jury was given all of the evidence and they decided not to indict,” Champion said. “From my perspective, the case is closed at this point.”

    “Everything about this is wrong. I am outraged. Shame, shame on the police department, shame on the DA. Mr. Champion, shame on you. You need to retire,” Pastor Rolando Rostro, Lopez family advocate, said.

    In July of 2017, Ismael Lopez and his wife were the only ones home when Ismael heard his dogs barking, so he took a look outside to see what was going on. Seconds later, he would be shot and killed by people who claim to protect society. Police had no right to be there and had gone to the wrong address.

    The Southaven Police Department admitted officers went to the wrong house that fateful night. According to police, they were trying to serve a warrant for domestic assault to Samuel Pearman—who lives 36 feet away from Lopez’s home.

    Police claim that when Lopez came to the door, he pointed a gun at them. However, multiple bullets were fired through the closed door and Champion admitted that the autopsy showed Lopez died from a gunshot wound to the back of the head.

    According to WMC 5, three officers were at the scene, but only one of them opened fire. That officer fired six total shots—two at a dog that ran out of Lopez’s house toward the officers and four into the house. The bullets went through Lopez’s front door; one hit him in the back of the head. Lopez’s dog was grazed by a bullet.

    “I do not believe [the officers] identified themselves at the door,” Champion said.

    Champion said Lopez was pulling the gun away from the direction of the officers when the officers opened fire. He said he did not want to speculate about how it happened, but he thought Lopez could have been shot in the back of the head while he turned away from the officers, reports WMC 5.

    None of the officers were wearing a body camera nor was any of the incident recorded on dash camera.

    An attorney for the Lopez family says they are now planning to file a civil suit against the department.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/no-indictment-cops-wrong-home-kill-man/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 27, 2018, 09:23:57 AM
    Distracted driving due to mobile phone usage is dangerous and unfortunately widespread. However, in most places, cops are exempt from laws about cell phone usage while driving. And this is not the only incident that has happened that involved a cop being distracted while driving. This bicyclist could have been killed. In fact, he was lucky he wasn't arrested or killed after the incident. The laws should apply equally to everyone with no exceptions. A badge should not grant immunity or exemption from the law.

    Cop Looking at His Phone Plows Into Cyclist Sitting at a Stop Sign

    Peculiar, MO — A rather shocking video was uploaded to YouTube this week by a cyclist wearing a helmet camera who filmed a distracted police officer ram him head on as he waited at a stop sign. Officer Wallace with the Peculiar police department was looking down at his phone while turning left and never saw Joe Fas sitting there on his bicycle.

    As Fas sat at the stop sign, waiting to turn, his helmet camera showed him looking right and then looking left. All of the sudden, officer Wallace, driving his police SUV, marked unit 396, turns left—into the wrong lane—and slams into Fas who couldn’t get out of the way fast enough.

    “Whoa! Whoa!” Fas screamed as officer Wallace looked down at his phone, clearly not paying attention to where he was going.

    “You motherffucker, you were looking at your phone, officer,” says Fas as he gets to his feet.

    Wallace opens his door and immediately gives the excuse that he was “fucking looking at a text from another officer,” as if this makes plowing over an innocent bicyclist acceptable.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-plows-into-cyclist-looking-phone/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 27, 2018, 01:00:29 PM
    As it has been mentioned before, we are dealing with gangs. And here is another case where the gang members get tattoos and other gang symbols. Let's see what will come out of this, if it is properly investigated.

    L.A. County sheriff announces inquiry into secret societies of deputies and their matching tattoos

    Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell has launched a comprehensive inquiry into secret deputy cliques and is looking into whether gangs that condone illicit behavior are operating within his ranks, he said Thursday.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-sheriff-tattoo-oversight-commission-20180726-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 27, 2018, 04:06:47 PM
    Once again we see that these criminals are ruthless and don't care about  truth, justice, laws or BS such as "noble causes". This happened a few years ago. Scum like this should be sent to the electric chair.

    The chief wanted perfect stats, so cops were told to pin crimes on black people, probe found

    The indictment was damning enough: A former police chief of Biscayne Park and two officers charged with falsely pinning four burglaries on a teenager just to impress village leaders with a perfect crime-solving record.

    But the accusations revealed in federal court last month left out far uglier details of past policing practices in tranquil Biscayne Park, a leafy wedge of suburbia just north of Miami Shores.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article213647764.html

    Once again, we are dealing with criminal gangs. Remember this case?

    Cop admits framing two black men as Florida town’s false arrest scandal widens

    The federal investigation into a handful of former Biscayne Park police officers accused of framing innocent people widened this week, when another cop was accused of falsifying arrest warrants for two men at the direction of the police chief.

    Guillermo Ravelo, who was fired from the force earlier this year, pleaded guilty Thursday in Miami federal court to a conspiracy charge that he violated the rights of the falsely accused men — one charged with a pair of home break-ins in 2013, the other with five vehicle burglaries the following year. The charges against the two men, both black, were eventually dropped.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/article215589545.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 28, 2018, 12:24:32 PM
    And once again we're seeing another criminal gang... They should both be executed.

    Former Missouri sheriff, deputy had affair, now indicted on multiple felonies

    A southern Missouri sheriff and a deputy with whom he had an affair were both indicted last week on felonies -- including assault, robbery and harassment -- in a scenario that the interim sheriff described as “wheels (falling) off.”

    Former Texas County Sheriff James Sigman, 48, and Lt. Deputy Jennifer Tomaszewski, 38, also were indicted on child endangerment and unlawful use of a weapon.

    Sigman hired Tomaszewski as a jailer in December 2016, which was around the time they began a romance, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported, citing court records. She was then promoted to administrator of the 72-bed jail seven months later, the report said.

    The probable cause statement said she did not have “prior experience” when she was promoted.

    Tomaszewski hit an inmate with the mental capacity of a 9-year-old in the face with her elbows after he was rendered unconscious, possibly by a "choke hold," a Missouri State Highway Patrol trooper wrote in a report.

    A corrections officer told investigators that Tomaszewski said she was "trying to bust his (the inmate’s) eardrum out."

    "If we hadn't been there, they would have killed that boy. He was completely unconscious and his lips were turning blue," a deputy told investigators, according to the probable cause statement.

    The statement said Sigman was present during the incident and that reports about what happened were removed from the mentally disabled inmate's file.

    The trooper wrote that Tomaszewski also threatened to put a bullet in the head of another inmate but that the grievance the inmate filed was missing when a search warrant was served this spring at the sheriff's office.

    The statement said she went on ride-alongs, acted as an undercover officer during stings and served search warrants during which she would detain suspects, search residences and perform other duties reserved for commissioned officers.

    Sometimes she was armed with an AR-15 rifle normally used by Sigman and wore a uniform that was indistinguishable from what deputies wore, the trooper wrote.

    While serving one search warrant, she pointed a firearm at several people, including a 1-year-old, who lived across the street from the home being searched, placing all of them in "immediate danger," the trooper wrote.

    Tomaszewski confronted them because she thought they were video recording the officers and taking photos -- and mistakenly believed that wasn't allowed.

    The statement also said that a child was brought into the jail multiple times, helped serve meals to inmates and ate with two of the inmates, including a sexually violent offender.


    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/28/former-missouri-sheriff-deputy-had-affair-now-indicted-on-multiple-felonies.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 28, 2018, 01:20:32 PM
    This thread has turned out far more revealing and disturbing than was originally intended .   But excellent posts
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2018, 01:09:28 PM
    TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in secret surveillance program

    Federal Air Marshals have begun following ordinary US citizens not suspected of a crime or on any terrorist watch list and collecting extensive information about their movements and behavior under a new domestic surveillance program that is drawing criticism from within the agency.

    https://apps.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/graphics/2018/07/tsa-quiet-skies/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on July 29, 2018, 02:24:48 PM
    TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in secret surveillance program

    Federal Air Marshals have begun following ordinary US citizens not suspected of a crime or on any terrorist watch list and collecting extensive information about their movements and behavior under a new domestic surveillance program that is drawing criticism from within the agency.

    https://apps.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/graphics/2018/07/tsa-quiet-skies/
    A good friend of mine travels A LOT and when I bring up stuff like this to him he says he doesn't care because he has no intention of breaking the law. :-\
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2018, 02:32:26 PM
    Would it have different if she was "on duty"?

    Cop Arrested and Fired for Kicking an 8-month Pregnant Woman in the Stomach

    North Miami Beach, FL — In a disgusting display of brutality, a North Miami Beach Police officer has been fired and arrested for kicking a pregnant woman in the stomach. The kick was so violent that it caused the innocent woman to go into labor.

    Officer Ambar Pacheco was charged with aggravated battery after she attacked the innocent pregnant mother in South Beach Wednesday night. According to the arrest affidavit, Pacheco was off-duty at the time of the attack.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-arrested-kicking-pregnant-woman/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2018, 08:50:22 PM
    "I feared for my life". Blanket excuse for cops when they kill someone. Doesn't always apply to citizens.
    "Know your target and what's beyond it". Basic rule of gun safety. Doesn't seem to apply to cops.

    Lycoming County jury finds Donald Meyer Jr. guilty on all counts involving death of his daughter, Ciara

    WILLIAMSPORT — A Lycoming County jury convicted Donald Meyer Jr. Friday of all counts in the 2016 death of his 12-year-old daughter, Ciara, who was struck in the chest by a bullet fired from a constable there to evict Meyer from his Penn Township, Perry County home.

    https://fox43.com/2018/07/27/lycoming-county-jury-finds-donald-meyer-jr-guilty-on-all-counts-involving-death-of-his-daughter-ciara/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2018, 08:51:42 PM
    Southport police force on leave after chief, lieutenant arrested

    SOUTHPORT, NC (WECT) - All police operations in Southport have been suspended and the entire force placed on paid administrative leave after the city's police chief and a lieutenant were arrested Thursday and charged with double-dipping at a second job while on the clock at the police department.

    https://www.wect.com/story/38741150/southport-police-chief-arrested-after-investigation-by-sbi-fbi
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 30, 2018, 04:09:21 AM
    "I feared for my life". Blanket excuse for cops when they kill someone. Doesn't always apply to citizens.
    "Know your target and what's beyond it". Basic rule of gun safety. Doesn't seem to apply to cops.

    Lycoming County jury finds Donald Meyer Jr. guilty on all counts involving death of his daughter, Ciara

    WILLIAMSPORT — A Lycoming County jury convicted Donald Meyer Jr. Friday of all counts in the 2016 death of his 12-year-old daughter, Ciara, who was struck in the chest by a bullet fired from a constable there to evict Meyer from his Penn Township, Perry County home.

    https://fox43.com/2018/07/27/lycoming-county-jury-finds-donald-meyer-jr-guilty-on-all-counts-involving-death-of-his-daughter-ciara/


    [/quote


    Geez - i read the story.  Yikes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 30, 2018, 09:04:56 AM
    NC coastal town's police force on leave after chief and lieutenant arrested
    WECT ^ | Jul 27, 2018
    Posted on 7/30/2018, 9:52:49 AM by george76

    SOUTHPORT, N.C. - All police operations in Southport have been suspended and the entire force placed on paid administrative leave after the city's police chief and a lieutenant were arrested Thursday and charged with double-dipping at a second job while on the clock at the police department.

    Chief Gary Smith, 46, and Lt. Michael Christian Simmons, 48, were both charged with conspiracy to obtain property by false pretenses, willful failure to discharge duties, and obstruction of justice.

    ...

    State investigators said Smith and Simmons were driving overnight shifts for an unnamed local trucking company during the same hours they had claimed on their daily activity reports for the Southport Police Department.

    David said Smith and Simmons' duties for the trucking company routinely required them to be out of town and even out of the county.

    Smith was taken into custody Thursday morning and booked into the Brunswick County Detention Center under a $10,000 unsecured bond. He was later released after posting bail.

    ...

    Despite the entire police force being put on administrative leave, David cautioned not to put all the officers in a negative light.

    (Excerpt) Read more at cbs17.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 30, 2018, 12:04:11 PM
    Good. Let's see if they will actually be held accountable and not claim some BS immunity.

    Trump supporters pelted by eggs, punches can sue San Jose cops after attack, court says

    Supporters of then-presidential candidate Donald Trump who were met with flying eggs and punches from counter protesters during a June 2016 San Jose campaign rally can sue the city’s police for allegedly failing to protect them, a new court ruling said.

    Trump supporters – many sporting red Make America Great Again hats – who were attending a rally at the McEnery Convention Center were met with hundreds of anti-Trump protesters as they were shepherded out of the building via a single exit.

    The suit's 20 plaintiffs claim in a lawsuit that police knowingly ordered them to leave through an exit where protesters were waiting, despite the existence of a safer route and other exits, the San Francisco Chronicle reported last week.

    The plaintiff's said they were beaten or struck by objects thrown by the protesters. Initial accounts of the events also said at least one woman was pelted by an egg after a crowd of demonstrators surrounded her, as seen in video of the incident.

    One plaintiff claims an officer told her police had been instructed not to intervene in the melee.

    The lawsuit says police arrested three people for allegedly assaulting officers at the scene, but no one for attacking Trump supporters, the Chronicle reported.

    On Friday, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said, if the allegations are true, “the officers acted with deliberate indifference to a known and obvious danger” and violated the constitutional rights of Trump supporters.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/30/trump-supporters-pelted-by-eggs-punches-can-sue-san-jose-cops-in-attack-court-says.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 30, 2018, 02:56:15 PM
    Her "logic" is that unless an "officer is down" she will not rush to the scene. This is how the police state treats the normal citizens. If you are part of their clique, they will rush to your aid. If you're a tax paying citizen lowly pleb, you're not important.

    Florida officer disciplined for lack of urgency in response

    BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) -- A Florida police officer has been disciplined for not turning on her lights and siren when responding to the scene of an accidental shooting death.

    The Bradenton Herald reports that Officer Amy Schwartz was disciplined for not showing any urgency in responding to the shooting scene last February in Bradenton, Florida.

    Schwartz told internal affairs investigators she usually doesn't activate her lights and sirens unless "there's an officer down."

    http://www.wctv.tv/content/news/Florida-officer-disciplined-for-lack-of-urgency-in-response-489471241.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 30, 2018, 05:02:10 PM
    Her "logic" is that unless an "officer is down" she will not rush to the scene. This is how the police state treats the normal citizens. If you are part of their clique, they will rush to your aid. If you're a tax paying citizen lowly pleb, you're not important.

    Florida officer disciplined for lack of urgency in response

    BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) -- A Florida police officer has been disciplined for not turning on her lights and siren when responding to the scene of an accidental shooting death.

    The Bradenton Herald reports that Officer Amy Schwartz was disciplined for not showing any urgency in responding to the shooting scene last February in Bradenton, Florida.

    Schwartz told internal affairs investigators she usually doesn't activate her lights and sirens unless "there's an officer down."

    http://www.wctv.tv/content/news/Florida-officer-disciplined-for-lack-of-urgency-in-response-489471241.html

    Her logic is skewed. That is not how the police state typically responds as you suggest. There are countless examples of officers getting in crashes going to scenes that didn't involve an officer because they were driving too fast.  Your bias is showing a tad bit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 31, 2018, 11:37:13 AM
    A homeowner did what he had to to protect his family and then the cops show up and kill him.

    After Armed Homeowner Defends Family from Home Invader, Cops Show Up and Kill Him

    Aurora, CO — When an armed intruder broke into a family’s home early Monday morning, and reportedly began harming a juvenile inside, the homeowner did what he was supposed to do. He armed himself, called 911, and defended his home—and he was successful. However, after he’d successfully fended off the home invader—by killing him—police then showed up and killed the innocent homeowner.

    According to police, they received a call from the homeowner notifying them that a man had broken into the home. When officers arrived, the scene was chaotic, according to police.

    “Officers arrived to a very chaotic and violent scene,” Aurora Police Chief Nick Metz wrote in a news release issued Monday afternoon.

    Police say they heard gunshots inside the home and when they ran inside, they found an armed man. The armed man was the homeowner and they killed him.

    There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident.

    After clearing the scene, according to Metz, police found the intruder dead on the bathroom floor. Metz explained that officers also found a child in the residence who’d been seriously injured by the intruder. The child was taken to the hospital for “serious, but non-life-threatening injuries” caused by the intruder, Metz said.

    According to Metz, the identities of the two men will be released by the Adams County Coroner’s Office. Metz also explained that the officer who killed the homeowner is on routine paid administrative leave.

    As the Denver Channel reports, the Aurora Police Major Crimes Unit, the Denver Police Department and the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office will conduct the investigation into the shooting.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/homeowner-defends-home-police-kill-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 31, 2018, 03:42:10 PM
    A homeowner did what he had to to protect his family and then the cops show up and kill him.

    After Armed Homeowner Defends Family from Home Invader, Cops Show Up and Kill Him

    Aurora, CO — When an armed intruder broke into a family’s home early Monday morning, and reportedly began harming a juvenile inside, the homeowner did what he was supposed to do. He armed himself, called 911, and defended his home—and he was successful. However, after he’d successfully fended off the home invader—by killing him—police then showed up and killed the innocent homeowner.

    According to police, they received a call from the homeowner notifying them that a man had broken into the home. When officers arrived, the scene was chaotic, according to police.

    “Officers arrived to a very chaotic and violent scene,” Aurora Police Chief Nick Metz wrote in a news release issued Monday afternoon.

    Police say they heard gunshots inside the home and when they ran inside, they found an armed man. The armed man was the homeowner and they killed him.

    There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident.

    After clearing the scene, according to Metz, police found the intruder dead on the bathroom floor. Metz explained that officers also found a child in the residence who’d been seriously injured by the intruder. The child was taken to the hospital for “serious, but non-life-threatening injuries” caused by the intruder, Metz said.

    According to Metz, the identities of the two men will be released by the Adams County Coroner’s Office. Metz also explained that the officer who killed the homeowner is on routine paid administrative leave.

    As the Denver Channel reports, the Aurora Police Major Crimes Unit, the Denver Police Department and the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office will conduct the investigation into the shooting.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/homeowner-defends-home-police-kill-him/


    FFS
    Yet again Police Chief Justifiying another Murder by His Gang.

    We’d Struggle to make stories like this up.
    In any other environment that chief would think your bonkers
    If you were telling him that story & trying to defend people killing
    Innocents.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 31, 2018, 11:20:21 PM
    LAPD releases video of Van Nuys standoff in which officers fatally shot a hostage

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-lapd-hostage-shooting-20180730-story.html




    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 01, 2018, 09:27:11 AM

    FFS
    Yet again Police Chief Justifiying another Murder by His Gang.

    We’d Struggle to make stories like this up.
    In any other environment that chief would think your bonkers
    If you were telling him that story & trying to defend people killing
    Innocents.

    I also struggle with this one. Anytime someone calls 911 and it involves a gun, the dispatchers are trained to tell them to put the gun up before police arrive for this very reason. The cops coming into a situation don't know who the good and bad guys are and anyone with a gun is certainly a concern in many cases. The situation may not have allowed for the homeowner to put the gun up prior to police arrival and may have and probably was drove up on Adrenalin. He had just shot someone in his home.

    If the cops came in and he was holding the gun, not following directions and was waving it in their direction, I can't fault them for shooting him. I know you're thinking a guy ought to be able to call the police and not get killed in his own home and I agree. However sometimes tragic things occur like a son sneaking in the window after curfew and getting blown away by the father thinking its a burglar or a 10 year old daughter hiding in the closet playing a game on Dad and gets shot by him. These happened and it is tragic. This may be one of those times. I'd like to see the video   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 01, 2018, 01:30:09 PM
    This is the extremely rare case of a cop witnessing another cop committing a crime, in this case assaulting a handcuffed teenager inside a police car, and actually arresting the cop on the spot instead of participating in the crime or covering it up. But let's not kid ourselves, did you really expect the cop to go to prison for the assault or face punishment that ordinary people would receive? Of course he got a sweet deal and only has to resign (so he can now go work at another police department), pay $170 (damn, they almost bankrupted him...), complete an "anger management" course and not commit a crime for the next 3 years. Had an ordinary citizen attacked someone else, let alone a cop, the outcome would've been much different.

    Cop Beats Handcuffed Child, Spits on Mentally Ill Man, and Kills Someone—Can Still Be a Cop

    Jacksonville, FL — When it comes to holding police accountable, America is an utter and complete failure. All too often, a cop can be seen on video killing unarmed and innocent people, beating handcuffed individuals and wreaking havoc in general and not face any punishment. Timothy James is one of those cops.

    Earlier this year, James was charged after fellow officers witnessed him beating a handcuffed 17-year-old boy in the back of his squad car. As TFTP reported, he repeatedly punched  a 17-year-old child in the face. According to the reports, James climbed into the back seat of his patrol car, where two teens were waiting and handcuffed, and began punching one of the brothers in the face—hitting him so hard that he broke the boy’s teeth. The sergeant saw it all from his own patrol car and then, like a good cop is supposed to do, he arrested James.

    For beating 17-year-old Elias Campos—while he was in handcuffs—James was arrested and charged with battery. However, thanks to a corrupt and broken system, these charges have now all been dropped.

    As part of a plea deal released by the State Attorney’s Office, James had all charges dropped in exchange for his resignation.


    Also, as New4Jax reports, James must perform 50 hours of community service, complete an anger management program and pay $170. James cannot commit any new local, state or federal offenses for three years.

    Although he can’t be hired on back at the JSO for the next three years, James can go over to the next town and get hired on, right now. Seriously.



    As Jack Burns wrote earlier this year, the damning part of this story is that the beating of Campos was not the first time James had been arrested by his own police force. It was the second time — inside a month. But that’s not all. In fact, this model cop killed a pedestrian with his squad car too. And while JSO is prohibited from discussing his priors, investigative reporters with First Coast News uncovered his personnel file, which reveal the officer’s sordid work history.

    On at least 10 different occasions, James has been in violation of departmental policy. Killing pedestrians and beating handcuffed kids is not the upper limit of this cop’s corrupt ability. In April, he’s alleged to have spit on and abused a mentally ill man at UF Health, the University of Florida hospital.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beats-teen-spits-kills-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 01, 2018, 02:17:25 PM
    I also struggle with this one. Anytime someone calls 911 and it involves a gun, the dispatchers are trained to tell them to put the gun up before police arrive for this very reason. The cops coming into a situation don't know who the good and bad guys are and anyone with a gun is certainly a concern in many cases. The situation may not have allowed for the homeowner to put the gun up prior to police arrival and may have and probably was drove up on Adrenalin. He had just shot someone in his home.

    If the cops came in and he was holding the gun, not following directions and was waving it in their direction, I can't fault them for shooting him. I know you're thinking a guy ought to be able to call the police and not get killed in his own home and I agree. However sometimes tragic things occur like a son sneaking in the window after curfew and getting blown away by the father thinking its a burglar or a 10 year old daughter hiding in the closet playing a game on Dad and gets shot by him. These happened and it is tragic. This may be one of those times. I'd like to see the video   


    “There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident”.

    Kind of negates a few of your points. If the above is correct.

    The other examples you give are very tragic - Though most likely those doing the Shooting
    Were not “trained” cops.

    The more I read the more I wonder what the hell exactly are they training cops in.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 01, 2018, 02:33:53 PM
    This is one of the best threads ever.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 01, 2018, 03:16:04 PM

    “There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident”.

    Kind of negates a few of your points. If the above is correct.

    The other examples you give are very tragic - Though most likely those doing the Shooting
    Were not “trained” cops.

    The more I read the more I wonder what the hell exactly are they training cops in.


    With incidents such as these, people might start questioning the point of calling the cops in the event of a home invasion since they have the real risk of one of their innocent family members getting killed by cops. Especially in serious situations where seconds count, such as a home invasion, the police might take a while to respond and will only arrive too late.
    Aside from late response or lack of training, part of the problem is the mentality of some cops who think they're military super operators in a post apocalyptic war zone and see "threats" everywhere and violence as the solution to everything. With the immunity and protection that they have, they don't seem to care much about consequences. This sort of violent police response has been exploited by scumbags with the phenomenon known as "swatting".

    Here we had a family man, a grandfather, a decorated Vietnam veteran, recipient of a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart, who successfully defended his grandchild from a violent intruder. Then the cops arrive and kill him. Of course they will say the usual "oh it's a tragic incident", probably even say the usual "it was a mistake", as if that somehow absolves them of responsibility (even though they enjoy several layers of protection and immunity anyhow). Supposedly the cops had bodycams so it will be interesting to see if the cameras were on and if they recorded any footage because police bodycams tend to "malfunction" too often when they might contain footage that doesn't vindicate the cops. At any rate, I doubt we will see the cop(s) going to prison despite sending this brave man to the grave.

    Now we learn that the killer (who was not been identified yet - must be one of the job perks) was involved in another shooting in June but he was put back on duty before the investigation was finished:

    Officer who shot Aurora homeowner was in another deadly shooting in June

    An Aurora police officer who shot an armed homeowner had been returned to duty after another deadly confrontation in late June, even though the investigation of that first incident has not been completed.

    https://www.9news.com/article/news/officer-who-shot-aurora-homeowner-was-in-another-deadly-shooting-in-june/73-579198076

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 01, 2018, 03:20:23 PM
    With incidents such as these, people might start questioning the point of calling the cops in the event of a home invasion since they have the real risk of one of their innocent family members getting killed by cops. Especially in serious situations where seconds count, such as a home invasion, the police might take a while to respond and will only arrive too late.
    Aside from late response or lack of training, part of the problem is the mentality of some cops who think they're military super operators in a post apocalyptic war zone and see "threats" everywhere and violence as the solution to everything. With the immunity and protection that they have, they don't seem to care much about consequences. This sort of violent police response has been exploited by scumbags with the phenomenon known as "swatting".

    Here we had a family man, a grandfather, a decorated Vietnam veteran, recipient of a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart, who successfully defended his grandchild from a violent intruder. Then the cops arrive and kill him. Of course they will say the usual "oh it's a tragic incident", probably even say the usual "it was a mistake", as if that somehow absolves them of responsibility (even though they enjoy several layers of protection and immunity anyhow). Supposedly the cops had bodycams so it will be interesting to see if the cameras were on and if they recorded any footage because police bodycams tend to "malfunction" too often when they might contain footage that doesn't vindicate the cops. At any rate, I doubt we will see the cop(s) going to prison despite sending this brave man to the grave.

    Now we learn that the killer (who was not been identified yet - must be one of the job perks) was involved in another shooting in June but he was put back on duty before the investigation was finished:

    Officer who shot Aurora homeowner was in another deadly shooting in June

    An Aurora police officer who shot an armed homeowner had been returned to duty after another deadly confrontation in late June, even though the investigation of that first incident has not been completed.

    https://www.9news.com/article/news/officer-who-shot-aurora-homeowner-was-in-another-deadly-shooting-in-june/73-579198076



    “Aside from late response or lack of training, part of the problem is the mentality of some cops who think they're military super operators in a post apocalyptic war zone and see "threats" everywhere and violence is the solution to everything. With the immunity and protection that they have, they don't seem to care much about consequences”

    Well said.

    The above statement really does sum their attitude up very well.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 01, 2018, 05:11:37 PM
    I also struggle with this one. Anytime someone calls 911 and it involves a gun, the dispatchers are trained to tell them to put the gun up before police arrive for this very reason. The cops coming into a situation don't know who the good and bad guys are and anyone with a gun is certainly a concern in many cases. The situation may not have allowed for the homeowner to put the gun up prior to police arrival and may have and probably was drove up on Adrenalin. He had just shot someone in his home.

    If the cops came in and he was holding the gun, not following directions and was waving it in their direction, I can't fault them for shooting him. I know you're thinking a guy ought to be able to call the police and not get killed in his own home and I agree. However sometimes tragic things occur like a son sneaking in the window after curfew and getting blown away by the father thinking its a burglar or a 10 year old daughter hiding in the closet playing a game on Dad and gets shot by him. These happened and it is tragic. This may be one of those times. I'd like to see the video   
    Yeah, I'd like to know how this went down. Sucks for sure, but I'm leaning towards trigger happy cops. If that homeowner didn't raise his gun or threaten them in any way, someone should face charges.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 01, 2018, 08:00:09 PM

    “There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident”.

    Kind of negates a few of your points. If the above is correct.

    The other examples you give are very tragic - Though most likely those doing the Shooting
    Were not “trained” cops.

    The more I read the more I wonder what the hell exactly are they training cops in.


    It's not uncommon for news stations to not get the facts during an investigation. That there were none, you could also say there was no reports the man did not point his weapon at them...

    There have been a couple of anti police activist recently that actually were participants in police training where they were put in positions cops are put in on a regular basis and they found out it isn't as easy as it seems.

    Picture yourself going into a home where someone has a gun and you come across a male with a gun? Personally, in a volatile situation like that, I would treat the subject as a danger until I knew he wasn't. So I tell him "Drop the gun! Drop the gun! Most people who aren't meaning me harm will drop the gun like it's hot. So what if he doesn't? What if he comes at me all excited and waving the gun around? Do I calmly wait until he fires to determine if he is the intruder or the suspect? I can see how someone who hasn't been in that predicament could think "In every case, an officer who arrives on a scene of a shooting should be able to immediately determine who the bad guy is. In most cases they can. In some they can't and depending on the distance, cover, etc. they have decisions to make. Again, I am not saying in this specific case the officers weren't negligent and should have known... I don't know. I am just giving you a perspective that there are times when the wrong person gets shot and it is not "out of control poorly trained officers" it is a series of events that led to that outcome.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 01, 2018, 08:37:58 PM
    Unless we see the camera footage (if there is any) there will be an internal investigation and the officers will be found to be "scared for their lives"
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 01, 2018, 08:54:15 PM
    Unless we see the camera footage (if there is any) there will be an internal investigation and the officers will be found to be "scared for their lives"

    Not necessarily. But I would say even if there were camera footage like the shooting in Minneapolis where it was clear the suspect had a gun and pulled it, there will STILL be droves of anti police saying it was murder.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 02, 2018, 12:28:21 AM
    It's not uncommon for news stations to not get the facts during an investigation. That there were none, you could also say there was no reports the man did not point his weapon at them...

    There have been a couple of anti police activist recently that actually were participants in police training where they were put in positions cops are put in on a regular basis and they found out it isn't as easy as it seems.

    Picture yourself going into a home where someone has a gun and you come across a male with a gun? Personally, in a volatile situation like that, I would treat the subject as a danger until I knew he wasn't. So I tell him "Drop the gun! Drop the gun! Most people who aren't meaning me harm will drop the gun like it's hot. So what if he doesn't? What if he comes at me all excited and waving the gun around? Do I calmly wait until he fires to determine if he is the intruder or the suspect? I can see how someone who hasn't been in that predicament could think "In every case, an officer who arrives on a scene of a shooting should be able to immediately determine who the bad guy is. In most cases they can. In some they can't and depending on the distance, cover, etc. they have decisions to make. Again, I am not saying in this specific case the officers weren't negligent and should have known... I don't know. I am just giving you a perspective that there are times when the wrong person gets shot and it is not "out of control poorly trained officers" it is a series of events that led to that outcome.    


    It's not uncommon for news stations to not get the facts during an investigation.




    Really - and Like it’s Not Uncommon For Cops To Lie & Fabricate / Hide Evidence
    Or Cover For Each Other.

    Like you are & do - Desperately trying to
    Protect
    Cover
    Find a Reason
    For What They Do.

    How About Looking For A Reason For Them To NOT
    Shoot & Kill.

    If Cops Wore & Had Body Cams That they were unable to
    Switch off or Tamper with ( as is often the case )
    And Not Found To Be Lying So Often,
    The Doubt & Questioning would Subside.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2018, 08:47:09 AM
    So now cops arrest people and confiscate their drugs so they can use them?

    Police: Kirkersville police chief overdosed on drugs taken from evidence room

    KIRKERSVILLE, OH (WCMH) – Investigators say Kirkersville Police Chief James Hughes Jr. died after overdosing on drugs taken from the evidence room of the police department.

    According to Reynoldsburg Police Lt. Ron Wright, detectives found packaging and material taken from the Kirkersville Police Department evidence room in Hughes' living room. Wright said they found an opened package of fentanyl and closed packages of heroin, fentanyl and LSD in his home.

    https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/police-kirkersville-police-chief-overdosed-on-drugs-taken-from-evidence-room/1339908530
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 02, 2018, 09:37:46 AM
    So now cops arrest people and confiscate their drugs so they can use them?

    Police: Kirkersville police chief overdosed on drugs taken from evidence room

    KIRKERSVILLE, OH (WCMH) – Investigators say Kirkersville Police Chief James Hughes Jr. died after overdosing on drugs taken from the evidence room of the police department.

    According to Reynoldsburg Police Lt. Ron Wright, detectives found packaging and material taken from the Kirkersville Police Department evidence room in Hughes' living room. Wright said they found an opened package of fentanyl and closed packages of heroin, fentanyl and LSD in his home.

    https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/police-kirkersville-police-chief-overdosed-on-drugs-taken-from-evidence-room/1339908530


    Darwinism
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 02, 2018, 12:23:45 PM



    Really - and Like it’s Not Uncommon For Cops To Lie & Fabricate / Hide Evidence
    Or Cover For Each Other.

    Like you are & do - Desperately trying to
    Protect
    Cover
    Find a Reason
    For What They Do.

    How About Looking For A Reason For Them To NOT
    Shoot & Kill.

    If Cops Wore & Had Body Cams That they were unable to
    Switch off or Tamper with ( as is often the case )
    And Not Found To Be Lying So Often,
    The Doubt & Questioning would Subside.


    Yes some cops have lied and fabricated. Doesn't mean these are

    I think 24/7 recording would be a storage problem. Also, turning off the camera is certain possible, tampering with digital is not from my experience. Once it is recorded, the cops have no access to it.

    I am not trying desperately to do anything. What I am trying to do is give a perspective from the cops angle what might have transpired. Maybe it didn't. Maybe they agreed at Roll Call that day that they were going to shoot a citizen and this was the perfect opportunity. At this point we don't know. But in my opinion, to crucify the cops before knowing the facts is counter productive.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 02, 2018, 01:47:08 PM
    Yes some cops have lied and fabricated. Doesn't mean these are

    I think 24/7 recording would be a storage problem. Also, turning off the camera is certain possible, tampering with digital is not from my experience. Once it is recorded, the cops have no access to it.

    I am not trying desperately to do anything. What I am trying to do is give a perspective from the cops angle what might have transpired. Maybe it didn't. Maybe they agreed at Roll Call that day that they were going to shoot a citizen and this was the perfect opportunity. At this point we don't know. But in my opinion, to crucify the cops before knowing the facts is counter productive.

    Some people have raised guns & or not followed police instructions
    Doesn’t Mean He Did Either of those - yet He’s Dead.

    Yes You are trying to find excuses or ways out / explanations for the cops
    I’m playing devils advocate & doing the same against.

    And one Huge Difference Your overlooking The Cops are Alive
    He is Not.

    As for nonsense like storage issues for camera digital data Really  ::)
    Your better than that.
    And cameras should not be able to be switched off by the cop wearing it on shift,
    Again an easy thing to achieve.

    How about give a perspective from the dead man.
    That may help prevent future murders.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2018, 02:13:30 PM
    And one Huge Difference Your overlooking The Cops are Alive
    He is Not.

    This. It's easy for cops to speak when they happen to be alive, covered with immunity and also investigating themselves while their victims are dead and can't present their view of the event.

    The image of the intruder was released today:

    (https://i0.wp.com/www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Dajon-Harper.jpg?fit=620%2C9999px&ssl=1)

    Also, according to the hero's son, his father was handcuffed after he was shot...

    Also his son said this:

    Quote
    "My dad exited the bathroom, went around the corner and I immediately heard multiple shots, which I thought was my dad engaging these other people in the house," Hayashi said. "There was a pause, and then I hear people enter the house."

    He recalled hearing three shots, followed by officers yelling "police."

    Quote
    Before leaving the police station, Hayashi said, a police official told him something about Black that isn't true.
    "I was told that he was told to drop the weapon and he didn't," Hayashi said. "I never heard anything about 'drop your weapon.' There was no warning at all. They should have been yelling from the moment they hit the driveway, 80 feet down. It's a long driveway. They should have been yelling, especially as many police officers as there were on scene."

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/dad-hero-son-bronze-star-recipient-shot-dead/story?id=56961901
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 02, 2018, 02:15:27 PM
    Some people have raised guns & or not followed police instructions
    Doesn’t Mean He Did Either of those - yet He’s Dead.

    Yes You are trying to find excuses or ways out / explanations for the cops
    I’m playing devils advocate & doing the same against.

    And one Huge Difference Your overlooking The Cops are Alive
    He is Not.

    As for nonsense like storage issues for camera digital data Really  ::)
    Your better than that.
    And cameras should not be able to be switched off by the cop wearing it on shift,
    Again an easy thing to achieve.

    How about give a perspective from the dead man.
    That may help prevent future murders.

    Perspective from the dead man. He was stoked up on adrenaline, he had just killed someone, he had tunnel vision, he may have even forgot he still had the gun in his hand. He may have been excitedly talking over the police giving him instructions to drop the weapon  never thinking he might appear to be the danger at the moment.

    Perspective from the cops. Stoked up on adrenaline, comes upon a man with a gun not following orders and possibly pointing it excitedly and they reacted. Sad all around.

    Again, it may not have been that way, they may have had plenty of time to determine he wasn't a threat and shot him anyway. I don't know, you don't know, but again, sometimes shit happens and sometimes its very bad shit and ends in something like this. Doesn't always mean the cops weren't reasonable
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 02, 2018, 02:23:21 PM
    Perspective from the dead man. He was stoked up on adrenaline, he had just killed someone, he had tunnel vision, he may have even forgot he still had the gun in his hand. He may have been excitedly talking over the police giving him instructions to drop the weapon  never thinking he might appear to be the danger at the moment.

    Perspective from the cops. Stoked up on adrenaline, comes upon a man with a gun not following orders and possibly pointing it excitedly and they reacted. Sad all around.

    Again, it may not have been that way, they may have had plenty of time to determine he wasn't a threat and shot him anyway. I don't know, you don't know, but again, sometimes shit happens and sometimes its very bad shit and ends in something like this. Doesn't always mean the cops weren't reasonable


    Fair comments

    No it dosent always mean the cops weren’t reasonable
    Correct

    Just as correct is the fact We clearly often see that cops are Far from Reasonable.

    If it was the cops dead - it’s a fair guess you’d have a wholly different attitude
    Regardless of who or what was the cause / causes.

    I see the camera issue you’ve dropped like a hot potatoe.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2018, 04:12:25 PM
    Some people seem to have itchy trigger fingers and can't control themselves. Oh wait, it's a cop so the gun must have "discharged itself"... No charges of course.

    Police officers injured after accidental gunfire at Sgt. Michael Chesna's funeral

    Two Massachusetts police officers are recovering after a Rhode Island police officer accidentally discharged a gun at the funeral of Weymouth Police Sergeant Michael Chesna on July 20.

    No charges have been filed against Sgt. Patnaud for the accidental discharge, but the Cranston Police are conducting an internal investigation to determine what happened and what caused the incident, according to Crampton Police Chief Michael Winquist.

    https://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2018/08/police_officers_injured_after.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 02, 2018, 05:24:42 PM
    Some people seem to have itchy trigger fingers and can't control themselves. Oh wait, it's a cop so the gun must have "discharged itself"... No charges of course.

    Police officers injured after accidental gunfire at Sgt. Michael Chesna's funeral

    Two Massachusetts police officers are recovering after a Rhode Island police officer accidentally discharged a gun at the funeral of Weymouth Police Sergeant Michael Chesna on July 20.

    No charges have been filed against Sgt. Patnaud for the accidental discharge, but the Cranston Police are conducting an internal investigation to determine what happened and what caused the incident, according to Crampton Police Chief Michael Winquist.

    https://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2018/08/police_officers_injured_after.html


    😂😂😂😂😂 Ha Ha Ha
    You’re making this up.....

    No charges filed  ::)  what yet again.

    I’d bet they were in Fear for their Lives,
    So many guns & other cops around them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 02, 2018, 06:31:46 PM
    So the judge can order or request the murder of a person? We have seen cases where judges ordered the court cops to torture people and sadly the cops comply. Why did the cop turn off the camera after a certain point? Why was this only revealed after the man that the judge wanted shot obtained the video?

    Judge apologizes after video of him telling officer to shoot man goes viral

    Magisterial District Judge Thomas P. Caulfield apologized Wednesday after a video of him suggesting that a police officer shoot a man who visited his office went viral on social media .

    The video, which appears to be from a police officer’s body camera, shows the officer enter an office to ask Caulfield what to do in the future when Brian Jones of Forest Hills stops by the office.

    Caulfield tells the officer to shoot Jones.

    Quote
    Cop: “I want to see how you want to proceed … in the future,”

    Judge: “I want you to shoot him,” Caulfield says.

    The two continue talking

    [...]

    Cop: “I don’t know how you think of it.”

    Judge: “Shoot him,” Caulfield says again.

    The officer then appears to turn off the body camera.

    https://triblive.com/local/allegheny/13927884-74/district-judge-apologizes-after-video-of-him-telling-an-officer-to-shoot
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 02, 2018, 08:52:59 PM

    Fair comments

    No it dosent always mean the cops weren’t reasonable
    Correct

    Just as correct is the fact We clearly often see that cops are Far from Reasonable.

    If it was the cops dead - it’s a fair guess you’d have a wholly different attitude
    Regardless of who or what was the cause / causes.


    I see the camera issue you’ve dropped like a hot potatoe.

    Ok lets talk camera issue. There are a number of rules about when and where cameras are to be used.

    I'm going from memory but basically

    You will have your camera on;

    During any citizen contact

    During any call

    While driving code 2 or 3

    You can turn off your camera when a call has reached its final disposition. For example, when you have worked a crash and now are just waiting for a tow truck to arrive.

    I am no techie but I do know that video takes up a lot of storage space. 2000 cops working 24/7 (say only 1000) assigned to patrol, and from what I was told it would be a storage problem. Maybe someone with more knowledge can jump in and give an idea of the cost of storage

    Then you have the issue of being on during the entire shift.. meal breaks, bathroom breaks, just wouldn't be workable in the real world. Rather than get unreasonable with the process, as I have said before, having a policy where an officer is subject to termination if it is deemed they intentionally turned off their camera during a call or citizen contact would go a long way.

    I'm a fan of cameras, I advocated for their use at our department. The downside to cameras are psychologically, some people are prone to a default position of the cops are guilty if there are no cameras available.   

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 03, 2018, 01:05:52 AM
    Ok lets talk camera issue. There are a number of rules about when and where cameras are to be used.

    I'm going from memory but basically

    You will have your camera on;

    During any citizen contact

    During any call

    While driving code 2 or 3

    You can turn off your camera when a call has reached its final disposition. For example, when you have worked a crash and now are just waiting for a tow truck to arrive.

    I am no techie but I do know that video takes up a lot of storage space. 2000 cops working 24/7 (say only 1000) assigned to patrol, and from what I was told it would be a storage problem. Maybe someone with more knowledge can jump in and give an idea of the cost of storage

    Then you have the issue of being on during the entire shift.. meal breaks, bathroom breaks, just wouldn't be workable in the real world. Rather than get unreasonable with the process, as I have said before, having a policy where an officer is subject to termination if it is deemed they intentionally turned off their camera during a call or citizen contact would go a long way.

    I'm a fan of cameras, I advocated for their use at our department. The downside to cameras are psychologically, some people are prone to a default position of the cops are guilty if there are no cameras available.   



    It’s 2018
    We have technology - How many Days or years worth of video is added to YouTube
    Each day - storage space problems. Really.

    Body cams on at all times when interacting with public or responding to call outs etc
    Other than meal & food breaks - any violation of turning off Should Be
    1, Instant Dismissal offence
    2, any injuries/ death to public while cop has camera off Instant Incarceration
    / prosecution

    No not all cops are bad or bent
    Sadly many are - and innocent people are being murdered & beaten / robbed by them
    A Belt & Braces Approach is needed To weed those ones out & stop the Gang Warfare & Mentality

    Anything less is just excuses.
    What is being allowed to pass as cop behaviour in America
    Is worse than many 3rd world / dictators countries.

    Stop Making Excuses or trying to find loop holes.
    Make LE as Honest / Accountable & Corruption Free as Possible.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 03, 2018, 09:39:39 AM
    It’s 2018
    We have technology - How many Days or years worth of video is added to YouTube
    Each day - storage space problems. Really.

    Body cams on at all times when interacting with public or responding to call outs etc
    Other than meal & food breaks - any violation of turning off Should Be
    1, Instant Dismissal offence
    2, any injuries/ death to public while cop has camera off Instant Incarceration
    / prosecution

    No not all cops are bad or bent
    Sadly many are - and innocent people are being murdered & beaten / robbed by them
    A Belt & Braces Approach is needed To weed those ones out & stop the Gang Warfare & Mentality

    Anything less is just excuses.
    What is being allowed to pass as cop behaviour in America
    Is worse than many 3rd world / dictators countries.

    Stop Making Excuses or trying to find loop holes.
    Make LE as Honest / Accountable & Corruption Free as Possible.


    What you deem making excuses and loopholes is in my opinion using common sense and reality. Put it this way... You could argue cops should shoot the weapon out of their hand or shoot them in the shoulder instead of killing poeple. To you it would seem reasonable. I would explain that it's hard enough to shoot center mass on a moving target under stress and that's why cops are trained to shoot center mass. And you can shoot someone in the shoulder and they can still kill you. You would then argue that I am making excuses and loopholes just to kill people. That's what is happening with our current argument.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 03, 2018, 10:16:51 AM
    Another extremely violent criminal. Round up all the cops who participated in the assault (including those who didn't intervene or report anything) and lock them up for life. Funny how only after this incident the cop claimed he had some sort of condition that he thought would justify his violent actions. Sounds similar to how some christian priests who participated in child abuse and were conveniently diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease just before they went to trial in order to avoid punishment.

    Cop Convicted After Savagely Beating a 17yo Boy Chained to Hospital Bed

    A veteran cop from the Guelph police department has been charged and convicted for his role in a savage beating caught on camera of a 17-year-old boy in a hospital — who was restrained to a bed. Failing to take responsibility for his actions, the officer blamed the incident on PTSD.

    The incident happened in September of 2016 after the teen was admitted to Guelph General Hospital. The teen was apparently suicidal so he’d been restrained to a hospital bed and was taken to a safe room.

    As the video shows, in spite of being chained to the bed, the teen was still flailing about, trying to cause himself harm. That’s when officer Corey McArthur snapped and threw a vicious elbow about the face and upper body of the teen.

    The blow resulted in a massive gash below the defenseless teen’s eye which had to be treated with stitches by hospital staff.

    After hospital staff investigated the cause of the teen’s injuries, they watched the surveillance footage and then notified police. None of McArthur’s fellow cops who witnessed the attack said a thing.

    After the incident, McArthur and his defense team claimed that it was his PTSD that caused him to lose control and beat the restrained child in a hospital. However, the PTSD was completely undiagnosed and untreated prior to this incident. Markson said that his client has PTSD stemming from the death of a fellow cop who died in a car crash.

    In total, McArthur has faced charges three times for assault. In 2010, he was found guilty of assault and given an unconditional discharge. However, he was rehired where he would strike again in 2014 and 2016.



    The prosecution is seeking a suspended sentence with probation, which would leave McArthur with a criminal record.

    The defense is seeking a conditional discharge with probation, which, if McArthur stayed out of trouble for three years, would leave him with no criminal record.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beats-teen-hospital-bed-convicted/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 03, 2018, 11:54:12 AM
    What you deem making excuses and loopholes is in my opinion using common sense and reality. Put it this way... You could argue cops should shoot the weapon out of their hand or shoot them in the shoulder instead of killing poeple. To you it would seem reasonable. I would explain that it's hard enough to shoot center mass on a moving target under stress and that's why cops are trained to shoot center mass. And you can shoot someone in the shoulder and they can still kill you. You would then argue that I am making excuses and loopholes just to kill people. That's what is happening with our current argument.

    You are making presumptions

    I'm 57 & do you know exactly what I have done throughout my life ??
    So I've never been in police / military I've never fired gun's or had them fired at me ??
    I've never been in life & death situations in war zones ??
    I've never been shot or shot & killed others ??

    And you're lecturing Me on how to fire weapons or otherwise.
    That's extremely condescending & rude of you.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 03, 2018, 01:21:57 PM
    https://m.ctpost.com/news/article/Judge-orders-cop-chief-to-explain-lack-of-13127477.php?cmpid=fbsocialflow

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 03, 2018, 01:42:08 PM
    https://m.ctpost.com/news/article/Judge-orders-cop-chief-to-explain-lack-of-13127477.php?cmpid=fbsocialflow



    There was another case (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg9078894#msg9078894) posted earlier this week of a cop who didn't bother to rush to an incident unless a cop was shot. Then we had a 911 dispatcher hanging up on thousands of calls saying "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real." (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8615783#msg8615783)
    WTF is going on, how many people have been crime victims because of this inaction and when are these lazy scumbags going to be held accountable? Just saying "mistakes were made" does not absolve them of responsibility. Who knows, maybe they will investigate themselves about all those incidents they ignored. Or, to continue their pattern, they probably will sit on their ass and not do a thing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 03, 2018, 04:29:26 PM
    You are making presumptions

    I'm 57 & do you know exactly what I have done throughout my life ??
    So I've never been in police / military I've never fired gun's or had them fired at me ??
    I've never been in life & death situations in war zones ??
    I've never been shot or shot & killed others ??

    And you're lecturing Me on how to fire weapons or otherwise.
    That's extremely condescending & rude of you.



    It's perplexing to me how I can give  or try to give a scenario or paint a picture of what can be a volatile situation and you say I am making excuses.. That is a bit offensive in itself. I have not at anytime given those officers a pass or said I think they are non negligent. I am saying sometimes those scenes can be extremely unpredictable and concluding based on a news story the officers should be vindicated or charged is counterproductive.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 03, 2018, 05:28:41 PM
    It's perplexing to me how I can give  or try to give a scenario or paint a picture of what can be a volatile situation and you say I am making excuses.. That is a bit offensive in itself. I have not at anytime given those officers a pass or said I think they are non negligent. I am saying sometimes those scenes can be extremely unpredictable and concluding based on a news story the officers should be vindicated or charged is counterproductive.   
    lol @ offended :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 03, 2018, 06:33:03 PM
    It's perplexing to me how I can give  or try to give a scenario or paint a picture of what can be a volatile situation and you say I am making excuses.. That is a bit offensive in itself. I have not at anytime given those officers a pass or said I think they are non negligent. I am saying sometimes those scenes can be extremely unpredictable and concluding based on a news story the officers should be vindicated or charged is counterproductive.  

    It’s perplexing to you !! Is it.?
    Please re-read your reply’s without your rose tinted specs on
    In regards your bias towards all things & behaviour cop wise.

    You were pointing out to Me about shooting centre mass & how
    Stressful situations can be..... What like Only you & cops know?

    If you’re offended by my previous reply statement Why is that?
    Have I or others never been in unpredictable stressful situations
    & don’t know what that’s like.

    Generally I enjoy & like your reply’s & often your insight & cop
    Perspective.

    Let me state yet again for you Not all cops are Bad
    There are lots of very decent honest & good ones,
    Only there is No denying for some cops (a significant minority )
    They behave like a Gang of Thugs & The system / hierarchy backs
    Them up & absolves them.

    That Needs to Stop. They should have to take responsibility & accountability
    For their actions.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 03, 2018, 09:02:25 PM
    It’s perplexing to you !! Is it.?
    Please re-read your reply’s without your rose tinted specs on
    In regards your bias towards all things & behaviour cop wise.

    You were pointing out to Me about shooting centre mass & how
    Stressful situations can be..... What like Only you & cops know?

    If you’re offended by my previous reply statement Why is that?
    Have I or others never been in unpredictable stressful situations
    & don’t know what that’s like.

    Generally I enjoy & like your reply’s & often your insight & cop
    Perspective.

    Let me state yet again for you Not all cops are Bad
    There are lots of very decent honest & good ones,
    Only there is No denying for some cops (a significant minority )
    They behave like a Gang of Thugs & The system / hierarchy backs
    Them up & absolves them.

    That Needs to Stop. They should have to take responsibility & accountability
    For there actions.

    cool
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2018, 05:45:36 PM
    Another case where people learn the hard way not to call the police unless they want violence and brutality. These violent criminals don't care about innocent and frail elderly women, their violent nature emerges with every chance they get. Interesting how the released video is very blurry. Must be similar to how bodycams happen to "malfunction" or "miraculously" turn off when they happen to capture police brutality.

    Police Release Body Cam, Showing Officers Brutally Assault 84yo Grandmother

    Mesa, AZ — An Arizona family has learned the hard way what calling the police to help a relative can often look like as their grandmother was hospitalized after a welfare check. Showing their incompetence, the welfare check was for another family member but the police assaulted the innocent grandmother anyway.

    The Free Thought Project reported on the incident when it happened last week and this week, body camera footage was released.

    Although they released the video, the Mesa police department deliberately blurred the entire clip. However, even low resolution can’t hide the sadistic act of abusing an innocent grandmother.

    As we previously reported, Ashlee Hahn detailed the assault in a dramatic Facebook post which showed the extent of her grandmother’s injuries. Hahn’s grandmother was hurt so bad during the check that she had to be hospitalized.

    According to Hahn, her grandmother “is recovering from her fourth stroke and is confused, cognitively impaired & barely physically able to stand on her own because of uncontrollable shaking.”

    Hahn’s mother had called in a welfare check for her son who lives on his grandmother’s property. She told police her son was suicidal. Police were even given specific instructions not to disturb the 84-year-old because she is easily confused and fragile.

    “The police were called to her residence for a wellness check for a close family member who lives on her property,” explained Hahn. “They were specifically asked not to bother or question my grandmother because of her present and very fragile state.”


    In spite of telling them to steer clear, however, police did the exact opposite.


    “They forced her out of her home into the street, holding her arms tight enough to leave bruises and bleeding,” wrote Hahn. “Her inability to hold still (because of her previous strokes, as seen in uploaded videos) inclined them to slam her down, head first on the asphalt. They handcuffed her after she woke from her unconscious state.”

    Indeed, the video shows this exact scenario. Officers forced the woman from her home by repeatedly telling her to come toward them. When she gets by them, she was clearly confused and had no idea what was going on.

    Illustrating just how out of it she was, she starts referencing officers being behind the cars like a movie. As she turned around, the officers grabbed her and then surrounded her.

    “You are not following my directions,” says a cop to the severely frail innocent elderly woman. Moments later, the innocent grandmother is slammed to the ground as cops jump on top of her and put her in handcuffs.

    When Hahn’s grandmother woke up, she was in the hospital, bloodied and bruised. Police then immediately began conducting damage control.

    “After seeing the damage they had done & sending my Grandmother off in an ambulance, they called my Mother (who made the original wellness check call) and told her that my Grandmother “slipped,” Hahn explained.

    To try and alleviate their liability, an officer was sent, not to check on an elderly grandmother who’d just been the subject of a savage attack, but, instead, to defend their fellow cop and his choice to inflict harm on an innocent old lady.

    “The officer who came down to the hospital only seemed to care about deflecting & defending the officers involved. No accountability. No apologies,” Hahn wrote.

    What’s more, to try to legitimize the attack on an innocent grandmother, police then charged her with obstruction.

    Hahn filmed part of the interaction with the officer in the hospital as he defended his fellow cop’s decision to needlessly confront her (against the family’s wishes) and then violently throw her to the ground.

    “Why did he put me down on the asphalt?” asked the innocent elderly woman.

    “It is my understanding when I spoke to the officer, that you pulled away from him a little bit and he took action like that, okay?” the officer callously explains of how his fellow officer could somehow rationalize assaulting an innocent grandmother.

    Pulling away from an officer “a little bit” in the land of the free will now apparently result in innocent elderly women being thrown to the ground.

    “I said don’t treat me like this. I don’t want to have a stroke,” the innocent grandmother says as she shakes in her hospital bed. “I don’t want to have a heart attack. Don’t treat me this way.”

    According to Hahn, her grandmother is “traumatized & feels untrusting of the people who she thought would protect her.”

    Hahn has a message for the Mesa Police Department as well.

    “If this was your grandmother, what would you do? Mesa police department needs to be held accountable.”

    Indeed, they do.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/grandmother-body-camera-abused-police/

    Remember this case?

    Innocent 84yo Grandmother Sues After Cops Attack Her on Video and Lie to Cover It Up

    Mesa, AZ — An Arizona family has learned the hard way what calling the police to help a relative can often look like as their grandmother was hospitalized after a welfare check. Showing their incompetence, the welfare check was for another family member but the police assaulted the innocent grandmother anyway. Now, the grandmother is filing a lawsuit and the taxpayers will likely be the ones held accountable.

    Virginia Archer filed the suit last week at the U.S. District Court in Phoenix, alleging she was unlawfully arrested on Feb. 14 and subjected to “excessive, brutal and completely unnecessary force” by Mesa police officers who went to her home checking on the safety of her grandson.

    The complaint names officers C. Orr and D. Grimm, as well as the department.

    “Defendant Orr’s and Defendant Grimm’s actions were uncalled for, and they knew it immediately,” the lawsuit says. “Since they knew they were wrong, they attempted to justify their actions by lying to multiple people that Plaintiff (Archer) was being combative and/or ‘not following directions at all.’”

    According to Hahn, at the time her grandmother was “recovering from her fourth stroke and is confused, cognitively impaired & barely physically able to stand on her own because of uncontrollable shaking.”

    “They forced her out of her home into the street, holding her arms tight enough to leave bruises and bleeding,” wrote Hahn. “Her inability to hold still (because of her previous strokes, as seen in uploaded videos) inclined them to slam her down, head first on the asphalt. They handcuffed her after she woke from her unconscious state.”

    When Hahn’s grandmother woke up, she was in the hospital, bloodied and bruised. Police then immediately began conducting damage control.

    “After seeing the damage they had done & sending my Grandmother off in an ambulance, they called my Mother (who made the original wellness check call) and told her that my Grandmother “slipped,” Hahn explained.

    To try and alleviate their liability, an officer was sent, not to check on an elderly grandmother who’d just been the subject of a savage attack, but, instead, to defend their fellow cop and his choice to inflict harm on an innocent old lady.

    “The officer who came down to the hospital only seemed to care about deflecting & defending the officers involved. No accountability. No apologies,” Hahn wrote.

    What’s more, to try to legitimize the attack on an innocent grandmother, police then charged her with obstruction.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandmother-sues-attack-hospitalized/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 07, 2018, 04:16:46 AM
    Crazy

    Remember this case?

    Innocent 84yo Grandmother Sues After Cops Attack Her on Video and Lie to Cover It Up

    Mesa, AZ — An Arizona family has learned the hard way what calling the police to help a relative can often look like as their grandmother was hospitalized after a welfare check. Showing their incompetence, the welfare check was for another family member but the police assaulted the innocent grandmother anyway. Now, the grandmother is filing a lawsuit and the taxpayers will likely be the ones held accountable.

    Virginia Archer filed the suit last week at the U.S. District Court in Phoenix, alleging she was unlawfully arrested on Feb. 14 and subjected to “excessive, brutal and completely unnecessary force” by Mesa police officers who went to her home checking on the safety of her grandson.

    The complaint names officers C. Orr and D. Grimm, as well as the department.

    “Defendant Orr’s and Defendant Grimm’s actions were uncalled for, and they knew it immediately,” the lawsuit says. “Since they knew they were wrong, they attempted to justify their actions by lying to multiple people that Plaintiff (Archer) was being combative and/or ‘not following directions at all.’”

    According to Hahn, at the time her grandmother was “recovering from her fourth stroke and is confused, cognitively impaired & barely physically able to stand on her own because of uncontrollable shaking.”

    “They forced her out of her home into the street, holding her arms tight enough to leave bruises and bleeding,” wrote Hahn. “Her inability to hold still (because of her previous strokes, as seen in uploaded videos) inclined them to slam her down, head first on the asphalt. They handcuffed her after she woke from her unconscious state.”

    When Hahn’s grandmother woke up, she was in the hospital, bloodied and bruised. Police then immediately began conducting damage control.

    “After seeing the damage they had done & sending my Grandmother off in an ambulance, they called my Mother (who made the original wellness check call) and told her that my Grandmother “slipped,” Hahn explained.

    To try and alleviate their liability, an officer was sent, not to check on an elderly grandmother who’d just been the subject of a savage attack, but, instead, to defend their fellow cop and his choice to inflict harm on an innocent old lady.

    “The officer who came down to the hospital only seemed to care about deflecting & defending the officers involved. No accountability. No apologies,” Hahn wrote.

    What’s more, to try to legitimize the attack on an innocent grandmother, police then charged her with obstruction.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandmother-sues-attack-hospitalized/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 07, 2018, 01:12:28 PM
    Remember this case?

    Innocent 84yo Grandmother Sues After Cops Attack Her on Video and Lie to Cover It Up

    Mesa, AZ — An Arizona family has learned the hard way what calling the police to help a relative can often look like as their grandmother was hospitalized after a welfare check. Showing their incompetence, the welfare check was for another family member but the police assaulted the innocent grandmother anyway. Now, the grandmother is filing a lawsuit and the taxpayers will likely be the ones held accountable.

    Virginia Archer filed the suit last week at the U.S. District Court in Phoenix, alleging she was unlawfully arrested on Feb. 14 and subjected to “excessive, brutal and completely unnecessary force” by Mesa police officers who went to her home checking on the safety of her grandson.

    The complaint names officers C. Orr and D. Grimm, as well as the department.

    “Defendant Orr’s and Defendant Grimm’s actions were uncalled for, and they knew it immediately,” the lawsuit says. “Since they knew they were wrong, they attempted to justify their actions by lying to multiple people that Plaintiff (Archer) was being combative and/or ‘not following directions at all.’”

    According to Hahn, at the time her grandmother was “recovering from her fourth stroke and is confused, cognitively impaired & barely physically able to stand on her own because of uncontrollable shaking.”

    “They forced her out of her home into the street, holding her arms tight enough to leave bruises and bleeding,” wrote Hahn. “Her inability to hold still (because of her previous strokes, as seen in uploaded videos) inclined them to slam her down, head first on the asphalt. They handcuffed her after she woke from her unconscious state.”

    When Hahn’s grandmother woke up, she was in the hospital, bloodied and bruised. Police then immediately began conducting damage control.

    “After seeing the damage they had done & sending my Grandmother off in an ambulance, they called my Mother (who made the original wellness check call) and told her that my Grandmother “slipped,” Hahn explained.

    To try and alleviate their liability, an officer was sent, not to check on an elderly grandmother who’d just been the subject of a savage attack, but, instead, to defend their fellow cop and his choice to inflict harm on an innocent old lady.

    “The officer who came down to the hospital only seemed to care about deflecting & defending the officers involved. No accountability. No apologies,” Hahn wrote.

    What’s more, to try to legitimize the attack on an innocent grandmother, police then charged her with obstruction.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-grandmother-sues-attack-hospitalized/



    More cool behaviour by criminals
    Only Let’s Not Jump To Conclusions
    Let’s Back Them & Wait for All The True Evidence These cops have.

    Those Poor Defenceless Highly Trained & Responsible Cops
    We’re In Total Fear Of Their Lives
    When Confronted With a Wild Crazed Marauding 84 yr old Woman
    Really What we’re they Meant to do to Protect Themselves..... ::)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2018, 01:59:20 PM
    Of course he will not be charged. At least he didn't kill her.

    ‘Do you want me to take her out like last time?’: A June shooting, ruled unjustified, was not the first time this Utah corporal shot a suspect

    An Enoch police corporal told investigators he had “mentally purchased” the idea that he would have to shoot Ivonne Casimiro when he first arrived at the Parowan truck stop where she was suspected of breaking into cars.

    But Corporal Jeremy Dunn was not justified in shooting her as she held a screwdriver and argued with officers June 28, Iron County prosecutors ruled Monday.

    Casimiro is not the first person Dunn has shot — and in video of the confrontation, he can be heard asking another officer: “Do you want me to take her out like last time?”

    Iron County Attorney Scott Garrett said: “It appears that the situation was manageable at the time Corporal Dunn arrived and it would have seemed reasonable for officers to continue de-escalation tactics until the situation could be more fully contained. Corporal Dunn was only on scene for three minutes before firing shots.”

    Although Garrett found the shooting to be unjustified, Dunn will not be charged because “the State would not be able to prove the requisite criminal intent,” Garrett wrote.



    https://www.sltrib.com/news/2018/08/07/do-you-want-me-take-her/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2018, 02:10:20 PM
    The grandfather did what he was supposed to do but the armed and violent terrorists killed him regardless - and also injured his wife. At least one of the armed intruders received serious damage to his face. Notice this "minor" detail too:
    Quote
    "Police say the 20-year-old man who they were initially looking for later turned himself in and was questioned. He was later released however and no charges were filed."

    ‘All-Out Absolute Tragedy’: Grandfather Killed After Firing at Officers He Believed Were Home Intruders, Police Say

    A Philadelphia grandfather mistook SWAT officers for home intruders and opened fire on police as they entered his home Monday morning to serve a search warrant for the man's grandson, the city's police commissioner said.

    The confusion led to a shootout that ended with three people shot, police said. The homeowner was ultimately killed, his wife hurt and a veteran officer was left with a bullet lodged in his jaw.

    https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/national-international/Knox-Street-Officer-Incident-490132781.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 10, 2018, 02:20:23 PM
    An L.A. County deputy faked evidence. Here's how his misconduct was kept secret in court for years

    Quote
    A Times investigation last year identified Ovalle and others on a secret Sheriff’s Department list of deputies whose misconduct included falsely testifying in court, pulling over a motorist and receiving oral sex from her while on patrol, and tipping off a drug dealer’s girlfriend about a narcotics bust.

    Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell wanted to disclose the so-called Brady list of about 300 officers to prosecutors, but the deputies union went to court to stop him.

    Ovalle is not an isolated example. Misconduct by law enforcement officers who testify in court is routinely kept hidden by California’s police privacy laws.

    The U.S. Supreme Court requires prosecutors to inform criminal defendants about an officer’s wrongdoing — but the state’s laws are so strict that prosecutors cannot directly access the personnel files of their own police witnesses. Instead, California puts the burden on defendants to prove to a judge that an officer’s record is relevant.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-brady-list-secrecy-court-20180809-htmlstory.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2018, 03:06:21 PM
    An L.A. County deputy faked evidence. Here's how his misconduct was kept secret in court for years

    http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-brady-list-secrecy-court-20180809-htmlstory.html

    Govt
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 14, 2018, 05:26:43 PM
    TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in secret surveillance program

    Federal Air Marshals have begun following ordinary US citizens not suspected of a crime or on any terrorist watch list and collecting extensive information about their movements and behavior under a new domestic surveillance program that is drawing criticism from within the agency.

    https://apps.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/graphics/2018/07/tsa-quiet-skies/

    TSA administrator says domestic surveillance program "makes an awful lot of sense"

    TSA Administrator David Pekoske said a surveillance program known as "Quiet Skies," which has been criticized for tracking American citizens not suspected of any crimes, "makes an awful lot of sense."

    "Quiet Skies," first reported by The Boston Globe, dates back to 2011. It uses computer software to flag travelers, including U.S. citizens, who could pose a threat but may not have been accused of a crime and are not on the No Fly List.

    In March, the program expanded to include assigning teams of air marshals to observe certain flyers' behavior while at airports and on flights.

    Now, TSA has eyes on up to 50 flyers a day on domestic carriers nationwide under the program, according to leaked documents and sources who spoke to CBS News.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tsa-administrator-david-pekoske-says-quiet-skies-domestic-surveillance-program-makes-an-awful-lot-of-sense/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2018, 01:00:14 PM
    Once again, the "brave" and "fearless" "heroes" attack an elderly person. This time an 87 year old woman cutting vegetation FFS...
    Of course the local gang boss was quick to defend his goons...

    87yo Great-Grandmother Tasered in Her Breast by Police While Cutting Dandelions with a Knife

    Chatsworth, GA — A family is outraged and a great-grandmother recovering after she was tasered in her breast for failing to understand police when they told her to drop a knife she was using to reportedly cut flowers.

    According to police, they received a call from a Boys and Girls club employee noting that Martha Al-Bishara, 87, was walking a trail with a knife. The caller noted that Al-Bishara was not threatening anyone and appeared to be “walking around looking for something, like, vegetation to cut down or something.” She also had a bag.

    According to her family Al-Bishara’s taser attack was captured on body camera footage and they were able to watch it. However, citing pending charges against the great-grandmother, police are not releasing it publicly.

    The family told police that Al-Bishara was simply on the property to cut dandelions with a kitchen knife—a story backed up by the transcripts of the 911 call. The bag in her hand, the description from the 911 call, and the fact that the woman never threatened anyone should’ve given officers this impression. Instead, however, a gun and a taser were pointed at her.

    Being that Al-Bishara speaks Arabic, she likely did not understand the officers when they were telling her to put down the knife.

    According to the family, the video shows Chatsworth Police Chief Josh Etheridge pointing a gun at Al-Bishara before another officer deploys the taser striking the great-grandmother in her left breast and her stomach.

    She then falls over in agony and begins sobbing as the officers move in to handcuff her.

    Naturally, police are standing by their decision to taser the non-threatening great-grandmother and noted that even though she never moved toward anyone with the knife that she still presented a threat.

    “I completely understand and if I hadn’t been there and it would come across my desk, that is the first thing I would ask as well,” Etheridge said. “Why did we Tase an 87-year-old woman? I guess in that circumstance, I am glad I was there and saw it firsthand and understand why it occurred. An 87-year-old woman with a knife still has the ability to hurt an officer.”

    “The question’s always going to be why did he (the officer) not retreat,” Etheridge said. “The thought behind that would be if the officer had retreated, with her being in an elevated position, he could have easily fell down,” Etheridge said, “at which time she could have been progressing on top of him and deadly force could have been used at that point in time. And that was the whole goal, to try to avoid using any type of force, but if we have to use force, use the minimum force.”

    Family members disagree and said the officers made no attempt to be kind or show bravery.

    “If they would have approached her with an open hand rather than with their guns drawn, she would have handed it (the knife) to them right away,” said grandson Timothy Douhne. “My grandmother is the most kind, generous-hearted woman.”

    “You don’t Tase an 87-year-old woman,” said great-nephew Solomon Douhne, a former Dalton Police Department officer. “She was not a threat. If anything, she was confused and didn’t know what was going on. It was a ridiculous turn of events. If three police officers couldn’t handle an 87-year-old woman, you might want to reconsider hanging up your badge.”

    The fact that she still hasn’t been charged with a crime speaks to unnecessarily violent nature of the stop. Walking with a knife is not a crime, especially while holding a bag and collecting dandelions. Sadly, however, the great-grandmother was traumatized by the incident.

    “She is OK,” great-granddaughter Martha Douhne said. “She is still repeating the incident over in her mind and telling us she didn’t mean for this to happen and apologizing that she didn’t want to bring this on us. She is having trouble sleeping and is stressed.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/great-grandmother-tasered-police-picking-flowers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 15, 2018, 02:01:10 PM
    Police body cam footage shows Superior sergeant having sex in his office

    A report from the Pinal County Sheriff's Office reveals the video was saved in a folder on Doran's desktop titled "Fun Time." That folder contained 36GB of more pornographic videos as well as nude photos Doran appeared to take of himself.

    https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/valley/police-body-cam-footage-shows-superior-sergeant-having-sex-in-his-office/75-584199621

    Also, notice this part:

    Quote
    Investigators also discovered naked pictures of an underage girl in the same folder. The sergeant viewing the images as part of the investigation wrote in his report, "The images and the fact they were intersected with pictures of sexual situations caused me to physically react with shaking hands and upset stomach."

    PCSO later discovered the images are of Doran's daughter. The Pinal County Attorney's Office did not charge Doran with a crime, but PCSO's report concluded by saying, "There is suspicion that some grooming behavior may be present."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 15, 2018, 04:26:27 PM
    Police body cam footage shows Superior sergeant having sex in his office

    A report from the Pinal County Sheriff's Office reveals the video was saved in a folder on Doran's desktop titled "Fun Time." That folder contained 36GB of more pornographic videos as well as nude photos Doran appeared to take of himself.

    https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/valley/police-body-cam-footage-shows-superior-sergeant-having-sex-in-his-office/75-584199621

    Also, notice this part:

    What in the actual fuck?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 15, 2018, 04:33:10 PM
    Police body cam footage shows Superior sergeant having sex in his office

    A report from the Pinal County Sheriff's Office reveals the video was saved in a folder on Doran's desktop titled "Fun Time." That folder contained 36GB of more pornographic videos as well as nude photos Doran appeared to take of himself.

    https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/valley/police-body-cam-footage-shows-superior-sergeant-having-sex-in-his-office/75-584199621

    Also, notice this part:


    And He Wasn’t Charged or Sacked
    WTF !!!

    Come on I bet even Agnostic isn’t going to try and defend this one.
    Are You ???
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2018, 04:24:07 PM
    As if the cameras conveniently "malfunctioning" just before critical incidents wasn't enough, now there is there is.

    Police bodycams can be hacked to doctor footage

    At the DefCon security conference in Las Vegas on Saturday, one researcher will present findings that many body cameras on the market today are vulnerable to remote digital attacks, including some that could result in the manipulation of footage.

    In all but the Digital Ally device, the vulnerabilities would allow an attacker to download footage off a camera, edit things out or potentially make more intricate modifications, and then re-upload it, leaving no indication of the change. Or an attacker could simply delete footage they don't want law enforcement to have.
    Mitchell found that all of the devices he tested had security issues that could allow an attacker to track their location or manipulate the software they run.

    https://www.wired.com/story/police-body-camera-vulnerabilities/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 17, 2018, 10:22:33 AM
    https://www.sotomayorent.com/carlylecalhoun


    This is I N S A N E !!!! 


    WTF - I'd sue for MILLIONS 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 20, 2018, 09:53:42 AM
    TSA administrator says domestic surveillance program "makes an awful lot of sense"

    TSA Administrator David Pekoske said a surveillance program known as "Quiet Skies," which has been criticized for tracking American citizens not suspected of any crimes, "makes an awful lot of sense."

    "Quiet Skies," first reported by The Boston Globe, dates back to 2011. It uses computer software to flag travelers, including U.S. citizens, who could pose a threat but may not have been accused of a crime and are not on the No Fly List.

    In March, the program expanded to include assigning teams of air marshals to observe certain flyers' behavior while at airports and on flights.

    Now, TSA has eyes on up to 50 flyers a day on domestic carriers nationwide under the program, according to leaked documents and sources who spoke to CBS News.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tsa-administrator-david-pekoske-says-quiet-skies-domestic-surveillance-program-makes-an-awful-lot-of-sense/

    TSA administrator David Pekoske:
    Quote
    "Makes an awful lot of sense"

    Quote
    "I would say to the American public: Ordinary citizens don’t need to worry about Quiet Skies”

    Meanwhile:

    TSA says air marshals don’t follow ‘ordinary’ travelers. Some ordinary travelers beg to differ

    Taylor Usry’s routine work trip in July began like any other.

    She chose a comfy dress and sandals to ease her travel anxiety, and arrived early at the airport, where she passed through security — her body scanned, searched, and patted, her belongings swabbed and sent through an X-ray machine.

    Usry, a 39-year-old social media manager for an arts-and-crafts company, recalls buying a chicken biscuit and a Diet Dr Pepper while she waited in the terminal for her flight to Florida for a meeting at the Home Shopping Network.

    She had no idea she was being watched during her humble meal — watched the entire time, in fact.

    A team of armed federal air marshals was shadowing her every move — recording whether she touched her face or sweated, where she went, how she looked, and other seemingly minor details as she made her way through the Charlotte airport. The air marshals even flew with Usry, closely watching her until she left the Tampa airport, according to records reviewed by the Globe.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2018/08/18/tsa-says-armed-air-marshals-don-follow-ordinary-fliers-some-ordinary-fliers-beg-differ/Y0k3mV3HPUCgzS20PpAU3H/story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 20, 2018, 11:57:37 AM
    Another criminal gang exposed.

    New Jersey police chief resigns after arrest for allegedly buying cocaine

    A New Jersey police chief resigned last week after he was arrested earlier this month for allegedly buying cocaine online.

    Michael Coppola, the embattled Palisades Interstate Parkway Police Department chief, allegedly bought cocaine on the Internet and had it delivered to a post office box. Coppola was arrested during a traffic stop on Aug. 9 after allegedly picking up the package of what he believed to be cocaine from the post office, WNBC-TV reported.

    The 43-year-old, who had led the law enforcement agency since 2014, submitted his resignation Aug. 15, Jim Hall, the executive director of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, told NJ.com.

    Coppola’s arrest came after a year of controversies for the Palisades Interstate Parkway Police Department. Investigators began to probe the agency in November after two suspects died during police chases.

    Prosecutors said in July the force misused police tactics, failed to properly investigate officers accused of misconduct and chased people without cause or permission. Investigators also said Coppola ran an “awards and incentives” program for officers who had the most arrests and tickets.

    Coppola was suspended for 90 days after the findings were released.

    Coppola is charged with attempt to possess cocaine and possession of drug paraphernalia and faces up to five years in prison, NorthJersey.com reported.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/08/20/new-jersey-police-chief-resigns-after-arrest-for-allegedly-buying-cocaine.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 20, 2018, 01:26:25 PM
    Another criminal gang exposed.

    New Jersey police chief resigns after arrest for allegedly buying cocaine

    A New Jersey police chief resigned last week after he was arrested earlier this month for allegedly buying cocaine online.

    Michael Coppola, the embattled Palisades Interstate Parkway Police Department chief, allegedly bought cocaine on the Internet and had it delivered to a post office box. Coppola was arrested during a traffic stop on Aug. 9 after allegedly picking up the package of what he believed to be cocaine from the post office, WNBC-TV reported.

    The 43-year-old, who had led the law enforcement agency since 2014, submitted his resignation Aug. 15, Jim Hall, the executive director of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, told NJ.com.

    Coppola’s arrest came after a year of controversies for the Palisades Interstate Parkway Police Department. Investigators began to probe the agency in November after two suspects died during police chases.

    Prosecutors said in July the force misused police tactics, failed to properly investigate officers accused of misconduct and chased people without cause or permission. Investigators also said Coppola ran an “awards and incentives” program for officers who had the most arrests and tickets.

    Coppola was suspended for 90 days after the findings were released.

    Coppola is charged with attempt to possess cocaine and possession of drug paraphernalia and faces up to five years in prison, NorthJersey.com reported.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/08/20/new-jersey-police-chief-resigns-after-arrest-for-allegedly-buying-cocaine.html


    Surprised they didn’t try to defend him or cover for him
    Or suspended him on full pay for years & years

    I suppose as he resigned he gets full pension
    They should stop that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 23, 2018, 01:42:26 PM
    And He Wasn’t Charged or Sacked
    WTF !!!

    Come on I bet even Agnostic isn’t going to try and defend this one.
    Are You ???

    Unfortunately there are worse examples. While working as a cop, this guy was accused of molesting 2 girls aged 13 and 14. He was fired from his job, pleaded no contest to the charges, served no jail time but had to register as a sex offender. Then a few years later he was arrested again and pleaded no contest to molesting a 10 year old boy. He was sentenced to serve 180 days in jail and five years probation. And now he was arrested again on charges of molesting another child.

    Cop Convicted Multiple Times for Raping Children and Never Sent to Prison, Strikes Again

    Salinas, CA — Highlighting the sheer lunacy of blue privilege and the broken justice system, a former California Highway patrol officer was found guilty of raping children twice and never went to jail. Now, this predator may finally be sent to prison but only after his third conviction for horrifying crimes against children.

    Jacob Mark Duenas, a former Monterey County-based California Highway Patrol officer, was found guilty earlier this month of brutally and repeatedly raping an 8-year-old boy. The abuse happened when Duenas was training to be a law enforcement officer.

    Prior to this conviction, Duenas pleaded no contest to multiple charges of molesting two girls, ages 13 and 14, while he worked as a CHP officer. Flexing his blue privilege, after he was found guilty of sexually abusing the girls, Duenas served no time in jail.

    Because this pedophile was never locked up, a few years later, he struck again. This time, his victim was a 10-year-old boy. Again, he was arrested, and again, he did not go to jail.

    As KSBW reports, at the time of the sentencing, Butte County Deputy District Attorney Matt Taylor told KRCR, “My feelings on the sentencing are summed up in one word: surprised. What makes this case unusual is that you have a psychologist, independently commissioned by the court, who made a finding that Mr. Duenas was a pedophile and a sexual predator. And regardless of that, the judge sentenced Mr. Duenas to probation.”

    Now that this monster has been convicted of raping a fourth child, he may finally be locked up.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/california-cop-finally-going-jail-children/

    https://www.ksbw.com/article/ex-monterey-county-chp-officer-convicted-of-rape/22719552
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 23, 2018, 01:46:58 PM
    Unfortunately there are worse examples. While working as a cop, this guy was accused of molesting 2 girls aged 13 and 14. He was fired from his job, pleaded no contest to the charges, served no jail time but had to register as a sex offender. Then a few years later he was arrested again and pleaded no contest to molesting a 10 year old boy. He was sentenced to serve 180 days in jail and five years probation. And now he was arrested again on charges of molesting another child.

    Cop Convicted Multiple Times for Raping Children and Never Sent to Prison, Strikes Again

    Salinas, CA — Highlighting the sheer lunacy of blue privilege and the broken justice system, a former California Highway patrol officer was found guilty of raping children twice and never went to jail. Now, this predator may finally be sent to prison but only after his third conviction for horrifying crimes against children.

    Jacob Mark Duenas, a former Monterey County-based California Highway Patrol officer, was found guilty earlier this month of brutally and repeatedly raping an 8-year-old boy. The abuse happened when Duenas was training to be a law enforcement officer.

    Prior to this conviction, Duenas pleaded no contest to multiple charges of molesting two girls, ages 13 and 14, while he worked as a CHP officer. Flexing his blue privilege, after he was found guilty of sexually abusing the girls, Duenas served no time in jail.

    Because this pedophile was never locked up, a few years later, he struck again. This time, his victim was a 10-year-old boy. Again, he was arrested, and again, he did not go to jail.

    As KSBW reports, at the time of the sentencing, Butte County Deputy District Attorney Matt Taylor told KRCR, “My feelings on the sentencing are summed up in one word: surprised. What makes this case unusual is that you have a psychologist, independently commissioned by the court, who made a finding that Mr. Duenas was a pedophile and a sexual predator. And regardless of that, the judge sentenced Mr. Duenas to probation.”

    Now that this monster has been convicted of raping a fourth child, he may finally be locked up.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/california-cop-finally-going-jail-children/

    https://www.ksbw.com/article/ex-monterey-county-chp-officer-convicted-of-rape/22719552

    It just gets fucking worse
    No fucking sense of justice
    This Criminal Gang & their Masters

    Makes my Blood Boil.
    Every damn excuse for Bastard Cops.

    Scumbags are Scumbags end of.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 27, 2018, 01:16:33 PM
    As it has been mentioned several times in this topic, we are dealing in many cases with organized, trained, armed and dangerous criminal gangs and domestic terrorists:

    Tampering with dash camera footage of a DWI stop, tampering with the video of an arrest, using excessive force against a woman he was arresting and unlawful arrest of that woman on charges of assaulting a public servant and resisting arrest.

    Picking a lock, trying to force their way inside a house without a warrant and then breaking down the door. Several more unlawful arrests (but remember, you can be arrested for "resisting arrest" but you are not allowed to do anything when criminals like these assault you and kidnap you).

    These are just some of the charges against this criminal gang of "law enforcement officers".

    Remember when cop lovers said that cops don't just wake up to go commit crimes and also that bodycams clear cops accused of misconduct? Here's a prime example. In this particular case, the corruption is so deep that this police department seems to be crumbling with several of its "officers" indicted.

    Llano Police Department nearly wiped out in series of indictments

    LLANO, Texas (KXAN) – Grand jury indictments against a city of Llano police officer and a Llano County deputy are the latest in a series of criminal charges against the largest municipal police force in the county.

    On Aug. 13, a grand jury indicted Llano Police Officer Mark Burke and Llano County Deputy Duncan Roberts each on three counts of official oppression after trying to pick a lock at a home, then kicking the door in and arresting a man inside.

    https://www.kxan.com/news/investigations/llano-police-department-nearly-wiped-out-in-series-of-indictments/1390845957

    Mugshots of some of the criminals:
    (https://media.kxan.com/nxs-kxantv-media-us-east-1/photo/2018/08/23/llano-pd_36682914_ver1.0_640_360%20_OP_1_CP__1535042352205.jpg_52843889_ver1.0_640_360.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 28, 2018, 02:05:34 PM
    Finally, a cop is found guilty of murder.

    Ex-Balch Springs police officer Roy Oliver guilty of murdering teenager Jordan Edwards

    DALLAS
    A Dallas County jury has found ex-Balch Springs police officer Roy Oliver guilty of murder in the death of 15-year-old Jordan Edwards, an African-American youth who was unarmed when Oliver shot him in April 2017.

    [...]

    Officers aren’t usually charged or convicted of shooting civilians — even when they’re unarmed.

    In Texas, of the 880 officers involved in shootings between 2010 and 2015, an investigation by The Texas Tribune showed that only 25 were disciplined by their departments. Ten were fired for their actions and 14 were suspended. One was given a written reprimand.

    In 2016, a former Farmers Branch police officer involved in a deadly shooting was convicted of killing Jose Cruz and seriously injuring Edgar Rodriguez, both 16 at the time. Ken Johnson was off-duty when he fired at the teenagers 16 times.

    Until Oliver’s conviction, it had been more than 40 years since an on-duty officer had been convicted of killing someone in a shooting in Texas.

    https://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/crime/article217224030.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2018, 02:06:51 PM
    Out of control gangs. When are these animals going to be locked up? This is the same gang that executed Daniel Shaver. (read more: http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8440709#msg8440709)

    Notice how they all participate in the violent attack (even the limp bald guy) and how violent the black cop is. Where were all those "good apples" we keep hearing about to arrest these animals on the spot?

    Graphic Video Shows Cops Savagely Beat Unarmed Man, Keep Hitting Him After He’s Knocked Out

    Mesa, AZ — A shocking video has surfaced out of Mesa, Arizona this week showing a half-dozen cops jump an unarmed and non-violent man—punching him in the head until he falls unconscious to the floor. Despite several cops participating in the beating, not one word of it was mentioned in a report and the chief claims he had no idea it even happened.

    The video is of an incident from May 23, in which police were responding to a call at an apartment complex. The Mesa Police department says they received a call from a woman stating that 20-year-old Erick Reyes was trying to get into the apartment of his ex-girlfriend.

    When police arrived on the scene, Reyes and another man, 33-year-old Robert Johnson were leaving the complex. When police told Reyes to sit down on the ground, he reportedly complied with their order. Johnson was given the same order as he walked to the elevator.

    Instead of sitting on the ground, Johnson, likely knowing he had done nothing wrong, simply sat against the wall. Apparently, this was not enough to appease the officers who then swarmed the unarmed and seemingly innocent man.

    Cops are then seen on video brutally punching the non-violent man in the face and kneeing him in the stomach. Even after he’s knocked unconscious, the massive cop in front of him pummels his face as he falls to the ground.

    In a statement this week, Mesa police chief Ramon Batista claimed he had no idea that this video existed nor did he know his officers savagely beat a man for no reason. Once it was publicly released, four of the officers involved in the incident were placed on administrative leave.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/mesa-police-beat-unarmed-nonviolent-man/

    Remember this case? As expected, the police "investigated" and found the violent attack justified...

    Police: No charges against officers who punched Robert Johnson in hallway



    https://www.abc15.com/news/region-southeast-valley/mesa/police-no-charges-against-officers-who-punched-robert-johnson-in-hallway

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2018, 11:22:53 AM
    https://www.nbc4i.com/news/u-s-world/nc-sheriff-s-office-2-million-fentanyl-drug-bust-turns-out-to-be-13-pounds-of-sugar/1404391613


     ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 31, 2018, 11:41:30 AM
    https://www.nbc4i.com/news/u-s-world/nc-sheriff-s-office-2-million-fentanyl-drug-bust-turns-out-to-be-13-pounds-of-sugar/1404391613


     ;D

    Notice this:

    Quote
    A field test indicated it was the powerful opioid, justifying a host of charges against three suspects.

    WTF sort of "field test" is this?

    Reminds me of that case where the cops arrested and jailed someone for "meth" that was actually glazed doughnut crumbs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2018, 04:28:03 PM
    Why is the criminal gang spoliating evidence and recordings and releasing only edited portions that suit their narrative? They killed an innocent woman and the only thing they care about is to cover up their own incompetence?

    Family of Woman Killed by Police Gunfire in Trader Joe’s Shootout Disputes LAPD’s ‘Highly-Edited’ Videos of the Incident

    Hours after police released more videos of the deadly Silver Lake Trader Joe's shootout in July, attorneys for the family of the 27-year-old woman killed by LAPD gunfire in the incident have called the footage "highly-edited" and slammed the department for withholding other video and delaying the release of her autopsy report.

    When the Corado family tried getting ahold of surveillance video from the Trader Joe's store, they were informed "LAPD has taken custody of the original video card," according to Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    Her father directly addressed the Los Angeles Police Department, calling on the agency to release all the evidence "so we can move on with our lives."

    That includes all raw video of the incident, from the store's surveillance video to unedited body cam footage, as well as Melyda Corado's complete autopsy report, according to the family's attorneys.

    But the family's lawyers said it's been impossible to get ahold of those materials, with LAPD placing a security hold on Corado's autopsy report and ordering toxicology tests for her that will further delay the report's release, said Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    https://ktla.com/2018/09/04/family-of-woman-killed-by-police-gunfire-in-trader-joes-shootout-dispute-lapds-highly-edited-videos-of-the-incident/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 05, 2018, 04:48:30 PM
    Why is the criminal gang spoliating evidence and recordings and releasing only edited portions that suit their narrative? They killed an innocent woman and the only thing they care about is to cover up their own incompetence?

    Family of Woman Killed by Police Gunfire in Trader Joe’s Shootout Disputes LAPD’s ‘Highly-Edited’ Videos of the Incident

    Hours after police released more videos of the deadly Silver Lake Trader Joe's shootout in July, attorneys for the family of the 27-year-old woman killed by LAPD gunfire in the incident have called the footage "highly-edited" and slammed the department for withholding other video and delaying the release of her autopsy report.

    When the Corado family tried getting ahold of surveillance video from the Trader Joe's store, they were informed "LAPD has taken custody of the original video card," according to Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    Her father directly addressed the Los Angeles Police Department, calling on the agency to release all the evidence "so we can move on with our lives."

    That includes all raw video of the incident, from the store's surveillance video to unedited body cam footage, as well as Melyda Corado's complete autopsy report, according to the family's attorneys.

    But the family's lawyers said it's been impossible to get ahold of those materials, with LAPD placing a security hold on Corado's autopsy report and ordering toxicology tests for her that will further delay the report's release, said Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    https://ktla.com/2018/09/04/family-of-woman-killed-by-police-gunfire-in-trader-joes-shootout-dispute-lapds-highly-edited-videos-of-the-incident/

    Edited video / Hold on the autopsy - Being Obstructive - With holding evidence
    What else would you expect from a criminal gang.

    When cops do all the above it’s ok though... ::)
    No doubt they have a perfectly good reason - Only they do no one else ever has a good reason.

    Same old double standards & protecting their own.
    No gang like behaviour from the ever.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2018, 04:59:26 PM
    Edited video / Hold on the autopsy - Being Obstructive - With holding evidence
    What else would you expect from a criminal gang.

    When cops do all the above it’s ok though... ::)
    No doubt they have a perfectly good reason - Only they do no one else ever has a good reason.

    Same old double standards & protecting their own.
    No gang like behaviour from the ever.

    It appears to be a common and deliberate tactic, and that is on top of investigating themselves of course. They did the same thing with material related to Paddock's mass shooting incident in Las Vegas, trying to buy time and delay the release of material until a judge ordered them to cut the BS and release them immediately.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2018, 02:21:16 PM
    Let's see if the killer will go to prison. Not holding my breath though. It is possible that they could overcharge him to trick the family and the public to a faint hope of justice, only for him to be found not guilty because of overcharging or a jury that is reluctant to sentence a cop.

    Officer who fatally shot Justine Damond charged with murder, turns himself in

    The Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot an Australian woman in July was charged with murder Tuesday after he turned himself in when a warrant was issued for his arrest.

    Officer Mohamed Noor turned himself in on Tuesday in connection to the 2017 death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. his attorney confirmed.

    The criminal complaint remained sealed by midday Tuesday, but according to the jail roster Noor was booked on a third-degree murder charge for perpetrating an eminently dangerous act while showing a "depraved mind." The second-degree manslaughter charge alleges he acted with "culpable negligence creating unreasonable risk."

    Damond was shot July 15, minutes after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her home. The 40-year-old life coach’s death drew international attention, cost the police chief her job and forced major revisions to the department’s policy on body cameras.

    Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was scheduled to discuss charges Tuesday afternoon.

    Noor, a 32-year-old Somali-American, has not talked publicly about the case and declined to be interviewed by state investigators.

    In a statement Tuesday, Damond's family praised the charges, calling them "one step toward justice."

    "No charges can bring our Justine back. However, justice demands accountability for those responsible for recklessly killing the fellow citizens they are sworn to protect, and today's actions reflect that," the statement said.

    A policeman who was with Noor at the time of the shooting, Matthew Harrity, told investigators that he was startled by a loud noise right before Damond approached the driver's side window of their police SUV. Harrity, who was driving, said Noor then fired his weapon from the passenger seat. Damond died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

    The officers did not turn on their body cameras until after the shooting, and there was no squad camera video of the incident.

    The lack of video was widely criticized, and Damond's family members were among the many people who called for changes in procedure, including how often officers are required to turn on their cameras.

    The shooting also prompted questions about the training of Noor, a two-year veteran and Somali-American whose arrival on the force had been celebrated by city leaders and Minnesota's large Somali community. Noor, 32, had trained in business and economics and worked in property management before becoming an officer.

    Then-Chief Janee Harteau defended Noor's training and said he was suited to be on the street, even as she criticized the shooting itself. But Harteau — who was on vacation when the shooting happened and didn't make her first public appearance until several days after the shooting — was forced out soon after by Mayor Betsy Hodges, who said she had lost confidence in the chief.

    Harteau's replacement, Medaria Arradondo, quickly announced a policy change requiring officers to turn on their body cameras in responding to any call or traffic stop.

    If convicted of third-degree murder, Noor could face a maximum of 25 years in prison, though the presumptive sentence is 12 ½ years. A judge could issue a sentence ranging from about 10 ½ to 15 years.

    The second-degree manslaughter charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, but the presumptive sentence is four years.

    Jail records show he’s being held on $500,000 bail.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/20/officer-who-fatally-shot-justine-damond-turns-himself-in-charges-pending.html

    Remember Justine Damond, the innocent woman who was killed by a cop?

    Once again, the perennial defenders of corruption and crime, police unions, are supporting a killer. And despite the cover up attempts and the poor excuses, the killer displayed warning signs and red flags but it appears they were ignored since he was hired and ultimately, killed an innocent woman.

    Filing: Mohamed Noor raised red flags among psychiatrists, training officers

    Former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor concerned psychiatrists and training officers about his fitness for duty long before he fatally shot Justine Ruszczyk Damond, new court records show.

    Revelations about Noor's past were introduced by Hennepin County prosecutors on Wednesday in response to a motion by defense attorneys to dismiss the third-degree murder and manslaughter charges filed against him in Damond's death.

    Noor was flagged by two psychiatrists during the pre-hiring evaluation in early 2015 after he exhibited an inability to handle the stress of regular police work and unwillingness to deal with people, according to the records.

    http://www.startribune.com/judge-rejects-motion-to-seal-medical-records-in-trial-for-officer-who-killed-justine-ruszczyk-damond/492518991/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2018, 11:04:38 AM
    A man was shot and killed by an armed and violent thug but since she happened to have a badge it’s just a “mistake”. No arrest, no charges not even the name of the killer is released.

    Dallas cop fatally shoots neighbor in his apartment after mistaking it for her own

    A Dallas police officer returning home from work shot and killed a neighbor on Thursday after she mistook his apartment for her own, police said.

    The Dallas Police Department said in a news release on Friday the officer had arrived at her apartment complex in uniform after working a shift. She called dispatch to report the shooting and told responding officers she believed the victim’s apartment was her own when she entered it.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/07/dallas-cop-fatally-shoots-neighbor-in-his-apartment-after-mistaking-it-for-her-own-police-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 07, 2018, 02:21:32 PM
    A man was shot and killed by an armed and violent thug but since she happened to have a badge it’s just a “mistake”. No arrest, no charges not even the name of the killer is released.

    Dallas cop fatally shoots neighbor in his apartment after mistaking it for her own

    A Dallas police officer returning home from work shot and killed a neighbor on Thursday after she mistook his apartment for her own, police said.

    The Dallas Police Department said in a news release on Friday the officer had arrived at her apartment complex in uniform after working a shift. She called dispatch to report the shooting and told responding officers she believed the victim’s apartment was her own when she entered it.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/07/dallas-cop-fatally-shoots-neighbor-in-his-apartment-after-mistaking-it-for-her-own-police-say.html


    FFS
    Shoot & Killed a completely innocent man!!!

    No fucking charges  ::) Jeez I struggle to believe this crap is real.
    The stupid bitch shouldn’t have a badge - let alone be anywhere near a Gun.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2018, 02:45:06 PM

    FFS
    Shoot & Killed a completely innocent man!!!

    No fucking charges  ::) Jeez I struggle to believe this crap is real.
    The stupid bitch shouldn’t have a badge - let alone be anywhere near a Gun.

    Notice this from the article:

    Quote
    "I won't go into that information right now," Sgt. Warren Mitchell, a spokesman for the police department, said. "I mean, we have not interviewed her, and like I said this is just a preliminary statement. We still have a lot to do in this investigation. ... This is all we can give you at this time."

    They haven't even interviewed her. Is this so she can have time to make up her story? You would think that police would want to interview suspects and witnesses as soon as possible. But when it comes to cops committing crimes they are often given time to interact with others and corroborate their story. Let's see how this turns out.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 07, 2018, 02:55:57 PM
    Notice this from the article:

    They haven't even interviewed her. Is this so she can have time to make up her story? You would think that police would want to interview suspects and witnesses as soon as possible. But when it comes to cops committing crimes they are often given time to interact with others and corroborate their story. Let's see how this turns out.

    Fucking nonsense they’ve not interviewed her - WTF are they to busy !!
    An innocent man lost his life in his own home doing Fuck all wrong.
    They are a Bunch of Cu.nts the lot of them.

    If it was her shot dead - it would be a whole different fucking story.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 07, 2018, 03:14:53 PM
    Notice this from the article:

    They haven't even interviewed her. Is this so she can have time to make up her story? You would think that police would want to interview suspects and witnesses as soon as possible. But when it comes to cops committing crimes they are often given time to interact with others and corroborate their story. Let's see how this turns out.

    Here is the reasoning for it

    Unlike citizens, cops don't have the option of not cooperating or not giving a statement. Over time, history has shown that statements taken immediately after a traumatic experience aren't always as accurate as statements taken when a person has had time to calm down and reflect. Yes, you could say they can also make up a story but that's not an overwhelming reason to get what will likely be an incomplete statement right away. And a citizen correcting their earlier statement isn't viewed in the same light as an officer correcting an earlier statement. The latter is automatically viewed by many in the public of being a part of a cover up or lie. So they are given 72 hrs to collect their thoughts, review their reports and give a complete statement.
    I can tell you that there were times when I was involved in an incident I thought X happened. For example, after a shooting incident and chase (not an officer involved shooting) after catching the shooter, adrenaline was high it was a chaotic scene. I remembered putting the suspect in my partners back seat. Would have sworn to it. When I watched the video, I was surprised to see that shortly before we walked him to the street, another unit had pulled up and that is the car we put him in. Small thing, but certainly could have been made to look like I was lying.
    So yeah, officers get 72 hrs, but, they are also compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions.
     
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 07, 2018, 03:33:42 PM
    Here is the reasoning for it

    Unlike citizens, cops don't have the option of not cooperating or not giving a statement. Over time, history has shown that statements taken immediately after a traumatic experience aren't always as accurate as statements taken when a person has had time to calm down and reflect. Yes, you could say they can also make up a story but that's not an overwhelming reason to get what will likely be an incomplete statement right away. And a citizen correcting their earlier statement isn't viewed in the same light as an officer correcting an earlier statement. The latter is automatically viewed by many in the public of being a part of a cover up or lie. So they are given 72 hrs to collect their thoughts, review their reports and give a complete statement.
    I can tell you that there were times when I was involved in an incident I thought X happened. For example, after a shooting incident and chase (not an officer involved shooting) after catching the shooter, adrenaline was high it was a chaotic scene. I remembered putting the suspect in my partners back seat. Would have sworn to it. When I watched the video, I was surprised to see that shortly before we walked him to the street, another unit had pulled up and that is the car we put him in. Small thing, but certainly could have been made to look like I was lying.
    So yeah, officers get 72 hrs, but, they are also compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions.
     


    She walks into the wrong apartment shoots dead the rightful owner / occupier
    WTF
    If we all did similar to what this bitch did when we think we’re somewhere we’re not
    They’d be a lot more dead innocent people.

    I know I’d of killed a few more.

    Just charge her & prosecute her - end of.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 07, 2018, 06:15:05 PM
    A man was shot and killed by an armed and violent thug but since she happened to have a badge it’s just a “mistake”. No arrest, no charges not even the name of the killer is released.

    Dallas cop fatally shoots neighbor in his apartment after mistaking it for her own

    A Dallas police officer returning home from work shot and killed a neighbor on Thursday after she mistook his apartment for her own, police said.

    The Dallas Police Department said in a news release on Friday the officer had arrived at her apartment complex in uniform after working a shift. She called dispatch to report the shooting and told responding officers she believed the victim’s apartment was her own when she entered it.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/07/dallas-cop-fatally-shoots-neighbor-in-his-apartment-after-mistaking-it-for-her-own-police-say.html
    Fucked up. Sitting around in your chonies, watching South Park, eating pork rinds and chugging a beer when some slut comes walking in and caps your ass on your own couch.

    She needs to fry for that.



    Here is the reasoning for it

    Unlike citizens, cops don't have the option of not cooperating or not giving a statement. Over time, history has shown that statements taken immediately after a traumatic experience aren't always as accurate as statements taken when a person has had time to calm down and reflect. Yes, you could say they can also make up a story but that's not an overwhelming reason to get what will likely be an incomplete statement right away. And a citizen correcting their earlier statement isn't viewed in the same light as an officer correcting an earlier statement. The latter is automatically viewed by many in the public of being a part of a cover up or lie. So they are given 72 hrs to collect their thoughts, review their reports and give a complete statement.
    I can tell you that there were times when I was involved in an incident I thought X happened. For example, after a shooting incident and chase (not an officer involved shooting) after catching the shooter, adrenaline was high it was a chaotic scene. I remembered putting the suspect in my partners back seat. Would have sworn to it. When I watched the video, I was surprised to see that shortly before we walked him to the street, another unit had pulled up and that is the car we put him in. Small thing, but certainly could have been made to look like I was lying.
    So yeah, officers get 72 hrs, but, they are also compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions.
     
    Of course you would defend the killer.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 08, 2018, 11:13:59 AM

    Bitches w badges.  Insanity.

    A man was shot and killed by an armed and violent thug but since she happened to have a badge it’s just a “mistake”. No arrest, no charges not even the name of the killer is released.

    Dallas cop fatally shoots neighbor in his apartment after mistaking it for her own

    A Dallas police officer returning home from work shot and killed a neighbor on Thursday after she mistook his apartment for her own, police said.

    The Dallas Police Department said in a news release on Friday the officer had arrived at her apartment complex in uniform after working a shift. She called dispatch to report the shooting and told responding officers she believed the victim’s apartment was her own when she entered it.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/07/dallas-cop-fatally-shoots-neighbor-in-his-apartment-after-mistaking-it-for-her-own-police-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 08, 2018, 08:05:01 PM
    Fucked up. Sitting around in your chonies, watching South Park, eating pork rinds and chugging a beer when some slut comes walking in and caps your ass on your own couch.

    She needs to fry for that.


    Of course you would defend the killer.

    How the hell do you get that I'm defending anyone by giving background on a process... jesus h christ
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 08, 2018, 11:42:05 PM
    How the hell do you get that I'm defending anyone by giving background on a process... jesus h christ

    So if the Exact situation was the other way round & He had shot the Bitch dead mistakenly
    He would be given 72hrs before having to make a statement So he could calm his
    Mind and get the facts in the correct order.
    As History has shown taking a statement after a traumatic event aren’t always as accurate.

    Would’ve he been given the same treatment??  Simple Yes or No answer Please.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 09, 2018, 01:04:21 AM
    It's September and after a nice, long vacation, school's back in session. Let's learn together!

    Here is the reasoning for it

    Unlike citizens, cops don't have the option of not cooperating or not giving a statement.

    First, let's get a couple of things straight: The Fifth Amendment extends to everyone under its jurisdiction; that is, it extends to citizens and non-citizens alike. You likely meant to say "civilian" (a dreadful reminder of how militarized your profession has become), but even that would be wrong: the Fifth Amendment does not make exceptions for cops. The Fifth Amendment begins with "No person shall" and it doesn't include an exception for Cops.

    So your statement is, to be blunt, false: nobody can be compelled to testify against themselves. The Constitution is the supreme law of the land and it firmly establishes our right to not answer any questions. This means that a cop could opt to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to not write the report and not answer questions. He'd lose his job, probably—and that's how it should be—but he could not be "compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions" anymore than any other person can be.
     

    Over time, history has shown that statements taken immediately after a traumatic experience aren't always as accurate as statements taken when a person has had time to calm down and reflect.

    That seems reasonable. Tell me, if I accidentally walked into the wrong apartment and shot my neighbor, would I be allowed to go home for the night to "calm down and reflect" before I would have to come down to have a nice friendly talk with my coworkers?

    If accurate statements are what's important and we know that people are unable to give accurate statements in the immediate aftermath of an incident—which does seem at least reasonable—should we not afford every the same courtesy of a cooldown and reflection period to everyone? Because, surely this inability to provide accurate statement isn't something that only cops, right?


    Yes, you could say they can also make up a story but that's not an overwhelming reason to get what will likely be an incomplete statement right away.

    I could also say that time appears to be of the essence in every other investigation, except when cops are involved. I could also say that it's better to have as much information collected as soon after the incident as practicable, and allow for follow-up interviews, as necessary.


    And a citizen correcting their earlier statement isn't viewed in the same light as an officer correcting an earlier statement.

    It isn't viewed in the same light as who? Any such statements would almost certainly not be released publicly, at least until the case goes to Court.

    So, you're suggesting that cops would be more understanding of a civilian who corrects his statements and less understanding of a cop? You realize that's just laughable right?

    And, beyond that, if the cops make inferences because someone corrects an earlier statement, having taken time to "calm down and reflect", then what does that say about your brothers in blue? You just told us that history teaches us that taking time is good because it helps people make more accurate statements. Are cops unaware of the teachings of history?


    The latter is automatically viewed by many in the public of being a part of a cover up or lie. So they are given 72 hrs to collect their thoughts, review their reports and give a complete statement.

    And do you blame the public? Not a day goes by when cops are caught in blatant lies; check out for one particularly egregious example (https://www.aclu.org/blog/free-speech/photographers-rights/police-accidentally-record-themselves-conspiring-fabricate).

    Oh, and while we're here, how is the former viewed cops and ADAs? "Oh, good, the suspect remembered more details which help us clear him. Imagine if he hadn't; we could have put an innocent man in jail!" ::)


    I can tell you that there were times when I was involved in an incident I thought X happened. For example, after a shooting incident and chase (not an officer involved shooting) after catching the shooter, adrenaline was high it was a chaotic scene. I remembered putting the suspect in my partners back seat. Would have sworn to it. When I watched the video, I was surprised to see that shortly before we walked him to the street, another unit had pulled up and that is the car we put him in. Small thing, but certainly could have been made to look like I was lying.

    It's one thing to be mistaken about which unit you put the perp in; after all, all cop cars look alike. It's also something that's largely inconsequential (thought I'm sure an attorney would relish the opportunity to grill you over it in front of the jury to gain some points).

     
    So yeah, officers get 72 hrs, but, they are also compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions.

    Yes, cops have to write reports about incidents they are involved in in their official capacity as cops. Airline pilots have to write reports if they declare an emergency, or they dip into their reserve fuel. University instructors have to write reports when a student complains about a grade. Doctors have to write reports after they finish giving your prostate a thorough tickling.

    But they can't be compelled to testify against themselves. The Constitution is the supreme law of the land and it firmly establishes our right to not answer any questions. This means that a cop could opt to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to not write the report and not answer questions. He'd lose his job, probably—and that's how it should be—but he could not be "compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions" anymore than any other person can be.

    See the first part of my answer if you need a refresher as to why that is.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 10:16:28 AM
    So if the Exact situation was the other way round & He had shot the Bitch dead mistakenly
    He would be given 72hrs before having to make a statement So he could calm his
    Mind and get the facts in the correct order.
    As History has shown taking a statement after a traumatic event aren’t always as accurate.

    Would’ve he been given the same treatment??  Simple Yes or No answer Please.

    It's not a yes or no answer sorry. The answer is the citizen would have the option of NEVER giving a statement, ever. That is the difference. And Avxo, while cops are both citizens and cops, cops have the civil service they operate under as well as state and federal law. So while you  are correct a cop ultimately has the choice of not saying anything, they will be terminated for not complying with civil service and department policy directives.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 09, 2018, 10:35:12 AM
    It's not a yes or no answer sorry. The answer is the citizen would have the option of NEVER giving a statement, ever. That is the difference. And Avxo, while cops are both citizens and cops, cops have the civil service they operate under as well as state and federal law. So while you  are correct a cop ultimately has the choice of not saying anything, they will be terminated for not complying with civil service and department policy directives.

    Right, so they are not compelled.

    Affording cops and only cops 72 hours to calm down and collect their thoughts before a statement is wrong, especially if you, as you  claim, getting accurate statements in the immediate aftermath of an event is not possible.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 09, 2018, 12:34:20 PM
    Right, so they are not compelled.

    Affording cops and only cops 72 hours to calm down and collect their thoughts before a statement is wrong, especially if you, as you  claim, getting accurate statements in the immediate aftermath of an event is not possible.
    The police collect statements at the scene all the time, they don't wait 72 hours for anything.
    Ever see the tv series, The First 48? :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 09, 2018, 04:04:23 PM
    It's not a yes or no answer sorry. The answer is the citizen would have the option of NEVER giving a statement, ever. That is the difference. And Avxo, while cops are both citizens and cops, cops have the civil service they operate under as well as state and federal law. So while you  are correct a cop ultimately has the choice of not saying anything, they will be terminated for not complying with civil service and department policy directives.

    Yes it was a Yes / No answer.
    That’s what I asked.
    That murdering bitch needs terminating ASAP.

    Take the job title away
    Take the uniform away
    Take the badge away

    You have human beings & Your trying to justify how it’s fair for one set of humans to get 72hrs
    To compose themselves & The other Humans Not allowed It.
    That’s Totally & utterly Wrong & Double Standards.

    I thought Better of you than that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 08:17:36 PM
    Right, so they are not compelled.

    Affording cops and only cops 72 hours to calm down and collect their thoughts before a statement is wrong, especially if you, as you  claim, getting accurate statements in the immediate aftermath of an event is not possible.

    we can agree to disagree.Most cops, I would say 99% are interested in keeping their jobs and will give a statement within the time frame. Compared to citizens who do not have to give a statement at any time.. this is fair
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 08:19:26 PM
    Yes it was a Yes / No answer.
    That’s what I asked.
    That murdering bitch needs terminating ASAP.

    Take the job title away
    Take the uniform away
    Take the badge away

    You have human beings & Your trying to justify how it’s fair for one set of humans to get 72hrs
    To compose themselves & The other Humans Not allowed It.
    That’s Totally & utterly Wrong & Double Standards.

    I thought Better of you than that.

    I do appreciate that. But if I am torn between telling the facts as they are, and keeping your respect, I have to side with facts. As I said earlier, I am not defending her I was explaining the history behind the 72 hr rule. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 09, 2018, 09:10:34 PM
    we can agree to disagree.Most cops, I would say 99% are interested in keeping their jobs and will give a statement within the time frame. Compared to citizens who do not have to give a statement at any time.. this is fair

    No. It’s demonstrably not fair to have a caste-like system, where cops—who we are reminded all the time, are highly trained—are afforded 72 hours of quiet reflection in the aftermath of an incident to collect their thoughts to be followed by, in most cases, a friendly chat with your coworkers. It’s not fair because  a non-cop would, in similar circumstances, end up getting arrested on the spot and interrogated, a process that you well know is adversarial and during which cops not only can and do lie, but also leverage several psychological tricks to extract a confession.

    It’s demonstrably not fair when a cop can be pulled over while driving and found to be too drunk to even remember his name and will get a ride home, but a civilian will be arrested because a cop claims to have smelled alcohol and spotted bloodshot eyes. And that is just one example.

    It’s demonstrably not fair when a cop is caught falsifying a police report—an official document—and I don’t mean an inconsequential mistake, like your example about which unit a perp was placed in; I mean writing up a complete fabrication which, if proven to be a fabrication, will end up sweeped under the rug, whereas a civilian can and frequently does suffer serious consequences for “lying to the police” because of an honest mistake in a statement, often in response to a leading question.

    If a cop did nothing wrong, he should want to get his side out as soon as possible and writing his report should not require 72 hours of quiet reflection. And if he did something wrong, he can—and should—shut the fuck up and not talk to the police, but he should not expect to keep his job.

    You’ve told us many times that you were a good and honest cop. I have no reason to doubt that. But that doesn’t make you objective. You’re firmly on one side of the thin blue line and your views are tainted very deeply blue. Which is why you can’t see the injustice in a system where a badge affords the badgeholder more rights than the rest of us.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 09:11:11 PM
    https://www.cnn.com/2018/09/09/us/amber-guyger-arrest-botham-shem-jean/index.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 09:13:24 PM
    No. It’s demonstrably not fair to have a caste-like system, where cops—who we are reminded all the time, are highly trained—are afforded 72 hours of quiet reflection in the aftermath of an incident to collect their thoughts to be followed by, in most cases, a friendly chat with your coworkers. It’s not fair because  a non-cop would, in similar circumstances, end up getting arrested on the spot and interrogated, a process that you well know is adversarial and during which cops not only can and do lie, but also leverage several psychological tricks to extract a confession.

    It’s demonstrably not fair when a cop can be pulled over while driving and found to be too drunk to even remember his name and will get a ride home, but a civilian will be arrested because a cop claims to have smelled alcohol and spotted bloodshot eyes. And that is just one example.

    It’s demonstrably not fair when a cop is caught falsifying a police report—an official document—and I don’t mean an inconsequential mistake, like your example about which unit a perp was placed in; I mean writing up a complete fabrication which, if proven to be a fabrication, will end up sweeped under the rug, whereas a civilian can and frequently does suffer serious consequences for “lying to the police” because of an honest mistake in a statement, often in response to a leading question.

    If a cop did nothing wrong, he should want to get his side out as soon as possible and writing his report should not require 72 hours of quiet reflection. And if he did something wrong, he can—and should—shut the fuck up and not talk to the police, but he should not expect to keep his job.

    You’ve told us many times that you were a good and honest cop. I have no reason to doubt that. But that doesn’t make you objective. You’re firmly on one side of the thin blue line and your views are tainted very deeply blue. Which is why you can’t see the injustice in a system where a badge affords the badgeholder more rights than the rest of us.
    Can't help you. I this case, she was arrested. the system worked
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 09, 2018, 10:10:39 PM
    Can't help you. I this case, she was arrested. the system worked

    She was, and the outrage probably had a lot to do with it. I’ll ask you point blank: if I walked into the wrong apartment and shot someone, would I have gotten the same courtesy as she did because of her employment status?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 09, 2018, 11:12:50 PM
    She was, and the outrage probably had a lot to do with it. I’ll ask you point blank: if I walked into the wrong apartment and shot someone, would I have gotten the same courtesy as she did because of her employment status?

    again... you would have the right to not answer questions, the officer, if they wished to maintain their jobs, would not.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 10, 2018, 05:57:35 AM
    I do appreciate that. But if I am torn between telling the facts as they are, and keeping your respect, I have to side with facts. As I said earlier, I am not defending her I was explaining the history behind the 72 hr rule. 

    I wasn’t asking you to clarify the fact cops are given 72hrs.
    In all realism she cannot have any defence other than it Being Manslaughter.

    Yes it was a Yes / No answer.
    That’s what I asked.

    That murdering bitch needs terminating ASAP.

    Take the job title away
    Take the uniform away
    Take the badge away

    You have human beings & Your trying to justify how it’s fair for one set of humans to get 72hrs
    To compose themselves & The other Humans Not allowed It.
    That’s Totally & utterly Wrong & Double Standards.


    I’m asking YOU if you Believe in the double standards
    And a Privilege system for some People over Others

    It is A Simple Yes / No Answer.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 10, 2018, 06:19:33 AM
    It's September and after a nice, long vacation, school's back in session. Let's learn together!

    First, let's get a couple of things straight: The Fifth Amendment extends to everyone under its jurisdiction; that is, it extends to citizens and non-citizens alike. You likely meant to say "civilian" (a dreadful reminder of how militarized your profession has become), but even that would be wrong: the Fifth Amendment does not make exceptions for cops. The Fifth Amendment begins with "No person shall" and it doesn't include an exception for Cops.

    If accurate statements are what's important and we know that people are unable to give accurate statements in the immediate aftermath of an incident—which does seem at least reasonable—should we not afford every the same courtesy of a cooldown and reflection period to everyone? Because, surely this inability to provide an accurate statement isn't something that only affects cops, right?


    I could also say that time appears to be of the essence in every other investigation, except when cops are involved. I could also say that it's better to have as much information collected as soon after the incident as practicable, and allow for follow-up interviews, as necessary.


    And do you blame the public? Not a day goes by when cops are caught in blatant lies; check out for one particularly egregious example (https://www.aclu.org/blog/free-speech/photographers-rights/police-accidentally-record-themselves-conspiring-fabricate).

    It's one thing to be mistaken about which unit you put the perp in; after all, all cop cars look alike. It's also something that's largely inconsequential (thought I'm sure an attorney would relish the opportunity to grill you over it in front of the jury to gain some points).

     
    Yes, cops have to write reports about incidents they are involved in in their official capacity as cops. Airline pilots have to write reports if they declare an emergency, or they dip into their reserve fuel. University instructors have to write reports when a student complains about a grade. Doctors have to write reports after they finish giving your prostate a thorough tickling.

    But they can't be compelled to testify against themselves. The Constitution is the supreme law of the land and it firmly establishes our right to not answer any questions. This means that a cop could opt to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to not write the report and not answer questions. He'd lose his job, probably—and that's how it should be—but he could not be "compelled to cooperate and give statements and answer all the questions" anymore than any other person can be.


    Some Great points Avxo.
    Though I did trim some of them.

    Yet again cops caught ( by pure chance - thankfully) conspiring to falsely charge someone
    Clearly it’s not their 1st time - We’ll never know the full extent of how often this happens
    A Fair Guess is Very Frequently.

    AGNOSTIC
    please take the Rose tinted cop specs off & Pull your head out of the All things Cops Arse (yes a bit harsh)
    And See Things as a Citizen/ member of the public Ohh & also FTN about Keeping Her Job  ::)
    An innocent man mainding his own business in his own home shot dead & Your on about her
    Trying to Keep her Fucking Job.... You really are Totally off on This One.

    If it was your son / brother shot I’m sure you’d be caring about her right to protect her job.
    Really- ::) !!

    And No I’m Not Just Bashing Cops For The Sake Of.
    If They Are Wrong They Are Wrong Same as Anyone Else.
    Fuck Special Privilege’s — That’s just Ridiculous.
    How does that invoke Fairness & Trust in The General Public.
    It Doesn’t.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 10, 2018, 08:09:13 AM
    again... you would have the right to not answer questions, the officer, if they wished to maintain their jobs, would not.

    Notice how you’ve shifted.

    Originally, it was “well, in the aftermath it’s hard to give accurate statements, so the extra time helps make sure what they say is right.” No explanation for why only cops benefit from that period of quiet reflection.

    When challenged, you moved to the “well cops are compelled to answer but citizens aren’t” which is, of course not true. Cops can plead the Fifth at any time.

    And when that was pointed out you pivoted to “Oh, they can’t be compelled but if they want to keep their jobs they must answer.”

    I’m not sympathetic. We all have things our jobs require us to do, and if we fail to do them are in jeopardy of being terminated. If a cop did something that he can’t truthfully describe in a report that his job requires him to file because that would lead to his prosecution then, to be blunt, he should lose his job.

    Now, you’re like “oh well, she was arrested! The system works.” Yeah, maybe. The outrage and publlicity basically forced the hands of the Police in this instance. Shit, the few facts we know make this such an egregious case that if she weren’t arrested and charged, then we might as well codify that cops are above the law and call it a day.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 10, 2018, 02:16:52 PM
    Notice how you’ve shifted.

    Originally, it was “well, in the aftermath it’s hard to give accurate statements, so the extra time helps make sure what they say is right.” No explanation for why only cops benefit from that period of quiet reflection.

    When challenged, you moved to the “well cops are compelled to answer but citizens aren’t” which is, of course not true. Cops can plead the Fifth at any time.

    And when that was pointed out you pivoted to “Oh, they can’t be compelled but if they want to keep their jobs they must answer.”

    I’m not sympathetic. We all have things our jobs require us to do, and if we fail to do them are in jeopardy of being terminated. If a cop did something that he can’t truthfully describe in a report that his job requires him to file because that would lead to his prosecution then, to be blunt, he should lose his job.

    Now, you’re like “oh well, she was arrested! The system works.” Yeah, maybe. The outrage and publlicity basically forced the hands of the Police in this instance. Shit, the few facts we know make this such an egregious case that if she weren’t arrested and charged, then we might as well codify that cops are above the law and call it a day.

    You raised a good point. In the vast majority of these cases, cops don't resign right off and will go through the process. I haven't known any that haven't. I was focused on what happens in almost all of the cases. But you are right, if the cop figures they screwed the pooch with no chance of surviving it, they could refuse to cooperate. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 10, 2018, 02:17:34 PM
    I wasn’t asking you to clarify the fact cops are given 72hrs.
    In all realism she cannot have any defence other than it Being Manslaughter.

    I’m asking YOU if you Believe in the double standards
    And a Privilege system for some People over Others

    It is A Simple Yes / No Answer.

    no
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 10, 2018, 02:47:58 PM
    no

    Ahhh Thank you
    It wasn’t to difficult.

    Faith restored.
     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 10, 2018, 03:31:15 PM
    Great posts by avxo and illuminati. However, on the issue of the 5th Amendment, I think that police, courts and prosecutors have abused and limited its scope and power significantly by limiting its use only when someone is in custody (regardless of how clear or unclear this distinction is to a person or whether or not actual custody makes any difference) or requiring an explicit invocation of the 5th amendment or even using someone's silence as evidence of guilt: just look at the disgraceful Salinas decision. A SCOTUS Justice even wrote in his dissent for another 5th Amendment case: "If I ask my son whether he saw a movie I had forbidden him to watch, and he remains silent, the import of his silence is clear."  
    So for "ordinary plebs" it's pretty much "damned if you do, damned if you don't". At any rate though, the aforementioned "ordinary plebs" are not given the privileged treatment that cops get like for example the 72 hours that they remain anonymous and free so they can "collect themselves" and make up their story. It is only a matter of time before we hear the usual BS excuses from police when they try to justify murder or assault like the person inside his home was "intoxicated", "combative", "refused to comply with commands" or was "resisting" while providing cover for the cop's "mistake".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 11, 2018, 05:49:58 AM
    Dallas Officer Who Killed Man in His Own Home Says He Ignored Her Commands
    The New York Times ^ | 10 September 2018 | Sarah Mervosh and Matthew Haag
    Posted on 9/10/2018, 10:38:00 PM by Theoria

    A Dallas police officer who fatally shot her neighbor in his apartment, claiming she mistook the unit for her own, told the authorities that the door was already ajar when she entered and that she shot him after he ignored verbal commands, according to court records released on Monday.

    The officer, Amber R. Guyger, 30, who has been charged with manslaughter, could face additional charges in a case that has led to accusations that the officer received preferential treatment and debate about whether race may have played a role in the deadly encounter between a white police officer and a black man in his home.

    On Monday, the Dallas County district attorney, Faith Johnson, insisted that the investigation into the death of the neighbor, Botham Shem Jean, 26, had not ended and that her office could seek charges “including anything from murder to manslaughter.”

    “We’ll present a thorough case to the grand jury so that a right decision can be made,” Ms. Johnson said at a news conference.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 11, 2018, 08:04:55 AM
    Dallas Officer Who Killed Man in His Own Home Says He Ignored Her Commands

    Let the victim-blaming begin!

    Yeah, why wouldn’t the victim, probably startled to have someone entering his apartment, immediately comply with the “commands” that were almost certainly yelled at him? If only he’d been compliant, then he’d be alive!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 11, 2018, 09:04:41 AM
    Manslaughter should be easy to make. Ignoring commands vs shooting someone dead because you walked into his apartment by accident.. pretty obvious what the bigger concern is
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 11, 2018, 10:27:22 AM
    Text has a pretty firm castle doctrine and hold your ground. Do you believe the homeowner would be justified in shooting this cop, Agnostic? And do you believe that if he had, he’d have been arrested on the spot?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 11, 2018, 11:52:44 AM
    Text has a pretty firm castle doctrine and hold your ground. Do you believe the homeowner would be justified in shooting this cop, Agnostic? And do you believe that if he had, he’d have been arrested on the spot?
    Lmao!! Of course he would have been arrested and charged within 24 hours. Face plastered all over tv, labeled a cop killer and we would have to hear about how she was coming home after a long, hard day on the job and accidentally walked into an ambush.
    She smokes an innocent dude in his own house and has an entire department doing public damage control for her. ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 11, 2018, 01:01:38 PM
    Dallas Officer Who Killed Man in His Own Home Says He Ignored Her Commands
    The New York Times ^ | 10 September 2018 | Sarah Mervosh and Matthew Haag
    Posted on 9/10/2018, 10:38:00 PM by Theoria

    A Dallas police officer who fatally shot her neighbor in his apartment, claiming she mistook the unit for her own, told the authorities that the door was already ajar when she entered and that she shot him after he ignored verbal commands, according to court records released on Monday.

    The officer, Amber R. Guyger, 30, who has been charged with manslaughter, could face additional charges in a case that has led to accusations that the officer received preferential treatment and debate about whether race may have played a role in the deadly encounter between a white police officer and a black man in his home.

    On Monday, the Dallas County district attorney, Faith Johnson, insisted that the investigation into the death of the neighbor, Botham Shem Jean, 26, had not ended and that her office could seek charges “including anything from murder to manslaughter.”

    “We’ll present a thorough case to the grand jury so that a right decision can be made,” Ms. Johnson said at a news conference.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...

    And there we go...

    Lowly plebs, next time intruders break in to your house you better "obey their commands" or you will be killed. And if your killer happens to have a badge, he/she will get the benefit of doubt, remain anonymous and free for 72 hours because they are too important to be treated like everyone else and moreover they will have all the usual cop BS excuses and attempts to present her as some sort of misunderstood hero: "she was tired after a hard day of risking her life to push pencils protect people", "it was a mistake", "it was an accident" etc... I wonder if she will end up in prison and for how many years. At least this case has received some publicity which might help put the killer in prison but there are similar cases that don't receive publicity and are swept under the rug or ignored.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 11, 2018, 02:14:04 PM
    This case & the police actions has highlighted quite a few issues
    That could really do with being addressed & sorted out regarding
    How police act & are treated with Special Privileges.

    Now the Bitch Killer is claiming the innocent man in His Own Home
    Didn’t comply with her Commands !! Who The Fuck She Think She Is.
    And Really why would he bitch - It’s You that’s Totally & utterly in the wrong.

    Stop Trying to Blame The Innocent Dead Man.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on September 11, 2018, 04:17:44 PM
    She was, and the outrage probably had a lot to do with it. I’ll ask you point blank: if I walked into the wrong apartment and shot someone, would I have gotten the same courtesy as she did because of her employment status?

    One witness reported hearing a woman yelling, “Let me in! Let me in!” before the gunshots and a man’s voice saying, “Oh my God. Why did you do that?” after them.

    "If Jean had mistakenly gone to Guyger’s apartment and then gunned her down in cold blood after demanding that she follow his commands, would he face a manslaughter charge?"

    https://www.guy-botham-jean-shooting-police-must-face-impartial-justice/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 11, 2018, 05:59:06 PM
    “Get a warrant”—Florida appeals court admonishes cops in two murder cases

    A Florida state appellate court has made two recent pro-privacy rulings that take into account a landmark Supreme Court case from earlier this year.
    In Florida v. Sylvestre, the District Court of Appeal of the State of Florida, Fourth District, affirmed a lower court’s granting of a motion to suppress evidence. In doing so, the court found that the warrantless use of a stingray is unconstitutional.

    In the second case, Ferrari v. Florida, the Fourth District reversed a lower court ruling that denied the suppression of cell-site location information (CSLI). This data was specifically at issue in the June 2018 Supreme Court decision, Carpenter v. United States.

    Carpenter involved a suspect, Timothy Carpenter, who was accused of leading an armed robbery gang that hit Radio Shack and other cell phone stores in Michigan and Ohio in 2010 and 2011. The government was able to warrantlessly obtain 127 days worth of his CSLI from his mobile provider, which detailed precisely where Carpenter had been during that time.The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that when the government seeks to obtain such a large volume of intimate information, it needs to get a warrant first in most cases.

    Taken together, these two cases shed light on how some state appellate courts are starting to think about the ramifications of Carpenter.

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/09/get-a-warrant-florida-appeals-court-admonishes-cops-in-two-murder-cases/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 11, 2018, 10:09:51 PM
    Text has a pretty firm castle doctrine and hold your ground. Do you believe the homeowner would be justified in shooting this cop, Agnostic? And do you believe that if he had, he’d have been arrested on the spot?

    Man I don't know. I believe the homeowner would be justified in shooting the cop. I just don't know if the homeowner would be arrested on the spot. I'd like to think they wouldn't but man I just don't know for sure.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2018, 05:01:38 PM
    As it has been mentioned many times before, we are dealing with criminal gangs here.

    NYPD officers arrested in prostitution, gambling probe

    Seven New York City police officers were arrested Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging gambling and prostitution inquiry, multiple media outlets reported.

    According to the New York Post, the investigation centered on a retired vice detective who operated multiple brothels in Brooklyn and Queens with his prostitute wife.

    WABC-TV reported that the arrested officers — three sergeants, two detectives and two officers — are suspected of providing protection for the ring.


    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/12/nypd-officers-arrested-in-prostitution-gambling-probe.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 12, 2018, 05:02:20 PM
    https://abc7ny.com/7-nypd-officers-arrested-in-connection-with-prostitution-ring/4224928/?sf197539173=1


    Crazy



    As it has been mentioned many times before, we are dealing with criminal gangs here.

    NYPD officers arrested in prostitution, gambling probe

    Seven New York City police officers were arrested Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging gambling and prostitution inquiry, multiple media outlets reported.

    According to the New York Post, the investigation centered on a retired vice detective who operated multiple brothels in Brooklyn and Queens with his prostitute wife.

    WABC-TV reported that the arrested officers — three sergeants, two detectives and two officers — are suspected of providing protection for the ring.


    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/12/nypd-officers-arrested-in-prostitution-gambling-probe.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2018, 05:10:28 PM
    "Reasonable" and "justified" as always...

    ‘You Killed My Son!’ Cop Kills Unarmed Boy in Courtroom In Front of His Mom—No Charges

    Franklin County, OH — As TFTP reported at the beginning of the year, in juvenile court, a 16-year-old boy intervened after a police officer allegedly pushed his mother against the wall—so the police officer shot and killed him. Now, it’s just been announced that the officer who killed the unarmed boy was justified in doing so.

    A Franklin County Grand Jury ruled that Deputy Richard Scarborough, who shot and killed the unarmed boy, was justified and his use of deadly force “reasonable under the law.”

    The boy who was killed in January for allegedly intervening to help his mother fend off a cop was Joseph Haynes and he was unarmed.

    As ABC 6 reports, Karen Haynes says as they were leaving the courtroom, she blocked the deputy with her arm and he pinned her to the wall. She says her son was coming to her defense when he grabbed the deputy by the shoulders. That’s when Haynes says Scarborough grabbed Joseph, flipping him on to the ground, and was on top of him when the shot was fired.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-you-killed-my-son-cop-kills-unarmed-boy-in-courtroom-in-front-of-his-mom-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 12, 2018, 05:15:35 PM

    Horrible.

    "Reasonable" and "justified" as always...

    ‘You Killed My Son!’ Cop Kills Unarmed Boy in Courtroom In Front of His Mom—No Charges

    Franklin County, OH — As TFTP reported at the beginning of the year, in juvenile court, a 16-year-old boy intervened after a police officer allegedly pushed his mother against the wall—so the police officer shot and killed him. Now, it’s just been announced that the officer who killed the unarmed boy was justified in doing so.

    A Franklin County Grand Jury ruled that Deputy Richard Scarborough, who shot and killed the unarmed boy, was justified and his use of deadly force “reasonable under the law.”

    The boy who was killed in January for allegedly intervening to help his mother fend off a cop was Joseph Haynes and he was unarmed.

    As ABC 6 reports, Karen Haynes says as they were leaving the courtroom, she blocked the deputy with her arm and he pinned her to the wall. She says her son was coming to her defense when he grabbed the deputy by the shoulders. That’s when Haynes says Scarborough grabbed Joseph, flipping him on to the ground, and was on top of him when the shot was fired.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-you-killed-my-son-cop-kills-unarmed-boy-in-courtroom-in-front-of-his-mom-no-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2018, 05:19:29 PM
    And another one...

    Ex-cop sentenced to 43 years in prison for raping women while on duty

    A former Phillipsburg cop convicted of raping four women while on duty was sentenced to 43 years in prison. Sanderson was found guilty of 19 counts, including kidnapping and rape.

    https://www.whio.com/news/crime--law/cop-called-predator-sentenced-today-for-raping-women-while-duty

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 13, 2018, 05:49:46 PM
    And the victim blaming has begun: “We did a search and found marijuana!” The guy could have been running the biggest illegal dispensary in the world and he’d still be the victim here.

    http://www.fox4news.com/news/search-warrant-marijuana-found-in-botham-jeans-apartment-after-deadly-shooting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on September 13, 2018, 05:51:37 PM
    "Reasonable" and "justified" as always...

    ‘You Killed My Son!’ Cop Kills Unarmed Boy in Courtroom In Front of His Mom—No Charges

    Franklin County, OH — As TFTP reported at the beginning of the year, in juvenile court, a 16-year-old boy intervened after a police officer allegedly pushed his mother against the wall—so the police officer shot and killed him. Now, it’s just been announced that the officer who killed the unarmed boy was justified in doing so.

    A Franklin County Grand Jury ruled that Deputy Richard Scarborough, who shot and killed the unarmed boy, was justified and his use of deadly force “reasonable under the law.”

    The boy who was killed in January for allegedly intervening to help his mother fend off a cop was Joseph Haynes and he was unarmed.

    As ABC 6 reports, Karen Haynes says as they were leaving the courtroom, she blocked the deputy with her arm and he pinned her to the wall. She says her son was coming to her defense when he grabbed the deputy by the shoulders. That’s when Haynes says Scarborough grabbed Joseph, flipping him on to the ground, and was on top of him when the shot was fired.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-you-killed-my-son-cop-kills-unarmed-boy-in-courtroom-in-front-of-his-mom-no-charges/

    That’s just crazy! The cops are basically out of control at this point.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 14, 2018, 01:32:06 AM
    Man I don't know. I believe the homeowner would be justified in shooting the cop. I just don't know if the homeowner would be arrested on the spot. I'd like to think they wouldn't but man I just don't know for sure.

    That's honest of you
    The awful behaviour of members of this gang is becoming hard to ignore
    And defend - just look at the other posts on just this page and more of
    the same type of behaviour is seen - let alone all that gets covered up
    these bits are just the tip of the ice berg.

    we've said it many many times on here there is something very wrong
    with cops & policing in general.

    No Doubt there are some very Good & Decent Cops Its Time for the
    Good & decent ones to take a Stand & identify & speak out,
    Otherwise they are condoning the Behaviour of the bad ones.

    Just Like The Good Black folk not speak out against the huge number
    of Black on Black shootings & Dindu Behaviour - The majority remain
    silent.
    BLM swing into action when a white person kills a Black.. ::) ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 14, 2018, 01:00:58 PM
    And the victim blaming has begun: “We did a search and found marijuana!” The guy could have been running the biggest illegal dispensary in the world and he’d still be the victim here.

    http://www.fox4news.com/news/search-warrant-marijuana-found-in-botham-jeans-apartment-after-deadly-shooting

    Exactly. Of primary importance to the police is whether one of their own is involved in the crime. The "us" (the sentinels of order and arbiters of law) and "them" (lowly scum who plot against us and must be scoured) mentality is very much alive (unlike so many of their victims).

    Notice this:

    Quote
    There have been several warrants signed by judges and executed in this case aside from the arrest warrant for Guyger and the search warrant signed September 7 that were returned to the court on Thursday. The others are still sealed and not accessible.

    I wonder if the killer's home was also searched and the search was part of the still sealed warrants.

    Quote
    The inventory return yielded:
    2 fired cartridge casings
    1 laptop computer
    1 black backpack with police equipment and paperwork
    1 insulated lunch box
    1 black ballistic vest with "police" markings
    10.4 grams of marijuana in ziplock bags
    1 metal marijuana grinder
    2 RFID keys
    2 used packages of medical aid

    The document does not say where any of the items were located in the apartment or who the items belong to.

    So at this point the marijuana could have belonged to the cop or someone else or it might have even been planted by the cops. But as it often happens in these cases there is an attempt to divert the spotlight from the fact that a uniformed thug broke in to an apartment and then shot and killed the occupant and also that the killer was given 72 hours to make up her story while remaining anonymous and free (a privilege granted only to thugs with a badge).
    Whether the occupant of the apartment possessed marijuana is irrelevant in this case. As mentioned, the victimy could have been running the biggest illegal dispensary in the world and it would not matter in this context. A person has every right to be in his apartment or residence. An intruder does not. "Issuing verbal commands" (gotta use cop language to appear "authoritative") does not matter in this case. If anything it should be working against the killer. The police will usually decline to comment when it comes to the cops involved in crimes citing "pending investigations" but they don't seem to have an issue with revealing (or leaking) information when that can be used to discredit the victim or support the cops' story. If the killer ends up in prison it will probably be because of the publicity that this story has received. Several other anonymous people whose cases haven't received publicity have been killed, attacked and abused by cops and usually nothing happens to the attackers.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 14, 2018, 01:06:50 PM
    That's honest of you
    The awful behaviour of members of this gang is becoming hard to ignore
    And defend - just look at the other posts on just this page and more of
    the same type of behaviour is seen - let alone all that gets covered up
    these bits are just the tip of the ice berg.

    we've said it many many times on here there is something very wrong
    with cops & policing in general.

    No Doubt there are some very Good & Decent Cops Its Time for the
    Good & decent ones to take a Stand & identify & speak out,
    Otherwise they are condoning the Behaviour of the bad ones.

    Just Like The Good Black folk not speak out against the huge number
    of Black on Black shootings & Dindu Behaviour - The majority remain
    silent.
    BLM swing into action when a white person kills a Black.. ::) ::)

    BLM is just another political/racist farce who often choose to defend the worst and most questionable cases while ignoring or even ridicule and silence other victims of police violence and misconduct (just look at this topic for victims of all ages, colors, backgrounds). In doing so they are doing a disservice to the cause for police accountability and transparency and for laws applying equally to everyone without asterisks, exceptions or special immunities and protections.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 17, 2018, 05:48:12 PM
    Interestingly enough the cops searched the victim's apartment but it appears they didn't get a warrant to search inside the killer's apartment. So the killer "officer" was allowed to roam free for 72 hours after killing an innocent man in his own apartment, have ample time to make up or corroborate her story while enjoying the anonymity that her badge provides and now, according to this article, she had enough time to "vacate" her apartment. So even if the cops decided to conduct a search now (a week later), it is unlikely they would find something useful.

    Dallas officer Amber Guyger vacates apartment after Botham Jean shooting

    Apartment staff notified residents in an email Sunday morning that Guyger "has vacated her apartment and no longer resides at our community."

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-vacates-apartment-after-botham-jean-shooting/287-595196502


    Door locks seized from apartments of Botham Jean, Amber Guyger, warrants say

    WFAA obtained copies of the five warrants which were signed Tuesday. An inventory of what was seized was returned to the court on Friday.
    Two of the warrants allowed investigators to remove the front door of Guyger and Jean’s apartment, their door locks and to download data for their door locks.
    A third search warrant gave investigators the authority to enter Jean’s apartment and collect additional evidence.
    A return for the fourth search warrant shows investigators seized video from the surveillance camera system in the apartment management’s office.
    A fifth search warrant gave investigators the authority to obtain all communications related to the incident in the possession of property management, as well as all surveillance video and all entry and access logs from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. on the night of the shooting.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-warrants-say/287-594511839
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 17, 2018, 06:01:47 PM
    Exactly. Of primary importance to the police is whether one of their own is involved in the crime. The "us" (the sentinels of order and arbiters of law) and "them" (lowly scum who plot against us and must be scoured) mentality is very much alive (unlike so many of their victims).

    Notice this:

    I wonder if the killer's home was also searched and the search was part of the still sealed warrants.

    So at this point the marijuana could have belonged to the cop or someone else or it might have even been planted by the cops. But as it often happens in these cases there is an attempt to divert the spotlight from the fact that a uniformed thug broke in to an apartment and then shot and killed the occupant and also that the killer was given 72 hours to make up her story while remaining anonymous and free (a privilege granted only to thugs with a badge).
    Whether the occupant of the apartment possessed marijuana is irrelevant in this case. As mentioned, the victimy could have been running the biggest illegal dispensary in the world and it would not matter in this context. A person has every right to be in his apartment or residence. An intruder does not. "Issuing verbal commands" (gotta use cop language to appear "authoritative") does not matter in this case. If anything it should be working against the killer. The police will usually decline to comment when it comes to the cops involved in crimes citing "pending investigations" but they don't seem to have an issue with revealing (or leaking) information when that can be used to discredit the victim or support the cops' story. If the killer ends up in prison it will probably be because of the publicity that this story has received. Several other anonymous people whose cases haven't received publicity have been killed, attacked and abused by cops and usually nothing happens to the attackers.

    IF you read the article you will find the POLICE did not say anything about the victim. They did not release the information. They returned it (the executed warrant) to the judge who then filed it.. and it became open records which the news media was waiting to pounce on. I doubt that matters to you, but its a more accurate picture than "The bad police are blaming the victim"
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 17, 2018, 06:15:58 PM
    Interestingly enough the cops searched the victim's apartment but it appears they didn't get a warrant to search inside the killer's apartment. So the killer "officer" was allowed to roam free for 72 hours after killing an innocent man in his own apartment, have ample time to make up or corroborate her story while enjoying the anonymity that her badge provides and now, according to this article, she had enough time to "vacate" her apartment. So even if the cops decided to conduct a search now (a week later), it is unlikely they would find something useful.


    Hahaaaa thin blue line!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 17, 2018, 06:30:22 PM
    Hahaaaa thin blue line!


    Chaos. Do you know for a fact she didn't give consent to have her apartment searched? Do you? Did you know, there are at least 3 ways available to the cops to search her apartment? A warrant, consent and exigent circumstances. The latter wouldn't apply but the 1st 2 certainly do.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 17, 2018, 06:53:40 PM
    Citizens have little they can do when they want action against cops. They are always told to "file a complaint". In this case, a man tried to do just that and the cop tracked him down, broke into his home, beat him and arrested him. This is one of the rare times that a uniformed violent criminal is imprisoned and still for all this abuse he only got 4 years in prison. It should have been 40 years.

    Press release from a "police hating" website:

    Former Kentucky Police Officer Sentenced for Wrongful Arrest
    Officer Illegally Arrested Citizen After The Citizen Attempted To File Complaints Against Him


    William Dukes, Jr., a former sergeant with the Providence, Kentucky, Police Department, was sentenced today to 42 months in federal prison and three years’ supervised release for willfully depriving a Kentucky citizen of his constitutional rights under color of law, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman for the Western District of Kentucky.

    The jury found that Dukes willfully violated the Constitution by arresting the victim, while knowing that he did not have probable cause to believe that the victim had committed any crime. The evidence presented at trial established that after the victim called the authorities seeking to file a complaint about an earlier interaction with Dukes, he wrongfully arrested the victim.

    The jury heard evidence presented in court that when the victim called the Providence Police Department to complain about Dukes, Dukes responded by threatening to arrest him if he called back again.  Still determined to file a complaint, the victim then called the local sheriff’s office and the Kentucky State Police. When Dukes became aware of these additional calls, he drove to the victim’s home in the middle of the night, without a warrant, to arrest him.

    Upon arriving at the victim’s home after 1 a.m., Dukes attempted to arrest the victim based solely on the phone calls he had made complaining about Dukes.  When the victim insisted he had done nothing wrong and retreated into his home, Dukes entered the victim’s home without a warrant.  Dukes then tased the victim, sprayed him in the face with pepper spray, struck him repeatedly with a police baton, and punched him in the face, breaking the victim’s nose. Next, Dukes handcuffed the victim and charged him with four crimes, including a charge of property damage because blood from the victim’s broken nose got onto Dukes’s police uniform.


    The jury convicted Dukes of willfully violating the victim’s constitutional rights, and found that the offense involved the use of a dangerous weapon or resulted in bodily injury.

    “Police officers have a duty to protect the rights of members of their communities and safeguard them from harm or injury,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore. “Dukes abused his authority as a law enforcement officer by illegally arresting his victim and also by inflicting unwarranted physical harm, and the Justice Department held him responsible.”

    “Kentucky lawmen and women are among the finest in the nation,” said U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman “But when they cross a clear line, as did Mr. Dukes, they will be held accountable like any other citizen of our Commonwealth.”

    This case was investigated by the Louisville Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Seth Hancock of the Western District of Kentucky and Trial Attorney Zachary Dembo of the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-kentucky-police-officer-sentenced-wrongful-arrest

    (http://wevv-com-44a.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/William-Dukes.jpg)

    Notice how the other accomplices treat the scumbag like some sort of brave hero returning from the war zone:


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 17, 2018, 07:01:05 PM
    Citizens have little they can do when they want action against cops. They are always told to "file a complaint". In this case, a man tried to do just that and the cop tracked him down, broke into his home, beat him and arrested him. This is one of the rare times that a uniformed violent criminal is imprisoned and still for all this abuse he only got 4 years in prison. It should have been 40 years.

    Press release from a "police hating" website:

    Former Kentucky Police Officer Sentenced for Wrongful Arrest
    Officer Illegally Arrested Citizen After The Citizen Attempted To File Complaints Against Him


    William Dukes, Jr., a former sergeant with the Providence, Kentucky, Police Department, was sentenced today to 42 months in federal prison and three years’ supervised release for willfully depriving a Kentucky citizen of his constitutional rights under color of law, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman for the Western District of Kentucky.

    The jury found that Dukes willfully violated the Constitution by arresting the victim, while knowing that he did not have probable cause to believe that the victim had committed any crime. The evidence presented at trial established that after the victim called the authorities seeking to file a complaint about an earlier interaction with Dukes, he wrongfully arrested the victim.

    The jury heard evidence presented in court that when the victim called the Providence Police Department to complain about Dukes, Dukes responded by threatening to arrest him if he called back again.  Still determined to file a complaint, the victim then called the local sheriff’s office and the Kentucky State Police. When Dukes became aware of these additional calls, he drove to the victim’s home in the middle of the night, without a warrant, to arrest him.

    Upon arriving at the victim’s home after 1 a.m., Dukes attempted to arrest the victim based solely on the phone calls he had made complaining about Dukes.  When the victim insisted he had done nothing wrong and retreated into his home, Dukes entered the victim’s home without a warrant.  Dukes then tased the victim, sprayed him in the face with pepper spray, struck him repeatedly with a police baton, and punched him in the face, breaking the victim’s nose. Next, Dukes handcuffed the victim and charged him with four crimes, including a charge of property damage because blood from the victim’s broken nose got onto Dukes’s police uniform.


    The jury convicted Dukes of willfully violating the victim’s constitutional rights, and found that the offense involved the use of a dangerous weapon or resulted in bodily injury.

    “Police officers have a duty to protect the rights of members of their communities and safeguard them from harm or injury,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore. “Dukes abused his authority as a law enforcement officer by illegally arresting his victim and also by inflicting unwarranted physical harm, and the Justice Department held him responsible.”

    “Kentucky lawmen and women are among the finest in the nation,” said U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman “But when they cross a clear line, as did Mr. Dukes, they will be held accountable like any other citizen of our Commonwealth.”

    This case was investigated by the Louisville Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Seth Hancock of the Western District of Kentucky and Trial Attorney Zachary Dembo of the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-kentucky-police-officer-sentenced-wrongful-arrest

    (http://wevv-com-44a.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/William-Dukes.jpg)

    Notice how the other accomplices treat the scumbag like some sort of brave hero returning from the war zone:




    We can agree on this. Whatever the maximum was, that is the sentence he should have gotten. When a police officer is convicted of violating someones rights or simply breaking the law, as an example, they should always be given the maximum sentence allowed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 17, 2018, 08:59:42 PM

    Chaos. Do you know for a fact she didn't give consent to have her apartment searched? Do you? Did you know, there are at least 3 ways available to the cops to search her apartment? A warrant, consent and exigent circumstances. The latter wouldn't apply but the 1st 2 certainly do.
    Is that what you got out of my post? LOL 3 ways available and her partners didn't bother to use a single one?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2018, 12:23:59 AM
    Is that what you got out of my post? LOL 3 ways available and her partners didn't bother to use a single one?

    DO YOU KNOW FOR  A FACT HER APT WASN'T Searched. YES OR NO
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2018, 12:25:05 AM
    I just cant hold your hand anymore than that.. you are on your own from this point on. God bless
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 18, 2018, 05:37:17 PM
    DO YOU KNOW FOR  A FACT HER APT WASN'T Searched. YES OR NO
    Nobody knows, the big blue wall doesn't talk.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2018, 06:10:05 PM
    This cop killed a woman in front of her family back in 2015 and claimed that a dog "attacked" him. The woman was shot in the chest and arms and another bullet only grazed the dog.
    Only 12 seconds of video were released. Now why would that happen? Of course he was found justified in the killing, a badge grants certain privileges after all and also no public outrage (not that it specifically matters in this case but the killer was black and his victim was white), no looting of course and no fancy twitter "hashtags".  
    However, there were more than 12 seconds of video recorded but, strangely enough, the full video (7 minutes) remained confidential for 3 years. Now again, why would that happen?
    Both the Iowa Department of Public Safety and the Burlington Police Department were charged with violating the state's open records law but, hey, when the cops and the government are violating the laws, who cares, they're not just above the law, they are the law. Watch and hear the cop saying that he's going to prison after killing the poor woman and other things that would have caused ordinary people a lot of trouble, if not secure their conviction.

    Police officer moments after fatally shooting Iowa mom: I'm 'going to prison'

    A Burlington police officer who accidentally killed a mother standing in her yard with her toddler told another officer he was going to prison just minutes after the January 2015 shooting, records released Wednesday by order of a federal judge show.

    “I pulled my gun and shot it and I hit her,” a frantic Officer Jesse Hill told Officer Tim Merryman, according to Hill's body camera video. “Oh, my God, no! Oh, fuck, Tim! Shit, Tim! I’m fucking going to prison, Tim!”



    https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/investigations/2018/09/12/autumn-steele-burlington-police-officer-jesse-hill-shooting-video-released/1278329002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2018, 02:36:41 PM
    Since the city had no trouble utilizing the ridiculous civil asset forfeiture against people, maybe all the assets of the city, the police department the district attorney and their employees should have been seized "forfeited" and given to the people they robbed.

    City Forced to Abolish Civil Asset Forfeiture and Pay Back Victims the Millions It Stole from Them

    Philadelphia, PA – The city that has gained a reputation for the egregious civil asset forfeiture practices committed by its police department, will now be forced to dismantle the program altogether, as a result of a lawsuit filed by a family who had their home seized by police after their son was accused of a minor drug crime.

    Residents who have been harmed by the Philadelphia Police department’s civil asset forfeiture practices could also receive part of $3 million in compensation. Markela and Chris Sourovelis initially filed a lawsuit in 2014 after their son was caught trying to sell $40 in heroin on the street.

    The parents complied with the judge and took their son to a court-ordered rehabilitation treatment. But when they returned home, they found that police had locked them out of their house.

    The Sourovelis family’s home was seized by police even though there was no evidence that the parents had any knowledge of their son’s attempt to sell drugs, and there was no evidence that the parents or any other family members had engaged in any kind of drug-related activity deemed “illegal” by the state.

    Sourovelis worked with the Institute of Justice to file a new lawsuit a class action lawsuit, which alleged that the city was seizing 300 to 500 homes each year, violating residents’ constitutional rights and illegally creating a profit incentive because the revenue generated by the program was going straight to local police and district attorneys.

    To say that the city has a problem is an understatement. While the city of Allegheny, Pennsylvania, filed 200 petitions for civil asset forfeiture from 2008 to 2011, Philadelphia filed 6,560 petitions—in 2011 alone. A report from the Philadelphia Inquirer also found that the city brought in more than $64 million in seized property from 2004 to 2014, which is almost twice the amount raised by cities like Brooklyn, New York, and Los Angeles, California.

    A 2015 report from the American Civil Liberties Union noted that “an estimated 32 percent of cash forfeitures are not supported by a conviction,” which means that more than $1 million is forfeited every year from innocent residents in Philadelphia:

    “Worrying evidence suggests that the profits and sweeping powers offered by civil forfeiture have distorted a tool originally targeted at cartels and drug kingpins. An article in the Philadelphia City Paper in 2012 indicated that Philadelphia prosecutors regularly forfeit sums as small as $100 and that people trying to get their property back sometimes had to attend upwards of ten court dates just to reach a hearing before a judge. Other media accounts chronicled the human toll of civil forfeiture. In one, a Philadelphia grandmother faced losing her home because a grandson sold a small amount of drugs out of it. In another, a Lancaster mother had $300 seized from her purse when her son was arrested on narcotics charges.”

    The city of Philadelphia has now agreed to a settlement, which includes the following promises, according to a report from Reason:

    The city will no longer seek property forfeitures for simple drug possession
    The city will stop seizing petty amounts of cash without accompanying arrests or evidence in a criminal case
    The city will put judges in charge of forfeiture hearings and will streamline the hearing process
    The city will ban the Philadelphia district attorney and Philadelphia Police Department from using forfeiture revenue to fund their payroll.
    The city will disburse the $3 million settlement fund to qualifying members of the class action based on the circumstances of their case.
    While the results of the lawsuit are encouraging, it remains to be seen how the Philadelphia Police department will respond, and if it will lash out at residents for the large decrease in revenue that was being stolen from innocent citizens.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/city-demolish-nations-most-egregious-civil-asset-forfeiture-program-pay-millions-residents/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2018, 05:27:33 PM
    Was she attacked? Was she violently arrested? Was she jailed? The answer seems to be no. These things tend to happen to ordinary plebs only.

    Florida prosecutor accused of shoplifting beauty products

    A Florida prosecutor who oversees cases against sexual predators is facing a shoplifting charge after surveillance video caught her swiping $43 worth of cosmetics from a grocery store, police said.

    Stacey Honowitz, 56, was suspended from her $108,000-a-year- job as a Broward County assistant state attorney pending an investigation and was charged with misdemeanor theft, the Sun Sentinel reported.

    Security footage released by the Aventura Police Department shows Honowitz shopping with her parents and daughter on Saturday at a Publix grocery store in the small city 20 miles north of Miami.

    She is seen browsing the cosmetics aisle placing the beauty products into her purse. She later paid a cashier $125 for groceries and then got in line again to purchase a lottery ticket.

    A manager confronted Honowitz and she handed over the allegedly stolen goods, the Miami Herald reported.

    Honowitz was not jailed. Instead she was given a notice to appear in a Miami-Dade County court.

    She was suspended from work and will take vacation time until the case is sorted out, a Broward State Attorney’s Office spokeswoman told the Herald.

    “We have been made aware of the incident by the prosecutor. She has been suspended pending an administrative review. She will be utilizing her vacation time until we complete the investigation,” said spokeswoman Constance Simmons.

    Honowitz’s attorney, Jayne Weintraub, called the incident an “honest mistake” and that her client simply forgot to pay for the items. 

    Five years ago, she appeared at a Miami courtroom when her brother was arrested on theft and forgery charges. During the hearing, she mentioned her job several times, the Herald reported.

    The judge freed her brother from jail.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/19/florida-prosecutor-accused-shoplifting-beauty-products.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Kwon3 on September 19, 2018, 05:29:46 PM
    ^^^^^^^^^^^

    Proof the country's DAs and prosecutors are creeps and thieves in their personal lives, even as they sanctimoniously lecture juries and judges on how the people in the defendant box should be locked up for crimes which they do in their own lives once peoples' backs are turned.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2018, 02:53:22 PM
    This armed and violent criminal tried to kill the man (and threatened to shoot him for a second time while the man was suffering on the ground from his wounds) but it is unlikely that this will be treated as attempted murder since the criminal had a uniform and claimed that he "feared for his life". The incident happened over 10 months ago but only a portion of the footage was released now. Let's see if the armed and violent attacker will end up in prison and for how long.

    Innocent Unarmed Man Begs For His Life, As Cop Shoots Him Over Stealing His OWN CAR

    Dallas, TX – Disturbing body camera footage has been released from the shooting of a man who police claimed was mistaken for a thief as he sat in the vehicle he owned. The video shows that when the man was approached by an officer, he attempted to comply before he was shot twice in the back.

    Lyndo Jones is lucky to be alive after his encounter with police in November 2017 left him with severe injuries that forced him to spend several days in the intensive care unit. It has taken several months, but some footage from the night Jones was shot has finally been released, and it shows that the officer who confronted him was agitated from the start.

    Officer Derick Wiley, a 10-year veteran of the Mesquite Police Department, started by approaching the vehicle with his gun raised, pointed at Jones, who was sitting the driver’s seat.

    “Put your hands up! Or I will fucking shoot you,” Wiley yelled as soon as Jones started to slowly open the door.

    “Get out of the truck and get on the ground! Get on the ground,” Wiley continued, and Jones appeared to comply, although it was clear that the man was confused as to why he was being confronted and screamed at by a police officer.

    Jones attempted to speak, and Wiley immediately yelled, “I don’t give a fuck… get on the ground. Put your hands on your head!”

    Jones complied, and Wiley then walked over to him and started saying “Turn over. Turn over on your stomach. Fucking turn over.”

    The body camera turns so that Jones is out of view, and Wiley can be heard yelling, “Stay on the ground before I shoot you!”

    Jones could then be heard responding, “Yes sir, yes sir. I’m on the ground, man.”

    Wiley continued to yell at Jones, even though the footage shows that he was clearly complying with the officer’s orders. He appeared to escalate the situation by pushing his left foot into the man’s back, even though Jones was laying on the ground with his hands behind his back, and he did not look like he was trying to flee.

    As soon as Wiley began using force, Jones turned his head and asked, “What are you doing, man? What are you doing?” and the officer responded by placing his hands on Jones’ throat.

    As soon as Wiley tried to choke him, Jones then began scooting backward and got to his feet. Instead of lunging at the officer or making any moves towards him, Jones backed away and began pleading with Wiley and begging him not to shoot.

    Wiley wasted no time and responded by firing two shots at Jones, hitting him in the back.

    The most disturbing part of the video occurs after Wiley has just fired his weapon when Jones collapses to the ground and is seen writhing in pain. Even though it is clear that Wiley is on the ground, and his mobility is limited because he was just shot—therefore he poses even less of a threat to the officer—Wiley continues to yell.

    “451 shots fired,” Wiley yelled into his radio, and then because his colleagues were listening, he continued to yell at Jones as if Jones was a threat to him, “Stay on the ground! Shots fired! I will shoot you again!”

    The video ends as Wiley screams one final command, for Jones to put his hands behind his back, and the injured man is seen attempting to do so, even though he must have been in an incredible amount of pain, and no one was attempting to call in any aid for him.

    As The Free Thought Project reported, police then continued to violate Jones’ civil rights, and while he was in the ICU recovering from the gunshot wounds, his attorneys claimed he was treated like a criminal, chained to the bed and forcibly interviewed by police when his legal counsel was not present.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-innocent-unarmed-man-begs-for-his-life-as-cop-shoots-him-over-stealing-his-own-car/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 20, 2018, 03:15:58 PM
    This armed and violent criminal tried to kill the man (and threatened to shoot him for a second time while the man was suffering on the ground from his wounds) but it is unlikely that this will be treated as attempted murder since the criminal had a uniform and claimed that he "feared for his life". The incident happened over 10 months ago but only a portion of the footage was released now. Let's see if the armed and violent attacker will end up in prison and for how long.

    Innocent Unarmed Man Begs For His Life, As Cop Shoots Him Over Stealing His OWN CAR

    Dallas, TX – Disturbing body camera footage has been released from the shooting of a man who police claimed was mistaken for a thief as he sat in the vehicle he owned. The video shows that when the man was approached by an officer, he attempted to comply before he was shot twice in the back.

    Lyndo Jones is lucky to be alive after his encounter with police in November 2017 left him with severe injuries that forced him to spend several days in the intensive care unit. It has taken several months, but some footage from the night Jones was shot has finally been released, and it shows that the officer who confronted him was agitated from the start.

    Officer Derick Wiley, a 10-year veteran of the Mesquite Police Department, started by approaching the vehicle with his gun raised, pointed at Jones, who was sitting the driver’s seat.

    “Put your hands up! Or I will fucking shoot you,” Wiley yelled as soon as Jones started to slowly open the door.

    “Get out of the truck and get on the ground! Get on the ground,” Wiley continued, and Jones appeared to comply, although it was clear that the man was confused as to why he was being confronted and screamed at by a police officer.

    Jones attempted to speak, and Wiley immediately yelled, “I don’t give a fuck… get on the ground. Put your hands on your head!”

    Jones complied, and Wiley then walked over to him and started saying “Turn over. Turn over on your stomach. Fucking turn over.”

    The body camera turns so that Jones is out of view, and Wiley can be heard yelling, “Stay on the ground before I shoot you!”

    Jones could then be heard responding, “Yes sir, yes sir. I’m on the ground, man.”

    Wiley continued to yell at Jones, even though the footage shows that he was clearly complying with the officer’s orders. He appeared to escalate the situation by pushing his left foot into the man’s back, even though Jones was laying on the ground with his hands behind his back, and he did not look like he was trying to flee.

    As soon as Wiley began using force, Jones turned his head and asked, “What are you doing, man? What are you doing?” and the officer responded by placing his hands on Jones’ throat.

    As soon as Wiley tried to choke him, Jones then began scooting backward and got to his feet. Instead of lunging at the officer or making any moves towards him, Jones backed away and began pleading with Wiley and begging him not to shoot.

    Wiley wasted no time and responded by firing two shots at Jones, hitting him in the back.

    The most disturbing part of the video occurs after Wiley has just fired his weapon when Jones collapses to the ground and is seen writhing in pain. Even though it is clear that Wiley is on the ground, and his mobility is limited because he was just shot—therefore he poses even less of a threat to the officer—Wiley continues to yell.

    “451 shots fired,” Wiley yelled into his radio, and then because his colleagues were listening, he continued to yell at Jones as if Jones was a threat to him, “Stay on the ground! Shots fired! I will shoot you again!”

    The video ends as Wiley screams one final command, for Jones to put his hands behind his back, and the injured man is seen attempting to do so, even though he must have been in an incredible amount of pain, and no one was attempting to call in any aid for him.

    As The Free Thought Project reported, police then continued to violate Jones’ civil rights, and while he was in the ICU recovering from the gunshot wounds, his attorneys claimed he was treated like a criminal, chained to the bed and forcibly interviewed by police when his legal counsel was not present.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-innocent-unarmed-man-begs-for-his-life-as-cop-shoots-him-over-stealing-his-own-car/


    WTF Is it with these Low Life Scumbag Cops
    Yet another innocent person shot for doing nowt wrong

    That cop needs shouting at I Don’t Give A Fuck How Much This Hurts
    And his Gun emptying up his arse.

    Please agnostic don’t come & try any kind of defence for him.
    Just another scumbag in uniform & with a badge just like that
    Bitch cop shooting that man in his own apartment.

    I’d Happily shot them Scumbags & not lose a seconds sleep.
    And policing would be much better off without them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2018, 01:58:00 PM
    Good job by the home owner defending his family, property and rights. Surprisingly enough, he wasn't killed and also will not face any charges. Unfortunately the armed and dangerous invaders got away only with light injuries but even that should teach them a lesson.

    Pr. George’s police thought they were bursting into home of a drug dealer. They were at an innocent man’s door instead.

    A police search warrant team going after a drug dealer targeted the wrong address and burst into the apartment of an innocent resident who shot and wounded two officers believing they were home invaders, Prince George’s law enforcement officials said.

    Police Chief Hank Stawinski apologized for the error Thursday and said he has halted executing search warrants until the department reviews how it corroborates information to confirm addresses and the location of investigative targets.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/public-safety/two-police-officers-shot-in-prince-georges-county-officials-said/2018/09/19/4ff9d2e0-bc84-11e8-b7d2-0773aa1e33da_story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 21, 2018, 02:17:54 PM
    The incident happened in 2015... As expected, no video was released then. Only after the taxpayers were forced to foot the bill for the actions of this scumbag was the video released. And of course not only did the scumbag not go to prison but to add insult to injury he was named "Officer of the Year". This is how criminal gangs reward and promote their goons.

    Trooper Snaps, Smashes Man’s Face In, Lies About It—Gets Named ‘Officer of the Year’

    Souix Falls, SD — Surveillance footage has just been released after the taxpayers of South Dakota were held liable for the actions of a brutal police officer. The video shows the officer lied and that Trooper Cody Jansen nearly killed Troy Rokusek by smashing his face into the concrete floor for no reason at all. Following the incident, Jansen was named “Trooper of the Year.”

    The incident happened in April of 2015, however, the video was only released this week after taxpayers shelled out $100,000 to pay for Trooper Jansen’s brutality.

    What began over a routine DUI stop quickly morphed into the horrific treatment of a defenseless man who did nothing to deserve it. According to police, Rokusek was stopped for suspicion of DUI and the entire stop was peaceful. Rokusek agreed to submit to a blood test without a warrant, so he was driven back to the station.

    When Rokusek got back to the station, Jansen told him that he would have to submit to the blood test in the garage, or sally port area. Rokusek then asked if it would be possible to have the procedure done in a hospital or cleaner area as the garage was unsanitary.

    This apparently enraged the trooper who then ordered Rokusek to his feet so he could handcuff him and then forcefully draw his blood in the garage. As the video shows, Rokusek complied, stood up, and put his hands behind his back.

    Then, without any justification, Jansen slammed Rokusek into the wall face first, placed him in a “double chicken wing” hold and pile drove him face first into the ground. Rokusek, whose hands were behind his back, was unable to brace himself or stop his face from smashing into the concrete floor.

    Immediately, blood begins pouring from his mouth as the officer continues his assault.

    Jansen was 6’4″ and 220 pounds at the time, while Rokusek was 5’6″ and only 135 pounds. The force could’ve killed him. Luckily for Rokusek, however, he only fractured his face and lost multiple teeth.

    After the incident, Jansen lied, claiming that Rokusek resisted arrest. However, this was entirely proven wrong by the video and the court agreed. What’s more, as the woman in the garage witnessed it, she looked up at the camera in disbelief, as if to make sure this was captured on video. She even seemed a bit scared that she may be next.

    The judge who heard Rokusek’s case ruled that the video did not corroborate the trooper’s story and did not show the victim resisting.

    “It is not clear from the Sally Port Video whether Rokusek pushed back against Jansen, but the Sally Port Video shows that Rokusek’s head remained against the wall until Jansen threw him to the ground,” Piersol wrote. “Jansen slammed Rokusek to the ground while he was in the double chicken wing position, unable to protect his head and face. On the Sally Port Video, blood can be seen pooling near Rokusek’s mouth on the floor.”


    Following the incident, Rokusek had to be taken to the hospital to be treated for his injuries. Whether or not Rokusek was charged with DUI remains unclear.

    For losing his temper and nearly killing a man half his size, Jansen got a piece of paper entered into his record for an improper takedown.

    “Cody,” the reprimand said, “you are much larger than Mr. Rokusek who was extremely intoxicated. Considering your training, size, and the level of resistance from Rokusek, your actions to control him were not reasonable and significantly increased the potential for injury.”

    After this slap on the wrist the officer who should’ve been immediately fired and charged with assault was instead rewarded with the department’s highest honor.

    Last year, as the Argus Leader reports, Jansen was named “trooper of the year” by the Highway Patrol for “continued demonstration of exceptional service to the agency, citizens and communities.”

    “The Highway Patrol is proud of Trooper Jansen, not only for his commitment to the Highway Patrol, but also to his family and community,” Col. Craig Price, superintendent of the Highway Patrol, said in a release announcing the award. “Trooper Jansen reflects the high standards of the Highway Patrol in his daily life and for that, is well deserving of this award.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/defenseless-man-state-trooper-year/

    https://www.argusleader.com/story/news/2018/09/17/south-dakota-highway-patrol-cody-jansen-state-settles-brutality-case-graphic-video/1305093002/

    Video: https://www.argusleader.com/videos/news/crime/2018/09/17/watch-dwi-suspect-slammed-ground-highway-patrol-trooper/1335376002/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2018, 03:24:32 PM
    This took them a while. Notice the reason as well. "Engaged in adverse conduct when she was arrested for Manslaughter."
    What's more interesting is that initially the police chief said she couldn't fire the killer (https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-over-botham-jean-right-away-dpd-general-orders-say-otherwise/287-596185930): “I can’t do that because there are both local, state and federal laws that prohibit me from taking action. There are civil service laws we have to adhere to"
    There were arguments that she could have fired the killer before that:

    Quote
    The Dallas Police Department general orders do allow the chief to take action, saying, "The Chief of Police may circumvent all formal disciplinary procedures to render an immediate decision when it deems it necessary to preserve the integrity of the department.”
    The general orders are the policies that officers have to follow and are governed by within the department.

    Apparently the "local, state and federal laws" that "prohibited" the police chief from taking action against the killer a few weeks ago, didn't seem to prohibit her today.

    Dallas police officer accused in neighbor's death fired

    DALLAS –  A white Dallas police officer who fatally shot her black neighbor inside his own apartment was fired Monday, the same day the man was being buried in his Caribbean homeland.

    Police Chief U. Renee Hall dismissed Officer Amber Guyger during a hearing Monday, according to a statement posted on Twitter . Guyger is charged with manslaughter in the Sept. 6 shooting that left 26-year-old Botham Jean dead, and she was fired because of her arrest, according to Dallas police.

    Court records show Guyger said she thought she had encountered a burglar inside her own home. She turned herself in three days later , and is currently out on bond.

    A statement from police said an internal investigation concluded that on Sept. 9, Guyger "engaged in adverse conduct when she was arrested for Manslaughter." Dallas police spokesman Sgt. Warren Mitchell later said that when an officer has been arrested for a crime, "adverse conduct" is often cited in the officer's termination.

    Mitchell said that adverse conduct is "conduct which adversely affects the (morale) or efficiency of the Department or which has a tendency to adversely affect, lower, destroy public respect and confidence in the Department or officer."

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/24/dallas-police-officer-accused-in-neighbors-death-fired.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 25, 2018, 07:53:02 AM
    This took them a while. Notice the reason as well. "Engaged in adverse conduct when she was arrested for Manslaughter."
    What's more interesting is that initially the police chief said she couldn't fire the killer (https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-over-botham-jean-right-away-dpd-general-orders-say-otherwise/287-596185930): “I can’t do that because there are both local, state and federal laws that prohibit me from taking action. There are civil service laws we have to adhere to"
    There were arguments that she could have fired the killer before that:

    Apparently the "local, state and federal laws" that "prohibited" the police chief from taking action against the killer a few weeks ago, didn't seem to prohibit her today.

    Dallas police officer accused in neighbor's death fired

    DALLAS –  A white Dallas police officer who fatally shot her black neighbor inside his own apartment was fired Monday, the same day the man was being buried in his Caribbean homeland.

    Police Chief U. Renee Hall dismissed Officer Amber Guyger during a hearing Monday, according to a statement posted on Twitter . Guyger is charged with manslaughter in the Sept. 6 shooting that left 26-year-old Botham Jean dead, and she was fired because of her arrest, according to Dallas police.

    Court records show Guyger said she thought she had encountered a burglar inside her own home. She turned herself in three days later , and is currently out on bond.

    A statement from police said an internal investigation concluded that on Sept. 9, Guyger "engaged in adverse conduct when she was arrested for Manslaughter." Dallas police spokesman Sgt. Warren Mitchell later said that when an officer has been arrested for a crime, "adverse conduct" is often cited in the officer's termination.

    Mitchell said that adverse conduct is "conduct which adversely affects the (morale) or efficiency of the Department or which has a tendency to adversely affect, lower, destroy public respect and confidence in the Department or officer."

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/24/dallas-police-officer-accused-in-neighbors-death-fired.html

    Well that's one step
    They've got rid of her - likely they not going to cover up or protect her either.
    Good.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2018, 06:04:48 PM
    Just 12 months in prison and $1000 fine? Make that 12+ years and $1,000,000+ fine and maybe criminals like him would think twice about assaulting and trying to cover it up.

    Ex-VA police officer sentenced for punching patient during arrest

    A former Indianapolis-based police officer is headed to prison for shoving and repeatedly punching a person he was arresting at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center, federal authorities announced Tuesday.

    Michael Kaim, 28, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Indianapolis to 12 months behind bars and ordered to pay a $1,000 fine for deprivation of civil rights, according to a news release from the U.S. Department of Justice.

    Kaim was also accused of falsifying records in an effort to impede a federal investigation, according to the indictment.

    In the falsified report, Kaim wrote that the man resisted efforts to be escorted from a building and that he began acting aggressively, according to court documents.

    The indictment said the man actually followed orders.

    https://www.indystar.com/story/news/crime/2018/09/18/ex-indy-va-police-officer-sentenced-prison-civil-rights-case/1352495002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2018, 02:57:43 PM
    30 months instead of 30 years... What a travesty. Also notice how the other cops just stood by watching, they were complicit in the abuse.

    Video of Cop Torturing Man With K9 so Disturbing, He Was Just Sentenced to 30 Months in Prison

    New Iberia, LA — Shocking surveillance footage, which was subpoenaed by federal investigators, shows a savage and violent attack on Louisiana man by a sheriff’s deputy and his K9 partner. The footage was so deeply disturbing that 6 years after it happened, the deputy responsible has finally been brought to justice.

    Former sheriff’s deputy David Prejean pleaded guilty in February to the assault and is only just now being sentenced. Prejean was a K9 sergeant with the Iberia Parish Sheriff’s Office and had been called to the jail to assist with a shakedown, according to prosecutors. Prejean will now spend the next 30 months behind bars for the attack.

    The attack happened on Dec 6, 2012. Marcus Robicheaux along with all of the other inmates was being subject to a contraband sweep. Like all of the other inmates, Robicheaux had his hands on his head and his nose on the wall.

    As the video begins, we see Deputy Prejean, grab Robicheaux by the back of his shirt and drag him to the middle of the room where he’s thrown to the ground.

    The entire time Robicheaux is seen keeping his hands up and not resisting. The prosecution agreed.

    “While M.R. was lying on his stomach, with his hands behind his head, the defendant commanded his K9 to bite M.R., despite the fact that M.R. had complied with the defendant’s commands and was not a threat to the defendant, his K9, or anyone else on the rec yard,” prosecutors said in court documents.

    In his report, Prejean claimed that Robicheaux was resisting and fighting back. He also said that the assault happened because Robicheaux refused his commands to “stop looking” at him. According to the Advocate,

    Prejean’s report on the incident said that in addition to ignoring commands, Robicheaux “rocked up” and tried to strike the police dog “with his right hand.” The video does not show Robicheaux “rocking up” or trying to hit the dog.

    The entire department and all the officials bought Prejean’s lies and he remained on the force. Not until officials actually viewed the footage, was Prejean fired. This took more than two years.

    No investigation was ever conducted in regards to this attack. In March of 2015, according to the Advocate, former deputy, Cody Laperouse, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor federal civil rights charge for using excessive force against a handcuffed man in the same incident.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/k9-deputy-video-sentenced-30-month-prison/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 26, 2018, 03:09:05 PM
    This is how you deal with criminal gangs.

    Entire Mexican police force arrested after mayoral candidate’s murder

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B470300000578-0-image-a-30_1529923069967.jpg)

    (http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/06/25/11/4D9B46EC00000578-0-image-a-32_1529923135316.jpg)

    A Mexican town’s entire police force has been arrested in connection with the slaying of a mayoral candidate.

    The 28 officers from the town of Ocampo in the western state of Michoacan were arrested Sunday on suspicion of involvement in the murder of Fernando Angeles Juarez.

    Juarez, 64, was running as the candidate for the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution in Ocampo, before being shot dead June 21.

    State officials took the cops in for having alleged ties with criminal groups possibly involved in the candidate’s killing, El Universal reported.

    Public Security Director Venancio Colin was chased out by 16 Ocampo cops in a hail of bullets when he first tried to arrest them Saturday, sources told the paper.

    He came back Sunday with reinforcements and arrested the entire force, who were cuffed and taken to the state capital for questioning.


    https://nypost.com/2018/06/25/entire-mexican-police-force-arrested-after-mayoral-candidates-murder/



    Once again, this is how you deal with criminal gangs.

    Mexican police force disbanded, investigated for strong links to drug cartels

    The police force of the once-glittering Mexican resort town of Acapulco has been disarmed as authorities investigate claims that local cops have strong ties to warring drug cartels in the region.

    Officials in the southern state of Guerrero claim the drug cartels Beltran Leyva and Independent of Acapulco have infiltrated the local police force. Two top Acapulco police commanders were arrested and accused of homicide, El Universal reported.

    The chief of Acapulco’s highway police was also detained after he was allegedly found carrying unlicensed weapons.

    The state government said it took these steps “because of suspicion that the force had been infiltrated by criminal groups” and “the complete inaction of the municipal police in fighting the crime wave.”

    On Tuesday, military and federal law enforcement forces took over control of security of the seaside city of 800,000 residents, El Universal reported.

    More than 700 cops were stripped of their guns, radios and bullet-proof vests. They were then taken for background checks.

    Local police in several parts of Mexico have been disbanded because they were corrupted by drug cartels. In Guerrero alone, local police have been disarmed in more than a dozen towns and cities since 2014, though none as large as Acapulco.

    In the northern state of Tamaulipas, one of the hardest hit by drug violence, almost all local police forces state-wide have been disbanded since 2011.

    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2018/09/25/mexican-police-force-disbanded-investigated-for-strong-links-to-drug-cartels.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 26, 2018, 03:57:07 PM
    Way to go Mexico
    They got the right idea & more back bone than the American cops
    Mind that number would likey be around 50 to 100,000 & that’s by
    Agnostic’s own reckoning of 5-10%.
    That estimate could be way out and an awful lot more need bring to
    Book.
    Jeez 100,000 + That’s a very very large organised Criminal Gang!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2018, 02:08:52 PM
    As it has been mentioned many times in this topic, we are dealing with violent criminal gangs.

    Cop Beats Innocent Handcuffed Woman, Takes a Picture and Brags About It—Not Fired

    (https://s.hdnux.com/photos/71/70/24/15172903/5/920x920.jpg)
    “This is what happens when someone hits one of my men”

    Schenectady, NY — A Schenectady police lieutenant — who should’ve been fired and arrested multiple times — is still on the job in spite of brutally attacking an innocent handcuffed woman, smashing in her head, and then lying on a report, claiming she attacked him. What’s more, after he split her head wide open, he took a picture of it so he could brag about it to his friends and fellow cops. Now, the taxpayers are going to be shelling out “a lot of money” to pay for his crimes.

    On Monday, the City Council’s Claims Committee in Schenectady unanimously approved a settlement to the victim, Nicola Cottone.

    After the vote, according to the Daily Gazette, independent Councilman Vince Riggi, chairman of the committee, would not disclose the amount. He could only say that “It’s a lot of money.”

    “It’s a tentative settlement,” Riggi said. “It’s not done until all of the parties involved are on board with it.”

    The council will approve the final measure on Oct. 9 at their next meeting. In March, as TFTP reported, the department found that Lt. Mark McCracken had committed excessive force, however, he was never charge, nor fired.

    “This is what happens when someone hits one of my men,” McCracken would say as he showed off his trophy photo, bragging about severely injuring an innocent handcuffed woman in the midst of an emotional breakdown.

    The internal affairs report summarized the encounter as follows:

    "(McCracken) pulling and swinging the feet out from (Cottone) while she was handcuffed caused (Cottone) to sustain the laceration to her head. ... After the initial altercation (McCracken) hoists (Cottone) off of the bench and into the air by only her arms, which are still cuffed behind her back. He then carries her in this position out of the muster room and drops her onto her feet in the hallway in front of the Sergeants desk. These actions are egregious and placed (Cottone) at risk of injury. These techniques are not taught in training. A common technique used in this type of circumstance is a bar hammer or something similar. This use of force was excessive."

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/handcuffed-woman-lawsuit-police-officer/

    https://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Report-alleges-excessive-force-boast-12725660.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2018, 05:45:05 PM
    Red Springs police chief, town manager charged after personnel records taken

    The police chief and town manager of Red Springs were arrested Tuesday in connection with the removal of part of the chief's personnel file from Town Hall, authorities said.

    Police Chief Ronnie Patterson and Town Manager David Ashburn each face 10 counts of unlawful removal of public records and 10 counts of conspiracy to commit removal of public records. Ashburn also was charged with 10 counts of unlawful disposal of public records.

    Authorities said the records included an investigative file related to a sex harassment complaint against Patterson by a former Red Springs employee, documentation related to two felony charges against Patterson related to a fraudulent workers compensation claim by a former town employee, an investigative file related to possible obstruction of justice by Patterson in a federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives case, the results of polygraph examinations of Patterson in all three cases, documents from a federal lawsuit against Patterson and documents from his grievances against the town.

    https://www.wral.com/red-springs-police-chief-town-manager-charged-after-personnel-records-taken/17873383/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2018, 01:52:57 PM
    No surprise that she lied and her department rushed to defend her. Now she will enjoy prison for the next 15 years.

    Cop Sentenced to 15 Years for Faking a ‘War on Cops’, Shooting Herself and Blaming Fake ‘Black Man’

    Jackson, GA — In September of 2016, police around the country spread the story and asked for prayers for one of their own who’d been shot while on duty. An investigation was launched, a dragnet conducted, the town locked down and a suspect had been brought in. However, cops and their supporters quickly found out they had been duped by their fellow officer once investigators discovered the entire story had been fabricated. This week, former Jackson Police Department Officer Sherry Hall was sentenced to prison for her lies.

    In an unprecedented sentence, Superior Court Judge Thomas Wilson made Hall, 43, pay for her crimes. He gave her 15 years in prison followed by another 23 years on probation.

    Her story, which sounds like a kindergartner made it up, went something like this — while on patrol, Hall saw a man sitting on the roadside and decided to approach him. As she approached, the man became argumentative, shot her in the stomach, and fled. As the non-existent suspect, described by Hall as ‘a 5’8″ to 6′ black male weighing about 200 pounds,’ ran away, Hall fired twice.

    Immediately after the fake shooting, news outlets across the country ran with the narrative that a cop had been shot and the suspect was still at large.

    During a press conference after the shooting, Chief James Morgan with the Jackson Police Department, called Hall, a four-year law enforcement veteran, the ultimate professional.

    “She’s highly trained and gives it her all,” Morgan said. “She’s a very good officer and a very good person.”

    He was then forced to eat those words.

    Because an outside agency, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), conducted the investigation, and not the Jackson Police Department, inconsistencies were found and actually examined.


    Peaking their interests was the fact that Hall indicated she’d turned off all video and audio recording equipment prior to ‘being shot.’ This led to the GBI looking at evidence from the hard drive of the in-car camera system, as well as engaging the assistance of a GBI Digital Forensic Investigator in an effort to recover additional evidence, according to 11 Alive.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-shot-15-years-fake/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2018, 02:01:29 PM
    Remember the deranged "logic" that cops and the government often employ? "If you have nothing to hide, what are you afraid of?"

    Ironic how they cite "unwanted invasion of personal privacy" as one of the reasons for not releasing information but when it comes to lowly plebs (i.e. non-cops) they rarely seem to have an issue with invading their privacy.

    Dallas police, DA refuse to release officer's 911 call, other info related to Botham Jean killing

    The city of Dallas refuses to release a recording of the 911 call that Dallas police Officer Amber Guyger made after she fatally shot Botham Jean in his apartment last month. Assistant City Attorney Pavala Armstrong wrote that releasing the information would interfere with the investigation into the Sept. 6 shooting.

    Other records that police and prosecutors refuse to release include:

    The city cited a variety of other reasons for withholding the information, including that the release of some items would represent "an unwanted invasion of personal privacy" and would be "highly intimate or embarrassing and of no legitimate concern to the public."

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/dallas-police/2018/10/02/everything-city-dallas-wont-tell-death-botham-jean
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2018, 01:31:59 PM
    The "heroes" who "serve and protect". Stealing Christmas gift money from the pocket of a dying elderly man...

    Cop Caught on Own Body Cam Stealing Dying Elderly Man’s Christmas Money

    TEXAS CITY, Texas (CN) – A widow claims in court that a former Texas City police officer found her husband unconscious on the side of the road with more than $2,000 in cash meant for Christmas gifts and stole the money, just before the man died.

    Linda Mabe sued Texas City and former police officer Linnard Crouch Jr. in Galveston federal court Wednesday, claiming Crouch stole $2,400 in cash from her husband, James Mabe, while he was incapacitated on the side of the road.

    Instead of returning the full amount, Crouch gave Mabe less than $300 in a “stack of $1.00 bills that James kept in the center console of the truck he drove,” according to the complaint.

    “Some people would call that theft,” Linda’s attorney Randall Kallinen said during a press conference Thursday. “Many would call that theft.”

    Linda’s husband was robbed by Crouch, victimized by someone who was supposed to protect and serve the public, she said during the press conference.

    Crouch resigned from his position as a Texas City police officer on Jan. 30, according to a press release issued by the police department on Thursday.

    “Mr. Crouch is facing criminal charges of theft and possession of a controlled substance,” the press release states. “These charges have been presented to the Galveston County District Attorney’s Office and will be presented to a grand jury upon completion of the investigation.”

    The police department declined to give any additional details in the press release, citing the ongoing investigation.

    Kallinen said that if the Texas City Police Department had taken more decisive action after several infractions, the incident involving Mabe and Crouch would not have occurred.

    He also suggested that the Texas City District Attorney’s Office could face repercussions for corruption if they had failed to correct Crouch’s actions after repeated infractions.

    On Dec. 19, 2016, Linda gave her husband the money to buy Christmas presents for the family, according to the complaint.

    “Linda and James loved the Christmas Season with the family tradition for more than 45 years being that Linda and James would host a huge Christmas meal followed by the exchange and opening of Christmas gifts,” the lawsuit states.

    Mabe didn’t complete the trip and stopped on the side of the road when he “felt that something was wrong physically,” according to the complaint.

    Texas City police received a call about the vehicle and sent Crouch to investigate.

    “After opening James’ locked truck door, Officer Crouch then reached into James’ right front pocket and removed James’ $2,400 in Christmas present money and other money,” the complaint states. “Officer Crouch never reported the $2,400 and other money [and] instead gave back less than $300.”

    A police department memo from January corroborates Linda’s allegations.

    “I have reviewed Officer Crouch’s body camera video and have observed Officer Crouch to have removed money from Mr. Mabe’s right front pocket he appears not to have reported,” according to the memo written by Assistant Chief Joe Stanton to Police Chief Robert Burby.

    Crouch was suspended last year prior to the incident described in the lawsuit after several complaints were filed against him, dating back to 2011.

    The former officer failed to complete incident reports, left information out of other completed reports and failed to wear his body camera at all times while on duty, according to a 68-page notice of suspension and a list of official complaints included as an exhibit with the plaintiff’s lawsuit.

    Notices from the list characterized Crouch pattern of actions as “dereliction” and “neglect of duty,” but he didn’t resign until after the Mabe incident.

    After emergency services were called, Mabe was taken to a local emergency room where he died later that evening, according to the complaint. His family says his heart failed.

    Crouch met with Linda and her son, Michael Mabe, at the emergency room to return James’ personal belongings, the complaint states.

    He handed them a baggie with a few hundred dollars inside and allegedly told them that the money was the only personal possession he had found on James.

    According to the complaint, Crouch had also breached protocol by giving Linda and Michael the money directly instead of the usual documenting of property by the police department’s inventory process.

    Michael said during Thursday’s press conference that the police department and district attorney did not believe that Crouch had taken his family’s money.

    He said he didn’t find out about the department’s memo acknowledging the video proof of theft until he requested documents from the department.

    When asked who he blames for the incident, Michael said there was “more than enough anger to go around.”

    He said that in addition to seeking justice for his mother, he wants to help ensure that “this doesn’t happen to someone else” after seeing his mother’s “day-to-day struggle” since the incident in December.

    Michael also indicated that his mother’s lawsuit was filed to focus on the alleged crimes committed, rather than reimbursement of the $2,400.

    “The Mabe family’s Christmas, made so sad by James’ death, was shocking and appalling due to the theft or taking by a police officer of the Mabe’s Christmas money,” the lawsuit states.

    Linda Mabe seeks punitive damages against Texas City and Crouch for alleged Fourth Amendment and due-process violations. Her attorney, Kallinen, is based in Houston.

    Crouch could not be reached for comment.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-caught-body-cam-stealing-dying-elderly-mans-christmas-money/

    Remember this case? A 74 year old man was about to purchase some Christmas gifts with some money that his wife gave him. On his way to the shops he started having chest pain so he pulled over and called for help. The "officer" who "swore" to "serve and protect" didn't help the man, but in this time of need when seconds count, he proceeded to rob him and take his money. This was captured on his bodycam. The poor man later died in the hospital. But that's not all. Not only did he steal $2400 but he later went to the hospital where the man died and gave his grieving wife just $300. Life in prison is the very least that this scumbag deserves but he's no ordinary pleb: he is a uniformed criminal with a badge so of course he got no prison time... And if you look at his record, we are talking about a ruthless and violent career criminal.


    Cop Caught on Own Body Cam Stealing Dying Elderly Man’s Money Instead of Helping Him—NO JAIL

    Texas City, TX — Officer Linnard R. Crouch was seen on his own body camera—not helping a 74-year-old man who was having a heart attack—but robbing him. The elderly victim, James Mabe had the cash to go buy Christmas presents for his grandchildren, but because the cop robbed him instead of helped him he’d never make it. Now, the officer who stole a dying elderly man’s Christmas money will not be going to jail.

    Last month, with almost no news coverage, Crouch pleaded guilty to robbing the elderly dying man. Instead of being punished for his utter betrayal of public trust and despicable act, Crouch was given probation and will not spend one day behind bars.

    But that’s not all, Crouch has a history of corruption. Crouch was suspended prior to robbing a dying elderly man on Chirstmas after several complaints were filed against him, dating back to 2011.

    The former officer failed to complete incident reports, left information out of other completed reports and failed to wear his body camera at all times while on duty, according to a 68-page notice of suspension and a list of official complaints included as an exhibit with Linda Mabe’s lawsuit filed last year.

    What’s more, he was also facing an aggravated assault charge stemming from an incident involving a gun and his girlfriend, according to the Dallas Morning News. But as part of the plea deal, that charge was dismissed.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-steals-elderly-mans-christmas-money/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2018, 01:00:30 PM
    Chicago cop found guilty of second degree murder of Laquan McDonald

    Jason Van Dyke, the white Chicago police officer accused of fatally shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times in less than 30 seconds, was found guilty of second-degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery on Friday.

    After the verdict was read, protestors who had gathered outside the courthouse cheered and clapped. Some chanted “justice has won.”

    Ahead of the verdict, Judge Vincent Gaughan warned people in the courtroom to contain their outbursts, telling them: “If you do act out, I will have you arrested.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/jason-van-dyke-trial-chicago-cop-found-guilty-of-second-degree-murder-of-laquan-mcdonald
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2018, 02:00:24 PM
    Remember the deranged "logic" that cops and the government often employ? "If you have nothing to hide, what are you afraid of?"

    Ironic how they cite "unwanted invasion of personal privacy" as one of the reasons for not releasing information but when it comes to lowly plebs (i.e. non-cops) they rarely seem to have an issue with invading their privacy.

    Dallas police, DA refuse to release officer's 911 call, other info related to Botham Jean killing

    The city of Dallas refuses to release a recording of the 911 call that Dallas police Officer Amber Guyger made after she fatally shot Botham Jean in his apartment last month. Assistant City Attorney Pavala Armstrong wrote that releasing the information would interfere with the investigation into the Sept. 6 shooting.

    Other records that police and prosecutors refuse to release include:
    • Guyger's personnel file
    • Records related to her shooting of a man she said took her Taser during a struggle in 2017
    • Guyger's clock-in and clock-out times the day of the shooting
    • Guyger's annual salary
    • Previous administrative leave with the department
    • Other 911 calls about the shooting
    • Guyger's work schedule
    • Body camera and dash camera videos
    • Any off-duty jobs she was approved to work

    The city cited a variety of other reasons for withholding the information, including that the release of some items would represent "an unwanted invasion of personal privacy" and would be "highly intimate or embarrassing and of no legitimate concern to the public."

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/dallas-police/2018/10/02/everything-city-dallas-wont-tell-death-botham-jean


    Seriously you just can’t make this stuff up.
    This Gang have no morals & are Totally hypocritical

    1 set of rules for the Gang members
    And another for non gang members ( Public )
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2018, 02:05:30 PM
    Remember this case? A 74 year old man was about to purchase some Christmas gifts with some money that his wife gave him. On his way to the shops he started having chest pain so he pulled over and called for help. The "officer" who "swore" to "serve and protect" didn't help the man, but in this time of need when seconds count, he proceeded to rob him and take his money. This was captured on his bodycam. The poor man later died in the hospital. But that's not all. Not only did he steal $2400 but he later went to the hospital where the man died and gave his grieving wife just $300. Life in prison is the very least that this scumbag deserves but he's no ordinary pleb: he is a uniformed criminal with a badge so of course he got no prison time... And if you look at his record, we are talking about a ruthless and violent career criminal.


    Cop Caught on Own Body Cam Stealing Dying Elderly Man’s Money Instead of Helping Him—NO JAIL

    Texas City, TX — Officer Linnard R. Crouch was seen on his own body camera—not helping a 74-year-old man who was having a heart attack—but robbing him. The elderly victim, James Mabe had the cash to go buy Christmas presents for his grandchildren, but because the cop robbed him instead of helped him he’d never make it. Now, the officer who stole a dying elderly man’s Christmas money will not be going to jail.

    Last month, with almost no news coverage, Crouch pleaded guilty to robbing the elderly dying man. Instead of being punished for his utter betrayal of public trust and despicable act, Crouch was given probation and will not spend one day behind bars.

    But that’s not all, Crouch has a history of corruption. Crouch was suspended prior to robbing a dying elderly man on Chirstmas after several complaints were filed against him, dating back to 2011.

    The former officer failed to complete incident reports, left information out of other completed reports and failed to wear his body camera at all times while on duty, according to a 68-page notice of suspension and a list of official complaints included as an exhibit with Linda Mabe’s lawsuit filed last year.

    What’s more, he was also facing an aggravated assault charge stemming from an incident involving a gun and his girlfriend, according to the Dallas Morning News. But as part of the plea deal, that charge was dismissed.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-steals-elderly-mans-christmas-money/


    And as for this Gang member
    He’s A total lowlife - He should be beaten everyday of his miserable life
    And then beaten some more.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2018, 02:39:12 PM
    Police dog attacks and mauls ordinary people? "Good boy!"
    Police dog attacks cops? "Kill the dog!"

    Waco PD dog killed after it attacks handler

    A Waco officer shot and killed a police dog Friday after the dog bit its handler while police served a warrant, authorities said.

    This isn’t the first episode in which a police dog had to be shot when it attacked an officer in the line of duty. In July 2001, Waco police shot and killed the department’s 3-year-old Dutch shepherd named Blur when the dog and its handler, Waco police Officer John Allovio, were searching for a stolen car suspect in the 800 block of Harlem Avenue. The dog attacked another officer who approached him from behind.

    https://www.wacotrib.com/news/police/waco-pd-dog-killed-after-it-attacks-handler/article_4ec7a685-9772-59ed-b367-3c6c1a67b546.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 09, 2018, 11:46:15 PM
    Police dog attacks and mauls ordinary people? "Good boy!"
    Police dog attacks cops? "Kill the dog!"

    Waco PD dog killed after it attacks handler

    A Waco officer shot and killed a police dog Friday after the dog bit its handler while police served a warrant, authorities said.

    This isn’t the first episode in which a police dog had to be shot when it attacked an officer in the line of duty. In July 2001, Waco police shot and killed the department’s 3-year-old Dutch shepherd named Blur when the dog and its handler, Waco police Officer John Allovio, were searching for a stolen car suspect in the 800 block of Harlem Avenue. The dog attacked another officer who approached him from behind.

    https://www.wacotrib.com/news/police/waco-pd-dog-killed-after-it-attacks-handler/article_4ec7a685-9772-59ed-b367-3c6c1a67b546.html


    The Dogs even Know & Dislike which are the Thug Gang Members    ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 10, 2018, 10:11:03 PM
    U guys having fun?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 11, 2018, 01:54:15 AM
    U guys having fun?

    Yes of course we are  ;D
    Are you Not ?

    Where’s your sense of Humor
    And Where are your Thoughts & Opinions
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2018, 02:40:52 PM
    2 violent and armed criminals break in to a house, abuse and arrest the occupant and put him in jail. The uniformed criminals had no warrant and now they face charges of home invasion and misconduct in office.
    The criminals spent less time in jail than the man they falsely arrested (he was deprived of his liberty for 36 hours) and of course they are now enjoying paid vacation. Now let's see if they'll end up in prison. They could get up to 15 years, which doesn't sound enough. It should be noted that the criminals were part of the gang's "Burglary Task Force" and one of them was honored by Obama with an award in 2012.

    2 Detroit cops charged with home invasion

    Two Detroit police officers assigned to a burglary task force have been charged with home invasion and misconduct in office after they allegedly kicked in the door of a house on the city’s west side without a search warrant and arrested the homeowner.

    Officer Bradley Clark and Sgt. Paul Glaza were charged Friday in 36th District Court  with second-degree home invasion, misconduct in office, malicious destruction of property under $200, and entering without a homeowner's permission in connection with the alleged incident Jan. 22.

    Clark was one of 15 Detroit police officers honored in 2012 by former President Barack Obama with the National Association of Police Organizations Top Cops awards.

    If convicted, the officers could face up to 15 years in prison.

    https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2018/10/08/2-detroit-cops-charged-home-invasion/1566750002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 11, 2018, 02:45:50 PM
    Brave grandfather defends his family from an armed and violent criminal.

    "Once they shot two times at my face, I had no choice. I was in fear of my life, and I returned fire. I got five grandkids in this house, I'd lay my life down for every one of them.”

    No Charges for Grandpa Who Shot an Officer on His Property to Protect His Grandkids

    Time and again, as the Free Thought Project has consistently reported, police officers will enter the home of an innocent person and kill them. As is the case most of the time, the officers aren’t charged despite gross negligence leading up to the innocent homeowner’s death. Or, if the homeowner does successfully defend themselves, they are often charged. In rare instances, however, homeowners defend themselves against the officers who come onto their property with no warrant or mistakenly and they are deemed justified in doing so.

    David Turley, 63, was one of these homeowners who defended his home against who he thought was an intruder—but was actually a cop—and he has not been charged. What’s more, according to Turley, the cop opened fire on him and all Turley did was return fire. Luckily for Turley, officer Zachary Morris was a bad shot.

    According to police, the incident happened Wednesday morning just before 6 a.m. in Turley’s neighborhood. Police say Morris was responding to a call about a “suspicious person” and when he arrived in the neighborhood, someone matching the description fled.

    Police say Morris pursued the person until he lost sight of him behind some houses. That’s when Turley heard someone trying to come into his yard.

    “I heard some commotion over there by the fence,” said Turley. “I saw someone standing there with a flashlight on the ground, so I walked over to see what was going on. As I got closer, POW POW! And when he did, I had my weapon by my side and I just pulled up and fired and I started toward the ground to take cover.”

    Turley told WFIE News that after he heard two bullets wiz past his head, he had no other option but to return fire. Unlike Morris, Turley did not miss and the bullet struck the officer in the lower section of his bullet proof vest and fragmenting off into his abdomen.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/no-charges-for-grandpa-who-shot-an-officer-on-his-property-to-protect-his-grandkids/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 16, 2018, 02:40:42 PM
    Remember when they can't make the charges stick to someone, they will just slap the "lying to the FBI" charge to put them in prison or extort them. Now see what happens if someone who works for the FBI lied under oath...

    FBI official improperly accepted sports tickets from reporter, watchdog finds

    A senior FBI official accepted two tickets to a professional sporting event from a television reporter who regularly covered the bureau, the Justice Department's internal watchdog said Tuesday.

    The office of DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that the unnamed official had not reimbursed the correspondent for the tickets, despite initially claiming under oath that he had done so. The watchdog said that the official's actions violated federal regulations on gifts.

    The Justice Department declined to prosecute the official, who has since retired from the FBI.

    Horowitz's office also found that the official previously accepted a ticket to a different sporting event from the same reporter, as well as a ticket to a third sporting event from a different correspondent. The official said he had reimbursed the reporters for those tickets, but the watchdog said it found no evidence to support that claim and the official did not provide any proof.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fbi-official-improperly-accepted-tickets-from-reporter-watchdog-finds
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2018, 03:48:43 PM
    Just one year is not enough and probably less than the person they framed would have gotten.

    Two former Florida officers get prison for framing black teenager

    Both will serve a year in federal prison for framing a black teenager for burglaries he did not commit.

    They admitted to being part of a scheme to frame the 16-year-old so the police chief could claim a perfect rate of solving burglaries in the small city.

    The judge insisted on prison for the pair despite plea deals calling for house arrest.

    Link to story (https://www.guy-n921141)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2018, 03:54:38 PM
    This habitual liar tried to cover up his hit and run by lying and claiming his car was stolen. "Ordinary" people get the book thrown at them just for a hit-and-run, let alone to stage this elaborate coverup. Of course he will not serve a single day in prison. But let's keep deluding ourselves that "the system works" and the laws apply equally.

    Former Clay County homicide detective found guilty for lying about hit-and-run

    The former Clay County Sheriff’s Office homicide detective who was accused of staging a scene after he was involved in a hit-and-run has been found guilty of two charges.

    Mark Andrews, a 10-year veteran of the Sheriff’s Office, pleaded no contest to leaving the scene of an accident resulting in damage and for false report of a commission of crime, but the judge adjudicated him guilty.

    Andrews must surrender his law-enforcement certification, serve 11 months of probation, pay back nearly $6,675 in court costs and complete 25 hours of community service.

    Andrews had been at the Sheriff’s Office for 10 years, and wasn’t the first time he was accused of lying.

    https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20181016/former-clay-county-homicide-detective-found-guilty-for-lying-about-hit-and-run
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 18, 2018, 02:46:05 PM
    Just 4 years?

    Ex-FBI agent sentenced for leaking classified documents to reporter

    A Minnesota judge on Thursday sentenced a former FBI agent to four years behind bars after the man reportedly confessed to giving classified defense documents to a reporter.

    U.S. District Judge Wilhelmina Wright told Terry James Albury, 39, who pleaded guilty earlier this year, that he “knowingly” committed the crime despite its illegality, according to The Associated Press.

    “You did so willingly. You knew that what you did was a criminal act, and you knew that you were putting the nation's security at risk,” the judge told Albury.

    The 4-year prison term matches the seriousness of the crime, Wright said, and should serve as a deterrent to others.

    Prosecutors labeled Albury’s actions a betrayal of the public’s trust when he stole more than 70 documents, dozens of which were considered classified, The Associated Press reported. A “secret” document pertaining to how the bureau assesses confidential informants was reportedly among the records he provided to an online news organization.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ex-fbi-agent-sentenced-for-leaking-classified-documents-to-reporter

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2018, 04:32:05 PM
    Criminal gang.

    Feds: 3 Miami cops took cash to guard "drug traffickers" in undercover sting

    (https://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/xmv6at/picture220509145/alternates/LANDSCAPE_1140/cop-mugs-composite.jpg)

    Three City of Miami police officers are facing federal narcotics charges after they allegedly took cash to provide armed escorts for what they believed to be drug traffickers in a months-long undercover operation, federal prosecutors announced Tuesday.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/feds-3-miami-cops-took-cash-to-guard-drug-traffickers-in-undercover-sting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2018, 04:43:25 PM
    Of course they will lie to cover up their crimes. And even the "internal investigation" is now being called into question. No surprise. When you wield this sort of power and you can also investigate yourself these things are bound to happen.

    Trial Begins for 2 Pomona Police Officers Charged With Beating Teen at Fairgrounds, Then Trying to Cover it Up

    A federal prosecutor in the criminal trial of two Pomona police officers charged in a violent encounter with a teenager told jurors Tuesday that a video showing cops pummeling the teen would prove the officers’ guilt, while defense attorneys countered the same footage would help to vindicate the men.

    The dueling claims over the video a bystander captured on his cellphone came during opening statements in the trial. Cpl. Chad Jensen, a 21-year veteran of the Pomona department, faces charges he used excessive force against then-16-year-old Christian Aguilar during the incident at the Los Angeles County Fair three years ago.

    Jensen and Officer Prince Hutchinson, his partner on the night of the encounter, are also accused of lying in reports and court testimony to cover up the two blows Jensen dealt to the teen’s face. A separate trial for a third officer, who faces charges stemming from how he conducted the department’s internal investigation into the incident, is scheduled for next month.



    https://ktla.com/2018/10/23/trial-begins-for-2-pomona-police-officers-charged-with-beating-teen-at-fairgrounds-then-trying-to-cover-it-up/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 24, 2018, 08:02:27 PM
    Remember this case? A 74 year old man was about to purchase some Christmas gifts with some money that his wife gave him. On his way to the shops he started having chest pain so he pulled over and called for help. The "officer" who "swore" to "serve and protect" didn't help the man, but in this time of need when seconds count, he proceeded to rob him and take his money. This was captured on his bodycam. The poor man later died in the hospital. But that's not all. Not only did he steal $2400 but he later went to the hospital where the man died and gave his grieving wife just $300. Life in prison is the very least that this scumbag deserves but he's no ordinary pleb: he is a uniformed criminal with a badge so of course he got no prison time... And if you look at his record, we are talking about a ruthless and violent career criminal.


    Cop Caught on Own Body Cam Stealing Dying Elderly Man’s Money Instead of Helping Him—NO JAIL

    Texas City, TX — Officer Linnard R. Crouch was seen on his own body camera—not helping a 74-year-old man who was having a heart attack—but robbing him. The elderly victim, James Mabe had the cash to go buy Christmas presents for his grandchildren, but because the cop robbed him instead of helped him he’d never make it. Now, the officer who stole a dying elderly man’s Christmas money will not be going to jail.

    Last month, with almost no news coverage, Crouch pleaded guilty to robbing the elderly dying man. Instead of being punished for his utter betrayal of public trust and despicable act, Crouch was given probation and will not spend one day behind bars.

    But that’s not all, Crouch has a history of corruption. Crouch was suspended prior to robbing a dying elderly man on Chirstmas after several complaints were filed against him, dating back to 2011.

    The former officer failed to complete incident reports, left information out of other completed reports and failed to wear his body camera at all times while on duty, according to a 68-page notice of suspension and a list of official complaints included as an exhibit with Linda Mabe’s lawsuit filed last year.

    What’s more, he was also facing an aggravated assault charge stemming from an incident involving a gun and his girlfriend, according to the Dallas Morning News. But as part of the plea deal, that charge was dismissed.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-steals-elderly-mans-christmas-money/


    This is a good and valid example of the court system failing the citizens. It is my belief and always has, that when a police officer violates the trust given his position like what happened here, that the court go out of its way to set an example with the officer by filing the most serious valid charges and then sentencing the officer to the maximum sentence in every case. I can't justify what happened here and it sickens me
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 24, 2018, 08:03:49 PM

    The Dogs even Know & Dislike which are the Thug Gang Members    ;D

    Not all that funny
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 25, 2018, 02:25:07 AM
    Not all that funny

    No Not if your a Scumbag "Gang" member & you get mauled by your own Dog
    Only The Rest of us decent Folk Think They got what they've long deserved & its Hilarious.
    No Not at All funny for The Scumbag "Gang" Members Dog - poor thing is shot dead.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2018, 02:39:08 PM
    Once again, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill for the violent entertainment of these uniformed criminals. Notice how they moved to quickly settle this (they're not paying out of their pockets anyway) before the discovery phase, which might have uncovered a more widespread pattern of abuse.

    Cuyahoga County to pay $180,000 settlement after juvenile inmates forced to fight for guards’ entertainment

     Cuyahoga County has agreed to pay nearly $180,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by four former juvenile detention inmates who claimed guards forced them to fight for their own entertainment. The suit claims the fights, referred to as "Fight Nights," were a long standing tradition inside the detention center.

    At least one of those fights was captured on a surveillance camera inside the detention center, showing an inmate throwing a punch, then body slamming the other inmate to the ground. Attorneys for the inmates claim the video also shows guards letting the inmates into a room two at a time, locking the door and then having them fight inside the room.

    Because the case was settled before discovery, attorneys said they could not really determine how many other inmates were involved or for how long the activity had taken place.

    https://fox8.com/2018/10/24/cuyahoga-county-to-pay-180000-settlement-after-juvenile-inmates-forced-to-fight-for-guards-entertainment
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2018, 02:45:04 PM
    No Not if your a Scumbag "Gang" member & you get mauled by your own Dog
    Only The Rest of us decent Folk Think They got what they've long deserved & its Hilarious.
    No Not at All funny for The Scumbag "Gang" Members Dog - poor thing is shot dead.

    Indeed. There are several cases when cops unleash the dogs on handcuffed, cooperative or even innocent people and they laugh at the unnecessary suffering and abuse. However, when it's one of their own that gets attacked, all of a sudden they don't find it that entertaining.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 25, 2018, 03:28:31 PM
    Indeed. There are several cases when cops unleash the dogs on handcuffed, cooperative or even innocent people and they laugh at the unnecessary suffering and abuse. However, when it's one of their own that gets attacked, all of a sudden they don't find it that entertaining.

    Now Likely in Agnostics eyes There are No Cooperative people in Handcuffs
    Or Innocent People Who Get attacked by Police Dogs & Those People
    Deserve All the suffering & abuse they Get.  ;D

    Plus No Cops are “Gang” members of their own “Gang” & They Don't do any Wrong &
    Most Definitely do not Deserve Their own Dogs attacking them.   ;D

    How could we say such Things.


    I replied for you Agnostic- Saved you the effort.
     ;D


    No doubt I’ll be hearing from you very soon.....  :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2018, 02:19:37 PM
    Dallas police pursue drones for department, vow that they will not be used to spy on people

    Authorities in Dallas are pursuing the use of drones to assist in their duties to locate suspects and access areas that are unreachable by helicopters.

    Paul Stokes, Dallas assistant police chief, outlined the department’s planned use of the drones during a recent city council briefing, saying the technology would allow officers to make sure a building is clear before entering, assist in fires and large protests and help identify suspects, the Dallas Morning News reported on Monday. According to FOX 4, it seems as council members approved of the idea, with Councilwoman Sandy Greyson calling drones “such cool technology.”

    Drone use in law enforcement has been a privacy concern raised by the community, and something Stokes was quick to ensure would not be compromised. The department is hoping to buy five drones at a total cost of about $100,000 dollars, which would also need to be approved by the FAA for use in the crowded airspace in Dallas.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/dallas-police-pursuing-use-of-drones-to-help-fight-crime
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2018, 02:32:08 PM
    Shoot 50 times and kill the wrong people? Who cares, it's cops who did they shooting, so the DA found their actions justified.

    3 Denver officers cleared in shooting death of man who was mistaken for escaped inmate

    Denver’s district attorney determined three police officers were justified when they shot and killed a man who had been mistaken for an escaped jail inmate, but lawyers for the man called the shooting “egregious” and are questioning whether the officers violated the department’s policies for firing at moving cars.



    https://www.denverpost.com/2018/10/16/denver-police-fatal-shooting-escaped-inmate/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2018, 02:40:02 PM
    As is usual in these cases, the violent criminals charged the victim with "resisting arrest" and "disorderly conduct" in order to cover up their crimes.
    Will they go to prison? Will they actually pay the victim in full out of their own pockets? Will they still be employed as cops?

    Jury awards Syracuse man $1.5 million: Cops used excessive force in bloody arrest

    (https://image.syracuse.com/home/syr-media/width600/img/crime_impact/photo/alonzo-grant-injuriespng-b9525a00592a8900.png)

    UTICA, N.Y. -- The jury in a Syracuse police brutality trial has sided with a man beaten in a bloody arrest, awarding him and his family more than $1.5 million.

    Alonzo Grant, 57, sued the city of Syracuse and police officers Damon Lockett and Paul Montalto alleging they used excessive force and falsely arrested him in June 2014.

    https://www.syracuse.com/crime/index.ssf/2018/10/jury_awards_syracuse_man_15_million_finds_cops_beat_him_in_violent_arrest.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2018, 02:51:11 PM
    Feds took woman’s iPhone at border, she sued, now they agree to delete data

    An American Muslim woman who two months ago asked a federal judge to compel border officials to erase data copied from her iPhone 6S Plus has settled her lawsuit with the government—federal authorities have now agreed to delete the seized data. The case, Lazoja v. Nielsen, involves what's called a Rule 41(g) Motion, otherwise known as a "Motion to Return Property."

    Normally, this rule is invoked for tangible items seized as part of a criminal investigation, not for digital data that can easily be copied, bit for bit. Here, the plaintiff, Rejhane Lazoja, asked the judge to return data that she already has—after all, federal authorities eventually returned her iPhone after 90 days, fully intact.

    As Ars has reported previously, the government claims that it has the authority to search and seize someone's device without a warrant—otherwise needed in the interior of the country. Federal authorities rely on what's known as the "border doctrine." This is the controversial but standing legal idea that warrants are not required to conduct a search at the border. The theory has been generally recognized by courts, even in recent years.

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/10/feds-agree-to-delete-data-seized-off-womans-iphone-during-border-search/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 01, 2018, 03:25:06 PM
    While ordinary plebs who drink and cause accidents (or don't drink but just drive "erratically") are beaten, tazed, arrested, have blood drawn forcibly or even shot or killed, the situation suddenly changes when it involves a cop. Of course he now enjoys paid vacation.

    Cop Crashes His Patrol Vehicle While Drunk and Cries Like a Baby As He Gets Blue Privilege

    Piqua, OH — Body camera video was released this week showing the extraordinary privilege granted to police officers when they commit crimes that would get the average citizen beaten, tasered, or even killed. A Piqua police department cop crashed his cruiser, while heavily intoxicated, pulled his gun, refused to obey commands, and was told he could simply “go home.”

    On October 27, Officer Justin Augustine drove his police cruiser into a semi-trailer. As the body camera shows, he was clearly drunk out of his mind when he self-reported the crash into the flat-bed trailer hauling a concrete barrier used to separate lanes during road construction.

    After Augustine had been taken back to the police station, another officer told the supervisor investigating that he felt the supervisor “needed to go on station to deal with Officer Augustine as he appeared to be impaired and was demonstrating odd behavior, to include hugging and kissing him and other officers and telling them that he loved them,” the report read.

    As the Piqua Daily Call reports:

    Quote
    According to Piqua police reports about the incident, Augustine reported the private property crash, telling his supervisor Lt. Rick Byron of the Piqua Police Department that he was trying to urinate near the southeast corner of the building.

    Lt. Byron observed “significant damage to the entire passenger side” of Augustine’s patrol vehicle, beginning at the front windshield and ending on the rear quarter panel. The windshield and both passenger side door windows were broken, according to police reports.

    When Lt. Byron asked Augustine what happened, Augustine reportedly said again that he was trying to urinate. Augustine said that he was driving 20 mph during the incident. Augustine would also occasionally yell obscenities while he was being questioned.

    An officer observed that Augustine’s eyes “were bloodshot and red and that his speech was slow and slurred,” according to police reports. A Four Loko Gold 14 percent alcohol per volume malt beverage can was later located in the driver’s door of Augustine’s personal vehicle. An empty can of the same beverage was also found near the crash scene.

    The Piqua Police Department attempted to have Augustine go to the Upper Valley Medical Center to undergo a drug and alcohol screen due to being in an accident with a city-owned vehicle, but he refused. Augustine reportedly admitted to drinking alcohol earlier in the day, but he refused all OVI tests and was placed under an Administrative License Suspension (ALS).

    As the body camera footage shows, Augustine was entirely uncooperative and at one point, he held his pistol in his hand. Had an average citizen done the same thing, rest assured that they would’ve been killed on the spot.

    “I’m done,” Augustine told Lt. Byron as he received his blue privilege. “I can drive fine,” he said as he refused to obey the officer’s commands.

    “I might as well be dead,” said the drunk cop. Byron described Augustine as “totally insubordinate” in his report, yet he treated him as if he were his best friend. Byron also noted that Augustine was not wearing his bulletproof vest, saying, that Augustine “drove for an hour without a vest.”

    Instead of being arrested and hauled off to jail, Augustine was simply cited for driving drunk, allowed to go home, and placed on paid vacation—blue privilege indeed.

    Lt. Byron gave his fellow cop so much leeway that he even considered letting the drunken “Augie” drive home—after he just drove his police cruiser into a semi-trailer.


    On Wednesday, Augustine pleaded not guilty to driving while intoxicated, in spite of admitting to drinking and having a .14 BAC.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-officer-drunk-patrol-vehicle-cries/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 03, 2018, 12:24:24 AM
    While ordinary plebs who drink and cause accidents (or don't drink but just drive "erratically") are beaten, tazed, arrested, have blood drawn forcibly or even shot or killed, the situation suddenly changes when it involves a cop. Of course he now enjoys paid vacation.

    Cop Crashes His Patrol Vehicle While Drunk and Cries Like a Baby As He Gets Blue Privilege

    Piqua, OH — Body camera video was released this week showing the extraordinary privilege granted to police officers when they commit crimes that would get the average citizen beaten, tasered, or even killed. A Piqua police department cop crashed his cruiser, while heavily intoxicated, pulled his gun, refused to obey commands, and was told he could simply “go home.”

    On October 27, Officer Justin Augustine drove his police cruiser into a semi-trailer. As the body camera shows, he was clearly drunk out of his mind when he self-reported the crash into the flat-bed trailer hauling a concrete barrier used to separate lanes during road construction.

    After Augustine had been taken back to the police station, another officer told the supervisor investigating that he felt the supervisor “needed to go on station to deal with Officer Augustine as he appeared to be impaired and was demonstrating odd behavior, to include hugging and kissing him and other officers and telling them that he loved them,” the report read.

    As the Piqua Daily Call reports:

    As the body camera footage shows, Augustine was entirely uncooperative and at one point, he held his pistol in his hand. Had an average citizen done the same thing, rest assured that they would’ve been killed on the spot.

    “I’m done,” Augustine told Lt. Byron as he received his blue privilege. “I can drive fine,” he said as he refused to obey the officer’s commands.

    “I might as well be dead,” said the drunk cop. Byron described Augustine as “totally insubordinate” in his report, yet he treated him as if he were his best friend. Byron also noted that Augustine was not wearing his bulletproof vest, saying, that Augustine “drove for an hour without a vest.”

    Instead of being arrested and hauled off to jail, Augustine was simply cited for driving drunk, allowed to go home, and placed on paid vacation—blue privilege indeed.

    Lt. Byron gave his fellow cop so much leeway that he even considered letting the drunken “Augie” drive home—after he just drove his police cruiser into a semi-trailer.


    On Wednesday, Augustine pleaded not guilty to driving while intoxicated, in spite of admitting to drinking and having a .14 BAC.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-officer-drunk-patrol-vehicle-cries/


    Agnostic are you out there ?
    What’s your View
    Did he receive Special treatment & Are civilians ever Taserd / Beaten or Shot
    For similar type Behaviour.

    Aren’t cops meant to apply the Law equally & Not Be Above The Law.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2018, 04:06:27 PM
    As if crossing the red light at high speed was not enough this scumbag, in an attempt to cover up his actions and project his "authority", even tried to lecture the man who was lying paralyzed on the sidewalk with fractured pelvis and vertebrae, his upper-torso dangling off the curb in a painful contortion. His body camera was conveniently activated after he exited his vehicle. And of course it seems that the cop lied, claiming that he stopped at the intersection among other things. Remember folks, you lie to "law enforcement", you can end up in prison. Not quite the same though when "law enforcement officers" lie.
    Now, you'd think that such a dangerous lunatic would be in prison or at the very minimum fired and barred from driving. He is still a cop and he still operates police vehicles.

    OPD Cop Caught Making Apparent False Statements After Injury Crash

    An Oakland police officer claimed he 'stopped fully' before smashing into a motorcyclist and even lectured the person he hurt. But a nearby surveillance camera contradicts his account.



    https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/opd-cop-caught-making-apparent-false-statements-after-injury-crash/Content?oid=22367426
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 10, 2018, 08:29:36 AM
    The DEA and ICE are hiding surveillance cameras in streetlights

    The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have hidden an undisclosed number of covert surveillance cameras inside streetlights around the country, federal contracting documents reveal. According to government procurement data, the DEA has paid a Houston, Texas company called Cowboy Streetlight Concealments LLC roughly $22,000 since June 2018 for “video recording and reproducing equipment.” ICE paid out about $28,000 to Cowboy Streetlight Concealments over the same period of time.

    It’s unclear where the DEA and ICE streetlight cameras have been installed, or where the next deployments will take place. ICE offices in Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio have provided funding for recent acquisitions from Cowboy Streetlight Concealments; the DEA’s most recent purchases were funded by the agency’s Office of Investigative Technology, which is located in Lorton, Virginia.

    Christie Crawford, who owns Cowboy Streetlight Concealments with her husband, a Houston police officer, said she was not at liberty to discuss the company’s federal contracts in detail.

    “We do streetlight concealments and camera enclosures,” Crawford told Quartz. “Basically, there’s businesses out there that will build concealments for the government and that’s what we do. They specify what’s best for them, and we make it. And that’s about all I can probably say.”
    However, she added: “I can tell you this—things are always being watched. It doesn’t matter if you’re driving down the street or visiting a friend, if government or law enforcement has a reason to set up surveillance, there’s great technology out there to do it.”

    https://qz.com/1458475/the-dea-and-ice-are-hiding-surveillance-cameras-in-streetlights/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 10, 2018, 09:14:10 PM
    Agnostic are you out there ?
    What’s your View
    Did he receive Special treatment & Are civilians ever Taserd / Beaten or Shot
    For similar type Behaviour.

    Aren’t cops meant to apply the Law equally & Not Be Above The Law.

    hard to take your questions serious when you say a civilian in that instance would be beaten or shot. As Trump would say.. "Thats a stupid question"
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 10, 2018, 09:43:49 PM
    hard to take your questions serious when you say a civilian in that instance would be beaten or shot. As Trump would say.. "Thats a stupid question"

    What the fuck? Let’s read this again:

    A Piqua police department cop crashed his cruiser, while heavily intoxicated, pulled his gun, refused to obey commands, and was told he could simply “go home.”

    Cops have shot and killed people for holding cell phones (https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/22/us/sacramento-police-shooting/index.html). They tackle grandfathers (https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/j54w8b/video-emerges-as-alabama-cop-is-arrested-for-paralyzing-57-year-old-indian-man) and do it with impunity (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/assault-charges-dropped-alabama-cop-who-partially-paralyzed-indian-grandfather-n573806). They brutally beat handcuffed men (https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/apr/09/second-officer-walter-scott-video-sued-stomping) and women (https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/). If you need more, go back and reread this very thread.

    People—regular civilians from all walks of life—have been maimed and killed for much, much less than what this cop did and got away with.

    Fact: an encounter with a cop is a scary fucking experience, because your brothers and your sisters in blue are either trigger-happy bullies that are drunk on power or cowards without the moral courage to stomp out the corrupt among themselves and uphold the oath they took.

    You’re here, telling us what a good cop you are, and how this shit doesn’t happen in your department. Bullshit. It happens in every department and if you don’t see it, it’s because you aren’t looking. You come on here and defend the indefensible and pretend it’s bevause you have some refined and superior sense of justice.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 10, 2018, 09:50:11 PM
    What the fuck? Let’s read this again:

    A Piqua police department cop crashed his cruiser, while heavily intoxicated, pulled his gun, refused to obey commands, and was told he could simply “go home.”

    Cops have shot and killed people for holding cell phones (https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/22/us/sacramento-police-shooting/index.html). They tackle grandfathers (https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/j54w8b/video-emerges-as-alabama-cop-is-arrested-for-paralyzing-57-year-old-indian-man) and do it with impunity (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/assault-charges-dropped-alabama-cop-who-partially-paralyzed-indian-grandfather-n573806). They brutally beat handcuffed men (https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/apr/09/second-officer-walter-scott-video-sued-stomping) and women. If you need more, go back and reread this very thread.

    Fact: an encounter with a cop is a scary fucking experience, because your brothers and your sisters in blue are either trigger-happy bullies that are drunk on power or cowards without the moral courage to stomp out the corrupt among themselves and uphold the oath they took.

    You’re here, telling us what a good cop you are, and how this shit doesn’t happen in your department. Bullshit. It happens in every department and if you don’t see it, it’s because you aren’t looking. You come on here and defend the indefensible and pretend it’s bevause you have some refined and superior sense of justice.
     (https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/11/13/former-skokie-cop-gets-probation-for-shoving-woman-in-cell/)

    I respect your opinion, So I don't easily discount what you have to say. But when someone asks my opinion, and starts it off with "anyone else would be beaten or shot" and you and I know that while you are correct there are instances where cops have screwed the pooch, there are many times more where they didn't,  I don't believe the question was posed with any curiosity as to what I might think. Do you?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 10, 2018, 10:28:33 PM
    I didn't really the post you were responding to. Your post was just the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back. Maybe the situation was always this bad but we just didn't know it before. But we are in the era of YouTube and Facebook and this shit gets out and circulates, and now it's not just the word of a cop against a citizen's.

    The line must be drawn at some point. And that point is here. We as a society need to say to cops "this far, no farther." You (and I use the plural form) aren't samurai, in the service of a feudal lord. And we aren't serfs who must revere and respect you lest our life be forfeit.

    Cops enjoy tremendous privileges and are, in all but the most outrageous of outrageous cases, never subjected to any sort of justice. The norm seems to be the sort of talking to that Andy Griffith would deliver to Opie (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KW6tuTJMwE&t=705).

    If you aren't outraged with the posts in this thread, I got to tell: you're part of the problem. This stuff should make your blood boil. You say there are cases were cops didn't screw the pooch and that's true enough. But you say that like it's some kind of accomplishment. It's not! I submit to you that that alone should be an indication that something is very very wrong here.

    Look back. You really don't know of any cop that lied on the stand? Or someone who roughed up someone while yelling the obligatory "stop resisting"? Who didn't abuse their power even a little bit? You really haven't seen any of those things ever?

    I'll ask you an honest question:

    All other things being equal, if I was discovered heavily intoxicated, having just crashed my vehicle, and I refused to obey commands and pulled my gun, would I just be told to "go home"? I think that if we're being honest, the answer is no: I'd probably be shot and I'd be lucky to end up in a hospital instead of the morgue.

    Blue privilege is as real as that thin blue line; the one that cops drew separate themselves from the hoi polloi; it's a line between those whose life is valuable and matters and those whose life isn't and doesn't. This line is just an example of primitive thinking; a form of tribalism-the tribe of the badge. And like all forms of tribalism, it is wrong and morally repugnant.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on November 11, 2018, 03:28:40 PM
    I didn't really the post you were responding to. Your post was just the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back. Maybe the situation was always this bad but we just didn't know it before. But we are in the era of YouTube and Facebook and this shit gets out and circulates, and now it's not just the word of a cop against a citizen's.

    The line must be drawn at some point. And that point is here. We as a society need to say to cops "this far, no farther." You (and I use the plural form) aren't samurai, in the service of a feudal lord. And we aren't serfs who must revere and respect you lest our life be forfeit.

    Cops enjoy tremendous privileges and are, in all but the most outrageous of outrageous cases, never subjected to any sort of justice. The norm seems to be the sort of talking to that Andy Griffith would deliver to Opie (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KW6tuTJMwE&t=705).

    If you aren't outraged with the posts in this thread, I got to tell: you're part of the problem. This stuff should make your blood boil. You say there are cases were cops didn't screw the pooch and that's true enough. But you say that like it's some kind of accomplishment. It's not! I submit to you that that alone should be an indication that something is very very wrong here.

    Look back. You really don't know of any cop that lied on the stand? Or someone who roughed up someone while yelling the obligatory "stop resisting"? Who didn't abuse their power even a little bit? You really haven't seen any of those things ever?

    I'll ask you an honest question:

    All other things being equal, if I was discovered heavily intoxicated, having just crashed my vehicle, and I refused to obey commands and pulled my gun, would I just be told to "go home"? I think that if we're being honest, the answer is no: I'd probably be shot and I'd be lucky to end up in a hospital instead of the morgue.

    Blue privilege is as real as that thin blue line; the one that cops drew separate themselves from the hoi polloi; it's a line between those whose life is valuable and matters and those whose life isn't and doesn't. This line is just an example of primitive thinking; a form of tribalism-the tribe of the badge. And like all forms of tribalism, it is wrong and morally repugnant.

    I didn't see the video of pulling the gun. I can honestly say that in my experience, we have arrested cops off duty out of uniform for DWI. Several cases of this. So it is not in my experience unusual to see a cop arrested the same as a citizen. As for your question, no, you would not be allowed to go home. In my experience. the officer would have been processed for DWI. All kinds of policy violations would be initiated and he would face both a criminal trial for DWI and an internal affairs administrative investigation for several violations and would be terminated. So yes, that cop received special treatment no doubt and it is wrong. Going back to the original question, I personally have chased down suspects and had to fight them into cuffs on more than one occasion. When the cuffs went on, the fight was over. There was no beatings. The assumption that if this was a civilian they would be shot beaten or otherwise is something I am not going to agree with. Because I have seen hundreds of times when it didnt happen. But if all I ever saw was youtube video of police abuse, I might very well be prone to assume they are all that way. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 11, 2018, 03:36:38 PM
    hard to take your questions serious when you say a civilian in that instance would be beaten or shot. As Trump would say.. "Thats a stupid question"

    Come on Agnostic
    Are you Really trying to say That Cop & A Civilian would’ve received the same treatment.

    As Trump would say & most others That’s a very stupid point of view.

     ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on November 11, 2018, 04:50:33 PM
    Come on Agnostic
    Are you Really trying to say That Cop & A Civilian would’ve received the same treatment.

    As Trump would say & most others That’s a very stupid point of view.

     ;D
    He always acts like everyone would be treated equally but we all know cops help cover each others crimes.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 11, 2018, 05:27:41 PM
    He always acts like everyone would be treated equally but we all know cops help cover each others crimes.

    Clearly not everyone is treated equally
    We’ve seen enough evidence of this & Very likely that is just a tip of the iceberg
    To try and say otherwise is just silly.

    I’m sure agnostic was a decent cop & acted professionally & means well
    The same Cannot be said for an awful lot of other cops.

    Previously Agnostic estimated 5-10% of Cops are rogue
    That’s roughly between 50-100,000 Now that’s a sizeable Gang / army
    Of Armed Villainous Cops.
    Not Something to be taken lightly or tried to gloss over.
    Then add in the cops who stay silent or worse cover for them
    And as can Regularly be Seen it’s A Huge Problem.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 12, 2018, 04:47:32 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 12, 2018, 04:49:40 AM
    I didn't really the post you were responding to. Your post was just the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back. Maybe the situation was always this bad but we just didn't know it before. But we are in the era of YouTube and Facebook and this shit gets out and circulates, and now it's not just the word of a cop against a citizen's.

    The line must be drawn at some point. And that point is here. We as a society need to say to cops "this far, no farther." You (and I use the plural form) aren't samurai, in the service of a feudal lord. And we aren't serfs who must revere and respect you lest our life be forfeit.

    Cops enjoy tremendous privileges and are, in all but the most outrageous of outrageous cases, never subjected to any sort of justice. The norm seems to be the sort of talking to that Andy Griffith would deliver to Opie (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KW6tuTJMwE&t=705).

    If you aren't outraged with the posts in this thread, I got to tell: you're part of the problem. This stuff should make your blood boil. You say there are cases were cops didn't screw the pooch and that's true enough. But you say that like it's some kind of accomplishment. It's not! I submit to you that that alone should be an indication that something is very very wrong here.

    Look back. You really don't know of any cop that lied on the stand? Or someone who roughed up someone while yelling the obligatory "stop resisting"? Who didn't abuse their power even a little bit? You really haven't seen any of those things ever?

    I'll ask you an honest question:

    All other things being equal, if I was discovered heavily intoxicated, having just crashed my vehicle, and I refused to obey commands and pulled my gun, would I just be told to "go home"? I think that if we're being honest, the answer is no: I'd probably be shot and I'd be lucky to end up in a hospital instead of the morgue.

    Blue privilege is as real as that thin blue line; the one that cops drew separate themselves from the hoi polloi; it's a line between those whose life is valuable and matters and those whose life isn't and doesn't. This line is just an example of primitive thinking; a form of tribalism-the tribe of the badge. And like all forms of tribalism, it is wrong and morally repugnant.


    Its called "Testilie" 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2018, 04:11:08 PM
    When a group of people that was kicked out of a bar for being disruptive, they returned and one of them started firing shots inside the bar. This brave security guard stood up and managed to control the situation, detaining the alleged shooter and potentially saving several lives. Then the cops showed up and killed him.
    Since they killed an innocent man, the cops will come up with many excuses and they'll probably claim it was just "a mistake" and "tragic" like they usually do in such cases. As is usual, the cop has not been named yet and is enjoying paid vacation.

    Family Files Federal Lawsuit After Police Officer Kills Security Guard While Responding To Bar Shooting

    A Midlothian police officer shot and killed a security guard at a south suburban bar on Sunday, and now the guard’s mother is suing police, after witnesses said the Jemel Roberson had subdued a gunman who opened fire at the club.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2018/11/12/robbins-shooting-security-guard-jemel-roberson-midlothian-police-officer-mannys-luxury-lounge/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 13, 2018, 04:33:12 PM
    So awful.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on November 13, 2018, 07:53:17 PM
    Shoot 50 times and kill the wrong people? Who cares, it's cops who did they shooting, so the DA found their actions justified.

    3 Denver officers cleared in shooting death of man who was mistaken for escaped inmate

    Denver’s district attorney determined three police officers were justified when they shot and killed a man who had been mistaken for an escaped jail inmate, but lawyers for the man called the shooting “egregious” and are questioning whether the officers violated the department’s policies for firing at moving cars.



    https://www.denverpost.com/2018/10/16/denver-police-fatal-shooting-escaped-inmate/


    These motherfuckers have no idea how much damage they are making to the Constitution and our Rights.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2018, 08:23:29 PM
    NJ Supreme Court rules more than 20,000 DWI convictions could be tossed

    More than 20,000 Breathalyzer tests might be tossed out after it was discovered the machines were apparently not properly calibrated. New Jersey State Police Sgt. Marc Dennis allegedly mishandled the devices that determine a driver's blood alcohol content (BAC), the state's Supreme Court ruled Tuesday, according to NJ Advance Media.

    The justices unanimously found that criminal charges pending against Dennis — who oversaw the calibration of the devices as a coordinator with the State Police Alcohol Drug Testing Unit — made breath-testing device test results from five counties inadmissible as evidence.

    The sergeant pleaded not guilty in January 2017 to official misconduct and records tampering charges after he was accused in 2016 of lying about the Breathalyzer machines on official documents. Authorities have alleged he skipped a required step in the calibration process. State authorities, however, have maintained that the step Dennis allegedly skipped was one of several redundancies and fail-safes meant to ensure the readings are accurate. They claim that omitting that one step didn't invalidate the results, noting New Jersey is the only state that requires the step. Dennis has denied any wrongdoing and has pleaded not guilty to records tampering and other charges.

    As many as 20,667 DWI convictions could now be challenged, according to state authorities and the lawyer for the now-dead plaintiff who brought the case that the court ruled upon.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/nj-supreme-court-rules-more-than-20000-dwi-convictions-could-be-tossed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2018, 02:01:18 PM
    The lazy bums didn't even get out of their car yet still claim they "investigated". They must be held responsible for this kid's death.

    Body camera footage shows police never got out of cruiser to check for Ohio teen crushed by minivan seat

    Body camera footage from two Cincinnati officers showed they never left their patrol car to investigate the 911 calls about a teen being stuck in a minivan last week.

    Kyle Plush, 16, called 911 twice on April 10, 2018, from inside a minivan begging for help and providing a dispatcher with a description and location of the vehicle in a school parking lot. Plush suffocated after he became trapped under the third-row seat that flipped and pinned him while he was trying to reach his tennis equipment. Police said Amber Smith, the 911 operator who answered Plush’s second call, failed to relay information to the additional officers who were at the scene.

    During the call, Plush explained to Smith the call was not a joke.

    "I am trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of the Seven Hills...Send officers immediately," Plush pleaded. "I’m almost dead.”

    Smith, who has been a 911 operator for four years, returned to work this week after being put on administrative leave. She told supervisors her computer froze and she was unable to put information into the system. She also told her supervisors she didn't hear the teenager, according to a police quality review report obtained by FOX19.  

    The footage showed Officers Edsel Osborne and Brian Brazile driving their cruiser around the parking lot but not leaving the vehicle, WCPO reported. Music appeared to be playing in the background.

    "I don't see nobody, which I didn't imagine I would,” one of the officers was heard saying.

    “I’m going to shut this off,” one of the officers was heard saying.




    Records showed officers were at the school for about 11 minutes.

    The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the footage also shows the officers did not check all the school's parking lots.

    Osborne and Brazile were not placed on administrative leave, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

    Tiffany Hardy, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati Police Department, said the footage was “the entirety of what was recorded.”

    A Hamilton County deputy who was directing traffic also looked for the teen but did not find anything.

    Another officer was told to respond to the scene later in the day but thought the call was a joke.

    "I think somebody's playing pranks. It was something about they were locked in a vehicle across from the school, we never found anything. But we'll respond and see what else we can find," an officer was heard saying in the radio transmission.

    Plush was found dead hours later by his father.

    Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has called for an internal investigation into the teen’s death and why first responders failed to help him.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/21/body-camera-footage-shows-police-never-got-out-cruiser-to-check-for-ohio-teen-crushed-by-minivan-seat.html



    Remember this case? The prosecutor will not file any charges... Then again you may remember for example that 911 dispatcher who hung up on emergency calls and even said "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real." and only got 10 days (not months or years) in prison. (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg9025786#msg9025786) Don't expect any rioting or protests...

    No criminal charges in case of teen crushed to death in van after calling 911

    No criminal charges will be filed in the case of a 16-year-old boy who died trapped in his van after making multiple calls to 911 for help, prosecutors said.

    Kyle Plush, of Cincinnati, Ohio, died in April from asphyxia due to chest compression while he was trapped in the third row bench seat of his Honda Odyssey in his school parking lot.

    Following a thorough review, "no criminal charges are appropriate and, therefore, none will be filed," Hamilton County Prosecutor Joseph Deters said in a statement Thursday.

    In a harrowing call to 911 in April, Plush said, "Help! I'm stuck in my van. ... I need help!"

    But Plush could not hear the dispatcher, police said. An operator repeatedly asked Plush where he was. The teen said several times he was at "Seven Hills," which is the name of the Cincinnati school he attended.

    The terrified teen is heard screaming and later said on the call, "I'm in desperate need of help!"

    The call disconnected, and dispatchers tried to call Plush back but reached his voicemail, police said at the time.

    Officers responded to the area and tried to find the car but couldn't, police said at the time.

    In another call to 911, Plush said, "I probably don't have much time left. Tell my mom I love her if I die."

    "This is not a joke," Plush said. "I'm trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the ... parking lot of Seven Hills."

    But Plush again said he couldn't hear the dispatcher.

    The dispatcher and Plush didn't communicate and the information wasn't relayed to the officers who were still at the scene, police said.

    "Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead," Plush said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/criminal-charges-case-teen-died-van-calling-911/story?id=59215644
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 15, 2018, 02:26:04 PM
    The coward of Broward.

    Scot Peterson, Parkland deputy who didn't enter school during shooting, doesn't show for investigative panel

    Scot Peterson, the disgraced Broward County sheriff's deputy who did not confront Nikolas Cruz as he opened fire at Marjory Stoneman Douglas in February, declined on Thursday to testify before a public safety commission investigating the massacre.

    Peterson, 55, would've been asked why he didn't enter the Parkland, Florida school building where 17 people were killed in one of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history. The school resource officer's attorney, Joseph DiRuzzo, instead appeared before the commission. He told them that earlier Thursday he filed a lawsuit to stop the 14-member panel's subpoena.

    The commission, which is meeting this week to dissect the Feb. 14 shooting, criticized Peterson on Wednesday, as they believe he could've prevented at least six deaths if he entered the building immediately. Instead, Peterson took cover from Cruz's gunfire and never went inside.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/scot-peterson-parkland-deputy-who-failed-to-enter-school-during-shooting-no-show-in-front-of-investigative-panel
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on November 15, 2018, 10:09:16 PM
    Remember this case? The prosecutor will not file any charges... Then again you may remember for example that 911 dispatcher who hung up on emergency calls and even said "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real." and only got 10 days (not months or years) in prison. (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg9025786#msg9025786) Don't expect any rioting or protests...

    No criminal charges in case of teen crushed to death in van after calling 911

    No criminal charges will be filed in the case of a 16-year-old boy who died trapped in his van after making multiple calls to 911 for help, prosecutors said.

    Kyle Plush, of Cincinnati, Ohio, died in April from asphyxia due to chest compression while he was trapped in the third row bench seat of his Honda Odyssey in his school parking lot.

    Following a thorough review, "no criminal charges are appropriate and, therefore, none will be filed," Hamilton County Prosecutor Joseph Deters said in a statement Thursday.

    In a harrowing call to 911 in April, Plush said, "Help! I'm stuck in my van. ... I need help!"

    But Plush could not hear the dispatcher, police said. An operator repeatedly asked Plush where he was. The teen said several times he was at "Seven Hills," which is the name of the Cincinnati school he attended.

    The terrified teen is heard screaming and later said on the call, "I'm in desperate need of help!"

    The call disconnected, and dispatchers tried to call Plush back but reached his voicemail, police said at the time.

    Officers responded to the area and tried to find the car but couldn't, police said at the time.

    In another call to 911, Plush said, "I probably don't have much time left. Tell my mom I love her if I die."

    "This is not a joke," Plush said. "I'm trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the ... parking lot of Seven Hills."

    But Plush again said he couldn't hear the dispatcher.

    The dispatcher and Plush didn't communicate and the information wasn't relayed to the officers who were still at the scene, police said.

    "Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead," Plush said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/criminal-charges-case-teen-died-van-calling-911/story?id=59215644

    This is just fuckin' insane!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 16, 2018, 01:13:34 AM
    Quote from: Skeletor on 15-11-2018, 22:01:18
    Remember this case? The prosecutor will not file any charges... Then again you may remember for example that 911 dispatcher who hung up on emergency calls and even said "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real." and only got 10 days (not months or years) in prison. Don't expect any rioting or protests...

    No criminal charges in case of teen crushed to death in van after calling 911

    No criminal charges will be filed in the case of a 16-year-old boy who died trapped in his van after making multiple calls to 911 for help, prosecutors said.

    Kyle Plush, of Cincinnati, Ohio, died in April from asphyxia due to chest compression while he was trapped in the third row bench seat of his Honda Odyssey in his school parking lot.

    Following a thorough review, "no criminal charges are appropriate and, therefore, none will be filed," Hamilton County Prosecutor Joseph Deters said in a statement Thursday.

    In a harrowing call to 911 in April, Plush said, "Help! I'm stuck in my van. ... I need help!"

    But Plush could not hear the dispatcher, police said. An operator repeatedly asked Plush where he was. The teen said several times he was at "Seven Hills," which is the name of the Cincinnati school he attended.

    The terrified teen is heard screaming and later said on the call, "I'm in desperate need of help!"

    The call disconnected, and dispatchers tried to call Plush back but reached his voicemail, police said at the time.

    Officers responded to the area and tried to find the car but couldn't, police said at the time.

    In another call to 911, Plush said, "I probably don't have much time left. Tell my mom I love her if I die."

    "This is not a joke," Plush said. "I'm trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the ... parking lot of Seven Hills."

    But Plush again said he couldn't hear the dispatcher.

    The dispatcher and Plush didn't communicate and the information wasn't relayed to the officers who were still at the scene, police said.

    "Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead," Plush said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/criminal-charges-case-teen-died-van-calling-911/story?id=59215644


    This is just fuckin' insane!


    I’m sure Agnostic will be here to point out
    A, He was a drug dealer / wife beater / child abuser
    And deserved to Die
    B, The cops acted correctly & followed correct procedure
    C, The cops were in fear of their lives
    D, The cops are heroes & should get paid extended leave
    And promotion when they return to work
    E, The police are equality employers & The Cop the operator
    was talking to is completely Stone deaf


     ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2018, 04:07:18 PM
    Remember lowly plebs, the only things that matter are the opinions of armed and violent "experts" with a badge... The same type of "experts" that arrested and jailed a man because in their "expert opinion" donut glaze is meth (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg8900401#msg8900401).. Of course don't expect the cops to go to prison or to have to pay a $1m bail - or even pay anything from their own pockets.

    Monroe County woman sues county after wrongful imprisonment from false drug test results

    A woman is suing Monroe County after a wrongful arrest. A roadside drug test falsely labeled a bag of cotton candy as methamphetamine. Dasha Fincher says Dec. 31, 2016 is a day she'll never forget. She says deputies with the Monroe County Sheriff's Office pulled her over and searched her car.

    She was put in jail for more than three months. Fincher says a judge set her bond at $1 million. In March 22, 2017, GBI lab tests came back to said there were "no controlled substances confirmed in the sample."

    "I want Monroe County to pay for they did to me," said Fincher.

    Fincher filed a lawsuit Thursday against Monroe County, the two deputies who arrested her, the company that manufactured the drug test, and others. Prosecutors dropped the charges against Fincher in April 18, 2017. She says she missed major life events while locked up.

    "My daughter had a miscarriage. I wasn't there for that. My twin grandsons were born. I missed that," said Fincher.

    https://www.13wmaz.com/article/news/local/monroe-county-woman-sues-county-after-wrongful-imprisonment-from-false-drug-test-results/93-615434650
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2018, 05:11:46 PM
    It's always "unfortunate", "tragic" or "a mistake" when it involves cops and there rarely seem to be any criminal charges for them. The mother was of course arrested and will probably have the book thrown at her so that the blame will be placed on her instead of the parties (cops and towers and tow lot) who were responsible for this girl being ignored, abandoned and locked up in the cold.

    4-year-old girl left in van overnight after vehicle towed to city lot

    MILWAUKEE – A Milwaukee family is speaking out after city workers towed a van with a 4-year-old girl inside and left it in a lot overnight amid frigid temperatures, according to WITI.

    Milwaukee police stopped the minivan near 39th and Forest Home Avenue around 12:30 a.m. on Tuesday and arrested the driver of the minivan – who they suspected was intoxicated.

    Officers took custody of a 10-month-old child, but apparently didn't notice the 4-year-old before the vehicle was towed to the Department of Public Works Tow Lot.

    Around 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, officials said they found the girl crying inside the minivan. An officer called in the fire department and emergency personnel evaluated the girl. Officials said she seemed to be "OK" but was taken to an area hospital for a more thorough review.

    The minivan was towed to the city lot, where it received another quick inspection. DPW officials said when a vehicle comes to the city's tow lot, it is usually on a flatbed truck and vehicle information is taken and a walk-around with a flashlight is done.

    https://fox2now.com/2018/11/13/4-year-old-girl-left-in-van-overnight-after-vehicle-towed-to-city-lot/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on November 19, 2018, 05:45:02 PM
    It's always "unfortunate", "tragic" or "a mistake" when it involves cops and there rarely seem to be any criminal charges for them. The mother was of course arrested and will probably have the book thrown at her so that the blame will be placed on her instead of the parties (cops and towers and tow lot) who were responsible for this girl being ignored, abandoned and locked up in the cold.

    4-year-old girl left in van overnight after vehicle towed to city lot

    MILWAUKEE – A Milwaukee family is speaking out after city workers towed a van with a 4-year-old girl inside and left it in a lot overnight amid frigid temperatures, according to WITI.

    Milwaukee police stopped the minivan near 39th and Forest Home Avenue around 12:30 a.m. on Tuesday and arrested the driver of the minivan – who they suspected was intoxicated.

    Officers took custody of a 10-month-old child, but apparently didn't notice the 4-year-old before the vehicle was towed to the Department of Public Works Tow Lot.

    Around 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, officials said they found the girl crying inside the minivan. An officer called in the fire department and emergency personnel evaluated the girl. Officials said she seemed to be "OK" but was taken to an area hospital for a more thorough review.

    The minivan was towed to the city lot, where it received another quick inspection. DPW officials said when a vehicle comes to the city's tow lot, it is usually on a flatbed truck and vehicle information is taken and a walk-around with a flashlight is done.

    https://fox2now.com/2018/11/13/4-year-old-girl-left-in-van-overnight-after-vehicle-towed-to-city-lot/
    How the hell do you miss seeing a 4 year old kid???
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 22, 2018, 10:26:20 PM
    This cop was assigned to an "elite" "specialized" unit that investigated crimes against children and now he's accused of raping a 14 year old whose case he was investigating. How many more perverts like that serve on these "elite" units that investigate crimes against children? Incidents like this can make children victims of sexual assault think twice before contacting the police (and this cop is accused of doing this exact thing, dissuading the victim from testifying). Normally in such cases the police tries to name and shame the accused but it seems that when it's a cop involved the treatment is a bit different. In this case the Sheriff's Department did not announce the arrest initially and provided information after an inquiry by the LA Times.

    L.A. County sheriff's sex crimes investigator arrested on suspicion of raping minor

    (https://www.latimes.com/resizer/GDzjkteKW7lv6pm9BxE996dL40s=/1400x0/www.trbimg.com/img-5bf5ffcd/turbine/la-1542848455-m0dphufvgv-snap-image)

    A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy assigned to handle sensitive sex abuse crimes, often involving vulnerable minors, has been arrested on suspicion of raping a 14-year-old girl in a case he was investigating.

    Neil Kimball was taken into custody Friday evening after a monthlong inquiry into the allegations by the sheriff's criminal internal investigation bureau. He was booked on suspicion of rape by force and preventing or dissuading a victim from testifying.

    The 45-year-old investigator with the special victims unit met the girl during the “scope of his work,” a department spokeswoman said Monday.

    Kimball was relieved of duty with pay and was booked at the Los Angeles County Inmate Reception Center shortly after 11 p.m. Friday. His bail is set at $2 million.

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-deputy-svu-rape-20181119-story.html

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-sheriff-deputy-charged-20181121-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 23, 2018, 12:16:06 AM
    This cop was assigned to an "elite" "specialized" unit that investigated crimes against children and now he's accused of raping a 14 year old whose case he was investigating. How many more perverts like that serve on these "elite" units that investigate crimes against children? Incidents like this can make children victims of sexual assault think twice before contacting the police (and this cop is accused of doing this exact thing, dissuading the victim from testifying). Normally in such cases the police tries to name and shame the accused but it seems that when it's a cop involved the treatment is a bit different. In this case the Sheriff's Department did not announce the arrest initially and provided information after an inquiry by the LA Times.

    L.A. County sheriff's sex crimes investigator arrested on suspicion of raping minor

    (https://www.latimes.com/resizer/GDzjkteKW7lv6pm9BxE996dL40s=/1400x0/www.trbimg.com/img-5bf5ffcd/turbine/la-1542848455-m0dphufvgv-snap-image)

    A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy assigned to handle sensitive sex abuse crimes, often involving vulnerable minors, has been arrested on suspicion of raping a 14-year-old girl in a case he was investigating.

    Neil Kimball was taken into custody Friday evening after a monthlong inquiry into the allegations by the sheriff's criminal internal investigation bureau. He was booked on suspicion of rape by force and preventing or dissuading a victim from testifying.

    The 45-year-old investigator with the special victims unit met the girl during the “scope of his work,” a department spokeswoman said Monday.

    Kimball was relieved of duty with pay and was booked at the Los Angeles County Inmate Reception Center shortly after 11 p.m. Friday. His bail is set at $2 million.

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-deputy-svu-rape-20181119-story.html

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-sheriff-deputy-charged-20181121-story.html


    No doubt if found guilty
    1, He doesn’t go to prison
    2, He’ll get a pay rise
    3, also be promoted
    4, get some kind of honour or medal

    Yet another low life scumbag who should be treated like a lowlife scumbag
    Or worse as he’s in a position of trust & authority
    Yet he won’t be treated harshly at all as he’s a cop.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on November 24, 2018, 07:20:39 AM
    Why do these cocksuckers still get pay? Fucking piece of shit unions, should be abolished.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on November 24, 2018, 09:06:24 AM
    https://news.unclesamsmisguidedchildren.com/wrong-man-killed-in-alabama-mall-altercation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 26, 2018, 08:30:15 PM
    Grand jury hearing case against former Dallas officer Amber Guyger

    (https://media.fox4news.com/media.fox4news.com/photo/2018/09/10/guyger%20jean%20dallas%20lamar%20shooting_1536612763678.png_6042738_ver1.0_640_360.jpg)

    The criminal case against a fired Dallas police officer who shot and killed her neighbor is now being presented to a Dallas County grand jury.

    Former officer Amber Guyger is charged with manslaughter for the shooting death of Botham Jean, who was fatally shot in his own apartment in early September by Guyger. She told investigators she mistakenly entered Jean's apartment and mistook him for a burglar in her own home.

    Grand jury proceedings are secret, so the details and evidence being presented by the Dallas County District Attorney will not be made public until the grand jury finishes its review, which began Monday. Guyger could be indicted for manslaughter, face an upgraded charge of murder or be cleared of any potential charges.

    An announcement of charges could come as soon as Wednesday.

    https://www.fox7austin.com/home/grand-jury-hearing-case-against-dallas-officer-amber-guyger
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2018, 03:00:40 PM
    Once again we see that these criminals are ruthless and don't care about  truth, justice, laws or BS such as "noble causes". This happened a few years ago. Scum like this should be sent to the electric chair.

    The chief wanted perfect stats, so cops were told to pin crimes on black people, probe found

    The indictment was damning enough: A former police chief of Biscayne Park and two officers charged with falsely pinning four burglaries on a teenager just to impress village leaders with a perfect crime-solving record.

    But the accusations revealed in federal court last month left out far uglier details of past policing practices in tranquil Biscayne Park, a leafy wedge of suburbia just north of Miami Shores.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article213647764.html

    Once again, we are dealing with criminal gangs. Remember this case?
    Cop admits framing two black men as Florida town’s false arrest scandal widens

    The federal investigation into a handful of former Biscayne Park police officers accused of framing innocent people widened this week, when another cop was accused of falsifying arrest warrants for two men at the direction of the police chief.

    Guillermo Ravelo, who was fired from the force earlier this year, pleaded guilty Thursday in Miami federal court to a conspiracy charge that he violated the rights of the falsely accused men — one charged with a pair of home break-ins in 2013, the other with five vehicle burglaries the following year. The charges against the two men, both black, were eventually dropped.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/article215589545.html

    Remember this case? The head of the criminal gang got only 3 years in prison... Two of the other gang members were sentenced to just 1 year in prison...

    Former Biscayne Park police chief gets 3 years in prison for framing black people

    The former police chief of Biscayne Park will serve three years in prison for a conspiracy in his department to frame black people for crimes they did not commit.

    A federal judge in Miami imposed the sentence Tuesday on ex-Biscayne Park Police Chief Raimundo Atesiano, who had faced a maximum 10-year sentence.

    https://www.local10.com/news/crime/former-biscayne-park-police-chief-gets-3-years-in-prison-for-framing-black-people
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 28, 2018, 03:19:41 PM
    3 cops charged in Laquan McDonald cover-up set for trial in July

    Three Chicago Police officers charged with attempting to cover up misconduct by the fellow officer who shot Laquan McDonald will go to trial in July.

    https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/3-cops-charged-in-laquan-mcdonald-cover-up-will-go-to-trial-in-july/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2018, 01:40:50 PM
    Grand jury hearing case against former Dallas officer Amber Guyger

    (https://media.fox4news.com/media.fox4news.com/photo/2018/09/10/guyger%20jean%20dallas%20lamar%20shooting_1536612763678.png_6042738_ver1.0_640_360.jpg)

    The criminal case against a fired Dallas police officer who shot and killed her neighbor is now being presented to a Dallas County grand jury.

    Former officer Amber Guyger is charged with manslaughter for the shooting death of Botham Jean, who was fatally shot in his own apartment in early September by Guyger. She told investigators she mistakenly entered Jean's apartment and mistook him for a burglar in her own home.

    Grand jury proceedings are secret, so the details and evidence being presented by the Dallas County District Attorney will not be made public until the grand jury finishes its review, which began Monday. Guyger could be indicted for manslaughter, face an upgraded charge of murder or be cleared of any potential charges.

    An announcement of charges could come as soon as Wednesday.

    https://www.fox7austin.com/home/grand-jury-hearing-case-against-dallas-officer-amber-guyger

    Now let's see how the trial goes and if she'll go to prison (better yet, though highly unlikely, sent to death row).

    Fired cop Amber Guyger indicted on a murder charge in Botham Jean killing

    Guyger was arrested on a manslaughter charge on Sept. 9, three days after the shooting. But after a week of hearing evidence in the case, a grand jury on Friday indicted Guyger on a charge of murder.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-indicted-on-a-murder-charge-in-botham-jean-killing/287-619078538
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 30, 2018, 05:22:40 PM
    As it has been mentioned many times in this topic, we are dealing with violent criminal gangs.
    One of the few times that cops are indicted for beating someone. Maybe that's because the person they assaulted happened to be an undercover cop. As expected, the scumbags are represented by the cop union lawyers.

    St. Louis cops indicted for assaulting undercover officer posing as protester: 'Gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads'

    hen a judge acquitted a white St. Louis police officer in September 2017 for fatally shooting a young black man, the city's cops braced for massive protests. But St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Officer Dustin Boone wasn't just prepared for the unrest - he was pumped.

    "It's gonna get IGNORANT tonight!!" he texted another officer on Sept. 15, 2017, the day of the verdict. "It's gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads once the sun goes down and nobody can tell us apart!!!!"

    Two days later, prosecutors say, that's exactly what Boone did to one black protester. Boone, 35, and two other officers, Randy Hays, 31, and Christopher Myers, 27, threw a man to the ground and viciously kicked him and beat him with riot shields, even though he was complying with their instructions.

    But the three cops had no idea that the man was actually a 22-year police veteran working undercover, whom they beat so badly that he couldn't eat and lost 20 pounds.

    On Thursday, a federal grand jury indicted the three officers in the assault. They also indicted the men and another officer, Bailey Colletta, 25, for destroying evidence and lying about the attack. Prosecutors released text messages showing the officers bragging about assaulting protesters, with Hays even noting that "going rogue does feel good."

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/midwest/ct-st-louis-police-officers-charged-in-beating-20181129-story,amp.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 01, 2018, 11:30:17 PM
    Insane. This happened in the US, not some third world shithole. Hopefully the nurse, the doctor and all the others involved spend the rest of their lives in prison.

    “Every reasonable prison officer and medical personnel would have known that wrongfully misclassifying a biological female as a male inmate and placing that female in the male population of a detention facility was unlawful,”

    Maybe the judge has no idea that several of the prison "officers", staff and "law enforcement officers" in this country are not particularly reasonable, professional or law abiding.
    Surely they'll claim it was an "accident" but it certainly doesn't seem like one.

    Grandmother placed in jail cell with 40 men can proceed with lawsuit, judge rules

    A federal judge in Florida last month reinstated a lawsuit filed by a grandmother who was booked into jail as a man, resulting in her spending nearly 10 hours in a holding cell with leering male inmates.

    The ruling allows Fior Pichardo de Veloz to pursue a trial against Dr. Fredesvindo Rodriguez-Garcia and nurse Fatu Kamara Harris, of the Miami-Dade Corrections Department, the Miami Herald reported.

    “Every reasonable prison officer and medical personnel would have known that wrongfully misclassifying a biological female as a male inmate and placing that female in the male population of a detention facility was unlawful,” Judge Frank Hull wrote in the unanimous opinion released Nov. 21.

    Harris was “exposed to consistent and repeated information that Mrs. Pichardo was a woman” and “stubbornly refused” to confirm Pichardo’s gender, and the doctor “knew that sending a woman to an all-male prison would pose a risk of serious harm to her safety, however, he took no steps to verify Mrs. Pichardo’s sex before re-classifying her as male,” the court said.

    Pichardo, 55, an attorney and elected official in the Dominican Republic, was arrested in November 2013 at Miami International Airport on suspicion of an old drug case.

    During the booking process at Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center, Pichardo was asked her whether she was a man because her file noted that she was taking hormone pills. She was under hormone replacement therapy at the time to help with menopause symptoms, the court said.

    The doctor never had Pichardo undress, never conducted a physical examination and never asked about her gender or why she was on the pills before classifying her as a man, according to the paper.

    The nurse also claimed Pichardo was a man, the paper said.

    The nurse added a note to Pichardo’s file: ”Transgender, male parts, female tendencies."

    Some corrections officers relayed their concerns about placing Pichardo in a cell with men, but were brushed off, the paper reported.

    One jailer told the grandmother, "You are a woman. Good luck if you're alive tomorrow," according to the court opinion.

    Pichardo was housed with about 40 men who laughed at her and yelled out “Mami! Mami!”

    She was so afraid to use the toilet, “she urinated on herself instead,” the court opinion said.

    Male jailers laughed at her and the mistake wasn’t realized until Pichardo’s family came to the jail and she was taken out of the cell.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/court-rules-grandma-booked-into-miami-jail-as-a-man-can-proceed-with-lawsuit
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2018, 04:38:38 PM
    So this man got assaulted, was beaten and spent 7 months in jail and still he was acquitted. What happens now to the gang that attacked him?

    Man who chomped off piece of a cop's finger is acquitted and set free in time to greet newborn son

    A Brooklyn jury acquitted a man accused of biting off and wolfing down the tip of a police officer’s finger after a startling video showed that that the man was on the ground and being beaten by arresting officers, the Daily News has learned.

    Incarcerated for seven months, Ainsley Johnson, 34, was set free Monday after he was found not guilty at trial. He was released from jail just in time to meet his fiancée Christine at Maimonides Medical Center with his new son Casey, who was born as the trial ended.

    [..]

    Police charged him with assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest, but a surveillance video of the incident from inside the precinct told an entirely different story, Biniakewitz said.

    The video shows officers throwing Johnson onto the floor. As four cops jumped him, he screams out to another man in a jail cell, asking him to remember his name. When Officer Hawk tries to cover Johnson’s mouth to silence him, his finger is bitten off, the attorney said.

    The jury acquitted Johnson within an hour. They also determined there wasn’t enough evidence to convict Johnson of damaging the car, which led to the clash with police.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-metro-cop-biter-acquitted-20181127-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2018, 04:43:13 PM
    West Palm Beach police officer arrested, accused of stealing money from suspect arrested in October

    https://www.wptv.com/news/region-c-palm-beach-county/west-palm-beach/west-palm-beach-police-officer-arrested-for-allegedly-stealing-money-from-suspect
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 03, 2018, 10:45:49 PM
    These cases are likely just the tip of the iceberg
    Sadly it appears Reading them that the US Police
    Are from some Dictatorship or 3rd world country.

    Where’s Agnostic gone - does he no longer post on this thread
    Giving us the benefit of the insider (& Correct  ;D ) police view
    To these minor incidents.  ::)

    Come back Agnostic I enjoy your views.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2018, 10:49:13 PM
    https://news.unclesamsmisguidedchildren.com/wrong-man-killed-in-alabama-mall-altercation/

    Shot 3 times in the back. In many cases homeowners defending their family can get in trouble if they fire 1 shot against an intruder, let alone if they shoot him in the back, and here the cops shot this man 3 times in the back, they initially gave all sorts of narratives to cover up for themselves and now they are refusing to release the videos..

    E.J. Bradford shot in the back, attorneys say: What we learned from the private autopsy

    Attorneys for a the man killed by police at a Hoover mall on Thanksgiving night released findings of a private medical review on Monday morning at a news conference.

    Emantic “E.J." Bradford was fatally shot by Hoover police on Nov. 22 just before 10 p.m. Police were responding to gunfire in the Riverchase Galleria mall, where two others were injured. Ben Crump, a civil rights attorney hired by the Bradford family, said at a news conference Monday that 21-year-old Bradford was shot three times from behind while he was running away.

    Hoover police initially described Bradford as the mall gunman, but later said they were wrong and Bradford was likely not the person who wounded an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl. Police said Bradford was brandishing a handgun moments after the shooting, which increased the threat for officers. The results of that review, as provided by Crump and Baraganier, show Bradford was shot three times: Once in the head, once in the neck, and once in the back. The bullets all entered the 21-year-old’s body from the back, the report showed. Mitchell also noted in the report that each of the three bullets entered the body at a slightly upward angle.

    Hoover Police Chief Nick Derzis announced Monday morning just before Crump’s press conference that details of the deadly shooting, including police body camera footage or mall surveillance video, will not be released by police at this time.

    https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2018/12/private-autopsy-of-emantic-ej-fitzgerald-bradford-expected-to-be-released.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 03, 2018, 11:30:30 PM
    Shot 3 times in the back. In many cases homeowners defending their family can get in trouble if they fire 1 shot against an intruder, let alone if they shoot him in the back, and here the cops shot this man 3 times in the back, they initially gave all sorts of narratives to cover up for themselves and now they are refusing to release the videos..

    E.J. Bradford shot in the back, attorneys say: What we learned from the private autopsy

    Attorneys for a the man killed by police at a Hoover mall on Thanksgiving night released findings of a private medical review on Monday morning at a news conference.

    Emantic “E.J." Bradford was fatally shot by Hoover police on Nov. 22 just before 10 p.m. Police were responding to gunfire in the Riverchase Galleria mall, where two others were injured. Ben Crump, a civil rights attorney hired by the Bradford family, said at a news conference Monday that 21-year-old Bradford was shot three times from behind while he was running away.

    Hoover police initially described Bradford as the mall gunman, but later said they were wrong and Bradford was likely not the person who wounded an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl. Police said Bradford was brandishing a handgun moments after the shooting, which increased the threat for officers. The results of that review, as provided by Crump and Baraganier, show Bradford was shot three times: Once in the head, once in the neck, and once in the back. The bullets all entered the 21-year-old’s body from the back, the report showed. Mitchell also noted in the report that each of the three bullets entered the body at a slightly upward angle.

    Hoover Police Chief Nick Derzis announced Monday morning just before Crump’s press conference that details of the deadly shooting, including police body camera footage or mall surveillance video, will not be released by police at this time.

    https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2018/12/private-autopsy-of-emantic-ej-fitzgerald-bradford-expected-to-be-released.html


    The classic refusal to release video evidence
    Why
    1, Is it because it’s not supportive or corroborating if it shows cops in bad light
    Only If it’s showing others doing wrong.
    If it shows police potentially act wrong then it’s “The video evidence doesn’t show
    The whole picture”  “ It can be misconstrued “  “ we don’t want people to jump to conclusions”
    Yet them terms are never used when it’s Not a cop involved.
    Talk about double standards - is it any wonder police trust & support is so low.

    2, Or are they just editing the video’s - Like that never happens/ they don’t do that.
    3, They May get mysteriously lost or destroyed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2018, 06:24:35 PM
    Shot 3 times in the back. In many cases homeowners defending their family can get in trouble if they fire 1 shot against an intruder, let alone if they shoot him in the back, and here the cops shot this man 3 times in the back, they initially gave all sorts of narratives to cover up for themselves and now they are refusing to release the videos..

    E.J. Bradford shot in the back, attorneys say: What we learned from the private autopsy

    Attorneys for a the man killed by police at a Hoover mall on Thanksgiving night released findings of a private medical review on Monday morning at a news conference.

    Emantic “E.J." Bradford was fatally shot by Hoover police on Nov. 22 just before 10 p.m. Police were responding to gunfire in the Riverchase Galleria mall, where two others were injured. Ben Crump, a civil rights attorney hired by the Bradford family, said at a news conference Monday that 21-year-old Bradford was shot three times from behind while he was running away.

    Hoover police initially described Bradford as the mall gunman, but later said they were wrong and Bradford was likely not the person who wounded an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl. Police said Bradford was brandishing a handgun moments after the shooting, which increased the threat for officers. The results of that review, as provided by Crump and Baraganier, show Bradford was shot three times: Once in the head, once in the neck, and once in the back. The bullets all entered the 21-year-old’s body from the back, the report showed. Mitchell also noted in the report that each of the three bullets entered the body at a slightly upward angle.

    Hoover Police Chief Nick Derzis announced Monday morning just before Crump’s press conference that details of the deadly shooting, including police body camera footage or mall surveillance video, will not be released by police at this time.

    https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2018/12/private-autopsy-of-emantic-ej-fitzgerald-bradford-expected-to-be-released.html

    The cops are now ordered to submit the videos to alleged shooter's attorney, but not to the family of the man that the cops killed. Stiil, it's a blow to the usual police tactics of withholding evidence when they are involved. Let's see if they will obey the order.

    Videos must be handed over to Galleria shooting suspect’s attorney, judge orders

    A judge has ordered that all body camera and surveillance footage showing the shooting at the Riverchase Galleria on Thanksgiving night must be handed over to the attorney representing the man charged in the incident.

    Erron Martez Dequan Brown, 20, is charged with attempted murder in the Nov. 22 shooting, which left an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl injured. Hoover police shot and killed Emantic “E.J.” Bradford in the chaos that ensued, but said the following day that Bradford was likely not the person who fired the shots that injured the other two.

    Late Tuesday, Brown’s attorney Charles Salvagio filed a routine motion requesting discovery from prosecutors. In that motion, Salvagio added a special request for all videos and police body camera footage of the incident. Wednesday morning, Jefferson County District Judge William A. Bell Jr. granted the motion. Salvagio said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon that although the judge ordered prosecutors to turn over the footage, the prosecutors don’t have any videos—the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, who is also investigating the case, does.

    https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2018/12/lawyer-for-galleria-shooting-suspect-requests-video.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 05, 2018, 10:14:58 PM
    A homeowner did what he had to to protect his family and then the cops show up and kill him.

    After Armed Homeowner Defends Family from Home Invader, Cops Show Up and Kill Him

    Aurora, CO — When an armed intruder broke into a family’s home early Monday morning, and reportedly began harming a juvenile inside, the homeowner did what he was supposed to do. He armed himself, called 911, and defended his home—and he was successful. However, after he’d successfully fended off the home invader—by killing him—police then showed up and killed the innocent homeowner.

    According to police, they received a call from the homeowner notifying them that a man had broken into the home. When officers arrived, the scene was chaotic, according to police.

    “Officers arrived to a very chaotic and violent scene,” Aurora Police Chief Nick Metz wrote in a news release issued Monday afternoon.

    Police say they heard gunshots inside the home and when they ran inside, they found an armed man. The armed man was the homeowner and they killed him.

    There were no reports from officers claiming that the homeowner opened fire or even raised the gun toward officers. Also, none of the officers were hurt during the incident.

    After clearing the scene, according to Metz, police found the intruder dead on the bathroom floor. Metz explained that officers also found a child in the residence who’d been seriously injured by the intruder. The child was taken to the hospital for “serious, but non-life-threatening injuries” caused by the intruder, Metz said.

    According to Metz, the identities of the two men will be released by the Adams County Coroner’s Office. Metz also explained that the officer who killed the homeowner is on routine paid administrative leave.

    As the Denver Channel reports, the Aurora Police Major Crimes Unit, the Denver Police Department and the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office will conduct the investigation into the shooting.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/homeowner-defends-home-police-kill-him/

    Remember this case? Once again, an innocent man is executed inside his home while trying to defend his family and his killers get away without any charges...

    DA: Aurora officer won’t face charges in fatal shooting of armed homeowner who shot intruder

    AURORA, Colo. -- No criminal charges will be filed against an Aurora police officer who fatally shot a homeowner in July, the 17th Judicial District announced Monday.

    Officer Drew Limbaugh shot and killed an armed homeowner, 73-year-old Richard "Gary" Black Jr., defending his grandson against an intruder, Dajon Harper, on July 30.

    https://kdvr.com/2018/12/03/da-no-charges-against-aurora-officer-who-fatally-shot-armed-homeowner/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 12, 2018, 04:53:34 PM
    Bodycams on cops can conveniently "malfunction" or be "accidentally" turned off. However, a citizen recording cops committing crimes can be a problem for the blue gang because there is the grave danger that such a video could be used to expose police crimes or coverups. Of course the cops and DA wasted no time in investigating and prosecuting citizens who dared record public servants performing their duties (and/or crimes):

    Quote
    Since 2011, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office (“SCDAO”) has opened at least 11 case files that involve a felony charge under Section 99. These have included Section 99 charges where the person recorded was a police officer performing her duties in public. During the same period, the Boston Police Department (“BPD”) has applied for a criminal complaint on a Section 99 violation against at least nine individuals for secretly recording police officers performing their duties in public.

    Fortunately, a District Judge issued the correct decision and this horrible legislation has been ruled unconstitutional.

    Federal judge rules Mass. law prohibiting secret audio recording of police, government officials is unconstitutional

    A federal court judge Monday ruled a Massachusetts General Law prohibiting the secret audio recording of police or government officials is unconstitutional.

    Chief United States District Judge Patti B. Saris made the ruling on two similar cases -- one involving two Jamaica Plain residents who frequently record police officers and a second case involving Project Veritas, the undercover organization founded by conservative political activist James O'Keefe.

    https://www.masslive.com/news/boston/index.ssf/2018/12/federal_judge_rules_mass_law_p.html

    Quote
    Consistent with the language of Glik, the Court holds that Section 99 may not constitutionally prohibit the secret audio recording of government officials, including law enforcement officials, performing their duties in public spaces, subject to reasonable time, manner, and place restrictions.

    The Court declares Section 99 unconstitutional insofar as it prohibits audio recording of government officials, including law enforcement officers, performing their duties in public spaces, subject to reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions.

    https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/MA-16-11362-item-159.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 12, 2018, 10:37:22 PM
    Bodycams on cops can conveniently "malfunction" or be "accidentally" turned off. However, a citizen recording cops committing crimes can be a problem for the blue gang because there is the grave danger that such a video could be used to expose police crimes or coverups. Of course the cops and DA wasted no time in investigating and prosecuting citizens who dared record public servants performing their duties (and/or crimes):

    Fortunately, a District Judge issued the correct decision and this horrible legislation has been ruled unconstitutional.

    Federal judge rules Mass. law prohibiting secret audio recording of police, government officials is unconstitutional

    A federal court judge Monday ruled a Massachusetts General Law prohibiting the secret audio recording of police or government officials is unconstitutional.

    Chief United States District Judge Patti B. Saris made the ruling on two similar cases -- one involving two Jamaica Plain residents who frequently record police officers and a second case involving Project Veritas, the undercover organization founded by conservative political activist James O'Keefe.

    https://www.masslive.com/news/boston/index.ssf/2018/12/federal_judge_rules_mass_law_p.html

    https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/MA-16-11362-item-159.pdf


    Of Course They are Good Film You whenever it suits them
    Only Your not Good to Film Them!!!
    Seems Fair Enough...... ::)  ::)  ::)

    One Rule For Them
    And Different one for Everyone Else.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2018, 09:06:34 AM
    Free to abuse citizens with impunity but no duty to protect them...

    The coward of Broward strikes again...

    Florida Judge Rules Deputy Had Duty to Protect in Parkland School Shooting Suit

    A judge has rejected a deputy’s claim that he had no duty to confront the gunman during the school shooting in Parkland, Florida.

    Refusing to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the parent of a victim, Broward Circuit Judge Patti Englander Henning found after a hearing Wednesday that ex-deputy Scot Peterson did have a duty to protect those inside the school where 17 people died and 17 were wounded on Feb. 14. Video and other evidence shows Peterson, the only armed officer at the school, remained outside while shots rang out.

    The negligence lawsuit was filed by Andrew Pollack, whose daughter Meadow was killed. He said it made no sense for Peterson’s attorneys to argue that a sworn law enforcement officer with a badge and a gun had no requirement to go inside.

    “Then what is he doing there?” Pollack said after the ruling. “He had a duty. I’m not going to let this go. My daughter, her death is not going to be in vain.”

    Peterson attorney Michael Piper said he understands that people might be offended or outraged at his client’s defense, but he argued that as a matter of law, the deputy had no duty to confront the shooter. Peterson did not attend the hearing.

    “There is no legal duty that can be found,” Piper said. “At its very worst, Scot Peterson is accused of being a coward. That does not equate to bad faith.”

    https://www.insurancejournal.com/news/southeast/2018/12/14/512142.htm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 15, 2018, 09:31:54 PM

    Of Course They are Good Film You whenever it suits them
    Only Your not Good to Film Them!!!
    Seems Fair Enough...... ::)  ::)  ::)

    One Rule For Them
    And Different one for Everyone Else.


    How you been?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 15, 2018, 10:13:58 PM

    How you been?

    Very Good Thanks.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2018, 03:34:34 PM
    More stupid laws regarding reduced magazine capacity. However, it's quite rich that when a law restricting magazine capacity doesn't make exceptions for off duty cops, the police commissioner throws a hissy fit. Why does he want 2 standards and have the law apply only to some but not to others? Sadly this mentality is not rare with several cops, who are used to be exempt from laws that restrict "normal" people but in the rare instance that they have to comply to the same set of laws and rules as everyone else suddenly they react.

    'This Is Just Crazy': Former NYPD Commissioner Blasts NJ Gov. Over 'Insane' Gun Law

    Former NYPD Commissioner Bernard Kerik slammed New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy over a gun law that bans off-duty officers in the state from carrying magazines holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition.

    Kerik tweeted a leaked memo to law enforcement signed by Acting Bergen County Prosecutor Dennis Calo, which said violating the law would result in a fourth-degree crime.

    According to NJ.com, Murphy (D) signed the bill into law in June, which also states that an officer may not be convicted of a criminal offense if he or she voluntarily surrenders a weapon in question.

    Kerik said Sunday on Fox & Friends that the law is not only "outrageous," it also puts officers at risk.

    "You're taking the ability away from the cops to possess the rounds they may need in a gun battle. ... That's insane," he said.

    The law applies to New Jersey residents as well as off-duty officers, and Kerik said Murphy has essentially taken guns "away from the people" of the state.

    "It's one thing if you violate a rule of a department," Kerik added. "But this is a law. A criminal law, and it makes you, then, a criminal. So, this is just crazy."


    http://insider.foxnews.com/2018/12/16/new-jersey-gun-ammunition-law-bernard-kerik-former-nypd-commissioner-blasts-phil-murphy

    To see just how restrictive and absurd the law is, read this:

    New Jersey invites in violent criminal aliens while stripping citizens of the right to self-defense

    When the clock strikes midnight Tuesday morning, anyone in New Jersey who owns a magazine capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition is officially in possession of illegal contraband and is deemed a fourth-degree felon. Unlike previous magazine bans, this one retroactively bans people from even owning such magazines in their homes, even though they had been purchased legally. At the same time, the most violent criminal aliens will be actively shielded from deportation by state officials, against federal law. The inmates are running the asylum, while the law-abiding citizens and federal law enforcement are treated like criminals.

    https://www.conservativereview.com/news/new-jersey-invites-in-violent-criminal-aliens-while-stripping-citizens-of-the-right-to-self-defense/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on December 17, 2018, 05:48:56 PM
    Several states have retarded gun laws that strip law abiding citizens of their rights over night and turn otherwise honest, good people into felons.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2018, 01:37:56 PM
    This man was left paralyzed by the cop who shot him, was arrested and facing up to 99 years in prison, all based on the cop's story which initially went unchallenged. When it turned out that the situation unfolded differently from what the cop said, the charges were dropped. However, the man still is paralyzed, went to jail but the cop is still out there and his only "punishment? A mere 15 days without pay.

    Former UTSA-area barber cleared of charges in shootout with off-duty officer outside S.A. strip club

    Demontae Walker, a 25-year-old who used to work as a barber near the University of Texas at San Antonio, was facing two charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a first-degree felony punishable by up to 99 years in prison. Due to the grand jury's decision, his case will not go to trial and the charges against him will be dismissed.

    The off-duty police officer in the case, Dezi Rios, was recently issued a 15-day suspension without pay for his role in the shooting on May 29 in the parking lot of All Stars Gentlemen's Club in the 9400 block of Interstate 10 West. Investigators discovered Rios had been drinking and engaged in a road rage dispute with Walker prior to the shooting, according to disciplinary records.

    Police have previously accused Walker of confronting Rios in the parking lot and then shooting him, prompting Rios to return fire. Adams disputed that narrative. His client claims Rios confronted him, and when Walker saw Rios was armed, he shot him once in the leg and called 911 to report the incident. While he was on the phone with the dispatcher, Rios opened fire on him, Adams said.

    The shootout left both Rios and Walker with multiple gunshot wounds. Rios made a full recovery, but Walker is now a paraplegic.

    https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/crime/article/Former-UTSA-barber-cleared-of-charges-in-shootout-13466809.php

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2018, 01:54:39 PM
    Only 4 years...

    Missouri Cop Sentenced to Four Years in Prison for Leaving Teen in Coma for Video Recording Traffic Stop

    It started off as a routine traffic stop on a high school student in a residential neighborhood in Missouri with the cop getting angry that the teen was asking questions, so he tasered him for 20 seconds, sending the 17-year-old into cardiac arrest.

    Independence police officer Timothy Runnels then yanked the boy out of the car, handcuffing him before picking him up and slamming him face first into a sidewalk, leaving the boy in a coma.

    Runnels later claimed he had smelled marijuana in the car.

    But witnesses said that Runnels became angry when Bryce Masters would not fully roll down the window. They also said he pulled out his phone to record the traffic stop, asking the officer questions about the legality of the stop, which is what set Runnels off.

    It was only later when Runnels discovered that Masters was the son of a Kansas City police officer, who had taught his son how to ask questions during traffic stops. And the window was apparently broken, which is why Masters was unable to roll it down.

    On Tuesday, 20 months after the September 2014 incident, Runnels was sentenced to four years in prison.

    According to the United States Department of Justice:

    As part of his guilty plea, Runnels admitted that while he was employed as an officer of the Independence Police Department, he deprived the minor of his civil rights by deliberately dropping the minor face first onto the ground while the minor was restrained and not posing a threat to Runnels or others. According to the court filings, Runnels also admitted that his actions resulted in bodily injury to the minor.

    During a sentencing hearing before Senior U.S. District Court Judge Dean Whipple of the Western District of Missouri, the government provided evidence that Runnels deployed his taser into the minor’s chest during a traffic stop and then caused the electric current to run for approximately 20 seconds, four times longer than officers are trained to deploy a taser. Evidence at the hearing revealed that as a result of the tasing, the minor went into cardiac arrest and became unresponsive. Dash camera video of the incident depicts Runnels handcuffing the minor after the taser deployment and then picking him up. The video and other evidence presented at the sentencing demonstrates that Runnels then deliberately dropped the handcuffed victim face-first into the pavement. Although the minor suffered cardiac arrest and facial injuries, he survived the incident due to timely medical treatment by medical personnel at the scene and at the hospital.

    Judge Whipple issued the sentence, which will be followed by two years of supervised release.

    Although Masters is said to have recorded the incident, his phone was seized by Independence police and no further mention was ever made of it. But the incident was also captured on Runnels’ dash cam, which also has not been released.

    And as you can see in the news reports below, Independence police stuck to their guns after the incident, putting the blame on Masters for forcing the cop to almost kill him.

    But because Masters’ friends witnessed the incident, even capturing the tail end of the altercation on video – not to mention the fact that his father is a cop – the FBI was asked to step in and investigate.

    And as a result, Runnels will spend the next four years behind bars.

    Masters recovered from the incident but still suffers from traumatic brain injury.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/missouri-cop-sentenced-four-years-prison-leaving-teen-coma-video-recording-traffic-stop/

    Remember this case? For this horrific attack, instead of being imprisoned for life or executed, this violent criminal only received 4 years in prison. Now let a citizen just tap a cop on the shoulder and see what happens. Of course the $6m are nothing next to the damage this young man suffered and of course it will not be taken from the pockets of the criminal who committed the assault, nor from the coffers of his gang.

    Notice how violent this criminal is:



    Jury awards more than $6 million to Independence teen tased by officer in 2014

    https://fox4kc.com/2018/12/14/jury-awards-more-than-6-million-to-independence-teen-tased-by-officer-in-2014/?fbclid=IwAR3kvHHGUW3UbegrlwhcYpscTV2Sbg9wePZJc80pi7CcRyILXl1DYFv3B2Y
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 18, 2018, 03:06:50 PM
    Remember this case? For this horrific attack, instead of being imprisoned for life or executed, this violent criminal only received 4 years in prison. Now let a citizen just tap a cop on the shoulder and see what happens. Of course the $6m are nothing next to the damage this young man suffered and of course it will not be taken from the pockets of the criminal who committed the assault, nor from the coffers of his gang.

    Notice how violent this criminal is:



    Jury awards more than $6 million to Independence teen tased by officer in 2014

    https://fox4kc.com/2018/12/14/jury-awards-more-than-6-million-to-independence-teen-tased-by-officer-in-2014/?fbclid=IwAR3kvHHGUW3UbegrlwhcYpscTV2Sbg9wePZJc80pi7CcRyILXl1DYFv3B2Y


    Pfft No it’s not much of a sentence
    Only at least he didn’t walk away from it

    He’s got 4yrs & let’s hope he gets face slammed a good few times
    And with some luck a 20+ seconds Tasering
    I’m sure he’ll thinks it’s fair & well deserved if he gets it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2018, 02:13:28 PM
    We’re Suing the Government to Learn Its Rules for When It Hacks Into People’s Devices

    Hacking by the government raises grave privacy concerns, creating surveillance possibilities that were previously the stuff of science fiction. It also poses a security risk, because hacking takes advantage of unpatched vulnerabilities in our devices and software.

    By hacking into a phone, laptop, or other device, federal agents can obtain all kinds of sensitive, confidential information. They can even activate a device’s camera and microphone, log keystrokes, or otherwise hijack a device’s functions. Often, users are completely unaware that they are being surveilled.

    Given the serious issues at stake, the public has a right to know the nature and extent of the government’s hacking activities and, importantly, the rules that govern these powerful surveillance tools. But so far, most of what we know is based on scattered news accounts.

    That’s why on Friday, the ACLU, Privacy International, and the University at Buffalo Law School’s Civil Liberties & Transparency Clinic filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit demanding disclosure of basic information about government hacking. We’re suing seven federal criminal and immigration enforcement agencies, including the FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

    The lawsuit demands that the agencies disclose which hacking tools and methods they use, how often they use them, the legal basis for employing these methods, and any internal rules that govern them. We are also seeking any internal audits or investigations related to their use.

    The little that we do know about government hacking is very troubling. In one case, the government commandeered an internet hosting service in order to set up a “watering hole” attack that may have spread malware to many innocent people who visited websites on the server. In another case, an FBI agent investigating fake bomb threats impersonated an Associated Press reporter in order to deploy malware on a suspect’s computer. The agent, posing as a reporter, created a fake story and sent a link to the story to a high school student. When the student visited the website, it implanted malware on his computer in order to report back identifying information to the FBI.

    https://www.aclu.org/blog/privacy-technology/internet-privacy/were-suing-government-learn-its-rules-when-it-hacks-peoples
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2018, 02:25:02 PM
    Before and After: What We Learned About the Hemisphere Program After Suing the DEA

    As the year draws to a close, so has EFF’s long-running Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Drug Enforcement Agency about the mass phone surveillance program infamously known as “Hemisphere.”

    We won our case and freed up tons of records. (So did the Electronic Privacy Information Center.) The government, on the other hand, only succeeded in dragging out the fake secrecy.

    In late 2013, right as the world was already reeling from the Snowden revelations, the New York Times revealed that the AT&T gives federal and local drug enforcement investigators access to a phone records surveillance system that dwarfs the NSA’s. Through this program, code-named Hemisphere, police tap into trillions of of phone records going back decades.

    It’s been five long years of privacy scandals, and Hemisphere has faded somewhat from the headlines since it was first revealed. That was long enough for officials to rebrand the program “Data Analytical Services,” making it even less likely to draw scrutiny or stick in the memory. Nevertheless Hemisphere remains a prime example of how private corporations and the government team up to help themselves to our digital lives, and the lengths they will go to to cover their tracks. 

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/12/and-after-what-we-learned-about-hemisphere-program-after-suing-dea
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2018, 04:25:50 PM
    http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11 (http://www.businessinsider.com/david-eckerts-traffic-stop-in-new-mexico-2013-11)

    For more details, check this: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml (http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3209305.shtml?cat=500#.Unk4H2u9K0f)

    What the fuck? Wow!

    Remember this case the avxo posted? Here is a similar recent case. To add insult to injury they sent the man the medical bill.

    Syracuse cops push St. Joe’s to probe man’s rectum for drugs; ‘What country are we living in?’

    Syracuse, NY -- Syracuse police, a city court judge and St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center worked together last year to conduct a highly unusual drug search.

    They collaborated to sedate a suspect and thread an 8-inch flexible tube into his rectum in a search for illegal drugs. The suspect, who police said had taunted them that he’d hidden drugs there, refused consent for the procedure. Members of the Syracuse Police Gang Violence Task Force said they stopped Jackson because he didn’t signal a turn in time, records show.

    At least two doctors resisted the police request. An X-ray already had indicated no drugs. They saw no medical need to perform an invasive procedure on someone against his will.

    The notes from police and doctors suggest some tension, a standoff. At one point, eight police officers were at the hospital. A doctor remembers telling officers: “We would not be doing that.”

    The hospital’s top lawyer got pulled in. He talked with the judge who signed the search warrant, which was written by police and signed at the judge’s home.

    When they were done, the hospital lawyer overruled its doctors. The lawyer told his doctors that a search warrant required the doctors to use “any means” to retrieve the drugs, records show.

    So St. Joe’s medical staff knocked out the suspect and performed the sigmoidoscopy, in search of evidence of a misdemeanor or low-level felony charge, records show.

    https://www.syracuse.com/crime/2018/12/syracuse-cops-push-st-joes-to-probe-mans-rectum-for-drugs-what-country-are-we-living-in.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 22, 2018, 12:02:21 AM
    Remember this case the avxo posted? Here is a similar recent case. To add insult to injury they sent the man the medical bill.

    Syracuse cops push St. Joe’s to probe man’s rectum for drugs; ‘What country are we living in?’

    Syracuse, NY -- Syracuse police, a city court judge and St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center worked together last year to conduct a highly unusual drug search.

    They collaborated to sedate a suspect and thread an 8-inch flexible tube into his rectum in a search for illegal drugs. The suspect, who police said had taunted them that he’d hidden drugs there, refused consent for the procedure. Members of the Syracuse Police Gang Violence Task Force said they stopped Jackson because he didn’t signal a turn in time, records show.

    At least two doctors resisted the police request. An X-ray already had indicated no drugs. They saw no medical need to perform an invasive procedure on someone against his will.

    The notes from police and doctors suggest some tension, a standoff. At one point, eight police officers were at the hospital. A doctor remembers telling officers: “We would not be doing that.”

    The hospital’s top lawyer got pulled in. He talked with the judge who signed the search warrant, which was written by police and signed at the judge’s home.

    When they were done, the hospital lawyer overruled its doctors. The lawyer told his doctors that a search warrant required the doctors to use “any means” to retrieve the drugs, records show.

    So St. Joe’s medical staff knocked out the suspect and performed the sigmoidoscopy, in search of evidence of a misdemeanor or low-level felony charge, records show.

    https://www.syracuse.com/crime/2018/12/syracuse-cops-push-st-joes-to-probe-mans-rectum-for-drugs-what-country-are-we-living-in.html


    FFS
    And this happened in America !!!
    Not some 3rd world Iraq run by dictator Saddam.
    It’s No wonder Agnostic has given up trying to defend the behaviour
    Of this Gang.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 22, 2018, 06:13:50 AM
    Dancing FBI agent gets no jail despite shooting traumatized bar patron
    NY Post ^ | 21 Dec 2018
    Posted on 12/21/2018, 10:51:24 PM by DUMBGRUNT

    He pleaded not guilty in November to second-degree assault, which carries a penalty of up to 16 years in prison.

    Bishop, who will serve his probation in Georgia, was in Denver on FBI business and was off-duty at the time of the shooting

    The man who was shot, Tom Reddington, 24, spoke emotionally in court about how he lost his job at an Amazon warehouse after the shooting, his chronic pain and his concern that he may never be able to run again.

    “I have done months of physical therapy,” he said. “I have sought counseling. However, being in public, especially seeing law enforcement with guns, makes me very uncomfortable.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    TOPICS: Government; Miscel
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on December 22, 2018, 10:36:31 AM
    Dancing FBI agent gets no jail despite shooting traumatized bar patron
    NY Post ^ | 21 Dec 2018
    Posted on 12/21/2018, 10:51:24 PM by DUMBGRUNT

    He pleaded not guilty in November to second-degree assault, which carries a penalty of up to 16 years in prison.

    Bishop, who will serve his probation in Georgia, was in Denver on FBI business and was off-duty at the time of the shooting

    The man who was shot, Tom Reddington, 24, spoke emotionally in court about how he lost his job at an Amazon warehouse after the shooting, his chronic pain and his concern that he may never be able to run again.

    “I have done months of physical therapy,” he said. “I have sought counseling. However, being in public, especially seeing law enforcement with guns, makes me very uncomfortable.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    TOPICS: Government; Miscel
    I feel for the guy, but this is just a bullshit line in order to play on peoples emotions about guns in society right now.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on December 22, 2018, 10:39:26 AM
    Remember this case the avxo posted? Here is a similar recent case. To add insult to injury they sent the man the medical bill.

    Syracuse cops push St. Joe’s to probe man’s rectum for drugs; ‘What country are we living in?’

    Syracuse, NY -- Syracuse police, a city court judge and St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center worked together last year to conduct a highly unusual drug search.

    They collaborated to sedate a suspect and thread an 8-inch flexible tube into his rectum in a search for illegal drugs. The suspect, who police said had taunted them that he’d hidden drugs there, refused consent for the procedure. Members of the Syracuse Police Gang Violence Task Force said they stopped Jackson because he didn’t signal a turn in time, records show.

    At least two doctors resisted the police request. An X-ray already had indicated no drugs. They saw no medical need to perform an invasive procedure on someone against his will.

    The notes from police and doctors suggest some tension, a standoff. At one point, eight police officers were at the hospital. A doctor remembers telling officers: “We would not be doing that.”

    The hospital’s top lawyer got pulled in. He talked with the judge who signed the search warrant, which was written by police and signed at the judge’s home.

    When they were done, the hospital lawyer overruled its doctors. The lawyer told his doctors that a search warrant required the doctors to use “any means” to retrieve the drugs, records show.

    So St. Joe’s medical staff knocked out the suspect and performed the sigmoidoscopy, in search of evidence of a misdemeanor or low-level felony charge, records show.

    https://www.syracuse.com/crime/2018/12/syracuse-cops-push-st-joes-to-probe-mans-rectum-for-drugs-what-country-are-we-living-in.html
    And they found no drugs.....fucking lawsuit up the ass right there.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on December 24, 2018, 11:10:12 PM
    Quote
    The hospital’s top lawyer got pulled in. He talked with the judge who signed the search warrant, which was written by police and signed at the judge’s home.

    When they were done, the hospital lawyer overruled its doctors. The lawyer told his doctors that a search warrant required the doctors to use “any means” to retrieve the drugs, records show.

    Holy fuckballs. If I were a doctor, I’d rather resign than comply with  some lawyer that ordered me to perform such a procedure on a patient against their will.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 25, 2018, 02:16:36 PM
    “California police have a long history of shredding records to avoid scrutiny of their actions.”


    Inglewood to destroy more than 100 police shooting records that could otherwise become public under new California law

    The city of Inglewood has authorised the shredding of more than 100 police shooting and other internal investigation records, weeks before a new state law could allow the public to access them for the first time.

    https://www.latimes.com/politics/essential/la-pol-ca-essential-politics-may-2018-city-of-inglewood-to-destroy-more-than-1545504782-htmlstory.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 26, 2018, 05:52:24 PM
    In Michigan, a person is legally intoxicated when his or her blood-alcohol level hits 0.08; a person is super drunk at 0.17. This "sheriff" registered 0.223.

    Police body cam shows drunk driving arrest of Midland County sheriff

    KALKASKA, MI – With a deputy’s body camera recording, Midland County Sheriff Scott A. Stephenson stood beside his car, begging and pleading, mumbling and cursing in an effort to keep himself from going to jail. The video shows the result of his preliminary breath test - 0.233 - puts him in the state’s “super drunk” range.

    He was jailed on a drunken-driving charge.

    “I’m the fucking Midland County sheriff,” Stephenson says, displaying a commemorative badge. “I’m fucking good. I had a bad day. I don’t need EMS. I don’t need you.”


    Stephenson on Dec. 13 appeared in Kalkaska County District Court for arraignment and ended up pleading guilty to one count of operating a motor vehicle while visibly impaired. In exchange, the prosecution dismissed a charge of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.

    Stephenson was not charged under the super drunk statute, which comes with maximum potential penalty of 180 days in jail, as opposed to the 93-day maximum of standard operating while intoxicated.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 26, 2018, 05:56:25 PM

    Former Sheriff's Captain arrested on child pornography charges will serve no jail time

    https://wtvr.com/2018/12/17/former-sheriffs-captain-arrested-on-child-pornography-charges-will-serve-no-jail-time/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 27, 2018, 03:28:29 AM
    In Michigan, a person is legally intoxicated when his or her blood-alcohol level hits 0.08; a person is super drunk at 0.17. This "sheriff" registered 0.223.

    Police body cam shows drunk driving arrest of Midland County sheriff

    KALKASKA, MI – With a deputy’s body camera recording, Midland County Sheriff Scott A. Stephenson stood beside his car, begging and pleading, mumbling and cursing in an effort to keep himself from going to jail. The video shows the result of his preliminary breath test - 0.233 - puts him in the state’s “super drunk” range.

    He was jailed on a drunken-driving charge.

    “I’m the fucking Midland County sheriff,” Stephenson says, displaying a commemorative badge. “I’m fucking good. I had a bad day. I don’t need EMS. I don’t need you.”


    Stephenson on Dec. 13 appeared in Kalkaska County District Court for arraignment and ended up pleading guilty to one count of operating a motor vehicle while visibly impaired. In exchange, the prosecution dismissed a charge of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.

    Stephenson was not charged under the super drunk statute, which comes with maximum potential penalty of 180 days in jail, as opposed to the 93-day maximum of standard operating while intoxicated.





    Yet again a Bad Cop was let off very lightly
    Had it been a member of the public the book would’ve been thrown at them.

    Though at least this cop was arrested & charged & sentenced
    That’s a step in the right direction.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on December 27, 2018, 02:36:49 PM
    https://finance.yahoo.com/video/fbi-harassing-family-jerome-corsi-015042582.html


    How can you trust any of the previous testimony of this Mueller investigation when this type of coercion and coaching is used?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on December 27, 2018, 06:44:22 PM
    https://finance.yahoo.com/video/fbi-harassing-family-jerome-corsi-015042582.html


    How can you trust any of the previous testimony of this Mueller investigation when this type of coercion and coaching is used?
    Can't trust anything from the Mueller con job.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 27, 2018, 06:56:38 PM
    Another "mistake".

    Lawsuit filed after drug raid at the wrong home

    Legal trouble is looming for officers who carried out a drug warrant at the wrong home. The family has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against members of a multi-agency drug unit.

    According to the Bexar County Sheriff's Office incident report the confidential informant provided information that directed officers to the wrong home. The nightmare for Lucil Basco began about an hour earlier when officers stopped her for a traffic violation and searched her vehicle.

    Civil Rights Attorney Solomon Radner said:

    “When police make a mistake they never ever own up to it and it's got to stop. What happened to this family is an absolute travesty. It never should have happened, it never should happen again. The police have proven time and time again that they are absolutely 100 percent incapable of policing themselves.”

    https://news4sanantonio.com/news/local/lawsuit-filed-after-drug-raid-at-the-wrong-home-12-24-2018
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on December 27, 2018, 08:25:59 PM

    Yet again a Bad Cop was let off very lightly
    Had it been a member of the public the book would’ve been thrown at them.

    Though at least this cop was arrested & charged & sentenced
    That’s a step in the right direction.
    yes it was
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 28, 2018, 07:30:12 AM
    yes it was
    Only just a small step forwards

    Fixed it. 😀

    Thanks
    👍🏻 Glad you agree.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 07, 2019, 09:11:54 AM
    https://nypost.com/2019/01/07/cop-caught-on-camera-shooting-small-barking-dog/?utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook


    scary ass chiaahuaha
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 07, 2019, 11:16:31 AM
    https://nypost.com/2019/01/07/cop-caught-on-camera-shooting-small-barking-dog/?utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook


    scary ass chiaahuaha


    Yet another He-Man Cop upholding the Law While in Fear of His Life

    And he was allowed to carry a gun Legally  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 07, 2019, 01:22:16 PM
    There is a reason why in some places, school zone laws apply to everyone and not even cops are exempted. This cur killed a 4 year old girl, in a school zone, in the bus loading area... Probably enjoying paid vacation for this killing. She'll probably be portrayed as a "victim" of a "tragic mistake" instead of a killer and a reckless driver.

    4-year-old struck, killed by Columbia officer at Battle High

    A Columbia police officer struck and killed a 4-year-old girl Friday at Battle High School when the officer drove her Chevrolet Tahoe SUV onto a sidewalk on an assignment to observe students departing school, the Missouri State Highway Patrol stated in an accident report filed online.

    Andria L. Heese, 27, was driving in the school bus loading area at Battle and drove off the left side of the road onto the sidewalk, striking Gabriella Curry, who was walking on the sidewalk at the time.

    https://www.columbiatribune.com/news/20190104/4-year-old-struck-killed-by-columbia-officer-at-battle-high

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 08, 2019, 02:59:55 PM
    Once again a cop endangering children by speeding through s stopped bus with its stop sign on. And this wasn't just any cop but the police chief. While the incident happened in October but the video was just released today. Of course the cop, being used to being exempt from laws, claimed he didn't think it was illegal. I'm certain that this "argument" doesn't fly when it's uttered by someone who's not a member of the blue gang.

    Newark police chief caught on camera blowing school bus stop sign

    Video has surfaced of the Newark Police Chief blowing through a school bus stop sign. Police say the chief thought what he was doing was legal.

    Chief Barry Connell was responding to help his officers who were involved in a foot pursuit and struggle with a wanted felon.

    The incident happened on October 10 and Patty Hughes was behind the wheel of the bus in question. Her camera captured footage as a student exited.

    "I told him my concern, I told him I had a video. He basically said he's not interested in seeing the video. And he kept telling me, 'Oh we can do that. As long as we use due diligence.' I said, 'Okay, let's go with that argument. How do you have due diligence when you're coming from behind a 60-foot long vehicle where you can't see the front end of that?' Where's their due diligence?"

    A police spokesperson says Connell believed emergency vehicles were allowed to pass school bus stop signs with caution.

    After this incident, they say they know that's not the case.

    The explanation doesn't wash with Hughes.

    "As they tell every defendant, ignorance of the law is no excuse."

    She says she'd also like to see the Chief charged as any other driver would be.

    https://www.10tv.com/article/newark-police-chief-caught-camera-blowing-school-bus-stop-sign
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 08, 2019, 03:19:49 PM
    Chicago Seized And Sold Nearly 50,000 Cars Over Tickets Since 2011, Sticking Owners With Debt
    WBEZ News ^ | January 7, 2019 | Elliot Ramos
    Posted on 1/8/2019, 6:10:56 PM by Forgotten Amendments

    In 2017 alone, Chicago booted more than 67,000 vehicles for unpaid tickets. In about a third of those cases, the driver couldn’t afford to remove the boot, and the vehicle was later towed to a city impound lot.

    Of those 20,000 impounded cars, more than 8,000 ended up like Botello’s: They were sold off, with the owners receiving none of the sale proceeds. Instead, the city and its towing contractor pocketed millions of dollars, while residents were left with ticket debt.

    All told, there have been nearly 50,000 of these sales since 2011.

    (Excerpt) Read more at wbez.org ...

    TOPICS: Con
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 08, 2019, 03:21:50 PM
    Chicago Seized And Sold Nearly 50,000 Cars Over Tickets Since 2011, Sticking Owners With Debt
    WBEZ News ^ | January 7, 2019 | Elliot Ramos
    Posted on 1/8/2019, 6:10:56 PM by Forgotten Amendments

    In 2017 alone, Chicago booted more than 67,000 vehicles for unpaid tickets. In about a third of those cases, the driver couldn’t afford to remove the boot, and the vehicle was later towed to a city impound lot.

    Of those 20,000 impounded cars, more than 8,000 ended up like Botello’s: They were sold off, with the owners receiving none of the sale proceeds. Instead, the city and its towing contractor pocketed millions of dollars, while residents were left with ticket debt.

    All told, there have been nearly 50,000 of these sales since 2011.

    (Excerpt) Read more at wbez.org ...

    TOPICS: Con

    Quite a racket they have running.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 08, 2019, 04:07:21 PM
    Once again a cop endangering children by speeding through s stopped bus with its stop sign on. And this wasn't just any cop but the police chief. While the incident happened in October but the video was just released today. Of course the cop, being used to being exempt from laws, claimed he didn't think it was illegal. I'm certain that this "argument" doesn't fly when it's uttered by someone who's not a member of the blue gang.

    Newark police chief caught on camera blowing school bus stop sign

    Video has surfaced of the Newark Police Chief blowing through a school bus stop sign. Police say the chief thought what he was doing was legal.

    Chief Barry Connell was responding to help his officers who were involved in a foot pursuit and struggle with a wanted felon.

    The incident happened on October 10 and Patty Hughes was behind the wheel of the bus in question. Her camera captured footage as a student exited.

    "I told him my concern, I told him I had a video. He basically said he's not interested in seeing the video. And he kept telling me, 'Oh we can do that. As long as we use due diligence.' I said, 'Okay, let's go with that argument. How do you have due diligence when you're coming from behind a 60-foot long vehicle where you can't see the front end of that?' Where's their due diligence?"

    A police spokesperson says Connell believed emergency vehicles were allowed to pass school bus stop signs with caution.

    After this incident, they say they know that's not the case.

    The explanation doesn't wash with Hughes.

    "As they tell every defendant, ignorance of the law is no excuse."

    She says she'd also like to see the Chief charged as any other driver would be.

    https://www.10tv.com/article/newark-police-chief-caught-camera-blowing-school-bus-stop-sign


    He’s meant to be the Chief of the Gang
    Of course he knew the Law
    He’s another lying bastard who deserves to be locked up.

    Scumbag.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 10, 2019, 02:06:20 PM
    Queens Woman Says Sign Snafu To Blame For Car Getting Towed

    Imagine having to shell out big bucks despite leaving your car in a legal spot. Nicole Laveglia has lived and parked on the same block for a decade, but little did she know her car would be towed from a spot she says was legal when she went to bed but illegal when she woke up.

    “I came home from the gym parked over there around 8:30 the next morning, my neighbor was knocking on my door around 9 o’clock,” the Maspeth resident said. “I saw the car going down the block.”

    Her car was long gone. In its place were two brand new “No Standing Anytime” signs up instead which she says were installed by the city’s Department of Transportation about an hour before she got the boot at 52nd Avenue and 70th Street.

    She was slapped with a $185 towing fee as well as a $115 ticket.

    “It’s a headache, it’s a hassle,” she said. “I just feel like I was robbed.”

    The signs were removed from a nearby corner by workers who dug them right out of the ground just a few days later.

    https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2019/01/09/queens-woman-says-sign-snafu-to-blame-for-car-getting-towed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 16, 2019, 02:29:30 PM
    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us."

    Cop Gets Just 90 Days in Jail for Horrific Child Porn as Man Selling Weed Gets 5 YEARS

    Columbus, OH — A community is outraged this week as a former Columbus police officer of 20 years was sentenced to just 90 days in jail for possession and distribution of child porn involving small children. Meanwhile, a man in Louisiana who happened to get caught selling a plant to willing customers was sentenced to over 5 years behind bars.

    Former Columbus Division of Police Sgt. Dean Worthington had been a police officer for over 20 years before being busted. During that time—as he allegedly served the public—he’d been secretly participating in and contributing to a vile child pornography ring.

    According to NBC4i, in November, Worthington pleaded guilty to four counts of sex-related charges including illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance and three counts of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor.

    On Thursday, Worthington was handed down a 9-year sentence. However, due to his status as a former police officer, all but 90 days of it was suspended. His defense even had the audacity to ask for simple probation for the horrific exploitation of small children.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-90-days-child/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 16, 2019, 02:34:08 PM
    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us."

    Cop Gets Just 90 Days in Jail for Horrific Child Porn as Man Selling Weed Gets 5 YEARS

    Columbus, OH — A community is outraged this week as a former Columbus police officer of 20 years was sentenced to just 90 days in jail for possession and distribution of child porn involving small children. Meanwhile, a man in Louisiana who happened to get caught selling a plant to willing customers was sentenced to over 5 years behind bars.

    Former Columbus Division of Police Sgt. Dean Worthington had been a police officer for over 20 years before being busted. During that time—as he allegedly served the public—he’d been secretly participating in and contributing to a vile child pornography ring.

    According to NBC4i, in November, Worthington pleaded guilty to four counts of sex-related charges including illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance and three counts of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor.

    On Thursday, Worthington was handed down a 9-year sentence. However, due to his status as a former police officer, all but 90 days of it was suspended. His defense even had the audacity to ask for simple probation for the horrific exploitation of small children.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-90-days-child/



    Absolutely Fucking Ridiculous Sentencing
    Got to Wonder what the Judge is into in their private life.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 16, 2019, 05:52:55 PM
    Holy F


    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us."

    Cop Gets Just 90 Days in Jail for Horrific Child Porn as Man Selling Weed Gets 5 YEARS

    Columbus, OH — A community is outraged this week as a former Columbus police officer of 20 years was sentenced to just 90 days in jail for possession and distribution of child porn involving small children. Meanwhile, a man in Louisiana who happened to get caught selling a plant to willing customers was sentenced to over 5 years behind bars.

    Former Columbus Division of Police Sgt. Dean Worthington had been a police officer for over 20 years before being busted. During that time—as he allegedly served the public—he’d been secretly participating in and contributing to a vile child pornography ring.

    According to NBC4i, in November, Worthington pleaded guilty to four counts of sex-related charges including illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance and three counts of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor.

    On Thursday, Worthington was handed down a 9-year sentence. However, due to his status as a former police officer, all but 90 days of it was suspended. His defense even had the audacity to ask for simple probation for the horrific exploitation of small children.

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-sentenced-90-days-child/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2019, 03:39:05 PM
    Once again the dangerous buffoons keep seeing ghosts and imaginary enemies in order to cover up their incompetence. Were they charged for lying, dangerous driving and not paying attention to the road? (rhetorical question)

    Irving Police Motorcycle Crash Not a Hit-and-Run

    The northbound lanes of Texas 161 are open again in Irving after two motorcycle police officers crashed, apparently into each other.

    The officers were just south of Texas 183 when they crashed. Police initially believed the officers were hit by a car that left the scene, but after investigating the incident said no one else was involved in the crash.

    https://www.nbcdfw.com/traffic/stories/2-Irving-Motorcycle-Officers-Car-Collide-Shutting-Down-Texas-161-504377151.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2019, 03:40:19 PM
    Former Marine Accuses LaSalle County Sheriff Of Illegal Strip Search; Incident Caught On Video

    A former Marine has sued the LaSalle County Sheriff’s office, saying deputies “humiliated, degraded and dehumanized” her when they dragged her into a cell and forcibly stripped her naked after she was arrested on suspicion of DUI two years ago.

    In a lawsuit filed in federal court, Zandrea Askew’s attorneys said she was sitting in her parked car when two LaSalle County sheriff’s deputies questioned her, and ordered her to undergo field sobriety tests, even though she had not committed any traffic violations, or been involved in an accident.

    Askew’s lawsuit accuses LaSalle County Sheriff Thomas Templeton and several deputies of false arrest, unlawful detention, excessive force, malicious prosecution, and violation of due process.

    The lawsuit claims Askew, 28, passed all of the field sobriety tests, and showed no signs of being drunk, or under the influence of drugs, but was still arrested for DUI.



    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/01/16/zandrea-askew-strip-search-lawsuit-lasalle-county-sheriff-excessive-force/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2019, 03:42:36 PM
    Instead of being thrown in a cell with feral dogs, he is enjoying paid vacation.

    St. Paul officer federally indicted over kicking of innocent man

    The St. Paul police officer who was fired for kicking an innocent man and then rehired was indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury for using excessive force in the incident.

    Brett Palkowitsch, 31, was charged with one count of deprivation of rights in connection with the incident, which left Frank Baker severely injured.

    “The indictment alleges that Palkowitsch used unreasonable force when he kicked arrestee [Baker] repeatedly while [Baker] was on the ground and in the grips of a police canine, resulting in bodily injury,” said a news release from the Minneapolis’ FBI office, which investigated the case.

    The charge carries a maximum of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    Palkowitsch was placed on paid administrative leave Wednesday pending the outcome of the case, said police spokesman Steve Linders. Palkowitsch could not be reached for comment, and a message left with an attorney for the St. Paul Police Federation, the officers’ union, was not returned.

    http://www.startribune.com/st-paul-officer-federally-indicted-for-excessive-force-in-kicking-of-innocent-man/504453382/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2019, 03:51:55 PM
    Not only did the armed and violent thugs break in to the house without a warrant, they viciously attacked 2 people who weren't the person the cops were looking for, and then arrested them for "resisting arrest". (Let that sink in: "arrested for resisting arrest")

    'You're Not Looking For Me': Brothers Speak After Sweetwater Cop's Punch Caught on Camera

    The Sweetwater police chief is defending the actions of an officer who was caught on home cameras punching a man during the tense moments police raided a home to arrest his brother. Sweetwater police were searching for 40-year-old James Castro, who they say hit and injured an officer with a car while making a traffic stop earlier that morning.

    Surveillance video obtained by NBC 6 captured Wednesday’s incident showing officers swarming the family’s home in the 12900 block of SW 20th Terrace. Officers are seen trying to detain two men – neither of them were James Castro, but his brothers, Gary and Christian Castro. An officer is later seen punching one of the men and then putting him in a chokehold.

    James Castro was nowhere to be found in the Tamiami home – his two brothers, who police say had nothing to do with the initial traffic stop, were arrested instead. Both of them were charged with resisting arrest, and one of them faces an additional charge of battery on an officer.

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/Sweetwater-Cop-Incident-504139561.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2019, 03:36:38 PM
    Too little and of course it's not coming from the pockets of the criminals or the coffers of their gang...

    Student tackled by police for 'stealing' own car settles suit for $1.25M

    A Chicago suburb has tentatively agreed to pay a former doctoral student $1.25 million to settle a lawsuit alleging police officers tackled him to the ground and arrested him for stealing a car that turned out to be his own, his attorney said.

    Evanston City Manager Wally Bobkiewicz confirmed a settlement was reached with Lawrence Crosby, who was 25 and an engineering doctoral student at Northwestern University in 2015 when the incident occurred.

    Touhy said Crosby was trying to repair loose molding on his car when a woman called police to report a black man trying to steal a car.

    When he drove off, the woman followed Crosby in her car as he drove from his apartment to Northwestern's science building, giving police his location.

    Crosby got out the car with his hands raised after being stopped by police but was tackled when he failed to immediately obey orders to get on the ground. Police later determined the car belonged to Crosby but charged him anyhow with disobeying officers and resisting arrest.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/student-tackled-police-stealing-own-car-settles-suit-1-25m-n961526?fbclid=IwAR3nlHD_aScrp30fiCZpyZjT4F8fLPHejVhIVC7gAfohJriG0i0t5JqZCnU
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2019, 11:29:38 PM
    Of course, instead of the 2 cops being sentenced to life in prison or executed they are let off the hook because apparently "that is the way things were done then".

    Bronx man convicted for 1989 murder of mother cleared — 30 years later

    Huwe Burton was wrongly convicted of one of the worst crimes imaginable — fatally stabbing his mom for drug money, then stripping her body naked to make it look as if she had been raped and murdered by an intruder. He served almost 20 years in prison before he was paroled in 2009, but the Bronx native never truly felt free until Thursday. That’s when he was finally cleared of the horrific 1989 killing.

    Burton was 16 when he returned home from school and found the body of his mother, Keziah, in her bedroom at their Williamsbridge apartment on Jan. 3, 1989. His father, Raphael, was visiting relatives in Jamaica at the time. Eager to make an arrest, detectives forced Burton, then a sophomore at Evander Childs HS, to confess to the slaying, according to a two-year, joint investigation by the Bronx district attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit and the nonprofit Innocence Project. The sleep-deprived teen copped to investigators’ theory — that he was a crack addict who exploded in a rage when his mom refused to give him $200 to pay his dealer.

    https://nypost.com/2019/01/24/bronx-man-convicted-for-1989-murder-of-mother-cleared-30-years-later/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 25, 2019, 01:05:53 AM
    Once again the dangerous buffoons keep seeing ghosts and imaginary enemies in order to cover up their incompetence. Were they charged for lying, dangerous driving and not paying attention to the road? (rhetorical question)

    Irving Police Motorcycle Crash Not a Hit-and-Run

    The northbound lanes of Texas 161 are open again in Irving after two motorcycle police officers crashed, apparently into each other.

    The officers were just south of Texas 183 when they crashed. Police initially believed the officers were hit by a car that left the scene, but after investigating the incident said no one else was involved in the crash.

    https://www.nbcdfw.com/traffic/stories/2-Irving-Motorcycle-Officers-Car-Collide-Shutting-Down-Texas-161-504377151.html


    Ha ha ha
    A Funny one for a change.
    😂😂😂😂😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 25, 2019, 02:12:29 AM
    https://abc7ny.com/5105356


    Crazy.  This is big unaccountable govt.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2019, 02:22:32 AM
    https://abc7ny.com/5105356


    Crazy.  This is big unaccountable govt.

    3 years in jail without trial, half of them in solitary confinement and the charges were eventually dropped... Is this the US or some third world shithole?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 25, 2019, 05:18:53 AM
    https://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-cnn-airs-footage-of-fbi-arresting-roger-stone


    For F's Sake - this looks like they were trying to take down bin laden. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 25, 2019, 10:57:02 AM
    3 years in jail without trial, half of them in solitary confinement and the charges were eventually dropped... Is this the US or some third world shithole?

    When it concerns the Thug Life Gang America becomes 3rd world Shithole
    Time & Time again we’re seeing this.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 25, 2019, 11:05:34 AM
    https://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-cnn-airs-footage-of-fbi-arresting-roger-stone


    For F's Sake - this looks like they were trying to take down bin laden. 

    If you didn’t Know you’d think it was a High Risk Terrorist Group Being Arrested
    Not a older single white male.!!!

    Is this a regular way of arresting non violent men for the FBI

    One could surmise there is some sort of Political motive behind it
    And That The FBI are Leftwing Controlled
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2019, 01:46:04 PM
    The cops know how very well how to attack the vulnerable, the elderly, the deaf or plain innocent people and then claim "they followed their rules and training" and also "feared for their lives" but here we see how several police agencies failed a young woman who had contacted them multiple times about her harasser, a sex offender on parole who lied about his age and status. He killed her while she was talking to her parents on the phone.

    Mom of murdered student blasts University of Utah police

    Calling it an "unforgivable lapse of judgment and professional competency," the mother of slain University of Utah student Lauren McCluskey on Thursday blasted campus police for not taking her daughter's case seriously.

    Jill McCluskey also called for the officers, whom she believes "failed" her daughter, "be held accountable for neglecting her numerous, persistent attempts to seek help, and be disciplined appropriately."

    Lauren McCluskey met Rowland in September. At that time, Rowland lied about his name and age. In early October, she learned Rowland's true identity and discovered he was a registered sex offender who had been paroled from the Utah State Prison three times. On Oct. 10, Jill McCluskey called university police herself.

    The McCluskeys said the fact that Rowland was a registered sex offender, was sending fake messages to their daughter to lure her outside, and that their daughter was scared of him, should have prompted U. police to treat her case as more than a simple extortion case.

    But the family said that in a police report filed on Oct. 12 based on their daughter's phone call, an officer wrote, "I explained that without any threats or anything of a criminal nature that there isn’t much we can do."

    Lauren McCluskey made many calls and sent emails to U. police between Oct. 13 and 19, her mother said. But because of their lack of response, she contacted Salt Lake police "out of desperation," hoping they might be able to do something. Salt Lake police could only refer her case back to the U. since the investigation was in the university's jurisdiction.

    https://www.deseretnews.com/article/900047488/mom-of-slain-student-lauren-mccluskey-blasts-university-of-utah-police.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2019, 03:37:49 PM
    Several cock cop lovers often say: "Bodycams clear police officers falsely accused of misconduct"

    In this case, a cop kicked a handcuffed man so hard the man suffered an epileptic seizure inside the cop car. The violent attacker high fived another gang member for his "success" and of course he and the other gang members tried to cover it up as it was hushed up for a year. Of course being a gang member comes with several privileges, this one got a sweetheart deal and just resigned from his department. He will probably be hired by another "department" that values people with such "policing" credentials.

    Milwaukee cop resigns as part of plea deal in battery of handcuffed man

    A Milwaukee police officer resigned as part of a plea deal to resolve criminal charges that he kicked a handcuffed subject enough to break his nose, but he likely won't go to jail.

    Michael L. Gasser, 37, was charged, convicted and sentenced in the span of two days last month for the August 2017 assault on a driver who led police on a chase that ended in Franklin.

    Gasser, a 10-year veteran of the department, pleaded guilty Sept. 7 before Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Kristy Yang to one count of battery and two counts of disorderly conduct, all misdemeanors. He was sentenced to 14 days of jail, with work release, as a condition of 18 months' probation, but the jail time was left to the discretion of his probation officer. A complaint had been filed Sept. 6.

    He was also fined $500, ordered to perform 20 hours of community service and write an apology to the victim, Rafael Rosales.

    https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/crime/2018/10/19/milwaukee-cop-resigns-plea-deal-over-battery-handcuffed-man/1696957002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on January 25, 2019, 05:35:06 PM
    Several cock cop lovers often say: "Bodycams clear police officers falsely accused of misconduct"

    In this case, a cop kicked a handcuffed man so hard the man suffered an epileptic seizure inside the cop car. The violent attacker high fived another gang member for his "success" and of course he and the other gang members tried to cover it up as it was hushed up for a year. Of course being a gang member comes with several privileges, this one got a sweetheart deal and just resigned from his department. He will probably be hired by another "department" that values people with such "policing" credentials.

    Milwaukee cop resigns as part of plea deal in battery of handcuffed man

    A Milwaukee police officer resigned as part of a plea deal to resolve criminal charges that he kicked a handcuffed subject enough to break his nose, but he likely won't go to jail.

    Michael L. Gasser, 37, was charged, convicted and sentenced in the span of two days last month for the August 2017 assault on a driver who led police on a chase that ended in Franklin.

    Gasser, a 10-year veteran of the department, pleaded guilty Sept. 7 before Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Kristy Yang to one count of battery and two counts of disorderly conduct, all misdemeanors. He was sentenced to 14 days of jail, with work release, as a condition of 18 months' probation, but the jail time was left to the discretion of his probation officer. A complaint had been filed Sept. 6.

    He was also fined $500, ordered to perform 20 hours of community service and write an apology to the victim, Rafael Rosales.

    https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/crime/2018/10/19/milwaukee-cop-resigns-plea-deal-over-battery-handcuffed-man/1696957002/
    I dunno….you make the cops chase you and you kinda deserve a kick or two.
    Or ten
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 25, 2019, 06:48:50 PM
    I dunno….you make the cops chase you and you kinda deserve a kick or two.
    Or ten

    I disagree. The man was placed in handcuffs (by other cops) and then this cop showed up, intent on committing the attack just to have "fun". The man was violently attacked after he was handcuffed by someone who wasn't even present during the apprehension. There is no excuse for that.
     
    According to the DA: "He wasn't even supposed to be in the chase. He was on another call for the city of Milwaukee and heard it go out, and he and his partner decided it would be fun to join in. So they joined in."
    In fact, they didn't even radio in their involvement in the chase. And after the attack, he bragged with his partner saying "best fucking thing...best one ever."
    These are unstable and violent people that you don't want to hold law enforcement authority (or any sort of authority for this matter).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on January 25, 2019, 07:32:05 PM
    I disagree. The man was placed in handcuffs (by other cops) and then this cop showed up, intent on committing the attack just to have "fun". The man was violently attacked after he was handcuffed by someone who wasn't even present during the apprehension. There is no excuse for that.
     
    According to the DA: "He wasn't even supposed to be in the chase. He was on another call for the city of Milwaukee and heard it go out, and he and his partner decided it would be fun to join in. So they joined in."
    In fact, they didn't even radio in their involvement in the chase. And after the attack, he bragged with his partner saying "best fucking thing...best one ever."
    These are unstable and violent people that you don't want to hold law enforcement authority (or any sort of authority for this matter).
    Yes they are. However, when you run or fight against the cops, you stand the chance of getting your ass handed to you before, during and after your cuffed. Right or wrong. I feel for the guys that were going quietly and peacefully and still suffered abuse, those guys don't deserve to be slapped around.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 26, 2019, 08:23:04 AM
    https://lawandcrime.com/crazy/police-officer-allegedly-killed-by-fellow-officer-during-game-of-russian-roulette

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2019, 03:19:40 AM
    https://lawandcrime.com/crazy/police-officer-allegedly-killed-by-fellow-officer-during-game-of-russian-roulette



    You mean the case where the cops initially said it was "an accident", then claimed the weapon was "mishandled" and is now claimed to be a game or Russian roulette? By the "highly trained professionals", the only ones who are "qualified" to handle guns, unlike citizens mere plebs whose gun rights are slowly eroding? 2 on-duty cops meet up with an off-duty cop at one of the on-duty cop's home and decided to play Russian roulette? Something seems off here, however, knowing how stupid and incompetent several of these buffoons are it wouldn't surprise me if that was their idea of "fun".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2019, 03:26:51 AM
    It's quite possible that he was drunk and just abandoned the (taxpayer funded) car in the middle of the street.
    Notice the phrase "he was assigned on home duty".

    LAPD commander on home duty after leaving car at Carson crash scene, officials say

    A Los Angeles Police Department commander has been assigned to home duty after abandoning his city-issued vehicle following an early-morning crash in Carson, officials say.

    Multiple sources tell Eyewitness News the person is Jeff Nolte, a commander with the LAPD's Force Investigation Group.

    The LAPD and CHP are investigating why the Dodge Charger was left in the area of 213th Street and Avalon Boulevard around 4 a.m. Friday.

    Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department deputies say when they found the abandoned Charger it had clearly been involved in a traffic collision and was missing a tire.

    https://abc7.com/lapd-commander-on-home-duty-after-carson-crash/5106905/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 28, 2019, 06:13:55 PM
    https://www.wcvb.com/nowcast


    Sick
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 29, 2019, 04:00:50 PM
    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/cop-who-allegedly-killed-colleague-during-game-of-russian-roulette-gave-himself-black-eye/


    Cafone
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 29, 2019, 10:32:37 PM
    Listen to this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats:



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 30, 2019, 03:32:13 PM
    Another man who spent more than 30 years in prison has been released. Once again, an overly zealous prosecutor with a penchant for theatrics as well as coerced "confessions" seem to have been the primary factors in this case. The judge that originally sentenced this man was known for giving out 100+ years sentences (that were often reversed) and he later killed himself when the state started investigating him for loans. Great job by the Innocence Project.

    ‘It’s been a long time,’ says man who served 30 years for Tampa murder before doubts led to his release

    Prosecutors have dropped their case against Dean McKee amid doubts about his guilt in a 1987 Tampa murder.

    McKee, 47, is free after serving more than 30 years in prison for the crime. He wept when Assistant State Attorney Megan Newcomb announced the state would not put him through a second trial.

    http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/its-been-a-long-time-says-man-who-served-30-years-for-tampa-murder-before-doubts-led-to-his-release-20190130/

    More context:
    https://bit.ly/1KK8Tr2
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 30, 2019, 10:06:42 PM
    Yes they are. However, when you run or fight against the cops, you stand the chance of getting your ass handed to you before, during and after your cuffed. Right or wrong. I feel for the guys that were going quietly and peacefully and still suffered abuse, those guys don't deserve to be slapped around.

    Its wrong. Whether you stand the chance or not can be debated. That it is wrong to hand someone their ass after they have been handcuffed is wrong. That is not debatable.

    I have fought, chased, handcuffed a LOT of people over the years. the rule was, once the handcuffs go on, it's over. There have been cops in my purview that let emotions get the best of them and those cops paid the price because the fact remains, once a subject is subdued, it is over.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 31, 2019, 04:28:05 AM
    More FBI agents arrested Stone than SEALs sent to kill bin Laden: An American nightmare
    Fox News ^ | January 31 2019 | Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
    Posted on 1/31/2019, 7:11:13 AM by knighthawk

    Last Friday, on a quiet residential street at 6 in the morning, the neighborhood exploded in light, noise and terror. Seventeen SUVs and two armored vehicles arrived in front of one house. Each vehicle had sirens blaring and lights flashing. The house, which abutted a canal, was soon surrounded by 29 government agents, each wearing military garb, each carrying a handgun and most carrying high-powered automatic rifles.

    In the canal were two amphibious watercrafts, out of which more heavily armed government agents came. Circling above all this was a helicopter equipped with long-range precision weaponry and high-powered spotlights.

    Four agents approached the front door to the house. Two held a battering ram, and two pointed their rifles at the door. One of the agents shouted and banged on the front door until the terrified owner of the house emerged, barefoot and wearing shorts and a T-shirt. He was greeted in the dark at his open front door by two rifle barrels aimed at his head.

    (Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...

    ________________________ ________________________ ___


    Unreal.   What a pile of shit and waste of time and energy these "law enforcement" clowns are.  Bunch of retards. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2019, 02:18:08 PM
    You mean the case where the cops initially said it was "an accident", then claimed the weapon was "mishandled" and is now claimed to be a game or Russian roulette? By the "highly trained professionals", the only ones who are "qualified" to handle guns, unlike citizens mere plebs whose gun rights are slowly eroding? 2 on-duty cops meet up with an off-duty cop at one of the on-duty cop's home and decided to play Russian roulette? Something seems off here, however, knowing how stupid and incompetent several of these buffoons are it wouldn't surprise me if that was their idea of "fun".

    Even the St. Louis Circuit Attorney thinks the cops might be trying to cover up some facts or influence the investigation. Criminals and their gangs can't be trusted to investigate themselves.

    Family of Officer Alix hires attorney to act as watchdog over police investigation

    Defense attorney Scott Rosenblum is known for defending clients charged with high-profile crimes. In this case, he’s looking at many angles, ranging from a possible civil lawsuit to being a watchdog over the investigation of a St. Louis police officer who shot and killed a colleague.

    Rosenblum wouldn’t say what he thinks about the St. Louis police investigation into Officer Nathanial Hendren but he said you can’t avoid hearing criticisms from St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner.

    Gardner spoke about the search for truth Wednesday during a news conference on public safety. She accused police of obstructing the truth and making up their minds before starting their investigation in a January 28 letter to St. Louis Public Safety Director Judge Jimmie Edwards.

    https://fox2now.com/2019/01/30/family-of-officer-alix-hires-attorney-to-act-as-watchdog-over-police-investigation/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2019, 03:05:29 PM
    More FBI agents arrested Stone than SEALs sent to kill bin Laden: An American nightmare
    Fox News ^ | January 31 2019 | Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
    Posted on 1/31/2019, 7:11:13 AM by knighthawk

    Last Friday, on a quiet residential street at 6 in the morning, the neighborhood exploded in light, noise and terror. Seventeen SUVs and two armored vehicles arrived in front of one house. Each vehicle had sirens blaring and lights flashing. The house, which abutted a canal, was soon surrounded by 29 government agents, each wearing military garb, each carrying a handgun and most carrying high-powered automatic rifles.

    In the canal were two amphibious watercrafts, out of which more heavily armed government agents came. Circling above all this was a helicopter equipped with long-range precision weaponry and high-powered spotlights.

    Four agents approached the front door to the house. Two held a battering ram, and two pointed their rifles at the door. One of the agents shouted and banged on the front door until the terrified owner of the house emerged, barefoot and wearing shorts and a T-shirt. He was greeted in the dark at his open front door by two rifle barrels aimed at his head.

    (Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...

    ________________________ ________________________ ___


    Unreal.   What a pile of shit and waste of time and energy these "law enforcement" clowns are.  Bunch of retards.  

    I guess if laws are supposed to apply equally to everyone we should now expect the FBI to conduct similar raids for everyone, every time.

    Judge Andrew Napolitano: An American nightmare

    In the current, unreal world -- where politics deeply infuse law enforcement -- prosecutors use brute force to send a message of terror to innocent defendants. Like all defendants at the time of arrest, Stone is innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. What message does brute force send? It is a message of terror, and it has no place in American life. As if to add embarrassment to terror, the feds may have tipped off CNN, which carried all this live in real time.

    [...]

    One item in the government's possession that is very problematic constitutionally is the transcript of the testimony Stone gave to the House Intelligence Committee, wherein the indictment accuses Stone of lying. Because that testimony is classified, Stone is not permitted to see it, and his lawyers -- who may view it only in a secret facility -- may not copy it.

    How can they defend against these charges? How can it be that the government has a piece of paper that allegedly is proof of the crime charged and the defendant's lawyers may not copy it? Didn't the government waive the classified nature of this document by Stone's very presence at the hearing where the document was created? What remains of the constitutional guarantee of confronting one's accusers and challenging their evidence?

    No innocent American merits the governmental treatment Stone received. It was the behavior of a police state where the laws are written to help the government achieve its ends, not to guarantee the freedom of the people -- and where police break the laws they are sworn to enforce. Regrettably, what happened to Roger Stone could happen to anyone.

    https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/judge-andrew-napolitano-an-american-nightmare

    Reps. Jordan and Meadows join call for FBI to explain show of force in Roger Stone arrest

    Two more high-ranking Congressional Republicans are asking FBI director Christopher Wray to explain the bureau’s show of force when arresting Roger Stone, a longtime adviser and confidant of President Trump, last week at his Florida home.

    Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, and Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., the ranking member of the Government Operations Subcommittee, sent a letter to Wray and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to request a briefing on the tactics employed during the raid. The letter also raised concerns about CNN’s “apparent advanced knowledge of the raid.”

    “These raids are dangerous, and they pose serious risks to the officers, the arrestee and his family, and the community," the two lawmakers said in their letter. "Given Stone's advanced age and the nature of charges against him, as well as his statement that he would have surrendered voluntarily, it is unsettling that the Justice Department chose to use agents in full tactical assault gear to arrest Stone.”

    The letter continues: ‘”[T]he presence and proximity of television news cameras during Stone's arrest raise questions about whether any Justice Department or FBI personnel alerted the media about Stone's imminent arrest.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/reps-jordan-and-meadows-join-call-for-fbi-to-explain-use-of-force-in-roger-stone-arrest
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 31, 2019, 03:13:02 PM
    I guess if laws are supposed to apply equally to everyone we should now expect the FBI to conduct similar raids for everyone, every time.

    Judge Andrew Napolitano: An American nightmare

    In the current, unreal world -- where politics deeply infuse law enforcement -- prosecutors use brute force to send a message of terror to innocent defendants. Like all defendants at the time of arrest, Stone is innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. What message does brute force send? It is a message of terror, and it has no place in American life. As if to add embarrassment to terror, the feds may have tipped off CNN, which carried all this live in real time.

    [...]

    One item in the government's possession that is very problematic constitutionally is the transcript of the testimony Stone gave to the House Intelligence Committee, wherein the indictment accuses Stone of lying. Because that testimony is classified, Stone is not permitted to see it, and his lawyers -- who may view it only in a secret facility -- may not copy it.

    How can they defend against these charges? How can it be that the government has a piece of paper that allegedly is proof of the crime charged and the defendant's lawyers may not copy it? Didn't the government waive the classified nature of this document by Stone's very presence at the hearing where the document was created? What remains of the constitutional guarantee of confronting one's accusers and challenging their evidence?

    No innocent American merits the governmental treatment Stone received. It was the behavior of a police state where the laws are written to help the government achieve its ends, not to guarantee the freedom of the people -- and where police break the laws they are sworn to enforce. Regrettably, what happened to Roger Stone could happen to anyone.

    https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/judge-andrew-napolitano-an-american-nightmare

    Reps. Jordan and Meadows join call for FBI to explain show of force in Roger Stone arrest

    Two more high-ranking Congressional Republicans are asking FBI director Christopher Wray to explain the bureau’s show of force when arresting Roger Stone, a longtime adviser and confidant of President Trump, last week at his Florida home.

    Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, and Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., the ranking member of the Government Operations Subcommittee, sent a letter to Wray and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to request a briefing on the tactics employed during the raid. The letter also raised concerns about CNN’s “apparent advanced knowledge of the raid.”

    “These raids are dangerous, and they pose serious risks to the officers, the arrestee and his family, and the community," the two lawmakers said in their letter. "Given Stone's advanced age and the nature of charges against him, as well as his statement that he would have surrendered voluntarily, it is unsettling that the Justice Department chose to use agents in full tactical assault gear to arrest Stone.”

    The letter continues: ‘”[T]he presence and proximity of television news cameras during Stone's arrest raise questions about whether any Justice Department or FBI personnel alerted the media about Stone's imminent arrest.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/reps-jordan-and-meadows-join-call-for-fbi-to-explain-use-of-force-in-roger-stone-arrest

    29 Agents - FFS !!!!!
    No matter what political side your on I’d expect everyone to find that completely OTT
    And Does warrant an Explanation.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2019, 03:46:55 PM
    29 Agents - FFS !!!!!
    No matter what political side your on I’d expect everyone to find that completely OTT
    And Does warrant an Explanation.

    CNN curiously enough was there to record the whole operation, talk about overkill.

    https://www.cnn.com/videos/politics/2019/01/25/roger-stone-fbi-arrest-vo.cnn
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 31, 2019, 03:50:46 PM
    CNN curiously enough was there to record the whole operation, talk about overkill.

    https://www.cnn.com/videos/politics/2019/01/25/roger-stone-fbi-arrest-vo.cnn


    FFS - So the FBI invited them along !!!
    Serious questions need to be asked and answered.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2019, 04:10:36 PM

    FFS - So the FBI invited them along !!!
    Serious questions need to be asked and answered.

    What is also interesting is that quite often citizens who record cops abusing their authority or committing crimes are attacked or arrested or have their phones/cameras confiscated or tampered with despite court precedent that allows citizens to film cops in public. Here we see CNN came prepared and didn't seem to face any reactions from the FBI. Does CNN have cameras outside the homes of people and record their daily activities? Or were they were "tipped off" about the operation by "anonymous sources"?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2019, 04:12:12 PM
    This innocent man was trying to sell his car to a person. Then the cops showed up to arrest the prospective buyer on outstanding warrants; he pulled out a gun and fired, the cops fired back and killed him and also injured the innocent seller, who ended up with a bullet lodged in his spine. His medical bills were over $78,000 and he was unable to work for months and according to his doctor he is likely to face additional health issues in the future. After several years this man will receive $225,000 which seems very low and the amount is unlikely to come from the pockets of the shooters or from the coffers of their gang. It is interesting to note the police response to this incident, the total number of police staff who visited the scene was almost 100.

    Jury awards man $225K in lawsuit over Las Vegas police shooting

    https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/courts/jury-awards-man-225k-in-lawsuit-over-las-vegas-police-shooting-1586155/

    https://www.courthousenews.com/las-vegas-cops-shoot-up-car-sale/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on January 31, 2019, 05:35:11 PM
    Its wrong. Whether you stand the chance or not can be debated. That it is wrong to hand someone their ass after they have been handcuffed is wrong. That is not debatable.

    I have fought, chased, handcuffed a LOT of people over the years. the rule was, once the handcuffs go on, it's over. There have been cops in my purview that let emotions get the best of them and those cops paid the price because the fact remains, once a subject is subdued, it is over.
    I never said it was right, just that when you run/fight with cops, many will take liberties before/during/after the cuffing. Have a good buddy who was nicknamed Opie for what a dopey, honest, straight guy he was. Mexican guy kept threatening his family after his arrest, he "accidentally" ran into a door jam a couple of times. I guess he was pretty quiet after that. ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 01, 2019, 05:17:37 AM
    https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2018/11/05/fatal-officer-involved-shooting-in-anne-arundel-county/?fbclid=IwAR3Y4XyAHdfpSF_nCv2Muz4UOInNBwsqry3fNYcLDKpnE53oXbcwchMb2eg

     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 01, 2019, 10:54:00 AM
    https://www.yahoo.com/news/detroit-cop-posts-racist-video-225509470.html?fbclid=IwAR1_vKp4O5dlAn5-Qx4LZUw2ba4lG8fuedtE74VqghVeKT-yK_zZQapHtlY&ncid=facebook_yahoonewsf_akfmevaatca


    So FNG dumb 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2019, 11:41:43 AM
    https://www.yahoo.com/news/detroit-cop-posts-racist-video-225509470.html?fbclid=IwAR1_vKp4O5dlAn5-Qx4LZUw2ba4lG8fuedtE74VqghVeKT-yK_zZQapHtlY&ncid=facebook_yahoonewsf_akfmevaatca


    So FNG dumb  

    Seize the car for expired registration? And then mock her? In this cold weather? And we are talking about a violent offender with a criminal record that somehow still worked as an “officer”.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2019, 05:00:46 PM
    Once again, violent armed criminals roam the streets attacking, extorting and kidnapping innocent people. This man was jailed for 41 days for supposed possession of 92 (!) grams of heroin, based on a "test" that the cop "conducted". Oh wait, that was actually Tide laundry detergent. Not that it matters much to these cops. 11 people in total were freed from jail after the thug's crime spree was discovered. He was fired but at this point it seems that, unlike his victims, he won't spend any time in jail.

    Falsely arrested, freed Martin County man speaks about ordeal

    https://www.wpbf.com/article/falsely-arrested-freed-martin-county-man-talks-to-wpbf-25-news/26070012

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 01, 2019, 06:08:41 PM



    The uniform that you're wearing as a copper
    it is a wonderful disguise.
    You cheat the people you're supposed to be protecting
    No... not really a surprise.

    You're nothing more,
    than a fucking little gangster,
    making money on the side.

    You've dealing drugs whatever
    happened to your conscience,
    It seems you even lost your pride.

    Bent Coppers, fuck them one and all!
    they're the worst kind of criminal!

    The weakest link defines how strong a chain is
    others need to play along.
    Untouchable, that's what you think is your position,
    don't you think you could be wrong.

    Now... you've been grassed...
    send down... to do your time...
    You... have to pay...
    For the lowest... type of crime....

    Bent Coppers, fuck them one and all!
    they're the worst kind of criminal!

    [/youtube]
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 01, 2019, 06:47:16 PM
    Not only did they shoot this man but they handcuffed and arrested him and charged him with "making terroristic threats" and "causing or risking widespread injury or damage". Body cam footage seems to indicate that they lied in an effort to cover up their actions. It's incredible that he was so calm even after being receiving a bullet to the stomach by the thugs trying to kill him. While the man was lying on the street bleeding, one of the cops even called the victim's wound a "graze". Instead of providing any aid the shooting victim was handcuffed. At least the judge was not particularly convinced about the cops' claims after reviewing the body cam footage.

    Man shot by cops demands AG review. Body cams show confusion over whether he had a gun.

    Lawyers for an Orange man who was shot and wounded during an encounter with Elizabeth police in December have released police body camera footage from the chaotic incident and are asking for the state Attorney General’s office to investigate.

    The frenetic video shows officers firing several shots and subduing 37-year-old Michael A. Bates in the street, as Bates himself even tries to calm the officers and assure them they did what they were “supposed to do.”

    And a judge later released Bates, saying she had concerns about the official account presented by officers.

    https://www.nj.com/crime/2019/01/man-shot-by-cops-demands-ag-review-videos-shows-confusion-over-whether-suspect-had-gun.html



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 04, 2019, 05:21:11 AM
    https://www.disclose.tv/undercover-police-posing-as-drug-buyers-arrested-by-undercover-police-poses-as-drug-dealer-330650?fbclid=IwAR0-YmpSJ337bne1l4IMY_E3uR19HCNgLsP8NN12Do_Akys8nSXQ_SjQ1NI

    You have got to be fng kidding me!!!!

     :o :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 04, 2019, 02:13:00 PM
    https://www.disclose.tv/undercover-police-posing-as-drug-buyers-arrested-by-undercover-police-poses-as-drug-dealer-330650?fbclid=IwAR0-YmpSJ337bne1l4IMY_E3uR19HCNgLsP8NN12Do_Akys8nSXQ_SjQ1NI

    You have got to be fng kidding me!!!!

     :o :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D


    You can’t make this farcical nonsense up  ::)
    And people are meant to trust the police know what they doing.

    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2019, 03:10:31 PM
    https://www.disclose.tv/undercover-police-posing-as-drug-buyers-arrested-by-undercover-police-poses-as-drug-dealer-330650?fbclid=IwAR0-YmpSJ337bne1l4IMY_E3uR19HCNgLsP8NN12Do_Akys8nSXQ_SjQ1NI

    You have got to be fng kidding me!!!!

     :o :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D

    Hahaha! The incompetent buffoons strike again! So did the "drug dealer" cops arrest the "drug buyer" cops and vice versa?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 04, 2019, 06:20:26 PM
    https://www.disclose.tv/undercover-police-posing-as-drug-buyers-arrested-by-undercover-police-poses-as-drug-dealer-330650?fbclid=IwAR0-YmpSJ337bne1l4IMY_E3uR19HCNgLsP8NN12Do_Akys8nSXQ_SjQ1NI

    You have got to be fng kidding me!!!!

     :o :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D
    Scene from a comedy movie ???
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 05, 2019, 04:29:47 PM
    What a shithole. Quite a racket they have there.

    Brooklyn real estate agent allegedly brokered gun permits known as 'a de Blasio special' in corrupt NYPD License Division

    It was known as “a de Blasio special.”

    A politically connected businesswoman got gun permit applications upgraded and rubber-stamped by the NYPD’s corrupt license division in early 2014, multiple sources told the Daily News. Brooklyn real estate agent Charlene Gayle allegedly received the VIP treatment when she accompanied members of the Orthodox Jewish community seeking full-carry firearms licenses, the sources said.

    Ex-NYPD Lt. Paul Dean alluded to the allegations in paperwork filed in Manhattan Federal Court Wednesday. Dean’s supervisor in the unit allegedly told him, “This person takes care of Mayor de Blasio and in return we are supposed to take care of this person,” Dean’s attorney wrote.

    Sources identified the businesswoman as Gayle, a longtime donor to de Blasio who served on his 2014 inauguration team. She is currently on the board of advisers to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-metro-mayor-ally-gun-licenses-20190123-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 05, 2019, 04:40:54 PM
    Remember this when an "officer" tries to lecture everyone about "speeding" (which is ok when they do it of course), especially when they pull over someone for doing 3-5 miles over.
    This cop was street racing with another cop, doing 80mph in a 30 mph zone near a high school and killed a man who was crossing the road. For that he was sentenced to 3-12 months (not years, MONTHS). And not only that, he can leave jail so he can work. It pays to be a cop...

    Ex-officer gets 3-12 months in jail for drag racing death

    A former Philadelphia police officer was ordered to serve 3 to 12 months in county jail for killing a man while drag racing with another officer two years ago.

    Soto was granted work release to be able to provide for his wife and 2-month-old child, meaning he can leave jail to work. The judge ordered Soto to turn himself in Feb. 8 to begin serving his sentence.

    https://www.wfsb.com/ex-officer-gets---months-in-jail-for-drag/article_8e1b4e1c-8d58-5d6d-bad9-da267dab3944.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 05, 2019, 04:55:11 PM
    What a shithole. Quite a racket they have there.

    Brooklyn real estate agent allegedly brokered gun permits known as 'a de Blasio special' in corrupt NYPD License Division

    It was known as “a de Blasio special.”

    A politically connected businesswoman got gun permit applications upgraded and rubber-stamped by the NYPD’s corrupt license division in early 2014, multiple sources told the Daily News. Brooklyn real estate agent Charlene Gayle allegedly received the VIP treatment when she accompanied members of the Orthodox Jewish community seeking full-carry firearms licenses, the sources said.

    Ex-NYPD Lt. Paul Dean alluded to the allegations in paperwork filed in Manhattan Federal Court Wednesday. Dean’s supervisor in the unit allegedly told him, “This person takes care of Mayor de Blasio and in return we are supposed to take care of this person,” Dean’s attorney wrote.

    Sources identified the businesswoman as Gayle, a longtime donor to de Blasio who served on his 2014 inauguration team. She is currently on the board of advisers to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-metro-mayor-ally-gun-licenses-20190123-story.html
    We need more people like her out here in LA. :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 06, 2019, 05:29:59 AM
    https://nypost.com/2019/02/05/nypd-tried-to-hide-ms-13-gangster-accused-of-subway-slaying/?utm_source=NYPFacebook&sr_share=facebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&fbclid=IwAR3ZKUZq82XK32_Ko4MK3ny1HxT607cxT6BgAvllFfFtPoxQ0XT9ZlRcwPg&fbclid=IwAR2jl3cbdW8IPo9HHWtPVHuCyn9O3_oY7cEmSLaurARmDbIksbGmuqGn0mE


     >:(  >:(  >:(  >:(

    Unreal - what a freaking joke 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 06, 2019, 03:30:37 PM
    https://nypost.com/2019/02/05/nypd-tried-to-hide-ms-13-gangster-accused-of-subway-slaying/?utm_source=NYPFacebook&sr_share=facebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&fbclid=IwAR3ZKUZq82XK32_Ko4MK3ny1HxT607cxT6BgAvllFfFtPoxQ0XT9ZlRcwPg&fbclid=IwAR2jl3cbdW8IPo9HHWtPVHuCyn9O3_oY7cEmSLaurARmDbIksbGmuqGn0mE


     >:(  >:(  >:(  >:(

    Unreal - what a freaking joke 


    Really WTF is Going on.
    Are NYPD Sanctuary Cops Now.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2019, 12:25:35 PM
    Free speech? Screw that, it gets in the way of their established revenue stream.

    NYPD to Waze: Stop snitching on our checkpoints!

    The police reportedly sent a cease-and-desist to Google

    "Police reported ahead" is a common phrase heard on a drive using the crowd-sourced navigation app Waze. Added to the app in real time by nearby users, it's one of numerous alerts sent to drivers about upcoming obstacles on a route. Many users view it as a harmless way to avoid getting speeding tickets, but others use the app to point out police checkpoints, including those setup for DUI prevention. The New York Police Department (NYPD) wants it to stop.

    Written about by the The New York Times and reported by Streetsblog, the NYPD sent a cease-and-desist letter to Waze's owner, Google. It insisted the app's capabilities should not be allowed and could even be considered illegal.

    "Individuals who post the locations of DWI checkpoints may be engaging in criminal conduct since such actions could be intentional attempts to prevent and/or impair the administration of the DWI laws and other relevant criminal and traffic laws," NYPD Deputy Commissioner for Legal Matters and lawyer Ann P. Prunty said in the letter.

    https://www.autoblog.com/2019/02/07/waze-dui-checkpoint-police-nypd-cease-desist/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2019, 03:52:41 PM
    Hundreds of Bounty Hunters Had Access to AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint Customer Location Data for Years

    In January, Motherboard revealed that AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint were selling their customers’ real-time location data, which trickled down through a complex network of companies until eventually ending up in the hands of at least one bounty hunter. Motherboard was also able to purchase the real-time location of a T-Mobile phone on the black market from a bounty hunter source for $300. In response, telecom companies said that this abuse was a fringe case.

    In reality, it was far from an isolated incident.

    Around 250 bounty hunters and related businesses had access to AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint customer location data, with one bail bond firm using the phone location service more than 18,000 times, and others using it thousands or tens of thousands of times, according to internal documents obtained by Motherboard from a company called CerCareOne, a now-defunct location data seller that operated until 2017. The documents list not only the companies that had access to the data, but specific phone numbers that were pinged by those companies.

    In some cases, the data sold is more sensitive than that offered by the service used by Motherboard last month, which estimated a location based on the cell phone towers that a phone connected to.

    https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/43z3dn/hundreds-bounty-hunters-att-tmobile-sprint-customer-location-data-years
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 08, 2019, 11:05:18 AM
    Cop punches a 16 year old boy that's almost unconscious from drugs and then lies by "forgetting" to mention the assault, gets no prison time, 1 year probation and $1000 fine.
    Guy bites cop, gets 30 years in prison.

    Even body camera footage is not enough to send these violent career criminals to prison.

    Murray police sergeant convicted after body camera footage shows him punching a teen boy in the face

    https://www.sltrib.com/news/2019/02/06/murray-police-sergeant/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 08, 2019, 11:14:07 AM
    Note that when it comes to cops, they always seem to violate "policy" but don't care about laws. Despite court decisions about recording cops in public, the "internal investigation" took 7 months (!) to "determine" that this woman should not have been detained or arrested. Also, the cops "conveniently" turn on their cameras belatedly. Of course don't expect them to go to prison for assaulting and kidnapping this woman. Because they determined it is only a matter of "policy" they will only get a 2 days pay worth of fine.

    Denver police violated policy when they detained Indy editor, internal investigation finds

    A Denver Police Department internal investigation released today found two officers violated city policy when they handcuffed and detained Colorado Independent Editor Susan Greene last summer. Both face fines worth two days of pay.

    Greene’s action — recording on-duty officers in public with her phone camera — “does not, in itself, provide grounds for detention or arrest,” a department rule states. Officers are not allowed to “threaten or intimidate individuals who are recording police activities, nor will they discourage or interfere with the recording of police activities.” The seven-month internal investigation determined that Officers James Brooks and Adam Paulsen violated this rule, according to reports the city provided today on each officer’s conduct.

    Additionally, the reports state in footnotes that Brooks turned on his body camera belatedly, failing to record his behavior when approaching Greene, and that the officers were both mistaken in telling her she was violating HIPAA — a federal law outlining an individual’s rights to privacy in medical records — when recording their handling of a vulnerable man on a Colfax Avenue sidewalk.

    https://www.coloradoindependent.com/2019/02/06/denver-police-violated-policy-when-they-detained-indy-editor-internal-investigation-finds/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 08, 2019, 05:27:14 PM
    Cop punches a 16 year old boy that's almost unconscious from drugs and then lies by "forgetting" to mention the assault, gets no prison time, 1 year probation and $1000 fine.
    Guy bites cop, gets 30 years in prison.

    Even body camera footage is not enough to send these violent career criminals to prison.

    Murray police sergeant convicted after body camera footage shows him punching a teen boy in the face

    https://www.sltrib.com/news/2019/02/06/murray-police-sergeant/




    Seems fair enough   ::) ::) ::)
    After all it was a Gang Member that Got Bit.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2019, 09:14:00 PM
    Insane. This level of violence is horrifying.

    If you're wondering what happened to the award winning violent gang member:

    Quote
    Schneider, who has won multiple awards from the police chief and has represented Glendale twice on the TV show Cops,  was suspended for 30 hours and remains an active officer on the force, records show.

    Abuse of Force: Body camera video shows man tased 11 times by Glendale officers

    On July 27, 2017, Johnny Wheatcroft was a passenger in a silver Ford Taurus when a pair of Glendale police officers pulled in front them in a Motel 6 parking lot.

    The stop was for an alleged turn signal violation.

    Minutes later, Wheatcroft was handcuffed lying face down on the hot asphalt on a 108-degree day. He'd already been tased 10 times, with one officer kneeling on his back as another, Officer Matt Schneider, kicked him in the groin and pulled down his athletic shorts to tase him a final time in his testicles, according to a federal lawsuit and body camera footage obtained by ABC15.

    Wheatcroft and Chapman, who were arrested and charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, spent months in jail after the incident because they couldn’t afford bail.

    Chapman agreed to plead guilty to a lesser charge in order to get home to her children, her attorneys said.

    The charges against Wheatcroft were dismissed by the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office after prosecutors saw the body camera video.



    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/abuse-of-force-body-camera-video-shows-man-tased-11-times-by-glendale-officers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 11, 2019, 09:43:40 PM
    As it has been shown several times, we are dealing with a criminal gang here. For a decade of planting evidence, fabricating charges and destroying lives, this criminal served just 22 months (not years, MONTHS) in prison, while the people he framed received (combined) many decades in prison.

    10 more convictions connected to corrupt Chicago police sergeant overturned

    Ten men are the latest group of people who have been exonerated after reportedly being framed by former Chicago Police Sergeant Ronald Watts. Watts spent a decade planting evidence and fabricating charges against South Side residents.

    Monday's mass exoneration brings the total number of people whose Watt-related drug convictions have been dismissed to 59. And while these men are now vindicated, their lives have, in most cased, been irreparably altered.

    Derrick Lewis served five years in prison. He was framed not once, but twice, by Watts and his team. Watts was indicted in federal court seven years ago.

    https://abc7chicago.com/10-more-convictions-connected-to-corrupt-cpd-sergeant-overturned/5132361/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 12, 2019, 10:56:26 AM
    https://www.theblaze.com/news/kamala-harris-smoking-pot-as-prosecutor?fbclid=IwAR0lOus7sYdAfBCz8PFBnj3rMYpLQ-GVWjCzYcQQnrTPpCaERzJtxLalJIA&utm_campaign=theblaze&utm_content=buffer8512f&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com

    phony
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2019, 11:30:53 AM
    https://www.theblaze.com/news/kamala-harris-smoking-pot-as-prosecutor?fbclid=IwAR0lOus7sYdAfBCz8PFBnj3rMYpLQ-GVWjCzYcQQnrTPpCaERzJtxLalJIA&utm_campaign=theblaze&utm_content=buffer8512f&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com

    phony

    How many people did she prosecute for marijuana related crimes?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2019, 11:54:55 AM
    Ex-Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke beaten in prison in Connecticut, his wife says

    Former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke, who last month received a 6-year, 9-month prison sentence for the murder of teenager Laquan McDonald, has been assaulted by prison inmates in his cell in Connecticut, his wife said Wednesday.

    Van Dyke was transferred earlier this month to a federal prison in Connecticut. Hours after his arrival, he was placed in the general population before being assaulted in his cell.

    https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/former-chicago-cop-jason-van-dyke-beaten-in-lockup-in-connecticut-wife-says/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2019, 04:27:08 PM
    Some of these cops are so eager to shoot people that they disobey the commands of their superiors and yet they still they get away with it. In this case a man was shot and left blind and cognitively incapacitated permanently.

    Family files lawsuit against Lakemore, Springfield Township police officers cleared in shooting that seriously injured man

    The family of a man left permanently injured after a Feb. 2018 police shooting in Lakemore filed a lawsuit Tuesday in federal court against the two police officers involved. Lakemore officer Ezekial Ryan and Springfield Township officer Kristofer London shot 31-year-old Matthew Burghardt while he sat unarmed in a van Feb. 13, 2018, according to court documents. Gunshot wounds rendered Burghardt blind and permanently cognitively incapacitated, according to the lawsuit.



    https://www.cleveland.com/akron/2019/02/family-files-lawsuit-against-lakemore-springfield-township-police-officers-cleared-in-shooting-that-seriously-injured-man.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 15, 2019, 10:49:46 AM
    The criminal gang trying to cover up their activities. But for this particular gang, this is simply called "lapse in judgment" and they decided that as long they "learn from the experience" everything's ok.

    Caught on camera: Deputies put mud on surveillance camera to block view

    The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department launched an internal affairs investigation after an Imperial resident filed a complaint about the actions of three deputies, which were recorded on a home security system. "I was getting ready for bed, we'd been gone all day. And I looked over at the monitor, because it sits on the desk in our bedroom and noticed that camera 1 is black," said Mathis.

    Mathis and her fiancé, Gary Schuetz, backed up the video for camera 1 and saw three deputies walked into their yard earlier in the day while the couple was gone. Then the video shows one of the deputies reaching up and putting something on the lens, blocking its view. The security camera turned out to have mud on the lens.

    The sheriff’s department characterized the officers’ decision to put mud on the surveillance camera as a lapse in judgment. But a spokesperson for the department said the officers would learn from the experience and that this mistake wouldn’t happen again.

    https://www.kmov.com/news/caught-on-camera-deputies-put-mud-on-surveillance-camera-to/article_b58f8d5c-2ffc-11e9-9915-ebba2e2a5f50.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 15, 2019, 10:56:19 AM
    Kidnapping US citizens on US soil... How many citizens serfs know about the 100 mile zone?

    2 Montana women sue border patrol after claiming they were detained for speaking Spanish

    Two Montana women questioned by a U.S. border agent who overheard them speaking Spanish in a convenience store sued U.S. Customs and Border Protection on Thursday, saying the agent illegally detained them without reason.

    In May, Ana Suda and Martha “Mimi” Hernandez were waiting in line to buy milk and eggs at the Town Pump, a convenience store in Havre, when a border agent approached them.

    The CBP agent, Paul O’Neal, “singled out, detained and interrogated” them “because he heard them speaking Spanish,” according to the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Great Falls.

    The agent held Suda and Hernandez for 40 minutes in a parking lot without reasonable suspicion or probable cause, the lawsuit claims.

    "Ma'am, the reason I asked you for your ID is because I came in here and I saw that you guys are speaking Spanish, which is very unheard of up here," O'Neal said in the video.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/montana-women-sue-border-patrol-over-racial-profiling-claims
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 15, 2019, 12:23:09 PM
    First Amendment Coalition Sues CA Attorney General to Force Disclosure of Police Misconduct Files

    The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) filed suit today against California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for failing to comply with the state’s new, landmark police transparency law.
    The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, seeks the release of records regarding serious police misconduct—records that all state and local agencies are now required to disclose under Senate Bill 1421. The bill, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires the disclosure of files that have been confidential for decades, including those involving police shootings and accusations of police misconduct.

    The California Department of Justice, under the authority of the Attorney General, is one of a relatively small number of agencies that has refused to comply with the law. FAC requested records from the department under SB 1421 on January 4, but it refused to disclose the records in a response sent on January 28, prompting FAC’s lawsuit.

    “As the highest law enforcement officer in the state, the Attorney General has an obligation to not only comply with the California Public Records Act, but to send the right message about transparency to police departments across the state,” said FAC Executive Director David Snyder. “Unfortunately, the Attorney General has done neither. By denying public access to these crucial files, he has given a green light to other departments to disregard the new law.”

    Police unions across California have been working to undermine the law by arguing it doesn’t apply to records prior to Jan. 1 of this year. FAC has led media coalitions to work to defeat these efforts in various counties, including successfully opposing an attempt by a police union in San Bernardino County—the California Supreme Court denied the union’s request to make the law apply only after Jan. 1 after FAC filed a briefing to block the last-ditch effort.

    FAC and a media coalition also prevailed last week in Contra Costa County Superior Courtwhere a judge sided with the organization and denied a preliminary injunction sought by police unions. A similar attempt is taking place in Los Angeles County and multiple other counties around the state.

    https://firstamendmentcoalition.org/2019/02/fac-sues-ca-attorney-general-to-force-disclosure-of-police-misconduct-files/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 15, 2019, 02:32:25 PM
    First Amendment Coalition Sues CA Attorney General to Force Disclosure of Police Misconduct Files

    The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) filed suit today against California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for failing to comply with the state’s new, landmark police transparency law.
    The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, seeks the release of records regarding serious police misconduct—records that all state and local agencies are now required to disclose under Senate Bill 1421. The bill, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires the disclosure of files that have been confidential for decades, including those involving police shootings and accusations of police misconduct.

    The California Department of Justice, under the authority of the Attorney General, is one of a relatively small number of agencies that has refused to comply with the law. FAC requested records from the department under SB 1421 on January 4, but it refused to disclose the records in a response sent on January 28, prompting FAC’s lawsuit.

    “As the highest law enforcement officer in the state, the Attorney General has an obligation to not only comply with the California Public Records Act, but to send the right message about transparency to police departments across the state,” said FAC Executive Director David Snyder. “Unfortunately, the Attorney General has done neither. By denying public access to these crucial files, he has given a green light to other departments to disregard the new law.”

    Police unions across California have been working to undermine the law by arguing it doesn’t apply to records prior to Jan. 1 of this year. FAC has led media coalitions to work to defeat these efforts in various counties, including successfully opposing an attempt by a police union in San Bernardino County—the California Supreme Court denied the union’s request to make the law apply only after Jan. 1 after FAC filed a briefing to block the last-ditch effort.

    FAC and a media coalition also prevailed last week in Contra Costa County Superior Courtwhere a judge sided with the organization and denied a preliminary injunction sought by police unions. A similar attempt is taking place in Los Angeles County and multiple other counties around the state.

    https://firstamendmentcoalition.org/2019/02/fac-sues-ca-attorney-general-to-force-disclosure-of-police-misconduct-files/

    Such pleasant decent & honest people in this Gang
    Being so Professional and above reproach I just Can’t Fathom
    Why they Wouldn’t want to Release them Records
    After all I doubt there are more than 3or4 minor instances of any type
    Of Wrong doing.



    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 16, 2019, 03:21:51 PM
    Listen to this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats:





    Remember this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats?

    Turns out that he didn't "wait for all the facts to come out", as cops often say.

    Once again, another crime was committed based on lies and fabrications that the "law enforcement professionals" didn't bother to check. It only crossed their mind to do so after 2 people were murdered in their home. Just claiming "it was a mistake" will not bring these people back and their killing could have been avoided but apparently the lives of non cops are of little importance to these scumbags. Will this killer and his gang be held accountable for the killing of these 2 people?

    'You lie, you die' | HPD undercover cop lied about drug buy that led to deadly raid, Chief Acevedo says

    In a bombshell development, the undercover cop who led a drug raid that ended with a deadly shootout last month is now the target of a criminal investigation.

    The narcotics officer lied in the search warrant affidavit about a drug buy that never happened, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo confirmed Friday.

    "That’s totally unacceptable. I’ve told my police department that if you lie, you die," Acevedo said. "When you lie on an affidavit, that's not sloppy police work, that's a crime."

    The case agent obtained a search warrant to conduct the no-knock raid on Jan. 28 after he swore a confidential informant bought heroin at the home the night before. He said the informant told him he saw a 9mm handgun and a large amount of heroin in the house.

    Turns out, there never was a drug buy at the house or an informant who saw a large amount of heroin and weapons.



    https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/you-lie-you-die-hpd-undercover-cop-lied-about-drug-buy-that-led-to-deadly-raid-chief-acevedo-says/285-54ca0bb4-ba03-4e9d-ab6e-7d40bab2b356
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 20, 2019, 05:34:05 AM
    https://www.ammoland.com/2019/02/houston-cop-lied-for-warrant-married-couple-killed-4-police-wounded

    Holy S 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 21, 2019, 02:58:09 PM
    Remember this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats?

    Turns out that he didn't "wait for all the facts to come out", as cops often say.

    Once again, another crime was committed based on lies and fabrications that the "law enforcement professionals" didn't bother to check. It only crossed their mind to do so after 2 people were murdered in their home. Just claiming "it was a mistake" will not bring these people back and their killing could have been avoided but apparently the lives of non cops are of little importance to these scumbags. Will this killer and his gang be held accountable for the killing of these 2 people?

    'You lie, you die' | HPD undercover cop lied about drug buy that led to deadly raid, Chief Acevedo says

    In a bombshell development, the undercover cop who led a drug raid that ended with a deadly shootout last month is now the target of a criminal investigation.

    The narcotics officer lied in the search warrant affidavit about a drug buy that never happened, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo confirmed Friday.

    "That’s totally unacceptable. I’ve told my police department that if you lie, you die," Acevedo said. "When you lie on an affidavit, that's not sloppy police work, that's a crime."

    The case agent obtained a search warrant to conduct the no-knock raid on Jan. 28 after he swore a confidential informant bought heroin at the home the night before. He said the informant told him he saw a 9mm handgun and a large amount of heroin in the house.

    Turns out, there never was a drug buy at the house or an informant who saw a large amount of heroin and weapons.



    https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/you-lie-you-die-hpd-undercover-cop-lied-about-drug-buy-that-led-to-deadly-raid-chief-acevedo-says/285-54ca0bb4-ba03-4e9d-ab6e-7d40bab2b356

    Remember that union goon's outrage about cops being victimized and shot, with the whole narrative about "war on cops"? He is not very vocal now.
    It seems that it took some members of his gang to get shot to end the no knock warrants, instead of the members of his gang who invaded the house of an innocent couple and killed them.

    Houston Police To Cease 'No Knock' Warrants, Chief Announces After Deadly Raid

    Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo says his department will stop serving "no knock" search warrants, weeks after a raid on a house left two married suspects dead and five officers injured. Acevedo also reiterated that the officer who led that raid may face criminal charges.

    "The no-knock warrant's going to go away, kind of like leaded gasoline in our city," Acevedo said. He added that raids that stem from those warrants would only be used in very limited cases — and that they would not be used to nab people suspected of dealing small amounts of drugs.

    No heroin was found at the residence, and Acevedo and the Houston police were forced to backtrack after initially saying the two suspects had opened fire on officers as soon as they reached the door of the house in the Pecan Park neighborhood, south of downtown Houston. The official narrative changed after it emerged that the police seemed to have opened fire first — shooting the couple's dog.

    https://www.npr.org/2019/02/19/695926963/houston-police-to-cease-no-knock-warrants-chief-announces-after-deadly-raid


    Now let's see if anyone will end up in prison for the murder of this couple.

    FBI opens civil rights investigation into botched Houston drug bust, police chief says

    The FBI has launched an independent civil rights investigation into the conduct of officers involved  in the botched no-knock drug raid that left two people dead and five officers wounded, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said Wednesday at a City Hall press conference.

    The probe is the latest aftershock after last month's deadly drug raid, which left two people dead, thrown the Houston Police Department into turmoil, and sent city and county leaders scrambling to contain a burgeoning scandal.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Houston-chief-mayor-and-DA-set-to-speak-on-13630749.php

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 21, 2019, 03:24:02 PM
    If the above wasn't enough, this lying criminal is the reason why 1400 cases that he's been involved in will be re-evaluated. Aside from any charges about the killing of the 2 people, will he also have to pay the costs for all the hours and resources that will be spent on re-examining these cases, as well as any charges for people who were wrongfully convicted and tortured because of his lies?

    DA Ogg announces reviews of 1400 cases

    The Harris County District Attorney's Office has launched a review of more than 1,400 criminal cases spanning Houston Police Officer Gerald Goines' decades-long career. Twenty-seven of those cases are active.
    “Our duty is to see that justice is done in every case,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said. “Although the criminal investigation of Officer Goines is ongoing, we have an immediate ethical obligation to notify defendants and their lawyers in Goines' other cases to give them an opportunity to independently review any potential defenses."

    https://app.dao.hctx.net/da-ogg-announces-review-1400-cases
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 21, 2019, 05:14:48 PM

    Just nuts.   Fng nuts.
    If the above wasn't enough, this lying criminal is the reason why 1400 cases that he's been involved in will be re-evaluated. Aside from any charges about the killing of the 2 people, will he also have to pay the costs for all the hours and resources that will be spent on re-examining these cases, as well as any charges for people who were wrongfully convicted and tortured because of his lies?

    DA Ogg announces reviews of 1400 cases

    The Harris County District Attorney's Office has launched a review of more than 1,400 criminal cases spanning Houston Police Officer Gerald Goines' decades-long career. Twenty-seven of those cases are active.
    “Our duty is to see that justice is done in every case,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said. “Although the criminal investigation of Officer Goines is ongoing, we have an immediate ethical obligation to notify defendants and their lawyers in Goines' other cases to give them an opportunity to independently review any potential defenses."

    https://app.dao.hctx.net/da-ogg-announces-review-1400-cases
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on February 22, 2019, 04:50:35 PM
    Remember this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats?

    Turns out that he didn't "wait for all the facts to come out", as cops often say.

    Once again, another crime was committed based on lies and fabrications that the "law enforcement professionals" didn't bother to check. It only crossed their mind to do so after 2 people were murdered in their home. Just claiming "it was a mistake" will not bring these people back and their killing could have been avoided but apparently the lives of non cops are of little importance to these scumbags. Will this killer and his gang be held accountable for the killing of these 2 people?

    'You lie, you die' | HPD undercover cop lied about drug buy that led to deadly raid, Chief Acevedo says

    In a bombshell development, the undercover cop who led a drug raid that ended with a deadly shootout last month is now the target of a criminal investigation.

    The narcotics officer lied in the search warrant affidavit about a drug buy that never happened, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo confirmed Friday.

    "That’s totally unacceptable. I’ve told my police department that if you lie, you die," Acevedo said. "When you lie on an affidavit, that's not sloppy police work, that's a crime."

    The case agent obtained a search warrant to conduct the no-knock raid on Jan. 28 after he swore a confidential informant bought heroin at the home the night before. He said the informant told him he saw a 9mm handgun and a large amount of heroin in the house.

    Turns out, there never was a drug buy at the house or an informant who saw a large amount of heroin and weapons.



    https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/you-lie-you-die-hpd-undercover-cop-lied-about-drug-buy-that-led-to-deadly-raid-chief-acevedo-says/285-54ca0bb4-ba03-4e9d-ab6e-7d40bab2b356

    Talks too fast and clearly lacks sincerity. Also, he does have an annoying voice.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 24, 2019, 05:06:03 PM
    Good decision, unanimous as well, even though it does not eliminate theft committed by government. Interestingly enough, according to the NY Times, the decision was written by Ginsburg.

    Supreme Court Limits Police Powers to Seize Private Property

    The Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that the Constitution places limits on the ability of states and localities to take and keep cash, cars, houses and other private property used to commit crimes.

    The practice, known as civil forfeiture, is a popular way to raise revenue and is easily abused, and it has been the subject of widespread criticism across the political spectrum. The court’s decision will open the door to new legal arguments when the value of the property seized was out of proportion to the crimes involved.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/20/us/politics/civil-asset-forfeiture-supreme-court.html


    Of course police state advocate Kamala Harris wasted no time to tweet about this and even claimed that "excessive fines and confiscation of property lead to the criminalization of poverty". She didn't seem to think that about civil asset forfeiture when she was Attorney General in California:

    Quote
    As California attorney general, Kamala Harris opposed a 2011 law restraining the practice of civil asset forfeiture. In 2015 she sponsored a bill to allow authorities to seize suspects’ assets before filing charges. That year California forfeitures totaled $50 million.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 25, 2019, 03:50:05 PM
    Death of South Carolina DUI suspect raises questions, prompts investigation

    A form refusing medical treatment was signed by an officer — not the man himself — raising questions about why he wasn’t taken to the hospital.


    State investigators are reviewing a case where a DUI suspect died after an officer — not the suspect — signed a form refusing medical treatment. The man, Nathaniel Rhodes, 58, had eight broken ribs and a ruptured liver when he died, according to medical records.

    Rhodes crashed his van last August and, according to a police report, the father of three was already on a stretcher in an ambulance when an officer decided to conduct a field sobriety test after finding an open bottle of wine in his van. According to the report, Rhodes told the officer that “he had no injuries that would stop him from completing the tests” and then after being taken out of the ambulance, “failed to maintain his balance” during the tests.

    Instead of being taken to the hospital, Rhodes was sent to the police station to be booked for DUI.

    A form refusing medical treatment lists a signature to be provided by the patient, in this case Rhodes, or a guardian. But instead, an officer on the scene signed the form — raising questions about why Rhodes wasn’t taken to the hospital.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/death-south-carolina-dui-suspect-raises-questions-prompts-investigation-n975111
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 26, 2019, 03:30:44 PM
    So this guy is issuing threats now.

    Notice, the list contains 12,000 names, that is quite a lot of "very few bad apples".

    California keeps a secret list of criminal cops, but says you can’t have it
    Attorney General warns reporters it's illegal to possess list of thousands of cop convictions


    Their crimes ranged from shoplifting to embezzlement to murder. Some of them molested kids and downloaded child pornography. Others beat their wives, girlfriends or children.

    The one thing they had in common: a badge.

    Thousands of California law enforcement officers have been convicted of a crime in the past decade, according to records released by a public agency that sets standards for officers in the Golden State.

    The revelations are alarming, but the state’s top cop says Californians don’t have a right to see them. In fact, Attorney General Xavier Becerra warned two Berkeley-based reporters that simply possessing this never-before-publicly-released list of convicted cops is a violation of the law.

    The documents provide a rare glimpse at the volume of officer misconduct at a time of heightened interest over police accountability. The list includes cops who trafficked drugs, cops who stole money from their departments and even one who robbed a bank wearing a fake beard. Some sexually assaulted suspects. Others took bribes, filed false reports and committed perjury. A large number drove under the influence of drugs and alcohol — sometimes killing people on the road.

    The Berkeley journalists chose not to publish the entire list until they could spend more time reporting to avoid misidentifying people among the nearly 12,000 names in the documents.

    https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2019/02/26/california-keeps-a-secret-list-of-criminal-cops-but-says-you-cant-have-it/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 26, 2019, 05:29:29 PM
    FOIA?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 26, 2019, 05:40:22 PM
    FOIA?

    He only cares about FOIA when it comes to him going against the Trump admin (https://oag.ca.gov/news/press-releases/attorney-general-becerra-submits-foia-request-trump-administration-owes-us) but when it comes to crimes of cops he doesn't seem to like transparency. About what you'd expect from a California AG.

    Quote
    The California Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training — known as POST — provided the information last month in response to routine Public Records Act requests from reporters for the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley and its production arm, Investigative Studios. But when Becerra’s office learned about the disclosure, it threatened the reporters with legal action unless they destroyed the records, insisting they are confidential under state law and were released inadvertently.

    See this as well:

    First Amendment Coalition Sues CA Attorney General to Force Disclosure of Police Misconduct Files

    The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) filed suit today against California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for failing to comply with the state’s new, landmark police transparency law.
    The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, seeks the release of records regarding serious police misconduct—records that all state and local agencies are now required to disclose under Senate Bill 1421. The bill, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires the disclosure of files that have been confidential for decades, including those involving police shootings and accusations of police misconduct.

    The California Department of Justice, under the authority of the Attorney General, is one of a relatively small number of agencies that has refused to comply with the law. FAC requested records from the department under SB 1421 on January 4, but it refused to disclose the records in a response sent on January 28, prompting FAC’s lawsuit.

    “As the highest law enforcement officer in the state, the Attorney General has an obligation to not only comply with the California Public Records Act, but to send the right message about transparency to police departments across the state,” said FAC Executive Director David Snyder. “Unfortunately, the Attorney General has done neither. By denying public access to these crucial files, he has given a green light to other departments to disregard the new law.”

    Police unions across California have been working to undermine the law by arguing it doesn’t apply to records prior to Jan. 1 of this year. FAC has led media coalitions to work to defeat these efforts in various counties, including successfully opposing an attempt by a police union in San Bernardino County—the California Supreme Court denied the union’s request to make the law apply only after Jan. 1 after FAC filed a briefing to block the last-ditch effort.

    FAC and a media coalition also prevailed last week in Contra Costa County Superior Court where a judge sided with the organization and denied a preliminary injunction sought by police unions. A similar attempt is taking place in Los Angeles County and multiple other counties around the state.

    https://firstamendmentcoalition.org/2019/02/fac-sues-ca-attorney-general-to-force-disclosure-of-police-misconduct-files/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 26, 2019, 06:46:54 PM
    So this guy is issuing threats now.

    Notice, the list contains 12,000 names, that is quite a lot of "very few bad apples".

    California keeps a secret list of criminal cops, but says you can’t have it
    Attorney General warns reporters it's illegal to possess list of thousands of cop convictions


    Their crimes ranged from shoplifting to embezzlement to murder. Some of them molested kids and downloaded child pornography. Others beat their wives, girlfriends or children.

    The one thing they had in common: a badge.

    Thousands of California law enforcement officers have been convicted of a crime in the past decade, according to records released by a public agency that sets standards for officers in the Golden State.

    The revelations are alarming, but the state’s top cop says Californians don’t have a right to see them. In fact, Attorney General Xavier Becerra warned two Berkeley-based reporters that simply possessing this never-before-publicly-released list of convicted cops is a violation of the law.

    The documents provide a rare glimpse at the volume of officer misconduct at a time of heightened interest over police accountability. The list includes cops who trafficked drugs, cops who stole money from their departments and even one who robbed a bank wearing a fake beard. Some sexually assaulted suspects. Others took bribes, filed false reports and committed perjury. A large number drove under the influence of drugs and alcohol — sometimes killing people on the road.

    The Berkeley journalists chose not to publish the entire list until they could spend more time reporting to avoid misidentifying people among the nearly 12,000 names in the documents.

    https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2019/02/26/california-keeps-a-secret-list-of-criminal-cops-but-says-you-cant-have-it/
    There are approximately 68,220 police and sheriff officers in California.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 26, 2019, 07:26:49 PM
    So this guy is issuing threats now.

    Notice, the list contains 12,000 names, that is quite a lot of "very few bad apples".

    California keeps a secret list of criminal cops, but says you can’t have it
    Attorney General warns reporters it's illegal to possess list of thousands of cop convictions


    Their crimes ranged from shoplifting to embezzlement to murder. Some of them molested kids and downloaded child pornography. Others beat their wives, girlfriends or children.

    The one thing they had in common: a badge.

    Thousands of California law enforcement officers have been convicted of a crime in the past decade, according to records released by a public agency that sets standards for officers in the Golden State.

    The revelations are alarming, but the state’s top cop says Californians don’t have a right to see them. In fact, Attorney General Xavier Becerra warned two Berkeley-based reporters that simply possessing this never-before-publicly-released list of convicted cops is a violation of the law.

    The documents provide a rare glimpse at the volume of officer misconduct at a time of heightened interest over police accountability. The list includes cops who trafficked drugs, cops who stole money from their departments and even one who robbed a bank wearing a fake beard. Some sexually assaulted suspects. Others took bribes, filed false reports and committed perjury. A large number drove under the influence of drugs and alcohol — sometimes killing people on the road.

    The Berkeley journalists chose not to publish the entire list until they could spend more time reporting to avoid misidentifying people among the nearly 12,000 names in the documents.

    https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2019/02/26/california-keeps-a-secret-list-of-criminal-cops-but-says-you-cant-have-it/

    12000 just in California  :o
    Out of 68000 - Close to 1 in 5 !!
    That’s one big gang of Criminals.
    Nothing startling or to be very concerned about is it.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2019, 01:03:56 PM
    12000 just in California  :o
    Out of 68000 - Close to 1 in 5 !!
    That’s one big gang of Criminals.
    Nothing startling or to be very concerned about is it.  ::)

    You've mentioned it previously that even if we consider the "very few bad apples" that cops often say we are still talking about many tens of thousands of criminals across the country. Now in this case, whether you look at it percentage wise or absolute numbers-wise, we see that the "very few bad apples" turn out to be 12000 in California alone. And on top of that you have the Attorney General trying to prevent the public from knowing about these criminals.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 27, 2019, 01:12:24 PM
    You've mentioned it previously that even if we consider the "very few bad apples" that cops often say we are still talking about many tens of thousands of criminals across the country. Now in this case, whether you look at it percentage wise or absolute numbers-wise, we see that the "very few bad apples" turn out to be 12000 in California alone. And on top of that you have the Attorney General trying to prevent the public from knowing about these criminals.

    Sadly it’s outrageous that the authorities are keeping these people in such a crucial job where they
    Can exploit their power of law - it’s no wonder there is such bad feeling & distrust about policing.
    As for the attorney general his actions are Traitorous to the people.
    In 2019 in some areas it appears it’s no better than some 3rd world / dictatorship countries.
    Awful state of affairs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 27, 2019, 01:16:16 PM
    This level of abuse is horrifying but not unusual for those of his ilk. But aside from the actions of this violent criminal (his mugshot below), why did the others stand idle? Why didn't they subdue him and arrest him? If they let him commit this abuse they are accessories to the crime.
    But you may ask "Was he punished? What happened to him?" Well, he was on paid vacation for 2 years (!) collecting $120,000 (!!) and now he was allowed to resign and will also get another $10,000 (!!!). But he'll have to pay a $150 fine... He'll probably go work in another city/county/state and, more likely than not, commit similar abuses in the future.

    ‘You Ain’t Seen Excessive Force Yet’: Ramsey Co. Deputy To Resign After Video Shows Him Assaulting Inmate

    (https://i0.wp.com/www.twincities.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Vandewiele.jpg?fit=620%2C9999px&ssl=1)

    A Ramsey County correctional officer says he plans to resign after a video shows him attacking an inmate. The resignation of deputy Travis Vandewiele comes two years after inmate Terrell Johnson complained the officer used excessive force while restraining him.

    Vandewiele was charged by the Minneapolis City Attorney’s Office with two counts of fifth-degree assault, a misdemeanor.

    As part of a plea agreement Vandewiele pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and paid a $150 fine.

    Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher says there have been — and will be more — changes, including additional training and the hiring of more supervisors.

    When Vandewiele resigns with no discipline on Feb. 28, he will be given almost $10,000 in vacation and sick time.

    For the two years he was on paid administrative leave, Vandewiele collected more than $120,000 in salary.




    https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2019/02/26/ramsey-co-deputy-resign-inmate-assault/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 27, 2019, 04:44:03 PM
    12000 just in California  :o
    Out of 68000 - Close to 1 in 5 !!
    That’s one big gang of Criminals.
    Nothing startling or to be very concerned about is it.  ::)
    And those are just the ones that were caught. ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 28, 2019, 06:38:19 PM
    Let's see if the killer will go to prison. Not holding my breath though. It is possible that they could overcharge him to trick the family and the public to a faint hope of justice, only for him to be found not guilty because of overcharging or a jury that is reluctant to sentence a cop.

    Officer who fatally shot Justine Damond charged with murder, turns himself in

    The Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot an Australian woman in July was charged with murder Tuesday after he turned himself in when a warrant was issued for his arrest.

    Officer Mohamed Noor turned himself in on Tuesday in connection to the 2017 death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. his attorney confirmed.

    The criminal complaint remained sealed by midday Tuesday, but according to the jail roster Noor was booked on a third-degree murder charge for perpetrating an eminently dangerous act while showing a "depraved mind." The second-degree manslaughter charge alleges he acted with "culpable negligence creating unreasonable risk."

    Damond was shot July 15, minutes after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her home. The 40-year-old life coach’s death drew international attention, cost the police chief her job and forced major revisions to the department’s policy on body cameras.

    Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was scheduled to discuss charges Tuesday afternoon.

    Noor, a 32-year-old Somali-American, has not talked publicly about the case and declined to be interviewed by state investigators.

    In a statement Tuesday, Damond's family praised the charges, calling them "one step toward justice."

    "No charges can bring our Justine back. However, justice demands accountability for those responsible for recklessly killing the fellow citizens they are sworn to protect, and today's actions reflect that," the statement said.

    A policeman who was with Noor at the time of the shooting, Matthew Harrity, told investigators that he was startled by a loud noise right before Damond approached the driver's side window of their police SUV. Harrity, who was driving, said Noor then fired his weapon from the passenger seat. Damond died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

    The officers did not turn on their body cameras until after the shooting, and there was no squad camera video of the incident.

    The lack of video was widely criticized, and Damond's family members were among the many people who called for changes in procedure, including how often officers are required to turn on their cameras.

    The shooting also prompted questions about the training of Noor, a two-year veteran and Somali-American whose arrival on the force had been celebrated by city leaders and Minnesota's large Somali community. Noor, 32, had trained in business and economics and worked in property management before becoming an officer.

    Then-Chief Janee Harteau defended Noor's training and said he was suited to be on the street, even as she criticized the shooting itself. But Harteau — who was on vacation when the shooting happened and didn't make her first public appearance until several days after the shooting — was forced out soon after by Mayor Betsy Hodges, who said she had lost confidence in the chief.

    Harteau's replacement, Medaria Arradondo, quickly announced a policy change requiring officers to turn on their body cameras in responding to any call or traffic stop.

    If convicted of third-degree murder, Noor could face a maximum of 25 years in prison, though the presumptive sentence is 12 ½ years. A judge could issue a sentence ranging from about 10 ½ to 15 years.

    The second-degree manslaughter charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, but the presumptive sentence is four years.

    Jail records show he’s being held on $500,000 bail.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/20/officer-who-fatally-shot-justine-damond-turns-himself-in-charges-pending.html

    Remember this case?
    Once again we see that the killer exhibited warning signs previously and it finally came down to murdering an innocent woman. Before killing Justine Damond, he pointed a gun at a motorist that he stopped for not using a turn signal. Once again we see that bodycams were either not turned on or only turned on until halfway through the incident. The motorist didn't realize at the time how lucky he was he wasn't shot by this violent thug. Naturally, the thug's lawyers want to keep this video out of court.

    KARE 11 Investigates: Video of Officer Noor traffic stop

    Months before the shooting death of Justine Damond and the international headlines that followed, prosecutors say there was a routine traffic stop that shows former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor had a history of “unnecessarily escalating force.”

    KARE 11 obtained police dashcam video – never seen publicly before – of the May 18, 2017 traffic stop.



    Even though he approached the car with his gun drawn, officer Noor never turned on his body camera.

    Officer Justin Schmidt also had his weapon drawn when he walked up to the other side of the car but didn’t activate his body camera until halfway through the incident.


    So, what happened as a result of the traffic stop? The driver was ticketed for failing to obey traffic signs and signal. But it was thrown out by a judge when neither officer showed up to court.

    https://www.kare11.com/article/news/investigations/kare-11-investigates-video-of-officer-noor-traffic-stop/89-f8d109bc-b98d-4e89-bfea-4e0fe4f5256d
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2019, 01:59:58 AM
    The incompetent buffoons strike again. This time the "professional investigators" arrested and humiliated an innocent man. Of course don't expect the buffoons to go to prison or pay a dime out of their pockets.

    Florida prostitution ring: Charges dropped as man mistakenly arrested in spa investigation

     Charges against one of the dozens of men arrested in the ongoing sex spa case were dropped, as investigators say the arrest was a case of mistaken identity, a sheriff's official said Friday.

    S. P., 47, was arrested Feb. 25 on misdemeanor charges of use of a structure or conveyance for prostitution and soliciting prostitution.

    Sheriff’s Lt. Mike Dougherty said P., of Jensen Beach, was wrongly identified as having patronized Florida Therapy Spa for sex acts in Stuart on Nov. 19.

    Meanwhile, Indian River County Sheriff’s Maj. Eric Flowers said one of the dozens of so-called “johns” arrested in a spa case in his jurisdiction was misidentified, but Flowers did not release the name.

    In Martin County, the confusion came as investigators researched the four-door Porsche in which the man who actually received the sex services left.

    https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/crime/martin-county/2019/03/01/charges-against-man-spa-case-dropped-mistaken-id-case/3029727002/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2019, 01:23:25 PM
    Naturally the criminals and their gangs are not happy with the decision. Ironic that they don't give a shit about the rights or the privacy of innocent citizens but they only care when it comes to covering up crimes by cops.

    Orange County Judge Orders Police Records Unsealed

     A judge in Southern California lifted a temporary seal on Orange County police misconduct records Thursday, striking another blow to police unions who’ve argued in courts across the state that unsealing the records violates officers’ constitutional rights to privacy. The new California law opens up access to previously shielded internal records on police shootings, complaints of sexual assault by officers and internal records on police misconduct.

    Attorneys for the Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs sought to stop the release of records, arguing in court papers that state lawmakers were unclear whether they intended for the law – which took effect on Jan. 1 – to apply to all records, including those that cover past incidents.

    But Orange County Superior Court Judge Nathan Scott denied the union’s request for a preliminary injunction, saying in a 10-page order Thursday that the temporary restraining order he approved will be lifted on March 15 in a timeline that allows the union to appeal the ruling if they choose.

    Scott dismissed the union’s argument that officers’ privacy protections were at risk, saying in the order that the disclosure of misconduct records was a matter of public interest and that it is “unknown whether any released information will actually harm the officer.”

    https://www.courthousenews.com/orange-county-judge-orders-police-records-unsealed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2019, 03:02:57 PM
    Another police racket.

    NYPD Puts Up "No Parking" Signs for Department Flag Football Game

    When Tasha Darbes tried to park her car on West 218th Street early Sunday, she noticed temporary “No Parking” signs were everywhere.

    "I assumed it was for construction, and there was no time," said Darbes, an Inwood resident. "So, I didn't know what time I would need to move my car by, so I went and parked in the local garage."

    Darbes soon learned the "No Parking" signs were not for construction, but for the NYPD.

    The street is home to Columbia University's athletic fields, and the NYPD was hosting its flag football championship there Sunday.

    Members of the department took the spaces so they could park there for the game.

    Columbia told NY1 "no parking" signs are never put up on 218th Street when several thousand people attend the school's football games in the fall.


    The NYPD said it relocated 30 cars by tow.

    https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2019/03/05/nypd-puts-up--no-parking--signs-for-department-flag-football-game
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2019, 11:37:40 AM
    I've said it before that these are criminal gangs. Here is a prime example.
    25 years is not enough. This career criminal and the rest of his criminal gang should have been executed. Slowly.

    Rogue Baltimore police unit ringleader Wayne Jenkins sentenced

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/44D6/production/_101922671_jenkins-bp-photos.jpg)

    The leader of a rogue Baltimore police unit sobbed as he was sentenced to 25 years in prison in a corruption scandal prosecutors called "breathtaking". Ex-police sergeant Wayne Earl Jenkins apologised in court for the crimes he committed while heading an elite squad called the Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF).

    "I'm wrong, God knows I'm wrong," the 37-year-old said. "I'm so sorry to the citizens of Baltimore."

    He was arrested along with almost every member of the unit in March 2017. Jenkins must serve three years of supervised release after his custodial sentence.

    He was convicted on multiple counts including racketeering, robbery and falsification of records.

    Jenkins pleaded guilty in January and admitted taking part in at least 10 robberies of Baltimore citizens, planting drugs on innocent people and re-selling drugs he stole from suspects on an almost daily basis, including heroin, cocaine and prescription painkillers.

    He walked into the court wearing a maroon prison uniform. It was his first public appearance since he was arrested along with six other officers last year.

    Prosecutors urged the judge to sentence him to the maximum 30 years, adding that the unit's corruption resulted in 1,700 criminal cases being thrown out.

    "The largest share of the blame, the largest share of those crimes belongs to him," US attorney Leo Wise told the court.

    "He perverted the criminal justice system."

    The GTTF was made up of eight officers, all but one of whom were indicted.

    Detectives Maurice Ward, Evodio Hendrix, Momodu Gondo and Jemell Rayam all pleaded guilty.

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/8DF6/production/_101924363_threeupone.png)

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/66E6/production/_101924362_threeuptwo.png)

    Detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor went forward to trial and a jury found them guilty of robbery, extortion and fraud in February.

    A former member of the unit, Sergeant Thomas Allers, also pleaded guilty.

    Although the indicted officers committed many robberies individually before joining the Gun Trace Task Force, prosecutors charge that they grew bolder and more prolific after Jenkins took over the unit in June 2016.

    According to testimony from Ward and Hendrix, Jenkins played an outsized role in the schemes.

    They said he prepared an arsenal of weapons and tools to begin carrying out burglaries.

    The jury was shown axes, machetes and pry bars, as well as black masks that were found in Jenkins' van after his arrest.


    Prosecutors pointed to the fact that Jenkins fabricated evidence, like producing a bogus iPhone video of his officers cracking a drug dealer's safe, when they had in fact already broken into it and stolen $200,000 in cash.

    "It shows what a committed, sophisticated, devious person can do," Mr Wise said. "What chance do we have when you have people like Jenkins and his co-defendants fabricating evidence?"


    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-44402948

    As it has been mentioned several times, we are dealing with organized and violent criminal gangs, not just "very few bad apples". Below is another example. How many other gangs continue their crime spree because of cover-ups and witness intimidation like this?

    Former BPD Sergeant Allegedly Helped GTTF Member By Planting Gun At Arrest Scene, Telling Witness To Lie

    (https://cbsbaltimore.files.wordpress.com/2019/03/0305gladstone.jpg?w=225&h=300)

    A former Baltimore police sergeant faces federal indictment for several charges related to allegedly assisting a member of the Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task Force.

    A federal grand jury has indicted Baltimore Police Sergeant Keith Allen Gladstone, 51, of New Park, Pennsylvania on federal charges of conspiracy to deprive civil rights, conspiracy to commit offenses against the United States and witness tampering.

    https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2019/03/05/former-bpd-sergeant-allegedly-helped-gttf-member-by-planting-gun-at-arrest-scene-telling-witness-to-lie/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 06, 2019, 12:33:10 PM
    https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/former-congressman-aaron-schock-investigation-court-case-campaign-committee


     ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 06, 2019, 02:46:38 PM
    Do you believe them? How many other secret surveillance programs are they using?

    Also, notice the crafty language: "[the "irregularities"] resulted in the production to NSA of some (call data records) that NSA was not authorized to receive"

    House aide: NSA has shut down phone call record surveillance

    The most controversial National Security Agency surveillance program, originally exposed by documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, has apparently ended quietly, according to the National Security Advisor to Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. In a discussion recorded for the Lawfare Podcast released on March 2, Luke Murry said that the NSA was no longer collecting call detail records—the metadata associated with phone calls and text messages—and that the Trump administration had not used the program for over six months.

    The program, launched under authority claimed by the George W. Bush administration under the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, originally collected all call records from telecommunications providers to search for patterns of connections between persons of interest. But bulk collection was ended under the Obama Administration in 2015, and a new process—targeted collection under Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court warrants from records retained by telecommunications companies—was codified by Title V of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 2015 and the USA Freedom Act of 2015

    However, the new program had some technical problems. In June of 2018, the NSA announced that the agency was deleting all call-detail records it had acquired from telecommunications providers since 2015 because analysts discovered "technical irregularities" in the data being provided by the telecommunications companies. Those irregularities "also resulted in the production to NSA of some (call data records) that NSA was not authorized to receive," an NSA spokesperson said in an official release. Those records were of US citizens and residents not covered by FISA warrants.

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/03/house-aide-nsa-has-shut-down-phone-call-record-surveillance/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2019, 10:42:29 AM
    South Florida Cop Charged in Shooting Death of Corey Jones Because of Audio Recording

    Palm Beach Gardens police officer Nouman Raja had no idea he was being audio recorded when he pulled up to Corey Jones at 3 a.m. on the side of the road last year and killed him.

    But it was that audio recording that led to his indictment today where he is now facing life in prison.

    And he deserves nothing less.

    He not only pulled up to Jones in an unmarked vehicle wearing plainclothes on October 18, 2015, he never identified himself as an officer.

    And as we’ve seen so many times before, he rewrote the narrative as to what led to the shooting when he called 911 minutes after killing Jones.

    But Jones, a 31-year-old drummer who had broken down on the side of an off-ramp on Interstate 95, was on the phone with a tow truck dispatcher when Raja pulled up.

    And we all know those calls are always recorded for “quality assurance.”

    But the recording became quality evidence against Raja.

    The grand jury indicted Raja on one count of manslaughter by culpable negligence, a second-degree felony that carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison, as well as one count of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm, which can send him to prison for life.

    Perhaps the legal experts will explain how a cold-blooded murder can turn into attempted murder, but if it lands him in prison for life, then it’s all good.

    Raja had claimed he was in fear for his life, of course, claiming Jones pulled out a gun on him after he had identified himself as a police officer.

    He even said Jones had charged him. Textbook police fiction from the cop with a history of disciplinary problems who was also a certified firearms instructor.

    But forensics indicate Jones was running from Raja as he was being shot.

    The recording, which became the key piece of evidence against Raja, captured the following exchange, according to the charging documents, which you can read here.

    Jones: Huh?

    Raja: You good?

    Jones: I’m good

    Raja: Really?

    Special:
    Jones: Yeah, I’m good.

    Raja: Really?

    Jones: Yeah

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Get your fucking hands up!

    Jones: Hold on!

    Raja: Get your fucking hands up! Drop!

    Raja then fired three time, causing the dispatcher to gasp, “oh my gosh!”

    And he fired three more shots ten seconds later.

    He then called 911 and before the dispatcher could respond, he said, “drop that fucking gun right now.”

    And then he stated the following:

    “I came out, I saw him come out with a handgun. I gave him commands, I identified myself, and he turned, pointed the gun at me, and started running. I shot him.”

    Raja has been taken into custody.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/06/south-florida-cop-charged-shooting-death-corey-jones/


    First time in 30 years that a cop in Florida is sentenced for killing a citizen.

    Think about that.

    30 years.

    Unfortunately he is not facing execution but at least he may get life in prison.

    Notice how most news outlets emphasize the "ex-police officer" or "fired police officer", but yet he was an on-duty cop when he murdered this innocent man.

    Ex-police Officer Nouman Raja convicted in fatal shooting of black motorist Corey Jones

    A fired Florida police officer was convicted Thursday of manslaughter and attempted murder in the fatal shooting of a stranded black motorist in 2015.

    Nouman Raja, 41, faces life in prison for fatally shooting musician Corey Jones, 31, who was waiting for help for his broken down SUV on the side of a South Florida highway when he was killed by Raja.

    Prosecutors say an audio recording of the shooting indicate Raja — who was on-duty but in plainclothes and driving an unmarked white van — had never identified himself.

    They said Jones, who was returning home from a performance with drums valued at $10,000 in the back of his SUV, pulled his legally-owned handgun because he feared he was being robbed.

    Raja shot him repeatedly. A medical examiner testified that Jones was killed by a shot through his heart. The musician, who also worked as a housing inspector, was also shot once in each arm.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/florida-police-officer-nouman-raja-who-fatally-shot-stranded-black-n980436
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 07, 2019, 12:45:01 PM

    First time in 30 years that a cop in Florida is sentenced for killing a citizen.

    Think about that.

    30 years.

    Unfortunately he is not facing execution but at least he may get life in prison.

    Notice how most news outlets emphasize the "ex-police officer" or "fired police officer", but yet he was an on-duty cop when he murdered this innocent man.

    Ex-police Officer Nouman Raja convicted in fatal shooting of black motorist Corey Jones

    A fired Florida police officer was convicted Thursday of manslaughter and attempted murder in the fatal shooting of a stranded black motorist in 2015.

    Nouman Raja, 41, faces life in prison for fatally shooting musician Corey Jones, 31, who was waiting for help for his broken down SUV on the side of a South Florida highway when he was killed by Raja.

    Prosecutors say an audio recording of the shooting indicate Raja — who was on-duty but in plainclothes and driving an unmarked white van — had never identified himself.

    They said Jones, who was returning home from a performance with drums valued at $10,000 in the back of his SUV, pulled his legally-owned handgun because he feared he was being robbed.

    Raja shot him repeatedly. A medical examiner testified that Jones was killed by a shot through his heart. The musician, who also worked as a housing inspector, was also shot once in each arm.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/florida-police-officer-nouman-raja-who-fatally-shot-stranded-black-n980436


    Bang on
    The Scumbag WAS A COP at the Time of The Murder.
    They’ll do anything to try to cover / deflect.

    Just call the Murdering Scumbag Cop A Murdering Scumbag Cop.
    Simple.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 07, 2019, 08:25:37 PM
    Just a quick check in..are Cops still the scum of the earth?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 07, 2019, 08:42:23 PM
    Just a quick check in..are Cops still the scum of the earth?

    Very Good to See you posting in here.
    NO Not All Cops are - (Just like all Blacks aren’t Thick or Fellons )
    There is No Denying a Very Large Number are & Operate in a Gang.

    The Decent Honest One’s are Tarred with the Same Brush at Times Unfortunately.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 07, 2019, 08:52:06 PM
    Very Good to See you posting in here.
    NO Not All Cops are - (Just like all Blacks aren’t Thick or Fellons )
    There is No Denying a Very Large Number are & Operate in a Gang.

    The Decent Honest One’s are Tarred with the Same Brush at Times Unfortunately.

    Fair enough.. And I trust you do some research on Skeletor because he is prone to posting from anti cop websites that look like news organizations. if that is being done then it probably is what it appears to be 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2019, 10:19:05 PM
    Since facts don't usually matter to several cops and their ilk, let's have a look at the links of the last few pages:

    arstechnica.com Technology website.

    foxnews.com Fox News network.

    thefreethoughtproject.com Police accountability/anti cop.

    minnesota.cbslocal.com CBS station in Minnesota.

    kare11.com NBC affiliated news station and website in MN.

    whio.com News channel, radio and website in OH.

    wfaa.com ABC affiliated station in Dallas, TX.

    cnn.com CNN, Cable News Network.

    app.dao.hctx.net Harris County (TX) District Attorney's Office.

    reviewjournal.com Las Vegas Review Journal, Adelson owned newspaper and news website in Las Vegas, NV.

    wpbf.com ABC affiliated news station in Florida.

    desmoinesregister.com Iowa station, part of USA Today network.

    washingtonpost.com Washington Post, newspaper and news website.

    argusleader.com South Dakota newspaper, part of USA Today network.

    indystar.com Newspaper and website in Indianapolis.

    wral.com NBC-affiliated television station and website in North Carolina.

    dallasnews.com Newspaper and website in Dallas, TX.

    wacotrib.com Waco Tribune-Herald, newspaper and website in Waco, TX.

    detroitnews.com Detroit News, news website in Detroit.

    jacksonville.com Florida Times Union, newspaper and website in Florida.

    cbsnews.com CBS News.

    ktla.com KTLA, news website in Los Angeles, CA.

    fox8.com FOX8 News station in Cleveland, OH.

    autoblog.com Car/automotive news website.

    motherboard.vice.com Part of Vice Media network.

    sltrib.com Salt Lake Tribune, news website in Utah.

    coloradoindependent.com The Colorado Independent, newspaper and website in Colorado.

    denverpost.com The Denver Post, newspaper and website in Denver, CO.

    eastbayexpress.com The East Bay Express is an Oakland-based weekly newspaper serving the Berkeley, Oakland, and East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.

    syracuse.com The Post-Standard is a major newspaper serving the greater Syracuse, New York metro area, published by Advance Publications.

    qz.com Quartz Business/news website.

    chicago.cbslocal.com Local CBS news station in Chicago.

    abcnews.go.co ABC News.

    khou.com KHOU ABC affiliated station in Texas.

    npr.org National Public Radio.

    chron.com News station in Houston.

    nytimes.com New York Times.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    firstamendmentcoalition.org First Amendment Coalition website. Per wikipedia: "The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) is a nonprofit public interest organization committed to freedom of speech, more open and accountable government, and public participation in civic affairs".

    eastbaytimes.com News organization/website in California.

    tcpalm.com Treasure Coast Newspapers in Florida, part of USA Today network.

    courthousenews.com Courthouse News Service, reports on court cases.

    ny1.com Spectrum News NY1 New York City news station.

    baltimore.cbslocal.com CBS station in Baltimore.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    nj.com News website in New Jersey.

    nydailynews.com New York Daily News, newspaper and news website.

    wfsb.com TV station and website in Hartford, CT.

    abc15.com ABC15 local news station in Arizona.

    abc7chicago.com ABC7 Chicago, local news station in Chicago, IL.

    chicago.suntimes.com The Chicago Sun Times, newspaper and website in Chicago, IL.

    cleveland.com The Plain Dealer, major daily newspaper of Cleveland, OH.

    kmov.com Local CBS affiliate in St Louis, Missouri.

    tampabay.com The Tampa Bay Times, previously named the St. Petersburg Times through 2011, newspaper published in St. Petersburg, Florida. It has won twelve Pulitzer Prizes.

    fox2now.com KTVI, Fox affiliated news station in St Louis, Missouri.

    columbiatribune.com The Columbia Daily Tribune, one of two daily newspapers in Columbia, Missouri.

    10tv.com WBNS-10TV local news station in Columbus, OH.

    cbslocal.com CBS.

    nbcdfw.com NBC local station, Dallas Forth Worth News.

    startribune.com The Star Tribune, largest newspaper in Minnesota.

    nbcmiami.com NBC local station in Miami, FL.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    deseretnews.com The Deseret News, newspaper and website in Salt Lake City, UT.

    jsonline.com Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, news station in Milwaukee, WI.

    insurancejournal.com The Insurance Journal, news website for the property and casualty insurance business.

    conservativereview.com The Conservative Review is an American conservative news media company founded my Mark Levin.

    mysanantonio.com Local San Antonio, TX news station.

    fox4kc.com Fox 4 Kansas City, local news station in Kansas City, Missouri.

    aclu.org American Civil Liberties Union.

    eff.org Electronic Frontier Foundation, website about digital privacy and communications.

    latimes.com The Los Angeles Times, a daily newspaper which has been published in Los Angeles, California since 1881. It has the fourth-largest circulation among United States newspapers.

    wtvr.com WTVR-TV is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Richmond, Virginia, United States. The station is owned by Tribune Broadcasting, a subsidiary of the Tribune Media Company.

    news4sanantonio.com WOAI-TV, virtual channel 4, is an NBC-affiliated television station licensed to San Antonio, Texas.

    13wmaz.com WMAZ-TV, virtual and VHF digital channel 13, is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Macon, GA. The station is owned by Tegna, Inc.

    fox7austin.com Local news station in Austin, TX.

    local10.com WPLG is an ABC-affiliated television station in Miami, FL.

    wptv.com WPTV-TV is an NBC-affiliated TV station in West Palm Beach, Florida.

    al.com The Birmingham News, largest newspaper in Alabama.

    kdvr.com KDVR, Fox-affiliated TV station in Denver, CO.

    masslive.com News website owned by Advance Publications.


    I almost forgot, the most notable anti-cop source:

    justice.gov Department of Justice.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 07, 2019, 11:19:12 PM
    Back to the daily crimes, this man was picking up trash in the place he resided, yet he was confronted by an armed thug who called in reinforcements. The thug is now enjoying paid vacation but his gang will not release his name.

    Boulder police launch investigation into contact with man picking up trash

    Boulder police have launched an internal investigation after officers confronted a black man who was picking up trash at his own house.

    According to a release, a Boulder police officer observed a man sitting in a partially enclosed patio area behind a "private property" sign in the 2300 block of Arapahoe Avenue at 8:30 a.m. Friday and asked if the man was allowed to be there.



    http://www.dailycamera.com/ci_32490946/boulder-police-launch-investigation-into-contact-man-picking
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 07, 2019, 11:55:59 PM
    Fair enough.. And I trust you do some research on Skeletor because he is prone to posting from anti cop websites that look like news organizations. if that is being done then it probably is what it appears to be 

    Since facts don't usually matter to several cops and their ilk, let's have a look at the links of the last few pages:

    arstechnica.com Technology website.

    foxnews.com Fox News network.

    thefreethoughtproject.com Police accountability/anti cop.

    minnesota.cbslocal.com CBS station in Minnesota.

    kare11.com NBC affiliated news station and website in MN.

    whio.com News channel, radio and website in OH.

    wfaa.com ABC affiliated station in Dallas, TX.

    cnn.com CNN, Cable News Network.

    app.dao.hctx.net Harris County (TX) District Attorney's Office.

    reviewjournal.com Las Vegas Review Journal, Adelson owned newspaper and news website in Las Vegas, NV.

    wpbf.com ABC affiliated news station in Florida.

    desmoinesregister.com Iowa station, part of USA Today network.

    washingtonpost.com Washington Post, newspaper and news website.

    argusleader.com South Dakota newspaper, part of USA Today network.

    indystar.com Newspaper and website in Indianapolis.

    wral.com NBC-affiliated television station and website in North Carolina.

    dallasnews.com Newspaper and website in Dallas, TX.

    wacotrib.com Waco Tribune-Herald, newspaper and website in Waco, TX.

    detroitnews.com Detroit News, news website in Detroit.

    jacksonville.com Florida Times Union, newspaper and website in Florida.

    cbsnews.com CBS News.

    ktla.com KTLA, news website in Los Angeles, CA.

    fox8.com FOX8 News station in Cleveland, OH.

    autoblog.com Car/automotive news website.

    motherboard.vice.com Part of Vice Media network.

    sltrib.com Salt Lake Tribune, news website in Utah.

    coloradoindependent.com The Colorado Independent, newspaper and website in Colorado.

    denverpost.com The Denver Post, newspaper and website in Denver, CO.

    eastbayexpress.com The East Bay Express is an Oakland-based weekly newspaper serving the Berkeley, Oakland, and East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.

    syracuse.com The Post-Standard is a major newspaper serving the greater Syracuse, New York metro area, published by Advance Publications.

    qz.com Quartz Business/news website.

    chicago.cbslocal.com Local CBS news station in Chicago.

    abcnews.go.co ABC News.

    khou.com KHOU ABC affiliated station in Texas.

    npr.org National Public Radio.

    chron.com News station in Houston.

    nytimes.com New York Times.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    firstamendmentcoalition.org First Amendment Coalition website. Per wikipedia: "The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) is a nonprofit public interest organization committed to freedom of speech, more open and accountable government, and public participation in civic affairs".

    eastbaytimes.com News organization/website in California.

    tcpalm.com Treasure Coast Newspapers in Florida, part of USA Today network.

    courthousenews.com Courthouse News Service, reports on court cases.

    ny1.com Spectrum News NY1 New York City news station.

    baltimore.cbslocal.com CBS station in Baltimore.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    nj.com News website in New Jersey.

    nydailynews.com New York Daily News, newspaper and news website.

    wfsb.com TV station and website in Hartford, CT.

    abc15.com ABC15 local news station in Arizona.

    abc7chicago.com ABC7 Chicago, local news station in Chicago, IL.

    chicago.suntimes.com The Chicago Sun Times, newspaper and website in Chicago, IL.

    cleveland.com The Plain Dealer, major daily newspaper of Cleveland, OH.

    kmov.com Local CBS affiliate in St Louis, Missouri.

    tampabay.com The Tampa Bay Times, previously named the St. Petersburg Times through 2011, newspaper published in St. Petersburg, Florida. It has won twelve Pulitzer Prizes.

    fox2now.com KTVI, Fox affiliated news station in St Louis, Missouri.

    columbiatribune.com The Columbia Daily Tribune, one of two daily newspapers in Columbia, Missouri.

    10tv.com WBNS-10TV local news station in Columbus, OH.

    cbslocal.com CBS.

    nbcdfw.com NBC local station, Dallas Forth Worth News.

    startribune.com The Star Tribune, largest newspaper in Minnesota.

    nbcmiami.com NBC local station in Miami, FL.

    nbcnews.com NBC News.

    deseretnews.com The Deseret News, newspaper and website in Salt Lake City, UT.

    jsonline.com Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, news station in Milwaukee, WI.

    insurancejournal.com The Insurance Journal, news website for the property and casualty insurance business.

    conservativereview.com The Conservative Review is an American conservative news media company founded my Mark Levin.

    mysanantonio.com Local San Antonio, TX news station.

    fox4kc.com Fox 4 Kansas City, local news station in Kansas City, Missouri.

    aclu.org American Civil Liberties Union.

    eff.org Electronic Frontier Foundation, website about digital privacy and communications.

    latimes.com The Los Angeles Times, a daily newspaper which has been published in Los Angeles, California since 1881. It has the fourth-largest circulation among United States newspapers.

    wtvr.com WTVR-TV is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Richmond, Virginia, United States. The station is owned by Tribune Broadcasting, a subsidiary of the Tribune Media Company.

    news4sanantonio.com WOAI-TV, virtual channel 4, is an NBC-affiliated television station licensed to San Antonio, Texas.

    13wmaz.com WMAZ-TV, virtual and VHF digital channel 13, is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Macon, GA. The station is owned by Tegna, Inc.

    fox7austin.com Local news station in Austin, TX.

    local10.com WPLG is an ABC-affiliated television station in Miami, FL.

    wptv.com WPTV-TV is an NBC-affiliated TV station in West Palm Beach, Florida.

    al.com The Birmingham News, largest newspaper in Alabama.

    kdvr.com KDVR, Fox-affiliated TV station in Denver, CO.

    masslive.com News website owned by Advance Publications.


    I almost forgot, the most notable anti-cop source:

    justice.gov Department of Justice.


    That’s a Long List
    Agnostic are any of them known anti Police Sites. ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 08, 2019, 12:17:24 AM

    That’s a Long List
    Agnostic are any of them known anti Police Sites. ?

    Out of all the aforementioned websites only one could be classified as "anti cop" by some people, and it has been mentioned as such. Maybe some people could even label another website such as the ACLU to be "anti cop" though I don't necessarily agree. Almost every other site is a large national news network or a local TV station/newspaper. Also, the Department of Justice, a notorious anti cop institution.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 08, 2019, 07:36:00 AM
    Out of all the aforementioned websites only one could be classified as "anti cop" by some people, and it has been mentioned as such. Maybe some people could even label another website such as the ACLU to be "anti cop" though I don't necessarily agree. Almost every other site is a large national news network or a local TV station/newspaper. Also, the Department of Justice, a notorious anti cop institution.

    That’s pretty convincing the reports are fairly accurate I think it’s fair to say.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 08, 2019, 03:35:20 PM
    Once again "ex cop" is on the headline but he was a cop when he was committing these crimes and stalking his victims. The first time he was caught was back in 2012 where he was suspended for 3 days without pay, but that didn't stop him of course, he continued until recently. As expected he wasn't fired, he resigned last October.

    Ex-BPD cop misused badge in 2011 to meet woman. There are now at least 150 victims, chief says

    Former Bradenton police sergeant Leonel Marines was suspended for three days without pay in 2012, after the first time he was caught misusing police databases and his badge to target women for dates or to have sex with them, according to internal affairs records.

    The pattern of abuse would continue for six years before another internal affairs investigation would fully reveal the scope of his abuse, which is now the subject of an FBI investigation, Police Chief Melanie Bevan said Thursday.

    During those six years, Marines abused his access to information to target a minimum of 150 women for dates or to have sex with them, sometimes while on duty, Bevan revealed during a news conference.

    https://www.bradenton.com/news/local/crime/article227210994.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on March 08, 2019, 06:00:05 PM
    Just a quick check in..are Cops still the scum of the earth?
    From CA stats I'd say at least 20% are, and those are just the ones they've caught.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 09, 2019, 03:54:24 AM
    Once again "ex cop" is on the headline but he was a cop when he was committing these crimes and stalking his victims. The first time he was caught was back in 2012 where he was suspended for 3 days without pay, but that didn't stop him of course, he continued until recently. As expected he wasn't fired, he resigned last October.

    Ex-BPD cop misused badge in 2011 to meet woman. There are now at least 150 victims, chief says

    Former Bradenton police sergeant Leonel Marines was suspended for three days without pay in 2012, after the first time he was caught misusing police databases and his badge to target women for dates or to have sex with them, according to internal affairs records.

    The pattern of abuse would continue for six years before another internal affairs investigation would fully reveal the scope of his abuse, which is now the subject of an FBI investigation, Police Chief Melanie Bevan said Thursday.

    During those six years, Marines abused his access to information to target a minimum of 150 women for dates or to have sex with them, sometimes while on duty, Bevan revealed during a news conference.

    https://www.bradenton.com/news/local/crime/article227210994.html



    Ridiculous nonesense How could he be an Ex-Cop when Misusing his badge and
    Accessing the police data base.  ::)
    He Was a Cop.
    And is Ex-Cop Now.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on March 09, 2019, 02:18:39 PM
    Granted it IS Little Rock after all... Another PIG executing a civilian:



    Now, the PIG knows when escalation is about to occur because he's got his gun drawn and pointing at the person. The PIGS have this car cornered and with no possible escape... this PIG decides right there and then to escalate and murder the civilian. IFFFFF the intent was to get the person out of the car, the PIG could've just as easily shoot at the tires and effectively parked the car for the guy. Instead, as is always the case with PIGS, the guy escalates under the false premise that he has to exit his car, starts shooting repeatedly at the man through the windshield and, while being driven around like the Mercedes logo, this PIG keeps on shooting.

    This is exactly why 90% of the PIGS can't and shouldn't be allowed to be cops. Once the civilian decided to not follow the officer's instructions, the PIG then decides to kill this man because, at the moment, he thinks it's the best decision to make.

    Verdict? Civilian dead and PIG gets to live.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on March 09, 2019, 03:06:07 PM
    Granted it IS Little Rock after all... Another PIG executing a civilian:



    Now, the PIG knows when escalation is about to occur because he's got his gun drawn and pointing at the person. The PIGS have this car cornered and with no possible escape... this PIG decides right there and then to escalate and murder the civilian. IFFFFF the intent was to get the person out of the car, the PIG could've just as easily shoot at the tires and effectively parked the car for the guy. Instead, as is always the case with PIGS, the guy escalates under the false premise that he has to exit his car, starts shooting repeatedly at the man through the windshield and, while being driven around like the Mercedes logo, this PIG keeps on shooting.

    This is exactly why 90% of the PIGS can't and shouldn't be allowed to be cops. Once the civilian decided to not follow the officer's instructions, the PIG then decides to kill this man because, at the moment, he thinks it's the best decision to make.

    Verdict? Civilian dead and PIG gets to live.

    Reported stolen vehicle
    One squad, one officer
    Driver refuses to comply with orders to get out of the car
    Driver attempts to leave the scene and/or hit the officer with vehicle - a deadly weapon
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2019, 03:33:06 PM
    Video of the shooting below. The shooter is the son of a cop in that's town's police department.

    However:

    "A suspect has yet to be named"...


    No charges filed in Killeen shooting caught on video, Bell County DA says

    Video of the shooting shows Curtis Shelley and a man believed to be one of his neighbors arguing in the middle of the street, when the neighbor shot Shelley, who was unarmed. Shelley later died at the hospital.

    The Bell County Grand Jury met Wednesday and no charges were returned in the shooting death of Curtis Shelley, Bell County District Attorney Henry Garza confirmed Wednesday.

    https://www.kcentv.com/article/news/local/no-charges-filed-in-killeen-shooting-caught-on-video-bell-county-da-says/500-e5422aaa-b884-4e97-8d8c-0967d6a4aa6d

    Video of the shooting:



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on March 09, 2019, 03:52:58 PM
    Granted it IS Little Rock after all... Another PIG executing a civilian:



    Now, the PIG knows when escalation is about to occur because he's got his gun drawn and pointing at the person. The PIGS have this car cornered and with no possible escape... this PIG decides right there and then to escalate and murder the civilian. IFFFFF the intent was to get the person out of the car, the PIG could've just as easily shoot at the tires and effectively parked the car for the guy. Instead, as is always the case with PIGS, the guy escalates under the false premise that he has to exit his car, starts shooting repeatedly at the man through the windshield and, while being driven around like the Mercedes logo, this PIG keeps on shooting.

    This is exactly why 90% of the PIGS can't and shouldn't be allowed to be cops. Once the civilian decided to not follow the officer's instructions, the PIG then decides to kill this man because, at the moment, he thinks it's the best decision to make.

    Verdict? Civilian dead and PIG gets to live.
    Meh. Gotta go with the pig on this one, I'd have shot his ass too.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 10, 2019, 10:26:51 PM
    A cop attacks and punches his autistic son and smashes his head on a wall 3 times. He is arrested on charges of assault and battery of a child with injury. He is not jailed but instead he's released on his own recognizance, however, he violated the conditions of his release so he was taken into custody again. In court, he admitted a judge or jury could find him guilty of the charge and agreed to have the case continued for two years.

    Quite a deal he got: during this time if he doesn't abuse his son, doesn't drink, attends anger management classes and complies with Department of Children and Families requirements the charges against him will be dropped. It appears that being a cop can help someone stay out jail for assaulting his own son, even when violating the conditions imposed after the arrest. Not only that but it appears that it even helps in having the charges dropped too.

    Suspended Amesbury police officer avoids jail time

    https://www.newburyportnews.com/news/local_news/suspended-amesbury-police-officer-avoids-jail-time/article_e122ae81-bd04-5c5e-83d1-7259d9c23c00.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 11, 2019, 01:42:20 AM
    Granted it IS Little Rock after all... Another PIG executing a civilian:



    Now, the PIG knows when escalation is about to occur because he's got his gun drawn and pointing at the person. The PIGS have this car cornered and with no possible escape... this PIG decides right there and then to escalate and murder the civilian. IFFFFF the intent was to get the person out of the car, the PIG could've just as easily shoot at the tires and effectively parked the car for the guy. Instead, as is always the case with PIGS, the guy escalates under the false premise that he has to exit his car, starts shooting repeatedly at the man through the windshield and, while being driven around like the Mercedes logo, this PIG keeps on shooting.

    This is exactly why 90% of the PIGS can't and shouldn't be allowed to be cops. Once the civilian decided to not follow the officer's instructions, the PIG then decides to kill this man because, at the moment, he thinks it's the best decision to make.

    Verdict? Civilian dead and PIG gets to live.


    Just how would they be able to do any policing without having guns & shooting everyone.
    Sure the driver was being a bit difficult - Shooting Him was The Only solution  ::) - and that cop is allowed to vote !!

    For some cops Shoot Everyone is The Only Option.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2019, 10:24:27 AM
    Another "brave hero"...
    This one also shot and killed a woman during a prostitution sting. Now it appears he has many more cases that he will have to explain such as why he kidnapped women.

    Columbus vice officer charged with holding victims, forcing them to engage in sexual acts

    Columbus police vice detective Andrew Mitchell is facing federal charges after he allegedly held women against their will and forced them to engage in sexual acts for their freedom.

    A grand jury indicted Mitchell on March 7. He was arrested Monday morning by federal agents.

    Mitchell is being charged on seven counts: three counts deprivation of rights under color of law, two counts witness tampering, one count of obstruction of justice and one count false statement to a US agency.

    https://www.10tv.com/article/columbus-vice-officer-charged-holding-victims-forcing-them-engage-sexual-acts
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 13, 2019, 03:13:53 PM
    Remember this case? No drugs were found but it seems like the usual nebulous "searching for drugs" was just the pretext this gang of perverts wanted.

    Not only was this pervert not charged but he was allowed to quietly resign like many other gang members do. Of course the city continues to shell thousands of dollars in order to stall the process and protect the criminals.

    SAPD officer pulled out woman's tampon, did vaginal search on side of road, lawsuit claims

    A lawsuit filed in federal court Friday claims a San Antonio Police officer pulled a woman's tampon out and searched her vaginal cavity along the shoulder of a public street in 2016.

    Natalie D. Simms' attorney filed the lawsuit against the City of San Antonio and a female officer, identified as Mara Wilson, stating that the search violated Simms' constitutional rights.

    According to the filing, Simms was approached by officers while sitting on a curb, talking on the phone and waiting for her boyfriend. The lawsuit claims Simms consented to a search of her car, which was parked across the street from where she was sitting, and that authorities found no illegal items.

    Then, the lawsuit alleges, authorities called a female officer, Wilson, to the scene to search Simms.

    The lawsuit details parts of the conversations between Simms and Wilson, recorded from Wilson's body camera. According to the court documents, Simms and Wilson went back and forth about the kind of clothes she was wearing before Wilson began searching her vaginal cavity.

    Court documents report that Wilson told a detective she was "searching everything," and had removed Simms' tampon because she "just wanted to make sure there wasn't anything in there."

    The document states Simms never consented to the vaginal cavity search and that authorities never found anything illegal during their search. She was allowed to leave.

    An internal investigation, the lawsuit states, revealed the officer that called Wilson to the scene "never indicated to do a cavity search." Court documents state Wilson retired on May 1.

    https://www.ksat.com/news/sapd-officer-pulled-out-womans-tampon-did-vaginal-search-on-side-of-road-lawsuit-claims

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on March 13, 2019, 05:59:09 PM
    Remember this case? No drugs were found but it seems like the usual nebulous "searching for drugs" was just the pretext this gang of perverts wanted.

    Not only was this pervert not charged but he was allowed to quietly resign like many other gang members do. Of course the city continues to shell thousands of dollars in order to stall the process and protect the criminals.

    SAPD officer pulled out woman's tampon, did vaginal search on side of road, lawsuit claims

    A lawsuit filed in federal court Friday claims a San Antonio Police officer pulled a woman's tampon out and searched her vaginal cavity along the shoulder of a public street in 2016.

    Natalie D. Simms' attorney filed the lawsuit against the City of San Antonio and a female officer, identified as Mara Wilson, stating that the search violated Simms' constitutional rights.

    According to the filing, Simms was approached by officers while sitting on a curb, talking on the phone and waiting for her boyfriend. The lawsuit claims Simms consented to a search of her car, which was parked across the street from where she was sitting, and that authorities found no illegal items.

    Then, the lawsuit alleges, authorities called a female officer, Wilson, to the scene to search Simms.

    The lawsuit details parts of the conversations between Simms and Wilson, recorded from Wilson's body camera. According to the court documents, Simms and Wilson went back and forth about the kind of clothes she was wearing before Wilson began searching her vaginal cavity.

    Court documents report that Wilson told a detective she was "searching everything," and had removed Simms' tampon because she "just wanted to make sure there wasn't anything in there."

    The document states Simms never consented to the vaginal cavity search and that authorities never found anything illegal during their search. She was allowed to leave.

    An internal investigation, the lawsuit states, revealed the officer that called Wilson to the scene "never indicated to do a cavity search." Court documents state Wilson retired on May 1.

    https://www.ksat.com/news/sapd-officer-pulled-out-womans-tampon-did-vaginal-search-on-side-of-road-lawsuit-claims


    Gross
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2019, 03:18:04 PM
    Florida cop who shot unarmed therapist was aiming for his patient
    nydailynews.com ^ | July 22, 2016 | Meg Wagner
    Posted on 7/24/2016, 1:44:14 PM by Morgana

    Sorry about that bullet, man. I was aiming for the autistic guy.

    A Florida cop who wounded an unarmed black therapist was actually trying to shoot the man’s patient, a union official said Thursday.

    The unidentified North Miami police officer thought Charles Kinsey — who was lying on his back with his arms in the air — was in danger, his union chief said. The patient, who escaped from MACtown Inc., a nearby group home where Kinsey works, had a toy in his hand.

    “All he has is a toy truck, a toy truck,” Kinsey told the cop Monday, according to video obtained by his lawyer. “I am a behavior therapist at a group home.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...



    It seems that once again the taxpayers will be extorted to pay the bill while the deranged armed criminals walk around free without losing a cent from the pocket or a minute in jail.

    Police shooting victim files federal lawsuit against North Miami officer

    Two weeks after a controversial shooting, Charles Kinsey has filed a federal lawsuit against North Miami police Officer Jonathan Aledda.

    In the lawsuit, Kinsey argues that Aledda and other officers wrongfully arrested him and used excessive force — saying that Aledda did not help stop the bleeding after the shooting, even after officers recognized there was no weapon at the scene. They are demanding a jury trial, unstated monetary damages and any other fees due to the physical, emotional and mental pain the incident caused.

    Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/north-miami/article93720952.html

    Remember this case? Once again a thug gets away with shooting, this time he shot at a harmless innocent man who was on the ground and had his hands up. What more could this man have done so that he wouldn't be shot by this violent thug?

    North Miami police officer not guilty on lesser charge; jury hung on others

    A North Miami police officer on trial in the 2016 shooting of an unarmed man has been found not guilty on one count of culpable negligence, but the jury remains hung on the more serious charges of attempted manslaughter.

    Officer Jonathan Aledda was charged with two counts of attempted manslaughter and two counts of culpable negligence in the 2016 shooting of Charles Kinsey.
    Jurors returned to deliberate Friday, but they couldn't decide on both counts of attempted manslaughter and one count of culpable negligence.

    They asked to re-watch three videos that showed Kinsey on the ground prior to the shooting and also asked to rehear part of Aledda's testimony, in which he talked about what he did after the shooting.

    https://www.local10.com/news/florida/north-miami/officer-jonathan-aledda-verdict
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 18, 2019, 05:16:11 PM
    Committing crimes then investigating themselves to clear themselves of wrongdoing. Extorting and stealing from citizens to fill their coffers. Citizens get assaulted, beaten, raped, killed, arrested or imprisoned even for minor infractions and in some cases even if they're completely innocent. Now this. What will happen to these criminals?

    South Carolina sheriffs fly first class, bully employees and line their pockets with taxpayer money

    South Carolina sheriffs have embezzled, bribed and dipped into public funds for expensive chauffeurs. They’ve driven drunk and bullied other public officials. They’ve been accused of leveraging their power to sexually assault their female employees.

     In the past decade, no fewer than 11 of South Carolina’s 46 counties have seen their sheriffs accused of breaking laws — nearly one in four.

    Like the sheriff in Orangeburg who funneled public funds into bogus credit union accounts to buy a $72,000 motor home. The missing money was discovered only after the sheriff died.

    And the sheriff in Chesterfield County who embezzled money, gave weapons to inmates — even let a prisoner host a dinner at the sheriff’s home. A judge sentenced the sheriff to two years.

    Among the findings by The Post and Courier investigation: some sheriffs spent public money on luxury accommodations, personal clothing and a host of other questionable purchases. Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood spent thousands to fly first class to conferences. Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott used thousands of dollars in campaign funds to join a private club where members dine on beef tenderloin and rack of lamb.

    https://www.postandcourier.com/news/sc-sheriffs-fly-first-class-bully-employees-and-line-their/article_bed9eb48-2983-11e9-9a4c-9f34f02f8378.html


    It is a long article because there are several "sheriffs" who misappropriate funds or outright steal, threaten and intimidate. Definitely worth a read.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2019, 05:46:26 PM
    Organized crime

    Committing crimes then investigating themselves to clear themselves of wrongdoing. Extorting and stealing from citizens to fill their coffers. Citizens get assaulted, beaten, raped, killed, arrested or imprisoned even for minor infractions and in some cases even if they're completely innocent. Now this. What will happen to these criminals?

    South Carolina sheriffs fly first class, bully employees and line their pockets with taxpayer money

    South Carolina sheriffs have embezzled, bribed and dipped into public funds for expensive chauffeurs. They’ve driven drunk and bullied other public officials. They’ve been accused of leveraging their power to sexually assault their female employees.

     In the past decade, no fewer than 11 of South Carolina’s 46 counties have seen their sheriffs accused of breaking laws — nearly one in four.

    Like the sheriff in Orangeburg who funneled public funds into bogus credit union accounts to buy a $72,000 motor home. The missing money was discovered only after the sheriff died.

    And the sheriff in Chesterfield County who embezzled money, gave weapons to inmates — even let a prisoner host a dinner at the sheriff’s home. A judge sentenced the sheriff to two years.

    Among the findings by The Post and Courier investigation: some sheriffs spent public money on luxury accommodations, personal clothing and a host of other questionable purchases. Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood spent thousands to fly first class to conferences. Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott used thousands of dollars in campaign funds to join a private club where members dine on beef tenderloin and rack of lamb.

    https://www.postandcourier.com/news/sc-sheriffs-fly-first-class-bully-employees-and-line-their/article_bed9eb48-2983-11e9-9a4c-9f34f02f8378.html


    It is a long article because there are several "sheriffs" who misappropriate funds or outright steal, threaten and intimidate. Definitely worth a read.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 18, 2019, 11:21:14 PM
    Another child dead because the scum "was visiting" and left the child unattended for 4 hours. Tragically ironic that cops will arrest parents who leave children in the car unattended even for minutes but somehow it appears that it's different if someone is a cop. As of yet, no arrests of course.

    2 Mississippi officers on paid leave after child left in patrol car dies

    KILN, Miss. –  Two police officers in Mississippi are on paid leave after a 3-year-old daughter of one of the officers died unattended in a patrol car.

    Hancock County Chief Deputy Sheriff Don Bass said Long Beach police officer Cassie Barker's daughter died Friday after the child was left in the car for four hours while her mother was visiting with Long Beach patrolman Clark Ladner. Both officers were off-duty at the time.

    Long Beach Police Chief Wayne McDowell told The Sun Herald that Barker and Ladner were placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation.

    Hancock County Sheriff Ricky Adam said the car was running and the air conditioning was on when investigators found the child, who died at a hospital.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/10/03/2-mississippi-officers-on-paid-leave-after-child-left-in-patrol-car-dies.html

    http://www.sunherald.com/news/local/counties/hancock-county/article105649806.html

    Remember this case? The whore left her child alone for 4 hours (!) to die an agonizing death in a patrol car so she could fuck her supervisor. And this wasn't the first time she left her daughter alone and unattended in the car. In another incident 1 year before the child's death, she was suspended for one week without pay and her one-year probationary period was extended by 90 days. Doesn't seem like a particularly harsh punishment. After 1 year the child died tragically, strapped inside a police car while her mother was fucking her supervisor.
    Remember this treatment and the plea deal she got the next time you hear cops trying to preach to everyone else about not leaving children inside a car in hot weather.
    It also appears that neither the cops nor CPS (who took temporary custody of the child) had notified the father of this and he only found out after his daughter was killed.
    (Once again the headline mentions "Ex-Coast cop" but she was a cop when she let her daughter die from the heat inside a police car.)

    Ex-Coast cop admits having sex with supervisor while her 3-year-old was dying in hot patrol car

    Former Long Beach police officer Cassie Barker tearfully admitted Monday she was having sex with her supervisor while her 3-year-old daughter was dying of heat exposure in her patrol car. Barker has remained free on bond since her initial arrest after Cheyenne’s death. Originally indicted on a charge of second-degree murder, the 29-year-old pleaded guilty Monday to a reduced charge of manslaughter in a plea deal with the state.

    The state recommended a 20-year sentence, but Circuit Judge Larry Bourgeois said he wants more time to consider it.

    https://www.sunherald.com/news/local/crime/article228082704.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2019, 01:46:00 AM
    Jesus fng Christ.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 19, 2019, 01:50:44 AM
    Jesus fng Christ.


    Unbelievable & she did it before !!
    Yet they thought she was good cop material  ::)
    She needs banging up for a very long long time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2019, 12:25:54 PM
    The "very few bad apples" were so few that the vice unit was disbanded.

    Columbus, Ohio, police unit that focused on 'moral crimes' disbanded amid scandals

    After a series of scandals and investigations, Ohio's capital city is disbanding its police department's unit that was supposed to focus on "moral crimes."

    Columbus' vice unit has been subject to internal and FBI investigations, and came under scrutiny last year when vice officers arrested adult film actress Stormy Daniels at a strip club. More recently, charges were brought against Columbus vice squad officer Andrew Mitchell, 55, alleging he forced two women to have sex with them under threat of an arrest.

    Interim Columbus Police Chief Thomas Quinlan announced the closing of the vice unit Tuesday on Twitter, saying the remaining officers will be assigned to other departments. Three of the vice unit's 10 officers are currently under suspension.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/columbus-ohio-police-unit-focused-moral-crimes-disbanded-amid-scandals-n985351
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 21, 2019, 03:31:43 PM
    The "very few bad apples" were so few that the vice unit was disbanded.

    Columbus, Ohio, police unit that focused on 'moral crimes' disbanded amid scandals

    After a series of scandals and investigations, Ohio's capital city is disbanding its police department's unit that was supposed to focus on "moral crimes."

    Columbus' vice unit has been subject to internal and FBI investigations, and came under scrutiny last year when vice officers arrested adult film actress Stormy Daniels at a strip club. More recently, charges were brought against Columbus vice squad officer Andrew Mitchell, 55, alleging he forced two women to have sex with them under threat of an arrest.

    Interim Columbus Police Chief Thomas Quinlan announced the closing of the vice unit Tuesday on Twitter, saying the remaining officers will be assigned to other departments. Three of the vice unit's 10 officers are currently under suspension.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/columbus-ohio-police-unit-focused-moral-crimes-disbanded-amid-scandals-n985351

    The "very few bad apples" were so few that the vice unit was disbanded.

    Columbus, Ohio, police unit that focused on 'moral crimes' disbanded amid scandals.

    😂😂😂😂😂
    HA HA HA

    Come on Agnostic even your good self has got read that they disbanded the whole unit
    & Think WTF is Going.

    The one bit of positivity is that at least & finally they did disband them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2019, 10:33:58 AM
    https://boston.cbslocal.com/2019/03/21/state-trooper-convicted-of-rape-will-lose-job/?fbclid=IwAR1_2w2fa08hfqjpjlkz_5vIDr3XEY4XOgm6F0nj6DqPsfTRfJY0c6Qmlm8


     :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2019, 01:04:37 PM
    https://nj1015.com/prosecutors-say-nj-cops-pulled-over-drivers-to-rob-them/?fbclid=IwAR2pEP17A0MIkjaah2uMH8Lq_F5k-vXQ2QZG8rDefq4cS2GBt4BXFlG4Akw


    holy F!!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2019, 01:11:31 PM
    https://nj1015.com/prosecutors-say-nj-cops-pulled-over-drivers-to-rob-them/?fbclid=IwAR2pEP17A0MIkjaah2uMH8Lq_F5k-vXQ2QZG8rDefq4cS2GBt4BXFlG4Akw


    holy F!!!

    Just "violation of civil rights"? This is straight RICO Act shit:

    Quote
    A city police officer accused of stealing money during illegal traffic stops and shakedowns and then falsifying reports has been indicted on charges he conspired to violate individuals' civil rights.

    Federal prosecutors announced the indictment against 28-year-old Eudy Ramos on Wednesday. They claim he conspired with four other officers — two already arrested and two who remain unnamed — to commit the crimes.

    Prosecutors say the conspirators stopped drivers and pedestrians and robbed them of cash, then split the proceeds in a scheme that included coded text messages and falsifying reports. The conspiracy allegedly occurred from at least 2016 through April 2018.

    As it has been mentioned several times in this topic, we're dealing with criminal gangs here.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2019, 03:24:18 PM
    Gotta laugh at the "tough" statement by the FBI. Why were the other goons who stood by and watched and did nothing to stop the attack not charged? They are accessories to the crimes.
    Moreover, it appears that crime and corruption is widespread in that shithole department.

    Elkhart police officers indicted on federal charges in beating of handcuffed man

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/southbendtribune.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/f/c6/fc6ff89a-c926-5664-9f1f-ce61992b13a6/5c054ddaccdd1.image.jpg?resize=1200%2C851)

    A federal grand jury has indicted two Elkhart police officers on civil rights charges for repeatedly punching a handcuffed man last year, U.S. prosecutors announced Friday.

    Elkhart County prosecutors had originally charged the two officers, Cory Newland and Joshua Titus, with misdemeanor battery in November, only after the South Bend Tribune and nonprofit news organization ProPublica learned of the incident and requested video.

    The video showed Mario Guerrero Ledesma, seated and wearing handcuffs, in a detention area at the city police station, while Newland, Titus and other officers stood nearby. At one point Guerrero Ledesma spat toward Newland. Titus and Newland immediately punched Guerrero Ledesma in the face, causing him to fall backward onto the floor, then jumped on top of him and punched him repeatedly. Guerrero Ledesma had initially been arrested on suspicion of domestic battery.

    “Today’s indictments send a clear message that the FBI won’t tolerate the abuse of power or victimization of citizens by anyone in law enforcement,” Grant Mendenhall, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Indianapolis division, said in a statement.

    The Tribune and ProPublica first requested video of the beating as part of an investigation into disciplinary matters in the Elkhart Police Department. The news organizations also revealed 28 of the department’s 34 highest-ranking officers had disciplinary records, 15 had been suspended and seven had opened fire in at least one fatal shooting. Later, The Tribune and ProPublica found another disciplinary case in which Windbigler, the chief at the time, had provided inaccurate or incomplete information to the civilian oversight commission.



    https://www.southbendtribune.com/news/publicsafety/elkhartjustice/elkhart-police-officers-indicted-on-federal-charges-in-beating-of/article_75a3cf55-9bdb-5d83-acc6-d29950774451.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2019, 10:44:47 PM
    FEMA did not safeguard disaster survivors’ sensitive personally identifiable information

    During our ongoing audit of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Transitional Sheltering Assistance (TSA) program, we determined that FEMA violated the Privacy Act of 1974 and Department of Homeland Security policy by releasing to [REDACTED] the PII and SPII of 2.3 million survivors of hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria and the California wildfires in 2017. FEMA should only provide with limited information needed to verify disaster survivors’ eligibility for the TSA program. The privacy incident occurred because FEMA did not take steps to ensure it provided only required data elements to Without corrective action, the disaster survivors involved in the privacy incident are at increased risk of identity theft and fraud.

    https://www.oig.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/assets/2019-03/OIG-19-32-Mar19.pdf

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2019, 11:31:44 AM
    This criminal gang was particularly violent against this teenager. As expected authorities refused to release the video until recently. But what is the outcome of this? Just one indictment for "deprivation of rights under color of law". Why couldn't they first check the condition of the victim and assess if the he needed medical help after the crash and then arrest if it is warranted? Why are these gang members so violent? Are they incapable of behaving like reasonable persons and follow the law?

    Video Shows Teen's Beating During West Virginia Traffic Stop

    A police dashcam video released Thursday shows a West Virginia police officer kicking and punching a handcuffed teenage boy on the ground and kneeling on his shoulder during a November traffic stop.

    Berkeley County Prosecutor Catie Wilkes Delligatti released the eight-minute video to The Associated Press. Authorities originally denied media requests for the video, citing the investigation. The teen's face is redacted in the video, taken from a sheriff's cruiser.

    The video shows two officers yanking the teen through the open driver's side window to the ground, where he lands face first and is immediately placed in handcuffs. Footage shows one of the officers then kicks and stomps him several times and puts his knee on the teen's shoulder blade, pressing down with his full weight. The officer then punches the teen at least eight times.

    A minute later, the teen is pulled up to his feet but remains limp as he is thrown further to the side of the road.

    Gov. Jim Justice has said the incident "cast a dark shadow" on law enforcement.

    https://www.wvpublic.org/post/video-shows-teens-beating-during-west-virginia-traffic-stop



    Full video:
    https://www.dropbox.com/s/y50q2u0hc47vei2/Merson Video Redacted.mp4?dl=0
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 25, 2019, 01:37:38 PM
    https://meaww.com/police-officer-texas-san-antonio-twitter-reactions-poop-sandwich-kept-job?utm_source=meaww_com&utm_medium=40003&utm_campaign=facebook&fbclid=IwAR18ILbTnF_NAKf7G5AkrqiKtcwvfUdakI25YO0FbHqMYyCWI2t-uLzpVl4



     >:(  >:(  >:(  >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2019, 07:21:21 PM
    Why not force the criminals to pay out of their own pockets (or raid their union's coffers)?

    Jury awards $5.1 million to family of man killed by Chicago police

    http://www.fox32chicago.com/news/local/jury-awards-51-million-to-family-of-man-killed-by-chicago-police
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2019, 07:26:04 PM
    Listen to this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats:

     



    Remember this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats?

    Turns out that he didn't "wait for all the facts to come out", as cops often say.

    Once again, another crime was committed based on lies and fabrications that the "law enforcement professionals" didn't bother to check. It only crossed their mind to do so after 2 people were murdered in their home. Just claiming "it was a mistake" will not bring these people back and their killing could have been avoided but apparently the lives of non cops are of little importance to these scumbags. Will this killer and his gang be held accountable for the killing of these 2 people?

    'You lie, you die' | HPD undercover cop lied about drug buy that led to deadly raid, Chief Acevedo says

    In a bombshell development, the undercover cop who led a drug raid that ended with a deadly shootout last month is now the target of a criminal investigation.

    The narcotics officer lied in the search warrant affidavit about a drug buy that never happened, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo confirmed Friday.

    "That’s totally unacceptable. I’ve told my police department that if you lie, you die," Acevedo said. "When you lie on an affidavit, that's not sloppy police work, that's a crime."

    The case agent obtained a search warrant to conduct the no-knock raid on Jan. 28 after he swore a confidential informant bought heroin at the home the night before. He said the informant told him he saw a 9mm handgun and a large amount of heroin in the house.

    Turns out, there never was a drug buy at the house or an informant who saw a large amount of heroin and weapons.



    https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/you-lie-you-die-hpd-undercover-cop-lied-about-drug-buy-that-led-to-deadly-raid-chief-acevedo-says/285-54ca0bb4-ba03-4e9d-ab6e-7d40bab2b356

    Remember this recent case? Once again we see the same thing, these scumbags are quietly allowed to resign or retire.

    Houston narcotics officer involved in deadly raid retires

    https://wtop.com/national/2019/03/houston-narcotics-officer-involved-in-deadly-raid-retires/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 26, 2019, 05:45:05 PM
    Once again, an armed violent gang invades a family's home to terrorize and intimidate them. They even destroyed the kid's birthday cake. Of course the violent gang just shrugs it off and says it was an "error".  The family members are lucky to be alive. When is there going to be a crack down on those armed violent gangs?

    Police Raid Wrong Home During Birthday Party, Point Guns At Children; ‘I Thought They Was Going To Shoot Me, And My Brother, And Everybody Else’

    Seven-year-old Samari Boswell said she was terrified the night of her younger brother TJ Boswell’s birthday party last month. She was expecting a party with cake and singing, but instead she and her family suddenly found themselves surrounded by police with guns pointed at them.

    CBS 2 Investigators have been looking at Chicago Police wrong raids since August of 2018. To date, we have shown four cases, involving 11 children, where police held innocent families for long periods of time without showing them the warrants.

    In each case, the families say the warrants were not turned over until police were leaving.


    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/03/25/chicago-police-wrong-raid-birthday-party-4-year-old/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 27, 2019, 05:21:10 AM
    https://patch.com/new-jersey/wayne/least-4-cops-paterson-busted-fbi-probe?utm_content=newjersey&utm_campaign=blasts&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&fbclid=IwAR1Y8X7BBltIKMYnCUjcpJsVVulCLy5JLyxzogx4r79fKyMiHbQFzVyCtQE


    Criminal gangsters
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 27, 2019, 09:50:14 AM
    In my region, I'm around a wide variety of conservative Trump voters.
    What surprised me, is how "anti-police" some  are.
    I wrongly assumed that respect and deference for law enforcement was something we could agree on.

    Nope.

    In fact, a few told me they hate cops.
    Over time ( in gym), I leared they were pissed at being pulled over and charged with drunk driving.
    A few others were pissed off they got ticketed for excessive speeding ( 90+ mph) or driving on a suspended license, etc.

    While I'm sure plenty of liberals hate cops for similar reasons, Trumpers hating them really surpised me.
    AGAIN, I respect the poilce and tend to take their side. I wrongly assumed all Trumpers would as well. WRONG.


    I don’t Hate all Cops just as I don’t hate all Blacks  
    ( I do hate all Muslims  ;D )

    All Scumbag Cops that behave like they are part of a big gang and those that try to cover
    For them - That’s an entirely different matter
    Same goes for all the Scumbag Gang Member Blacks.

    Difference is the Scumbag Cops are Generally Protected by Other Cops
    The Blacks aren’t - So Even you’d have To Admit That Situation is even worse as the cops
    Are Meant to uphold the Law & Serve & Protec -

    This Thread Really Does Highlight the vast
    Amount of Bad Cops Out There - They deserve to be Hated Banged up & Fucked up badly.

    Tell Me Otherwise.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2019, 04:49:14 PM
    Once again, we're dealing with criminal gangs. Press release from an anti-cop website:

    Fourteen Springfield Police Officers Charged in Connection With Assault Near Bar and Cover up Afterwards

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 3/27/2019                                              

    Office of Attorney General Maura Healey

    Thirteen Springfield Police Department officers and one former officer have been indicted on various charges in connection with an assault on four victims and an attempt to cover up the details of the assault afterwards, Attorney General Maura Healey and FBI Boston Division Special Agent in Charge Joseph R. Bonavolonta announced today.

    A specially-designated Statewide Grand Jury sitting in Worcester returned indictments against the following individuals today, in connection with the assault on the four alleged victims:


    The above defendants are charged with Assault and Battery with a Dangerous Weapon, Shod Foot (4 counts each), Assault and Battery - Serious Bodily Injury (1 count each), Assault and Battery (3 counts each), and Conspiracy (1 count each).

    The Statewide Grand Jury also returned indictments against the following individuals today, in connection with attempting to cover up details of the assault afterwards:

    John Sullivan
    Misleading a Federal Agent/Investigator

    Springfield Police Officer Jose Diaz
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator

    Springfield Police Officer Darren Nguyen, age 40, of Holland
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Officer Shavonne Lewis, age 29, of Springfield
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Sergeant Louis Bortolussi, age 57, of East Longmeadow
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Officer Derrick Gentry-Mitchell, age 29, of Springfield
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator/Grand Jury
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Officer James D’Amour, age 42, of Hampden
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Officer John Wajdula, age 34, of Springfield
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator/Federal Agent
    Filing a False Police Report

    Former Springfield Police Officer Nathanael Perez, age 27, of West Springfield
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Investigator
    Filing a False Police Report

    Springfield Police Officer Melissa Rodriguez, age 32, of Springfield
    Perjury

    Bar Manager Joseph Sullivan, age 42, of Hampden
    Perjury
    Misleading a Police Officer/Federal Agent/Investigator/Grand Jury

    All defendants will be arraigned in Hampden and/or Worcester Superior Courts at later dates.

    These criminal charges are the result of a joint ongoing investigation by the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Boston Division. The AG’s Office alleges that on April 8, 2015, off-duty Springfield Police Department officers Billingsley, Anthony and Christian Cicero, Basovskiy, Williams, and Diaz and bar owner John Sullivan, physically assaulted four victims after a confrontation at Nathan Bills Bar & Restaurant in Springfield. The victims had already left the bar when the defendants allegedly located them down the street and assaulted them. The victims were allegedly beaten and kicked, and sustained significant injuries as a result of the assault, some permanent. The AG’s Office and the FBI collected statements from victims and witnesses, phone records, and video evidence that led to the identification of the defendants and these charges.

    The AG’s Office also alleges that after the assault, nine Springfield Police officers as well as John Sullivan and Joseph Sullivan (no relation) were a part of a long-standing and ongoing cover up of the assault. John Sullivan allegedly misled the FBI during the course of the investigation, and Diaz gave misleading statements in an interview with the Internal Investigations Unit of the Springfield Police Department. Nguyen, Lewis, Bortolussi, Gentry-Mitchell, D’Amour, Wajdula, Perez, Rodriguez, and Joseph Sullivan all allegedly committed perjury by lying when testifying in front of the Statewide Grand Jury, and many of these defendants also misled authorities and/or filed false police reports during the investigation.

    https://www.mass.gov/news/fourteen-springfield-police-officers-charged-in-connection-with-assault-near-bar-and-cover-up
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 27, 2019, 04:54:38 PM
    Once again "former" in the headline but he was a state trooper when he was committing the crime and embezzling funds. 90 days is a very light penalty for this criminal. Press release from the most notorious anti cop website:

    Former Massachusetts State Trooper Sentenced to Three Months in Prison for Overtime Fraud

    A former Massachusetts State Trooper was sentenced today in federal court in Boston in connection with the ongoing investigation of overtime abuse at the Massachusetts State Police (MSP).

    Gregory Raftery, 47, of Westwood, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William G. Young to 90 days in prison, one year of supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $51,377. In July 2018, Raftery pleaded guilty to one count of embezzling funds from a state agency receiving federal funds.

    Raftery admitted that in 2015 and 2016, he was not present and did not work for hundreds of hours of overtime shifts for which he had been paid by the Massachusetts State Police. Raftery admitted that he frequently left overtime shifts early, and, on multiple occasions, did not work overtime shifts at all. To hide his conduct, Raftery submitted bogus motor vehicle citations that were never issued to operators, and then claimed on the citations and internal MSP paperwork that they had been written during overtime shifts that, in reality, Raftery did not work.  

    Raftery acknowledged that in 2015 he was paid over $24,000, and in 2016, he was paid almost $30,000 for overtime hours that he did not work.

    Raftery is the second Trooper to be sentenced as a result of the ongoing investigation. Thus far, eight MSP troopers have been charged and pleaded guilty.

    United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling; Joseph R. Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Field Division; and Douglas Shoemaker, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Office of Inspector General, made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Dustin Chao and Mark Grady of Lelling’s Public Corruption Unit are prosecuting the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-ma/pr/former-massachusetts-state-trooper-sentenced-three-months-prison-overtime-fraud
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2019, 03:15:34 PM
    Once again, unrestrained violence and cops covering up and clearing themselves of wrongdoing.

    Bronx woman who lost eye in horrific confrontation with cops sues NYPD; officer accused was cleared in internal probe
    (http://bronxjusticenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Screen-Shot-2019-03-25-at-6.23.40-PM-238x300.png) (https://patch.com/img/cdn20/users/22965231/20190326/012754/styles/T800x600/public/processed_images/johanna_pagan-alomar_picture_1-1553621254-6158.jpg?width=705)

    A Bronx woman who lost her eye in a horrific confrontation with cops is suing the NYPD -- despite cops’ claims the bloody beatdown was somehow justified.

    Johanna Pagan-Alomar says in her recently filed suit that Officer Theresa Lustica had a key clenched in her fist when the officer pummeled her face and destroyed her eye.

    At the 46th Precinct stationhouse, a captain asked why EMS hadn’t been called, and ordered the partners to get Pagan-Alomar to the hospital right away, Pagan-Alomar says.

    Police dispute this account, saying EMS was called to the arrest scene and took her to St. Barnabas Hospital. But the FDNY, which oversees EMS, has no record of a response to the arrest scene that day.

    Regardless, the outcome was the same – Pagan-Alomar’s left orbital wall was fractured and the eye ruptured. About three months later, doctors removed it. She is awaiting a prosthetic replacement.

    The NYPD says there is no reason to discipline Lustica: “The Internal Affairs Bureau conducted an investigation and determined that the officer’s actions were appropriate under the circumstances -- and neither excessive nor unnecessary,” said Assistant Chief Patrick Conry, an NYPD spokesman.

    The NYPD says that when IAB cops tried to interview Lustica at Bronx Lebanon Hospital the day after the incident, she refused to cooperate. They had her sign a “statement of complaint withdrawal” form to confirm this and went on to complete the investigation clearing the cops without her input.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-bronx-woman-accuses-female-cop-of-assault-20190325-dsygsdslknf3banxsotea4jbtm-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 28, 2019, 03:25:19 PM
    Every police dept is composed of human beings and some do bad things.
    I'm NOT about to defend corrupt police conduct
    At least the internal affairs dept and the courts reign in and sentence bad cops.

    Notice in my post, I used examples of those who had clearly broken some law.
    They seem outraged about being stopped for drunk driving or ticketed for going 90 in a 55 mph zone.
    How do we enforce these laws if the police never bother to enforce them?

    Did you fully read & understand what I Wrote ?
    Enforcing laws is one thing.
    The Thousands of examples posted here on this thread of police Brutality/ Stupidity/ Corruption/
    Disregard for Law & Lives Etc Is entirely another.
    I’m certainly not ask or expecting cops not to enforce the laws.
    I also don’t expect to see / hear about a never ending stream of Bad Cops getting away with
    Awful behaviour & others covering for them.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 28, 2019, 03:45:11 PM
    https://lawandcrime.com/crazy/police-chief-and-his-friend-charged-with-raping-underage-girl-over-7-year-span



    Insane.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2019, 03:49:27 PM
    https://lawandcrime.com/crazy/police-chief-and-his-friend-charged-with-raping-underage-girl-over-7-year-span



    Insane.

    Damn. The girl reported this several times but she was shut down. And this is the Chief of Police in that town...

    Attorney General Josh Shapiro Announces Arrests of Two Carbon County Men, Including Weissport Police Chief, for Child Rape

    HARRISBURG — Attorney General Shapiro today announced the arrests of two Carbon County men for child rape. Weissport Chief of Police Brent Getz, 27, and Gregory Wagner, 28, both of Lehighton, PA, were charged on Tuesday with Rape of Child, Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercourse with a Child, Aggravated Indecent Assault of Child, and several related charges.

    This investigation began in May 2012 when the victim, then 12-years-old, reported to a substitute teacher that Gregory Wagner, then 22-years-old, was sexually assaulting her. The teacher reported it to the Franklin Township Police Department and, after an investigation, no charges were filed at that time.

    In 2015, the case was reassigned and police prepared a criminal complaint charging Wagner with various crimes. The complaint was dismissed by the Magisterial District Judge due to a paperwork error. The charges were never refiled.

    In August 2018, a Franklin Township Police Officer revisited the case and asked the victim to come back in for an interview. At this time, the victim also disclosed that Brent Getz, who was Wagner’s friend, had sexually assaulted her too. Getz is now the Chief of Police in Weissport, Carbon County.

    The victim revealed that, consistent with her prior disclosures and examinations, from age 4-11 she was orally, vaginally, and anally raped by Wagner. She reported that Getz would also join in these assaults. Additionally, she said that Wagner often made her watch pornography with him, which she recalled depicted teenagers.

    “The defendants terrorized this young victim by assaulting her hundreds of times over seven years,” said Attorney General Josh Shapiro. “My Office will listen to survivors and prosecute anyone who sexually abuses children to the fullest extent of the law we are able—no matter how much time has passed. I’m grateful for the work of my agents to bring these predators to justice and prevent them from harming anyone else.”

    Agents executed a search warrant of Wagner’s residence on March 26, 2019. They located numerous electronic devices, including his cell phone, which contained Google searches of terms which are indicative of child pornography.

    Wagner was interviewed and admitted to sexually abusing the victim over the course of several years. He also admitted that Getz sexually abused the victim and that they would do so together.

    The case of Brent Getz was referred to the Office of Attorney General by Carbon County District Attorney Jean Engler because Getz was a police officer employed or formerly employed at several police departments in Carbon County. The case of Gregory Wagner was also referred to the Office of Attorney General. The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Elo.

    https://www.attorneygeneral.gov/taking-action/press-releases/attorney-general-josh-shapiro-announces-arrests-of-two-carbon-county-men-including-weissport-police-chief-for-child-rape/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 28, 2019, 03:56:06 PM
    Damn. The girl reported this several times but she was shut down. And this is the Chief of Police in that town...

    Attorney General Josh Shapiro Announces Arrests of Two Carbon County Men, Including Weissport Police Chief, for Child Rape

    HARRISBURG — Attorney General Shapiro today announced the arrests of two Carbon County men for child rape. Weissport Chief of Police Brent Getz, 27, and Gregory Wagner, 28, both of Lehighton, PA, were charged on Tuesday with Rape of Child, Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercourse with a Child, Aggravated Indecent Assault of Child, and several related charges.

    This investigation began in May 2012 when the victim, then 12-years-old, reported to a substitute teacher that Gregory Wagner, then 22-years-old, was sexually assaulting her. The teacher reported it to the Franklin Township Police Department and, after an investigation, no charges were filed at that time.

    In 2015, the case was reassigned and police prepared a criminal complaint charging Wagner with various crimes. The complaint was dismissed by the Magisterial District Judge due to a paperwork error. The charges were never refiled.

    In August 2018, a Franklin Township Police Officer revisited the case and asked the victim to come back in for an interview. At this time, the victim also disclosed that Brent Getz, who was Wagner’s friend, had sexually assaulted her too. Getz is now the Chief of Police in Weissport, Carbon County.

    The victim revealed that, consistent with her prior disclosures and examinations, from age 4-11 she was orally, vaginally, and anally raped by Wagner. She reported that Getz would also join in these assaults. Additionally, she said that Wagner often made her watch pornography with him, which she recalled depicted teenagers.

    “The defendants terrorized this young victim by assaulting her hundreds of times over seven years,” said Attorney General Josh Shapiro. “My Office will listen to survivors and prosecute anyone who sexually abuses children to the fullest extent of the law we are able—no matter how much time has passed. I’m grateful for the work of my agents to bring these predators to justice and prevent them from harming anyone else.”

    Agents executed a search warrant of Wagner’s residence on March 26, 2019. They located numerous electronic devices, including his cell phone, which contained Google searches of terms which are indicative of child pornography.

    Wagner was interviewed and admitted to sexually abusing the victim over the course of several years. He also admitted that Getz sexually abused the victim and that they would do so together.

    The case of Brent Getz was referred to the Office of Attorney General by Carbon County District Attorney Jean Engler because Getz was a police officer employed or formerly employed at several police departments in Carbon County. The case of Gregory Wagner was also referred to the Office of Attorney General. The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Elo.

    https://www.attorneygeneral.gov/taking-action/press-releases/attorney-general-josh-shapiro-announces-arrests-of-two-carbon-county-men-including-weissport-police-chief-for-child-rape/

    Fucking outrageous
    How many others involved or doing the same there.
    Plenty of opportunities to stop the abuse & help the Girl
    Yet not taken - I say that’s suspicious.
    If it’s proven beyond a doubt them two want impaling on spikes
    And left to Rot for all to see.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2019, 05:25:38 PM
    No prison time despite being indicted on 3 felony counts of reckless handling of a firearm resulting in serious bodily injury, unlawful wounding and unlawful shooting at an occupied domicile.

    Lynchburg officers who shot man inside his home sentenced to community service

    Two Lynchburg Police officers charged in an officer-involved shooting have pleaded no contest to an amended charge.

    Walker Sigler was shot in the leg after police said they were investigating an open door at his home on Link Road around 1:15 a.m. Saturday, February 17, 2018.

    Ferron and Simmons were both found guilty of a misdemeanor reckless handling of a firearm charge. They were both sentenced to 12 months in jail each, with all time suspended, plus 100 hours of community service that must be completed by March 1, 2020.

    https://wset.com/news/local/lynchburg-officers-who-shot-man-inside-his-home-sentenced-to-community-service
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 28, 2019, 05:32:00 PM
    She couldn't distinguish between her tazer and her firearm so she shot the man and could also have hurt the other cop who was fighting him. These are the "highly trained professionals" who are "qualified" to handle firearms, unlike the citizens whose gun rights are being slowly eroded. Lack of training, lack or experience and in this case probably being a small female doesn't help.

    Video shows former Lawrence police officer shoot driver during May 29 traffic stop

    Police dash cam video released Monday shows a driver wrestle a Lawrence police officer to the ground and fight him before being shot in the back by another officer during a traffic stop last year.

    Brindley Blood, the officer who shot the man, is charged in Douglas County District Court with reckless aggravated battery. Blood has maintained the May 29 shooting was accidental and she meant to reach for her stun gun instead of her firearm.



    https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article228379669.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 31, 2019, 07:41:33 PM
    Cop Who Savagely Beat Footbal Fan on Video, Used Unnecessary Force 56 Times, Injured 17 People

    Pittsburgh, PA – Caught on video savagely beating a teenage football fan and falsifying arrest reports, a fired police sergeant has recently been accused by the district attorney of using more force than necessary at least 56 times. Establishing a pattern of violence and falsifying reports, Allegheny County prosecutors introduced the new evidence on Monday in preparation for the ex-cop’s upcoming state trial.

    On November 28, 2015, a surveillance video captured off-duty police Sgt. Stephen Matakovich ordering 19-year-old Gabriel Despres to leave Heinz Field. In his arrest report, Matakovich falsely claimed that Despres adopted an “aggressive posture” and appeared ready to attack him.

    But according to the video, Despres calmly stood with his arms down at his sides when Matakovich suddenly shoved the teen to the ground and began punching him in the head. Although Despres did not provoke the attack and did not appear to fight back, the off-duty cop repeatedly struck him while several other security guards watched.

    Treated for a bloody nose, Despres eventually pleaded guilty to trespassing and public drunkenness. After watching the video of the incident, Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay fired Matakovich and opened an investigation that led to his state trial.

    Charged with simple assault and official oppression in state court for attacking Despres, Matakovich also faces federal counts of deprivation of civil rights and falsification of a record. Even though the state charges are only misdemeanors that carry no more than two years in prison, Matakovich could be sentenced up to 30 years for the federal charges.
    In an attempt to establish the ex-cop’s history of violence, county prosecutors introduced a motion on Monday detailing Matakovich’s use of unnecessary force against 56 other people and another case in which he assaulted a security guard then arrested him on false charges.

    On December 28, 2014, Matakovich had been assigned to work as a plainclothes officer at Heinz Field. After an altercation broke out, Matakovich responded to the scene and tried to break up the fight.

    Due to the fact that Matakovich was not in uniform, security guard Dylan Burton failed to recognize the cop before tapping him on the shoulder and questioning him. When Matakovich ignored his questions, Burton grabbed his shoulder a moment before the plainclothes cop turned around and began repeatedly punching Burton in the face. Although the security guard had committed no crime, Matakovich arrested Burton and charged him with aggravated assault.

    Instead of going to trial, Burton ended up pleading guilty to a summary count of harassment. By showcasing Matakovich’s actions against Burton, county prosecutors will also be able to present a pattern of violence stemming from at least 56 other incidents since 2011 in which Matakovich claimed that a person had resisted.

    Out of those 56 reports, 20 cases involved strikes to the face and head, with 17 of those resulting in injuries including broken noses, broken jaws, and loss of consciousness.

    “In both cases, the defendant charged aggravated assault on a police officer when neither Despres nor Burton had come anywhere close to committing such an offense,” the motion said. “Furthermore, in an attempt to support this felony charge and justify his excessive force, in each case the defendant concocted a version of events to fit his narrative. Finally, in an attempt to clear himself of potential accusations of wrongdoing and put the incidents to rest, the defendant offered Despres and Burton pleas to summary harassment.”

    According to the prosecution and video footage, Matakovich brutalized innocent people and arrested them under false charges in order to cover up his own violent provocations. Instead of succumbing to the proliferation of Big Brother watching us, the public continually finds ways to use those electronic eyes against corrupt members of our government.



    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-beat-teen-unnecessary-force-56-times/

    Remember this case? Once again, instead of having the criminals pay out of their pockets or raiding their gang's coffers, the taxpayers are footing the bill.

    City Council To Approve Settlement For Man Attacked By Officer Outside Heinz Field

    The city has agreed to pay $77,500 to the man who was beaten by former Pittsburgh Police officer Stephen Matakovich outside Heinz Field in 2015.

    A federal judge sentenced Matakovich to 27 months in prison for violating Gabriel Despres’ right, and now his attorneys have won this civil settlement.

    https://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2019/03/26/pittsburgh-city-council-settlement-approval-heinz-field-officer-attack/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2019, 03:22:30 PM
    Investigating everyone else is ok but when it comes to investigating him, his cronies or the organization he used to head suddenly it becomes an issue?

    Comey says he fears possible counterinvestigation after Mueller report

    Former FBI Director James Comey on Tuesday condemned President Donald Trump’s calls for a possible investigation into how special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia inquiry started, adding that it creates a troubling precedent.

    During an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, Comey was asked about whether he feared possible counterinvestigations.

    “I don't fear it personally. I fear it as a citizen,” he said. “Right? Investigate what? Investigate that investigations were conducted? What would be the crime you’d be investigating? So it’s a terrible cycle to start.”

    https://www.politico.com/story/2019/04/02/comey-mueller-counter-investigation-1249236



    Also, notice this question by CNN's Amanpour. Did she want the FBI to investigate, arrest, censor or "shut down" people who were saying "lock her up"?

    CNN's Amanpour Asks Comey Why the FBI Didn't Censor 'Lock Her Up' Chant as 'Hate Speech'

    “Of course, ‘lock her up’ was a feature of the 2016 Trump campaign,” Amanpour said, asking “do you in retrospect wish that people like yourself, the FBI, I mean, the people in charge of law and order, had shut down that language — that it was dangerous potentially, that it could’ve created violence, that it’s kind of hate speech. Should that have been allowed?”

    Comey replied by explaining the First Amendment to the CNN host.

    “That’s not the role for government to play,” he said. “The beauty of this country is people can say what they want, even if it’s misleading and it’s demagoguery.”



    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/laurettabrown/2019/04/02/cnns-amanpour-asks-comey-why-he-and-the-fbi-didnt-censor-lock-her-up-chant-as-hate-speech-n2544169
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 02, 2019, 04:32:03 PM
    Amanoour is one of the biggest lackeys there exists. 


    Investigating everyone else is ok but when it comes to investigating him, his cronies or the organization he used to head suddenly it becomes an issue?

    Comey says he fears possible counterinvestigation after Mueller report

    Former FBI Director James Comey on Tuesday condemned President Donald Trump’s calls for a possible investigation into how special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia inquiry started, adding that it creates a troubling precedent.

    During an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, Comey was asked about whether he feared possible counterinvestigations.

    “I don't fear it personally. I fear it as a citizen,” he said. “Right? Investigate what? Investigate that investigations were conducted? What would be the crime you’d be investigating? So it’s a terrible cycle to start.”

    https://www.politico.com/story/2019/04/02/comey-mueller-counter-investigation-1249236



    Also, notice this question by CNN's Amanpour. Did she want the FBI to investigate, arrest, censor or "shut down" people who were saying "lock her up"?

    CNN's Amanpour Asks Comey Why the FBI Didn't Censor 'Lock Her Up' Chant as 'Hate Speech'

    “Of course, ‘lock her up’ was a feature of the 2016 Trump campaign,” Amanpour said, asking “do you in retrospect wish that people like yourself, the FBI, I mean, the people in charge of law and order, had shut down that language — that it was dangerous potentially, that it could’ve created violence, that it’s kind of hate speech. Should that have been allowed?”

    Comey replied by explaining the First Amendment to the CNN host.

    “That’s not the role for government to play,” he said. “The beauty of this country is people can say what they want, even if it’s misleading and it’s demagoguery.”



    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/laurettabrown/2019/04/02/cnns-amanpour-asks-comey-why-he-and-the-fbi-didnt-censor-lock-her-up-chant-as-hate-speech-n2544169
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2019, 02:45:53 PM
    First Amendment Coalition Sues CA Attorney General to Force Disclosure of Police Misconduct Files

    The First Amendment Coalition (FAC) filed suit today against California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for failing to comply with the state’s new, landmark police transparency law.
    The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, seeks the release of records regarding serious police misconduct—records that all state and local agencies are now required to disclose under Senate Bill 1421. The bill, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires the disclosure of files that have been confidential for decades, including those involving police shootings and accusations of police misconduct.

    The California Department of Justice, under the authority of the Attorney General, is one of a relatively small number of agencies that has refused to comply with the law. FAC requested records from the department under SB 1421 on January 4, but it refused to disclose the records in a response sent on January 28, prompting FAC’s lawsuit.

    “As the highest law enforcement officer in the state, the Attorney General has an obligation to not only comply with the California Public Records Act, but to send the right message about transparency to police departments across the state,” said FAC Executive Director David Snyder. “Unfortunately, the Attorney General has done neither. By denying public access to these crucial files, he has given a green light to other departments to disregard the new law.”

    Police unions across California have been working to undermine the law by arguing it doesn’t apply to records prior to Jan. 1 of this year. FAC has led media coalitions to work to defeat these efforts in various counties, including successfully opposing an attempt by a police union in San Bernardino County—the California Supreme Court denied the union’s request to make the law apply only after Jan. 1 after FAC filed a briefing to block the last-ditch effort.

    FAC and a media coalition also prevailed last week in Contra Costa County Superior Courtwhere a judge sided with the organization and denied a preliminary injunction sought by police unions. A similar attempt is taking place in Los Angeles County and multiple other counties around the state.

    https://firstamendmentcoalition.org/2019/02/fac-sues-ca-attorney-general-to-force-disclosure-of-police-misconduct-files/

    Haha! Screw the cop unions and the AG. Transparency for everyone, not just for citizens plebs. Were the worms trying to destroy files before the court decision like the Stasi scum when their headquarters were stormed by angry citizens?

    Court upholds broad release of police misconduct records in California

    A new law granting public access to police misconduct records and investigations of officers’ use of force applies to all records that existed when the law took effect this year no matter when they were created, a state appeals court has ruled in a decision with immediate statewide impact.

    Police unions in numerous localities, including Contra Costa County and five of its cities in the current case, sued to block release of records created before 2019. The unions, which had opposed the disclosure law in the Legislature, contend the law was not drafted to apply to earlier records.

    Superior Court judges around the state have generally disagreed with the unions. But in the first decision with broad impact, the First District Court of Appeal in San Francisco late Friday published an earlier two-page order in the Contra Costa case making all existing records available to the public.

    https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Court-upholds-broad-release-of-police-misconduct-13733312.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2019, 03:01:35 PM
    The thugs don't even respect injured veterans.

    Marine vet, disabled in Sangin explosion, wins $250,000 settlement after park ranger allegedly used excessive force over use of a handicapped parking spot

    In 2012, a disabled Marine veteran visited the Sequoia National Park in California, where he says a National Park Service ranger used excessive force against him over his use of a handicapped parking spot.

    Dominic Esquibel said that despite displaying an appropriate handicapped marker, a park ranger didn’t believe he was disabled. Esquibel wears brace on his leg for an injury in a 2011 bomb explosion in Afghanistan. The end of the confrontation allegedly ended with the parking ranger kicking the Marine veteran’s injured leg and handcuffing him.

    A charge against Esquibel for failing to follow a lawful order was dropped, but he filed a lawsuit against the federal government over the excessive force that could result in the loss of his leg. On Tuesday, the Washington Post reported that Esquibel won a $250,000 settlement from the federal government in March, as it was trying to avoid a trial.

    https://www.marinecorpstimes.com/guy-allegedly-used-excessive-force-over-a-handicapped-spot/


    It's interesting to read about this veteran and his awards:

    Quote
    Esquibel was awarded the Navy Cross for braving machine gun fire to rescue two Marines and carrying out the body of another Marine during operation Phantom Fury, also known as the Second Battle of Fallujah, in Iraq in 2004. Esquibel declined the award, citing personal reasons. His lawyer, Butch Wagner, told the Post that his client “didn’t feel right about the award” and that other Marines would have done the same for him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 03, 2019, 03:02:35 PM
    Haha! Screw the cop unions and the AG. Transparency for everyone, not just for citizens plebs. Were the worms trying to destroy files before the court decision like the Stasi scum when their headquarters were stormed by angry citizens?

    Court upholds broad release of police misconduct records in California

    A new law granting public access to police misconduct records and investigations of officers’ use of force applies to all records that existed when the law took effect this year no matter when they were created, a state appeals court has ruled in a decision with immediate statewide impact.

    Police unions in numerous localities, including Contra Costa County and five of its cities in the current case, sued to block release of records created before 2019. The unions, which had opposed the disclosure law in the Legislature, contend the law was not drafted to apply to earlier records.

    Superior Court judges around the state have generally disagreed with the unions. But in the first decision with broad impact, the First District Court of Appeal in San Francisco late Friday published an earlier two-page order in the Contra Costa case making all existing records available to the public.

    https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Court-upholds-broad-release-of-police-misconduct-13733312.php

    WTF they trying to Hide - Clearly Worried What Those records will Show.

    The Police Service Needs a Damn Good Shake up - Start over Again
    It’s Full of Corruption & Deceit on so many Levels it’s become totally
    Untrustworthy.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2019, 03:14:10 PM
    Once again, the headline says " "former" but he was a cop when he was caught. Not only that but he was a lieutenant,  the head of the "Vice Squad" and also happened to be a pastor as well.

    Former St. George police lieutenant, Utah man arrested in human trafficking sting

    Two men, including a former St. George police lieutenant, were arrested during an undercover human trafficking investigation, according to the Utah County Sheriff's Office.

    He was booked into jail on the following charges: Exploiting a prostitute, 3rd degree felony; patronizing a prostitute, class A misdemeanor; sexual battery, class A misdemeanor; and two counts of lewdness, class B misdemeanor.

    https://kutv.com/news/local/former-st-george-police-lieutenant-utah-man-arrested-in-human-trafficking-sting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 03, 2019, 03:15:28 PM
    KCK school resource officer arrested on suspicion of multiple child sex crimes

    The Kansas Bureau of Investigation arrested a KCK school resource officer following allegations of rape and other sex crimes against children.

    30-year-old Mark A. Scheetz, of Lansing, was arrested without incident in Bonner Springs on suspicion of rape, aggravated criminal sodomy and aggravated indecent liberties with a child. The alleged crimes are suspected to have occurred when Scheetz resided in Norton County between 2013 and 2015 and stem from reports that he allegedly engaged in sex acts with a minor, sent lewd photos to minors and used electronic devices to solicit sex with minors.

    https://fox4kc.com/2019/03/27/kck-school-resource-officer-arrested-on-suspicion-of-multiple-child-sex-crimes/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2019, 03:01:25 PM
    Cop lovers often say "Body cams clear police officers who are falsely accused"...

    So here we have a gang of armed and violent criminals breaking down the door and invading a house, attacking the occupants, attacking a man on the street who had his hands up and then kidnapped them and charged them, among other things, with "resisting arrest", the typical blanket charges in most such cases. What is disturbing is that if it weren't for body cams, which thankfully didn't "malfunction" this time, the criminals would have gotten away with their crimes because it is unlikely the victims would have been believed (their word would not carry much weight vs the word of "sworn officers").

    Churchill: Police body cameras recorded an ugly truth

    https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Churchill-Police-body-cameras-recorded-an-ugly-13739003.php

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 05, 2019, 05:53:33 AM
    https://nypost.com/2019/04/04/ohio-cop-indicted-on-charges-of-killing-a-sex-worker/?sr_share=facebook&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow&utm_campaign=SocialFlow

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2019, 02:25:44 PM
    "Police officers are the best of us".

    Of course he is on paid leave.

    Darthmouth police officer arrested on child rape charges

    Officer Shawn Souza, 37, of Dartmouth, was arrested Thursday by Massachusetts State Police assigned to the Bristol County District Attorney's Office following an investigation.

    Souza was arrested on charges of rape of a child by force, rape of a child - aggravated by age difference and two counts of indecent assault and battery on a person under 14 years old by a mandated reporter. The alleged incidents took place in Dartmouth.

    Gregg Miliote, spokesman for the Bristol County District Attorney's Office, tells WBSM News there are two alleged victims in the case.

    Dartmouth Police Chief Brian Levesque confirmed this morning that a police officer with the Dartmouth Police Department "was placed on paid administrative leave pending further developments associated with the District Attorney’s investigation. "

    https://wbsm.com/dartmouth-police-officer-arrested-on-child-rape-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2019, 02:50:12 PM
    What a joke. Conveniently a few weeks before the trial, is he trying to cover up for his gang? As usual they investigate themselves and clear themselves of wrongdoing.

    NYPD Surgeon: Officer Didn't Use Chokehold on Eric Garner

    The NYPD’s chief surgeon ruled that the officer accused in Eric Garner’s death did not put him in a chokehold, the officer’s attorney said.

    Daniel Pantaleo, who is charged with reckless use of a chokehold and intentional use of a chokehold in Garner’s July 2014 death on Staten Island, faces a disciplinary trial in May.

    At a pre-trial hearing Thursday, Pantaleo’s lawyer Stuart London said an internal report from the NYPD’s chief surgeon Eli Kleinman in 2014 found Pantaleo’s action wasn’t a chokehold, and that Garner most likely died because of an underlying heart condition.

    The report "indicated there was no misconduct at all," London maintained.

    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/NYPD-Surgeon-Officer-Didnt-Use-Chokehold-on-Eric-Garner-Daniel-Pantaleo-508132531.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2019, 12:54:47 AM
    Maybe they should lock them up in prison for a few years and have them lick the toilets every day.
    Link from notorious anti-cop source:

    Two Honolulu Police Officers Charged With Federal Civil Rights Offenses

    Department of Justice
    U.S. Attorney’s Office
    District of Hawaii

    HONOLULU – Two Honolulu Police Department officers were arrested today pursuant to a federal indictment charging them with one count of conspiring to deprive a person of his civil rights, and one count of acting under color of law to deprive the same individual of his civil rights. The indictment alleges that on or about January 28, 2018, HPD Officers John Rabago and Reginald Ramones deprived an individual of his constitutional right to be free from an unreasonable seizure by a law enforcement officer.

    The conspiracy charge carries a maximum term of 10 years imprisonment and a maximum fine of $250,000; and the deprivation of rights under color of law charge carries a maximum term of one-year imprisonment and a maximum fine of $100,000. The charges in the indictment are merely allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    This case is being investigated by the Honolulu Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Timothy Visser of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and Assistant U.S Attorney Thomas Brady for the District of Hawaii.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-hi/pr/two-honolulu-police-officers-charged-federal-civil-rights-offenses



    2 Honolulu police officers indicted for allegedly forcing homeless man to lick urinal

    Two Honolulu Police Department officers were arrested today by federal authorities after being indicted with two counts of civil rights violations for allegedly forcing a homeless man to lick a public urinal.

    HPD officers John Rabago and Reginald Ramones have been charged with one count of conspiring to deprive a person of his civil rights and another count of acting under color of law to deprive the same individual of his civil rights, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

    https://www.staradvertiser.com/2019/04/05/breaking-news/2-honolulu-police-officers-indicted-for-allegedly-forcing-homeless-man-to-lick-urinal/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 08, 2019, 10:43:56 AM
    Cops find an dirt bike that an allegedly reckless rider abandoned, stupid cop proceeds to ride it, no helmet, revs it, pops a wheelie, runs a red light, almost hits a car and falls, much to the excitement of onlookers.
    Let's see if he will be charged for all these violations or they'll try to blame the car going legally through the intersection.

    NYPD officer wipes out on dirt bike in Harlem

    An NYPD cop went on a wild dirt-bike ride in Harlem on Sunday afternoon — and injured himself when he tumbled off the bike and slammed into the road, video of the crash shows.

    The cop popped a wheelie, and then sped off into traffic on the bike on Lenox Avenue and 135th Street at about 6 p.m., according to the video and police.

    During the ride, he veered to his left to avoid a car that pulled into the intersection and then completely lost control of the bike, the video shows.

    https://nypost.com/2019/04/08/nypd-officer-wipes-out-on-dirt-bike-in-harlem/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on April 08, 2019, 05:41:10 PM
    Cops find an dirt bike that an allegedly reckless rider abandoned, stupid cop proceeds to ride it, no helmet, revs it, pops a wheelie, runs a red light, almost hits a car and falls, much to the excitement of onlookers.
    Let's see if he will be charged for all these violations or they'll try to blame the car going legally through the intersection.

    NYPD officer wipes out on dirt bike in Harlem

    An NYPD cop went on a wild dirt-bike ride in Harlem on Sunday afternoon — and injured himself when he tumbled off the bike and slammed into the road, video of the crash shows.

    The cop popped a wheelie, and then sped off into traffic on the bike on Lenox Avenue and 135th Street at about 6 p.m., according to the video and police.

    During the ride, he veered to his left to avoid a car that pulled into the intersection and then completely lost control of the bike, the video shows.

    https://nypost.com/2019/04/08/nypd-officer-wipes-out-on-dirt-bike-in-harlem/
    Saw this video earlier, hilarious! :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 08, 2019, 10:47:12 PM
    Cops find an dirt bike that an allegedly reckless rider abandoned, stupid cop proceeds to ride it, no helmet, revs it, pops a wheelie, runs a red light, almost hits a car and falls, much to the excitement of onlookers.
    Let's see if he will be charged for all these violations or they'll try to blame the car going legally through the intersection.

    NYPD officer wipes out on dirt bike in Harlem

    An NYPD cop went on a wild dirt-bike ride in Harlem on Sunday afternoon — and injured himself when he tumbled off the bike and slammed into the road, video of the crash shows.

    The cop popped a wheelie, and then sped off into traffic on the bike on Lenox Avenue and 135th Street at about 6 p.m., according to the video and police.

    During the ride, he veered to his left to avoid a car that pulled into the intersection and then completely lost control of the bike, the video shows.

    https://nypost.com/2019/04/08/nypd-officer-wipes-out-on-dirt-bike-in-harlem/

    According to the NYPD patrol guide, police are permitted to drive confiscated vehicles to voucher them.

    “That’s how you bring the bikes back if you don’t have a trailer to put them on,” a police source said. “You can’t leave them in the street.”

    They’re you go the Excuses are Already starting.
    He can go through red lights & Ride without a helmet like a Twat & it’s all okay & Legal  ::)

    Cops are slowly becoming nearly as big a Problem as inner city Blacks
    Both lots couldn’t care less about the laws applying to Themselves.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2019, 10:51:02 AM
    Remember this case (one of the many) the next time you see some cops hypocritically preach about the dangers of drunk or distracted driving, except when it comes to them of course or when they force innocent people to go through excessive, illegal or downright torturous procedures in an attempt to find non existing substances.
    After calls about reckless driving, this "sheriff" was pulled over but apparently was given the blue courtesy and left and later injured a woman in a head on crash. The cop that let him go should be charged as an accessory to this crash and the woman's injuries.

    Speaking of criminal gangs, we are talking about a career criminal here. This "sheriff" was also arrested and booked in jail in 2015 for "making terroristic threats" and he was also charged with failure to wear a seat belt, operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs, possession of an open alcohol container in a motor vehicle and failure to signal properly.

    Sheriff charged with DUI stopped by local officer in the hour before his crash

    (http://www.wave3.com/resizer/mfSjKP7ziF7y00bf8p4AJ4GMY5c=/1200x600/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod-raycom.s3.amazonaws.com/public/HWAY64EMRNCIVDUB2PTJSPS46U.JPG) (https://dehayf5mhw1h7.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/622/2016/04/28050855/10035506.jpg)

    Breckinridge County Sheriff Todd Pate was arrested in March after police said he was drunk driving, ultimately crashing and hurting another driver. In the hour before that crash, a local officer, who knew the sheriff, was responding to a 911 call for a reckless driver. That driver was Todd Pate and the officer let him go.

    According to dispatch records, the 911 caller complained of a male driver "asleep at the wheel" and said that driver was "all over the road" crossing three lanes of traffic and then "hit a curb" turning into the gas station parking lot.

    In the minutes that followed, Irvington Police Officer Crag Ball had a conversation with Pate and then let him get back into his car. Pate drove about 20 miles and then crashed, hurting another driver.

    https://www.whas11.com/article/news/local/sheriff-charged-with-dui-stopped-by-local-officer-in-the-hour-before-his-crash/417-ae6d56bb-3e9a-49f3-b6f6-99e41415b94c?fbclid=IwAR0sbbjv9VZSAWWiByx-bmB4u5NulvT9RkA_dVRFvVTP1xKSkU-4oJv6wOk
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2019, 01:01:42 PM
    The former director of the FBI... ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Comey scoffs at Barr testimony, claims ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Former FBI Director James Comey joined the chorus of Democratic critics complaining about Attorney General Bill Barr’s testimony this week that “spying did occur” against the 2016 Trump campaign, claiming he has no idea what the Justice Department leader is talking about -- and saying he “never thought of” electronic surveillance as “spying.”

    Comey sought to draw a distinction between surveillance -- which was authorized against a Trump adviser -- and spying during a cybersecurity conference in California on Thursday, echoing Democratic lawmakers who have accused Barr of going too far in his Senate testimony this week.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/comey-scoffs-at-barr-testimony-claims-surveillance-is-not-spying
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on April 12, 2019, 05:48:53 PM
    sur·veil·lance
    [sərˈvāləns]

    NOUN
    close observation, especially of a suspected spy or criminal.
    "he found himself put under surveillance by military intelligence"
    synonyms:
    observation · scrutiny · watch · view · inspection ·
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 12, 2019, 07:53:12 PM

    This is why I love trump. 


    The former director of the FBI... ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Comey scoffs at Barr testimony, claims ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Former FBI Director James Comey joined the chorus of Democratic critics complaining about Attorney General Bill Barr’s testimony this week that “spying did occur” against the 2016 Trump campaign, claiming he has no idea what the Justice Department leader is talking about -- and saying he “never thought of” electronic surveillance as “spying.”

    Comey sought to draw a distinction between surveillance -- which was authorized against a Trump adviser -- and spying during a cybersecurity conference in California on Thursday, echoing Democratic lawmakers who have accused Barr of going too far in his Senate testimony this week.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/comey-scoffs-at-barr-testimony-claims-surveillance-is-not-spying
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2019, 12:13:38 PM
    "Police officers are the best of us".

    Bossier City Police Officer arrested for filming himself having sex with an animal

    Thirty-eight-year-old Terry Yetman was arrested on December 19 and charged with 20 counts of sexual abuse of animals by performing sexual acts with an animal, and 20 counts of filming sexual acts with an animal, according to the Louisiana State Police.

    https://wgno.com/2018/12/20/bossier-city-police-officer-arrested-for-filming-himself-having-sex-with-an-animal/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2019, 12:18:31 PM
    BJU police officer charged with multiple sex crimes

    A Bob Jones University Police Department officer has been dismissed after being accused of repeatedly sexually assaulting a mentally impaired woman over a period of three years. Greenville County Sheriff’s Office investigators arrested Darren Thomas Wesley. 51, Tuesday on multiple criminal sexual conduct charges.

    Investigators began an investigation March 14 after receiving a report that a vulnerable adult had been sexually victimized by Wesley, a former officer with the BJU police. Deputies said that during the investigation, they determined Wesley had committed multiple criminal sexual offenses against the woman.

    An arrest warrant said Wesley told the woman that if she resisted the sexual assaults or told anyone about them, he would destroy her family, which "caused serious psychological harm to the victim."

    https://www.wyff4.com/article/former-bju-police-officer-charged-with-multiple-sex-crimes/27101765
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2019, 12:24:41 PM
    She couldn't distinguish between her tazer and her firearm so she shot the man and could also have hurt the other cop who was fighting him. These are the "highly trained professionals" who are "qualified" to handle firearms, unlike the citizens whose gun rights are being slowly eroded. Lack of training, lack or experience and in this case probably being a small female doesn't help.

    Video shows former Lawrence police officer shoot driver during May 29 traffic stop

    Police dash cam video released Monday shows a driver wrestle a Lawrence police officer to the ground and fight him before being shot in the back by another officer during a traffic stop last year.

    Brindley Blood, the officer who shot the man, is charged in Douglas County District Court with reckless aggravated battery. Blood has maintained the May 29 shooting was accidental and she meant to reach for her stun gun instead of her firearm.



    https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article228379669.html


    Another "highly trained professional" who is "qualified" to handle firearms, unlike the citizens whose gun rights are being slowly eroded. But according to the DA the shooting was "neither justified, nor criminal, but was excused". You know, the exact same standard that doesn't apply to citizens when they interact with police. As expected the shooter enjoyed a 5 week paid vacation and then retired. Shoot a person "by mistake", get paid vacation and then retire. Cop life.

    Cop mistook his gun for his Taser and shot a man in a holding cell, but that’s not a crime, DA rules

    A New Hope borough police officer who shot a man tussling with another cop in a holding cell in March thought he was deploying his Taser when he fired his handgun, the Bucks County district attorney found.

    The unnamed officer will not face any criminal charges because of his “honest but mistaken” belief he was deploying his Taser at the time he discharged his service weapon, District Attorney Matthew Weintraub said in a news release Friday.

    “After careful consideration, I have determined that (the officer’s) shooting of arrestee Brian Riling on March 3, 2019, was neither justified, nor criminal, but was excused,” Weintraub wrote in a letter to New Hope Police Chief Michael Cummings.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2019, 03:06:47 PM
    Tracking Phones, Google Is a Dragnet for the Police

    The tech giant records people’s locations worldwide. Now, investigators are using it to find suspects and witnesses near crimes, running the risk of snaring the innocent.

    When detectives in a Phoenix suburb arrested a warehouse worker in a murder investigation last December, they credited a new technique with breaking open the case after other leads went cold.

    The police told the suspect, Jorge Molina, they had data tracking his phone to the site where a man was shot nine months earlier. They had made the discovery after obtaining a search warrant that required Google to provide information on all devices it recorded near the killing, potentially capturing the whereabouts of anyone in the area.

    But after he spent nearly a week in jail, the case against Mr. Molina fell apart as investigators learned new information and released him. Last month, the police arrested another man: his mother’s ex-boyfriend, who had sometimes used Mr. Molina’s car.

    Long article but very interesting:
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/04/13/us/google-location-tracking-police.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 16, 2019, 06:54:11 AM
    Tracking Phones, Google Is a Dragnet for the Police

    The tech giant records people’s locations worldwide. Now, investigators are using it to find suspects and witnesses near crimes, running the risk of snaring the innocent.

    When detectives in a Phoenix suburb arrested a warehouse worker in a murder investigation last December, they credited a new technique with breaking open the case after other leads went cold.

    The police told the suspect, Jorge Molina, they had data tracking his phone to the site where a man was shot nine months earlier. They had made the discovery after obtaining a search warrant that required Google to provide information on all devices it recorded near the killing, potentially capturing the whereabouts of anyone in the area.

    But after he spent nearly a week in jail, the case against Mr. Molina fell apart as investigators learned new information and released him. Last month, the police arrested another man: his mother’s ex-boyfriend, who had sometimes used Mr. Molina’s car.

    Long article but very interesting:
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/04/13/us/google-location-tracking-police.html

    Rule No.1 When doing anything remotely Dodgy Do Not Take Your Modern Entrapment Device.
    Rule No.2 Have an old Nokia Type Anolgue Phone - You can Remove The Battery 😆
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 17, 2019, 08:31:54 PM
    Chicago top cop admits some officers ‘look the other way’ at police misconduct

    Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson on Friday made the case to keep his $260,044-a-year job even after the retirement of Mayor Rahm Emanuel — and acknowledged that some officers “look the other way” when it comes to reporting police misconduct.

    “Do I think there might be officers that look the other way? Yeah, I do. … There are a lot of reasons why cops might not report misconduct. If they see their partner engage in misconduct, they may look the other way,” he said.

    https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/eddie-johnson-makes-his-case-to-remain-as-superintendent-under-new-mayor
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2019, 12:50:19 PM
    Let's see if the killer will go to prison. Not holding my breath though. It is possible that they could overcharge him to trick the family and the public to a faint hope of justice, only for him to be found not guilty because of overcharging or a jury that is reluctant to sentence a cop.

    Officer who fatally shot Justine Damond charged with murder, turns himself in

    The Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot an Australian woman in July was charged with murder Tuesday after he turned himself in when a warrant was issued for his arrest.

    Officer Mohamed Noor turned himself in on Tuesday in connection to the 2017 death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. his attorney confirmed.

    The criminal complaint remained sealed by midday Tuesday, but according to the jail roster Noor was booked on a third-degree murder charge for perpetrating an eminently dangerous act while showing a "depraved mind." The second-degree manslaughter charge alleges he acted with "culpable negligence creating unreasonable risk."

    Damond was shot July 15, minutes after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her home. The 40-year-old life coach’s death drew international attention, cost the police chief her job and forced major revisions to the department’s policy on body cameras.

    Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was scheduled to discuss charges Tuesday afternoon.

    Noor, a 32-year-old Somali-American, has not talked publicly about the case and declined to be interviewed by state investigators.

    In a statement Tuesday, Damond's family praised the charges, calling them "one step toward justice."

    "No charges can bring our Justine back. However, justice demands accountability for those responsible for recklessly killing the fellow citizens they are sworn to protect, and today's actions reflect that," the statement said.

    A policeman who was with Noor at the time of the shooting, Matthew Harrity, told investigators that he was startled by a loud noise right before Damond approached the driver's side window of their police SUV. Harrity, who was driving, said Noor then fired his weapon from the passenger seat. Damond died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

    The officers did not turn on their body cameras until after the shooting, and there was no squad camera video of the incident.

    The lack of video was widely criticized, and Damond's family members were among the many people who called for changes in procedure, including how often officers are required to turn on their cameras.

    The shooting also prompted questions about the training of Noor, a two-year veteran and Somali-American whose arrival on the force had been celebrated by city leaders and Minnesota's large Somali community. Noor, 32, had trained in business and economics and worked in property management before becoming an officer.

    Then-Chief Janee Harteau defended Noor's training and said he was suited to be on the street, even as she criticized the shooting itself. But Harteau — who was on vacation when the shooting happened and didn't make her first public appearance until several days after the shooting — was forced out soon after by Mayor Betsy Hodges, who said she had lost confidence in the chief.

    Harteau's replacement, Medaria Arradondo, quickly announced a policy change requiring officers to turn on their body cameras in responding to any call or traffic stop.

    If convicted of third-degree murder, Noor could face a maximum of 25 years in prison, though the presumptive sentence is 12 ½ years. A judge could issue a sentence ranging from about 10 ½ to 15 years.

    The second-degree manslaughter charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, but the presumptive sentence is four years.

    Jail records show he’s being held on $500,000 bail.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/20/officer-who-fatally-shot-justine-damond-turns-himself-in-charges-pending.html

    As it has been mentioned previously, we are dealing with a criminal gang. The Mafia has the omerta, this criminal gang has the blue wall of silence. All who participated in this coverup or knew about it and didn't act should be rounded up and charged as accomplices to the killing of Justine Damond.

    Light shined on cops’ code of silence

    Testimony in the trial of a former Minneapolis police officer who shot and killed an unarmed woman after she called 911 to report a possible sexual assault near her home has shined a light on officers’ actions at the scene and raised questions about whether they were trying to protect one of their own.

    The incident commander turned her body camera off when talking to Mohamed Noor in the moments after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, while other officers told him not to say a word, according to prosecutors and court testimony. Many responding officers turned their body cameras on and off at will; one had his camera recording while headed to the scene and shut it off upon arrival.

    “These are extremely troublesome things,” said Phil Turner, a defense attorney and former federal prosecutor in Chicago who is not connected to the case. “They’re law enforcement officers and they are supposed to enforce the law equally, whether someone is a sworn law enforcement officer or not.”

    Prosecutors have told the court that about 20 police officers refused to talk to investigators and met with union officials to discuss withholding information.

    https://www.avpress.com/news/newsline/light-shined-on-cops-code-of-silence/article_2fc3c1aa-60c8-11e9-a8c4-fff1ee46e975.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 18, 2019, 02:02:56 PM
    US facial recognition will cover 97 percent of departing airline passengers within four years

    The Department of Homeland Security says it expects to use facial recognition technology on 97 percent of departing passengers within the next four years. The system, which involves photographing passengers before they board their flight, first started rolling out in 2017, and was operational in 15 US airports as of the end of 2018.

    The facial recognition system works by photographing passengers at their departure gate. It then cross-references this photograph against a library populated with facesimages from visa and passport applications, as well as those taken by border agents when foreigners enter the country.

    https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/18/18484581/us-airport-facial-recognition-departing-flights-biometric-exit
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 19, 2019, 09:46:17 AM
    https://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/2019/04/nj-state-police-trooper-arrested-on-child-porn-charge.html


    jesus fng Christ!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 19, 2019, 07:37:04 PM
    As it has been mentioned previously, we are dealing with a criminal gang. The Mafia has the omerta, this criminal gang has the blue wall of silence. All who participated in this coverup or knew about it and didn't act should be rounded up and charged as accomplices to the killing of Justine Damond.

    Light shined on cops’ code of silence

    Testimony in the trial of a former Minneapolis police officer who shot and killed an unarmed woman after she called 911 to report a possible sexual assault near her home has shined a light on officers’ actions at the scene and raised questions about whether they were trying to protect one of their own.

    The incident commander turned her body camera off when talking to Mohamed Noor in the moments after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, while other officers told him not to say a word, according to prosecutors and court testimony. Many responding officers turned their body cameras on and off at will; one had his camera recording while headed to the scene and shut it off upon arrival.

    “These are extremely troublesome things,” said Phil Turner, a defense attorney and former federal prosecutor in Chicago who is not connected to the case. “They’re law enforcement officers and they are supposed to enforce the law equally, whether someone is a sworn law enforcement officer or not.”

    Prosecutors have told the court that about 20 police officers refused to talk to investigators and met with union officials to discuss withholding information.

    https://www.avpress.com/news/newsline/light-shined-on-cops-code-of-silence/article_2fc3c1aa-60c8-11e9-a8c4-fff1ee46e975.html


    They should all be arrested & charged - then sacked for non cooperation
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 21, 2019, 01:13:35 PM
    An armed and violent thug attacking a man who was minding his own business in his own property. So this gang member threatened, tresspassed, assaulted, tazed, detained and kidnapped a man, filed a report with false and misleading information and he also turned off his car camera prior to the incident and in the video he places his hand over his body camera several times, possibly attempting to turn it off "malfunction". Even his own department found out about his crimes. What did he get for all the above? He was suspended for 80 hours and now he is "back on the force"...
    Of course, no criminal charges, as criminals like him are shielded with special privileges along with fellow gang members who assist in covering up the crimes so they only end up violating "department guidelines" so they get a slap on the wrist. Naturally, if the victim prevails in his lawsuit, the cop is unlikely to pay a single dime from his pocket and once again the taxpayers will be forced to pay for the crimes committed by terrorist groups.

    Chattanooga PD officer assaulted, arrested man he mistook for suspect

    A lawsuit alleges a Chattanooga Police officer mistook a man for a suspect, hitting him with a stun gun, pointing a firearm at him, and falsely arresting him.

    On Wednesday, we spoke with the man's attorney, Robin Flores, who says this is another case that shows CPD officers using excessive force.

    Flores says Officer Cody Thomas assaulted and falsely arrested his client, Nate Carter, but police reports tell a different story.

    Body camera footage shows a CPD officer hitting a man with a stun gun as he walks away.

    https://newschannel9.com/news/local/lawsuit-chattanooga-pd-officer-assaulted-arrested-man-he-mistook-for-suspect


    Chattanooga PD: Officer used force outside department's guidelines

     Weeks after a Chattanooga Police officer was sued for an alleged assault and false arrest, an internal affairs investigation is revealing new details on his conduct.

    According to the lawsuit, CPD officer Cody Thomas mistook a man for a suspect, hit him with a stun gun, pointed a firearm at him, and falsely arrested him.

    https://newschannel9.com/news/local/chattanooga-pd-officer-used-force-outside-departments-guidelines

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on April 21, 2019, 05:28:54 PM
    Holy SHIIIIIIT!

    What a horrible way to approach any situation.

    That pig should be unloading trucks in Secaucus, not protecting The People.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 22, 2019, 01:48:48 AM
    Holy SHIIIIIIT!

    What a horrible way to approach any situation.

    That pig should be unloading trucks in Secaucus, not protecting The People.

    They should do a deal with the Russians and send all
    The Criminal Scumbag Cops To Siberia to Break Rocks.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 22, 2019, 12:56:00 PM
    https://www.guy-cop-lied-in-arrest-paperwork-da-has-done-nothing-abou-20190422-ldx7agqvvfdsvecpfqctipyfcy-story.html?fbclid=IwAR3jawCRrlDKphJ5VdLvLqKasg6QZoYqNAYUq3AibPkPXMqu15Ge6EN_etY


     :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2019, 03:15:11 PM
    Once again, "former" cop in the headline but he was a cop, acting in his official capacity when he allegedly committed the crime.
    Press release from a notorious "anti-cop" website:

    Former Alabama Police Investigator Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Handcuffed Arrestee

    The Department of Justice announced today that a former Tallassee Police investigator, Brandon Smirnoff, 27, pleaded guilty to assaulting a handcuffed, 24-year-old man.

    According to the guilty plea, Smirnoff, who was on duty as an investigator with the Tallassee Police Department, used his patrol car to pursue the victim, J.M., who was on a four-wheeler. After the pursuit, J.M. stepped off his four-wheeler, laid face down on the ground, and allowed several Tallassee police officers to handcuff him. While J.M. was handcuffed and compliant, Smirnoff lifted him into the air and then slammed him to the ground. Smirnoff then repeated the assault. Moments later, before Smirnoff placed the victim into his patrol car, Smirnoff slammed the victim’s head into the side of the vehicle. For each assault, the victim was handcuffed, compliant, and did not pose a threat.    

    “Police officers who willfully use excessive force not only violate the Constitution, they erode public trust in law enforcement,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. “The Civil Rights Division is committed to protecting victims of these abuses and upholding the Constitution and laws that protect us all.”

    “It is especially important in a climate of distrust between law enforcement and the public, that officers act ethically and within the bounds of the law,” said U.S. Attorney Louis V. Franklin for the Middle District of Alabama. “This police officer’s brutal behavior was unacceptable and criminal. He violated this young man’s constitutional rights and the trust placed in law enforcement officers to faithfully, ethically, and morally enforce the law. You can be sure that anytime an officer steps over the line and into criminal behavior, as this one did, my office will hold that individual accountable.”

    FBI Special Agent in Charge James E. Jewell stated, "the FBI supports our state and local law enforcement partners but will not tolerate the intentional abuse of a citizen. The position of police officer should convey compassion as well as trust and we intend to hold that line."

    Smirnoff faces a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Montgomery Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Denise Simpson of the Middle District of Alabama and Trial Attorney Michael J. Songer of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-alabama-police-investigator-pleads-guilty-assaulting-handcuffed-arrestee
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 22, 2019, 04:29:28 PM
    Once again, "former" cop in the headline but he was a cop, acting in his official capacity when he allegedly committed the crime.
    Press release from a notorious "anti-cop" website:

    Former Alabama Police Investigator Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Handcuffed Arrestee

    The Department of Justice announced today that a former Tallassee Police investigator, Brandon Smirnoff, 27, pleaded guilty to assaulting a handcuffed, 24-year-old man.

    According to the guilty plea, Smirnoff, who was on duty as an investigator with the Tallassee Police Department, used his patrol car to pursue the victim, J.M., who was on a four-wheeler. After the pursuit, J.M. stepped off his four-wheeler, laid face down on the ground, and allowed several Tallassee police officers to handcuff him. While J.M. was handcuffed and compliant, Smirnoff lifted him into the air and then slammed him to the ground. Smirnoff then repeated the assault. Moments later, before Smirnoff placed the victim into his patrol car, Smirnoff slammed the victim’s head into the side of the vehicle. For each assault, the victim was handcuffed, compliant, and did not pose a threat.    

    “Police officers who willfully use excessive force not only violate the Constitution, they erode public trust in law enforcement,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. “The Civil Rights Division is committed to protecting victims of these abuses and upholding the Constitution and laws that protect us all.”

    “It is especially important in a climate of distrust between law enforcement and the public, that officers act ethically and within the bounds of the law,” said U.S. Attorney Louis V. Franklin for the Middle District of Alabama. “This police officer’s brutal behavior was unacceptable and criminal. He violated this young man’s constitutional rights and the trust placed in law enforcement officers to faithfully, ethically, and morally enforce the law. You can be sure that anytime an officer steps over the line and into criminal behavior, as this one did, my office will hold that individual accountable.”

    FBI Special Agent in Charge James E. Jewell stated, "the FBI supports our state and local law enforcement partners but will not tolerate the intentional abuse of a citizen. The position of police officer should convey compassion as well as trust and we intend to hold that line."

    Smirnoff faces a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Montgomery Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Denise Simpson of the Middle District of Alabama and Trial Attorney Michael J. Songer of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-alabama-police-investigator-pleads-guilty-assaulting-handcuffed-arrestee


    “It is especially important in a climate of distrust between law enforcement and the public, that officers act ethically and within the bounds of the law,” said U.S. Attorney Louis V. Franklin for the Middle District of Alabama. “This police officer’s brutal behavior was unacceptable and criminal. He violated this young man’s constitutional rights and the trust placed in law enforcement officers to faithfully, ethically, and morally enforce the law. You can be sure that anytime an officer steps over the line and into criminal behavior, as this one did, my office will hold that individual accountable.”

    Great - And About Time This Started Happening Much More Often With These Gang Members
    Hope He Gets The Full 10yrs & Max Fine - just as a non cop scumbag would get.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2019, 03:27:58 PM
    As it has been shown several times, we are dealing with criminal gangs comprised of violent career criminals.
    Each count of civil rights violation can be punished with up to 10 years in prison. Each count of false records can be punished with up to 20 years in years. In this case we are talking about multiple counts of the aforementioned charges. Let's see how many decades they will spend in prison, if they actually end there.

    Another press release from a notorious "cop-hating" website:

    Two Trenton Police Officers Charged with Civil Rights Violations, Obstruction of Justice

    TRENTON, N.J. – Two Trenton police officers have been charged with civil rights and obstruction of justice charges for allegedly assaulting a man they were arresting, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced today.

    One of the officers, who has since left the Trenton Police Department, is charged with additional civil rights and obstruction counts for allegedly assaulting a second defendant while in a holding cell at Trenton Police Headquarters.

    Trenton Police Officer Drew Inman, 25, of Hamilton, New Jersey, and former Trenton Police Officer Anthony Villanueva, 25, of Ewing, New Jersey, are charged in a six-count indictment that was returned by a federal grand jury on April 18, 2019, and unsealed today. Both defendants are charged with one count aiding and abetting one another to deprive a man of his civil rights. Villanueva is charged with two counts of obstruction, and Inman with one count of obstruction, in connection with that incident. Villanueva is also charged with depriving a second man of his civil rights in a separate incident, and with obstruction related to that second incident.

    “Police work is difficult and dangerous, but officers need to respect the civil rights of the people they are policing,” U.S. Attorney Carpenito said. “They cannot resort to excessive force in performing their duties. Incidents like these erode the public’s confidence in law enforcement, and make policing harder for everyone whose job it is to keep our communities safe.”

    “Civil Rights violations are of great concern, particularly when the allegations involve a member of law enforcement,” FBI Newark Special Agent in Charge Gregory W. Ehrie said. “The public has an absolute right to trust that law enforcement will protect those they serve and keep them safe. When that trust is violated, it makes it more difficult for our fellow police officers and federal agents to maintain the community's  confidence.”

    According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

    On April 9, 2017, a Trenton man involved in a routine traffic stop fled in his vehicle and then on foot and was pursued by Trenton police officers. The man was eventually surrounded by Trenton police officers and complied when he was ordered to put his hands in the air. While the man was complying with further police commands, Villanueva approached the man and punched him in the face and Inman tackled the man to the ground. Inman and Villanueva then punched the man numerous times, while he cried out in pain, and told officers, “stop hitting me in my face,” and “you’ve got my hands.”

    Inman and Villanueva returned to the police station to prepare reports in connection with the victim’s arrest. To justify their actions against the victim, Inman and Villanueva prepared and submitted false and fraudulent reports, in which they attempted to portray the victim as the aggressor and an ongoing threat.


    On Nov. 28, 2017, Villanueva, who had been assigned to work in the holding cell area of Trenton Police Headquarters, sprayed Oleoresin Capsicum (commonly referred to a “pepper spray”) on a prisoner who was confined in a holding cell. Villanueva later completed an incident report that contained numerous false statements designed to conceal his unlawful conduct and improper treatment of the prisoner.

    The violation of civil rights counts each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. The false records counts each carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. The maximum fine for each of the charges is $250,000.

    The charges and accusations contained in the indictment are merely accusations, and Inman and Villanueva are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

    U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Gregory W. Ehrie in Newark, with the investigation leading to today’s indictment.   

    The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Molly Lorber, Joseph Gribko and Ray Mateo of the U.S. Attorney=s Office Criminal Division in Trenton in the criminal case.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-nj/pr/two-trenton-police-officers-charged-civil-rights-violations-obstruction-justice
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2019, 03:47:46 PM
    A person cannot be safe in his own home even if he has done nothing wrong. Roving gangs of criminals stalk the neighborhoods to invade homes and will even shoot through doors, as it happened here. As expected, the cops got off very lightly with ZERO days in prison (originally just 12 months but all of it was suspended) and 100 hours of community service. Somehow I doubt that if this man had shot the cops through the door he would've gotten off as lightly - that is if he was still alive and not end up dead from 100+ bullets.

    New bodycam footage of Link Road officer-involved shooting released

    New video footage released following the Link Road incident where two Lynchburg officer's shot a man in the leg.

    Below is the footage released by the special prosecutor:



    Two Lynchburg Police officers were charged in that officer-involved shooting.

    Walker Sigler was shot in the leg after police said they were investigating an open door at his home on Link Road around 1:15 a.m. Saturday, February 17, 2018.

    Officers with the Lynchburg Police Department said they approached the home and announced that they were there to investigate suspicious activity. One of the officers attorney's, Chuck Felmlee, said the officers then heard yelling and heavy foot steps as though someone was running toward them. They say it was Sigler who then slammed the door which made a loud clanging sound they believed to be a gun shot at the time. The officers fired four shots. One bullet hit Sigler and shattered his leg.

    Officers Edward Ferron, 41, and Savannah Simmons, 22, were both indicted on three felony counts of reckless handling of a firearm resulting in serious bodily injury, unlawful wounding and unlawful shooting at an occupied domicile. At their trial on Monday, March 25 they both pleaded no contest to amended charges of reckless handling of a firearm. They were both found guilty of a misdemeanor reckless handling of a firearm charge. They were both sentenced to 12 months in jail each, with all time suspended, plus 100 hours of community service that must be completed by March 1, 2020.

    https://wset.com/news/local/bodycam-footage-of-link-road-shooting-released
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2019, 04:35:55 PM
    Federal appeals court says tire-chalking by parking enforcement officers is unconstitutional

    The age-old parking enforcement practice of tire-chalking is unconstitutional, a federal appeals court ruled Monday, saying it violated the Fourth Amendment’s bar on unreasonable searches.

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, in a first-of-its-kind decision, ruled that marking a car’s tires to gather information is a form of trespass requiring a warrant, similar to police attaching a GPS to a vehicle to track a suspected drug dealer.

    Parking attendants across the country have been chalking tires with big white lines for decades in zones without meters to enforce of time limits and issue tickets. It’s a substantial source of revenue for many cities.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/federal-appeals-court-says-tire-chalking-by-parking-enforcement-officers-is-unconstitutional/2019/04/22
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2019, 05:40:15 PM
    And another one from that vile cop-hating website... There seems to be an epidemic of violent cops.. Once again, the headline says "former" but he was a cop during the period the crimes occurred.

    Former Grundy County, Tennessee, Sheriff’s Deputy Charged with Civil Rights Offense and Making False Statements

    Gregory Higgins, 42, was indicted today for using excessive force against an arrestee while Higgins was a deputy with the Grundy County, Tennessee, Sheriff’s Office, announced Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee J. Douglas Overbey, and FBI Knoxville Special Agent in Charge Troy A. Sowers.

    Higgins is charged with one count of deprivation of rights under color of law and one count of making false statements to the FBI. The indictment alleges that Higgins used unreasonable force when he assaulted handcuffed arrestee A.L., resulting in bodily injury to A.L., and that Higgins then made false statements to the FBI about the assault.

    The first count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years of imprisonment while the second count carries a maximum penalty of five years. An indictment is merely an accusation and the defendant is presumed innocent unless proven guilty.

    This case was investigated by the Knoxville Division of the FBI, and is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Kathryn E. Gilbert of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division and Assistant United States Attorney Perry H. Piper.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-grundy-county-tennessee-sheriff-s-deputy-charged-civil-rights-offense-and-making-false

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 25, 2019, 10:44:49 AM
    https://www.wcvb.com/article/former-police-officer-to-be-sentenced-in-mans-kidnapping-killing/27270085?utm_campaign=trueAnthem%3A+Trending+Content&utm_content=5cc1e1d1429533000152e7aa&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=facebook
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2019, 12:32:40 PM
    He was released without bail but the people who were framed were sent to prison.

    Cop busted lying about drug deals: prosecutors

    A crooked cop helped put two innocent people behind bars when he lied about observing the men dealing drugs — and video evidence proves that the transactions never took place, Manhattan prosecutors said.

    Detective Joseph Franco, 46, was charged with 16 counts of perjury on Wednesday for falsely claiming that he watched drug deals go down in three cases between 2017 and 2018, the Manhattan District Attorney’s office said.

    “This detective lied to judges, prosecutors, and his own colleagues in the NYPD about crimes that never happened, and three New Yorkers wrongfully lost their liberty as a result,” said District Attorney Cy Vance Jr.

    Franco pleaded not guilty to 16 counts of perjury for falsely arresting one woman and two men.

    https://nypost.com/2019/04/24/cop-busted-lying-about-drug-deals-prosecutors/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 25, 2019, 01:18:14 PM
    https://nypost.com/video/chilling-footage-captures-deputy-violently-assaulting-handcuffed-man/?utm_medium=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook&fbclid=IwAR30Waf4mXkXaIpIdn7bJ7ZX16XjBHzwKCXBbVolFd-v_5zCMA9vIxr8aOI

    Insane. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2019, 04:09:36 PM
    And that's after all the immunities and special privileges they have, along with laws attempting to conceal their records. Imagine if they didn't have these and they were also investigated, arrested and prosecuted aggressively, reported by their partners in crime and if they were sentenced like ordinary citizens.

    A USA TODAY Network investigation uncovered records of thousands of police officers investigated for serious misconduct.

    Every year, tens of thousands of police officers are investigated for serious misconduct — assaulting citizens, driving drunk, planting evidence and lying among other misdeeds.

    The vast majority get little notice. And there is no public database of disciplined police officers.

    To create the first, journalists at USA TODAY and its affiliated newspapers across the country – and media partners including the Invisible Institute in Chicago – gathered records from thousands of state agencies, prosecutors and local police departments.

    Starting with lists of officers who lost their law enforcement certification in 44 states, we are making those records available here.

    Search the list of more than 30,000 police officers banned by 44 states:

    https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2019/04/24/biggest-collection-police-accountability-records-ever-assembled/2299127002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2019, 04:16:55 PM
    https://nypost.com/video/chilling-footage-captures-deputy-violently-assaulting-handcuffed-man/?utm_medium=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook&fbclid=IwAR30Waf4mXkXaIpIdn7bJ7ZX16XjBHzwKCXBbVolFd-v_5zCMA9vIxr8aOI

    Insane.  

    What do you expect from the Coward County Sheriff's office, the same one whose "officers" cowered while school kids were being murdered? This scumbag wasn't even given the usual paid vacation and he's still "on duty", despite lying and closing the door before violently attacking a man handcuffed to a bed.

    The video:

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2019, 05:12:13 PM
    As it has been mentioned previously, we are dealing with a criminal gang. The Mafia has the omerta, this criminal gang has the blue wall of silence. All who participated in this coverup or knew about it and didn't act should be rounded up and charged as accomplices to the killing of Justine Damond.

    Light shined on cops’ code of silence

    Testimony in the trial of a former Minneapolis police officer who shot and killed an unarmed woman after she called 911 to report a possible sexual assault near her home has shined a light on officers’ actions at the scene and raised questions about whether they were trying to protect one of their own.

    The incident commander turned her body camera off when talking to Mohamed Noor in the moments after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, while other officers told him not to say a word, according to prosecutors and court testimony. Many responding officers turned their body cameras on and off at will; one had his camera recording while headed to the scene and shut it off upon arrival.

    “These are extremely troublesome things,” said Phil Turner, a defense attorney and former federal prosecutor in Chicago who is not connected to the case. “They’re law enforcement officers and they are supposed to enforce the law equally, whether someone is a sworn law enforcement officer or not.”

    Prosecutors have told the court that about 20 police officers refused to talk to investigators and met with union officials to discuss withholding information.

    https://www.avpress.com/news/newsline/light-shined-on-cops-code-of-silence/article_2fc3c1aa-60c8-11e9-a8c4-fff1ee46e975.html

    The excuses this cop uses to justify killing an innocent woman... Btw, this phrase in bold sounds familiar, it has probably been uttered several times to justify wounding or killing innocent people.

    Ex-cop: Saw woman at window, fired ‘to stop threat’

    A former Minneapolis police officer on trial in the fatal shooting of an unarmed woman testified Thursday that he saw fear in his partner’s eyes, then saw a woman in a pink shirt with blond hair appear at the partner’s window and raise her right arm before he fired his gun “to stop the threat.”

    Mohamed Noor refused to talk to investigators after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond , a dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia, making his testimony his first public statements since her death.

    “Action is better than reaction,” Noor said. “If you’re reacting, that means it’s too late ... to protect yourself. ... You die.”

    https://www.apnews.com/cca7e99bc92c431391abfd0d893ef57a
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2019, 06:02:30 PM

    First time in 30 years that a cop in Florida is sentenced for killing a citizen.

    Think about that.

    30 years.

    Unfortunately he is not facing execution but at least he may get life in prison.

    Notice how most news outlets emphasize the "ex-police officer" or "fired police officer", but yet he was an on-duty cop when he murdered this innocent man.

    Ex-police Officer Nouman Raja convicted in fatal shooting of black motorist Corey Jones

    A fired Florida police officer was convicted Thursday of manslaughter and attempted murder in the fatal shooting of a stranded black motorist in 2015.

    Nouman Raja, 41, faces life in prison for fatally shooting musician Corey Jones, 31, who was waiting for help for his broken down SUV on the side of a South Florida highway when he was killed by Raja.

    Prosecutors say an audio recording of the shooting indicate Raja — who was on-duty but in plainclothes and driving an unmarked white van — had never identified himself.

    They said Jones, who was returning home from a performance with drums valued at $10,000 in the back of his SUV, pulled his legally-owned handgun because he feared he was being robbed.

    Raja shot him repeatedly. A medical examiner testified that Jones was killed by a shot through his heart. The musician, who also worked as a housing inspector, was also shot once in each arm.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/florida-police-officer-nouman-raja-who-fatally-shot-stranded-black-n980436


    25 years is still not enough. And to repeat a comment from the previous post, first time in 30 years that a cop in Florida is sentenced for killing a citizen.

    Former Palm Beach Gardens officer sentenced to 25 years for shooting of Corey Jones

    A former Florida police officer was ordered Thursday to spend 25 years in prison for the fatal on-duty shooting of a black musician whose SUV had broken down after a late-night concert.

    Former Palm Beach Gardens officer Nouman Raja was sentenced by Circuit Judge Joseph Marx as family and friends of the 31-year-old victim, Corey Jones, looked on in a courtroom jammed with supporters on both sides. The 41-year-old defendant, shackled and clad in a blue jumpsuit, was the first Florida officer in nearly 30 years to be convicted and sentenced for an on-duty killing — and one of a few nationwide.

    The last Florida officer sentenced for an on-duty killing was Miami’s William Lozano in 1989. The Hispanic officer fatally shot a black motorcyclist who he said tried to hit him. A passenger died when the motorcycle crashed, setting off three days of rioting.

    Lozano was convicted of two manslaughter counts in a Miami trial and sentenced to seven years, but he never served it. State appellate court justices dismissed the verdict, saying the case should have been moved from Miami because of racial tensions. Lozano was acquitted at a 1993 retrial.

    https://wsvn.com/news/local/former-palm-beach-gardens-officer-sentenced-to-25-years-for-shooting-of-corey-jones/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2019, 09:47:50 AM
    NSA Recommends Dropping Phone-Surveillance Program

    The National Security Agency has recommended that the White House abandon a surveillance program that collects information about U.S. phone calls and text messages, saying the logistical and legal burdens of keeping it outweigh its intelligence benefits, according to people familiar with the matter. The program, created after 9/11, has encountered compliance challenges and questions about its efficacy in recent years.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/nsa-recommends-dropping-phone-surveillance-program-11556138247

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2019, 02:19:57 PM
    The "ex-police officers" were cops, in uniform, performing their "official duties" when they committed these crimes.

    Ex-Detroit Police officers accused of misconduct in new lawsuits

    Represented by attorney Todd Weglarz, Murriel alleges that Steele broke her arm during an incident in 2018.

    Murriel was dropping her infant son off at his father's house when an altercation ensued between her and the girlfriend of the father of her child. Murriel had a personal protection order against her, but it is alleged that the girlfriend attempted to run Murriel over with a vehicle.

    The lawsuit says Murriel defended herself by discharging her licensed firearm in the direction of the girlfriend's car, and Detroit police responded. Murriel told officers she had a concealed weapons permit and was acting in defense of herself.

    Among other officers responding to the scene, the lawsuit said Steele decided to arrest Murriel "suddenly and physically." She was holding her son in her arms and was told to put her hands behind her back.

    The lawsuit alleges Steele told another officer to hold Murriel's arms, while another officer took the child away. Steele then allegedly pushed Murriel up against the vehicle, grabbed her arms and forced her left arm to "bend backward, in an abnormal manner, and against the natural range of motion allowed by the elbow joint."

    Police body camera video of the incident was shown at the news conference.

    Weglarz said Murriel was taken to the hospital before being taken to jail, and an exam showed that her arm was broken. He said Murriel was given a sling, and stayed in jail for four days until she was released with no charges.

    Fieger added that Murriel continues to have difficulty with her arm, and has had surgery to repair the damage.

    Both lawsuits mention that Steele faced numerous felony charges after reportedly assaulting his ex-girlfriend in March 2008. One of the suits describes the incident, stating Steele hit her with a baseball bat, choked her, put a loaded gun inside of her mouth, pointed the gun to her head, threatened to kill her and fired three shots near the side of her head.  Steele entered a no-contest plea.

    https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/detroit/2019/04/26/detroit-police-racism-snapchat/3586812002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2019, 02:22:14 PM
    An innocent woman, wife and mother dead because these scumbags wanted to play heroes.

    Chicago, Two CPD Officers To Pay $21 Million Settlement After Woman Killed As Result Of High Speed Chase

     The City of Chicago and two police officers will pay more than $21 million to the family of a woman killed during a high speed chase in Englewood.

    Maria Carrion Adame, 37, who died in the crash, left behind a husband and five children.

    The family was on the way to an Our Lady of Guadalupe pilgrimage in December 2015 when its minivan was hit by a stolen car during a police chase.

    At the civil trial, a jury found the officers violated a number of department policies, including driving with no lights and sirens in an unmarked car and ignoring a sergeant’s orders to stop the pursuit.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/04/24/chicago-two-cpd-officers-to-pay-21-million-settlement-after-woman-killed-as-result-of-high-speed-chase/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 28, 2019, 02:29:54 PM
    The official statement by the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation:

    "As they tried to approach the suspect, there was an incident that happened. An officer involved shooting took place,"

    3 children shot as Oklahoma police open fire on alleged robbery suspect

    Three children aged 1, 4 and 5 were injured as police in Oklahoma opened fire on a robbery suspect Friday evening. The suspect was also shot in the incident.

    William Devaughn Smith, 21, was located in Hugo, near the Texas-Oklahoma border, where police attempted to take the man into custody, according to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation. Smith is suspected of robbing a Pizza Hut in Hugo on April 11.

    While attempting to "make contact" with Smith, police officers opened fire and shot him, as well as three children, the OSBI said in a statement. Smith and four children were in a vehicle when the detectives from the Hugo Police Department opened fire, Brook Arbeitman, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, told The Associated Press.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/children-shot-oklahoma-police-open-fire-alleged-robbery/story
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 28, 2019, 02:53:52 PM
    The official statement by the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation:

    "As they tried to approach the suspect, there was an incident that happened. An officer involved shooting took place,"

    3 children shot as Oklahoma police open fire on alleged robbery suspect

    Three children aged 1, 4 and 5 were injured as police in Oklahoma opened fire on a robbery suspect Friday evening. The suspect was also shot in the incident.

    William Devaughn Smith, 21, was located in Hugo, near the Texas-Oklahoma border, where police attempted to take the man into custody, according to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation. Smith is suspected of robbing a Pizza Hut in Hugo on April 11.

    While attempting to "make contact" with Smith, police officers opened fire and shot him, as well as three children, the OSBI said in a statement. Smith and four children were in a vehicle when the detectives from the Hugo Police Department opened fire, Brook Arbeitman, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, told The Associated Press.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/children-shot-oklahoma-police-open-fire-alleged-robbery/story

    FFS
    3 Kids Shot !! Ages 1, 4, & 5 WTF

    Is there anyone Daft Enough To Defend these Twats & There Gun Happy Behaviour.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 30, 2019, 04:07:08 PM
    The excuses this cop uses to justify killing an innocent woman... Btw, this phrase in bold sounds familiar, it has probably been uttered several times to justify wounding or killing innocent people.

    Ex-cop: Saw woman at window, fired ‘to stop threat’

    A former Minneapolis police officer on trial in the fatal shooting of an unarmed woman testified Thursday that he saw fear in his partner’s eyes, then saw a woman in a pink shirt with blond hair appear at the partner’s window and raise her right arm before he fired his gun “to stop the threat.”

    Mohamed Noor refused to talk to investigators after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond , a dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia, making his testimony his first public statements since her death.

    “Action is better than reaction,” Noor said. “If you’re reacting, that means it’s too late ... to protect yourself. ... You die.”

    https://www.apnews.com/cca7e99bc92c431391abfd0d893ef57a

    GUILTY.

    Now how about they charge his accomplices (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg9201301#msg9201301)?

    (https://cbsminnesota.files.wordpress.com/2019/03/mohamed-noor-and-justine-ruszczyk-damond.jpg)

    Former Minneapolis police officer found guilty in 2017 death of unarmed woman shot after calling 911

    Former Minneapolis Police Officer Mohamed Noor was found guilty by a jury on Tuesday in the 2017 death of Justine Damond, an unarmed woman who was fatally shot shortly after she called 911 to report a possible rape.

    The decision from the jury, which received the case on Monday, followed three weeks of testimony in the trial against Noor.

    The former officer was found guilty of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. However, the jury found him not guilty of second-degree murder. Noor was taken straight from the courtroom into the custody of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Dept. His sentencing was scheduled for June 7.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/former-minneapolis-police-officer-found-guilty-in-2017-death-of-unarmed-woman-shot-after-calling-911
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 01, 2019, 10:58:41 AM
    New Documents Reveal DHS Asserting Broad, Unconstitutional Authority to Search Travelers’ Phones and Laptops

    The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the ACLU today asked a federal court to rule without trial that the Department of Homeland Security violates the First and Fourth Amendments by searching travelers’ smartphones and laptops at airports and other U.S. ports of entry without a warrant.

    The number of electronic device searches at the border has increased dramatically in the last few years. Last year, CBP conducted more than 33,000 border device searches, almost four times the number from just three years prior.

    The request for summary judgment comes after the groups obtained documents and deposition testimony revealing that U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement authorize border officials to search travelers’ phones and laptops for general law enforcement purposes, and consider requests from other government agencies when deciding whether to conduct such warrantless searches.

    “This new evidence reveals that government agencies are using the pretext of the border to make an end run around the First and Fourth Amendments,” said Esha Bhandari, staff attorney with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “The border is not a lawless place, ICE and CBP are not exempt from the Constitution, and the information on our electronic devices is not devoid of Fourth Amendment protections. We’re asking the court to stop these unlawful searches and require the government to get a warrant.”

    The government documents and testimony, portions of which were publicly filed in court today, reveal CBP and ICE are asserting broad and unconstitutional authority to search and seize travelers’ devices. The evidence includes ICE and CBP policies and practices that authorize border officers to conduct warrantless and suspicionless device searches for purposes beyond the enforcement of immigration and customs laws. Officials can search devices for general law enforcement purposes, such as enforcing bankruptcy, environmental, and consumer protection laws, and for intelligence gathering or to advance pre-existing investigations. Officers also consider requests from other government agencies to search devices. In addition, the agencies assert the authority to search electronic devices when the subject of interest is someone other than the traveler—such as when the traveler is a journalist or scholar with foreign sources who are of interest to the U.S. government, or even when the traveler is the business partner of someone under investigation. Both agencies further allow officers to retain information from travelers’ electronic devices and share it with other government entities, including state, local, and foreign law enforcement agencies.

    https://www.eff.org/press/releases/new-documents-reveal-dhs-asserting-broad-unconstitutional-authority-search-travelers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2019, 02:34:34 PM
    They should have gotten the money from the pockets and the pensions of the murderer and his accomplices (http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=329944.msg9201301#msg9201301).

    Justine Damond's family agrees to $20 million settlement with Minneapolis over police shooting death

    The city of Minneapolis agreed to a $20 million settlement with the family of a woman shot dead by a police officer who was convicted of murder, lawmakers announced on Friday.

    The settlement came just three days after jurors convicted the former officer, Mohamed Noor, of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the July 15, 2017, slaying of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, a dual citizen of the United States and Australia.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/justine-damond-s-family-agrees-20-million-settlement-minneapolis-over-n1001716
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 07, 2019, 10:57:00 AM
    The former director of the FBI... ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Comey scoffs at Barr testimony, claims ‘surveillance’ is not ‘spying’

    Former FBI Director James Comey joined the chorus of Democratic critics complaining about Attorney General Bill Barr’s testimony this week that “spying did occur” against the 2016 Trump campaign, claiming he has no idea what the Justice Department leader is talking about -- and saying he “never thought of” electronic surveillance as “spying.”

    Comey sought to draw a distinction between surveillance -- which was authorized against a Trump adviser -- and spying during a cybersecurity conference in California on Thursday, echoing Democratic lawmakers who have accused Barr of going too far in his Senate testimony this week.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/comey-scoffs-at-barr-testimony-claims-surveillance-is-not-spying

    Split with Barr? FBI Director Wray says surveillance not the same as ‘spying’

    FBI Director Christopher Wray, testifying to Congress Tuesday, said that he would not describe the bureau's traditional surveillance as “spying” -- indicating a possible split with Attorney General William Barr on his controversial use of the term to describe intelligence-gathering during the Russia probe.

    “That’s not the term I would use,” Wray told lawmakers on the Senate Appropriations Committee when asked if FBI agents engage in "spying" when they follow FBI policies and procedures. “Lots of people have different colloquial phrases. I believe that the FBI is engaged in investigative activity, and part of investigative activity includes surveillance activity of different shapes and sizes, and to me the key question is making sure that it's done by the book, consistent with our lawful authorities.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/split-with-barr-fbi-director-wray-says-surveillance-not-the-same-as-spying
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 08, 2019, 03:48:40 PM
    "Nobody but us".

    Stolen NSA hacking tools were used in the wild 14 months before Shadow Brokers leak

    One of the most significant events in computer security happened in April 2017, when a still-unidentified group calling itself the Shadow Brokers published a trove of the National Security Agency’s most coveted hacking tools. The leak and the subsequent repurposing of the exploits in the WannaCry and NotPetya worms that shut down computers worldwide made the theft arguably one of the NSA’s biggest operational mistakes ever.

    On Monday, security firm Symantec reported that two of those advanced hacking tools were used against a host of targets starting in March 2016, fourteen months prior to the Shadow Brokers leak. An advanced persistent threat hacking group that Symantec has been tracking since 2010 somehow got access to a variant of the NSA-developed "DoublePulsar" backdoor and one of the Windows exploits the NSA used to remotely install it on targeted computers.

    The revelation that the powerful NSA tools were being repurposed much earlier than previously thought is sure to touch off a new round of criticism about the agency’s inability to secure its arsenal.

    “This definitely should bring additional criticism of the ability to protect their tools,” Jake Williams, a former NSA hacker who is now a cofounder of Rendition Infosec, told Ars. “If they didn't lose the tools from a direct compromise, then the exploits were intercepted in transit or they were independently discovered. All of this completely kills the NOBUS argument.”

    “NOBUS” is shorthand for nobody but us, a mantra NSA officials use to justify their practice of privately stockpiling certain exploits rather than reporting the underlying vulnerabilities so they can be fixed.

    https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2019/05/stolen-nsa-hacking-tools-were-used-in-the-wild-14-months-before-shadow-brokers-leak/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 08, 2019, 05:10:12 PM
    This is insane. The cop should be made an example of and get several years in prison for this BS.

    Florida man arrested for refusing to remove "I Eat Ass" sticker from his pickup truck

    A man has been arrested on suspicion of obscenity after refusing to remove a bumper sticker from his vehicle reading “I eat ass.”

    Dillon Shane Webb, 23, of Lake City, Florida, has been charged with misdemeanor counts of possession of obscene material and resisting arrest without violence following an incident on Highway 90 on May 5.

    The Columbia County Sheriff’s Office said a deputy spotted the sticker on the rear window of a brown Chevrolet truck traveling west on the highway at around 5:50 p.m.

    The deputy believed that the sticker violated the state’s Statute 847.011 which prohibits the possession of obscene or lewd material, including drawings, pictures, or any other written or printed matter.

    The deputy also asked Webb how a parent of a small child would explain the meaning of the graphic sticker if they saw it, to which Webb replied it would be “up to the parent.”

    Webb was initially cited with obscenity and handed a notice to appear in court by the deputy.  After being asked to remove one of the letters from the sticker to make it less offensive, Webb refused citing his First Amendment rights, according to the report. He was then also charged with resisting arrest.

    https://www.newsweek.com/florida-man-obscenity-remove-bumper-sticker-1418881
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 14, 2019, 02:02:56 PM
    This is insane. The cop should be made an example of and get several years in prison for this BS.

    Florida man arrested for refusing to remove "I Eat Ass" sticker from his pickup truck

    A man has been arrested on suspicion of obscenity after refusing to remove a bumper sticker from his vehicle reading “I eat ass.”

    Dillon Shane Webb, 23, of Lake City, Florida, has been charged with misdemeanor counts of possession of obscene material and resisting arrest without violence following an incident on Highway 90 on May 5.

    The Columbia County Sheriff’s Office said a deputy spotted the sticker on the rear window of a brown Chevrolet truck traveling west on the highway at around 5:50 p.m.

    The deputy believed that the sticker violated the state’s Statute 847.011 which prohibits the possession of obscene or lewd material, including drawings, pictures, or any other written or printed matter.

    The deputy also asked Webb how a parent of a small child would explain the meaning of the graphic sticker if they saw it, to which Webb replied it would be “up to the parent.”

    Webb was initially cited with obscenity and handed a notice to appear in court by the deputy.  After being asked to remove one of the letters from the sticker to make it less offensive, Webb refused citing his First Amendment rights, according to the report. He was then also charged with resisting arrest.

    https://www.newsweek.com/florida-man-obscenity-remove-bumper-sticker-1418881

    Here lies the problem with all these BS "arrests" that cops like to perform when they blatantly violate the rights of the people and the Constitution. Aside from being assaulted, kidnapped, deprived of his liberty and subjected to public ridicule, he also has expenses for this travesty. Instead of the cops paying from their pockets and going to prison, this man was jailed and has to foot the bill for now, despite the bogus charges being dropped.

    Florida man who had charges dismissed for vulgar sticker on truck asking public for help with legal costs

    A Florida man who had charges against him dropped over a vulgar sticker that read “I eat ass” on his truck is now asking the public to help cover his legal costs.

    The GoFundMe account set up on May 10 in the name of Dillon Shane Webb, 23, had a goal of $15,000. As of Tuesday evening, $284 had been raised.

    “It is all over the news and we would like to have this get some more traction as there to help him pay for his cost of having to pay for a 2500$ bond, over 200$ for having his truck towed, time from missed work and to pay for a lawyer to represent him against this Sheriff for standing up for his rights as well as yours,” the page stated.

    The State’s Attorney’s Office in Columbia County last week filed court documents saying it wouldn’t pursue legal action against Webb.

    The Lake City resident was arrested and charged on May 5 with misdemeanor counts of violating Florida’s obscenity law and resisting a police officer without violence when he refused to remove the sticker from his truck. He initially was cited for obscenity with a notice to appear in court and was told to change the derogatory part of the sticker. When he refused, he was taken to jail.

    He told The Associated Press he planned to fight the charges based on his First Amendment right to free speech.

    “I'm tired of police forces thinking they are above the Constitution, the Bill of Rights,” Webb said following his arrest. “He said he could see why the sticker would be seen as vulgar by some but the law doesn’t really define what that is.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-man-vulgar-sticker-truck-charges-dismissed-gofundme
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2019, 03:03:09 PM
    More fake news about "correctional officers" from anti cop websites. Still, these sentence are a joke and should have been years, not months.

    Former Louisiana Corrections Officers Sentenced for Roles in a Conspiracy to Cover up Abuse of Inmates

    Two former corrections officers at the Richwood Correctional Center were sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Monroe, Louisiana, for their roles in a conspiracy to cover up the abuse of inmates by officers. The defendants -- Demario Shaffer, 34, of Delhi, Louisiana, and David Parker, 28, of Tallulah, Louisiana, previously pleaded guilty to conspiring to falsify documents with the intent to obstruct and influence the investigation of a matter within federal jurisdiction. According to the defendants’ plea agreements and admissions in court, Shaffer, Parker, and other officers sprayed a chemical agent directly in the faces and eyes of five inmates while the inmates were handcuffed, compliant, kneeling on the floor, and not posing a physical threat to anyone. Following that abuse, the officers conspired to hide their conduct by submitting false reports.

    Shaffer, who was a sergeant at the time, was sentenced to serve 15 months in prison, and Parker, a nonsupervisory officer, was sentenced to serve 21 months. Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband for the Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana David C. Joseph made the announcement.

    “Conspiring to cover up physical assault against an inmate is in blatant violation of federal law and the Department of Justice will hold violators accountable,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Civil Rights Division. “The Civil Rights Division will continue to enforce the laws that prohibit this type of misconduct.”

    “Abuse of prisoners is illegal and tarnishes the reputation of those correctional officers who work hard every day to perform their duties with distinction and professionalism,” U.S. Attorney David C. Joseph stated. “To maintain the fairness and integrity of the American justice system, my office will hold accountable anyone who violates the civil rights of inmates or conspires to cover up the abuse of inmates under their custody.”

    Two other officers, Roderick Douglas and Christopher Loring have also pleaded guilty and are scheduled for sentencing by U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty on June 5 and July 3.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Mudrick of the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Western District of Louisiana, and Trial Attorney Anita Channapati of the Civil Rights Division, Criminal Section, prosecuted the case. The Monroe Division of the FBI investigated the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-louisiana-corrections-officers-sentenced-roles-conspiracy-cover-abuse-inmates
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 15, 2019, 03:09:41 PM
    Cops will lie to get their way but, unlike citizens, they face no consequences. This man was arrested and jailed for refusing to provide his name and yet he was never charged with a crime. At least he's lucky he wasn't killed by the criminal gang.

    City of Bakersfield settles lawsuit with ACLU over allegedly unlawful traffic stop

    The city of Bakersfield has agreed to pay $60,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union Foundations of Southern and Northern California on behalf of a man who was arrested in 2017 after he refused to answer questions from the Bakersfield Police Department during a traffic stop.

    The plaintiff in the lawsuit, Bakersfield resident Robert Mitchell, who is black, was the passenger in a vehicle occupied by three other black men when BPD pulled the vehicle over in March 2017. The lawsuit says the police used the pretext that air fresheners were hanging from the vehicle's rear-view mirror, the tires were bald and the car had come to a rest in the turn lane with its wheels touching the dividing line to initiate the traffic stop.

    https://www.bakersfield.com/news/city-of-bakersfield-settles-lawsuit-with-aclu-over-allegedly-unlawful/article_3bee74d2-7047-11e9-91af-47e6c02825f8.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2019, 01:31:32 PM
    A man can't be safe from the gangs even in his front yard. Too bad he wasn't armed so he could defend himself against the violent attackers.

    Houston man grabbed by deputy who mistakes him for fugitive

    A Houston man wants answers after constable deputies came on his property believing he was someone else who had warrants for his arrest.

    The incident happened last week. Clarence Evans shared to his Facebook page video of the incident, which has more than 20,000 shares.

    In the video, a Harris County Precinct 4 constable deputy can be seen holding Evans' arm and telling him there are warrants for his arrest.

    "He don't know my name, and he's telling me I have a warrant," Evans is heard telling the person recording the incident.

    "He has a warrant," the constable deputy said. "From Louisiana."

    During the five-minute video, law enforcement asks Evans for identification, but he doesn't comply.

    https://abc13.com/man-grabbed-by-deputy-who-mistakes-him-for-fugitive/5298552/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2019, 03:46:54 PM
    Once again, "former" cop in the headline but he was a cop, acting in his official capacity when he allegedly committed the crime.
    Press release from a notorious "anti-cop" website:

    Former Alabama Police Investigator Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Handcuffed Arrestee

    The Department of Justice announced today that a former Tallassee Police investigator, Brandon Smirnoff, 27, pleaded guilty to assaulting a handcuffed, 24-year-old man.

    According to the guilty plea, Smirnoff, who was on duty as an investigator with the Tallassee Police Department, used his patrol car to pursue the victim, J.M., who was on a four-wheeler. After the pursuit, J.M. stepped off his four-wheeler, laid face down on the ground, and allowed several Tallassee police officers to handcuff him. While J.M. was handcuffed and compliant, Smirnoff lifted him into the air and then slammed him to the ground. Smirnoff then repeated the assault. Moments later, before Smirnoff placed the victim into his patrol car, Smirnoff slammed the victim’s head into the side of the vehicle. For each assault, the victim was handcuffed, compliant, and did not pose a threat.    

    “Police officers who willfully use excessive force not only violate the Constitution, they erode public trust in law enforcement,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. “The Civil Rights Division is committed to protecting victims of these abuses and upholding the Constitution and laws that protect us all.”

    “It is especially important in a climate of distrust between law enforcement and the public, that officers act ethically and within the bounds of the law,” said U.S. Attorney Louis V. Franklin for the Middle District of Alabama. “This police officer’s brutal behavior was unacceptable and criminal. He violated this young man’s constitutional rights and the trust placed in law enforcement officers to faithfully, ethically, and morally enforce the law. You can be sure that anytime an officer steps over the line and into criminal behavior, as this one did, my office will hold that individual accountable.”

    FBI Special Agent in Charge James E. Jewell stated, "the FBI supports our state and local law enforcement partners but will not tolerate the intentional abuse of a citizen. The position of police officer should convey compassion as well as trust and we intend to hold that line."

    Smirnoff faces a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Montgomery Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Denise Simpson of the Middle District of Alabama and Trial Attorney Michael J. Songer of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-alabama-police-investigator-pleads-guilty-assaulting-handcuffed-arrestee

    And another one...

    Kentucky Correctional Officer Pleads Guilty to Beating Handcuffed and Compliant Inmate

    Devan Edwards, 22, a former correctional officer at the Louisville Metro Department of Corrections, one of three officers charged last week in connection with the beating of a handcuffed and compliant inmate, pleaded guilty today, announced Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband for the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman for the Western District of Kentucky, and FBI Louisville Special Agent in Charge James Robert Brown Jr.

    In open court today, Edwards admitted that he and another officer removed an inmate from his cell, handcuffed him, and took him to a holding cell outside the view of surveillance cameras. In the holding cell, while the inmate was seated, handcuffed, and not resisting, the other officer grabbed the inmate by the neck with his right hand and began to strangle him. The inmate struggled to breathe. After the other officer released his grip on the inmate’s neck, the other officer and Edwards punched the inmate repeatedly in the head until a third officer intervened. After the incident, at his supervisor’s direction, Edwards wrote and filed a use-of-force report that exaggerated the inmate’s initial non-compliance and omitted any mention of the beating.

    “Correctional officers who abuse their power and harm inmates violate our civil rights laws, said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband. “This type of abuse towards inmates will not be tolerated by the Department of Justice.”

    “The rule of law is only upheld in our Commonwealth when all Kentuckians are held to the same standard regardless of position,” stated U.S. Attorney Russell Coleman.

    “Today’s guilty plea should send a clear message that the FBI and the Department of Justice will not tolerate the abuse of power or victimization of citizens by anyone in law enforcement,” said Special Agent in Charge Robert Brown Jr.  “The Kentucky Public Corruption and Civil Rights Task Force was set up to insure the integrity of our criminal justice system for all citizens.  The Task Force will vigorously investigate these kinds of cases, and those who violate the public's trust will be held accountable.”

    Edwards faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    This case was investigated jointly by the FBI’s Louisville Resident Agency Office and by the Louisville Metro Police Department’s Public Integrity Unit.  It is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Christopher J. Perras of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, and Assistant United States Attorney Amanda Gregory of the Western District of Kentucky.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/kentucky-correctional-officer-pleads-guilty-beating-handcuffed-and-compliant-inmate
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2019, 04:04:51 PM
    The UK Police State... Police bragging on Twitter about how they took several "weapons" off the streets like kitchen knives, and more importantly, a spoon! Terrifying to imagine that such weapons of mass destruction are in the hands of billions of people...

    Police station mocked for photo of knife haul – that includes a spoon

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D6hiNgmWkAE7biJ.jpg)

    "Yesterday we conducted weapons sweeps,dealt with a person injured from a van reversing on them, reported a burglary and collected all these from @scope charity shop who diligently didn’t want them to get into the wrong hands & disposed of correctly & safely"

    https://twitter.com/MPSRegentsPark/status/1128259712984735744

    A British police station this week lauded themselves with a picture on Twitter designed to showcase their efforts at tackling knife crime — but didn’t quite scoop up the coverage they were hoping for thanks to the presence of a rogue spoon in the image.

    https://nypost.com/2019/05/16/police-station-mocked-for-photo-of-knife-haul-that-includes-a-spoon/


    These fearless heroes have also conducted major operations against the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
    Here is another one of their successes:

    (https://preview.redd.it/wnunz15c7wq01.jpg?width=640&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=10178b3804240e05353dcf3964b61fc49623f293)

    https://twitter.com/MPSRegentsPark/status/974645778558980096
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on May 16, 2019, 06:04:29 PM
    LMAO!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2019, 06:42:55 PM
    Back to the daily crimes, this man was picking up trash in the place he resided, yet he was confronted by an armed thug who called in reinforcements. The thug is now enjoying paid vacation but his gang will not release his name.

    Boulder police launch investigation into contact with man picking up trash

    Boulder police have launched an internal investigation after officers confronted a black man who was picking up trash at his own house.

    According to a release, a Boulder police officer observed a man sitting in a partially enclosed patio area behind a "private property" sign in the 2300 block of Arapahoe Avenue at 8:30 a.m. Friday and asked if the man was allowed to be there.



    http://www.dailycamera.com/ci_32490946/boulder-police-launch-investigation-into-contact-man-picking


    The thug resigned just as the "internal investigation" concluded. He can now work in other departments like several of his ilk do. Despite harassing and illegally detaining an innocent person minding his own business, this thug, as it usually happens with cops, didn't break only laws, only "departmental policy".

    Boulder officer resigns, investigation complete after officer tries to detain man cleaning outside home

    The investigation into a Boulder police officer who tried to detain a black man cleaning trash around his home has been completed, and the police department has released all related body camera footage and reports .

    https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/boulder-officer-resigns-investigation-complete-after-police-try-to-detain-man-cleaning-outside-home

    https://bouldercolorado.gov/march1-police-incident
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2019, 06:56:22 PM
    More police state madness from the UK. Unfortunately it looks like the world is heading towards this Orwellian dystopia.

    Moment police fine pedestrian after he covered face for facial recognition camera

    Footage has shown the moment police fined a pedestrian £90 for disorderly behaviour after he tried to cover his face from a facial recognition camera in London.

    Police set up the camera on a van in east London which matches faces of passers-by with a database of wanted suspects, according to BBC Click.

    One man walking past hid his face with his hat and jacket as he spotted the camera in Romford.

    He was later handed a fine for disorderly behaviour, the clip shows.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/newslondon/moment-police-fine-pedestrian-after-he-covered-face-from-facial-recognition-camera/ar-AABsbrv
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2019, 04:57:32 AM
    More police state madness from the UK. Unfortunately it looks like the world is heading towards this Orwellian dystopia.

    Moment police fine pedestrian after he covered face for facial recognition camera

    Footage has shown the moment police fined a pedestrian £90 for disorderly behaviour after he tried to cover his face from a facial recognition camera in London.

    Police set up the camera on a van in east London which matches faces of passers-by with a database of wanted suspects, according to BBC Click.

    One man walking past hid his face with his hat and jacket as he spotted the camera in Romford.

    He was later handed a fine for disorderly behaviour, the clip shows.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/newslondon/moment-police-fine-pedestrian-after-he-covered-face-from-facial-recognition-camera/ar-AABsbrv

    Without there being person conseuqneces to those involved - nothing will change. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2019, 11:24:26 PM
    Haha! Screw the cop unions and the AG. Transparency for everyone, not just for citizens plebs. Were the worms trying to destroy files before the court decision like the Stasi scum when their headquarters were stormed by angry citizens?

    Court upholds broad release of police misconduct records in California

    A new law granting public access to police misconduct records and investigations of officers’ use of force applies to all records that existed when the law took effect this year no matter when they were created, a state appeals court has ruled in a decision with immediate statewide impact.

    Police unions in numerous localities, including Contra Costa County and five of its cities in the current case, sued to block release of records created before 2019. The unions, which had opposed the disclosure law in the Legislature, contend the law was not drafted to apply to earlier records.

    Superior Court judges around the state have generally disagreed with the unions. But in the first decision with broad impact, the First District Court of Appeal in San Francisco late Friday published an earlier two-page order in the Contra Costa case making all existing records available to the public.

    https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Court-upholds-broad-release-of-police-misconduct-13733312.php

    Judge orders California attorney general to release pre-2019 police misconduct files

    A San Francisco judge has ordered California's attorney general to release police misconduct records predating Jan. 1, when new transparency legislation took effect.

    San Francisco County Superior Court Judge Richard B. Ulmer Jr. on Friday also rejected arguments by Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra that his office should not have to release records of local law enforcement.

    The tentative ruling was a win for the First Amendment Coalition and National Public Radio member KQED-FM, which sued Becerra’s office for records under the legislation.

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-police-misconduct-ruling-becerra-20190517-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2019, 01:54:41 PM
    Once again, these criminal gangs terrorize and have no respect for anything, even for cremated remains. They will break in to homes, harass and attack innocent people and even the elderly. And not only will they not return the ashes of this poor woman's husband but they dare to claim they "have to" dispose of them. These are the supposed "highly trained professionals"... But these crimes will continue as long as these gangs are given immunity and special privileges instead of being sent to prison or executed.

    NYPD mistook relative’s ashes for heroin in Brooklyn raid, family claims

    A Brooklyn family claims bumbling cops raided their home for drugs and snatched up small capsules they thought contained heroin — but were actually the ashes of their dearly departed patriarch.

    Lucia Santiago, 65, was napping in her Bushwick apartment in February 2018 when she awoke to chaos. Cops cuffed the grandmother, her son and a grandson as they searched the Starr Street home, demanding to know where “the guns and drugs” were hidden, the Santiagos claim in a lawsuit.

    But all the cops found were “personal memorial urns” containing the cremated remains of Lucia’s husband, Miguel, who died of natural causes in 2016 at age 72, the family says. The officers believed the ashes, sealed in an airtight capsule inside bullet-sized vials, was heroin, and took the urns as evidence, according to the Brooklyn federal-court lawsuit against the city.

    Cops conducted the raid in connection to allegations one of Santiago’s grandsons was involved in a gun sale. They charged the grandmother, one of her sons and two grandsons with possession of a controlled substance and ammunition. The charges were later dismissed.

    Making it worse was the NYPD’s refusal to return the ashes, said Nelson Santiago. Nelson Santiago said the family was told that “evidence they don’t use is discarded. We don’t know where my dad is at. We’re going on a year.”

    https://nypost.com/2019/05/18/nypd-mistook-relatives-ashes-for-heroin-in-brooklyn-raid-family-claims/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2019, 02:49:39 PM
    As it has been said many times previously, we are dealing with organized and violent criminal gangs.
    Once again, the body cameras "conveniently" did not record footage of the violent attacks or they were not even equipped. More importantly, the most violent and heavily armed gang members, the SWAT teams, are not even required to wear body cams. These things don't just happen, they're planned to ensure the criminals can commit their crimes without fear of getting caught.

    Key Body Camera Footage Missing After Chicago Police Officers Raid Wrong Homes, Point Guns At Children

    During one incident, the family was in the middle of celebrating a 4-year-old’s birthday party. They say police pointed their guns at children.

    On another night, a family had just sat down to eat dinner together. A child accused an officer of pointing an assault rifle at him.

    And in a third incident, a woman was spending time at home with her grandchildren. She said an officer pointed a gun at her grandson’s head.

    In all three cases, Chicago Police officers had the incorrect address listed on a warrant and raided the wrong home, traumatizing innocent families and children. But now, CBS 2 has uncovered more troubling information. Critical moments – and possible wrongdoing – that should have been captured on police body worn cameras are missing or were never recorded at all.

    CBS 2 Investigators have reported on these incidents for nearly a year. Some families have even filed federal lawsuits.

    CBS 2’s ongoing investigation has revealed a troubling pattern when officers execute search warrants at the wrong homes. Multiple families have accused officers of pointing guns at children, handcuffing innocent people and continuing to search the home after learning they were at the wrong location.

    While every patrol officer is required to wear a body camera – 8,200 have been issued to officers, including tactical teams – many are executing search warrants without wearing them.

    In addition, members of Chicago Police’s SWAT team, which accompanies officers on these raids, are not required to wear them, according to police.

    Our team requested an interview with Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson and sent specific questions to Chicago Police asking about missing body camera video and wrong raids data. Instead, in a statement, Thomas Ahern, deputy director of news affairs, said Johnson was “unavailable for an interview this week” and that his schedule is “completely booked.” Our questions were not answered.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/05/04/key-body-camera-footage-missing-after-chicago-police-officers-raid-wrong-homes-point-guns-at-children/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 20, 2019, 05:48:15 PM
    As it has been said many times previously, we are dealing with organized and violent criminal gangs.
    Once again, the body cameras "conveniently" did not record footage of the violent attacks or they were not even equipped. More importantly, the most violent and heavily armed gang members, the SWAT teams, are not even required to wear body cams. These things don't just happen, they're planned to ensure the criminals can commit their crimes without fear of getting caught.

    Key Body Camera Footage Missing After Chicago Police Officers Raid Wrong Homes, Point Guns At Children

    During one incident, the family was in the middle of celebrating a 4-year-old’s birthday party. They say police pointed their guns at children.

    On another night, a family had just sat down to eat dinner together. A child accused an officer of pointing an assault rifle at him.

    And in a third incident, a woman was spending time at home with her grandchildren. She said an officer pointed a gun at her grandson’s head.

    In all three cases, Chicago Police officers had the incorrect address listed on a warrant and raided the wrong home, traumatizing innocent families and children. But now, CBS 2 has uncovered more troubling information. Critical moments – and possible wrongdoing – that should have been captured on police body worn cameras are missing or were never recorded at all.

    CBS 2 Investigators have reported on these incidents for nearly a year. Some families have even filed federal lawsuits.

    CBS 2’s ongoing investigation has revealed a troubling pattern when officers execute search warrants at the wrong homes. Multiple families have accused officers of pointing guns at children, handcuffing innocent people and continuing to search the home after learning they were at the wrong location.

    While every patrol officer is required to wear a body camera – 8,200 have been issued to officers, including tactical teams – many are executing search warrants without wearing them.

    In addition, members of Chicago Police’s SWAT team, which accompanies officers on these raids, are not required to wear them, according to police.

    Our team requested an interview with Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson and sent specific questions to Chicago Police asking about missing body camera video and wrong raids data. Instead, in a statement, Thomas Ahern, deputy director of news affairs, said Johnson was “unavailable for an interview this week” and that his schedule is “completely booked.” Our questions were not answered.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/05/04/key-body-camera-footage-missing-after-chicago-police-officers-raid-wrong-homes-point-guns-at-children/

    On & on it goes - They Just carry on doing as they want & abusing innocent people
    How or why those supposedly in charge keep letting them off & turning a blind eye
    Is equally as Bad as the criminal acts.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 21, 2019, 01:56:31 PM
    A teen was hurrying to catch the bus when an out of state and off duty gang member cop pulls out her firearm, threatens to shoot the teen and holds him at gunpoint. Of course don't expect her to be held accountable for threatening, terrorizing, assaulting and kidnapping a young man who was minding his own business.

    Bad bust puts cop in legal trouble

    A teenager held at gunpoint last summer by an off-duty police officer who assumed he had committed a crime is suing her for violating his civil rights.

    In a complaint filed Thursday in Teton County District Court, Gerardo Becerra, 18, claims assault, battery, false imprisonment and outrage against Colorado police officer Vanessa Schultz.

    An investigation pointed to charging Schultz with felonious restraint and aggravated assault, but Fremont County Attorney Patrick LeBrun, who was assigned as a special prosecutor, decided not to file criminal charges against the vacationing officer “because it is apparent she lacked criminal intent or evil mind.”

    https://www.jhnewsandguide.com/news/cops_courts/article_5db8e089-d0b0-500d-942a-c33f8ff068cd.html?fbclid=IwAR0eYYQMlcWAdHEFihUO7GYcbTrvTcHOGNyiRgHpoHhVtowIC10juEqLaE8
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 22, 2019, 02:16:40 PM
    New Jersey police officer could get life sentence after driver gunned down during high-speed chase

    (https://media2.s-nbcnews.com/j/newscms/2019_21/2865896/190521-jovanny-crespo-newark-officer-ac-1117p_28d4b39b10e807249a50d8581c92d238.fit-360w.jpg)

    A New Jersey police officer could spend the rest of his life behind bars after being charged with shooting and killing a driver and wounding a passenger during a wild chase that was all caught on video.

    Jovanny Crespo of the Newark Police Department was indicted by a grand jury Tuesday on six counts related to the late January death of Gregory Griffin, the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office said. The announcement coincided with the release of a dramatic bodycam video of the fatal police pursuit, showing the 26-year-old officer firing off numerous rounds into the car Griffin was driving.

    “It is the state’s position that this officer’s conduct that night was criminal,” acting Essex County Prosecutor Theodore Stephens said. “He showed a reckless disregard for human life by shooting into a moving vehicle, a vehicle which had heavily tinted windows. This is the first fatal police-involved shooting to result in an indictment in Essex County in recent memory."



    Investigators say the Jan. 28 incident began after a female Newark police officer pulled over Griffin’s car in a traffic stop. They say he sped off and the officer “radioed… that she saw a gun,” which “led to a pursuit involving a number of police cars.”

    Crespo’s bodycam footage starts with him riding in the passenger seat of a police cruiser, repeatedly demanding the driver to “cut in front” of Griffin’s black car.

    Crespo then hops out as Griffin pulls into an intersection, firing off several rounds at the vehicle while saying “get out of the car”. But Griffin takes off again and Crespo re-enters the police cruiser, and is heard breathing heavily as his driver revs the engine in pursuit.

    “I shot at him, bro,” Crespo says to the driver. He then resumes giving instructions to the driver, who tells him to “relax”. At one point, the now-agitated driver yells at Crespo to stay inside the car as he tries to open his passenger door and engage Griffin a second time.

    Yet at another intersection, Crespo appears to ignore the driver’s command. The footage shows him jumping out of the car and firing off more rounds at Griffin’s vehicle, which once again speeds off.

    “Bro, he pointed the gun right at me,” Crespo tells the driver after getting back inside his police car.

    The chase ends with Crespo leaving his police cruiser a third time to approach Griffin, now stopped in the middle of a street.

    “Stop the car!” Crespo is heard saying as Griffin’s vehicle – with its passenger door slightly open – begins moving again. Crespo fires off multiple rounds at the car and other officers swarm it, pulling out 35-year-old passenger Andrew Dixon, who sustained serious injuries. Griffin, behind the wheel, remained motionless.

    The Essex County Prosecutor’s Office says both men were shot in the head during the pursuit and Griffin, 46, died at a hospital the following day. No officers were injured during the incident and Crespo was the only one to discharge his weapon, they added.

    In the bodycam footage, Crespo is heard telling his colleagues “I shot him in the head” and “I shot both of them.”

    The New Jersey Attorney General’s use of force policy states that officers are only allowed to use deadly force to prevent the escape of a fleeing suspect if it is determined that the suspect “will pose an imminent danger of death of serious bodily harm should the escape succeed.” The policy also says officers can only use deadly force in those conditions if it “presents no substantial risk of injury to innocent persons.”

    Crespo was taken into custody Tuesday being charged with aggravated manslaughter, aggravated assault, two counts of Possession of Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose and two counts of Official Misconduct – and faces life in prison if convicted on all counts. He has been suspended without pay and is expected to make his first court appearance Wednesday or Thursday.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/new-jersey-police-officer-charged-after-killing
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 22, 2019, 02:22:11 PM
    Gangster Disciple gang members convicted — including ex-DeKalb cop

    A federal jury in Atlanta has convicted five members of the Gangster Disciples street gang, including the highest-ranking member in Georgia and a now-disgraced ex-DeKalb County police officer.

    https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/jurors-convict-gangster-disciple-gang-members-including-former-cop/0DO5S32j1AkH8WLNaHXSWL/

    (https://www.ajc.com/rf/image_lowres/Pub/p8/AJC/2017/07/28/Images/Vancito_edited_1008x631.jpg)

    Forty-Eight Alleged Members of Gangster Disciples Indicted on Federal Racketeering Charges

    Forty-eight alleged members of the violent Gangster Disciples Gang – including the top leaders in Tennessee and Georgia – have been charged in two indictments and accused of conspiring to participate in a racketeering enterprise that included multiple murders, attempted murder and drug crimes. The scope of the Gangster Disciples’ crimes is wide-ranging and consistent throughout the national operation.  The RICO conspiracies charged here include attempted murder, narcotics trafficking, extortion, firearms crimes, obstruction of justice and other crimes in furtherance of the Gangster Disciples enterprise and to raise funds for the gang.  In Georgia, for example, the Gangster Disciples brought money into the gang through, among other things, drug trafficking, robbery, carjacking, extortion, wire fraud, credit card fraud, insurance fraud and bank fraud.

    The gang protected its power and operation through threats, intimidation and violence, including murder, attempted murder, assault and obstruction of justice.  It also promoted the Gangster Disciples enterprise through member-only activities, including conference calls, birthday celebrations of the gang’s founder, the annual Gangster Ball, award ceremonies and other events.

    The gang also provided financial and other support to members charged with or incarcerated for gang-related offenses and members who were fugitives from law enforcement were provided “safe houses” in which to hide from police.  To introduce the criminal nature of the Gangster Disciples to a new member, older members and leaders in the various local groups ordered newer members to commit crimes, including murder, robbery and drug trafficking.  Further, Gangster Disciples members would teach other members how to commit certain crimes, including frauds and would provide drugs on discount to other Gangster Disciples members for resale.

    The Atlanta RICO conspiracy indictment names the following defendants and their alleged roles within the Gangster Disciples:

    Shauntay Craig, 37, of Birmingham, held the rank of Gangster Disciples board member;

    Alonzo Walton, 47, of Atlanta, held at different relevant times the positions of governor of Georgia and governor of governors, the latter position controlling Georgia, Florida, Texas, Indiana and South Carolina;

    Kevin Clayton, 43, of Decatur, Georgia, was the chief enforcer for the state of Georgia;

    Donald Glass, 26, of Decatur, served as a first coordinator of the eastside group of the Gangster Disciples;

    Lewis Mobely, 38, of Atlanta, was an enforcer;

    Vertious Wall, 40, of Marietta, was a first coordinator for the Macon Gangster Disciples group;

    Adrian Jackson, 37, of San Jose, California, was the national treasurer for the Gangster Disciples;

    Terrence Summers, 45, of Birmingham, held at different relevant times the positions of governor of Alabama and governor of governors for Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina and Florida;

    Markell White, 43, of Atlanta, was a regional leader in Macon;

    Ronald McMorris, 34, of Atlanta, was first coordinator of the Atlanta group;

    Perry Green, 29, of Decatur, was a member of the Gangster Disciples and acted as enforcer of a Gangster Disciples group;

    Dereck Taylor, 29, of Macon, was a member of the Gangster Disciples and acted as security for a Macon group;

    Alvis O’Neal, 37,of Denver, was a senior member of and money launderer for the Gangster Disciples;

    Jeremiah Covington, 32, of Valdosta, Georgia, was a first coordinator for the Valdosta region;

    Antonio Ahmad, 33, of Atlanta, was the chief of security for the state of Georgia;

    Eric Manney, 39, of Atlanta, was a member of the Gangster Disciples and stored multiple guns at his house;

    Quiana Franklin, 33, of Birmingham, served as treasurer for the state of Alabama;

    Frederick Johnson, 37, of Marietta, was a chief enforcer for a Gangster Disciples group;

    Charles Wingate,25, of Conyers, Georgia, was chief of security for a Covington, Georgia group;

    Vancito Gumbs, 25, of Stone Mountain, Georgia, was a member of the Gangster Disciples while at the same time serving as a police officer with the DeKalb County Police Department;

    Thomas Pasby, 42, of Cochran, Georgia, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Denise Carter, 41, of Detroit, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Carlton King Jr., 25, of Cochran, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Kelvin Sneed, 26, of Cochran, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Arrie Freeney, 32, of Detroit, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Myrick Stevens, 26, of Madison, Wisconsin, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Curtis Thomas, 45, of Cochran, was a member of the Gangster Disciples;

    Yohori Epps, 36,of Marietta, was a member of the Gangster Disciples; and

    Michael Drummound, 49, of Marietta, was a member of the Gangster Disciples.

    In addition to the RICO conspiracy, Glass and Mobely are each charged with committing or attempting to commit murder in aid of racketeering and using firearms during those crimes.  Mobely, Glass, Craig, O’Neal, Covington and Travis Riley, 35, of Wichita, Kansas are also charged with various drug distribution crimes and Mobely and Glass are further charged with related firearms crimes.  Walton, Ahmad and Laderris Dickerson, 45, of Chicago, are also charged with carjacking and Walton and Dickerson are charged with a related firearms offense.  

    The Memphis RICO conspiracy indictment names the following defendants and their alleged roles within the Gangster Disciples:

    Byron Montrail Purdy, aka “Lil B” or “Ghetto,” 37, of Jackson, Tennessee, served as Gangster Disciples leader in Tennessee;

    Derrick Kennedy Crumpton, aka “38,” 32, of Memphis, served as Gangster Disciples leader in Tennessee;

    Demarcus Deon Crawford, aka “Trip,” 32, of Jackson, served as leader of security in Tennessee;

    Henry Curtis Cooper, aka “Big Hen,” 36, of Memphis, served as leader of security in Tennessee;

    Rico Terrell Harris, aka “Big Brim,” 43, of Memphis, served as leader of security in Tennessee;

    Shamar Anthony James, aka “Lionheart,” 37, of Memphis, held the rank of governor of a region in Memphis;

    Demario Demont Sprouse, aka “Taco,” 35, of Memphis, held the rank of chief of security of a region in Memphis;

    Robert Elliott Jones, aka “Lil Rob” or “Mac Rob,” 36, of Memphis, held the rank of governor of a region in Memphis;

    Denton Suggs, aka “Denny Mo” or “Diddy Mo,”40, of Memphis, held the rank of chief of security in a section of Memphis;

    Santiago Megale Shaw, aka “Mac-T,” 23, of Jackson, was a member of the security team or blackout squad in Jackson;

    Tarius Montez Taylor, aka “T,” 26, of Jackson, was a member of the security team or blackout squad in Jackson;

    Tommy Earl Champion Jr., aka “Duct Tape,” 27, of Jackson, held the rank of chief of security of Jackson;

    Cory Dewayne Bowers, aka “Bear Wayne,” 32, of Jackson, was associated with the Gangster Disciples and acted as a member of the security team in Jackson;

    Gerald Eugene Hampton, aka “G30,” 30, of Jackson, held the rank of assistant chief of security and was a member of the security team’s blackout squad in Jackson;

    Daniel Lee Cole, aka “D-Money,” 37, of Jackson, acted as assistant governor and assistant education coordinator for the Gangster Disciples in Jackson; and

    Tommy Lee Wilkins (Holloway), aka “Tommy Gunz,” 28, of Memphis, was a member of the security team in Memphis.                                                                    

    In addition to the RICO conspiracy, all 16 defendants are charged with a cocaine-distribution conspiracy, and Crawford, Shaw, Taylor, Champion and Bowers are charged with seven counts of attempted murder in aid of racketeering and using a firearm during the commission of those offenses.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/forty-eight-alleged-members-gangster-disciples-indicted-federal-racketeering-charges

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 23, 2019, 10:47:30 AM
    A ring of pedophile cops operating within the police department? Impossible!

    Lawsuits unveil alleged culture of teen sex abuse in Louisville police mentorship program

    Public service was in his blood.

    His father served in both the local fire and police departments, and his brothers preceded him in the Louisville Metro Police Department’s Youth Explorer career mentorship program. His interest in becoming a police officer led him to enroll in the mentorship program when he was about 14.

    "C.F.," who uses a pseudonym to protect his identity in a civil lawsuit, said that what should have been a golden opportunity to learn about law enforcement became a nightmare of exploitation and sexual abuse.

    C.F. is one of seven people to file civil lawsuits against current and former LMPD officers who served as advisers in the Youth Explorer program. All plaintiffs filed under pseudonyms to protect their identities. He detailed his alleged abuse in a 2018 interview with Fox News.

    His story shows an alleged pattern of grooming, coercion and sexual assault by former officer Kenneth Betts, as well as a lack of accountability by police leadership.

    Betts is married with a young daughter. The disgraced officer resigned from the Louisville Metro Police Department on March 24, 2014, following an internal investigation into an inappropriate relationship the officer allegedly had with a teenage female Explorer cadet.

    “It was beyond, like, friendly conversations,” C.F. said. “[Betts] would ask for nude pictures. Ask for favors. Stuff like that. Ask if I would want to go work details or do ride-alongs with him.”

    When he and “N.C.” – another former Explorer cadet who also filed suit in Louisville – were between the ages of 15 and 17, C.F. said Betts would often initiate inappropriate actions with the teens.

    One night, Betts picked them up to help him move paperwork from the office to his home. After the task, he offered the minors alcohol and allegedly began to “come on to” them in unwanted ways. C.F. said he felt coerced and pressured by the power Betts had over his career ambitions and opportunities within the program.

    “I had about two or three [drinks], and I had a buzz. And that’s when he pulled us back into his room, started taking our clothes off and kind of pushed us onto the bed,” he said. “And from there, it led on to him giving us oral sex and us giving him oral sex. And it led to him – penetrating me and N.C.”

    The allegations of the sexual abuse, harassment, coercion and inappropriate actions during ride-alongs, where cadets would join officers on patrol, are recurring themes in Louisville and similar Explorer scandals across the country. C.F.’s story is just one of many that have helped lawyers, local politicians and prosecutors piece together a picture of sexual abuse, negligence and cover-up within the program and police department. It adds to a growing list of abuses by officers involved in the nationwide program spanning decades. C.F.’s lawsuit also helps establish a pattern of allegedly sexually abusive behavior by Betts specifically.


    STIRRING A HORNET’S NEST

    In March 2016, a former Youth Explorer cadet with accusations of sexual abuse approached Louisville Metro Councilman David Yates. At the time, Yates was council president, and understandably hesitant about suing the city he represents. He said he needed incontrovertible evidence to file suit – and he got it.

    “Pictures of the genitalia of the abuses that [the officers] had sent them,” Yates said. “This was something that – this was when you realized that this is real.”

    Yates and other attorneys said about 15 victims have come forward with stories of abuse. Fearing public embarrassment and retaliation from the defendants, only seven – less than half – agreed to file lawsuits, fearing public embarrassment and retaliation. Those who did file only agreed to under assurances that their identities would remain private.

    Eventually, Yates would drop from the litigation due to his role in local government. Local attorney Tad Thomas took over the lawsuits, and has been advocating for the plaintiffs since. Yates filed the first lawsuit on behalf on N.C. on March 8, 2017. Former officers Betts and Brandon Wood are the primary accused abusers in the lawsuits. Also named were Maj. Curtis Flaherty, Chief Steve Conrad, Mayor Greg Fischer, as well as the Boy Scouts of America and Learning for Life – the two parent organizations of the Youth Explorer program. Flaherty was in charge of the local chapter.

    All defendants are named in multiple lawsuits. In total, the lawsuits name more than eight current or former LMPD officers. At the center of the scandal are three former LMPD officers: the aforementioned Betts, Wood, and Flaherty, who ran the local Explorers program. All three have left the force, and Betts and Wood are charged with sex crimes in both state and federal courts; each officer pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing.

    Wood pled guilty to a federal attempted enticement charges and is scheduled to be sentenced May 28.

    Betts pled guilty to federal enticement and and child pornography charges and will be sentenced May 23, although that date could be delayed.

    Betts struck a plea deal that had him serve 10 to 15 years in prison, but the judge suggested the deal might be too lenient. Federal sentencing guidelines, according to US District Court Judge David Hale, call for a 27-year sentence for Betts. He’s also expected to plea guilty to state charges of sodomy, according to local news reports.

    Attorneys for Betts and Wood would not comment or make their clients available for interviews. Similarly, LMPD officials did not respond to a number of requests for comment. Multiple attempts to reach Flaherty at his home were unsuccessful. Flaherty has not been charged criminally for his role as supervisor of the local Explorer chapter. He has been named in all seven lawsuits filed by former cadets, with each plaintiff alleging the former officer acted negligently.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/lawsuits-unveil-culture-of-teen-sex-abuse-in-louisville-police-mentorship-program
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2019, 01:24:42 PM
    Great-Grandma Arrested at Disney World for Having CBD Oil She Uses to Treat Arthritis

    A 69-year-old great-grandmother whose doctor suggested she use CBD oil to alleviate pain was arrested for carrying it at Disney World during a trip she and her family had planned for two years. Hester Jordan Burkhalter had scrimped and saved to spend April 15 at the happiest place on Earth, but instead she spent it in jail after she was charged with possession of hashish in Orange County, Florida, The News & Observer wrote.

    Her arrest came after an Orange County sheriff’s deputy discovered CBD oil in her purse at a checkpoint to enter the Orlando theme park, authorities said.

    Burkhalter had begun using the oil to lessen the pain caused by her arthritis at her doctor’s recommendation, which he also put in writing, she said.

    CBD, or cannabinol, is an extract from cannabis and has been found to have medicinal properties. It does not make the user “high,” unlike THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, another extract found in the same plant that is the active agent in marijuana, authorities say.

    https://www.clickorlando.com/inside-edition/greatgrandma-arrested-at-disney-world-for-having-cbd-oil-she-uses-to-treat-arthritis
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2019, 02:06:51 PM
    These career criminals only received 22 months and 18 months prison sentences. What a travesty.

    Former Chicago cop exposes criminal cover up in police department, says she feared for her life

    A former Chicago police officer -- who risked her own safety to help nab a corrupt officer extorting money from the city's poorest and planting drugs on those who refused to pay -- will have her story featured Friday on the CBS series "Whistleblowers."

    Shannon Spalding says she's had her tires slashed and was repeatedly threatened while she helped build the case against a corrupt team of officers run by former Sgt. Ronald Watts.

    "Someone was trying to kill me," Spalding said. "When I signed up for this job, I knew I might have to lay my life down, but I never thought I'd have to worry about it being a fellow officer doing that to me." Spalding, who joined the Chicago Police Department in 1996, said she spent time in some of the city's most violent neighborhoods. To survive, she recalled leaning on veteran cops like Watts. "I thought he was battling crime and he was doing it with finesse and grace," she said.

    But about a decade later, while on an undercover assignment in the narcotics division, she began to see Watts in a different light.

    Spalding said she began troubling rumors as she and her partner would make an arrest, with a suspect saying something along the lines of: "I can't believe you're going to arrest me when one of your own is actually running the narcotics side," Spalding said.

    After some digging, Spalding learned the charge was true: Watts and his group would threaten and plant drugs on residents of the Ida B. Wells projects who didn't go along with their rules -- and that type of intimidation had gone on for years.

    Spalding was faced with a decision.

    "If we don't report this criminal conduct we're absolutely no better than Watts or any of these other corrupt officers. And if we do, we may just be ending our careers and putting ourselves in real danger," she said. In the end, she and her partner went to the FBI.

    "My greatest fear was that because this was such a long-running...criminal enterprise...I felt that we would be set up for dead," she said.

    Eventually, though, Watts and one of his officers, Kallat Mohammed, were arrested after they were caught stealing $5,200 from a drug courier -- who also happened to be Spalding's informant and was wearing a wire at the time. Watts was sentenced to 22 months behind bars while Mohammed received an 18-month sentence.

    Since their arrest, 60 Chicagoans who were wrongfully arrested by Watts and his team have been exonerated.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/former-chicago-cop-exposes-criminal-cover-up-in-police-department-says-she-feared-for-her-life
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 25, 2019, 12:32:10 AM
    As if the government goons were not enough, now you have wannabe cops invading and destroying the homes of people. Too bad the residents didn't defend themselves against the intruders.

    Miami bounty hunters armed with battering ram storm home over $750 bond, video shows

    The armed agents woke up Donald Colas on the night of May 5, surrounding his Miami Gardens home and shining a light into the bedroom where his 2-year-old son was asleep.

    Wielding a battering ram, stun guns and crow bars, they stormed the home searching for a fugitive who owed $750 following his arrest for driving with a suspended license.

    The bounty hunters broke down two doors, searched under mattresses and quoted a 147-year-old Supreme Court opinion.

    The man, Colas’ 28-year-old cousin Berlin Gabriel, wasn’t there. He hadn’t lived there in 20 years, Colas said.

    What Colas says he didn’t know: His cousin used his address when police asked where he lived. That gave the bounty hunters — referred to as bail bond agents in Florida and bail recovery agents elsewhere — a right to locate and detain Gabriel at his listed residence.

    As private agents licensed by Florida’s Department of Financial Services and empowered by Florida Administrative Code, they do not require a search warrant to enter the home where they believe the fugitive they’re seeking is residing.

    “We have more jurisdiction than police officers,” one of the bounty hunters said in a video of the incident. Miami Gardens Police are reviewing the incident. A spokesman did not respond to a reporter’s questions about the video.

    The incident demonstrates the far-reaching protections and privileges afforded to bail bonds agents, said Brian Johnson, a professor at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan, who authored a study on the American bail-bonds recovery industry. The Fourth Amendment right to protection against illegal search and seizures does not apply for private entities like bounty hunters, Johnson said.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/article230692964.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on May 25, 2019, 07:59:42 AM
    The Fourth Amendment right to protection against illegal search and seizures does not apply for private entities like bounty hunters, Johnson said.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/article230692964.html

    2 to the chest does.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 25, 2019, 09:37:44 PM
    San Francisco police chief concedes raid on journalist was wrong — ‘I’m sorry’

    After two weeks of growing outrage, San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott apologized Friday for raiding a journalist’s home and office in a bid to unmask a confidential source, admitting the searches were probably illegal and calling for an independent investigation into the episode.

    Scott said he has now reviewed all material relating to the May 10 search of freelance videographer Bryan Carmody’s home and office, which was part of an investigation into who leaked him a salacious police report on the February death of Public Defender Jeff Adachi — a report Carmody then sold to three television stations.

    The chief said he was “concerned” that the applications for the search warrants didn’t adequately identify Carmody as a journalist — particularly a warrant to search his phone.

    California’s shield law protects journalists from being forced to reveal confidential sources or hand over unpublished information including notes, recordings and pictures. It specifically bars police from obtaining this sensitive information through searches.

    https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/San-Francisco-police-chief-concedes-raid-on-13895536.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2019, 12:10:52 PM
    https://nypost.com/2019/05/28/cop-killed-self-after-accusations-he-sexually-abused-teen-girl/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook&utm_source=NYPFacebook&fbclid=IwAR1W35ttdQc65xUxmKKv8445h3RGXvhifB79fhPggituhfJc8RWrFSxT1kw



     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 28, 2019, 03:25:57 PM
    https://nypost.com/2019/05/28/cop-killed-self-after-accusations-he-sexually-abused-teen-girl/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=SocialFlow&sr_share=facebook&utm_source=NYPFacebook&fbclid=IwAR1W35ttdQc65xUxmKKv8445h3RGXvhifB79fhPggituhfJc8RWrFSxT1kw



     >:(


    Great News One Less Scumbag Gang Member
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 28, 2019, 04:26:52 PM
    It has been mentioned countless times now in this thread that we are dealing with organized criminal gangs: since 2018, 30 members (!) of the same department gang  have been arrested.


    Bexar County deputy arrested on public corruption charges

    A deputy with the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office was arrested Saturday on public corruption charges related to bribery and smuggling heroin and Suboxone, which is often used to treat opioid addiction, into the Bexar County Jail.

    Armando Trevino, who has been employed by the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office for five years, faces charges of bribery and possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, Sheriff Javier Salazar announced at a news conference. Trevino, 30, is a corporal. He has been smuggling the drugs into the facility for several years and an investigation into his actions has been going on for some time, Salazar said.

    https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/article/Bexar-County-deputy-arrested-on-public-corruption-13897245.php

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 28, 2019, 04:51:10 PM
    A very bad decision.

    Supreme Court limits free speech claim in arrests

    The Supreme Court on Tuesday said an individual cannot make a claim that he was arrested in retaliation for exercising his free speech if police had probable cause for his arrest.

    The ruling is a victory for law enforcement, which argued in favor of a bright line rule that officers could follow that would also defeat possible frivolous claims from defendants objecting to their arrest.

    The case concerned a man in Alaska who says he was arrested in retaliation for speech that is protected under the First Amendment. At issue before the court was a question that has divided lower courts: if police have probable cause to make an arrest, does that defeat a claim of retaliatory arrest?

    https://www.kesq.com/news/politics/supreme-court-limits-free-speech-claim-in-arrests/1081617190
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2019, 03:26:30 PM
    It only took 6+ years to fire him... But, he was on paid desk duty since 2012!

    Chicago cop fired for soliciting sexual favors from teenage girl after police impounded car

    A veteran Chicago police officer has been fired over allegations he solicited sexual favors from a teenage girl in return for offering his help to get her mother’s impounded car released from the city pound.

    The Chicago Police Board voted 9-0 to dismiss Officer Darius Alexander while sharply criticizing the Police Department for its delay of more than six years in bringing the disciplinary charges.

    Alexander was on paid desk duty for nearly half of his almost 13 years with the department. Records show he was paid about $87,000 a year most recently.

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-met-chicago-cop-fired-sexual-favors-20190520-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 29, 2019, 03:28:31 PM

    We clearly need higher taxes

    It only took 6+ years to fire him... But, he was on paid desk duty since 2012!

    Chicago cop fired for soliciting sexual favors from teenage girl after police impounded car

    A veteran Chicago police officer has been fired over allegations he solicited sexual favors from a teenage girl in return for offering his help to get her mother’s impounded car released from the city pound.

    The Chicago Police Board voted 9-0 to dismiss Officer Darius Alexander while sharply criticizing the Police Department for its delay of more than six years in bringing the disciplinary charges.

    Alexander was on paid desk duty for nearly half of his almost 13 years with the department. Records show he was paid about $87,000 a year most recently.

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-met-chicago-cop-fired-sexual-favors-20190520-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2019, 03:57:21 PM
    Once again, criminal gangs covering up for their members. How many other incidents like this are swept under the rug and remain undiscovered? Press release from a notorious "cop hating" website:

    Former Federal Supervisory Correctional Officer Pleads Guilty to Civil Rights Offense for Aiding in the Assault of an Inmate

    Khristal Ford, 32, a former Lieutenant at the Federal Correctional Complex (FCC) in Beaumont, Texas, pleaded guilty today to aiding and abetting another correctional officer in his assault on an inmate.

    According to the plea documents and information presented in court, Khristal Ford was a supervisory correctional officer at the FCC on June 8, 2017, when Ford opened the door of a medical observation cell where A.A., an inmate, was being held. Ford then told a senior correctional officer to “take care of it” and watched as the officer entered the cell and punched A.A. in the head three times without justification. Following this assault, Ford submitted a written memorandum that omitted any reference to the punches and included a falsified breathalyzer photo sheet, all in an effort to conceal the incident and make it appear as if the victim was highly intoxicated at the time of the officer’s assault.

    “This type of behavior in our correctional officers erodes public trust,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Civil Rights Division. “The Department of Justice will vigorously prosecute those who violate the civil rights of inmates.”

    “When correctional officers abuse their authority like this, it hurts more than the victim of the assault,” said U.S. Attorney Joseph Brown of the Eastern District of Texas. “It damages the whole system, hurting the credibility of the good officers who try to do the right thing every day. We will do everything we can to make sure these kinds of violations are prosecuted.”

    Ford will be sentenced at a later date and faces a maximum statutory penalty of 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

    A former federal correctional officer faces federal charges in connection with this incident. This former officer is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

    The Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael A. Anderson of the Eastern District of Texas and Trial Attorney Nicholas Reddick of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division are prosecuting the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-federal-supervisory-correctional-officer-pleads-guilty-civil-rights-offense-aiding
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 29, 2019, 04:18:41 PM
    So we have misconduct, leaking sensitive information and violating federal law; however, "the prosecution of the Deputy Assistant Director was declined".

    DOJ watchdog: Former FBI official illegally leaked court docs, disclosed 'sensitive' information and took gift from media

    The Justice Department's internal watchdog announced in an investigative summary released Wednesday that an unnamed former FBI deputy assistant director engaged in "misconduct," including leaking "sensitive" information to the media, violating federal law by disclosing sealed court records and taking a gift from someone in the media.

    Nevertheless, the inspector general (IG) indicated, without explanation, that "prosecution of the DAD [deputy assistant director] was declined." The investigation's findings will be referred to the FBI for potential further action, the IG said.

    The official became the second high-level FBI employee to be formally rebuked by the IG over media contacts seen as improper. Former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe was fired from the bureau in March 2018 by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions after an inspector general report revealed that he "lacked candor" when discussing his communications about federal probes with members of the media.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/doj-watchdog-finds-fmr-fbi-deputy-assistant-director-leaked-sensitive-information-took-gift-from-media-but-declines-prosecution
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 30, 2019, 12:07:12 PM
    These are the "sworn law enforcement officers" who abuse children and then lie. Even when the child's mother was there they did not allow her to see her son unless they got "permission" from the "officer".
    Notice the creative wording to cover up the lies:
    "Statements collected by Barnes, and his own report, offer versions of events that deviate from the lapel footage."

    Will he be held accountable for abusing this student or does the badge grant him and his ilk the right to abuse children? (rhetorical question)

    Sheriff's Deputy Tases High School Student

    A 15-year-old special education student at Española Valley High School was tased by Rio Arriba County Sheriff’s Deputy Jeremy Barnes on May 10, for allegedly failing to comply with a search.

    The incident took place in the High School’s administrative offices, where Assistant Principal Veronica Dean, Deputy Jeremy Barnes and two other staff members were present.

    Barnes deployed the Taser in the student's chest area, which the manufacturer warns can induce cardiac arrest or lead to serious injury or death.

    On Wednesday (5/29), New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas said he opened a probe into the incident.

    "Schools should be a place where students feel safe and protected," Balderas said in a written statement. "I am aggressively investigating this disturbing incident."

    [...]

    The mother then told Barnes that the student had an individualized education plan that directly addressed the way her son would be approached while at school.

    An individualized education plan is a written document developed for school children eligible for special education.

    Barnes said the plan did not matter.Barnes refused to allow the child’s mother to be with him in the back administration office.  It was not until medics arrived and asked Barnes to bring the mother to her child that she was allowed to be in the same room with him. Nearly 16 minutes had passed since her son was tased.

    Statements collected by Barnes, and his own report, offer versions of events that deviate from the lapel footage.



    Sheriff’s Office Maj. Randy Sanches said May 22 when providing the footage following a public records request that it was a “good” use of force by Barnes. He said later that his initial assessment of the incident was not the official stance of the Sheriff’s Office.

    Sanches said he was basing his assessment on his training and experience, but declined to say what specialized training he had concerning use of force, or use of force involving juvenlies. When asked about the Sheriff’s Office policies concerning use of force, Sanches said he would have to locate them, but that he did not have time to provide them before press time.

    http://www.riograndesun.com/news/sheriff-s-deputy-tases-high-school-student/article_d8768598-824d-11e9-b3f9-2b6caa5afc70.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 30, 2019, 08:25:27 PM
    Look at the honorable heroes criminal scum.

    7 Baltimore officers federally indicted for racketeering, including robbing victims

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C527TggXEA0xSKx.jpg)

    Seven Baltimore City Police officers are being federally indicted for a racketeering conspiracy, according to the Justice Department, in an investigative case that was secretly conducted and kept quiet about even from the city's State's Attorney.

    The arrests of the officers allegedly involved in racketeering were announced in the U.S. Attorney’s Office on Wednesday morning. The accused officers were reportedly robbing victims ranging from $200,000 to a 'couple hundred dollars,' filing false affidavits, and making fraudulent overtime claims while officers vacationed in Myrtle Beach and gambled at casinos.

    One officer is also charged in a separate drug distribution indictment. Sometimes, narcotics and weapons were seized in addition to money and, "in several instances, the defendants did not file any police reports," the indictment alleges.

    "These seven police officers betrayed the trust" of not only the police department but also the public, said Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, during a time when the city was "under scrutiny" and trying to heal in a post-Freddie Gray climate.

    According to a handout by the U.S. Attorney's Office, the involved officers have been identified as Momodu Bondeva Kenton Gondo a/k/a 'GMoney' and 'Mike,' Wayne Earl Jenkins, Evodio Calles Hendrix, Maurice Kilpatrick Ward, Jemell Lamar Rayam, Daniel Thomas Hersl and Marcus Roosevelt Taylor. All have been suspended without pay and are in custody of the FBI as police are search for more victims who may have interacted with any of these officers under suspicious circumstances.

    The Baltimore DEA’s Assistant Special Agent in Charge Don Hibbert explained that the DEA was conducting a probe when they "discovered information in the course of our drug investigation and we were able to work with our partners at Baltimore PD and the FBI and passed the information along and it worked the way it should” have been.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/03/01/7-baltimore-officers-federally-indicted-for-racketeering-including-robbing-victims.html

    He was sobbing... But he wasn't sobbing when he committed the crimes. 12 years are not nearly enough.
    (and of course "former" is in the headline, but he was a cop when he was committing these crimes)
    Another one of the many examples of a criminal gang.

    Former Baltimore Police detective sentenced to 12 years in Gun Trace Task Force corruption case

    A former Baltimore Police officer who robbed people for the better part of a decade was ordered Tuesday to serve 12 years in prison, the final sentence handed down against members of the corrupt Gun Trace Task Force.

    Wearing an orange jail-issue uniform, Jemell Rayam apologized to city residents and the law enforcement community, saying he was raised to know better and had tried to make things right after getting caught. He cooperated extensively, admitting to additional crimes and helping lead to the indictment of at least four co-conspirators.

    Complete coverage: Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task Force corruption case »

    “I did take an oath to protect and serve, and I broke that oath,” Rayam told U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Blake.

    But Assistant U.S. Attorney Derek Hines reminded Blake of the breathtaking scope of Rayam’s crimes, which included armed home invasions and drug dealing.

    https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-ci-rayam-sentencing-20190528-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2019, 02:01:11 AM
    Baltimore really is a shithole


    He was sobbing... But he wasn't sobbing when he committed the crimes. 12 years are not nearly enough.
    (and of course "former" is in the headline, but he was a cop when he was committing these crimes)
    Another one of the many examples of a criminal gang.

    Former Baltimore Police detective sentenced to 12 years in Gun Trace Task Force corruption case

    A former Baltimore Police officer who robbed people for the better part of a decade was ordered Tuesday to serve 12 years in prison, the final sentence handed down against members of the corrupt Gun Trace Task Force.

    Wearing an orange jail-issue uniform, Jemell Rayam apologized to city residents and the law enforcement community, saying he was raised to know better and had tried to make things right after getting caught. He cooperated extensively, admitting to additional crimes and helping lead to the indictment of at least four co-conspirators.

    Complete coverage: Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task Force corruption case »

    “I did take an oath to protect and serve, and I broke that oath,” Rayam told U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Blake.

    But Assistant U.S. Attorney Derek Hines reminded Blake of the breathtaking scope of Rayam’s crimes, which included armed home invasions and drug dealing.

    https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-ci-rayam-sentencing-20190528-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2019, 12:38:53 PM
    He's shedding crocodile tears now but he didn't even care when he and his accomplice, as prosecutors, withheld evidence from the defense that their victim, Fred Steese, was not even in Nevada at the time of the murder. Yet not only were these prosecutors not sent to prison but they are now County District Judges...

    Not only was this innocent man hunted by prosecutors who withheld evidence in favor of him but he was also imprisoned for 20 years.
    After many years, a Nevada Eighth Judicial District Court judge issued a rare Order of Actual Innocence, the first of its kind in that court, essentially declaring that Steese didn’t kill anyone. But the Clark County District Attorney’s Office refused to concede it had convicted the wrong man. Instead, prosecutors vowed to fight Steese’s exoneration and to retry him. Assistant District Attorney Pamela Weckerly told Steese she’d agree to release him from prison under one condition: he pleaded guilty. She offered Steese an unusual deal called an Alford plea, which allows a defendant to assert his innocence on the record while still accepting a deal.

    Of course these people are covered by multiple layers of immunity and can destroy the lives of innocent people just to add another "successful" prosecution and conviction to their record.

    Judge chokes back tears testifying on imprisonment of innocent man

    Clark County District Judge Doug Herndon is uniquely qualified to testify about a bill before state lawmakers designed to compensate people who are wrongfully convicted in Nevada.

    Herndon’s daughter participated in researching the measure. But the judge’s qualifications go well beyond that connection.

    “I was also a prosecutor who was involved in prosecuting a case in which a gentleman was convicted of murder who was later found to be factually innocent,” Herndon testified, choking back tears between words.

    As a prosecutor, Herndon and then-colleague William Kephart, also a judge today, withheld exculpatory evidence from the defense that would have proved the convicted man, Fred Steese, was not in Nevada at the time of the murder.

    https://www.nevadacurrent.com/2019/05/28/judge-chokes-back-tears-testifying-on-imprisonment-of-innocent-man/

    Long but interesting article about this innocent man's ordeal:

    http://truthinjustice.org/steese.htm
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2019, 05:19:27 PM
    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us".

    Multiple sexual assault charges against a 5 year old girl, four of the charges were Class A felonies carrying mandatory 20-year prison terms.

    NO PRISON TIME.

    No jail time for former HPD officer charged with sexually assaulting child

    (https://kitv.images.worldnow.com/images/18447797_G.png?auto=webp&disable=upscale&height=560&fit=bounds&lastEditedDate=1559263218000)

    A former Honolulu Police Department officer charged with sexually assaulting a 5-year-old girl for several years will not go to jail.

    According to an indictment, Teddy Van Lerberghe assaulted the girl from 2004 to 2008.

    Van Lerberghe initially pleaded not guilty, but he changed his plea to no contest earlier this month after reaching a deal with prosecutors.

    Felony sex assault charges usually carry long prison terms, but the 45-year-old only faces five years probation when he's sentenced in August.

    He will also have to register as a sex offender.

    https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2019/05/29/no-jail-time-former-hpd-officer-charged-with-sexually-assaulting-child/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 31, 2019, 07:41:47 PM

    Great News One Less Scumbag Gang Member

    I'm not going to miss him..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 01, 2019, 04:43:42 AM
    I'm not going to miss him..

    👍🏻
    Good to see you post in here.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2019, 02:31:56 PM
    The Coward of Broward has been arrested...

    Disgraced Broward Deputy Scot Peterson Arrested

    Following an investigation by FDLE, former Broward Sheriff’s Deputy Scot Peterson, 56, was arrested in Broward County today on seven counts of neglect of a child and three counts of culpable negligence and one count of perjury. The arrest comes after a 15-month investigation into the actions of law enforcement following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. 

    “The FDLE investigation shows former Deputy Peterson did absolutely nothing to mitigate the MSD shooting that killed 17 children, teachers and staff and injured 17 others,” said FDLE Commissioner Rick Swearingen. “There can be no excuse for his complete inaction and no question that his inaction cost lives.”

    https://953wdae.iheart.com/featured/florida-news/content/2019-06-04-disgraced-broward-deputy-scot-peterson-arrested/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2019, 02:36:27 PM
    Baltimore really is a shithole


    More criminal gang activity from Baltimore...

    Former Baltimore Police Sergeant Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Deprive Civil Rights for Assisting a Member of the Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task Force by Planting a Gun at the Scene of an Arrest
    Also Admitted that He Told a Witness to Lie


    Baltimore, Maryland – Former Baltimore Police Sergeant Keith Allen Gladstone, age 51, of New Park, Pennsylvania, pleaded guilty today to conspiracy to deprive civil rights, in connection with planting evidence at a crime scene.  As part of his plea, Gladstone also admitted that he told a witness to lie about the event if questioned by law enforcement.

    The guilty plea was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur and Acting Special Agent in Charge Jennifer L. Moore of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office.

    “Prosecuting criminals who work in police agencies is essential both to protect our communities and to support the many honorable officers whose reputations they unfairly tarnish,” said U.S. Attorney Robert K. Hur.

    Keith Allen Gladstone joined the Baltimore Police Department (BPD) as an officer on November 20, 1992, and was promoted to Sergeant on December 16, 2011.  Gladstone retired from the BPD on December 25, 2012, but was subsequently reinstated as a Sergeant on December 9, 2013.  In March 2014, Gladstone was the officer-in-charge of a Special Enforcement Section (SES) unit assigned to BPD’s Western District.  Gladstone retired from the BPD for a second time on May 1, 2017.

    According his plea agreement, on the evening of March 26, 2014, Gladstone, who was on duty, was having dinner with Officer 1 when he received a call on his cell phone from a sergeant in the BPD who was in a panic because he had just run over an arrestee, D.S., in the front yard of a home in Northeast Baltimore.  Gladstone obtained a BB gun from another officer, then drove with Officer 1 to the site of D.S.’s arrest on Anntana Avenue and Belair Road in Northeast Baltimore City.  Gladstone admitted that he dropped the BB gun near a pickup truck where D.S. lay injured on the ground.  Gladstone told the sergeant, in Officer 3’s presence, “it’s over by the truck,” or words to that effect.  The BB gun was then seen by another BPD officer and ultimately recovered by the BPD’s crime lab unit.  Based on a false statement of probable cause written by the sergeant in another officer’s name, D.S. was subsequently charged in Maryland state court with possession, use, and discharge of a gas or pellet gun, for the BB gun that Gladstone planted at the scene of D.S.’s arrest, and a number of drug offenses.  D.S. was detained on those charges until at least April 2, 2014.  On January 16, 2015, the charges were disposed of by nolle prosequi, which is a form of dismissal.

    As a result of his actions, Gladstone conspired to deprive D.S. of his liberty without the due process of law, and conspired to commit offenses against the United States, specifically to impede, obstruct, and influence an investigation.

    As detailed in his plea agreement, after the sergeant and six other officers who had been members of the GTTF were arrested on federal racketeering charges, Gladstone and Officer 1 arranged to meet in person.  Gladstone arranged for the meeting to take place in a swimming pool, to ensure that Officer 1 was not wearing a recording device.  Gladstone admitted that during the meeting, he told Officer 1 that if questioned by federal law enforcement about the events on March 26, 2014, Officer 1 should tell federal investigators that Gladstone and Officer 1 were at the crime scene for “scene security,” which Officer 1 knew was not true.  Gladstone also told Officer 1 to tell law enforcement that Gladstone had gotten the BB gun from his trunk, which was also not true, since Gladstone and Officer 1 had obtained the gun from another officer.   

    Gladstone faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for conspiracy to violate civil rights.  U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake has scheduled sentencing for September 13, 2019, at 9:15 a.m.

    United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI for its work in the investigation.  Mr. Hur thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Leo J. Wise and Derek E. Hines, who are prosecuting the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-md/pr/former-baltimore-police-sergeant-pleads-guilty-conspiracy-deprive-civil-rights-assisting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2019, 03:14:03 PM
    Watchdog says FBI has access to about 640M photographs

    A government watchdog says the FBI has access to about 640 million photographs — including from driver’s licenses, passports and mugshots — that can be searched using facial recognition technology.

    The figure reflects how the technology is becoming an increasingly powerful law enforcement tool, but is also stirring fears about the potential for authorities to intrude on the lives of Americans. It was reported by the Government Accountability Office at a congressional hearing in which both Democrats and Republicans raised questions about the use of the technology.

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/fbi-has-access-to-about-640m-photographs-watchdog-says
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2019, 10:24:12 PM
    When seconds counted, the cops were 3 phone calls and 26 minutes away.
    Good thing this woman had a firearm and was prepared to use it.

    Florida mom holds suspected intruder at gunpoint for 26 minutes

    A Florida mother held a suspected intruder at gunpoint for 26 minutes last month while waiting for police to arrive, according to reports.

    Lauren Richards, 25, first called 911 just after midnight May 25 and told them someone unfamiliar was outside her Tampa Bay area home, WFLA reported. After calling police, she noticed her garage door, which she usually keeps open, was shut. She opened the door. “He is about 8 feet from me approximately," she told WFLA.

    "I have a gun pointed and I need the police to show up immediately," she told 911 in a second call. "I called 10 minutes ago and nobody has shown up."

    She reportedly had to hold the gun on the intruder for another 13 minutes before police arrived just after 1 a.m. Another neighbor assisted Richards in holding the suspected intruder at gunpoint after she called him.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-woman-holds-suspected-intruder-at-gunpoint-for-26-minutes
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 05, 2019, 02:06:38 PM
    Why do we pay for this.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2019, 02:05:38 AM
    Outrageous... Even though the maximum sentence he faces is just 12.5 years for killing an innocent woman, now his attorneys are asking that he serves just 2 weeks per year in a workhouse: one week on the anniversary of his victim's death and another week on his victim's birthday.
    The article also mentions how several letters of support were submitted from cops as well as a State Rep of Somali descent who, oddly enough, in her campaign said that "residents of color are over policed" and advocated for "greater police accountability" (it is quite odd then that now she supports a cop who killed an innocent woman, maybe because the victim was white and innocent and the cop who killed her was of Somali descent).

    Attorneys for Noor propose unusual sentence

    Two days before Mohamed Noor is to be sentenced, attorneys for the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond have asked a judge to consider an unusual sentence that would only have Noor locked up for two weeks a year.

    In their memorandum in support of a "mitigated sentencing departure," attorneys Thomas Plunkett and Peter Wold asked the court to consider Noor's lack of a criminal history, remorse and community support.

    In the first of two proposed sentences, the attorneys asked for no prison time, instead requiring Noor to turn himself in to the Hennepin County workhouse for one week on the anniversary of Damond's death in July, and one more week on her birthday in April.

    https://kstp.com/news/mohamed-noor-sentencing-justine-ruszczyk-damond/5379143/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 06, 2019, 04:12:46 AM
    Outrageous... Even though the maximum sentence he faces is just 12.5 years for killing an innocent woman, now his attorneys are asking that he serves just 2 weeks per year in a workhouse: one week on the anniversary of his victim's death and another week on his victim's birthday.
    The article also mentions how several letters of support were submitted from cops as well as a State Rep of Somali descent who, oddly enough, in her campaign said that "residents of color are over policed" and advocated for "greater police accountability" (it is quite odd then that now she supports a cop who killed an innocent woman, maybe because the victim was white and innocent and the cop who killed her was of Somali descent).

    Attorneys for Noor propose unusual sentence

    Two days before Mohamed Noor is to be sentenced, attorneys for the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond have asked a judge to consider an unusual sentence that would only have Noor locked up for two weeks a year.

    In their memorandum in support of a "mitigated sentencing departure," attorneys Thomas Plunkett and Peter Wold asked the court to consider Noor's lack of a criminal history, remorse and community support.

    In the first of two proposed sentences, the attorneys asked for no prison time, instead requiring Noor to turn himself in to the Hennepin County workhouse for one week on the anniversary of Damond's death in July, and one more week on her birthday in April.

    https://kstp.com/news/mohamed-noor-sentencing-justine-ruszczyk-damond/5379143/

    Sickening that an innocent life gets taken and this is the aftermath
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 06, 2019, 11:42:26 AM
    Outrageous... Even though the maximum sentence he faces is just 12.5 years for killing an innocent woman, now his attorneys are asking that he serves just 2 weeks per year in a workhouse: one week on the anniversary of his victim's death and another week on his victim's birthday.
    The article also mentions how several letters of support were submitted from cops as well as a State Rep of Somali descent who, oddly enough, in her campaign said that "residents of color are over policed" and advocated for "greater police accountability" (it is quite odd then that now she supports a cop who killed an innocent woman, maybe because the victim was white and innocent and the cop who killed her was of Somali descent).

    Attorneys for Noor propose unusual sentence

    Two days before Mohamed Noor is to be sentenced, attorneys for the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond have asked a judge to consider an unusual sentence that would only have Noor locked up for two weeks a year.

    In their memorandum in support of a "mitigated sentencing departure," attorneys Thomas Plunkett and Peter Wold asked the court to consider Noor's lack of a criminal history, remorse and community support.

    In the first of two proposed sentences, the attorneys asked for no prison time, instead requiring Noor to turn himself in to the Hennepin County workhouse for one week on the anniversary of Damond's death in July, and one more week on her birthday in April.

    https://kstp.com/news/mohamed-noor-sentencing-justine-ruszczyk-damond/5379143/


    Fucking Nonsense
    What kinda Drugs are Those attorneys on.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2019, 04:36:59 PM
    Another joke sentence, just 60 months...

    Former Supervisor at Louisiana Correctional Facility Sentenced for Role in Conspiracy to Violate Civil Rights of Inmates

    A former captain at the Richwood Correctional Center was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Monroe, Louisiana, for his role in a conspiracy to violate the civil rights of five inmates. Roderick Douglas, 38, of Monroe, Louisiana, previously pleaded guilty to conspiring with five other corrections officers to violate the Constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. According to the defendant’s plea agreement and admission in court, Douglas and other officers sprayed a chemical agent directly in the faces and eyes of five inmates while the inmates were handcuffed, compliant, kneeling on the floor, and not posing a physical threat to anyone. Following that abuse, the officers conspired to hide their conduct by submitting false reports.

    Douglas was sentenced to serve 60 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty of the Western District of Louisiana. Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband for the Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana David C. Joseph made the announcement.

    “This blatant abuse of power will not be tolerated by the Department of Justice,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband. “Today’s sentencing demonstrates the commitment of the Civil Rights Division to vigorously prosecute those who inflict cruel and unusual punishment against inmates under their care.” 

    “Correctional officers deserve our respect for the jobs they do, but we must also hold them accountable when they willfully break the law and cover up the abuse of inmates,” said U.S. Attorney David C. Joseph. “The defendant in this case ignored his role as a caretaker for prisoners and violated the rights of those he was sworn to protect. My office is committed to upholding the laws of our land and the rights of all.”

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Mudrick of the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Western District of Louisiana, and Trial Attorney Anita Channapati of the Civil Rights Division, Criminal Section, prosecuted the case. The Monroe Division of the FBI investigated the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-supervisor-louisiana-correctional-facility-sentenced-role-conspiracy-violate-civil
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2019, 04:49:24 PM
    Facial recognition is coming to US schools, starting in New York

    The Lockport City School District in New York will start testing a facial and object recognition system called "Aegis" on June 3rd. According to BuzzFeed News, that will make it the first in the US to pilot a facial recognition surveillance system on its students and faculty. The district installed cameras and the software suite back in September, using $1.4 million of the $4.2 million funding it received through the New York Smart Schools Bond Act. Funding provided through the Bond Act is supposed to go towards instructional tech devices, such as iPads and laptops, but the district clearly had other plans.

    BuzzFeed News got its hands on a copy of a letter distributed to the students' parents, and it describes Aegis as "an early warning system" that can notify officials of threats. The system, created by Canadian company SN Technologies, can apparently keep track of certain individuals in school grounds. They include level 2 or 3 sex offenders, anyone prohibited from entering the schools and anybody believed to pose a threat based on credible information.

    https://www.engadget.com/2019/05/30/facial-recognition-us-schools-new-york/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2019, 05:03:02 PM
    That's a nice racket by NYC and NYPD...

    NYC Makes 11th Avenue One Way With No Warning, Then Tickets Drivers For Not Knowing

    The city’s sudden change to traffic flow on a heavily traveled west side avenue led to mass confusion Tuesday.

    A one-way only stretch on 11th Avenue has been extended. The city said it’s part of the mayor’s “Vision Zero” plan, but drivers and bikers say it came with zero warning. With the brush of this truck, Department of Transportation workers wiped out the double lanes on 11th Avenue and slowly erected one way sign posts. There will now be only one way traffic from 57th Street all the way to the Lincoln Tunnel.

    Some drivers realized the change Tuesday morning as police issued summonses to drivers making a left onto 11th Avenue from 56th Street to head north.  One driver didn’t notice the poorly announced change and was chased down by an NYPD officer to turn around, but still didn’t understand why.

    CBS2’s Lisa Rozner then questioned the officers on why they were handing out pricey tickets for a policy that was literally minutes old and gave drivers no warning.

    Hours later – and as more cars continued to make the customary turn – police instead pulled over drivers to give out fliers informing them about the “new traffic pattern.”

    https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2019/06/04/nyc-11th-avenue-one-way-tickets/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2019, 11:22:20 PM
    Another reminder that we are dealing with violent criminal gangs. Of course local crime bosses were quick to defend them.

    Video shows Cuyahoga County Jail officer pummel mentally-ill inmate after turning off body camera

    Guards strapped Terrance Debose to a chair in a small cell tucked away in the Cuyahoga County Jail where no one else could see him.

    Corrections Cpl. Nicholas Evans stood next to the chair. He flipped his body camera off and pummeled the face of the 47-year-old inmate who suffers from an undiagnosed mental illness. Debose could not move his arms to defend himself from the onslaught.

    Cuyahoga County released surveillance video to cleveland.com Thursday of the March 22 incident after months of delays and denials.

    The video showed Timothy Dugan, another corrections officer, punch Debose in the face one last time. The two now-indicted guards left Dubose strapped in the chair for two hours as his face bled.

    The beating takes 13 seconds and is among the shortest of the videos released by Cuyahoga County of corrections officers accused of abuse and violating the civil-rights of jail inmates. But it’s also among the most brutal in its depiction of violence.

    Debose suffered a concussion as a result of the attack.

    Evans punches Debose six times and Dugan twice. Evans faces a felonious assault charge that carries a potential eight-year prison sentence if he’s convicted. Dugan is charged with misdemeanor assault, and both are charged with violating Debose’s civil rights. They pleaded not guilty at their arraignments in early April.

    The two officers are on unpaid administrative leave while the case is pending.

    “While we can’t run from the video, the evidence provided to us during the course of our defense does not appear to show serious physical harm to sustain a felony conviction in this case," said Adam Chaloupka, an attorney with the Ohio Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association.



    https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2019/06/video-shows-cuyahoga-county-jail-officer-pummel-mentally-ill-inmate-after-turning-off-body-camera.html


    Btw, this is the same county where this happened:



    This level of brutality and sadism should be countered with capital punishment.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2019, 10:47:11 AM
    Outrageous... Even though the maximum sentence he faces is just 12.5 years for killing an innocent woman, now his attorneys are asking that he serves just 2 weeks per year in a workhouse: one week on the anniversary of his victim's death and another week on his victim's birthday.
    The article also mentions how several letters of support were submitted from cops as well as a State Rep of Somali descent who, oddly enough, in her campaign said that "residents of color are over policed" and advocated for "greater police accountability" (it is quite odd then that now she supports a cop who killed an innocent woman, maybe because the victim was white and innocent and the cop who killed her was of Somali descent).

    Attorneys for Noor propose unusual sentence

    Two days before Mohamed Noor is to be sentenced, attorneys for the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond have asked a judge to consider an unusual sentence that would only have Noor locked up for two weeks a year.

    In their memorandum in support of a "mitigated sentencing departure," attorneys Thomas Plunkett and Peter Wold asked the court to consider Noor's lack of a criminal history, remorse and community support.

    In the first of two proposed sentences, the attorneys asked for no prison time, instead requiring Noor to turn himself in to the Hennepin County workhouse for one week on the anniversary of Damond's death in July, and one more week on her birthday in April.

    https://kstp.com/news/mohamed-noor-sentencing-justine-ruszczyk-damond/5379143/

    Still not enough but at least he didn't get that joke of a sentence his lawyers proposed (serving 2 weeks per year in a workhouse: one week on the anniversary of his victim's death and another week on his victim's birthday).

    Ex-Minneapolis officer who killed Justine Damond sentenced to 12.5 years

    Mohamed Noor, the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the fatal shooting of an Australian woman who called 911 for help, was sentenced Friday to 12 1/2 years in prison.

    Noor, 33, fatally shot Justine Ruszczyk Damond, on July 15, 2017, after Noor and his partner responded to Damond’s call to report that she thought a woman was being sexually assaulted.

    Defense lawyer Thomas Plunkett asked for just one year and a day in prison for his client, and filed 44 letter with the court in support of Noor. But Senior Hennepin County Attorney Amy Sweasy countered that such a light sentence would make Noor's murder conviction equivalent to a misdemeanor DUI. “Such a sentence would be wildly inappropriate in a case this severe," Sweasy said.

    And Hennepin County Judge Kathryn Quaintance lauded Noor's record of community service but said she couldn't cut him any slack.

    “The law does not allow leniency because somebody is a good person,” the judge said. “Good people sometimes do bad things."

    Quaintance sentenced him to 150 months in prison, minus 41 days in jail he's always served.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ex-minneapolis-officer-who-killed-justine-damond-sentenced-12-5-n1013926
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2019, 11:10:09 AM
    Got caught watching porn on duty for 105 hours (!), now he's an "undersheriff"...

    Former BCSO deputy caught watching porn at work, now Valencia Co. undersheriff

    He got caught looking at hours of porn while on duty with the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office. Now, Mark Kmatz is the undersheriff in another county, raising questions about how his misconduct was handled.

    Kmatz was hired by BCSO in 1997 and was the face of the department for many years.  However, in 2015, BCSO said Kmatz was caught on a Bernalillo County owned computer looking at porn sites for approximately 105 hours while on duty.

    BCSO Undersheriff Rudy Mora filed a misconduct report stating Deputy Kmatz signed his time card indicating full compensation for time worked while committing the policy violations, meaning he was committing time fraud.

    Kmatz resigned in 2015 as BCSO moved to fire him. Four years later, he's now the undersheriff in Valencia County.  

    https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/former-bcso-deputy-caught-watching-porn-at-work-now-valencia-co-undersheriff/2058720972
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 07, 2019, 02:07:54 PM
    Baltimore is a cesspool of criminal gangs. And get this, in 2018 this guy got paid more than the fucking Mayor of Baltimore, earning $243,132! The only other city employee to earn more than him was another cop!

    Police sergeant arrested after allegedly lying about assault caught on body cam

    Baltimore police announced the arrest of one of their own on Thursday after reviewing officer-worn body cam footage painting a very different picture than what one of their senior officers reported.

    Sgt. Ethan Newberg was charged with second-degree assault, misconduct and false imprisonment for allegedly attacking a man who did nothing wrong. The charges came after officials reviewed footage from his body-worn camera of an arrest earlier this week conducted by Newberg.

    According to officials, Newberg, a 24-year veteran with the department, was running a warrant check and claimed a second man at the scene "challenged him and became combative and aggressive."

    “The body worn camera that I reviewed tells a much different story," Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said at a press conference Thursday. "It shows the man speaking to Sgt. Newberg and walking calmly away after offering his opinion that Sgt. Newberg should have not placed the suspect on a wet sidewalk."

    In a video Harrison called "disturbing," he said Newberg is seen chasing and grabbing the subject while another officer tackled the subject to the ground and placed him in handcuffs.

    Newberg was the second-highest paid city employee in 2018, making $243,132, according to city records. The only city employee who made more gross salary was fellow police Sgt. William Harris Jr.

    The sergeant was paid over $60,000 more than then-Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh
    .

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/police-sergeant-arrested-allegedly-lying-assault-caught-body/story?id=63543894
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2019, 08:41:26 PM
    Border Agency’s Images of Travelers Stolen in Hack

    Tens of thousands of images of travelers and license plates stored by the Customs and Border Protection agency have been stolen in a digital breach, officials said Monday, prompting renewed questions about how the federal government secures and shares personal data.

    An official at the agency said it learned on May 31 that a federal subcontractor had transferred copies of the images to the subcontractor’s network, which the agency said was done without its knowledge and in violation of the contract. The subcontractor’s network was then hacked.

    The hacked material did not include images from airports, but rather of drivers in their cars and license plates of vehicles crossing through one port of entry over a six-week period, officials said. One United States government official said no more than 100,000 people had their information compromised by the attack.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/10/us/politics/customs-data-breach.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2019, 07:13:33 PM
    Horrific. And it happened 5 years ago. Incredible how in 2015 a grand jury found there was "insufficient evidence" to indict this abuser (see video below for the insufficient evidence). The victim filed the lawsuit in 2016 and only now a judge decided he could proceed.

    Handcuffed Houston man whose injury was captured on video headed for trial against police on civil rights violation

    A Houston police officer holds a young man’s head against a sky blue wall at a city lockup and moments later fresh blood can be seen on video dripping from the wall and on the white linoleum floor of the holding cell.

    These images captured in 2014 surveillance videos at the municipal facility on Riesner helped convince a federal judge this week that a federal civil rights complaint should proceed to trial against the officer on charges he slammed the handcuffed man’s head into a metal door jamb and pressed it against the wall, causing him to lose consciousness. A medical provider administered 10 stitches to his forehead to seal the wound.

    Police suspended the officer with pay during an internal investigation, but he was reinstated, a department spokesman previously said.

    The police department’s internal affairs division disciplined Corral after the incident for “not being aware of his surroundings,” according to Kallinen.

    In June 2015, a grand jury in the 174th District Court found insufficient evidence to indict the officer.

    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Handcuffed-Houston-man-whose-injury-was-captured-13973626.php

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2019, 06:08:36 PM
    All this was based on the allegation of a security guard about the theft of a $1 doll by a 4 year old girl.
    After the video was made public, the cops said that the "Professional Standards Bureau" (LMAO!) will "investigate" the incident...

    Phoenix police investigating officers caught sweeping handcuffed man’s leg and pointing gun at car with children inside

    The Phoenix Police Department has opened an investigation into some of its officers and how they handled a shoplifting-theft incident.

    The decision comes after cell phone video was released showing an officer sweeping the leg of a handcuffed man.

    Seconds later, another officer points his gun at the backseat of a car before a pregnant mother and her two young daughters emerge. The officer then holsters his weapon.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/central-phoenix/phoenix-police-investigating-officers-caught-sweeping-handcuffed-mans-leg-and-pointing-gun-at-car-with-children-inside


    Amid Backlash, Phoenix Refuses to ID Cursing Cop, Family Files $10M Claim

    Shocking footage of a Phoenix police officer telling a 22-year-old man, "I'm gonna put a fucking cap in your fucking head" has sparked backlash against a department already reeling from the revelation last week of racist social media posts from officers.

    Now, the man and family in the video — Dravon Ames, his pregnant fiancée, Iesha Harper, and their two young children — have filed a notice of claim against the city of Phoenix. The family is seeking $10 million in damages. Former Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne is representing the family.

    "The police officers committed battery, unlawful imprisonment, false arrest, infliction of emotional distress, and violation of civil rights under the fifth and 14th amendments of the United States Constitution," the claim states.

    https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/phoenix-shoplifting-video-brutality-family-files-claim-11312081

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2019, 06:14:28 PM
    Sacramento County Deputy Arrested for Alleged Sex With 16-Year-Old Boy

    A Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy has been arrested for allegedly having sex with a 16-year-old boy.

    Authorities say 44-year-old Shauna Bishop of Citrus Heights turned herself into Folsom police on Thursday. She was booked and later released.

    An investigation began in May and authorities had obtained an arrest warrant. Bishop could face charges of child molestation and unlawful sex.

    https://ktla.com/2019/06/13/sacramento-county-deputy-arrested-for-alleged-sex-with-16-year-old-boy/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 14, 2019, 11:35:22 PM
    Horrific. And it happened 5 years ago. Incredible how in 2015 a grand jury found there was "insufficient evidence" to indict this abuser (see video below for the insufficient evidence). The victim filed the lawsuit in 2016 and only now a judge decided he could proceed.

    Handcuffed Houston man whose injury was captured on video headed for trial against police on civil rights violation

    A Houston police officer holds a young man’s head against a sky blue wall at a city lockup and moments later fresh blood can be seen on video dripping from the wall and on the white linoleum floor of the holding cell.

    These images captured in 2014 surveillance videos at the municipal facility on Riesner helped convince a federal judge this week that a federal civil rights complaint should proceed to trial against the officer on charges he slammed the handcuffed man’s head into a metal door jamb and pressed it against the wall, causing him to lose consciousness. A medical provider administered 10 stitches to his forehead to seal the wound.

    Police suspended the officer with pay during an internal investigation, but he was reinstated, a department spokesman previously said.

    The police department’s internal affairs division disciplined Corral after the incident for “not being aware of his surroundings,” according to Kallinen.

    In June 2015, a grand jury in the 174th District Court found insufficient evidence to indict the officer.

    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Handcuffed-Houston-man-whose-injury-was-captured-13973626.php



    Any video of police wrong doing is “Never Enough Evidence”  ::)
    “As it Doesn’t Show The Full Story”  ::)
    Yet if the situation was reversed it would be more Than Enough Evidence to Convict.

    Why do Police service Want or Need to Retain & Cover For Scumbags, is the service
    Just so Full of them - It’s the only conclusion to come to.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on June 17, 2019, 10:42:14 PM
    Sacramento County Deputy Arrested for Alleged Sex With 16-Year-Old Boy

    A Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy has been arrested for allegedly having sex with a 16-year-old boy.

    Authorities say 44-year-old Shauna Bishop of Citrus Heights turned herself into Folsom police on Thursday. She was booked and later released.

    An investigation began in May and authorities had obtained an arrest warrant. Bishop could face charges of child molestation and unlawful sex.

    https://ktla.com/2019/06/13/sacramento-county-deputy-arrested-for-alleged-sex-with-16-year-old-boy/

    This kid must be a fag.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 18, 2019, 05:40:13 PM
    Deputy suspended for 'attendance issues' charged with driving drunk with child passenger

    A Bexar County sheriff deputy who was already on unpaid administrative leave for attendance problems is set to be fired after she was arrested for Thursday night for allegedly driving drunk with a child in her car, according to a news release from the sheriff's office.

    Nancy Cruz, 23, was arrested just before midnight by a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper, according to the news release. Her bail is set at $5,000.

    https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/crime/article/BCSO-Deputy-suspended-for-attendance-issues-13997632.php



    She is the 8th cop arrested in this department for 2019:

    "BCSO administration has begun termination proceedings for what is a pattern of misconduct for this employee, and will be serving her with those documents later this morning," according to the news release.


    The attitude of Bexar County Sheriff Javier Salazar should be applauded, and of course just firing the scum is not enough, there should also be charges and prison time where appropriate:
    "I will make it a point to hunt you down and cut you down like a cancer," Salazar said during a press conference on March 30 where he announced the firing of several deputies from this year.



    This is an article from last year about the same department:

    Astounding Bexar County Sheriff's deputy arrest rate continues to skyrocket

    (https://news4sanantonio.com/resources/media/658dd15c-fbcd-4a09-bd94-0be2c9b846b3-large16x9_Arresteddeputies.PNG?1536342340411)

    Twenty-four Bexar County Sheriff’s Office staffers have now been arrested this year, more than double the total from 2017. And there are still four weeks left in the year.

    With 1,374 deputies in the county, that is an arrest rate of 1.7 percent.

    By comparison, five of the 2,329 officers in the San Antonio Police Department have been arrested this year, a rate of 0.2 percent.

    If SAPD officers were being arrested at the same rate as the Sheriff’s Department, the number of police arrested would be 39..

    The most recent deputy arrested - on Dec. 3 - is Michael Dewitt, 51, for assault-family choking/strangulation.

    https://news4sanantonio.com/news/local/bexar-county-sheriffs-deputies-being-arrested-at-prolific-rate
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 18, 2019, 05:52:38 PM
    'Fucking go': DPS trooper screams after allegedly punching elderly couple's windshield

    A Fort Bend County family is demanding answers after they say a Texas state trooper punched the front windshield of their car during a traffic stop.

    "To me, this here is totally unjustifiable for the trooper who did it," said Marcie Creek, the couple's daughter.

    Francisco Montemayor, 81, was driving his 75-year-old wife to a Saturday afternoon lunch in Richmond when they say they slowed down to pass a trooper who was conducting a traffic stop.

    That's when her mother claims that without warning, the trooper fired a punch into the passenger side of the front windshield.

    ABC13 Eyewitness News spoke with a DPS supervisor as he visited the family's home Monday, checking on the couple and their car.

    He admitted the trooper was responsible for the broken windshield and said an internal investigation is underway.

    https://abc13.com/dps-trooper-smashes-elderly-couples-windshield-with-fist/5350514/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2019, 05:04:35 PM
    Once again, the "brave" and "fearless" "heroes" attack an elderly person. This time an 87 year old woman cutting vegetation FFS...
    Of course the local gang boss was quick to defend his goons...

    87yo Great-Grandmother Tasered in Her Breast by Police While Cutting Dandelions with a Knife

    Chatsworth, GA — A family is outraged and a great-grandmother recovering after she was tasered in her breast for failing to understand police when they told her to drop a knife she was using to reportedly cut flowers.

    According to police, they received a call from a Boys and Girls club employee noting that Martha Al-Bishara, 87, was walking a trail with a knife. The caller noted that Al-Bishara was not threatening anyone and appeared to be “walking around looking for something, like, vegetation to cut down or something.” She also had a bag.

    According to her family Al-Bishara’s taser attack was captured on body camera footage and they were able to watch it. However, citing pending charges against the great-grandmother, police are not releasing it publicly.

    The family told police that Al-Bishara was simply on the property to cut dandelions with a kitchen knife—a story backed up by the transcripts of the 911 call. The bag in her hand, the description from the 911 call, and the fact that the woman never threatened anyone should’ve given officers this impression. Instead, however, a gun and a taser were pointed at her.

    Being that Al-Bishara speaks Arabic, she likely did not understand the officers when they were telling her to put down the knife.

    According to the family, the video shows Chatsworth Police Chief Josh Etheridge pointing a gun at Al-Bishara before another officer deploys the taser striking the great-grandmother in her left breast and her stomach.

    She then falls over in agony and begins sobbing as the officers move in to handcuff her.

    Naturally, police are standing by their decision to taser the non-threatening great-grandmother and noted that even though she never moved toward anyone with the knife that she still presented a threat.

    “I completely understand and if I hadn’t been there and it would come across my desk, that is the first thing I would ask as well,” Etheridge said. “Why did we Tase an 87-year-old woman? I guess in that circumstance, I am glad I was there and saw it firsthand and understand why it occurred. An 87-year-old woman with a knife still has the ability to hurt an officer.”

    “The question’s always going to be why did he (the officer) not retreat,” Etheridge said. “The thought behind that would be if the officer had retreated, with her being in an elevated position, he could have easily fell down,” Etheridge said, “at which time she could have been progressing on top of him and deadly force could have been used at that point in time. And that was the whole goal, to try to avoid using any type of force, but if we have to use force, use the minimum force.”

    Family members disagree and said the officers made no attempt to be kind or show bravery.

    “If they would have approached her with an open hand rather than with their guns drawn, she would have handed it (the knife) to them right away,” said grandson Timothy Douhne. “My grandmother is the most kind, generous-hearted woman.”

    “You don’t Tase an 87-year-old woman,” said great-nephew Solomon Douhne, a former Dalton Police Department officer. “She was not a threat. If anything, she was confused and didn’t know what was going on. It was a ridiculous turn of events. If three police officers couldn’t handle an 87-year-old woman, you might want to reconsider hanging up your badge.”

    The fact that she still hasn’t been charged with a crime speaks to unnecessarily violent nature of the stop. Walking with a knife is not a crime, especially while holding a bag and collecting dandelions. Sadly, however, the great-grandmother was traumatized by the incident.

    “She is OK,” great-granddaughter Martha Douhne said. “She is still repeating the incident over in her mind and telling us she didn’t mean for this to happen and apologizing that she didn’t want to bring this on us. She is having trouble sleeping and is stressed.”

    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/great-grandmother-tasered-police-picking-flowers/

    Footage released of the "brave" and "fearless" "heroes", attacking and tazing an 87 year old woman who was cutting dandelions but according to these "heroes" was in "an elevated position with a knife" so they probably feared for their lives.

    New video shows Chatsworth officer tasing 87-year-old woman

    An attorney has released police body camera video showing his 87-year-old client being tased by a Chatsworth police officer.

    The video was captured from the body camera of one of three Chatsworth police officers who responded back in August 2018. It shows the moments before and after Al-Bishara was tased. The elderly woman was arrested and charged with obstruction of an officer and criminal trespassing.

    When Channel 3 reached out to the Chatsworth police chief in August, he sent a statement saying in part, "the last thing any member of our department wanted to do was use a taser on an elderly female. However, when she began to walk towards the officer, from an elevated position with a knife, the officer used the most reasonable amount of force that he could at the time.”

    Channel 3 reached out again on Wednesday, but Chief Josh Etheridge said the department's insurance company has advised him not to comment.



    https://www.wrcbtv.com/story/40682186/body-cams-show-chatsworth-officer-tasing-87yearold-woman
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2019, 10:54:10 PM
    Joke of a sentence once again.

    Former Hadley, Massachusetts, Police Officer Sentenced for Using Excessive Force and Obstructing Investigation

    A former Hadley Police Department Officer was sentenced today in federal court in Springfield, Massachusetts, for using unreasonable force during an arrest and then falsifying a police report of the incident.

    Christopher M. Roeder, 50, of Agawam, Massachusetts, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Mark G. Mastroianni to 14 months in prison. In February 2019, after a week-long trial, a federal jury found Roeder guilty of one count of deprivation of rights under color of law and one count of falsification of a document.

    Evidence presented at trial established that, on April 3, 2017, Roeder struck an arrestee in the face without legal justification, while the arrestee was seated on a bench in the Hadley Police Department booking area. The strike fractured the arrestee’s nose in multiple places and required surgery to repair. Roeder subsequently attempted to obstruct the investigation into his assault of the arrestee by falsifying his police report describing the incident.

    “Law enforcement officers are sworn to uphold and defend the laws of our nation,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband. “Roeder abused his power and violated the constitutional rights of an arrestee, eroding the public’s trust in law enforcement. The Department of Justice will continue to hold law enforcement officers accountable for their actions.”

    “Officers aren’t only expected to enforce the law in their communities, they are expected to follow it themselves,” said U.S. Attorney Andrew E. Lelling. “In this case, an officer broke a man’s nose for no legitimate purpose and then, in an effort to cover up the attack, falsified official documents about the incident. This behavior is unacceptable in someone entrusted with protecting the public safety.”

    “As a police officer sworn to uphold the law, Mr. Roeder’s conduct deliberately abused the authority bestowed upon him, undermining the integrity of our criminal justice system,” said Special Agent in Charge Joseph R. Bonavolanta of the FBI Boston Division. “The overwhelming majority of law enforcement officers perform their duties with dedication and integrity, putting their lives on the line every day to keep our communities safe. This case illustrates the FBI’s commitment and ability to address isolated incidents where officers betray the badge and the public’s trust.”

    Assistant Attorney General Dreiband; U.S. Attorney Lelling; and FBI SAC Bonavolonta made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorney Deepika Bains Shukla of Lelling’s Springfield Branch Office and Trial Attorney Timothy Visser of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division prosecuted the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-hadley-massachusetts-police-officer-sentenced-using-excessive-force-and-obstructing
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2019, 12:09:27 PM
    Militia threat shuts down Oregon Capitol amid walkout by Republican lawmakers

    The Oregon Capitol was closed Saturday because of a "possible militia threat" from right-wing protesters as a walkout by Republican lawmakers over landmark climate change legislation dragged on.

    Republican state senators fled the Legislature — and some, the state — earlier this week to deny the majority Democrats enough votes to take up the climate bill, which would dramatically reduce fossil fuel emissions by 2050. If passed, it would be the second program of its kind in the nation after California.

    Democrats have an 18 to 12 majority in the chamber, but they need 20 members present for a quorum. One GOP senator recently died and has not yet been replaced. Gov. Kate Brown dispatched state police to round up the lawmakers. A small group of people demonstrated outside the Capitol on Saturday to support the walkout, and a larger demonstration was expected Sunday.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/militia-threat-shuts-down-oregon-capitol-amid-walkout-republican-lawmakers-n1020696
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2019, 03:42:58 PM
    Alabama gov. signs law allowing Briarwood Presbyterian Church to have own police force

    After several years of seeking to establish a private police force to adequately protect its church and school campuses, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey has signed legislation allowing the Briarwood Presbyterian Church to do just that despite objections from critics.

    The Associated Press reported Wednesday that Ivey approved the legislation some two week ago.

    In a statement on the approval, Briarwood said that despite having a great relationship with local law enforcement agencies, establishing a private police force had become necessary because the state was unable to provide adequate security for the approximately 2,000 students and faculty of Briarwood Christian School located on two campuses in unincorporated Jefferson and Shelby County due to budget cuts.

    Randall Marshall, the executive director of the ACLU of Alabama, told the AP that the law could allow the church to cover-up criminal activity that occurs on its campuses and expects it to be challenged in courts for unconstitutionally granting government power to a religious institution.

    Matthew Moore, Briarwood's church administrator, told ABC 33/40 that they won’t be hiring their own officers immediately. He added that police officers in the agency they establish will be answerable only to the church.

    “Line officers will report to supervisors and supervisors will report to the director of safety and security/chief of police,” Moore said. “The director/chief reports to the administrator/chief operating officer/dean/college president, who is then responsible for reporting to the governing body, ie: board of trustees, board of education or ruling elders.”

    https://www.christianpost.com/news/alabama-gov-signs-law-allowing-briarwood-presbyterian-church-have-own-police-force.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2019, 08:17:31 PM
    Alabama gov. signs law allowing Briarwood Presbyterian Church to have own police force

    After several years of seeking to establish a private police force to adequately protect its church and school campuses, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey has signed legislation allowing the Briarwood Presbyterian Church to do just that despite objections from critics.

    The Associated Press reported Wednesday that Ivey approved the legislation some two week ago.

    In a statement on the approval, Briarwood said that despite having a great relationship with local law enforcement agencies, establishing a private police force had become necessary because the state was unable to provide adequate security for the approximately 2,000 students and faculty of Briarwood Christian School located on two campuses in unincorporated Jefferson and Shelby County due to budget cuts.

    Randall Marshall, the executive director of the ACLU of Alabama, told the AP that the law could allow the church to cover-up criminal activity that occurs on its campuses and expects it to be challenged in courts for unconstitutionally granting government power to a religious institution.

    Matthew Moore, Briarwood's church administrator, told ABC 33/40 that they won’t be hiring their own officers immediately. He added that police officers in the agency they establish will be answerable only to the church.

    “Line officers will report to supervisors and supervisors will report to the director of safety and security/chief of police,” Moore said. “The director/chief reports to the administrator/chief operating officer/dean/college president, who is then responsible for reporting to the governing body, ie: board of trustees, board of education or ruling elders.”

    https://www.christianpost.com/news/alabama-gov-signs-law-allowing-briarwood-presbyterian-church-have-own-police-force.html

    This is not something I would be concerned with . University of Texas, Texas State, and a ton of Universities across the country have their own police force. While chain of command is followed like any other policing entity, they still have to abide by the state laws and Law Enforcement guidelines. In my opinion, this is a non issue.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 24, 2019, 08:24:34 PM
    The Coward of Broward has been arrested...

    Disgraced Broward Deputy Scot Peterson Arrested

    Following an investigation by FDLE, former Broward Sheriff’s Deputy Scot Peterson, 56, was arrested in Broward County today on seven counts of neglect of a child and three counts of culpable negligence and one count of perjury. The arrest comes after a 15-month investigation into the actions of law enforcement following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting.  

    “The FDLE investigation shows former Deputy Peterson did absolutely nothing to mitigate the MSD shooting that killed 17 children, teachers and staff and injured 17 others,” said FDLE Commissioner Rick Swearingen. “There can be no excuse for his complete inaction and no question that his inaction cost lives.”

    https://953wdae.iheart.com/featured/florida-news/content/2019-06-04-disgraced-broward-deputy-scot-peterson-arrested/


    This is good news. I have utter contempt for that POS. I get that a citizen might not want to enter a building where shots are being fired. Hell, I get that a cop wouldn't really want to.. but when you signed up for that, and put on that badge and uniform, you should have known that if you found yourself in that position, that's what you had to do, and whatever the punishment is for failing to respond in combat, should at least be the penalty for this case. This wasn't a gray area, this wasn't a case where there was confusion and he might not have known what to do. This is what you train for, and understand if it happens, you act. I would love to sit on that jury.
    I've talked to several of my police friends and they are all disgusted by his lack of action.    
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: James on June 25, 2019, 08:33:14 AM
    Dirty Cops beat Suicide patient in hospital and film it laughing.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 25, 2019, 10:18:13 AM
    This is good news. I have utter contempt for that POS. I get that a citizen might not want to enter a building where shots are being fired. Hell, I get that a cop wouldn't really want to.. but when you signed up for that, and put on that badge and uniform, you should have known that if you found yourself in that position, that's what you had to do, and whatever the punishment is for failing to respond in combat, should at least be the penalty for this case. This wasn't a gray area, this wasn't a case where there was confusion and he might not have known what to do. This is what you train for, and understand if it happens, you act. I would love to sit on that jury.
    I've talked to several of my police friends and they are all disgusted by his lack of action.    


    Great to hear that from your good self.
    Hopefully you feel the same about many other dreadful things on here.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 25, 2019, 11:27:52 AM

    Great to hear that from your good self.
    Hopefully you feel the same about many other dreadful things on here.

    Likely I do.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 25, 2019, 11:39:43 AM
    Dirty Cops beat Suicide patient in hospital and film it laughing.




    Disgusting! Glad to hear the asshole will be doing time for that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 25, 2019, 06:49:27 PM
    Another "brave hero" who shot a monstrous 250 lb Cerberus small chihuahua in the head, "fearing for his safety"... Notice how after shooting the dog, the resident orders him to leave the property and not only does he disobey and refuses to comply but he advances towards him. Maybe the resident should have feared for his life and shot at the armed attacker in self defense. After 5 months, and the sheriff sayign otherwise, he has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty.

    Former Faulkner County deputy charged with animal cruelty in dog shooting

    A former Faulkner County sheriff's office deputy has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty after shooting a loose Chihuahua in January.

    Faulkner County court records show an arrest warrant was issued Tuesday for Keenan Wallace. The warrant had been served by Wednesday morning, according to court records.

    Sheriff's office spokesman Erinn Stone confirmed that Wallace was the defendant in the case.

    Wallace shot a Chihuahua named Reese's in the head on Jan. 4 after being called about a loose and aggressive dog in a Conway neighborhood, according to the sheriff's office. Wallace, a former K-9 handler, reportedly said he opened fire after the dog lunged at him and tried to bite him. The dog survived.

    The dog's caretaker, Doug Canady, said the dog posed no threat to Wallace and was turning away from the deputy when he opened fire. He posted a video of the incident that went viral.

    The sheriff's office fired Wallace after investigating the shooting. Sheriff Tim Ryals said in a statement that it did not appear that Wallace violated any state law or agency policy, but had fallen short of department standards.


    (0:23)

    https://katv.com/news/local/former-faulkner-county-deputy-charged-with-animal-cruelty-in-dog-shooting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on June 26, 2019, 08:58:26 PM
    Another "brave hero" who shot a monstrous 250 lb Cerberus small chihuahua in the head, "fearing for his safety"... Notice how after shooting the dog, the resident orders him to leave the property and not only does he disobey and refuses to comply but he advances towards him. Maybe the resident should have feared for his life and shot at the armed attacker in self defense. After 5 months, and the sheriff sayign otherwise, he has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty.

    Former Faulkner County deputy charged with animal cruelty in dog shooting

    A former Faulkner County sheriff's office deputy has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty after shooting a loose Chihuahua in January.

    Faulkner County court records show an arrest warrant was issued Tuesday for Keenan Wallace. The warrant had been served by Wednesday morning, according to court records.

    Sheriff's office spokesman Erinn Stone confirmed that Wallace was the defendant in the case.

    Wallace shot a Chihuahua named Reese's in the head on Jan. 4 after being called about a loose and aggressive dog in a Conway neighborhood, according to the sheriff's office. Wallace, a former K-9 handler, reportedly said he opened fire after the dog lunged at him and tried to bite him. The dog survived.

    The dog's caretaker, Doug Canady, said the dog posed no threat to Wallace and was turning away from the deputy when he opened fire. He posted a video of the incident that went viral.

    The sheriff's office fired Wallace after investigating the shooting. Sheriff Tim Ryals said in a statement that it did not appear that Wallace violated any state law or agency policy, but had fallen short of department standards.


    (0:23)

    https://katv.com/news/local/former-faulkner-county-deputy-charged-with-animal-cruelty-in-dog-shooting

    A Chihuahua, really?  What a fucking pussy.  Should do time, lose his job and never be allowed to carry a firearm ever again.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2019, 10:50:24 AM
    Notice how once again the cops try to downplay their abuse through creative use of language and of course trying to discredit the person they abused.

    Phoenix Police Suspended Officer Involved in Unwarranted Body Cavity Search

    The Phoenix Police Department suspended an officer who performed an unwarranted body cavity search on a 37-year-old black mother in violation of department policy, according to a press statement.

    The police narrative did not name the female officer who conducted the search, reveal the length of the suspension (which began in February), or say whether the officer was paid during her disciplinary period. It did not use the phrase "body cavity search," opting instead for "thorough search."

    The statement also failed to answer accusations that officers orchestrated a cover-up of the alleged sexual assault of Erica Reynolds, the details of which are outlined in a notice of claim filed Monday.

    The situation began on December 26, when Phoenix police surveilled Reynolds meeting with Charles Riggins, the suspected leader of a criminal drug ring. After the meeting, officers pulled Reynolds over and claimed to smell marijuana in her car.

    They searched her vehicle, patted her down, and brought out a drug-sniffing dog. None of those procedures turned up any drugs. Still, the officers took her to a substation where they asked her to strip naked and bend over, her claim states. A female cop used her fingers to probe Reynolds' anus and vagina.

    https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/phoenix-officer-suspended-over-cavity-search-11318316
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2019, 04:16:36 PM
    Another bad decision that could have wider implications. Apparently, warrants do not matter anymore. What other rights will be waived through the ridiculous "implied consent" and "exigent circumstances" doctrine?

    Supreme Court Affirms Police Can Order Blood Drawn From Unconscious DUI Suspects

    The Supreme Court has ruled that police may, without a warrant, order blood drawn from an unconscious person suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol.

    The Fourth Amendment generally requires police to obtain a warrant for a blood draw. But in a 5-4 vote on Thursday, the court upheld a Wisconsin law that says people driving on a public road have impliedly consented to having their blood drawn if police suspect them of driving under the influence. It also said that "exigent circumstances" permit police to obtain a blood sample without a warrant.

    The decision conflicts with previous court rulings in which the justices ruled that a blood draw is a significant bodily intrusion into a person's privacy and that there are less intrusive ways of enforcing drunken driving laws against unconscious motorists — getting a warrant, for instance, which in these tech-savvy days can be done relatively easily and quickly.

    In 2013, for instance, the high court ruled that police violated the Constitution when they ordered a nonconsensual blood draw without a warrant in a routine DUI case. The vote then was 5-4, but two of the justices in that majority, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, are no longer on the court.

    The constitutional rights case produced four opinions — two concurring and two in dissent. In a break with his conservatives benchmates, one of those dissents came from Justice Neil Gorsuch.

    In his concurring opinion, Thomas wrote that because the evidence of alcohol in drivers' blood will dissipate over time, states can invoke the "exigent-circumstances doctrine" on that basis alone to allow police to order a blood test without a warrant. Explaining why he took a stand apart from Alito's plurality opinion, Thomas wrote that it "adopts a rule more likely to confuse than clarify."

    Alito's concurring opinion agreed that speed is vital in obtaining blood-alcohol evidence. But he also said that the demands on police officers' time contribute to creating exigent circumstances that allow an exception to warrant requirements — especially if an unconscious motorist has caused a crash. And he noted that police usually take such drivers to the emergency room — removing their chance of administering a breath test at the police station.

    Twenty-eight states have laws similar to Wisconsin's. The case, Mitchell v. Wisconsin, was accepted by the court at the start of this year, amid sharp divisions among state appellate courts over whether the blood draws violate motorists' Fourth Amendment rights.

    In separate dissents, Justices Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor said the majority had erred in deciding the case on the grounds of exigent circumstances, rather than through an analysis of Wisconsin's implied consent law — the statute they say the state was actually seeking to test.

    Sotomayor emphasized that in lower courts, Wisconsin officials admitted there had been time to get a warrant — but they said the step wasn't needed because of implied consent.


    "Wisconsin has not once, in any of its briefing before this Court or the state courts, argued that exigent circumstances were present here," Sotomayor wrote. "In fact, in the state proceedings, Wisconsin 'conceded' that the exigency exception does not justify the warrantless blood draw in this case."

    In his terse one-page dissent, Gorsuch said the case should have never risen to the Supreme Court in the first place.

    "We took this case to decide whether Wisconsin drivers impliedly consent to blood alcohol tests thanks to a state statute," Gorsuch wrote. "That law says that anyone driving in Wisconsin agrees — by the very act of driving — to testing under certain circumstances. But the Court today declines to answer the question presented. Instead, it upholds Wisconsin's law on an entirely different ground—citing the exigent circumstances doctrine."

    https://www.npr.org/2019/06/27/732852170/supreme-court-affirms-police-can-draw-blood-from-unconscious-drivers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on June 27, 2019, 05:18:48 PM
    Another bad decision that could have wider implications. Apparently, warrants do not matter anymore. What other rights will be waived through the ridiculous "implied consent" and "exigent circumstances" doctrine?

    Supreme Court Affirms Police Can Order Blood Drawn From Unconscious DUI Suspects

    The Supreme Court has ruled that police may, without a warrant, order blood drawn from an unconscious person suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol.

    The Fourth Amendment generally requires police to obtain a warrant for a blood draw. But in a 5-4 vote on Thursday, the court upheld a Wisconsin law that says people driving on a public road have impliedly consented to having their blood drawn if police suspect them of driving under the influence. It also said that "exigent circumstances" permit police to obtain a blood sample without a warrant.

    The decision conflicts with previous court rulings in which the justices ruled that a blood draw is a significant bodily intrusion into a person's privacy and that there are less intrusive ways of enforcing drunken driving laws against unconscious motorists — getting a warrant, for instance, which in these tech-savvy days can be done relatively easily and quickly.

    In 2013, for instance, the high court ruled that police violated the Constitution when they ordered a nonconsensual blood draw without a warrant in a routine DUI case. The vote then was 5-4, but two of the justices in that majority, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, are no longer on the court.

    The constitutional rights case produced four opinions — two concurring and two in dissent. In a break with his conservatives benchmates, one of those dissents came from Justice Neil Gorsuch.

    In his concurring opinion, Thomas wrote that because the evidence of alcohol in drivers' blood will dissipate over time, states can invoke the "exigent-circumstances doctrine" on that basis alone to allow police to order a blood test without a warrant. Explaining why he took a stand apart from Alito's plurality opinion, Thomas wrote that it "adopts a rule more likely to confuse than clarify."

    Alito's concurring opinion agreed that speed is vital in obtaining blood-alcohol evidence. But he also said that the demands on police officers' time contribute to creating exigent circumstances that allow an exception to warrant requirements — especially if an unconscious motorist has caused a crash. And he noted that police usually take such drivers to the emergency room — removing their chance of administering a breath test at the police station.

    Twenty-eight states have laws similar to Wisconsin's. The case, Mitchell v. Wisconsin, was accepted by the court at the start of this year, amid sharp divisions among state appellate courts over whether the blood draws violate motorists' Fourth Amendment rights.

    In separate dissents, Justices Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor said the majority had erred in deciding the case on the grounds of exigent circumstances, rather than through an analysis of Wisconsin's implied consent law — the statute they say the state was actually seeking to test.

    Sotomayor emphasized that in lower courts, Wisconsin officials admitted there had been time to get a warrant — but they said the step wasn't needed because of implied consent.


    "Wisconsin has not once, in any of its briefing before this Court or the state courts, argued that exigent circumstances were present here," Sotomayor wrote. "In fact, in the state proceedings, Wisconsin 'conceded' that the exigency exception does not justify the warrantless blood draw in this case."

    In his terse one-page dissent, Gorsuch said the case should have never risen to the Supreme Court in the first place.

    "We took this case to decide whether Wisconsin drivers impliedly consent to blood alcohol tests thanks to a state statute," Gorsuch wrote. "That law says that anyone driving in Wisconsin agrees — by the very act of driving — to testing under certain circumstances. But the Court today declines to answer the question presented. Instead, it upholds Wisconsin's law on an entirely different ground—citing the exigent circumstances doctrine."

    https://www.npr.org/2019/06/27/732852170/supreme-court-affirms-police-can-draw-blood-from-unconscious-drivers


    Doesn't matter.  Wisconsin liberal judges only give a slap on the wrist to repeat offenders.  It's not uncommon to have drunkards out on the streets with 3-5-7 duis
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on June 27, 2019, 05:24:33 PM
    Ludicrous:’ 2 serial drunk drivers arrested in Milwaukee County for their 9th OWIs

    https://fox6now.com/2018/07/19/ludicrous-2-serial-drunk-drivers-arrested-in-milwaukee-county-for-their-9th-owis/

    Madison woman cited for drunken driving 2 times in 3 hours

    https://fox6now.com/2018/07/02/madison-woman-cited-for-drunken-driving-2-times-in-3-hours/

    Fond du Lac man convicted of 11th drunken driving offense

    https://fox6now.com/2017/04/13/fond-du-lac-man-convicted-of-11th-drunken-driving-offense/

    Wisconsin man faces at least his 10th drunk driving charge

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/wisconsin-man-faces-at-least-his-10th-drunk-driving-charge

    Loophole in Wisconsin law allows for four first time OWIs

    https://www.tmj4.com/news/project-drive-sober/loophole-in-wisconsin-law-allows-for-four-first-time-owis

    Man charged with 7th OWI was nearly 4 times legal limit to drive

    https://www.wbay.com/content/news/Man-charged-with-7th-OWI-was-nearly-4-times-legal-limit-to-drive-509005911.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on June 27, 2019, 05:34:19 PM
    And then there's daily advertisements for this  ::)

    (https://www.grievelaw.com/Content/images/grieveLawLogo.png)

    Drunk Driving Lawyer in Waukesha, Milwaukee, and Others Cities in Southeast Wisconsin

    Drunk Driving Lawyers in MilwaukeeIt happened. You didn't think it actually could, but now the terrifying reality is setting in: you or someone you know has been charged with a DUI in Milwaukee (OWI is technically the right legal term in the state of Wisconsin, although most people call it a DUI or Drunk Driving, while some call it DWI). Perhaps the situation is even deeper, and you've been charged with a repeat drunk driving offense in Wisconsin. Either way, you need an experienced DUI attorney with a proven record of DUI DISMISSALS and reduced charges to beat your drunk driving charge.

    Don’t worry. There’s still a way to get out of drunk driving charges.
    How to Beat a Drunk Driving Charge in Wisconsin
    https://www.grievelaw.com/Waukesha/DUI
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 27, 2019, 05:53:09 PM


    Doesn't matter.  Wisconsin liberal judges only give a slap on the wrist to repeat offenders.  It's not uncommon to have drunkards out on the streets with 3-5-7 duis

    How repeat DUI offenders are punished is not the point of the decision though. The issue was supposed to be "implied consent", which according to Gorsuch wasn't what the Court focused on but rather the "exigent circumstances". Then there is also the issue of the warrantless search. Sotormayor in her dissent mentions:

    Quote
    The State of Wisconsin conceded in the state courts that it had time to get a warrant to draw Gerald Mitchell’s blood, and that should be the end of the matter. Because the plurality needlessly casts aside the established protections of the warrant requirement in favor of a brand new presumption of exigent circumstances that Wisconsin does not urge, that the state courts did not consider, and that contravenes this Court’s precedent, I respectfully dissent.

    So the cops could have obtained a warrant for the blood draw but they didn't bother and went with the blank check of "implied consent".
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 30, 2019, 05:59:31 PM
    With a single wiretap, police collected 9.2 million text messages

    For four months in 2018, authorities in Texas collected more than 9.2 million messages under a single court-authorized wiretap order, newly released figures show.

    The wiretap, granted by a federal judge in the Southern District of Texas, was granted as part of a narcotics investigation and became the federal wiretap with the most intercepts in 2018, according to the government’s annual wiretap report.

    Little is known about the case, except that 149 individuals involved in the case were targeted by the wiretap.  The wiretap expired last year, allowing the judiciary to disclose the case.

    To date, no arrests have been made

    Trailing behind it was another narcotics investigation in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania saw police obtain a three-month wiretap that collected 9.1 million text message from 45 individuals. No arrests were made either.

    The two cases represent the largest wiretap cases seen in years.

    https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/29/wiretap-prosecutors-texas/

    https://www.uscourts.gov/statistics-reports/wiretap-report-2018
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 02, 2019, 10:14:27 PM
    The "brave heroes" shot dead a 6 year old kid in "self defense"... #kidlivesmatter? Where is the outrage for this killing? Even though it happened almost a year ago it has been hardly mentioned in the news.

    Louisiana Cops Shoot into Car, Killing 6-Year-Old Jeremy Mardis

    Body cam footage showing Louisiana cops shooting into a car and killing a 6-year-old boy sitting in the passenger seat of his father’s car was released earlier today, showing no evidence that the cops were in fear for their lives as they have been claiming since last year.

    After all, not only does the video not show Christopher Few using his car as a weapon by ramming his car into their cars.

    His car is not even pointed in their direction.

    What it does show is Few sitting in his car with both hands out the window as his car is angled perpendicular to the two Marksville City Marshals who pull up in their cars, step out and start shooting.

    The incident took place November 3, 2015 after marshals Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. claimed they tried to pull Few over for an outstanding warrant.

    But it turned out, there was never a warrant for Few’s arrest. Nor was there a gun in the car.

    But his son was in the car, a 6-year-old boy named Jeremy Mardis who had been diagnosed with autism. He was shot five times.


    At the time, there was talk that perhaps the deputies had a personal vendetta against Few but that has not been talked about since.

    The video, which is what led to murder and attempted murder charges against the two cops, captures their surprise when they realized they had just killed a child.

    “I never saw a kid in the car, man,” Stafford tells Greenhouse according to the Associated Press, which has not published that part of the video yet.

    “I never saw a kid, bro.”

    But ballistics indicate he fired his gun 14 times, striking the child at least three times.

    Greenhouse fired four times, but they have not determined if his bullets struck anybody.

    The footage is from a body cam worn by a third cop, Marksville Police Sgt. Kenneth Parnell, III, who did not fire his gun, although it certainly looks that way from the video.

    The video was released today by a judge during a hearing for the two cops. Local media says it has much more footage but much of it is gruesome, so they are deciding what is appropriate to release.

    There is no audio for the first 30 seconds of the video, which indicates Parnell turned it on as the other cops were shooting Few, resulting in the half-minute buffer with no audio also being recorded.

    Both face second-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder charges.

    As is the case with many cops we write about, both cops had a history of violence and unchecked abuses, especially Stafford, who was once charged with aggravated rape, so if only they would have fired him from the get-go, little Jeremy Mardis would be alive today.





    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/28/watch-louisiana-deputies-shoot-into-car-killing-6-year-old-jeremy-mardis/

    Remember this story? These cops claimed they had a warrant to serve to someone and when they attempted to do it, they claimed the man tried to hit them with his car (so they could claim to fear for their lives). As expected they lied: they didn't have a warrant (no big deal for scum like them, who cares about warrants when they have a badge and a gun), the man didn't try to hit them and yet they ended up killing the man's 6 year old son. The poor child was shot 5 times.  One of the killers was released from prison after staying less than 2 years... Somehow it was deemed that killing this 6 year old child by shooting him 5 times was not a "crime of violence"...

    Norris Greenhouse, Jr. released from prison after completing portion of his sentence

    (https://media.graytvinc.com/images/810*465/Norris+Greenhouse+clipped.JPG)

     Norris Greenhouse, Jr. has completed a portion of his sentence and has been released from the custody of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections as of June 28, according to Ken Pastorick, the communications director for the department.

    Greenhouse, Jr. was sentenced to seven years and six months after pleading guilty in October 2017 to malfeasance in office and negligent homicide. He received two years and six months on the malfeasance conviction and five years for negligent homicide for his role in the November 2015 shooting death of 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis and the shooting of his father, Chris Few, in Marksville.

    Greenhouse, Jr. was one of two deputy Ward 2 city marshals charged in connection with the crime, the other being Derrick Stafford, who is serving a 40 year sentence for manslaughter and attempted manslaughter.

    According to Pastorick, "because by law these are not crimes of violence, he (Greenhouse, Jr.) was required to serve 35-percent of this sentence (958 days)."

    https://www.kalb.com/content/news/Norris-Greenhouse-Jr-released-from-prison-after-completing-portion-of-his-sentence-512068622.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 05, 2019, 12:25:28 AM
    Remember this case? Once again a thug gets away with shooting, this time he shot at a harmless innocent man who was on the ground and had his hands up. What more could this man have done so that he wouldn't be shot by this violent thug?

    North Miami police officer not guilty on lesser charge; jury hung on others

    A North Miami police officer on trial in the 2016 shooting of an unarmed man has been found not guilty on one count of culpable negligence, but the jury remains hung on the more serious charges of attempted manslaughter.

    Officer Jonathan Aledda was charged with two counts of attempted manslaughter and two counts of culpable negligence in the 2016 shooting of Charles Kinsey.
    Jurors returned to deliberate Friday, but they couldn't decide on both counts of attempted manslaughter and one count of culpable negligence.

    They asked to re-watch three videos that showed Kinsey on the ground prior to the shooting and also asked to rehear part of Aledda's testimony, in which he talked about what he did after the shooting.

    https://www.local10.com/news/florida/north-miami/officer-jonathan-aledda-verdict

    Remember this case? What do these violent gang members need to do to go to prison? They abuse, kidnap, shoot, kill innocent people, the elderly, the deaf, even children and they still somehow manage to avoid harsh punishment.
    This particular one will not stay a single day in prison, but he has to write an essay. Is this elementary school or what?
    He shot at a harmless innocent man, a caretaker, who, probably knowing that an encounter with the criminal gang can turn fatal, laid flat on the ground with his hands up and begged the gang members not to shoot but to no avail.

    (http://fojusi.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/ggdg-25.jpg)

    North Miami Police Officer Avoids Prison in Caretaker Shooting

    A North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker won't be spending time in prison.

    At a hearing Wednesday, Officer Jonathan Aledda was sentenced to one year of administrative probation and told he must complete 100 hours of community service related to the developmentally disabled. Aledda also must write an essay about better radio communication at police scenes.

    Prosecutor Don Horn said: "His conduct was gross and flagrant, his course of conduct that day showed reckless disregard for human life. It showed reckless disregard for the safety of persons exposed to his dangerous effect. It showed grossly careless disregard for the safety and welfare of the public."

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/North-Miami-Police-Officer-Avoids-Prison-in-Caretaker-Shooting-512174221.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 05, 2019, 04:39:11 AM
    There is little accountability to public sector employees

    Remember this case? What do these violent gang members need to do to go to prison? They abuse, kidnap, shoot, kill innocent people, the elderly, the deaf, even children and they still somehow manage to avoid harsh punishment.
    This particular one will not stay a single day in prison, but he has to write an essay. Is this elementary school or what?
    He shot at a harmless innocent man, a caretaker, who, probably knowing that an encounter with the criminal gang can turn fatal, laid flat on the ground with his hands up and begged the gang members not to shoot but to no avail.

    (http://fojusi.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/ggdg-25.jpg)

    North Miami Police Officer Avoids Prison in Caretaker Shooting

    A North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker won't be spending time in prison.

    At a hearing Wednesday, Officer Jonathan Aledda was sentenced to one year of administrative probation and told he must complete 100 hours of community service related to the developmentally disabled. Aledda also must write an essay about better radio communication at police scenes.

    Prosecutor Don Horn said: "His conduct was gross and flagrant, his course of conduct that day showed reckless disregard for human life. It showed reckless disregard for the safety of persons exposed to his dangerous effect. It showed grossly careless disregard for the safety and welfare of the public."

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/North-Miami-Police-Officer-Avoids-Prison-in-Caretaker-Shooting-512174221.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 05, 2019, 05:21:18 PM
    Skeletor your last 2 posts are tough to understand just How these Scumbags keep
    Getting away with little to no punishment.
    They are utter scumbags- A uniform & a badge doesn’t change that.
    It really does appear they can literally get away with Murder 99.9% of the Time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 05, 2019, 05:28:14 PM
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/sacramento-county-says-its-illegal-to-work-on-your-own-car-in-your-own-garage/ar-AADOizD?ocid=spartanntp


    Insane
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 05, 2019, 05:46:59 PM
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/sacramento-county-says-its-illegal-to-work-on-your-own-car-in-your-own-garage/ar-AADOizD?ocid=spartanntp


    Insane


    Seriously  :o :o :o
    WTFF
    Like you said it Fucking Insanity!!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 05, 2019, 08:17:50 PM
    Dallas police officer accused of writing fake tickets arrested

    A Dallas police officer accused of writing fake tickets and forging names was arrested Thursday. Officer Matt Rushing was arrested on 10 counts of tampering with a government record.

    His arrest, WFAA sources say, was part of a Dallas Police Department criminal investigation and audit of tickets issued by the officer.  Sources say Rushing is one of the leading ticket writers for the department.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/crime/dallas-police-officer-accused-of-writing-fake-tickets-arrested/287-963af3e1-f392-4f9d-80ee-68be0e81ac99
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 05, 2019, 08:38:30 PM
    MSP troopers blow through stop sign, arrest driver that ran into them

    Not even 30 seconds after a crash involving undercover Michigan State Police troopers and a civilian, the troopers ordered that civilian to the ground, threatening him with a taser and handcuffing him, according to his family.
    Carlos Martinez's red Honda crashed into the Jeep, causing the Jeep to spin 360 degrees before stopping next to a house where a surveillance camera captured all of it.

    The undercover trooper, who was driving, got out of his crashed SUV, walked over to Martinez, who was slowly getting out of his car, and the trooper ordered Martinez to the ground. The trooper's partner then handcuffed him.

    https://www.wxyz.com/news/msp-troopers-blow-through-stop-sign-arrest-driver-that-ran-into-them
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 07, 2019, 09:00:12 PM
    Indiana Is Still Arguing That It's Constitutional To Seize Your Car for Driving 5 MPH Over the Speed Limit

    After losing at the U.S Supreme Court, the state of Indiana still hasn't given up its argument that there are virtually no Eighth Amendment limits on what it can seize using civil asset forfeiture.

    In oral arguments before the Indiana Supreme Court last week, Indiana Solicitor General Thomas Fisher said the state's position that it would be constitutional to seize any and every car that went over the speed limit—a line of argument that elicited laughter from the nation's highest court last year—hasn't budged.

    The Indiana Supreme Court is now reconsidering the case of Tyson Timbs' $42,000 Land Rover, and whether the state's 2015 seizure of Timbs' car after he was convicted of a drug felony violated his Eighth Amendment protections against excessive fines and fees.

    In February, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Indiana Supreme Court's ruling that Timbs could not challenge the seizure on Eighth Amendment grounds because the excessive fines clause had not yet been applied, or "incorporated," to the states.

    https://reason.com/2019/07/03/indiana-is-still-arguing-that-its-constitutional-to-seize-your-car-for-driving-5-mph-over-the-speed-limit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 08, 2019, 07:55:43 AM
    Watchdog says FBI has access to about 640M photographs

    A government watchdog says the FBI has access to about 640 million photographs — including from driver’s licenses, passports and mugshots — that can be searched using facial recognition technology.

    The figure reflects how the technology is becoming an increasingly powerful law enforcement tool, but is also stirring fears about the potential for authorities to intrude on the lives of Americans. It was reported by the Government Accountability Office at a congressional hearing in which both Democrats and Republicans raised questions about the use of the technology.

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/fbi-has-access-to-about-640m-photographs-watchdog-says

    FBI, ICE find state driver’s license photos are a gold mine for facial-recognition searches

    Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Immigration and Customs Enforcement have turned state driver’s license databases into a facial-recognition gold mine, scanning through millions of Americans’ photos without their knowledge or consent, newly released documents show.

    Thousands of facial-recognition requests, internal documents and emails over the past five years, obtained through public-records requests by Georgetown Law researchers and provided to The Washington Post, reveal that federal investigators have turned state departments of motor vehicles databases into the bedrock of an unprecedented surveillance infrastructure.

    Police have long had access to fingerprints, DNA and other “biometric data” taken from criminal suspects. But the DMV records contain the photos of a vast majority of a state’s residents, most of whom have never been charged with a crime.

    Neither Congress nor state legislatures have authorized the development of such a system, and growing numbers of Democratic and Republican lawmakers are criticizing the technology as a dangerous, pervasive and error-prone surveillance tool.

    Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio), the House Oversight Committee’s ranking Republican, seemed particularly incensed during a hearing into the technology last month at the use of driver’s license photos in federal facial-recognition searches without the approval of state legislators or individual license holders.

    “They’ve just given access to that to the FBI,” he said. “No individual signed off on that when they renewed their driver’s license, got their driver’s licenses. They didn’t sign any waiver saying, ‘Oh, it’s okay to turn my information, my photo, over to the FBI.’ No elected officials voted for that to happen.”

    Despite those doubts, federal investigators have turned facial recognition into a routine investigative tool. Since 2011, the FBI has logged more than 390,000 facial-recognition searches of federal and local databases, including state DMV databases, the Government Accountability Office said last month, and the records show that federal investigators have forged daily working relationships with DMV officials. In Utah, FBI and ICE agents logged more than 1,000 facial-recognition searches between 2015 and 2017, the records show. Names and other details are hidden, though dozens of the searches are marked as having returned a “possible match.”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/07/07/fbi-ice-find-state-drivers-license-photos-are-gold-mine-facial-recognition-searches
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on July 08, 2019, 12:36:58 PM

    Seriously  :o :o :o
    WTFF
    Like you said it Fucking Insanity!!

    The law seems pretty cut and dry. However, there's sometimes more to the story than the media reports.

    A friend has at times owned as many as five vehicles, most of them relics from the 60's and 70's. His garage is full of computer stuff, which he also repairs. So, the cars are in front of his home, which is located in a residential neighborhood, in the city of Milwaukie, Clackamas County, Oregon.

    Across the street form my previous home in Rivercrest Park, OR, the owner did auto body repairs inside his garage as a business. He worked on one vehicle at a time. This is how he skirted the zoning code which disallowed running a business out of your home. Also, none of his neighbors reported him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 08, 2019, 01:19:45 PM
    The law seems pretty cut and dry. However, there's sometimes more to the story than the media reports.

    A friend has at times owned as many as five vehicles, most of them relics from the 60's and 70's. His garage is full of computer stuff, which he also repairs. So, the cars are in front of his home, which is located in a residential neighborhood, in the city of Milwaukie, Clackamas County, Oregon.

    Across the street form my previous home in Rivercrest Park, OR, the owner did auto body repairs inside his garage as a business. He worked on one vehicle at a time. This is how he skirted the zoning code which disallowed running a business out of your home. Also, none of his neighbors reported him.

    Of course we are seeing this more & more in terms of what the media reports or rather doesn’t.

    I just find it a bit OTT that they trying to stop people working on their own vehicles
    It will just lead to more & more that you won’t be allowed to do at your own home
    It’s a very slippery slope downhill.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 08, 2019, 11:58:24 PM
    Not only was the man shot, but the cops stole his money. There is no word yet on charging the cops with larceny, like any "ordinary" person would be if they stole money from someone.

    APD fires officer connected to money stolen from a deceased victim

    (https://www.ajc.com/rf/image_inline/Pub/p10/AJC/2019/07/08/Images/Richburg.bmp_web.jpg)

    Leilani Collier found Jamel Harris lying in the road, shot in the head on June 19. After trying to save him, she gave his belongings, including more than $500 to Atlanta police when they arrived on scene. That money disappeared and an investigation into what happened was opened.

    At the center of the investigation is Officer Keisha Richburg. As a result of their findings, Richburg was let go from the force.

    A statement was sent to CBS46 reading in part:

    "An administrative investigation was not able to determine what happened to the cash, but Officer Richburg did not properly account for the money according to the department's policies and procedures. As a result, she was terminated."

    https://www.cbs46.com/news/apd-fires-officer-connected-to-money-stolen-from-a-deceased/article_cd462a3c-a1f8-11e9-99fc-13bd07fef99f.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 09, 2019, 12:18:43 AM
    While a man surrendered, a cop let his unleashed police dog maul him, while at the same time other cops were screaming at the man to "stop resisting".... The usual code word excuse used for abuse and coverups: "stop resisting". Not so easy to stay motionless and silent when you are already surrendering and suddenly a wild animal is viciously attacking you.
    As it conveniently happens in many of these cases, the offending cop's bodycam "happened" to be turned off but the other cops present had functioning bodycams that were turned on.
    For each of the infractions the cop received a "harsh" 10 day suspension, however, they wouldn't add up but they would run concurrently. Still, he couldn't even handle that so he appealed the suspensions at the last minute so the process will be delayed.

    Denver police K-9 handler suspended for 10 days after allowing dog to bite man who was surrendering

    https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/denver-police-k-9-handler-suspended-for-10-days-after-allowing-dog-to-bite-man-who-was-surrendering

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 09, 2019, 03:49:03 PM

    Video shows current Durant police officer used questionable force during traffic stop

    Police dash cam video is raising questions over whether or not the Durant Police Department should have hired a former Iowa State Patrol trooper.

    Last month, the I9 investigative team learned Durant Police Officer Robert Smith is the only peace officer in Cedar County with a "Giglio file." The contents of a Giglio file are secret and detail misconduct by a police officer, which may include instances of lying or using excessive force. Only judges can look at Giglio files.

    Smith joined the Durant Police Department in 2018 after retiring from the Iowa State Patrol. Around nine months before Smith left the state patrol he was involved in a traffic stop, where he can be seen in video obtained by I9 through an open records request with the Cedar County Attorney's office using a questionable amount of force before making an arrest.

    The video was shot on the night of September 25th, 2017. It shows then-Trooper Smith turning on his lights and pulling over a then-20-year-old Bryce Yakish, of Davenport, near West Liberty.

    Yakish can be seen quickly pulling off the road, which is quickly followed by a physical confrontation. Smith takes out his gun and then shoves Yakish to the ground by the head His bike is knocked over in the process. You can hear Yakish in the video groaning in pain.

    In court documents, Smith claimed Yakish tried to elude him even though he gave "a visual and audible signal to stop," The video does not confirm Smith's written version of events. Nevertheless, Yakish would be arrested for a felony charge of eluding a law enforcement vehicle.

    Cedar County Sheriff Warren Wethington has also reviewed the footage and said this is one reason why he recently chose to stop booking people arrested by Durant police officers into his jail.

    "It's absolutely wrong," Wethington said. "My opinion, Bob Smith should have been charged criminally."



    https://www.kcrg.com/content/news/Video-shows-current-Durant-police-officer-used-questionable-force-during-traffic-stop--512444331.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2019, 01:46:05 PM
    Oh look, another one:

    FDLE arrests Wester for fabricating evidence, false imprisonment

    FDLE agents arrested Zachary Wester, 26, on felony charges of racketeering, official misconduct, fabricating evidence, possession of a controlled substance and false imprisonment. Wester, a former deputy with Jackson County Sheriff’s Office, was arrested this morning in Crawfordville, Fla.  He is also charged with misdemeanor perjury, possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.
     
    FDLE began its investigation last August at the request of Jackson County Sheriff’s Office.  The investigation shows Wester routinely pulled over citizens for alleged minor traffic infractions, planted drugs inside their vehicles and arrested them on fabricated drug charges. Wester circumvented JCSO’s body camera policy and tailored his recordings to conceal his criminal activity.
     
    “There is no question that Wester’s crimes were deliberate and that his actions put innocent people in jail,” said FDLE Pensacola Assistant Special Agent in Charge Chris Williams. “I am proud of the hard work and dedication shown by our agents and analysts on this case to ensure justice is served.”

    https://www.fdle.state.fl.us/News/2019/July/FDLE-arrests-Wester-for-fabricating-evidence,-fals
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 11, 2019, 11:26:20 PM
    As it has been mentioned so many times in this topic, we are dealing with organized criminal gangs.
    It appears the FBI is also investigating this issue.

    Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy describes attack by Banditos clique

    Deputy gangs are facing renewed scrutiny at the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department as the district attorney weighs potential criminal charges against members of the Banditos, a gang or clique that operates out of the East Los Angeles patrol station.

    Sheriff Alex Villanueva unveiled a new policy Friday meant to root out the problem.

    The measure follows a violent deputy confrontation at a department sponsored party at Kennedy Hall in East L.A.

    A deputy who was beaten up at that party is speaking out anonymously as he and six other deputies file a legal claim alleging harassment and discrimination.

    "There's people getting, you know, stomped on... being choked out... it was just crazy, crazy to believe they're all cops," the deputy tells Eyewitness News.

    The deputies allege that it was a one-sided fight with younger deputies attacked by veteran "shot callers" of the East L.A. sheriff's station, a group bearing tattoos of a skeleton in a sombrero with a shotgun.

    It is the Los Banditos logo.

    The deputies' attorney calls the group a gang.

    "Two of the four perpetrators of the Banditos who did the attacking at Kennedy Hall had been previously fired, one for domestic violence and another for filing a false police report," said lawyer Vincent Miller.

    Even Sheriff Villanueva, who once worked at the East L.A. station acknowledges a bully culture. He says that that the clique came to control even the station captain.

    https://abc7.com/lasd-deputy-describes-attack-by-banditos-clique/5370629/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 12, 2019, 02:18:27 PM
    Remember this case?

    Cop Who Killed Unarmed Dad Begging for His Life Claims Showing Jury Body Cam is “Unfair”

    Phoenix, AZ —  In March of 2016, Mesa Police Officer Philip Brailsford was charged with second-degree murder for gunning down Daniel Shaver, an innocent husband, and father of two. The shooting was captured on his body cam, part of which was released the following May.

    Now, however, Brailsford’s defense is claiming that the prosecution showing the jury the body cam during opening statements would be unfair to the killer cop.

    According to AZ Central, Brailsford, 26, is scheduled to stand trial starting Oct. 23 on a charge of second-degree murder. The trial is expected to last 16 days. In a memorandum filed in Maricopa County Superior Court on Monday, attorney Michael Piccarreta says prosecutor Susie Charbel plans to show an 18-minute police body- camera recording during her opening statement, scheduled for Oct. 25.

    Piccarreta says in the memo “that it is extremely unfair to the defense” to show the video during the opening statement because that wouldn’t allow the defense lawyer to immediately cross-examine any witnesses about the footage.

    However, the playing of the video is in line with standards of opening statements allowing the prosecution to establish their credibility in this case. The video of Brailsford killing Shaver will undoubtedly be at the very center of the case so the defense’s claim of not being allowed to cross-examine any witness about the footage is unfounded.

    Regardless of when the body camera video is shown, it will be the first time the full, unedited version will be played.

    Last year, an Arizona judge announced that they would be releasing the body camera footage showing Brailsford murder Shaver. When they did release it, however, the city released two videos, both of which were clearly edited and portions redacted.

    Police said Shaver, a 26-year-old from Texas staying at the La Quinta Inn & Suites on a business trip on Jan. 18, 2016, had invited a couple he met to his room for drinks. No one was in any danger and the entire incident was a misunderstanding. For the majority of the video, police appear to be in a standoff with people who simply can’t hear them.

    “Occupants of room 5-0-2, this is the Mesa Police,” the officer is heard yelling on the video, to which he receives no response.

    “Listen to my instructions or it’s going to become very uncomfortable for you,” the officer said. “The female is to step outside the room.”

    When ‘the female’ does step out the room, she is escorted away by an officer as she tells him how scared she is.

    “I’m so scared,” she told the officer, clearly in shock with the multiple officers in the hallway responding to a hotel in which no crime had been committed and innocent people were simply sharing drinks.

    Below are the redacted versions of the police body cameras.



    The videos above clearly illustrate the intentions behind only releasing a portion of the body camera footage. It is made to look like it was an intense standoff as well as make the police look like heroes as they comforted the woman.

    However, as we pointed out, it was likely that there was no standoff and they simply did not hear the officers. Also, the woman was most likely not scared of the man who she voluntarily consented to have drinks with — she was scared of the multiple armed men pointing AR-15s at them. This will likely come out when the defense is allowed to cross-examine her.

    When Laney Sweet, Shaver’s wife originally asked to see the footage, she was told that if she watched it, she would be forced to remain completely silent about its contents.

    During an interview with Maricopa County attorney, Bill Montgomery, Sweet was given the ultimatum — watch the disturbing video and never speak of it, or don’t. The widow of an innocent man, killed by the government, was told that the video proves her husband did not deserve to die. However, Sweet will now have to wait until the city decides to release the unedited version of the video to get closure—this would have been over a year.

    In a statement to the press, the county stated that Daniel Shaver was complying with officers, crawling on his hands and knees and begged not to be shot, just before Brailsford opened fire.

    “Please don’t shoot me,” Shaver is quoted in the police report.

    However, last year, Brailsford’s attorney denied Shaver begged not to shoot him while at the same time thanking Superior Court Judge Sam Myers for not releasing the entire video.

    On January 18, Brailsford, along with several other officers, responded to a call about a suspect with a rifle in a hotel room. The ‘rifle’ was nothing more than a pellet gun that was used in Shaver’s business of pest control, and Shaver was not in possession of the pellet gun when he was murdered in cold blood by officer Brailsford.

    According to KTAR, Brailsford told investigators that Shaver was ordered to crawl toward officers with his hands on the ground, but the officer believed Shaver’s move forward was an attempt to get “a better firing position on us.”

    The officer said he could no longer see Shaver’s right hand and worried that Shaver could have easily drawn on officers, who were just feet away in a hallway outside his room. However, none of the other officers fired, illustrating the lack of danger.

    “So that’s when I assessed the threat. I fired my weapon, uh, five times,” Brailsford said, adding that it was terrifying the first time Shaver reached back.

    Charging an officer with murder in Arizona is an exceptionally rare incident, which speaks to the severity of what must be shown on the body camera. It also means that this coward officer was in no danger when he decided to pull the trigger — 5 times.

    Brailsford was fired from the department in March of 2016 for multiple policy violations not associated with the murder of Shaver. After he was fired, we learned that he should have never had a badge that night he killed an innocent man.

    Aside from his unsatisfactory performance, records released by Mesa Police revealed that Brailsford was accused of beating three people a few months before he killed Shaver. He also etched “You’re Fucked” into his AR-15 police rifle — illustrating his disregard for human life.

    Two children and a wife will now live the rest of their lives without their loving father because of the actions of this public servant. The one thing that could help get this family closure is to see the man who stole the life of their dad and husband put behind bars. Hopefully, this case ends differently than the countless cases before which ended with killer cops walking free for needlessly killing other human beings.

    The Free Thought Project will continue to cover the trial as it unfolds next week.

    http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-killed-unarmed-dad-begged-life-claims-showing-jury-body-cam-unfair/

    Remember this case? No rioting or looting for Daniel Shaver of course, apparently only "blue" and "black lives matter".
    Now we see that the cop has been rehired so that he can get pension (apparently lifetime pension $2500 per month) and is now "medically retired".
    Criminal gangs look after their own...

    Fired ex-Mesa police Officer Philip Brailsford rehired to help him get a public-safety pension

    Philip "Mitch" Brailsford, a former Mesa police officer acquitted of killing an unarmed man in 2016, was temporarily rehired by the department so he could apply for a monthly pension, records show.

    A Maricopa County jury found Brailsford not guilty of second-degree murder in the shooting of 26-year-old Daniel Shaver, who was unarmed and on his knees begging for his life when the officer shot him five times in the hallway of a Mesa hotel.

    Brailsford was fired in March 2016. City and court records show he was briefly rehired by the Mesa Police Department in 2018 so he could apply for the pension, which totals more than $30,000 annually.

    The shooting, which is the subject of a multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed by Shaver's family and a federal civil-rights investigation, received national attention after unedited footage depicting the minutes before the killing was released a year later.

    Minutes from the Sept. 13, 2018, meeting of the MesaPublic Safety Personnel Retirement System show Brailsford was reinstated on Aug. 27 for 42 days.

    During that time period, Brailsford applied for accidental disability.

    An accidental disability is one that occurred while the employee was on the clock and permanently prevents the employee from doing his or her job. Both physical and mental conditions can qualify.

    It's not known what incident Brailsford cited. Steven Wright, a spokesman for the city of Mesa, said he could not comment on the matter as it would violate medical privacy laws.  

    In August 2018, Brailsford reached an agreement with Mesa that allowed him to be reinstated to an "unfunded budget position with no pay or duties," according to Wright.

    The temporary reinstatement was primarily procedural, as officers need to be employed in order to file for disability.

    Commander Ed Wessing, a Mesa police spokesman, clarified that Brailsford "was not in any way fulfilling a capacity as a police officer" during the 42-day period.

    Brailsford first appeared before the board Sept. 13. His application was the only item on the agenda. All discussions pertaining to Brailsford's "disabling injury" and subsequent treatments were discussed in executive session.

    The board told him he needed to receive an independent medical exam before it could make a decision, which is standard procedure.

    He was approved for medical retirement on Oct. 8 in a unanimous vote.

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2019/07/10/mesa-police-officer-philip-brailsford-rehired-pension-daniel-shaver-shooting/1698540001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2019, 06:19:59 PM
    This cop was assigned to an "elite" "specialized" unit that investigated crimes against children and now he's accused of raping a 14 year old whose case he was investigating. How many more perverts like that serve on these "elite" units that investigate crimes against children? Incidents like this can make children victims of sexual assault think twice before contacting the police (and this cop is accused of doing this exact thing, dissuading the victim from testifying). Normally in such cases the police tries to name and shame the accused but it seems that when it's a cop involved the treatment is a bit different. In this case the Sheriff's Department did not announce the arrest initially and provided information after an inquiry by the LA Times.

    L.A. County sheriff's sex crimes investigator arrested on suspicion of raping minor

    (https://www.latimes.com/resizer/GDzjkteKW7lv6pm9BxE996dL40s=/1400x0/www.trbimg.com/img-5bf5ffcd/turbine/la-1542848455-m0dphufvgv-snap-image)

    A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy assigned to handle sensitive sex abuse crimes, often involving vulnerable minors, has been arrested on suspicion of raping a 14-year-old girl in a case he was investigating.

    Neil Kimball was taken into custody Friday evening after a monthlong inquiry into the allegations by the sheriff's criminal internal investigation bureau. He was booked on suspicion of rape by force and preventing or dissuading a victim from testifying.

    The 45-year-old investigator with the special victims unit met the girl during the “scope of his work,” a department spokeswoman said Monday.

    Kimball was relieved of duty with pay and was booked at the Los Angeles County Inmate Reception Center shortly after 11 p.m. Friday. His bail is set at $2 million.

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-deputy-svu-rape-20181119-story.html

    https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-sheriff-deputy-charged-20181121-story.html

    Remember this case?

    Molesting a 15 year old girl who was already the victim of sexual abuse and thought she would get help by going to the police... He is expected to get just 3 years in prison...

    LASD Sex Crimes Detective Pleads Guilty to Molesting Teen Whose Sex Assault Case He Was Investigating

    A former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department detective pleaded guilty to child molestation involving a teenager whose sexual assault case he was investigating, authorities said Wednesday.

    Neil David Kimball, 46, of Agoura, pleaded guilty to a lewd act with a child and unlawful sexual intercourse, the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said.

    The former detective was initially charged with forcible rape against a minor 14 years or older while the victim was tied or bound, as well as witness intimidation by threat of force, the DA said.

    While working as a detective with the Special Victims Bureau for sex crimes in 2017, he met with a 15-year-old when she reported being a victim of sexual assault.

    Kimball’s sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 8, 2019, at a Ventura court. He is expected to be sentenced to three years in prison under the terms of a plea agreement.

    https://ktla.com/2019/07/10/l-a-county-sheriffs-sex-crimes-detective-pleads-guilty-to-molesting-teen-whose-sexual-assault-case-he-was-investigating
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on July 14, 2019, 06:23:10 PM
    Remember this case?

    Molesting a 15 year old girl who was already the victim of sexual abuse and thought she would get help by going to the police... He is expected to get just 3 years in prison...

    LASD Sex Crimes Detective Pleads Guilty to Molesting Teen Whose Sex Assault Case He Was Investigating

    A former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department detective pleaded guilty to child molestation involving a teenager whose sexual assault case he was investigating, authorities said Wednesday.

    Neil David Kimball, 46, of Agoura, pleaded guilty to a lewd act with a child and unlawful sexual intercourse, the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said.

    The former detective was initially charged with forcible rape against a minor 14 years or older while the victim was tied or bound, as well as witness intimidation by threat of force, the DA said.

    While working as a detective with the Special Victims Bureau for sex crimes in 2017, he met with a 15-year-old when she reported being a victim of sexual assault.

    Kimball’s sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 8, 2019, at a Ventura court. He is expected to be sentenced to three years in prison under the terms of a plea agreement.

    https://ktla.com/2019/07/10/l-a-county-sheriffs-sex-crimes-detective-pleads-guilty-to-molesting-teen-whose-sexual-assault-case-he-was-investigating
    Didn't a female teacher just get 20 years?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2019, 06:31:47 PM
    Didn't a female teacher just get 20 years?

    Yes, one of the few females to get a sentence that somewhat resembles what men get in similar cases. Most of the times the female teachers get very little if any prison time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on July 14, 2019, 06:35:22 PM
    Yes, one of the few females to get a sentence that somewhat resembles what men get in similar cases. Most of the times the female teachers get very little if any prison time.
    How does this cop only get 3?
    Wait a minute, LA county.... ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2019, 11:55:46 AM
    But of course they are allowed to investigate themselves so they can then clear themselves of any wrongdoing.
    Ironically, the syndicate responsible for the "internal investigations" is called "Professional Standards Bureau".

    Kansas chief concerned about police shooting investigations

    A Kansas police chief testified in a newly released deposition that he was so concerned about the fairness of internal department probes of police shootings in Wichita that he removed the high-ranking officers overseeing them and detectives conducting them.

    Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay acknowledged investigators asked leading questions that could have prompted police officers to claim the shootings were in self-defense. He also testified that detectives working on the internal probes got involved in the related criminal investigations and were “potentially contaminating” those investigations.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/kansas-chief-concerned-about-police-shooting-investigations/2019/07/11
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 21, 2019, 10:03:19 PM
    I wanted the 10,000th post to be something remotely funny or in reply to a WYHI thread but, alas, this came up.
    Once again, we are dealing with organized criminal gangs. Initially this gang member was facing 40 years in prison for attacking, kidnapping and robbing innocent people but instead he now faces a possible sentence of just 30 to 37 months (months, not years)... Meanwhile ordinary people serve more time than that for less severe and less violent crimes..

    'Everything we do is illegal': 7th Paterson cop arrested in FBI police corruption probe

    Police Officer Frank Toledo pleaded guilty on Tuesday to participating in illegal traffic stops and shakedowns, making him the seventh city cop arrested in an ongoing FBI corruption probe.

    Standing in federal court in Newark, Toledo admitted joining with other rogue cops in a conspiracy that allegedly started in late 2016 and continued until 2018. He also admitted beating people he arrested in at least two instances. During his plea, Toledo said he sent a text message to another cop in which he said, “Everything we do is illegal.”

    As part of the probe, five officers were arrested in 2018 and a sixth earlier this year.

    https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/paterson-press/2019/07/16/paterson-feds-nab-7th-cop-police-corruption-probe/1744294001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 25, 2019, 08:54:55 AM
    Crazy


    I wanted the 10,000th post to be something remotely funny or in reply to a WYHI thread but, alas, this came up.
    Once again, we are dealing with organized criminal gangs. Initially this gang member was facing 40 years in prison for attacking, kidnapping and robbing innocent people but instead he now faces a possible sentence of just 30 to 37 months (months, not years)... Meanwhile ordinary people serve more time than that for less severe and less violent crimes..

    'Everything we do is illegal': 7th Paterson cop arrested in FBI police corruption probe

    Police Officer Frank Toledo pleaded guilty on Tuesday to participating in illegal traffic stops and shakedowns, making him the seventh city cop arrested in an ongoing FBI corruption probe.

    Standing in federal court in Newark, Toledo admitted joining with other rogue cops in a conspiracy that allegedly started in late 2016 and continued until 2018. He also admitted beating people he arrested in at least two instances. During his plea, Toledo said he sent a text message to another cop in which he said, “Everything we do is illegal.”

    As part of the probe, five officers were arrested in 2018 and a sixth earlier this year.

    https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/paterson-press/2019/07/16/paterson-feds-nab-7th-cop-police-corruption-probe/1744294001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2019, 04:19:10 PM
    Once again, the sentence is a joke.

    Former Sheriff of Philadelphia Sentenced to Prison

    The former Sheriff of Philadelphia John Green, 72, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was sentenced today to serve five years in prison followed by one year of supervised release, and ordered to forfeit $76,581 by U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetlestone of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

    John Green was convicted of conspiring to defraud the citizens of Philadelphia of his honest services as Sheriff of Philadelphia by receiving and accepting a stream of hidden personal benefits from co-defendant James Davis in exchange for giving Davis millions of dollars of business at the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office.  From 2002 to 2011, Green accepted hidden bribes and kickbacks from his co-defendant Davis totaling over $675,000.  The bribes and kickbacks that Davis gave to Green included:

    (1) a move-in ready home in Philadelphia for Green and his new wife in 2003, with rent-free living and then Green’s purchase of the home at a discount;
    (2) employment of Green’s new wife as a subcontractor when she started a new business in 2004, paying her over $89,000, and being the primary and at times sole employer of Green’s wife;
    (3) facilitation of over $65,000 in hidden campaign contributions to Green’s 2007 re-election campaign through others;
    (4) payment of over $148,000 in advertising for Green’s 2007 re-election campaign and falsely reporting the payments on the campaign finance reports; and
    (5) over $320,000 in payments to Green to assist him with the purchase of his retirement home in Florida in 2010.  In exchange, Green gave his co-defendant Davis over $35 million of business at the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office in the sale of homes at sheriff’s sales.  

    “Sheriff Green sold the business of his office for hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes and kickbacks,” said Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.  “Today’s sentence holds him accountable for his near-decade-long betrayal of the public trust.”

    “Public officials hold office to serve the public good, not to line their own pockets” said U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.  “When public servants abuse their authority and flout the rule of law, they disgrace themselves and the offices they hold.  That is what Green did here and he is now paying the price.  Every public official should be on notice after today’s sentence: federal law enforcement is watching and we will hold you accountable to the law and to the public that you are supposed to serve.”

    “This type of corruption erodes the faith of citizens in the city's ability to function and causes people to question the honesty, integrity and efficiency of how the city is run,” said City of Philadelphia Inspector General Amy L. Kurland.  “This case was especially significant to the city and this sentence sends a strong message that we will not tolerate employees or officials using their positions to enhance their own wealth at the taxpayers’ expense.”

    Green left office at the end of 2010, over one year before the expiration of his term, after the City of Philadelphia, Office of the Controller had issued an audit report in October 2010 expressing concern about potential irregularities with respect to the funds held by the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office relating to Sheriff’s sales.  The Controller’s Office hired Deloitte Financial Advisory Services, which conducted a forensic investigation of the Sheriff’s Office.  Deloitte issued a report in October 2011 that revealed the extent of the hidden business that Green had given to co-defendant Davis.  Deloitte provided its findings to the government.  Green pleaded guilty in April 2019.

    The case was investigated by the FBI, IRS Criminal Investigation, and the City of Philadelphia Office of Inspector General.  Trial Attorney Jennifer A. Clarke of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sarah L. Grieb and Christopher Diviny of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania prosecuted the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-sheriff-philadelphia-sentenced-prison
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2019, 05:11:18 PM
    Notice how once again the cops try to downplay their abuse through creative use of language and of course trying to discredit the person they abused.

    Phoenix Police Suspended Officer Involved in Unwarranted Body Cavity Search

    The Phoenix Police Department suspended an officer who performed an unwarranted body cavity search on a 37-year-old black mother in violation of department policy, according to a press statement.

    The police narrative did not name the female officer who conducted the search, reveal the length of the suspension (which began in February), or say whether the officer was paid during her disciplinary period. It did not use the phrase "body cavity search," opting instead for "thorough search."

    The statement also failed to answer accusations that officers orchestrated a cover-up of the alleged sexual assault of Erica Reynolds, the details of which are outlined in a notice of claim filed Monday.

    The situation began on December 26, when Phoenix police surveilled Reynolds meeting with Charles Riggins, the suspected leader of a criminal drug ring. After the meeting, officers pulled Reynolds over and claimed to smell marijuana in her car.

    They searched her vehicle, patted her down, and brought out a drug-sniffing dog. None of those procedures turned up any drugs. Still, the officers took her to a substation where they asked her to strip naked and bend over, her claim states. A female cop used her fingers to probe Reynolds' anus and vagina.

    https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/phoenix-officer-suspended-over-cavity-search-11318316

    Let's see if this "police veteran" will face charges for violent sexual assault.

    Phoenix officer's body-cavity search was 'inappropriate,' investigation finds

    Phoenix Officer Timaree Murphy, a 20-year police veteran, acted inappropriately when she conducted a body-cavity search on a woman without her consent or a warrant, according to a Feb. 25 internal affairs report.

    The Arizona Republic acquired the report through a public records request. It determined Murphy in her actions violated a policy classified as "the inappropriate use of police powers, authority, and privileges."

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2019/07/31/phoenix-police-officer-timaree-murphy-body-cavity-search-suspect-inappropriate-investigation-finds/1873153001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2019, 05:21:04 PM
    These are the "highly trained" officers who are "qualified" to handle firearms, unlike the "ordinary" people whose rights are slowly eroding. The cop wanted to shoot at the dog, but the bullets only grazed the dog and instead the cop killed the poor woman.

    Arlington officer accidentally kills woman while shooting at running dog, police say

    An Arlington police officer on Thursday fatally shot a woman who was lying in grass as he fired upon a running, barking dog near her, the police department said.

    https://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/crime/article233429077.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2019, 05:27:50 PM
    So this "Assistant Chief" and his family get no prison time for helping their rapist son flee to Mexico. The son was eventually captured and convicted to 35 years to life for rape.
    Ordinary people get arrested and go to prison for helping criminals or "aiding and abetting", even if the criminals are their family members. But maybe cops and their families are subject to different/lower standards.

    Former CHP leader and wife spared jail after helping rapist son flee to Mexico

    A former California Highway Patrol assistant chief and his estranged wife were sentenced to six months of probation for their role in helping their son escape to Mexico during his rape trial in 2012.

    Retired Fresno County Judge John Gallagher issued the sentence Friday, ending more than five years of legal drama for the Kyle Scarber, his wife Gail Scarber and their daughter Crystal Reynoso.

    All were implicated in helping Spencer Scarber flee to Acapulco.

    https://www.fresnobee.com/news/local/crime/article233016537.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2019, 05:35:04 PM
    Another joke sentence...
    45 days in prison for battery of a person older than 65 and false imprisonment is apparently a harsh sentence if you are a cop.. Meanwhile, ordinary people who barely touch a cop get years in prison, that is if they are alive an in one piece.

    Miami officer gets 45 days in jail for tossing nurse to ground in fight over niece

    A fired Miami cop, convicted last month of battering a nursing supervisor at Jackson Memorial Hospital, was sentenced to 45 days in jail Friday despite pleas from friends and family who said the officer was kind and often went out of his way to help others.

    Bohnenblust, 51, was convicted of battery of someone over 65 and false imprisonment by a jury in June for a May 2018 confrontation with JMH nursing supervisor James Nicholson, 66, at the hospital. Surveillance video caught Bohnenblust grabbing Johnson by the shoulders and slamming him to the ground at the hospital’s behavioral health unit during a discussion about Bohnenblust’s niece.

    The officer’s niece had been released from the hospital, but returned the next day with her father, who was upset when Nicholson refused to re-admit her. So, her father called Bohnenblust who arrived in uniform and demanded that his niece be re-admitted before walking to the side with Nicholson and grabbing him by the back of his jacket. Bohnenblust at first told Nicholson he was under arrest and called for backup.

    Nicholson, a nurse for 29 years who was only two months shy of retirement, was not arrested and Bohnenblust was arrested after the video surfaced.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article233174611.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2019, 01:15:45 PM
    Pentagon testing mass surveillance balloons across the US

    The US military is conducting wide-area surveillance tests across six midwest states using experimental high-altitude balloons, documents filed with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reveal.

    Up to 25 unmanned solar-powered balloons are being launched from rural South Dakota and drifting 250 miles through an area spanning portions of Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Missouri, before concluding in central Illinois.

    Travelling in the stratosphere at altitudes of up to 65,000ft, the balloons are intended to “provide a persistent surveillance system to locate and deter narcotic trafficking and homeland security threats”, according to a filing made on behalf of the Sierra Nevada Corporation, an aerospace and defence company.

    The balloons are carrying hi-tech radars designed to simultaneously track many individual vehicles day or night, through any kind of weather. The tests, which have not previously been reported, received an FCC license to operate from mid-July until September, following similar flights licensed last year.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/aug/02/pentagon-balloons-surveillance-midwest

    https://apps.fcc.gov/els/GetAtt.html?id=233815&x=.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2019, 03:08:27 PM
    3 years paid vacation... Is this why cop unions are fighting to keep the records of cops sealed?

    LA County Deputy Found To Be Getting Salary, Benefits While Not Working Since 2016

    A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy arrested during a disturbance call in East Los Angeles last week was found to be receiving his pay and benefits, even though he hasn’t been working since 2016.

    Antonio Ramirez, 45, was arrested on July 29 after a 911 call reported an intoxicated man throwing items inside a garage, according to a statement released by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department on Friday. Deputies identified Ramirez as an off-duty deputy.

    The statement said the 911 caller asked that Ramirez be removed from the location, but when deputies tried to detain him, “an altercation ensued” and they had to use force to restrain him.

    Felony charges were subsequently filed July 31 against Ramirez, according to the sheriff’s department. Ramirez is being held on $225,000 bail and is scheduled to make his first court appearance on Aug. 13, according to the Los Angeles County sheriff’s online inmate information database.

    Sheriff’s officials say further inquiry showed a prior arrest on July 12, 2016, during which time he was on approved unpaid leave. Immediately following that arrest, sheriff’s officials say a decision was made by Sheriff Jim McDonnell’s administration to put Ramirez on paid administrative leave.

    https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2019/08/05/los-angeles-county-sheriffs-deputy-unpaid-leave-getting-salary-2016-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 07, 2019, 06:39:18 PM
    Welfare
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2019, 03:19:30 PM
    Of course the cop lied when the incident occurred but people still think "why would a cop lie"? The cop's attorney said that the charges are “vindictive” and said it was “overkill” and “not a good season to be a police officer. “ Those poor criminal cops.. Let's see if he gets a lengthy prison sentence and if he is treated in the same way he treated his victim.
    Naturally if it wasn't for the video, the criminal would've probably gotten away with this, as his word would be more than enough for his fellow gang members to justify the crime.

    Homestead Police Officer Arrested, Accused Of Shoving Handcuffed Suspect Into Wall

    A Homestead police officer has been charged after he reportedly used excessive force on a suspect who was in handcuffs. Officer Lester Brown pushed the handcuffed man into a wall, which caused a bloody facial injury, according to police. The incident happened in December 2018 at the Homestead substation and was captured on internal surveillance video.
    Brown said in his police report that the suspect fell because of a struggle between them.
    “Our investigation of this incident and our review of the police surveillance video contradicts, in our view, it contradicts the official representation by Officer Brown of allegedly the facts of what happened that night,” Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said.

    https://miami.cbslocal.com/2019/08/07/homestead-police-officer-arrested-accused-of-shoving-handcuffed-suspect-into-wall/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2019, 03:41:29 PM
    A homeowner is trying to defend his life and property inside his house. Even that is apparently not allowed in police state USA though, so a cop shot him through the front window..
    Now an ordinary criminal or tresspasser or burglar would have faced charges. But we are not talking about "ordinary" criminals, this is the uniformed criminal division we're dealing with here.
    "We investigated ourselves and cleared ourselves of any wrongdoing".

    SC deputy cleared by internal affairs after shooting homeowner through front window

    Greenville County Sheriff's Office investigators have determined a deputy acted according to policy when he shot a 62-year-old man through a front window of his Simpsonville home.

    The Sheriff's Office's Officer of Professional Standards conducted an internal investigation to see if Deputy Kevin Azzara violated any written policies during the incident. The investigation concluded and found that no agency policies were violated, spokesman Lt. Ryan Flood told The Greenville News Wednesday.

    Azzara responded to an alarm call on Eastcrest Drive in Simpsonville June 14. After approaching the front door, he saw a man inside, later identified as the homeowner, armed with a handgun. According to the Sheriff's Office, the man pointed the gun at Azzara, at which point Azzara fired his weapon into the home.

    Azzara struck homeowner Dick Tench twice, once in the pelvis and once in the aortic artery.

    Initial statements from the Sheriff's Office claimed Tench opened the front door and pointed a gun at Azzara before Azzara fired shots.  An edited video presentation of body camera footage the Sheriff's Office shared 45 days later showed that Tench never opened the door.

    https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/news/local/south-carolina/2019/08/07/sc-deputy-cleared-internal-affairs-after-shooting-homeowner/1944593001/

    (source may not be reliable:)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2019, 06:59:52 PM
    Cop near me busted for child porn in port Chester
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2019, 10:58:14 AM
    Facial recognition software mistook 1 in 5 California lawmakers for criminals, says ACLU

    California Assemblyman Phil Ting has never been arrested, but he was recently mistaken for a criminal.

    He’s not surprised.

    Ting (D-San Francisco), who authored a bill to ban facial recognition software from being used on police body cameras, was one of 26 California legislators who was incorrectly matched with a mug shot in a recent test of a common face-scanning program by the American Civil Liberties Union.

    About 1 in 5 legislators was erroneously matched to a person who had been arrested when the ACLU used the software to screen their pictures against a database of 25,000 publicly available booking photos. Last year, in a similar experiment done with photos of members of Congress, the software erroneously matched 28 federal legislators with mug shots.

    The results highlight what Ting and others said is proof that facial recognition software is unreliable. They want California law enforcement banned from using it with the cameras they wear while on duty.

    “The software clearly is not ready for use in a law enforcement capacity,” Ting said. “These mistakes, we can kind of chuckle at it, but if you get arrested and it’s on your record, it can be hard to get housing, get a job. It has real impacts.”

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-08-12/facial-recognition-software-mistook-1-in-5-california-lawmakers-for-criminals-says-aclu
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 13, 2019, 06:19:11 PM
    Facial recognition software mistook 1 in 5 California lawmakers for criminals, says ACLU

    California Assemblyman Phil Ting has never been arrested, but he was recently mistaken for a criminal.

    He’s not surprised.

    Ting (D-San Francisco), who authored a bill to ban facial recognition software from being used on police body cameras, was one of 26 California legislators who was incorrectly matched with a mug shot in a recent test of a common face-scanning program by the American Civil Liberties Union.

    About 1 in 5 legislators was erroneously matched to a person who had been arrested when the ACLU used the software to screen their pictures against a database of 25,000 publicly available booking photos. Last year, in a similar experiment done with photos of members of Congress, the software erroneously matched 28 federal legislators with mug shots.

    The results highlight what Ting and others said is proof that facial recognition software is unreliable. They want California law enforcement banned from using it with the cameras they wear while on duty.

    “The software clearly is not ready for use in a law enforcement capacity,” Ting said. “These mistakes, we can kind of chuckle at it, but if you get arrested and it’s on your record, it can be hard to get housing, get a job. It has real impacts.”

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-08-12/facial-recognition-software-mistook-1-in-5-california-lawmakers-for-criminals-says-aclu
    :D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 14, 2019, 02:04:21 PM
    This man was pulled over by cops without probable cause (according to one of the cops) and when the cops couldn't find any drugs they beat him up while he was handcuffed, resulting in trauma that required brain surgery and then they locked him in a closet for 4 days (!) without food or use of a toilet, only 1 carton of milk. As expected, the dashcam portion that showed the cops beating the man was conveniently "missing" during request for discovery...
    For all this brutality, the man was awarded $20m back in 2016 but an appeals court overtruned this. Now he is receiving $50m but once again, the taxpayers will foot the bill instead of the criminals or their gang's coffers. No information of course on whether the cops were charged with anything. Maybe they were "punished" with paid vacation..

    Jury awards $50 million to man beaten, locked in East Cleveland police department storage room

    A Cuyahoga County jury on Friday awarded $50 million ($20 million in compensatory damages and $30 million in punitive damages against the city of East Cleveland) to an East Cleveland man who filed a lawsuit that said police in that city beat him while he was in handcuffs in 2012, then locked him in a concrete storage room for four days with no food or restroom.

    The award came after the second jury trial in the case of Arnold Black, after an appeals court last year overturned a previous award for $22 million.

    In the run up to the first civil trial in 2016, East Cleveland’s law department did not respond to any requests from Black’s lawyers for evidence it planned to present to jurors in the city’s defense. A judge ruled that the move violated the rules of discovery and barred East Cleveland from presenting any evidence at trial.

    The portion of the police dashboard camera video showing Hicks punching Black was missing when the department handed it over to Black’s lawyers prior to the first trial. The lawsuit claimed that the officers deliberately edited that portion out.

    https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2019/08/jury-awards-50-million-to-man-beaten-locked-in-east-cleveland-police-department-storage-room.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 15, 2019, 08:00:05 AM
    Insane


    This man was pulled over by cops without probable cause (according to one of the cops) and when the cops couldn't find any drugs they beat him up while he was handcuffed, resulting in trauma that required brain surgery and then they locked him in a closet for 4 days (!) without food or use of a toilet, only 1 carton of milk. As expected, the dashcam portion that showed the cops beating the man was conveniently "missing" during request for discovery...
    For all this brutality, the man was awarded $20m back in 2016 but an appeals court overtruned this. Now he is receiving $50m but once again, the taxpayers will foot the bill instead of the criminals or their gang's coffers. No information of course on whether the cops were charged with anything. Maybe they were "punished" with paid vacation..

    Jury awards $50 million to man beaten, locked in East Cleveland police department storage room

    A Cuyahoga County jury on Friday awarded $50 million ($20 million in compensatory damages and $30 million in punitive damages against the city of East Cleveland) to an East Cleveland man who filed a lawsuit that said police in that city beat him while he was in handcuffs in 2012, then locked him in a concrete storage room for four days with no food or restroom.

    The award came after the second jury trial in the case of Arnold Black, after an appeals court last year overturned a previous award for $22 million.

    In the run up to the first civil trial in 2016, East Cleveland’s law department did not respond to any requests from Black’s lawyers for evidence it planned to present to jurors in the city’s defense. A judge ruled that the move violated the rules of discovery and barred East Cleveland from presenting any evidence at trial.

    The portion of the police dashboard camera video showing Hicks punching Black was missing when the department handed it over to Black’s lawyers prior to the first trial. The lawsuit claimed that the officers deliberately edited that portion out.

    https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2019/08/jury-awards-50-million-to-man-beaten-locked-in-east-cleveland-police-department-storage-room.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 16, 2019, 01:32:02 AM
    This man was pulled over by cops without probable cause (according to one of the cops) and when the cops couldn't find any drugs they beat him up while he was handcuffed, resulting in trauma that required brain surgery and then they locked him in a closet for 4 days (!) without food or use of a toilet, only 1 carton of milk. As expected, the dashcam portion that showed the cops beating the man was conveniently "missing" during request for discovery...
    For all this brutality, the man was awarded $20m back in 2016 but an appeals court overtruned this. Now he is receiving $50m but once again, the taxpayers will foot the bill instead of the criminals or their gang's coffers. No information of course on whether the cops were charged with anything. Maybe they were "punished" with paid vacation..

    Jury awards $50 million to man beaten, locked in East Cleveland police department storage room

    A Cuyahoga County jury on Friday awarded $50 million ($20 million in compensatory damages and $30 million in punitive damages against the city of East Cleveland) to an East Cleveland man who filed a lawsuit that said police in that city beat him while he was in handcuffs in 2012, then locked him in a concrete storage room for four days with no food or restroom.

    The award came after the second jury trial in the case of Arnold Black, after an appeals court last year overturned a previous award for $22 million.

    In the run up to the first civil trial in 2016, East Cleveland’s law department did not respond to any requests from Black’s lawyers for evidence it planned to present to jurors in the city’s defense. A judge ruled that the move violated the rules of discovery and barred East Cleveland from presenting any evidence at trial.

    The portion of the police dashboard camera video showing Hicks punching Black was missing when the department handed it over to Black’s lawyers prior to the first trial. The lawsuit claimed that the officers deliberately edited that portion out.

    https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2019/08/jury-awards-50-million-to-man-beaten-locked-in-east-cleveland-police-department-storage-room.html

    And On & On it Goes
    This Criminal Gang Needs To Be Reigned in / stopped
    Yet it’s allowed to continue - Almost as if the Victims are not important
    Or a Price worth paying.

    On that subject of paying its Tax payers coughing up Not Ever The Gang Member.
    Sickening truly sickening in this day and age.


    And Not 1 Cop or ex cop on this Board can come up with a Solution
    To the Gang Member Mentality - Plenty of Excuses & Squirming to
    Back or Defend The Scumbag Cops. No Solutions.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 17, 2019, 02:34:00 PM
    -Interesting article in today's Oregonian. The police photoshopped a man's appearance by removing his facial tattoos. According to the bank tellers who were held up, the perpetrator had no facial tattoos and the security cameras confirmed this. Some of the witnesses identified the man in the altered photo as the bank robber. The robber was then arrested and charge with robbing four banks.

    (https://www.oregonlive.com/resizer/8cxm-n7Y7TeIETJdgH4bOoYaM8I=/960x0/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod-advancelocal.s3.amazonaws.com/public/CW7ZINL23ZFSXHJL5USIUQNAUM.png)

    https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2019/08/the-case-of-the-missing-tattoos-altered-photo-lineup-by-portland-police-draws-objection.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on August 17, 2019, 06:57:30 PM
    Cop near me busted for child porn in port Chester

    Was that John Telesca?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 19, 2019, 04:48:56 PM
    Typical political move: his voters/constituents will think he "supports" the common man by "restraining" police, whereas the cops can still continue operating as before. Another feelgood measure that will change nothing and does not focus on holding the cops personally or collectively accountable for their crimes.

    Newsom signs ‘Stephon Clark’s Law,’ setting new rules on police use of force

    After an emotional fight that laid bare the chasm between California’s communities of color and police, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed Assembly Bill 392, creating what some have described as one of the toughest standards in the nation for when law enforcement officers can kill.

    Intense private negotiations and public outcry influenced the final language of the legislation, which will take effect on Jan. 1. Recent fatal police shootings of unarmed black men, in particular, prompted activists to seek changes in rules that in some cases were more than a century old. Though the final bill doesn’t go as far as some wanted, supporters say it’s a first step in changing the culture of policing in California.

    What does the law do?

    The new language will require that law enforcement use deadly force only when “necessary,” instead of the current wording of when it is “reasonable.” In large urban law enforcement departments that already train for deescalation and crisis intervention, day-to-day policing will probably not noticeably change. The law also prohibits police from firing on fleeing felons who don’t pose an immediate danger, an update from California’s original code that dates back to 1872.

    Law enforcement groups vehemently opposed AB 392 when it was introduced. They backed a counterproposal, Senate Bill 230, written by state Sen. Anna Caballero (D-Salinas), that largely left current law unchanged but instead focused on training. SB 230 was significantly altered during the committee process and was amended so that it could pass only if AB 392 did.

    After months of negotiations, law enforcement groups, including the California State Sheriff’s Assn. and the California Highway Patrol, unexpectedly dropped their opposition to AB 392 after it was amended to address their concerns. Newsom and leaders of both the Assembly and Senate then threw their support behind the measure.

    https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-california-police-use-of-force-law-signed-20190711-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 22, 2019, 07:08:22 AM
    https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2019/08/cleveland-cop-urinated-on-12-year-old-girl-waiting-for-school-bus-while-recording-on-cellphone-prosecutors-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 22, 2019, 09:40:51 AM
    https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2019/08/cleveland-cop-urinated-on-12-year-old-girl-waiting-for-school-bus-while-recording-on-cellphone-prosecutors-say.html

    Seriously- WTF !!

    Guess the Race 🤣😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 22, 2019, 02:08:46 PM
    Seriously- WTF !!

    Guess the Race 🤣😂

    There are some really crazy people in the world. The girl was smart not to accept the ride. Goes to show, cops can sometimes be criminals.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 22, 2019, 02:12:07 PM
    There are some really crazy people in the world. The girl was smart not to accept the ride. Goes to show, cops can sometimes be criminals.

    Yep definitely so.
    And reading this thread There Most Certainly are a Lot of Criminal cops
    And sadly most often times they’re getting away with their Crimes
    Which is worse than the criminal’s as they are supposed to be up holding
    The Law & Should Be held to higher standard.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 22, 2019, 03:02:00 PM
    Yep definitely so.
    And reading this thread There Most Certainly are a Lot of Criminal cops
    And sadly most often times they’re getting away with their Crimes
    Which is worse than the criminal’s as they are supposed to be up holding
    The Law & Should Be held to higher standard.

    Apparently, some cops and government officials believe they are above the law.  ;)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 24, 2019, 02:18:53 PM
    Listen to this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats:





    Remember this angry effeminate dirtbag making threats?

    Turns out that he didn't "wait for all the facts to come out", as cops often say.

    Once again, another crime was committed based on lies and fabrications that the "law enforcement professionals" didn't bother to check. It only crossed their mind to do so after 2 people were murdered in their home. Just claiming "it was a mistake" will not bring these people back and their killing could have been avoided but apparently the lives of non cops are of little importance to these scumbags. Will this killer and his gang be held accountable for the killing of these 2 people?

    'You lie, you die' | HPD undercover cop lied about drug buy that led to deadly raid, Chief Acevedo says

    In a bombshell development, the undercover cop who led a drug raid that ended with a deadly shootout last month is now the target of a criminal investigation.

    The narcotics officer lied in the search warrant affidavit about a drug buy that never happened, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo confirmed Friday.

    "That’s totally unacceptable. I’ve told my police department that if you lie, you die," Acevedo said. "When you lie on an affidavit, that's not sloppy police work, that's a crime."

    The case agent obtained a search warrant to conduct the no-knock raid on Jan. 28 after he swore a confidential informant bought heroin at the home the night before. He said the informant told him he saw a 9mm handgun and a large amount of heroin in the house.

    Turns out, there never was a drug buy at the house or an informant who saw a large amount of heroin and weapons.



    https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/you-lie-you-die-hpd-undercover-cop-lied-about-drug-buy-that-led-to-deadly-raid-chief-acevedo-says/285-54ca0bb4-ba03-4e9d-ab6e-7d40bab2b356

    Remember that union goon's outrage about cops being victimized and shot, with the whole narrative about "war on cops"? He is not very vocal now.
    It seems that it took some members of his gang to get shot to end the no knock warrants, instead of the members of his gang who invaded the house of an innocent couple and killed them.

    Houston Police To Cease 'No Knock' Warrants, Chief Announces After Deadly Raid

    Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo says his department will stop serving "no knock" search warrants, weeks after a raid on a house left two married suspects dead and five officers injured. Acevedo also reiterated that the officer who led that raid may face criminal charges.

    "The no-knock warrant's going to go away, kind of like leaded gasoline in our city," Acevedo said. He added that raids that stem from those warrants would only be used in very limited cases — and that they would not be used to nab people suspected of dealing small amounts of drugs.

    No heroin was found at the residence, and Acevedo and the Houston police were forced to backtrack after initially saying the two suspects had opened fire on officers as soon as they reached the door of the house in the Pecan Park neighborhood, south of downtown Houston. The official narrative changed after it emerged that the police seemed to have opened fire first — shooting the couple's dog.

    https://www.npr.org/2019/02/19/695926963/houston-police-to-cease-no-knock-warrants-chief-announces-after-deadly-raid


    Now let's see if anyone will end up in prison for the murder of this couple.

    FBI opens civil rights investigation into botched Houston drug bust, police chief says

    The FBI has launched an independent civil rights investigation into the conduct of officers involved  in the botched no-knock drug raid that left two people dead and five officers wounded, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said Wednesday at a City Hall press conference.

    The probe is the latest aftershock after last month's deadly drug raid, which left two people dead, thrown the Houston Police Department into turmoil, and sent city and county leaders scrambling to contain a burgeoning scandal.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Houston-chief-mayor-and-DA-set-to-speak-on-13630749.php



    Remember this story? Remember how this union scumbag came out to defend the "heroic" cops and to threaten people?

    Then as the story progressed it turned out that the "heroic" cops were not shot by "anti police extremists"... The cops instead concocted a raid where they murdered 2 people and then of course there was a big attempt at covering everything up.

    As expected the cops retired shortly after so they can enjoy their union mandated benefits.

    Now, finally, there are murder charges against these killers. With all these charges it would seem like an ordinary person would receive life sentence or quite possibly execution. Let's see if this same standard will apply here. Not that it matters much but the victims of these killers were white and at least one of the killers is black. Of course don't expect to see any protests or looting... Had the races been different though it would have been a different story.

    Former HPD officer charged with murder in botched raid at Harding Street house

    A former Houston Police Department narcotics officer has been charged with murder, nearly seven months after a botched drug raid left a couple dead and unleashed a sprawling police scandal.

    Ex-case agent Gerald Goines on Friday was charged with two counts of felony murder in the Jan. 28 deaths of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas and is still under investigation over claims he stole guns, drugs and money, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced at a news conference downtown. His partner, Steven Bryant, was charged with one count of evidence tampering, a state jail felony.

    Ogg said that as investigators probed the case, they determined that:

    Goines first lied about using a confidential informant to buy heroin;
    then claimed to have bought the drugs himself; then lied about who identified the drugs;
    and finally admitted that he couldn’t determine whether Tuttle was the same person from whom he allegedly purchased the drugs.

    Ogg also said that after the shooting, Bryant lied in an offense report about helping Goines with the investigation and falsely claimed that they’d recovered a plastic bag that contained a white napkin and two small packets of heroin.

    Because the deaths occurred in the course of another alleged felony — tampering with a government record — Goines was charged with felony murder.

    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Former-HPD-officer-charged-with-murder-in-botched-14373874.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2019, 01:28:18 PM
    News stations: "BREAKING NEWS: DEPUTY SHOT, GUNMAN AT LARGE"

    Mayor: "Think about what happened today, a sniper took out one of our deputies. The only reason that deputy is alive is because he had his vest on." "Thank god we don't have a funeral"

    According to sources, the mayor even stated that he went to the hospital and saw the "injured officer" in "pain" and saw his "wound"...

    SWAT teams with helicopters and armored vehicles (because apparently this is Ramadi or Kabul) started looking for the "active shooter".

    An evil sniper shooting at "heroic" cops...

    But as it turns out once again, a cop LIED, he made it up all up.
    (as apparently did the mayor, if he "saw" the liar in the hospital with the fictional wound)

    Officer Jussie...

    BLUELIESMATTER


    Officials: LA County Sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster fabricated report he was shot by sniper

    In a rare Saturday night press conference, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials revealed that the rookie deputy who claimed he was shot in the shoulder at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station “completely fabricated” the incident and would be relieved of his duties.

    Investigators who met Saturday with 21-year-old Deputy Angel Reinosa “saw no visible injury to Reynosa’s shoulder,” department officials said.

    After getting interrogated due to doubts raised from his testimony, Reinosa admitted that he was not shot at from an apartment complex near the station as he previously claimed, sheriff’s Capt. Ken Wegener said.

    “He also told investigators that he had caused the holes in his uniform shirt by cutting it with a knife,” Wegener said. “There was no sniper, no shots fired and no gunshot injury sustained to his shoulder. “(It was) completely fabricated.”

    https://www.dailynews.com/2019/08/24/officials-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-in-lancaster-fabricated-report-he-was-shot-at-by-sniper/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 25, 2019, 08:05:56 PM
    News stations: "BREAKING NEWS: DEPUTY SHOT, GUNMAN AT LARGE"

    Mayor: "Think about what happened today, a sniper took out one of our deputies. The only reason that deputy is alive is because he had his vest on." "Thank god we don't have a funeral"

    According to sources, the mayor even stated that he went to the hospital and saw the "injured officer" in "pain" and saw his "wound"...

    SWAT teams with helicopters and armored vehicles (because apparently this is Ramadi or Kabul) started looking for the "active shooter".

    An evil sniper shooting at "heroic" cops...

    But as it turns out once again, a cop LIED, he made it up all up.
    (as apparently did the mayor, if he "saw" the liar in the hospital with the fictional wound)

    Officer Jussie...

    BLUELIESMATTER


    Officials: LA County Sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster fabricated report he was shot by sniper

    In a rare Saturday night press conference, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials revealed that the rookie deputy who claimed he was shot in the shoulder at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station “completely fabricated” the incident and would be relieved of his duties.

    Investigators who met Saturday with 21-year-old Deputy Angel Reinosa “saw no visible injury to Reynosa’s shoulder,” department officials said.

    After getting interrogated due to doubts raised from his testimony, Reinosa admitted that he was not shot at from an apartment complex near the station as he previously claimed, sheriff’s Capt. Ken Wegener said.

    “He also told investigators that he had caused the holes in his uniform shirt by cutting it with a knife,” Wegener said. “There was no sniper, no shots fired and no gunshot injury sustained to his shoulder. “(It was) completely fabricated.”

    https://www.dailynews.com/2019/08/24/officials-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-in-lancaster-fabricated-report-he-was-shot-at-by-sniper/


    Was the Mayors name Jussie Smollett ?

    Great not only are cops Blatantly Lying the Mayor is joining in
    And Backing Them.  ::)
    FFS
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 26, 2019, 05:56:15 PM
    News stations: "BREAKING NEWS: DEPUTY SHOT, GUNMAN AT LARGE"

    Mayor: "Think about what happened today, a sniper took out one of our deputies. The only reason that deputy is alive is because he had his vest on." "Thank god we don't have a funeral"

    According to sources, the mayor even stated that he went to the hospital and saw the "injured officer" in "pain" and saw his "wound"...

    SWAT teams with helicopters and armored vehicles (because apparently this is Ramadi or Kabul) started looking for the "active shooter".

    An evil sniper shooting at "heroic" cops...

    But as it turns out once again, a cop LIED, he made it up all up.
    (as apparently did the mayor, if he "saw" the liar in the hospital with the fictional wound)

    Officer Jussie...

    BLUELIESMATTER


    Officials: LA County Sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster fabricated report he was shot by sniper

    In a rare Saturday night press conference, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials revealed that the rookie deputy who claimed he was shot in the shoulder at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station “completely fabricated” the incident and would be relieved of his duties.

    Investigators who met Saturday with 21-year-old Deputy Angel Reinosa “saw no visible injury to Reynosa’s shoulder,” department officials said.

    After getting interrogated due to doubts raised from his testimony, Reinosa admitted that he was not shot at from an apartment complex near the station as he previously claimed, sheriff’s Capt. Ken Wegener said.

    “He also told investigators that he had caused the holes in his uniform shirt by cutting it with a knife,” Wegener said. “There was no sniper, no shots fired and no gunshot injury sustained to his shoulder. “(It was) completely fabricated.”

    https://www.dailynews.com/2019/08/24/officials-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-in-lancaster-fabricated-report-he-was-shot-at-by-sniper/
    Good old CA.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 27, 2019, 04:02:35 AM
    Skip to comments.

    Police Charged with Murder, Tampering, in Houston No-Knock Raid
    Ammoland ^ | 25 August, 2019 | Dean Weingarten
    Posted on 8/27/2019, 6:38:50 AM by marktwain

    Images from Houston Police Department, source nbcnews.com, 23 August, 2019, combined, cropped and scaled by Dean Weingarten.

    U.S.A. –-(Ammoland.com)-Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg has announced felony murder charges for former Sergeant Gerald Goins of Narcotics Squad 15, the Houston Police Department (HPD), in the homicides of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas. The married couple, who lived in their modest Houston home at 7815 Harding Street for Twenty years, were killed with their dog in a no-knock raid on January 28th. DA Ogg also announced former Houston police officer Steven Bryant has been charged with second-degree tampering of a government document.

    Both officers retired two months after the raid, as the investigation into the raid proceeded.

    The video of the press conference is 26 minutes long, courtesy of ABC13 Houston.

    At every turn of the investigation of the 28 January raid, where the married couple was killed, and four officers wounded, more questions are raised and more disturbing facts uncovered.

    We know the no-knock warrant was fraudulent. Both Houston Police Chief Acevedo and District Attorney Ogg acknowledge this fact. We know no significant amount of drugs or cash was found at 7815 Harding Street. We know most of the neighbors did not see anything suspicious and knew Dennis Tuttle as a medically discharged Navy man, and Rhogena Nicholas as a caring, believing Christian wife, who sent a prayer to her mother every day.

    (Excerpt) Read more at ammoland.com ...

    TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; US: Texas
    KEYWORDS: banglist; houston;
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 27, 2019, 11:21:00 PM
    As it has been shown over and over, we are dealing with criminal gangs.
    Think about this also: some cops were making $302,000 a year (!) — including $131,650 in overtime (!).

    How a trooper’s alleged racist remark ignited the State Police overtime scandal

    The woman was driving through the Ted Williams Tunnel on her way to Logan Airport on a weeknight three years ago when a Massachusetts State Police trooper popped out of nowhere in front of her car, arms flailing, gesturing to pull over.

    “Do you not speak English?” the trooper yelled after she rolled down the window.

    An Asian-American with a medical degree from Harvard, the woman spoke 4 languages fluently.

    Eventually, a second trooper at the scene handed her a ticket for driving 10 miles per hour over the speed limit. The citation she received was for the following day, not the night she was pulled over.

    The federal and state investigations have revealed troopers were writing bogus traffic citations to meet unconstitutional ticket quotas, falsified other paperwork, and destroyed documents. The convictions showed how troopers and supervisors stole money and coordinated a coverup of their tracks — signs, prosecutors say, of systemic cultural problems and lax oversight at the state’s largest law enforcement agency.

    Read more: Boston Globe (https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2019/08/17/how-one-trooper-alleged-racist-remark-ignited-state-police-overtime-fraud-scandal/xrzYDzQHFRFA9RTIhWPDHP/story.html)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 28, 2019, 12:12:52 AM
    As it has been shown over and over, we are dealing with criminal gangs.
    Think about this also: some cops were making $302,000 a year (!) — including $131,650 in overtime (!).

    How a trooper’s alleged racist remark ignited the State Police overtime scandal

    The woman was driving through the Ted Williams Tunnel on her way to Logan Airport on a weeknight three years ago when a Massachusetts State Police trooper popped out of nowhere in front of her car, arms flailing, gesturing to pull over.

    “Do you not speak English?” the trooper yelled after she rolled down the window.

    An Asian-American with a medical degree from Harvard, the woman spoke 4 languages fluently.

    Eventually, a second trooper at the scene handed her a ticket for driving 10 miles per hour over the speed limit. The citation she received was for the following day, not the night she was pulled over.

    The federal and state investigations have revealed troopers were writing bogus traffic citations to meet unconstitutional ticket quotas, falsified other paperwork, and destroyed documents. The convictions showed how troopers and supervisors stole money and coordinated a coverup of their tracks — signs, prosecutors say, of systemic cultural problems and lax oversight at the state’s largest law enforcement agency.

    Read more: Boston Globe (https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2019/08/17/how-one-trooper-alleged-racist-remark-ignited-state-police-overtime-fraud-scandal/xrzYDzQHFRFA9RTIhWPDHP/story.html)

    Yeah....And don't drive in Lake Oswego, Oregon after cocktail hour or after 10:00 p.m.. If you do, you run the risk of the city police pulling you over for no good reason so they can check your sobriety. If you are sober, they'll give you a ticket anyway for some bogus infraction. -Go to the courthouse and they pretty much reduce the fine to nothing. I guess it helps keep drunks off the road. But, when you are the person pulled over, it is more than annoying.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on August 28, 2019, 07:43:35 PM
    Yeah....And don't drive in Lake Oswego, Oregon after cocktail hour or after 10:00 p.m.. If you do, you run the risk of the city police pulling you over for no good reason so they can check your sobriety. If you are sober, they'll give you a ticket anyway for some bogus infraction. -Go to the courthouse and they pretty much reduce the fine to nothing. I guess it helps keep drunks off the road. But, when you are the person pulled over, it is more than annoying.
    Tell us more about your experience trolling the streets of Lake Oswego, Oregon after 10 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2019, 12:58:24 AM
    Only the finest...

    DEA Special Agent Convicted of Perjury, Obstruction of Justice and Falsification of Government Records

    A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) special agent was convicted yesterday by a federal jury in New Orleans, Louisiana of perjury, obstruction of justice and falsifying government records.

    After a seven-day trial, Chad A. Scott, 51, of Covington, Louisiana, was found guilty of two counts of perjury, three counts of obstruction of justice and two counts of falsifying government records.  U.S. District Judge Jane Triche Milazzo of the Eastern District of Louisiana, who presided over the trial, has scheduled sentencing for Dec. 4, 2019.

    According to the evidence presented during the seven-day trial, Scott, while a DEA special agent in New Orleans, committed these crimes in and around the New Orleans, Louisiana, and Houston, Texas, areas.  Specifically, the evidence showed that Scott directed a Houston-based drug trafficker to buy a Ford F-150 truck worth approximately $43,000 and forfeit the truck to Scott as part of the drug trafficker’s cooperation.  Scott then falsified the seizure paperwork for the truck in various aspects, including falsely claiming that he had seized the truck in New Orleans instead of Houston, in order to facilitate the vehicle being forfeited and given to Scott as his official government vehicle.

    “Chad Scott violated his sworn commitment to serve the public and uphold justice, dishonoring the special trust that we place in each of our federal law enforcement agents,” said Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.  “Today’s conviction sends a clear message to the public that malfeasance by federal law enforcement officers will not be tolerated.” 

    “The conviction of Chad Scott reinforces the message that no one is above law,” said FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge Anthony T. Riedlinger.  “Scott’s actions were selfish and placed an unnecessary stain on an otherwise stellar agency.  We commend our partners at the DEA for their unprecedented level of cooperation throughout this investigation.”

    “The criminal justice system relies on law enforcement agents to act with integrity and honesty.  By soliciting bribes and compromising cases, Scott undermined the values he swore to uphold as a federal agent,” said Special Agent in Charge Robert A. Bourbon of the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (DOJ-OIG).  “The Office of the Inspector General will continue to be vigilant that corrupt law enforcement agents are held accountable.”

    “At its core, DEA is a law enforcement agency committed to faithful and effective service to our country and its citizens, as well as uncompromising personal and institutional integrity,” said DEA Chief Inspector Brian McKnight.  “Throughout the course of this investigation and its ultimate trial, DEA was appreciative of the professionalism and support that we received from our law enforcement partners.”

    Additionally, the evidence showed that Scott convinced the same Houston-based drug trafficker, as well as another drug trafficker in Houston, to testify falsely at a federal trial in New Orleans as to the identification of a major cocaine and heroin supplier in the Houston area.  Along with obstructing justice by inducing this false testimony, Scott then himself committed perjury during a motion session as well as during the federal trial, the evidence showed.  After a trial including this false testimony, the alleged supplier was found guilty.  Once Scott’s actions and the false testimony came to light, the case against the alleged supplier was dismissed by the court at the request of the United States.

    Scott has been indefinitely suspended as a DEA special agent.

    Two other former Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana Sheriff’s Office deputies who were serving as DEA task force officers in New Orleans have pleaded guilty in this investigation.  Karl Emmett Newman, 52, of Kentwood, Louisiana, pleaded guilty to unlawfully carrying a firearm in furtherance of an August 2015 robbery, which was disguised as the execution of a search warrant, as well as misappropriating money confiscated by the DEA during another search.  Johnny Domingue, 30, of Maurepas, Louisiana, pleaded guilty to possession of cocaine and misappropriating money confiscated by the DEA.

    Scott is additionally charged, along with Rodney Gemar, 43, of Ponchatoula, Louisiana, a former Hammond, Louisiana police officer and DEA task force officer, with various counts, including unlawful conversion of property by a government officer or employee and removing property to prevent seizure.  Trial on those charges is set for October 2019.  Those charges are only allegations and the defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    This case was initially investigated by the Louisiana State Police and later investigated by the FBI’s New Orleans Field Division, DEA-OPR and DOJ-OIG.  Acting Deputy Chief Charles Miracle of the Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section and Trial Attorney Timothy Duree of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section are prosecuting the case.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/drug-enforcement-administration-special-agent-convicted-perjury-obstruction-justice-and
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2019, 02:57:02 PM
    No prison time... As usual, they resigned before the trial...

    Ex-NYPD cops dodge jail time for sex with suspect inside police van in plea deal despite Brooklyn DA’s opposition

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-police-van-sex-dodge-jail-20190829-esaxcddk5ne7lmbgayiaxu5y7y-story.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2019, 03:04:09 PM
    This "brave hero" gave a 75 year old man with a prosthetic leg a $257 ticket for "disorderly conduct" (the typical bogus catch all that cops use when they can't find something to pin on someone) because the elderly man "dared" to tell him to close the bathroom door... He even threatened a woman who was filming the interaction.

    Belton officer terminated after ticketing man for bathroom door altercation in restaurant

    Belton police officer Thaddeus Shockley was terminated from the Belton Police Department following a confrontation with a 75-year-old man over an open bathroom door, according to Belton Mayor Wendell Page.
    Shockley was terminated Aug. 23 for violating agency policy, a day after the Independent-Mail reported on the Aug. 20 incident with Bobby Ray Phillips at the Standpipe Family Restaurant, authorities said.

    On Aug. 20, Shockley walked into Standpipe Family Restaurant for lunch and went to the bathroom. When he left the bathroom, Phillips, a restaurant regular, yelled at the officer to shut the door, according to Shockley's written account.

    Shockley wrote that he asked Phillips for identification. Phillips declined and also did not get up to go outside with the officer, as the officer requested, according to Shockley's report.

    Phillips told the Independent Mail last week that he was loud, as he always is, due to hearing difficulties. He has an artificial leg and said it is difficult to stand and he wanted to finish his meal.
     Shockley can be seen in the video interacting with Phillips, using the word “handcuff” before turning to Young, saying “ma’am, do I need to take that phone from you?” Young said no and shut off her phone. Young said she was intimidated by the officer and didn’t want to be arrested or have her phone seized.

    https://www.independentmail.com/story/news/2019/08/29/belton-officer-terminated-after-ticketing-man-for-bathroom-door-altercation/2150128001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2019, 03:05:32 PM
    Another cop who, as usual, resigns just before being charged...

    NC policeman resigns, faces prostitution charge

    https://www.cbs17.com/news/north-carolina-news/nc-policeman-resigns-faces-prostitution-charge/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 29, 2019, 03:50:22 PM
    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/ex-detectives-formerly-charged-with-raping-woman-plead-guilty-to-other-charges-avoid-jail-time/


    Crazy !  Wtf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2019, 02:31:22 PM
    Notice the usual "if you have nothing to hide what are you afraid of" by the cop...

    Police can get your Ring doorbell footage without a warrant, report says

    Hundreds of police departments around the country have partnerships with Amazon's home surveillance brand Ring. The relationship benefits both sides: the company provides tech and software to law enforcement, and the cops both provide data to Amazon and also help sell the product to local homeowners. That alone raises troubling issues, but according to a pair of new reports, Ring also gets access to real-time 911 data, and the company helps police work around a need for search warrants when looking for footage.

    And for those recalcitrant few, for whom no amount of social buy-in is enough, there's an end-run: police also have the option to ask Amazon directly for Ring footage if a user declines, effectively generating a subpoena.

    The Fresno County (California) Sheriff's Office told Government Technology that, while most users "play ball," for the ones who don't, "If we ask within 60 days of the recording and as long as it’s been uploaded to the cloud, then Ring can take it out of the cloud and send it to us legally so that we can use it as part of our investigation."

    The officer who spoke to us also dismissed the potential for user privacy concerns. "The consumer knows what they're getting into... If you're a good upstanding person who is doing things lawfully, nobody has concerns," the officer told GovTech.

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/08/police-can-get-your-ring-doorbell-footage-without-a-warrant-report-says/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2019, 03:20:24 PM
    The "highly trained professionals" just looked at Facebook pictures and arrested a young man who had nothing to do with the rape. He offered DNA samples immediately hoping to prove his innocence but he still was jailed and it took 15 months (!) just to send the DNA samples for testing and then another year (!!) to conduct the test. This young man lost 2 years of his life, the bail money ($540,000) and of course his name will still be stained.

    When cops and prosecutors are not held accountable, why would they care if they throw an innocent man in jail? If instead they were sent to prison (or death row to be executed) and forced to pay all the expenses and punitive damages out of their own pockets it might be a different story. Laws and punishment don't seem to apply to cops and prosecutors.

    Man who spent 2 years in jail for crime he did not commit now free

    For two years, Weaver was locked up in jail for a crime that he did not commit.

    “It’s just sad that two years of a young man’s life were taken away from him,” Emory Anthony Jr., the attorney representing Weaver, said. He first took the case back in 2017. “This all started with the allegation that a home was broken into. The young lady was raped, sodomized. They were robbed.”

    Anthony Jr. explained that through a photo of Weaver on Facebook that bore a resemblance to the alleged perpetrator, Weaver was linked to the case and arrested. In total, he was facing 11 charges.

    Weaver never did give up, but because bond was set to about $540,000, he sat in jail for two years. For the entirety of that time, he waited for DNA found at the crime scene to be tested. Per his attorney, Weaver eagerly submitted his own DNA for testing as well.

    The test results came back this summer and the DNA collected at the scene did not match Weaver’s.

    He could finally go home. He was finally free.

    https://www.cbs42.com/top-stories/man-who-spent-2-years-in-jail-for-crime-he-did-not-commit-now-free/


    Two Years Later, Treveon Weaver Exonerated

    According to Weaver’s attorney, Emory Anthony, Weaver was pegged as the suspect through one of his photos on Facebook. Apparently, the attorney said, Weaver bore a resemblance to the real attacker.

    A resemblance, as in, “well, he kinda looks like the guy,” which might be said about one, or ten or a thousand, people.* Some of us have unique characteristics that make our appearance stand out. Others, well, we’re fairly ordinary looking. But almost all of us have other people who resemble us, to some extent or another. To say Weaver “resembled” the perp is to say that the silver Prius resembled the getaway car, limiting the focus to a few thousand cars in any given city.

    According to court records, the assailant urinated on the victim. DNA samples were taken from the scene. Those samples were turned over to the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences and returned to Bessemer police on April 19, 2018.

    The results excluded Weaver’s DNA from being found on the victim or at the scene of the crime, according to a motion filed by Weaver’s attorney Anthony, who had repeatedly requested the results. He received them, he said, days before Weaver’s April 1 trial was to begin.

    “The untimely giving of the DNA results some 11 months later is prejudicial to the defendant in this case and has violated his constitutional right to timely have evidence showing he is not guilty,’’ Anthony wrote.

    It took 11 months to get the DNA results that could have been produced the next day had the prosecution wanted that to happen. But it also took 15 months beforehand to get Weaver’s DNA tested at all, based on his lawyer’s pushing and motion. One might suspect that the cops or prosecutors would have sought DNA testing within minutes of Weaver’s arrest, if for no other reason than to nail down their case against him and prove as conclusively as possible that he was the person who raped and sodomized a woman in her own home.

    https://blog.simplejustice.us/2019/08/29/two-years-later-treveon-weaver-exonerated/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2019, 04:25:14 PM
    Crazy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 30, 2019, 09:57:49 PM

    “When cops and prosecutors are not held accountable, why would they care if they throw an innocent man in jail? If instead they were sent to prison (or death row to be executed) and forced to pay all the expenses and punitive damages out of their own pockets it might be a different story. Laws and punishment don't seem to apply to cops”

    If only the above was true
    Some of the most despicable criminals
    Are Cops & Prosecutors- Disgusting People
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2019, 12:21:36 PM
    Even this horrific abuse, attack and kidnapping of a nurse who was following the law and serving her community and the flagrant and purposeful disregard for the laws and the courts was not enough it seems to make citizens fully realize the abusive nature of these violent criminals.
    Firing and/or demotion is not enough. Until now, these violent criminals were on paid vacation. It is likely that Payne will appeal, the cop union will get involved and enforce their own rules and he won't suffer any actual consequences. He along with his supervisor should rot in prison as should any other cops that might have been present but did not subdue and arrest Payne.

    Utah Cop who Forcibly Arrested Nurse for Refusing Blood Draw Fired

    The Utah cop video recorded roughly handcuffing a nurse after she refused to allow a blood draw on an unconscious patient has been fired.

    Salt Lake Police Chief Mike Brown relieved detective Jeff Payne of his duties for violating department policies when he arrested Alex Wubbels and dragged the screaming nurse out of the hospital.

    Chief Brown demoted Payne’s supervisor, watch commander Lt. James Tracey, to the rank of officer after viewing the video, which was recorded on police body cams on July 26.

    The decision to fire Payne comes after an internal affairs report released Sept. 13 found both officers violated department policy by failing to uphold the department’s requirement to treat all citizens “equally with courtesy, consideration and dignity.”

    “You demonstrated extremely poor professional judgment (especially for an officer with 27 years of experience), which calls into question your ability to effectively serve the public and the department,” Brown wrote in a termination letter to Payne, which can be read below.

    “In examining your conduct, I am deeply troubled by your lack of sound professional judgment and your discourteous, disrespectful, and unwarranted behavior, which unnecessarily escalated a situation that could and should have been resolved in a manner far different from the course of action you chose to pursue.”

    “You inappropriately acted against Ms. Wubbels,” Brown added.

    Payne’s attorney Greg Skordas argued firing Payne was excessive and said his client served the department well for nearly three decades.

    “I‘m really frustrated by the way this case has been processed,
    Skordas told the Salt Lake Tribune.

    “I do think that Salt Lake City did a fair job of doing the investigation, and I think that their findings are, by and large, accurate. But I think the chief reacted to a lot of public pressure and scrutiny in making a decision that doesn’t fit the conduct.”

    Payne was previously disciplined in 2013 after an internal affairs investigation confirmed he sexually harassed a female co-worker.

    The former officer worked part-time as a paramedic, but was fired from that job on September 5 after fallout from his arrest of Wubbels continued.

    During the incident, Payne threatened to punish the hospital as well as Wubbels by bringing “all the transients” to the hospital and taking the “good patients” elsewhere.

    “I’ll bring them all the transients and take good patients elsewhere,”  Payne says in the video.

    Body cam footage of the incident, which sparked a nationwide conversation on the level of force used by police, can be seen below.



    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/10/utah-cop-forcibly-arrested-nurse-refusing-blood-draw-fired/

    Was anyone under the impression that the scumbag who threatened, violently assaulted and kidnapped a nurse would not find a job in the same County? Guess again...

    Police officer who handcuffed Utah nurse Alex Wubbels gets hired at Weber County jail

    Jeff Payne, the former Salt Lake City police officer who handcuffed nurse Alex Wubbels, has been hired to work at the Weber County jail, a human resources employee confirmed Wednesday.

    The county’s human resources office said Payne was hired Aug. 9 to work part time at the jail in a position that does not include benefits. Sheriff’s officials later confirmed that Payne was hired as a “civilian corrections assistant” to work in the medical unit of the jail.

    This marks the second time in recent weeks that the Weber County Sheriff’s Office has hired a peace officer who was fired from a previous job. The department also hired a former University of Utah detective who was fired after she ignored concerns from student athlete Lauren McCluskey, who later was murdered, and from a 17-year-old girl who said she had been unlawfully detained by a U. student she was dating.

    https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2019/08/28/police-officer-who/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 03, 2019, 01:52:07 PM
    A "sheriff" fires 10 rounds (with an "assault rifle" nonetheless, the ones they want to ban but only for law abiding citizens, not for cops or criminals) at an innocent man in a white pickup, suffering two collapsed lungs and an injured liver.... NO CHARGES
    Of course, expect the taxpayers to foot the bill when this poor man files a lawsuit for the medical expenses and any other damages he suffered.

    The radio alert said a gray pickup. The truck the sheriff shot 10 times was white.

    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/politics/texas/article/The-radio-alert-said-a-gray-pickup-The-truck-the-14395847.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 03, 2019, 01:58:16 PM
    A cop sexually assaulted a 5 year old girl but he gets probation, NO PRISON TIME! Cops sure seem to get some sweet plea deals for abhorrent crimes.

    Former Honolulu police officer gets probation in sex assault of 5-year-old girl

    Deputy Prosecutor Loren Haugen said in state court Tuesday that he offered fired Honolulu police officer Teddy Van Lerberghe a plea deal in the sexual assault case against him involving a victim who was 5-year-old when the sexual assaults started because that’s what the victim wanted.

    “There was one aspect that she did deem quite important. And that by pleading to the charges, Teddy Van Lerberghe could never, ever again be a police officer or become a police officer in this state or any state,” Haugen said.

    The victim did not show up in court Tuesday for Van Lerberghe’s sentence.

    Somerville sentenced Van Lerberghe, 45, to five years of probation for 4 counts of second-degree sexual assault and 3 counts of third-degree sexual assault, and did not order him to serve any of the five years behind bars, according to the terms of the plea agreement. She also ordered Van Lerberghe to pay $735 in fees into a state special fund for crime victims, $700 into a fund used to investigate and prosecute internet crimes against children and a $150 probation services fee.

    In addition, Van Lerberghe must submit to sex offender treatment and register as a convicted sex offender for the rest of his life.

    An Oahu grand jury returned an indictment in 2017 charging Van Lerberghe with four counts of first-degree sexual assault and the three third-degree sexual assaults. The state agreed to reduce the first-degree sexual assaults to second-degree sexual assaults. Van Lerberghe pleaded no contest in May.

    https://www.staradvertiser.com/2019/08/27/hawaii-news/former-honolulu-police-officer-gets-probation-in-sex-assault-of-5-year-old-girl/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on September 03, 2019, 02:12:31 PM
    Tell us more about your experience trolling the streets of Lake Oswego, Oregon after 10 PM

    I think you mean commuting and not trolling. Lake Oswego is situated between West Linn and Portland. This is the shortest route to take when I go to Portland and from Portland to home. Sorry, there is no more to tell.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2019, 10:25:31 AM
    Once again: criminal gangs.

    Cops don disguises, trash cars of man who filed complaint against them, prosecutor says

    Two Asbury Park police officers donned disguises to exact revenge on a citizen who filed a complaint against them by slashing the tires on two of his vehicles, authorities announced Wednesday.

    The Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office charged officers Stephen Martinsen, 29, and Thomas Dowling, 26, both of Asbury Park, with conspiracy, criminal mischief and weapons offenses. The officers are accused of vandalizing two vehicles in Ocean Grove and Asbury Park early on Sept. 3, authorities said.

    “It is alleged that officer Martinsen and Special Law Enforcement officer Dowling did purposely damage both vehicles, both owned by the same person,” a press release from the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office said. “The vehicle owner had filed an administrative complaint against both officers several days before the vandalism incidents.”

    Authorities said the two officers wore disguises when they rode their bikes to the vehicles, smashed out windows and slashed all the tires.

    The victim, Ernest Mignoli said: “I’m a concerned citizen, outspoken critic of Asbury Park Police Department. But this goes behind the pale. I’m constantly harassed by police wherever I go. It’s just the nature of my work.”

    https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2019/09/cops-don-disguises-and-trash-cars-of-man-who-filed-complaint-against-them-in-stunning-act-of-revenge-prosecutor-alleges.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2019, 07:27:06 PM
    If cops have "no duty to protect" the citizens they are supposed to serve and will ignore crimes or cries for help, citizens should also not be forced to help cops or be charged with a crime.

    It’s no longer a crime to refuse to help a cop after Gavin Newsom signed this law

    A legal vestige from California’s Wild West days is no more.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill striking down a law that makes it a crime to refuse a police officer’s request for help.

    The California Posse Comitatus Act of 1872 made it a misdemeanor for any “able-bodied person 18 years of age or older” to refuse a police officer’s call for assistance in making an arrest.

    https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article234664847.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 05, 2019, 07:36:03 PM
    If cops have "no duty to protect" the citizens they are supposed to serve and will ignore crimes or cries for help, citizens should also not be forced to help cops or be charged with a crime.

    It’s no longer a crime to refuse to help a cop after Gavin Newsom signed this law

    A legal vestige from California’s Wild West days is no more.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill striking down a law that makes it a crime to refuse a police officer’s request for help.

    The California Posse Comitatus Act of 1872 made it a misdemeanor for any “able-bodied person 18 years of age or older” to refuse a police officer’s call for assistance in making an arrest.

    https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article234664847.html

    Its a shame either of these are acceptable. I don't think a citizen should be compelled by law to aid an officer, I think they should be compelled by morals and eithics. But I do think officers should be compelled to assist citizens. Can't think of many instances where this has been an issue but I am sure Skeletor can educate me

    https://www.firearmsandliberty.com/kasler-protection.html

    While the ruling pertained to domestic violence it has also been used on pursuit cases where the police, determining the subject in the vehicle was not going to stop, was wanted for a misdemeanor and therefore the pursuit was called off. The suspect later continuing to drive like an idiot crashed and caused injury to others., Police were sued and the courts determined the police did the right thing, but some people interpret it as the police have no duty to protect citizens.. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2019, 07:37:36 PM
    Another cop who sexually assaulted children gets a sweet plea deal and will not spend more than 1 year in prison...

    Ex-Lansing officer charged in school sexual assaults of 3 students takes plea deal

     A former Lansing police officer accused of attempting to kiss and molest three girls in his office at Eastern and in his patrol vehicle has made a plea agreement.

    Matthew Priebe pleaded no contest to second-degree criminal sexual conduct, attempted fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, misconduct in office and two counts of assault and battery on Monday, Livingston County Prosecutor William Vailliencourt said. The youngest victim connected to the charges was 14 and the oldest was 17 at the time of the sexual assault.

    In exchange for his plea, one charge of distributing sexually explicit material to a minor was dismissed.

    Ingham County Prosecutor Carol Siemon recused her office due to a conflict of interest.

    Vailliencourt said Priebe's sentence recommendation is not more than 12 months in jail. Once released, he will have to register as a sex offender. Priebe was taken into custody Monday, and his bond was revoked.

    https://www.lansingstatejournal.com/story/news/2019/08/12/lansing-police-sex-assault-misconduct-student-molest-child-eastern-school/1989935001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 05, 2019, 07:42:32 PM
    Criminal gangs.
    (press release from notorious cop hating website)

    Second Tennessee Correctional Officer Pleads Guilty to Federal Civil Rights Offense for Beating Inmate

    Tanner Penwell, 22, pleaded guilty to using unlawful force on an inmate while Penwell was serving as a correctional officer with the Tennessee Department of Corrections.

    “This type of behavior and violation of an inmate’s civil rights will not be tolerated,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. “The Department of Justice will continue to seek out justice on behalf of those who have had their civil rights violated.”

    “Correctional officers must abide by and adhere to the same laws they take an oath to uphold and enforce. Instead of serving and protecting the public, this officer used physical force to violate the civil rights of an individual and will now be held accountable, vividly illustrating that no one is above the law,” said U.S. Attorney D. Michael Dunavant for the Western District of Tennessee.

    “The FBI will vigorously investigate and bring to justice any law enforcement officer who crosses the line and engages in activity that violates the civil rights of those whose safety they are charged with,” said Bryan McCloskey, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Memphis Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. “This plea should be a reminder that wearing a badge does not make one above the law.”

    With his guilty plea, Penwell admitted that, on Feb. 1, he and several other correctional officers entered the cell of R.T., an inmate in the mental health unit at the Northwest County Correctional Complex in Tiptonville, Tennessee. Penwell and the other officers entered the cell because R.T. was a suicide risk. Inmate R.T. was already bleeding when the officers entered his cell, and R.T. flung blood toward the correctional officers.

    Once inside, a correctional officer looked in the direction of the surveillance camera in the cell and said, “violate the camera.” Another correctional officer then covered the camera with his hand. The correctional officer who asked for the camera to be violated then repeatedly punched R.T. Penwell estimated that this officer hit R.T. more than 20 times. When the officer stopped hitting R.T., he looked back at Penwell and said, “get him.”  Penwell stepped up and punched R.T. multiple times in the head. After Penwell stopped punching R.T., a third correctional officer punched R.T.

    Throughout the time he was being punched by the correctional officers, inmate R.T. sat on the bench in the cell and only used his arms to cover his face in an apparent attempt to protect his face from the correctional officers’ punches. At no point did R.T. attempt to fight back. Penwell knew that punching R.T. was unlawful, but he did not step in to stop it. A supervisor and several correctional officers were in a position to watch as the three correctional officers punched inmate R.T., but none of them attempted to stop the officers from hitting R.T. After R.T. was punched by the officers, Penwell observed that R.T. was bleeding much more than when they had first entered the cell.

    Once outside of the cell, Penwell spoke with several correctional officers and a supervisor. The supervisor said he needed to see if the camera inside the cell was working.  The supervisor and the first correctional officer who punched R.T. decided that all of the officers would falsely claim that R.T. injured himself while he was on suicide watch in the mental health unit.

    The next morning, the first correctional officer who punched R.T. told Penwell that instead of falsely claiming that R.T. injured himself, as the supervisor had proposed the day before, they should both falsely blame the third correctional officer who punched R.T. for all of R.T.’s injuries. Over the next few days, the first officer who punched R.T. repeatedly told Penwell to stick to this new cover story.

    With today’s guilty plea, Penwell admitted that he violated 18 U.S.C. § 242 when he repeatedly punched and injured inmate R.T. without legal justification. The maximum penalty for this civil rights offense is 10 years imprisonment.

    In a related case, former Correctional Officer Nathaniel Griffin entered a guilty plea in federal court on Aug. 15. Sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 27.

    This case was investigated by the Memphis Division of the FBI with the support of the Tennessee Department of Corrections, and is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Rebekah J. Bailey of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and Assistant United States Attorney David Pritchard of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Tennessee.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/second-tennessee-correctional-officer-pleads-guilty-federal-civil-rights-offense-beating
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 09:46:01 AM
    Feds Order Apple And Google To Hand Over Names Of 10,000+ Users Of A Gun Scope App

    Own a rifle? Got a scope to go with it? The government might soon know who you are, where you live and how to reach you.

    That’s because Apple and Google have been ordered by the U.S. government to hand over names, phone numbers and other identifying data of at least 10,000 users of a single gun scope app, Forbes has discovered. It’s an unprecedented move: Never before has a case been disclosed in which American investigators demanded personal data of users of a single app from Apple and Google. And never has an order been made public where the feds have asked the Silicon Valley giants for info on so many thousands of people in one go.

    According to a court order filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ) on September 5, investigators want information on users of Obsidian 4, a tool used to control rifle scopes made by night-vision specialist American Technologies Network Corp. The app allows gun owners to get a live stream, take video and calibrate their gun scope from an Android or iPhone device. According to the Google Play page for Obsidian 4, it has more than 10,000 downloads. Apple doesn’t provide download numbers, so it’s unclear how many iPhone owners have been swept up in this latest government data grab.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2019/09/06/exclusive-feds-order-apple-and-google-to-hand-over-names-of-10000-users-of-a-gun-scope-app
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 02:00:07 PM
    And another one...
    As usual, he resigned before he could get fired.

    Tennessee police officer admits to raping 3 women while on duty

     A Tennessee police officer has admitted to raping three women who were in his custody.

    News outlets report that former Chattanooga police officer Desmond Logan reached a plea agreement Wednesday in federal court in which he also admitted to pulling a stun gun on a woman to prevent her from leaving her car. According to court documents, the 33-year-old has agreed to plead guilty to two counts of deprivation of rights. Each count carries up to 10 years in prison and $250,000 in fines.

    Earlier this year, two retired Chattanooga officers were accused of helping suppress allegations against Logan. The women say they notified police, but an official probe wasn't launched until the county sheriff was notified.

    Logan resigned in February before he could be fired.

    https://www.knoxnews.com/story/news/2019/09/06/chattanooga-tennessee-police-officer-admits-raping-3-women-while-duty/2229976001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 02:02:24 PM
    And another one...

    Florida police officer arrested on child pornography charges

    A Florida police officer was arrested by the FBI Thursday on charges of possessing child pornography. Gabriel Albala, 45, of Margate, Fla. was ordered held without bond following an appearance in Fort Lauderdale federal court Friday.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fbi-arrests-florida-cop
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 02:20:03 PM
    Once again taxpayers are footing the bill for roaming criminal gangs that execute people. Even this small amount cannot compensate his family for losing their loved one, but since cops don't face criminal charges and don't even pay out of their pockets, why would they care?

    Stephon Clark's children to receive $2.4 million settlement from city of Sacramento

    The city of Sacramento will pay $2.4 million to the children of Stephon Clark, the man shot and killed by Sacramento police officers in his grandmother's backyard last year, according to federal court documents.

    The federal lawsuit was filed on behalf of Clark's two sons, his parents and his grandparents. It contended that officers used excessive force and that Clark was a victim of racial profiling. The family was seeking more than $20 million in damages. The city of Sacramento agreed to pay Clark's two sons and their attorneys a total sum of $2.4 million, court documents show. Each child will get $893,113 after attorney's fees.

    The officers stated that they shot Clark, firing 20 rounds, believing that he had pointed a gun at them. Police found only a cell phone on him. According to the pathologist hired by the Clark family, Clark was shot eight times, including six times in the back. However, the Sacramento County Coroner's autopsy report concluded that Clark was shot seven times, including three shots to the right side of the back.

    https://www.abc10.com/article/news/local/sacramento/stephon-clark-sacramento-settlement-millions
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 02:38:46 PM
    DMVs Are Selling Your Data to Private Investigators

    Departments of Motor Vehicles in states around the country are taking drivers' personal information and selling it to thousands of businesses, including private investigators who spy on people for a profit, Motherboard has learned. DMVs sell the data for an array of approved purposes, such as to insurance or tow companies, but some of them have sold to more nefarious businesses as well. Multiple states have made tens of millions of dollars a year selling data.

    Motherboard has obtained hundreds of pages of documents from DMVs through public records requests that lay out the practice. Members of the public may not be aware that when they provide their name, address, and in some cases other personal information to the DMV for the purposes of getting a driver's license or registering a vehicle, the DMV often then turns around and offers that information for sale.

    The sale of this data to licensed private investigators is perfectly legal, due to the Driver's Privacy Protection Act (DPPA), a law written in the '90s before privacy became the cultural focus that it is today, but which critics believe should be changed. The DPPA was created in 1994 after a private investigator, hired by a stalker, obtained the address of actress Rebecca Schaeffer from a DMV. The stalker went on to murder Schaeffer. The purpose of the law was to restrict access to DMV data, but it included a wide range of exemptions, including for the sale to private investigators.

    https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/43kxzq/dmvs-selling-data-private-investigators-making-millions-of-dollars
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 06, 2019, 07:26:42 PM
    Its a shame either of these are acceptable. I don't think a citizen should be compelled by law to aid an officer, I think they should be compelled by morals and eithics. But I do think officers should be compelled to assist citizens.
    This
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 06, 2019, 08:46:59 PM
    Its a shame either of these are acceptable. I don't think a citizen should be compelled by law to aid an officer, I think they should be compelled by morals and eithics. But I do think officers should be compelled to assist citizens. Can't think of many instances where this has been an issue but I am sure Skeletor can educate me

    https://www.firearmsandliberty.com/kasler-protection.html

    While the ruling pertained to domestic violence it has also been used on pursuit cases where the police, determining the subject in the vehicle was not going to stop, was wanted for a misdemeanor and therefore the pursuit was called off. The suspect later continuing to drive like an idiot crashed and caused injury to others., Police were sued and the courts determined the police did the right thing, but some people interpret it as the police have no duty to protect citizens.. 

    Agree pretty much with what you say.
    And as Far as Educating you - Your well aware of the endless
    Horrendous reports on this thread posted by Skeletor & others
    Pertaining to the activities & behaviour of criminal cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 06, 2019, 09:12:56 PM
    Agree pretty much with what you say.
    And as Far as Educating you - Your well aware of the endless
    Horrendous reports on this thread posted by Skeletor & others
    Pertaining to the activities & behaviour of criminal cops.

    One of the most recent court decisions about cops not having a "duty to protect" stemmed from the Parkland school shooting, and more specifically the "heroic" Coward of Broward. Point is, citizens are always at a disadvantage, they are in a "damned if they do, damned if they don't" situation because unlike cops they are not covered by immunities (as well as others covering up for them).

    Cops and schools had no duty to shield students in Parkland shooting, says judge who tossed lawsuit

    A federal judge says Broward schools and the Sheriff’s Office had no legal duty to protect students during the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

    U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom dismissed a suit filed by 15 students who claimed they were traumatized by the crisis in February. The suit named six defendants, including the Broward school district and the Broward Sheriff’s Office, as well as school deputy Scot Peterson and campus monitor Andrew Medina.

    “His arbitrary and conscience-shocking actions and inactions directly and predictably caused children to die, get injured, and get traumatized,” the lawsuit claimed.

    Medina knew Cruz and saw him arrive on campus, but did not confront him.

    Bloom ruled that the two agencies had no constitutional duty to protect students who were not in custody.

    “The claim arises from the actions of [shooter Nikolas] Cruz, a third party, and not a state actor,” she wrote in a ruling Dec. 12. “Thus, the critical question the Court analyzes is whether defendants had a constitutional duty to protect plaintiffs from the actions of Cruz.

    “As previously stated, for such a duty to exist on the part of defendants, plaintiffs would have to be considered to be in custody” — for example, as prisoners or patients of a mental hospital, she wrote.

    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/broward/parkland/florida-school-shooting/fl-ne-douglas-survivor-lawsuit-federal-judge-20181217-story.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 06, 2019, 11:51:04 PM
    One of the most recent court decisions about cops not having a "duty to protect" stemmed from the Parkland school shooting, and more specifically the "heroic" Coward of Broward. Point is, citizens are always at a disadvantage, they are in a "damned if they do, damned if they don't" situation because unlike cops they are not covered by immunities (as well as others covering up for them).

    Cops and schools had no duty to shield students in Parkland shooting, says judge who tossed lawsuit

    A federal judge says Broward schools and the Sheriff’s Office had no legal duty to protect students during the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

    U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom dismissed a suit filed by 15 students who claimed they were traumatized by the crisis in February. The suit named six defendants, including the Broward school district and the Broward Sheriff’s Office, as well as school deputy Scot Peterson and campus monitor Andrew Medina.

    “His arbitrary and conscience-shocking actions and inactions directly and predictably caused children to die, get injured, and get traumatized,” the lawsuit claimed.

    Medina knew Cruz and saw him arrive on campus, but did not confront him.

    Bloom ruled that the two agencies had no constitutional duty to protect students who were not in custody.

    “The claim arises from the actions of [shooter Nikolas] Cruz, a third party, and not a state actor,” she wrote in a ruling Dec. 12. “Thus, the critical question the Court analyzes is whether defendants had a constitutional duty to protect plaintiffs from the actions of Cruz.

    “As previously stated, for such a duty to exist on the part of defendants, plaintiffs would have to be considered to be in custody” — for example, as prisoners or patients of a mental hospital, she wrote.

    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/broward/parkland/florida-school-shooting/fl-ne-douglas-survivor-lawsuit-federal-judge-20181217-story.html



    That maybe the Legal Bollocks
    Only Any Sane Rational Person Thinks That The Law Is Fucked Up.
    And Badly Fucked Up.

    Kids are Being Shot & Killed in School & The Police Don’t Have To Protect Them ::) ::)
    What are they For Then just to Protec Each Other.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2019, 01:11:10 AM
    That maybe the Legal Bollocks
    Only Any Sane Rational Person Thinks That The Law Is Fucked Up.
    And Badly Fucked Up.

    Kids are Being Shot & Killed in School & The Police Don’t Have To Protect Them ::) ::)
    What are they For Then just to Protec Each Other.

    The decision pretty much implies that they have a constitutional duty to protect the shooter that they arrested after he killed so many kids. But the cops do not have a constitutional duty to protect the kids at school from being killed! Insane.

    Quote
    The suit also alleged that Peterson had remained outside the building while Cruz was inside shooting students. And the suit claimed that a Broward sheriff’s commander at the scene prevented emergency responders from entering the building to confront Cruz or help the victims.

    U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom cited the 1989 Supreme Court decision DeShaney v. Winnebago County, which said that the due process clause “is phrased as a limitation on the state’s power to act, not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security.”

    The government does have a duty to protect when a person such as a prisoner is in custody, Bloom said.

    But school custody doesn’t rise to a level that requires an obligation to protect, Bloom said, citing appellate precedent.

    From "to serve and protect" to "no duty to protect"....
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2019, 03:46:26 PM
    Perjury? Lying to both the FBI and a federal grand jury? Of course these scumbags "sworn law enforcement officers" will lie to cover up their crimes. The victim of this violent attack happened to be an undercover cop. If the victim was just an "ordinary" person things would have been different. She's getting off lightly. The other 4 cops are still awaiting trial.

    One of the messages they allegedly exchanged before the attack said: "The more the merrier! It's gonna get IGNORANT tonight!! But it's gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads once the sun goes down and nobody can tell us apart!!!"

    Once again: criminal gangs.

    Former St. Louis Metropolitan Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Committing Perjury

    Bailey Colletta, 26, a former police officer with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD) pleaded guilty today in federal court in the Eastern District of Missouri to one count of making false statements to a federal grand jury about her knowledge of the arrest and assault of a fellow SLMPD police officer, who was working undercover in downtown St. Louis during protests following the 2017 acquittal of a former SLMPD officer on a state murder charge. Colletta’s co-defendants, SLMPD officers Dustin Boone, Randy Hays, and Christopher Myers, remain under indictment on federal charges related to the assault and subsequent cover-up. They have pleaded not guilty.

    According to the plea agreement, in addition to facing a maximum of five years in prison, Colletta must forfeit her law enforcement certification. A sentencing date has been set for Dec. 13. The trial of Boone, Hayes, and Myers is set for Dec. 2, 2019.

    This case is being investigated by the St. Louis Division of the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Reginald Harris of the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Special Litigation Counsel Fara Gold and Trial Attorney Janea Lamar of the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Criminal Section.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-st-louis-metropolitan-police-officer-pleads-guilty-committing-perjury

    https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/st-louis-cop-admits-lying-to-fbi-grand-jury-about/article_6bb1bc58-80fe-5195-a790-10a394293104.html?fbclid=IwAR2aNiMPfCQva-7pxBOgMQOaO_UO8vEBZ7Fv3Rj5Es41dIspiFghyCAfaRA

    (https://media2.fdncms.com/riverfronttimes/imager/u/blog/32228789/slmpd02.jpg?cb=1567791700) (https://media2.fdncms.com/riverfronttimes/imager/u/blog/32228788/slmpd03.jpg?cb=1567791700)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 09, 2019, 04:00:27 PM
    Perjury? Lying to both the FBI and a federal grand jury? Of course these scumbags "sworn law enforcement officers" will lie to cover up their crimes. The victim of this violent attack happened to be an undercover cop. If the victim was just an "ordinary" person things would have been different. She's getting off lightly. The other 4 cops are still awaiting trial.

    One of the messages they allegedly exchanged before the attack said: "The more the merrier! It's gonna get IGNORANT tonight!! But it's gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads once the sun goes down and nobody can tell us apart!!!"

    Once again: criminal gangs.

    Former St. Louis Metropolitan Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Committing Perjury

    Bailey Colletta, 26, a former police officer with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD) pleaded guilty today in federal court in the Eastern District of Missouri to one count of making false statements to a federal grand jury about her knowledge of the arrest and assault of a fellow SLMPD police officer, who was working undercover in downtown St. Louis during protests following the 2017 acquittal of a former SLMPD officer on a state murder charge. Colletta’s co-defendants, SLMPD officers Dustin Boone, Randy Hays, and Christopher Myers, remain under indictment on federal charges related to the assault and subsequent cover-up. They have pleaded not guilty.

    According to the plea agreement, in addition to facing a maximum of five years in prison, Colletta must forfeit her law enforcement certification. A sentencing date has been set for Dec. 13. The trial of Boone, Hayes, and Myers is set for Dec. 2, 2019.

    This case is being investigated by the St. Louis Division of the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Reginald Harris of the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Special Litigation Counsel Fara Gold and Trial Attorney Janea Lamar of the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Criminal Section.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-st-louis-metropolitan-police-officer-pleads-guilty-committing-perjury

    https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/st-louis-cop-admits-lying-to-fbi-grand-jury-about/article_6bb1bc58-80fe-5195-a790-10a394293104.html?fbclid=IwAR2aNiMPfCQva-7pxBOgMQOaO_UO8vEBZ7Fv3Rj5Es41dIspiFghyCAfaRA

    (https://media2.fdncms.com/riverfronttimes/imager/u/blog/32228789/slmpd02.jpg?cb=1567791700) (https://media2.fdncms.com/riverfronttimes/imager/u/blog/32228788/slmpd03.jpg?cb=1567791700)


    So Heart Warming to read such Stories of Heroism from Cops   Thugs
    Ohh it’s just a Small Problem in Policing - Bollocks is it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2019, 04:13:31 PM
    Following the death of 21 month old Killian Vanderhagen, his father, Jonathan Vanderhagen, was incensed that the child was placed in the custody of his ex-wife, who he felt was unfit, and when his child died, he began posting his criticisms of the system, and Judge Rancilo, who he felt was responsible for his child’s death, and promising, “I’m gonna dig up all the skeletons in this court’s closet.” The judge claimed to feel threatened, and referred the matter to police, who found no threat, but for "some reason" he was charged with “malicious use of telecommunications services,” and released on $2000 bond. When he continued his criticisms, his bond was revoked, and now he is sitting in jail on $500,000 bond.

    It appears that judges can ignore the 1st Amendment whenever they feel like it.

    Chesterfield Township man jailed on $500,000 bond for posts about Macomb County judge

    A Chesterfield Township man is being held on a $500,000 bond and faces a misdemeanor trial, accused of posting implied threats to a Macomb County judge related to the death of his young son.

    Jonathan Vanderhagen, 35, was arrested and jailed July 11 for posting comments and images about circuit Judge Rachel Rancilio related to his late son, Killian, who died at 21 months in September 2017 while under the care of his mother. Rancilio filed a police complaint against Vanderhagen.

    https://www.macombdaily.com/news/copscourts/chesterfield-township-man-jailed-on-bond-for-posts-about-macomb/article_ac125880-d0fc-11e9-8923-33941dfbdd98.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 10, 2019, 06:37:33 PM
    Only the finest people...

    This one just happened to be charged with a mere 61 counts:

    2 counts of sexual abuse
    2 counts of attempted sexual abuse
    1 count of attempted sexual assault
    4 counts of sexual extortion
    4 counts of unlawful sexual conduct
    8 counts of unlawful imprisonment
    8 counts of kidnapping
    4 counts of harassment
    8 counts of forgery
    5 counts of fraudulent schemes and artifices
    7 counts of fraudulent schemes and practices, willful concealment
    8 counts of tampering with a public record


    Arizona trooper arrested on sex-related, kidnapping and fraud charges

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/09/1862/1048/Tremaine-Jackson.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    An Arizona state trooper was arrested Tuesday and charged with 61 counts -- ranging from alleged sexual abuse and extortion to kidnapping and fraud -- after his department said he was using his position to trade "leniency for favor."

    Tremaine Jackson, 43, worked for the Arizona Department of Public Safety (AZDPS) for 13 years and was assigned to the department's Metro Motors District when authorities say they started receiving calls from women alleging that he'd made inappropriate comments and sexually abused them while on the job.

    Col. Frank Milstead, director of AZDPS, said at a press conference Tuesday that on May 19, the department received its first complaint from a female motorist. who said Jackson made inappropriate comments to her during a traffic stop.

    While investigating that complaint, police received a second complaint that alleged Jackson made inappropriate comments and engaged in "criminal behavior to the extent of sexual abuse," Milstead said. Jackson was put on administrative leave.

    As the AZDPS's special investigation unit began to further probe Jackson's behavior while on duty, it contacted several women who had been stopped or cited by him dating back to Oct. 29, 2018, when police believe the first account of inappropriate and unlawful contact occurred.

    Milstead said the investigation revealed at least eight women were alleged to have been harassed or sexually abused by Jackson while he was in uniform and in a marked or unmarked Arizona Department trooper car. Further, Milstead said, "we believe this may not be all of our victims."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/arizona-trooper-arrested-on-sex-related-kidnapping-and-fraud-charges-police
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 11, 2019, 02:28:24 PM
    Only the finest people...

    This one just happened to be charged with a mere 61 counts:

    2 counts of sexual abuse
    2 counts of attempted sexual abuse
    1 count of attempted sexual assault
    4 counts of sexual extortion
    4 counts of unlawful sexual conduct
    8 counts of unlawful imprisonment
    8 counts of kidnapping
    4 counts of harassment
    8 counts of forgery
    5 counts of fraudulent schemes and artifices
    7 counts of fraudulent schemes and practices, willful concealment
    8 counts of tampering with a public record


    Arizona trooper arrested on sex-related, kidnapping and fraud charges

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/09/1862/1048/Tremaine-Jackson.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    An Arizona state trooper was arrested Tuesday and charged with 61 counts -- ranging from alleged sexual abuse and extortion to kidnapping and fraud -- after his department said he was using his position to trade "leniency for favor."

    Tremaine Jackson, 43, worked for the Arizona Department of Public Safety (AZDPS) for 13 years and was assigned to the department's Metro Motors District when authorities say they started receiving calls from women alleging that he'd made inappropriate comments and sexually abused them while on the job.

    Col. Frank Milstead, director of AZDPS, said at a press conference Tuesday that on May 19, the department received its first complaint from a female motorist. who said Jackson made inappropriate comments to her during a traffic stop.

    While investigating that complaint, police received a second complaint that alleged Jackson made inappropriate comments and engaged in "criminal behavior to the extent of sexual abuse," Milstead said. Jackson was put on administrative leave.

    As the AZDPS's special investigation unit began to further probe Jackson's behavior while on duty, it contacted several women who had been stopped or cited by him dating back to Oct. 29, 2018, when police believe the first account of inappropriate and unlawful contact occurred.

    Milstead said the investigation revealed at least eight women were alleged to have been harassed or sexually abused by Jackson while he was in uniform and in a marked or unmarked Arizona Department trooper car. Further, Milstead said, "we believe this may not be all of our victims."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/arizona-trooper-arrested-on-sex-related-kidnapping-and-fraud-charges-police


    Nah He Dindu Nuffink
    He Be a Good Cop
    😂🤣
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2019, 01:11:37 PM
    Once again the taxpayers will foot the bill. And these people who were unjustly imprisoned and dragged through the mud will have to wait years before they get the full amount. Why not raid the coffers or the houses of the cops and prosecutors who were responsible for this injustice? Why should taxpayers always foot the bill?

    Nebraska county OKs sales tax to pay wrongfully convicted

    A Nebraska county that owes more than $30 million to six people wrongfully convicted of murder approved a new half-cent sales tax Wednesday to help pay the legal judgment, but the former prisoners still will have to wait at least six years to collect the full amount they're owed.

    The Gage County Board of Supervisors voted 7-0 to impose the sales tax, which will generate an additional $1.3 million annually to cover the county's debt.

    Known as the Beatrice Six, the ex-inmates spent more than 70 years in prison collectively for a 1985 rape and killing in Beatrice, Nebraska, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of Lincoln. DNA evidence exonerated them in 2008.

    They sued Gage County the following year, alleging that the county ran a reckless investigation. A federal jury awarded them $28.1 million in 2016, plus interest and attorney fees that raise the total to more than $30 million. The county wasn't properly insured when the six were convicted, and its appeals were all rejected. That left officials with no choice but to pay the judgment.

    Now that the county has to pay it, "we're trying to find ways to fund this as best as possible and take some of the burden off the landowner," said County Board Chairman Erich Tiemann, according to the Beatrice Daily Sun.

    Gage County has already raised its property tax as high as legally allowed and has started making $3.8 million a year in payments, but county officials say relying on property taxes alone isn't fair to farmers whose land requires them to pay much more than homeowners and renters.

    https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/business/article234987382.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 13, 2019, 01:21:37 PM
    The same government that will use force to remove children from their families "for their own good", will send them in even worse abusive situations and ignore reports about the child's horrific abuse. First they send the 2 year old girl to be with a disgusting pedophile, then they sent her to another home where she was abused to the point of suffering organ failure, losing her toes and suffering serious burns to 80% of her skin. But remember, the government "protects" you. The descriptions below are horrific.

    Horrible Child Abuse Blamed on Arizona Agencies

    TUCSON (CN) — After Arizona’s Department of Child Safety placed a toddler with a man who ran a “pornographic pedophile ring” out of his home, it moved her to a home where the foster mother burned her with scalding water over 80 percent of her body, the little girl’s guardian claims in court.

    Fleming and Curti PLC, court-appointed guardian of Jane Doe, sued Arizona, its Department of Child Safety, other state agencies, the Christian Family Care Agency and a host of other institutions and people, in Pima County Court.

    The Department of Child Safety, formerly Child Protective Services, removed Jane Doe from her biological mother’s home in 2013, when she was 2, and placed her with David and Barbara Frodsham, a state-licensed foster home, according to the June 16 lawsuit.

    The state allowed Jane to stay with the Frodshams for 18 months, despite her biological mother’s complaints of “Jane Doe’s repeated documented urinary tract infections,” the complaint states.

    “Instead of investigating Jane Doe’s biological mother’s concerns of abuse, [DCS] and the defendant caseworkers accused her of making false and exaggerated reports to DCS,” according to the complaint.

    The state did not act until David Frodsham, driving drunk, left 3-year-old Jane and another child in his parked car while he was collecting his foster parent check in a state office, while “visibly drunk and acting belligerent.” Police were called and found Frodsham had a .28 blood alcohol concentration. They removed Jane from his care but did not investigate his home, the complaint states.

    It continues: “Later, David Frodsham was arrested and accused of sexual misconduct with a minor, procuring minors for sex, and possessing and/or manufacturing child pornography. Law enforcement’s investigation revealed a video made by David Frodsham of a 3- or 4-year-old girl being penetrated by an adult male and screaming for her mommy. David Frodsham pled guilty rather than face a trial and has been sentenced to 17 years in the Arizona Department of Corrections. David Frodsham was part of a pornography ring involving numerous children in his pornography and the procurement of sex for the ring.” (Citation to sentencing document omitted.)

    Four more state and federal cases involving a child placed in Frodsham’s home are pending against him, and more are expected to be filed, according to the complaint.


    Unfortunately, things did not improve much when the state moved Jane into the care of Justin and Samantha Osteraas, her guardian says. According to the complaint, “Defendant Samantha Osteraas submerged and held down Jane Doe, a 5-year-old, in a bath of scalding hot water. Jane Doe suffered severe burns over 80 percent of her body. When police arrived, there was blood on the floor and piece of Jane Doe’s skin were falling off her body. There were bruises to her neck and arms along with other signs of trauma.”

    Jane had to be placed in a medically induced coma, suffering from organ failure. She lost her toes to amputation “and will undergo lifelong operations to replace 80 percent of the skin on her body and will need incredible amounts of care for the duration of her life as a result of the abuse she suffered in the Osteraases’ home.”


    Samantha Osteraas, 28, was arrested in January this year and charged with child abuse. The state then removed her three biological children from her home, according to the Arizona Daily Star. She is awaiting trial.

    Jane’s guardian seeks punitive damages for negligence, respondeat superior, breach of duty, intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault and battery, and constitutional violations.

    Here are the defendants:
    State of Arizona;
    Arizona Department of Child Safety;
    Arizona Department of Economic Security;
    Child Protective Services;
    Division of Children, Youth and Families;
    Christian Family Care;
    Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona Inc.;
    St. Nicholas of Myra;
    Mark Brnovich;
    Gregory McKay;
    Charles Flanagan;
    Clarence Carter;
    Jeannette Sheldon;
    Eva Pena;
    Katherine Mayer;
    Cassie Dixon;
    Monica Reyes;
    Norel Alviti;
    Rosette Codner;
    Jack Roddy;
    David Frodsham;
    Barbara Frodsham;
    Samantha Osteraas;
    Justin Osteraas.

    Jane is represented by the Cadigan Law Firm and Carillo Law Firms of Tucson, and by Manly, Stewart & Finaldi in Irvine, Calif.

    A DCS spokesperson said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.

    https://www.courthousenews.com/horrible-child-abuse-blamed-arizona-agencies/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 13, 2019, 07:01:52 PM
    That maybe the Legal Bollocks
    Only Any Sane Rational Person Thinks That The Law Is Fucked Up.
    And Badly Fucked Up.

    Kids are Being Shot & Killed in School & The Police Don’t Have To Protect Them ::) ::)
    What are they For Then just to Protec Each Other.

    Speaking for a vast majority of the cops, we don't care what a judge decides in an aftermath, 1 of the main reasons we chose the career was the possibility we at some point could intervene and stop something like this. That an officer had the chance and chose not to act, I have no sympathy for them. Throw them to the wolves. If you wear the badge, and aren't willing on a daily basis to risk your safety for others, especially children, you are in the wrong profession
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on September 14, 2019, 08:59:15 AM
    Speaking for a vast majority of the cops, we don't care what a judge decides in an aftermath, 1 of the main reasons we chose the career was the possibility we at some point could intervene and stop something like this. That an officer had the chance and chose not to act, I have no sympathy for them. Throw them to the wolves. If you wear the badge, and aren't willing on a daily basis to risk your safety for others, especially children, you are in the wrong profession
    The most rational thing you've ever posted.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 15, 2019, 04:42:42 PM
    Speaking for a vast majority of the cops, we don't care what a judge decides in an aftermath, 1 of the main reasons we chose the career was the possibility we at some point could intervene and stop something like this. That an officer had the chance and chose not to act, I have no sympathy for them. Throw them to the wolves. If you wear the badge, and aren't willing on a daily basis to risk your safety for others, especially children, you are in the wrong profession

    Agreed
    On most of what you stated.
    👍🏻
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 17, 2019, 11:29:05 AM
    Only took them 5 years to indict him... So this "sheriff" allegedly planned to have someone kill a cop that might have had dirt on him but he was not charged for conspiring and planning the murder and only with "obstruction of justice"?

    North Carolina sheriff urged killing ex-deputy over racist recording, records allege

    Granville County Sheriff Brindell Wilkins was indicted Monday on two counts of felony obstruction of justice amid allegations he discussed killing a former deputy who had a recording of him using “racially insensitive language.”

    Wilkins, who has served since 2009, was indicted after a recorded conversation with a “well-known” person who threatened a former deputy, Joshua Freeman, Wake County District Attorney Lorrin Freeman said Monday.

    During a 2014 conversation, court records said, Wilkins indicated he thought Freeman would soon unveil an audio recording of him using “racially insensitive language” to authorities in Raleigh.

    The sheriff advised the person to “take care of it” and “the only way you gonna stop him is kill him,” court records said, adding instructions on how to commit the murder without being identified.

    “You ain’t got the weapon, you ain’t got nothing to go on,” Wilkins said, according to court records. “The only way we find out these murder things is people talk. You can’t tell nobody, not a thing.”

    In that conversation, Wilkins heard specific threats to kill his former deputy at a particular time and place but did not warn the officer or take any action, court records said.

    https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/crime/article235162622.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 17, 2019, 08:28:23 PM
    An innocent man sitting in jail for 2 years without even being convicted and on very flimsy, if any, evidence... He was about to buy a house but he spent all his life savings defending himself against a vindictive state and lost his job. As long as the cops and the prosecutors are not held accountable, things like this will continue to happen.

    Trinidad native who served two years in jail awaiting murder trial in Bronx is innocent

    A Trinidad native who served two years behind bars awaiting trial for a 2017 murder walked out of a Bronx courthouse a free man after prosecutors moved to dismiss his case Tuesday.

    Virgil Mitchell, 34 and father of a 3-year-old boy who he hasn’t seen in two years, was elated after leaving the courtroom with his attorneys after his double-shooting case was formally tossed by Justice James McCarty on a strong recommendation by the Bronx District Attorney’s office.

    Mitchell, who was brought into the case by an anonymous Crime Stoppers tip, was picked out in a photo array and a lineup by a single witness. But the one-witness identification was debunked and there was ample evidence that exonerates Mitchell of the crime, the DA’s office said.

    Several witnesses provided to the DA’s office by the defense, all of whom had clean records, put Mitchell inside the heavily-secured Trinidadian festival “the entire time that they were." They told prosecutors there was tight NYPD security that day — with the use of metal detector wands. As is customary during the event known as “Holiday of Colors,” attendees were splashed with colorful paint. Prosecutors conceded that it is “highly likely” Mitchell’s clothes would have been drenched with paint and could not have “looked like a white [t-shirt]” which the gunman was said to have been wearing.

    Prosecutors eventually conceded that the case against Mitchell was flimsy.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-virgil-mitchell-murder-dismissed-20190917-ssjujtckqjenviy3fnn7fyzrfa-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2019, 12:13:14 AM
    Providing security for El Chapo's wife and dealing cocaine.. "NY's finest".

    NYPD cop who ‘provided security’ for El Chapo’s wife busted for dealing cocaine

    An NYPD officer who provided security for the wife of El Chapo was busted for dealing cocaine and acting as security for other dealers in Queens, sources said Wednesday.

    Officer Ishmael Bailey, 36, escorted the wife of the notorious drug kingpin, Emma Coronel Aispuro, to Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán’s sentencing in Brooklyn federal court in July, law enforcement sources told The Post. Bailey was nabbed Wednesday on charges of conspiracy, sale of a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance, bribe receiving and official misconduct for allegedly acting as security twice when a load of cocaine was transported from various locations around Queens.

    https://nypost.com/2019/09/18/nypd-cop-who-provided-security-for-el-chapos-wife-busted-for-dealing-cocaine/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2019, 12:21:28 AM
    Only the finest people to protect the children..

    ECISD officer charged with sexual assault of a child

    An Ector County ISD officer is facing charges for sexual assault of a child.  David Franco, 43, worked at Wilson and Young Middle school, though it's unclear if that's where the assault happened. He has since been terminated.

    According to police records, on Sept. 14, a parent reported that her 14-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by Franco. The child's parents found inappropriate text messages, to which Franco later admitted having sent. Franco also admitted to having intercourse with the child, an arrest affidavit reads.

    Franco has also been charged with improper relationship between educator and student as well as indecency with a child (sexual contact). All three of his charges are second degree felonies.

    https://www.newswest9.com/article/news/crime/ecisd-officer-arrested-sexual-assault-child/513-5d384f7e-8a4e-4d2c-913e-742db1214325
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2019, 12:25:46 AM
    These people are put in leadership positions?
    (beware, the article is taken from a notorious "anti cop" website)

    Former Alabama Correctional Lieutenant Indicted for Allowing Inmate Abuse

    The Justice Department today announced that a Federal Grand Jury sitting in Montgomery, Alabama, returned a two-count indictment charging former Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) Lieutenant Willie Burks, 39, with failing to stop a sergeant under his command from kicking and striking with a baton a handcuffed and compliant inmate at ADOC’s Elmore Correctional Facility. Burks also was charged with making false statements to the federal grand jury in connection with the investigation.

    Three former and current corrections officers have previously pleaded guilty in connection with this incident. Former Alabama Department of Corrections Sergeant Ulysses Oliver pleaded guilty to unlawfully assaulting two handcuffed inmates. Corrections Officers Briana Mosley and Leon Williams pleaded guilty for failing to intervene to prevent the abuse by former-Sergeant Oliver.

    According to the prior guilty pleas, Oliver went to an observation room holding the two inmate victims, who were both handcuffed and sitting quietly. Oliver pulled the first victim from the observation room into an adjacent hallway, where he struck the victim multiple times with his fists and feet, and then used his collapsible baton to strike the victim approximately 19 times. After assaulting the first victim, Oliver returned to the observation room and pulled the second victim into the hallway. Oliver kicked the second victim and used his baton to strike the victim approximately 10 times. During the assaults, the victims were handcuffed, and were not resisting or posing a threat. After, Oliver returned to the observation room where the victims were held and shoved the tip of his baton into the face of one of the victims, lacerating the victim’s face. Oliver assaulted the victims as punishment because he believed that the victims had brought contraband into the facility. Oliver assaulted the victims in the presence of other ADOC correctional officers, who did not intervene to prevent the assaults.   

    Burks faces a statutory maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.

    The charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in court.

    This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Mobile Division and ADOC’s Investigations and Intelligence Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Ben Baxley of the Middle District of Alabama, and Special Legal Counsel Mark Blumberg, Special Litigation Counsel Jared Fishman, and Trial Attorney David Reese of the Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-alabama-correctional-lieutenant-indicted-allowing-inmate-abuse
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 19, 2019, 05:10:04 AM
    should be executed

    Only the finest people to protect the children..

    ECISD officer charged with sexual assault of a child

    An Ector County ISD officer is facing charges for sexual assault of a child.  David Franco, 43, worked at Wilson and Young Middle school, though it's unclear if that's where the assault happened. He has since been terminated.

    According to police records, on Sept. 14, a parent reported that her 14-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by Franco. The child's parents found inappropriate text messages, to which Franco later admitted having sent. Franco also admitted to having intercourse with the child, an arrest affidavit reads.

    Franco has also been charged with improper relationship between educator and student as well as indecency with a child (sexual contact). All three of his charges are second degree felonies.

    https://www.newswest9.com/article/news/crime/ecisd-officer-arrested-sexual-assault-child/513-5d384f7e-8a4e-4d2c-913e-742db1214325
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2019, 10:11:11 AM
    Cops chase a car that crashes on to another car. The car hits a telephone pole and catches fire and the innocent driver (not the one the cops were chasing) crawls out of his car while he's on fire. Of course the cops have "no duty to protect" but apparently all the intention to attack an innocent person so they starting kicking him. The man sustained fractured ribs and has been left permanently disfigured with third degree burns.

    Of course the cops received no prison time, their only "punishment" is that they can't be cops again.. Yeah that'll show them...  ::) Apparently the DA thinks this is "accountability" and "the most fair and just resolution". I'm sure he would've said the same thing if a gang of thugs attacked a cop lying on the ground while he was burning.

    Jersey City cops shown on video kicking man lose jobs, avoid jail time

    Jersey City police officers will not face jail time but lost their jobs after they entered guilty pleas for charges stemming from their actions when they were caught on camera kicking a man after a fiery 2017 crash, authorities said Tuesday.

    Police were chasing Leo Pinkston on June 4, 2017, at a high speed for 6 miles in Jersey City before Pinkston crashed into a car driven by Miguel Feliz-Rodriguez. Three officers fired shots at Pinkston's vehicle during the chase.

    Both cars caught fire, and when Feliz-Rodriguez got out of his car, he was seen being kicked by several officers. His clothing was on fire when he got out of the vehicle. He was also dragged by his legs on the ground away from the vehicle.

    https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/crime/2019/09/17/jersey-city-nj-police-video-kicking-man-lose-jobs-avoid-jail-time/2356317001/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 19, 2019, 10:20:43 AM
    should be executed


    I agree. But it wouldn't surprise me if he gets some sweet plea deal will little to no prison time. Just look at these recent examples:

    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us".

    Multiple sexual assault charges against a 5 year old girl, four of the charges were Class A felonies carrying mandatory 20-year prison terms.

    NO PRISON TIME.

    No jail time for former HPD officer charged with sexually assaulting child

    (https://kitv.images.worldnow.com/images/18447797_G.png?auto=webp&disable=upscale&height=560&fit=bounds&lastEditedDate=1559263218000)

    A former Honolulu Police Department officer charged with sexually assaulting a 5-year-old girl for several years will not go to jail.

    According to an indictment, Teddy Van Lerberghe assaulted the girl from 2004 to 2008.

    Van Lerberghe initially pleaded not guilty, but he changed his plea to no contest earlier this month after reaching a deal with prosecutors.

    Felony sex assault charges usually carry long prison terms, but the 45-year-old only faces five years probation when he's sentenced in August.

    He will also have to register as a sex offender.

    https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2019/05/29/no-jail-time-former-hpd-officer-charged-with-sexually-assaulting-child/



    Remember this case?

    Molesting a 15 year old girl who was already the victim of sexual abuse and thought she would get help by going to the police... He is expected to get just 3 years in prison...

    LASD Sex Crimes Detective Pleads Guilty to Molesting Teen Whose Sex Assault Case He Was Investigating

    A former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department detective pleaded guilty to child molestation involving a teenager whose sexual assault case he was investigating, authorities said Wednesday.

    Neil David Kimball, 46, of Agoura, pleaded guilty to a lewd act with a child and unlawful sexual intercourse, the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said.

    The former detective was initially charged with forcible rape against a minor 14 years or older while the victim was tied or bound, as well as witness intimidation by threat of force, the DA said.

    While working as a detective with the Special Victims Bureau for sex crimes in 2017, he met with a 15-year-old when she reported being a victim of sexual assault.

    Kimball’s sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 8, 2019, at a Ventura court. He is expected to be sentenced to three years in prison under the terms of a plea agreement.

    https://ktla.com/2019/07/10/l-a-county-sheriffs-sex-crimes-detective-pleads-guilty-to-molesting-teen-whose-sexual-assault-case-he-was-investigating
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 22, 2019, 09:41:09 AM
    Civil asset forfeiture is stealing, pure and simple, a well organized racket but it's only marginally "legal" because it's done by the government. Keep in mind this decision is by the 9th District Court..

    Ninth Circuit Upholds Its Previous Declaration That Cops Stealing Your Stuff Doesn't Violate The Constitution

    Earlier this spring, the Ninth Circuit Appeals Court basically said it's okay for cops to steal property from citizens. This isn't because stealing is okay. It isn't. It's illegal. It's that stealing someone's possessions after they've been seized with a warrant doesn't violate the Constitution.

    In this case, officers, who were engaged in an illegal gambling investigation, raided a couple's home, walking away with far more property than they officially said they did:

    Following the search, the City Officers gave Appellants an inventory sheet stating that they seized approximately $50,000 from the properties. Appellants allege, however, that the officers actually seized $151,380 in cash and another $125,000 in rare coins. Appellants claim that the City Officers stole the difference between the amount listed on the inventory sheet and the amount that was actually seized from the properties.

    Despite it being apparently obvious that being illegally stripped of personal possessions would interfere with a person's direct interest in the property they no longer have, the court extended qualified immunity to the officers. It reasoned that theft, while illegal, isn't unconstitutional, even when it's the government stealing from citizens.

    The panel determined that at the time of the incident, there was no clearly established law holding that officers violate the Fourth or Fourteenth Amendment when they steal property that is seized pursuant to a warrant.

    The Ninth Circuit then withdrew this opinion, suggesting it may have had second thoughts about allowing officers to engage in theft so long as they have a warrant. It needn't have bothered. The superseding opinion [PDF] changes nothing. It points out that only one other circuit has reached the conclusion that theft by law enforcement officers violates the Constitution, but that opinion was unpublished, which means it simply doesn't count.

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20190909/12232742945/ninth-circuit-upholds-previous-declaration-that-cops-stealing-your-stuff-doesnt-violate-constitution.shtml
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 22, 2019, 01:44:15 PM
    Another "brave hero"... This time he arrested a 6 year old and an 8 year old child the same day. Several of his ilk seem to act real tough when it comes to children but will run and hide when they have to face real danger (see for example the Coward of Broward who didn't have a "duty to protect" the students that were being killed).

    Orlando school resource officer to face probe after arresting students ages 6, 8

    An Orlando police school resource officer arrested two elementary school students — ages 6 and 8 — on unrelated misdemeanor charges Thursday morning, according to a department spokesman.

    Officer Dennis Turner is now facing a department investigation because he did not receive approval from a Watch Commander, which is department policy for arresting minors under age 12, Sgt. David Baker said in an email. Turner is a member of the department’s Reserve Unit, which is made up of retired OPD officers.

    https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-ne-elementary-students-arrested-opd-20190920-butinzfpnvbf3j2xk7euiyshve-story.html

    https://www.clickorlando.com/news/grandmother-outraged-over-6-year-old-girls-arrest?source=twitter&medium=social&campaign=snd&utm_content=wkmg6
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2019, 03:25:43 PM
    So we have trespassing, breaking into a house, not having a warrant, shooting 2 dogs and killing one of them, yet there are no charges against them. Maybe the woman should have taken steps to defend herself against these violent criminals.

    Lawsuit accuses Detroit police of shooting 2 dogs at home

    A Detroit pet owner is suing police over an encounter in which an officer shot both of her dogs, killing one of them.

    According to a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Detroit, the unidentified officers went to Teresa Thomas’ home in the 2400 block of Beals on July 19 seeking a suspect whom they believed was there. Thomas told the officers no one else was in the house, aside from herself and the two dogs, and told them they needed a search warrant, then closed the door, the filing stated.

    One of the officers said he was going to search the house; Thomas repeated her warning, but he “grabbed the security door and yanked it open,” pulling the woman out because she had her hand on the door, according to the suit. At that point, her two dogs, Tiny and Winter, went out of the front door and around the corner to their food bowls. The second officer shot at both animals, the lawsuit alleges.

    When Thomas tried to help her wounded pets, the first officer laughed, the filing said.

    https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2019/09/16/detroit-police-shooting-2-dogs-home-sparks-lawsuit/2347619001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2019, 05:17:29 PM
    The UK Police State... Police bragging on Twitter about how they took several "weapons" off the streets like kitchen knives, and more importantly, a spoon! Terrifying to imagine that such weapons of mass destruction are in the hands of billions of people...

    Police station mocked for photo of knife haul – that includes a spoon

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D6hiNgmWkAE7biJ.jpg)

    "Yesterday we conducted weapons sweeps,dealt with a person injured from a van reversing on them, reported a burglary and collected all these from @scope charity shop who diligently didn’t want them to get into the wrong hands & disposed of correctly & safely"

    https://twitter.com/MPSRegentsPark/status/1128259712984735744

    A British police station this week lauded themselves with a picture on Twitter designed to showcase their efforts at tackling knife crime — but didn’t quite scoop up the coverage they were hoping for thanks to the presence of a rogue spoon in the image.

    https://nypost.com/2019/05/16/police-station-mocked-for-photo-of-knife-haul-that-includes-a-spoon/


    These fearless heroes have also conducted major operations against the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
    Here is another one of their successes:

    (https://preview.redd.it/wnunz15c7wq01.jpg?width=640&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=10178b3804240e05353dcf3964b61fc49623f293)

    https://twitter.com/MPSRegentsPark/status/974645778558980096

    Hahaha! Lunacy in the UK...

    Police stop publishing seized knives pictures

    A police force has stopped publishing images of knives seized in amnesties to avoid upsetting the public.

    Photos of dozens of weapons laid out on tables by police are a common sight after successful knife amnesties.

    But Thames Valley Police said it had stopped doing it because of the impact "knife imagery can have on those who see it".

    The force is currently taking part in Operation Sceptre, a national campaign to reduce knife crime.

    Its knife amnesty, which lasts until Sunday, involves members of the public anonymously dropping off weapons in special bins at 16 police stations across the region.

    The force said it had made the decision to "stop publicising images of seized knives to help reduce the fear of knives and knife carrying in our local communities".

    It came to the decision as a result of discussions held by the National Police Chiefs' Council and other forces.

    A spokesperson added: "Although no formal guidance has been put in place, the force has decided that it will not publicise images of knives that have been seized throughout this week of action."

    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-49755080
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 23, 2019, 05:47:06 PM
    I’d rather be shot dead than butchered w those things


    Hahaha! Lunacy in the UK...

    Police stop publishing seized knives pictures

    A police force has stopped publishing images of knives seized in amnesties to avoid upsetting the public.

    Photos of dozens of weapons laid out on tables by police are a common sight after successful knife amnesties.

    But Thames Valley Police said it had stopped doing it because of the impact "knife imagery can have on those who see it".

    The force is currently taking part in Operation Sceptre, a national campaign to reduce knife crime.

    Its knife amnesty, which lasts until Sunday, involves members of the public anonymously dropping off weapons in special bins at 16 police stations across the region.

    The force said it had made the decision to "stop publicising images of seized knives to help reduce the fear of knives and knife carrying in our local communities".

    It came to the decision as a result of discussions held by the National Police Chiefs' Council and other forces.

    A spokesperson added: "Although no formal guidance has been put in place, the force has decided that it will not publicise images of knives that have been seized throughout this week of action."

    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-49755080
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2019, 08:48:18 PM
    Gang wars...
    But remember, these are the "professionals" who are "qualified" to handle firearms, who violate traffic laws because they are "trained" and yet so frequently "fear for their lives".

    A Sunday drive, two off-duty cops and a self-inflicted gunshot wound. What went wrong?

    Authorities are investigating how an off-duty Alhambra police officer ended up with a self-inflicted gunshot wound after an encounter on the road with an off-duty Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy.

    The San Marino Police Department initially said the driver of a blue Subaru had shot himself after a road rage incident about 8:40 a.m. Sunday near Duarte Road and San Gabriel Boulevard. But on Monday morning, the police department said that wasn’t the case: “At this point in the preliminary investigation, this does not appear to be a road rage incident and neither party knew each other or was aware they were members of a law enforcement agency,” police said in an updated news release.

    According to San Marino police, a second driver, identified as an off-duty sheriff’s deputy, told investigators he thought the man in the Subaru was driving erratically. He wanted to stop the man and ask him not to speed in the neighborhood.

    Police said the deputy, who was in a Mercedes-Benz, pulled alongside the other man as both were driving and “attempted to contact the driver,” motioning for the man to lower his window.

    The Subaru driver slowed and moved to the right to allow the Mercedes to pass. The Alhambra officer later told investigators that the man in the Mercedes was speeding and that he believed he was driving in an aggressive manner.

    “Fearing for his safety, the Alhambra officer drew his firearm while inside his vehicle,” San Marino police said.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-09-23/off-duty-police-officer-shoots-himself-road-rage-san-marino
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2019, 09:52:18 AM
    Grand jury hearing case against former Dallas officer Amber Guyger

    (https://media.fox4news.com/media.fox4news.com/photo/2018/09/10/guyger%20jean%20dallas%20lamar%20shooting_1536612763678.png_6042738_ver1.0_640_360.jpg)

    The criminal case against a fired Dallas police officer who shot and killed her neighbor is now being presented to a Dallas County grand jury.

    Former officer Amber Guyger is charged with manslaughter for the shooting death of Botham Jean, who was fatally shot in his own apartment in early September by Guyger. She told investigators she mistakenly entered Jean's apartment and mistook him for a burglar in her own home.

    Grand jury proceedings are secret, so the details and evidence being presented by the Dallas County District Attorney will not be made public until the grand jury finishes its review, which began Monday. Guyger could be indicted for manslaughter, face an upgraded charge of murder or be cleared of any potential charges.

    An announcement of charges could come as soon as Wednesday.

    https://www.fox7austin.com/home/grand-jury-hearing-case-against-dallas-officer-amber-guyger

    Now let's see how the trial goes and if she'll go to prison (better yet, though highly unlikely, sent to death row).

    Fired cop Amber Guyger indicted on a murder charge in Botham Jean killing

    Guyger was arrested on a manslaughter charge on Sept. 9, three days after the shooting. But after a week of hearing evidence in the case, a grand jury on Friday indicted Guyger on a charge of murder.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/guy-indicted-on-a-murder-charge-in-botham-jean-killing/287-619078538

    The trial has begun. Let's see if Texas which is usually proud of its executions will sentence a cop to death or life in prison or if she'll walk away. We'll probably hear cops testify how usual it is for people to casually walk into the wrong apartments, kill the residents and then just say "oops, my bad lol".

    Texts between Amber Guyger, Dallas police partner revealed at murder trial

    Prosecutors in the murder trial of ex-Dallas police Officer Amber Guyger focused on a series of text exchanges she shared with her partner at the time, whom she had been having a sexual relationship with, to question her defense that she was fatigued from work on the night she fatally shot her neighbor.

    The testimony of her former partner, Officer Martin Rivera, capped the end of the first day of Guyger's murder trial on Monday, when prosecutors revealed the pair had sent sexually explicit messages to each other throughout the day and just before she shot her neighbor, Botham Jean, on Sept. 6, 2018.

    Guyger walked into Jean's apartment by mistake on a different floor, confusing his unit for hers, she has said, and shot him believing he was a burglar.

    In his testimony, Rivera said he would send Guyger, 31, provocative photos of himself.

    Lead prosecutor Jason Hermus said that the pair was texting each other hours before the shooting, including one message in which Guyger said she was "super horny today."

    https://www.guy-dallas-police-partner-revealed-murder-trial-n1058051
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2019, 01:46:42 PM
    As if their son's brutal murder was not enough, are they trying to completely destroy this family? The DA violating a gag order by doing a TV interview? Other people would have landed in jail for this. A juror having some unspecified "professional relationship" with one of the defense's star wtinesses, a Texas Ranger? Are they trying to get the cop to walk away with this incompetence (if it is incompetence and not something else). The killer has gotten so much preferential treatment it's ridiculous.

    Judge in disbelief after DA breaks rule in Amber Guyger trial

    https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2019/09/25/amber-guyger-trial-judge-kemp-reaction-da-press-conference-dig-orig-jk.cnn



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2019, 03:03:19 PM
    Not enough.
    The "justice" system managed to put an innocent man in prison for murder when he wasn't even in the state that the murder was committed. Not that these details matter to cops or prosecutors since they don't end up in prison or have to pay out of their pockets for these "mistakes". And of course, the City "stands behind these officers" who have retired.

    Jury awards Mark Schand $27M in wrongful imprisonment lawsuit against former Springfield police officers

    A federal jury on Friday awarded Mark Schand more than $27 million dollars in a civil verdict after Schand spent that many years in state prison for a 1986 murder he said he didn’t commit.

    Jurors agreed, returning the verdict after just over two hours of deliberations following a two-week trial in U.S. District Court.

    It is, by far, the largest ever civil judgment against city police officers.

    The surviving four defendants in the lawsuit were Deputy Chief Elmer McMahon, patrolmen Raymond Muise and Leonard Scammons, and Sgt. Michael Reid, all retired.

    The then-21-year-old Schand, a Hartford resident, was identified by Hartford police as a troublemaker, according to lawyers for the Springfield officers. His was included in a crop of photos Hartford police passed on to Springfield detectives. Schand and his attorneys have long argued that Springfield detectives skewed photo arrays and police line-ups, which led to Schand being wrongly convicted in Hampden Superior Court.

    https://www.masslive.com/news/2019/09/jury-awards-mark-schand-27m-in-wrongful-imprisonment-lawsuit-against-former-springfield-police-officers.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2019, 09:22:29 PM
    Only the finest people..
    Especially in a unit that is "supposed" to keep track of sex offenders...

    NYPD Special Victims detective arrested for molesting 12-year-old girl

    An NYPD detective responsible for keeping tabs on city sex offenders found himself behind bars for molesting a 12-year-old girl, police said Saturday.

    Det. Juan Jimenez, 37, was arrested at 7 p.m. Friday after he was accused of sexually abusing the child, his daughter’s friend, cops said.

    Jimenez was babysitting his daughter and her pal in his Brooklyn home over the summer when he allegedly groped and tried to kiss the girl. The victim reported it and cops launched an investigation, authorities said. Jimenez grabbed the child by the waist and “attempted to kiss (the victim) about the mouth,” according to court papers. He also grabbed the girl’s behind, prosecutors said.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-nypd-detective-arrested-for-molesting-girl-20190928-vgvkzisucrbrfo7hg7l22mobr4-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 28, 2019, 09:29:33 PM
    Only the finest people..
    Especially in a unit that is "supposed" to keep track of sex offenders...

    NYPD Special Victims detective arrested for molesting 12-year-old girl

    An NYPD detective responsible for keeping tabs on city sex offenders found himself behind bars for molesting a 12-year-old girl, police said Saturday.

    Det. Juan Jimenez, 37, was arrested at 7 p.m. Friday after he was accused of sexually abusing the child, his daughter’s friend, cops said.

    Jimenez was babysitting his daughter and her pal in his Brooklyn home over the summer when he allegedly groped and tried to kiss the girl. The victim reported it and cops launched an investigation, authorities said. Jimenez grabbed the child by the waist and “attempted to kiss (the victim) about the mouth,” according to court papers. He also grabbed the girl’s behind, prosecutors said.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-nypd-detective-arrested-for-molesting-girl-20190928-vgvkzisucrbrfo7hg7l22mobr4-story.html

    Just fry the Fucker - End Of.

    It appears more & more that if you want to be a Scumbag & get rewarded for it
    Join the Police Dept.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on September 29, 2019, 10:54:40 PM
    Only the finest people..
    Especially in a unit that is "supposed" to keep track of sex offenders...

    NYPD Special Victims detective arrested for molesting 12-year-old girl

    An NYPD detective responsible for keeping tabs on city sex offenders found himself behind bars for molesting a 12-year-old girl, police said Saturday.

    Det. Juan Jimenez, 37, was arrested at 7 p.m. Friday after he was accused of sexually abusing the child, his daughter’s friend, cops said.

    Jimenez was babysitting his daughter and her pal in his Brooklyn home over the summer when he allegedly groped and tried to kiss the girl. The victim reported it and cops launched an investigation, authorities said. Jimenez grabbed the child by the waist and “attempted to kiss (the victim) about the mouth,” according to court papers. He also grabbed the girl’s behind, prosecutors said.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-nypd-detective-arrested-for-molesting-girl-20190928-vgvkzisucrbrfo7hg7l22mobr4-story.html

    What the lamestream media isn't telling you is that he actually thought the girl was 13.  Fucking fake news.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2019, 02:12:45 PM
    Ordinary people end up behind bars for smoking weed or even for possessing doughnuts, a cop overdosing on heroin inside his patrol car gets probation and zero prison time... Not only that but if he completes a drug program, his record will be expunged..

    Franklin police officer who overdosed on heroin in patrol car gets probation

    A former Franklin Township police officer was sentenced to five years’ probation and ordered to attend Drug Court on charges of possessing heroin and driving while intoxicated while on duty in April.

    Matthew D. Ellery, 29, of Middlesex Borough, was sentenced Friday by Superior Court Judge Kathy Qasim as part of a plea agreement reached in July with the Somerset County Prosecutor's Office.

    Ellery, who forfeited his job as a police officer, also had his driver's license revoked for seven months.

    If Ellery completes the Drug Court program, his record will be expunged. If he does not complete the program, he faces a potential prison sentence of three to five years.

    https://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/news/crime/2019/08/23/franklin-nj-police-officer-matthew-ellery-overdosed-heroin-probation/2096886001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 30, 2019, 02:20:31 PM
    Ordinary people end up behind bars for smoking weed or even for possessing doughnuts, a cop overdosing on heroin inside his patrol car gets probation and zero prison time... Not only that but if he completes a drug program, his record will be expunged..

    Franklin police officer who overdosed on heroin in patrol car gets probation

    A former Franklin Township police officer was sentenced to five years’ probation and ordered to attend Drug Court on charges of possessing heroin and driving while intoxicated while on duty in April.

    Matthew D. Ellery, 29, of Middlesex Borough, was sentenced Friday by Superior Court Judge Kathy Qasim as part of a plea agreement reached in July with the Somerset County Prosecutor's Office.

    Ellery, who forfeited his job as a police officer, also had his driver's license revoked for seven months.

    If Ellery completes the Drug Court program, his record will be expunged. If he does not complete the program, he faces a potential prison sentence of three to five years.

    https://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/news/crime/2019/08/23/franklin-nj-police-officer-matthew-ellery-overdosed-heroin-probation/2096886001/

    Is it any wonder the Respect for Police is so Low
    They can do as they want good or bad & continually be rewarded.
    The police & judiciary are Rotten through & through.

    Yes there are many decent people in both - Only these Constant
    Punches in the face to General population is Disgusting,
    It should’ve stopped long ago - yet it continues   ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 01, 2019, 09:43:12 AM
    Finally. She should've been sentenced to death but even life sentence, if served fully i.e. die in prison, is still something. Of course she might receive a lesser sentence.

    Amber Guyger guilty in Botham Jean shooting, jury finds

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/720x405/p07ptjb6.jpg)

    Amber Guyger, the white Dallas cop who shot black neighbor Botham Jean when she mistook his apartment for hers, on Tuesday was found guilty of murder.

    She faces a maximum of life in prison.

    Guyger was off duty but in uniform when she shot Jean twice, hitting him in the head and chest on Sept. 6, 2018. She had worked a 13-1/2 hour shift on the Dallas Police Department's crime response team that day, and mistakenly parked on the fouth floor of the complex's garage.

    Guyger lived on the third floor and Jean, a 26-year-old accountant from St. Lucia, lived in the apartment above hers.

    Prosecutors said Jean was watching television and eating a bowl of ice cream in his living room when Guyger burst inside. Prosecutors said the trajectory of the bullets showed that Jean was either getting up from his couch or cowering when Guyger fired her service weapon.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/amber-guyger-guilty-in-botham-jean-shooting-jury-finds
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 02, 2019, 01:44:00 PM
    Finally. She should've been sentenced to death but even life sentence, if served fully i.e. die in prison, is still something. Of course she might receive a lesser sentence.

    Amber Guyger guilty in Botham Jean shooting, jury finds

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/720x405/p07ptjb6.jpg)

    Amber Guyger, the white Dallas cop who shot black neighbor Botham Jean when she mistook his apartment for hers, on Tuesday was found guilty of murder.

    She faces a maximum of life in prison.

    Guyger was off duty but in uniform when she shot Jean twice, hitting him in the head and chest on Sept. 6, 2018. She had worked a 13-1/2 hour shift on the Dallas Police Department's crime response team that day, and mistakenly parked on the fouth floor of the complex's garage.

    Guyger lived on the third floor and Jean, a 26-year-old accountant from St. Lucia, lived in the apartment above hers.

    Prosecutors said Jean was watching television and eating a bowl of ice cream in his living room when Guyger burst inside. Prosecutors said the trajectory of the bullets showed that Jean was either getting up from his couch or cowering when Guyger fired her service weapon.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/amber-guyger-guilty-in-botham-jean-shooting-jury-finds

    I don’t buy her story she didn’t recognise it wasn’t her apartment
    No idea what was going on it’s highly doubtfull it was a wrong apartment
    Mix up.
    Still she murdered him & rightly has been found guilty of that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2019, 02:29:21 PM
    Finally. She should've been sentenced to death but even life sentence, if served fully i.e. die in prison, is still something. Of course she might receive a lesser sentence.

    Amber Guyger guilty in Botham Jean shooting, jury finds

    (https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/720x405/p07ptjb6.jpg)

    Amber Guyger, the white Dallas cop who shot black neighbor Botham Jean when she mistook his apartment for hers, on Tuesday was found guilty of murder.

    She faces a maximum of life in prison.

    Guyger was off duty but in uniform when she shot Jean twice, hitting him in the head and chest on Sept. 6, 2018. She had worked a 13-1/2 hour shift on the Dallas Police Department's crime response team that day, and mistakenly parked on the fouth floor of the complex's garage.

    Guyger lived on the third floor and Jean, a 26-year-old accountant from St. Lucia, lived in the apartment above hers.

    Prosecutors said Jean was watching television and eating a bowl of ice cream in his living room when Guyger burst inside. Prosecutors said the trajectory of the bullets showed that Jean was either getting up from his couch or cowering when Guyger fired her service weapon.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/amber-guyger-guilty-in-botham-jean-shooting-jury-finds

    She just got sentenced to 10 years. What a travesty! Ordinary people receive this sort of sentence for lesser crimes and here we see this killer breaking into an innocent man's apartment and murdering him and she only gets 10 years...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 02, 2019, 02:37:42 PM
    She just got sentenced to 10 years. What a travesty! Ordinary people receive this sort of sentence for lesser crimes and here we see this killer breaking into an innocent man's apartment and murdering him and she only gets 10 years...

    Outrageous!!!

    FTN

    Killed a Totally Innocent Man in His own Home.
    Fcuking load of Bollocks Sentence
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 03, 2019, 08:19:47 PM
    Once again the government wants to be able to access your communications while it remains in the shadows. And of course the government will spy, snoop and eavesdrop on communications anyway even when it can't find "legal" back doors. And that is as if big tech companies snooping on people was not enough.

    Attorney General Barr Signs Letter to Facebook From US, UK, and Australian Leaders Regarding Use of End-To-End Encryption

    The Department of Justice today published an open letter to Facebook from international law enforcement partners from the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia in response to the company’s publicly announced plans to implement end-to-end-encryption across its messaging services.

    The letter is signed by Attorney General William P. Barr, United Kingdom Home Secretary Priti Patel, Australia’s Minister for Home Affairs Peter Dutton, and Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan.

    Addressed to Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, the letter requests that Facebook not proceed with its end-to-end encryption plan without ensuring there will be no reduction in the safety of Facebook users and others, and without providing law enforcement court-authorized access to the content of communications to protect the public, particularly child users.

    Facebook’s proposals would put at risk its own vital work that keeps children safe. In 2018, Facebook made 16.8 million reports of child sexual exploitation and abuse content to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), 12 million of which it is estimated would be lost if the company pursues its plan to implement end-to-end encryption.

    The concerns highlighted in this letter to Facebook are at the core of the Department of Justice’s Lawful Access Summit that will take place on Friday, Oct. 4, 2019, on warrant-proof encryption and its impact on child exploitation cases.

    The summit will feature a keynote address by Attorney General Barr along with remarks by Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen, FBI Director Christopher Wray, and NCMEC co-founder John Walsh. The summit also includes a dialogue with Australian Minister Dutton and U.K. Home Secretary Patel, who will discuss international perspectives on the area of encryption and why Facebook must reconsider its plan to implement end-to-end encryption.

    Use of end-to-end encryption, which allows messages to be decrypted only by end users, leaves service providers unable to produce readable content in response to wiretap orders and search warrants. This barrier allows criminals to avoid apprehension by law enforcement by limiting access to crucial evidence in the form of encrypted digital communications. The use of end-to-end encryption and other highly sophisticated encryption technologies significantly hinders, or entirely prevents serious criminal and national security investigations.

    Many service providers, device manufacturers, and application developers who use encryption fail to implement technology that would allow the government to obtain electronic evidence necessary to investigate and prosecute threats to public safety and national security. Law enforcement believes it is crucial for technology companies to include lawful access mechanisms in the design of their products or services. The Department of Justice is committed to developing a coherent national and international policy that encourages responsible encryption, enhances public safety, while protecting privacy and cybersecurity.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/attorney-general-barr-signs-letter-facebook-us-uk-and-australian-leaders-regarding-use-end


    The Open Letter from the Governments of US, UK, and Australia to Facebook is An All-Out Attack on Encryption

    Top law enforcement officials in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia told Facebook today that they want backdoor access to all encrypted messages sent on all its platforms. In an open letter, these governments called on Mark Zuckerberg to stop Facebook’s plan to introduce end-to-end encryption on all of the company’s messaging products and instead promise that it will “enable law enforcement to obtain lawful access to content in a readable and usable format.”

    This is a staggering attempt to undermine the security and privacy of communications tools used by billions of people. Facebook should not comply. The letter comes in concert with the signing of a new agreement between the US and UK to provide access to allow law enforcement in one jurisdiction to more easily obtain electronic data stored in the other jurisdiction. But the letter to Facebook goes much further: law enforcement and national security agencies in these three countries are asking for nothing less than access to every conversation that crosses every digital device.

    The letter focuses on the challenges of investigating the most serious crimes committed using digital tools, including child exploitation, but it ignores the severe risks that introducing encryption backdoors would create. Many people—including journalists, human rights activists, and those at risk of abuse by intimate partners—use encryption to stay safe in the physical world as well as the online one. And encryption is central to preventing criminals and even corporations from spying on our private conversations, and to ensure that the communications infrastructure we rely on is truly working as intended. What’s more, the backdoors into encrypted communications sought by these governments would be available not just to governments with a supposedly functional rule of law. Facebook and others would face immense pressure to also provide them to authoritarian regimes, who might seek to spy on dissidents in the name of combatting terrorism or civil unrest, for example.

    The Department of Justice and its partners in the UK and Australia claim to support “strong encryption,” but the unfettered access to encrypted data described in this letter is incompatible with how encryption actually works.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/10/open-letter-governments-us-uk-and-australia-facebook-all-out-attack-encryption
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2019, 01:24:52 PM
    Once again, we are dealing with criminal gangs.

    N.J. cop pleads guilty to stealing cash from people during illegal stops

    The last Paterson police officer charged in an FBI probe of the department has pleaded guilty for his role in a scheme among officers to steal cash from people after illegally stopping and searching their vehicles, his attorney said.

    Daniel Pent admitted to being part of a conspiracy in which the officers routinely illegally stopped residents, both in their vehicles and on the street, and stole money and other items from them. He also regularly "used unreasonable and excessive force,” authorities said.

    https://www.nj.com/news/2019/10/nj-cop-pleads-guilty-to-stealing-cash-from-people-during-illegal-stops.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2019, 01:31:52 PM
    A simple job, pick up a stray chicken from a neighbor's yard. What did the cop do? He killed the chicken by hitting it with a club and then stomping on its head... Insane. These are the "brave heroes" who constantly "fear for their lives" and will inflict senseless violence on anyone weaker than them.
    Of course no charges yet, only a question of whether there was a "violation of protocol".

    But this starts to become a pattern. People call police for small and simple issues (like a child mouthing off, a stray chicken in their yard, a noise complaint) and then they often end up having someone beaten, abused, arrested or killed.

    Ottumwa police officer questioned over handling of stray chicken

    An Ottumwa police officer is being questioned this week over his handling of a stray chicken that wandered into a resident’s yard.

    On Saturday, Laura Enloe said her relatives asked animal control to remove the chicken from their property on Fourth Street. Ottumwa’s Animal Control Officer Jeff Williams was off duty at the time, so an on-duty patrol officer responded instead.

    Members of Enloe's family said they were uncomfortable with the way the officer put the animal down, so they filed an animal cruelty complaint against him. The complaint accuses the officer of using a baton and his foot to destroy the animal.

    https://ktvo.com/news/local/ottumwa-police-officer-questioned-over-handling-of-stray-chicken
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2019, 03:17:02 PM
    Legacy Systems Held DHS' Biometrics Programs Back. Not Anymore.

    The Homeland Security Department is retiring the decades-old system officials use to analyze biometric data, and its replacement is poised to both refine and significantly expand the agency’s application of the controversial technology.

    The new cloud-based platform, called the Homeland Advanced Recognition Technology System, or HART, is expected to bring more processing power, new analytics capabilities and increased accuracy to the department’s biometrics operations. It will also allow the agency to look beyond the three types of biometric data it uses today—face, iris and fingerprint—to identify people through a variety of other characteristics, like palm prints, scars, tattoos, physical markings and even their voices.

    The agency’s existing platform, the Automated Biometric Identification System, or IDENT, was stood up in 1994 to help federal law enforcement officials collect and process fingerprints, but in recent years officials retrofitted the system with facial and iris recognition tools. Today, IDENT houses identity data on more than 250 million different people, and it serves as the “workhorse” for the department’s expanding biometric identification regime, according to Nemeth.

    But as the agency rolls out facial recognition technology across U.S. airports and increases the use of biometrics at the border, officials are finding themselves constrained by their legacy tech.
    The phase-two solicitation also lists DNA-matching as a potential application of the HART system. While the department doesn’t currently analyze DNA, officials on Wednesday announced they would start adding DNA collected from hundreds of thousands of detained migrants to the FBI’s criminal database.

    https://www.nextgov.com/it-modernization/2019/10/legacy-systems-held-dhs-biometrics-programs-back-not-anymore/160347/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 04, 2019, 04:15:52 PM
    A homeowner is trying to defend his life and property inside his house. Even that is apparently not allowed in police state USA though, so a cop shot him through the front window..
    Now an ordinary criminal or tresspasser or burglar would have faced charges. But we are not talking about "ordinary" criminals, this is the uniformed criminal division we're dealing with here.
    "We investigated ourselves and cleared ourselves of any wrongdoing".

    SC deputy cleared by internal affairs after shooting homeowner through front window

    Greenville County Sheriff's Office investigators have determined a deputy acted according to policy when he shot a 62-year-old man through a front window of his Simpsonville home.

    The Sheriff's Office's Officer of Professional Standards conducted an internal investigation to see if Deputy Kevin Azzara violated any written policies during the incident. The investigation concluded and found that no agency policies were violated, spokesman Lt. Ryan Flood told The Greenville News Wednesday.

    Azzara responded to an alarm call on Eastcrest Drive in Simpsonville June 14. After approaching the front door, he saw a man inside, later identified as the homeowner, armed with a handgun. According to the Sheriff's Office, the man pointed the gun at Azzara, at which point Azzara fired his weapon into the home.

    Azzara struck homeowner Dick Tench twice, once in the pelvis and once in the aortic artery.

    Initial statements from the Sheriff's Office claimed Tench opened the front door and pointed a gun at Azzara before Azzara fired shots.  An edited video presentation of body camera footage the Sheriff's Office shared 45 days later showed that Tench never opened the door.

    https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/news/local/south-carolina/2019/08/07/sc-deputy-cleared-internal-affairs-after-shooting-homeowner/1944593001/

    (source may not be reliable:)


    After cops investigated themselves and cleared themselves of any wrongdoing, now the attorney general will not press charges... A killer is not charged and will be on the loose again... Homeowners can't even be safe inside their homes from the criminal gangs.

    Greenville County deputy won't be charged for shooting Simpsonville homeowner

    A Greenville County deputy who shot a Simpsonville homeowner through his front-door window has been cleared of criminal wrongdoing.

    The State Law Enforcement Division investigated the shooting and submitted findings to the state Attorney General's Office, which recommended that no criminal charges be filed against Deputy Kevin Azzara.

    "It is my legal opinion that the officer used lawful force under the circumstances. As such, we are not recommending initiation of criminal charges against the officer," Jerrod Fussnecker, an assistant attorney general, wrote in a disposition letter to SLED that was obtained by The Greenville News.

    https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/news/local/south-carolina/2019/10/02/greenville-deputy-wont-charged-shooting-sc-homeowner/3839322002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2019, 04:59:18 PM
    A key witness that helped convict the cop for murder has been shot dead...

    Botham Jean's neighbor, a key witness in Amber Guyger trial, shot to death in Dallas

    A key witness in Amber Guyger's murder trial was shot and killed Friday evening at an apartment complex near Dallas' Medical District, authorities said. Joshua Brown, a neighbor of Botham Jean's and Guyger at the South Side Flats apartments, was slain about 10:30 p.m. in the 4600 block of Cedar Springs Road. Witnesses told police they heard several gunshots and saw a silver four-door sedan speeding out of the parking lot.

    Brown, 28, lived across the hall from Jean and testified about the night he was killed. Dallas County prosecutor Jason Hermus, the lead prosecutor in the Guyger case, said Saturday that Brown stood up at a time when others won't say what they know.


    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2019/10/05/man-fatally-shot-apartment-complex-near-dallas-medical-district-suspect-loose/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on October 05, 2019, 07:47:37 PM
    A key witness that helped convict the cop for murder has been shot dead...

    Botham Jean's neighbor, a key witness in Amber Guyger trial, shot to death in Dallas

    A key witness in Amber Guyger's murder trial was shot and killed Friday evening at an apartment complex near Dallas' Medical District, authorities said. Joshua Brown, a neighbor of Botham Jean's and Guyger at the South Side Flats apartments, was slain about 10:30 p.m. in the 4600 block of Cedar Springs Road. Witnesses told police they heard several gunshots and saw a silver four-door sedan speeding out of the parking lot.

    Brown, 28, lived across the hall from Jean and testified about the night he was killed. Dallas County prosecutor Jason Hermus, the lead prosecutor in the Guyger case, said Saturday that Brown stood up at a time when others won't say what they know.


    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2019/10/05/man-fatally-shot-apartment-complex-near-dallas-medical-district-suspect-loose/



    This whole story is a circle of misery. I know apartment complexes look the same floor to floor but when you make the mistake of killing somebody in their own place you should spend a majority of the rest of your life in the slammer. Then again involuntary manslaughter usually sentenced around a year and voluntary around 10 years. I don't know how you don't consider this an aggravated event and go 20 or more though...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 07, 2019, 12:31:16 PM
    A key witness that helped convict the cop for murder has been shot dead...

    Botham Jean's neighbor, a key witness in Amber Guyger trial, shot to death in Dallas

    A key witness in Amber Guyger's murder trial was shot and killed Friday evening at an apartment complex near Dallas' Medical District, authorities said. Joshua Brown, a neighbor of Botham Jean's and Guyger at the South Side Flats apartments, was slain about 10:30 p.m. in the 4600 block of Cedar Springs Road. Witnesses told police they heard several gunshots and saw a silver four-door sedan speeding out of the parking lot.

    Brown, 28, lived across the hall from Jean and testified about the night he was killed. Dallas County prosecutor Jason Hermus, the lead prosecutor in the Guyger case, said Saturday that Brown stood up at a time when others won't say what they know.


    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2019/10/05/man-fatally-shot-apartment-complex-near-dallas-medical-district-suspect-loose/

    It sounds like the FBI should take over this case instead of letting Dallas police investigate themselves.

    Slain witness in ex-cop's trial would have testified in civil case against Dallas police

    A key witness in the murder trial of a former Dallas police officer is now dead. Joshua Brown, Botham Jean's neighbor, was shot to death on Friday. His testimony helped prosecutors piece together the events of Jean's murder, and ultimately led to Amber Guyger's conviction.

    Dallas police say they are investigating Friday night's shooting and, so far, do not have any suspects or a motive. The attorney for Botham Jean's family is also the attorney for Brown and says he should have been protected after he testified at Guyger's murder trial. The Jean family has filed a civil case against the city of Dallas for the murder of their son Botham. Merritt says Brown would have been one of their first witnesses.  

    https://www.cbsnews.com/guy-trial-slain-witness-joshua-brown-would-have-testified-botham-jean-civil-case-against-dallas-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 07, 2019, 03:12:04 PM
    Fishy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2019, 02:54:59 PM
    Sexually assaulting 5 women and possessing child porn? No problem, he's a cop and a got a sweet plea deal, just 5 years in prison but he could be eligible for parole after he completes a "sex offender treatment program"...

    Pablo Cano: Ex-LMPD officer accepts plea deal, avoids rape charges

    Former Louisville Metro Police Officer Pablo Cano was sentenced to five years in prison after being accused of rape.

    Multiple women accused Cano of forcing them to have sex, some times while he was in uniform, armed and on duty.

    Cano and his victims agreed on a plea deal that allowed him to plead guilty to lesser charges and avoid a trial. His victims, in turn, avoided having to testify. In all, five women were listed in the criminal complaint.

    Cano pleaded guilty to five counts of sexual misconduct, a misdemeanor. He also pleaded guilty to one count of possessing material portraying the sexual performance of a minor.

    https://www.wave3.com/2019/10/07/pablo-cano-ex-lmpd-officer-accepts-plea-deal-avoids-rape-charges/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 08, 2019, 03:01:55 PM
    Employing foreign companies to hack and spy on Americans... Cellebrite's history goes back more than a decade ago (https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/michigan-police-cellphone-data-extraction-devices-aclu-objects/story?id=13428178#.T9JCT9WNfSY)..

    Inside New York City’s Partnership With Israeli iPhone Hacking Company Cellebrite

    In June 2019, the secretive Israeli digital forensics firm Cellebrite, which works with law enforcement to unlock cell phones, announced a significant product development: For the first time, government agencies would be able to break into phones in-house using licensed Cellebrite software. Previously, if law enforcement wanted to get into newer devices, they had to send the phones to one of Cellebrite’s digital forensics labs, located in New Jersey and Virginia. But Cellebrite’s new UFED Premium program gave law enforcement the ability to “unlock and extract data from all iOS and high-end Android devices” on their own, using software installed on computers in their offices.

    A contract obtained by OneZero shows that the Manhattan District Attorney’s office — one of the largest and most influential prosecution offices in the country — has had UFED Premium in-house since January 2018. According to the contract, the DA’s office agreed to pay Cellebrite about $200,000 over three years for UFED Premium.

    https://onezero.medium.com/exclusive-inside-new-yorks-partnership-with-israeli-iphone-cracking-company-cellebrite-12a2252c3ebf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2019, 09:56:29 AM
    Probably not the first time they "misused" surveillance data... But don't expect any punishment or prison sentences.

    FBI misused surveillance data, spied on its own, FISA ruling finds

    In an October 2018 ruling unsealed and posted on October 8, 2019 by the Office of the Director of Intelligence, the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) found that the employees of the Federal Bureau of Investigation had inappropriately used data collected under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The FBI was found to have misused surveillance data to look into American residents, including other FBI employees and their family members, making large-scale queries that did not distinguish between US persons and foreign intelligence targets.

    The revelation drew immediate outcry from privacy advocates and renewed calls for the termination of FISA and USA FREEDOM Act that authorized bulk intelligence collection. President Donald Trump signed a bill extending Section 702 collection authorizations for six years in 2018; the Office of the Director of National Intelligence announced earlier this year that the administration would seek the extension of authority for collection of call data granted under the USA FREEDOM Act.


    The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court ruling found that the FBI's "querying procedures" for intelligence data did not properly record when the database of intelligence data was searched for information about US persons. "The querying procedures did not require FBI personnel to document the basis for finding that each United States-person query term satisfied the relevant standard—i.e., that queries be reasonably designed to return foreign-inteligence information or evidence of crime," the FISC opinion stated. "Without such documentation and in view of reported instances of non-compliance with that standard, the procedures seemed unreasonable under FISA's definition of 'minimization procedures' and possibly the Fourth Amendment."

    Among those instances of "non-compliance" were:


    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/10/unsealed-fisa-ruling-slaps-fbi-for-misuse-of-surveillance-data
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2019, 03:18:39 PM
    Facial recognition software mistook 1 in 5 California lawmakers for criminals, says ACLU

    California Assemblyman Phil Ting has never been arrested, but he was recently mistaken for a criminal.

    He’s not surprised.

    Ting (D-San Francisco), who authored a bill to ban facial recognition software from being used on police body cameras, was one of 26 California legislators who was incorrectly matched with a mug shot in a recent test of a common face-scanning program by the American Civil Liberties Union.

    About 1 in 5 legislators was erroneously matched to a person who had been arrested when the ACLU used the software to screen their pictures against a database of 25,000 publicly available booking photos. Last year, in a similar experiment done with photos of members of Congress, the software erroneously matched 28 federal legislators with mug shots.

    The results highlight what Ting and others said is proof that facial recognition software is unreliable. They want California law enforcement banned from using it with the cameras they wear while on duty.

    “The software clearly is not ready for use in a law enforcement capacity,” Ting said. “These mistakes, we can kind of chuckle at it, but if you get arrested and it’s on your record, it can be hard to get housing, get a job. It has real impacts.”

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-08-12/facial-recognition-software-mistook-1-in-5-california-lawmakers-for-criminals-says-aclu

    Finally a good law in California.

    California Governor Signs Landmark Bill Halting Facial Recognition on Police Body Cams

    Today, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed landmark legislation making California the largest state in the country to block law enforcement agencies from using facial recognition and other biometric tracking technology in connection with officer body cameras.

    Assemblymember Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) introduced AB 1215: The Body Camera Accountability Act earlier this year in light of heightened concerns that law enforcement agencies may add face-tracking technology onto body cameras, jeopardizing Californians’ safety and civil liberties. AB 1215 received bipartisan support in both chambers of the California Legislature. The new law goes into effect January 1, 2020 with a three-year sunset provision.

    https://www.aclunc.org/news/california-governor-signs-landmark-bill-halting-facial-recognition-police-body-cams
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2019, 10:05:08 PM
    Only the finest people...

    Former Wewoka police officer arrested on multiple child sex crimes

    The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) arrested a former Wewoka Police Officer on multiple charges after allegedly raping a 14-year-old girl.

    On October 2, the Wewoka Police Department requested OSBI assistance in investigating allegations of a police officer raping a high school student. The student told school officials that 33-year-old Wendell Birt began Snapchatting with her in May 2019.

    Over the course of several months, Birt allegedly asked the girl for sexually explicit photographs and received them. They met on three occasions where Birt allegedly raped the 14-year-old.

    Birt recently left the Wewoka Police Department and is currently working as a police officer for the Delaware Nation of Oklahoma.

    https://kfor.com/2019/10/08/former-wewoka-police-officer-arrested-on-multiple-child-sex-crimes/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 12, 2019, 05:29:31 PM
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Apparently the cops decided that there is a special exemption that allows criminal gangs to shoot anybody they want and get away with it. This woman was inside her home when an armed criminal who was prowling suspiciously around her home "orders" her to put her hands up and instantly shoots her dead through the window. Of course the killer is now enjoying paid vacation and remains anonymous due to his gang affiliation. Let's see what sort of excuses the criminals will concoct to cover up their crimes.

    Woman fatally shot inside her home by Fort Worth officer

    A Fort Worth Police Department officer fatally shot a woman who was inside her home early Saturday morning.

    This fatal officer-involved shooting happened just before 2:30 a.m., when police got a call about a home’s front door being open in the 1200 block of E. Allen Ave.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long. It shows him arrive at the home, and while searching the area, he looks inside the home through a window and sees a person standing inside.

    According to police, the officer pulled out his service weapon after “perceiving a threat.”

    On the body camera video, the officer can be heard saying, “Put your hands up. Show me your hands,” before shooting through the window at the person inside.

    The officer couldn’t be heard saying anything before that.

    Officers then went into the home, and found a woman, identified as 28-year-old Atatiana Jefferson, who had been shot by the officer, along with a handgun. Police have not said whether the gun was found near Jefferson, or found in another part of the home.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long.

    https://www.fox4news.com/news/woman-fatally-shot-inside-her-home-by-fort-worth-officer
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on October 12, 2019, 10:52:33 PM
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Apparently the cops decided that there is a special exemption that allows criminal gangs to shoot anybody they want and get away with it. This woman was inside her home when an armed criminal who was prowling suspiciously around her home "orders" her to put her hands up and instantly shoots her dead through the window. Of course the killer is now enjoying paid vacation and remains anonymous due to his gang affiliation. Let's see what sort of excuses the criminals will concoct to cover up their crimes.

    Woman fatally shot inside her home by Fort Worth officer

    A Fort Worth Police Department officer fatally shot a woman who was inside her home early Saturday morning.

    This fatal officer-involved shooting happened just before 2:30 a.m., when police got a call about a home’s front door being open in the 1200 block of E. Allen Ave.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long. It shows him arrive at the home, and while searching the area, he looks inside the home through a window and sees a person standing inside.

    According to police, the officer pulled out his service weapon after “perceiving a threat.”

    On the body camera video, the officer can be heard saying, “Put your hands up. Show me your hands,” before shooting through the window at the person inside.

    The officer couldn’t be heard saying anything before that.

    Officers then went into the home, and found a woman, identified as 28-year-old Atatiana Jefferson, who had been shot by the officer, along with a handgun. Police have not said whether the gun was found near Jefferson, or found in another part of the home.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long.

    https://www.fox4news.com/news/woman-fatally-shot-inside-her-home-by-fort-worth-officer

    Apparently you are anti police and drew a conclusion based on that
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on October 13, 2019, 11:00:55 PM
    Or he’s just “anti-assholes-who-shoot-and-kill-for-any-reason-even-no-reason-at-all-and-do-it-mostly-with-impunity.”

    You keep telling us what a good cop you were (are?) but holy fuckballs, judging by your posts, a cop could shove a gun up a pregnant woman’s vagina and empty a clip and you’d be a-fucking-ok with it as long as the cop claims to have felt threatened.

    The Internet has allowed people to see just how corrupt and out-of-control cops are. In the past, we’d hear maybe one or two cases a year, and it’d be easy to dismiss as an “unfortunate and regrettable incident” or “one bad apple.”

    But it’s 2019 and not a day goes by when a new story doesn’t surface.

    You can keep living in Mayberry, Sheriff Andy. But the rest of us can’t afford to.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2019, 11:53:00 AM
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Apparently the cops decided that there is a special exemption that allows criminal gangs to shoot anybody they want and get away with it. This woman was inside her home when an armed criminal who was prowling suspiciously around her home "orders" her to put her hands up and instantly shoots her dead through the window. Of course the killer is now enjoying paid vacation and remains anonymous due to his gang affiliation. Let's see what sort of excuses the criminals will concoct to cover up their crimes.

    Woman fatally shot inside her home by Fort Worth officer

    A Fort Worth Police Department officer fatally shot a woman who was inside her home early Saturday morning.

    This fatal officer-involved shooting happened just before 2:30 a.m., when police got a call about a home’s front door being open in the 1200 block of E. Allen Ave.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long. It shows him arrive at the home, and while searching the area, he looks inside the home through a window and sees a person standing inside.

    According to police, the officer pulled out his service weapon after “perceiving a threat.”

    On the body camera video, the officer can be heard saying, “Put your hands up. Show me your hands,” before shooting through the window at the person inside.

    The officer couldn’t be heard saying anything before that.

    Officers then went into the home, and found a woman, identified as 28-year-old Atatiana Jefferson, who had been shot by the officer, along with a handgun. Police have not said whether the gun was found near Jefferson, or found in another part of the home.

    Just hours after the shooting, police released the officer's body camera video, which is less than two minutes long.

    https://www.fox4news.com/news/woman-fatally-shot-inside-her-home-by-fort-worth-officer

    As usual, the killer resigned before he could be fired...

    Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting and killing black woman has resigned, chief says

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend has resigned, Interim Police Chief Ed Kraus announced Monday. Kraus on Monday identified the officer involved in the shooting as Aaron Dean. He said Dean was placed on detached duty and stripped of his badge and firearm after he was served with his written administrative complaint yesterday.

    “My intent was to meet with him today to terminate his employment with the Fort Worth Police Department. However, the officer tendered his resignation this morning before we met," Kraus told reporters Monday. "Even though he no longer works for the city, we will continue the administrative investigation as if he did. The case will be completed and reviewed by the chain of command.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on October 14, 2019, 01:39:21 PM
    Apparently you are anti police and drew a conclusion based on that
    LMAO ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 14, 2019, 06:08:52 PM
    As usual, the killer resigned before he could be fired...

    Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting and killing black woman has resigned, chief says

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend has resigned, Interim Police Chief Ed Kraus announced Monday. Kraus on Monday identified the officer involved in the shooting as Aaron Dean. He said Dean was placed on detached duty and stripped of his badge and firearm after he was served with his written administrative complaint yesterday.

    “My intent was to meet with him today to terminate his employment with the Fort Worth Police Department. However, the officer tendered his resignation this morning before we met," Kraus told reporters Monday. "Even though he no longer works for the city, we will continue the administrative investigation as if he did. The case will be completed and reviewed by the chain of command.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation

    Fort Worth police officer jailed on murder charge after resigning in shooting that killed woman in home

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/10/1862/1048/aaronDean.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend, killing her, has been jailed on a murder charge, online court records revealed Monday. The charge against Aaron Dean was made public hours after the officer resigned from the force. Bond was not immediately set.

    Dean's resignation letter read: "Effective immediately I am tendering my resignation from the Fort Worth Police Department." The letter was released by the state's largest police union, the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas. The group’s executive director, Charley Wilkison, said that Dean has not yet hired an attorney but that one will be provided with financial support from the union.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 15, 2019, 04:31:19 PM
    Officer draws gun, breaks man’s leg during traffic stop. Driver not charged with crime

    A police body camera video showing a Doral officer pulling his weapon and breaking a man’s leg while forcefully arresting him during a traffic enforcement detail appears to contradict the chain of events described in the arrest report.

    The video was damning enough that state prosecutors decided not to move forward with charges against motorist Craig Nembhard. The officer who pulled his weapon on the unarmed man is now under internal investigation and the city of Doral was given notice in late September that the man whose leg was broken intends to file a civil rights lawsuit arguing police used excessive force.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article236229843.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on October 15, 2019, 04:39:57 PM
    Officer draws gun, breaks man’s leg during traffic stop. Driver not charged with crime

    A police body camera video showing a Doral officer pulling his weapon and breaking a man’s leg while forcefully arresting him during a traffic enforcement detail appears to contradict the chain of events described in the arrest report.

    The video was damning enough that state prosecutors decided not to move forward with charges against motorist Craig Nembhard. The officer who pulled his weapon on the unarmed man is now under internal investigation and the city of Doral was given notice in late September that the man whose leg was broken intends to file a civil rights lawsuit arguing police used excessive force.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article236229843.html

    Stand by. Any moment now, the Police will announce that the femur in question was given detention twice during high school, before stating that they can't comment on an active investigation.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 15, 2019, 04:51:37 PM
    Stand by. Any moment now, the Police will announce that the femur in question was given detention twice during high school, before stating that they can't comment on an active investigation.

    Of course the cop union defends him. The man was also charged with "resisting arrest without violence". So according to the cops the man committed "aggravated assault" against them but he also "resisted arrest without violence". The man spent 5 days in the hospital where a rod was put in his leg and then he was taken to jail so he lost his job and then lost his apartment because he didn't have a job. It took 5 months for the prosecutors to decide to drop charges against the man with the broken leg. No charges against the cops yet.

    Quote
    “The guy was arrested and during the arrest his leg was broken,” said Doral Police spokesman Rey Valdes.

    The video seems at odds with the arrest report written by Doral Police Officer Jack St. Thomas.

    In the report, Thomas said that Nembhard “directed his vehicle towards officer Cooper, which created a well-founded fear that defendant, who was agitated and angry, was about to thrust his vehicle at officer Cooper. Officer Cooper, in fear for his life, unholstered his duty weapon and pointed it at the defendant while simultaneously stepping out of the direct path of he vehicle, which was driving directly towards him.”

    The video shows Cooper calmly stepping to the side of Nembhard’s barely moving car and quickly pulling his gun. Nembhard was arrested and charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest without violence. After reviewing the evidence, state prosecutors decided against moving forward with the charges. The state said it couldn’t prove the case “beyond a reasonable doubt” and that Cooper was made aware of the decision.

    Still, Cooper maintains the support of his union, the Miami-Dade branch of the Police Benevolent Association. President Steadman Stahl said from the “limited” video he’s seen, the officer acted properly and that two officers actually drew their weapons.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 15, 2019, 10:49:16 PM
    It Speaks Volumes That the Cops & Ex Cops On this Board Remain Silent
    At these Never Ending Scumbag Lowlifes Actions.  ::)

    If I was a cop or these actions were being constantly done by others in my line
    Of work I’d Be Very Unhappy & Letting Everyone Know how Bad their actions are
    By Being Continually Silent they’re condoning these Atrocities.

    Disgusting.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 16, 2019, 08:26:09 AM
    Fort Worth police officer jailed on murder charge after resigning in shooting that killed woman in home

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/10/1862/1048/aaronDean.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend, killing her, has been jailed on a murder charge, online court records revealed Monday. The charge against Aaron Dean was made public hours after the officer resigned from the force. Bond was not immediately set.

    Dean's resignation letter read: "Effective immediately I am tendering my resignation from the Fort Worth Police Department." The letter was released by the state's largest police union, the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas. The group’s executive director, Charley Wilkison, said that Dean has not yet hired an attorney but that one will be provided with financial support from the union.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation

    This is a execution 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 16, 2019, 12:52:20 PM
    The "highly trained professional" determined that "based on his training and experience", powdered milk is cocaine and this man would have served 15 years in prison... Had there been no lab testing, this scumbag would have sent a man in prison for 15 years and he wouldn't lose a second of sleep. Of course he doesn't care either way since he won't face any consequences for this actions.

    Homeless man facing prison cleared by lab results

    A homeless man who pleaded guilty to trafficking cocaine had his case dismissed after the substance turned out to be powdered milk.

    Cody Gregg told a judge he entered the plea so he could get out of the Oklahoma County jail.

    Gregg, 26, pleaded guilty last week to possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and was sentenced to 15 years in prison, court records show. He asked to withdraw his plea after receiving a negative lab report. Oklahoma County District Judge Timothy R. Henderson granted the request on Thursday and the case was dismissed the next day.

    Gregg had been in Oklahoma County jail since his arrest in August. He was released Friday, according to jail records.

    https://oklahoman.com/article/5644076/homeless-man-facing-prison-cleared-by-lab-results
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 16, 2019, 01:44:06 PM
    Think of the billions wasted due to this crap. 

    The "highly trained professional" determined that "based on his training and experience", powdered milk is cocaine and this man would have served 15 years in prison... Had there been no lab testing, this scumbag would have sent a man in prison for 15 years and he wouldn't lose a second of sleep. Of course he doesn't care either way since he won't face any consequences for this actions.

    Homeless man facing prison cleared by lab results

    A homeless man who pleaded guilty to trafficking cocaine had his case dismissed after the substance turned out to be powdered milk.

    Cody Gregg told a judge he entered the plea so he could get out of the Oklahoma County jail.

    Gregg, 26, pleaded guilty last week to possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and was sentenced to 15 years in prison, court records show. He asked to withdraw his plea after receiving a negative lab report. Oklahoma County District Judge Timothy R. Henderson granted the request on Thursday and the case was dismissed the next day.

    Gregg had been in Oklahoma County jail since his arrest in August. He was released Friday, according to jail records.

    https://oklahoman.com/article/5644076/homeless-man-facing-prison-cleared-by-lab-results
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2019, 02:29:19 PM
    Child abusers.

    Mountain View police officers named in lawsuit over traumatic forced exam of 5-year-old's genitals

    A Mountain View family filed a federal lawsuit against the city claiming that Mountain View Police Department officers unlawfully forced their 5-year-old daughter to undergo a traumatic sexual assault exam, violating their civil rights and running afoul of department protocol.

    The suit, filed on behalf of parents Annie and Douglas Lother last month, seeks a jury trial after three officers showed up at the family's house on Jan. 28 and demanded the child's genitals be examined by a paramedic. Officers reportedly believed the child may have been a victim of sexual abuse.

    The child had injured her pubic area three days prior when she fell at a Sky High Sports trampoline park, according to the civil complaint. The injury had healed, but the girl mentioned that her vagina had bled or was bleeding while she was at Landels Elementary School and a teacher or principal made a referral to either Child Protective Services (CPS) or law enforcement. The girl was pulled from class and questioned on Jan. 28.

    Later that day, officers -- identified in the suit as Mark Poirier, Mason Motomura and Matthew Rogers -- reportedly pounded on the door of the family's home, entered and refused to explain why they were there, according to the suit. A social worker with the county, identified as Joseph Phan, accompanied the officers and also did not explain the nature of the report that brought them there -- a requirement under California law.

    The girl was separated from her mother and questioned in the front yard in plain view of the public, the lawsuit states. She told officers that she had injured herself at a trampoline park and, after minutes of interrogation, started to whine and told them she didn't want to answer any more questions. According to the suit, Poirier is heard on a police body camera recording saying that the concerns of possible sexual abuse seemed "more and more unfounded," and that the injuries were innocent in nature.

    After asking several probing questions to Douglas Lother, including how he disciplines his daughters and if there was "anything more" he could tell officers to understand "a little bit more about the situation," the officers gave an ultimatum: allow a paramedic to inspect the child's genitals or have her forcibly transported to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for an examination.

    The suit states that the parents tried multiple times to offer alternatives, including a trip to a physician to verify the injury was not serious and healing. Danielle Lother also offered contact information for witnesses who could corroborate the story that the girl injured herself at a trampoline park.

    The Lothers say they were forced to hold down their child and pull off her clothes for the paramedic while she was kicking and crying. The paramedic commented that she couldn't see without better lighting, leading Douglas Lother to pull out the flashlight on his phone to assist in the examination.

    "In a nightmarish moment of his life, Douglas (Lother) actually found himself holding a flashlight with one hand, pointed at his daughter's private parts, while he and his wife were holding down their struggling, screaming, crying 5-year-old daughter, as a stranger was putting her fingers on his child's labia and spreading the outer folds of the labia with her fingers to visually inspect them in the bright light of a flashlight held by Douglas," according to the suit.

    https://www.mv-voice.com/news/2019/10/15/mountain-view-police-officers-named-in-lawsuit-over-traumatic-forced-exam-of-5-year-olds-genitals
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 17, 2019, 02:32:50 PM
    Let's see if these criminals will end up in prison or if they'll get a promotion and a hefty bonus.

    Florida Cop and Police Chief Both Charged in Shooting Death of Elderly Woman During Training Exercise

    Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel was finally charged in the shooting death of Mary Knowlton, the 73-year-old retired librarian who was shot and killed during a citizens academy last year.

    Punta Gordo Police Chief Tom Lewis, who has defended Coel throughout his troubled career, was also charged, State Attorney Steve Russell announced during a press conference Wednesday.

    Coel, who shot and killed Knowlton during an exercise in which he was supposed to use blanks last August, was charged with manslaughter, which is a first degree felony. He is facing up to 30 years in prison.

    Lewis was charged with culpable negligence, which is a misdemeanor. He faces up to 60 days in jail, according to a press release from the state attorney’s office.

    Coel turned himself in earlier today but was quickly released after posting a $5,000 bond. Lewis was issued a summons to appear in court, according to WINK News.

    Coel, who has been on paid administrative leave since August 9, 2016 incident, has a long history of abuse as we pointed out last year.

    He is the same cop who allowed his police dog to maul a man for riding a bicycle at night without lights.

    “I’ve been saying for months that this guy was going to kill somebody and now he has killed somebody,” attorney Scott Weinberg said during a telephone interview with Photography is Not a Crime last year.

    “Everybody had been put on notice that he was a loose cannon, that he should not have had a badge and a gun. The city, the state attorney and the police department knew he was not mentally fit to serve the public.”

    But Chief Lewis continued to defend Coel, even after the cop fired a gun with live ammunition during a “shoot, don’t shoot” exercise, celebrating the fact that Coel was an award-winning officer, even if he did have a history of disciplinary actions against him, including a forced resignation from another law enforcement agency.

    Knowlton had signed up for the citizens academy class because she wanted to show her support for police during a time when police were being criticized nationwide for their abusive tactics.

    The incident led to a $2 million settlement for her family in November.

    https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2017/02/22/florida-cop-and-police-chief-both-charged-in-shooting-death-of-elderly-woman-during-training-exercise/

    Remember this story? No prison for the cop who killed this poor woman, despite the fact that there were warning signs about his behavior before he killed her...

    Ex-Florida officer who fatally shot retired librarian during drill gets no jail time

    A former Florida police officer who fatally shot a 73-year-old retired librarian during a demonstration for the public in 2016 will not serve jail time. Then-officer Lee Coel was performing in a "shoot/don't shoot" exercise with the Punta Gorda Police Department in the summer of 2016 when he shot Mary Knowlton, who had volunteered to participate.

    She was struck by the fatal bullet in front of about three dozen people, including Knowlton's husband of 55 years, who were at the citizen police academy watching the drill about police use of firearms.

    Coel, who was charged the following year with felony manslaughter with a firearm, accepted a plea deal this week, sparing him from serving jail time, according to NBC affiliate WBBH. The deal stipulates that he spend 10 years on probation. He had faced up to 30 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ex-florida-officer-who-fatally-shot-retired-librarian-during-drill-n1068046

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2019, 06:01:36 PM
    "Only the finest people"....

    Hopefully he ends up being sentenced to the full 60 years in prison.

    Ex-Miccosukee Cop Who Forced Teens to Run Naked Found Guilty

    A former Miccosukee police officer accused of forcing two teens to strip naked and run down a secluded road in the Everglades during a 2016 traffic stop was convicted Thursday on four felony charges: 2 counts each of extortion and unlawful compensation.

    Martinez had pulled the two teens over after they ran a stop sign on Aug. 5, 2016. After he found a small amount of marijuana in the car, he told the teens to follow him down a secluded road, then told them they'd go to jail if they didn't strip naked.

    Once they were naked, Martinez forced the teens to run down the road, then tried to get the teen girl to perform a sex act on him, prosecutors said. The victims, who were 18 at the time, said they felt they had no option but to do what Martinez said.

    Martinez faces up to 60 years in prison at sentencing, scheduled for Nov. 25.

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/Ex-Miccosukee-Cop-Who-Forced-Teens-to-Run-Naked-Found-Guilty-563318072.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2019, 06:09:57 PM
    Once again... It's starting to become a regular occurrence... The shooter is enjoying paid vacation and anonymity while the victim will probably be smeared as a criminal.

    Unannounced Aurora cop shot man in the back through a window in his home

    An Aurora police officer allegedly shot a 22-year-old man in the back through a window in the man’s home Oct. 10, an attorney familiar with the matter told The Sentinel Tuesday.

    Defense attorney Birk Baumgartner said officers did not announce they were outside the house of Andy Huff, 22, in the city’s Side Creek neighborhood nor identify themselves as police officers prior to the shooting last Thursday. He said one officer opened fire, shooting five times into the house and striking Huff in the buttocks. Baumgartner said Huff was critically injured in the shooting. His colon was severed and the officer’s bullet is still lodged in the lower portion of his body.

    Police did not immediately return requests for comments about the allegations. In a news release issued Tuesday, a spokeswoman wrote that “no further information is available for release at this time.” The officer involved in the shooting has been placed on paid administrative leave, per department policy, police said.

    https://sentinelcolorado.com/news/metro/attorney-unannounced-aurora-cop-shot-man-in-the-back-through-a-window-in-his-home/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 20, 2019, 06:25:10 PM
    Once again we see the criminals lying... This sort of violence against an elderly man by a brutish 6ft 4 criminal was according to them "reasonable and appropriate"... Only after the footage was "discovered" was this pussy charged. If his buddies and accessories don't protect him he will probably not be very popular in jail.

    Lawsuit filed after body cam video shows corrections officer slam handcuffed man to the ground

    Cocke County originally claimed the man resisted and the "force was reasonable and appropriate." The man claims he suffered 8 broken ribs and a punctured lung.

    A man is suing Cocke County for excessive force after he said a correctional officer picked him up and body slammed him into the floor while he was handcuffed, causing serious injuries as he was being processed into the jail. Kelton Townsend, a former corrections officer who can be seen on video slamming a handcuffed man down to the floor is now charged.

    Body camera footage obtained by 10News shows the incident as it happened in February 2019. The footage is from the perspective of the arresting officer after he brought the plaintiff, Jerry Miller, into the jail.

    The lawsuit claims Miller suffered eight broken ribs and a punctured lung in the incident. He also claims he was denied adequate medical care until the next morning after he was released on his own recognizance and processed out of the jail.



    https://www.wbir.com/article/news/crime/sheriff-jailer-seen-on-video-slamming-handcuffed-inmate-to-the-ground-is-now-charged/51-6ec95967-305a-4741-a2fd-7120ff5c7ee3

    Kelton Townsend, charged with aggravated assault and official oppression:

    (https://www.gannett-cdn.com/presto/2019/10/18/PKNS/bd109b61-8971-4cb6-a121-642878ebe215-73924F.Jpg?width=540&height=&fit=bounds&auto=webp)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 21, 2019, 12:21:05 PM
    Florida Cops Went to Absurd Lengths to Entrap Man Who Showed No Interest in Underage Sex
    Reason ^ | 10 21 2019 | Lenore Skenazy
    Posted on 10/21/2019, 2:10:02 PM by yesthatjallen

    How do you catch a predator in Sarasota, Florida? You create one.

    The Sarasota County Sheriff's Office (SCSO) is going to "outrageous lengths" to make law-abiding lonely guys into sex offenders. That's according to Noah Pransky, a fearless journalist who has been covering Florida's addiction to entrapment for years.

    In September, SCSO arrested 23 men for allegedly soliciting underage girls for sex. Pransky's most recent piece in Florida Politics chronicles the elaborate back and forth between one of those men and a police officer pretending to be a young female. Pransky writes:

    In one example from a 2017 operation, SCSO spent two days trying to seduce a 20-year-old man who showed no interest in having sex with a child. Detectives, who posted an ad for an 18-year-old woman on Tinder, matched with the young man and proceeded to swap "getting-to-know-you" texts for more than an hour; only then did detectives tell the man he was chatting with a 14-year-old girl, not an 18-year-old.

    Undercover detectives continued to try and talk about sex with the man the next day; he again rebuffed the attempts, but continued the small talk because he indicated he was bored. Detectives then sent unsolicited, flirty photos to the man; a tactic that violates best practices and ethical standards for this type of stings.

    The terrible thing about this case is that the sheriff's office is not trying to save any actual kids. It is just trying to get an easy win.

    Most parents who worry about predators online are picturing a creepy guy lurking on some kiddie site where he lures unsuspecting youngsters away to a sordid encounter at the Dairy Queen.

    But the SCSO folks flip that scenario entirely. They log onto adult sites, claiming to be adult age. It's only once they establish some kind of bond with an adult who went online hoping to find a legal-age companion that they then confess that they are underage.

    SNIP
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 21, 2019, 01:04:35 PM
    Florida Cops Went to Absurd Lengths to Entrap Man Who Showed No Interest in Underage Sex
    Reason ^ | 10 21 2019 | Lenore Skenazy
    Posted on 10/21/2019, 2:10:02 PM by yesthatjallen

    How do you catch a predator in Sarasota, Florida? You create one.

    The Sarasota County Sheriff's Office (SCSO) is going to "outrageous lengths" to make law-abiding lonely guys into sex offenders. That's according to Noah Pransky, a fearless journalist who has been covering Florida's addiction to entrapment for years.

    In September, SCSO arrested 23 men for allegedly soliciting underage girls for sex. Pransky's most recent piece in Florida Politics chronicles the elaborate back and forth between one of those men and a police officer pretending to be a young female. Pransky writes:

    In one example from a 2017 operation, SCSO spent two days trying to seduce a 20-year-old man who showed no interest in having sex with a child. Detectives, who posted an ad for an 18-year-old woman on Tinder, matched with the young man and proceeded to swap "getting-to-know-you" texts for more than an hour; only then did detectives tell the man he was chatting with a 14-year-old girl, not an 18-year-old.

    Undercover detectives continued to try and talk about sex with the man the next day; he again rebuffed the attempts, but continued the small talk because he indicated he was bored. Detectives then sent unsolicited, flirty photos to the man; a tactic that violates best practices and ethical standards for this type of stings.

    The terrible thing about this case is that the sheriff's office is not trying to save any actual kids. It is just trying to get an easy win.

    Most parents who worry about predators online are picturing a creepy guy lurking on some kiddie site where he lures unsuspecting youngsters away to a sordid encounter at the Dairy Queen.

    But the SCSO folks flip that scenario entirely. They log onto adult sites, claiming to be adult age. It's only once they establish some kind of bond with an adult who went online hoping to find a legal-age companion that they then confess that they are underage.

    SNIP

    Fucking arsehole cops
    They should all be arrested & Prostituted
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 21, 2019, 01:13:27 PM
    Fucking arsehole cops
    They should all be arrested & Prostituted

    They probably would be if they ended up in prison. I don't think other inmates would take kindly to cops who framed innocent people, especially for crimes relating to children. But as long as they don't go to prison, pay out of their pockets or suffer for their crimes this sort of thing will keep happening.
    Those who knowingly falsely accuse someone of a crime (like those false rape accusations) should receive the full sentence the innocent party would have received if found guilty.
    If it’s a cop that is trying to frame and entrap someone that sentence should be doubled or just make it life sentence without parole.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 21, 2019, 06:19:11 PM
    Another man shot inside his own home by cops. The man was begging for police to arrive to his house in response to burglars but as usual when seconds count, the cops are late and may attack the victims, not the criminals. The cops claim they mistook him for a burglar (inside his own home!). As a result this young man at just 26 years old is paralyzed from the neck down, unable to feed or bathe himself and in need of medical care for the rest of his life. Of course the cops investigated themselves and determined that the cop who paralyzed this poor man "acted appropriately in response to an apparent deadly threat".

    The Sheriff's Office will only pay $750,000 for this which amounts to nothing for destroying an innocent young man's life and of course none of this will come from the pockets of the cops who shot him or their union's coffers.

    Man paralyzed by shooting awarded $750K after officers mistook him for burglar in his own home

    A South Carolina man has settled a lawsuit against the Charleston County Sheriff's Office, ending a years-long battle that began when an officer shot him in his own home after mistaking him for a burglar.

    Bryant Heyward, who was left paralyzed by by a police shooting in 2015 after calling 911 to report a home invasion, settled his lawsuit against the sheriff's office for $750,000 -- a far cry from the $25 million he'd originally asked for, his attorney revealed Sunday.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/man-paralyzed-shooting-awarded-750k-officers-mistook-burglar/story?id=66409696
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 21, 2019, 06:33:11 PM
    Duluth police shock wrong man with stun gun outside Walmart

    Duluth Police officers used a taser to take down a shoplifting suspect outside a Walmart, but moments later, they discovered they shocked the wrong man.

    The man, identified as Chiedu Amahagwu, was leaving the store on Pleasant Hill Road on September 22, but when Duluth Police asked him to stop, they said he got into a fight with the officer.

    Officers said the Walmart Loss Prevention team identified Amahagwu as one of two people involved in stealing a ring from the jewelry section of the store.

    “We take their word for it until we figure out, and this time ultimately it wasn’t the suspect,” said Duluth Police Officer Ted Sadowski.

    “To fight the officer just because you believe you're right, and in this circumstance he was, but that doesn't give you the right to fight the officer,” said Sadowski.

    Amahagwu faces two counts of obstruction of a law enforcement officer.

    https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/duluth-police-shock-wrong-man-with-stun-gun-outside-walmart
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 22, 2019, 04:34:07 AM
    Another man shot inside his own home by cops. The man was begging for police to arrive to his house in response to burglars but as usual when seconds count, the cops are late and may attack the victims, not the criminals. The cops claim they mistook him for a burglar (inside his own home!). As a result this young man at just 26 years old is paralyzed from the neck down, unable to feed or bathe himself and in need of medical care for the rest of his life. Of course the cops investigated themselves and determined that the cop who paralyzed this poor man "acted appropriately in response to an apparent deadly threat".

    The Sheriff's Office will only pay $750,000 for this which amounts to nothing for destroying an innocent young man's life and of course none of this will come from the pockets of the cops who shot him or their union's coffers.

    Man paralyzed by shooting awarded $750K after officers mistook him for burglar in his own home

    A South Carolina man has settled a lawsuit against the Charleston County Sheriff's Office, ending a years-long battle that began when an officer shot him in his own home after mistaking him for a burglar.

    Bryant Heyward, who was left paralyzed by by a police shooting in 2015 after calling 911 to report a home invasion, settled his lawsuit against the sheriff's office for $750,000 -- a far cry from the $25 million he'd originally asked for, his attorney revealed Sunday.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/man-paralyzed-shooting-awarded-750k-officers-mistook-burglar/story?id=66409696


    Thats freaking terrible 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 22, 2019, 02:26:54 PM
    Another man shot inside his own home by cops. The man was begging for police to arrive to his house in response to burglars but as usual when seconds count, the cops are late and may attack the victims, not the criminals. The cops claim they mistook him for a burglar (inside his own home!). As a result this young man at just 26 years old is paralyzed from the neck down, unable to feed or bathe himself and in need of medical care for the rest of his life. Of course the cops investigated themselves and determined that the cop who paralyzed this poor man "acted appropriately in response to an apparent deadly threat".

    The Sheriff's Office will only pay $750,000 for this which amounts to nothing for destroying an innocent young man's life and of course none of this will come from the pockets of the cops who shot him or their union's coffers.

    Man paralyzed by shooting awarded $750K after officers mistook him for burglar in his own home

    A South Carolina man has settled a lawsuit against the Charleston County Sheriff's Office, ending a years-long battle that began when an officer shot him in his own home after mistaking him for a burglar.

    Bryant Heyward, who was left paralyzed by by a police shooting in 2015 after calling 911 to report a home invasion, settled his lawsuit against the sheriff's office for $750,000 -- a far cry from the $25 million he'd originally asked for, his attorney revealed Sunday.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/man-paralyzed-shooting-awarded-750k-officers-mistook-burglar/story?id=66409696

    Outrageous- Not only did they Shoot the Wrong person
    They add insult to injury with a £750,000 payout.
    And the cop keeps his badge & gun to shoot & cripple other innocents

    Doesn’t it Just Fill Everyone with Total Confidence & Honesty - Cops investigating Cops  ::)
    Totally Absurd.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 22, 2019, 02:42:36 PM
    Disgusting child abusers.. This "highly trained professional" considered an 11 year old special needs girl a "threat"...

    Of course he is allowed to quietly resign instead of being fired.

    Officer resigns amid accusations of excessive force on 11-year-old student

    A veteran Farmington police officer is out of a job following accusations he used excessive force on a middle school student with special needs. Lapel video from the Aug. 27 incident shows Officer Zachary Christensen roughing up an 11-year-old girl at Mesa View Middle School.

    The incident in question involved a 6th grade student who was in trouble for behavioral issues. The day of the incident, school administrators can be seen on the lapel video following the girl around campus as she waits for her mom to pick her up from school.

    “This morning, she went straight to the cafeteria. She took more milks that she was supposed to. She threw a milk on the ground,” said Officer Christensen in the lapel camera footage obtained by the KOB 4 Investigates team.

    According to Officer Christensen’s field report, the child assaulted two school employees that morning. The officer claims one assault occurred when the girl walked past the assistant principal and brushes past him and the second occurred when the girl attempted to open the door and walked past the principal. Ultimately, the charges against the girl did not stick.

    Following the perceived offenses, Officer Christensen loses his patience, grabs the girls backpack and throws her to the ground. The struggle lasts for roughly six minutes.

                Officer: Put your arms behind your back!
                Student: Ow! You're hurting my arm! Get off of me!
                Officer: Turn over! Turn over! Do not resist. Do not resist!
                Officer: Stop resisting!
                Student: Ow! You're hurting me!
                Administrator: (redacted) stop resisting...
                Officer: Put your arms behind your back!
                Student: Okay, let me stand up!
                School Administrator: Zach, let's let her stand up.

    At one point, a school administrator repeatedly tells the officer to allow the girl to get up:

    “Officer Christensen – she is not a threat to yourself or others at this moment,” said the school employee to which the officer replied: “No, she is!”



    https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/4-investigates-farmington-police-officer-resigns-amid-accusations-of-excessive-force-on-11-year-old-student/5529724/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 22, 2019, 07:11:04 PM
    Probably not the first time they "misused" surveillance data... But don't expect any punishment or prison sentences.

    FBI misused surveillance data, spied on its own, FISA ruling finds

    In an October 2018 ruling unsealed and posted on October 8, 2019 by the Office of the Director of Intelligence, the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) found that the employees of the Federal Bureau of Investigation had inappropriately used data collected under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The FBI was found to have misused surveillance data to look into American residents, including other FBI employees and their family members, making large-scale queries that did not distinguish between US persons and foreign intelligence targets.

    The revelation drew immediate outcry from privacy advocates and renewed calls for the termination of FISA and USA FREEDOM Act that authorized bulk intelligence collection. President Donald Trump signed a bill extending Section 702 collection authorizations for six years in 2018; the Office of the Director of National Intelligence announced earlier this year that the administration would seek the extension of authority for collection of call data granted under the USA FREEDOM Act.


    The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court ruling found that the FBI's "querying procedures" for intelligence data did not properly record when the database of intelligence data was searched for information about US persons. "The querying procedures did not require FBI personnel to document the basis for finding that each United States-person query term satisfied the relevant standard—i.e., that queries be reasonably designed to return foreign-inteligence information or evidence of crime," the FISC opinion stated. "Without such documentation and in view of reported instances of non-compliance with that standard, the procedures seemed unreasonable under FISA's definition of 'minimization procedures' and possibly the Fourth Amendment."

    Among those instances of "non-compliance" were:

    • Between March 24 and 27, 2017, the FBI ran queries against intelligence data "using identifiers for over 70,000 communications facilities 'associated with' persons with access to FBI facilities and systems," the court noted, "notwithstanding advice from the FBI Office of General Counsel (OGC) that they should not be conducted without the approval of the OGC and the National Security Division of the Department of Justice."
    • On December 1, 2017, a redacted FBI division "conducted over 6,800 queries using the Social Security Numbers of individuals" against raw, unredacted FISA data. A week later, the same unit conducted 1,600 queries using another set of identifiers for US persons. The person who conducted the queries "advised he did not intend to run them against raw FISA information, but nonetheless reviewed raw FISA information returned by them."
    • In February of 2018, the FBI searched raw FISA data for information, with about 30 queries regarding "potential [redacted] sources," and conducted about 45 other queries on people "under consideration as potential sources of information."
    • In an undated event, reported to the Department of Justice's National Security Division in April of 2018, the FBI ran queries against raw FISA metadata using identifiers for "approximately 57,000 individuals" where it was not clear that the information would return foreign intelligence information.
    • Queries against individual US persons were run against the FISA data on a number of occasions, including people about to be served a FISA order—and "a small number of cases in which FBI personnel apparently conducted queries for improper personal reasons—for example, a contract linguist who ran queries on himself, other FBI employees, and relatives."

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/10/unsealed-fisa-ruling-slaps-fbi-for-misuse-of-surveillance-data

    A declassified court ruling shows how the FBI abused NSA mass surveillance data

    The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court found that the FBI may have violated the rights of potentially millions of Americans — including its own agents and informants — by improperly searching through information obtained by the National Security Agency’s mass surveillance program.

    U.S. District Court Judge James E. Boasberg, who serves in the District of Columbia and the FISA court, made his sweeping and condemnatory assessment in October 2018 in a 138-page ruling, which was declassified by the U.S. government this week.

    To longtime critics of the government’s mass surveillance program, the FBI’s abuses are confirmation that federal law enforcement agents are combing through the communications of Americans without warrants, in violation of Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.

    “These opinions reveal devastating problems with the FBI’s backdoor searches, which often resembled fishing expeditions through Americans’ personal emails and online messages,”
    said Patrick Toomey, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project. “But the court did not go nearly far enough to fix those abuses. The Constitution requires FBI agents to get a warrant before they go combing through our sensitive communications.”

    The ruling concerns the FBI’s ability to access communications obtained through the NSA’s mass surveillance program, the existence of which was revealed in documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden. Critics of Snowden’s decision to leak classified NSA documents noted at the time that safeguards existed to prevent Americans’ communications from being searched improperly. The declassified FISA court ruling, however, shows that few safeguards existed at all.

    https://theintercept.com/2019/10/10/fbi-nsa-mass-surveillance-abuse/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 24, 2019, 02:03:03 PM
    "Only the finest people"...

    Fucking disgusting child abusers once again...

    Louisiana sheriff’s deputy, junior-high teacher wife held on child rape and porn charges: reports

    Photos of two suspects, a married couple, posing nude with a child were among the items authorities seized when a longtime sheriff’s deputy and a junior high school teacher were arrested this week in Louisiana on child rape and pornography charges, according to a report.

    Taken into custody Wednesday were Dennis Perkins, 44, and his wife, Cynthia Perkins, 34, FOX 8 of New Orleans reported.

    Both husband and wife were charged with 60 counts of production of pornography involving a child under 13, as well as rape charges, authorities said.

    Dennis Perkins was additionally charged with obstruction of justice because he allegedly tossed his cellphone into a river after realizing investigators were about to arrest him while he was on a fishing trip, a source told FOX 8.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/louisiana-sheriffs-deputy-junior-high-teacher-wife-held-on-child-rape-and-porn-charges-report
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2019, 04:30:49 PM
    Just 1 year... However, the "sheriff" appeared to be scared of prison and asked for home incarceration... Not so tough when facing the reality that he's going to prison, even if it's just for a year...

    Convicted Greenville County Sheriff Will Lewis sentenced to one year in prison

    Convicted Greenville County Sheriff Will Lewis was led away from the courtroom in handcuffs Friday morning after he was sentenced to one year in prison. Judge G. Thomas Cooper Jr. sentenced Lewis to the maximum sentence for the charge of misconduct of a public officer. Shortly after the sentencing Gov. Henry McMaster issued an executive order permanently removing Lewis from the office of sheriff.

    A jury found Lewis guilty late Thursday. It was a split verdict. Jurors found Lewis not guilty of misconduct that involves not doing a public job properly.

    The charges stem from a 2017 budget trip to Charlotte during which Lewis had sex with his assistant, Savanah Nabors. Lewis testified the sex was consensual. Nabors testified that after a night of drinking, the two went back to her hotel room and she woke up with Lewis having sex with her. Nabors filed a civil lawsuit against Lewis in October 2017. A settlement was reached in October 2018. Nabors was paid nearly $100,000 from a state insurance fund in May.

    Solicitor Kevin Brackett said Lewis’ misconduct was “brazen, naked corruption” and his evasive answers and convenient memory lapses about key details that might be harmful or humiliating show he remains arrogant and cocky.

    “He has no insight into his own personal failings. His wasn’t an isolated incident. This is who he is. I don’t think he’s capable of change,” Brackett said.

    https://www.wyff4.com/article/judge-to-sentence-will-lewis-friday-after-jury-convicts-him-on-1-charge/29586717
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 25, 2019, 04:43:32 PM
    Once again the taxpayers are being held liable for the crimes of the "finest" people who "just do their job"..
    Why not liquidate all the assets of those responsible for this man's death to pay for the compensation and then tie them up to a chair and leave them to die, exactly like they did to that poor man?
    But do you know what happened? The jail administrator got sentenced to 55 hours (!) in prison for tying up a drunk man to a chair and letting him die.
    Not 55 years.
    Not 55 month
    Not even 55 days just 55 hours!
    And of course the sentence would not be served in the same prison she worked..

    County leaders agree to $12.5 million settlement in connection to inmate’s death

    Garfield County Commissioners say county officials have agreed to a settlement following the death of an inmate in custody.

    Officials say Anthony Huff was arrested on June 4, 2016, for public intoxication and was held at the Garfield County Jail. Investigators say Huff was placed in a restraint chair on June 6 and was found unresponsive in the chair on June 8. Later that day, he was pronounced dead. During his time in the chair, Huff was not given “proper amounts of food, water or medical treatment for illnesses he was suffering from,” a release from Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter read.

    An autopsy performed on June 9, 2016, said Huff died of natural causes, with the probable cause of death being chronic alcoholism due to a compulsive condition from a prior disease. In a federal lawsuit filed in 2017, lawyers allege jail employees were negligent because they should have known about Huff’s medical conditions from previous incarcerations and been aware that he took medications for heart disease, hypertension, depression, and other conditions.

    Huff started hallucinating and exhibiting delusions at some point during his incarceration and was placed in the restraint chair, the lawsuit says.

    Jail personnel didn’t receive a medical recommendation to use the chair, the lawsuit says, and jail employees didn’t check his blood pressure regularly, didn’t give him blood pressure medication and didn’t offer him hydration every two hours.

    https://kfor.com/2019/10/22/county-leaders-agree-to-12-5-million-settlement-in-connection-to-inmates-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 26, 2019, 10:07:26 AM
    An innocent deaf young man was waiting on the sidewalk for his mom to pick him up. However, he was assaulted and tazed by cops who had to make "split second decisions" because the innocent young man "didn't comply with orders" he couldn't hear because he was deaf. Not that it makes a difference to cops, all they see is "non compliance" and a challenge to their "authority" which prompts them to respond in their default mode: violence
    We have seen cops several times attacking the deaf and using that disability as an excuse for violence.

    Teen loses cochlear implant after being tased

    https://www.wate.com/news/top-stories/teen-loses-cochlear-implant-after-being-tased/?fbclid=IwAR0XpAe8-i7mdzmmeFkz_vTRQJM4gMVTSysthBaJ4WrI3JLFIPgjy5oto4A
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 27, 2019, 06:17:43 AM
    They should start a victims fund paid by the LE people themselves.


    Once again the taxpayers are being held liable for the crimes of the "finest" people who "just do their job"..
    Why not liquidate all the assets of those responsible for this man's death to pay for the compensation and then tie them up to a chair and leave them to die, exactly like they did to that poor man?
    But do you know what happened? The jail administrator got sentenced to 55 hours (!) in prison for tying up a drunk man to a chair and letting him die.
    Not 55 years.
    Not 55 month
    Not even 55 days just 55 hours!
    And of course the sentence would not be served in the same prison she worked..

    County leaders agree to $12.5 million settlement in connection to inmate’s death

    Garfield County Commissioners say county officials have agreed to a settlement following the death of an inmate in custody.

    Officials say Anthony Huff was arrested on June 4, 2016, for public intoxication and was held at the Garfield County Jail. Investigators say Huff was placed in a restraint chair on June 6 and was found unresponsive in the chair on June 8. Later that day, he was pronounced dead. During his time in the chair, Huff was not given “proper amounts of food, water or medical treatment for illnesses he was suffering from,” a release from Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter read.

    An autopsy performed on June 9, 2016, said Huff died of natural causes, with the probable cause of death being chronic alcoholism due to a compulsive condition from a prior disease. In a federal lawsuit filed in 2017, lawyers allege jail employees were negligent because they should have known about Huff’s medical conditions from previous incarcerations and been aware that he took medications for heart disease, hypertension, depression, and other conditions.

    Huff started hallucinating and exhibiting delusions at some point during his incarceration and was placed in the restraint chair, the lawsuit says.

    Jail personnel didn’t receive a medical recommendation to use the chair, the lawsuit says, and jail employees didn’t check his blood pressure regularly, didn’t give him blood pressure medication and didn’t offer him hydration every two hours.

    https://kfor.com/2019/10/22/county-leaders-agree-to-12-5-million-settlement-in-connection-to-inmates-death/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2019, 01:53:01 PM
    San Bernardino police officer is off the force after killing man who had his hands up

    A San Bernardino police officer is off the force after shooting to death a man who had put down a gun and had his hands up but refused orders to stop walking toward police.

    Interim Police Chief Eric McBride released details and body-worn camera footage Friday, Oct. 25, in a video posted on YouTube. The shooting took place Sept. 28, 2018.

    “Upon completion of our internal investigation and review process, we’ve concluded that one of our officer’s decision-making did not meet the standards held by our department or the community we serve,” McBride said in the video. “As a result he no longer works for the San Bernardino Police Department.”

    McBride did not say whether Officer Brandon Gaddie was fired or resigned.

    https://www.sbsun.com/2019/10/25/san-bernardino-police-officer-dismissed-after-fatal-shooting-da-reviewing-incident/


    Video (of dubious objectivity):
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 29, 2019, 01:02:16 PM
    Florida Police Using FINDER System to Create Lists of Gun Owners

    Earlier this month AmmoLand brought its reader a story of an alleged illegal gun list compiled by the Charlotte County Sheriff's Department using the FINDER system in Florida.

    Pawnbrokers are required to enter information on firearms transactions into the FINDER system. The system transmits the serial number of the firearm along with the make and model to the local sheriffs' department to make sure that the person pawning the gun, did not steal it. A bug in the system also transmitted the names and addresses of the transfers to local law enforcement. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Department used the information to create a list of gun owners.

    In Florida, it is a felony for law enforcement agencies to keep a list of gun owners under Florida Statute 790.335. The Charlotte County State's Attorney's Office determined that the Charlotte County Sheriff's Department did not violate any laws in compiling the list. After the results of the investigation, Florida Carry asked the Attorney General's Office of the state to carry out an independent investigation.

    AmmoLand has discovered with the help of reporter Andrew Sheets that abuse of the FINDER system appears to extend past Charlotte County into surrounding jurisdictions. It isn’t clear how far the abuses extend across the state.

    Emails obtained by Mr. Sheets and AmmoLand shows that the Charlotte County Sheriff's Department shared their list with other departments. One of the other law enforcement agencies that the Sheriff shared their list with is the North Port Police department.

    The Sarasota Sheriff's Office has also been compiling a list using the FINDER system. More disturbing is that the Sheriff provided an unredacted list of pawn transactions via email to Mr. Sheets. The file contains not only information about the firearm, but also the names of the person pawning the gun, putting them at risk of robbery and violating their privacy rights.

    AmmoLand received a tip that the FINDER system was never supposed to release the gun owner's personal information to law enforcement organizations. We spoke to a support team member off the record, and they told AmmoLand that the system has been fixed and no longer transmits anything outside the serial number and make and model of the firearm.

    https://www.ammoland.com/2019/10/florida-police-using-finder-system-to-create-lists-of-gun-owners/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 29, 2019, 01:07:47 PM
    911 call: Wilmington lieutenant left child naked and alone in vehicle outside bar

     The Wilmington Police Department is conducting an internal investigation into the actions of one of the department’s lieutenants following a 911 call that reveals he left his 8-year-old child naked and alone in a car while he was inside Ogden Tap Room.

    According to the 911 caller, whose name is redacted, the child was locked in a car and “his dad said he couldn’t get out of the car and he has to go to the bathroom.” WECT has confirmed the child’s father is Lt. Matthew Malone.

    According to the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Office, the parents told deputies the child’s clothes got wet. One of her parents took the child to the car, removed her wet clothes, wrapped her in a blanket and returned to the restaurant.

    The case was reviewed by the district attorney’s office but a spokesperson for NHCSO said it was determined the incident didn’t meet the criteria for misdemeanor child abuse.

    North Carolina’s statute on misdemeanor child abuse states (http://“any parent of a child less than 16 years of age, or any other person providing care to or supervision of such child, who inflicts physical injury, or who allows physical injury to be inflicted, or who creates or allows to be created a substantial risk of physical injury, upon or to such child by other than accidental means is guilty of the Class A1 misdemeanor of child abuse.")

    https://www.wect.com/2019/10/28/call-wilmington-lieutenant-left-daughter-naked-alone-vehicle-outside-bar/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 30, 2019, 05:27:36 PM
    “Slap the shit out of me and get it off your chest.”

    “Are you going to arrest me?”

    “No, I'm giving you permission to slap the shit out of me, and get it off your chest”


    Old guy starts to slowly and lightly move his hand as if to slap but before he finishes, the cop slaps him so hard he is knocked on the ground and as if that's not enough, the cop immediately arrests him...

    Pussy with a badge. Notice also how the other cops do nothing.

    The pussy has now been charged with a misdemeanor. Had the old man slapped him it would have been felony charges, along with a more severe beating.

    Deputy indicted for punching 61-year-old outside IHOP

    A grand jury indicted a Harris County Sheriff's Office deputy for knocking a man to the ground outside of an IHOP in 2018 after encouraging him to slap him.

    Deputy Ellison Collins was indicted for assault, according to District Attorney Kim Ogg.

    The incident happened outside of an IHOP on the Katy Freeway. Deputies were there responding to a disturbance when Collins, now 39, invited Jerry Allen Vaco, now 61, to slap him in the face.

    https://abc13.com/deputy-indicted-for-punching-61-year-old-outside-ihop/5657112/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on October 30, 2019, 06:30:48 PM
    “Slap the shit out of me and get it off your chest.”

    “Are you going to arrest me?”

    “No, I'm giving you permission to slap the shit out of me, and get it off your chest”


    Old guy starts to slowly and lightly move his hand as if to slap but before he finishes, the cop slaps him so hard he is knocked on the ground and as if that's not enough, the cop immediately arrests him...

    Pussy with a badge. Notice also how the other cops do nothing.

    The pussy has now been charged with a misdemeanor. Had the old man slapped him it would have been felony charges, along with a more severe beating.

    Deputy indicted for punching 61-year-old outside IHOP

    A grand jury indicted a Harris County Sheriff's Office deputy for knocking a man to the ground outside of an IHOP in 2018 after encouraging him to slap him.

    Deputy Ellison Collins was indicted for assault, according to District Attorney Kim Ogg.

    The incident happened outside of an IHOP on the Katy Freeway. Deputies were there responding to a disturbance when Collins, now 39, invited Jerry Allen Vaco, now 61, to slap him in the face.

    https://abc13.com/deputy-indicted-for-punching-61-year-old-outside-ihop/5657112/



    I love how the other two officers just stand around doing nothing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2019, 09:38:21 AM
    Colorado homeowner owed nothing after police SWAT shootout destroys his house, federal court rules

    A federal appeals court in Colorado ruled Tuesday that a local police department does not have to compensate a homeowner whose house was destroyed by 19 hours of gunfire between officers and an armed shoplifting suspect who had chosen to barricade himself inside to evade arrest.

    Judges on the U.S. District Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit upheld a lower court’s decision, ruling that the city of Greenwood Village, near Denver, did not owe homeowner Leo Lech any additional compensation, even though the suspect was a stranger to the homeowner, the Denver Post reported.

    Lech’s home, valued at $580,000, was marked for demolition in 2015 after a SWAT team used armored vehicles to breach the structure, deployed tear gas and explosives and shot 40 mm rounds in an effort to drive the suspect out after he refused to surrender and shot at officers, the Post reported. The suspect broke into the house when no one was home to use it as a hideout.

    “The bottom line is that destroying somebody’s home and throwing them out in the street by a government agency for whatever circumstances is not acceptable in a civilized society,” Lech told the Post. “It destroyed our lives completely.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/colorado-federal-court-rules-police-dept-owes-homeowner-nothing-after-swat-destroys-his-house

    (https://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AAJC3Wg.img) (https://media.9news.com/assets/KUSA/images/287804846/287804846_1140x641.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 06, 2019, 10:00:43 AM
    This is some crazy S#$%$

    https://reason.com/2019/11/06/a-michigan-man-underpaid-his-property-taxes-by-8-41-the-county-seized-his-property-sold-it-and-kept-the-profits

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2019, 10:38:16 AM
    This is some crazy S#$%$

    https://reason.com/2019/11/06/a-michigan-man-underpaid-his-property-taxes-by-8-41-the-county-seized-his-property-sold-it-and-kept-the-profits



    Insane. Just like civil asset forfeiture and ticket quotas, it's another state created and run racket. As if Detroit wasn't enough of a shithole.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2019, 01:13:11 PM
    The little pussies feel like they got "stabbed in the back" because the people voted for more oversight on cops... While it still doesn't address the (un)accountability of police, even this little step has the crooks reacting.

    NYC voters approve tougher oversight of NYPD

    New York City voters passed a ballot measure Tuesday that will boost a government watchdog’s oversight of the police department — coming just a day after the resignation of Police Commissioner James O’Neill and after years of tense cop-community relations.

    The amendment to the city constitution gives the Civilian Complaint Review Board more power to investigate cops it suspects lied to the panel regarding alleged brutality or other misconduct.

    https://nypost.com/2019/11/05/nyc-voters-approve-tougher-oversight-of-nypd/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 06, 2019, 01:43:57 PM
    Colorado homeowner owed nothing after police SWAT shootout destroys his house, federal court rules

    A federal appeals court in Colorado ruled Tuesday that a local police department does not have to compensate a homeowner whose house was destroyed by 19 hours of gunfire between officers and an armed shoplifting suspect who had chosen to barricade himself inside to evade arrest.

    Judges on the U.S. District Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit upheld a lower court’s decision, ruling that the city of Greenwood Village, near Denver, did not owe homeowner Leo Lech any additional compensation, even though the suspect was a stranger to the homeowner, the Denver Post reported.

    Lech’s home, valued at $580,000, was marked for demolition in 2015 after a SWAT team used armored vehicles to breach the structure, deployed tear gas and explosives and shot 40 mm rounds in an effort to drive the suspect out after he refused to surrender and shot at officers, the Post reported. The suspect broke into the house when no one was home to use it as a hideout.

    “The bottom line is that destroying somebody’s home and throwing them out in the street by a government agency for whatever circumstances is not acceptable in a civilized society,” Lech told the Post. “It destroyed our lives completely.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/colorado-federal-court-rules-police-dept-owes-homeowner-nothing-after-swat-destroys-his-house

    (https://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AAJC3Wg.img) (https://media.9news.com/assets/KUSA/images/287804846/287804846_1140x641.jpg)


    That Really is Unbelievable
    And Totally & Utterly Stupid of The Court.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 06, 2019, 01:48:30 PM

    That Really is Unbelievable
    And Totally & Utterly Stupid of The Court.

    I wonder if homeowners insurance covered anything. 

    Horrible story. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 06, 2019, 01:51:24 PM
    I wonder if homeowners insurance covered anything. 

    Horrible story. 

    I would sincerely hope he was compensated
    By insurance or State as the house was destroyed
    Through No Fault of His.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2019, 01:54:54 PM
    I wonder if homeowners insurance covered anything.  

    Horrible story.  

    Quote
    Lech's attorney told the Post that his home insurance company paid him $345,000 for the damage but that amount did not come close to covering additional costs related to personal property damage, demolishing and rebuilding the home and taking out a new mortgage on the new house.

    “It’s a miracle insurance covered any of it in the first place,” attorney Rachel Maxam told the Post. “Insurance is for fires, floods. There’s no ‘police blew up my house’ insurance.”

    As long as they are not forced to pay out of their pockets or their retirement fund, these things will keep happening.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2019, 03:52:15 PM
    Fort Worth police officer jailed on murder charge after resigning in shooting that killed woman in home

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/10/1862/1048/aaronDean.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend, killing her, has been jailed on a murder charge, online court records revealed Monday. The charge against Aaron Dean was made public hours after the officer resigned from the force. Bond was not immediately set.

    Dean's resignation letter read: "Effective immediately I am tendering my resignation from the Fort Worth Police Department." The letter was released by the state's largest police union, the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas. The group’s executive director, Charley Wilkison, said that Dean has not yet hired an attorney but that one will be provided with financial support from the union.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation

    "Only the finest people"...

    Ever notice how on incidents involving the questionable conduct of cops, there is almost immediate character assassination of the civilians involved by trying to portray them as some sort of dangerous career criminals with lengthy records? Not quite the same standard for cops as you rarely hear about a cop's criminal record or any history of abuse or complaints. It has been revealed now that the cop who killed an innocent woman through the window of her own home had been charged with assault and the police department knew about it.

    It's also interesting that during his interview with the police department, when asked "Will you be able to kill somebody if you have to", he instantly replies "no problem"....

    In job interview, officer who shot woman discusses use of force, desire to be a cop

    https://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/crime/article237029399.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on November 06, 2019, 03:59:37 PM

    That Really is Unbelievable
    And Totally & Utterly Stupid of The Court.

    And homeowners policies usually exclude property damage caused by "governmental action."   ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 06, 2019, 09:33:06 PM
    Cop was doing 66 in a 30 mph zone without emergency lights or sirens when he hit and killed an 11 year old kid riding a minibike. It took 50 seconds for the cop to get out of the car and look at what he had done but didn't even offer the child any help. Of course the cop was not charged.

    Family wants public to watch dashcam of 11-year-old’s fatal crash with deputy

    It has been 23 weeks since Norman Hood died after a Calhoun County deputy hit the 11-year-old riding a minibike. Michigan State Police have released dash camera footage from the moment it happened on May 28. Much of it was blurred by MSP as a redacted version.

    FOX 17 obtained the video from the Calhoun County deputy’s cruiser through the Freedom of Information Act. According to MSP, the deputy was traveling 66 mph in a 30 mph zone. The law enforcement officer was en route to an emergency call but did not have emergency lights or sirens on when the collision happened.

    According to video, CPR and resuscitating measures were not done in the minutes prior to the paramedics' arrival.

    "He didn't treat him like he was a human," said Regina Hale. "He didn't look for a pulse. He didn't do CPR. He just flashed a light in his face."

    https://fox17online.com/2019/11/05/norman-hood-family-dascham/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 07, 2019, 12:08:36 AM
    Cop was doing 66 in a 30 mph zone without emergency lights or sirens when he hit and killed an 11 year old kid riding a minibike. It took 50 seconds for the cop to get out of the car and look at what he had done but didn't even offer the child any help. Of course the cop was not charged.

    Family wants public to watch dashcam of 11-year-old’s fatal crash with deputy

    It has been 23 weeks since Norman Hood died after a Calhoun County deputy hit the 11-year-old riding a minibike. Michigan State Police have released dash camera footage from the moment it happened on May 28. Much of it was blurred by MSP as a redacted version.

    FOX 17 obtained the video from the Calhoun County deputy’s cruiser through the Freedom of Information Act. According to MSP, the deputy was traveling 66 mph in a 30 mph zone. The law enforcement officer was en route to an emergency call but did not have emergency lights or sirens on when the collision happened.

    According to video, CPR and resuscitating measures were not done in the minutes prior to the paramedics' arrival.

    "He didn't treat him like he was a human," said Regina Hale. "He didn't look for a pulse. He didn't do CPR. He just flashed a light in his face."

    https://fox17online.com/2019/11/05/norman-hood-family-dascham/




    Yet another Scumbag
    I can only Hope The Same or In fact Worse Happens To Him
    And He’s Left To Die In Agony & Slowly - If it were my Kid
    I’d Hunt The Fucker Down & Do Him In - Give 2 Hoots it Being A Cop.
    Eliminate it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2019, 03:36:51 PM
    NYPD cop among 27 arrested in massive $18 million insurance fraud scam: feds

    An NYPD cop was arrested by feds as part of the take down of a massive $18 million insurance fraud scam, authorities Thursday.

    Officer Yaniris Deleon was taken into custody while on duty in Manhattan Wednesday by federal agents with drawn assault weapons, sources said.

    Nurses at city hospitals are among 26 other defendants in the case.

    Deleon, along with four NYPD 911 operators and a supervisor, are accused of selling scammers names, phone numbers and confidential information about car crash victims they had access to as part of their jobs. The nurses are accused of similar conduct.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-bronx-cop-arrested-by-fbi-for-fraud-20191107-xlx7r4syjzcdvlh5bm3nbzn4qi-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2019, 03:43:41 PM
    Tempe Police Tased Black Man in His Home as He Held His Baby

    The use-of-force incident from June 15, which can be seen in body camera footage posted online, followed a tense, five-minute standoff between the officers and the 31-year-old father, Ivaughn Oakry, who demanded they leave and refused to let go of his child. Oakry was later arrested and charged with misdemeanor assault for allegedly pushing the mother of his children while intoxicated, and with child endangerment for picking up his baby before he was tased. Tempe city prosecutors dropped both charges in August.

    Tempe police published its own press release at about 10 a.m., denying the child was hurt. In its statement, the police department said no use-of-force violations occurred, but that it has implemented new training procedures in light of the incident. Tempe PD's full statement at the bottom of this story.



    https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/video-tempe-police-tased-black-man-home-baby-law-firm-matter-11381035
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on November 07, 2019, 03:57:08 PM
    Cop was doing 66 in a 30 mph zone without emergency lights or sirens when he hit and killed an 11 year old kid riding a minibike. It took 50 seconds for the cop to get out of the car and look at what he had done but didn't even offer the child any help. Of course the cop was not charged.

    Family wants public to watch dashcam of 11-year-old’s fatal crash with deputy

    It has been 23 weeks since Norman Hood died after a Calhoun County deputy hit the 11-year-old riding a minibike. Michigan State Police have released dash camera footage from the moment it happened on May 28. Much of it was blurred by MSP as a redacted version.

    FOX 17 obtained the video from the Calhoun County deputy’s cruiser through the Freedom of Information Act. According to MSP, the deputy was traveling 66 mph in a 30 mph zone. The law enforcement officer was en route to an emergency call but did not have emergency lights or sirens on when the collision happened.

    According to video, CPR and resuscitating measures were not done in the minutes prior to the paramedics' arrival.

    "He didn't treat him like he was a human," said Regina Hale. "He didn't look for a pulse. He didn't do CPR. He just flashed a light in his face."

    https://fox17online.com/2019/11/05/norman-hood-family-dascham/



    Reporter stated that the kid landed 20 yards from the vehicle.  According to CHP,
    I traveled 50 ft after being struck from behind, so I have an idea of the injuries.
    I was wearing a helmet, though.  That poor kid and his family.   :'(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 07, 2019, 07:35:58 PM

    Former Westfield Police Detective Brian Fanion shot his wife in the head and staged it as a suicide, prosecutors say

    Retired Westfield Police Detective Brian Fanion on Thursday denied a murder charge brought in connection with the death of his wife last year, which prosecutors said he staged as a suicide.

    Amy Fanion, 51, died on May 8, 2018. Her death was originally investigated as a suicide — a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Fanion told his colleagues at the time of her death.

    Assistant District Attorney Mary Sandstrom told a Hampden Superior Court judge Fanion was having an affair with another woman, and reluctant to surrender half his pension in the wake of a divorce. She also said forensic experts found the trajectory of the bullet and other factors made a suicide “impossible.”

    https://www.masslive.com/news/2019/11/former-westfield-police-detective-brian-fanion-shot-his-wife-in-the-head-and-staged-it-as-a-suicide-prosecutors-say.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 08, 2019, 02:05:31 PM
    "Only the finest people"...

    Once again, we are dealing with criminal gangs. More than that, this was a police network of child molesters and showcases the absurdity of cops investigating themselves.

    As if the cops sexually abusing young prospects was not enough, now the police department is violating the law and withholding the records.

    Years of scandals, investigations, and lawsuits bruise police morale in Louisville

    Two former police officers in Louisville, Ky., are in prison. The mentorship program they used to sexually pursue minors is no longer operating. Months after their guilty pleas, though, the city’s residents still wait for an honest accounting of the department’s investigation into the officers’ crimes.

    The Louisville Metro Police Department initially denied a request for records by the Courier-Journal. Now, the department may be mandated to turn over thousands of documents related to the internal investigation after the state’s attorney general ruled that their denial violated state law.

    The records pertain to two former officers, Kenneth Betts and Brandon Wood, who stand accused of using their positions as mentors in the department’s Youth Explorer program to sexually pursue, exploit and abuse teenage participants.

    Betts, 35, was sentenced to 16 years in federal prison on charges of enticement of a minor and child pornography, both of which involved children he had been entrusted to mentor. Wood, 33, is serving five years for sexually abusing a teen he met in the program. Both are central to the scandal that grew to be about much more than just two officers.

    In the lawsuits, several other LMPD officers are accused of acting negligently when informed of sexual impropriety by officers like Betts and Wood in the Youth Explorer program.

    Retired Maj. Curtis Flaherty has been accused of turning a blind eye to sexual misconduct in the program. He is named in each of the seven lawsuits explicitly.

    Flaherty started the Youth Explorer program in Louisville, and mentored Betts when he was a cadet. Thomas said the trio of Flaherty, Betts and Wood perpetuated a cycle of mock accountability that allowed the abuse to flourish for years.

     According to Thomas, Betts’ victims would report their abuse to Wood, who would take their concerns to Flaherty, where they would be dead on arrival. The same thing allegedly happened in reverse, with Wood’s victims going to Betts.

    Flaherty held dual roles within the department. He ran the Explorer program while overseeing LMPD’s Public Integrity Unit – the department responsible for internal investigations. Louisville Metro Council President David James, himself a former police officer, said Flaherty’s positions in the department were a clear conflict of interest.

    “So, the case went under investigation,” James said. “During the investigation, the chief allowed officer Betts to resign from the police department. And once that resignation took place, he closed the investigation.”

    Louisville Metro Police Chief Steve Conrad closed the case by exception, which means the department declined to pursue charges after the officer resigned. Betts resigned in 2014 without any sexual misconduct marks on his record, and went on to work as a code enforcement officer at a nearby police department from 2015 to 2017.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/years-of-scandals-investigations-and-lawsuits-bruise-police-morale-in-louisville
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 08, 2019, 03:31:08 PM
    http://bronx.news12.com/story/41296181/nypd-employees-among-27-arrested-in-alleged-bribery-scheme



    Holy s
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 08, 2019, 05:34:45 PM
    As it has been mentioned many times in this topic, we are dealing with violent criminal gangs.
    One of the few times that cops are indicted for beating someone. Maybe that's because the person they assaulted happened to be an undercover cop. As expected, the scumbags are represented by the cop union lawyers.

    St. Louis cops indicted for assaulting undercover officer posing as protester: 'Gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads'

    hen a judge acquitted a white St. Louis police officer in September 2017 for fatally shooting a young black man, the city's cops braced for massive protests. But St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Officer Dustin Boone wasn't just prepared for the unrest - he was pumped.

    "It's gonna get IGNORANT tonight!!" he texted another officer on Sept. 15, 2017, the day of the verdict. "It's gonna be a lot of fun beating the hell out of these shitheads once the sun goes down and nobody can tell us apart!!!!"

    Two days later, prosecutors say, that's exactly what Boone did to one black protester. Boone, 35, and two other officers, Randy Hays, 31, and Christopher Myers, 27, threw a man to the ground and viciously kicked him and beat him with riot shields, even though he was complying with their instructions.

    But the three cops had no idea that the man was actually a 22-year police veteran working undercover, whom they beat so badly that he couldn't eat and lost 20 pounds.

    On Thursday, a federal grand jury indicted the three officers in the assault. They also indicted the men and another officer, Bailey Colletta, 25, for destroying evidence and lying about the attack. Prosecutors released text messages showing the officers bragging about assaulting protesters, with Hays even noting that "going rogue does feel good."

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/midwest/ct-st-louis-police-officers-charged-in-beating-20181129-story,amp.html

    Former St. Louis Metropolitan Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Undercover Officer Believed to Be Protestor

    Randy Hays, 32, a former police officer with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD) pleaded guilty today in federal court in the Eastern District of Missouri to one count of using unreasonable and excessive force against a fellow SLMPD police officer, who was believed to be a protestor while the officer was working undercover in downtown St. Louis during protests following the 2017 acquittal of a former SLMPD officer on a state murder charge. Hays’ co-defendant Bailey Colletta pled guilty to committing perjury related to this assault on Sept. 6, 2019.  Co-defendants and former SLMPD officers Dustin Boone and Christopher Myers remain under indictment on federal charges related to the assault and subsequent cover-up. They have pleaded not guilty.

    According to the plea agreement, in addition to facing a maximum of 10 years in prison, Hays must forfeit his law enforcement certification. A sentencing date has not yet been set.

    The trial of Boone and Myers is set for Dec. 2, 2019.

    This case is being investigated by the St. Louis Division of the FBI and is being prosecuted by First Assistant United States Attorney Carrie Costantin of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and Special Litigation Counsel Fara Gold and Trial Attorney Janea Lamar of the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Criminal Section.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-st-louis-metropolitan-police-officer-pleads-guilty-assaulting-undercover-officer
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 09, 2019, 11:05:58 AM
    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-metro-nypd-cop-guilty-drug-trafficking-20190307-story.html

    Geez
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2019, 03:21:10 PM
    Apparently it is illegal to eat a sandwich on a train platform in Califronia.
    Good to see that the cops focus on the crime epidemic of felonious sandwich eaters instead of wasting taxpayer money on petty crime such as rapes, murders or burglaries. It took 4 of them to conduct this high risk operation!

    BART police handcuff, cite man for eating sandwich on platform

    A Concord man is speaking out after he was handcuffed and detained by BART police for eating on the platform at the Pleasant Hill station. Steve Foster of Concord tells ABC7 News this all happened Monday morning at the Pleasant Hill station when he was approached by a BART police officer.

    "I was just up there eating my sandwich waiting for the train to come."

    Foster says the officer, wearing the name badge McCormick, walked past several other people eating and drinking on the platform and confronted him. His girlfriend caught the interaction on her cellphone. He was even handcuffed.

    BART says state law prohibits people from eating or drinking in the paid portions of the station. In other words, from the time you enter the turnstiles to the time to exit them at your destination.BART released a statement on Friday in response:

    "He was not arrested. He was cited for eating, which is a violation of state law," said spokeswoman Alicia Trost. She adds the man was lawfully handcuffed after refusing to provide his name multiple times. Once he provided his name, he was cited and released."



    https://abc7news.com/society/bart-police-handcuff-cite-man-for-eating-sandwich-on-platform/5684480/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2019, 03:24:23 PM
    Intra-gang violence?

    Mannford police chief allegedly killed by one of his officers

    The Mannford, Oklahoma, police chief was killed by one of his officers while the two were in Florida for a conference, according to the Escambia County Sheriff's Office.

    Chief Lucky Miller and Mannford Officer Michael Nealey were in Pensacola Beach, Florida, attending the Southeast Public Safety Training Conference at the Hilton.

    The Sheriff's Office said there was a physical altercation between Miller and Nealey.

    Miller, 44, died from his injuries.

    https://ktul.com/news/local/mannford-police-chief-killed-in-florida-by-mannford-officer
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on November 11, 2019, 03:36:47 PM
    Intra-gang violence?

    Mannford police chief allegedly killed by one of his officers

    The Mannford, Oklahoma, police chief was killed by one of his officers while the two were in Florida for a conference, according to the Escambia County Sheriff's Office.

    Chief Lucky Miller and Mannford Officer Michael Nealey were in Pensacola Beach, Florida, attending the Southeast Public Safety Training Conference at the Hilton.

    The Sheriff's Office said there was a physical altercation between Miller and Nealey.

    Miller, 44, died from his injuries.

    https://ktul.com/news/local/mannford-police-chief-killed-in-florida-by-mannford-officer

    Fighting over the TV remote?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 11, 2019, 03:44:56 PM
    Only the finest people...

    Imagine someone getting so shit faced that he strips naked in a night club and starts dancing... Then when the cops arrive they give him a ride to the police station so he can get in his car and drive home.

    While the police chief mentions that the clown's actions "have brought discredit and embarrassment upon the Conway Police Department" he proceeds to say it "could have resulted in your arrest for Public Intoxication". Why wasn't he arrested if he was so shit faced and then allowed to drive in that condition?

    Conway police officer suspended after dancing naked at nightclub

    A Conway police officer has been suspended after he was recorded dancing naked at a Little Rock nightclub last month.

    Officer Cebron Hackett was suspended without pay for 30 days and ordered to complete remedial training. He was off-duty and appeared to be "highly intoxicated" when he removed all his clothes at Discovery Nightclub on Oct. 13, Chief Jody Spradlin wrote in a letter of suspension.

    "Your actions have brought discredit and embarrassment upon the Conway Police Department and could have resulted in your arrest for Public Intoxication," the letter says.

    Hackett declined to comment.

    The letter was released under the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act, along with cellphone video from the nightclub. The video shows Hackett completely nude and dancing to "Don't Stop Believin'" by Journey. Surrounded by onlookers, Hackett stumbles into a table and is grabbed by a security guard. Hackett pushes away the guard and stumbles onto the floor. Two security guards eventually escort Hackett, still naked, away from the crowd. Hackett was kicked out of the club.

    What happened after that is not entirely clear. According to the letter, a Pulaski County sheriff's deputy called Conway police to give Hackett a ride. Someone then drove Hackett near the Conway Police Department, where his personal vehicle was parked. Hackett then drove himself home, the letter says.

    Spradlin wrote in the letter that not enough time had passed for Hackett to "safely and legally drive a motor vehicle."



    https://katv.com/news/local/conway-police-officer-suspended-after-dancing-naked-at-nightclub
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 12, 2019, 07:51:21 PM
    Surveillance everywhere.

    School apps track students from classroom to bathroom, and parents are struggling to keep up

    When Christian Chase wants to take a bathroom break at his high school, he can’t just raise his hand.

    Instead, the 17-year-old senior makes a special request on his school-issued Chromebook computer. A teacher approves it pending any red flags in the system, such as another student he should avoid out in the hall at the same time, then logs him back in on his return. If he were out of class for more than a set amount of time, the application would summon an administrator to check on him.

    Heritage High School in Loudoun County, Va., introduced the software, called e-Hallpass, in September as a way to track trips to the bathroom, the nurse’s office, the principal or other places on campus. It collects the data for each student’s comings and goings so approved administrators can see pass histories or look for patterns.

    As technology becomes more pervasive in schools, parents and students are getting a lesson in data privacy. Every year, they face the overwhelming task of sorting through the benefits, drawbacks and privacy implications of each piece of educational software. Families have to decide if they are comfortable with how information is being collected and used and whether they want to — or even can — opt their kids out.

    Hundreds of applications, big and small, are being used at schools across the country to do everything from track homework to modify behavior. They can collect data about intelligence, disciplinary issues, personalities and schedules.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/10/29/school-apps-track-students-classroom-bathroom-parents-are-struggling-keep-up
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2019, 12:00:32 AM
    "If you don't want to do the time, don't do the crime".. This man, like several other innocent people, did the time but didn't do the crime but don't expect someone to end in prison for ruining this man's life. For the government it's always an "unfortunate mistake" when innocent people end up in prison.

    LA man wrongly convicted in series of Boyle Heights robberies freed from prison after 11 years

    A Los Angeles man who was wrongly convicted in 2008 for a series of armed robberies in Boyle Heights was released from prison Tuesday, prosecutors announced.

    Ruben Martinez Jr. became a suspect in a string of unsolved armed robberies at the same auto body shop after eye witnesses identified him as the assailant, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office. His alibis were not fully presented and Martinez Jr. was later convicted of nine counts of second-degree robbery during a retrial for the case.

    He served 11 years of a nearly 48-year prison sentence. Martinez was found factually innocent of the crimes and was permanently released from prison Tuesday.

    "I did not do this time by myself. My family did time. My wife did time with me, did the 11 years with me. I couldn't do it on my own," Martinez said.

    Over the years, Martinez maintained his innocence, filing several appeals that were denied. He and his wife, Maria, then contacted the District Attorney's Conviction Review Unit and claimed that he was at work when two of the crimes were committed.

    https://abc7.com/la-man-wrongly-convicted-of-serial-robbery-freed-from-prison/5693308/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2019, 12:36:35 AM
    A step in the right direction. Effectively the government, as usual, violated the Constitution on several occasions.

    Government must have reasonable suspicion of digital contraband before searching electronic devices at the US Border

    In a major victory for privacy rights, a federal court in Boston today ruled that the government’s suspicionless searches of international travelers’ smartphones and laptops at airports and other U.S. ports of entry violate the Fourth Amendment. The ruling came in a lawsuit, Alasaad v. McAleenan, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and ACLU of Massachusetts, on behalf of 11 travelers whose smartphones and laptops were searched without individualized suspicion at U.S. ports of entry.

    “This ruling significantly advances Fourth Amendment protections for the millions of international travelers who enter the United States every year,” said Esha Bhandari, staff attorney with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “By putting an end to the government’s ability to conduct suspicionless fishing expeditions, the court reaffirms that the border is not a lawless place and that we don’t lose our privacy rights when we travel.”

    “This is a great day for travelers who now can cross the international border without fear that the government will, in the absence of any suspicion, ransack the extraordinarily sensitive information we all carry in our electronic devices," said Sophia Cope, EFF senior staff attorney.

    The district court order puts an end to CBP and ICE’s "asserted authority" to search and seize travelers’ devices for purposes far afield from the enforcement of immigration and customs laws. Border officers must now demonstrate individualized suspicion of contraband before they can search a traveler’s device.

    The number of electronic device searches at U.S. ports of entry has increased significantly. Last year, CBP conducted more than 33,000 searches, almost four times the number from just three years prior.

    International travelers returning to the United States have reported numerous cases of improper searches in recent months. A border officer searched plaintiff Zainab Merchant’s phone, despite her informing the officer that it contained privileged attorney-client communications. An immigration officer at Boston Logan Airport reportedly searched an incoming Harvard freshman’s cell phone and laptop, reprimanded the student for friends’ social media postings expressing views critical of the U.S. government, and denied the student entry into the country following the search.

    The opinion is here: https://www.aclu.org/legal-document/alasaad-v-mcaleenan-opinion-summary-judgment.

    https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/federal-court-rules-suspicionless-searches-travelers-phones-and-laptops
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 13, 2019, 04:34:16 PM
    http://www.wbrz.com/news/despite-driving-nearly-double-the-speed-limit-no-charges-for-off-duty-cop-in-crash-that-killed-infant?fbclid=IwAR2kc_N75cv3ArO5v4Zot0aLGhfAxPRhcT4SgqkK1dGGI_frJQZ_j2u5FG0



    Crazy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 13, 2019, 04:46:10 PM
    http://www.wbrz.com/news/despite-driving-nearly-double-the-speed-limit-no-charges-for-off-duty-cop-in-crash-that-killed-infant?fbclid=IwAR2kc_N75cv3ArO5v4Zot0aLGhfAxPRhcT4SgqkK1dGGI_frJQZ_j2u5FG0



    Crazy

    Investigators said Manuel was driving his personal vehicle, a Chevrolet Corvette, at a speed of 94 mph when he slammed into an SUV. That's nearly double the posted speed limit of 50 mph on that stretch of road.

    The crash killed a 1-year-old who was riding in the other vehicle.

     :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 17, 2019, 04:54:38 PM
    The "brave hero" attacked a teen with no arms and no legs... And then arrested another teen who was filming the attack...

    A 15-year-old with no arms or legs was tackled and pinned by a sheriff’s deputy in a ‘horrific’ video

    The shirtless 15-year-old screams as he lies facedown on the kitchen floor of his Tucson group home. He has no arms or legs, so he can’t flee or fight back. But a sheriff’s deputy at least twice his size is crouching over him and pinning him to the ground, using his body weight to restrain the quadruple amputee.

    The eight-minute cellphone video, which was first published by KOLD, has now prompted an internal affairs investigation at the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. A spokesman told The Washington Post on Friday that the deputy in the video, Manuel Van Santen, has been placed on administrative leave.

    But Pima County Public Defender Joel Feinman told The Washington Post that the disturbing incident likely wouldn’t have come to light if it weren’t for another teenager at the group home, who recorded the confrontation and then had his head pushed into the wall by deputies.

    While most information about the teens is being withheld to protect their privacy, Feinman said that Immanuel, the 15-year-old quadruple amputee, is in state custody because he was abandoned by his parents. On the morning of Sept. 26, an adult who works at the group home called police to report that Immanuel had knocked over a trash can and was yelling and screaming. Feinman isn’t sure what got the teenager riled up, and, in his opinion, it doesn’t matter.

    The deputy from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department who responded to the call determined that Immanuel was disturbing the peace and decided to restrain him, Feinman said. That’s when C.J., a 16-year-old who also lives at the group home, began surreptitiously recording from an adjoining room.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/11/15/pima-county-sheriffs-office-year-old-video-quadruple-amputee/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 18, 2019, 01:20:30 PM
    The "brave hero" attacked a teen with no arms and no legs... And then arrested another teen who was filming the attack...

    A 15-year-old with no arms or legs was tackled and pinned by a sheriff’s deputy in a ‘horrific’ video

    The shirtless 15-year-old screams as he lies facedown on the kitchen floor of his Tucson group home. He has no arms or legs, so he can’t flee or fight back. But a sheriff’s deputy at least twice his size is crouching over him and pinning him to the ground, using his body weight to restrain the quadruple amputee.

    The eight-minute cellphone video, which was first published by KOLD, has now prompted an internal affairs investigation at the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. A spokesman told The Washington Post on Friday that the deputy in the video, Manuel Van Santen, has been placed on administrative leave.

    But Pima County Public Defender Joel Feinman told The Washington Post that the disturbing incident likely wouldn’t have come to light if it weren’t for another teenager at the group home, who recorded the confrontation and then had his head pushed into the wall by deputies.

    While most information about the teens is being withheld to protect their privacy, Feinman said that Immanuel, the 15-year-old quadruple amputee, is in state custody because he was abandoned by his parents. On the morning of Sept. 26, an adult who works at the group home called police to report that Immanuel had knocked over a trash can and was yelling and screaming. Feinman isn’t sure what got the teenager riled up, and, in his opinion, it doesn’t matter.

    The deputy from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department who responded to the call determined that Immanuel was disturbing the peace and decided to restrain him, Feinman said. That’s when C.J., a 16-year-old who also lives at the group home, began surreptitiously recording from an adjoining room.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/11/15/pima-county-sheriffs-office-year-old-video-quadruple-amputee/




    Absolute Fucking ArseWipe Cop

    I can only Hope He Has His Arms & Legs Removed
    Fucking Lowlife Bastard Scumbag 

    If there is Karma he’ll Get Battered To Fuck
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 19, 2019, 01:27:43 PM
    "Only the finest people"...

    Cop is caught molesting girl in bathroom and threatens her mother, Oklahoma police say

    An Oklahoma police officer is accused of multiple sex crimes of children, according to KFOR and other media outlets.

    Bradley Don Goodin, 45, is charged with “three counts of lewd molestation and two counts of child sexual abuse in separate cases filed Thursday in Creek County District Court,” Tulsa World.com reported.

    An affidavit obtained by Tulsa World alleges “a parent of one of the victims walked into a bathroom on Oct. 5 while Goodin had his hand down the pants of a 9-year-old girl.” When Goodin was confronted, he threatened to physically harm the child’s mother, the affidavit said.

    Goodin is also accused of touching an 11-year-old girl inappropriately on multiple occasions, the Sapulpa Times said.

    “The third time the defendant explained what happened,” an investigator wrote in the affidavit obtained by Tulsa World. “He said his watchband that he wears on his left wrist got caught in the shirt the victim was wearing and that must have been what the witness saw and mistook as him touching her.”

    Goodin is an officer with the Bristow Police Department, which released a statement via Facebook that said Goodin is on paid leave.

    https://www.star-telegram.com/news/nation-world/national/article237417759.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 20, 2019, 09:42:51 AM
    A woman stuck in stop and go traffic was moving along at 6 mph and a cop rear ended her at 68 mph... The woman luckily made it out alive but she was in a coma for 4 weeks and suffered traumatic brain injuries.

    But remember, cops are "specially trained" and can drive over the speed limit, ignore traffic rules and are exempt from laws regarding cell phone usage or even watching videos on their vehicle's screen...

    Yet, this scumbag was only cited for "following too closely".... And we are talking about someone with a long history of traffic accidents, this was his 8th at fault incident.


    'Grand Theft Auto' video playing when officer slams into car, investigation finds

    A distracted driver doing nearly 70 miles per hour in stop-and-go rush hour traffic on Interstate 85 crashed into a woman’s car, nearly killing her.

    That distracted driver was a Gwinnett County police officer and a Grand Theft Auto video was playing in his car at the time.

    “How you holding up, boss?” asked an officer on police body camera video.

    Gwinnett County police Officer Todd Ramsey said in the moments after the crash on I-85. he didn’t even know who he hit.

    “Do you know what car it is? He says he doesn’t know,” said an officer.

    Channel 2 Action News filed an open records request for the internal Gwinnett County police investigation into the crash to find out. It shows Ramsey had multiple browser screens open on his onboard computer terminal, pulling a large amount of data.

    It states that before getting on the highway, Ramsey was sitting and watching a Grand Theft Auto video and that video was still playing at the time of the crash. Ramsey told investigators he had a problem with his eye or contact.

    “That terminal in the vehicle certainly not intended for watching Grand Theft Auto videos?” Gray asked.

    The only citation issued to Ramsey was for following too closely.

    Channel 2 Action News wanted to ask Gwinnett County police why Ramsey didn’t face any other charges, but they would not talk to us, citing a pending claim and potential litigation.

    We filed an open records request for his disciplinary records and found this was Ramsey’s eighth at-fault accident.

    https://www.wsbtv.com/news/2-investigates/cop-crashed-into-car-while-playing-grand-theft-auto-video-investigation-finds/1009924685
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 22, 2019, 05:27:14 AM
    https://news.yahoo.com/ive-dying-25-years-cop-015659608.html


     :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 03, 2019, 02:37:52 PM
    Ex-Chicago police commander spared prison for collecting dead mom’s Social Security checks for years
    Chicago Tribune ^ | 3 Dec 2019 | Jason Meisner
    Posted on 12/3/2019, 5:09:00 PM by csvset

    A former Chicago police commander once considered a rising star in the department was spared federal prison Tuesday for pocketing more than $360,000 in Social Security payments intended for his mother that he continued to collect for nearly 25 years after her death.

    U.S. District Judge Manish Shah sentenced Kenneth Johnson to two years of probation and ordered him to serve the first six months in community confinement, likely at the Salvation Army.

    . In handing down the sentence, U.S. District Judge Manish Shah said Johnson’s decision to betray the public’s trust was “infuriating.” “How many times (as a police commander) did you plead with people to come forward and accept responsibly for something?” Shah said. “Yet all that while, there was a crime being committed that you knew all about, and you did nothing to stop it.”

    Johnson, 55, pleading guilty in May to theft of government funds, admitting he bilked the Social Security Administration out of a total of $363,064 from the time of his mother’s death in May 1994 to November 2017 when the scheme was uncovered. In seeking up to two years in prison, federal prosecutors revealed in a court filing that Johnson withdrew some of the stolen funds from an ATM at the Englewood District police station. In 2016, Johnson used stolen funds to pay for a hotel room in Phoenix, according to the filing. Two months later, he used other Social Security payments for round-trip airfare to Los Angeles to attend a “crime-fighters conference,” prosecutors said.

    The scheme was eventually unraveled by a watchdog arm of the Social Security Administration that red-flagged Johnson’s mother’s account in 2017 because she had not used Medicare, even though at that point she would have been 96, according to the prosecution filing..

    (Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 03, 2019, 03:14:53 PM
    https://news.yahoo.com/ive-dying-25-years-cop-015659608.html


     :(

    This story is both horrific and outrageous. Look at what this cop got away with (and still does). The judges, prosecutors and doctors are also to blame for this travesty.

    The cop was found guilty of 3 counts of sexual assault of his daughter's 12 year old friend. He faced up to 20 years in prison (not much for this type of crime but it's still something considering he was a cop). However, the Judge came to his rescue and claimed the female prosecutor had too much "emotional involvement" in the case and ordered a new trial. Quite the privilege that cops enjoy...

    It took 7 years or legal malarkey before a new trial could ultimately begin. At that point the cop started "dying"...

    In 1995 the cop must again appear in court (normal people who don't show up in court usually get arrested) but he claimed he had heart failure and was on a transplant list or he would die within a year.

    The prosecutors delay the trial.

    A year passes, the cop has not received a transplant and has not died either.

    But he has retired comfortably in Florida, going on trips (when he claimed that he couldn't even travel due to ill health) but he keeps being "on the verge of death" every time the court bothers him.

    In dozens of filings and phone calls to the Vermont court, the cop kept delaying or attempting to postpone his trial his case, every time claiming that is dying in one way or another....

    In 2012, he claimed he had been removed from the transplant list because his situation was so dire.

    In 2014, he claimed he was undergoing a surgical procedure with up to an 85% likelihood of death.

    In 2017, he claimed he had been referred to hospice care and had 6 months to live.

    Get this:

    Quote
    Macedonio and Wimmer said Forte maintained close relationships with prosecutors and at least one powerful judge. Macedonio recalled being beckoned to the dugout of a ballfield at midnight by a prosecutor who warned him to tread carefully. And Macedonio said that the prosecutor who presented Dinko’s allegations to a grand jury for potential sexual abuse and attempted rape charges informed him that a judge had ordered her to water down her presentation.

    Quote
    Macedonio said he ignored his supervisor’s order to leave the case alone and instead brought it to the Vermont State Police for them to investigate Dinko’s allegations, since much of the alleged abuse occurred there.

    Macedonio believes his pursuit of Forte cost him professionally. When he later asked to be transferred to the homicide squad, he was denied the coveted assignment despite 23 years on the job. He retired from the department out of frustration and moved to Florida, where he got a $6-an-hour security job at a racetrack before joining the Port Richey Police Department, ultimately becoming its police chief. According to personnel records, his career in both departments was unblemished.

    Quote
    A Vermont jury initially convicted Forte in 1988 of three counts of sexual assault, which could have meant a 60-year prison sentence. But Judge Theodore S. Mandeville tossed out the verdict on grounds that prosecutors would decry as sexist, ruling that the female prosecutor in the case had prejudiced the jury by being overly emotional.

    A new prosecutor, Vermont Assistant Attorney General David Tartter, decided 7 years later to retry the case before he agreed to Forte’s request for a health-related delay.

    Quote
    The 12-year-old girl who accused him of rape in 1987 is now a 45-year-old mother to her own teenagers. She has spent nearly three-quarters of her life waiting for him to appear in a Vermont courtroom.

    He even retired from police on a "disability pension" because of facial injuries he received after a car accident.

    Oh, and in 2016 he and his wife were arrested for stealing a leopard purse, a bike lock, socks, slippers and a low-carb cookbook from a Goodwill store. However, because of Goodwill's policy not to pursue charges against the elderly, they were let go...

    (https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/tmwZCCshuvBFTeAQTANJNw--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTQyMDtoPTU2MA--/https://media.zenfs.com/en-us/usa_today_news_641/72cc9b634e19dd498421410b7fbcb2e1)

    Child molesters, cops and perverts know very well how to use this corrupt system of "justice" to get away with abusing children...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 04, 2019, 05:28:35 AM
    https://abc7.com/lapd-officer-on-leave-after-allegedly-fondling-corpse/5732304/?fbclid=IwAR3_cTNUfaQCKBGyWtydRrj4dfDOGPsIx5QCuEBWCKlt1zVYYg2ng9T3Paw



     :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2019, 02:16:03 PM
    Uber reports a sharp rise in government demands for user data

    Uber says the number of legal demands for riders’ data made by U.S. and Canadian authorities has risen sharply in the past year.

    The ride-hailing company said the number of law enforcement demands for user data during 2018 are up 27% on the year earlier, according to its annual transparency report published Wednesday. Uber said the rise in demands was partly due to its business growing in size, but also a “rising interest” from governments to access data on its customers.

    Uber said it received 3,825 demands for 21,913 user accounts from the U.S. government, with the company turning over some data in 72% of cases, during 2018.

    That’s up from 2,940 demands for 17,181 user accounts a year earlier, with a slightly higher compliance rate of 73%.

    Canadian authorities submitted 161 demands for data on 593 user accounts during 2018.

    Uber said that the rise in demands for customer data presents a challenge for the ride-hailing company, previously valued at $82 billion, which went public in May. “Our responsibility to preserve consumer privacy while meeting regulatory and public safety obligations will become increasingly complex and challenging as we field a growing number of government requests for data every year,” said Uttara Sivaram, global privacy and security public policy manager at Uber.

    The company also said it disclosed ride information on 34 million users to U.S. regulators and 1.8 million users to Canadian regulators, such as local taxi and transport authorities. Uber said it is mandated to give over the information to regulators as part of the “bespoke legal and regulatory requirements to which we are subject,” which can include pickup and drop-off locations, fares, and other data that may “identify individual riders,” the company said.

    Uber isn’t the only company fielding a record number of demands from governments. Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Twitter have all reported a rise in government demands over the past year as their customer base continues to grow while governments become increasingly hungry for companies’ data.

    https://techcrunch.com/2019/11/20/uber-transparency-government-data/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2019, 02:36:46 PM
    Once again...

    Not only is this cop accused of child molestation but he was assigned to the Juvenile investigations unit. How ironic.. But what's even worse is that he taught kids how to avoid child predators online and he even received an award for "keeping the children safe"...

    GBI Arrests Former Paulding County Deputy on Child Molestation Charges

    Paulding County, GA (November 25, 2019) – On November 25, 2019, Agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation Region 1 Field Office arrested Paulding County Sheriff’s Deputy Steve Sorrells, age 48, for two counts of Child Molestation and Violation of Oath of Office.  The investigation was initiated on November 14, 2019 by the GBI at the request of the Paulding County Sheriff’s Office after an allegation of inappropriate sexual contact with a minor was made to the sheriff’s office.  Sorrells was employed as a Detective at the Paulding County Sheriff’s Office and was assigned to the juvenile investigation’s division.  Sorrells was immediately placed on administrative leave at the onset of the investigation and was terminated from employment upon his arrest.  Sorrells was taken into custody and booked at the Paulding County jail without incident.

    https://gbi.georgia.gov/press-releases/2019-11-25/gbi-arrests-former-paulding-county-deputy-child-molestation-charges
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 04, 2019, 02:38:35 PM
    And another one...

    West Virginia correctional officer facing more than 600 counts of child sex charges

    A West Virginia correctional officer is facing more than 600 counts of various sex charges after West Virginia State Police said he assaulted a young girl over a 4 year period.

    James Cain, 48 of Salem, began sexually assaulting the girl when she was nine and continued until she was 13, state troopers said.

    Cain is charged with:
     104 counts of first degree sexual assault;
    208 counts of sexual abuse by a parent, guardian, custodian or person in a position of trust to a child;
    104 counts of third-degree sexual assault;
    208 counts of incest;
    and charges of use of minors in filming sexually explicit conduct and sending, distributing, exhibiting, possessing, displaying or transporting material by a parent, guardian or custodian depicting a child engaged in sexually explicit conduct.

    https://www.wowktv.com/news/west-virginia/west-virginia-correctional-officer-facing-more-than-600-counts-of-child-sex-charges/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 06, 2019, 04:46:41 PM
    More innocent people ("civilians" as cops called them) killed... I doubt any cops will face murder charges for the death of innocents,as usual. They'll probably pat each other in the back and get a medal or a promotion for their "bravery". Apparently it was more important to them that no cops died during the shootout:

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ELFTSC2X0AAUwhG.jpg)

    ’They murdered him:’ Family of UPS driver killed in shootout lashes out at police

    While mourning his death, the family of the UPS driver killed in Thursday’s shootout in Miramar is also lashing out at police who they believe are responsible for the loss of life.

    “They murdered him,” Joe Merino, the stepfather of Frank Ordonez, told Local 10 News. “I hope you can understand that and how I feel because it could have been prevented.”

    While admitting he’s not a police officer, Merino wondered why there was a rush to open fire at the truck before other options were considered.

    “I have common sense, like we all do, and it shows me, where’s the protocol? Where was protocol? Where was SWAT? Where was the hostage negotiator? Where was the sniper?” Merino said. “They shot him dead!"

    Merino believes police failed to consider the innocent victims, including his stepson, during the incident.

    “The negligence, the irresponsibility, the lack of life, the lack of concern," Merino said. “The disregard for life for the victim.”

    https://www.local10.com/news/local/2019/12/06/they-murdered-him-family-of-ups-driver-killed-in-shootout-lashes-out-at-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 06, 2019, 05:07:07 PM


    Read about this. 
    Horrible.


    More innocent people ("civilians" as cops called them) killed... I doubt any cops will face murder charges for the death of innocents,as usual. They'll probably pat each other in the back and get a medal or a promotion for their "bravery". Apparently it was more important to them that no cops died during the shootout:

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ELFTSC2X0AAUwhG.jpg)

    ’They murdered him:’ Family of UPS driver killed in shootout lashes out at police

    While mourning his death, the family of the UPS driver killed in Thursday’s shootout in Miramar is also lashing out at police who they believe are responsible for the loss of life.

    “They murdered him,” Joe Merino, the stepfather of Frank Ordonez, told Local 10 News. “I hope you can understand that and how I feel because it could have been prevented.”

    While admitting he’s not a police officer, Merino wondered why there was a rush to open fire at the truck before other options were considered.

    “I have common sense, like we all do, and it shows me, where’s the protocol? Where was protocol? Where was SWAT? Where was the hostage negotiator? Where was the sniper?” Merino said. “They shot him dead!"

    Merino believes police failed to consider the innocent victims, including his stepson, during the incident.

    “The negligence, the irresponsibility, the lack of life, the lack of concern," Merino said. “The disregard for life for the victim.”

    https://www.local10.com/news/local/2019/12/06/they-murdered-him-family-of-ups-driver-killed-in-shootout-lashes-out-at-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2019, 06:10:58 PM
    "Only the finest people".

    Just 10 years for raping a 12 year old! Another child rapist cop that got a sweet plea deal...

    Ex-Cy-Fair ISD officer sentenced to 10 years in rape of 12-year-old

    An ex-Cypress-Fairbanks ISD police officer was sentenced to 10 years in prison Tuesday for the rape of a 12-year-old Deer Park girl he lured to a hotel after meeting online.

    Bastida resigned from the police department shortly after being accused of rape.

    https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Ex-Cy-Fair-ISD-officer-sentenced-to-10-years-in-14878706.php
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 07, 2019, 06:22:05 PM
    Notice the disclaimer in the article, the cops lied as they usually do to cover up their crimes.
    That female cop is a prime example of today's dangerous cops: power tripping fools, zero self control, full of ego, escalating the situation instead of de-escalating, quick to resort to violence and still managing to harm innocents.

    Bodycam video shows Greenville deputy shot suspect's mother inside Greer home

    An earlier version of this story included incorrect information provided by the Greenville County Sheriff's Office that no wrongdoing was found from an internal-affairs investigation. A spokesman for the Sheriff's Office later said the deputy did violate the agency's arrest policy.

    Newly released body camera footage shows a Greenville County Sheriff's Office deputy shot a shoplifting suspect's mother during a heated confrontation inside a Greer home.

    The mother remains hospitalized a month and a half after the Oct. 20 incident, according to the suspect's attorney.

    The deputy was found to have violated the agency's arrest policy, according to the Sheriff's Office.

    The State Law Enforcement Division is investigating the case.



    https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/news/local/south-carolina/2019/12/04/bodycam-video-shows-greenville-sc-deputy-shot-suspect-mother-during-tense-scene-inside-greer-home/2597237001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2019, 02:16:04 PM
    Another one...

    Maryland cop charged with multiple counts of rape, suspended without pay

    A Maryland police officer has been arrested and charged by his own police department for alleged rape.

    Anthony Westerman, a 25-year-old officer with the Baltimore County Police Department, was charged with two counts of second-degree rape and three counts of second-degree assault, officials said in a news release on Sunday.

    Although the police statement did not elaborate on when the alleged situations took place, WBAL-TV reports one incident happened on Oct. 4, 2017, and another happened on June 6, 2019.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/maryland-cop-charged-multiple-rapes
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2019, 02:20:53 PM
    As is usual is such cases, the violent gang members faced no charges. But if the "good cop" saw the assault by these criminals why did he not arrest them on the spot (and use appropriate force if they resisted) instead of just testifying against them afterwards? Why did he allow the man to be assaulted and tortured by these violent criminals while he watched?

    Good Cop Quits, Crosses Blue Line After Video Shows Fellow Cops Allow K9 to Maul Innocent Man

    St. Paul, MN — On the night of June 24, 2016, Frank Baker ‘fit the description’ of a ‘black man’ in the area, so he was attacked by police and their K9. For several minutes, Baker was beaten, tasered, and viciously mauled by their K9. Also at the scene that fateful night was officer Tony Spencer — whose dashcam recorded the violent assault on Baker, who was entirely innocent.

    That night, Spencer and his partner responded to a call, which ended up being fake, about a man with dreadlocks wearing a white t-shirt and armed with a gun.
    When they arrived on the scene, Spencer and his partner saw Baker and realized he did not look like a suspect.

    “There are about 50 people who would have matched that description that night,” Spencer said of Baker. “He is not acting agitated. To me, he does not appear to be engaged in a fight. He did not appear to have run from a fight … so we continue to roll through.”

    However, just after they passed Baker, two less experienced and far more violent cops showed up, pulled out their guns, and unleashed a dog.
    Because police said Baker was slow to respond when showing his hands, officer Brian Ficcandenti let loose the K9, ‘Falco.’

    “I’m thinking he (Ficcadenti) saw something we didn’t see or missed and is now performing a felony-style stop,” Spencer recalled. “As I turn the car and see the dog pulling out this man from the cars, I recognize it’s (Baker). I can clearly see there’s nothing in his hand as he comes between the cars.”

    While having his flesh literally torn from his body, Ficcandenti is heard encouraging the dog. “Get him, buddy. Good,” said the officer. “Get him.”

    The dashcam then captured the following beat down — after Baker had been mauled. When officer Brett Palkowitsch exited the vehicle, he ran over to the innocent man and began kicking and stomping Baker’s ribs.
    Baker’s legs were so severely injured during the attack that he spent weeks in the hospital recovering. He also suffered several broken ribs and collapsed lungs.


    According to his attorney Robert Bennett, the dog tore “hunks of flesh” as its teeth bit “down to the bone” of Baker’s legs.

    After watching his fellow officers do this to an innocent person, Spencer could no longer stand it and decided to become a good cop. He crossed the thin blue line and testified against the officers who nearly killed an innocent man.

    “It was very difficult because it was something I had been programmed throughout my career to never do,” Spencer, 46, told Ruben Rosario from Twin Cities.
    “But I decided that the right thing to do was tell Mr. Baker’s story,” he added as he looked away momentarily, tears starting to form in his eyes, explained Rosario. “I owed it to him. How do you explain to that guy what happened to him was justified?”

    Spencer, who felt horrible after watching his fellow officers do this to an innocent man, he visited Baker in the hospital.

    “He had these big tears in his eyes,” Spencer noticed. “He was still having trouble breathing. And then he tells me: ‘I know there are good cops and there are bad cops. The thing is I know what you guys are up against out there. I know what St. Paul cops deal with. I live in that area. I love my St. Paul cops. The dog thing I almost get because I did not come out as quick as I probably should have. But those kicks he did were bogus.’ ”

    Sadly, the officer who released the dog was not fired and remains on the force. As for officer Palkowitsch, who kicked the innocent Baker as he bled out, he will likely be getting his job back. Neither of the cops faced any charges.

    “We are the department that brought (cop killer) Guy Harvey Baker to jail alive,” Spencer said. “That’s what the community expects of us. The younger cops don’t understand the legacy of the department. In our darkest hour on our worst day, we brought in that guy alive. And he did not have seven broken ribs and two collapsed lungs, did he? And he killed two of our cops.”

    Because of Spencer’s testimony, which was described as the entire department against him and his partner, Baker received the largest settlement for police misconduct in the history of St. Paul. Attorneys for Frank Arnal Baker said Monday that they have a verbal agreement with the city for $2 million for the case. The agreement, they noted, has yet to be signed by all parties, reports the pioneer press.

    Officer Spencer is the epitome of a good cop as he was unafraid of pointing out the crimes of his fellow cops against an innocent member of society — whom they ostensibly protect.

    However, that good cop is now gone and he will, like he alluded to above, be replaced by “younger cops [who] don’t understand the legacy of the department” who are more prone to destroy first and attempt to justify later.

    Below is a video showing the type of legacy the new cops intend to leave for the St. Paul police department — and it is terrifying.



    Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-quits-video-shows-fellow-cops-allow-k9-maul-innocent-man-nearly-death/

    The maximum sentence of 10 years is not enough.

    Jury Convicts St. Paul Police Officer of Excessive Force

    Today, a federal jury convicted Brett Palkowitsch, 32, an officer with the St. Paul Police Department, of using excessive force against an unarmed civilian, announced Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Civil Rights Division and FBI Minneapolis Special Agent in Charge Jill Sanborn.

     “The behavior of the defendant will not be tolerated and the Department of Justice will seek to prosecute those who abuse their power,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband for the Civil Rights Division. “We commend the officers who came forward and brought about the opening of the investigation. We also thank our law enforcement partners who assisted in this case.”

    "Law enforcement officers receive certain powers from the government so they can protect the rights of the citizens they serve," said FBI Minneapolis Special Agent in Charge, Jill Sanborn.  "When an individual officer’s actions violate that trust, he or she should be held accountable which the jury confirmed with today's verdict. We thank all those who assisted on this case," Sanborn added.

    The evidence presented at trial established that the Defendant and other officers responded to a 911 call alleging that an unidentified black male with dreadlocks and a white t-shirt had been involved in a street fight and was carrying a gun. Upon their arrival on scene, officers found no evidence of any street fight, but they noticed one man who matched that general description, sitting in his car talking on a cellphone. One of the responding officers, along with his police K-9, approached the man’s car and, without identifying himself as a police officer, yelled at the man to get out. The man, later identified as Frank Baker, got out of the car, as the officer yelled commands and the police K-9 barked loudly at him. Seven seconds later, the officer released the K-9, which took Mr. Baker to the ground and began mauling his leg. While Mr. .Baker was on the ground, screaming in pain, the Defendant arrived and kicked Mr. Baker three times in the ribs. The defendant’s kicks broke seven of Mr. Baker’s ribs and caused both of his lungs to collapse, putting him in critical condition. Officers found no gun at the scene and no evidence that Mr. Baker, a 52-year-old grandfather who lived in the neighborhood, had been involved in any fight.

    Two of the officers who witnessed the defendant’s actions that night, Officers Joseph Dick and Anthony Spencer, reported the Defendant to their supervisor. Mr. Dick and Mr. Spencer both testified for the government at trial, about the defendant’s use of force and about harassment and retaliation they suffered after stepping forward to report a fellow officer. Dick, Spencer, and a third officer from the scene told the jury that they saw no legitimate reason for the defendant’s kicks. Additionally, officers testified that the defendant boasted afterward about having kicked Mr. Baker.

    Following more than two weeks of trial, the jury in the U.S. District Court in St. Paul, MN, deliberated for 11 hours before finding the Defendant guilty of using excessive force.

    The Defendant faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office. 

    This case was investigated by the Minneapolis Division of the FBI, and was prosecuted by Special Litigation Counsel Christopher J. Perras and Trial Attorney Zachary Dembo of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/jury-convicts-st-paul-police-officer-excessive-force
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 09, 2019, 05:11:26 PM
    This line of work seems to attract a lot of perverts.

    Texas deputy arrested for alleged 'unlawful strip searches' of 6 women in less than 2 weeks

    A Texas sheriff’s deputy has been arrested on charges that he unlawfully strip-searched at least six women in less than two weeks. Floyd Berry, 49, was arrested Saturday and charged with three misdemeanor counts of official oppression, investigators said in a news release, cited by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

    Berry, an 18-year veteran with the Bexar County Sheriff’s office, was placed on leave after multiple people came forward alleging misconduct. Officials said Berry had “unlawfully strip-searched” six women while on patrol in late November and early December, the release said.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/texas-deputy-alleged-unlawful-strip-searches
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on December 09, 2019, 05:51:36 PM
    More innocent people ("civilians" as cops called them) killed... I doubt any cops will face murder charges for the death of innocents,as usual. They'll probably pat each other in the back and get a medal or a promotion for their "bravery". Apparently it was more important to them that no cops died during the shootout:

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ELFTSC2X0AAUwhG.jpg)

    ’They murdered him:’ Family of UPS driver killed in shootout lashes out at police

    While mourning his death, the family of the UPS driver killed in Thursday’s shootout in Miramar is also lashing out at police who they believe are responsible for the loss of life.

    “They murdered him,” Joe Merino, the stepfather of Frank Ordonez, told Local 10 News. “I hope you can understand that and how I feel because it could have been prevented.”

    While admitting he’s not a police officer, Merino wondered why there was a rush to open fire at the truck before other options were considered.

    “I have common sense, like we all do, and it shows me, where’s the protocol? Where was protocol? Where was SWAT? Where was the hostage negotiator? Where was the sniper?” Merino said. “They shot him dead!"

    Merino believes police failed to consider the innocent victims, including his stepson, during the incident.

    “The negligence, the irresponsibility, the lack of life, the lack of concern," Merino said. “The disregard for life for the victim.”

    https://www.local10.com/news/local/2019/12/06/they-murdered-him-family-of-ups-driver-killed-in-shootout-lashes-out-at-police/

    I can absolutely imagine how the family of Frank Ordonez feels with regards to his probably unnecessary death. My heart goes out to them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on December 09, 2019, 09:19:13 PM
    https://summit.news/2019/12/09/never-trumper-rick-wilson-suggests-putting-anti-vaxxers-in-re-education-camps/



    Wilson was responding to an NBC News story about how people who question the safety of vaccines are now taking their fight “offline” due to mass censorship by the likes of Facebook and are “harassing doctors and private citizens.”

    “Anti-vaxxers are a scourge and a strong argument for re-education camps, the immediate seizure of their property, and putting their children into protective custody,” responded Wilson.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2019, 12:29:27 PM
    The first source is a notable hub of anti-police rhetoric so take it with a grain of salt.

    Hialeah Police Officer Charged with Civil Rights Violations

    A federal grand jury in Miami, Florida, yesterday returned a two-count indictment against Hialeah Police Department Officer Jesus Manuel Menocal Jr, 32,  for depriving two women of their civil rights.

    According to the indictment, in June of 2015, while working as a police officer with the Hialeah Police Department in Florida, Officer Menocal is alleged to have willfully deprived a minor female of her right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures when, for his own sexual gratification, he directed her to remove her clothing. The indictment further alleges that the offense included kidnapping, and the use and threatened use of a dangerous weapon.

    On another date in 2015, while working as a police officer, Officer Menocal is also alleged to have exposed himself to a woman and grabbed her.  This offense also included the use and threatened use of a dangerous weapon.

    Menocal is scheduled to have his initial appearance today at 2 P.M. before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Becerra (Case No. 19-20822-CR-Williams/Torres).

    This investigation remains ongoing. Anyone with additional information is encouraged to call the FBI’s Miami Field Office at 754.703.2000.

    An indictment is merely a formal accusation of criminal conduct. The defendant is presumed innocent unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    The indictment was announced by Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband, U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo Orshan, and FBI Special Agent in Charge, George Piro, who also acknowledged the efforts of the Hialeah Police Department and the Miami Dade County State Attorney’s Office.

    This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ilham Hosseini and Edward N. Stamm of the Southern District of Florida and Special Litigation Counsel Samantha Trepel of the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/hialeah-police-officer-charged-civil-rights-violations


    The title of the first article doesn't fully convey the seriousness of the crimes so here is another article. It sounds like the prosecutor should also be investigated for covering up the crimes.

    FBI arrests Hialeah cop accused of sexual assault by four women and girls

    FBI agents walked into Hialeah’s police department Friday morning and arrested a decorated officer, Sgt. Jesús Menocal Jr., who has faced allegations over the past four years that he sexually assaulted and threatened four girls and women.

    By the afternoon, federal prosecutors had charged Menocal with violating the civil rights of two women, one a minor, by unlawfully detaining them and pressuring them for sex while working as a police officer. He is also accused of threatening them with the use of a dangerous weapon, his police-issued firearm.

    The two-count civil rights indictment carries up to life in prison — because of a “kidnapping” factor — on the first charge and up to 10 years on the second. Following a hearing in federal court, Menocal, 32, received a $250,000 bond co-signed by his wife and father, a former chief of police in Sweetwater. He faces an arraignment hearing on Wednesday. He must surrender his firearms and concealed weapons permit.

    Menocal had survived an earlier investigation by the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office in 2016, when prosecutors declined to file sexual battery and false imprisonment charges against him. But the FBI’s public integrity squad took up the case, focusing on whether he used his authority as a police officer to pressure the girls and women into having sex with him.

    The long-running allegations against Menocal gained new attention in November when the Herald published an investigation into how Velázquez, the chief, and state prosecutors handled his case. The Herald investigation determined that the lead prosecutor for the state attorney’s office did not interview three of the four accusers and lost portions of the case file. It also found that Velázquez brought Menocal back to active duty before he was formally cleared and did not discipline him despite sustaining an internal affairs complaint.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/hialeah/article238346583.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2019, 12:35:55 PM
    Oh look, another one. "Only the finest people".

    Tennessee sheriff's deputy indicted on 44 charges including rape, sexual battery amid ongoing lawsuits

    A Chattanooga-area sheriff's deputy has been charged with more than 40 counts ranging from rape and sexual battery to oppression and extortion.

    Daniel Wilkey, 26, was indicted on 44 charges stemming from allegations of inappropriate behavior and assault while he was working for the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office, the Associated Press reports.

    Hamilton County Sheriff Jim Hammond told news outlets he was notified on Tuesday that a grand jury had indicted Wilkey, AP reports.

    Wilkey has been named, along with other HCSO deputies, in four lawsuits that accuse him of misconduct during traffic stops. The alleged misconduct ranges from a forced baptism, groping underage girls and an illegal, forcible drug search, AP reports.

    In July, dashboard camera footage appeared to show Wilkey and another deputy involved in a strip search of a man on the side of the road in Soddy-Daisy.

    Wilkey faces an excessive force lawsuit related to the stop in which the defendant says the effects of the search required treatment for anal contusions and surgery on a previously-untreated hernia.

    https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/crime/2019/12/11/chattanooga-hamilton-county-daniel-wilkey-deputy-charged-rape-extortion-indicted/4402076002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 14, 2019, 06:53:25 PM
    Google Hands Feds 1,500 Phone Locations In Unprecedented ‘Geofence’ Search

    Two dead dogs and more than $50,000 in damaged property were just some of the casualties of arsons carried out across Milwaukee, Wisconsin, throughout 2018 and 2019.

    To find the perpetrators, officers from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) demanded Google supply records of user devices in the respective locations at the times the arsons took place, Forbes has learned. Though federal agents had used the technique before, they’d never received such a data haul back from Google.

    The requests, outlined in two search warrants obtained by Forbes, demanded to know which specific Google customers were located in areas covering 29,387 square meters (or 3 hectares) during a total of nine hours for the four separate incidents. Unbeknownst to many Google users, if they have “location history” turned on, their whereabouts are stored by the tech giant in a database called SensorVault.

    In this case, Google found 1,494 device identifiers in SensorVault, sending them to the ATF to comb through. In terms of numbers, that’s unprecedented for this form of search. It illustrates how Google can pinpoint a large number of mobile phones in a brief period of time and hand over that information to the government. Previous Forbes reporting has shown searches across far wider areas.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2019/12/11/google-gives-feds-1500-leads-to-arsonist-smartphones-in-unprecedented-geofence-search/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 15, 2019, 03:28:34 AM
    This would lessen itself if more were held accountable


    Oh look, another one. "Only the finest people".

    Tennessee sheriff's deputy indicted on 44 charges including rape, sexual battery amid ongoing lawsuits

    A Chattanooga-area sheriff's deputy has been charged with more than 40 counts ranging from rape and sexual battery to oppression and extortion.

    Daniel Wilkey, 26, was indicted on 44 charges stemming from allegations of inappropriate behavior and assault while he was working for the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office, the Associated Press reports.

    Hamilton County Sheriff Jim Hammond told news outlets he was notified on Tuesday that a grand jury had indicted Wilkey, AP reports.

    Wilkey has been named, along with other HCSO deputies, in four lawsuits that accuse him of misconduct during traffic stops. The alleged misconduct ranges from a forced baptism, groping underage girls and an illegal, forcible drug search, AP reports.

    In July, dashboard camera footage appeared to show Wilkey and another deputy involved in a strip search of a man on the side of the road in Soddy-Daisy.

    Wilkey faces an excessive force lawsuit related to the stop in which the defendant says the effects of the search required treatment for anal contusions and surgery on a previously-untreated hernia.

    https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/crime/2019/12/11/chattanooga-hamilton-county-daniel-wilkey-deputy-charged-rape-extortion-indicted/4402076002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2019, 12:59:41 AM
    This "profession" seems to attract child abusers. Ordinary people would have been arrested on the spot and most likely jailed if they attacked a child like that. But this "brave hero" is still out there and enjoys paid vacation.

    SRO on paid administrative leave after video of student being thrown, dragged surfaces

    Law enforcement authorities in Vance County told the Associated Press on Sunday that a school resource officer has been placed on paid administrative leave after school surveillance video showed him violently slamming a middle school student to the ground twice before dragging him off camera.

    School district officials reported the officer to authorities Thursday.

    The incident was captured on video shot inside the school. The video shows a student wearing a red top and the school resource officer in uniform walking toward the camera side by side. The officer stops, reaches out, lifts the student against the wall, flips the child head-down and slams the child to the floor. The officer then bends over, drags the student to a standing position and lets him drop a second time. As the video ends, the officer drags the student toward the camera. The officer appears to be dragging the student by the shirt.

    https://www.wral.com/vance-county-deeply-concerned-by-video-that-shows-school-resource-officer-throwing-dragging-middle-school-student/18831501/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 16, 2019, 09:02:26 AM
    This "profession" seems to attract child abusers. Ordinary people would have been arrested on the spot and most likely jailed if they attacked a child like that. But this "brave hero" is still out there and enjoys paid vacation.

    SRO on paid administrative leave after video of student being thrown, dragged surfaces

    Law enforcement authorities in Vance County told the Associated Press on Sunday that a school resource officer has been placed on paid administrative leave after school surveillance video showed him violently slamming a middle school student to the ground twice before dragging him off camera.

    School district officials reported the officer to authorities Thursday.

    The incident was captured on video shot inside the school. The video shows a student wearing a red top and the school resource officer in uniform walking toward the camera side by side. The officer stops, reaches out, lifts the student against the wall, flips the child head-down and slams the child to the floor. The officer then bends over, drags the student to a standing position and lets him drop a second time. As the video ends, the officer drags the student toward the camera. The officer appears to be dragging the student by the shirt.

    https://www.wral.com/vance-county-deeply-concerned-by-video-that-shows-school-resource-officer-throwing-dragging-middle-school-student/18831501/





    We’ve said it over & over Again
    There is a Massive Problem in Law Enforcement
    Either the Job power / privileges / gang mentality Corrupts them
    Or it Attract Bullies & Cowards Who Need the Badge / uniform / Gang to Protect them.

    It’s Sickening Behaviour over & over again.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 16, 2019, 09:45:33 AM
    Holy crap - he could have killed that kid 



    We’ve said it over & over Again
    There is a Massive Problem in Law Enforcement
    Either the Job power / privileges / gang mentality Corrupts them
    Or it Attract Bullies & Cowards Who Need the Badge / uniform / Gang to Protect them.

    It’s Sickening Behaviour over & over again.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2019, 04:03:52 PM
    Scanning obituaries to break into and burglarize homes while the families were at a funeral... How much lower can these people go?

    Former Jefferson Co. sheriff’s deputy accused of burglarizing homes when residents were attending funerals

    A charge of felony burglary has been filed against former Jefferson County Sheriff’s Deputy Janelle Gericke.

    According to a news release, sheriff’s office personnel discovered evidence that led officials to suspect Gericke, 29, may be involved in illegal conduct while off duty. Specifically, “evidence showed she may have attempted to gain access to a house without consent.”

    The criminal complaint against Gericke says these attempts to gain access to homes “occurred while the homeowners were attending the funeral of a family member. In such instances, the deceased person’s online obituary listed the homeowners as surviving relatives along with the date and time of funeral services. If confronted, Gericke would explain that she was there to complete a transaction arising from Facebook.”

    https://fox6now.com/2019/12/17/former-jefferson-co-sheriffs-deputy-accused-of-burglarizing-homes-when-residents-were-attending-funerals/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2019, 04:07:59 PM
    Former Austin officer VonTrey Clark pleads guilty to killing pregnant girlfriend in 2015

    Conditions of Clark's plea agreement include that he loses his right to an appeal, enters a guilty plea and that he will receive life in prison without parole.

    The prosecutors read the document Clark signed, which stated Freddie Lee Smith killed Dean. The document stated that Smith's gun misfired, Smith returned and fired the gun again and then the scene was staged to look like a drug deal gone bad.

    https://www.kvue.com/article/news/crime/vontrey-clark-trial-austin-texas-move-forward
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2019, 05:05:05 PM
    Ordinary people go to prison for "lying" to law enforcement, which is usually what they get charged with when the government or the cops can't make any other charges stick. Here we see multiple lies and "omissions" (in front of a court no less) in order to secure warrants to further their conspiracy. Why is this gang not sent to prison?

    FISA court slams FBI over surveillance applications, in rare public order

    In a rare public order Tuesday, the chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court [FISC] strongly criticized the FBI over its surveillance-application process, giving the bureau until Jan. 10 to come up with solutions, in the wake of findings from Justice Department Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz.

    The order, from the court's presiding judge Rosemary M. Collyer, came just a week after the release of Horowitz's withering report about the wiretapping of Carter Page, a former campaign adviser to President Trump.

    "The FBI's handling of the Carter Page applications, as portrayed in the [Office of Inspector General] report, was antithetical to the heightened duty of candor described above," Collyer wrote in her four-page order. "The frequency with which representations made by FBI personnel turned out to be unsupported or contradicted by information in their possession, and with which they withheld information detrimental to their case, calls into question whether information contained in other FBI applications is reliable."

    "The [FISA court] expects the government to provide complete and accurate information in every filing with the court," Collyer wrote. "Without it, the [FISA court] cannot properly ensure that the government conducts electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence purposes only when there is a sufficient factual basis."

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fisa-court-slams-fbi-over-surveillance-applications-in-rare-public-order
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2019, 06:18:17 PM
    Another cop who sexually abused multiple women gets a sweet plea deal, very little prison time and will not have even to register as sex offender.

    Deputy sentenced for on-duty sex crimes against 16 women

    A former San Diego County sheriff's deputy who groped, hugged and tried to kiss more than a dozen women while on duty was sentenced Tuesday to 44 months behind bars followed by 16 months of post-release supervision. Under his sentence, however, Richard Fischer will not have to register as a sex offender.

    Fischer pleaded guilty in September to four felony counts of assault under color of authority, two misdemeanor counts of assault under color of authority and one misdemeanor count of false imprisonment. The charges stemmed from attacks between 2015 and 2017 on 16 women, some of whom he arrested and others he met while responding to 911 calls the victims made. The former U.S. Marine could have faced up to five years in prison under the terms of his plea agreement. Fischer also originally faced 20 felony and misdemeanor charges and was looking at potentially more than 25 years to life prior to the plea agreement.

    Fischer will serve 22 months in a county jail before he is eligible for release. Following his release, he'll be subject to GPS monitoring and will have to undergo psychological evaluations. He'll also be barred from obtaining another job in law enforcement.

    https://fox5sandiego.com/2019/12/10/deputy-to-be-sentenced-for-more-than-a-dozen-on-duty-sex-crimes/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2019, 06:27:04 PM
    The cop kept hitting the man so many times he suffered a broken hand. And get this, he's trying to get worker's compensation for it! And as usual, he resigned before he could be fired.

    Pike County deputy assaults restrained man, FBI asked to probe

    A Pike County Sheriff’s deputy has resigned and a supervisor has been demoted after a man in their custody was beaten while restrained in a holding area of the sheriff’s office, Local 12 News has learned.

    Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk said he has asked the FBI to investigate the conduct of former Pike County Sheriff's Deputy Jeremy Mooney for potential federal criminal charges. The video shows a man who was taken into custody for a misdemeanor offense restrained in a chair and Mooney punching him in the face 11 times with his fists.

    https://local12.com/news/local/pike-county-deputy-assaults-restrained-man-fbi-asked-to-probe

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2019, 03:38:40 PM
    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/wisconsin-deputy-allegedly-scoured-obits-broke-homes-people-funerals-n1104021?cid=sm_npd_nn_fb_ma


    Insane.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 19, 2019, 02:45:55 PM
    This cop rear ended a stopped car and killed a mother and her 1 year old child. No arrests or charges so far. Remember this the next time the cops trying to preach to everyone else about distracted driving while they themselves are exempt. But it's ok, "the sheriff's office sends their thoughts and prayers to the family".

    Video shows crash with San Joaquin County deputy that left child dead, mother critically injured

    https://fox40.com/2019/12/16/video-shows-crash-with-san-joaquin-deputy-that-left-child-dead-mother-critically-injured/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 19, 2019, 02:51:19 PM
    And in another instance, a cop was so drunk he was passed out inside his patrol car. Yet, he faces no charges, as of writing, and gets to keep his job. Meanwhile ordinary people who are not drunk are subjected to violent attacks and forced blood draws because a cop had a "hunch" that the driver was impaired. Remember this the next time the cops sanctimoniously preach about drunk driving.

    On-duty Aurora police officer who passed out drunk while driving kept job, was never charged with DUI

    An on-duty, armed and uniformed Aurora police officer who passed out drunk while driving an unmarked patrol car in March but avoided criminal charges and kept his job is now facing new scrutiny from the 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    District Attorney George Brauchler said Wednesday his office is looking into the March 29 incident and the subsequent investigation by Aurora police. The actions of Officer Nathan F. Meier could warrant criminal charges. “I don’t have any reason to second-guess the Aurora Police Department’s conduct in the investigation at this point, but I’m interested in knowing what information exists,” Brauchler said. “That interest stems from the fact it involves an officer in that agency.”

    The March 29 incident began around 3:45 p.m. when two people called 911 after they discovered Meier unconscious in the driver’s seat of his unmarked car in the middle of East Mississippi Avenue near Buckley Air Force Base, according to an Aurora internal affairs evidence summary obtained Wednesday by The Denver Post.

    Firefighters who responded to the 911 calls could not rouse the officer and were forced to break the car’s window to get to Meier. Aurora police officers who responded smelled alcohol on Meier, according to the summary. He was taken to a hospital by ambulance because he was completely unresponsive, the evidence summary stated.

    In a later interview with internal affairs, Meier admitted that he went home during his shift and drank vodka. He told internal affairs investigators he was impaired by the vodka and did not remember anything after drinking until he woke up in the hospital, according to the summary. He also provided investigators with medical records that “indicated his level of alcohol consumption,” according to a statement from Aurora police.

    https://www.denverpost.com/2019/12/11/aurora-police-officer-drunk-driving/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 20, 2019, 09:51:48 AM
    Another innocent person attacked and shot. Don't expect the "highly trained professionals" criminals to go to prison.

    Wanted man was already in jail when agents raided his former home and shot woman inside

    The man who investigators were looking to arrest was already in jail when a task force raided his former home in Wilmer on Thursday morning.

    Ann Rylee, a 19-year-old woman who now lives at the home on Old Moffat Road, was shot several times as investigators made their way inside the house. Mobile County Sheriff Sam Cochran claims that Rylee had a shotgun in her hand and pointed it at officers.

    Family members told FOX10 News that Rylee is hospitalized in stable condition and is expected to survive. The family also disputed the sheriff's claims and said that the agents never identified themselves as law enforcement and never told Rylee to drop the gun.

    The Mobile County Sheriff’s Office, Homeland Security, and US Customs and Border Patrol conducted the raid. Sheriff Cochran said that the shots were not fired by Mobile County Sheriff's Office deputies. He said the Alabama State Bureau of Investigation will be the agency investigating the shooting.

    https://www.fox10tv.com/news/mobile_county/wanted-man-was-already-in-jail-when-agents-raided-his/article_a650cf04-22bd-11ea-9246-0bbf3725f06f.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 20, 2019, 10:27:49 AM
    https://nj1015.com/cop-who-asked-woman-for-nude-girl-pic-had-more-child-porn-nj-says/?fbclid=IwAR3at6q01fk-SMQ1vGCES4JZfudLzomw4E46JjtLDY5GFf-Rrm38wpAHp-I



     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 20, 2019, 10:28:44 AM
    Another innocent person attacked and shot. Don't expect the "highly trained professionals" criminals to go to prison.

    Wanted man was already in jail when agents raided his former home and shot woman inside

    The man who investigators were looking to arrest was already in jail when a task force raided his former home in Wilmer on Thursday morning.

    Ann Rylee, a 19-year-old woman who now lives at the home on Old Moffat Road, was shot several times as investigators made their way inside the house. Mobile County Sheriff Sam Cochran claims that Rylee had a shotgun in her hand and pointed it at officers.

    Family members told FOX10 News that Rylee is hospitalized in stable condition and is expected to survive. The family also disputed the sheriff's claims and said that the agents never identified themselves as law enforcement and never told Rylee to drop the gun.

    The Mobile County Sheriff’s Office, Homeland Security, and US Customs and Border Patrol conducted the raid. Sheriff Cochran said that the shots were not fired by Mobile County Sheriff's Office deputies. He said the Alabama State Bureau of Investigation will be the agency investigating the shooting.

    https://www.fox10tv.com/news/mobile_county/wanted-man-was-already-in-jail-when-agents-raided-his/article_a650cf04-22bd-11ea-9246-0bbf3725f06f.html

    Dumb and incompetent
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 20, 2019, 10:43:07 PM
    Another innocent person attacked and shot. Don't expect the "highly trained professionals" criminals to go to prison.

    Wanted man was already in jail when agents raided his former home and shot woman inside

    The man who investigators were looking to arrest was already in jail when a task force raided his former home in Wilmer on Thursday morning.

    Ann Rylee, a 19-year-old woman who now lives at the home on Old Moffat Road, was shot several times as investigators made their way inside the house. Mobile County Sheriff Sam Cochran claims that Rylee had a shotgun in her hand and pointed it at officers.

    Family members told FOX10 News that Rylee is hospitalized in stable condition and is expected to survive. The family also disputed the sheriff's claims and said that the agents never identified themselves as law enforcement and never told Rylee to drop the gun.

    The Mobile County Sheriff’s Office, Homeland Security, and US Customs and Border Patrol conducted the raid. Sheriff Cochran said that the shots were not fired by Mobile County Sheriff's Office deputies. He said the Alabama State Bureau of Investigation will be the agency investigating the shooting.

    https://www.fox10tv.com/news/mobile_county/wanted-man-was-already-in-jail-when-agents-raided-his/article_a650cf04-22bd-11ea-9246-0bbf3725f06f.html


    FFS - Their Stupidity Just Keeps on Shining Through.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 20, 2019, 11:30:02 PM
    Fort Worth police officer jailed on murder charge after resigning in shooting that killed woman in home

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2019/10/1862/1048/aaronDean.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    The white Fort Worth police officer accused of shooting a black woman inside her home over the weekend, killing her, has been jailed on a murder charge, online court records revealed Monday. The charge against Aaron Dean was made public hours after the officer resigned from the force. Bond was not immediately set.

    Dean's resignation letter read: "Effective immediately I am tendering my resignation from the Fort Worth Police Department." The letter was released by the state's largest police union, the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas. The group’s executive director, Charley Wilkison, said that Dean has not yet hired an attorney but that one will be provided with financial support from the union.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/fort-worth-police-officer-in-shooting-investigation

    Fort Worth police officer who fatally shot Atatiana Jefferson indicted on murder charge

    A Texas grand jury on Friday indicted a former Fort Worth police officer for murder after fatally shooting a woman who had been babysitting her nephew at home in a case that drew public outcry for police accountability.

    The Tarrant County District Attorney's Office confirmed the indictment against the former officer, Aaron Dean, 35, in the shooting death of Atatiana Jefferson, a 28-year-old pre-med graduate student.

    Lee Merritt, an attorney for Jefferson's family, tweeted that they are relieved with the indictment, but "remain cautious that a conviction and appropriate sentence is still a long way away."

    The case led to a rare murder charge against a police officer in the United States, when Dean was initially arrested just days after the incident occurred. He resigned from the Fort Worth Police Department prior to his arrest.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/fort-worth-police-officer-who-fatally-shot-atatiana-jefferson-indicted-n1105916
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2019, 12:25:05 AM
    These people, who claim to want to "serve" the community, don't give a fuck about helping or saving lives.

    911 dispatcher who scolded drowning woman won't face charges

    A former Arkansas 911 dispatcher was cleared of wrongdoing following accusations that she mishandled a call with a drowning woman and told her to "shut up" just moments before she died.

    An internal investigation concluded that operator Donna Reneau violated policy by being rude during an August call with Debbie Stevens shortly before her death, but she did nothing that would have warranted her termination, according to the Fort Smith Police Department.

    "No evidence of criminal negligence or activities on former Operator Reneau’s part. In fact, the evidence shows that while Operator Reneau spoke rudely to Mrs. Stevens during the call, she actually bumped the call up in the order of importance shortly after receiving it," the department said in a report released Friday. Stevens' death made national news earlier this year when the department released audio of the 911 call. Stevens only had minutes to live, but Reneau appeared unconcerned and even scolded the 47-year-old woman for driving into such deep waters.

    "I have an emergency -- a severe emergency, I can’t get out, and I’m scared to death, ma’am. Can you please help me?"

    "I’m going to die," Stevens cried later.

    "You’re not going to die,” Reneau responded. "I don’t know why you’re freaking out … You freaking out is doing nothing but losing your oxygen in there. So, calm down."

    Later on during the 911 call, the dispatcher assures Stevens that she is not going to die.

    "I don't know why you are freaking out. It's OK. I know the water level is high," the operator said.

    "I'm scared!" Stevens said.

    "I understand that but you freaking out, doing nothing but losing oxygen up in there, so calm down."

    Stevens could be heard crying on the phone.

    "I'm scared. I've never had anything happen to me like this before,"

    "Well, this will teach you next time, don't drive in the water," the operator said.

    "I couldn't see it, ma'am. I'm sorry I wouldn't have,"
    Steven said.

    "I don't see how you didn't see it. You had to go right over it so,"
    the operator said.

    At one point, Stevens got frantic and had this exchange with the dispatcher.

    "These people are all standing out here watching me,"
    Stevens said.

    "Miss Debbie, you're gong to have to shut up. OK. I need you to listen,"
    said the dispatcher.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/911-dispatcher-told-drowning-woman-shut-face-charges/story
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 27, 2019, 11:27:44 AM
    Once again, we are dealing with organized criminal gangs filled with dangerous career criminals. He is the 20th cop arrested this year. And the city was funding his crime spree, in fact he was the 2nd highest paid employee with $243,000 per year. Think about that.
    Baltimore is indeed a shithole.

    Baltimore Police sergeant charged with assault now indicted on 32 more counts; ‘pattern of harassment’ alleged

    A veteran Baltimore Police sergeant criminally charged with forcibly arresting a bystander without justification in May has now been indicted on 32 additional counts of false imprisonment, assault and misconduct in office based on a “pattern and practice of harassment and intimidation” that prosecutors identified by viewing past body-camera footage, Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced Thursday.

    The indictment, handed down by a grand jury, alleges that Sgt. Ethan Newberg, 49, “did knowingly, intentionally, and unlawfully harass, detain and assault citizens who were engaged in lawful conduct for the improper purposes of dominating, intimidating and instilling fear" in them between July 2018 and May of this year.

    Newberg ignored his training as a police officer and the policies of the department, according to the indictment, and repeatedly “stopped, accosted, intimidated, harassed and threatened” people without probable cause in at least nine separate incidents.

    Newberg was the second-highest-paid city employee in fiscal year 2018, after making $243,000 largely through overtime.

    https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/crime/bs-md-ci-cr-newberg-indicted-20191212-nm5kvghikrbofgir7pd4fzzkzy-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 27, 2019, 12:25:33 PM
    Another murder.. As usual instead of helping people and de-escalating the situation, the cops go in shouting and barking with their firearms ready to kill if anyone does not "obey their commands".

    OKC Police Officer Charged With Second-Degree Murder

    An Oklahoma City police officer was arrested and booked into the Oklahoma County Jail for second-degree murder in connection with a November officer-involved shooting.

    Sgt. Keith Patrick Sweeney was charged in connection to the death of 29-year-old Dustin Pigeon.

    Police were called on Nov. 15 to the 1400 block of SW 20 to approach a suicidal person. Pigeon reportedly doused himself with lighter fluid, held a lighter and threatened to kill himself. Pigeon was killed when he refused to comply with officers' commands. Pigeon's death was the seventh officer-involved shooting and the 77th homicide in Oklahoma City.

    According to the court document, Sweeney shot Pigeon multiple times after Pigeon was hit by projectile from a bean bag shotgun deployed by another officer. Pigeon was pronounced dead at the scene. The court document said the investigation into the incident concluded Pigeon was not armed and was not a threat to the officers when he was shot by Sweeney.

    The district attorney's office determined the use of deadly force was not justified.

    https://www.news9.com/story/36997191/okc-police-officer-charged-with-second-degree-murder
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 27, 2019, 05:01:08 PM
    The old school republican used to proudly back the police , FBI, etc.
    Now, the Trumpers question these law enforcement agencies like Black Lives Matter did/does.
    I don't get it? I tend to give deference to the police, and FBI. Always did.

    What No Matter what they do or How they Behave. ??
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 28, 2019, 10:44:09 PM
    Not only did she shoot an unarmed man, but she will be paid $57k a year possibly for the rest of her life because of the "stress" she "suffered". Meanwhile, the man she attacked and shot was in the hospital for 12 days, lost part of his lung, the bullet is still inside his body and, unlike the cop, he has not received any money.

    Ex-cop getting $57K a year in disability due to stress caused by being charged with shooting unarmed man

    A former Brown Deer police officer who faced felony charges for shooting an unarmed man in the back is collecting more than $57,000 a year tax-free through duty disability insurance. Devon Kraemer, 30, could receive the payments for life.

    Kraemer was not convicted of aggravated battery because the jury in her February 2018 trial could not agree on a verdict. Two months later, Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm said his office would not retry the case.

    In August 2018, Brown Deer Police Chief Mike Kass announced Kraemer, who had been on administrative leave since the shooting, had resigned, effective July 9. He did not say that on July 6 Kraemer had applied for duty disability, contending the stress of the shooting and its aftermath had left her unable to work as a police officer. Kass at some point supported the application, which was approved by the state's Employee Trust Fund in the fall of last year.

    Kraemer's new benefits were revealed in court records recently filed in a civil rights lawsuit filed by the man Kraemer shot, Manuel Burnley Jr. In Milwaukee, several officers suspected of misconduct had claimed debilitating stress as the basis for collecting, sometimes even citing the department's investigation or media coverage as the cause of their stress. The city's Employee Retirement System adopted changes to close the loopholes that allowed that in 2013.

    According to Burnley's lawyers, the Brown Deer Police Department never did an internal investigation of the shooting even though prosecutors believed it was criminal conduct. In a deposition for the civil case, Kraemer denied she was told to resign or face disciplne within the department.

    https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/local/milwaukee/2019/12/20/ex-brown-deer-cop-charged-shooting-gets-57-000-duty-disability/2703702001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 30, 2019, 06:24:01 PM

    Porum assistant police chief charged with child sexual abuse

    Porum’s assistant police chief has been charged with two counts of child sexual abuse, according to court documents.

    David Ray Kash, 49, was charged Thursday after he sexually assaulted a 9-year-old and 7-year-old between September and December, according to documents filed with the case.

    Muskogee County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a 911 call the night of Dec. 19. The caller told arriving deputies that the children said Kash was sexually assaulting them, states an affidavit filed with the case. The OSBI then conducted a sexual assault nurse examination, or SANE, which found injuries to one of the children were consistent with child sexual abuse, the affidavit states.

    During interviews with Kash on Dec. 20 and Dec. 23, the affidavit states, Kash confessed to the interviewer that he was often left alone with the children and began sexually abusing the two children in question sometime in September.

    “[Kash] described instances of receiving oral sex from juvenile 1 and juvenile 2, and also detailed instances of vaginal manipulation on juvenile 2 occurring at [Kash’s] residence located in Porum, Oklahoma,” the affidavit states.

    https://www.muskogeephoenix.com/news/porum-assistant-police-chief-charged-with-child-sexual-abuse/article_dc6105ce-285c-11ea-83d0-2bd0f128bf47.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 30, 2019, 08:26:13 PM
    Recently there was a story about how a cop ordered a coffee from a McDonalds and supposedly the coffee cup he received said "Fucking pig".
    As usual there were the usual statements of "support" for cops as well as the media narrative of cops getting "disrespected" and "attacked" everywhere they go and of course there were calls for the McDondalds staff to be fired.

    However, as we often see with similar incidents where there are racial slurs or some sort of "offensive" language, it was a hoax, perpetrated by the victim. Only after the McDonalds store reviewed the video footage and determined there was no offensive message on the cup did the cop resign. Officer Juicy Smollett made this whole thing up and later claimed "it was a joke".

    What's more interesting is how the cops often say "wait for the facts to come out", only when it suits them of course (usually when they try to cover up something). In this case the police chief was all too quick to jump into conclusion and didn't even bother to wait for the facts. He initially posted this on facebook but it was later deleted for some odd reason:

    (https://www.ksnt.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/86/2019/12/POLICE-CHIEF-POST-BLUR-1.jpg)

    Herington PD: Officer made up story about expletive on his coffee cup

    A Herington Police Officer is no longer employed after admitting he "fabricated" a story a McDonald's employee wrote an expletive on his coffee cup over the weekend.

    After initially standing by his story, Hornaday said the officer has since told him the note was "meant to be a joke."

    The officer made the claims Saturday, telling the Chief he was on his way to work when he ordered a coffee at the Junction City McDonald's drive-thru. As he continued on his way, he saw the words "f***ing pig" written on his cup.

    Hornaday shared his concerns over the incident, along with a photo of the cup, in a Facebook post which quickly garnered thousands of shares. McDonald's immediately said it was taking the allegation seriously. McDonald’s Owner/Operator Dana Cook addressed the matter in a written statement Monday as well, saying, “My McDonald’s have the utmost respect for all members of law enforcement and the military and were troubled by the accusation made. We thoroughly reviewed our security video from every angle, which clearly shows the words were not written by one of our employees. We look forward to working with Chief Hornaday as he continues his investigation."

    https://www.kwch.com/content/news/Herington-PD-Officer-made-up-story-about-expletive-on-his-coffee-cup-566583271.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 02, 2020, 01:22:11 PM
    Recently there was a story about how a cop ordered a coffee from a McDonalds and supposedly the coffee cup he received said "Fucking pig".
    As usual there were the usual statements of "support" for cops as well as the media narrative of cops getting "disrespected" and "attacked" everywhere they go and of course there were calls for the McDondalds staff to be fired.

    However, as we often see with similar incidents where there are racial slurs or some sort of "offensive" language, it was a hoax, perpetrated by the victim. Only after the McDonalds store reviewed the video footage and determined there was no offensive message on the cup did the cop resign. Officer Juicy Smollett made this whole thing up and later claimed "it was a joke".

    What's more interesting is how the cops often say "wait for the facts to come out", only when it suits them of course (usually when they try to cover up something). In this case the police chief was all too quick to jump into conclusion and didn't even bother to wait for the facts. He initially posted this on facebook but it was later deleted for some odd reason:

    (https://www.ksnt.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/86/2019/12/POLICE-CHIEF-POST-BLUR-1.jpg)

    Herington PD: Officer made up story about expletive on his coffee cup

    A Herington Police Officer is no longer employed after admitting he "fabricated" a story a McDonald's employee wrote an expletive on his coffee cup over the weekend.

    After initially standing by his story, Hornaday said the officer has since told him the note was "meant to be a joke."

    The officer made the claims Saturday, telling the Chief he was on his way to work when he ordered a coffee at the Junction City McDonald's drive-thru. As he continued on his way, he saw the words "f***ing pig" written on his cup.

    Hornaday shared his concerns over the incident, along with a photo of the cup, in a Facebook post which quickly garnered thousands of shares. McDonald's immediately said it was taking the allegation seriously. McDonald’s Owner/Operator Dana Cook addressed the matter in a written statement Monday as well, saying, “My McDonald’s have the utmost respect for all members of law enforcement and the military and were troubled by the accusation made. We thoroughly reviewed our security video from every angle, which clearly shows the words were not written by one of our employees. We look forward to working with Chief Hornaday as he continues his investigation."

    https://www.kwch.com/content/news/Herington-PD-Officer-made-up-story-about-expletive-on-his-coffee-cup-566583271.html

    Must be something to do with being called Smollet & making Stories up.
    Has Chief Hornaday posted this up on His Bookface & An Apology To McDonalds workers. .?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 06, 2020, 01:03:16 PM
    NYPD cop caught planting stun gun in car by his own bodycam: lawsuit

    An NYPD cop planted a stun gun in a driver’s SUV during a traffic stop — and got caught in the act by his own body camera, according to a new lawsuit.

    Omar Prescott, of Flatbush, alleges in a lawsuit filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court Friday that two officers approached him as he was parking his Chevrolet Suburban outside his Brooklyn home.

    At one point, a cop identified in the papers as Officer Carlo Cassata planted the stun gun in his glove compartment in an attempt to stick him with a now-dismissed illegal weapons charge, Prescott claims.

    In body camera footage obtained by The Post, the cop is seen holding a stun gun in his hand then searching around Prescott’s car.

    Then the officer backs away from the vehicle, turns on the sound on his body cam, leans back into Prescott’s vehicle and pulls what appears to be the same stun gun from the glove compartment.

    Cassata said at the time that he pulled Prescott over after making an illegal u-turn and noticed marijuana in the center console.

    Prescott was arrested and charged with fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon and marijuana possession, but in June the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office dismissed the charges and sealed the case.

    https://nypost.com/2020/01/03/nypd-cop-caught-planting-stun-gun-in-car-by-his-own-bodycam-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 07, 2020, 12:51:22 PM
    Once again, armed criminal gangs attacking innocent people inside their home.

    Charges dismissed against homeowner alleging excessive force by Cheatham County Sheriff's deputies

    CHEATHAM COUNTY, Tenn. (WTVF) — Criminal charges filed against a Cheatham County homeowner alleging excessive force by sheriff's deputies have been dismissed after body camera video was viewed by a judge.

    Back in August of 2018, Cheatham County deputy Doug Fox fired eight rounds through the front door of Mark Campbell's rural home. A federal lawsuit against the deputies involved is moving forward.

    Body cam video shows deputies Fox and Chris Austin investigating two 9-1-1 cellphone hang-ups from an unknown location in the area. It's after dark when the deputies approached Campbell's home. They knocked, but never identified themselves, before calling out to Campbell:

    "Come on out Mark. What's up man? You gotta gun. What's going on Mark?"

    "I got one too,"
    Campbell responded.

    At that moment, Sgt. Fox turned and pulled his weapon, firing eight rounds through the front door seconds later.  The deputies said they saw Campbell open the door with a weapon. But, the video only shows Campbell peeking from behind the door. The deputies never identified themselves. And, no gun was ever found. Those are two keys that will be part of that federal lawsuit which seeks damages claiming the homeowner's constitutional rights were violated.

    https://www.newschannel5.com/news/charges-dismissed-against-homeowner-alleging-excessive-force-by-cheatham-county-sheriffs-deputies
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 07, 2020, 03:59:32 PM



    Horrible

    Once again, armed criminal gangs attacking innocent people inside their home.

    Charges dismissed against homeowner alleging excessive force by Cheatham County Sheriff's deputies

    CHEATHAM COUNTY, Tenn. (WTVF) — Criminal charges filed against a Cheatham County homeowner alleging excessive force by sheriff's deputies have been dismissed after body camera video was viewed by a judge.

    Back in August of 2018, Cheatham County deputy Doug Fox fired eight rounds through the front door of Mark Campbell's rural home. A federal lawsuit against the deputies involved is moving forward.

    Body cam video shows deputies Fox and Chris Austin investigating two 9-1-1 cellphone hang-ups from an unknown location in the area. It's after dark when the deputies approached Campbell's home. They knocked, but never identified themselves, before calling out to Campbell:

    "Come on out Mark. What's up man? You gotta gun. What's going on Mark?"

    "I got one too,"
    Campbell responded.

    At that moment, Sgt. Fox turned and pulled his weapon, firing eight rounds through the front door seconds later.  The deputies said they saw Campbell open the door with a weapon. But, the video only shows Campbell peeking from behind the door. The deputies never identified themselves. And, no gun was ever found. Those are two keys that will be part of that federal lawsuit which seeks damages claiming the homeowner's constitutional rights were violated.

    https://www.newschannel5.com/news/charges-dismissed-against-homeowner-alleging-excessive-force-by-cheatham-county-sheriffs-deputies
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 07, 2020, 04:05:33 PM
    Ex-sergeant alleges dozens of internal affairs complaints were buried by OC Sheriff’s Department without investigation

    Supervisors hid or had some files destroyed, according to retired sheriff’s sergeant who testified in a closed-door personnel hearing

    A retired Orange County sheriff’s sergeant testified in a confidential personnel hearing that dozens of complaints against sheriff’s employees — some alleging criminal activity – have sat gathering dust in internal affairs, some of them intentionally buried to protect favored deputies.

    An audit found that more than 60 internal affairs complaints were not investigated from 2013 to 2018, testified former Sgt. William West in a September arbitration hearing. Most of the cases were referrals, including use of force, from captains and supervisors within the Sheriff’s Department.

    West’s sworn testimony about missteps in the internal affairs system deepens the recent controversy over the department’s systemic mishandling of evidence by sheriff’s deputies. The department also is under a federal civil rights investigation for inappropriately using jailhouse informants to extract confessions from inmates.

    https://www.ocregister.com/2019/12/05/dozens-of-internal-affairs-complaints-allegedly-buried-by-oc-sheriffs-department-without-investigation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 11, 2020, 01:04:09 PM
    “It’s a lie, but it’s fun" said the cop. These scumbags don't give a damn that lives are at stake through their actions.

    Ordinary people "lying" to police: prison.

    Police lying, conspiring or "omitting" information that might even result in deaths: no problem, no punishment.

    But according to these cops, it wasn't lying; it was a "ruse". And the lowlife will not even accept responsibility, he said it was "regrettable" the poor man took his own life, yet he insisted that he was not responsible and said he had not abused his discretion or acted unprofessionally.

    Seattle police officer contributed to man’s death with ruse that ‘shocked the conscience,’ investigation finds

    “It’s a lie, but it’s fun,” a Seattle police officer remarked to his partner as they approached a West Seattle home in search of a suspect in a hit-and-run collision.

    His comment referred to a ruse he planned to use in their pursuit of a man who had fled the collision.

    When the two officers reached the home, they spoke with a woman who said the man used her address to register his car. She told the officers he wasn’t there but she would get his phone number.

    The officer who had devised the ruse he described as fun then set it in motion, unleashing events that spiraled into unforeseen tragedy when the man took his own life days later. Now, a police watchdog has found that the officer’s action “shocked the conscience” and contributed to the man’s death.

    The two officers had not been involved in investigating the collision, which  occurred in another precinct and involved several vehicles. They were asked to go to the home after the address was tied to the fleeing driver’s vehicle. They were told no one was injured, which made the hit-and-run a misdemeanor.

    But as the woman searched her phone for the suspect’s number, the officer with the ruse plan told her they were looking for the man because he was involved in a hit-and-run that left a woman in critical condition.[/b] A  summary report on the 2018 incident was recently released by the Police Department’s Office of Police Accountability (OPA).

    The officer told her the injured woman “might not survive.”

    The woman was “clearly emotionally affected” by the news, police body-camera video showed, according to the OPA report. After the officers left, the woman tracked down the hit-and-run suspect, told him what the police had said and advised him to get an attorney. Initially, he didn’t appear overly concerned, saying he didn’t think he had been involved in a collision that left anyone injured, the woman later told the OPA.

    But he began to worry that he might have hit a pedestrian without realizing it, the OPA report said. He became increasingly despondent over the possibility he had killed someone, the woman told the OPA. She said he had been a heroin addict for nearly 20 years and had prior legal troubles.

    Shortly after, the man died by suicide, according to the OPA report.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/seattle-police-officer-contributed-to-mans-death-with-ruse-that-shocked-the-conscience-investigation-finds/

    https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/6609888-OPA-Summary-Report.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 11, 2020, 02:59:44 PM
    Disgusting.


    “It’s a lie, but it’s fun" said the cop. These scumbags don't give a damn that lives are at stake through their actions.

    Ordinary people "lying" to police: prison.

    Police lying, conspiring or "omitting" information that might even result in deaths: no problem, no punishment.

    But according to these cops, it wasn't lying; it was a "ruse". And the lowlife will not even accept responsibility, he said it was "regrettable" the poor man took his own life, yet he insisted that he was not responsible and said he had not abused his discretion or acted unprofessionally.

    Seattle police officer contributed to man’s death with ruse that ‘shocked the conscience,’ investigation finds

    “It’s a lie, but it’s fun,” a Seattle police officer remarked to his partner as they approached a West Seattle home in search of a suspect in a hit-and-run collision.

    His comment referred to a ruse he planned to use in their pursuit of a man who had fled the collision.

    When the two officers reached the home, they spoke with a woman who said the man used her address to register his car. She told the officers he wasn’t there but she would get his phone number.

    The officer who had devised the ruse he described as fun then set it in motion, unleashing events that spiraled into unforeseen tragedy when the man took his own life days later. Now, a police watchdog has found that the officer’s action “shocked the conscience” and contributed to the man’s death.

    The two officers had not been involved in investigating the collision, which  occurred in another precinct and involved several vehicles. They were asked to go to the home after the address was tied to the fleeing driver’s vehicle. They were told no one was injured, which made the hit-and-run a misdemeanor.

    But as the woman searched her phone for the suspect’s number, the officer with the ruse plan told her they were looking for the man because he was involved in a hit-and-run that left a woman in critical condition.[/b] A  summary report on the 2018 incident was recently released by the Police Department’s Office of Police Accountability (OPA).

    The officer told her the injured woman “might not survive.”

    The woman was “clearly emotionally affected” by the news, police body-camera video showed, according to the OPA report. After the officers left, the woman tracked down the hit-and-run suspect, told him what the police had said and advised him to get an attorney. Initially, he didn’t appear overly concerned, saying he didn’t think he had been involved in a collision that left anyone injured, the woman later told the OPA.

    But he began to worry that he might have hit a pedestrian without realizing it, the OPA report said. He became increasingly despondent over the possibility he had killed someone, the woman told the OPA. She said he had been a heroin addict for nearly 20 years and had prior legal troubles.

    Shortly after, the man died by suicide, according to the OPA report.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/seattle-police-officer-contributed-to-mans-death-with-ruse-that-shocked-the-conscience-investigation-finds/

    https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/6609888-OPA-Summary-Report.html


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on January 13, 2020, 10:57:36 AM
    Disgusting.



    In other words these cops are making up their own laws and acting on them based on their personal opinions. This seems very similar to what is being discussed in another thread. The only difference being that it is Getbig vigilantes advocating for taking the law into their own hands
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 13, 2020, 01:27:08 PM
    In other words these cops are making up their own laws and acting on them based on their personal opinions. This seems very similar to what is being discussed in another thread. The only difference being that it is Getbig vigilantes advocating for taking the law into their own hands


    Well it very Much appears reading this thread that a very large Number of Police officers do as they please
    Being Judge jury & executioner on a very regular basis & continually get away with it,
    Then why not Members of the Public do the same.
    Police aren’t setting a Very Good Example are They.

    I take it you disapprove of the Police Behaviour in this thread
    And of Vigilantes dealing with Rogue Scumbags.


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 13, 2020, 01:57:51 PM
    In other words these cops are making up their own laws and acting on them based on their personal opinions. This seems very similar to what is being discussed in another thread. The only difference being that it is Getbig vigilantes advocating for taking the law into their own hands


    Cops get to investigate themselves (and often clear themselves of any wrongdoing), they get much different treatment from their buddies and the prosecutors (like the ones who give sweet plea deals to child raping pedophile cops) compared to ordinary people, they make their own additional rules through their unions and often even the juries are reluctant to convict cops sometimes even through intimidation. There is also the “minor” detail that aside from all the above, cops have qualified immunity and special protections and are even outright exempt from several laws. But in your soggy perverted mind you can keep thinking about laws and courts of “justice”.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 13, 2020, 02:29:12 PM
    Cops get to investigate themselves (and often clear themselves of any wrongdoing), they get much different treatment from their buddies and the prosecutors (like the ones who give sweet plea deals to child raping pedophile cops) compared to ordinary people, they make their own additional rules through their unions and often even the juries are reluctant to convict cops sometimes even through intimidation. There is also the “minor” detail that aside from all the above, cops have qualified immunity and special protections and are even outright exempt from several laws. But in your soggy perverted mind you can keep thinking about laws and courts of “justice”.

    X2
    Not much Justice goes on in Courts Nowadays that’s for Sure.
    Certainly by reading this thread it’s clear to see.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 14, 2020, 08:00:03 PM
    Cops using "bait cars" for trashy TV shows: no problem.

    Real victims of crime using a "bait" bicycle on their property: arrest and jail.

    Instead of arresting the criminals i.e. the trespassers and thieves, the cops arrest the true victims. In fact the cops even refer to the thieves as "victims". A female cop said: “Definitely disturbing. I would definitely be concerned and I would definitely like action to be taken for what has been done to these victims.”

    Meanwhile, car burglaries are rampant and seldom prosecuted: Car burglaries in some California cities are at crisis levels. Prosecutors say their hands are tied (https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-12-02/california-car-burglaries-lawmakers-loophole)

    That's California and its "laws" for you.

    California couple left out bikes for thieves, beat them, posted videos to YouTube, police say

    A California couple was arrested last week, for allegedly luring in thieves with an unguarded bicycle and then beating them with baseball bats when they tried to steal it.

    Corey Cornutt, 25 and Savannah Grillot, 29, claimed they were robbed the first night they spent in their Visalia home after a burglar broke into their car. A few nights later, another burglar allegedly broke into their car again.

    They both became hyper-vigilant and decided to take a proactive stance in defending their home, using the bike as bait. After beating on the perpetrators who came to steal it, Cornutt and Grillot would later post the videos to Youtube.

    The couple reportedly continued their crusade for months before they were finally detained by authorities for assault.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/california-couple-robbery-beating-youtube
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 15, 2020, 12:01:14 PM
    1510 kids abused over a 16 year period, and the cops turned a blind eye so they wouldn't appear "racist" against the "Asian" scum that abused these girls. Of course the only racism in this case was Pakistani muslime scum abusing young white girls. But in this "politically correct" age if the victims are not "minority" it doesn't fit the narrative. So here we see the cops conspiring to cover up the sexual abuse of young girls on
    a massive scale because the perpetrators were predominantly Pakistanis. The cops who did this and did not act are just as despicable as the "Asian" abusers and should be charged as accessories and part of the child abuse gang.

    Britain hit by another Asian grooming gang scandal as report exposes child sex abuse in Manchester

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2018/10/1862/1048/103925253_huddersfield_grooming_gang_1.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    British authorities knew that a network of predominantly South Asian men was grooming vulnerable children in Manchester, but failed to act to stop dozens of girls from being abused -- according to a damning new report released this week that details yet another Asian grooming scandal in the U.K.

    The report is a harrowing look at how Greater Manchester Police and other local authorities failed to take appropriate action more than 15 years ago, despite getting details of nearly 100 “persons of interest” who were using takeout restaurants as a base to rape and abuse children in care between the ages of 11 and 17. It describes offenders as operating “in plain sight” and hanging around care homes and foster homes in cars as they preyed upon vulnerable children.

    “There was clear evidence that professionals at the time were aware these young people were being sexually exploited, and that this was generally perpetrated by a group of older Asian men,” the report says. “There was significant information known at the time about their names, their locations and telephone numbers but the available evidence was not used to pursue offenders.”

    The review refers to “predominantly Asian men” without going into detail about specifics of heritage or other religious or national identities, but elsewhere Margaret Oliver, a detective on the team who had expressed concern about the operation's closure, described the case as men of “largely Pakistani heritage...abusing vulnerable white girls” in Hulme and around Rusholme -- where there are a number of curry and kebab stores along the area's "Curry Mile."

    The report details how all the victims were “young white females” while the perpetrators are “almost exclusively Asian adult males, many of whom are associated via the Asian restaurant trade.”

    The review was commissioned in 2017 by Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and describes how the men took girls from the homes, plied them with drugs and abused them at “sex parties.”

    Greater Manchester Police launched Operation Augusta to investigate allegations of grooming after the death of Victoria Agoglia, a 15-year-old girl in care who died from a suspected heroin overdose in 2003. The Manchester Evening News reports that Mohammed Yaqoob, 50, was responsible for injecting her with the drug and was later jailed for three-and-a-half years. (just 3.5 years!!!!!)

    The report includes shocking stories of how children told their carers of the abuse and pleaded to be removed from harm. One child is said to have begged her carers to get her away from Manchester as she was too involved with Asian men and that one “made her do things she didn’t want to.” Another spoke of how she was taken to apartments with friends and was given vodka and cocaine and made to “do whatever they wanted us to do.” The report finds that the children were not protected by the appropriate agencies.

    Additionally, it details how offenders eyed a specific children’s home in Manchester that was used as an emergency placement for children entering the care system and therefore, in the report’s words, “maintained a steady supply of victims.”

    The report comes nearly six years after a report detailing the abuse of more than 1,500 victims in Rotherham shocked Britain and made international headlines. That report, commissioned in 2014, found that children as young as 11 were  “raped by multiple perpetrators, abducted, trafficked to other cities in England, beaten and intimidated.”

    In that scandal, about 80 percent of the suspects were of South Asian Muslim backgrounds. Similar gangs have been exposed in Newcastle, Bradford, and Rochdale. The report found that there was a belief that the abuse was ignored by authorities due to a fear of fueling racists.[/b]

    That too appears to have played a role in the Manchester case. An unidentified officer in the report says that they tracked down an offender who was not of Asian heritage. The officer says that what had a “massive input" was that the main offenders were predominantly Asian men and “we were told to try and get other ethnicities.”

    https://www.foxnews.com/world/manchester-asian-grooming-scandal
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 15, 2020, 12:41:13 PM
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    It’s an absolute Disgrace What has been going on Here in the U.K. with these Mainly
    Paki Muslime Gangs - Police & Social services had long been aware & Did Fcuk All.
    To worried they’d be Called Racist 🙄 FFS Just How Pathetically Weak Those People Were
    And Are. - They Should All Be Removed From public office Prosecuted/ Persecuted & Prostituted.

    The repercussions are Still on Going - Will The Many be held accountable??
    Sad to say I’m not Convinced they will.

    Fucking awful in a Supposed advanced 1st world country This Was Allowed To Happen.
    And it Was Allowed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on January 15, 2020, 07:14:04 PM
     ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2020, 01:54:43 PM
    Admits to "using" the car... I'm sure cops also say that other people who steal cars are just "using" them.
    Of course he didn't get a single day in prison, just a year of probation.

    Ex-Philly Cop Admits to Driving Stepdaughter to Prom in Confiscated Porsche

    A former Philadelphia police officer has pleaded guilty to using a confiscated Porsche to drive his stepdaughter to prom, prosecutors announced Friday.

    James Coolen Jr. admitted to the unauthorized use of a motor vehicle after taking the car, which was sized in a narcotics investigation, from a secured parking lot in April of last year, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office announced.

    “James Coolen betrayed the public trust and his fellow Philadelphia Police officers when he improperly and illegally used a 2018 Porsche Cayenne SUV, that was impounded as evidence in a case that he was assigned to, as transportation for his stepdaughter’s prom,” District Attorney Larry Krasner said in a statement. Coolen resigned from the force and turned himself over last year. He pleaded guilty Thursday and was sentenced to one year of probation, the district attorney’s office said.

    https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/ex-philly-cop-admits-to-driving-stepdaughter-to-prom-in-confiscated-porsche/2276012/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2020, 02:50:11 PM
    Once again, from the shithole called Baltimore...
    How many other uniformed gangs are out there operating like this?

    Baltimore Police Detective Charged In BB Gun Planting Incident, Latest In Gun Trace Task Force Scandal Fallout

    Federal prosecutors have charged another Baltimore police detective in connection with a BB gun planting incident from 2014.

    According to the five-count indictment, Robert Hankard, 43, has been with the BPD since 2007 and was promoted to detective in 2014.

    Hankard’s being indicted on federal charges related to allegations that he provided a BB gun he knew would be planted on a suspect, falsified an application for a search warrant and an arrest report in a second incident where drugs were planted on a suspect, as well as that he falsely testified to a federal grand jury in a federal investigation.

    The charges stem from Sgt. W.J. striking someone with his vehicle in March 2014 and calling another officer asking for a BB gun to plant to justify his actions running the man over. The officer then planted the BB gun underneath the vehicle.

    The man, known as “D.S” in the indictment, had no guns or drugs on him at the time of his arrest. He was taken from the scene of his arrest to a hospital, in custody, where drugs were recovered from him.

    He was then charged with possession, use and discharge of a gas or pellet gun- for the BB gun that was planted at the scene of D.S.’s arrest and a number of drug offenses.

    “D.S.” was detained until April 2014 but the charges were dismissed in 2015.

    The indictment alleges that Hankard also knew drugs had been planted in a motel room in September 2015 and wrote a search warrant containing false statements.

    https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/01/15/baltimore-police-officer-charged-in-bb-gun-planting-incident-latest-in-gun-trace-task-force-scandal-fallout/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2020, 05:59:09 PM
    News stations: "BREAKING NEWS: DEPUTY SHOT, GUNMAN AT LARGE"

    Mayor: "Think about what happened today, a sniper took out one of our deputies. The only reason that deputy is alive is because he had his vest on." "Thank god we don't have a funeral"

    According to sources, the mayor even stated that he went to the hospital and saw the "injured officer" in "pain" and saw his "wound"...

    SWAT teams with helicopters and armored vehicles (because apparently this is Ramadi or Kabul) started looking for the "active shooter".

    An evil sniper shooting at "heroic" cops...

    But as it turns out once again, a cop LIED, he made it up all up.
    (as apparently did the mayor, if he "saw" the liar in the hospital with the fictional wound)

    Officer Jussie...

    BLUELIESMATTER


    Officials: LA County Sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster fabricated report he was shot by sniper

    In a rare Saturday night press conference, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials revealed that the rookie deputy who claimed he was shot in the shoulder at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station “completely fabricated” the incident and would be relieved of his duties.

    Investigators who met Saturday with 21-year-old Deputy Angel Reinosa “saw no visible injury to Reynosa’s shoulder,” department officials said.

    After getting interrogated due to doubts raised from his testimony, Reinosa admitted that he was not shot at from an apartment complex near the station as he previously claimed, sheriff’s Capt. Ken Wegener said.

    “He also told investigators that he had caused the holes in his uniform shirt by cutting it with a knife,” Wegener said. “There was no sniper, no shots fired and no gunshot injury sustained to his shoulder. “(It was) completely fabricated.”

    https://www.dailynews.com/2019/08/24/officials-la-county-sheriffs-deputy-in-lancaster-fabricated-report-he-was-shot-at-by-sniper/

    Remember the story about this uniformed liar? The cops  launched a huge manhunt, sent SWAT teams and armoured vehicles, blocked off roads and buildings searching for the imaginary sniper while the liar was taken to the hospital.

    Former Deputy Arrested in Lancaster Shooting Hoax

    (https://static.foxla.com/www.foxla.com/content/uploads/2019/08/06231BC6E45549F980620C4227CF35AC.jpg)

    The former Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy accused of falsely claiming he'd been shot by a sniper in the parking lot of the Lancaster Sheriff's Station has been arrested and has been charged with insurance fraud and filing a false report, multiple law enforcement sources told NBC Los Angeles.

    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/former-deputy-arrested-in-lancaster-shooting-hoax/2293393/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 17, 2020, 06:11:14 PM

    Crazy.   What In the fng hell


    Remember the story about this uniformed liar? The cops  launched a huge manhunt, sent SWAT teams and armoured vehicles, blocked off roads and buildings searching for the imaginary sniper while the liar was taken to the hospital.

    Former Deputy Arrested in Lancaster Shooting Hoax

    (https://static.foxla.com/www.foxla.com/content/uploads/2019/08/06231BC6E45549F980620C4227CF35AC.jpg)

    The former Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy accused of falsely claiming he'd been shot by a sniper in the parking lot of the Lancaster Sheriff's Station has been arrested and has been charged with insurance fraud and filing a false report, multiple law enforcement sources told NBC Los Angeles.

    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/former-deputy-arrested-in-lancaster-shooting-hoax/2293393/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 18, 2020, 04:12:54 PM
    Ordinary people "lying" to police: prison.

    Police lying, conspiring or "omitting" information that might even result in deaths: no problem, no punishment.

    This cop received the brutal sentence of 1 day (!) in prison, which he had already served so he was let go with probation. This particular judge seems to be very lenient with uniformed criminals.

    No jail time for ex-NYPD detective who perjured himself

    A former NYPD officer who lied about almost getting run over by a suspect will not do any time for the crime, a Brooklyn judge ruled Wednesday.

    Ex-grand larceny detective Michael Bergmann, claimed a burglary suspect tried to mow him down in Sunset Park, Brooklyn on Feb. 1.

    Bergmann, 34, swore to a grand jury and in a criminal complaint that the alleged burglar saw him and his partner get out of their car on 65th St. between Second and Third Aves. and tried to run them down.

    Surveillance video revealed that the man’s car was nowhere near the two cops, debunking Bergmann’s account.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-no-jail-ex-cop-perjury-20200108-aatvjls7dnahdnwz52az5eyomq-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 18, 2020, 07:12:27 PM
    Records on Clearview AI reveal new info on police use

    It’s likely most Americans have never heard of Clearview AI, Inc., but many still have a good chance of being in the company’s massive facial recognition database.

    Technological capacity for collecting, storing, and analyzing images is growing, and Clearview is one of the private vendors accelerating the trend. The company claims to use “billions of publicly available photos, including news articles, social media accounts, and public mugshot databases,” which is used to find matches when an image needs to be identified.

    In collaboration with Open The Government, MuckRock requested materials from the largest police departments in the country, including Atlanta, Georgia, which first released records on Clearview AI.

    As part of that project, Police Surveillance: Facial Recognition Use in Your Backyard, OTG’s Freddy Martinez then requested information about Clearview’s business in other locations, including Gainesville, Florida and Clifton, New Jersey.

    In one August 2019 record from Atlanta, an estimated 200 agencies were reported to use the Clearview system, and police officers are sharing their access with other agencies, according to documents received through a MuckRock request.

    Early Saturday, The New York Times released a report on Clearview and the materials found in our requests. Clearview told the New York Times that, using the billions of photos it has scraped from millions of websites, it can find a match for an individual’s face up to 75% of the time. The company also reported that its customer base has actual grown to more than 600 law enforcement agencies and some private security companies. It also has created code to link its facial recognition app to augmented reality glasses, advancing the ability to apply facial recognition analysis to any face one sees on the street.

    https://www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2020/jan/18/clearview-ai-facial-recogniton-records/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Powerlift66 on January 19, 2020, 05:48:33 AM
    Ordinary people "lying" to police: prison.

    Spoiled, gay, black actors - No prison.

    Police lying, conspiring or "omitting" information that might even result in deaths: no problem, no punishment.


    Fixed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 19, 2020, 09:22:29 PM
    She couldn't distinguish between her tazer and her firearm so she shot the man and could also have hurt the other cop who was fighting him. These are the "highly trained professionals" who are "qualified" to handle firearms, unlike the citizens whose gun rights are being slowly eroded. Lack of training, lack or experience and in this case probably being a small female doesn't help.

    Video shows former Lawrence police officer shoot driver during May 29 traffic stop

    Police dash cam video released Monday shows a driver wrestle a Lawrence police officer to the ground and fight him before being shot in the back by another officer during a traffic stop last year.

    Brindley Blood, the officer who shot the man, is charged in Douglas County District Court with reckless aggravated battery. Blood has maintained the May 29 shooting was accidental and she meant to reach for her stun gun instead of her firearm.



    https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article228379669.html


    Remember this case? The cop who shot that man has now "vanished".

    Attorneys say former Lawrence police officer who shot driver cannot be found for lawsuit

    The police officer who shot a Lawrence driver after a 2018 traffic stop turned violent cannot be found.

    The driver, Akira Lewis, filed an excessive-force lawsuit in September against the former officer Brindley Blood, as well as the City of Lawrence, the other officer involved in the traffic stop and the police chief. The lawsuit also alleges that the city failed to properly train its officers. Efforts by Lewis’ attorneys — including hiring a private investigator — have not succeeded in locating Blood so that she can be served the court summons, according to court filings.

    Attorney Shaye Downing, who represents Lewis, filed an affidavit for service by publication Tuesday in the United States District Court of Kansas City, Kan. Downing states in the affidavit that she has tried unsuccessfully to serve Blood the petition and summons. She states that she has sought assistance from law enforcement, a process service company and a private investigator to locate Blood but has been unable to find out where she is currently living. The court will decide whether to approve serving Blood through newspaper publication.

    https://www2.ljworld.com/news/city-government/2020/jan/15/attorneys-say-police-officer-who-shot-driver-and-is-being-sued-cannot-be-found/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 19, 2020, 09:41:45 PM
    Government-run racket.

    Family Sues DEA and TSA After Elderly Man's Life Savings Were Seized at Airport

    Terrence Rolin kept his life savings in a Tupperware container, but all that money now belongs to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), even though the 79-year-old retired railroad engineer hasn't been charged with a crime.

    When Rolin's daughter, Rebecca Brown, tried to take her fathers' savings—$82,373 in cash—on an airplane, a DEA agent seized it simply because large amounts of cash are considered suspicious by the agency.

    Brown and Rolin are now the lead plaintiffs in a federal class-action lawsuit filed Wednesday by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm, challenging the DEA and TSA's practice of seizing large amounts of cash from airline passengers without any evidence of any underlying crime.

    "Flying with any amount of cash is completely legal, but once again we see government agents treating American citizens like criminals," Institute for Justice senior attorney Dan Alban said in a press release. "You don't forfeit your constitutional rights when you try to board an airplane. It is time for TSA and federal law enforcement to stop seizing cash from travelers simply because the government considers certain amounts of cash 'suspicious.'"

    Rolin and Brown's trouble started last August. Rolin had asked his daughter to take his money and open a joint savings account, the Washington Post reports:

    Rebecca Brown was catching a flight home from the Pittsburgh airport early the next day and said she didn't have time to stop at a bank. She confirmed on a government website that it's legal to carry any amount of cash on a domestic flight and tucked the money in her carry-on.

    But just minutes before departure in late August, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent met her at the busy gate and questioned her about the cash, which showed up on a security scan. He insisted Brown put Rolin on the phone to confirm her story. Brown said Rolin, who is suffering mental decline, was unable to verify some details.

    "He just handed me the phone and said, 'Your stories don't match,'" Brown recalled the agent saying. "'We're seizing the cash.'"

    The DEA then notified Brown that it was seeking to permanently forfeit Rolin's life savings. Neither Rolin or Brown have been charged with a crime.

    In the meantime, the lawsuit says the loss of Rolin's savings has left him unable to fix his truck, which is his primary means of transportation, or get needed dental work.

    https://reason.com/2020/01/16/family-sues-dea-and-tsa-after-elderly-mans-life-savings-were-seized-at-airport/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 20, 2020, 01:47:08 PM
    Government-run racket.

    Family Sues DEA and TSA After Elderly Man's Life Savings Were Seized at Airport

    Terrence Rolin kept his life savings in a Tupperware container, but all that money now belongs to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), even though the 79-year-old retired railroad engineer hasn't been charged with a crime.

    When Rolin's daughter, Rebecca Brown, tried to take her fathers' savings—$82,373 in cash—on an airplane, a DEA agent seized it simply because large amounts of cash are considered suspicious by the agency.

    Brown and Rolin are now the lead plaintiffs in a federal class-action lawsuit filed Wednesday by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm, challenging the DEA and TSA's practice of seizing large amounts of cash from airline passengers without any evidence of any underlying crime.

    "Flying with any amount of cash is completely legal, but once again we see government agents treating American citizens like criminals," Institute for Justice senior attorney Dan Alban said in a press release. "You don't forfeit your constitutional rights when you try to board an airplane. It is time for TSA and federal law enforcement to stop seizing cash from travelers simply because the government considers certain amounts of cash 'suspicious.'"

    Rolin and Brown's trouble started last August. Rolin had asked his daughter to take his money and open a joint savings account, the Washington Post reports:

    Rebecca Brown was catching a flight home from the Pittsburgh airport early the next day and said she didn't have time to stop at a bank. She confirmed on a government website that it's legal to carry any amount of cash on a domestic flight and tucked the money in her carry-on.

    But just minutes before departure in late August, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent met her at the busy gate and questioned her about the cash, which showed up on a security scan. He insisted Brown put Rolin on the phone to confirm her story. Brown said Rolin, who is suffering mental decline, was unable to verify some details.

    "He just handed me the phone and said, 'Your stories don't match,'" Brown recalled the agent saying. "'We're seizing the cash.'"

    The DEA then notified Brown that it was seeking to permanently forfeit Rolin's life savings. Neither Rolin or Brown have been charged with a crime.

    In the meantime, the lawsuit says the loss of Rolin's savings has left him unable to fix his truck, which is his primary means of transportation, or get needed dental work.

    https://reason.com/2020/01/16/family-sues-dea-and-tsa-after-elderly-mans-life-savings-were-seized-at-airport/


    Really- From reading that they come across as utter Bastards deserving of being shot.
    Surely they would have a duty to investigate this further after seizing $ ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2020, 02:02:58 PM

    Really- From reading that they come across as utter Bastards deserving of being shot.
    Surely they would have a duty to investigate this further after seizing $ ?

    Unfortunately that’s what “civil asset forfeiture” is, you don’t need to be convicted or even charged to have your property or money stolen by the government. There have been many cases where people would be pulled over and have their money confiscated because a cop thought it’s “suspicious” to carry cash, even when the cops can’t articulate their suspicions or even bring charges. A government run racket indeed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 20, 2020, 02:07:53 PM
    Unfortunately that’s what “civil asset forfeiture” is, you don’t need to be convicted or even charged to have your property or money stolen by the government. There have been many cases where people would be pulled over and have their money confiscated because a cop thought it’s “suspicious” to carry cash, even when the cops can’t articulate their suspicions or even bring charges. A government run racket indeed.

    That really is astonishing- and they don’t have to investigate or provide any proof !!
    How on earth do Innocent people get their money back.?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2020, 02:16:40 PM
    Disgusting


    Government-run racket.

    Family Sues DEA and TSA After Elderly Man's Life Savings Were Seized at Airport

    Terrence Rolin kept his life savings in a Tupperware container, but all that money now belongs to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), even though the 79-year-old retired railroad engineer hasn't been charged with a crime.

    When Rolin's daughter, Rebecca Brown, tried to take her fathers' savings—$82,373 in cash—on an airplane, a DEA agent seized it simply because large amounts of cash are considered suspicious by the agency.

    Brown and Rolin are now the lead plaintiffs in a federal class-action lawsuit filed Wednesday by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm, challenging the DEA and TSA's practice of seizing large amounts of cash from airline passengers without any evidence of any underlying crime.

    "Flying with any amount of cash is completely legal, but once again we see government agents treating American citizens like criminals," Institute for Justice senior attorney Dan Alban said in a press release. "You don't forfeit your constitutional rights when you try to board an airplane. It is time for TSA and federal law enforcement to stop seizing cash from travelers simply because the government considers certain amounts of cash 'suspicious.'"

    Rolin and Brown's trouble started last August. Rolin had asked his daughter to take his money and open a joint savings account, the Washington Post reports:

    Rebecca Brown was catching a flight home from the Pittsburgh airport early the next day and said she didn't have time to stop at a bank. She confirmed on a government website that it's legal to carry any amount of cash on a domestic flight and tucked the money in her carry-on.

    But just minutes before departure in late August, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent met her at the busy gate and questioned her about the cash, which showed up on a security scan. He insisted Brown put Rolin on the phone to confirm her story. Brown said Rolin, who is suffering mental decline, was unable to verify some details.

    "He just handed me the phone and said, 'Your stories don't match,'" Brown recalled the agent saying. "'We're seizing the cash.'"

    The DEA then notified Brown that it was seeking to permanently forfeit Rolin's life savings. Neither Rolin or Brown have been charged with a crime.

    In the meantime, the lawsuit says the loss of Rolin's savings has left him unable to fix his truck, which is his primary means of transportation, or get needed dental work.

    https://reason.com/2020/01/16/family-sues-dea-and-tsa-after-elderly-mans-life-savings-were-seized-at-airport/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2020, 02:37:22 PM
    That really is astonishing- and they don’t have to investigate or provide any proof !!
    How on earth do Innocent people get their money back.?

    They have to go to court and request the money. That in itself is a costly and time consuming process for ordinary people. In these cases the prosecutors will often extort the people to either accept half the money or risk being sued or charged, especially if they have no reason or evidence to verify their “suspicions”. In some other cases the cops or prosecutors make the victims sign an agreement that if they receive their stolen property they will not sue the cops/prosecutors. Think about it: it is like having a thief tell you he will give you back what he stole from you if you don’t sue him or threatening to attack you or sue you if you “dare” to demand more than half of your possessions that he stole. All this after the victims endure significant expenses for this procedure. This is really no different than organized crime.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 20, 2020, 02:40:37 PM
    They have to go to court and request the money. That in itself is a costly and time consuming process for ordinary people. In these cases the prosecutors will often extort the people to either accept half the money or risk being sued or charged, especially if they have no reason or evidence to verify their “suspicions”. In some other cases the cops or prosecutors make the victims sign an agreement that if they receive their stolen property they will not sue the cops/prosecutors. Think about it: it is like having a thief tell you he will give you back what he stole from you if you don’t sue him or threatening to attack you or sue you if you “dare” to demand more than half of your possessions that he stole. All this after the victims endure significant expenses for this procedure. This is really no different than organized crime.


    Damn - That Really is Awful - And as you rightly say it’s tantamount to legalised Stealing
    & Bullying Tactics. Totally Disgusting & Disgraceful Tactics / Behaviour By Police.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2020, 04:39:47 PM
    Who are you and what are you doing? Answer or be detained under Kentucky Senate bill

    A bill pending in the Kentucky Senate would give police new powers to stop people on the street and demand that they identify themselves and explain their actions, drawing criticism from civil rights lawyers who say that would be an unconstitutional device likely used against minority groups.

    https://www.kentucky.com/news/politics-government/article239389143.html

    https://apps.legislature.ky.gov/record/20rs/sb89.html

    Quote
    Any peace officer may stop any person in a public place whom the officer
    encounters under circumstances which reasonably indicate that the person has
    committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime, and the officer may demand:

    (a) 1. The person's name, address, and date of birth; or

    The person's government-issued identification, if in the person's possession;
    and

    (b) An explanation for the person's actions.

    (2) Any person stopped under subsection (1) of this section who fails to identify
    himself or herself or explain the person's actions to the satisfaction of the officer
    may be detained and further questioned and investigated by the peace officer for
    a period not to exceed two (2) hours.

    (3) Detention under this section is not an arrest and shall not be recorded as an
    arrest in any official record. At the end of the detention period, the detained
    person shall be released or arrested and charged with a crime outside of this
    section.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 20, 2020, 04:46:59 PM
    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us"

    Only 12 years in prison? Ordinary people get 5-10 years in prison for much lesser crimes.

    (link from a notorious "anti-police" website)

    Former Montgomery County Sheriff’s Officer Pleads Guilty to Child Pornography Offenses

     First Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Matthew Laver, age 38, of Souderton, in Montgomery County, PA, entered a plea of guilty before United States District Judge Michael Baylson to multiple counts of distribution, receipt, and possession of child pornography.

    The defendant was indicted in March 2019 after an investigation into the defendant’s collection of almost 4,000 images and videos depicting the sexual abuse of children that he downloaded and distributed to other users on the internet over approximately ten years. The investigation revealed that Laver trafficked in child pornography that depicted children as young as infants being sexually assaulted and raped, and that he did so during the time that he was employed as a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Officer.

    “The harm caused by child exploitation is devastating and long-lasting, which is why we prosecute these cases aggressively,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Williams. “In this case, the conduct was particularly egregious because the defendant was a member of a law enforcement organization charged with enforcing the law. We stand ready with our federal and local partners to identify and prosecute all those who would prey upon minor children.”

    “Law enforcement officers take an oath to serve and protect, thus our conduct must be beyond reproach ,” said Marlon V. Miller, special agent in charge of HSI Philadelphia. “Homeland Security Investigations special agents worked closely with our law enforcement partners to further prevent this perpetrator from victimizing children by distributing images of sexual assault.”

    This case is part of Project Safe Childhood (PSC), a nationwide program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce sexual crimes against children. The Department of Justice and U.S. Attorney’s Offices work in partnership with federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement and the local community to develop effective, locally-based strategies to reduce sexual crimes against children.

    The case was investigated by the Department of Homeland Security and the Abington Police Department, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Eileen Zelek and Michelle Rotella.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/former-montgomery-county-sheriff-s-officer-pleads-guilty-child-pornography-offenses

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2020, 05:27:55 PM
    Hopefully inmates will ice him.



    VPOTUS: "Police officers are the best of us"

    Only 12 years in prison? Ordinary people get 5-10 years in prison for much lesser crimes.

    (link from a notorious "anti-police" website)

    Former Montgomery County Sheriff’s Officer Pleads Guilty to Child Pornography Offenses

     First Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Matthew Laver, age 38, of Souderton, in Montgomery County, PA, entered a plea of guilty before United States District Judge Michael Baylson to multiple counts of distribution, receipt, and possession of child pornography.

    The defendant was indicted in March 2019 after an investigation into the defendant’s collection of almost 4,000 images and videos depicting the sexual abuse of children that he downloaded and distributed to other users on the internet over approximately ten years. The investigation revealed that Laver trafficked in child pornography that depicted children as young as infants being sexually assaulted and raped, and that he did so during the time that he was employed as a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Officer.

    “The harm caused by child exploitation is devastating and long-lasting, which is why we prosecute these cases aggressively,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Williams. “In this case, the conduct was particularly egregious because the defendant was a member of a law enforcement organization charged with enforcing the law. We stand ready with our federal and local partners to identify and prosecute all those who would prey upon minor children.”

    “Law enforcement officers take an oath to serve and protect, thus our conduct must be beyond reproach ,” said Marlon V. Miller, special agent in charge of HSI Philadelphia. “Homeland Security Investigations special agents worked closely with our law enforcement partners to further prevent this perpetrator from victimizing children by distributing images of sexual assault.”

    This case is part of Project Safe Childhood (PSC), a nationwide program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce sexual crimes against children. The Department of Justice and U.S. Attorney’s Offices work in partnership with federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement and the local community to develop effective, locally-based strategies to reduce sexual crimes against children.

    The case was investigated by the Department of Homeland Security and the Abington Police Department, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Eileen Zelek and Michelle Rotella.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/former-montgomery-county-sheriff-s-officer-pleads-guilty-child-pornography-offenses


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 21, 2020, 08:05:04 AM
    And another one...

    Feds: DEA Investigator Tried to Meet With 14-Year-Old for Sex

    A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration investigator has been arrested on charges he sent sexually explicit images to an undercover officer posing as a 14-year-old boy.

    Frederick L. Scheinin, 29, was charged with attempted production of child pornography and attempted enticement of a minor. Scheinin is accused of sending sexually explicit images to an agent posing as a 14-year-old boy. He also tried arrange a meeting to have sex with the boy, according to a criminal complaint.

    He appeared Friday in Manhattan federal court and was released on house arrest with electronic monitoring. A message was sent to his defense attorney seeking comment.

    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/feds-dea-investigator-tried-to-meet-with-14-year-old-for-sex/2262106/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2020, 12:31:31 PM
    Another innocent young man victim of gang violence. Government-run gang violence that is.

    PD: Teen hospitalized after being misidentified as suspect by federal agent

    On Thursday, Phoenix police told ABC15 that a Phoenix police officer misidentified the teen during a case they were working involving an attempted murder, but they have since clarified it was a federal agent with the ATF Crime Gun Enforcement Team that made the identification. The federal agents were working jointly with the Phoenix Police Department when the misidentification was made.

    On Friday, Humphrey said he was walking home from dropping his sisters off at school when he heard what sounded like a gunshot from a white vehicle, so he took off running.

    The teen didn't know at the time, that the unmarked vehicle was the Phoenix Police Department and the ATF firing a stun grenade as they thought he was a suspect in a case being investigated by the Special Assignment Unit. Humphrey said he was then blocked off by a second unmarked vehicle, was hit with non-lethal force, and tackled to the ground.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/pd-teen-hospitalized-after-being-misidentified-as-suspect-by-federal-agent
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2020, 02:29:18 PM
    Of course they keep criminals on the payroll.

    Former officer who pleaded guilty to assault is still on payroll for city

    51 days after she pleaded guilty to assaulting a suspect she had just arrested, former Westmoreland police officer Amanda Wolfe is still an employee of the city.

    News4 Investigates confirmed since her guilty plea, Wolfe has been working in animal control for Westmoreland, pending a decision by the City Council on Thursday night if her employment should continue. News4 Investigates first exposed that Wolfe is accused of asking a fellow officer to turn off her body camera and then repeatedly assaulting an inmate that she had just arrested.

    https://www.wsmv.com/news/investigations/former-officer-who-pleaded-guilty-to-assault-is-still-on/article_1277f402-38a1-11ea-aead-df50bc0b14e0.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2020, 02:33:35 PM
    "Only the finest people".

    As usual, the title prominently says "former" but this piece of shit was a cop when he committed all these rapes.

    Former San Mateo Cop Sentenced To 81 Years In Prison For Multiple Rapes

    (https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/15116056/2016/07/former-san-mateo-police-officer-noah-white-winchester.jpg)

    A former San Mateo and Los Rios Community College police officer convicted of raping 5 women while on duty was sentenced on Thursday to 81 years to life in prison.

    Noah Winchester, 35, was sentenced in San Mateo, said San Mateo County Assistant District Attorney Shin-Mee Chang.

    Winchester was convicted in October of raping three women between July 2013 and October 2015 while he served with the San Mateo Police Department and two others when he was an officer for the Los Rios Community College District in Sacramento. The charges against Winchester filed in July of 2016 include kidnapping with intent to commit rape, rape, sexual penetration and oral copulation under color of authority, battery, criminal threats, and forcible sex offenses.

    https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/01/17/ex-officer-sentenced-to-81-years-in-prison-for-rapes/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on January 23, 2020, 08:56:49 PM
    That really is astonishing- and they don’t have to investigate or provide any proof !!
    How on earth do Innocent people get their money back.?

    It goes to probate court. But the bottom line is asset seizure has a history of being abused. I never liked it and still don't. When the guidelines first came out it was used sparingly and appropriately. As time went on it like many things, started to get abused. It needs to be revamped to when an agency confiscates money and it is shown to be in error, the agency suffers consequences.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 26, 2020, 05:30:38 PM
    Have a search warrant for you data? Google wants you to pay

    Facing an increasing number of requests for its users’ information, Google began charging law enforcement and other government agencies this month for legal demands seeking data such as emails, location tracking information and search queries.

    Google’s fees range from $45 for a subpoena and $60 for a wiretap to $245 for a search warrant, according to a notice sent to law enforcement officials and reviewed by The New York Times. The notice also included fees for other legal requests. Federal law allows companies to charge the government reimbursement fees of this type, but Google’s decision is a major change in how it deals with legal requests.

    Google has tremendous amounts of information on billions of users, and law enforcement agencies in the United States and around the world routinely submit legal requests seeking that data. In the first half of 2019, the company received more than 75,000 requests for data on nearly 165,000 accounts worldwide; one in three of those requests came from the United States.

    In April, The Times reported that Google had been inundated with a new type of search warrant request, known as geofence searches. Drawing on an enormous Google database called Sensorvault, they provide law enforcement with the opportunity to find suspects and witnesses using location data gleaned from user devices. Those warrants often result in information on dozens or hundreds of devices, and require more extensive legal review than other requests.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/24/technology/google-search-warrants-legal-fees.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2020, 09:29:09 PM
    Remember the story about this uniformed liar? The cops  launched a huge manhunt, sent SWAT teams and armoured vehicles, blocked off roads and buildings searching for the imaginary sniper while the liar was taken to the hospital.

    Former Deputy Arrested in Lancaster Shooting Hoax

    (https://static.foxla.com/www.foxla.com/content/uploads/2019/08/06231BC6E45549F980620C4227CF35AC.jpg)

    The former Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy accused of falsely claiming he'd been shot by a sniper in the parking lot of the Lancaster Sheriff's Station has been arrested and has been charged with insurance fraud and filing a false report, multiple law enforcement sources told NBC Los Angeles.

    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/former-deputy-arrested-in-lancaster-shooting-hoax/2293393/

    Another liar who claimed he was shot.

    This particular one not only lied that he was shot at but he kept changing his story, 4 times in fact.

    When ordinary people call police for help they may not always get help. But when it's one of their own (or a protected species like Smollett) the cops will spend disproportionate resources to investigate, possibly ignoring serious crimes. In this case, over 50 cops and 10 different agencies (!) were involved, all based on a cop's lie. As well, several innocent people were harassed by cops in the search for the imaginary "shooter".

    Police department fires Warren officer accused of lying about shooting

    A Warren police officer who claimed a man he stopped to help shot at him has been fired and now faces felony criminal charges.

    On Wednesday, the Warren Police Department fired 23-year-old Noah Linnen. According to investigators, Linnen initially said he had been shot but changed his story about what happened multiple times, leading them to believe he was lying. Linnen was booked into the jail just before 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. He’s facing charges of tampering with evidence, falsification, interrupting public service and inducing panic.

    https://www.wkbn.com/news/local-news/warren-officer-who-said-he-was-shot-at-now-booked-into-trumbull-county-jail/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 02, 2020, 12:15:35 AM
    Sick fuck.

    Of course he got a sweet plea deal and will serve unsupervised probation.

    Nanny cam at Phoenix home catches federal agent smelling 3 year old girl's underwear

    A former federal law enforcement officer, accused of having a sexual motive for smelling a girl's dirty underwear in her bedroom, will be allowed to serve unsupervised probation.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/nanny-cam-catches-federal-agent-smells-girls-panties

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 02, 2020, 04:30:40 AM

    Saw that.  Insane. 


    Sick fuck.

    Of course he got a sweet plea deal and will serve unsupervised probation.

    Nanny cam at Phoenix home catches federal agent smelling 3 year old girl's underwear

    A former federal law enforcement officer, accused of having a sexual motive for smelling a girl's dirty underwear in her bedroom, will be allowed to serve unsupervised probation.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/nanny-cam-catches-federal-agent-smells-girls-panties


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on February 02, 2020, 08:23:51 AM
    Sick fuck.

    Of course he got a sweet plea deal and will serve unsupervised probation.

    Nanny cam at Phoenix home catches federal agent smelling 3 year old girl's underwear

    A former federal law enforcement officer, accused of having a sexual motive for smelling a girl's dirty underwear in her bedroom, will be allowed to serve unsupervised probation.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/nanny-cam-catches-federal-agent-smells-girls-panties


    What the fuck?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 06, 2020, 05:02:00 PM
    "Police officers are the best of us"

    It's disgusting to read all the things this scumbag said about his own 8 year old son that was left to die.

    Now they're saying that  the so called "system" "failed" the child (https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-boy-frozen-death-long-island-20200202-4ekupjsjyzbifkpk24em4aemmq-story.html). In 2 years, the child's school teachers made 20 calls to the state's abuse hotline. CPS "investigated" and supposedly couldn't find any signs of abuse. Could the fact that he was a cop have something to do with all these signs being ignored?

    Prosecutors Detail Horrifying Abuse as NYPD Officer Indicted in Son’s Murder

    An NYPD officer and his fiancee were indicted by a Suffolk County grand jury in the death of the cop's 8-year-old son, who was allegedly left to freeze to death in a cold garage after years of verbal and physical abuse.

    Investigators arrested 40-year-old Michael Valva, an NYPD officer, and his fiancee, Angela Pollina, 42, on Jan. 24, charging them Thomas Valva's murder.

    Detectives say the two forced Thomas Valva to sleep in a cold garage at their home at Center Moriches. According to police, by the time the little boy got to a hospital his body temperature was only 76 degrees, possibly indicating an earlier time of death.

    Prosecutors described a pattern of verbal and physical abuse, including food deprivation and being denied blankets, pillows and even clothing. Both came to school, prosecutors said, wearing diapers because they weren’t allowed to use the bathroom at home.

    In court, prosecutors claimed some of the abuse was captured on a camera in the garage labeled "the kids’ room" -- and that Pollina texted video clips to Michael Valva while he was on the job.

    The DA's office also alleged that the pair mocked the kids in text messages, and that Michael Valva called Thomas a "fucking moron" and a "stupid fucking son of a bitch" when the boy fell repeatedly in the garage.

    “I have zero clothing for him,” read a twisted text message from dad Michael Valva to his fiancée just two days before the death of his helpless son Thomas. “Fuck a piece of shit Thomas. He’s not going anywhere.”

    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/thomas-valva-father-indicted/2280432/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 07, 2020, 02:59:32 PM
    The Secretive Company That Might End Privacy as We Know It

    A little-known start-up helps law enforcement match photos of unknown people to their online images — and “might lead to a dystopian future or something,” a backer says.

    Until recently, Hoan Ton-That’s greatest hits included an obscure iPhone game and an app that let people put Donald Trump’s distinctive yellow hair on their own photos. Then Mr. Ton-That — an Australian techie and onetime model — did something momentous: He invented a tool that could end your ability to walk down the street anonymously, and provided it to hundreds of law enforcement agencies, ranging from local cops in Florida to the F.B.I. and the Department of Homeland Security.

    His tiny company, Clearview AI, devised a groundbreaking facial recognition app. You take a picture of a person, upload it and get to see public photos of that person, along with links to where those photos appeared. The system — whose backbone is a database of more than three billion images that Clearview claims to have scraped from Facebook, YouTube, Venmo and millions of other websites — goes far beyond anything ever constructed by the United States government or Silicon Valley giants. But without public scrutiny, more than 600 law enforcement agencies have started using Clearview in the past year, according to the company, which declined to provide a list.

    Federal and state law enforcement officers said that while they had only limited knowledge of how Clearview works and who is behind it, they had used its app to help solve shoplifting, identity theft, credit card fraud, murder and child sexual exploitation cases.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/18/technology/clearview-privacy-facial-recognition.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 12, 2020, 04:43:35 PM
    Once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill for the criminal gangs. In this case we see harassment, illegal arrest and kidnapping, surveillance without a warrant, tampering with evidence, racketeering and more. An employer asked his police chief fishing buddy to harass one employee who complained about discrimination. This shit will not stop until the cops are held personally responsible, both physically (go to prison and stay locked up for many years) and financially (pay our of their own pockets or their union's coffers).

    “It’s better that we arrest him before he makes the complaint (of race discrimination). Then it can’t be retaliation.”

    A black Oregon man told his boss about discrimination at work. Then he was arrested.

    A black man from Oregon sued the city of West Linn alleging that police officers unlawfully surveilled him at work and then falsely arrested him in retaliation for having raised complaints with his employer about racial discrimination.

    Michael Fesser of Portland claimed in the suit, an amended version of which was filed last month in U.S. District Court in Portland, that the incident left him suffering from emotional distress and resulted in economic damages. He sued the city and several members of the West Linn Police Department for false arrest, malicious prosecution, defamation and invasion of privacy.

    West Linn police began investigating Fesser in February 2017 after Fesser raised concerns to his boss, Eric Benson, owner of A&B Towing, that he was being racially discriminated against at work.

    According to separate court documents, Fesser said the discrimination included coworkers' calling him racial slurs. After he raised his concerns, Benson contacted West Linn Police Chief Terry Timeus, his friend, and persuaded to look into allegations that Fesser had stolen from the company, according to the lawsuit. The suit said the theft allegations were false and unsubstantiated.

    But with the approval of West Linn police Lt. Mike Stradley, Detectives Tony Reeves and Mike Boyd used audio and video equipment to watch Fesser while he was at work, according to the suit. The surveillance was "conducted without a warrant or probable cause" and did not result in any evidence that Fesser was stealing from his employer, the lawsuit stated.

    Regardless, West Linn officers, with the help of Portland police officers, arrested Fesser days later based on Reeves' and Stradley's "false representations" to Portland police that they had probable cause for an arrest.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/black-oregon-man-told-his-boss-about-discrimination-work-then-n1135011


    More details here, quite disturbing how the gang conspired to harass and destroy this man and how easy it is if you are a cop or you know one:
    https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2020/02/west-linn-to-pay-600000-to-settle-wrongful-arrest-racial-discrimination-suit-stemming-from-former-chiefs-favor-for-a-friend.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 13, 2020, 07:54:56 AM
    CRAZY!   WTF


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2020, 09:17:08 PM
    BB related...

    8 Sedgwick County detention deputies suspended for alleged use and sale of steroids

    The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office said eight detention deputies have been suspended for allegedly using, distributing and selling steroids.

    On Tuesday, the sheriff’s office received the allegation and began investigating and questioning deputies.

    “Throughout the day, we did numerous interviews,” said Sheriff Jeff Easter. “This is all contained within this group of deputies using, selling, and possessing steroids. Selling was transpiring between these deputies as well. It doesn’t appear it has been introduced into the facility.”

    https://www.ksn.com/news/local/8-sedgwick-county-detention-deputies-suspended-for-alleged-use-and-sale-of-steroids/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 13, 2020, 09:21:24 PM
    And another one in the long list of cops planting incriminating evidence on people. How many people have been arrested, abused and jailed because of uniformed criminals like this one?

    Jackson County deputy facing more charges as new victims come forward

    The former Jackson County Deputy that was fired for planting evidence during traffic stops is facing more charges. Zach Wester was arrested over the summer, and now, more victims are coming forward.

    Wester is looking at 76 charges including fabricating evidence, false imprisonment, and drug possession. In January, more charges were added after five more victims were discovered.

    Wester's arrest records say he planted drugs in people's cars during what seemed to be routine traffic stops, resulting in more than 100 people being wrongly charged. This all happened during his time as a Jackson County Deputy in 2017 and 2018.



    https://www.wtxl.com/news/local-news/jackson-county-deputy-facing-more-charges-as-new-victims-come-forward
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2020, 03:17:09 PM
    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/nypd-officer-charged-with-possessing-hundreds-of-child-porn-images/2290180/?_osource=SocialFlowFB_NYBrand


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2020, 04:34:10 PM
    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/nypd-officer-charged-with-possessing-hundreds-of-child-porn-images/2290180/?_osource=SocialFlowFB_NYBrand




    So not only was this cop allegedly distributing child porn but also producing it!

    And we are talking about cop who has been received the "Trooper of the Year" award. Only the finest people.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2020, 05:32:29 PM
    Voluntarily committing a 6 year old kid to a mental institution, keeping her sedated and holding her for 2 days. This happened in the US, not China...

    Body cam captures moments with police before Jacksonville girl was involuntarily committed

    Police body camera footage released Thursday by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office shows the moments before a 6-year-old girl was involuntarily committed to a mental health facility after an episode at Love Grove Elementary School.

    Martina Falk, the young girl’s mother, told News4Jax on Monday that her daughter is traumatized. Falk is demanding answers from Duval County Public Schools and the mental health facility where the girl was committed.

    “I got a call saying that she is so uncontrollable that they had to Baker Act her,” Falk said. “They called me and said ‘Ms. Falk we’re calling to let you know that there’s nothing else we could do.’ There’s nothing else you could do for my 6-year-old? When she was taken to that hospital to be locked away in this isolation, seclusion room. They said they did that as an attempt to calm her down."

    Falk said her child was heavily sedated. She was then put under a mandatory 48-hour hold and released Feb. 6.
    Footage shows 6-year-old holding officer’s hand as she’s escorted to police car at Love Grove Elementary



    https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2020/02/14/body-cam-captures-moments-with-police-before-jacksonville-girl-was-involuntarily-committed/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 15, 2020, 10:30:22 PM
    This prosecutor was spying on 350+ people. For that she only received 1 year in prison. Once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill for the crimes of organized gangs.

    NYC agrees to pay out millions of dollars in lawsuit against ex-Brooklyn prosecutor who illegally wiretapped colleague and NYPD cop ex-boyfriend

    New York City has agreed to shell out millions of dollars to settle a lawsuit against a disgraced Brooklyn prosecutor who illegally wiretapped her NYPD cop ex-boyfriend and a fellow prosecutor, the Daily News has learned.

    The city is in preliminary agreement to pay $950,000 to Detective Jarret Lemieux and $1.4 million to Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Stephanie Rosenfeld, who were both targeted by ex-ADA Tara Lenich.

    In a separate class-action lawsuit against Lenich and the Brooklyn DA’s Office, $3.2 million will go to 350 plaintiffs who argued their privacy was invaded in the scheme.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-city-agrees-settlement-brooklyn-prosecutor-wiretap-20200214-alhx2k5jqfa7rf3vnx6qgy7zte-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 17, 2020, 05:34:14 AM
    https://www.lohud.com/story/news/crime/2020/02/16/peekskill-police-officer-michael-agovino-arrested-and-charged-while-duty/4779060002/?fbclid=IwAR2hPtU9ABoUu3BHAkFfIUJU4trxZ3dqeS9jfhxdOU4RKjvexlMRsbGrboQ


    Geez! 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2020, 11:15:53 AM
    Even judges can see through the lies of the criminal gangs attacking people. It's time they treat them like the gangs they are, along the likes of MS13 and the Crips, disband them and throw them in prison.


    Judge’s scathing words for Allentown police over violent arrest caught on video: ‘You perjured yourself,’ ‘disgusting blue line’

    Lehigh County Judge Maria L. Dantos had scathing words for Allentown police and the Lehigh County district attorney’s office after a man whose violent 2018 arrest was captured on a video that went viral was acquitted of all charges Friday morning.

    Dantos told the man, John Perez, that he was justified in protecting himself after an officer forcefully shoved him, and said she was “disgusted” by what she heard on officers’ body cam videos.


    “For not the first time in recent history I became ashamed. I was embarrassed. I was ashamed of the officers and their conduct and their words and actions, and I was ashamed of the office I spent 17 years in that they would bring this prosecution.

    You chose to, instead, put on display police officers calling people p------, b------, threatening to shoot a dog, forming your disgusting blue line of four officers who turned their backs and said they saw nothing.


    You perjured yourselves. You escalated a situation without cause. Cops smirking on the stand at this jury, laughing at the defense attorney, high-fiving in the hallway after testimony as if there were something, anything, to be proud of here.

    You, officer Lebron, shoved Mr. Perez because you were mad, period. And then you got up on the stand and told that jury that you were just trying to make some space. That is not what happened.

    Nine officers, most of the night shift, pulling cars from other areas of the city because you lost it. That’s what happened. You lost it. Over nothing. Because someone was talking to you in a manner you didn’t like? No crime. You serve them."



    https://www.mcall.com/news/police/mc-nws-judge-maria-dantos-allentown-police-viral-video-20200221-yhcnfddnureydltwahrrybxhza-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2020, 07:55:01 PM
    That's what happens when you give fat, incompetent people a badge and "authority". All this because according to the cops "a man was moving between 2 train cars, in violation of  City ordinance".

    Charges dropped in case of man shot by Chicago police in incident captured on 'extremely disturbing' video

    Chicago authorities are dropping charges against a man shot twice by a police officer at a downtown train station in an incident caught on cellphone video that the mayor described as "extremely disturbing."

    Interim Police Superintendent Charlie Beck has asked prosecutors to drop narcotics and resisting-arrest charges against Ariel Roman in light of the events around the episode, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement tweeted Sunday.

    Roman was initially accused of illegally moving between two train cars and was shot during an altercation with police officers. Multiple investigations into Friday's incident were underway Sunday, and both officers involved were placed on administrative duties pending the outcome.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/01/chicago-shooting-extremely-disturbing-video-shows-train-incident/4922204002/

    Video:
    https://twitter.com/FreeRangeCritic/status/1233536447749201921
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2020, 07:57:49 PM
    Another case of elderly abuse. This time the "trained professionals" assumed an elderly couple, 86 and 67 years old were bank robbers...

    Elderly couple swarmed by police, handcuffed after being mistaken for bank robbers in Oak Park

    A couple is upset and shaken up after suburban police swarmed their car in a parking lot after they left their normal bank. Ottis Dugar, 86, and his 67-year-old wife Demitri still can't believe they were mistaken for armed thieves. The two great grandparents said they were handcuffed and detained for about 40 minutes.

    Ottis is a Korean War veteran with glaucoma and Demitri is diabetic. They said the incident happened after they left their Oak Park bank. Demtiri was driving Ottis to a Denny's when they were surrounded by Oak Park and River Forest police, all with guns drawn.

    "Yelling, 'Get out of the car! Put your hands up!' And when I'm having a bad knee, I cannot get out," Demitri said. "They asked me, 'Who's in the car?' I said my husband. 'What's his name?' I said it's Ottis. 'Does he have a gun in the car?' I said no, we don't have any guns. 'Well if he's got a gun in the car we're going to shoot him!'"

    The couple said they were handcuffed in separate vehicles, detained for about 40 minutes and ordered out of the cars several times to be identified by bank witnesses.

    https://abc7chicago.com/elderly-couple-swarmed-by-police-in-case-of-mistaken-identity-in-oak-park/5970427/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 02, 2020, 09:52:59 PM
    Another case of elderly abuse. This time the "trained professionals" assumed an elderly couple, 86 and 67 years old were bank robbers...

    Elderly couple swarmed by police, handcuffed after being mistaken for bank robbers in Oak Park

    A couple is upset and shaken up after suburban police swarmed their car in a parking lot after they left their normal bank. Ottis Dugar, 86, and his 67-year-old wife Demitri still can't believe they were mistaken for armed thieves. The two great grandparents said they were handcuffed and detained for about 40 minutes.

    Ottis is a Korean War veteran with glaucoma and Demitri is diabetic. They said the incident happened after they left their Oak Park bank. Demtiri was driving Ottis to a Denny's when they were surrounded by Oak Park and River Forest police, all with guns drawn.

    "Yelling, 'Get out of the car! Put your hands up!' And when I'm having a bad knee, I cannot get out," Demitri said. "They asked me, 'Who's in the car?' I said my husband. 'What's his name?' I said it's Ottis. 'Does he have a gun in the car?' I said no, we don't have any guns. 'Well if he's got a gun in the car we're going to shoot him!'"

    The couple said they were handcuffed in separate vehicles, detained for about 40 minutes and ordered out of the cars several times to be identified by bank witnesses.

    https://abc7chicago.com/elderly-couple-swarmed-by-police-in-case-of-mistaken-identity-in-oak-park/5970427/

    "It was a case of mistaken identity based on the initial report of an eye witness to an armed robbery of the U.S. Bank, 6011 North Avenue, at about 11:30 a.m. today. The witness provided a description of the car and its license plate number to the 911 operator, who broadcast the information. The car was stopped by River Forest Police on North Avenue. When Oak Park officers arrived, the two occupants of the vehicle were handcuffed and placed in separate cars as is procedure in a felony stop. A show-up was conducted at the stop and the witness continued to say the individuals were the ones seen leaving the bank. However, a teller from the bank brought to the show up corrected the information. The couple was immediately released and officers involved in the incident apologized for the mistaken identity. Officers reported that the man was in his 60s and the woman in her 50s, but no specific information on them was gathered. Officers also said the couple did not express any anger or concern about the incident, which all occurred within just a few minutes."

    While bad cops exists, do you ever feel you're just being a pain in the ass?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 02, 2020, 10:02:11 PM
    Scanning obituaries to break into and burglarize homes while the families were at a funeral... How much lower can these people go?

    Former Jefferson Co. sheriff’s deputy accused of burglarizing homes when residents were attending funerals

    A charge of felony burglary has been filed against former Jefferson County Sheriff’s Deputy Janelle Gericke.

    According to a news release, sheriff’s office personnel discovered evidence that led officials to suspect Gericke, 29, may be involved in illegal conduct while off duty. Specifically, “evidence showed she may have attempted to gain access to a house without consent.”

    The criminal complaint against Gericke says these attempts to gain access to homes “occurred while the homeowners were attending the funeral of a family member. In such instances, the deceased person’s online obituary listed the homeowners as surviving relatives along with the date and time of funeral services. If confronted, Gericke would explain that she was there to complete a transaction arising from Facebook.”

    https://fox6now.com/2019/12/17/former-jefferson-co-sheriffs-deputy-accused-of-burglarizing-homes-when-residents-were-attending-funerals/

    Remember this case?

    In trouble again: Former Jefferson deputy accused of breaking into home, stealing hydrocodone

    A former Jefferson County deputy accused of breaking into or trying to break into homes of grieving families is in trouble again. Charges of burglary and felony bail jumping were filed Tuesday, Feb. 25 after prosecutors said she was caught on camera breaking into a Jefferson home.

    https://fox6now.com/2020/02/26/in-trouble-again-former-jefferson-deputy-accused-of-breaking-into-home-stealing-hydrocodone/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on March 02, 2020, 10:10:39 PM
    Remember this case?

    In trouble again: Former Jefferson deputy accused of breaking into home, stealing hydrocodone

    A former Jefferson County deputy accused of breaking into or trying to break into homes of grieving families is in trouble again. Charges of burglary and felony bail jumping were filed Tuesday, Feb. 25 after prosecutors said she was caught on camera breaking into a Jefferson home.

    https://fox6now.com/2020/02/26/in-trouble-again-former-jefferson-deputy-accused-of-breaking-into-home-stealing-hydrocodone/

    so.... do you respond to questions or are you a posting robot Skeletor?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 11, 2020, 02:19:43 PM
    Don't you feel safe when you know those that are supposed to "protect" society ignore crimes such as child exploitation and simply get off with a $300 fine? Simple moving violations or city ordinances can often result in higher fines for "ordinary people".

    Horry County officer charged with not investigating child sex crimes gets $300 fine

    A disgraced Horry County police officer paid a $300 fine to settle 16 counts of misconduct in office for not investigating child abuse and other cases.

    On Monday, Todd Cox pleaded guilty to a lone charge of misconduct in office, according to Horry County court records. After the plea, the state dropped 15 of the 16 misconduct in office counts against Cox. The former detective started in 1996 and left Horry County police in May 2016. A judge sentenced him to one year in jail and a $300 fine, but suspended the jail time for payment of the fine.

    Cox paid a total of $747.50 in fines and court costs, records indicate.

    4 Horry County police officers - Cox, Luke Green, Allen Large and Darryl Williams - were indicted in September 2016 on dozens of charges of misconduct in office. Cox faced a total of 16 charges. Investigators say that Cox failed to investigate dozens of cases while serving as a detective with Horry County police. The indictments detail a lengthy list of misconduct. They allege that Cox did the following:


    https://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/crime/article241025951.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 11, 2020, 02:25:30 PM
    The "brave hero" attacked a teen with no arms and no legs... And then arrested another teen who was filming the attack...

    A 15-year-old with no arms or legs was tackled and pinned by a sheriff’s deputy in a ‘horrific’ video

    The shirtless 15-year-old screams as he lies facedown on the kitchen floor of his Tucson group home. He has no arms or legs, so he can’t flee or fight back. But a sheriff’s deputy at least twice his size is crouching over him and pinning him to the ground, using his body weight to restrain the quadruple amputee.

    The eight-minute cellphone video, which was first published by KOLD, has now prompted an internal affairs investigation at the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. A spokesman told The Washington Post on Friday that the deputy in the video, Manuel Van Santen, has been placed on administrative leave.

    But Pima County Public Defender Joel Feinman told The Washington Post that the disturbing incident likely wouldn’t have come to light if it weren’t for another teenager at the group home, who recorded the confrontation and then had his head pushed into the wall by deputies.

    While most information about the teens is being withheld to protect their privacy, Feinman said that Immanuel, the 15-year-old quadruple amputee, is in state custody because he was abandoned by his parents. On the morning of Sept. 26, an adult who works at the group home called police to report that Immanuel had knocked over a trash can and was yelling and screaming. Feinman isn’t sure what got the teenager riled up, and, in his opinion, it doesn’t matter.

    The deputy from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department who responded to the call determined that Immanuel was disturbing the peace and decided to restrain him, Feinman said. That’s when C.J., a 16-year-old who also lives at the group home, began surreptitiously recording from an adjoining room.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/11/15/pima-county-sheriffs-office-year-old-video-quadruple-amputee/



    Remember this case? The "brave hero" who attacked a quadruple amputee teen (without arms or legs) will not face any charges....

    https://www.scribd.com/document/451143627/Pima-County-Attorney-s-Office-decision-to-not-charge-deputy

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 11, 2020, 02:30:44 PM
    Once again, terror squads invading people's houses. The leader of the terror squad even orders his goons to "kill cameras" to cover up their crimes. And this is not the first time this terrorist and his squad have invaded people's homes.

    Sergeant Ordered Chicago Police Officers To ‘Kill’ Their Body Cams During Wrong Raid

    The CBS 2 Investigators have been exposing Chicago police busting down doors, pointing guns at children and parents, all while raiding the wrong homes.

    We have identified 51 wrong raids just in the past few years, and now, CBS 2 Investigator Dave Savini uncovers even more disturbing findings. A team of officers go in with cameras rolling, but soon after they are all ordered to kill their cameras.

    Police body camera footage is crucial in understanding what really goes on during these raids. It reveals what happens to innocent people as police are once again caught on their own cameras raiding another wrong home. The suspect named in the warrant did not live in the home.

    But not everything that happened during the raid to the family was caught on the police body cameras, because a Chicago police sergeant gave an order to his team. Sgt. Anthony Bruno was caught on those same body cameras saying, “Kill cameras.”

    Bruno gave the “kill cameras” order after recording only two and half minutes of the raid inside the house. It appears to be a complete violation of the Chicago Police Department’s body camera policy.

    Just four months earlier, Bruno and a team of officers were caught doing the same thing during another wrong raid. Three innocent children had guns pointed at them as they were forced to the ground. Police body camera video shows one of the siblings face down on the floor crying, “Please do not shoot me, please.” After terrifying that 14-year-old, her 7-year-old brother, and her 11-year old-sister, police interrogated them without a parent present. One officer can be heard on the body camera saying, “Just tell us, do you know where the stuff is at? Because if you can tell us that, then we are out of here.”

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/03/06/sgt-anthony-bruno-body-cams-turned-off-chicago-polcie-during-wrong-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2020, 09:03:22 PM
    Another case of elderly abuse. Once again the terror squad lied to cover up their crimes.

    Video shows police hurling 71-year-old man in bathrobe to ground

    Frank Serapiglia says he was in his kitchen drinking coffee and reading the news early one morning last September when he heard yelling and noticed several police officers outside his home with guns drawn.

    Serapiglia, 71, thought officers must be pursuing a suspect running through his neighborhood. Then he heard banging on his front door. As Serpadilia was opening the door in his bathrobe, a police officer reached in the house, grabbed him and threw him to the pavement, where he landed face first, according to police body cam video that captured the incident.

    The body camera video challenges the official police narrative of the events of last September, raising questions that now are part of a lawsuit filed in Jefferson Circuit Court on March 5.

    https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/lawsuit-video-shows-police-hurling--year-old-man-in/article_ba82ed38-63a7-11ea-8429-9384dadbe7c0.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 17, 2020, 06:51:02 PM
    Cowards. They're only brave when they abuse the elderly, molest children, attack the deaf or beat handcuffed and incapacitated people. But when they have to protect and serve the community, they shit their pants. This happened while Paddock was shooting so the coward's inaction might have caused the death of many innocent concert goers. All this is part of the information, documents and videos that the police wanted to keep and they were only released after months of delaying and stalling tactics by the police when a Court finally ordered them to release them immediately (ordinary people can be sent to prison for contempt of Court, the police of course get away with it).

    Las Vegas cop 'terrified with fear' as gunman murdered dozens, body camera footage shows

    An armed, veteran police officer stood idle for several minutes last October as the Las Vegas gunman slaughtered dozens of concertgoers from a perch one floor up, and now that cop's actions -- and inaction -- are being reviewed by the Metropolitan Police Department.

    The investigation into Cordell Hendrex, and the rest of the city’s police department, comes as Las Vegas prepares to release its ninth batch of footage and records related to the shooting, which left 58 dead and hundreds injured.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/03/las-vegas-cop-froze-with-fear-as-gunman-murdered-dozens-body-camera-footage-shows.html

    Remember the coward? With the cop union's help not only is he reinstated but he will not be disciplined and receive back pay. Unfortunately, it pays to be a coward with a badge (in his own words, he was "terrified with fear").

    Metro officer wins case, reinstated after waiting in hallway during 1 October mass shooting

    A Metro Police officer who was fired for hesitating and not acting during the 1 October mass shooting has been reinstated.

    Steve Grammas, Las Vegas Police Protective Association president, said Officer Cordell Hendrex won his case and will get back to work with Metro once he completes paperwork. He also noted Hendrex will not be disciplined and will receive back pay.

    https://www.8newsnow.com/news/local-news/metro-officer-wins-case-reinstated-after-waiting-in-hallway-during-1-oct-mass-shooting/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Irongrip400 on March 17, 2020, 07:15:16 PM
    Remember the coward? With the cop union's help not only is he reinstated but he will not be disciplined and receive back pay. Unfortunately, it pays to be a coward with a badge (in his own words, he was "terrified with fear").

    Metro officer wins case, reinstated after waiting in hallway during 1 October mass shooting

    A Metro Police officer who was fired for hesitating and not acting during the 1 October mass shooting has been reinstated.

    Steve Grammas, Las Vegas Police Protective Association president, said Officer Cordell Hendrex won his case and will get back to work with Metro once he completes paperwork. He also noted Hendrex will not be disciplined and will receive back pay.

    https://www.8newsnow.com/news/local-news/metro-officer-wins-case-reinstated-after-waiting-in-hallway-during-1-oct-mass-shooting/

    I don’t even understand how the guy has the balls to even come back to work?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2020, 08:48:42 AM
    Coronavirus Will Be Deadly To Your Liberty
    Reason ^ | 3.5.2020 | J.D. TUCCILLE
    Posted on 3/18/2020, 11:33:43 AM by TBP

    Nothing makes government grow like a crisis. People get scared, politicians respond to that fear with promises that the state will step in and make everything better, and government ends up larger and more powerful. The pandemic of COVID-19 coronavirus threatens a world-wide wave of sickness, but it's the healthiest thing to happen to government power in a very long time. As it leaves government with a rosy glow, however, our freedom will end up more haggard than ever.

    During Senate testimony, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Robert Kadlec, who coordinates the department's COVID-19 efforts, floated the idea of treating virus patients as disaster victims eligible for federal funds.

    What else can you do "in the face of an outbreak, a pandemic" that has, so far, resulted in an estimated 94,000 cases and 3,200 deaths worldwide (though the numbers continue to grow)? You could, I suppose, rely on the same not-yet-entirely government-dominated health system that deals with influenza outbreaks every year. In the 2019-20 flu season, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention our long-time viral enemy has, so far, infected 32 million Americans, sent 310,000 to the hospital, and killed 18,000.

    That's not to say that COVID-19 isn't serious, or that people aren't suffering from its effects. But we forget about our annual wrestling match with a deadly disease, the flu, while freaking out about the emergence of a virus that is frightening mostly because of its novelty, despite any evidence that we're inadequate to the challenge.

    Or, as Rahm Emanuel put it in 2008: "You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before."

    (Excerpt) Read more at reason.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 18, 2020, 10:54:23 AM
    Beware of the 'Emergency Declaration'
    Townhall.com ^ | March 18, 2020 | Bob Barr
    Posted on 3/18/2020, 1:38:44 PM by Kaslin



    In his 2004 book, “Against Leviathan – Government Power and a Free Society,” Robert Higgs explains how our federal government has transformed from one of “defined and limited” powers as envisioned by our Founders, into one driven by a “Crisis Constitution.” As Higgs clearly establishes, we are living in “an age of permanent emergency.”

    The still-developing COVID-19 pandemic illustrates that this “emergency” mindset today is directing the hands of government leaders, not only in our nation’s capital, but in statehouses and city councils across the country.

    It is by now clear that the COVID-19 pandemic represents a serious health problem. At a minimum, individuals should be heeding common sense hygiene rules ranging from the personal – washing hands frequently – to the socially interactive – minimize contacts with high-risk populations such as the elderly and infirm.

    From a regulatory and resource management standpoint, President Trump and governors across the country are directing and implementing appropriate and much-needed measures to reduce red tape and make additional funds available, thereby helping government agencies and private businesses to better meet the challenges posed by this “novel” virus.

    Actions that bear a direct and reasonable relationship to the health crisis posed by the virus, and which are undertaken by government and private-sector entities in response thereto, make sense and are appropriate in current circumstances, even if they minimally or tangentially impact individual liberties guaranteed by our Constitution.

    Beyond such steps – when we enter the realm of far-reaching and vague “emergency” declarations that go beyond any reasoned relationship to containing and defending against the virus – we find ourselves in the dangerous territory described by Higgs. It is this crisis-driven environment in which even the Supreme Court of the United States has declared more than once that, “[we] must surrender or forgo [sic] exercising rights which in other times could not be impaired.”

    In earlier times, government power grabs would be met with at least a noticeable degree of critical debate. Not so in our post-911 world. In fact, in recent days “emergency” steps already taken by state and local, and especially the federal governments, are being criticized openly as being inadequate, with many pundits and commentators demanding that more and further draconian restrictions on individuals and businesses be implemented.

    In this environment, Nanny State officials, ever eager to expand their turf, have seized on the COVID-19 pandemic to justify expanding power in areas they have long sought to control, most notably, 2nd Amendment rights. For example, a new COVID-19 declaration by the Mayor of Champaign, Illinois includes the power to ban the sale of firearms, ammunition, alcohol, and gasoline, as well as confiscate and take ownership of any private property.

    In this latest crisis, as in earlier ones, cries for governments at all levels “to do something” quickly drown out reasoned warnings that many such measures go beyond constitutionally permissible bounds, even past boundaries that routinely have been expanded by presidents, legislators, and judges fearful that if they do not heed calls “do something” they will be blamed if further problems occur.

    The Pandora’s Box is opened wider with each new “crisis.” Each time bites are taken out of our constitutionally guaranteed rights, it sets precedent for government officials that follow. Champaign’s Mayor today can point to similar gun control edicts issued previously by other local officials – New Orleans in 2005 and the U.S. Virgin Islands in 2017 – as a precedent for her gun confiscation power in 2020.

    The “National Emergencies Act” cited by Trump last week in his federal declaration places at Uncle Sam’s fingertips a range of powers that potentially limit virtually every activity in which an individual or business might engage, from banking and travel, to use of the internet. State and local “emergency” declarations, of course, add to restrictions on individual liberty imposed by the president’s declaration of a “national emergency.”

    Compounding the constitutional infirmities with contemporary “emergency declarations" is the fact that the strictures being imposed on citizens throughout the country are founded not on any clear definition or understanding of what actually constitutes an “emergency," the term is nowhere in law clearly defined. Sadly, it appears far more important to most Americans these days for government to “do something” than it is for government to do something constitutional.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 18, 2020, 11:49:52 PM
    When it comes to police state surveillance both sides work together just fine. This bill was introduced by Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT).

    The EARN IT Bill Is the Government’s Plan to Scan Every Message Online

    Imagine an Internet where the law required every message sent to be read by government-approved scanning software. Companies that handle such messages wouldn’t be allowed to securely encrypt them, or they’d lose legal protections that allow them to operate.

    That’s what the Senate Judiciary Committee has proposed and hopes to pass into law. The so-called EARN IT bill, sponsored by Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), will strip Section 230 protections away from any website that doesn’t follow a list of “best practices,” meaning those sites can be sued into bankruptcy. The “best practices” list will be created by a government commission, headed by Attorney General Barr, who has made it very clear he would like to ban encryption, and guarantee law enforcement “legal access” to any digital message.

    The EARN IT bill had its first hearing today, and its supporters’ strategy is clear. Because they didn’t put the word “encryption” in the bill, they’re going to insist it doesn’t affect encryption.

    “This bill says nothing about encryption,” co-sponsor Sen. Blumenthal said at today’s hearing. “Have you found a word in this bill about encryption?” he asked one witness.

    It’s true that the bill’s authors avoided using that word. But they did propose legislation that enables an all-out assault on encryption. It would create a 19-person commission that’s completely controlled by the Attorney General and law enforcement agencies. And, at the hearing, a Vice-President at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) made it clear [PDF] what he wants the best practices to be. NCMEC believes online services should be made to screen their messages for material that NCMEC considers abusive; use screening technology approved by NCMEC and law enforcement; report what they find in the messages to NCMEC; and be held legally responsible for the content of messages sent by others.

    You can’t have an Internet where messages are screened en masse, and also have end-to-end encryption any more than you can create backdoors that can only be used by the good guys. The two are mutually exclusive. Concepts like “client-side scanning” aren’t a clever route around this; such scanning is just another way to break end-to-end encryption. Either the message remains private to everyone but its recipients, or it’s available to others.

    The 19-person draft commission isn’t any better than the 15-person commission envisioned in an early draft of the bill. It’s completely dominated by law enforcement and allied groups like NCMEC. Not only will those groups have a majority of votes on the commission, but the bill gives Attorney General Barr the power to veto or approve the list of best practices. Even if other commission members do disagree with law enforcement, Barr’s veto power will put him in a position to strongarm them.

    The Commission won’t be a body that seriously considers policy; it will be a vehicle for creating a law enforcement wish list. Barr has made clear, over and over again, that breaking encryption is at the top of that wish list. Once it’s broken, authoritarian regimes around the world will rejoice, as they have the ability to add their own types of mandatory scanning, not just for child sexual abuse material but for self-expression that those governments want to suppress.

    The privacy and security of all users will suffer if U.S. law enforcement is able to achieve its dream of breaking encryption. Senators should reject the EARN IT bill.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/03/earn-it-bill-governments-not-so-secret-plan-scan-every-message-online

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/03/graham-blumenthal-bill-attack-online-speech-and-security
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 19, 2020, 05:04:06 PM
    ip to comments.

    Gov. Wolf orders all Pennsylvania businesses that aren’t ‘life-sustaining’ to close, will enforce order
    Philadelphia Enquirer ^ | Today | Angela Couloumbis
    Posted on 3/19/2020, 7:29:08 PM by ManHunter

    Gov. Wolf has announced that all but “life-sustaining” businesses in Pennsylvania must close by 8 p.m. Thursday as the novel coronavirus continues to spread.

    The governor had previously asked nonessential businesses such as salons, gyms, theaters, and entertainment venues to close. Under the new order, life-sustaining businesses that may continue physical operations include gas stations, farms, health care facilities, and transit systems, according to the Wolf administration.

    The order applies to the city of Philadelphia, which previously had been allowed to impose and enforce its own restrictions.

    In ordering the stricter shutdown, Wolf is drawing on powers that his administration said comes from the disaster emergency declaration he signed on March 6, as he and his administration scrambled to slow the spread of COVID-19.

    When Wolf declared the disaster emergency, he triggered a part of the state’s emergency management law that vastly expands a governor’s powers. They include everything from ordering mass evacuations to limiting or outright halting liquor and firearm sales.

    Also among the new powers: controlling “ingress and egress to and from a disaster area, the movement of persons within the area, and the occupancy of premises therein.”

    That is the section — coupled with other powers given to his administration from the state’s Disease Prevention and Control Law — that Wolf’s advisers have said gives the governor the authority to shut down schools and even order businesses to close.

    (Excerpt) Read more at inquirer.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 19, 2020, 06:35:27 PM
    The U.S. wants smartphone location data to fight coronavirus. Privacy advocates are worried.

    The White House and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are asking Facebook, Google and other tech giants to give them greater access to Americans' smartphone location data in order to help them combat the spread of the coronavirus, according to four people at companies involved in the discussions who are not authorized to speak about them publicly.

    Federal health officials say they could use anonymous, aggregated user data collected by the tech companies to map the spread of the virus — a practice known as "syndromic surveillance" — and prevent further infections. They could also use the data to see whether people were practicing "social distancing."

    Some sources stressed that the effort would be anonymized and that government would not have access to specific individuals' locations. They noted that users would be required to opt-in to the effort.

    The federal effort, first reported by The Washington Post, will force the tech giants to weigh their commitments to user privacy against their desire to help combat a disease that has cost thousands of human lives and upended the global economy.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/u-s-wants-smartphone-location-data-fight-coronavirus-privacy-advocates-n1162821
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2020, 06:27:10 PM
    DOJ seeks new emergency powers amid coronavirus pandemic
    One of the requests to Congress would allow the department to petition a judge to indefinitely detain someone during an emergency.


    The Justice Department has quietly asked Congress for the ability to ask chief judges to detain people indefinitely without trial during emergencies — part of a push for new powers that comes as the coronavirus spreads through the United States.

    Documents reviewed by POLITICO detail the department’s requests to lawmakers on a host of topics, including the statute of limitations, asylum and the way court hearings are conducted. POLITICO also reviewed and previously reported on documents seeking the authority to extend deadlines on merger reviews and prosecutions.

    In one of the documents, the department proposed that Congress grant the attorney general power to ask the chief judge of any district court to pause court proceedings “whenever the district court is fully or partially closed by virtue of any natural disaster, civil disobedience, or other emergency situation.”

    The proposal would also grant those top judges broad authority to pause court proceedings during emergencies. It would apply to “any statutes or rules of procedure otherwise affecting pre-arrest, post-arrest, pre-trial, trial, and post-trial procedures in criminal and juvenile proceedings and all civil process and proceedings,” according to draft legislative language the department shared with Congress. In making the case for the change, the DOJ document wrote that individual judges can currently pause proceedings during emergencies, but that their proposal would make sure all judges in any particular district could handle emergencies “in a consistent manner.”

    The request raised eyebrows because of its potential implications for habeas corpus –– the constitutional right to appear before a judge after arrest and seek release.

    “Not only would it be a violation of that, but it says ‘affecting pre-arrest,’” said Norman L. Reimer, the executive director of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. “So that means you could be arrested and never brought before a judge until they decide that the emergency or the civil disobedience is over. I find it absolutely terrifying. Especially in a time of emergency, we should be very careful about granting new powers to the government.”

    https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/21/doj-coronavirus-emergency-powers-140023
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 01, 2020, 08:24:08 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2020, 05:14:17 PM
    Isn't this ironic.. A county prosecutor arrested because the money stolen from people (as "civil asset forfeiture") was allegedly used to buy flowers and makeup for select secretaries, a security system for his residence, garden benches for staffers’ homes, country club catering for parties, campaign expenditures and more.

    Macomb County Prosecutor Eric Smith resigns amid criminal charges against him

    Macomb County Prosecutor Eric Smith, accused of embezzlement and misconduct in office over how drug and alcohol forfeiture funds were spent, resigned from office Monday.

    The announcement came less than week after the longtime prosecutor was charged with 10 criminal counts by the Michigan Attorney General's Office in a nearly yearlong probe of how his office spent the funds. Smith announced his resignation in a news release from his office.

    On Friday, Smith and his former chief of operations, Benjamin Liston, were released on $100,000 personal bonds on criminal charges related to the alleged embezzlement of $600,000 from drug and alcohol forfeiture funds since 2012.

    They and two others, including Derek Miller, who was Smith's current chief of operations, are charged in the probe by Michigan State Police.

    https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/macomb/2020/03/30/macomb-prosecutor-eric-smith-resigns/5087997002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2020, 05:20:43 PM
    Another case of elderly abuse by the "brave heroes"... This time they attacked and tried to suffocate a blind 63 year old man who was strapped on a gurney and had also been attacked again moments before the cops attacked him. The cops also slapped the usual bogus charges in order to keep this man in jail for 139 days but ultimately he was acquitted of all charges.

    South L.A. man sues LAPD, alleging officer suffocated him until he was unconscious

    A legally blind man is suing the Los Angeles Police Department, alleging an officer suffocated him while he was strapped to a hospital gurney last year.

    LAPD officers are accused of beating the man after responding to his apartment in the South Los Angeles neighborhood of Manchester Square, according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

    The city of Los Angeles and eight officers are named as defendants.

    According to the lawsuit, the officer held his hand over 63-year-old Michael Moore’s mouth until he lost consciousness at a hospital in downtown L.A. The suit also alleges LAPD falsely claimed Moore resisted arrest and threatened firefighters and an officer.

    A jury acquitted him of all charges but not before he spent 139 days in jail awaiting trial — he was unable to afford bail, court filings state.

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/south-l-a-man-sues-lapd-alleging-officer-suffocated-him-until-he-was-unconscious/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2020, 04:47:03 AM
    https://www.newsweek.com/california-county-fining-residents-1000-not-wearing-face-masks-public-1496692?fbclid=IwAR372KNBOwSNRimXAtGmFbNAc1-wn3TEZBbkg3eE9I60fYU8oSTLdtr-pR0


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 09, 2020, 11:21:17 PM
    This career criminal "brave hero" faces 44 charges ranging from rape and sexual battery to reckless driving and is also facing 9 lawsuits. But as it often happens in such cases the sheriff's office conveniently "lost" the camera footage...

    Court Steps in After Tennessee County Loses Dash-Cam Video

    Before appointing a forensic examiner or considering sanctions against a Tennessee county for the loss of months of dashboard-camera footage — possible evidence for nine lawsuits against a single sheriff’s deputy accused of a range of misconduct — a federal magistrate wants to ensure the footage is actually gone.

    Calling the loss of the data a “front-burner item,” U.S. Magistrate Judge Christopher Steger in Eastern District of Tennessee said Tuesday that Hamilton County, which sits in the southeast corner of the state, had a duty to preserve evidence — including the dash-cam footage of the traffic stops in question.

    At the center of the lost evidence is former Hamilton County Sheriff Deputy Daniel Wilkey. In December, the county district attorney filed 44 criminal charges against him that ranged from rape and sexual battery to reckless driving. Wilkey and Hamilton County also face nine civil lawsuits, including one class action.

    https://www.courthousenews.com/court-steps-in-after-tennessee-county-loses-dashcam-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 10, 2020, 12:40:27 PM
    I don’t even understand how the guy has the balls to even come back to work?

    I agree. I can't imagine his co workers are going to be very happy working with him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 11, 2020, 06:05:18 PM
    Imagine being in your home and suddenly getting shot. That's what happened to a man who lives next door to a cop.

    Notice the usual cop speak, stating how the cop's "duty weapon discharged unintentionally" and "the discharged round exited the officer’s residence and entered the residence immediately to the south striking the victim".

    As of yet the cop has not been named or arrested.

    Off-duty officer tells police he unintentionally shot neighbor in Kansas City

    Kansas City police were investigating after an officer said he unintentionally shot a neighbor early Monday.

    The shooting was reported just before 12:30 a.m. in the 5600 block of North Richmond Avenue in Kansas City, North, Sgt. Jacob Becchina, a Kansas City Police Department spokesman, said in an email. Moments later the off-duty officer, a 24-year police veteran, called for help, saying he had accidentally shot his neighbor.

    According to the preliminary investigation, it appeared the officer was off duty and inside his home when “his duty weapon discharged unintentionally,” Becchina said. “The discharged round exited the officer’s residence and entered the residence immediately to the south striking the victim.”

    A woman near the victim as well as others inside the victim’s home were not injured.

    https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article241794266.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 11, 2020, 08:08:08 PM
    https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/video-former-apd-officer-arrested-for-battery-kidnapping-charges/


    Anyone have heartburn with fellow officers cutting all the patches off this officers uniform as they arrested him for beating his girlfriend? He hasn't been tried or convicted yet. Did the police officers violate his rights and unnecessarily embarrass him before he had his day in court?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 15, 2020, 11:10:57 AM
    https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/15/new-york-gov-cuomo-to-order-all-people-to-wear-masks-or-face-coverings-in-public.html

    This is getting FNG nuts 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 20, 2020, 06:52:40 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 21, 2020, 05:35:35 PM
    Westport Police to Test ‘Pandemic Drone’ That Can Sense Fevers, Coughing

    Westport police are going to be testing a “pandemic drone” that can monitor people’s temperatures from 190 feet away and detect sneezing, coughing and heart and breathing rates amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Westport police said they are working with Draganfly, a drone company, to test technology in an effort to help combat the spread of the coronavirus.

    A news release from Draganfly said the pandemic drone will be equipped with a specialized sensor and computer vision systems that can display fever/temperature, heart and respiratory rates, as well as detect people sneezing and coughing in crowds, and wherever groups of people may work or congregate.

    https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/westport-police-to-test-pandemic-drone-that-can-sense-fevers-coughing/2258746/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 23, 2020, 06:02:02 PM
    Westport Police to Test ‘Pandemic Drone’ That Can Sense Fevers, Coughing

    Westport police are going to be testing a “pandemic drone” that can monitor people’s temperatures from 190 feet away and detect sneezing, coughing and heart and breathing rates amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Westport police said they are working with Draganfly, a drone company, to test technology in an effort to help combat the spread of the coronavirus.

    A news release from Draganfly said the pandemic drone will be equipped with a specialized sensor and computer vision systems that can display fever/temperature, heart and respiratory rates, as well as detect people sneezing and coughing in crowds, and wherever groups of people may work or congregate.

    https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/westport-police-to-test-pandemic-drone-that-can-sense-fevers-coughing/2258746/

    Damn 😱
    Big Brother IS watching us
    Technology Now is another Double edged Sword.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 23, 2020, 06:39:59 PM
    Damn 😱
    Big Brother IS watching us
    Technology Now is another Double edged Sword.

    Update: Westport police said they will not take part in the program.

    That's showing on the link when you click it
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2020, 07:51:40 PM
    Another one of those "fine people"...

    This "brave hero" is accused of repeatedly raping a woman when she was a child (from 4th grade until 8th grade!) and also that when the woman decided to come forth and report her rapist, he, along with his father broke into her home and assaulted her. However, a judge ordered that he not be held in jail.

    St. Albans police officer accused of assault and kidnapping released on conditions

    A judge Monday ordered that a St. Albans police officer who allegedly broke into a woman’s home, beat her up, threw her down a flight of stairs, and burnt her repeatedly with a cigar — all with the help of his father — be released on conditions.

    Zachary and Allen Pigeon, 29 and 56, respectively, each pleaded not guilty Monday to 5 charges: simple assault, kidnapping, obstructing justice, burglary, and unlawful restraint.

    The kidnapping charge carries the possibility of life behind bars, with the additional charges collectively adding the potential of another 26 years imprisonment.

    State police had said Sunday that Zachary Pigeon would also face an aggravated sexual assault charge, but that was not included in the counts filed against him in court Monday.

    https://vtdigger.org/2020/04/20/st-albans-police-officer-accused-of-sex-assault-and-kidnapping/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2020, 07:54:00 PM
    And another disgusting piece of shit:

    Anne Arundel County Police Officer Zachary Koshlap Arrested, Charged With Soliciting Child For Sex

    An Anne Arundel County police officer was arrested Friday and faces multiple charges of child pornography possession as well as sexual solicitation of a minor, officials said.

    Zachary Steven Koshlap, 33, of Glen Burnie, is a six-year veteran of the department’s patrol bureau.

    The FBI reportedly told police a member of an FBI Task Force was working undercover when they got a message from an unknown user who solicited a sexual encounter involving an eight-year-old child.

    Anne Arundel County detectives began investigating and identified the user as Koshlap. Later that day, they got a search warrant to search his home. During the search, officers seized multiple devices and other evidence.

    Police said Koshlap admitted during the search to taking part in the conversation. He was suspended from the force that day and is currently suspended without pay.

    He’s charged with 10 counts of possession of child pornography and one count of sexual solicitation of a minor.

    https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/04/03/anne-arundel-county-police-officer-zachary-koshlap-arrested-charged-with-soliciting-child-for-sex/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 23, 2020, 10:43:19 PM
    And another disgusting piece of shit:

    Anne Arundel County Police Officer Zachary Koshlap Arrested, Charged With Soliciting Child For Sex

    An Anne Arundel County police officer was arrested Friday and faces multiple charges of child pornography possession as well as sexual solicitation of a minor, officials said.

    Zachary Steven Koshlap, 33, of Glen Burnie, is a six-year veteran of the department’s patrol bureau.

    The FBI reportedly told police a member of an FBI Task Force was working undercover when they got a message from an unknown user who solicited a sexual encounter involving an eight-year-old child.

    Anne Arundel County detectives began investigating and identified the user as Koshlap. Later that day, they got a search warrant to search his home. During the search, officers seized multiple devices and other evidence.

    Police said Koshlap admitted during the search to taking part in the conversation. He was suspended from the force that day and is currently suspended without pay.

    He’s charged with 10 counts of possession of child pornography and one count of sexual solicitation of a minor.

    https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/04/03/anne-arundel-county-police-officer-zachary-koshlap-arrested-charged-with-soliciting-child-for-sex/

    In a statement, Police Chief Timothy Altomare said he is “heart sick, physically ill, disgusted and enraged” by Koshlap’s alleged conduct.

    “If someone wearing a badge betrays our oath of protection, we will do everything within our power to bring them to justice and make sure they never wear our uniform again,” he said.

    Refreshing, thanks for bringing this to our attention skeletor
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2020, 11:04:22 PM
    Good decision. However, this man spent almost 5 years in jail.

    Court rules ‘Stand Your Ground’ applies in Florida man’s case in deputy shooting

    A Fifth District Court of Appeals ruling means a Port St. John man will not face prosecution in connection with shooting of a Brevard County deputy.

    Citing the ‘Stand Your Ground,’ law, the Fifth District Court of Appeals dismissed the longstanding charges against a Port St. John man accused of shooting a Brevard County Sheriff’s deputy during a botched arrest in front of his home in 2015.

    The decision — issued Wednesday — ends the prosecution of John DeRossett, 60, on the attempted premeditated first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer while discharging a firearm. DeRossett spent nearly five years at the Brevard County Jail Complex in Sharpes as he awaited a trial. He was allowed to leave on bond in March.

    “The appellate decision is better than a jury acquittal. An acquittal only means ‘not guilty.’ This order means that John is innocent, that his actions were justified, and that he never should have been arrested in the first place. It’s a total vindication,” said DeRossett’s Orlando-based attorney, Michael Panella.

    https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20200416/court-rules-stand-your-ground-applies-in-florida-mans-case-in-deputy-shooting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 23, 2020, 11:19:11 PM
    Another one of those "fine people".

    Story from a random cop hating website:

    City Of Margate Police Officer Charged With Soliciting A Minor For Visual Depictions Of Sexually Explicit Conduct

    Jacksonville, Florida – United States Attorney Maria Chapa Lopez announces the arrest and charging by criminal complaint of Andrew Christian Hammock (46, Boca Raton) with soliciting visual depictions of a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct. If convicted, Hammock faces a mandatory minimum penalty of 15 years, and up to, 30 years in federal prison and a potential life term of supervised release.

    According to the complaint, Hammock was employed by the Margate Police Department as a police officer. From February 14 through March 17, 2020, Hammock engaged in chats using a social media application with whom he believed to be a 14-year-old female child. Hammock solicited the child to produce and send him child pornography on multiple occasions and indicated his desire to engage in sexual conduct with the “child,” who was actually an undercover FBI agent. Hammock was arrested at the City of Margate Police Department on March 17, 2020.

    This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Jacksonville Office), with assistance from the Margate Police Department. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Kelly S. Karase.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/city-margate-police-officer-charged-soliciting-minor-visual-depictions-sexually
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 24, 2020, 05:52:13 AM
    In a statement, Police Chief Timothy Altomare said he is “heart sick, physically ill, disgusted and enraged” by Koshlap’s alleged conduct.

    “If someone wearing a badge betrays our oath of protection, we will do everything within our power to bring them to justice and make sure they never wear our uniform again,” he said.

    Refreshing, thanks for bringing this to our attention skeletor


    That’s great to hear & Thanks for Posting it up.
    Only many many more police chiefs & DA’s Etc should echo & totally believe And Uphold them views.
    Not the constant exonerations or Pathetic wet Lettuce Wrist Slaps Dished Out.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 24, 2020, 05:40:14 PM
    "Only the finest people"...

    Fucking disgusting child abusers once again...

    Louisiana sheriff’s deputy, junior-high teacher wife held on child rape and porn charges: reports

    Photos of two suspects, a married couple, posing nude with a child were among the items authorities seized when a longtime sheriff’s deputy and a junior high school teacher were arrested this week in Louisiana on child rape and pornography charges, according to a report.

    Taken into custody Wednesday were Dennis Perkins, 44, and his wife, Cynthia Perkins, 34, FOX 8 of New Orleans reported.

    Both husband and wife were charged with 60 counts of production of pornography involving a child under 13, as well as rape charges, authorities said.

    Dennis Perkins was additionally charged with obstruction of justice because he allegedly tossed his cellphone into a river after realizing investigators were about to arrest him while he was on a fishing trip, a source told FOX 8.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/louisiana-sheriffs-deputy-junior-high-teacher-wife-held-on-child-rape-and-porn-charges-report

    Remember these disgusting pieces of shit? According to court filings it turns out that back in 1998 this "brave hero" applied for a position with the Baton Rouge Police Department. He was already a reserve deputy with the Livingston Parish Sheriff's Office at the time. During the application process, he allegedly admitted to several crimes including prostitution, sex with a minor and drug use. The Baton Rouge hiring board at that time voted unanimously not to hire Dennis. Despite all that and allegedly admitting to these crimes, he rose to be the SWAT commander of the LPSO. They seem to promote the finest people.

    New court filings into Dennis & Cynthia Perkins reveal alleged pattern with child sex abuse

    The Louisiana Attorney General’s Office has filed disturbing new documents that outline their alleged evidence against former high-ranking Livingston parish sheriff’s deputy Dennis Perkins and his former school-teacher wife, Cynthia.

    The complete filing contains extremely graphic descriptions of the alleged crimes.

    The new court filing includes a job application from 1998 to the Baton Rouge Police Department where Dennis allegedly admitted to several crimes including prostitution, sex with a minor and drug use. The BRPD hiring board at that time voted unanimously not to hire Dennis. He was a reserve deputy with LPSO when he applied for that job.

    https://www.wafb.com/2020/04/20/kiran-new-court-filings-into-dennis-cynthia-perkins-reveal-alleged-pattern-with-child-sex/

    The document below contains some very graphic and disturbing details:

    https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/track/?pageNum=51&uri=urn%3Aaaid%3Ascds%3AUS%3Aee87afe3-cbac-4aa5-b4f7-8813b8a7e004
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on April 24, 2020, 09:24:07 PM
    Good decision. However, this man spent almost 5 years in jail.

    Court rules ‘Stand Your Ground’ applies in Florida man’s case in deputy shooting

    A Fifth District Court of Appeals ruling means a Port St. John man will not face prosecution in connection with shooting of a Brevard County deputy.

    Citing the ‘Stand Your Ground,’ law, the Fifth District Court of Appeals dismissed the longstanding charges against a Port St. John man accused of shooting a Brevard County Sheriff’s deputy during a botched arrest in front of his home in 2015.

    The decision — issued Wednesday — ends the prosecution of John DeRossett, 60, on the attempted premeditated first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer while discharging a firearm. DeRossett spent nearly five years at the Brevard County Jail Complex in Sharpes as he awaited a trial. He was allowed to leave on bond in March.

    “The appellate decision is better than a jury acquittal. An acquittal only means ‘not guilty.’ This order means that John is innocent, that his actions were justified, and that he never should have been arrested in the first place. It’s a total vindication,” said DeRossett’s Orlando-based attorney, Michael Panella.

    https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20200416/court-rules-stand-your-ground-applies-in-florida-mans-case-in-deputy-shooting

    can you tell me the details and facts that led you to conclude it was a good decision other than it was a law enforcement officer shot? I read the story and the facts are sorely lacking. Maybe you have some additional details?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 28, 2020, 06:55:01 AM
    Our Dress Rehearsal for a Police State
    Townhall.com ^ | April 28, 2020 | Dennis Prager
    Posted on 4/28/2020, 7:11:32 AM by Kaslin



    All my life, I have dismissed paranoids on the right ("America is headed to communism") and the left ("It can happen here" -- referring to fascism). It's not that I've ever believed liberty was guaranteed. Being familiar with history and a pessimist regarding the human condition, I never believed that.

    But the ease with which police state tactics have been employed and the equal ease with which most Americans have accepted them have been breathtaking.

    People will argue that a temporary police state has been justified because of the allegedly unique threat to life posed by the new coronavirus. I do not believe the data will bear that out. Regardless, let us at least agree that we are closer to a police state than ever in American history.

    "Police state" does not mean totalitarian state. America is not a totalitarian state; we still have many freedoms. In a totalitarian state, this article could not be legally published, and if it were illegally published, I would be imprisoned and/or executed. But we are presently living with all four of the key hallmarks of a police state:

    No. 1: Draconian laws depriving citizens of elementary civil rights.

    The federal, state, county and city governments are now restricting almost every freedom except those of travel and speech. Americans have been banned from going to work (and thereby earning a living), meeting in groups (both indoors and outdoors), meeting in their cars in church parking lots to pray and entering state-owned properties such as beaches and parks -- among many other prohibitions.

    No. 2: A mass media supportive of the state's messaging and deprivation of rights.

    The New York Times, CNN and every other mainstream mass medium -- except Fox News, The Wall Street Journal (editorial and opinion pages only) and talk radio -- have served the cause of state control over individual Americans' lives just as Pravda served the Soviet government. In fact, there is almost no more dissent in The New York Times than there was in Pravda. And the Big Tech platforms are removing posts about the virus and potential treatments they deem "misinformation."

    No. 3: Use of police.

    Police departments throughout America have agreed to enforce these laws and edicts with what can only be described as frightening alacrity. After hearing me describe police giving summonses to, or even arresting, people for playing baseball with their children on a beach, jogging alone without a mask, or worshipping on Easter while sitting isolated in their cars in a church parking lot, a police officer called my show. He explained that the police have no choice. They must respond to every dispatch they receive.

    "And why are they dispatched to a person jogging on a beach or sitting alone in a park?" I asked.

    Because the department was informed about these lawbreakers.

    "And who told the police about these lawbreakers?" I asked.

    His answer brings us to the fourth characteristic of a police state:

    No. 4: Snitches.

    How do the police dispatchers learn of lawbreakers such as families playing softball in a public park, lone joggers without face masks, etc.? From their fellow citizens snitching on them. The mayor of New York City, Bill de Blasio, set up a "snitch line," whereby New Yorkers were told to send authorities photos of fellow New Yorkers violating any of the quarantine laws. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti similarly encouraged snitching, unabashedly using the term.

    It is said that about 1 in every 100 East German citizens were informers for the Stasi, the East German secret police, as superbly portrayed in the film "The Lives of Others." It would be interesting, and, I think, important, to know what percentage of New Yorkers informed on their fellow citizens. Now, again, you may think such a comparison is not morally valid, that de Blasio's call to New Yorkers to serve a Stasi-like role was morally justified given the coronavirus pandemic. But you cannot deny it is Stasi-like or that, other than identifying spies during World War II, this is unprecedented in American history at anywhere near this level.

    This past Friday night, I gathered with six others for a Shabbat dinner with friends in Santa Monica, California. On my Friday radio show, I announced I would be doing that, and if I was arrested, it would be worth it. In my most pessimistic dreams, I never imagined that in America, having dinner at a friend's house would be an act of civil disobedience, perhaps even a criminal act. But that is precisely what happens in a police state.

    The reason I believe this is a dress rehearsal is that too many Americans appear untroubled by it; the dominant force in America, the left, supports it, and one of the two major political parties has been taken over by the left. Democrats and their supporters have, in effect, announced they will use state power to enforce any law they can to combat the even greater "existential" crisis of global warming.

    On the CNN website this weekend, in one of the most frightening and fanatical articles in an era of fanaticism, Bill Weir, CNN chief climate correspondent, wrote an open letter to his newborn son. In it, he wrote of his idealized future for America: "completely new forms of power, food, construction, transportation, economics and politics."

    You cannot get there without a police state.

    If you love liberty, you must see that it is jeopardized more than at any time since America's founding. And that means, among other things, that at this time, a vote for any Democrat is a vote to end liberty.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2020, 02:26:28 PM
    That's what happens when you give fat, incompetent people a badge and "authority". All this because according to the cops "a man was moving between 2 train cars, in violation of  City ordinance".

    Charges dropped in case of man shot by Chicago police in incident captured on 'extremely disturbing' video

    Chicago authorities are dropping charges against a man shot twice by a police officer at a downtown train station in an incident caught on cellphone video that the mayor described as "extremely disturbing."

    Interim Police Superintendent Charlie Beck has asked prosecutors to drop narcotics and resisting-arrest charges against Ariel Roman in light of the events around the episode, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement tweeted Sunday.

    Roman was initially accused of illegally moving between two train cars and was shot during an altercation with police officers. Multiple investigations into Friday's incident were underway Sunday, and both officers involved were placed on administrative duties pending the outcome.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/01/chicago-shooting-extremely-disturbing-video-shows-train-incident/4922204002/

    Video:
    https://twitter.com/FreeRangeCritic/status/1233536447749201921

    More videos of this incident:

    Police Watchdog Agency Releases New Videos Of Officer Shooting Ariel Roman At Red Line Station

    The Civilian Office of Police Accountability on Tuesday released 18 new videos showing a Chicago police officer shooting an unarmed man at a busy CTA station in February, after confronting him for passing between cars on a Red Line train.

    The videos include a longer version of the infamous cell phone video showing Officer Melvina Bogard shooting Ariel Roman in the stomach and lower at the Grand Red Line station on Feb. 28.

    As CBS 2’s Charlie De Mar reported Tuesday night, some of the videos are also body camera videos, while others are from the Chicago Transit Authority and bystanders. But what you won’t see are the body camera videos from the perspective of the officers at the center of the incident, which were not included.

    The FBI and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office have opened criminal investigations into the shooting.

    Use of force experts who reviewed the video with CBS 2’s Megan Hickey have said the footage is problematic, particularly given that Roman was walking away when he was shot.

    “The law simply doesn’t allow what I saw in the video,” said University of Pittsburgh law professor David A. Harris.

    “I don’t see him strike the officers. I don’t see him at any time with a weapon,” said Retired LAPD SWAT Sgt. Scott Defoe.

    Both Harris and Defoe said the video does not suggest that Roman was a deadly threat. And police are not allowed to use deadly force to prevent an escape – which appeared to be what happened when the shot rang out as Roman ran up the escalator.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/04/28/ariel-roman-police-shooting-red-line-civilian-office-of-police-accountability-videos-officers-melvina-bogard-bernard-butler/

    https://www.chicagocopa.org/case/2020-0988/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 30, 2020, 10:50:38 PM
    This guy was going to schools teaching a class called “Sexting and Social Media”.

    Of course no criminal charges for him and he resigned before he could be fired.

    Cartersville cop resigns after ‘inappropriate’ messages with middle school girls

    A Cartersville police lieutenant resigned in lieu of termination amid an internal investigation into dozens of Snapchat messages and texts that he sent to middle school girls, authorities said.

    Lt. Ryan Prescott, who also worked as the school resource officer at Cartersville Middle School, admitted to sending the messages to three girls, which the department found “unprofessional and inappropriate” according to documents obtained by AJC.com through an open records request.

    https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/cartersville-cop-resigns-after-inappropriate-messages-with-middle-school-girls/jq1Y8bwW3xfhNgzCGxI9VM/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2020, 03:59:01 PM
    More videos of this incident:

    Police Watchdog Agency Releases New Videos Of Officer Shooting Ariel Roman At Red Line Station

    The Civilian Office of Police Accountability on Tuesday released 18 new videos showing a Chicago police officer shooting an unarmed man at a busy CTA station in February, after confronting him for passing between cars on a Red Line train.

    The videos include a longer version of the infamous cell phone video showing Officer Melvina Bogard shooting Ariel Roman in the stomach and lower at the Grand Red Line station on Feb. 28.

    As CBS 2’s Charlie De Mar reported Tuesday night, some of the videos are also body camera videos, while others are from the Chicago Transit Authority and bystanders. But what you won’t see are the body camera videos from the perspective of the officers at the center of the incident, which were not included.

    The FBI and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office have opened criminal investigations into the shooting.

    Use of force experts who reviewed the video with CBS 2’s Megan Hickey have said the footage is problematic, particularly given that Roman was walking away when he was shot.

    “The law simply doesn’t allow what I saw in the video,” said University of Pittsburgh law professor David A. Harris.

    “I don’t see him strike the officers. I don’t see him at any time with a weapon,” said Retired LAPD SWAT Sgt. Scott Defoe.

    Both Harris and Defoe said the video does not suggest that Roman was a deadly threat. And police are not allowed to use deadly force to prevent an escape – which appeared to be what happened when the shot rang out as Roman ran up the escalator.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/04/28/ariel-roman-police-shooting-red-line-civilian-office-of-police-accountability-videos-officers-melvina-bogard-bernard-butler/

    https://www.chicagocopa.org/case/2020-0988/

    Turns out the female cop who shot this man had been charged with assault 2 years before being hired as a cop.

    Officer involved in Grand Red Line shooting was charged with assault 2 years before CPD hired her

    (https://i1.wp.com/cwbchicago.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/RED-LINE-MELVINA-BOGARD.jpg?resize=602%2C552&ssl=1)

    The Chicago police officer who shot an unarmed man at the Grand Red Line station on Friday was charged with assaulting a McDonald’s restaurant worker in 2015, less than two years before the city hired her to become a cop. Prosecutors dropped the case when the alleged victim failed to appear in court.

    https://cwbchicago.com/2020/03/officer-involved-in-grand-red-line-shooting-was-charged-with-assault-2-years-before-cpd-hired-her.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 05, 2020, 02:30:28 AM
    Turns out the female cop who shot this man had been charged with assault 2 years before being hired as a cop.

    Officer involved in Grand Red Line shooting was charged with assault 2 years before CPD hired her

    (https://i1.wp.com/cwbchicago.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/RED-LINE-MELVINA-BOGARD.jpg?resize=602%2C552&ssl=1)

    The Chicago police officer who shot an unarmed man at the Grand Red Line station on Friday was charged with assaulting a McDonald’s restaurant worker in 2015, less than two years before the city hired her to become a cop. Prosecutors dropped the case when the alleged victim failed to appear in court.

    https://cwbchicago.com/2020/03/officer-involved-in-grand-red-line-shooting-was-charged-with-assault-2-years-before-cpd-hired-her.html

    Well at least they’re not hiding the Fact they’re hiring Thugs - From assaulting a McDonalds Staff To Shooting that man, Great Progression In 2yrs - I bet Chicago Police top Brass are patting each other’s back with the excellent selection of Her.

    😂🤣😂🤣😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on May 05, 2020, 01:31:22 PM
    WOW. YOU HAVE TWO YEARS TO TURN IN 1500 STYLES OF GUN TO THE GOVT IN CANADA.


    Following Canada's deadliest mass shooting, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau banned over 1,500 models and variants of assault-style firearms, including two guns used by the Nova Scotia gunman.

    “You do not need an AR-15 to take down a deer,” Trudeau said Friday. “So, effective immediately, it is no longer permitted to buy, sell, transport, import, or use military-grade, assault weapons in this country.”




    https://www.foxnews.com/us/connecticut-gun-manufacturers-ranch-rifle-among-weapons-banned-in-canada
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 05, 2020, 05:38:59 PM
    https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcdfw.com/news/coronavirus/dallas-salon-owner-sentenced-to-7-days-behind-bars-for-reopening-too-soon/2363928/%3famp
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 06, 2020, 06:07:59 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 06, 2020, 08:57:31 AM
    https://www.foxla.com/video/681204

    How can anyone defend this?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2020, 10:27:16 AM
    Once again the uniformed criminals go unpunished, protected by immunity.

    Lawsuit dismissed for Ga. woman wrongly jailed over cotton candy mistake

    A Macon woman now knows how much money she will get for being wrongly jailed over a false positive field test.

    Zero.

    Dasha Fincher, 43, sued the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office and others over her arrest on New Year’s Eve of 2016. Deputies used a disposable field test kit to examine a clump of blue material they found in a bag in the car.

    Fincher and her boyfriend David Morris allowed the search. Deputies originally pulled them over because they thought the car window tinting was too dark. It was not. Fincher told deputies the blue material was cotton candy. But deputies decided the test kit showed a positive reading for methamphetamines.

    Morris had a prior conviction for trafficking in meth. Fincher had served three years probation on a marijuana charge. Deputies found no other evidence of drug use in their car.

    Fincher and Morris would spend the next 94 days in the Monroe County Jail, unable to make a $1 million cash bond, set that high because of the amount of suspected meth.

    She would miss the birth of her twin grandsons.

    The charges were finally dropped when the GBI Crime Lab determined the sample was not a controlled substance.

    https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/lawsuit-dismissed-for-ga-woman-wrongly-jailed-over-cotton-candy-mistake
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: TheGrinch on May 06, 2020, 09:39:45 PM
    Nothing to see here folks.. move alone

    https://champ.gothamist.com/champ/gothamist/news/nypd-officer-seen-beating-man-social-distancing-arrest-has-history-alleged-brutality



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 06, 2020, 09:57:21 PM
    Nothing to see here folks.. move alone

    https://champ.gothamist.com/champ/gothamist/news/nypd-officer-seen-beating-man-social-distancing-arrest-has-history-alleged-brutality



    "NY's finest".

    Quote
    The NYPD officer who violently arrested a man in the East Village during a social distancing stop this weekend has a lengthy history of alleged brutality — garnering more than half a dozen misconduct lawsuits in five years, and costing city taxpayers nearly $200,000, according to the Legal Aid Society.

    According to a complaint filed in 2013, Garcia allegedly told a woman eating with her partner inside a Harlem restaurant that she "dressed like a man." When the woman attempted to get his badge number, Garcia allegedly pushed her, then replied: "Take a fucking picture of it, fucking dyke." The city settled that suit for $8,500.

    A year later, Garcia was accused of wrongfully arresting a man trying to visit his girlfriend inside a Washington Heights NYCHA building. According to a federal lawsuit, which the city settled for $27,500, Garcia "forced [the man] to the floor face-first," then punched, kicked, and clubbed him.

    And here's why you don't often hear of a cop's past record while ordinary people are dragged through the mud like they're hardened career criminals by mentioning any minor infraction or arrest:

    Quote
    A spokesperson for the NYPD did not respond to inquiries about whether Garcia ever faced discipline for past instances of misconduct. The department is not required to disclose such records, due to a state secrecy law that is among the nation's most restrictive.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 07, 2020, 11:31:46 AM
    "That's what you get for eluding". Federal lawsuit alleges Denver officer beat man in his own back yard

    (https://kdvr.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2020/05/may-4-20-dpd1.jpg?w=480)

    A lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court alleges that a Denver Police officer beat a man in his own backyard after he admitted to driving away from law enforcement during a traffic stop on New Year’s Eve 2019. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Denver man Justin Lecheminant, also alleges that the department failed to properly investigate the use of force incident.

    During the incident, Lecheminant suffered a broken nose, punctured eardrum, multiple broken ribs and a serious concussion, the lawsuit alleges.

    https://www.9news.com/article/news/crime/denver-police-brutality-lawsuit-justin-lecheminant/73-d6106b2a-3be9-4fcf-92bb-90baa2e29b61
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: James on May 08, 2020, 10:20:34 AM
    Police Officer Compelled To Speak Out Against Tyrannical Enforcement

    &t=9s
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 09, 2020, 12:31:38 AM
    https://www.foxla.com/video/681204

    How can anyone defend this?

    Can't. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 09, 2020, 03:27:45 PM
    Not only did he rob people during traffic stops but he even filled out the blank money orders in his name and then went to the bank in uniform to deposit them.

    Notice that there is no mugshot, when ordinary people have their mughsot published (and the mugshot industry is a very dirty business) even when the charges are dropped or even acquitted. This is why:

    "Henley’s mugshot is exempt from the release under Florida law due to his law enforcement status."

    So they claim he is "fired" but at the same time his mugshot can't be published due to his "law enforcement status".


    ECSO Deputy Arrested, Fired For Stealing Money Orders After Traffic Stop

    An Escambia County Sheriff’s Office deputy has been arrested and terminated after he was accused of stealing money orders from a vehicle after making an arrest.

    William Christopher Henley, 37, was charged with burglary, four counts of larceny, dealing in stolen property, fraud, two counts of intent to defraud and destroying evidence. He remained in the Escambia County Jail Friday afternoon without bond.

    A woman contacted the ECSO to report money orders had been stolen from a vehicle driven by her boyfriend. The boyfriend was pulled over and arrested by Henley on outstanding warrants, and the vehicle was left behind. The women contacted Western Union  and was provided copies that showed they had been deposited by William Henley. The address on the money orders matched that in Henley’s ECSO employee file, according to an arrest report.

    ECSO investigators obtained surveillance photos from Navy Federal that showed Henley in uniform depositing the money orders, the report states. The values of the money order were $200 and $500.

    http://www.northescambia.com/2020/05/ecso-deputy-arrested-fired-for-stealing-money-orders-after-traffic-stop

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 09, 2020, 06:17:31 PM
    Kentucky State Police trooper punches, kicks handcuffed mentally ill man

    A Kentucky State Police trooper beat a handcuffed schizophrenic man after arresting him in March 2019, slamming his head against a wall, and punching and kicking him repeatedly before throwing him to the ground, according to video from a jail recording system.

    The footage sheds light on a Bowling Green case that left the beaten man, Timothy “Michael” Heston, in jail for 11 months because state police withheld the video, a new lawsuit alleges.

    The lawsuit claims State Police Trooper Aaron Tucker “attacked Michael, who is bi-racial, without provocation, warning or justification and then fabricated a report about the assault.”

    Heston spent nearly a year in jail; police failed to provide the video to prosecutors, defense attorneys or the judge, according to the suit. The charges were later dismissed.

    When the trooper took Heston to jail on charges of terroristic threatening and resisting arrest, among other charges, Heston “tensed up” when he was taken out of the cruiser, resisted, attempted to spit on Tucker and “used his head to hit me,” according to the arrest citation.

    “After the altercation had ensued, I was able to regain control of the above offender by placing him on the ground,” Tucker wrote. 

    But in the video, obtained by WDRB News, Tucker gets Heston out of the cruiser and, after walking him to the door, Heston seems to weave or stumble and the trooper punches him in the face, pins him against the wall and hits him with his fist several more times. Tucker also knees the defendant in the face and chest several times before taking him to the ground, the video shows. Heston was handcuffed behind his back.

    There is no sound in the video and it does not appear Heston was resisting. It is unclear if Heston spit on or toward the trooper.

    State Police conducted an internal investigation of the case and fired Tucker, according to the lawsuit. KSP confirmed that Tucker is no longer employed but did not comment on the lawsuit. The charges against Heston, 27, were eventually dismissed, but not until after he had been indicted.

    The lawsuit claims State Police initially withheld the video from the prosecution, the defense, and the judge, causing him to remain in jail until the case was ultimately dismissed.


    https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/video-kentucky-state-police-trooper-punches-kicks-handcuffed-mentally-ill-man/article_f05ed566-9089-11ea-81b1-6f601210b02c.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2020, 04:48:37 PM
    As if one "brave hero" attacking a 65 year old woman was not enough, he asked for backup and it took a total of 3 cops to attack this poor woman. Funny how one of the "heroes" who arrived as backup resigned after complaining that he "wouldn't receive fair treatment" in the internal investigation (imagine that).

    Grandmother seeks $1.5 million in excessive force suit vs. Alpharetta police

    A woman who says Alpharetta officers used excessive force against her during a traffic stop is seeking $1.5 million in damages, according to her federal lawsuit.

    Rose Campbell, now 67, suffered physical injuries that required surgery, emotional trauma and has been unable to work consistently since the May 2018 incident, the lawsuit states. Campbell was working as a ride-share driver when she was pulled over on Ga. 400 by an officer who said she was not maintaining her lane. A spokesman for Alpharetta police declined to comment on the lawsuit, filed Sunday. The Alpharetta assistant city administrator said the city does not comment on pending litigation.

    Campbell refused to sign the citation and asked repeatedly to speak with the officer’s supervisor. Dash cam video later released of the incident appears to show Officer James Legg using profanity towards Campbell and pulling her out of her car. Additional officers also arrived at the scene to assist Legg. “Shut the (expletive) up and get out of the car,” Legg is heard saying in the video. Legg later resigned from the department, but defended his actions.

    https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/grandmother-seeks-million-excessive-force-suit-alpharetta-police/JO4Ka8ifCipDr87BhaYoJN/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 11, 2020, 05:03:16 PM

    Insane.  Totally fng insane

    Kentucky State Police trooper punches, kicks handcuffed mentally ill man

    A Kentucky State Police trooper beat a handcuffed schizophrenic man after arresting him in March 2019, slamming his head against a wall, and punching and kicking him repeatedly before throwing him to the ground, according to video from a jail recording system.

    The footage sheds light on a Bowling Green case that left the beaten man, Timothy “Michael” Heston, in jail for 11 months because state police withheld the video, a new lawsuit alleges.

    The lawsuit claims State Police Trooper Aaron Tucker “attacked Michael, who is bi-racial, without provocation, warning or justification and then fabricated a report about the assault.”

    Heston spent nearly a year in jail; police failed to provide the video to prosecutors, defense attorneys or the judge, according to the suit. The charges were later dismissed.

    When the trooper took Heston to jail on charges of terroristic threatening and resisting arrest, among other charges, Heston “tensed up” when he was taken out of the cruiser, resisted, attempted to spit on Tucker and “used his head to hit me,” according to the arrest citation.

    “After the altercation had ensued, I was able to regain control of the above offender by placing him on the ground,” Tucker wrote. 

    But in the video, obtained by WDRB News, Tucker gets Heston out of the cruiser and, after walking him to the door, Heston seems to weave or stumble and the trooper punches him in the face, pins him against the wall and hits him with his fist several more times. Tucker also knees the defendant in the face and chest several times before taking him to the ground, the video shows. Heston was handcuffed behind his back.

    There is no sound in the video and it does not appear Heston was resisting. It is unclear if Heston spit on or toward the trooper.

    State Police conducted an internal investigation of the case and fired Tucker, according to the lawsuit. KSP confirmed that Tucker is no longer employed but did not comment on the lawsuit. The charges against Heston, 27, were eventually dismissed, but not until after he had been indicted.

    The lawsuit claims State Police initially withheld the video from the prosecution, the defense, and the judge, causing him to remain in jail until the case was ultimately dismissed.


    https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/video-kentucky-state-police-trooper-punches-kicks-handcuffed-mentally-ill-man/article_f05ed566-9089-11ea-81b1-6f601210b02c.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2020, 05:18:41 PM
    Police Officer Compelled To Speak Out Against Tyrannical Enforcement

    &t=9s

    Officer placed on paid leave following video chastising other officers

    Port of Seattle Police Officer Greg Anderson said three hours after he was told by his department they were in full support of his video that he got a call instructing him to take down the video, which he refused to do.

    Now, Anderson has been placed on paid administrative leave pending an investigation.

    In a statement, Anderson wrote, “I’ve received tons of questions regarding my termination from the Port of Seattle Police. So I figured I should explain. I have been placed on administrative leave (still being paid) pending investigation. I was told by both the agency and my union that this will result in termination due to it being an insubordination charge for refusing to take down the video. I’m not sure what the timeline looks like. I walk un-intimidated into the fray. Thank you for all the support.”

    https://www.ocalapost.com/officer-placed-on-paid-leave-following-video-chastising-other-officers/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2020, 10:30:47 AM
    In the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, the cops kill an EMT while she is sleeping in her home.

    Conveniently, the killers did not wear body cameras. Of course none of them has been arrested.


    Family of Louisville EMT killed during LMPD raid files wrongful death lawsuit against officers

    (https://www.gannett-cdn.com/presto/2020/03/16/PLOU/80f13613-aaa9-489c-ab65-4fe24dbdb258-Breonna_Taylor_1.jpg?crop=479,639,x0,y0&quality=50&width=640)

    The family of a Louisville EMT killed in what's been alleged to have been a botched Louisville Metro Police raid has filed a lawsuit against the officers involved, claiming she did "nothing to deserve to die at their hands."

    Attorneys say police had the wrong home and that the suspect they were looking for was already in custody before the raid. Nothing illegal was found in Taylor's home.

    The officers burst into the home without knocking and "blindly fired" into it, spraying bullets into Taylor's house and neighboring apartments "with a total disregard for the value of human life," according to the lawsuit. Taylor, 26, was shot eight times.

    Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought they were being robbed, according to his attorney, and fired at officers when they rushed in, hitting LMPD Sgt. John Mattingly in the leg.

    Breonna Taylor was shot multiple times after officers used a battering ram to get into her home on Springfield Drive in south Louisville about 1 a.m. on March 13 in order to serve a warrant.

    Police say there is no body camera footage from the raid as officers in LMPD criminal interdiction division do not wear body cameras.

    https://www.wdrb.com/news/family-of-louisville-emt-killed-during-lmpd-raid-files-wrongful-death-lawsuit-against-officers/article_8caf7c9c-93b7-11ea-8253-5fbf4d80f0e7.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2020, 08:40:13 PM
    Sentenced to death and remained in prison for a combined 100+ years... No amount of money can bring back the years these men lost. The cops who were involved in this injustice will not pay a penny out of their own pockets and of course will not spend the rest of their life in prison, let alone get sentenced to death like these poor men.

    Cleveland men reach $18 million settlement after being wrongfully convicted, spending years in prison

    Three Cleveland men have reportedly reached an $18 million settlement in a lawsuit against the City of Cleveland and former detectives.

    According to a press release from attorneys Friedman and Gilbert, the lawsuit was for police misconduct and wrongful imprisonment. They said it puts an end to a 45-year “nightmare.”

    According to the release, Kwame Ajamu, formerly known as Ronnie Bridgeman; Wiley Bridgeman; and, Ricky Jackson were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for a combined 100-plus years for “a murder they did not commit.”

    The men were convicted on the testimony of a witness who was 12 years old in 1975 at the time of the murder. That witness, Edward Vernon, has since recanted, saying he was pressured by police into making the identifications.

    https://fox8.com/news/cleveland-men-reach-18-million-settlement-after-being-wrongfully-convicted-spending-years-in-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 13, 2020, 01:36:45 AM

    Holy F

    Sentenced to death and remained in prison for a combined 100+ years... No amount of money can bring back the years these men lost. The cops who were involved in this injustice will not pay a penny out of their own pockets and of course will not spend the rest of their life in prison, let alone get sentenced to death like these poor men.

    Cleveland men reach $18 million settlement after being wrongfully convicted, spending years in prison

    Three Cleveland men have reportedly reached an $18 million settlement in a lawsuit against the City of Cleveland and former detectives.

    According to a press release from attorneys Friedman and Gilbert, the lawsuit was for police misconduct and wrongful imprisonment. They said it puts an end to a 45-year “nightmare.”

    According to the release, Kwame Ajamu, formerly known as Ronnie Bridgeman; Wiley Bridgeman; and, Ricky Jackson were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for a combined 100-plus years for “a murder they did not commit.”

    The men were convicted on the testimony of a witness who was 12 years old in 1975 at the time of the murder. That witness, Edward Vernon, has since recanted, saying he was pressured by police into making the identifications.

    https://fox8.com/news/cleveland-men-reach-18-million-settlement-after-being-wrongfully-convicted-spending-years-in-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2020, 01:25:21 PM
    Supreme Court Justices Are Considering 13 Petitions Involving the Pernicious Doctrine of Qualified Immunity

    Based on an erroneous report of a "domestic assault," police officers came to rescue Melanie Kelsay from the man who supposedly was attacking her at a community swimming pool in Wymore, Nebraska. Then one of them actually assaulted her, lifting the 130-pound woman off the ground in a bear hug and throwing her to the ground, breaking her collarbone and knocking her unconscious, because she disobeyed his command to "get back here."

    Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit ruled that the assault did not violate Kelsay's "clearly established" Fourth Amendment rights, meaning she could not sue the sheriff's deputy who had injured her. Kelsay's appeal of that decision is one of 13 cases involving "qualified immunity" that the U.S. Supreme Court will consider for review on Friday, giving the justices ample opportunity to revisit a misbegotten doctrine that shields police officers from liability for egregious misconduct.

    Qualified immunity, which the Court invented in 1982, is supposed to protect government officials from the chilling effect of frivolous lawsuits under a federal statute that allows people to seek damages for violations of their constitutional rights. But in practice, the doctrine often means that victims like Kelsay cannot pursue their claims unless they can locate a precedent that closely matches the facts of their case.

    In a recent analysis of 252 excessive-force cases decided by federal appeals courts from 2015 through 2019, Reuters found that most of the lawsuits were blocked by qualified immunity. It also found that the share of cases decided in favor of police has risen during the last decade and a half, from 44% in 2005-07 to 57% in 2017-19.

    After 2009, when the Supreme Court said judges could grant police qualified immunity without deciding whether their actions were unconstitutional, that shortcut became increasingly common, making it even harder for victims of police abuse to find apposite precedents. As 5th Circuit Judge Don Willett has observed, "important constitutional questions go unanswered precisely because those questions are yet unanswered."

    Hard as it may be to believe, those questions include whether police in Idaho violated the Constitution when they wrecked a woman's home with tear gas grenades after she gave them permission to "get inside" so they could arrest her boyfriend (who was not actually there). While musing that getting inside could be construed to include firing toxic, destructive projectiles into the house, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit last year declined to decide whether that would be "reasonable" under the Fourth Amendment.

    That ruling, which the Supreme Court also has been asked to review, not only left the plaintiff without recourse; it gave other police officers license to do exactly the same thing, since the 9th Circuit approved qualified immunity without resolving the constitutional issue. So did the 6th Circuit in a 2018 case involving a Nashville officer who sicced a police dog on a burglary suspect who said he had already surrendered and was sitting on the ground with his hands up.

    Another petition the justices are mulling this week involves a Georgia sheriff's deputy who received qualified immunity after he shot a 10-year-old boy while trying to kill his dog. Neither the boy nor the dog had done anything to justify the use of lethal force, except that they happened to be in their own yard when the cops chased an unarmed suspect into it.

    Further fodder for the Supreme Court's potential reconsideration of qualified immunity: The Fresno cops who allegedly stole cash and property worth more than $225,000 while executing a search warrant. Although the officers should have understood that theft was "morally wrong," the 9th Circuit ruled last year, "they did not have clear notice that it violated the Fourth Amendment."

    Qualified immunity, by contrast, definitely gives police clear notice. It tells them they can get away with violating people's rights as long as they find new ways to do it.

    https://townhall.com/columnists/jacobsullum/2020/05/13/will-scotus-revoke-its-license-for-police-abuse-this-week-the-justices-are-considering-13-petitions-involving-the-pernicious-doctrine-of-qualified-immunity-n2568682

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 13, 2020, 11:11:24 PM
    Remember the coward? With the cop union's help not only is he reinstated but he will not be disciplined and receive back pay. Unfortunately, it pays to be a coward with a badge (in his own words, he was "terrified with fear").

    Metro officer wins case, reinstated after waiting in hallway during 1 October mass shooting

    A Metro Police officer who was fired for hesitating and not acting during the 1 October mass shooting has been reinstated.

    Steve Grammas, Las Vegas Police Protective Association president, said Officer Cordell Hendrex won his case and will get back to work with Metro once he completes paperwork. He also noted Hendrex will not be disciplined and will receive back pay.

    https://www.8newsnow.com/news/local-news/metro-officer-wins-case-reinstated-after-waiting-in-hallway-during-1-oct-mass-shooting/

    Another coward is reinstated...

    Note, this is not the original Coward of Broward, the cop assigned to the school, this was the first supervisor to arrive on the scene.

    "Tough guys" when abusing the elderly, the frail, the innocent and the defenseless but cowering in fear when faced with real threat and having to do their job and "serve and protect".

    Cop who was fired after Parkland shooting will get his job back

    A sheriff’s sergeant who was fired for sitting in his parked car while a gunman slaughtered students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School will get his job back.

    An arbitrator has dismissed the case against Brian Miller. According to a statement from the union that represents deputies and sergeants, the arbitrator’s ruling found that the Broward County Sheriff’s Office violated Miller’s due process rights when Sheriff Gregory Tony terminated him.

    Miller will receive back pay since his termination in June, 16 months after the school shooting in Parkland. He was paid more than $137,000 a year in 2018.

    Miller was the first supervisor on the scene. He arrived in time to hear three or four shots. As a supervisor, he didn’t rush to take command. Instead, a state commission investigating the shooting found that Miller took his time putting on a bulletproof vest and hid behind his car on Holmberg Road, not going on the radio for 10 minutes.

    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/crime/fl-ne-canned-parkland-cop-to-get-job-back-20200514-rjzg33nu3bbflezpgxglgvei7i-story.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2020, 06:12:46 AM
    https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/mom-arrested-after-confrontation-with-nypd-officers-over-face-mask/2416440/?fbclid=IwAR0Ub2X7MMRytp6HDPBUBGw3ldyCIPqnLdePZ3M6aNILtjouaXvSzR03eVA


     :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 15, 2020, 12:07:45 PM
    May 15, 2020
    Police State Dry Run a Huge Success
    By Carol Brown

    When the coronavirus landed on our shores, communist China came with it.

    We have become part of a mass scale human experiment in government control and it turned out that stripping away our freedom wasn’t all that difficult. Under the guise of concern for our health and well-being, tyrants came out of the woodwork.  Our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, and our lives are being destroyed as the left solidifies and expands their oppressive powers. We’ve been herded around like cattle, threatened, isolated, confined, silenced, and arrested. You name it, it’s happening.

    You tell me if what follows sounds like the United States, or China.

    We’ve been told who can work and who can’t, with language that separates us according to who is and who isn’t “essential” as the almighty State supersedes individual rights and the family unit.

    We’ve been physically and verbally harassed, threatened, fined, detained, arrested, jailed, and/or placed in forced quarantine. Business licenses have been revoked. Going to work without the permission of the government is now a crime. So is going to the park or a beach. Children playing together is also in defiance of the government. So is placing flags on the graves of veterans. The list of infractions goes on and on and on and on. Examples read like the manifesto of a demented madman. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)


     

    A talking drone warns Savannah, GA residents to maintain social distancing  (YouTube screen grab)

    Stay home. Do not go out. Do not earn money. Do not pay your bills, feed your family, maintain your credit rating, live your life. Do not make a single move without permission from the State or you will be punished.

    Do not dare go to church. They have been shut down, some threatened with permanent closure. Even services that maintained social distancing were not tolerated. (here, here, here, here, here)

    Religion cannot thrive in a totalitarian state, as the state must reign supreme.

    Meanwhile, as churches are closed, jails are opened -- criminals are released en masse, including child predators, rapists, and murderers. Prisoners, wise to the ruse, are now intentionally infecting themselves so they can be released early. And the left can’t get enough of it. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    In several places, our right to protest has been stripped away as has our right to promote protests. Tech tyrants are involved, shutting down social media for those trying to spread the word about peaceful gatherings. The Bill of Rights has been set on fire and tossed off the top of a skyscraper as a police state rushes in. (here, here, here, here, here, here)

    We’ve been subjected to inhumane separations, as the oldest among us are left to suffer alone in nursing homes, senior care facilities, and hospitals where there is often an impenetrable wall of secrecy surrounding patients.

    Meanwhile, “contact tracing” has become the next frontier to advance the police state as fascist tech gets in on the act, tracking our every move. The government will hunt you down, find you, and force you and other members of your household to stay in your home, even if there’s no food in the house. The quarantine cycle could leave an entire household locked up for weeks and weeks on end, with no end in sight as we are essentially placed under house arrest. Strategies for how to identify people who’ve met certain criteria have been discussed, including government issued armbands. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    To help the government keep us in line, we’ve been encouraged to snitch on our neighbors and hotlines have been set up for us to do just that. (here, here, here, here, here)

    And in keeping with the good for me, but not for thee reality of all oppressive regimes, many prominent leftists have broken their own rules so they could meet their lover, go golfing, take a walk with their family, get a haircut, and so on, all the while pointing their fingers and admonishing us little people to stay inside and do as we’re told. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    For the most part, law enforcement has been willing to follow these tyrannical orders, often with multiple officers arriving on the scene.

    As for the American Civil Liberties Union, not only are they missing in action, they’re part of the cabal of tyrants with upside down values, evidenced by the message featured on their home page which states their priorities as follows:

    “…protect voting rights, demand that vulnerable people in prisons, jails and immigration detention centers be released, and fight to ensure reproductive health care remains open and accessible to all who need it…”

    In other words, voter fraud, prisoner release, illegal invader released, and abortion. (here)

    All of this unfolds against the backdrop of an aggressive media campaign to parrot China’s talking points, replete with lavish praise for the communist regime that waged war against the entire world. There’s been a cascade of fools eager to align themselves with WHO and China, including many prominent individuals. The rush to embrace our enemies has resulted in silencing speech, as words such as “Wuhan flu” are deemed “hate speech.” Punishment to be determined. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    And while the lust for power underpins this shocking spectacle, it’s wrapped up in the guise of “safety.” Who could possibly question a doctor in a white coat touting such an idea? No good totalitarian regime would be without its idealized worldview to sell fools down the river.

    And so we’ve sailed, as our economy has collapsed, Americans have been controlled, law enforcement has complied, and people are bombarded with fearful messages every hour of every day – messages riddled with distorted information and lies, from bogus models to inflated mortality rates and everything in between, all of which serve to strengthen the left’s case against Trump while corrupt hospital administrators rake in money from cooking the books on cause of death. But perhaps more than that, it’s easier to control people who feel desperate and afraid. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    An exhausted and increasingly impoverished populace does not a healthy nation make. In fact, if you think this is bad, what could await is even more terrifying. As Dennis Praeger wrote in March:

    …Economic disasters rarely remain only economic disasters. To give a particularly dramatic example, the Nazis came to power because of economics more than any other single reason…Nazi success at the polls was almost entirely related to the Weimar economy. Communist parties don’t fare well in robust economies, but they’re very tempting when people are in dire economic straits. Only God knows what economic dislocation the shutting down of American and other Western economies will lead to. I am not predicting a Nazi or communist ascendancy, but economic and political disaster may be as likely, or even more likely, than a health disaster.

    It is quite apparent by now that even if the most horrific scenario as described above does not unfold, we have already sealed our fate with respect to a disaster of monumental proportions that runs the gamut from increased drug and alcohol addiction, increased domestic violence, suicide, and avoidance of medical care, among other concerns. Tragically, the things that put human beings at risk for many of these dire outcomes are the very things that are being thrust upon us: unemployment and isolation. At the same time, one of the most powerful forces that serves as a protective factor offering comfort and hope has been denied us, as Americans have been barred from attending church.  (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    As for the oft-cited idea that we are at war with an invisible enemy, I would say, no, we are not. When nations go to war, they do so to defend their culture and way of life. Instead, we are destroying ours.

    But there is a war being waged. The left is determined to take this nation down and the perfect time arrived to go in for the kill. Maximum suffering, pain, and destruction is on the menu and they’re serving it up every day as they plunge small towns, cities, counties, and states into protracted lockdowns and shifting goalposts.

    The scale of human suffering and the long-term effects of this are incalculable. They will not be seasonal, like a virus. They will be long-lasting. And the left cares not a bit.

    There is one thing and one thing only they desire: power. And they’re having at it. So far, the police state has been a wild success.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 15, 2020, 06:13:30 PM
    May 15, 2020
    Police State Dry Run a Huge Success
    By Carol Brown

    When the coronavirus landed on our shores, communist China came with it.

    We have become part of a mass scale human experiment in government control and it turned out that stripping away our freedom wasn’t all that difficult. Under the guise of concern for our health and well-being, tyrants came out of the woodwork.  Our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, and our lives are being destroyed as the left solidifies and expands their oppressive powers. We’ve been herded around like cattle, threatened, isolated, confined, silenced, and arrested. You name it, it’s happening.

    You tell me if what follows sounds like the United States, or China.

    We’ve been told who can work and who can’t, with language that separates us according to who is and who isn’t “essential” as the almighty State supersedes individual rights and the family unit.

    We’ve been physically and verbally harassed, threatened, fined, detained, arrested, jailed, and/or placed in forced quarantine. Business licenses have been revoked. Going to work without the permission of the government is now a crime. So is going to the park or a beach. Children playing together is also in defiance of the government. So is placing flags on the graves of veterans. The list of infractions goes on and on and on and on. Examples read like the manifesto of a demented madman. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)


     

    A talking drone warns Savannah, GA residents to maintain social distancing  (YouTube screen grab)

    Stay home. Do not go out. Do not earn money. Do not pay your bills, feed your family, maintain your credit rating, live your life. Do not make a single move without permission from the State or you will be punished.

    Do not dare go to church. They have been shut down, some threatened with permanent closure. Even services that maintained social distancing were not tolerated. (here, here, here, here, here)

    Religion cannot thrive in a totalitarian state, as the state must reign supreme.

    Meanwhile, as churches are closed, jails are opened -- criminals are released en masse, including child predators, rapists, and murderers. Prisoners, wise to the ruse, are now intentionally infecting themselves so they can be released early. And the left can’t get enough of it. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    In several places, our right to protest has been stripped away as has our right to promote protests. Tech tyrants are involved, shutting down social media for those trying to spread the word about peaceful gatherings. The Bill of Rights has been set on fire and tossed off the top of a skyscraper as a police state rushes in. (here, here, here, here, here, here)

    We’ve been subjected to inhumane separations, as the oldest among us are left to suffer alone in nursing homes, senior care facilities, and hospitals where there is often an impenetrable wall of secrecy surrounding patients.

    Meanwhile, “contact tracing” has become the next frontier to advance the police state as fascist tech gets in on the act, tracking our every move. The government will hunt you down, find you, and force you and other members of your household to stay in your home, even if there’s no food in the house. The quarantine cycle could leave an entire household locked up for weeks and weeks on end, with no end in sight as we are essentially placed under house arrest. Strategies for how to identify people who’ve met certain criteria have been discussed, including government issued armbands. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    To help the government keep us in line, we’ve been encouraged to snitch on our neighbors and hotlines have been set up for us to do just that. (here, here, here, here, here)

    And in keeping with the good for me, but not for thee reality of all oppressive regimes, many prominent leftists have broken their own rules so they could meet their lover, go golfing, take a walk with their family, get a haircut, and so on, all the while pointing their fingers and admonishing us little people to stay inside and do as we’re told. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    For the most part, law enforcement has been willing to follow these tyrannical orders, often with multiple officers arriving on the scene.

    As for the American Civil Liberties Union, not only are they missing in action, they’re part of the cabal of tyrants with upside down values, evidenced by the message featured on their home page which states their priorities as follows:

    “…protect voting rights, demand that vulnerable people in prisons, jails and immigration detention centers be released, and fight to ensure reproductive health care remains open and accessible to all who need it…”

    In other words, voter fraud, prisoner release, illegal invader released, and abortion. (here)

    All of this unfolds against the backdrop of an aggressive media campaign to parrot China’s talking points, replete with lavish praise for the communist regime that waged war against the entire world. There’s been a cascade of fools eager to align themselves with WHO and China, including many prominent individuals. The rush to embrace our enemies has resulted in silencing speech, as words such as “Wuhan flu” are deemed “hate speech.” Punishment to be determined. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    And while the lust for power underpins this shocking spectacle, it’s wrapped up in the guise of “safety.” Who could possibly question a doctor in a white coat touting such an idea? No good totalitarian regime would be without its idealized worldview to sell fools down the river.

    And so we’ve sailed, as our economy has collapsed, Americans have been controlled, law enforcement has complied, and people are bombarded with fearful messages every hour of every day – messages riddled with distorted information and lies, from bogus models to inflated mortality rates and everything in between, all of which serve to strengthen the left’s case against Trump while corrupt hospital administrators rake in money from cooking the books on cause of death. But perhaps more than that, it’s easier to control people who feel desperate and afraid. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    An exhausted and increasingly impoverished populace does not a healthy nation make. In fact, if you think this is bad, what could await is even more terrifying. As Dennis Praeger wrote in March:

    …Economic disasters rarely remain only economic disasters. To give a particularly dramatic example, the Nazis came to power because of economics more than any other single reason…Nazi success at the polls was almost entirely related to the Weimar economy. Communist parties don’t fare well in robust economies, but they’re very tempting when people are in dire economic straits. Only God knows what economic dislocation the shutting down of American and other Western economies will lead to. I am not predicting a Nazi or communist ascendancy, but economic and political disaster may be as likely, or even more likely, than a health disaster.

    It is quite apparent by now that even if the most horrific scenario as described above does not unfold, we have already sealed our fate with respect to a disaster of monumental proportions that runs the gamut from increased drug and alcohol addiction, increased domestic violence, suicide, and avoidance of medical care, among other concerns. Tragically, the things that put human beings at risk for many of these dire outcomes are the very things that are being thrust upon us: unemployment and isolation. At the same time, one of the most powerful forces that serves as a protective factor offering comfort and hope has been denied us, as Americans have been barred from attending church.  (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here)

    As for the oft-cited idea that we are at war with an invisible enemy, I would say, no, we are not. When nations go to war, they do so to defend their culture and way of life. Instead, we are destroying ours.

    But there is a war being waged. The left is determined to take this nation down and the perfect time arrived to go in for the kill. Maximum suffering, pain, and destruction is on the menu and they’re serving it up every day as they plunge small towns, cities, counties, and states into protracted lockdowns and shifting goalposts.

    The scale of human suffering and the long-term effects of this are incalculable. They will not be seasonal, like a virus. They will be long-lasting. And the left cares not a bit.

    There is one thing and one thing only they desire: power. And they’re having at it. So far, the police state has been a wild success.


    Very accurate - This will be used again & again Now it’s Been tested & worked so Well.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2020, 02:20:50 PM
    Another one of the "finest" people. How many others like him?

    Prosecutors review 50 murder convictions of men allegedly framed by cop

    Chicago prosecutors are reviewing more than 50 murder convictions of mainly Latino men who may have been framed by one detective decades ago.

    The cases were all handled by now-retired Det. Reynaldo Guevara in the 1980s and 90s. The move by the Cook County State Attorney could mean a mass exoneration in one of the biggest police scandals in US history, Buzzfeed News reported.

    At least 20 men have been cleared in Guevara-led murder cases, and another 14 are still in prison while their cases have been reopened. More than a dozen others have completed their sentences, but their records could be wiped clean.

    Cook County Conviction Integrity Unit officials asked lawyers to provide names and case numbers of people who’ve been convicted of crimes investigated by Guevara, according to a letter sent this week to criminal defense attorneys, advocates for the wrongfully convicted, and public defenders across Chicago.

    Guevara allegedly beat people into making false confessions, or intimidated witnesses to make fake statements stating they were at murder scenes when they were not, according to those convicted and their advocates, Buzzfeed reported.

    Guevara is also alleged to have told witnesses who to select from police lineups. He hasn’t been charged with a crime.

    https://nypost.com/2020/05/16/prosecutors-review-convictions-of-men-allegedly-framed-by-cop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2020, 02:33:07 PM
    The use of drug sniffing dogs is questionable, yet they are still used widely and without any hesitation despite the problems with false positives or handlers eliciting desired responses.

    Federal Court Says Every Drug Dog In Utah Is Unreliable

    For as long as people have been driving, cops have been imagining reasons to pull them over and coerce them into "voluntary" searches. The Supreme Court's Rodriguez decision (sort of) put an end to extended stops -- the ones that start with a perceived violation that's dragged out until a drug dog arrives. Unfortunately, that decision only removed part of the equation. The Supreme Court's Heien decision made it possible for cops to rely entirely on pretext to engage in fishing expeditions by saying cops only had to think they witnessed a traffic violation, rather than actually be accurate about the laws they're tasked with enforcing.

    Cops are still trying to bring drug dogs to routine traffic stops. The Rodriguez decision is generally taken to mean cops just need to be quicker about rustling up a K-9 unit. Cops love drug dogs because they allow cops to perform the warrantless searches they want to perform. The drug dog's handler can call literally any movement by the dog an "alert," turning normal dog behavior into "probable cause" for a search. It doesn't help that the dogs are rewarded for every alert and given no positive reinforcement for failing to find anything interesting.

    Courts have historically been willing to cut drug dogs as much slack as they cut their law enforcement officer handlers. Subjective interpretations of anything an animal does to please its master is considered close enough to Fourth Amendment compliance to justify warrantless searches. Every so often, a court will question the reliability of the dog or the intent of its handler, but those are anomalies.

    This case, via FourthAmendment.com, is an amazing anomaly. Not only did the court choose to hear from experts on drug dog training and handling, it actually went so far as to call into question the reliability of every drug dog in the state.

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20200505/10462744438/federal-court-says-every-drug-dog-utah-is-unreliable.shtml


    From the Court order:

    Quote
    The court finds, based on the testimony of Dr. Cablk and the records before it, that Utah POST Training inadequately addresses, and therefore fails to remove the risk of, inadvertent handler bias or cuing. Specifically, Utah POST’s failure to implement double-blind training raises questions as to the independence of its K9s and casts doubt as to whether the K9s are alerting or indicating because they actually detect the odor of narcotics or because they have learned that displaying such action is the best way to please their masters. This doubt is not allayed by Utah POST’s certification process, as the final test that a K9 must pass in order to be certified is not even performed single-blind. As such, the K9’s handler in the exam, who is the same officer who has worked with the K9 for months and has a clear interest in having his K9 be certified, knows exactly how many hides will be present in the exam and can therefore continue to search until the K9 finds them all. Such an examination does not reflect a real-world setting and does not, therefore, indicate that a passing K9 can reliably detect, and communicate his detection of, narcotics in the field.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on May 16, 2020, 03:31:58 PM
    https://www.foxla.com/video/681204

    How can anyone defend this?

    Dude was looking for trouble, but the male PO lost control.  Heck, he nearly clocked his partner.

    https://www.liveleak.com/view?t=kEHZ7_1589314011
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2020, 01:03:48 AM
    Quite reassuring to know that when you are blackmailed you can go to the cops and instead of receiving help, the cops keep the blackmailing material for their own sick enjoyment and brag about it to their buddies. Of course other cops who either saw the blackmailing material or knew about it didn't report it. So much for the magical "self policing" cops who supposedly report any police misconduct before even the citizens do.
    Tragically, despite the pleas for help this young woman made were not taken seriously and she was being bounced from one place to another until she was murdered just a few days after she went to the police.
    The University and the cops failed this young woman in the worst possible way.

    University of Utah police officer showed off explicit photos of Lauren McCluskey to his co-worker

    Lauren McCluskey explained to the officer at the University of Utah that she was being extorted over explicit photos she had taken of herself. Someone — she wasn’t certain who at that moment — had accessed her files and was threatening to release them if she didn’t hand over $1,000.

    Scared by the demand, she paid the money and then sent copies of the messages and the pictures to the campus police department as evidence.

    When Miguel Deras, one of the officers assigned to her case, received them, he saved the photos on his personal phone. And days before McCluskey was killed by the man who was blackmailing her, Deras showed off at least one of the images to a male co-worker and bragged about getting to look at them whenever he wanted, according to two fellow officers.

    The university has only now confirmed that display occurred — a year and a half after McCluskey first brought her concerns to the department — as part of a continued push by The Salt Lake Tribune to obtain public records on how the case was handled. The U. spoke to the officer who was shown the pictures by Deras and verified the action with him. The Tribune also substantiated it with another officer, who overheard Deras talking to that co-worker.

    Neither officer reported the incident at the time, and Deras was never disciplined for it.

    In fact, the university says it didn’t know about the inappropriate behavior and abuse of evidence until after Deras left the department in September 2019, though it occurred before McCluskey’s murder on Oct. 22, 2018.

    Logan police announced an internal affairs investigation into Officer Miguel Deras in reaction to this article.

    https://www.sltrib.com/news/education/2020/05/17/university-utah-police/


    More information on this tragic case:

    Her friends warned dorm staff; she kept calling police. But risks went unrecognized before the slaying of Utah student Lauren McCluskey.

    https://www.sltrib.com/news/2018/12/19/university-utah-announce/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2020, 01:07:44 PM
    You often see the government and the cops pontificate from a moral pulpit about the ills of human trafficking and prostitution and how the "Johns" are not only committing the crime of getting a handjob but also actively contributing to human trafficking. It appears that from the government's perspective, it's only illegal when "Johns" do it but perfectly legal when the government does it.

    Not only that but after the government goons pay for and receive the handjob they arrest the women, some of of whom may be trafficking victims. And since old habits die hard, they "seized" stole money despite many of the cases being dismissed.

    ICE Agents Fight Sex Trafficking by Paying Potential Victims for Hand Jobs

    Agents with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in Arizona have been "fighting" human trafficking by sending federal immigration agents to coerce suspected victims into paid sex acts. These acts were later used by authorities to justify arresting women who agreed to them, seizing their assets, and telling the press it was these women who were the real predators.

    Federal agents had at least 17 sexual encounters with "Asian females" working in massage parlors around Mohave County, Arizona, over a five-month period in 2018, according to new research from the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University (ASU). Internal ICE documents show these activities had the blessing of agents' supervisors.

    When it was all over, the years-long operation yielded three misdemeanor charges stemming from a single sexual encounter which authorities interrupted during a raid.

    Absurd and horrifying? Obviously. But also a scenario that is far from an isolated incident.

    The Mohave County investigation—dubbed "Operation Asian Touch"—exclusively targeted Asian massage businesses and spas. Police from Bullhead City and Lake Havasu City began the investigation in 2016 after allegedly receiving reports that some employees at these businesses would provide erotic extras along with back and foot rubs.

    Local cops decided these businesses were likely human-trafficking fronts after learning that all of the masseuses were Asian women, according to a Homeland Security memo about the investigation. So, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI)—a division of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)—got involved in spring 2018.

    Homeland Security Investigations was also a part of the Florida stings, with an undercover agent visiting businesses in Indian River Beach and Orange counties and paying women there for sex acts.

    "Our understanding of (Homeland Security) policy is that their investigators are allowed to participate in sex acts while working undercover,"
    Dan Doyle, police chief for Lake Havascu City, told Today's News-Herald last December.

    "Detectives were informed by HSI that the undercover sexual activity was authorized," Bullhead Police Department spokeswoman Emily Fromelt told Howard Center reporters.

    Nothing in Homeland Security rules explicitly ban agents from engaging in sexual activity as part of investigations. Meanwhile, an HSI manual expressly states that "otherwise illegal" activity is sometimes OK for undercover agents. Possible justifications for such activity are broad, including the need to "establish or maintain credibility of a cover identity" or to "obtain information or evidence … not reasonably available without participation in the otherwise illegal activity."

    HSI Deputy Special Agent in Charge Lon Weigand said at a press conference that $128,000 in cash and around $30,000 worth of gold coins and jewelry were seized during the operation. According to ASU's report, most of this—$105,120—has not been and will not be returned, despite most of the cases being dismissed.

    https://reason.com/2020/05/14/ice-agents-fight-sex-trafficking-by-paying-potential-victims-for-hand-jobs/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2020, 04:06:46 PM
    iPhone spyware lets police log suspects' passcodes when cracking doesn't work

    Apple faces a near-constant challenge: keeping its iPhones secure.

    The company has spent years and untold millions of dollars squaring off against a small but talented industry that works to figure out ways to help law enforcement break into iPhones. Currently, security experts believe that tools sold to police struggle to crack iPhone passcodes longer than six digits.

    But another tool, previously unknown to the public, doesn't have to crack the code that people use to unlock their phones. It just has to log the code as the user types it in.

    Software called Hide UI, created by Grayshift, a company that makes iPhone-cracking devices for law enforcement, can track a suspect's passcode when it's entered into a phone, according to two people in law enforcement, who asked not to be named out of fear of violating non-disclosure agreements.

    The spyware, a term for software that surreptitiously tracks users, has been available for about a year but this is the first time details of its existence have been reported, in part because of the non-disclosure agreements police departments sign when they buy a device from Grayshift known as GrayKey.

    Those NDAs have helped keep Hide UI a secret. Because of the lack of public scrutiny of the feature as well as its covert behavior, defense attorneys, forensic experts and civil liberties advocates are concerned that Hide UI could be used without giving owners the due process of law, such as a warrant.

    In order for this feature to work, law enforcement officials must install the covert software and then set up a scenario to put a seized device back into the hands of the suspect, said the people familiar with the system, who did not wish to be identified for fear of violating their NDA with Grayshift and having access to the device revoked.

    For example, a law enforcement official could tell the suspect they can call their lawyer or take some phone numbers off the device. Once the suspect has done this, even if they lock their phone again, Hide UI will have stored the passcode in a text file that can be extracted the next time the phone is plugged into the GrayKey device. Law enforcement can then use the passcode to unlock the phone and extract all the data stored on it.

    “It’s great technology for our cases, but as a citizen I don’t really like how it’s being used. I feel like sometimes officers will engage in borderline and unethical behavior,” the law enforcement official said.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/iphone-spyware-lets-cops-log-suspects-passcodes-when-cracking-doesn-n1209296
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 20, 2020, 12:00:00 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2020, 04:57:10 PM
    Samantha Harer Case: Key Lawsuit Hearing Nears

    For the first time in months, a lawsuit filed by the parents of deceased 911 emergency dispatcher Samantha Harer will go before a federal appeals court for a decision that will impact the future of the case. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago will hold a Zoom video hearing at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, May 26.

    The lawyers for both sides will each get 15 minutes to make their oral arguments to the federal appeals judges. The Joliet law firm of Mahoney, Silverman and Cross wants the judges to dismiss Channahon, Channahon's Police Chief Shane Casey, Deputy Chief Adam Bogart and Detective Andrew McClellan from the police misconduct and deprivation of civil rights lawsuit filed by Brooklyn, N.Y. attorney Jennifer Bonjean.

    On Feb. 13, 2018, Harer was found nude in her bedroom with a single gunshot through her head. Off-duty Crest Hill Police Officer Felipe "Phil" Flores, Harer's estranged boyfriend, called 911 claiming Harer had locked herself in her bedroom during an argument and shot herself.

    Gunshot residue tests analyzed by the Illinois State Crime Laboratory in Chicago found no gunshot residue on Harer's hands. The forensic scientist found several traces of gunshot residue on Flores' right hand as well as blood spatter and gunshot residue on Flores' black sweatshirt.

    Months later, on Dec. 28, 2018, Channahon's deputy police chief issued a news release indicating that Harer had died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to her head and her death was being ruled a suicide.


    Bonjean has repeatedly referred to the Channahon Police Department's 2018 death investigation as "a sham investigation" in her legal briefs.

    She argues Bogart, Casey and McClellan are responsible for covering up a homicide because they did not want to tarnish the reputation of another local police department.

    In addition to Channahon, the Harers' lawsuit names the Crest Hill Police Department and Flores as co-defendants.

    Bonjean said that Channahon police once told Harer's parents that gunshot residue was found on their daughter's hands, while Flores' tests were negative even though the opposite was true.

    Channahon "also hid from them very incriminating evidence before the case dismissed," Bonjean said. "They didn't tell them of third party witnesses who heard that there was a struggle."

    The Harer family lawyer said it's critical for Channahon's three top police officials to remain a key component of her civil rights lawsuit alleging police misconduct.

    "They covered up misconduct of a fellow officer because police departments circle the wagons when it comes to police officer misconduct," Bonjean told Patch last week. "That's essentially the blue code of silence. My clients are entitled to relief because Channahon has just obstructed their effort to learn the truth about Samantha's death."

    In March 2019, Flores resigned from Crest Hill in the middle of an internal affairs investigation surrounding Harer's death. Crest Hill Police had put Flores on paid suspension immediately after Harer's death and kept him on paid leave for more than a year, until he abruptly resigned.

    https://patch.com/illinois/channahon-minooka/samantha-harer-case-lawsuit-hearing-nears
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Dos Equis on May 20, 2020, 06:18:07 PM
    I never read this thread and didn't believe we lived in a police state--because we didn't--but that changed during this pandemic.  It is crazy how people rolled over and let governors write laws through proclamations, trampling on civil liberties, putting millions out of work, and bankrupting businesses. 

    The courts are starting to get involved and fix this (Oregon, Wisconsin, etc.), so I think this temporary police state will eventually go away. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 21, 2020, 04:36:58 AM
    Skip to comments.

    Dershowitz says forced coronavirus vaccination could happen: 'Police power of the state is very considerable'
    Fox News ^ | 05/20/2020 | Charles Creitz
    Posted on 5/21/2020, 12:46:12 AM by Olog-hai

    Harvard Law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz joined “Tucker Carlson Tonight” Wednesday to discuss the constitutionality of forcing members of the public to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, should a vaccine become available.

    Host Tucker Carlson began the segment by acknowledging the argument that people “don’t have a right to endanger other people, your right to punch ends at the tip of my nose” before asking Dershowitz whether “the government has a right to endanger” people who may have an adverse reaction to a vaccine by forcing them to take it.

    “The Supreme Court has said yes, and if the case came to the Supreme Court today, they would say yes, it would either be 9-0 or 8-1,” Dershowitz responded. “It is not a debatable issue constitutionally. Look, they have a right to draft you and put your life in danger to help the country. The police power of the state is very considerable.”

    Dershowitz added that he agrees with the “moral argument” that no one should be subject to vaccine that has not been fully vetted on the chance it could help other people and noted that he wouldn’t want people to submit to a vaccine unless it is proven safe. …

    (Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 22, 2020, 06:46:44 AM
    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/breonna-taylor-is-dead-because-of-no-knock-warrants-and-police-recklessness?fbclid=IwAR2eyMS7s8H44rgQFp_hpUdunKtk_wttsJI41MNdlaLYLprBq-pPBDBU8Hc


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2020, 06:24:28 AM
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/video-shows-minneapolis-cop-with-knee-on-neck-of-motionless-moaning-man-he-later-died/?fbclid=IwAR2NC--tff7Q1DG27BCBCrFtVZa3ZVJw6jC1lVt-9pDRjl8Y5CXX9HomWe0


     :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2020, 09:32:13 AM
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8357713/Minneapolis-cop-seen-kneeling-neck-black-man-moments-died.html?fbclid=IwAR2osAtC5yZBhyiTKisvKqL2Y5B7_STXUkb3ge09jdZ-MxWidOxnlE-ky_8


    This looks really really bad.   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2020, 10:02:30 AM
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/video-shows-minneapolis-cop-with-knee-on-neck-of-motionless-moaning-man-he-later-died/?fbclid=IwAR2NC--tff7Q1DG27BCBCrFtVZa3ZVJw6jC1lVt-9pDRjl8Y5CXX9HomWe0


     :(

    The violence is out of control. But the cops are enjoying paid vacation...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2020, 01:47:36 PM
    Minneapolis police now calls the 4 cops "former employees".

    Four Minneapolis police officers fired after death of unarmed man George Floyd

    Four officers have been fired following the death of an unarmed black man taken into custody in Minneapolis, Mayor Jacob Frey announced on Twitter.

    Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said that four officers are now "former employees" with the department, CBS Minnesota reports. Frey said the firing was the "right call."

    The death of the man identified by a family attorney as George Floyd has drawn outrage after video showed an officer kneeling on Floyd's neck as he cried out that he couldn't breathe. Floyd had been arrested outside a deli on suspicion of forgery. He died later at a hospital.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/george-floyd-minneapolis-police-officers-fired-kneeling-death-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2020, 02:32:12 PM

    I had to stop watching the video.  Horrendous.

    Minneapolis police now calls the 4 cops "former employees".

    Four Minneapolis police officers fired after death of unarmed man George Floyd

    Four officers have been fired following the death of an unarmed black man taken into custody in Minneapolis, Mayor Jacob Frey announced on Twitter.

    Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said that four officers are now "former employees" with the department, CBS Minnesota reports. Frey said the firing was the "right call."

    The death of the man identified by a family attorney as George Floyd has drawn outrage after video showed an officer kneeling on Floyd's neck as he cried out that he couldn't breathe. Floyd had been arrested outside a deli on suspicion of forgery. He died later at a hospital.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/george-floyd-minneapolis-police-officers-fired-kneeling-death-video/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2020, 08:51:42 PM
    Read the full article, it is very interesting.

    Inside the NSA’s Secret Tool for Mapping Your Social Network

    Edward Snowden revealed the agency’s phone-record tracking program. But thanks to “precomputed contact chaining,” that database was much more powerful than anyone knew.


    In the summer of 2013, I spent my days sifting through the most extensive archive of top-secret files that had ever reached the hands of an American journalist. In a spectacular act of transgression against the National Security Agency, where he worked as a contractor, Edward Snowden had transmitted tens of thousands of classified documents to me, the columnist Glenn Greenwald, and the documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras.

    One of those documents, the first to be made public in June 2013, revealed that the NSA was tracking billions of telephone calls made by Americans inside the US. The program became notorious, but its full story has not been told.

    The first accounts revealed only bare bones. If you placed a call, whether local or international, the NSA stored the number you dialed, as well as the date, time and duration of the call. It was domestic surveillance, plain and simple. When the story broke, the NSA discounted the intrusion on privacy. The agency collected “only metadata,” it said, not the content of telephone calls. Only on rare occasions, it said, did it search the records for links among terrorists.

    I stumbled across the first clue later that month. I had become interested in the NSA’s internal conversation about “bulk collection,” the acquisition of high-volume data sets in their entirety. Phone records were one of several kinds. The agency had grown more and more adept, brilliantly creative in fact, at finding and swallowing other people’s information whole. Lately the NSA had begun to see that it consumed too much to digest. Midlevel managers and engineers sounded notes of alarm in briefings prepared for their chains of command. The cover page of one presentation asked “Is It the End of the SIGINT World as We Have Come to Know It?” The authors tried for a jaunty tone but had no sure answer. The surveillance infrastructure was laboring under serious strain.

    One name caught my eye on a chart that listed systems at highest risk: Mainway. I knew that one. NSA engineers had built Mainway in urgent haste after September 11, 2001. Vice President Dick Cheney’s office had drafted orders, signed by President George W. Bush, to do something the NSA had never done before. The assignment, forbidden by statute, was to track telephone calls made and received by Americans on American soil. The resulting operation was the lawless precursor of the broader one that I was looking at now.

    According to my sources and the documents I worked through in the fall of 2013, Mainway soon became the NSA’s most important tool for mapping social networks—an anchor of what the agency called Large Access Exploitation. “Large” is not an adjective in casual use at Fort Meade. Mainway was built for operations at stupendous scale. Other systems parsed the contents of intercepted communications: voice, video, email and chat text, attachments, pager messages, and so on. Mainway was queen of metadata, foreign and domestic, designed to find patterns that content did not reveal. Beyond that, Mainway was a prototype for still more ambitious plans. Next-generation systems, their planners wrote, could amplify the power of surveillance by moving “from the more traditional analysis of what is collected to the analysis of what to collect.” Patterns gleaned from call records would identify targets in email or location databases, and vice versa. Metadata was the key to the NSA’s plan to “identify, track, store, manipulate and update relationships” across all forms of intercepted content. An integrated map, presented graphically, would eventually allow the NSA to display nearly anyone’s movements and communications on a global scale. In their first mission statement, planners gave the project the unironic name “the Big Awesome Graph.” Inevitably it acquired a breezy acronym, “the BAG.”

    https://www.wired.com/story/inside-the-nsas-secret-tool-for-mapping-your-social-network/


    Also, don't forget this fucking scumbag lying under oath:



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2020, 09:20:06 AM
    https://www.wnd.com/2020/05/watch-gym-member-arrested-5-police-officers-violating-lockdown-going-gym/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=wnd&utm_campaign=wjstudio&utm_content=2020-05-25&fbclid=IwAR1-ZIgt5xUC7Gygxbcti4DkcarwXGkv4Azsw9wrv748IkHmj7-u3X4R_Lc



     :(   

    5 FNG cops - 5 !   What is the cost to the taxpayer for this insanity. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2020, 07:29:20 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2020, 02:17:19 PM
    Very good article, worth a read.

    To Make Police Accountable, End Qualified Immunity

    In their preference for a policy that protects police, conservatives abandon their commitment to textualism and embrace pro-government judicial activism.

    If you haven’t watched the video of (former) Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin killing George Floyd by jamming his knee into Floyd’s cervical spine for nearly nine minutes until he loses consciousness, you really should. And if you can’t understand why large swaths of urban America have been in flames these last few nights, do two more things: (1) instead of George Floyd, who you probably don’t know, imagine the person pinned under Chauvin’s knee—prone, handcuffed, unresisting, and begging for mercy—was someone you love; and (2) listen to conservative pundits dissecting Chauvin’s merciless assault on Floyd with all the sangfroid of a referee performing an instant replay review to see whether the runner’s knee was down when the ball came loose. No wonder it seems as though the country is coming apart at the seams.

    In determining the relationship between government and governed, one of the most important decisions a society can make is how accountable those who wield official power must be to those against whom that power is wielded. Congress made a clear choice in that regard when it passed the Enforcement Act of 1871, which we now call “Section 1983” after its location in the U.S. Code. Simply put, Section 1983 creates a standard of strict liability by providing that state actors “shall be liable to the party injured” for “the deprivation of any rights.” Thus, if a police officer walks up to your house and peeks inside one of your windows without a warrant—a clear violation of your Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches—he is liable to you for the violation of that right.

    But many conservatives do an odd thing: In their preference for a more forgiving policy that gives police and other government officials substantial leeway in the exercise of discretion, they abandon their stated commitment to textualism and embrace an “interpretation” of Section 1983 that is utterly divorced from its text. The vehicle for this conservative brand of what we might call “living statutory interpretivism” is the Supreme Court’s qualified immunity doctrine, which judicially amends Section 1983 to provide that the standard for liability will no longer be the deprivation of “any rights”—as Congress expressly provided—but rather the deprivation of any “clearly established” rights.

    As documented in considerable detail on Cato’s Unlawful Shield website, those two words—“clearly established”—do an extraordinary amount of work in keeping meritorious cases out of court and ensuring that plaintiffs whose rights have been violated by police or other state actors will receive no recovery unless they can find a pre-existing case in the jurisdiction with nearly identical facts. But that is plainly not the statute that Congress wrote, nor is it the standard of accountability that Congress chose. Moreover, as Professor Will Baude demonstrates in his masterful article, “Is Qualified Immunity Unlawful?,” (http://www.californialawreview.org/print/2-is-qualified-immunity-unlawful/) there is no credible textual or historical basis for the qualified immunity doctrine; it is a blatant act of pro-government judicial policymaking—activism, if you will—and nothing more.

    So now back to the killing of George Floyd. Watching that horrific video, one cannot help but notice the look of utter complacency on the face of Derek Chauvin as he drives his knee into Floyd’s neck. There is no life-or-death struggle—indeed, no struggle at all; nor is there any evident anger or passion—there is simply the banality of a man wearing a badge, surrounded and supported by other men with badges, methodically squeezing the life out of another human being.

    It is well known that prosecutors rarely bring criminal charges against police officers, and indeed it seems unlikely Chauvin would have been charged had his assault on George Floyd not been captured on a viral video. That means the only avenue of accountability for most victims of police misconduct is a civil rights lawsuit that they themselves can initiate without the largesse of some prosecutor or citizen review board. But the Supreme Court has largely gutted that remedy with a judicially confected gloss that transforms the legislatively chosen policy of strict liability into one of near-zero accountability.

    Cities are burning, and many people are venting their rage—yet again—about how cavalier police have become with the use of force, including lethal force, against the very citizens they are sworn to protect. Those people are right to be angry, and they’d probably be even angrier if they understood that it was never supposed to be like this—that Congress specifically chose a system of robust government accountability that was repudiated and perverted by the Supreme Court.

    This Monday we will find out whether the Court will take the unprecedented opportunity it now has to revisit qualified immunity. It will be particularly interesting to see which self-styled conservatives—on and off the Court—place their stated commitment to textualism and judicial deference above whatever personal preference they may have for continuing our half-century experiment in near-zero accountability for law enforcement.

    Clark Neily
    Clark Neily is vice president for criminal justice at the Cato Institute.

    https://thebulwark.com/to-make-police-accountable-end-qualified-immunity/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2020, 10:42:44 PM
    As if the dindus, antifa and various other vandals attacking old people was not enough now you have cops attacking the elderly as well.

    ABC4 News captures police officer armed in protest gear pushing down man with cane

    While ABC4 News was live on air during riots in Salt Lake City Saturday night they captured a police officer armed in protective gear shoving a man with a cane down onto the street.

    The incident happened while ABC4’s Nicole Neuman and photojournalist Josh Witzel were in the field reporting live on air to the commuity.

    That video has now gone viral after it was posted to the station’s ABC4 YouTube channel and has been picked up by viewers around the country, many expressed anger at the officers actions.

    Salt Lake City Police Department Chief Mike Brown responded to the video and said he has opened investigation though Internal Affairs and the Civilian Review Board.

    https://www.abc4.com/news/top-stories/abc-4-news-captures-police-officer-armed-in-protest-gear-pushing-down-man-with-cane/

    At 0:19

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2020, 12:59:10 PM
    Cops attacking another elderly man and then try to cover it up by claiming "he tripped and fell".

    Buffalo police shove elderly man to ground, injuring him; claim he tripped

    Two Buffalo police officers have been suspended after shoving an elderly man to the ground, seriously injuring him, and then claiming he tripped.

    Video quickly went viral Thursday night of two cops appearing to push a 75-year-old man in front of City Hall as protests began wrapping up shortly after Buffalo’s curfew began at 8 p.m. The man fell to the pavement, hitting his head; a painful crack is heard as blood started rushing from his head.

    WBFO reports two medics quickly came forward to treat the unidentified man. He was taken to Erie County Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition with a concussion and lacerations. Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said he is expected to recover, but no other details were released.

    Buffalo Police claimed in a statement that the man fell: “A 5th person was arrested during a skirmish with other protestors and also charged with disorderly conduct. During that skirmish involving protestors, one person was injured when he tripped & fell.”

    https://www.syracuse.com/state/2020/06/buffalo-police-shove-elderly-man-to-ground-injuring-him-claim-he-tripped-graphic-video.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 05, 2020, 03:52:51 PM
    Cops attacking another elderly man and then try to cover it up by claiming "he tripped and fell".

    Buffalo police shove elderly man to ground, injuring him; claim he tripped

    Two Buffalo police officers have been suspended after shoving an elderly man to the ground, seriously injuring him, and then claiming he tripped.

    Video quickly went viral Thursday night of two cops appearing to push a 75-year-old man in front of City Hall as protests began wrapping up shortly after Buffalo’s curfew began at 8 p.m. The man fell to the pavement, hitting his head; a painful crack is heard as blood started rushing from his head.

    WBFO reports two medics quickly came forward to treat the unidentified man. He was taken to Erie County Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition with a concussion and lacerations. Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said he is expected to recover, but no other details were released.

    Buffalo Police claimed in a statement that the man fell: “A 5th person was arrested during a skirmish with other protestors and also charged with disorderly conduct. During that skirmish involving protestors, one person was injured when he tripped & fell.”

    https://www.syracuse.com/state/2020/06/buffalo-police-shove-elderly-man-to-ground-injuring-him-claim-he-tripped-graphic-video.html



    According to the local mob union boss, 57 members of the unit have resigned - from the unit, not their well paid job as cops of course. All this because the 2 cops involved in the attack were given unpaid vacation.

    Police crowd-control unit resigns in protest

    A special squad on the Buffalo Police Department — the Emergency Response Team — has resigned from their posts, according to the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association.

    The announcement comes one day after two members were suspended without pay when a video surfaced, showing the officers pushing over a 75-year-old protestor, causing injury. The BPD Internal Affairs unit has opened an investigation into the incident.

    “Fifty-seven resigned in disgust because of the treatment of two of their members, who were simply executing orders,” said John Evans, PBA president.

    All officers who resigned from ERT will remain on the job in their regular duties, Evans said.

    Their action stems from a decision by city officials Thursday to suspend two officers with pay after video showed them shoving a 75-year-old protester who struck his head on the pavement and immediately started bleeding onto the pavement. The victim is hospitalized in serious but stable condition.

    https://www.investigativepost.org/2020/06/05/police-unit-resigns-in-protest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 05, 2020, 04:40:58 PM

    Totally ridiculous.

    As if the dindus, antifa and various other vandals attacking old people was not enough now you have cops attacking the elderly as well.

    ABC4 News captures police officer armed in protest gear pushing down man with cane

    While ABC4 News was live on air during riots in Salt Lake City Saturday night they captured a police officer armed in protective gear shoving a man with a cane down onto the street.

    The incident happened while ABC4’s Nicole Neuman and photojournalist Josh Witzel were in the field reporting live on air to the commuity.

    That video has now gone viral after it was posted to the station’s ABC4 YouTube channel and has been picked up by viewers around the country, many expressed anger at the officers actions.

    Salt Lake City Police Department Chief Mike Brown responded to the video and said he has opened investigation though Internal Affairs and the Civilian Review Board.

    https://www.abc4.com/news/top-stories/abc-4-news-captures-police-officer-armed-in-protest-gear-pushing-down-man-with-cane/

    At 0:19


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2020, 09:56:02 AM
    2 cops have been charged with 2nd degree felony assault, there should have been more cops charged.

    (https://imagez.tmz.com/image/87/4by3/2020/06/06/87ac64e1c36b4d71b3a3a0f942d1f4ee_md.jpg)



    Buffalo mayor calls elderly protester shoved by police an ‘agitator’

    The elderly Buffalo protester knocked to the ground by cops in a viral video that has become an international symbol of police brutality was an “agitator” who was “trying to spark up the crowd of people,” the city’s mayor said.

    Explaining why he had yet to fire the officers seen pushing Martin Gugino, 75, to the ground, where he hit his head and bled onto the pavement, Mayor Byron Brown said, “I don’t want to jump ahead of the investigation. It is very important for officers to know they are getting due process,” according to WBEN Radio.

    https://nypost.com/2020/06/06/buffalo-mayor-calls-protester-shoved-by-police-an-agitator/

    The mayor of Buffalo now calls the old man "a major instigator" but he's worried about the "officers" getting their "due process".

    He sounds like a "white supremacist". Oh wait:

    (https://newsandevents.buffalostate.edu/sites/newsandevents.buffalostate.edu/files/imagedump/byronbrown.jpg)

    Well then surely he must be a Republican, don't these guys usually support cops? Oh dang it:

    Quote
    "Chair of the New York Democratic Party
    May 23, 2016 – January 14, 2019

    He is a close political ally of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byron_Brown

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2020, 03:06:21 PM
    Now how about the send the cops and the original prosecutors to death row?

    Philadelphia death row inmate freed after conviction in child's murder reversed

    A Philadelphia man who spent nearly 30 years in prison for the murder of a 4-year-old girl has had his conviction overturned.

    Walter Ogrod, 55, convinced prosecutors his confession to the murder of Barbara Jean Horn in 1988 had been coerced by cops investigating the homicide. A judge freed him from prison Friday.

    Orgrod was a neighbor of Barbara Jean’s. He spent most of his time behind bars on death row. The case was profiled on an episode of “Death Row Stories” narrated by Susan Sarandon, the station reported.

    “I’m sorry it took 28 years for us to listen to what Barbara Jean was trying to tell us: that you are innocent, and that the words of your statement of confession came from Philadelphia Police detectives and not you,” prosecutor Carrie Wood told Ogrod.

    Philadelphia Judge Shelley Robins-New vacated Ogrod’s conviction and death sentence Friday, based on prosecutorial misconduct and new evidence that supports his claim of innocence,
    The Associated Press reported.

    Ogrod's lawyers said Friday they are unsure whether authorities have a different suspect.

    The first trial against Ogrod ended in a mistrial when one juror announced he did not agree with a not guilty verdict as the foreman was about to read it, according to the AP. He was convicted after a second trial in 1996 of first-degree murder and attempted involuntary deviate sexual intercourse.

    Barbara Jean’s mother Sharon Fahy urged the judge to release Ogrod, NBC 10 reported.

    "My daughter is never coming home, but I wanted justice for her, not simply a closed case with an innocent person in jail. Two families have already been destroyed," she said in a court filing.

    Ogrod was hospitalized in March after contracting coronavirus.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/philadelphia-death-row-inmate-freed-after-conviction-in-childs-murder-reversed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2020, 01:24:29 PM
    Cops are always quick to expose or defame their victims but they also try to keep their own records of malfeasance, abuse and crime to be hidden.

    In a Historic Victory, NY Legislature Repeals 50-A

    Upon the Governor's signature, police misconduct in New York will no longer be hidden from the public.

    Today, the New York State Legislature passed critical legislation that will fully repeal 50-a, which up until now has allowed law enforcement to shield police misconduct records from the public. These disciplinary records will now be publicly disclosed, increasing systemic accountability through transparency and taking New York one step forward to addressing police violence in our communities.

    https://www.innocenceproject.org/in-a-historic-victory-the-new-york-legislature-repeals-50-a-requiring-full-disclosure-of-police-disciplinary-records/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 10, 2020, 02:52:06 PM
    Cops are always quick to expose or defame their victims but they also try to keep their own records of malfeasance, abuse and crime to be hidden.

    In a Historic Victory, NY Legislature Repeals 50-A

    Upon the Governor's signature, police misconduct in New York will no longer be hidden from the public.

    Today, the New York State Legislature passed critical legislation that will fully repeal 50-a, which up until now has allowed law enforcement to shield police misconduct records from the public. These disciplinary records will now be publicly disclosed, increasing systemic accountability through transparency and taking New York one step forward to addressing police violence in our communities.

    https://www.innocenceproject.org/in-a-historic-victory-the-new-york-legislature-repeals-50-a-requiring-full-disclosure-of-police-disciplinary-records/

    And that’s long overdue - If they’re calling out others records for being scumbags & rightly so
    Their records best be Clean - Don’t Throw stones comes to Mind.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 10, 2020, 02:56:41 PM
    Now how about the send the cops and the original prosecutors to death row?

    Philadelphia death row inmate freed after conviction in child's murder reversed

    A Philadelphia man who spent nearly 30 years in prison for the murder of a 4-year-old girl has had his conviction overturned.

    Walter Ogrod, 55, convinced prosecutors his confession to the murder of Barbara Jean Horn in 1988 had been coerced by cops investigating the homicide. A judge freed him from prison Friday.

    Orgrod was a neighbor of Barbara Jean’s. He spent most of his time behind bars on death row. The case was profiled on an episode of “Death Row Stories” narrated by Susan Sarandon, the station reported.

    “I’m sorry it took 28 years for us to listen to what Barbara Jean was trying to tell us: that you are innocent, and that the words of your statement of confession came from Philadelphia Police detectives and not you,” prosecutor Carrie Wood told Ogrod.

    Philadelphia Judge Shelley Robins-New vacated Ogrod’s conviction and death sentence Friday, based on prosecutorial misconduct and new evidence that supports his claim of innocence,
    The Associated Press reported.

    Ogrod's lawyers said Friday they are unsure whether authorities have a different suspect.

    The first trial against Ogrod ended in a mistrial when one juror announced he did not agree with a not guilty verdict as the foreman was about to read it, according to the AP. He was convicted after a second trial in 1996 of first-degree murder and attempted involuntary deviate sexual intercourse.

    Barbara Jean’s mother Sharon Fahy urged the judge to release Ogrod, NBC 10 reported.

    "My daughter is never coming home, but I wanted justice for her, not simply a closed case with an innocent person in jail. Two families have already been destroyed," she said in a court filing.

    Ogrod was hospitalized in March after contracting coronavirus.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/philadelphia-death-row-inmate-freed-after-conviction-in-childs-murder-reversed

    In such case when witness testimony is forged or corrupted all those knowingly involved should
    Get the same sentence & Time in Jail as the person they Framed.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 10, 2020, 03:02:18 PM
    As if the dindus, antifa and various other vandals attacking old people was not enough now you have cops attacking the elderly as well.

    ABC4 News captures police officer armed in protest gear pushing down man with cane

    While ABC4 News was live on air during riots in Salt Lake City Saturday night they captured a police officer armed in protective gear shoving a man with a cane down onto the street.

    The incident happened while ABC4’s Nicole Neuman and photojournalist Josh Witzel were in the field reporting live on air to the commuity.

    That video has now gone viral after it was posted to the station’s ABC4 YouTube channel and has been picked up by viewers around the country, many expressed anger at the officers actions.

    Salt Lake City Police Department Chief Mike Brown responded to the video and said he has opened investigation though Internal Affairs and the Civilian Review Board.

    https://www.abc4.com/news/top-stories/abc-4-news-captures-police-officer-armed-in-protest-gear-pushing-down-man-with-cane/

    At 0:19



    At least one & then others went to help him up & check he okay.
    Unlike many of the Vermin protestors knocking down & battering / killing people.

    That’s a bit of decency from the cops they realised they made a mistake/ were heavy handed
    And went some way to correct it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 10, 2020, 03:07:47 PM
    Cops attacking another elderly man and then try to cover it up by claiming "he tripped and fell".

    Buffalo police shove elderly man to ground, injuring him; claim he tripped

    Two Buffalo police officers have been suspended after shoving an elderly man to the ground, seriously injuring him, and then claiming he tripped.

    Video quickly went viral Thursday night of two cops appearing to push a 75-year-old man in front of City Hall as protests began wrapping up shortly after Buffalo’s curfew began at 8 p.m. The man fell to the pavement, hitting his head; a painful crack is heard as blood started rushing from his head.

    WBFO reports two medics quickly came forward to treat the unidentified man. He was taken to Erie County Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition with a concussion and lacerations. Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said he is expected to recover, but no other details were released.

    Buffalo Police claimed in a statement that the man fell: “A 5th person was arrested during a skirmish with other protestors and also charged with disorderly conduct. During that skirmish involving protestors, one person was injured when he tripped & fell.”

    https://www.syracuse.com/state/2020/06/buffalo-police-shove-elderly-man-to-ground-injuring-him-claim-he-tripped-graphic-video.html



    This one not good for cops  - older man appears to have over reacted to the shove
    Only when hit the ground & banged his head with it bleeding the Cops did fuck all
    To help him just left him there. Them lot are Lowlife Scumbags for sure.
    They should all be fired & never allowed to be cops again.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 10, 2020, 04:08:16 PM
    (https://www.startribune.com/officers-slashed-tires-on-vehicles-parked-during-mpls-protests-unrest/571105692/)


    Officers slashed tires on vehicles parked amid Minneapolis protests, unrest
    By Paul Walsh Star Tribune
    June 8, 2020 — 6:12pm


    Two law enforcement agencies acknowledged Monday that officers patrolling Minneapolis during the height of recent protests knifed the tires of numerous vehicles parked and unoccupied in at least two locations in the midst of the unrest.

    Hmm a very random thing for them to go and do.
    Has Any Explanation been given & are they going to be paying for all the replacement Tyres.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 10, 2020, 08:11:30 PM
    Cops attacking another elderly man and then try to cover it up by claiming "he tripped and fell".

    Buffalo police shove elderly man to ground, injuring him; claim he tripped

    Two Buffalo police officers have been suspended after shoving an elderly man to the ground, seriously injuring him, and then claiming he tripped.

    Video quickly went viral Thursday night of two cops appearing to push a 75-year-old man in front of City Hall as protests began wrapping up shortly after Buffalo’s curfew began at 8 p.m. The man fell to the pavement, hitting his head; a painful crack is heard as blood started rushing from his head.

    WBFO reports two medics quickly came forward to treat the unidentified man. He was taken to Erie County Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition with a concussion and lacerations. Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said he is expected to recover, but no other details were released.

    Buffalo Police claimed in a statement that the man fell: “A 5th person was arrested during a skirmish with other protestors and also charged with disorderly conduct. During that skirmish involving protestors, one person was injured when he tripped & fell.”

    https://www.syracuse.com/state/2020/06/buffalo-police-shove-elderly-man-to-ground-injuring-him-claim-he-tripped-graphic-video.html



    Don't you hate when they try and lump this into real police abuse incidents?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 10, 2020, 08:19:41 PM
    This one not good for cops  - older man appears to have over reacted to the shove
    Only when hit the ground & banged his head with it bleeding the Cops did fuck all
    To help him just left him there. Them lot are Lowlife Scumbags for sure.
    They should all be fired & never allowed to be cops again.

    Disagree. Here's why

    They were advancing clearing an area. He approached them. You can see the officer pointing and likely telling him to move aside, get out of the way. He ignores him and confronts them. He's not happy with just standing in front of them, he starts to slap the other officer on the arm for what seems to be no apparent reason other than agitating him. If you can think of another reason I'm open to it. The officers push/shove was not excessive nor brutal and likely well within the policy. This guy was a known activist, he should know what to expect if he antagonizes the police. Their intent was to move him away so they could continue their mission. It's unfortunate he tripped and fell but at 75 you should factor possibilities like that when you start slapping a cop with your phone. WTF are we doing bastardizing these officers for this? Way out of line. And as far as "helping", you see the supervisor calling EMS who arrived shortly thereafter and placed a collar on his neck. Moving him prior, sitting him up, etc could likely lead to further injuries and certainly a law suit and people on this thread would be screaming "Cops are trained not to move people with head injuries!"  No, there are a lot of examples of police excessive force lately, this aint one of them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 10, 2020, 08:48:14 PM
    (https://www.startribune.com/officers-slashed-tires-on-vehicles-parked-during-mpls-protests-unrest/571105692/)


    Officers slashed tires on vehicles parked amid Minneapolis protests, unrest
    By Paul Walsh Star Tribune
    June 8, 2020 — 6:12pm


    Two law enforcement agencies acknowledged Monday that officers patrolling Minneapolis during the height of recent protests knifed the tires of numerous vehicles parked and unoccupied in at least two locations in the midst of the unrest.

    In cop speak, that is "strategically deflating tires" or "disabling illegally abandoned vehicles via tire deflation". Because when you want to deflate your car's tires you just take a knife and slash them. The (rhetorical) question is if the cops will pay -from their own pocket- to replace the tires they damaged.

    Minnesota state troopers admit "strategically" deflating tires during George Floyd protests

    Minnesota State Patrol troopers have admitted to "strategically" deflating tires during protests following the death of George Floyd. The state's Department of Public Safety (DPS) confirmed the action, CBS Minnesota reports, after social media videos emerged of officers appearing to slash tires in parking lots amid the demonstrations.

    The department said troopers deflated tires to keep the vehicles from being used in attacks against law enforcement or protesters and for the vehicles to be towed if a collection of evidence was necessary. According to DPS, it was only done in certain situations.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/minnesota-state-patrol-deflated-tires-protests-george-floyd-black-lives-matter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 11, 2020, 05:13:23 AM
    In cop speak, that is "strategically deflating tires" or "disabling illegally abandoned vehicles via tire deflation". Because when you want to deflate your car's tires you just take a knife and slash them. The (rhetorical) question is if the cops will pay -from their own pocket- to replace the tires they damaged.

    Minnesota state troopers admit "strategically" deflating tires during George Floyd protests

    Minnesota State Patrol troopers have admitted to "strategically" deflating tires during protests following the death of George Floyd. The state's Department of Public Safety (DPS) confirmed the action, CBS Minnesota reports, after social media videos emerged of officers appearing to slash tires in parking lots amid the demonstrations.

    The department said troopers deflated tires to keep the vehicles from being used in attacks against law enforcement or protesters and for the vehicles to be towed if a collection of evidence was necessary. According to DPS, it was only done in certain situations.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/minnesota-state-patrol-deflated-tires-protests-george-floyd-black-lives-matter/

    I wonder who has to pay for this damage?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on June 11, 2020, 10:23:46 AM
    I wonder who has to pay for this damage?

    Gordon said police disabled the cars and trucks to prevent vehicles from "driving dangerously and at high speeds in and around protesters and law enforcement."

    "While not a typical tactic, vehicles were being used as dangerous weapons and inhibited our ability to clear areas and keep areas safe where violent protests were occurring," he said.

    Gordon also said some vehicles "contained items used to cause harm during violent protests (rocks, concrete, sticks, etc.)."

    My guess will be the agency that was responsible. Typically when damage is caused by police, for example pushing a vehicle out of the roadway with push bars and it damages the other vehicle, or say an officer backs over a mailbox, they would be given instructions to contact city legal and arrangements would be made to reimburse them. I would be surprised if that doesn't happen here. It absolutely should
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2020, 02:32:17 PM
    We found 85,000 cops who’ve been investigated for misconduct. Now you can read their records.

    At least 85,000 law enforcement officers across the USA have been investigated or disciplined for misconduct over the past decade, an investigation by USA TODAY Network found.

    Officers have beaten members of the public, planted evidence and used their badges to harass women. They have lied, stolen, dealt drugs, driven drunk and abused their spouses.

    Despite their role as public servants, the men and women who swear an oath to keep communities safe can generally avoid public scrutiny for their misdeeds.

    The records of their misconduct are filed away, rarely seen by anyone outside their departments. Police unions and their political allies have worked to put special protections in place ensuring some records are shielded from public view, or even destroyed.

    Reporters from USA TODAY, its affiliated newsrooms across the country and the nonprofit Invisible Institute in Chicago spent more than a year creating the biggest collection of police misconduct records.

    Obtained from thousands of state agencies, prosecutors, police departments and sheriffs, the records detail at least 200,000 incidents of alleged misconduct, much of it previously unreported. The records obtained include more than 110,000 internal affairs investigations by hundreds of individual departments and more than 30,000 officers who were decertified by 44 state oversight agencies.

    Among the findings:

    Most misconduct involves routine infractions, but the records reveal tens of thousands of cases of serious misconduct and abuse. They include 22,924 investigations of officers using excessive force, 3,145 allegations of rape, child molestation and other sexual misconduct and 2,307 cases of domestic violence by officers.

    Dishonesty is a frequent problem. The records document at least 2,227 instances of perjury, tampering with evidence or witnesses or falsifying reports. There were 418 reports of officers obstructing investigations, most often when they or someone they knew were targets.

    Less than 10% of officers in most police forces get investigated for misconduct. Yet some officers are consistently under investigation. Nearly 2,500 have been investigated on 10 or more charges. Twenty faced 100 or more allegations yet kept their badge for years.

    The level of oversight varies widely from state to state. Georgia and Florida decertified thousands of police officers for everything from crimes to questions about their fitness to serve; other states banned almost none.

    That includes Maryland, home to the Baltimore Police Department, which regularly has been in the news for criminal behavior by police. Over nearly a decade, Maryland revoked the certifications of just four officers. In Minneapolis, where officer Derek Chauvin kneeled on the neck of George Floyd until he died, at least seven police officers have been decertified since 2009, according to state records.

    https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2019/04/24/usa-today-revealing-misconduct-records-police-cops/3223984002/

    Search the database:

    https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2019/04/24/biggest-collection-police-accountability-records-ever-assembled/2299127002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 11, 2020, 02:48:22 PM
    In the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, the cops kill an EMT while she is sleeping in her home.

    Conveniently, the killers did not wear body cameras. Of course none of them has been arrested.


    Family of Louisville EMT killed during LMPD raid files wrongful death lawsuit against officers

    (https://www.gannett-cdn.com/presto/2020/03/16/PLOU/80f13613-aaa9-489c-ab65-4fe24dbdb258-Breonna_Taylor_1.jpg?crop=479,639,x0,y0&quality=50&width=640)

    The family of a Louisville EMT killed in what's been alleged to have been a botched Louisville Metro Police raid has filed a lawsuit against the officers involved, claiming she did "nothing to deserve to die at their hands."

    Attorneys say police had the wrong home and that the suspect they were looking for was already in custody before the raid. Nothing illegal was found in Taylor's home.

    The officers burst into the home without knocking and "blindly fired" into it, spraying bullets into Taylor's house and neighboring apartments "with a total disregard for the value of human life," according to the lawsuit. Taylor, 26, was shot eight times.

    Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought they were being robbed, according to his attorney, and fired at officers when they rushed in, hitting LMPD Sgt. John Mattingly in the leg.

    Breonna Taylor was shot multiple times after officers used a battering ram to get into her home on Springfield Drive in south Louisville about 1 a.m. on March 13 in order to serve a warrant.

    Police say there is no body camera footage from the raid as officers in LMPD criminal interdiction division do not wear body cameras.

    https://www.wdrb.com/news/family-of-louisville-emt-killed-during-lmpd-raid-files-wrongful-death-lawsuit-against-officers/article_8caf7c9c-93b7-11ea-8253-5fbf4d80f0e7.html


    Executing the poor woman inside her apartment while sleeping was not enough.

    Arresting her boyfriend, who tried to defend himself and his girlfriend against the intruders, for murder was not enough.

    Now it appears that the cops tried to cover up even more by not listing any injuries for the poor woman - when they shot her 8 times and she died. They specifically stated there was no forced entry in the apartment when they used a battering ram.

    And remember, this was a no knock warrant for someone they already had in custody.

    And of course, very conveniently, there is no body camera footage from the raid as officers in LMPD criminal interdiction division do not wear body cameras.


    Louisville police release the Breonna Taylor incident report. It's virtually blank

    Nearly three months after Louisville Metro Police officers fatally shot Breonna Taylor in her South End apartment, the department has released the incident report from that night.

    Except, it is almost entirely blank.

    The four-page report lists the time, date, case number, incident location and the victim's name — Breonna Shaquelle Taylor — as well as the fact that she is a 26-year-old black female.

    But it redacts Taylor's street number, apartment number and date of birth — all of which have been widely reported.

    And it lists her injuries as "none," even though she was shot at least eight times and died on her hallway floor in a pool of blood, according to attorneys for her family.

    It lists the charges as "death investigation — LMPD involved" but checks the "no" box under "forced entry," even though officers used a battering ram to knock in Taylor's apartment door.

    It also lists under the "Offenders" portion of the report the three officers who fired in Taylor's apartment, fatally shooting her — Sgt. Jon Mattingly, 47; Myles Cosgrove, 42; and Brett Hankison, 44.

    But the most important portion of the report — the "narrative" of events that spells out what happened March 13 — has only two words: "PIU investigation."

    And the rest of the report has no information filled in at all.

    "I read this report and have to ask the mayor, the police chief and the city's lawyers: Are you kidding? This is what you consider being transparent to taxpayers and the public?" asked Richard A. Green, editor of The Courier Journal.

    https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/crime/2020/06/10/breonna-taylor-shooting-louisville-police-release-incident-report/5332915002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2020, 04:44:28 PM
    Texas officers accused of violence, other crimes avoid prison in deals with prosecutors

    Across Texas, hundreds of law enforcement officers have permanently surrendered their peace officer license in the past four years. A KXAN investigation of 297 of those surrenders has discovered nearly all the officers were accused or charged with a crime – most often felonies. And, in almost every case the officers used their license as a bargaining tool by agreeing to surrender it as part of a deal to avoid jail or prison.

    KXAN reviewed 297 permanent surrender cases in Texas from 2015 through mid-2018. In nearly every case, the peace officers were accused of or charged with a crime. At least half of the cases were felonies.

    Peace officer licenses are issued and maintained by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement (TCOLE). All law enforcement officers at the municipal, county and state level, except for state corrections officers, must be licensed.

    In at least 245 instances, peace officers used their licenses to leverage a lesser sentence in a plea bargain. More than 30 officers surrendered their licenses in lieu of prosecution or to halt an investigation.

    KXAN uncovered the system of deals by analyzing records obtained from more than 100 public information act requests filed at all levels of state and local governments, including TCOLE, county and district courts, as well as local, county and state law enforcement agencies.

    Officers who agreed to surrender their licenses received little or no jail time for offenses including sexual assault of children and women in custody, taking bribes and dealing narcotics to prisoners, lying about the circumstances of a police shooting and destroying evidence in criminal cases.

    In some instances, the accused police officers already had histories of misconduct yet were able to trade their badges in a plea bargain and walk away with deferred adjudication and probation.


    KXAN found more than two dozen cases in the last four years in which police officers or jailers permanently surrendered their licenses to avoid prosecution or to end investigations into possible misconduct.

    The only indication KXAN could find of possible misconduct in many of these cases was noted in a portion of the file TCOLE maintains for each delicensed officer titled “summary of the reason for permanent surrender.” It’s a sheet each officer is supposed to provide, but that does not always happen.

    It is unclear what level of punishments those officers may have faced. It is also more difficult, if not impossible, to obtain records of police misconduct when charges are not filed against the officer.

    In Texas, state law limits TCOLE’s authority to permanently revoke an officer’s license, unless he or she has been convicted of a felony or certain misdemeanors. If district attorneys want to get a bad police officer out of law enforcement, in most cases they either have to go to trial or make a deal, said Roger Goldman, professor emeritus at Saint Louis University School of Law.

    Texas’ license decertification laws are pushing district attorneys to make these plea bargains, according to Goldman.

    Texas has the most licensed peace officers of any state, yet Florida and Georgia decertify far more officers per year than Texas does. Those states have broader authority to revoke the license, Goldman said.

    https://www.kxan.com/bargaining-the-badge/



    Just some of the cases and the punishment gift these scumbags received. Sexual assault of a child and not a single day in prison:

    Quote
    A City of Wharton police officer was charged with three counts of sexual assault of a child in 2016. In a negotiated deal that included the permanent surrender of his peace officer license, he pleaded guilty to one count and received 10 years’ probation. His punishment also included fines, sex offender registration and community service, according to court records.

    Quote
    A law enforcement officer in the Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office was charged with four counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child, all first-degree felonies, in 2012. He pleaded guilty to one count of injury to a child and received 10 years of probation, no prison time, and was required to permanently surrender his peace officer license.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 13, 2020, 05:12:29 PM
    Ridiculous.


    Texas officers accused of violence, other crimes avoid prison in deals with prosecutors

    Across Texas, hundreds of law enforcement officers have permanently surrendered their peace officer license in the past four years. A KXAN investigation of 297 of those surrenders has discovered nearly all the officers were accused or charged with a crime – most often felonies. And, in almost every case the officers used their license as a bargaining tool by agreeing to surrender it as part of a deal to avoid jail or prison.

    KXAN reviewed 297 permanent surrender cases in Texas from 2015 through mid-2018. In nearly every case, the peace officers were accused of or charged with a crime. At least half of the cases were felonies.

    Peace officer licenses are issued and maintained by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement (TCOLE). All law enforcement officers at the municipal, county and state level, except for state corrections officers, must be licensed.

    In at least 245 instances, peace officers used their licenses to leverage a lesser sentence in a plea bargain. More than 30 officers surrendered their licenses in lieu of prosecution or to halt an investigation.

    KXAN uncovered the system of deals by analyzing records obtained from more than 100 public information act requests filed at all levels of state and local governments, including TCOLE, county and district courts, as well as local, county and state law enforcement agencies.

    Officers who agreed to surrender their licenses received little or no jail time for offenses including sexual assault of children and women in custody, taking bribes and dealing narcotics to prisoners, lying about the circumstances of a police shooting and destroying evidence in criminal cases.

    In some instances, the accused police officers already had histories of misconduct yet were able to trade their badges in a plea bargain and walk away with deferred adjudication and probation.


    KXAN found more than two dozen cases in the last four years in which police officers or jailers permanently surrendered their licenses to avoid prosecution or to end investigations into possible misconduct.

    The only indication KXAN could find of possible misconduct in many of these cases was noted in a portion of the file TCOLE maintains for each delicensed officer titled “summary of the reason for permanent surrender.” It’s a sheet each officer is supposed to provide, but that does not always happen.

    It is unclear what level of punishments those officers may have faced. It is also more difficult, if not impossible, to obtain records of police misconduct when charges are not filed against the officer.

    In Texas, state law limits TCOLE’s authority to permanently revoke an officer’s license, unless he or she has been convicted of a felony or certain misdemeanors. If district attorneys want to get a bad police officer out of law enforcement, in most cases they either have to go to trial or make a deal, said Roger Goldman, professor emeritus at Saint Louis University School of Law.

    Texas’ license decertification laws are pushing district attorneys to make these plea bargains, according to Goldman.

    Texas has the most licensed peace officers of any state, yet Florida and Georgia decertify far more officers per year than Texas does. Those states have broader authority to revoke the license, Goldman said.

    https://www.kxan.com/bargaining-the-badge/



    Just some of the cases and the punishment gift these scumbags received. Sexual assault of a child and not a single day in prison:
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Slapper on June 14, 2020, 04:53:01 AM
    “Fifty-seven resigned in disgust because of the treatment of two of their members, who were simply executing orders,” said John Evans, PBA president.

    That's the problem right there: the police unions. This is the reason cops feel like either they can be cops and kill/harass the population or they don't want to be cops. THIS is the attitude they have. And THIS is precisely the reason they should NOT be cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 15, 2020, 05:54:57 AM
    https://news.yahoo.com/pentagon-surplus-handouts-stoke-militarization-us-police-014234957.html


     :-\
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2020, 11:44:31 AM
    This executive order is meaningless and changes little, if anything. Plus when you see cop unions praising these measures it is unlikely there will be real accountability. Banning chokeholds except for when "an officer's life is at risk" is meaningless since the cops are quick to claim they "fear for their lives" even when they are facing young kids, frail elderly people or 1oz hamsters. And of course the Democrats who suddenly "realized" the problems with police accountability are hypocrites: so many years they didn't care but now that "#blackliesmatter" is trending on social media and TV they try to appear as some sort of civil liberties champions.

    Trump signs police reform executive order in Rose Garden ceremony

    President Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order on law enforcement reform and said "chokeholds will be banned except if an officer’s life is at risk" as the nation reels from the death of George Floyd in the custody of the Minneapolis Police Department and the ensuing unrest -- which has sparked calls for changes in policing nationwide as drastic as dismantling entire departments.

    The president made comments in the Rose Garden in which he struck a conciliatory tone while also expressing strong support for police before officially signing the order, which he characterized as promoting "the highest professional standards." He also said, "These standards will be as high and as strong as there is on Earth."

    According to the White House, Trump's order touches on use of force best practices, information sharing to track officers who have repeated complaints against them and federal incentives for police departments to deploy non-police experts on issues like mental health, homelessness and addiction.

    Trump said law enforcement officers would only be allowed to use chokeholds if their lives are in danger.

    "As part of this new credentialing process, chokeholds will be banned except if an officer’s life is at risk,” the president said.

    "I strongly oppose the radical and dangerous efforts to defund, dismantle and dissolve our police departments. Especially now when we've achieved the lowest recorded crime rates in recent history," Trump said, while acknowledging a "tiny" number of bad police officers. "Without police there is chaos, without law there is anarchy and without safety there is a catastrophe."

    The order would also help departments secure less-than-lethal weapons that can help reduce the number of fatal encounters with police, and mandate that departments share information on officers who are accused of abusing power "so that officers with credible issues do not simply move from one police department to the next."

    The National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), the largest law enforcement union in the U.S., praised Trump's order on Tuesday.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-rose-garden-executive-order-police
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2020, 02:13:34 PM
    Massive corporate databases become government tools of surveillance

    The number of data requests the US government sent to Google has increased 510% since 2010. US government requests to Facebook have also increased 364% since the beginning of 2013. The databases of private companies are increasingly being used to monitor individuals with little transparency into the process.

    In 2013, when Edward Snowden revealed the National Security Agency was conducting dragnet, mass surveillance, he forced the public to refocus on how to protect the right to privacy. These revelations inspired the founders of ProtonMail to begin thinking about how people could privately communicate with each other.

    Two years later, the US Congress passed the Freedom Act, which stopped the NSA’s bulk collection of private data. Data collection can only be performed against individual suspects with the approval of the secretive FISA court. However, the bulk collection of private data still happens; only now it is carried out by private corporations like Google, Facebook, and Internet service providers. 

    While US law prevents the NSA from performing bulk data collection, corporations like Google and Facebook face few restrictions on gathering data on their users. So, to get the data it wants, the NSA simply goes to these companies with user data requests. Under the Freedom Act, if the US government can convince a judge in the FISA court that an investigation pertains to national security, then they can request that a company share whatever data it has on an individual. And requests that are delivered via a national security letter do not need a judge’s approval, not even from the FISA court. This secretive system gives the government access to the reams of personal information these companies collect with little transparency or public oversight.

    Companies can refuse or argue that the request should be more narrowly interpreted, but then they face costly legal action. Google began charging governments a fee for processing such  data requests, a move that some claim will help winnow out frivolous or unnecessary requests. That being said, the majority of user data requests are respected. Facebook has shared information in response to a user data request roughly 74% of the time, and that percentage has remained steady since 2017.

    This success rate has led more and more governments to use online platforms as their data collection services. Between the first half of 2013 and the end of 2019, the number of data requests made by governments worldwide to Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Yahoo has increased by roughly 320%.

    Unsurprisingly, given the weak privacy protections offered by the FISA courts, the United States sent the most data requests to private companies in 2019. In fact, the US made more data requests (168,000) to Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Yahoo than the rest of the countries that make up the 14 Eyes intelligence-sharing agreement combined. (These statistics do not include the user data requests sent to Twitter and Yahoo for the second half of 2019, as they have not yet shared this data.)

    https://protonmail.com/blog/privacy-user-data-requests/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 17, 2020, 12:51:11 PM
    This man spent 5 months in jail and was facing 20 years in prison. As usual the cops investigated themselves and cleared themselves of any wrongdoing. But why was the body cam footage ignored for 5 months? And why are the cops not in prison? (rhetorical questions)

    Man with mental illness spent nearly 5 months in jail before body cam video revealed Garfield Heights officers beat, tased and mocked him

    A group of Garfield Heights police officers punched, kicked and repeatedly shocked a man diagnosed with bipolar and schizophrenia disorders with a stun gun, according to body camera videos obtained by cleveland.com.

    The videos show the officers hurl curse words at 28-year-old Kenta Settles as he lay handcuffed on the ground.

    Officer Michael Malak stopped Settles Jan. 23 as he walked on the sidewalk on Turney Road in the city’s main business corridor. Malak immediately detained Settles without telling him why, and, in a matter of seconds, Malak and another officer, Robert Pitts, tackled Settles to the ground and shot Taser prongs into his back as he lay in the fetal position, the videos show.

    The ensuing scuffle left Malak with a broken nose and Settles with a chipped tooth, a rotator cuff injury and a slice near his eye, according to police and court records.

    Settles was indicted by a grand jury 7 days after his arrest on charges of felonious assault of a peace officer and obstructing official business. He was jailed on a $250,000 bond. Garfield Heights police were cleared two weeks after his indictment by an internal investigation that lay all of the blame for the altercation on Settles.

    He remained in jail for nearly 5 months, facing more than two decades in prison, as his case inched through the court system. Then the disclosure of the police officers’ body camera videos, which had been a public record for more than five months, sparked a flurry of developments in the last week.

    A judge on June 8 granted Settles a personal bond and released him from the county jail. Settles on Thursday filed a lawsuit in federal court in Cleveland accusing Malak, Pitts and three other Garfield Heights officers who aided his arrest of using excessive force against him and violating his constitutional rights.

    Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley’s office on Friday dismissed the criminal charges against Settles, two days after the county prosecutor whose office indicted Settles in January viewed the body camera video for the first time.

    O’Malley’s office will go back to the grand jury and re-present “the entire case” for any additional charges, a spokesman said on Friday. The spokesman refused to answer any other questions about the case, including whether O’Malley’s office is considering seeking charges against the officers.

    https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2020/06/mentally-ill-man-spent-nearly-5-months-in-jail-before-body-cam-video-revealed-garfield-heights-officers-beat-tased-and-mocked-him.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 21, 2020, 01:44:02 PM
    Domestic terrorism with "qualified immunity".

    Supreme Court: No Consequences for Police Who Destroy Home, Mistakenly Shoot 10-Year-Old Boy, or Sic Police Dog on Suspect Already Under Arrest

    Despite growing calls to hold police accountable for using excessive force in non-threatening circumstances, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review any cases challenging the doctrine of “qualified immunity,” which shields police from liability for official wrongdoing. The nine qualified immunity cases in which the Court denied cert involved a SWAT team’s destruction of a home by bombarding it with tear gas grenades, a police dog that was ordered to attack a man who had already surrendered, and the mistaken shooting of a 10-year-old boy by a cop who was aiming for a non-threatening family dog. The Rutherford Institute and a coalition that included the DKT Liberty Project, the Due Process Institute, and Reason Foundation had asked the Court to reign in police abuses by holding police accountable to the rule of law.

    Attorneys Jessica Ring Amunson and Andrew C. Noll of Jenner & Block LLP in Washington, D.C., assisted The Rutherford Institute with its amicus brief in West.

    “This refusal by the Supreme Court to hold police accountable for official misconduct is a chilling reminder that in the American police state, ‘we the people’ are at the mercy of law enforcement officers who have almost absolute discretion to decide who is a threat, what constitutes resistance, and how harshly they can deal with the citizens they were appointed to ‘serve and protect,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “In the police state being erected around us, the police and other government agents can probe, poke, pinch, taser, search, seize, strip and generally manhandle anyone they see fit in almost any circumstance, all with the general blessing of the courts, no matter how egregious or in opposition to the Constitution.”

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/supreme_court_no_consequences_for_police_who_destroy_home_mistakenly_shoot_10_year_old_boy_or_sic_police_dog_on_suspect_already_under_arrest

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2020, 02:41:05 PM
    The sensitive pussies overracted? How surprising... Notice also the role of the criminal unions on the issue.

    How conspiracy theories about the NYPD Shake Shack ‘poisoning’ blew up

    The three cops at the center of the NYPD milkshake “poisoning” scandal never even got sick, and there wasn’t the slightest whiff of criminality from the get-go — but that didn’t stop gung-ho brass from rolling out the crime scene tape and unions from dishing out empty conspiracy theories, The Post has learned.

    The fullest picture yet to emerge of the incident — which came amid fraught tensions between the police and public — is based on records and multiple interviews with police sources.

    The three officers were down from The Bronx, on protest duty in Lower Manhattan, on June 15 when they ordered the now-infamous mid-shift treats via a mobile app around 7:30 p.m., purchasing three shakes across two separate orders, sources said.

    Their drinks were waiting for them when they arrived at the Shake Shack on the second floor of 200 Broadway a few minutes later. A female officer picked up her strawberry shake from the front counter, and her two male colleagues grabbed their cherry and vanilla drinks from a side counter, sources said.

    Police sources explained it was clear that the workers couldn’t have known cops had placed the orders “since it wasn’t done in person” — and they couldn’t have dosed the drinks after the officers arrived, because they were packaged and waiting for pickup when the trio walked in.

    Soon after sipping the shakes, however, the cops realized they didn’t taste or smell right, so they threw the drinks in the trash and alerted a manager, who apologized and issued them vouchers for free food or drink, which they accepted, according to sources.

    But when the cops told their sergeant about the incident, the supervisor called in the Emergency Service Unit to set up a crime scene at the fast-food joint for an evidence search around 9:20 p.m. — nearly two hours after they first got the sour shakes.

    The three were rushed to Bellevue Hospital, where they were examined and released without ever showing symptoms, sources said.


    Meanwhile, a lieutenant from the Bronx blasted out an email to the unions that six cops “started throwing up after drinking beverages they got from shake shack on 200 Broadway.”

    It was unclear why the sergeant and lieutenant escalated the situation.

    Detectives easily closed the case after interviewing five employees and reviewing surveillance footage showing the shakes were made normally, sources said.

    The machine was cleaned before the officers ordered, according to sources, and it still contained residual milkstone remover — a typically acidic solution used to combat buildup in dairy equipment.

    But by 10:45 p.m., the Detectives Endowment Association was declaring that Finest had become “ill” after being “intentionally poisoned by one or more workers at the Shake Shack” — as Police Benevolent Association president Pat Lynch made a show of visiting Bellevue while his union declared at 10:47 p.m. that police officers came “under attack” from a “toxic substance, believed to be bleach.”


    Both messages flurried across social media, spawning a trending #BoycottShakeShack hashtag that was still being tweeted Sunday by users who appear to erroneously believe NYPD members were intentionally poisoned.

    Around 3 a.m. June 16, the department was reviewing a statement on the matter, and at 4 a.m. — just over eight hours after the cops picked up their shakes — Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison announced on Twitter that there was “no criminality.”

    The unions later deleted their tweets and issued statements walking back their discredited claims. Privately, they blamed the lieutenant who first raised the false alarm.

    https://nypost.com/2020/06/22/how-nypd-faked-shake-shack-controversy-and-conspiracy-theory/


    Also, notice the logo of one of the criminal unions. Are they try to fool or intimidate people into thinking they're the DEA with this made up badge?

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1248688458803097602/VwonFwZl_400x400.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2020, 09:16:39 PM
    The firing took a while but the chief of police is trying to cover his ass and his department. Of course the cops who participated in this execution, have not been arrested or charged.

    "He wantonly and blindly fired ten (10) rounds".

    Not only was Breonna Taylor executed in her own apartment while she was sleeping, but three of the rounds Hankison fired entered the apartment next to Taylor's. These are the "brave heroes" who are given a badge that they think gives them unlimited "authoritay", are supposedly "trained" to use firearms and whose supposed job is to "enforce laws".

    Louisville Police Department fires officer involved in Breonna Taylor's death

    The Louisville Metro Police Department announced Tuesday that it has fired Brett Hankison, one of the officers involved in the March shooting death of 26-year-old emergency medical worker Breonna Taylor. In a letter to Hankison tweeted by the department, the Louisville police chief called his conduct "a shock to the conscience."

    Taylor was killed on March 13, when officers entered her home looking for illegal drugs. Officials claimed the officers knocked on the door and announced themselves, and only started shooting after they were "immediately met by gunfire" from Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker. But Taylor's family said in a lawsuit that the officers did not identify themselves, and that Walker — a licensed gun owner — thought someone was trying to break in.

    The letter states that Hankison was found to have violated two standard operating procedures: obedience to rules and regulations and use of deadly force.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/breonna-taylor-shooting-officer-brett-hankison-involved-fired/



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2020, 05:50:56 AM
    I'd trust the military more than most local PD's.  Military members do constant training.   Most of these people don't do squat training wise. 

    The firing took a while but the chief of police is trying to cover his ass and his department. Of course the cops who participated in this execution, have not been arrested or charged.

    "He wantonly and blindly fired ten (10) rounds".

    Not only was Breonna Taylor executed in her own apartment while she was sleeping, but three of the rounds Hankison fired entered the apartment next to Taylor's. These are the "brave heroes" who are given a badge that they think gives them unlimited "authoritay", are supposedly "trained" to use firearms and whose supposed job is to "enforce laws".

    Louisville Police Department fires officer involved in Breonna Taylor's death

    The Louisville Metro Police Department announced Tuesday that it has fired Brett Hankison, one of the officers involved in the March shooting death of 26-year-old emergency medical worker Breonna Taylor. In a letter to Hankison tweeted by the department, the Louisville police chief called his conduct "a shock to the conscience."

    Taylor was killed on March 13, when officers entered her home looking for illegal drugs. Officials claimed the officers knocked on the door and announced themselves, and only started shooting after they were "immediately met by gunfire" from Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker. But Taylor's family said in a lawsuit that the officers did not identify themselves, and that Walker — a licensed gun owner — thought someone was trying to break in.

    The letter states that Hankison was found to have violated two standard operating procedures: obedience to rules and regulations and use of deadly force.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/breonna-taylor-shooting-officer-brett-hankison-involved-fired/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2020, 12:43:50 PM
    Perverted freak. Of course he is enjoying paid vacation.

    Trooper charged with stalking after taking woman's phone, sending himself nude photos

    A Minnesota State Patrol trooper was charged with felony stalking for taking a woman’s cell phone and using it to send himself nude photos of her, the Hennepin County Attorney's Office announced Tuesday.

    Albert Kuehne, 36, was charged with two counts of stalking with bias due to the fact the victim was a woman.

    According to the criminal complaint, on March 25, Kuehne worked a single-car accident at Interstate 94 and Cedar Avenue in Minneapolis. The driver, a 25-year-old woman, was detained by Kuehne as a possible drunk driver. She was taken to a hospital where she was treated and released.

    When the woman returned home, her boyfriend was using her laptop, which is linked to her cell phone. According to the complaint, the laptop records showed the woman’s phone was accessed and nude photos of her were texted from it to an unknown phone.

    Her boyfriend called the phone number, and the person who answered eventually identified himself as Kuehne. The woman called a lawyer, who reported the incident. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension began an investigation.

    According to the complaint, Kuehne’s squad video showed him leading the woman to his squad car. Along the way, the woman took out her phone, and Kuehne demanded that she give it to him. The cell phone records indicate the photos were sent from the woman’s phone at 4:44 p.m. The video showed Kuehne alone in his squad at that time while paramedics treated the woman.

    Investigators obtained a search warrant and seized Kuehne's phone. They found three photos of the woman on his phone, according to the complaint.

    According the the Minnesota State Patrol, Kuehne was placed on paid investigatory leave May 20, 2020.

    https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/trooper-charged-with-stalking-after-taking-womans-phone-sending-himself-nude-photos
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 24, 2020, 01:43:21 PM
    Perverted freak. Of course he is enjoying paid vacation.

    Trooper charged with stalking after taking woman's phone, sending himself nude photos

    A Minnesota State Patrol trooper was charged with felony stalking for taking a woman’s cell phone and using it to send himself nude photos of her, the Hennepin County Attorney's Office announced Tuesday.

    Albert Kuehne, 36, was charged with two counts of stalking with bias due to the fact the victim was a woman.

    According to the criminal complaint, on March 25, Kuehne worked a single-car accident at Interstate 94 and Cedar Avenue in Minneapolis. The driver, a 25-year-old woman, was detained by Kuehne as a possible drunk driver. She was taken to a hospital where she was treated and released.

    When the woman returned home, her boyfriend was using her laptop, which is linked to her cell phone. According to the complaint, the laptop records showed the woman’s phone was accessed and nude photos of her were texted from it to an unknown phone.

    Her boyfriend called the phone number, and the person who answered eventually identified himself as Kuehne. The woman called a lawyer, who reported the incident. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension began an investigation.

    According to the complaint, Kuehne’s squad video showed him leading the woman to his squad car. Along the way, the woman took out her phone, and Kuehne demanded that she give it to him. The cell phone records indicate the photos were sent from the woman’s phone at 4:44 p.m. The video showed Kuehne alone in his squad at that time while paramedics treated the woman.

    Investigators obtained a search warrant and seized Kuehne's phone. They found three photos of the woman on his phone, according to the complaint.

    According the the Minnesota State Patrol, Kuehne was placed on paid investigatory leave May 20, 2020.

    https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/trooper-charged-with-stalking-after-taking-womans-phone-sending-himself-nude-photos


    No doubt his bosses will tell him off for being so amateur & careless Then Give Him a Promotion.

    Nude Pics Matter.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2020, 04:33:52 PM
    Police Union Contract Arbitration Requirements Keep Bad Cops On The Job

    By Martha Bellisle, AP

    An Oregon police officer lost his job and then returned to work after fatally shooting an unarmed Black man in the back. A Florida sergeant was let go six times for using excessive force and stealing from suspects, while a Texas lieutenant was terminated five times after being accused of striking two women, making threatening calls and committing other infractions.

    These officers and hundreds of others across the country were fired, sometimes repeatedly, for violating policies but got their jobs back after appealing their cases to an arbitrator who overturned their discipline — an all-too-common practice that some experts in law and in policing say stands in the way of real accountability.

    “Arbitration inherently undermines police decisions,” said Michael Gennaco, a police reform expert and former federal civil rights prosecutor who specialized in police misconduct cases. “It’s dismaying to see arbitrators regularly putting people back to work.”

    The killing of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer sparked weeks of protests and calls for reforms, but experts say arbitration can block those efforts.

    Arbitration, the appeals process used by most law enforcement agencies, contributes to officer misconduct, limits public oversight and dampens morale, said Stephen Rushin, a Loyola University Chicago law professor who last year published a study on arbitration in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.

    “Police arbitration on appeal is one of the single most important accountability issues in the country,” he told The Associated Press. “You can’t change an organization if you have to keep employing people that you know are going to do bad things.”

    Generally, when a misconduct complaint is filed against an officer, it’s investigated internally and if a policy violation occurred, the chief or other official may order discipline ranging from oral reprimand to suspension to termination.

    An officer who objects can appeal to an arbitrator. Each state and municipality is different, but this is the most common process. Police unions argue that arbitration is less expensive and less time-consuming than going to court, so it’s written into their contracts.

    Arbitrators are usually lawyers who focus on labor law, and in most cases they have the final word. The process can take years. Officers who are fired and reinstated can get back pay for the time they weren’t working.

    The contract between the Seattle police union and the city states the burden of proof to fire an officer must be “more than preponderance of the evidence,” in cases for an offense that could “stigmatize” an officer and make it harder to get employment elsewhere.

    This type of requirement is common, Gennaco said, adding, “The raised standard for termination cases is another example of a union contract that gives special rights to police.”

    James Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police, which has 351,000 members, said management should do a better job when hiring officers.

    “Rather than acknowledge their failure in recruiting and screening, they want to blame problem officers on the union contract,” Pasco said Monday. “If they did appropriate recruiting, training and supervision, we wouldn’t be in the position of using arbitration.”

    It’s unclear whether some cases are overturned due to an arbitrator’s personal bias or flaws in the internal investigations, or both, said Rushin, the law professor.

    One Seattle officer was fired for punching a handcuffed woman in his patrol car in 2014. He appealed, and the arbitrator reduced his punishment to a 15-day suspension. The city appealed in state court, and the judge reinstated his dismissal.

    That’s unusual, Rushin said. More often, union agreements make the arbitrator’s decision final, and a court can’t overturn it.

    Officials in Portland, Oregon, took their opposition to an arbitrator’s decision to the Oregon Court of Appeals but lost their bid to enforce the firing of Officer Ron Frashour.

    Frashour and another officer had gone to the home of Aaron Campbell on Jan. 29, 2010, on a report that he was distraught over his brother’s death. The officers ordered Campbell to exit the home, and he came out unarmed, walking backward with his hands on his head. Frashour shot Campbell in his back, killing him.

    Portland settled a federal lawsuit with the Campbell estate in 2012 for $1.2 million, and city officials fired Frashour, concluding Campbell didn’t pose a threat. But an arbitrator ruled in 2012 that the city must reinstate him. The city appealed and lost again.


    San Antonio officials have repeatedly ordered discipline for Lt. Lee Rakun, but he successfully appealed his termination five times, according to reports. His most recent suspension occurred in 2018 for leaving work early and defying authority. He appealed that firing once again.

    Rakun isn’t alone. San Antonio TV station KSAT found that two-thirds of fired officers had gotten their jobs back since 2010.

    San Antonio City Manager Erik Walsh said the current collective bargaining agreement limits the chief’s ability to appropriately discipline officers.

    “We intend to bring those issues to the next contract negotiation with the police union,” he said. “I am hoping the police union will agree that these cases tarnish and impact the community’s confidence in our police department.”

    A Florida police officer who was fired six times went back on patrol in 2018. An arbitrator ordered the Opa-locka Police Department to rehire Sgt. German Bosque after he was fired in 2013 for evidence tampering. A 2011 Sarasota Herald-Tribune report said Bosque had 40 internal affairs complaints, including 16 for battery or excessive force.

    When an arbitrator changes the punishment or throws it out, it can have a demoralizing effect on the people in charge.

    “One of the most common complaints I’ve heard from chiefs is they say why should an unelected arbitrator, who doesn’t know our department, doesn’t know our history, why should they be the one that gets to decide which type of punishment is excessive and which type of punishment is reasonable?” Rushin said.

    No state or federal agency tracks arbitration outcomes, but media investigations have documented hundreds of officers who returned to work after being fired. A Washington Post report documented 1,881 officers who were fired between 2006 and 2016, and 451 got their jobs back through arbitration.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/police-union-contract-arbitration-requirements-keep-bad-cops-on-the-job/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 25, 2020, 10:49:16 AM
    In the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, the cops kill an EMT while she is sleeping in her home.

    Conveniently, the killers did not wear body cameras. Of course none of them has been arrested.


    Family of Louisville EMT killed during LMPD raid files wrongful death lawsuit against officers

    (https://www.gannett-cdn.com/presto/2020/03/16/PLOU/80f13613-aaa9-489c-ab65-4fe24dbdb258-Breonna_Taylor_1.jpg?crop=479,639,x0,y0&quality=50&width=640)

    The family of a Louisville EMT killed in what's been alleged to have been a botched Louisville Metro Police raid has filed a lawsuit against the officers involved, claiming she did "nothing to deserve to die at their hands."

    Attorneys say police had the wrong home and that the suspect they were looking for was already in custody before the raid. Nothing illegal was found in Taylor's home.

    The officers burst into the home without knocking and "blindly fired" into it, spraying bullets into Taylor's house and neighboring apartments "with a total disregard for the value of human life," according to the lawsuit. Taylor, 26, was shot eight times.

    Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought they were being robbed, according to his attorney, and fired at officers when they rushed in, hitting LMPD Sgt. John Mattingly in the leg.

    Breonna Taylor was shot multiple times after officers used a battering ram to get into her home on Springfield Drive in south Louisville about 1 a.m. on March 13 in order to serve a warrant.

    Police say there is no body camera footage from the raid as officers in LMPD criminal interdiction division do not wear body cameras.

    https://www.wdrb.com/news/family-of-louisville-emt-killed-during-lmpd-raid-files-wrongful-death-lawsuit-against-officers/article_8caf7c9c-93b7-11ea-8253-5fbf4d80f0e7.html

    Lying cops, none of whom wore body cameras quite conveniently, nearly blank police reports and now rubber stamping judges approving ridiculous warrants. And all this despite the fact that the man the cops were looking for had already been arrested. Now an innocent woman, an EMT who served her community unlike these domestic terrorists, was executed in cold blood.

    The judge who approved the warrant in Breonna Taylor's case signed 5 warrants in 12 minutes!

    Louisville detective who obtained no-knock search warrant for Breonna Taylor reassigned

    Detective Jaynes wrote five affidavits seeking a judge's permission for no-knock searches, including at Taylor's South End apartment, as a part of a narcotics investigation in March.

    Jefferson Circuit Judge Mary Shaw signed all five within 12 minutes.

    The language on all five warrants is similar, describing the criminal history of the suspects and Jaynes' observations. All end by asking for a no-knock entry "due to the nature of how these drug traffickers operate."

    Jaynes wrote that the subjects have a history of attempting to destroy evidence, use cameras to monitor police and have a history of fleeing law enforcement.

    https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2020/06/10/breonna-taylor-louisville-detective-joshua-jaynes-no-knock-warrant-reassigned/5333604002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 25, 2020, 07:20:48 PM
    Sheriff asks attorney general to monitor shooting while stonewalling inspector general

    The independent monitors for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department were brought in for moments like these.

    The law enforcement agency is facing outrage from the community and questions about back-to-back shootings that left two men dead as well as its handling of the death of Robert Fuller, 24, who was found hanging from a tree near Palmdale City Hall.

    But the two institutions tasked with overseeing investigations of deputies’ use of force — the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission and its investigative arm, the Office of Inspector General — say they are running into roadblocks.

    Inspector General Max Huntsman said his office on Monday asked the Sheriff’s Department for reports, documents and video relating to the shooting death of 18-year-old Andres Guardado, who was killed by a deputy near an auto body shop in Gardena. Huntsman said he hasn’t received a response.

    The office also requested the report that detailed events surrounding the death of Fuller’s half-brother, Terron Boone, who was killed in a shootout with undercover detectives, to “analyze the underlying reason for the manner in which the arrest was conducted,” Huntsman said. “But they refused to give it to us.”

    The watchdogs’ functions were centerpieces of reforms enacted at the Sheriff’s Department in the wake of a corruption and brutality scandal in the jails that led to indictments of several sheriff’s deputies and high-ranking commanders, including former Sheriff Lee Baca. But the agencies have increasingly complained that the administration of Sheriff Alex Villanueva is refusing to share information and stonewalling efforts to provide true oversight.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-06-25/sheriff-villanueva-attorney-general-shootings
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 25, 2020, 10:00:09 PM
    "If they have nothing to hide, what are they afraid of?"

    California Agency Blocks Release of Police Use of Force and Surveillance Training, Claiming Copyright

    Under a California law that went into effect on January 1, 2020, all law enforcement training materials must be “conspicuously” published on the California Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) website.

    However, if you visit POST’s Open Data hub and try to download the officer training materials relating to face recognition technology or automated license plate readers (ALPRs), or the California Peace Officers Association’s course on use of force, you will receive only a Word document with a single sentence:

    (https://www.eff.org/files/2020/06/25/post_alpr_training_copyright_redaction.png)

    This is unlawful, and unacceptable, EFF told POST in a letter submitted today. Under the new California law, SB 978, POST must post law enforcement training materials online if the materials would be available to the public under the California Public Records Act. Copyrighted material is available to the public under the California Public Records Act—in fact, EFF obtained a full, unredacted copy of POST’s ALPR training through a records request just last year.

    The company that creates POST’s courses on ALPR and face recognition is the same company that sells the technology: Vigilant Solutions (now a subsidiary of Motorola Solutions). This company has a long history of including non-publication clauses in its contracts with law enforcement as a means to control its intellectual property. But, as we explain in our letter, SB 978 is clear: copyright law is not a valid excuse for POST to evade its transparency obligations.

    And what’s just as bad is that even when copyright isn’t an issue, POST has only released training course outlines, and not the training materials themselves. Indeed, POST has made no training materials about the use of force available, sharing only the outlines. With police use of force currently a hotly debated issue throughout the state and nation, it is all the more concerning that POST is unlawfully hiding this material.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/06/california-agency-blocks-release-police-use-force-and-surveillance-training
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 29, 2020, 11:25:24 AM
    Notice how many cops are involved in domestic abuse, child abuse and generally violent behavior not just "at work" but also at home?

    Note that the police department he worked for was accused of covering up the abuse and was later disbanded.

    Colorado Court of Appeals overturns conviction of former Berthoud police officer for sexually abusing daughter

    The Colorado Court of Appeals has reversed the conviction of former Berthoud police officer Jeremy Yachik for sexually assaulting his daughter on the grounds that testimony of him physically abusing her was impermissibly entered into evidence.

    In an opinion published Thursday, Judge Gilbert Román wrote that Yachik’s conviction was overturned and he would have to have a new trial.

    Yachik, a former police officer for the now-disbanded Berthoud Police Department, was found guilty of two counts of sexual assault on a child by a jury in 2016, and sentenced to two consecutive 16-year terms in prison.

    The charges stem from two incidents in 2010 and 2011 or 2012 when Yachik sexually assaulted and groped his daughter, who was respectively in eighth and ninth grade, according to evidence.

    Yachik was also sentenced to three years of probation in 2014 after being convicted of a misdemeanor count of child abuse after his ex-girlfriend sent a video to law enforcement showing him hitting and kicking his daughter.

    The case sparked an investigation into the Berthoud Police Department, which was accused of failing to investigate the case. The department was dissolved and the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office took over law enforcement duties in Berthoud.

    During Yachik’s trial for sexual abuse, the video was included in evidence and his daughter testified that he had physically abused her almost daily during the time that she lived with him.

    “At the prosecutors’ prompting, she detailed for the jury how the defendant would force her to eat hot sauce concoctions, zip tie her hands behind her back and lock her in a dark room for hours, kick her, beat her, choke her, spray her eyes with police department grade pepper spray, deprive her of food and force her to endure extreme exercise without rest,” the opinion said.

    The prosecutor asked the jury to “think about what this girl went through, think about what she told you and described” and find Yachik guilty, the opinion said.

    In the appeal, Yachik argued that the evidence was irrelevant and highly prejudicial, and encouraged the jury to convict him based on prior misconduct.

    The prosecution argued that the testimony was important for helping the jury understand why Yachik’s daughter initially lied to protect him and why she delayed reporting the assaults, the opinion said.

    In a legal analysis, Román concluded that the evidence was not permissible because there is no proof that the physical and sexual abuse were linked or that describing the physical abuse was necessary context for the sexual abuse case.

    “Reading through the trial transcript, one might easily forget that the defendant was on trial for sexual assault and believe he was also on trial for charges of child abuse,” Román wrote in the opinion. “The prosecutor used this evidence to paint the defendant in a bad light and appeal to the jury’s emotions.”

    Because it cannot be proven that the evidence did not influence the verdict, the court reversed Yachik’s conviction and remanded the case for a new trial in which the evidence should be excluded.

    https://www.reporterherald.com/2020/06/26/colorado-court-of-appeals-overturns-conviction-of-former-berthoud-police-officer-for-sexually-abusing-daughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 29, 2020, 12:01:26 PM
    Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
    Now cops attack and mangle people for refusing to talk.

    Of course don't expect any riots about this incident and even in the slim chance the man is awarded damages the bill will sent to the taxpayers as the cops will not pay a cent from their pocket and won't see a day in prison.

    Loveland man sues police, claiming unlawful excessive force, false arrest

    A man is suing the Loveland Police Department after he says officers forcefully and wrongfully arrested him when he refused to answer questions as a witness about a motorcycle crash last fall.

    Preston Sowl says he needed a shoulder replacement surgery after an officer twisted his arms behind his back and threw him on the pavement in the parking lot of a Loveland bar in September.

    Sowl's arrest was captured on body camera footage. His attorney, Sarah Schielke, said he and his wife were leaving Charlie L's pub that afternoon when they saw a motorcyclist laying under a fallen motorcycle. The crash was blocking the parking lot exit. Sowl and other bystanders went to help the motorcyclist, and another bystander lifted the bike off the man, who was bleeding and visibly injured.

    Body camera footage of Sowl's arrest shows Loveland police officer Paul Ashe attempting to question Sowl about the crash after Sowl tells him where the injured man's motorcycle was moved.

    "I don't know what happened," Sowl said. "I'm not talking to nobody."

    The encounter quickly escalated, with Ashe telling Sowl that he had to talk to him and threatening to arrest him for obstruction. Sowl repeatedly refused, which was within his constitutional rights, his lawyers argued in the lawsuit.

    "It is long-established that a citizen cannot be charged with obstruction (or any crime) for merely refusing to answer police questioning," Schielke wrote.

    Ashe and other officers then arrested Sowl, twisting his arms behind his back to cuff him after he wouldn't put his hands behind his back. The footage shows Sowl yelling and cursing in protest during a struggle, and the camera's view is obscured for about 20 seconds. When the visual footage returns, Sowl is face down on the ground with his hands cuffed behind his back. As officers lift him from the ground, he yells in pain and says his shoulder is "f----ed up."

    Ashe cited Sowl for obstruction of a peace officer and resisting arrest, but the Larimer County District Attorney's Office dismissed the charges, according to the lawsuit. There is no record of the charges in public court documents.

    According to Sowl's lawsuit, his shoulder was dislocated during the arrest, and he suffered bleeding cuts on his head, knees, legs, arms and wrist. He also retore the rotator cuff he'd recently had repaired through surgery. He later had his shoulder replaced, which Schielke said was a result of injuries from the arrest. The Coloradoan reviewed redacted medical records verifying his surgery.



    https://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2020/06/23/loveland-man-sues-police-claiming-excessive-force-false-arrest/3238531001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on June 30, 2020, 05:24:17 AM
    looks like someones ma was ass-raped by cops here, total meltdown
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 03, 2020, 05:13:17 AM
    https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-guy-shoot-and-kill-unarmed-carlsbad-caverns-visitor/5777672

    Lets see where the riots and looting happen. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 04, 2020, 10:56:29 AM
    The young man who was killed was white so of course there was no rioting or looting. Had this young man been black it would have been a much different story.

    But secretly spending taxpayer money to give to the cop who killed this young man is outrageous.

    Overland Park paid former police officer who fatally shot teen to resign

    A former Overland Park police officer who fatally shot 17-year-old John Albers as he backed out of his driveway in January 2018 was paid $70,000 as part of a deal to resign.

    The city confirmed Tuesday that it negotiated an $81,040 buyout with former Overland Park Police Officer Clayton Jenison — which included $70,000 in severance pay and $11,040 owed for his regular salary ($8,000), compensation time ($2,354) and unused vacation and holiday pay ($686).

    The separation agreement came despite the fact the police department and prosecutor's office found nothing wrong with Jenison's conduct.

    After a review that was never made public by the Johnson County Officer Involved Shooting Investigation Team, Jenison was cleared of any wrongdoing by Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe and Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez.

    Sheila Albers called Donchez's comments "false" in an interview Tuesday. She also pointed out there was no mention of any payout for Jenison at that time and said the entire process surrounding her son's fatal shooting lacked transparency.

    "The dollars and the data speak for themselves, and I'm stunned," Sheila Albers said. "This was protecting a police officer at all costs, and those costs also mean the lack of truth. This was, in my opinion, a complete abuse of power."

    The Albers family won a wrongful death settlement in the case. Judge Daniel Crabtree, a U.S. District Court judge for the District of Kansas, ruled that Jenison was never in the path of Albers' vehicle and did not act reasonably in opening fire on the Blue Valley Northwest student.

    An expert the family hired for the lawsuit determined John Albers was backing out of the driveway at 2 1/2 mph when Jenison shot at the vehicle 13 times and killed him.

    https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/investigations/overland-park-paid-former-police-officer-who-fatally-shot-teen-to-resign
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 04, 2020, 11:02:19 AM
    How odd, one moment the bodycam video shows a young (white) man being tazed, then all of a sudden he has been shot dead. As expected, the 26 seconds that contain the shooting are conveniently missing.

    Video shows park ranger shoot and kill unarmed Carlsbad Caverns visitor

    Recently released videos from a body-camera worn by a National Park Ranger at Carlsbad Caverns National Park reveals the park visitor who he tased, then shot and killed did not provoke the use of force and was unarmed.

    Charles “Gage” Lorentz was traveling from his work site in Pecos, Texas on March 21. 2020 intending to head to his family’s home in Southwest Colorado.  A report from the Eddy County Sheriff’s Department noted that he detoured at Carlsbad Caverns National Park to meet a friend.  The report states National Park Ranger Robert Mitchell stopped him for speeding on a dirt road near the Rattlesnake Springs area of the park.

    The lapel video shows Ranger Mitchell ordered Lorentz to spread his feet and move closer to a railing.  Lorentz is seen complying with those orders.  But when the ranger orders Lorentz to turn around, Lorentz is seen in the video not complying and dancing to nearby music playing from someone’s vehicle.  Ranger Mitchell commanded Lorentz to take his hands out of his pockets, and without warning or an announcement that force will be used; Ranger Mitchell deployed his Taser at Lorentz.

    The video abruptly ends when the Taser is deployed.  26 seconds of the video is missing, but when the video resumes, the video shows Ranger Mitchell on top of  Lorentz.  That’s when the ranger shot him twice with his service gun.

    Later in the video, Ranger Mitchell is heard explaining what happened during the missing 26 seconds to an Eddy County Deputy.  He said, “that's when I shot him with a Taser.  It did nothing.  I went dry stun, he hit me somewhere right here on the side of my head.  The fight was on, he grabbed me around the neck, he tried to push my head into the push bar and I came up and fired one round.  I don't know if I got him or not, but I definitely got him on the second one and he crumbled.”



    https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-guy-shoot-and-kill-unarmed-carlsbad-caverns-visitor/5777672/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 07, 2020, 03:48:30 PM
    An "extraordinary series of bad decisions" is a very mild way to put it.

    Chasing a car supposedly for a broken taillight at 99mph (oddly specific velocity, was it more).

    Not using sirens or lights during said chase.

    Conveniently "forgetting" to turn on the body camera.

    Lying and deceiving the woman whose house was damaged.

    Lying on the police report.

    Trying to cover up the damage he caused on the police car.

    This isn't just an "extraordinary series of bad decisions", as the Denver Public Safety director called it. And how many others like him behave like this to varying degrees every day and get away with it?

    Of course none of the above seems to be a crime that will be prosecuted since the criminal has a badge. The "harsh" punishment this criminal received is he was fired and the other one got 22 days of unpaid suspension.


    “Extraordinary series of bad decisions”: Denver police officer fired for filing false report, covering up car chase

    A Denver police officer was fired for “an extraordinary series of bad decisions” that included an unauthorized car chase, failing to turn on his body camera during the chase, failing to notify the department that the chased car crashed into a innocent person’s garage, trying to conceal damage to his own car with white out and lying in his reports in an attempt to cover up the entire incident.

    Officer Nicholas Mauro “so significantly violated the public trust that the only appropriate penalty for this rule violation is termination,” Deputy Director of Denver Public Safety Mary Dulacki wrote in Mauro’s discipline letter.

    Another officer, Aldo Salayandia, will serve a 22-day unpaid suspension for participating in the chase, failing to intervene in Mauro’s misconduct and failing to report the misconduct to a supervisor.

    Mauro was working patrol on Nov. 19, 2019, when he saw an SUV with a broken tail light get on Interstate 70. He followed the SUV as it exited onto Havana Street and continued to match its speed, at one point reaching 99 mph. He did not turn on his lights or siren.

    Mauro then called Salayandia, who was nearby, and told the officer to look for the SUV as it traveled down East 56th Avenue. Salayandia followed the SUV as well, until it crashed into the garage door of a home on Laredo Street. Both officers approached the SUV, but nobody was inside. Mauro reached into the SUV to turn it off, but the SUV instead reversed down the driveway and struck Mauro’s car.

    That’s when the lying began.

    The homeowner told the officers she didn’t own or recognize the car. Mauro later told the woman via text to file an accident report online, even though policy mandated that he should take a report himself.

    Mauro then logged a false report that he simply found the vehicle damaged on the side of the road, several blocks from the woman’s house. He also logged a request that the vehicle be towed from the scene, not mentioning the chase, the crash or the damage to the woman’s house or his own patrol car.

    When he returned to the police station, he covered up damage to his car with white out, according to the disciplinary letter.


    The woman tried to file a report online, but wasn’t able to so she called dispatch and a corporal came to take her statement and watch video of the incident she retrieved from her doorbell camera. During his follow-up, the corporal found that Mauro lied in his report, failed to report the SUV crashing into the garage and failed to report the accident regarding his own patrol car.

    In an interview with internal affairs, Salayandia said he should have taken the lead on the situation, even though he had one less year on the force than Mauro. Salayandia joined the department in 2016 and Mauro joined in 2015.

    Mauro, in his interview with internal affairs, acknowledged that he made bad decisions and that he lied to avoid consequences.

    “Officer Mauro said he started to panic and that he was scared because he knew the repercussions of what had happened,” the letter states.

    Mauro said that he did not activate his body camera because he didn’t want it to show him pursuing the vehicle. He said he told the homeowner that the license plate on the SUV was fake because he didn’t want her to include the plate number in her online report, as it might connect the crash to his false report. He said he lied about finding the damaged SUV because he “feared repercussions.”

    Dulacki found that Mauro violated the department’s policy by chasing a vehicle for a traffic violation, failing to file required reports and lying about the entire situation in the reports he did file.

    “The totality of these actions and decisions is appalling,” Dulacki wrote in Mauro’s discipline letter.

    https://www.denverpost.com/2020/07/07/denver-police-officer-fired-nicholas-mauro/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 07, 2020, 09:48:52 PM
    Fairmont cop drove twice the speed limit in a fatal crash. He won't be charged.

    A police officer whose family politically supports Marion County’s top prosecutor won’t face charges after driving twice the speed limit in a crash that killed an elderly man.

    Jakob Streyle was traveling more than 70 mph in a marked 2016 Dodge Ram pickup in July 2019 when he T-boned the truck into an SUV driven by Steven Gene Santini, 72, who was killed a block away from the home, where he had lived with his wife, Emily, for 15 years.

    Streyle was not operating the police pickup’s emergency lights or sirens, nor was he responding to a call, civil court documents showed.

    Fairmont police neither disciplined Streyle nor responded to a request for comment.

    https://www.wvgazettemail.com/news/fairmont-cop-drove-twice-the-speed-limit-in-a-fatal-crash-he-wont-be-charged/article_5402bcec-c7db-5946-ab23-6bf53795ac23.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2020, 11:19:41 AM
    https://abc7ny.com/arrest-made-after-daughter-investigates-dads-murder-herself/6308024/?fbclid=IwAR3ukhnlOILbYiYR99-ym7QnF3HCNVB0S0jv5Pex9Kj2lYqwCAO10B1FWoU


     :( >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2020, 11:28:29 AM
    https://abc7ny.com/arrest-made-after-daughter-investigates-dads-murder-herself/6308024/?fbclid=IwAR3ukhnlOILbYiYR99-ym7QnF3HCNVB0S0jv5Pex9Kj2lYqwCAO10B1FWoU


     :( >:(

    Crazy. This is their job (aside from the "protect and serve" BS), getting paid by the taxpayers and they don't even give a fuck.

    Quote
    Espinal said police at the 103 Precinct refused to investigate what happened to her dad. When the lieutenant there refused to write up a police report, he told Espinal that she should go out into the neighborhood, and find her own evidence of a crime -- and so she did.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2020, 12:47:22 PM
    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/crime-courts/three-lapd-officers-face-felony-charges-falsely-labeling-people-gang-n1233412?fbclid=IwAR3sguSXy1ScIi6U_ZmuqWFr7O_jANSoZaFhw-W6Q5DDZS_aazP6xrrfsFw


    Geezus
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2020, 12:57:21 PM
    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/crime-courts/three-lapd-officers-face-felony-charges-falsely-labeling-people-gang-n1233412?fbclid=IwAR3sguSXy1ScIi6U_ZmuqWFr7O_jANSoZaFhw-W6Q5DDZS_aazP6xrrfsFw


    Geezus

    Damn, talk about a criminal gang:

    Quote
    According to a 59-count criminal complaint, the three were charged with conspiracy, filing false reports, and preparing fraudulent documents for court. It was not immediately clear how many of each of the charges applied to each officer.

    The three defendants are accused of falsifying cards used by officers to conduct interviews while in the field.

    In some instances, the defendants allegedly wrote on the card that a person admitted to being a gang member even though body-worn camera video showed the defendants never asked the individual about gang membership, prosecutors said.

    In other instances, the defendants allegedly wrote that a person admitted to being a gang member though the person had denied gang affiliation.

    Shaw is accused of falsifying 43 field interview cards. Coblentz is accused of falsifying seven cards and Martinez is accused of falsifying two cards.

    If convicted, Shaw faces up to 31 years and eight months in county jail, while Coblentz faces up to seven years and eight months and Martinez faces up to four years and four months.

    Alas, it is unlikely they will serve these prison sentences. Probably they'll get a sweet plea deal with probation.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2020, 01:00:19 PM
    Damn, talk about a criminal gang:

    Alas, it is unlikely they will serve these prison sentences. Probably they'll get a sweet plea deal with probation.

    In some instances, the defendants allegedly wrote on the card that a person admitted to being a gang member even though body-worn camera video showed the defendants never asked the individual about gang membership, prosecutors said.



    Unbelievable 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2020, 05:38:31 PM
    Most have heard of George Floyd by now but who knows or remembers Tony Timpa?

    He was killed by cops despite pleading for help more than 30 times. After killing him the cops laughed and joked.

    But his death didn't matter since he was white. No riots, no looting, no beating up innocent bystanders, no taking down statues. Very few even know his name.

    Now to add insult to injury, his killers enjoy the travesty known as "qualified immunity".

    Federal judge tosses excessive force suit against five Dallas officers in Tony Timpa case

    A federal judge in Dallas has thrown out an excessive force lawsuit filed against five Dallas police officers who handcuffed and pinned a mentally ill man to the ground shortly before he died.

    In a 27-page ruling, U.S. District Judge David Godbey granted the officers’ motion for summary judgment in the case of Tony Timpa. The unarmed Rockwall man died in 2016 from “sudden cardiac death due to the toxic effects of cocaine and physiological stress associated with physical restraint,” court records show.

    Godbey based his decision, signed Monday, on the controversial doctrine of qualified immunity. Under that standard, Timpa’s family had to identify a specific case in the Fifth Circuit court of appeals that clearly established that the officers’ conduct at the time was unconstitutional.

    A private security guard handcuffed Timpa before Dallas officers arrived. Timpa was unarmed, in shorts and barefoot. The responding officers mocked the 32-year-old as he screamed for his life, with one officer’s knee pinned in his back for about 14 minutes as he lay face down in the grass, according to court records. They joked after he became unresponsive that he was going to be late for school, the lawsuit says.

    The officers involved were Dustin Dillard, Raymond Dominguez, Kevin Mansell, Domingo Rivera and Danny Vasquez.

    Three of the officers later faced misdemeanor deadly conduct charges in connection with the death.

    But last year, Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot dismissed the charges against Dillard, Mansell and Vasquez. Creuzot said he met with three medical examiners who told him they did not believe the officers acted recklessly.

    All but one of the five officers remain on the force, a police spokeswoman said Tuesday. Mansell retired in August 2019, the spokeswoman said.

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2020/07/07/federal-judge-tosses-excessive-force-suit-against-five-dallas-officers-in-tony-timpa-case/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 11, 2020, 01:34:16 PM
    Another non-black victim. Don't expect any rioting, looting or "say his name" hashtags on twitter.

    Ex-St. Johns County deputy charged after man beaten during traffic stop

    An ex-deputy with the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, who was seen on video beating a man during a December traffic stop, has been charged with aggravated battery, according to the State Attorney’s Office.

    St. Johns County Sheriff David Shoar in March filed a criminal charge of aggravated battery against Anthony DeLeo for his use of force against Christopher Butler. DeLeo was fired from the Sheriff’s Office. The charges were sent to the State Attorney’s Office for review, and DeLeo surrendered to authorities Wednesday.

    Family told News4Jax that Butler was severely injured by deputies after he was pulled over for driving 15 mph on Interstate 95. Attorney John Phillips, representing Butler, said Butler was going through a medical episode when he was pulled over.

    Video of his arrest, captured by a witness and a state trooper’s dash camera, shows that over a nearly four-minute span DeLeo hit Butler 19 times with his baton, and kicked him in the head twice, while Butler was sitting on the ground offering little resistance. After DeLeo hit and kicked Butler, minimal effort was made to handcuff Butler, according to a warrant affidavit.

    “Based on the actions of (DeLeo), the gratuitous amount of force applied and the extent of injuries sustained by the victim; probable cause was established for the charge of aggravated battery,” the warrant affidavit stated.

    According to authorities, Butler would not cooperate during a traffic stop. After he was pulled over on County Road 210, a witness captured what happened next on his cellphone and shared it with Butler’s family. Teri Morgenstern, Butler’s mother, shared the video with News4Jax.

    In the video, Butler can be heard screaming and moaning when he was shocked with a Taser several times. Later in the video, DeLeo comes at him with a baton.

    In the report from the Sheriff’s Office, investigators said Butler was being uncooperative and was not responding to commands. They believed he was on drugs because it appeared to them the Taser had no effect, according to the report.

    https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2020/07/02/st-johns-county-deputy-charged-after-man-beaten-during-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2020, 03:20:34 PM
    Quite the "white privilege" these 2 men had.... They got sentenced to 50 and 55 years in prison based on a "bloody" towel that a famous "expert" witness by the government presented as evidence. The minor detail is that the "expert" did not test the towel and the "blood" on the towel was an inorganic substance.

    Yet, due to their "white privilege" both men spent 30 years in prison. Don't expect any rioting or looting or stupid twitter hashtags. And of course the "expert witness" will not serve a day for his lies that sent these men to prison.

    Who knows how many other people have been unjustly imprisoned or executed because of "expert witnesses" like this piece of shit?

    Judge dismisses murder charges against men imprisoned for three decades based in part on discredited testimony by world famous criminologist Henry C. Lee

    A judge on Friday dismissed the charges against two men who were convicted of murder and served three decades in prison based in part on erroneous trial testimony by the world-famous forensic scientist Dr. Henry C. Lee.

    Superior Court Judge Dan Shaban dismissed charges against Ralph Birch and Shawn Henning during two brief and sparsely attended hearings in a courthouse all but shut down by the coronavirus pandemic. Both men spent 30 years in prison until the state Supreme Court, in a decision sharply critical of Lee, reversed their convictions last year for the 1985 murder of retired truck driver Everett Carr in New Milford.

    Litchfield State’s Attorney Dawn Gallo told Shaban that the state had decided against retrying the men, saying key witnesses had died, the recollections of others had faded, two important prosecution witnesses recanted their testimony and a comprehensive series of tests and retests of evidence failed to turn up anything tying Birch and Henning to the murder. She did not mention Lee. Lawyers for the two men asked Shaban to dismiss murder and burglary charges and the judge agreed — putting Birch and Henning in a position to pursue millions of dollars in wrongful prosecution claims against the state.

    The dismissals are another blow to Lee’s increasingly tarnished reputation. Lawyers once fought over Lee, a fixture as star witness in the sensational criminal trials of O.J. Simpson, William Kennedy Smith and others. But more recently, his judgement has been questioned. Four murder convictions in Connecticut, including those of Birch and Henning, have been reversed or challenged over allegations of erroneous testimony by Lee about what he characterized as definitive blood evidence.

    Birch and Henning were troubled and homeless teenagers, aged 18 and 17, living in a stolen car and committing burglaries to raise money for drugs when Carr was beaten and stabbed to death in his New Milford home in an extraordinarily brutal attack.

    The theory of the crime was that Carr interrupted a burglary, putting Birch and Henning at the top of the suspect list. But the police were confronted by a contradiction. The crime scene suggested the teens should have been soaked with blood. There was not a trace on them, their clothing, the stolen Buick or any of the clutter of possessions they had stuffed into the car.

    Lee provided an explanation: He testified that he found a stained towel in an upstairs bathroom at Carr’s house and that his repeated tests on the stains proved they were made by blood. The prosecutor was able to suggest to jurors in his closing arguments that the teens could have used the towel to clean up. Birch and Henning were convicted in separate trials of felony murder and sentenced to 50 and 55 years in prison, respectively.

    It was more than 20 years later, in 2008, that they discovered a stunning oversight by the prosecution that discredited Lee’s testimony. Birch and Henning had arranged through a last-ditch appeal to have the bathroom towel subjected to sophisticated genetic testing unavailable at the time of their trials. Over the course of the testing, the state forensic laboratory found records showing that the towel had never been tested before, by Lee or anyone else. That meant, at the time of trial, there was no way of knowing what the stain was. When the towel ultimately was tested, the results showed the red-colored stains were not made by blood at all, but by an inorganic substance

    https://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-news-henry-lee-murder-charges-reversed-20200710-20200710-5pdanjzhwfhhpgvmuhncss7etu-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2020, 11:55:28 PM

    Lancaster Woman Says She Was Forced From Home Naked by Deputies During Fruitless Search

    A woman from Lancaster says Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department deputies violated her Constitutional rights when they burst through her door, handcuffed and moved her outside naked, and terrified her younger sister and son, while allegedly searching for the woman's brother -- who she later learned was being arrested at a different location.

    She filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court earlier this year as a, "Jane Doe," that claims the deputies were negligent when they conducted an unreasonable search of her home, and as a result, inflicted emotional distress. The woman does not want her name or face revealed publicly due to the nature of what happened and her allegations against the County.

    The woman says she asked her younger sister to begin recording the July 25, 2019 encounter with a cellphone, and the video shows four male deputies inside the home ordering her to walk down a flight of stairs while nude. The woman says she was in the shower when the deputies forced their way inside.

    The Sheriff's Department has declined to discuss the incident and said it could not address the allegations in the lawsuit.

    At the time of the search, the woman says the deputies told her they were searching for her brother, who was wanted in an assault case. Time-stamped Sheriff's Department booking records show he was being arrested by other deputies in South Los Angeles around the same time deputies forced open the woman's door in Lancaster.

    The Sheriff's Department has also yet to respond to a request under the California Public Records Act filed earlier this month for details of the response to Lancaster home and the circumstances of the arrest of her brother.

    The brother's arrest turned out to be fruitless, according to court and other records, because the L.A. County District Attorney's Office declined to file a criminal charge citing a lack of sufficient evidence. "No independent witnesses," and, "suspect denies," were listed by the deputy district attorney who rejected the case, according to a charge evaluation worksheet.

    The assault allegation against the brother stemmed from an alleged confrontation with a family member in April, 2019, according to a DA's office record.

    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/investigations/lancaster-woman-los-angeles-sheriff-deputy-naked-search-lawsuit/2394444/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2020, 03:54:19 PM
    Another hoax attack. Deputy Jussie...

    Virginia Deputy Lied About Roadside Attack, Sheriff Says

    A deputy who said he was the victim of a roadside attack in Fauquier County, Virginia, made up the incident and is facing charges, authorities say.

    Jake Preston Dooley, 22, said he was stopped at the intersection of Old Waterloo Road and Wilson Road near Warrenton after 7 p.m. Friday to remove a hazard in the roadway when he heard a vehicle approach and someone yelling.

    He said he saw a black SUV and was struck in the head, the sheriff's office said in a release Saturday.

    Dooley was taken to a hospital and was stable, authorities said.

    Later Saturday, the sheriff's office said detectives found the incident was false. Dooley was fired and charged with falsely summonsing law enforcement and obstruction of justice..

    https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/virginia-sheriffs-deputy-knocked-unconscious-in-attack/2358353/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2020, 06:44:27 PM
    That's some white privilege that white man is enjoying, getting beat up by a black cop and then getting charged with a felony as well. Will there be any rioting or looting for a black cop attacking a white person?

    Video Shows Cop Punching Man on Manhattan Subway. DA Vance Charges Rider With Assault

    A police officer punched and dragged a homeless man who was allegedly taking up more than one seat on a near-empty subway train in Manhattan, body camera video from May shows.

    But Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance is charging the bloodied man with felony assault, punishable by up to seven years in prison, for allegedly kicking the officer’s hand while the cop tried to cuff him on the platform of the Midtown station.

    The Manhattan District Attorney’s office stood by its decision to prosecute for a felony assault against police. The police initially arrested Joseph for resisting arrest and obstructing government administration, as well as a violation. But the district attorney’s office upgraded the charges.

    https://www.thecity.nyc/2020/7/14/21324745/video-shows-cop-punching-man-on-manhattan-subway



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 16, 2020, 12:59:58 PM
    The long quest to stop a ‘Sugar Daddy’ judge accused of preying on women

    She was 30 years old, jobless and facing a custody fight for two young children. To keep her kids, she needed a lawyer – someone cheap and willing to see her quickly.

    Tim Parker seemed ideal. He was available, and his fee was about half what another lawyer quoted. According to confidential testimony reviewed by Reuters, the woman told state authorities that Parker agreed to represent her in late 2013, then offered her some unexpected advice.

    “‘You need yourself a Sugar Daddy,’ is exactly what he said,” the woman said in the confidential testimony. “He was very persistent on it and knew that I was pretty much broke.”

    The woman told authorities that she covered part of her legal fees by having sex with Parker, and that Parker paid her at least $3,000 for more sex over the next two years. Typically, allegations that a lawyer had sex with a client or exchanged services for sex would be handled by local police or state ethics officials.

    But Parker’s case was complicated: He wasn't just a lawyer. He was also a part-time judge for the Carroll County District Court.

    That gave Arkansas' judicial oversight agency the jurisdiction to investigate Parker. Although the woman declined to talk with Reuters, she alleged in secret testimony to the agency that Parker had also used his authority as a judge to help her friends bond out of jail, again in return for sex. The alleged conduct was not isolated, according to the confidential records reviewed by Reuters and interviews with eight law enforcement officials in Arkansas.

    City police, the sheriff’s office, the state police, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and a federal grand jury investigated Parker for about four years. Witnesses gave evidence that the judge disclosed the identity of a confidential informant; traded money and opioids for sex; and gave favorable treatment to young women in his courtroom, Reuters found.

    Despite the intense scrutiny, Parker, 58, was never charged with any crime.
    In brief interviews with Reuters, Parker said he did nothing wrong, as a judge or as a lawyer. In a statement, Parker’s lawyer said the allegations of illegal drug use and sexual misconduct are “absolutely untrue.”

    Still, Parker’s term on the bench ended in disgrace, when the state judicial commission forced his removal and resignation on what was already scheduled to be his final day in office.

    The story of Tim Parker shows how hard it can be to remove an American judge suspected of corruption. It also illustrates how, even after misconduct on the bench becomes an open secret, a judge can remain in power for years when his victims are people who typically make for poor witnesses – in this case, petty criminals and drug addicts.

    In its investigation into judicial misconduct across America, Reuters sought to identify people harmed as a result of judges who break the law or violate their sworn oaths. Over a dozen years, the news agency found at least 5,206 people who were directly affected by a judge’s misconduct. The victims ranged from individuals who were illegally jailed to those subjected to racist, sexist and other abusive comments or actions.

    Parker’s case also provides a different, more hopeful lesson about ensuring accountability in America's state and local courts, however. It demonstrates how a well-staffed and persistent state judicial oversight agency – the exception, not the rule, in the United States – can hold judges to account when other authorities can’t.

    https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-judges-commissions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 27, 2020, 12:20:26 PM
    If the state owes you, tough luck.

    If you owe the state they seize your house, sell it and keep the change. And now that the Michigan Supreme Court argued otherwise, the county's argument is that if they are forced to pay back all their illegal profits to the rightful owners, the county would be bankrupt.

    Michigan county treasurer rebuked for seizing retiree's home over $8 tax debt

    Officials in one Michigan county are demanding answers from their treasurer amid concerns that the county could be on the hook for millions of dollars in payments to former homeowners whose properties were seized under a tough forfeiture practice.

    Oakland County commissioners sent an angry letter last week to Treasurer Andrew Meisner, a former Democratic Party member of the Michigan State House of Representatives, after the Michigan Supreme Court rebuked the county’s decision to seize one homeowner’s house after he underpaid his taxes by $8.41.

    The commissioners said that they are forming a special investigative committee to look into the forfeiture practices and "make recommendations to protect the Oakland County taxpayers."

    “It appears your actions as Treasurer to foreclose on an Oakland County retiree’s property for $8.41 has exposed the county to serious risk,” the July 21 letter to Meisner, signed by board Chairman David Woodward and commissioners Mike Gingell and Helen Zack, said, according to the Detroit News. Meisner did not immediately return Fox News' request for comment.

    The Michigan Supreme Court’s rebuke centers on the case of Uri Rafaeli, a retiree in his 80s whose 1,500-square-foot house in the Detroit suburb of Southfield was seized in 2014 and then sold for $24,500, with the county keeping all the earnings.

    While Rafaeli’s case was stunning at the time, it is hardly unique: more than 100,000 homeowners in the state have fallen victim to an aggressive property tax law that legislators in Lansing passed two decades ago. Similar statutes have been passed in more than a dozen other states.

    “When the government takes property to settle a debt, they have to give the extra money they make back to you,” Christina Martin, a lawyer with the Pacific Legal Foundation who was representing Rafaeli in his case against Oakland County, told Fox News last year. “It doesn’t matter what law Michigan passes, they have the constitutional obligation to pay back any more than they are owed.”

    The state’s Supreme Court ruled earlier this month that while Oakland County had the right to seize Rafaeli’s house to satisfy the tax debt and "any interest, penalties, and fees," it was not entitled to the full value of the home that it sold.

    Oakland County officials – and those in other counties across Michigan – are now worried that the high court’s ruling will open the floodgates for litigation as former homeowners whose properties were seized look to get the money from the sale of their seized homes.

    During a court appearance last year, William Horton and John Bursch, the county’s attorneys, argued that a ruling in favor of Rafaeli would set a precedent that could ultimately bankrupt Michigan counties by forcing local governments to compensate all homeowners in similar situations. He estimated it would cost around $2 billion.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/michigan-county-treasurer-after-seizing-retirees-home-for-8-tax-debt
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 27, 2020, 03:47:32 PM
    A 6 year old child killed by cops? Oh, the child was white so no protests, no rioting, no looting no stupid "sayhisname" hashtags on social media.
    Of course the cops investigated themselves and cleared themselves of any wrongdoing.

    'I can't see any weapons': Helicopter video shows moments before deputies shot unarmed woman, 6-year-old boy

    The family of a 6-year-old boy who was fatally shot by deputies days before Christmas in 2017 is now calling on Bexar County to settle a lawsuit connected with his death, documents obtained Thursday by Eyewitness Wants to Know revealed.

    Kameron Prescott, 6, was shot twice as Bexar County Sheriff's Deputies chased down, shot and killed a fugitive sought by bounty hunters and deputies.

    In a 16-page letter sent to county commissioners late last month, attorneys for Prescott's father and mother, Christopher and Rubi Prescott, laid out what they had discovered since filing suit against the county, writing that while they are "confident in our case," the Prescott family is "willing to accept, at this time, a fraction of what a jury would likely award as damages."

    The letter contains new details about the moments leading up to Prescott's death, including that a DPS trooper had informed responding officers they did not see firearms on the suspect, Amanda Jones, moments before deputies on the ground shot her.

    In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, Sheriff Javier Salazar said deputies suspected Jones was involved in a vehicle burglary, prompting the pursuit. But the lawsuit states that it was actually a bounty hunter that alerted deputies to the fact that Jones was in the area. Jones was wanted on fraud and credit card abuse warrants.

    "What we had was a case where a call from a bounty hunter led to a two-hour police chase of a non-violent suspect, and it resulted in that suspect fleeing and standing in front of a mobile home where there was a child's bicycle on the porch and a car in the driveway and a 6-year-old boy playing inside that had nothing to do with this police chase," said Tom Crosley, an attorney for Kameron Prescott's father, Christopher Prescott. "And deputies in this case fired 20 rounds from assault rifles. And one of those rounds killed this innocent young child."

    Attorneys for the Prescotts allege in the letter that a deputy's claim Jones was armed and had pointed a gun at him ultimately set off the extensive manhunt. The letter states that deputy recanted after the deadly shooting, stating he never saw a gun and instead "closed his eyes and flinched" when Jones ran past him.

    The letter also states deputy Longoria swore under oath he saw smoke coming from Jones's gun, though Jones was unarmed and investigators have never recovered the object deputies claimed she was holding when she tried to exit the trailer.

    https://www.kens5.com/article/news/local/family-of-6-year-old-killed-by-deputies-days-before-christmas-calling-on-county-to-settle-lawsuit-in-letter-detailing-deadly-shooting/273-b6415b16-5b98-49d7-892d-9a5da1ece0f2
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 04, 2020, 01:23:02 PM
    Repeated charges of illegal searches, violence, racial profiling, racial slurs and intimidation against Lt. Daniel Sbarra and his team have cost the city more than $1.5 million in settlements 

    NYPD veteran Daniel Sbarra donned his dress blues on Aug. 2, 2011, and headed to One Police Plaza — where Commissioner Raymond Kelly, a promotion and a pay raise awaited.

    Kelly shook his hand. And targets of Sbarra's crude and costly police tactics were left shaking their heads.
    The Brooklyn North Narcotics sergeant with 15 years on the job made lieutenant despite years of on-the-job conduct some say raises serious questions about whether he should still have his badge.

    A Daily News investigation of Sbarra and his team of cops exposed repeated charges of illegal searches, unprovoked violence, racial profiling, racial slurs and intimidation that cost the city more than $1.5 million in settlements.

    This figure could rise: 9 of the nearly 60 lawsuits filed against the accused rogue cops are still pending.

    Sbarra is involved in at least 15 of the suits — others involving his team reference various John and Jane Doe officers, whose names typically don't come to light when there are quick settlements. He's been the target of five to 10 Internal Affairs investigations, the lieutenant acknowledged in a deposition. And he's racked up a staggering 30 civilian complaints, among the most on the force.

    City settlements involving the 37-year-old married father total nearly $500,000.

    Just 4 months before his promotion, court papers say, Sbarra lost 20 days of vacation after an Internal Affairs probe into an unauthorized search of an ex-Marine's apartment. His union head said Sbarra pleaded guilty to the department charges because he couldn't get promoted until the case was closed out.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/lt-daniel-sbarra-team-finest-article-1.1348075
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2020, 01:17:20 PM
    Another man killed but since he was white there will be no protests, riots, looting or twitter hashtags.

    It started as a noise complaint. It ended in another fatal Phoenix police shooting

    Ryan Whitaker had heard a stranger knock on his Ahwatukee apartment door in the middle of the night earlier in May. So when he heard a similar knock on a Thursday after 10 p.m. later that same week, he answered the door holding his 9 mm gun.

    Holding the gun in his right hand, he was confronted by two Phoenix police officers standing on either side of the door. They appeared surprised by the sight of the firearm, body camera footage shows.

    3 seconds after Whitaker opened the door, Phoenix Officer Jeff Cooke shot Whitaker in the back at least two times, killing the 40-year-old man. Phoenix police had portrayed Whitaker's shooting as an emergency domestic violence call. A 30-minute police body camera video released this week indicates the incident started over a noise complaint from a neighbor upstairs who called police twice.

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2020/07/17/noise-complaint-fatal-police-shooting-ryan-whitaker/5459142002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on August 07, 2020, 01:39:04 PM
    All of these cases are horrible and good examples of police brutality. I disagree with rioting and violence for any reason, but I also do not abide police brutality. Judges who seem to condone it should be relieved of their judgeship and disbarred from practicing law.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 07, 2020, 11:01:22 PM
    I doubt these cops will end up in prison or pay a single cent out of their own pocket.

    District attorney opens investigation into Aurora police mistaken detention of Black family captured on video

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/08/08/03/31701790-8606357-image-a-18_1596855176203.jpg)

    Arapahoe County’s district attorney announced Friday that he will review Sunday’s detention of a Black family in Aurora in which officers drew their weapons and forced four girls, ages 6, 12, 14 and 17, to lie face down in a parking lot while they investigated a report of a stolen car.

    “Public accounts of the incident in a parking lot near Iliff and Buckley are very concerning,” 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler said in a statement. “Everyone is entitled to be treated equally under the law. No one is above the law. If our investigation determines that the officers involved committed a crime, I will not hesitate to file charges and prosecute them.”

    The detention of a Black woman and her daughter and nieces in the Aurora parking lot drew national criticism after a video taken by a bystander showed children on the ground, wailing and pleading for their mothers.

    Brittney Gilliam was taking the girls to a nail salon when they were approached in the parking lot by Aurora officers, who drew their guns and handcuffed some of them. Gilliam was detained in the back of a patrol car.

    Police mistakenly pulled over Gilliam’s SUV after receiving reports of a stolen vehicle with matching license plates. Those plates, however, belonged to a stolen motorcycle out of Montana instead.

    Wilson said officers made two mistakes that day. First, they failed to look up the plate number in the National Crime Information Center to double check the information on the stolen motorcycle. She also said officers should not have kept the children on the ground, even though department policy calls for officers to treat interactions with reported stolen vehicles as high-risk.

    https://www.denverpost.com/2020/08/07/aurora-police-district-attorney-investigation-children-detention/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2020, 04:51:14 PM
    Another criminal enterprise.

    Hidden guns, bodyguards and a DA raid on the Santa Clara County sheriff

    Prosecutors in Santa Clara County have served at least three search warrants while investigating whether Sheriff Laurie Smith’s office gave out coveted concealed-gun permits in exchange for campaign money, sources familiar with the investigation told The Chronicle.

    The Santa Clara County district attorney’s office raided the sheriff’s San Jose headquarters Aug. 2, seizing evidence through a search warrant that remains sealed. About a week before that, sources said, prosecutors served search warrants on two of the sheriff’s higher-ranking supervisors.

    Among those who have been contacted by investigators is AS Solution, a security company whose bodyguards protect Silicon Valley tech executives. Public records show one of the company’s managers gave a large contribution last year to an independent expenditure committee supporting Smith’s re-election.

    Prosecutors are investigating the Sheriff’s Office at a time when demand for specialized security is high among Silicon Valley companies and executives, particularly since April 2018, when a disgruntled YouTube video creator stormed the company’s San Bruno headquarters and shot three people before taking her own life. Many private guards are retired police officers who may carry hidden guns in California. Those who are not retired officers must apply for permits from their home city or county. The permits generally must be renewed after two years.

    https://www.sfchronicle.com/crime/article/Tech-security-firm-part-of-DA-investigation-into-14438702.php



    Four indicted in Santa Clara County Sheriff concealed gun permit scandal

    Captain, reelection committee officer, two others charged with conspiracy and bribery; Sheriff Laurie Smith and security firm that got permits were not indicted, but DA says ‘we’re not done’


    A grand jury has indicted a Santa Clara County Sheriff’s captain and three political supporters of Sheriff Laurie Smith for allegedly brokering a pay-for-play scheme in which campaign donations were exchanged for concealed-carry weapons permits. The sheriff herself avoided indictment, but prosecutors said Friday that their corruption probe is far from over.

    Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen announced felony charges including conspiracy and bribery against Capt. James Jensen; Christopher Schumb, an officer for a sheriff reelection committee and a prominent South Bay litigator; attorney Harpaul Nahal; and Milpitas gun-parts maker Michael Nichols. All four are accused of plotting to illegally secure concealed-gun permits for employees of Seattle-based executive security contractor AS Solution.

    The indictment marks the first criminal case to come out of a decade’s worth of complaints regarding political favoritism in Smith’s issuing of the hard-to-get concealed-carry permits. Rosen said Friday that an 18-month investigation uncovered a two-tiered policy for the concealed gun permits: a process for regular citizens whose applications were destined for a filing cabinet, and another for VIPs whose applications were fast-tracked for approval.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/08/06/da-to-reveal-results-of-sheriff-corruption-probe-into-concealed-gun-permits/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2020, 06:54:56 AM
    Same thing happened in NYC w pistol permits


    Another criminal enterprise.

    Hidden guns, bodyguards and a DA raid on the Santa Clara County sheriff

    Prosecutors in Santa Clara County have served at least three search warrants while investigating whether Sheriff Laurie Smith’s office gave out coveted concealed-gun permits in exchange for campaign money, sources familiar with the investigation told The Chronicle.

    The Santa Clara County district attorney’s office raided the sheriff’s San Jose headquarters Aug. 2, seizing evidence through a search warrant that remains sealed. About a week before that, sources said, prosecutors served search warrants on two of the sheriff’s higher-ranking supervisors.

    Among those who have been contacted by investigators is AS Solution, a security company whose bodyguards protect Silicon Valley tech executives. Public records show one of the company’s managers gave a large contribution last year to an independent expenditure committee supporting Smith’s re-election.

    Prosecutors are investigating the Sheriff’s Office at a time when demand for specialized security is high among Silicon Valley companies and executives, particularly since April 2018, when a disgruntled YouTube video creator stormed the company’s San Bruno headquarters and shot three people before taking her own life. Many private guards are retired police officers who may carry hidden guns in California. Those who are not retired officers must apply for permits from their home city or county. The permits generally must be renewed after two years.

    https://www.sfchronicle.com/crime/article/Tech-security-firm-part-of-DA-investigation-into-14438702.php



    Four indicted in Santa Clara County Sheriff concealed gun permit scandal

    Captain, reelection committee officer, two others charged with conspiracy and bribery; Sheriff Laurie Smith and security firm that got permits were not indicted, but DA says ‘we’re not done’


    A grand jury has indicted a Santa Clara County Sheriff’s captain and three political supporters of Sheriff Laurie Smith for allegedly brokering a pay-for-play scheme in which campaign donations were exchanged for concealed-carry weapons permits. The sheriff herself avoided indictment, but prosecutors said Friday that their corruption probe is far from over.

    Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen announced felony charges including conspiracy and bribery against Capt. James Jensen; Christopher Schumb, an officer for a sheriff reelection committee and a prominent South Bay litigator; attorney Harpaul Nahal; and Milpitas gun-parts maker Michael Nichols. All four are accused of plotting to illegally secure concealed-gun permits for employees of Seattle-based executive security contractor AS Solution.

    The indictment marks the first criminal case to come out of a decade’s worth of complaints regarding political favoritism in Smith’s issuing of the hard-to-get concealed-carry permits. Rosen said Friday that an 18-month investigation uncovered a two-tiered policy for the concealed gun permits: a process for regular citizens whose applications were destined for a filing cabinet, and another for VIPs whose applications were fast-tracked for approval.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/08/06/da-to-reveal-results-of-sheriff-corruption-probe-into-concealed-gun-permits/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 09, 2020, 05:34:13 PM
    Horrific. This is how easily this system can throw a man in prison accusing him of horrific crimes. At least unlike other cases where people are exonerated after 20 or 30 or 40 years this was much shorter but still this man's name has been permanently stained.
    When the cops realized that this man was not even there when the alleged abuse took place they simply decided to "backtrack" the date so that it fit their narrative.

    Cops, prosecutors and this poor fella's first lawyer should all have been sentenced for life or executed.

    The police chief "retired" shortly after and then was hired as chief of police in another town, but resigned a few weeks ago. The other cops were promoted as is usual in such cases.

    The female district attorney who prosecuted the poor man had a long history of misconduct and was repeatedly jailed for contempt. She was later found dead, possibly suicide. At least that's something.


    The Trials of Greg Kelley: A High School Football Phenom Wrongly Convicted of Molesting a 4-Year-Old Boy

    On August 9, 2013, Kelley was arrested on charges of sexually assaulting a four-year-old boy.

    According to authorities, the child alleged that Kelley “put his pee-pee” in his mouth on two occasions at a daycare operated by Shama McCarty. McCarty, a booster of the Leander Lions’ football team, had been allowing Kelley, a friend and classmate of McCarty’s son Johnathan, to stay at their home in nearby Cedar Park after his mother was hospitalized with a brain tumor. Days later, a second boy came forward to accuse Kelley of making him touch his penis. Kelley was charged with two counts of indecency with a child and two counts of super aggravated sexual assault, the latter carrying a minimum sentence of 25 years in prison.

    At the McCarty’s urging, the Kelley’s sold their house to pay for Patricia Cummings, a top defense attorney in the area.

    Over the course of the trial, several clues appeared to point to another suspect: Johnathan McCarty, who bore a striking resemblance to Greg Kelley.

    In his outcry interview conducted at the Child Advocacy Center in Georgetown, Texas, the first boy alleged that Kelley was wearing SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas during the assaults, and that the assaults occurred in a bedroom with a couch, a crib, and trophies. The boy reported it to his mother on July 13, leading police to determine that the assaults happened on July 12. The second boy initially named Johnathan as the assailant in his outcry interview, before a series of leading questions from a detective led the child to name Greg. Both boys were interviewed over a half-dozen times by various officials, prompting a child psychologist for the prosecution to testify at trial that asking a young child “repeated questions” about a particular event may cause them to believe that it happened.

    Here’s the thing: Kelley had moved out of the McCarty’s home on June 11, and on July 12 was many miles away from Cedar Park, helping his brother move from Hutto to a new place in South Austin. Plus, he spent most of his days in weight training or football practice. Johnathan, on the other hand, was still living in the home at the time of the alleged assaults, owned a pair of SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas that he regularly wore to school, and—unlike Kelley—slept in a bedroom with a couch, a crib, and trophies.

    None of these facts, however, were brought up at trial. In lieu of offering up Johnathan as an alternate suspect, Cummings sought to prove that the boys made the whole thing up—thereby pitting their words against Kelley’s. 

    Both young boys testified in a separate room via closed-circuit television. The second boy recanted, repeatedly saying that “Greg” did not assault him; the first boy maintained that Kelley did assault him but was not made to identify him in court. On July 16, 2014, Kelley was acquitted of the charges concerning the second boy but found guilty of two counts of super aggravated sexual assault against the first. Facing life in prison, he agreed to accept the minimum sentence of 25 years with no possibility for parole in exchange for waiving his right to appeal—though he reserved the right to file a motion for a new trial.

    In March of 2017, thanks to the financial assistance of a local activist named Jake Brydon, Kelley had managed to hire a new lawyer, Keith Hampton, who’d filed a writ of habeas corpus.

    Hampton’s writ of habeas corpus contained a bunch of new potentially exonerating evidence that was not presented at trial, including: that Kelley was not living at the house and helping his brother move when the alleged assaults took place; that Johnathan owned the SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas; that Johnathan’s bedroom contained the couch, crib and trophies; that a cache of child pornography was found on both Johnathan’s cell phone and computer; that four women had accused Johnathan of drugging and raping them while Kelley was behind bars; and that two witnesses heard Johnathan confessing to sexually assaulting the boy. Hampton also accused Cummings and the Cedar Park police department of negligence.

    Kelley also learned his initial attorney, Patricia Cummings, had strange ties to the McCarty family—including defending one of Johnathan’s half-brothers of sex crimes.

    Kelley was released on bond on August 22, 2017; that December, a judge recommended Kelley’s conviction be overturned due to actual innocence. It wasn’t until November 6, 2019, that Kelley’s conviction was finally vacated

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-trials-of-greg-kelley-a-high-school-football-phenom-wrongly-convicted-of-molesting-a-4-year-old-boy?ref=home

    https://www.law.umich.edu/special/exoneration/Pages/casedetail.aspx?caseid=5645
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2020, 05:42:48 AM
    FNG crazy. 

    Horrific. This is how easily this system can throw a man in prison accusing him of horrific crimes. At least unlike other cases where people are exonerated after 20 or 30 or 40 years this was much shorter but still this man's name has been permanently stained.
    When the cops realized that this man was not even there when the alleged abuse took place they simply decided to "backtrack" the date so that it fit their narrative.

    Cops, prosecutors and this poor fella's first lawyer should all have been sentenced for life or executed.

    The police chief "retired" shortly after and then was hired as chief of police in another town, but resigned a few weeks ago. The other cops were promoted as is usual in such cases.

    The female district attorney who prosecuted the poor man had a long history of misconduct and was repeatedly jailed for contempt. She was later found dead, possibly suicide. At least that's something.


    The Trials of Greg Kelley: A High School Football Phenom Wrongly Convicted of Molesting a 4-Year-Old Boy

    On August 9, 2013, Kelley was arrested on charges of sexually assaulting a four-year-old boy.

    According to authorities, the child alleged that Kelley “put his pee-pee” in his mouth on two occasions at a daycare operated by Shama McCarty. McCarty, a booster of the Leander Lions’ football team, had been allowing Kelley, a friend and classmate of McCarty’s son Johnathan, to stay at their home in nearby Cedar Park after his mother was hospitalized with a brain tumor. Days later, a second boy came forward to accuse Kelley of making him touch his penis. Kelley was charged with two counts of indecency with a child and two counts of super aggravated sexual assault, the latter carrying a minimum sentence of 25 years in prison.

    At the McCarty’s urging, the Kelley’s sold their house to pay for Patricia Cummings, a top defense attorney in the area.

    Over the course of the trial, several clues appeared to point to another suspect: Johnathan McCarty, who bore a striking resemblance to Greg Kelley.

    In his outcry interview conducted at the Child Advocacy Center in Georgetown, Texas, the first boy alleged that Kelley was wearing SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas during the assaults, and that the assaults occurred in a bedroom with a couch, a crib, and trophies. The boy reported it to his mother on July 13, leading police to determine that the assaults happened on July 12. The second boy initially named Johnathan as the assailant in his outcry interview, before a series of leading questions from a detective led the child to name Greg. Both boys were interviewed over a half-dozen times by various officials, prompting a child psychologist for the prosecution to testify at trial that asking a young child “repeated questions” about a particular event may cause them to believe that it happened.

    Here’s the thing: Kelley had moved out of the McCarty’s home on June 11, and on July 12 was many miles away from Cedar Park, helping his brother move from Hutto to a new place in South Austin. Plus, he spent most of his days in weight training or football practice. Johnathan, on the other hand, was still living in the home at the time of the alleged assaults, owned a pair of SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas that he regularly wore to school, and—unlike Kelley—slept in a bedroom with a couch, a crib, and trophies.

    None of these facts, however, were brought up at trial. In lieu of offering up Johnathan as an alternate suspect, Cummings sought to prove that the boys made the whole thing up—thereby pitting their words against Kelley’s. 

    Both young boys testified in a separate room via closed-circuit television. The second boy recanted, repeatedly saying that “Greg” did not assault him; the first boy maintained that Kelley did assault him but was not made to identify him in court. On July 16, 2014, Kelley was acquitted of the charges concerning the second boy but found guilty of two counts of super aggravated sexual assault against the first. Facing life in prison, he agreed to accept the minimum sentence of 25 years with no possibility for parole in exchange for waiving his right to appeal—though he reserved the right to file a motion for a new trial.

    In March of 2017, thanks to the financial assistance of a local activist named Jake Brydon, Kelley had managed to hire a new lawyer, Keith Hampton, who’d filed a writ of habeas corpus.

    Hampton’s writ of habeas corpus contained a bunch of new potentially exonerating evidence that was not presented at trial, including: that Kelley was not living at the house and helping his brother move when the alleged assaults took place; that Johnathan owned the SpongeBob Squarepants pajamas; that Johnathan’s bedroom contained the couch, crib and trophies; that a cache of child pornography was found on both Johnathan’s cell phone and computer; that four women had accused Johnathan of drugging and raping them while Kelley was behind bars; and that two witnesses heard Johnathan confessing to sexually assaulting the boy. Hampton also accused Cummings and the Cedar Park police department of negligence.

    Kelley also learned his initial attorney, Patricia Cummings, had strange ties to the McCarty family—including defending one of Johnathan’s half-brothers of sex crimes.

    Kelley was released on bond on August 22, 2017; that December, a judge recommended Kelley’s conviction be overturned due to actual innocence. It wasn’t until November 6, 2019, that Kelley’s conviction was finally vacated

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-trials-of-greg-kelley-a-high-school-football-phenom-wrongly-convicted-of-molesting-a-4-year-old-boy?ref=home

    https://www.law.umich.edu/special/exoneration/Pages/casedetail.aspx?caseid=5645
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 10, 2020, 03:57:43 PM
    It would be a clown show with these buffoons if it didn't have real consequences on people.

    These are the "highly trained professionals" who wear the "badge".

    (bb related: victim must lift some decent weights)

    (also, victim appears to be white so don't expect any protests, riots, looting or accountability)

    Body cam footage: Reno cop accidentally shot man after being struck by deputy's stun gun

    Reno police released body-worn camera footage Sunday showing an officer who unintentionally shot a driver after the officer was accidentally struck by a deputy's stun gun during a traffic stop last month.

    According to the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office, a deputy pulled over a driver who was reportedly driving recklessly on South Virginia Street.

    Authorities said the driver was uncooperative and non-compliant, causing the deputy to request help from available law enforcement officers.

    Deputy Chief Tom Robinson, of the Reno Police Department, said the officers arrived at a parking lot in the area to find several deputies pointing their Tasers at a 43-year-old man.

    Body camera footage released on Sunday shows one deputy had fired a Taser and missed. One of the darts struck a Reno police officer in the knee – causing him to "unintentionally" fire the gun once at the man’s shoulder, Robinson said in the video.

    https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2020/08/09/body-cam-cop-accidentally-shot-man-after-being-struck-stun-gun/3296003001/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on August 13, 2020, 06:59:48 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2020, 11:23:45 AM
    Another one of the "finest" people.

    Los Angeles police officer accused in lawsuit of fondling dead woman's body

    (https://www.the-sun.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2020/08/NINTCHDBPICT000552213601.jpg)

    The family of a woman who died in October is suing a Los Angeles police officer accused of fondling her body and sharing camera footage with others.

    The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleges that Officer David Rojas sexually molested Elizabeth Baggett. The lawsuit also alleges invasion of privacy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence, mishandling of human remains and other offenses.

    Rojas allegedly touched Baggett while he was alone with her corpse on Oct. 20 after he and his partner responded to the home where she died.

    Her manner of death was ruled an accidental overdose, according to the medical examiner's office.

    After Rojas and his partner determined the woman was dead, the partner left the room and Rojas turned off his body-worn camera, but the camera caught the alleged fondling in the moments before the officer turned it back on because the devices have two-minute buffering periods to capture what happens right before they are activated, The Associated Press has previously reported.

    Rojas was charged in December with one count of having sexual contact with human remains. He pleaded not guilty and was released on $20,000 bail, according to jail records.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/los-angeles-police-officer-accused-lawsuit-fondling-dead-woman-s-n1236473
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 14, 2020, 09:42:37 AM
    In 2017, 6 of the 9 cops in Superior Police Department in AZ were on the Brady List...

    Inside an Arizona police department filled with Brady list cops

    (https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/5284eab/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1280x720+0+0/resize/1280x720!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fewscripps-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F9b%2F8d%2Fc586de934634822122b54cacccfd%2Fensley-bio-pic.jpg)

    When Clint Peterson walked into the Superior Police Department, he had no idea what was coming.

    “I thought I was going to go in there, get my friend, and I was going to leave,” he said.

    Instead, within three minutes, Peterson found himself handcuffed, pinned on the ground under a pile of officers, and arrested for allegedly resisting arrest and hindering prosecution.

    The charges, which were later dismissed by prosecutors, were based on false statements filed by a team of officers with histories of misconduct, dishonesty, and crimes.

    But an ABC15 investigation found Superior’s police force was filled with discredited cops, who were enabled by a broken Brady list system that let them escape lasting accountability and kept past transgressions hidden from disclosure.

    One of the key officers in Peterson's arrest was Christian Ensley.

    According to personnel records obtained by ABC15, Ensley has worked in at least 6 Arizona police departments, either failing to meet standards, resigning under investigation, or getting fired for dishonesty. In 2010, he was required to undergo a psychological evaluation that determined, “he may be a poor candidate due to his moral self-righteousness, possible adjustment challenges, may be overly sensitive to criticism, and may be rigid and inflexible in his thinking.”

    Another officer involved in the arrest was Commander Anthony Doran, who was previously fired from the Pima County Sheriff’s Office for having sex on duty, records show. In 2019, Doran was fired from Superior for again having sex on duty, which he recorded on his body camera. He also had pornography stashed on his work computer in a folder labeled “Fun Time.”

    The Superior Police Department has faced lawsuits for excessive force, civil rights violations, and other misconduct.

    A man named Richard Manriquez is suing officers for a 2016 incident, alleging excessive force and an unlawful search of his home based on a false statements to obtain a warrant.

    The case, along with the corresponding incident reports and body camera videos, reveal disturbing behavior and unbelievable mistakes. Manriquez, who’s in his mid-50s and is a disabled 120-pound man, was hospitalized after police raided his home and allegedly beat him. Superior police claimed he resisted arrest.

    However, none of the officers claimed to have their body cameras rolling, despite recording hours of footage leading up to the search and immediately recording video after he’s placed into handcuffs.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/inside-an-arizona-police-department-filled-with-brady-list-cops
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 18, 2020, 11:41:50 AM
    "I don't need a warrant".

    Dad Tased in Hospital Room Near Toddler, Pregnant Fiancee

    Videos of alleged excessive police force have become all too common these days. But the ones at the center of a new lawsuit filed by Woodland Park resident C.J. Andersen are shocking, in part because of their setting — a Colorado Springs hospital room — and those present when he was tased not once but twice by police officers despite offering no resistance.

    As seen in body-camera footage, the witnesses included Andersen's seriously injured toddler and his fiancée (now his wife), who was pregnant with their second child.

    Attorney David Lane of Denver-based Killmer, Lane & Newman, LLP, who represents Andersen says: "It was a completely unjustified use of force — and tasing him twice was outrageous. He's an honorably discharged Marine combat veteran from Afghanistan, and he did absolutely nothing to make them believe he posed any threat to them. But the fact that he wouldn't do what they told him to do — give them his cell phone, which he wasn't required to do — caused them to lose their temper and tase him. So now we're hopefully going to teach these officers what the Constitution requires."

    The lawsuit is filed against four individuals — Colorado Springs Police officers Vito DelCore, Todd Eckert and Carlos Sandoval, plus Teller County Sheriff's Office Detective Anthony Matarazzo — as well as the City of Colorado Springs and Teller County. Colorado Springs isn't commenting on the lawsuit; Teller County hasn't responded to our inquiries.

    As Andersen tells the story, on April 17, 2019, his fiancée dropped off their then 19 month old daughter prior to leaving for an appointment, and as he was putting some of the child's belongings in his car, she wandered toward her mother as she was backing out. "She was bumped by the vehicle and had cuts on her face and a minor fracture to the back of her head — but we didn't know that last part yet," he notes.

    The toddler was flown by helicopter to Memorial Hospital in the Springs for treatment. "While she was getting a CAT scan, we talked to the main neurologist, who told us everything that was going on with the fracture," Andersen recalls. "The only worry was that there was fluid leaking into her ear, which healed up a couple of days later; she's 100 percent right now. But at that point, after he let us know everything would be fine, some forensic nurses wanted to take pictures and ask her mother questions. And we told them, 'No, don't ask her any questions,' because she was still hysterical and in shock. But that wasn't good enough for them."

    Indeed, the injuries apparently raised the (completely unfounded) prospect of child abuse for the nurses, and "they told the police we were a flight risk," Andersen continues. "While we were doing our final check-in about the insurance information, this man [Matarazzo] walks into the room and starts demanding that we hand over my wife's cell phone. He wouldn't tell us who he was, and he got right in my wife's face. I was about to throw him out of the room because he was being so disrespectful, when my father, who was there, too, asked, 'Are you conducting an investigation?' And he said, 'Yes, I am,' and dialed my wife's cell phone number."

    When the phone rang, Andersen notes, "I picked it up and put it in my pocket. He said, 'Give me the phone,' and I said, 'Do you have a warrant?' And he said, 'I don't need a warrant.'"


    Afterward, the situation continued to spiral. Andersen says that officers "had a judge sign an emergency protective order after they removed me and told my wife that if she didn't sign it, she'd be removed from the room in handcuffs. They basically forced her to sign the paperwork to the Department of Human Services. We didn't actually have a court date until the following Monday — this happened on a Wednesday afternoon — and after I was taken away in handcuffs, we weren't allowed to see our daughter until Friday, when we had a one-hour visitation. They also let my wife and my mother-in-law stay in the hospital over the weekend, but I wasn't allowed to stay with her until Monday, after we had a hearing with DHS and they dropped the case and gave us back custody of our daughter."

    That didn't end Andersen's journey through the criminal justice system, however. "They tried to charge me with resisting arrest and obstructing a police officer, even though you can see in the videos that I clearly wasn't resisting arrest and wasn't obstructing justice," he recalls. "The case didn't get resolved until last December, when we finally got the judge to tell the DA, 'You're going to lose this case. You need to drop it.' And they did drop it."

    https://www.westword.com/news/video-colorado-cop-tases-dad-in-hospital-near-toddler-pregnant-fiancee-11746661



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 21, 2020, 11:03:11 AM
    20 years is a joke for all the crimes he committed but as usual he got a plea deal.

    He even had the gall to say he "never hurt anyone".

    Former Chattanooga police officer Desmond Logan sentenced to 20 years for rapes

    Desmond Ladon Logan, the former Chattanooga police officer who admitted to raping three women in his custody and using a Taser on a fourth woman, has been sentenced to 20 years in federal prison, the maximum amount possible under his plea agreement.

    Dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit, shackled and wearing a mask due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Logan stood before U.S. District Judge Curtis Collier and said, "I'd like to apologize for all the trouble it's caused ... I am not a bad person. I made mistakes. I never hurt anyone."

    Defendants are allowed to address the court before they are sentenced if there is anything they wish the judge to consider when weighing punishment.

    Although difficult to understand at times due to his mask and the low volume of his voice, Logan continued, "I've done things wrong — moral things wrong, [but] I never hurt anyone."

    Logan pleaded guilty to two counts of deprivation of civil rights for the rapes of two women as part of a plea agreement. He also admitted to two additional assaults as part of the agreement.

    The agreement would, according to prosecutors, hold him publicly accountable for the assaults and spare the victims from having to endure a trial. In exchange, he faced no additional federal charges for the two assaults to which he admitted.

    https://www.timesfreepress.com/news/local/story/2020/aug/19/desmond-logan-sentenced/530188/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2020, 12:06:11 PM
    Once again the taxpayers have to foot the bill for the crimes of the state goons. How about they beat up the guards to the point they're left paralyzed and then confiscate all their money and possessions to pay this poor woman?

    Florida OKs $4.65 million payout for beating by staff that paralyzed inmate Cheryl Weimar

    Cheryl Weimar’s name is known in prison circles as an example of the few rights and little dignity inmates have in the Florida prison system. Weimar, 51, was brutally attacked by guards at Lowell Correctional Institution and paralyzed as a result.

    For the past year, Weimar has remained in prison, bound to a special hospital bed and dependent on catheters, mechanical breathing assistance, a tracheostomy and feeding tubes. Meanwhile, her attorneys were building a federal civil rights lawsuit on her behalf.

    On Tuesday, Weimar’s case was ordered closed. According to a settlement agreement provided to the Miami Herald by the Department of Financial Services, she will be paid $4.65 million, possibly the largest such settlement from the state of Florida. The family of Darren Rainey, the 50-year-old inmate with schizophrenia whose death in a rigged shower at Dade Correctional Institution led to sweeping reform, settled for $4.5 million.

    Weimar’s neck and spinal cord were broken in the August 2019 attack, which happened while she was on prison work duty at Lowell Correctional Institution. Officers ordered her to get on her knees and scrub a toilet, but Weimar, who had a hip condition, complained that she was in pain and said she was unable to do the task.

    The road to the settlement has not been the smoothest. In October 2019, the Florida Department of Corrections allegedly tried to dodge the costs of her medical care by releasing her from their custody, according to a petition from her lawyers. The lawsuit said department representatives intimidated and coerced Weimar into signing documents she didn’t understand, and signing over her disability benefits.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/special-reports/florida-prisons/article245146350.html


    By the way, these are the mugshots 2 of the guards. They look more like prisoners than guards and the record proves it: one of them was arrested on charges of sexual battery and child molestation but he was promoted regardless. Another guard was arrested on domestic violence charges.

    "Only the finest people".

    (https://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/89dh74/picture236907463/alternates/FREE_1140/FullsizeMugshotHandle_fitted.jpeg) (https://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/wb1jtp/picture240308976/alternates/FREE_1140/b2aed71c-12cb-4cd9-835b-31efcf514a66_image.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 27, 2020, 09:25:03 PM
    visited to see what was going on. Was willing to discuss issues with folks beside skeletor and soul crusher who don't respond past posting but didn't see any which is a good sign.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on August 27, 2020, 11:55:34 PM
    visited to see what was going on. Was willing to discuss issues with folks beside skeletor and soul crusher who don't respond past posting but didn't see any which is a good sign.

    I'm around. Still broadly disgusted with bad cops and also the "good" ones that all too often turn a blind eye. Slightly amused too, I guess, at all the police union mouthpieces and the various apologists who are telling us how hard cops have it and how we need to respect them and stand with them, when cops have, at every opportunity, chosen to adopt the "us vs. them" mentality that has gotten us where we are today.

    And how you doin'?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 28, 2020, 09:19:10 PM
    I'm around. Still broadly disgusted with bad cops and also the "good" ones that all too often turn a blind eye. Slightly amused too, I guess, at all the police union mouthpieces and the various apologists who are telling us how hard cops have it and how we need to respect them and stand with them, when cops have, at every opportunity, chosen to adopt the "us vs. them" mentality that has gotten us where we are today.

    And how you doin'?

    I'm doing pretty good. Glad I retired in 2016. I'm with you on the apologists and union mouth pieces. with great authority comes great responsibility
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: avxo on August 28, 2020, 09:51:21 PM
    I'm doing pretty good. Glad I retired in 2016. I'm with you on the apologists and union mouth pieces. with great authority comes great responsibility

    I’ll bet. Not a pretty environment out there right now.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2020, 01:47:49 PM
    The "other info" includes facial recognition. The shape of things to come.

    Bishop airport police get Smart Helmets to screen for coronavirus, scan other info

    Police at Bishop International Airport have a new tool to check passengers’ temperatures, run them through facial recognition software, check license plates and more from afar.

    The airport is the first -- and one of the only businesses in the United States -- to deploy the Smart Helmet by Italy-based KeyBiz. Bishop airport Director Nino Sapone said the helmets will be used primarily to screen passengers for a fever, which is a key symptom of coronavirus.

    The Smart Helmets already are in use at airports around the world, including Rome. Temperature screenings can be conducted up to 21 feet away from passengers and other guests in the terminal building. Passengers with a temperature of 100.4 degrees or higher will be escorted to an airline ticket counter and employees there will decide whether the passenger can board an aircraft.

    Anyone who isn’t a passenger who registers a temperature above 100.4 degrees will be asked to leave the terminal building after police conduct some limited coronavirus contact tracing to find out what areas of the building may have been exposed.

    The facial recognition, license plate reading and QR Code detection capabilities with the helmets will be rolled out later. Officials will be able to upload photos of criminal suspects and license plates into the helmets, which can scan passengers and vehicles for them.

    More features and additional technology can be added to the helmets in the future.

    https://www.abc12.com/2020/08/28/bishop-airport-police-get-smart-helmets-to-screen-for-coronavirus-scan-other-info/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 29, 2020, 05:17:04 PM
    What a shithole. Baltimore seems to have the most corrupt cops per capita (and possibly altogether) of any city in the US.

    Baltimore cops charged with kidnapping contractor in patio-renovation dispute

    A second Baltimore officer was arrested in the kidnapping and extortion of a home contractor whose work on a patio renovation project failed to satisfy a police department colleague.

    Juan A. Diaz, 46, was charged with abusing his position. He is accused of  helping homicide detective James Lloyd confront the contractor and get back money paid for the project.

    Prosecutors said Lloyd confronted the contractor on June 25 and demanded a refund, threatening to arrest him over a suspended driver's license.

    “You are going to give me my money back, and I’m going to give you freedom,” Lloyd told the contractor, according to charging documents.

    Police said he drove the victim to the bank and ordered him to withdraw money for a refund.

    Lloyd was arrested last month and charged with extorting, kidnapping and abusing the power of his office.

    Prosecutors said Diaz obtained $3,500 from the contractor, whose name was redacted in court documents, "by threat of force," Baltimore County Court records show.

    Diaz is facing a felony charge punishable by up to 10 years in jail and up to $1,000 in fines. Both Diaz and Lloyd were suspended by the police department without pay.

    Meanwhile, three other officers who are accused of being present during the confrontation have not been arrested but were reassigned to administrative duties instead, Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said, according to The Baltimore Sun.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/baltimore-cops-arrested-over-kidnapping-and-extorting-contractor-who-did-shoddy-job-on-house
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2020, 01:23:00 PM
    Notice how they kick him when he is standing with his hands up.

    He was "arrested for resisting arrest".

    The cop was supposedly "disciplined" (safe to assume he is not in prison) but the police refuse to release any information claiming it is confidential. They're quick to release any derogatory information they can find on a victim but when it comes to their own they hide, cover up or flat out refuse to release information.

    Sacramento sheriff investigating video that shows deputy kick man during arrest

    The Sacramento County Sheriff's Department has launched an excessive force investigation after video appearing to show a deputy kicking a man in the back went viral.

    According to the Instagram post, the man in the video was "minding his business" after a Sunday brunch when he found himself surrounded by Sacramento police officers and sheriff's deputies.

    "Can you please tell me what's going on then?" a woman is heard saying.

    "He has a warrant for his arrest," an unidentified officer claimed. "That's all I'm going to tell you".

    The Instagram post reveals the officers later determined they had the wrong guy. He allegedly did not have a felony warrant at all.

    Sgt. Tess Deterding with the sheriff's office said the man was ultimately charged with resisting arrest.

    The Sacramento County Sheriff's spokesperson told ABC10 Friday that "The Sheriff’s Office conducted an administrative investigation, the allegations were sustained against the deputy, and appropriate action has been taken."   

    The specific discipline was not released because the case doesn't fall under SB 1421, according to the spokesperson.  SB 1421 covers police conduct where there is a serious injury.

    https://www.abc10.com/article/news/local/sacramento/sacramento-county-sheriffs-office-launches-excessive-force-investigation/103-80227c9d-0447-4233-bfdc-ddd2255a5a6f

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2020, 10:36:04 AM
    The FBI falsified documents, lied to the court and abused its already broad and nearly unlimited powers. Business as usual. But of course since they're "law enforcement", it was just a "mistake" and they will take "corrective actions" (ie they will monitor themselves).

    Meanwhile, "lying" to the FBI, the catch-all charge when the government can't get nothing else to stick, will send ordinary people to prison.

    The criminals and their gang should be sent to prison and their crime ring dismantled.

    DOJ, FBI announce 'corrective actions' in push to prevent FISA abuse

    The Justice Department and FBI will implement "foundational" reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) process as well as changes to promote "active oversight" of FISA applications to surveil federal elected officials, candidates and their staffs, the Justice Department announced on Tuesday.

    "Since the Inspector General's Crossfire Hurricane report was issued last December, I have made clear that it describes conduct that was unacceptable and unrepresentative of the FBI as an organization," FBI Director Christopher Wray said in a statement. "That's why I immediately ordered more than 40 corrective actions, including foundational FISA reforms, many of which went beyond those recommended by the Inspector General."

    "FISA is an indispensable tool that the FBI uses to protect our country from national security threats, and Americans can rest assured that the FBI remains dedicated to continuously strengthening our FISA compliance efforts and ensuring that our FISA authorities are exercised in a responsible manner," Wray continued.

    The recently announced reforms include requiring the FBI to perform routine audits of its use of National Security Letters and compliance with FISA.

    Crossfire Hurricane was the code name of the FBI counterintelligence investigation into links between Trump associates like George Papadopoulos, Michael Flynn and Carter Page and Russian officials and whether they worked "wittingly or unwittingly, with the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election."

    Page was surveilled largely because of a discredited dossier funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. An FBI lawyer in that case even falsified a CIA email submitted to the FISA court in order to make Page's communications with Russians appear nefarious, the Justice Department inspector general found; and the Justice Department has concluded that the Page warrant was legally improper.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fisa-abuse-surveillance-william-barr-fbi-doj

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 01, 2020, 11:11:18 AM
    Yeah that one is total crappola  :(

    The FBI falsified documents, lied to the court and abused its already broad and nearly unlimited powers. Business as usual. But of course since they're "law enforcement", it was just a "mistake" and they will take "corrective actions" (ie they will monitor themselves).

    Meanwhile, "lying" to the FBI, the catch-all charge when the government can't get nothing else to stick, will send ordinary people to prison.

    The criminals and their gang should be sent to prison and their crime ring dismantled.

    DOJ, FBI announce 'corrective actions' in push to prevent FISA abuse

    The Justice Department and FBI will implement "foundational" reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) process as well as changes to promote "active oversight" of FISA applications to surveil federal elected officials, candidates and their staffs, the Justice Department announced on Tuesday.

    "Since the Inspector General's Crossfire Hurricane report was issued last December, I have made clear that it describes conduct that was unacceptable and unrepresentative of the FBI as an organization," FBI Director Christopher Wray said in a statement. "That's why I immediately ordered more than 40 corrective actions, including foundational FISA reforms, many of which went beyond those recommended by the Inspector General."

    "FISA is an indispensable tool that the FBI uses to protect our country from national security threats, and Americans can rest assured that the FBI remains dedicated to continuously strengthening our FISA compliance efforts and ensuring that our FISA authorities are exercised in a responsible manner," Wray continued.

    The recently announced reforms include requiring the FBI to perform routine audits of its use of National Security Letters and compliance with FISA.

    Crossfire Hurricane was the code name of the FBI counterintelligence investigation into links between Trump associates like George Papadopoulos, Michael Flynn and Carter Page and Russian officials and whether they worked "wittingly or unwittingly, with the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election."

    Page was surveilled largely because of a discredited dossier funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. An FBI lawyer in that case even falsified a CIA email submitted to the FISA court in order to make Page's communications with Russians appear nefarious, the Justice Department inspector general found; and the Justice Department has concluded that the Page warrant was legally improper.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fisa-abuse-surveillance-william-barr-fbi-doj
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 02, 2020, 07:45:41 AM
    The FBI falsified documents, lied to the court and abused its already broad and nearly unlimited powers. Business as usual. But of course since they're "law enforcement", it was just a "mistake" and they will take "corrective actions" (ie they will monitor themselves).

    Meanwhile, "lying" to the FBI, the catch-all charge when the government can't get nothing else to stick, will send ordinary people to prison.

    The criminals and their gang should be sent to prison and their crime ring dismantled.

    DOJ, FBI announce 'corrective actions' in push to prevent FISA abuse

    The Justice Department and FBI will implement "foundational" reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) process as well as changes to promote "active oversight" of FISA applications to surveil federal elected officials, candidates and their staffs, the Justice Department announced on Tuesday.

    "Since the Inspector General's Crossfire Hurricane report was issued last December, I have made clear that it describes conduct that was unacceptable and unrepresentative of the FBI as an organization," FBI Director Christopher Wray said in a statement. "That's why I immediately ordered more than 40 corrective actions, including foundational FISA reforms, many of which went beyond those recommended by the Inspector General."

    "FISA is an indispensable tool that the FBI uses to protect our country from national security threats, and Americans can rest assured that the FBI remains dedicated to continuously strengthening our FISA compliance efforts and ensuring that our FISA authorities are exercised in a responsible manner," Wray continued.

    The recently announced reforms include requiring the FBI to perform routine audits of its use of National Security Letters and compliance with FISA.

    Crossfire Hurricane was the code name of the FBI counterintelligence investigation into links between Trump associates like George Papadopoulos, Michael Flynn and Carter Page and Russian officials and whether they worked "wittingly or unwittingly, with the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election."

    Page was surveilled largely because of a discredited dossier funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. An FBI lawyer in that case even falsified a CIA email submitted to the FISA court in order to make Page's communications with Russians appear nefarious, the Justice Department inspector general found; and the Justice Department has concluded that the Page warrant was legally improper.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fisa-abuse-surveillance-william-barr-fbi-doj

    Fucking disgusting state of affairs - Those responsible should be sacked & held accountable
    Not left in place & it all swept under the carpet. The Corruption is Big.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 02, 2020, 07:42:33 PM
    Fucking disgusting state of affairs - Those responsible should be sacked & held accountable
    Not left in place & it all swept under the carpet. The Corruption is Big.

    can't question a fox news source..
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 03, 2020, 02:29:26 PM
    can't question a fox news source..



    Very Sadly at this present time it’s Best to Question anything & everything
    There’s so much lies & misinformation.

    Perhaps this is a deliberate tactic to confuse & divide people
    The Golden Rule of Control - Divide & Rule.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 03, 2020, 03:27:38 PM
    Even after Snowden's revelations, it took several years for the courts to decide it was illegal - and ineffective as well.

    Court rules NSA phone snooping illegal — after 7-year delay

    The National Security Agency program that swept up details on billions of Americans' phone calls was illegal and possibly unconstitutional, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday.

    However, the unanimous three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said the role the so-called telephone metadata program played in a criminal terror-fundraising case against four Somali immigrants was so minor that it did not undermine their convictions.

    The long-awaited decision is a victory for prosecutors, but some language in the court's opinion could be viewed as a rebuke of sorts to officials who defended the snooping by pointing to the case involving Basaaly Moalin and three other men found guilty by a San Diego jury in 2013 on charges of fundraising for Al-Shabaab.

    Judge Marsha Berzon's opinion, which contains a half-dozen references to the role of former NSA contractor and whistleblower Edward Snowden in disclosing the NSA metadata program, concludes that the "bulk collection" of such data violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

    The call-tracking effort began without court authorization under President George W. Bush following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. A similar program was approved by the secretive FISA Court beginning in 2006 and renewed numerous times, but the 9th Circuit panel said those rulings were legally flawed.

    The metadata program was officially shut down in 2015 after Congress passed the USA FREEDOM Act, which provided a new mechanism where phone providers retained their data instead of turning it over to the government. The revamped system appears to have been abandoned by the NSA in 2018 or 2019.

    The new 9th Circuit opinion cites congressional testimony by former FBI official Sean Joyce that the metadata program gave agents a break that led to them reopening the investigation into Moalin. But Berzon goes on to suggest that the public claims by Joyce or others were inaccurate because the metadata program did not play a pivotal role.

    "To the extent the public statements of government officials created a contrary impression, that impression is inconsistent with the contents of the classified record," she wrote.

    Joyce, who retired from the FBI several years ago, did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

    The release of the 59-page opinion Wednesday is another reminder of the exceedingly slow pace of some 9th Circuit appeals, particularly those involving classified information or FISA surveillance. The court took almost seven years to render its legal judgment on Moalin's appeal, filed in November 2013. The case was argued in November 2016, two days after Donald Trump's surprise victory in the presidential race.

    A Justice Department spokesperson had no immediate comment on the ruling.

    An NSA spokesman declined to comment.

    Another recent 9th Circuit decision involving allegations of illegal surveillance took about six years to produce an opinion, also authored by Berzon. The Justice Department said in a court filing Tuesday that it is still considering whether to seek Supreme Court review in that case.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/02/court-rules-nsa-phone-snooping-illegal-407727

    https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/09/02/13-50572.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on September 03, 2020, 04:33:44 PM


    Very Sadly at this present time it’s Best to Question anything & everything
    There’s so much lies & misinformation.

    Perhaps this is a deliberate tactic to confuse & divide people
    The Golden Rule of Control - Divide & Rule.


    You've got this right.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 03, 2020, 08:12:45 PM
    You've got this right.


    As always 👍🏻


    🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 04, 2020, 10:18:59 AM
    Once again the cops and the DA are trying to downplay the incident and even went as far as saying it was the merciful cops who asked to dismiss the bogus charges as if they did a favor to the man they attacked, arrested and jailed.

    ’I was guilty before proven innocent:’ Jogger speaks out after encounter with San Antonio police



    A day after his assault charges were dropped, Mathias Ometu said Wednesday his arrest and treatment by the San Antonio Police Department need to be addressed.

    Ometu, a Black man, was arrested on Aug. 25 after police stopped him for “fitting the description” of a family violence suspect they were seeking, even though the victim’s description differed from Ometu’s physical profile, according to body camera footage released on Tuesday.

    Ometu publicly spoke out about his arrest for the first time in a press conference he held with his attorneys, who recounted his experience of the arrest. While jogging near Interstate 10 and Woodstone Drive, Ometu said he noticed a police car slow down by him before speeding past him and turning back around toward him.

    Ometu said he felt targeted by the police, who were looking for Darren Smith Jr., who was arrested Friday on an unrelated robbery warrant. Smith has not been charged in connection with the family violence incident.

    When police told Ometu they wanted to take him to the apartment complex so the victim would identify him as the suspect, he persisted on remaining where he is. A struggle ensued as officers forcefully tried to place him in the car. During the struggle, officers said they were kicked by Ometu.

    Ometu admitted he was aggravated during the incident because he was an innocent man. Though he was not the suspect police sought, Ometu was still arrested and jailed for two days.

    San Antonio Police Chief William McManus, who said officers acted appropriately during the arrest, said officers requested to have the charges dropped in an effort to help the community heal in a time where policing and race has been scrutinized on a national level.


    ksat.com/guy-speaks-out-after-encounter-with-san-antonio-police



    Quote from: Bexar County District Attorney Joe Gonzales
    After reviewing all the evidence as well as considering all the facts and circumstances, I have decided that the just outcome is the dismissal of all charges against Mr. Ometu. It is important to note the officers involved in this case have requested dismissal as well. Neither officer wishes to have him incur any future consequences are a result of this incident. This case is one of competing interests. It is the officer’s duty to investigate and detain a person of interest that may be a suspect in a crime versus a citizen’s right not to disclose their identification where no arrest has been made. In this case, the officers did have a description that led them to believe that Mr. Ometu may have been the suspect they were seeking. However, Mr. Ometu was not that person and did not have an obligation to identify himself or make a statement. Ultimately, the officers agree that dismissal is in the interest of justice,” Gonzales said.


    By the way, this is what "fits the description" meant to these cops. The man they were looking for is to the right.

    (https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/13/71/40/19896383/6/420x0.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2020, 02:11:55 PM
    The FBI falsified documents, lied to the court and abused its already broad and nearly unlimited powers. Business as usual. But of course since they're "law enforcement", it was just a "mistake" and they will take "corrective actions" (ie they will monitor themselves).

    Meanwhile, "lying" to the FBI, the catch-all charge when the government can't get nothing else to stick, will send ordinary people to prison.

    The criminals and their gang should be sent to prison and their crime ring dismantled.

    DOJ, FBI announce 'corrective actions' in push to prevent FISA abuse

    The Justice Department and FBI will implement "foundational" reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) process as well as changes to promote "active oversight" of FISA applications to surveil federal elected officials, candidates and their staffs, the Justice Department announced on Tuesday.

    "Since the Inspector General's Crossfire Hurricane report was issued last December, I have made clear that it describes conduct that was unacceptable and unrepresentative of the FBI as an organization," FBI Director Christopher Wray said in a statement. "That's why I immediately ordered more than 40 corrective actions, including foundational FISA reforms, many of which went beyond those recommended by the Inspector General."

    "FISA is an indispensable tool that the FBI uses to protect our country from national security threats, and Americans can rest assured that the FBI remains dedicated to continuously strengthening our FISA compliance efforts and ensuring that our FISA authorities are exercised in a responsible manner," Wray continued.

    The recently announced reforms include requiring the FBI to perform routine audits of its use of National Security Letters and compliance with FISA.

    Crossfire Hurricane was the code name of the FBI counterintelligence investigation into links between Trump associates like George Papadopoulos, Michael Flynn and Carter Page and Russian officials and whether they worked "wittingly or unwittingly, with the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election."

    Page was surveilled largely because of a discredited dossier funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. An FBI lawyer in that case even falsified a CIA email submitted to the FISA court in order to make Page's communications with Russians appear nefarious, the Justice Department inspector general found; and the Justice Department has concluded that the Page warrant was legally improper.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fisa-abuse-surveillance-william-barr-fbi-doj

    Must've been fake news:

    https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/department-justice-and-federal-bureau-investigation-announce-critical-reforms-enhance


    Also:

    Court Approves Warrantless Surveillance Rules While Scolding F.B.I.

    The nation’s surveillance court found that the F.B.I. had committed “widespread violations” of rules intended to protect Americans’ privacy when analysts search through a repository of emails gathered without a warrant, but it nevertheless signed off on another year of the program, according to a newly declassified ruling.

    The heavily redacted, 83-page ruling about the warrantless surveillance program was issued in December and became public on Friday after it was declassified and posted on a government website.

    The release came days after a federal appeals court ruled in a different case that another, now-defunct surveillance-related program, in which the National Security Agency collected bulk logs of domestic phone calls, was illegal. The court nevertheless declined to overturn the convictions of defendants in a terrorism financing case that had included evidence derived from the program and that the government had pointed to in making the case for the program’s value.

    The December court ruling released on Friday centered on the warrantless wiretapping program, which since 2008 has been governed by a law known as Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act. That law authorizes the government to collect — without a warrant — from American companies, like Google and AT&T, the emails and phone calls of noncitizens abroad for foreign intelligence purposes — even when they are communicating with Americans.

    In the newly disclosed ruling, James E. Boasberg, the chief judge of the FISA Court, signed off on the new annual set of rules, but not before scolding the F.B.I. over many instances in which its analysts had violated a previous set of them, including requirements that searches of the repository have a foreign intelligence or criminal purpose.

    “It must be noted, however, that there still appear to be widespread violations of the querying standard by the F.B.I.,” he wrote.

    Most notably, in August 2019, the F.B.I. made a query for information using the identifiers of about 16,000 people, even though only seven of them had ties to an investigation. The F.B.I. argued that the entire search met the standard of being reasonably likely to retrieve foreign-intelligence information or evidence of a crime, but Judge Boasberg called that position “unsupportable” and portrayed all but the seven as “broad, suspicionless queries.”

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/05/us/politics/court-approves-warrantless-surveillance-rules-while-scolding-fbi.html


    Quote
    "It must be noted, however, that there still appear to be widespread violations of the querying standard by the FBI.· For example, NSD's oversight review of the Bureau's in June 2019 revealed queries of unminimized Section 702 information that were not reasonably likely to retrieve foreign-intelligence information or evidence of crime, including:

    • queries to vet a potential source;
    • queries to vet a candidate to become a local police officer; and
    • queries to find information related to a planned visit by foreign government officials.


    In July 2019 an oversight review discovered 87 queries of raw FISA acquired information that were not reasonably likely to retrieve foreign intelligence information or evidence of a crime including:

    • queries of college students participating in a "Collegiate Academy"; and
    • queries of individuals who had visited the FBI office (e.g. for maintenance).


    Additional improper queries include:
    • conducted queries to vet potential sources and to get information about a victim complainant and conducted other overly broad queries
    • conducted queries using a complainant's identifying data
    • conducted queries using identifiers of police officer candidates

    Based on the facts reported, the FBI's position that the queries for all 16,000 persons were reasonably likely to retrieve foreign-intelligence information or evidence of a crime is unsupportable. Apart from the seven individuals referenced above, there was no indication that as involved in criminal activity or foreign intelligence related conduct or any other reason to believe that running queries using identifiers for would return foreign-intelligence information or evidence of a crime. There is no relevant distinction between queries and other broad, suspicionless queries previously identified by the government and the Court as violations of the querying standard.


    https://www.intelligence.gov/assets/documents/702%20Documents/declassified/2019_702_Cert_FISC_Opinion_06Dec19_OCR.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 07, 2020, 02:17:37 PM
    Fucking disgusting state of affairs - Those responsible should be sacked & held accountable
    Not left in place & it all swept under the carpet. The Corruption is Big.



    Very Sadly at this present time it’s Best to Question anything & everything
    There’s so much lies & misinformation.

    Perhaps this is a deliberate tactic to confuse & divide people
    The Golden Rule of Control - Divide & Rule.

    Ex-F.B.I. Lawyer Pleads Guilty to Doctoring Email in Russia Inquiry

     A former F.B.I. lawyer pleaded guilty on Wednesday to doctoring an email from the C.I.A. that he forwarded to a colleague during preparations in 2017 to ask a court to renew an order to wiretap a former Trump campaign adviser, in a case that has attracted intense political attention.

    The lawyer, Kevin E. Clinesmith, who was working at the time with the F.B.I.’s Trump-Russia investigation team, admitted to a judge that he had intentionally inserted words into the text of the email, which discussed past relations between the C.I.A. and Carter Page, the former Trump campaign adviser.

    The alteration was uncovered last year by an inspector general report laying out a litany of errors and omissions in the Page wiretap applications. They included the F.B.I.’s failure to tell judges about Mr. Page’s history of talking to the C.I.A. about his interactions with Russian intelligence officials, a fact that might have made him look less suspicious. The report suggested that Mr. Clinesmith’s move prevented a colleague from recognizing the problem.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/19/us/politics/kevin-clinesmith-guilty.html


    Even reported by the "reliable" CNN:

    Judge accepts FBI lawyer's guilty plea for false statement in Carter Page warrant paperwork

    Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith formally pleaded guilty on Wednesday to changing text in an email when working to renew the surveillance application of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page in 2017. Judge James Boasberg of the DC District Court accepted his plea at a hearing that lasted about an hour Wednesday.

    Clinesmith admitted to one charge of inserting the words "not a source" into an email in 2017 about Page's history with the CIA, when Page had been a contact. The email was part of preparations officials were making to apply for a renewal to Page's wiretap in 2017. The Justice Department has since invalidated that renewal application, and several officials have harshly criticized FBI procedures in the handling of surveillance applications.
    "At the time I believed the information I was providing in the email was accurate. But I am agreeing that the information I inserted into the email was not originally there and I inserted that information," Clinesmith told the judge over the phone on Wednesday.

    https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/19/politics/clinesmith-carter-page-fisa-warrant/index.html


    Also:

    FBI Attorney Admits Altering Email Used for FISA Application During "Crossfire Hurricane" Investigation

    Former FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith, 38, pleaded guilty today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to a false statement offense stemming from his altering of an email in connection with the submission of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”) application, announced John H. Durham, Special Attorney to the Attorney General.

    Pursuant to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act), the guilty plea proceeding occurred via videoconference before U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, between July 2015 and September 2019, Clinesmith was employed with the FBI as an Assistant General Counsel in the National Security and Cyber Law Branch of the FBI’s Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C.  On July 31, 2016, the FBI opened a Foreign Agents Registration Act investigation, known as “Crossfire Hurricane,” into whether individuals associated with the Donald J. Trump for President Campaign were coordinating activities with the Russian government.  By August 16, 2016, the FBI had opened cases under the Crossfire Hurricane umbrella on four individuals, including an individual identified in this case as “Individual #1.”

    Clinesmith was assigned to provide legal support to FBI personnel working on Crossfire Hurricane, and he assisted FBI personnel with applications prepared by the FBI and the Justice Department’s National Security Division to conduct surveillance under the FISA.  During the investigation, there were a total of four court-approved FISA applications targeting Individual #1.  Each of the FISA applications alleged there was probable cause that Individual #1 was a knowing agent of a foreign power, specifically Russia.

    On August 17, 2016, prior to the approval of the first FISA application #1, another U.S. government agency (“OGA”) provided certain members of the Crossfire Hurricane team a memorandum indicating that Individual #1 had been approved as an “operational contact” for the OGA from 2008 to 2013 and detailing information that Individual #1 had provided to the OGA concerning Individual #1’s prior contacts with certain Russian intelligence officers.  The first three FISA applications did not include Individual #1’s history or status with the OGA.

    Prior to the submission of the fourth FISA application, and after Individual #1 stated publicly that he/she had assisted the U.S. government in the past, an FBI Supervisory Special Agent (“SSA”) asked Clinesmith to inquire with the OGA as to whether Individual #1 had ever been a “source” for the OGA.  On June 15, 2017, Clinesmith sent an email to a liaison at the OGA (“OGA Liaison”) seeking clarification as to whether Individual #1 was an OGA source, and the OGA Liaison responded via email to Clinesmith.  On June 19, 2017, Clinesmith altered the email he received from the OGA Liaison by adding the words “not a source,” and then forwarded the email to the FBI SSA.  Relying on the altered email, on June 29, 2017, the SSA signed and submitted the fourth FISA application to the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.  The application did not include Individual #1’s history or status with the OGA.

    Clinesmith pleaded guilty to one count of making a false statement within both the jurisdiction of the executive branch and judicial branch of the U.S. government, an offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years and a fine of up to $250,000.  Judge Boasberg scheduled sentencing for December 10, 2020.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-ct/pr/fbi-attorney-admits-altering-email-used-fisa-application-during-crossfire-hurricane
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on September 07, 2020, 02:30:37 PM
    Ex-F.B.I. Lawyer Pleads Guilty to Doctoring Email in Russia Inquiry

     A former F.B.I. lawyer pleaded guilty on Wednesday to doctoring an email from the C.I.A. that he forwarded to a colleague during preparations in 2017 to ask a court to renew an order to wiretap a former Trump campaign adviser, in a case that has attracted intense political attention.

    The lawyer, Kevin E. Clinesmith, who was working at the time with the F.B.I.’s Trump-Russia investigation team, admitted to a judge that he had intentionally inserted words into the text of the email, which discussed past relations between the C.I.A. and Carter Page, the former Trump campaign adviser.

    The alteration was uncovered last year by an inspector general report laying out a litany of errors and omissions in the Page wiretap applications. They included the F.B.I.’s failure to tell judges about Mr. Page’s history of talking to the C.I.A. about his interactions with Russian intelligence officials, a fact that might have made him look less suspicious. The report suggested that Mr. Clinesmith’s move prevented a colleague from recognizing the problem.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/19/us/politics/kevin-clinesmith-guilty.html


    Even reported by the "reliable" CNN:

    Judge accepts FBI lawyer's guilty plea for false statement in Carter Page warrant paperwork

    Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith formally pleaded guilty on Wednesday to changing text in an email when working to renew the surveillance application of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page in 2017. Judge James Boasberg of the DC District Court accepted his plea at a hearing that lasted about an hour Wednesday.

    Clinesmith admitted to one charge of inserting the words "not a source" into an email in 2017 about Page's history with the CIA, when Page had been a contact. The email was part of preparations officials were making to apply for a renewal to Page's wiretap in 2017. The Justice Department has since invalidated that renewal application, and several officials have harshly criticized FBI procedures in the handling of surveillance applications.
    "At the time I believed the information I was providing in the email was accurate. But I am agreeing that the information I inserted into the email was not originally there and I inserted that information," Clinesmith told the judge over the phone on Wednesday.

    https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/19/politics/clinesmith-carter-page-fisa-warrant/index.html


    Also:

    FBI Attorney Admits Altering Email Used for FISA Application During "Crossfire Hurricane" Investigation

    Former FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith, 38, pleaded guilty today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to a false statement offense stemming from his altering of an email in connection with the submission of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”) application, announced John H. Durham, Special Attorney to the Attorney General.

    Pursuant to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act), the guilty plea proceeding occurred via videoconference before U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, between July 2015 and September 2019, Clinesmith was employed with the FBI as an Assistant General Counsel in the National Security and Cyber Law Branch of the FBI’s Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C.  On July 31, 2016, the FBI opened a Foreign Agents Registration Act investigation, known as “Crossfire Hurricane,” into whether individuals associated with the Donald J. Trump for President Campaign were coordinating activities with the Russian government.  By August 16, 2016, the FBI had opened cases under the Crossfire Hurricane umbrella on four individuals, including an individual identified in this case as “Individual #1.”

    Clinesmith was assigned to provide legal support to FBI personnel working on Crossfire Hurricane, and he assisted FBI personnel with applications prepared by the FBI and the Justice Department’s National Security Division to conduct surveillance under the FISA.  During the investigation, there were a total of four court-approved FISA applications targeting Individual #1.  Each of the FISA applications alleged there was probable cause that Individual #1 was a knowing agent of a foreign power, specifically Russia.

    On August 17, 2016, prior to the approval of the first FISA application #1, another U.S. government agency (“OGA”) provided certain members of the Crossfire Hurricane team a memorandum indicating that Individual #1 had been approved as an “operational contact” for the OGA from 2008 to 2013 and detailing information that Individual #1 had provided to the OGA concerning Individual #1’s prior contacts with certain Russian intelligence officers.  The first three FISA applications did not include Individual #1’s history or status with the OGA.

    Prior to the submission of the fourth FISA application, and after Individual #1 stated publicly that he/she had assisted the U.S. government in the past, an FBI Supervisory Special Agent (“SSA”) asked Clinesmith to inquire with the OGA as to whether Individual #1 had ever been a “source” for the OGA.  On June 15, 2017, Clinesmith sent an email to a liaison at the OGA (“OGA Liaison”) seeking clarification as to whether Individual #1 was an OGA source, and the OGA Liaison responded via email to Clinesmith.  On June 19, 2017, Clinesmith altered the email he received from the OGA Liaison by adding the words “not a source,” and then forwarded the email to the FBI SSA.  Relying on the altered email, on June 29, 2017, the SSA signed and submitted the fourth FISA application to the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.  The application did not include Individual #1’s history or status with the OGA.

    Clinesmith pleaded guilty to one count of making a false statement within both the jurisdiction of the executive branch and judicial branch of the U.S. government, an offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years and a fine of up to $250,000.  Judge Boasberg scheduled sentencing for December 10, 2020.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-ct/pr/fbi-attorney-admits-altering-email-used-fisa-application-during-crossfire-hurricane

    Just trying to imagine the consequences if this had occurred to the newly-elected Obama in 08/09.

    Nope, can’t do it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 08, 2020, 09:51:52 AM
    FISA court scolds FBI for 'widespread violations' of privacy rules
    Just the News ^ | 9/7/2020 | John Solomon
    Posted on 9/8/2020, 11:51:15 AM

    Under Director Chris Wray, the FBI continues to engage in "widespread violations" of rules protecting Americans' privacy while searching through national security surveillance data, the chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has concluded.

    Despite the concerns, the judge nonetheless proceeded to approve the latest rules allowing the FBI to continue to conduct such searches of data gathered by the National Security Agency or under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

    (Excerpt) Read more at justthenews.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on September 08, 2020, 09:57:16 AM
    Obozo, biggest scam artist in US history, played the mindless libturds like puppets.
    And that fugly tranny of his and his coke-whore daughters, yukk.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 11, 2020, 12:39:36 AM
    A retired cop is on the receiving end of domestic terrorism.

    As usual, the intruders stated that it was "a mistake".

    Family startled by deputies serving warrant at wrong house

    A retired officer is calling deputies' response unprofessional and intimidating after they broke down his front door to serve a warrant. The problem though, it was not the right house.

    "The officers are looking for a Curtis Rogers in this house and there is no Curtis Rogers that lives in this house," said Louis Rodriguez's son.

    Video of what happened to the Rodriguez family on Sept. 1 shows the Harris County Sheriff's Office deputies at the door trying to serve a warrant.

    "They went that quickly to bust my front door down and come to my home," said Rodriguez, a retired police officer.

    He said it all happened so fast, his family was startled. Rodriguez said when he first looked out his window and heard the commotion he didn't know what to think. It was a chaotic situation.

    "Out of control yelling, demanding, threatening they wanted to come in. I wasn't sure they were police officers at the time," he said.

    Rodriguez said he yelled out he was a retired officer and he wanted to see the warrant.

    "Sir, you have the wrong house," yelled out Rodriguez's son in the video.

    However, within minutes the deputies bust the door open and the family was taken outside.

    "(They) manhandled myself and my son and brought us outside. (Then) they finally realized the mistake they made," he said.

    https://abc13.com/deputies-serve-arrest-warrant-at-wrong-home/6416494/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 11, 2020, 11:41:31 AM
    From cops burglarizing a family's home while they attend a funeral, to a cop burglarizing a home multiple times after the owner passed away. Scum.
    Of course he's now enjoying paid vacation.

    O.C. sheriff’s deputy arrested, put on paid leave after allegedly breaking into Yorba Linda home of man who recently died

    (https://ktla.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/09/Hortz-Booking-Photo-1.jpg?resize=274,332)

    An Orange County sheriff’s deputy suspected of breaking into the Yorba Linda home of a man who died in July is now on paid leave after being arrested, officials said Thursday.

    Surveillance footage captured Deputy Steve Hortz breaking into the home on at least three occasions and leaving with stolen possessions such as weapon safes, ceiling fans and cases of unknown items, according to the O.C. Sheriff’s Department. He was booked into Santa Ana Jail on suspicion of burglary.

    He is currently on paid administrative leave, said Carrie Braun, spokeswoman for the Sheriff’s Department.

    However, she said, the agency is “looking into the possibility” of getting him on unpaid leave.

    Hortz responded to a call for service at the home on July 20 regarding the death of a man in his 70s, who apparently died from natural causes, officials said.

    On Wednesday, an attorney representing the family estate of the man contacted the Sheriff’s Department about items reported missing from the home, officials said. He gave the department footage showing the deputy breaking in.

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/o-c-sheriffs-deputy-arrested-put-on-paid-leave-after-allegedly-breaking-into-yorba-linda-home-of-man-who-recently-died/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 13, 2020, 12:42:59 PM
    Once again domestic terrorism is protected under the criminal construct of "qualified immunity".

    Qualified immunity: Police off the hook for no-knock raid on wrong house

    A federal judge says the officers who raided the wrong house and arrested an innocent elderly man have immunity. Now, it's up to the court of appeals to decide.


    Onree Norris was watching the news when the explosion went off inside his home.

    “Something went off like a bomb in my house,” the now-81-year-old remembered from the February 8, 2018 raid on the home he has owned for half a century.

    It was the Henry County Sheriff’s Office Special Response Team smashing down his door with a battering ram. The explosion Norris heard was a flash-bang grenade that dynamic-entry teams use to disorient their targets.

    But Norris wasn’t the target of the raid. Deputies had the wrong man, and the wrong house.

    The no-knock search warrant signed by a Henry County magistrate was for the house next door. The warrant obtained by The Reveal investigative team shows a detailed description of the target address, including information about the suspected drug dealer living next to Norris’s house.

    The warrant described an off-white house with a black roof. Norris’ house is yellow with a gray roof. The houses even had separate driveways, addresses, and mailboxes.

    Yet the heavily-armed, camouflage-clad Henry County SRT deputies walked right past the target house without clearing it, and charged through a tree line straight to Norris’ back door.

    Three strikes with the battering ram, and the door gave way.

    "Sheriff’s office, search warrant!,” a deputy yelled before tossing in a flash-bang grenade.

    Norris said the deputies kicked down four doors before they found him standing in his hallway, illuminated by the tactical flashlights attached the SWAT team’s M4 rifles.

    The Reveal obtained eight complete helmet-camera videos that were provided to Norris as part of his lawsuit against the deputies. Once they realized they had the wrong man, the deputies turned off their cameras, one by one, but some remained in Norris’ house after the mistake was discovered.

    Norris said the deputies told him they would leave and he would be released only if he agreed to sign a piece of paper they put in front of the handcuffed 79-year-old.

    “So I signed my name on there,” Norris said. “I didn’t get a chance to read it.”

    Attorney Darryl Scott filed a lawsuit on behalf of Norris against the deputies who had laid siege to his home without a warrant. The primary defendant named in the lawsuit was the tactical commander, but a federal judge dismissed the case against him and the other deputies, ruling all law enforcement officers are protected by qualified immunity.

    https://www.11alive.com/article/news/investigations/the-reveal/henry-county-no-knock-warrant-wrong-house/85-3af2b307-8a6a-4f8c-8355-3ebe58a8c508
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 14, 2020, 01:31:59 PM
    ‘I’m shooting him! I need some paid vacation!’

    5 police agencies issued "an apology"... How about prison time for threatening to murder? But as usual the cop resigned before he could be fired so he can now work in other departments.

    Hells Angels member gets $25,000, apology from Colorado cop who joked about shooting him to get “paid vacation”

    Five Colorado police agencies paid $25,000 and issued an apology to a Hells Angels member after an officer two years ago joked that he’d shoot the man to get “paid vacation.”

    The settlement stems from a federal lawsuit filed in April by Anthony Mills against the city of Greeley, the town of LaSalle and the Weld County Sheriff’s Office, as well as individual officers from those jurisdictions and from the Kersey and Garden City police departments.

    The suit came in response to an April 8, 2018, incident in which David Miller, a LaSalle police officer, pulled over Mills for speeding.

    Saying he “loved getting to (expletive) with” the notorious motorcycle club, Miller asked the other officers who had responded to make sure their body cameras were off as they shared stories about the violent acts they had committed against members of the group, Mills’ attorney, Sarah Schielke, said in a news release announcing the settlement.

    “Officer Miller then announced to the group that if Mr. Mills did anything he didn’t like: ‘I’m shooting him! I need some paid vacation!’ ” Schielke said, citing footage from the officer’s own body camera, which he’d left on.

    As part of the settlement, Miller issued an apology to Mills, and has since resigned from the department, Schielke said.

    The incident marks at least the third time in recent decades in which Colorado cities have paid money and have been forced to apologize to Hells Angels members.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/09/11/hells-angels-lawsuit-settlement-apology-colorado/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on September 22, 2020, 11:27:08 AM
    Lying cops, none of whom wore body cameras quite conveniently, nearly blank police reports and now rubber stamping judges approving ridiculous warrants. And all this despite the fact that the man the cops were looking for had already been arrested. Now an innocent woman, an EMT who served her community unlike these domestic terrorists, was executed in cold blood.

    The judge who approved the warrant in Breonna Taylor's case signed 5 warrants in 12 minutes!

    Louisville detective who obtained no-knock search warrant for Breonna Taylor reassigned

    Detective Jaynes wrote five affidavits seeking a judge's permission for no-knock searches, including at Taylor's South End apartment, as a part of a narcotics investigation in March.

    Jefferson Circuit Judge Mary Shaw signed all five within 12 minutes.

    The language on all five warrants is similar, describing the criminal history of the suspects and Jaynes' observations. All end by asking for a no-knock entry "due to the nature of how these drug traffickers operate."

    Jaynes wrote that the subjects have a history of attempting to destroy evidence, use cameras to monitor police and have a history of fleeing law enforcement.

    https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2020/06/10/breonna-taylor-louisville-detective-joshua-jaynes-no-knock-warrant-reassigned/5333604002/

    Lots of lies in this one ^^^

    Read Cops were fired upon first by her boyfriend. I guess we might find out later today, supposed to release an update.

    Time for another Libturd BLM riot? Most peaceful murderers?  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 23, 2020, 02:18:34 PM
    Another "hero"...

    This was posted on Monday about a heroic cop being ambushed and shot by unknown attackers:

    Quote
    The Pineville Police Department has received an overwhelming response of support from our Community following the shooting of our Officer.

    We are appreciative of all the offers of fundraising and financial support. However, at this time, we covet your prayers for the Officer, his family, the Department and our City. Your continued support and information for the investigation is most needed.

    The Officer is home recuperating and a full recovery is expected. Please know that your support has been shared with the Officer.

    We will keep you posted as the investigation allows.

    Sincerely,

    Chief Donald Weatherford

    The usual "back the blue" brigade offered their "support" and "thoughts and prayers" to the "hero".

    The next day, however, the whole story collapsed as it turns out there was no "ambush" and he had shot himself and lied about it.


    Louisiana Police: Officer Who Said He Was Ambushed Actually Shot Himself

    A Pineville Police officer who reported being ambushed over the weekend actually shot himself.

    Officials say that Officer John Michael Goulart Jr. initially told them he was shot in a leg late Sunday night while exiting his patrol vehicle at a shopping center near Military Highway and Donahue Ferry Road while another shot hit a rear door of the unit, according to The Alexandria Town Talk.

    The department announced on Tuesday that an "investigation led to a determination that the officer shot himself, concealed and altered the facts." Goulart was placed on administrative leave.

    The 25-year-old officer was booked into the Rapides Parish Detention Center on one count of criminal mischief and one count of malfeasance in office. He was released on a $10,500 bond

    https://www.officer.com/investigations/news/21155437/louisiana-police-officer-who-said-he-was-ambushed-actually-shot-himself
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Howard on September 23, 2020, 05:52:56 PM
    If invented a time machine I'd  go back as a vice cop so I could arrest Shizzo for turning tricks in a San Francisco bath house
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on September 23, 2020, 11:57:43 PM
    If invented a time machine I'd  go back as a vice cop so I could arrest Shizzo for turning tricks in a San Francisco bath house

    Bullshit.  You'd go back in time and put yourself on the receiving end of Shizzo's notorious blowjob.  ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2020, 09:00:53 PM
    Female and cop means just 1 year in prison.

    Sacramento ex-deputy sentenced to jail for sex with ex-boyfriend’s teenage son

    A Sacramento County woman was sentenced Wednesday to a year in jail for unlawful sexual conduct with a minor — the 16-year-old son of her ex-boyfriend.

    At the time of the crime, in April 2019, Shauna Bishop was a Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy. The boy’s father, who had ended a yearlong relationship with Bishop, also worked for the sheriff’s department.

    In addition to the county jail time, Bishop, 46, was sentenced to five years probation and 180 hours of community service, and she’ll be required to register as a sex offender.

    She had pleaded guilty in July as part of a deal in which four other charges were dropped.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/09/24/sacramento-ex-deputy-sentenced-to-jail-for-sex-with-ex-boyfriends-teenage-son/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2020, 09:03:07 PM
    This "hero" was arrested near the home of a 13 year old after chatting with her online.

    His excuse? "He had no intention of engaging in sex but planned to alert the girl's mother about what was going on and call the police".

    As if that's not enough, after his arrest he was arrested again 6 months later for the same thing.

    Let's see if Detective Butts will end up in prison.

    Ex-MCSO detective arrested for trying to lure a minor for sex near Maricopa

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/azfamily.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/1/0a/10a70f34-9a15-11ea-98f0-6754ede56580/5ec44bc07b7a1.image.png?resize=540%2C304)

    A former Maricopa County Sheriff's Office detective was arrested for allegedly trying to lure a minor into having sex near Maricopa.

    Police say Christopher Michael Butts began talking to who he thought was a 13-year-old girl on a dating app on March 13. According to court documents, the "alleged minor" stated several times how old she was; however, Butts continued sending messages.

    On March 17, he messaged the girl through the app that he was in Maricopa and near the girl's home with one of her favorite drinks. Maricopa police arrested butts near the Cobblestone Farms subdivision off State Route 347 and Cobblestone Farms Drive. As he was taken into custody, Butts was found to have the specific drink the girl had previously mentioned, and the dating application was on Butt's cellphone. Butts told police in an interview that he had no intention of engaging in sex but planned to alert the girl's mother about what was going on and call the police, according to court paperwork.

    https://www.azfamily.com/news/pd-ex-mcso-detective-arrested-for-trying-to-lure-a-minor-for-sex-near-maricopa/article_0bcc0524-9a14-11ea-8f52-8be5342469cb.html



    He posted bail and was released. 6 months later he was arrested again:

    Quote
    Multiple arrests made between August 26, 2020 and September 3, 2020 are the culmination of a months-long proactive operation to combat child sexual exploitation and child sex trafficking in Pinal County.

    Arizona Department of Public Safety (AZDPS) detectives led the joint effort comprised of local, state and federal agencies in Operation Home Alone 2, which targeted sexual predators who attempted to lure underage children with the intent of engaging in sexual activity.

    On September 2, 2020, detectives arrested 44-year-old Christopher Butts, of Phoenix, for aggravated luring of a minor for sexual exploitation and furnishing harmful items to a minor. Butts, a former Maricopa County Sheriff's Office detective, was out on bond for his arrest in February 2020 for the same charges.

    https://www.azdps.gov/news/ims/56
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 24, 2020, 11:26:39 PM
    Once again the cops are lying and covering up their crimes. They even tried to blame the victim, a 14 year old boy.

    Teen attacked by police K-9 files lawsuit in case of mistaken identity

    Police were looking for a white male who had just led them on a high speed chase, after stealing beer and laundry detergent from a Safeway in Firestone on April 27, 2019.

    But the person they released a K-9 on and then handcuffed was a 14-year old Hispanic male. Now the teenager and his family are suing four law enforcement officers from three different agencies.

    Angel Nunez and his sister had just stepped outside their apartment complex in Fort Lupton to see what the police activity was about, when Nunez was tackled to the ground by officers and attacked by a police German Shepherd.

    It turns out the white male suspect had ditched a stolen car in a field and took off running towards the apartment complex, where Angel lives with his family. Body cam footage obtained by the Problem Solvers shows officers running in the dark and as soon as they see Nunez, one officer yells, “That’s our guy right there.”

    A moment later, Angel is thrown to the ground and bitten in the leg by a K-9 belonging to Weld County Sheriff Deputy Larry Neugebauer. Neugebauer is being sued along with Fort Lupton Police Officer Bryan Whyard and Firestone Police Officers Nate Morton and Justin Ellis.

    A suspect description sent out over police radio had described the suspect as a white male, with dark hair standing 5’9 to 5’10 wearing a black jacket, black pants and white shoes. At the time, Angel stood closer to 5’4” and was wearing a grey hoodie and black shoes.

    Angel’s parents are seen on body cam running out of their apartment and confronting officers immediately.

    Officer Morton is heard telling the boy’s parents, “Let us do our job and then I will talk to you,” and Angel’s mother, Priscilla Nuzez-Espinoza, responded, “You’re not doing your job, you’re arresting the wrong [expletive] kid, that’s what you`re doing.”

     Officer Morton replied, “They were in a stolen vehicle ma’am.”

    Only after Nunez and Officer Whyward (who helped tackle Nuzez) were both bitten by the K-9, can Officer Morton be heard asking another officer if the teenage boy matched the suspect description.

    A fellow officer seen on body cam whispers the suspect is White.

    Yet, it would be another 25 minutes before police removed the handcuffs from Angel so they could take him to the hospital to be treated for bite wounds.

    Moments after describing the so-called similarities between Angel and the actual suspect, Morton mutes the audio on his body cam while talking to a fellow officer about what happened.

    “Turning off the audio on their body camera the second they are about to start talking about quote unquote, ‘what actually happened.’ It’s very suspicious,” said attorney Adam Frank.

    Just as bad, said the civil rights attorney, is that Morton can be heard on body cam telling Angel he was at fault for not listening to officer commands to get on the ground.

    The Problem Solvers asked Firestone Police Chief David Montgomery if officer Morton violated body cam policy by turning off his audio and he refused to say.  But the Problem Solves learned through a public records request that Morton was never the target of an internal affairs investigation.

    https://kdvr.com/news/problem-solvers/teen-attacked-by-police-k-9-files-lawsuit-in-case-of-mistaken-identity/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 25, 2020, 05:10:20 AM
    The Full Report On Breonna Taylor's Tragic Death Changes Everything We Were Told
    www.eviemagazine.com ^ | Aug 27th 2020 | By Brooke Conrad
    Posted on 9/24/2020, 2:15:07 PM by Red Badger

    A lengthy internal report shows Breonna Taylor’s close connection with a convicted drug-dealer — a connection that eventually led to her death.

    The report, obtained by the Louisville Courier Journal, contains phone conversations between several individuals and drug traffickers connected to Taylor and/or her former boyfriend, Jamarcus Glover.

    Americans have heard a very disturbing narrative about the tragic death of Breonna Taylor: A black EMT was sleeping in her apartment, when cops broke into her place (thinking it was a different apartment), and shot her in her sleep. Activists took to the streets and social media to demand justice for the wrongful killing of yet another black American by racist cops. However, as you read further, the real story seems to contradict the one that has flooded social media over the last several months.

    Contrary to initial reports and beliefs, the conversations show that police had good reason to enter Taylor’s apartment on March 13, knocked loudly before entering the apartment, and only began firing after Taylor’s most recent boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired the first shot. Officers’ stray bullets hit Taylor in the hallway, leading to her death.

    Disclaimer: This article is simply a summary of the information that appears in the report. The Drug Dealer Police Sought Was Taylor’s Former Boyfriend

    Taylor’s association with Glover was initially “disputed,” according to the Louisville Courier Journal.

    But according to the report, their association dates back to at least 2016, when cops asked Taylor about a dead body found in her rental car. She said she didn’t know about it, but that Glover often drove her car. The dead man was the brother of an individual with whom Glover had been arrested numerous times.

    At the time, Taylor told the officers she had been dating Glover for three or four months. The report also notes that in 2017, Taylor posted bond for Glover on two pending cases.

    Jamarcus Glover called Breonna Taylor 26 times from jail between January 2016 and January 2020.

    The record also shows Glover called Taylor 26 times from jail between January 2016 and January 2020.

    On January 3, 2020, Glover told Taylor he planned to come over for the night. She replied, “When you’re around, I stress more… because I just always be worried about you… not like with you and b****** but just period with the police, like all kind of s***.” They both end the call saying, “I love you.” The Police Warrant Had the Correct Address

    Media reports initially questioned whether police had good reason to enter Taylor’s apartment. No illicit cash and no drugs were found at Taylor’s house during the police incident.

    The new report shows that officers suspected Glover may have used Taylor’s address, where he also resided, to mail narcotics. On one occasion, detectives snapped pictures of Glover taking a “suspected USPS package” from Taylor’s house to another location where detectives suspected the traffickers were keeping narcotics.

    Officers suspected Glover may have used Taylor’s address, where he also resided, to mail narcotics.

    Using a pole camera, detectives also observed Taylor’s car parked numerous times outside a “trap house,” where Glover was discovered to be one of the narcotics suppliers. In one instance while parked at the “trap house,” detectives observed Taylor herself step out of the passenger side of the vehicle, look around, and sit back down inside the vehicle.

    After Taylor’s death, Glover made a phone call from jail asking where his money was located. “Bre been handling my money,” he said, noting she had “like $8 grand.” The Cops Knocked Loudly

    Police obtained no-knock search warrants for all five houses involved in the March 13 drug bust, since this particular drug trafficking group had a history of destroying evidence, using cameras to compromise detectives, and running away. But Taylor’s house was considered a “soft target,” since they knew Glover wasn’t there, so officers decided beforehand that they would knock.

    According to Cornell Law, "no-knock warrants" are search warrants "authorizing police officers to enter certain premises without first knocking and announcing their presence... Such warrants are issued where an entry pursuant to the knock-and-announce rule (ie. an announcement prior to entry) would lead to the destruction of the objects for which the police are searching or would compromise the safety of the police or another individual."

    The phone conversation records in the new report repeatedly indicate that police knocked loudly before coming in the door. A police briefing regarding the incident claimed that officers also identified themselves as police before entering the apartment.

    “They was beating on the door,” Walker said during one of the recorded calls.

    Taylor’s house was considered a “soft target,” since Glover wasn’t there, so the officers decided to knock.

    It’s important to note that the officers wore plainclothes, according to the Courier Journal, although CNN reported they were wearing “tactical vests.” At the beginning of the call, Walker indicates he thought it might have been a home invasion.

    Unknown Male: “So y’all figured someone was trying to home invade you all?”

    Walker: “That’s what I thought you feel me.”

    Walker also indicated that officers didn’t identify themselves before busting through the door.

    he (Breonna Taylor) was like who is it and they ain’t saying nothin,” Walker said. Walker Fired the First Shot, and the Cops Fired Back

    The police then used a battering ram to enter Taylor’s house. Glover summarized the chain of events in one of his phone calls from jail: “He shoots at the police, they shoot back, Bre in the hallway and she gets killed.”

    Walker’s earlier account confirmed Glover’s statement: “The door like comes like off the hinges,” Walker told CBS News. “So I just let off one shot like I still can’t see who it is, or anything.”

    “He shoots at the police, they shoot back, Bre in the hallway and she gets killed.”

    Walker’s bullet hit Louisville Metro Police Department Sgt. Jon Mattingly in the leg.

    “And so I just returned fire,” Mattingly said, according to CNN. “I got four rounds off and it was like simultaneous. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.” Taylor Was Killed in the Crossfire

    Taylor was shot five times according to her death certificate, leading to the termination of Police Detective Brett Hankison, who fired a total of 10 shots, a few of which hit the wall adjoining the next-door apartment.

    Keira Bradley, identified as the “child’s mother” in the report, cast the blame for Taylor’s death not on the officers, but on Glover.

    “[T]hat girl got killed over you,” Bradley told him over a phone call the day of Taylor’s death.

    “That girl got killed over you."

    Glover later shifted the blame to Walker, noting that “he fired shots at the police.” Walker Lied about What Happened

    When Walker was arrested the night of the incident, the police asked him who had fired the gun, and Walker told them it was Taylor.

    "I had no reason to say it, like I say, my gun is legal and everything," Walker said. "Clearly, I was scared. I don't know."

    Walker's false testimony led to Taylor being incorrectly considered a suspect at first. Closing Thoughts

    It’s hard not to wonder if the trajectory of Breonna Taylor’s life would have been different if she had never gotten involved with a criminal boyfriend to begin with.

    Breonna Taylor’s death is a tragedy that indeed should be mourned. But the tragedy was only exacerbated by the widespread political narrative claiming that racist white cops invaded a random black woman’s home to murder her while she was sleeping. As always, it’s better to wait for the facts to come out before jumping to conclusions.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 28, 2020, 10:44:37 AM
    The young man who was killed was white so of course there was no rioting or looting. Had this young man been black it would have been a much different story.

    But secretly spending taxpayer money to give to the cop who killed this young man is outrageous.

    Overland Park paid former police officer who fatally shot teen to resign

    A former Overland Park police officer who fatally shot 17-year-old John Albers as he backed out of his driveway in January 2018 was paid $70,000 as part of a deal to resign.

    The city confirmed Tuesday that it negotiated an $81,040 buyout with former Overland Park Police Officer Clayton Jenison — which included $70,000 in severance pay and $11,040 owed for his regular salary ($8,000), compensation time ($2,354) and unused vacation and holiday pay ($686).

    The separation agreement came despite the fact the police department and prosecutor's office found nothing wrong with Jenison's conduct.

    After a review that was never made public by the Johnson County Officer Involved Shooting Investigation Team, Jenison was cleared of any wrongdoing by Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe and Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez.

    Sheila Albers called Donchez's comments "false" in an interview Tuesday. She also pointed out there was no mention of any payout for Jenison at that time and said the entire process surrounding her son's fatal shooting lacked transparency.

    "The dollars and the data speak for themselves, and I'm stunned," Sheila Albers said. "This was protecting a police officer at all costs, and those costs also mean the lack of truth. This was, in my opinion, a complete abuse of power."

    The Albers family won a wrongful death settlement in the case. Judge Daniel Crabtree, a U.S. District Court judge for the District of Kansas, ruled that Jenison was never in the path of Albers' vehicle and did not act reasonably in opening fire on the Blue Valley Northwest student.

    An expert the family hired for the lawsuit determined John Albers was backing out of the driveway at 2 1/2 mph when Jenison shot at the vehicle 13 times and killed him.

    https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/investigations/overland-park-paid-former-police-officer-who-fatally-shot-teen-to-resign

    The killing happened in January 2018 but only now did the FBI decide to investigate.

    Feds open civil rights investigation into Kansas teen killed by police during wellness check

    (https://media4.s-nbcnews.com/j/newscms/2020_02/3172496/200106-john-albers-cs-842a_23a99137690d66dace1aaf4ae755691b.fit-360w.jpg)

    Federal authorities have opened a civil rights investigation into the fatal police shooting of a Kansas teenager who was backing out of the family's garage when an officer — responding to a call for a wellness check — fired 13 times.

    The FBI will "collect all available facts and evidence and will ensure that the investigation is conducted in a fair, thorough and impartial manner," a spokeswoman told NBC News in a statement Thursday. The agency's Kansas City, Missouri, field office is working with the U.S. attorney's office in Kansas and the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division.

    After his death, Albers' family sought answers for what led to the shooting and even for the name of the officer who killed him, which they quickly learned was a struggle because of the state's restrictive public records laws, including for police documents.

    A month after the shooting of Albers, Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe announced an official investigation determined the officer, who said he feared for his life, was justified in his actions. At the time, Howe and Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez said the officer resigned from the police force before administrative action could be taken.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/feds-open-civil-rights-investigation-kansas-teen-killed-police-during-n1241014
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 29, 2020, 05:44:06 PM
    Female and cop means just 1 year in prison.

    Sacramento ex-deputy sentenced to jail for sex with ex-boyfriend’s teenage son

    A Sacramento County woman was sentenced Wednesday to a year in jail for unlawful sexual conduct with a minor — the 16-year-old son of her ex-boyfriend.

    At the time of the crime, in April 2019, Shauna Bishop was a Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy. The boy’s father, who had ended a yearlong relationship with Bishop, also worked for the sheriff’s department.

    In addition to the county jail time, Bishop, 46, was sentenced to five years probation and 180 hours of community service, and she’ll be required to register as a sex offender.

    She had pleaded guilty in July as part of a deal in which four other charges were dropped.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/09/24/sacramento-ex-deputy-sentenced-to-jail-for-sex-with-ex-boyfriends-teenage-son/

    Even more disturbing details...

    She will only serve 6 months (not years or decades) in prison...


    Exclusive: Court documents reveal lurid details of Sacramento deputy’s alleged sex with teen

    The 16-year-old boy who Sacramento Sheriff’s Deputy Shauna Bishop is charged with seducing is the son of her former boyfriend, a fellow deputy in the department, court records say.

    Bishop, 45, was arrested on her birthday last Thursday and faces four felony counts alleging unlawful sexual conduct with a minor and is scheduled to face arraignment Thursday in Sacramento Superior Court. She also faces a misdemeanor count of annoying or molesting a child.

    Court files provide graphic details of the alleged acts that occurred inside the home in late April where the boy lives with his mother, and describe Bishop as once having dated the boy’s father, who worked with her at the sheriff’s office and is a high-ranking officer in the department.

    “Bishop went on to tell (the boy) she watched stepmom/stepson related porn videos that made her (fantasize) about him,” the documents say. “Bishop told (the boy) she thinks about (him) while she masturbates and had wanted them to have sex for a long time.

    “She told (the boy) she used to walk around his dad’s house naked, hoping he would walk in on her.”

    The documents say that after police seized her cell phone, investigators found “several pornographic web searches (that) revealed she viewed ‘stepmom, stepson’ related pornographic videos prior to the reported incident, and several the day after the reported incident.

    “Each video she watched corresponded with the sexual acts performed by Bishop that (the boy) described during his second (police) interview,” the documents say.


    https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/crime/article231655003.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 29, 2020, 09:49:47 PM
    Another one of those "finest" of people. This poor girl thought she would get help if she went to the police and instead she was abused by the cop that was supposed to help her.


    NOPD officer allegedly sexually abused teen who was victim in case he was investigating

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/nola.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/c/44/c4462cc0-0039-11eb-bda9-eb179ab35dc4/5f6fa983aef04.image.jpg?resize=624%2C468)

    New Orleans police have arrested one of their own officers on charges of sexually molesting an underage girl while investigating a sexual assault she reported.

    Rodney Vicknair, 53, was booked with sexual battery, indecent behavior with a juvenile and malfeasance, police said Saturday.

    Police said their investigation into the 13-year veteran began when the Public Integrity Bureau received information that Vicknair had “an inappropriate relationship with the victim” at the center of the case. An official source familiar with the matter said Vicknair met a 15-year-old girl while he looked into allegations that she had been sexually assaulted by another person.

    Vicknair allegedly began sending text messages to the girl, going to her house during his personal time and remarking how attractive she was and how she aroused him, said the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. He is also accused of fondling the girl's genitals and breasts, the source said.

    https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/article_07e0824a-005e-11eb-af0a-53c2d964ca8a.html?1601169601745
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 29, 2020, 09:51:33 PM
    Williamson County Sheriff Robert Chody indicted on charge related to Javier Ambler case

    A Williamson County grand jury has indicted Sheriff Robert Chody on a charge related to the death of Javier Ambler in March 2019.

    Chody was indicted on a felony evidence-tampering charge stemming from the destruction of the video in Ambler's death. According to court documents, Chody is accused of destroying video recordings and audio recordings in the investigation into Ambler's death "with the intent to impair their availability as evidence in the investigation."

    Jail records show that Chody was booked in the Williamson County Jail on Sept. 28. He has since been released after posting a $10,000 bond.

    Jason Nassour, the attorney for Williamson County, also faces the same charge. According to Williamson County District Attorney Shawn Dick, Nassour was booked and released from jail the same day.

    https://www.kvue.com/article/news/local/williamson-county/robert-chody-williamson-county-sheriff-indicted-javier-ambler/269-b9b5f83a-8983-4107-89e4-1a835c3f4833
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 29, 2020, 09:58:29 PM
    Once again the taxpayers are on the hook for the execution of a handcuffed man inside a police car. Surprising they didn't say the victim shot himself. 6 times. While his hands were cuffed behind his back.

    Family to receive $20 million in handcuffed man's shooting death

    The family of a man shot to death by a Maryland police officer has reached a $20 million-dollar settlement with Prince George’s County, announced county officials Monday.

    The settlement, which appears to be among the highest ever paid in a single police shooting death, comes 9 months after Cpl. Michael Owen shot William Green, 43, six times in the back while he was handcuffed in the front seat of a police cruiser following his January 27 arrest.

    The night of Green’s death, Owen and one other officer were investigating traffic accidents in Silver Hill, Md., when Green was found in the nearby Temple Hills asleep in his car. Thought to be a suspect in the traffic accidents, Green was arrested and placed in the front seat of the police vehicle where Owen ultimately shot him six times while his hands were handcuffed behind his back. Owen was not wearing a body camera during the incident.

    Hours following the shooting, police said there was reason to believe Green was under the influence of PCP and that there were independent witnesses who could verify a struggle in the vehicle before the shooting. The next day, police recanted both claims.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-receive-20-million-handcuffed-man-s-shooting-death-n1241268
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 30, 2020, 05:56:06 AM
    Thats a lot of cash.   

    Once again the taxpayers are on the hook for the execution of a handcuffed man inside a police car. Surprising they didn't say the victim shot himself. 6 times. While his hands were cuffed behind his back.

    Family to receive $20 million in handcuffed man's shooting death

    The family of a man shot to death by a Maryland police officer has reached a $20 million-dollar settlement with Prince George’s County, announced county officials Monday.

    The settlement, which appears to be among the highest ever paid in a single police shooting death, comes 9 months after Cpl. Michael Owen shot William Green, 43, six times in the back while he was handcuffed in the front seat of a police cruiser following his January 27 arrest.

    The night of Green’s death, Owen and one other officer were investigating traffic accidents in Silver Hill, Md., when Green was found in the nearby Temple Hills asleep in his car. Thought to be a suspect in the traffic accidents, Green was arrested and placed in the front seat of the police vehicle where Owen ultimately shot him six times while his hands were handcuffed behind his back. Owen was not wearing a body camera during the incident.

    Hours following the shooting, police said there was reason to believe Green was under the influence of PCP and that there were independent witnesses who could verify a struggle in the vehicle before the shooting. The next day, police recanted both claims.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-receive-20-million-handcuffed-man-s-shooting-death-n1241268
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2020, 11:11:19 AM
    This woman was tried 3 times, the first 2 ending in a mistrial and after the 3rd trial due to, among other things, prosecutor misconduct and an incompetent attorney she received 2 life sentences. She spent 17 years in prison before she was released. As usual the prosecutor responsible for this left the office afterwards and did not spend a single day in prison. The prosecutor's office tries to absolve itself of any responsibility and claims it will "provide training" to "increase awareness". Very smooth talking there and not a single mention of prison time for crimes, unlike how they spoke about the woman they sent to prison.

    Brockton woman wrongfully convicted of arson, murder freed after 17 years in prison

    A Brockton woman who was convicted of arson and the murder of her parents in 2011 was freed Tuesday after Plymouth County prosecutors dropped the charges, making her the first Asian-American in Massachusetts to be exonerated for crimes she didn’t commit, her lawyers said.

    Frances Choy was incarcerated for 17 years following her arrest at age 17 on two counts of first-degree murder and one count of arson in the 2003 Brockton housefire that killed her parents. She was tried three times, with the first two ending in mistrials, according to legal filings.

    Superior Court Judge Linda Giles, who presided over the third trial in 2011 and sentenced Choy to two life sentences, vacated Choy’s convictions on Sept. 17.

    Giles made her ruling based on evidence that prosecutors in the case were racially biased against her, that her nephew had confessed to the crimes, and that her attorney failed to pursue leads that could have exonerated her, according to court filings.

    Choy’s parents, Jimmy and Ann Trahn Choy, died following a fire on April 17, 2003. according to court filings.

    Kenneth Choy, Jimmy Choy’s grandson from a previous relationship who was then 16 and living at the Brockton home, allegedly told a friend that he planned and set the housefire to get revenge, according to court documents. Jimmy Choy allegedly beat and verbally abused his grandson, whom he suspected of dealing drugs, documents show.

    Kenneth Choy was later charged with two counts of murder but was acquitted in 2008, a month after the first mistrial in Frances Choy’s case. Kenneth Choy testified that the fire was Frances Choy’s scheme and he had backed out, according to court records.

    He later fled to his native Hong Kong shortly before Frances Choy’s third trial began in 2011, court documents show.

    In her order vacating the convictions, Giles detailed a long list of issues with the case, including misconduct by prosecutors and a failure of Choy’s attorney to pursue leads and recruit an expert witness.

    Prosecutors in the case exchanged e-mails, discovered later, that included numerous racist jokes about Asians, including references to a stereotypical character in the movie “Sixteen Candles,” Giles said.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/09/29/metro/brockton-woman-wrongfully-convicted-arson-murder-freed-after-17-years-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 30, 2020, 11:13:37 AM


     >:( :(
    This woman was tried 3 times, the first 2 ending in a mistrial and after the 3rd trial due to, among other things, prosecutor misconduct and an incompetent attorney she received 2 life sentences. She spent 17 years in prison before she was released. As usual the prosecutor responsible for this left the office afterwards and did not spend a single day in prison. The prosecutor's office tries to absolve itself of any responsibility and claims it will "provide training" to "increase awareness". Very smooth talking there and not a single mention of prison time for crimes, unlike how they spoke about the woman they sent to prison.

    Brockton woman wrongfully convicted of arson, murder freed after 17 years in prison

    A Brockton woman who was convicted of arson and the murder of her parents in 2011 was freed Tuesday after Plymouth County prosecutors dropped the charges, making her the first Asian-American in Massachusetts to be exonerated for crimes she didn’t commit, her lawyers said.

    Frances Choy was incarcerated for 17 years following her arrest at age 17 on two counts of first-degree murder and one count of arson in the 2003 Brockton housefire that killed her parents. She was tried three times, with the first two ending in mistrials, according to legal filings.

    Superior Court Judge Linda Giles, who presided over the third trial in 2011 and sentenced Choy to two life sentences, vacated Choy’s convictions on Sept. 17.

    Giles made her ruling based on evidence that prosecutors in the case were racially biased against her, that her nephew had confessed to the crimes, and that her attorney failed to pursue leads that could have exonerated her, according to court filings.

    Choy’s parents, Jimmy and Ann Trahn Choy, died following a fire on April 17, 2003. according to court filings.

    Kenneth Choy, Jimmy Choy’s grandson from a previous relationship who was then 16 and living at the Brockton home, allegedly told a friend that he planned and set the housefire to get revenge, according to court documents. Jimmy Choy allegedly beat and verbally abused his grandson, whom he suspected of dealing drugs, documents show.

    Kenneth Choy was later charged with two counts of murder but was acquitted in 2008, a month after the first mistrial in Frances Choy’s case. Kenneth Choy testified that the fire was Frances Choy’s scheme and he had backed out, according to court records.

    He later fled to his native Hong Kong shortly before Frances Choy’s third trial began in 2011, court documents show.

    In her order vacating the convictions, Giles detailed a long list of issues with the case, including misconduct by prosecutors and a failure of Choy’s attorney to pursue leads and recruit an expert witness.

    Prosecutors in the case exchanged e-mails, discovered later, that included numerous racist jokes about Asians, including references to a stereotypical character in the movie “Sixteen Candles,” Giles said.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/09/29/metro/brockton-woman-wrongfully-convicted-arson-murder-freed-after-17-years-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 30, 2020, 02:25:50 PM
    Just misdemeanor charges and at most 1 year in prison? What a joke. Had the woman reacted when she was violently attacked she would have been charged with multiple felonies and spent many years in prison.

    As usual the cop lied on his report to justify his crimes.

    San Jose Police Officer Charged With Misdemeanor Assault For Kicking, Dragging Woman In Handcuffs

     A San Jose police officer has been charged with assault and battery under color of authority for kicking and dragging a woman who was in handcuffs across a parking lot in July in an incident captured on video.

    Officer Matthew Rodriguez, 36, was placed on administrative leave after the incident in the McDonald’s parking lot on East Santa Clara Street near U.S. Highway 101. The San Jose District Attorney’s Office said the 11-year veteran will self-surrender on the warrant and will be arraigned on the misdemeanor charge. He faces one year in jail, if convicted.

    A Door Dash worker was picking up an order when he noticed a commotion involving police and started recording on his cellphone. Seconds into the video, the officer is seen kicking a woman who is on her knees in the stomach after she was ordered out of her car. He then tackles the woman while his partner officer points a gun at her. A passenger and children in the car can be heard crying out before bystanders start shouting at the officers.

    In a press release, the district attorney’s office said the woman had complied with Rodriguez’s orders and had gotten on the ground voluntarily. Nevertheless, Rodriguez yelled at the woman, “I’m going to kick you in the (expletive deleted) face,” before kicking her in the stomach, the DA’s office said.

    Rodriguez later reported the woman was not complying with his commands, a report that was contradicted by the video footage from both the bystander and the officer’s body cam video, which was not made available. The victim suffered contusions and lacerations to her face, stomach, and legs, the DA’s office said.

    https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/09/29/san-jose-police-officer-charged-with-misdemeanor-assault-for-rough-arrest-caught-on-camera/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 02, 2020, 10:59:03 AM
    This is crazy - WTF 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 02, 2020, 10:59:42 AM
    https://www.citizenfreepress.com/breaking/incredible-video-perp-with-giant-knife-charges-chicago-cop-shot-15-times-before-falling-warning-graphic

    Holy S@#$%
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Princess L on October 02, 2020, 11:45:27 AM
    https://www.citizenfreepress.com/breaking/incredible-video-perp-with-giant-knife-charges-chicago-cop-shot-15-times-before-falling-warning-graphic

    Holy S@#$%

    They could've avoided all that by sending a social worker.

    What time do the riots begin again?

    Tomorrow's headline: "Peaceful protests break out over shooting of mostly unarmed black man."
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2020, 11:07:14 AM
    Criminal gangs.

    Office of Inspector General County of Los Angeles: Analysis of the criminal investigation of alleged assault by Banditos

    Deputy secret societies have existed since at least 1970, being noted in a report by Special Counsel James G. Kolts in 1992.
    The 2012 Report by the Citizens Commission on Jail Violence (CCJV) noted, “for years management has known about and condoned deputy cliques and their destructive subcultures that have undermined the Core Values articulate [sic] by the Sheriff. These factors have contributed to force problems in the jails as well as numerous off-duty force incidents involving deputies.” The Office of Inspector General’s 2018 quarterly report on Reform and Oversight Efforts encouraged the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (Sheriff’s Department) to implement CCJV recommendation 5.8: The Department should discourage participation in destructive cliques.

    Yet, as evidenced by the investigation which is the subject of this report, Sheriff Villanueva continues to promote a Code of Silence regarding these sub-groups. The Kennedy Hall incident investigation uncovered evidence that a group of veteran Sheriff’s Department deputies have undue influence over the daily activities and assignments at the East Los Angeles (East LA) station. Several of the witnesses interviewed identified this older group of deputies as having ties to the “Banditos,” a secret society of deputy sheriffs at the East LA Station. Some younger deputies at East LA allege that the secret group they identified as the Banditos used their influence, and sometimes force and violence, to push deputies out of the station for failing to live up to the Banditos’ work ethic. These witnesses also stated that they were assaulted by Banditos members after an East LA station party at Kennedy Hall. Yet the Sheriff’s Department’s criminal investigation of the Kennedy Hall incident maintained the Code of Silence which has protected deputy secret societies
    for decades.

    Following the incident, the LASD Internal Criminal Investigation Bureau (ICIB) conducted an investigation which almost completely ignored evidence of the involvement of the Banditos which led to the assaultive conduct at Kennedy Hall. ICIB interviewed nearly seventy-three witnesses. In those interviews minimal questions were asked about the Banditos and in the interviews during which the witnesses brought up the Banditos by name, very few follow-up questions were asked. Twenty-three witnesses declined to give statements against their fellow deputies despite the Sheriff’s Department Manual of Policy and Procedures (MPP) section 3-01/040.85, requiring their cooperation. Having received what appears to be a purposefully perfunctory investigation by ICIB (which did not gather evidence of the motive behind the alleged assault at Kennedy Hall), the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office (LADA) did not request statements be taken from the uncooperative witnesses or empanel a grand jury to compel statements.

    https://oig.lacounty.gov/Portals/OIG/Reports/Review_Banditos_Investigation.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 06, 2020, 11:08:21 AM
    https://www.citizenfreepress.com/breaking/incredible-video-perp-with-giant-knife-charges-chicago-cop-shot-15-times-before-falling-warning-graphic

    Holy S@#$%

    The female cop is useless. Surprising she didn't get shot.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 10, 2020, 11:57:28 AM
    Google is giving data to police based on search keywords, court docs show

    There are few things as revealing as a person's search history, and police typically need a warrant on a known suspect to demand that sensitive information. But a recently unsealed court document found that investigators can request such data in reverse order by asking Google to disclose everyone who searched a keyword rather than for information on a known suspect.

    In August, police arrested Michael Williams, an associate of singer and accused sex offender R. Kelly, for allegedly setting fire to a witness' car in Florida. Investigators linked Williams to the arson, as well as witness tampering, after sending a search warrant to Google that requested information on "users who had searched the address of the residence close in time to the arson."

    The July court filing was unsealed on Tuesday. Detroit News reporter Robert Snell tweeted about the filing after it was unsealed.

    Court documents showed that Google provided the IP addresses of people who searched for the arson victim's address, which investigators tied to a phone number belonging to Williams. Police then used the phone number records to pinpoint the location of Williams' device near the arson, according to court documents.

    The original warrant sent to Google is still sealed, but the report provides another example of a growing trend of data requests to the search engine giant in which investigators demand data on a large group of users rather than a specific request on a single suspect.

    "This 'keyword warrant' evades the Fourth Amendment checks on police surveillance," said Albert Fox Cahn, the executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project. "When a court authorizes a data dump of every person who searched for a specific term or address, it's likely unconstitutional."

    The keyword warrants are similar to geofence warrants, in which police make requests to Google for data on all devices logged in at a specific area and time. Google received 15 times more geofence warrant requests in 2018 compared with 2017, and five times more in 2019 than 2018. The rise in reverse requests from police have troubled Google staffers, according to internal emails.

    Google said Thursday that it works to protect the privacy of its users while also supporting law enforcement.

    "We require a warrant and push to narrow the scope of these particular demands when overly broad, including by objecting in court when appropriate," Google's director of law enforcement and information security, Richard Salgado, said in a statement. "These data demands represent less than 1% of total warrants and a small fraction of the overall legal demands for user data that we currently receive."

    The company declined to disclose how many keyword warrants it's received in the last three years.

    Reverse search warrants like geofence warrants are being challenged across the US for violating civil rights. Lawmakers in New York have proposed legislation to make these searches illegal, while in Illinois, a federal judge found that the practice violated the Fourth Amendment.

    https://www.cnet.com/news/google-is-giving-data-to-police-based-on-search-keywords-court-docs-show/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 13, 2020, 10:06:57 AM
    Another one of those "finest" of people, the "best of us", got a sweet plea deal for child molestation. Instead of 20 or 30 years in prison he will only serve 60 days...


    Jefferson County deputy pleads guilty to child molestation charge

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/kmov.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/a/73/a73d4cfe-21e5-11ea-b5fa-674c3e0e0618/5dfaa82f62234.image.jpg)

    A Jefferson County Sheriff’s deputy pleaded guilty to child molestation charges after he reportedly inappropriately touched two female victims while they were asleep.

    According to police, former deputy Joshua Skaggs, 25, is accused of molesting a 14-year-old girl and a 13-year-old girl on two different occasions while the girls were visiting his house in southern Jefferson County.

    Skaggs pleaded guilty to charges of child molestation and sexual abuse. He’ll serve 60 days in jail and be on probation for 5 years.

    https://www.kmov.com/news/former-jefferson-county-deputy-pleads-guilty-to-child-molestation-charge/article_5b4309d8-21c2-11ea-89c5-e3c8843fb2f5.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2020, 08:50:37 PM
    Allowed to resign so he can get the pension.

    Michael Valva, NYPD officer charged in son's death, resigns from the force, attorney says

    The New York City police officer accused of killing his 8-year-old son, Thomas Valva, who authorities said died after he was forced to sleep in a freezing garage at their Center Moriches home, resigned from the police department Wednesday, according to his attorney.

    Valva, 41, a 15-year-department veteran who has been suspended from the NYPD without pay since his January arrest, appeared briefly Wednesday morning in Suffolk County Court in Riverhead.

    Valva’s attorney John LoTurco confirmed after the brief status conference that his client signed his resignation papers.

    "He voluntarily resigned today," LoTurco said. "He executed paperwork in that regard today, which protects his benefits and his pension. There's no admission of any wrongdoing. It allows him to forgo any disciplinary hearing and in exchange, he will no longer receive any salary or any future benefits."

    Both Michael Valva, 41, and his fiancee Angela Pollina, 42, have pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and child endangerment in the Jan. 17 death of Thomas.

    A 3rd grader at East Moriches Elementary School, Thomas, who was on the autism spectrum, died from hypothermia after authorities said he was forced by Valva and Pollina to sleep in an unheated garage as temperatures outside dipped to 19 degrees. Pollina’s attorney waived her court appearance Wednesday.

    https://www.newsday.com/long-island/crime/thomas-valva-death-child-abuse-1.50050380


    As it often happens in cases involving cops, important evidence might "disappear".

    Mom Says Video Footage Of Thomas Valva’s Death Was Deleted

    The mother of Thomas Valva, an 8-year-old boy who froze to death after his father allegedly forced him to sleep in a garage, says surveillance videos from the night of the boy’s death have disappeared.

    Prosecutors say there were security cameras in nearly every room throughout Michael Valva’s Center Moriches home, where 8-year-old Thomas was found dead on Jan. 17.

    Thomas' mother, Justyna Zubko-Valva, notes there were also cameras inside the garage, where Thomas was allegedly forced to sleep in despite the freezing cold temperatures.

    She says there is proof that her 8-year-old son was murdered and she wants answers.

    “I was told two weeks ago by the District Attorney's office that they cannot get the images from the day that Tommy died, because, allegedly, they were deleted,” Zubko-Valva said. “But as you know we live in the technological age of everything being stored somewhere and can be, you know, brought back.”

    https://www.radio.com/wcbs880/articles/news/mom-says-video-footage-of-thomas-valva-s-death-was-deleted
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2020, 09:47:31 PM
    Domestic violence seems to be a not-so-uncommon occurrence with cops. Maybe when all they know is violence and demand "respect for their autoritay", this translates in the home with unfortunate results for the family members.

    And as it usually happens, the taxpayers have to foot the bill.

    City agrees to a tentative $320,000 settlement over HPD domestic violence case

    (https://d1l18ops95qbzp.cloudfront.net/wp-content/2019/04/30170206/darren-cachola-hpd-horz2.jpg)

    The city has reached a tentative settlement in a domestic violence lawsuit against a Honolulu Police officer, agreeing to pay his estranged wife $320,000.

    The suit alleged that officer Darren Cachola choked his wife in 2017 then pushed her against a wall and terrorized two years later after she filed for divorce.

    The city is on the hook because the suit alleges that HPD officers did not investigate her injuries and tried to talk her out of filing charges.

    “Here’s the sad thing. This money is coming from taxpayers,” said Ken Lawson of the University of Hawaii Law School.

    “When the HPD does not enforce its own rules and allows officers ... to come in and cover up for other officers in cases of domestic violence we end up paying for it.”

    But Cachola’s attorney said his client did nothing wrong.

    “There’s no admission of liability. He’s taken the position from day one that he did not do anything to his wife," said attorney William Harrison.

    The HPD has said it now investigates all domestic violence cases involving officers. It also has said that officers are being provided training to avoid stressful confrontations in their households.

    Part of the reason the settlement was so large is that there’s a history of domestic violence complaints against Cachola and there’s a history of allegation that officers covered up for him.

    Back in 2014, he was caught on surveillance cameras fighting with his then-girlfriend in an empty Waipahu restaurant.

    The responding officers did not arrest Cachola and did not file reports. A grand jury also declined to indict. Cachola was later fired but was reinstated.

    “When you commit crimes as a police officer, not get prosecuted, get fired and get your job back because of arbitration and not be punished ... what’s the deterrent from continuing to engage in misconduct," said Lawson.

    https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2020/10/25/city-agrees-tentative-settlement-over-hpd-domestic-violence-case/

    This happened in 2014:






    Is there a culture in Hawaii that protects criminal cops? Apparently even sexually assaulting a 5 year old is not enough for a cop to serve a single day in prison:

    A cop sexually assaulted a 5 year old girl but he gets probation, NO PRISON TIME! Cops sure seem to get some sweet plea deals for abhorrent crimes.

    Former Honolulu police officer gets probation in sex assault of 5-year-old girl

    (https://www.staradvertiser.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/web1_20190529_brk_tvl01.jpg)

    Deputy Prosecutor Loren Haugen said in state court Tuesday that he offered fired Honolulu police officer Teddy Van Lerberghe a plea deal in the sexual assault case against him involving a victim who was 5-year-old when the sexual assaults started because that’s what the victim wanted.

    “There was one aspect that she did deem quite important. And that by pleading to the charges, Teddy Van Lerberghe could never, ever again be a police officer or become a police officer in this state or any state,” Haugen said.

    The victim did not show up in court Tuesday for Van Lerberghe’s sentence.

    Somerville sentenced Van Lerberghe, 45, to five years of probation for 4 counts of second-degree sexual assault and 3 counts of third-degree sexual assault, and did not order him to serve any of the five years behind bars, according to the terms of the plea agreement. She also ordered Van Lerberghe to pay $735 in fees into a state special fund for crime victims, $700 into a fund used to investigate and prosecute internet crimes against children and a $150 probation services fee.

    In addition, Van Lerberghe must submit to sex offender treatment and register as a convicted sex offender for the rest of his life.

    An Oahu grand jury returned an indictment in 2017 charging Van Lerberghe with four counts of first-degree sexual assault and the three third-degree sexual assaults. The state agreed to reduce the first-degree sexual assaults to second-degree sexual assaults. Van Lerberghe pleaded no contest in May.

    https://www.staradvertiser.com/2019/08/27/hawaii-news/former-honolulu-police-officer-gets-probation-in-sex-assault-of-5-year-old-girl/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 02, 2020, 11:20:08 AM
    A cop arrested for sexually assaulting a 15 year old girl was previously disciplined 4 times. It seems like the "internal investigations" and "discipline" that cops establish by themselves for themselves are not particularly harsh.

    NOPD officer disciplined 4 times before he was charged with sexual battery

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/nola.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/f/ec/fecc93be-026b-11eb-ad11-57b2e7c65a37/5f735922239d4.image.jpg)

    In a gas station parking lot about a decade ago, a woman was “startled” when a New Orleans Police Department officer called her name and summoned her to his patrol car.

    The officer, who had been on the force less than three years, learned her name by running her car’s license plate through NOPD’s computer system, according to a disciplinary letter then-NOPD Superintendent Warren Riley wrote. It would be the first of four times the NOPD disciplined him.

    The officer was Rodney Vicknair, who NOPD arrested Sept. 28 based on allegations he molested a 15-year-old girl he met days earlier when driving her to the hospital for a sexual assault exam. Now 53 years old and a senior officer, he faces charges of sexual battery, indecent behavior with a juvenile and malfeasance in office. The NOPD suspended him pending the outcome of the criminal investigation.

    A warrant for Vicknair’s arrest says that after he established an inappropriate relationship with the underage sexual assault survivor, he allegedly victimized her himself. He arrived at her home and called her to his truck where he touched her inappropriately and asked to her have sex, the warrant alleges. He also asked for inappropriate pictures, police say. His lawyer, Townsend Myers, declined to comment for this story.

    A look at Vicknair’s disciplinary record raises questions: Should it have triggered NOPD’s early warning system? And why was a watchdog agency, with authority to monitor the NOPD’s system, denied access to it?

    NOPD’s internal investigators looked into nine separate complaints against Vicknair since he was hired in 2007. Between 2010 and 2016, NOPD suspended him three times and on a fourth occasion issued him a letter of reprimand, police records show.

    Prior to his recent emergency suspension, Vicknair’s latest discipline was in August 2016 for acting unprofessionally while responding to a fatal overdose. A year later, NOPD assigned him to work as a field training officer, making him a mentor for recruits fresh out of the police academy, according to an officer profile published by the department.

    Vicknair’s previous discipline history includes the following, NOPD records show:


    Each time NOPD punished Vicknair, the superintendent warned in a letter to him a similar infraction in the future could result in “more severe disciplinary action.” His most recent punishment was the lightest: a letter of reprimand.

    https://www.wdsu.com/article/wdsu-investigates-nopd-officer-disciplined-4-times-before-he-was-charged-with-sexual-battery/34497589
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on November 03, 2020, 10:37:07 AM
    We may as well go and burn down a city over this guy ^^^  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 03, 2020, 05:04:41 PM
    Another one of those "finest of people" facing a mere 52 charges for sexually abusing children.

    Winthrop police officer charged with sexual conduct with minors

    (https://wpcdn.us-east-1.vip.tn-cloud.net/www.wccbcharlotte.com/content/uploads/2020/10/Charles-Eugene-Price-mug-shot-225x300.png)

    A former Winthrop University police officer has been arrested and charged for alleged criminal sexual conduct with juveniles dating back to 2007, according to officials.

    Charles Eugene Price has been terminated from his job with the Rock Hill-based University, university officials confirmed, and is facing a total of 52 charges.

    "I think it's really scary especially because those are the people who are supposed to be protecting us and helping us," said student Nikki Delissio.

    On October 16, Price was arrested by officers from the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED). He was initially charged with two counts of Criminal Sexual Conduct with Minor under 11 years of age first-degree and Criminal Sexual Conduct first-degree.

    SLED has since charged Price with 49 additional charges related to the investigation. Officials told WCNC Charlotte Price is accused of having "multiple" victims.

    Price has been charged with:


    Between 2007 and 2008, Price is accused of engaging in a sexual battery with a child under the age of 11, according to warrants. In that same time period, he is also accused of having a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old.

    https://www.wcnc.com/article/news/crime/winthrop-former-police-officer-sex-crimes-arrest-charles-chuck-price-rock-hill-south-caorlina/275-f5d69f60-a133-40ec-a55e-edb85bdf961b
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 05, 2020, 09:42:32 AM
    Disgusting child abusers.. This "highly trained professional" considered an 11 year old special needs girl a "threat"...

    Of course he is allowed to quietly resign instead of being fired.

    Officer resigns amid accusations of excessive force on 11-year-old student

    A veteran Farmington police officer is out of a job following accusations he used excessive force on a middle school student with special needs. Lapel video from the Aug. 27 incident shows Officer Zachary Christensen roughing up an 11-year-old girl at Mesa View Middle School.

    The incident in question involved a 6th grade student who was in trouble for behavioral issues. The day of the incident, school administrators can be seen on the lapel video following the girl around campus as she waits for her mom to pick her up from school.

    “This morning, she went straight to the cafeteria. She took more milks that she was supposed to. She threw a milk on the ground,” said Officer Christensen in the lapel camera footage obtained by the KOB 4 Investigates team.

    According to Officer Christensen’s field report, the child assaulted two school employees that morning. The officer claims one assault occurred when the girl walked past the assistant principal and brushes past him and the second occurred when the girl attempted to open the door and walked past the principal. Ultimately, the charges against the girl did not stick.

    Following the perceived offenses, Officer Christensen loses his patience, grabs the girls backpack and throws her to the ground. The struggle lasts for roughly six minutes.

                Officer: Put your arms behind your back!
                Student: Ow! You're hurting my arm! Get off of me!
                Officer: Turn over! Turn over! Do not resist. Do not resist!
                Officer: Stop resisting!
                Student: Ow! You're hurting me!
                Administrator: (redacted) stop resisting...
                Officer: Put your arms behind your back!
                Student: Okay, let me stand up!
                School Administrator: Zach, let's let her stand up.

    At one point, a school administrator repeatedly tells the officer to allow the girl to get up:

    “Officer Christensen – she is not a threat to yourself or others at this moment,” said the school employee to which the officer replied: “No, she is!”



    https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/4-investigates-farmington-police-officer-resigns-amid-accusations-of-excessive-force-on-11-year-old-student/5529724/

    Another child abuser.

    Former Farmington police officer faces up to 3 years in prison for excessive force on a child

    Former Farmington Police Officer Zachary Christensen pleaded no contest to a felony charge of child abuse and a misdemeanor battery charge after roughing up an 11-year-old student at school. As part of a plea deal, two other battery charges were dropped.

    The case was referred to the local district attorney which declined to prosecute. However, The New Mexico Attorney General's office stepped in to take on the case, which led to Christensen's conviction. Despite the conviction, Christensen still has his state certification to be a law enforcement officer.

    https://www.kob.com/new-mexico-news/former-farmington-police-officer-faces-up-to-3-years-in-prison-for-excessive-force-on-a-child/5915748/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 05, 2020, 09:54:02 AM
     >:(
    Another child abuser.

    Former Farmington police officer faces up to 3 years in prison for excessive force on a child

    Former Farmington Police Officer Zachary Christensen pleaded no contest to a felony charge of child abuse and a misdemeanor battery charge after roughing up an 11-year-old student at school. As part of a plea deal, two other battery charges were dropped.

    The case was referred to the local district attorney which declined to prosecute. However, The New Mexico Attorney General's office stepped in to take on the case, which led to Christensen's conviction. Despite the conviction, Christensen still has his state certification to be a law enforcement officer.

    https://www.kob.com/new-mexico-news/former-farmington-police-officer-faces-up-to-3-years-in-prison-for-excessive-force-on-a-child/5915748/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 20, 2020, 09:26:43 AM
    Another case of mass falsified tests.

    She got off very lightly, just 15 years, the sentence should have been the maximum 99 years. Of course the state doesn't know how many people were affected, otherwise they'd probably end up bankrupt.

    Woman who cost parents custody of their children headed to prison

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2020/11/brandy-murrah-14.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=618&h=410&crop=1)

    The state of Alabama has no way to determine how many drug tests a woman falsified, per court testimony.

    However, several victims said Thursday that Brandy Murrah’s deceit cost them custody of their children. That’s because she purposely reported incorrect drug test findings to the Alabama Department of Human Resources.

    Jennifer Severs lost custody of her three children for several months after a forged lab report incorrectly showed she had used methamphetamine and marijuana.

    Furious, Judy McGinnis, Jennifer’s mother, tracked down the doctor whose name appeared on that paperwork. That’s when she learned that he had not tested the hair follicle sample. Meanwhile, Jennifer submitted a second sample through another lab, and it came back clean.

    Her persistence led to an investigation that revealed Murrah's crimes.

    After collecting samples, she never forwarded them for testing. Instead, she created false results and submitted those to DHR, an agency that relied on her firm, A and J Labs, for correct analysis. It is believed Murrah owed for previous tests and the labs that tested samples she collected may have no longer been willing to extend her credit.

    In another case, a reformed addict was also wronged. On the verge of reuniting with her children, test results submitted by Murrah wrongly showed Grace Faulk had relapsed.

    https://www.wtvy.com/2020/11/13/woman-who-cost-parents-custody-of-their-children-headed-to-prison/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on November 20, 2020, 02:19:07 PM
    Another case of mass falsified tests.

    She got off very lightly, just 15 years, the sentence should have been the maximum 99 years. Of course the state doesn't know how many people were affected, otherwise they'd probably end up bankrupt.

    Woman who cost parents custody of their children headed to prison

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2020/11/brandy-murrah-14.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=618&h=410&crop=1)

    The state of Alabama has no way to determine how many drug tests a woman falsified, per court testimony.

    However, several victims said Thursday that Brandy Murrah’s deceit cost them custody of their children. That’s because she purposely reported incorrect drug test findings to the Alabama Department of Human Resources.

    Jennifer Severs lost custody of her three children for several months after a forged lab report incorrectly showed she had used methamphetamine and marijuana.

    Furious, Judy McGinnis, Jennifer’s mother, tracked down the doctor whose name appeared on that paperwork. That’s when she learned that he had not tested the hair follicle sample. Meanwhile, Jennifer submitted a second sample through another lab, and it came back clean.

    Her persistence led to an investigation that revealed Murrah's crimes.

    After collecting samples, she never forwarded them for testing. Instead, she created false results and submitted those to DHR, an agency that relied on her firm, A and J Labs, for correct analysis. It is believed Murrah owed for previous tests and the labs that tested samples she collected may have no longer been willing to extend her credit.

    In another case, a reformed addict was also wronged. On the verge of reuniting with her children, test results submitted by Murrah wrongly showed Grace Faulk had relapsed.

    https://www.wtvy.com/2020/11/13/woman-who-cost-parents-custody-of-their-children-headed-to-prison/


    Shoot the Bitch.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 21, 2020, 10:55:43 PM
    210 firearms missing. They surely have secure storage...

    According to the City Controller: "Our investigation did find evidence of trading at gun shops with city sheriff's office guns."

    The current sheriff took over in January 2020. The previous sheriff is in prison (https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-sheriff-philadelphia-sentenced-prison).

    Controller’s Office Completes Investigation into Sheriff’s Office Gun Inventory; Finds 101 Service Firearms and 109 PFA Weapons are Missing

    City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart, joined by Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal, announced the results of her office’s investigation into the gun inventory maintained by the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office. After receiving a complaint alleging that 15 rifles and shotguns had been missing from the Sheriff’s Office gun inventory since 2016, the Controller’s Office opened an investigation into all firearms under the purview of the Sheriff’s Office.

    The investigation found that 101 service firearms and 109 PFA weapons were missing from the Sheriff’s Office inventory. The review also identified other issues with the overall management of the Sheriff’s Office gun inventory. In response to the review, Sheriff Bilal expressed her willingness to improve the management of her office’s gun inventory and to implement recommendations outlined in the report.

    “It’s unacceptable that more than 200 guns that should be in the Sheriff’s Office custody cannot be located,” said Controller Rhynhart. “The public needs to trust that the Sheriff’s Office is a reliable steward of its own property, as well as the personal property given to the Sheriff’s Office for safekeeping. I want to thank Sheriff Bilal and her office for their cooperation during this investigation.  While many of the issues identified pre-date Sheriff Bilal’s administration, I hope that she will take quick action to track down the missing guns, if possible, and ensure proper maintenance of the gun inventory moving forward.”

    The investigation included an on-site inspection of all firearms maintained by the Sheriff’s Office. The Sheriff’s Office gun inventory consists of service firearms – firearms carried by Deputy Sheriff Officers while executing their official duties – and PFA weapons – firearms and other weapons temporarily relinquished to the Sheriff’s Office for safekeeping by individuals subject to the Protection from Abuse Act. Investigators also reviewed all policies and procedures related to the Sheriff’s gun inventory; conducted interviews; and reviewed and analyzed all recordkeeping data maintained by the Sheriff’s Office related to firearms.

    https://controller.phila.gov/philadelphia-audits/investigation-and-review-of-the-sheriffs-office-gun-inventory/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on November 23, 2020, 08:18:22 AM
    Good for thee but not for me. Berating the common citizen when called out on it.



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 24, 2020, 03:24:12 PM
    Funny how all those SJW companies and their executives keep trying to undermine firearms and those who own them but they certainly don't mind bribing cops for the privilege of concealed carry. And of course the cops who award these "privileges" are all too happy to receive "support" and "donations".


    Undersheriff ensnared in Santa Clara County concealed guns corruption probe

     A corruption investigation targeting the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office over a possible pay-to-play racket for concealed-handgun privileges now has reached the top tier of Sheriff Laurie Smith’s administration, with sources saying her second-in-command — Undersheriff Rick Sung — now is a subject of the wide-ranging probe into whether Smith rewarded political donors with the coveted permits.

    Multiple sources confirmed that a search warrant was served Thursday morning at Sung’s office in the Sheriff’s Office headquarters on Younger Avenue in North San Jose. Computer equipment was seized by investigators with the District Attorney’s Office at the direction of its Public Integrity Unit, sources said.

    As the investigation intensifies, tension has been building inside the Sheriff’s Office. To date, at least four sheriff’s supervisors — including at least one other high-ranking commander — have been the subject of search warrants in connection with suspected “quid pro quo” handling of the permits, according to sources familiar with the case. The DA’s office previously served a warrant at Sheriff’s Office headquarters in early August.

    A focal point of the DA investigation continues to be a single $45,000 donation by Martin Nielsen, executive protection operations and executive projects manager for Seattle-based AS Solution. Records show Nielsen made the donation in October 2018 to the Santa Clara County Public Safety Alliance, an independent-expenditure committee that backed Smith’s bid for a sixth term, and he and multiple colleagues in the firm received concealed-carry weapon permits this past March.

    AS Solution, which specializes in executive security, has said in previous statements that the firm is cooperating with the DA investigation and has launched an internal probe into the matter. One of the firm’s employees granted a permit along with Nielsen recently took a job with Facebook, currently one of AS Solution’s most prominent clients. Facebook spokesperson Anthony Harrison confirmed that AS Solution “is one of at least a dozen security providers we use.”

    When asked whether Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg were among those protected by AS Solution, which first was reported by San Jose Inside, Harrison gave a more general answer. “Our security partners provide protection services for several key executives, including Mark and Sheryl,” Harrison wrote in an email.

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/11/08/undersheriff-ensnared-in-santa-clara-county-concealed-guns-corruption-probe/



    Apple’s head of global security indicted on bribery charges

    Apple’s head of global security was charged with bribery last week for allegedly promising to donate iPads to the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office in exchange for concealed-weapons permits, according to an indictment made public Monday.

    The charges are part of a broader, two-year investigation into the sheriff’s office, according to a news release on the Santa Clara County district attorney’s website. The investigation explored an alleged scheme to trade concealed-weapons permits in exchange for goods, such as iPads and expensive sports tickets.

    Thomas Moyer, who has run Apple’s security department since 2013, according to his LinkedIn page, had applied for concealed-weapons permits, according to the release. The sheriff’s office held up the application, the news release alleges, until Moyer agreed to get Apple to donate $70,000 worth of iPads.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/11/23/apple-sheriff-bribery/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 01, 2020, 09:26:33 PM
    San Diego Kept Quiet on Plans for Military-Grade Drone to Catch Speeding Drivers

    San Diego was supposed to be the site this year of a major drone project intended to show off the civilian capabilities of military-grade technology for monitoring things like wildfires and infrastructure. The players involved in the test flight obscured its other purpose: catching drivers who speed.

    Records obtained by Voice of San Diego show that the city’s Office of Homeland Security had been supportive of General Atomics, a local defense contractor, in its attempt to open the skies above San Diego to new forms of surveillance. They wound up talking last year about how police might benefit from putting a massive vehicle with a camera above the metro.

    The SkyGuardian is not an ordinary drone. It weighs upwards of 12,500 pounds, with a wingspan of 79 feet. Its predecessors were developed to help the war on terror, and the company has marketed it as a “persistent eye in the sky” that governments can incorporate into their public planning and emergency response efforts.

    In San Diego, officials kicked around the possibility of using the drone for vehicle enforcement on the freeway — but asked General Atomics to withhold that information publicly, omitting one of the reasons they were interested in the test flight.

    Behind the scenes, the company was still offering as late as December 2019 — two months after the press release went out — to assist local police with “border traffic surveillance, stoplight functionality, and vehicle speed enforcement.”

    The camera attached to the SkyGuardian would have required automatic license plate reading software to identify automobile owners from 12,000 feet up. The company did not respond to questions. Despite all the interest locally, the test flight never took place over San Diego. General Atomics wound up re-routing the SkyGuardian to the desert in April after the Federal Aviation Administration expressed safety concerns.

    https://voiceofsandiego.org/topics/government/san-diego-kept-quiet-on-plans-for-military-grade-drone-to-catch-speeding-drivers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 02, 2020, 11:02:50 AM
    When seconds counted, these cops didn't care. They have no duty to protect the citizens but the citizens are forced to pay up regardless.

    Another success from the Broward County Sheriff, the same one where the Parkland school shooting happened and the "brave" cops ("Coward of Broward") were cowering outside the school while kids were getting murdered.

    ‘Sheriff, hurry up please.’ Disabled Florida man battles intruder as cops wait down the street.

    He had just stepped from the shower and was settling in for the night when he caught a glimpse of a figure outside his window.

    70 year old Bill Norkunas, a childhood polio survivor, headed over to the light and flicked it on hoping to scare away whoever was there. Instead, the light was a beacon drawing a young man to his front door, a door made of glass.

    And then for the next 15 minutes, Norkunas stood there, barefoot and unclothed, with his crutches, on one side of the glass pane trying to steady a gun in his trembling hand while the stranger stood on the other side, pounding on the door, banging it with his hip or gnawing at the thick hurricane-grade glass with a garden paver.

    Norkunas, who suffered minor injuries from the glass digging into his foot, has no idea why the man, later identified as 23-year-old Timothy Johnson of Fort Lauderdale, tried to break down his door on Nov. 7.

    And as bewildering, and just as terrifying to him, is the knowledge that a squad of Broward sheriff’s deputies responded to his Tamarac neighborhood, but none came close to his home to stop the man. Instead, they waited down the street until he walked over to them and surrendered.

    The Sheriff’s Office refused to answer questions about the response, including why no one showed up at Norkunas’ home, whether policy was followed or broken, and whether the situation could have been handled better. Instead, the department released this statement:

    “Within days of the incident in Tamarac, the Broward Sheriff’s Office began a thorough review into how the deputies on scene handled the response to this fluid and rapidly evolving situation. The review into this incident is ongoing."

    While law enforcement officers take an oath to serve and protect, they are not bound to do so legally, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled.

    “The law doesn’t require law enforcement officers to protect you from other people,” said Rodney Jacobs, assistant director of the Civil Investigative Panel, a police oversight committee for the city of Miami.

    https://www.tampabay.com/news/crime/2020/11/28/sheriff-hurry-up-please-disabled-florida-man-battles-intruder-as-cops-wait-down-the-street/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 08, 2020, 12:36:13 PM
    Another man killed but since he was white there will be no protests, riots, looting or twitter hashtags.

    It started as a noise complaint. It ended in another fatal Phoenix police shooting

    Ryan Whitaker had heard a stranger knock on his Ahwatukee apartment door in the middle of the night earlier in May. So when he heard a similar knock on a Thursday after 10 p.m. later that same week, he answered the door holding his 9 mm gun.

    Holding the gun in his right hand, he was confronted by two Phoenix police officers standing on either side of the door. They appeared surprised by the sight of the firearm, body camera footage shows.

    3 seconds after Whitaker opened the door, Phoenix Officer Jeff Cooke shot Whitaker in the back at least two times, killing the 40-year-old man. Phoenix police had portrayed Whitaker's shooting as an emergency domestic violence call. A 30-minute police body camera video released this week indicates the incident started over a noise complaint from a neighbor upstairs who called police twice.

    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2020/07/17/noise-complaint-fatal-police-shooting-ryan-whitaker/5459142002/

    Once again the taxpayers have to pay for the killing of this man on his front door. No arrests and no charges for his killers who, as usual, claimed to "instantly fear for their lives". The neighbor who called should also be held accountable.

    Of course don't expect any rioting or looting, the victim was white.

    Phoenix approves $3M payout over deadly police shooting; family member vows to continue pursuit for justice

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EoQ6dkwU4AAjldv?format=jpg&name=900x900)

    The family of a man shot and killed by Phoenix Police will receive a $3 million payout, as members of the Phoenix City Council voted to approve the settlement during a meeting on Dec. 2.

    According to FOX 10's Justin Lum, the settlement over the police shooting that killed 40-year-old Ryan Whitaker was approved on a 9-0 vote, seven months after the shooting that killed a father of two children.

    During the meeting, City Council member Carlos Garcia spoke out about the deadly shooting.

    "We not only failed this family in our policies, but also, I feel like we failed them in being able to walk them through this process," said Councilmember Garcia.

    Councilmember Sal DiCiccio, who is usually vocal on his support of law enforcement, sided with Whitaker, saying he handled the situation correctly, and the settlement amount is low.

    Councilmember DiCiccio also called out Phoenix Police for allegedly not getting Whitaker medical help fast enough

    "We don't know if he would have lived or not, but the fact of the matter is it showed a strong callousness from those individuals that were there to not immediately call for help," said Councilmember DiCiccio.

    https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/phoenix-approves-3m-payout-over-deadly-police-shooting-family-member-vows-to-continue-pursuit-for-justice
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 08, 2020, 01:25:22 PM
    No riots?

    Once again the taxpayers have to pay for the killing of this man on his front door. No arrests and no charges for his killers who, as usual, claimed to "instantly fear for their lives". The neighbor who called should also be held accountable.

    Of course don't expect any rioting or looting, the victim was white.

    Phoenix approves $3M payout over deadly police shooting; family member vows to continue pursuit for justice

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EoQ6dkwU4AAjldv?format=jpg&name=900x900)

    The family of a man shot and killed by Phoenix Police will receive a $3 million payout, as members of the Phoenix City Council voted to approve the settlement during a meeting on Dec. 2.

    According to FOX 10's Justin Lum, the settlement over the police shooting that killed 40-year-old Ryan Whitaker was approved on a 9-0 vote, seven months after the shooting that killed a father of two children.

    During the meeting, City Council member Carlos Garcia spoke out about the deadly shooting.

    "We not only failed this family in our policies, but also, I feel like we failed them in being able to walk them through this process," said Councilmember Garcia.

    Councilmember Sal DiCiccio, who is usually vocal on his support of law enforcement, sided with Whitaker, saying he handled the situation correctly, and the settlement amount is low.

    Councilmember DiCiccio also called out Phoenix Police for allegedly not getting Whitaker medical help fast enough

    "We don't know if he would have lived or not, but the fact of the matter is it showed a strong callousness from those individuals that were there to not immediately call for help," said Councilmember DiCiccio.

    https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/phoenix-approves-3m-payout-over-deadly-police-shooting-family-member-vows-to-continue-pursuit-for-justice
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 08, 2020, 08:58:59 PM
    Happens in the dystopian UK.

    Police deploy border patrols and number plate recognition cameras to track drivers moving between tier 3 and 2

    North Yorkshire Police has been accused of “totalitarian” tactics after deploying border patrols and number plate recognition cameras to deter drivers from travelling into the county from areas with stricter coronavirus rules.

    The force warned it could take “enforcement action” against anyone from a tier 3 area caught visiting the region to go to a pub or restaurant or for a day trip.

    All of North Yorkshire was placed under tier 2 restrictions, which allow hospitality venues to open, when England emerged from its national lockdown this week. But the county is surrounded by tier 3 areas including the northeast, West Yorkshire, East Yorkshire and South Yorkshire, where pubs and restaurants are shut.

    The government’s tier 3 guidance state people should avoid travelling out of their area “other than where necessary" and lists work, education, volunteering, caring and medical appointments among the acceptable reasons. However, there is no law prohibiting travel between tiers.

    Superintendent Mike Walker, who is leading North Yorkshire Police’s Covid response, said: “I realise there may be some confusion over what is deemed necessary in these circumstances, so I’d like to be clear here. It is neither necessary or acceptable to leave a tier 3 area and enter a lower tier area for a day trip or to visit a pub or restaurant for a meal."

    Police have also been stopping drivers entering the country to check why they are travelling. Adam Wanger, a human rights barrister, said: “There is no legal restriction on travelling from one tier to another, or within one tiered area. There is no power under the regulations for police to stop cars. So in short, this should not be happening.”

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/north-yorkshire-police-drive-tier-3-b1766243.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 10, 2020, 01:15:45 PM
    https://apnews.com/article/fbi-sexual-misconduct-investigation-a0d33e4770acef8ff5f4a48f0267202c

     :( >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 10, 2020, 02:38:09 PM
    Happens in the dystopian UK.

    Police deploy border patrols and number plate recognition cameras to track drivers moving between tier 3 and 2

    North Yorkshire Police has been accused of “totalitarian” tactics after deploying border patrols and number plate recognition cameras to deter drivers from travelling into the county from areas with stricter coronavirus rules.

    The force warned it could take “enforcement action” against anyone from a tier 3 area caught visiting the region to go to a pub or restaurant or for a day trip.

    All of North Yorkshire was placed under tier 2 restrictions, which allow hospitality venues to open, when England emerged from its national lockdown this week. But the county is surrounded by tier 3 areas including the northeast, West Yorkshire, East Yorkshire and South Yorkshire, where pubs and restaurants are shut.

    The government’s tier 3 guidance state people should avoid travelling out of their area “other than where necessary" and lists work, education, volunteering, caring and medical appointments among the acceptable reasons. However, there is no law prohibiting travel between tiers.

    Superintendent Mike Walker, who is leading North Yorkshire Police’s Covid response, said: “I realise there may be some confusion over what is deemed necessary in these circumstances, so I’d like to be clear here. It is neither necessary or acceptable to leave a tier 3 area and enter a lower tier area for a day trip or to visit a pub or restaurant for a meal."

    Police have also been stopping drivers entering the country to check why they are travelling. Adam Wanger, a human rights barrister, said: “There is no legal restriction on travelling from one tier to another, or within one tiered area. There is no power under the regulations for police to stop cars. So in short, this should not be happening.”

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/north-yorkshire-police-drive-tier-3-b1766243.html


    It’s totally fucked up over here at this time. Police have become power crazed bullies on a lot of occasions
    & it’s getting more frequent. Anything lockdown related it top priority.
    Huge double standards are seen in policing everyday.
    Just yesterday a mother & daughter were being attacked in their car by a nutter with a machete, police were called several times & didn’t respond. Yet the same police had time & manpower to go with cutting gear to arrest a group of men drinking in a football club. And they proudly posted the video of them doing it. 🙄🙄
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on December 15, 2020, 07:37:32 PM
    Another case of mass falsified tests.

    She got off very lightly, just 15 years, the sentence should have been the maximum 99 years. Of course the state doesn't know how many people were affected, otherwise they'd probably end up bankrupt.

    Woman who cost parents custody of their children headed to prison

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2020/11/brandy-murrah-14.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=618&h=410&crop=1)

    The state of Alabama has no way to determine how many drug tests a woman falsified, per court testimony.

    However, several victims said Thursday that Brandy Murrah’s deceit cost them custody of their children. That’s because she purposely reported incorrect drug test findings to the Alabama Department of Human Resources.

    Jennifer Severs lost custody of her three children for several months after a forged lab report incorrectly showed she had used methamphetamine and marijuana.

    Furious, Judy McGinnis, Jennifer’s mother, tracked down the doctor whose name appeared on that paperwork. That’s when she learned that he had not tested the hair follicle sample. Meanwhile, Jennifer submitted a second sample through another lab, and it came back clean.

    Her persistence led to an investigation that revealed Murrah's crimes.

    After collecting samples, she never forwarded them for testing. Instead, she created false results and submitted those to DHR, an agency that relied on her firm, A and J Labs, for correct analysis. It is believed Murrah owed for previous tests and the labs that tested samples she collected may have no longer been willing to extend her credit.

    In another case, a reformed addict was also wronged. On the verge of reuniting with her children, test results submitted by Murrah wrongly showed Grace Faulk had relapsed.

    https://www.wtvy.com/2020/11/13/woman-who-cost-parents-custody-of-their-children-headed-to-prison/

    I'd let her jerk me off on her face.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 16, 2020, 09:56:06 AM
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses...

    This happened 2 years ago and still the intruders tried to keep the video secret.


    ‘You Have the Wrong Place:’ Body Camera Video Shows Moments Police Handcuff Innocent, Naked Woman During Wrong Raid

    For the first time, police body camera video reveals what an innocent woman said happened to her nearly two years ago: police officers wrongly entered her home with guns drawn and handcuffed her naked as she watched in horror.

    Last year, Anjanette Young filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for the video to show the public what happened to her that day. CBS 2 also filed a request for the video. But the Chicago Police Department denied the requests.

    Young recently obtained the footage after a court forced CPD to turn it over as part of her lawsuit against police.

    “I feel like they didn’t want us to have this video because they knew how bad it was,” Young said. “They knew they had done something wrong. They knew that the way they treated me was not right.”

    Hours before the TV version of this report broadcast, the city’s lawyers attempted to stop CBS 2 from airing the video by filing an emergency motion in federal court.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/12/15/you-have-the-wrong-place-body-camera-video-shows-moments-police-handcuff-innocent-naked-woman-during-wrong-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 16, 2020, 09:58:49 AM
    The place is a pigsty and woman is hideously fat.   Still messed up though.   :D ;D ;)

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses...

    This happened 2 years ago and still the intruders tried to keep the video secret.


    ‘You Have the Wrong Place:’ Body Camera Video Shows Moments Police Handcuff Innocent, Naked Woman During Wrong Raid

    For the first time, police body camera video reveals what an innocent woman said happened to her nearly two years ago: police officers wrongly entered her home with guns drawn and handcuffed her naked as she watched in horror.

    Last year, Anjanette Young filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for the video to show the public what happened to her that day. CBS 2 also filed a request for the video. But the Chicago Police Department denied the requests.

    Young recently obtained the footage after a court forced CPD to turn it over as part of her lawsuit against police.

    “I feel like they didn’t want us to have this video because they knew how bad it was,” Young said. “They knew they had done something wrong. They knew that the way they treated me was not right.”

    Hours before the TV version of this report broadcast, the city’s lawyers attempted to stop CBS 2 from airing the video by filing an emergency motion in federal court.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/12/15/you-have-the-wrong-place-body-camera-video-shows-moments-police-handcuff-innocent-naked-woman-during-wrong-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2020, 12:43:24 PM
    Great work by the Innocence Project.

    This man served 19 years despite being innocent. The "justice system" surely worked for him 19 years ago. How about they imprison for several decades the cops that framed him? But they probably received a promotion or retired comfortably.

    Police shot a Philly man, then accused him of rape. He was exonerated after 19 years.

    It was before dawn on Nov. 27, 2001, and Termaine Joseph Hicks was at the wrong place at precisely the wrong time.

    A woman had been pistol-whipped, dragged into an alleyway behind what was then St. Agnes Hospital in South Philadelphia, and raped — until the rapist was startled and fled the scene. Hicks heard her screams and rushed to help. But, seconds later, police officers arrived, took him for the rapist and shot him three times. Hicks survived, but was charged with the rape and sentenced to 12½ to 25 years in prison.

    On Wednesday, after 19 years’ incarceration, Hicks, 45, was, at last, exonerated.

    The Philadelphia District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit agreed with Hicks and his lawyers, civil-rights attorney Susan Lin, and the Innocence Project, that the case was built on lies — possibly to cover up the unjustified shooting — that were contradicted by newly analyzed and compelling forensic evidence.

    When he was sentenced to a maximum of 25 years, he told the judge: “An innocent man can’t sit in jail for long.” But at parole hearings, according to his lawyers, he was penalized for refusing to accept responsibility for the crime.

    The new analysis outlined a case in which ample physical evidence available 19 years ago ought to have been enough to clear Hicks, who was known in court records as Jermaine Weeks.

    Hicks fought for years to get the forensic evidence in his case reviewed but it was not provided to Hicks or his lawyers until after his trial had concluded.

    https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia-wrongful-conviction-exoneration-police-misconduct-tremaine-hicks-20201216.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 17, 2020, 01:24:24 PM

    Horrible,   


    Great work by the Innocence Project.

    This man served 19 years despite being innocent. The "justice system" surely worked for him 19 years ago. How about they imprison for several decades the cops that framed him? But they probably received a promotion or retired comfortably.

    Police shot a Philly man, then accused him of rape. He was exonerated after 19 years.

    It was before dawn on Nov. 27, 2001, and Termaine Joseph Hicks was at the wrong place at precisely the wrong time.

    A woman had been pistol-whipped, dragged into an alleyway behind what was then St. Agnes Hospital in South Philadelphia, and raped — until the rapist was startled and fled the scene. Hicks heard her screams and rushed to help. But, seconds later, police officers arrived, took him for the rapist and shot him three times. Hicks survived, but was charged with the rape and sentenced to 12½ to 25 years in prison.

    On Wednesday, after 19 years’ incarceration, Hicks, 45, was, at last, exonerated.

    The Philadelphia District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit agreed with Hicks and his lawyers, civil-rights attorney Susan Lin, and the Innocence Project, that the case was built on lies — possibly to cover up the unjustified shooting — that were contradicted by newly analyzed and compelling forensic evidence.

    When he was sentenced to a maximum of 25 years, he told the judge: “An innocent man can’t sit in jail for long.” But at parole hearings, according to his lawyers, he was penalized for refusing to accept responsibility for the crime.

    The new analysis outlined a case in which ample physical evidence available 19 years ago ought to have been enough to clear Hicks, who was known in court records as Jermaine Weeks.

    Hicks fought for years to get the forensic evidence in his case reviewed but it was not provided to Hicks or his lawyers until after his trial had concluded.

    https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia-wrongful-conviction-exoneration-police-misconduct-tremaine-hicks-20201216.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Taffin on December 17, 2020, 06:57:30 PM
    I'd let her jerk me off on her face.

    There's no way she'd let you...



    ...she'd insist on swallowing.

    (And be ready for the wave of self-loathing that would wash over you in that moment of cold regret immediately 'posr-pop')
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 17, 2020, 10:30:24 PM
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses...

    This happened 2 years ago and still the intruders tried to keep the video secret.


    ‘You Have the Wrong Place:’ Body Camera Video Shows Moments Police Handcuff Innocent, Naked Woman During Wrong Raid

    For the first time, police body camera video reveals what an innocent woman said happened to her nearly two years ago: police officers wrongly entered her home with guns drawn and handcuffed her naked as she watched in horror.

    Last year, Anjanette Young filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for the video to show the public what happened to her that day. CBS 2 also filed a request for the video. But the Chicago Police Department denied the requests.

    Young recently obtained the footage after a court forced CPD to turn it over as part of her lawsuit against police.

    “I feel like they didn’t want us to have this video because they knew how bad it was,” Young said. “They knew they had done something wrong. They knew that the way they treated me was not right.”

    Hours before the TV version of this report broadcast, the city’s lawyers attempted to stop CBS 2 from airing the video by filing an emergency motion in federal court.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/12/15/you-have-the-wrong-place-body-camera-video-shows-moments-police-handcuff-innocent-naked-woman-during-wrong-raid/

    When this story appeared in the news a few days ago, Mayor Beetlejuice first claimed she knew nothing about the incident (which happened 2 years ago) despite being the Mayor and thus overseeing the police. What a disgusting liar.

    Mayor Lightfoot Apologizes To Anjanette Young For Wrong Raid Where Young Was Handcuffed Naked, Says Video Was Not Brought To Her Attention

    Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday said the video showing Anjanette Young being handcuffed naked by Chicago Police, which CBS 2 aired this week, was appalling.

    Mayor Lightfoot on Wednesday called the video showing that incident appalling – and apologized for the first time, after her office tried to keep you from seeing the video. The story by CBS 2 Investigator Dave Savini is now making news across the nation.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/12/17/mayor-lightfoot-apologizes-to-anjanette-young-for-wrong-raid-where-young-was-handcuffed-naked-says-video-was-not-brought-to-her-attention/


    2 days later, Mayor Beetlejuice changes her tune and admits she knew about it more than a year ago but claimed she was "focused on budget issues".


    Lightfoot Acknowledges She Learned About Wrong Raid Of Anjanette Young’s More Than A Year Ago

    Still on the hot seat over the botched raid of Anjanette Young’s home in 2019, Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Thursday acknowledged her staff told her about the case sooner than she previously claimed, and admitted she was wrong about Young filing a Freedom of Information Act request for video footage of the incident.

    A day after apologizing to Young for the raid, Lightfoot admitted on Thursday she was wrong when she said one day earlier she was first informed of Young’s case only this week, even though the raid itself happened in February 2019, and CBS 2 first began reporting on her case in November 2019.

    Although the mayor maintained she didn’t see video of the raid until this week, Lightfoot said her staff has since informed her that Young’s case and other wrong raids were brought to her attention in November of 2019.  However, she said she doesn’t have any recollection of that.

    https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/12/17/lightfoot-acknowledges-she-learned-about-wrong-raid-of-anjanette-youngs-more-than-a-year-ago/

    (https://www.chicagotribune.com/resizer/qtLCrZ1wucUtQVKC8Jk_yvu64XM=/1200x0/center/top/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod-tronc.s3.amazonaws.com/public/3RORCDDX55AKFNH2UGBXU3MV3A.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on December 17, 2020, 11:19:58 PM
    There's no way she'd let you...



    ...she'd insist on swallowing.

    (And be ready for the wave of self-loathing that would wash over you in that moment of cold regret immediately 'posr-pop')

    It's something I'd have to learn to live with.  I used to hate when broads would want to keep sucking away after nutting down the hatch.  Sensitive as all hell.  Used to want to throat punch this one pig back in the 90's for doing it. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Taffin on December 18, 2020, 06:17:03 AM
    It's something I'd have to learn to live with.  I used to hate when broads would want to keep sucking away after nutting down the hatch.  Sensitive as all hell.  Used to want to throat punch this one pig back in the 90's for doing it.

    You romantic bastard  ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2020, 01:03:45 PM
    Why is the criminal gang spoliating evidence and recordings and releasing only edited portions that suit their narrative? They killed an innocent woman and the only thing they care about is to cover up their own incompetence?

    Family of Woman Killed by Police Gunfire in Trader Joe’s Shootout Disputes LAPD’s ‘Highly-Edited’ Videos of the Incident

    Hours after police released more videos of the deadly Silver Lake Trader Joe's shootout in July, attorneys for the family of the 27-year-old woman killed by LAPD gunfire in the incident have called the footage "highly-edited" and slammed the department for withholding other video and delaying the release of her autopsy report.

    When the Corado family tried getting ahold of surveillance video from the Trader Joe's store, they were informed "LAPD has taken custody of the original video card," according to Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    Her father directly addressed the Los Angeles Police Department, calling on the agency to release all the evidence "so we can move on with our lives."

    That includes all raw video of the incident, from the store's surveillance video to unedited body cam footage, as well as Melyda Corado's complete autopsy report, according to the family's attorneys.

    But the family's lawyers said it's been impossible to get ahold of those materials, with LAPD placing a security hold on Corado's autopsy report and ordering toxicology tests for her that will further delay the report's release, said Ron Rosengarten, one of the attorneys.

    https://ktla.com/2018/09/04/family-of-woman-killed-by-police-gunfire-in-trader-joes-shootout-dispute-lapds-highly-edited-videos-of-the-incident/

    LAPD officers who opened fire outside Trader Joe’s won’t be charged in manager’s death

    The Los Angeles police officers involved in the accidental killing of a Trader Joe’s manager when they opened fire on a man who was fleeing into the store after a car chase will not face criminal charges in the manager’s death, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office said Tuesday.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-15/lapd-officers-will-guy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 18, 2020, 01:09:54 PM
    Too little, too late.

    Amash introduces bill to eliminate civil asset forfeiture

    Rep. Justin Amash (L-Mich.) today introduced the Civil Asset Forfeiture Elimination Act to repeal civil asset forfeiture nationwide.
     
    Federal, state, and local law enforcement use civil asset forfeiture to take billions of dollars in cash and property from private citizens each year without convicting the owners of any crime. Instead, the government brings a civil action against the property itself, alleging that the property is “guilty” of being connected to criminal activity. This allows the government to take property without needing to charge the owner with a crime, prove their guilt, or otherwise afford them all the rights of a criminal defendant. Often, the government gains ownership of such property automatically unless the owner files a claim for it within a short period of time. And when an innocent owner does file a claim, many jurisdictions put the burden of proof on the owner to prove their innocence, rather than requiring the government to prove their guilt.
     
    By failing to protect property owners’ constitutionally secured rights, civil forfeiture often leads to forfeitures of property belonging to innocent people. In many cases, the property owner is not even accused of being involved in a crime; it suffices that their property was used by someone else who is alleged to have committed a crime.
     
    Civil asset forfeiture is incompatible with due process, but the courts have failed to recognize that fact. The Civil Asset Forfeiture Elimination Act cures this historical error and restores Americans’ rights by eliminating civil asset forfeiture at the state and federal level.
     
    “Civil asset forfeiture is a due process violation, and it always has been,” said Amash. “Its history is riddled with injustices not because it’s a valid practice that gets misused, but because its central premise—denying people their procedural rights—is inherently flawed. By ending it, my bill helps fulfill Congress’s obligation to stop rights violations at both the state and federal level, and it ends a practice that contributes to the frayed relationship between law enforcement and the public.”

    https://amash.house.gov/media/press-releases/amash-introduces-bill-eliminate-civil-asset-forfeiture
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 21, 2020, 08:29:22 PM
    Another case where the "brave heroes" attacked an innocent woman. Of course don't expect the cops to pay out of their pockets or go to prison. That's only for plebs and serfs.

    Fremont County pays $2.4 million to woman wrongly arrested while naked

    Fremont County paid $2.4 million last week to a woman who was wrongly arrested while naked and in her own apartment, then locked into a restraint chair and shocked with a Taser.

    A jury last year awarded the woman, Carolyn O’Neal, $3.6 million after she sued the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office over the 2014 incident, but a federal judge later reduced that amount to about $2.1 million, prompting both sides to appeal.

    The county later agreed to drop its appeal and settle with O’Neal for $2.4 million, her attorney, David Lane, said Sunday.

    “This was an outrageous case,” he said. “Law enforcement officers who believed they were above the law got smacked down hard by a jury. And unfortunately this costs the taxpayers of Fremont County a lot of money. But I hope it inspires the citizenry to demand accountability from law enforcement — otherwise it’s coming out of their pockets.”

    Sheriff’s deputies were called to O’Neal’s apartment in a sober living facility in May 2014 for a welfare check over concerns she might harm herself. She told the deputies who came to her door to go away, that she was naked and about to take a bath, and that she had no intention of harming herself.

    The three men used a key to enter her apartment anyway, then threw her on a bed and arrested her.

    She was still unclothed when she was taken to jail and put into a restraint chair for several hours. At one point, deputies released her legs from the chair, but later decided to strap them back in. O’Neal resisted their efforts and deputies shocked her twice with a Taser, even though her arms and torso were still completely restrained by the chair, and she’d been forced to wear a spit mask.

    O’Neal was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest; those charges were later dismissed.

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/12/21/23/37123962-9077289-image-a-9_1608592264806.jpg) (https://images1.westword.com/imager/u/original/11323505/carolyn.oneal.two.restraint.chair.jpg)

    https://www.denverpost.com/2020/12/20/carolyn-oneal-naked-arrest-fremont-county-sheriff-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on December 21, 2020, 08:40:32 PM
    Another case where the "brave heroes" attacked an innocent woman. Of course don't expect the cops to pay out of their pockets or go to prison. That's only for plebs and serfs.

    Fremont County pays $2.4 million to woman wrongly arrested while naked

    Fremont County paid $2.4 million last week to a woman who was wrongly arrested while naked and in her own apartment, then locked into a restraint chair and shocked with a Taser.

    A jury last year awarded the woman, Carolyn O’Neal, $3.6 million after she sued the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office over the 2014 incident, but a federal judge later reduced that amount to about $2.1 million, prompting both sides to appeal.

    The county later agreed to drop its appeal and settle with O’Neal for $2.4 million, her attorney, David Lane, said Sunday.

    “This was an outrageous case,” he said. “Law enforcement officers who believed they were above the law got smacked down hard by a jury. And unfortunately this costs the taxpayers of Fremont County a lot of money. But I hope it inspires the citizenry to demand accountability from law enforcement — otherwise it’s coming out of their pockets.”

    Sheriff’s deputies were called to O’Neal’s apartment in a sober living facility in May 2014 for a welfare check over concerns she might harm herself. She told the deputies who came to her door to go away, that she was naked and about to take a bath, and that she had no intention of harming herself.

    The three men used a key to enter her apartment anyway, then threw her on a bed and arrested her.

    She was still unclothed when she was taken to jail and put into a restraint chair for several hours. At one point, deputies released her legs from the chair, but later decided to strap them back in. O’Neal resisted their efforts and deputies shocked her twice with a Taser, even though her arms and torso were still completely restrained by the chair, and she’d been forced to wear a spit mask.

    O’Neal was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest; those charges were later dismissed.

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/12/21/23/37123962-9077289-image-a-9_1608592264806.jpg) (https://images1.westword.com/imager/u/original/11323505/carolyn.oneal.two.restraint.chair.jpg)

    https://www.denverpost.com/2020/12/20/carolyn-oneal-naked-arrest-fremont-county-sheriff-lawsuit/

    Hopefully they took turns sucking her tits.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 23, 2020, 11:15:21 AM
    Yet another incident...

    "I dont' care if that's private property, you think I care?"

    Man sues South Carolina PD after allegedly forced from his home, naked at gunpoint

    A South Carolina man is suing his local police department after he was forced from his home, naked and at gunpoint.

    This video released by the man's attorney shows what happened back on June 3, 2019.

    Jethro Devane, who is now 71 years old, says he was asleep in his bed when he was awakened by bright lights coming from his yard.

    When he went to investigate he was startled by Rock Hill police officers, who were in pursuit of four minors who were allegedly breaking into vehicles.

    One officer, Vincent Mentesana, was heard on camera yelling and directing orders to Devane, forcing him to stand in the nude outside.

    When DeVane asked what was going on, one of the officers, identified as Vincent Mentesana, told him 'I don't want to talk to you'.

    The officer held the gun to DeVane's head for 90 seconds as other officers looked through his home.

    Devane later filed a complaint against the city but it was dismissed with no disciplinary actions taken against the officers involved.

    He is now suing the department and the officers involved. His lawyer calls the incident humiliating and disgusting.



    https://kvoa.com/news/top-stories/2020/12/22/man-sues-south-carolina-pd-after-allegedly-forced-from-his-home-naked-at-gunpoint/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 24, 2020, 10:46:02 AM
    More gang violence.

    This incident is so absurd that the gang leader issued an "apology". And this particular gang member appears to have a history of crimes but don't expect him to go to prison.


    North Texas man sues two Keller police officers after August arrest

    A North Texas man is suing two officers in the Keller Police Department following his arrest in August. Keller PD demoted Sergeant Blake Shimanek for his role in the incident.   

    The arrest occurred Aug. 15 when 22-year-old Dillon Puente was pulled over for making a wide right turn. Puente was on his way to his grandmother’s house when he was stopped in the Riverdance neighborhood.   

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek ask Dillon to get out of the car before he places him in handcuffs. In a police report obtained by WFAA, Shimanek said he detained Dillon because he was worried about his safety.   

    “He was ticketed and taken to jail for a wide right turn,” said Dillon’s dad Marco Puente in an interview with WFAA. 

    Marco Puente was following Dillon to his grandma’s house, and he pulled up his vehicle after he saw his son was pulled over by police.

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek threaten Marco Puente with arrest if he continued to remain in the roadway with his truck. 

    After obeying the order to move his vehicle, Marco started recording his son’s arrest on his cellphone, while he was waiting on the sidewalk across the street from the scene.   

    “The officer didn’t like me being there recording anything,” Marco told WFAA. 

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek ordering Officer Ankit Tomer to arrest Marco too.

    “Put your phone down,” Tomer said, while his body-worn camera recorded. “Put your hands behind your head.” 

    “This guy is arresting me for just standing here,” Marco said in video captured by the body-worn camera. 

    “They tried to take me down and pepper spray me, and it was a fiasco,” Marco told WFAA. 

    Dillon Puente ultimately paid a ticket for his wide turn.

    Police records show Shimanek has had previous problems as a Keller officer. In 2016, an Internal Affairs review found that he entered a home without a search warrant and without approval from the homeowner.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/crime/north-texas-man-sues-two-keller-police-officers-after-august-arrest/287-89109d20-37c0-403f-86cf-c5921bc348ce

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on December 29, 2020, 10:43:39 AM
    He spent 10 days in jail after facial recognition software led to the arrest of the wrong man, lawsuit says

    When Nijeer Parks walked out of a New Jersey prison in 2016, he returned to his family in Paterson and told them he was done messing up his life.

    Twice convicted for selling drugs, Parks spent six years behind bars and said he decided after his release to earn an honest living. He found a job as a clerk at the local PriceRite, began saving money and made plans to marry his fiancé.

    So when police last year filed numerous charges against Parks stemming from a shoplifting incident at a Woodbridge hotel in which the suspect hit a police car before fleeing the scene, the ex-convict who had worked eagerly to repair his life, tried just as hard to clear his name.

    Parks didn’t drive a car, didn’t have a license and had to ask his cousin to drive him to the Woodbridge police station, after he learned police had a warrant for his arrest. Moments after he arrived, he said, he was in handcuffs and later confronted by detectives who told him repeatedly, “You know what you did.”

    Before everything was over, Parks would spend 10 days in jail, all of his life savings, and the next year fighting to clear his name. The Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office offered Parks a deal: In exchange for a guilty plea, he would serve six years in prison with no early release until he’d served 85 percent of his sentence. He would also be on parole for three years after his release.

    If he went to trial, the prosecutor intended to seek a sentence of 20 years or more based on his previous criminal history, Parks said.

    Parks attorney, Daniel Sexton of Jersey City, filed suit against the township, the police department and public officials, including Mayor John McCormac, alleging investigators violated his clients rights by relying on facial recognition software.

    Investigators relied on facial recognition software to identify Parks as a suspect in crimes that occurred the afternoon of Jan. 26, 2019, at the Hampton Inn hotel on Route 9 North in Woodbridge. This kind of software has been criticized for its heavy reliance on billions of social media photos to identify criminal suspects. The use of such software has now been banned by the state of New Jersey.

    https://www.nj.com/middlesex/2020/12/he-spent-10-days-in-jail-after-facial-recognition-software-led-to-the-arrest-of-the-wrong-man-lawsuit-says.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 30, 2020, 01:19:17 AM
    Girlfriend of Nashville bomber Anthony Warner told cops he was making bombs last year
    NY Post ^ | December 29, 2020 | 11:01pm | Jorge Fitz-Gibbon
    Posted on 12/29/2020, 11:28:23 PM by conservative98

    Nashville police were warned in 2019 that Anthony Warner was making a bomb inside his RV — but nothing was done to stop him.

    Warner’s girlfriend told Nashville cops on Aug. 21, 2019, that he “was building bombs in the RV trailer at his residence,” according to a report Tuesday in The Tennessean.

    City cops passed the tip off to the FBI and ATF.

    But when authorities showed up at Warren’s door no one answered, and a subsequent request to search the property was denied, The Tennessean reported.

    Warner’s bomb-making then continued unhindered until Christmas morning, when he detonated explosives in the vehicle and leveled a stretch of downtown Nashville.

    Records reviewed by the newspaper show that Raymond Throckmorton, an attorney for the woman, initially called police and said that Warner’s unnamed gal pal was concerned about comments he had made — and didn’t want two guns she said belonged to Warner in her home.

    Throckmorton told police Warner “frequently talks about the military and bomb-making,” and “knows what he is doing and is capable of making a bomb,” the records said.

    Police saw the RV in Warren’s driveway but it was fenced off so they did not enter.

    “They saw no evidence of a crime and had no authority to enter his home or fenced property,” Metropolitan Nashville Police Department spokesman Don Aaron said in a statement to the newspaper.

    Nashville PD forwarded the info to the feds, but “the FBI reported back that they checked their holdings and found no records on Warner at all,” Aaron said.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 06, 2021, 10:38:33 PM
    Another one of those "finest" people.

    Despite his vile crimes, and with charges that could have kept him in prison for hundreds of years, he got ZERO prison time and will not even register as a sex offender. Plus if he completes his 2 year probation (!), no convictions will be entered on his record.


    Wise granted PBJ on guilty plea for child pornography

    Former Ocean City police officer and sheriff’s deputy Jarrett “Jay” Wise, 53, who pleaded guilty to three counts of possession of child pornography, was granted probation before judgement on Wednesday.

    During a September hearing at the Worcester County Circuit Court in Snow Hill, Dorchester State’s Attorney Doug Jones told the court that on or around May 10, 2019, the Internet Task Force Program, a national child abuse and exploitation investigation network, sent a tip to the Worcester County Bureau of Investigations (WCBI) to investigate Wise.

    Jones said that the Federal Bureau of Investigations received a similar tip and coordinated with county investigators.

    The bureau of investigations obtained a subpoena for Comcast records that showed two IP addresses connected to Wise’s home and business computers. Investigators also discovered images and videos of child pornography in Wise’s email.

    The emails related to the September hearing were dated Sept. 30 and Oct. 6, 2018, and contained short videos of young children engaging in sexual activity with adult women.

    On or around June 25, 2019, investigators, who were armed with a search warrant, met with Wise, who waived his Miranda Rights and admitted to possessing the child pornography.

    Wise was indicted on Jan. 28, and was arrested the following Friday.

    He was charged with five felony counts of promoting and distributing child pornography, as well as 50 misdemeanor counts of possession of child pornography.

    He was held in the Worcester County Jail in Snow Hill until he posted a $25,000 bond following a hearing on Feb. 3, in Worcester County Circuit Court.

    One condition of his release was a prohibition on using computers or similar devices.

    As part of his plea deal, Wise waived his right to a jury trial and pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor counts of child pornography possession, which are punishable of up to 5 years in prison, a fine of up to $2,500 or both. A pre-sentence investigation was ordered, with the sentencing date contingent upon those findings.

    With Wednesday’s decision by Judge Thomas Groton, however, Wise will walk away more or less a free man — as long as he complies with his probation terms for the next two years, no convictions will be entered on his record.

    Additionally, Wise will not have to register as a sex offender during nor after his probation term.

    https://www.oceancitytoday.com/news/wise-granted-pbj-on-guilty-plea-for-child-pornography/article_591e81fe-359f-11eb-b537-4bfeb87a701c.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: ThisisOverload on January 08, 2021, 02:32:40 PM
    It's something I'd have to learn to live with.  I used to hate when broads would want to keep sucking away after nutting down the hatch.  Sensitive as all hell.  Used to want to throat punch this one pig back in the 90's for doing it.

    That's when you sneak the ol' thumb up her butt and watch her squirm. ;D

    Just hope she doesn't bite your cack off.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 10, 2021, 03:18:52 PM
    Another hoax. As usual, at the time, there was outrage about the "thugs" that "don't respect" the "heroes". The police "chief" is complicit in this hoax.

    Kansas police officer fabricated McDonald's coffee cup story 'as a joke,' chief says

    The Herington, Kansas, police chief said a former police officer fabricated an incident with a McDonald’s coffee cup involving an expletive and a pejorative “as a joke.”

    Herington Police Chief Brian Hornaday said in a news conference that a police officer at the center of the case is no longer with the department. Hornaday had originally claimed in a Facebook post that a McDonald’s employee wrote “(expletive) pig” on a coffee cup given to one of his officers, and that it was “a black eye” on Junction City.

    The 23-year-old officer had been with the department for about two months and fabricated what happened “as a joke,” Hornaday said. An investigation by Hornaday and McDonald’s determined no restaurant employee wrote the statement.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/kansas-police-officer-fabricated-mcdonald-s-coffee-cup-story-as-a-joke-chief-says/ar-BB1cxnt7



    This is what the "chief" posted on Facebook at the time and asked his followers to share:

    "One of my Officers decided to grab a coffee at the McDonalds located at 1127 South Washigton in Junction City this morning on his way to work. This is what he paid for. Although I understand this is likely the act of one person and not a representation of the company, when it was brought to their attention the company offered him a ‘free lunch'. No thank you. A Big Mac and large fries doesn't make up for it. The US Veteran who continues to serve deserves much more. This is not only bad for McDonalds, but it is also a black eye for Junction City. I apologize for the foul language but covering it up would away the full effect. Please share!”

    (https://heavy.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/brian-hornaday-mcdonalds-coffee-cup-kansas.jpg?quality=65&strip=all&w=318)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 11, 2021, 05:33:54 AM
    https://nypost.com/2021/01/11/memphis-cop-charged-with-kidnapping-murdering-man-while-on-duty


     :( >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on January 14, 2021, 08:38:12 PM
    That's when you sneak the ol' thumb up her butt and watch her squirm. ;D

    Just hope she doesn't bite your cack off.

    Sage advice.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 15, 2021, 02:59:26 PM
    Another child abuser.

    Former Farmington police officer faces up to 3 years in prison for excessive force on a child

    Former Farmington Police Officer Zachary Christensen pleaded no contest to a felony charge of child abuse and a misdemeanor battery charge after roughing up an 11-year-old student at school. As part of a plea deal, two other battery charges were dropped.

    The case was referred to the local district attorney which declined to prosecute. However, The New Mexico Attorney General's office stepped in to take on the case, which led to Christensen's conviction. Despite the conviction, Christensen still has his state certification to be a law enforcement officer.

    https://www.kob.com/new-mexico-news/former-farmington-police-officer-faces-up-to-3-years-in-prison-for-excessive-force-on-a-child/5915748/


    Once again, another uniformed child abuser gets ZERO time in prison. He claimed that attacking the child was "the way he was trained" because "he is not a social worker". He even claimed that the 11 year old girl was stronger than him (https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/4-investigates-farmington-police-officer-resigns-amid-accusations-of-excessive-force-on-11-year-old-student/5529724/)! What a "brave hero"...


    Former Farmington police officer who roughed up student with special needs sentenced to probation

    The former Farmington police officer who roughed up an 11-year-old student with special needs in 2019 will not serve any time behind bars.

    In December, Zachary Christensen pleaded no contest to a child abuse charge for his actions caught on his own lapel camera. The video, which was first exposed by the KOB 4 Investigates team, shows then-officer Christensen roughing up an 11-year-old girl after she misbehaved at school.

    Christensen resigned from the force shortly after the incident.

    https://www.kob.com/new-mexico-news/former-farmington-police-officer-who-roughed-up-student-with-special-needs-sentenced-to-probation/5978174/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 22, 2021, 10:37:58 PM
    Intelligence Analysts Use U.S. Smartphone Location Data Without Warrants, Memo Says

    A military arm of the intelligence community buys commercially available databases containing location data from smartphone apps and searches it for Americans’ past movements without a warrant, according to an unclassified memo obtained by The New York Times.

    Defense Intelligence Agency analysts have searched for the movements of Americans within a commercial database in five investigations over the past two and a half years, agency officials disclosed in a memo they wrote for Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon.

    The disclosure sheds light on an emerging loophole in privacy law during the digital age: In a landmark 2018 ruling known as the Carpenter decision, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution requires the government to obtain a warrant to compel phone companies to turn over location data about their customers. But the government can instead buy similar data from a broker — and does not believe it needs a warrant to do so.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/22/us/politics/dia-surveillance-data.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 27, 2021, 11:03:00 PM
    More gang violence.

    This incident is so absurd that the gang leader issued an "apology". And this particular gang member appears to have a history of crimes but don't expect him to go to prison.


    North Texas man sues two Keller police officers after August arrest

    A North Texas man is suing two officers in the Keller Police Department following his arrest in August. Keller PD demoted Sergeant Blake Shimanek for his role in the incident.   

    The arrest occurred Aug. 15 when 22-year-old Dillon Puente was pulled over for making a wide right turn. Puente was on his way to his grandmother’s house when he was stopped in the Riverdance neighborhood.   

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek ask Dillon to get out of the car before he places him in handcuffs. In a police report obtained by WFAA, Shimanek said he detained Dillon because he was worried about his safety.   

    “He was ticketed and taken to jail for a wide right turn,” said Dillon’s dad Marco Puente in an interview with WFAA. 

    Marco Puente was following Dillon to his grandma’s house, and he pulled up his vehicle after he saw his son was pulled over by police.

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek threaten Marco Puente with arrest if he continued to remain in the roadway with his truck. 

    After obeying the order to move his vehicle, Marco started recording his son’s arrest on his cellphone, while he was waiting on the sidewalk across the street from the scene.   

    “The officer didn’t like me being there recording anything,” Marco told WFAA. 

    Bodycam video shows Shimanek ordering Officer Ankit Tomer to arrest Marco too.

    “Put your phone down,” Tomer said, while his body-worn camera recorded. “Put your hands behind your head.” 

    “This guy is arresting me for just standing here,” Marco said in video captured by the body-worn camera. 

    “They tried to take me down and pepper spray me, and it was a fiasco,” Marco told WFAA. 

    Dillon Puente ultimately paid a ticket for his wide turn.

    Police records show Shimanek has had previous problems as a Keller officer. In 2016, an Internal Affairs review found that he entered a home without a search warrant and without approval from the homeowner.

    https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/crime/north-texas-man-sues-two-keller-police-officers-after-august-arrest/287-89109d20-37c0-403f-86cf-c5921bc348ce



    Once again, the taxpayers have to foot the bill while the criminals will not see a day in prison.

    $200,000 Settlement for Texas Man Pepper-Sprayed While Recording Son’s Traffic Stop

    A city in Texas has agreed to a $200,000 settlement of a lawsuit alleging civil rights violations and police brutality brought by a man who was pepper-sprayed twice while recording his son during a traffic stop over the summer.

    The city of Keller, which is about 30 miles northwest of Dallas, announced on Sunday that it was “pleased” with the agreement, which still needs to be signed by all parties and filed with the court.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/25/us/marco-puente-texas-police-settlement.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 28, 2021, 10:09:44 AM
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-proudboys-leader-exclusive/exclusive-proud-boys-leader-was-prolific-informer-for-law-enforcement-idUSKBN29W1PE


    So fng stupid.  How dumb are people to not realize this. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 28, 2021, 11:33:50 AM
    She looks great.  Hot as F! 

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 31, 2021, 03:55:31 PM
    Once again the taxpayers have to pay for the killing of this man on his front door. No arrests and no charges for his killers who, as usual, claimed to "instantly fear for their lives". The neighbor who called should also be held accountable.

    Of course don't expect any rioting or looting, the victim was white.

    Phoenix approves $3M payout over deadly police shooting; family member vows to continue pursuit for justice

    (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EoQ6dkwU4AAjldv?format=jpg&name=900x900)

    The family of a man shot and killed by Phoenix Police will receive a $3 million payout, as members of the Phoenix City Council voted to approve the settlement during a meeting on Dec. 2.

    According to FOX 10's Justin Lum, the settlement over the police shooting that killed 40-year-old Ryan Whitaker was approved on a 9-0 vote, seven months after the shooting that killed a father of two children.

    During the meeting, City Council member Carlos Garcia spoke out about the deadly shooting.

    "We not only failed this family in our policies, but also, I feel like we failed them in being able to walk them through this process," said Councilmember Garcia.

    Councilmember Sal DiCiccio, who is usually vocal on his support of law enforcement, sided with Whitaker, saying he handled the situation correctly, and the settlement amount is low.

    Councilmember DiCiccio also called out Phoenix Police for allegedly not getting Whitaker medical help fast enough

    "We don't know if he would have lived or not, but the fact of the matter is it showed a strong callousness from those individuals that were there to not immediately call for help," said Councilmember DiCiccio.

    https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/phoenix-approves-3m-payout-over-deadly-police-shooting-family-member-vows-to-continue-pursuit-for-justice


    As usual, the killer will not face any charges.

    No charges filed against Phoenix officer who shot, killed Ryan Whitaker

    Maricopa County Attorney Allister Adel announced that she would not be pursuing criminal charges against the police officer who shot and killed Ryan Whitaker in Ahwatukee in May 2020.

    Rather than hosting a news conference, Adel made the announcement via news release as she continues to recover from brain surgery on Election Day.

    The decision not to charge the officer who shot his brother is a disappointment., Steven Whitaker says. "The lack of accountability is a joke, in my opinion. It's a joke,"

    He advocated for Ryan over the summer, traveling to the Valley from his home in California for a press conference with the family.

    "You could be doing everything right and still lose your life," Steven said. "And someone's not going to be held accountable because they have a badge, and they say they're are in fear of their life."

    https://www.azfamily.com/news/maricopa-county-attorney-will-not-file-charges-against-officer-who-shot-killed-ryan-whitaker/article_65a5e0dc-626f-11eb-99a0-dfd9bfaf6074.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 04, 2021, 03:43:02 PM
    Took over a month to arrest and charge him.

    Ohio cop charged with murder of Andre Hill

    The former Columbus police officer accused of killing Andre Hill has been indicted for murder, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced at a press conference on Wednesday night. Adam Coy is accused of fatally shooting Hill, a 47-year-old black man, during an early-morning encounter in a residential garage in late December.

    Coy was indicted for murder in the commission of a felony, felonious assault, dereliction of duty for failing to activate his body camera and dereliction of duty for failing to tell his fellow officer that he believed Hill presented a danger, Yost said. The grand jurors did not indict Coy for purposeful murder.

    "Andre Hill should not be dead," Yost said, later adding that "I believe the evidence of this case supports the indictment."

    Authorities said the shooting occurred after a neighbor reported a person who was repeatedly starting and stopping the engine of an SUV at around 1:30 a.m. on a residential street. Body camera footage showed Coy approaching Hill, who was standing inside a garage. As Hill walked toward Coy holding a cellphone in his left hand, Coy fired his service weapon. Hill fell to the ground as Coy yelled for him to show his hands.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/andre-hill-shooting-adam-coy-charged-murder-ohio/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 08, 2021, 04:04:23 PM
    Supreme Court Will Decide Whether Police Can Enter A Home To Seize Guns Without A Warrant

    The 4th Amendment right against warrantless searches of a person’s home is a pillar of Americans’ constitutional liberties. Before a police officer, or any other government official, can enter your home, they must show a judge that they have probable cause that they will discover specific evidence of a crime.

    There are some limited exceptions to this right. There is an “exigent circumstances” exception. If a police officer looks through a home’s window and sees a person about to stab another person, the officer can burst through the door to prevent the attack. There is also the “emergency aid” exception. If the officer looked through the same window and saw the resident collapsing from an apparent heart attack, the officer could run into the house to administer aid. Neither of these cases violates the 4th Amendment and few would argue that it should be otherwise.

    However, there is a broader cousin to these amendments called the “community caretaking” exception. It originally derives from a case in which the police took a gun out of the trunk of an impounded vehicle without first obtaining a warrant. The Supreme Court held that there is a community caretaking exception to the 4th Amendment’s warrant requirement because police perform “community caretaking functions, totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute." The Court held that police activity in furtherance of these functions does not violate the 4th Amendment as long as it is executed in a “reasonable” manner.

    Note that, unlike the first two exceptions, this exception is not limited to immediate emergencies. In the Supreme Court case just described there was only a general concern that vandals might eventually break into the impounded car and steal any weapons that were in the trunk. So the community care exception is far broader than the other two.

    Also, all three exceptions allow warrantless searches so long as the police officer acted “reasonably”. That is one of the easiest constitutional standards to meet and is a significantly lower standard than “probable cause”, which is required for a warrant. As long as an officer might reasonably think that a warrantless search will alleviate a danger to the community, the search is considered constitutional.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/evangerstmann/2021/02/05/supreme-court-will-decide-whether-police-can-enter-a-home-to-seize-guns-without-a-warrant
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 08, 2021, 05:00:26 PM
    This is getting nuts now


    Supreme Court Will Decide Whether Police Can Enter A Home To Seize Guns Without A Warrant

    The 4th Amendment right against warrantless searches of a person’s home is a pillar of Americans’ constitutional liberties. Before a police officer, or any other government official, can enter your home, they must show a judge that they have probable cause that they will discover specific evidence of a crime.

    There are some limited exceptions to this right. There is an “exigent circumstances” exception. If a police officer looks through a home’s window and sees a person about to stab another person, the officer can burst through the door to prevent the attack. There is also the “emergency aid” exception. If the officer looked through the same window and saw the resident collapsing from an apparent heart attack, the officer could run into the house to administer aid. Neither of these cases violates the 4th Amendment and few would argue that it should be otherwise.

    However, there is a broader cousin to these amendments called the “community caretaking” exception. It originally derives from a case in which the police took a gun out of the trunk of an impounded vehicle without first obtaining a warrant. The Supreme Court held that there is a community caretaking exception to the 4th Amendment’s warrant requirement because police perform “community caretaking functions, totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute." The Court held that police activity in furtherance of these functions does not violate the 4th Amendment as long as it is executed in a “reasonable” manner.

    Note that, unlike the first two exceptions, this exception is not limited to immediate emergencies. In the Supreme Court case just described there was only a general concern that vandals might eventually break into the impounded car and steal any weapons that were in the trunk. So the community care exception is far broader than the other two.

    Also, all three exceptions allow warrantless searches so long as the police officer acted “reasonably”. That is one of the easiest constitutional standards to meet and is a significantly lower standard than “probable cause”, which is required for a warrant. As long as an officer might reasonably think that a warrantless search will alleviate a danger to the community, the search is considered constitutional.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/evangerstmann/2021/02/05/supreme-court-will-decide-whether-police-can-enter-a-home-to-seize-guns-without-a-warrant
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 09, 2021, 05:08:45 PM
    Turning off body cameras and lying on reports.

    Louisiana State Police arrests 4 troopers for 'use of force encounters'

    4 Louisiana State Police troopers were arrested Monday "following an extensive and detailed review of use of force encounters in the Monroe area," the law enforcement agency said in a press release.

    The troopers -- identified as 30-year-old Jacob Brown, 28-year-old Dakota DeMoss, 34-year-old Randall Dickerson and 26-year-old George Harper -- all face charges of simple battery and malfeasance in office. Brown faces an additional charge of obstruction of justice, according to the Louisiana State Police. It was unclear whether any of the troopers have obtained legal representation.

    The charges stem from two incidents in July 2019 and May 2020. The earlier incident took place during a traffic stop on Interstate 20 in Ouachita Parish, after troopers discovered suspected narcotics in the vehicle and placed the driver into custody, according to the Louisiana State Police. Brown and Dickerson allegedly utilized excessive and unjustifiable force on the handcuffed driver, deactivated body-worn cameras and reported untruthful statements regarding the alleged resistance by the suspect, according to the Louisiana State Police.

    The second incident occurred following a vehicle pursuit in Franklin Parish. After the successful deployment of a tire deflation device, the driver exited the vehicle and immediately laid on the ground in a compliant position, according to the Louisiana State Police. DeMoss, Harper and Brown allegedly utilized excessive and unjustifiable force during the handcuffing process and deactivated body-worn cameras. Brown also allegedly falsified the use of force and arrest reports and allegedly failed to indicate and provide video evidence, according to the Louisiana State Police.

    Louisiana State Police detectives obtained arrest warrants for all four troopers and placed them into custody without incident Monday afternoon.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/louisiana-state-police-arrests-troopers-force-encounters/story?id=75770944
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 09, 2021, 05:28:10 PM
    A sheriff’s deputy bilked $11 million from investors. They don’t know where the money went

    Craig Harbaugh made a convincing case while seeking loans and investments in his firearms company, Tactical Solutions Gear LLC.

    The Fremont, Neb., man rattled off law enforcement agencies in states from Alaska to Tennessee as clients. He had the contracts and purchase orders to back up his claims. And, in a detail that reportedly resonated with at least one investor, he himself worked as a Dodge County sheriff’s deputy.

    But Harbaugh, 50, admitted this week that none of the 12 agencies he named were actually doing business with him: He had falsified the documents. It was, he acknowledged in a guilty plea filed in Nebraska federal court, “effectively a Ponzi scheme.”

    In what the Omaha World-Herald described as potentially “one of the largest individual embezzlements in Nebraska history,” Harbaugh’s ploy bilked nearly $11 million from a bank and four investors.

    The now-former deputy could not be reached for comment Tuesday. He faces up to 20 years in prison at his May sentencing.

    Under the terms of the deal accepted in court Monday, he pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud. Prosecutors agreed to dismiss 12 other charges and to not pursue Harbaugh for fraud, tax and money laundering crimes uncovered during the discovery process.

    It’s not clear what happened to the millions of dollars Harbaugh stole. Nebraska Department of Justice Criminal Chief Michael Norris told The Washington Post “it would be premature” to disclose that information.

    An unidentified couple who lost $4.6 million to Harbaugh said in an interview with the World-Herald they weren’t counting on seeing their money again.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-law/2021/02/09/sheriffs-deputy-fraud-scheme/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 10, 2021, 04:21:45 AM
    Yikes  >:(

    A sheriff’s deputy bilked $11 million from investors. They don’t know where the money went

    Craig Harbaugh made a convincing case while seeking loans and investments in his firearms company, Tactical Solutions Gear LLC.

    The Fremont, Neb., man rattled off law enforcement agencies in states from Alaska to Tennessee as clients. He had the contracts and purchase orders to back up his claims. And, in a detail that reportedly resonated with at least one investor, he himself worked as a Dodge County sheriff’s deputy.

    But Harbaugh, 50, admitted this week that none of the 12 agencies he named were actually doing business with him: He had falsified the documents. It was, he acknowledged in a guilty plea filed in Nebraska federal court, “effectively a Ponzi scheme.”

    In what the Omaha World-Herald described as potentially “one of the largest individual embezzlements in Nebraska history,” Harbaugh’s ploy bilked nearly $11 million from a bank and four investors.

    The now-former deputy could not be reached for comment Tuesday. He faces up to 20 years in prison at his May sentencing.

    Under the terms of the deal accepted in court Monday, he pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud. Prosecutors agreed to dismiss 12 other charges and to not pursue Harbaugh for fraud, tax and money laundering crimes uncovered during the discovery process.

    It’s not clear what happened to the millions of dollars Harbaugh stole. Nebraska Department of Justice Criminal Chief Michael Norris told The Washington Post “it would be premature” to disclose that information.

    An unidentified couple who lost $4.6 million to Harbaugh said in an interview with the World-Herald they weren’t counting on seeing their money again.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-law/2021/02/09/sheriffs-deputy-fraud-scheme/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 10, 2021, 10:10:25 AM
    Idaho man fatally shot in own backyard after officer mistakes him for suspect, police say

    A police officer in Idaho fatally shot a man who was in his own backyard on Monday after mistaking him for a suspect on the loose in the neighborhood and believed to be armed, authorities said.

    Idaho Falls police did not immediately identify the victim or the officer involved in what Chief Bryce Johnson called a "devastatingly tragic" incident.

    The incident began just after midnight in Idaho Falls when a deputy from the Bonneville County Sheriff's Office pulled over a vehicle and saw a male passenger wearing a black shirt get out and flee into a residential neighborhood, the police statement said.

    Idaho Falls police officers and Bonneville County sheriff's deputies began searching the neighborhood for the suspect, authorities said.

    The deputy who had stopped the vehicle spoke with the driver, who identified the suspect as 22-year-old Tanner J.N. Shoesmith, the sheriff's office said in a news release. Deputies learned Shoesmith had multiple active warrants for his arrest, including for felony battery on an officer, resisting or obstructing arrest, and providing false information to law enforcement.

    As the search continued, police said a resident told officers they spotted the suspect run through a backyard and believed that he had a gun.

    Meanwhile, the driver who had stayed in the vehicle showed officers a message they received from the suspect that showed his GPS location, police said. The GPS appeared to show the suspect in a backyard of a nearby residence. Officers and deputies then surrounded the home.

    "Due to the information that the suspect may be armed, and a prior history of violence when interacting with police officers, law enforcement personnel entered the location with their service weapons drawn," the police statement said.

    Officers said they heard yelling when approaching the home and found a man wearing a black shirt and wielding a gun in the yard. They told the man to drop the gun, according to the statement.

    "We do not currently have the answers as to what exactly occurred during these moments," Johnson said. "We do know that during this interaction, an Idaho Falls police officer discharged his service weapon, firing one shot which struck the man."

    Johnson said officers and first responders attempted life-saving measures but they were unsuccessful.

    Officers and deputies determined that the man who had been shot was not the suspect but actually the resident of that address.

    After the shot was fired, Shoesmith was again spotted running through the area, police said. Officers tracked him to the yard of a nearby home and found him hiding in a shed.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/idaho-police-shoot-man-backyard-mistaken-identity-suspect-search

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 10, 2021, 10:12:23 AM
    Horrible!

    Idaho man fatally shot in own backyard after officer mistakes him for suspect, police say

    A police officer in Idaho fatally shot a man who was in his own backyard on Monday after mistaking him for a suspect on the loose in the neighborhood and believed to be armed, authorities said.

    Idaho Falls police did not immediately identify the victim or the officer involved in what Chief Bryce Johnson called a "devastatingly tragic" incident.

    The incident began just after midnight in Idaho Falls when a deputy from the Bonneville County Sheriff's Office pulled over a vehicle and saw a male passenger wearing a black shirt get out and flee into a residential neighborhood, the police statement said.

    Idaho Falls police officers and Bonneville County sheriff's deputies began searching the neighborhood for the suspect, authorities said.

    The deputy who had stopped the vehicle spoke with the driver, who identified the suspect as 22-year-old Tanner J.N. Shoesmith, the sheriff's office said in a news release. Deputies learned Shoesmith had multiple active warrants for his arrest, including for felony battery on an officer, resisting or obstructing arrest, and providing false information to law enforcement.

    As the search continued, police said a resident told officers they spotted the suspect run through a backyard and believed that he had a gun.

    Meanwhile, the driver who had stayed in the vehicle showed officers a message they received from the suspect that showed his GPS location, police said. The GPS appeared to show the suspect in a backyard of a nearby residence. Officers and deputies then surrounded the home.

    "Due to the information that the suspect may be armed, and a prior history of violence when interacting with police officers, law enforcement personnel entered the location with their service weapons drawn," the police statement said.

    Officers said they heard yelling when approaching the home and found a man wearing a black shirt and wielding a gun in the yard. They told the man to drop the gun, according to the statement.

    "We do not currently have the answers as to what exactly occurred during these moments," Johnson said. "We do know that during this interaction, an Idaho Falls police officer discharged his service weapon, firing one shot which struck the man."

    Johnson said officers and first responders attempted life-saving measures but they were unsuccessful.

    Officers and deputies determined that the man who had been shot was not the suspect but actually the resident of that address.

    After the shot was fired, Shoesmith was again spotted running through the area, police said. Officers tracked him to the yard of a nearby home and found him hiding in a shed.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/idaho-police-shoot-man-backyard-mistaken-identity-suspect-search
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on February 10, 2021, 02:43:38 PM
    Devastatingly Tragic - Shoot the Cop. End of. Job Done.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 16, 2021, 03:21:36 PM
    Very brave judge.

    North Carolina police department ordered to pay man back after forfeiting seized money through controversial process

    Iredell District Court Judge Christine Underwood has given the Town of Mooresville and its police department one week to comply with a court order or go to jail.

    On Nov. 16, 2020, the Mooresville Police Department was called out to a hotel where they searched an unoccupied rental car and seized small amount of marijuana as well as approximately $17,000 belonging to a Connecticut man, Jermaine Sanders, whose daughter resides in Iredell County.

    On Nov. 19 the Mooresville Police Department was put on notice of a hearing to challenge the seizure of Sanders’ money, according to his lawyer Ashley Cannon. However, the day before the hearing, Nov. 23, the police send a check for the money to the federal government under the authority of the controversial civil forfeiture law. Cannon says the timing was purposeful.

    “What they did was circumvent the system by giving it over to the federal government because they anticipated coming into court and being able to say, ‘sorry, we don’t have that money anymore. You’re going to have to chase it in the federal system.'”

    “The consequence of that is people are forever without their money, even if, ultimately, their case is dismissed or they’re found not guilty or otherwise their case goes away. The federal government can still keep that money.”

    To get forfeited money from federal authorities is also a costly process–one that most average people cannot afford.

    https://myfox8.com/news/north-carolina-police-department-ordered-to-pay-man-back-after-forfeiting-seized-money-through-controversial-process/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 20, 2021, 02:38:03 PM
    "Qualified immunity" once again.

    5th Circuit Grants Qualified Immunity to Cops Who Ignited a Suicidal, Gasoline-Drenched Man by Tasing Him

    Gabriel Eduardo Olivas doused himself with gasoline, but it was the cops who set him on fire. They were there to help him.

    Last week the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled that Jeremias Guadarrama and Ebony Jefferson, the Arlington, Texas, police officers who fired Tasers at Olivas, igniting him and burning his house down, are protected by qualified immunity, a court-invented doctrine that shields government officials from federal civil rights claims unless their alleged misconduct violated "clearly established" law. While Olivas' family argued that Guadarrama and Jefferson used excessive force, a unanimous 5th Circuit panel concluded that their actions were reasonable in the circumstances.

    On July 10, 2017, Olivas' son called 911 to report that his father was threatening to kill himself. According to the 5th Circuit's summary, Olivas' son also said his father was threatening to "burn down their house." That assertion contradicts the family's account, which the court was supposed to accept as true in determining whether the officers deserved qualified immunity. The family maintains that Olivas "did not threaten to harm his wife, his son, or anyone else in his home."

    Upon entering the house, Guadarrama smelled gasoline. Olivas' wife, Selina Marie Ramirez, directed Guadarrama, Jefferson, and Officer Caleb Elliott to a bedroom, where they found Olivas "leaning against a wall and holding a red gas can." According to the family's account—which, again, the 5th Circuit was supposed to accept as true in the context of this ruling—Elliott shouted to the other officers, "If we tase him, he is going to light on fire!" Elliott discharged pepper spray in Olivas' face, which temporarily blinded him.

    Around the same time, Olivas poured gasoline over himself. According to the 5th Circuit, it is not clear whether that happened before or after Olivas was hit with the pepper spray. The court says Guadarrama and Elliott "noticed that Olivas was holding some object that appeared as though it might be a lighter." Guadarrama "fired his taser at the gasoline-soaked man, causing him to burst into flames." Jefferson also fired his Taser, although he initially denied that he had done so.

    "The fire spread from Olivas to the walls of the bedroom, and the house eventually burned to the ground," the 5th Circuit notes. Olivas was taken to a hospital, where he eventually died from his injuries. The officers thus precipitated the very outcome they were ostensibly trying to prevent.

    Alvarez sued the officers under 42 USC 1983, which allows people to seek damages when government officials violate their constitutional rights. She argued that using Tasers in these circumstances was clearly reckless and that the officers should instead have used other techniques to control the situation.

    https://reason.com/2021/02/18/5th-circuit-grants-qualified-immunity-to-cops-who-ignited-a-suicidal-gasoline-drenched-man-by-tasing-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 05, 2021, 12:44:22 PM
    An innocent woman's home destroyed by cops who as usual are hiding behind "immunity".

    They fired tear gas, blew out the garage door and destroyed the fence. The family's dog was also left deaf and blind from the explosions.

    A SWAT team destroyed a Texas home and refused to pay for the damage. Now the homeowner is fighting back.

    Last summer, Vicki Baker woke up one morning to every homeowner’s worst nightmare: the night before, a fugitive had taken refuge in her second home, and after a standoff, the police SWAT team used tear gas grenades, explosives and an armored vehicle to utterly destroy the home. They called it “shock and awe.”

    The incident left Vicki in shock, too. When the smoke cleared, the home—which her daughter was living in and which was under contract to sell—was uninhabitable. The only living thing that survived the raid was her daughter’s dog, which was left deaf and blind from the explosions.

    Vicki, who had recently moved to Montana to retire, was left holding the bill. The city of McKinney and her homeowner’s insurance company told her that police had “immunity” and wouldn’t pay for a dime of the damage. A few days later, the buyer walked away and the sale fell through.

    All told, Vicki spent more than $50,000 and months of time to repair her home. She ran up debt on her credit cards, and when those ran out, she had to withdraw funds from her retirement account to afford the repairs. When she finally sold the home this winter, it was for substantially less than before the raid.

    https://ij.org/press-release/after-a-swat-team-destroyed-a-texas-home-it-refused-to-pay-for-the-damage-now-the-homeowner-is-fighting-back/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2021, 09:24:55 AM
    The "finest" people.

    2 other cops in the same department were also sentenced on child pornography and abuse charges.

    Former officer accused of sexual abuse won't serve jail time

    A former Kentucky officer accused of sexually abusing a teenage girl 10 years ago in the Louisville Metro Police Department’s now-defunct Youth Explorer program won’t serve jail time.

    https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2021/mar/11/former-officer-accused-of-sexual-abuse-wont-serve-/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2021, 12:12:31 PM
    Digital Trails: How the FBI Is Identifying, Tracking and Rounding Up Dissidents

    Databit by databit, we are building our own electronic concentration camps.

    With every new smart piece of smart technology we acquire, every new app we download, every new photo or post we share online, we are making it that much easier for the government and its corporate partners to identify, track and eventually round us up.

    Saint or sinner, it doesn’t matter because we’re all being swept up into a massive digital data dragnet that does not distinguish between those who are innocent of wrongdoing, suspects, or criminals.

    This is what it means to live in a suspect society.

    The government’s efforts to round up those who took part in the Capitol riots shows exactly how vulnerable we all are to the menace of a surveillance state that aspires to a God-like awareness of our lives.

    Relying on selfies, social media posts, location data, geotagged photos, facial recognition, surveillance cameras and crowdsourcing, government agents are compiling a massive data trove on anyone and everyone who may have been anywhere in the vicinity of the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

    The amount of digital information is staggering: 15,000 hours of surveillance and body-worn camera footage; 1,600 electronic devices; 270,000 digital media tips; at least 140,000 photos and videos; and about 100,000 location pings for thousands of smartphones.

    And that’s just what we know.

    More than 300 individuals from 40 states have already been charged and another 280 arrested in connection with the events of January 6. As many as 500 others are still being hunted by government agents.

    Also included in this data roundup are individuals who may have had nothing to do with the riots but whose cell phone location data identified them as being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    Forget about being innocent until proven guilty.

    In a suspect society such as ours, the burden of proof has been flipped: now, you start off guilty and have to prove your innocence.

    For instance, you didn’t even have to be involved in the Capitol riots to qualify for a visit from the FBI: investigators have reportedly been tracking—and questioning—anyone whose cell phones connected to wi-fi or pinged cell phone towers near the Capitol. One man, who had gone out for a walk with his daughters only to end up stranded near the Capitol crowds, actually had FBI agents show up at his door days later. Using Google Maps, agents were able to pinpoint exactly where they were standing and for how long.

    All of the many creepy, calculating, invasive investigative and surveillance tools the government has acquired over the years are on full display right now in the FBI’s ongoing efforts to bring the rioters to “justice.”

    FBI agents are matching photos with drivers’ license pictures; tracking movements by way of license plate toll readers; and zooming in on physical identifying marks such as moles, scars and tattoos, as well as brands, logos and symbols on clothing and backpacks. They’re poring over hours of security and body camera footage; scouring social media posts; triangulating data from cellphone towers and WiFi signals; layering facial recognition software on top of that; and then cross-referencing footage with public social media posts.

    It’s not just the FBI on the hunt, however.

    They’ve enlisted the help of volunteer posses of private citizens, such as Deep State Dogs, to collaborate on the grunt work. As Dinah Voyles Pulver reports, once Deep State Dogs locates a person and confirms their identity, they put a package together with the person’s name, address, phone number and several images and send it to the FBI.

    According to USA Today, the FBI is relying on the American public and volunteer cybersleuths to help bolster its cases.

    This takes See Something, Say Something snitching programs to a whole new level.

    The lesson to be learned: Big Brother, Big Sister and all of their friends are watching you.

    They see your every move: what you read, how much you spend, where you go, with whom you interact, when you wake up in the morning, what you’re watching on television and reading on the internet.

    Every move you make is being monitored, mined for data, crunched, and tabulated in order to form a picture of who you are, what makes you tick, and how best to control you when and if it becomes necessary to bring you in line.

    Simply liking or sharing this article on Facebook, retweeting it on Twitter, or merely reading it or any other articles related to government wrongdoing, surveillance, police misconduct or civil liberties might be enough to get you categorized as a particular kind of person with particular kinds of interests that reflect a particular kind of mindset that might just lead you to engage in a particular kinds of activities and, therefore, puts you in the crosshairs of a government investigation as a potential troublemaker a.k.a. domestic extremist.

    Chances are, as the Washington Post reports, you have already been assigned a color-coded threat score—green, yellow or red—so police are forewarned about your potential inclination to be a troublemaker depending on whether you’ve had a career in the military, posted a comment perceived as threatening on Facebook, suffer from a particular medical condition, or know someone who knows someone who might have committed a crime.

    In other words, you might already be flagged as potentially anti-government in a government database somewhere—Main Core, for example—that identifies and tracks individuals who aren’t inclined to march in lockstep to the police state’s dictates.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/digital_trails_how_the_fbi_is_identifying_tracking_and_rounding_up_dissidents
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2021, 10:26:30 AM
    Court filing: Richland sheriff covered up school deputy preying on teens for 9 years

    Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott and internal investigators protected a deputy from 2010 to 2019 who they had reason to know was a sexual predator, lawyers in a civil suit alleged in a Wednesday court filing.

    Protecting the now-former deputy, Jamel Bradley, who was primarily a school resource officer, amounted to a cover-up to save the Richland County Sheriff’s Department from embarrassment and liability, according to the filings.

    Lott and Capt. John E. Ewing, the former deputy’s supervisor, “deliberately and systematically concealed Deputy Bradley’s predatory nature and concealed their own knowledge of his predatory nature,” the filing said.

    https://www.thestate.com/news/local/crime/article250233290.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 05, 2021, 01:58:50 PM
    "Qualified immunity" again. But this time it didn't work. Hopefully the criminal gang will rot in prison, not holding my breath though.

    Texas Federal Judge Tosses Qualified Immunity Defense in First Amendment Retaliation Case

    On Friday Sylvia Gonzalez—a retiree and former Castle Hills, Texas, councilmember thrown in jail for speaking out against her local government—got the news she has waited more than a year to hear. In a powerful ruling issued Friday afternoon, Judge David Alan Ezra dismissed the city’s motion to dismiss and ruled that her case alleging First Amendment retaliation against the city’s chief of police, the mayor, a detective, and the city itself can proceed.

    “I’m incredibly grateful to be able to proceed with my case,” said Sylvia Gonzalez, who is represented by IJ in her fight. “I’m glad that after all I’ve been through the truth will prevail.”

    This decision marks an early and important victory in the fight to vindicate Sylvia’s constitutional rights. Too often, government officials argue that a legal doctrine known as “qualified immunity” shields them from being held responsible for violating individual rights. Soon after Sylvia filed her lawsuit, the government defendants claimed immunity and argued that the case should be thrown out. Judge Ezra disagreed and ruled for Sylvia. Now, Sylvia and IJ can proceed and are looking forward to their day in court.

    Sylvia’s case started in May 2019, when she decided to run for a city council seat. As part of her campaign, she helped organize a non-binding petition calling on the council to remove the Castle Hills city manager from his position. This did not sit well with the mayor and the police chief, among others, who engineered a campaign to retaliate against Sylvia by removing her from office. When that failed, they engineered a plot to throw her in jail—nonsensically arguing that she tried to steal her own petition. Seventy-two years old at the time, Sylvia spent an entire day behind bars, forced to sit on a metal bench (and not allowed to stand), wear an orange shirt, and use a bathroom with no doors or opportunity for privacy. Her mugshot appeared on TV screens all over Castle Hills and San Antonio.

    When Sylvia sued, the defendants invoked qualified immunity—a doctrine that shields government employees from being held accountable, even when they violate individual rights. To overcome immunity, the victim must prove that a court has ruled that the exactly the same conduct was already ruled unconstitutional.

    But here, the court saw through the government’s attempt to hide behind qualified immunity. Judge Ezra ruled that the law is clearly established, and the government has more than fair warning that throwing someone in jail in retaliation for exercising their free speech is a violation of the First Amendment. The judge also ruled that the claims against the city must move forward.

    “This decision is a remarkable victory for government accountability,” said Will Aronin, one of the IJ lawyers representing Sylvia in this case. “The judge ruled that Sylvia’s claims against every single defendant—including the city itself—can proceed. Now, Sylvia will finally get her day in court and we’re confident a jury will see the city’s actions for what they were—an unconstitutional attempt to punish her for exercising her constitutional rights.”

    Sylvia’s case is a part of IJ’s Project on Immunity and Accountability, which is dedicated to the principle that our Constitution is not an empty promise and must be enforced. In addition to Sylvia’s case, the Institute for Justice is litigating several other constitutional cases that arose in Texas: including one on behalf of a Vietnam veteran who was senselessly beaten by security guards at a veterans hospital in El Paso, Texas, and one on behalf of an innocent homeowner in McKinney, Texas, who was left holding a bill for more than $50,000 after a SWAT team destroyed her home in pursuit of a fugitive.

    https://ij.org/press-release/texas-federal-judge-tosses-qualified-immunity-defense-in-first-amendment-retaliation-case/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: IroNat on April 06, 2021, 04:25:09 AM
    Searched "Deep State Dogs".

    Nothing comes up.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 09, 2021, 09:36:02 AM
    DC Police Chief Says Teens Who Murdered UBER Driver Shouldn’t Be Prosecuted Because It ‘Won’t Bring Back The Lost Loved One’
    enVolve ^
    Posted on 4/9/2021, 12:31:11 PM by A.M. Smith

    Acting D.C. Police Chief Robert Contee III gave some disturbing answers to questions earlier this month regarding a recent crime that received national attention. Two teen girls carjacked an Uber-Eats driver, 66-year-old Mohammad Anwar and caused his death. The videos from the crime showed the brazen way in which the girls carjacked the driver and then sped off with him hanging from the car. When the car finally came to a stop, the man was flung onto the sidewalk where he lay dying. The girls did nothing to render aid but were more concerned with finding a cell phone (see our complete report below).

    Instead of deterrents to crimes, the DC police force is now acting as a protector of murderous thug teen criminals who should be tried as adults. Is this why teen carjackings have skyrocketed in DC? If there is no punishment for the crime, these teens will continue to carjack innocent people.

    (Excerpt) Read more at en-volve.com ...


     ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 10, 2021, 10:53:53 AM
    Now the gang members are attacking military personnel.

    Lawsuit claims Windsor police officers drew guns, pepper-sprayed uniformed Army officer during traffic stop

    Two Windsor police officers are facing a civil lawsuit that alleges they acted aggressively towards a minority, uniformed Army officer during a traffic stop.

    The lawsuit was filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for Eastern Virginia in Norfolk.

    Documents from the lawsuit claim officers Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker (the defendants) pulled over a newly-bought SUV for not having a rear license plate on December 5, 2020.

    They approached with guns pointed at the car, gave opposing instructions to a uniformed soldier behind the wheel, and then pepper-sprayed him -- all while threatening him with different charges and levels of violence for noncompliance.

    Nazario says once he was out of the vehicle, after being sprayed, the officers struck him multiple times, handcuffed him, and interrogated him.

    The documents say the officers ended up letting Nazario go after threatening to charge him with obstructing justice, eluding police, and assaulting a law enforcement officer (with the intent of derailing Nazario's military career).

    https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/local/lawsuit-claims-windsor-police-officers-drew-guns-pepper-sprayed-uniformed-army-officer-during-traffic-stop/291-713b97e3-a415-4b27-b11c-37620a9eb4ef

     
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2021, 12:34:16 PM
    Scum like him should be sent to death row or locked up for life.

    NYPD narcotics officer accused of lying about cases that led to unlawful arrests

    A former NYPD narcotics detective was arraigned Wednesday for allegedly making false statements in court proceedings and in court documents that led to multiple unlawful arrests.

    Authorities say Officer Joseph Franco, assigned to Manhattan South Narcotics Division, lied during three arrests for drug crimes that were made between February of 2017 and May of 2018.

    https://abc7ny.com/joseph-franco-nypd-officer-arrested-lying/5268628/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2021, 12:37:37 PM
    Maryland Becomes First State to Repeal Its Police Bill of Rights

    In 1974, Maryland became the first of around 20 states to establish a police bill of rights — laws that help shield officers from accountability by blocking civilian inquiries into misconduct on the force and erasing records of complaints filed against officers after a period of time. On Saturday, the Old Line State became the first to revoke such legislation, after Democratic lawmakers overrode Republican governor Larry Hogan’s veto of an expansive new police-reform bill.

    The new laws, which come amid a nationwide push toward law-enforcement reform in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd, are among some of the most significant criminal-justice changes in the U.S. to date. Measures in the bill include the mandatory use of body cameras, the establishment of a civilian role in police discipline, and a restriction on the use of no-knock warrants. One of its most important aspects involves an increased standard for use of force, requiring officers to first use de-escalation tactics. According to the law, force, which must be “necessary and proportional,” can only be used to halt “an imminent threat of physical injury” or to “effectuate a legitimate law enforcement objective.” If an officer has been found to use excessive force, they can be subject to a criminal penalty. The training and use-of-force limits begin in July of next year, while body cameras will be statewide by July 2025.

    The police disciplinary process will also be opened up to civilians, by establishing local administrative charging committees, which can recommend what sort of internal discipline a cop should face. And while some reform advocates pushed for full civilian control on disciplinary matters, police chiefs cannot impose less severe punishments than what the committee recommends. Another new law, which was not vetoed by Governor Hogan, transfers the investigations of police-involved deaths from local law enforcement to an independent office run by the state attorney general.

    The laws enacted this weekend also include a bill enabling the release of disciplinary records; previously, Maryland was one of around 20 states in which the public was blocked from seeing an officer’s history of complaints or punishments for misconduct.

    https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/04/maryland-becomes-first-state-to-repeal-police-bill-of-rights.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 12, 2021, 12:44:33 PM
    Indiana Constitutional Carry Bill Killed Due to Police Police Orgs’ Opposition

    State Rep. Ben Smaltz, R-Auburn, is puzzling over the failure of his gun-rights bill in the Indiana Senate this week.

    Smaltz’s “lawful carry” bill sought to allow law-abiding Hoosier adults to carry handguns without the need to obtain state permits.
    It passed the Indiana House of Representatives by a 65-31 vote on Feb. 22.
     
    Twenty-one of the 50 state senators had signed as co-sponsors of the bill, including both state senators who represent DeKalb County, Sue Glick, R-LaGrange, and Dennis Kruse, R-Auburn.

    His bill almost certainly would have passed in the Senate if it had been allowed to come to a vote, Smaltz said Friday.

    Instead, two Senate leaders of Smaltz’s own Republican Party blocked the bill by refusing to give it a committee hearing.

    Smaltz called the outcome “very disappointing.” He added, “The support was there. … Despite what was really trying to be done for the lawful good guy, decisions were made contrary to that.”

    Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray halted the bill because of opposition from the Indiana State Police superintendent, the state police chiefs association and the Indiana Fraternal Order of Police, he told the Associated Press.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/indiana-constitutional-carry-killed-due-to-police-police-orgs-opposition/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2021, 09:57:22 AM
    Criminal gangs.

    Ex-L.A. Sheriff’s Deputy Sentenced to Seven Years in Federal Prison for Leading $2 Million Armed Robbery of Marijuana Warehouse

    A former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy was sentenced today to 84 months in federal prison for orchestrating and leading a $2 million armed robbery – staged as a legitimate law enforcement search – at a downtown Los Angeles warehouse where more than half a ton of marijuana and over $600,000 in cash was stolen.

    Marc Antrim, 43, of South El Monte, who formerly was assigned to the LASD station in Temple City, was sentenced by United States District Judge Virginia A. Phillips, who said, “the seriousness of the crime could not be overstated.” The heist, which “sounded like a movie script,” was “tragic” for the victims and eroded “the public’s trust (in law enforcement),” the judge said.

    Antrim pleaded guilty in March 2019 to a five-count information charging him with conspiracy to distribute marijuana, possession with intent to distribute marijuana, conspiracy to deprive rights under color of law, deprivation of rights under color of law, and brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.

    During the early morning hours of October 29, 2018, Antrim and his co-conspirators dressed as armed LASD deputies and approached the warehouse in an LASD Ford Explorer. Upon arrival, Antrim flashed his LASD badge and a fake search warrant to the security guards to gain entry to the warehouse. To perpetuate the ruse that they were legitimate law enforcement officers, Antrim and two fake deputies sported LASD clothing, wore duty belts, and carried firearms. One fake deputy also visibly carried a long gun to further intimidate the guards into submission.

    At the beginning of the two-hour robbery, Antrim and his co-conspirators detained the three warehouse security guards in the cage of the LASD Ford Explorer. Soon after the guards were detained, a fourth man arrived at the warehouse in a large rental truck, and all four men began loading marijuana into the truck.

    When Los Angeles Police Department officers legitimately responded to a call for service at the warehouse during the robbery, Antrim falsely told the LAPD officers that he was an LASD narcotics deputy conducting a legitimate search. To facilitate the sham, Antrim handed his phone to one of the LAPD officers so that the police officer could speak to someone on the phone claiming to be Antrim’s LASD sergeant. The individual on the phone was not Antrim’s sergeant, and Antrim did not have a legitimate search warrant for the warehouse.

    After LAPD officers left the warehouse, other co-conspirators arrived and the robbery continued, allowing the fake law enforcement crew to steal even more marijuana and two large safes containing over half a million dollars in cash.

    At the time of the robbery, Antrim was a patrol deputy assigned to the Temple City station, but he was not on duty, was not assigned to the department’s narcotics unit, was not a detective, and would not have had a legitimate reason to search a marijuana distribution warehouse in the City of Los Angeles.

    Prosecutors have secured six convictions in this case for the co-conspirators who took part in the raid alongside Antrim.

    Christopher Myung Kim, 31, of Walnut, a disgruntled former warehouse employee, is serving a 14-year federal prison sentence after being found guilty by a jury for his role in planning the heist and making off with $1.5 million in stolen marijuana after the raid. Antrim testified at Kim’s trial, which the judge credited as a significant reason to reduce Antrim’s sentence.

    Kevin McBride, 45, of Glendora, and Eric Rodriguez, 35, of Adelanto, are serving federal prison sentences of six and nine years, respectively, after pleading guilty to felony charges in this case. In a related case, Antrim’s other co-conspirators, Matthew James Perez, 44, of Ontario, Daniel Aguilera, 33, of Los Angeles, and Jay Colby Sanford, 43, of Pomona, are serving sentences of six years’ imprisonment, two years’ imprisonment, and five years’ probation, respectively.

    This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration; the FBI; and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. LASD’s Internal Criminal Investigations Bureau provided substantial assistance to the federal investigation.

    Assistant United States Attorney Lindsey Greer Dotson of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section and Assistant United States Attorney Joseph D. Axelrad of the Violent and Organized Crime Section prosecuted this case.

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-cdca/pr/ex-la-sheriff-s-deputy-sentenced-seven-years-federal-prison-leading-2-million-armed
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2021, 01:11:29 PM
    Government-run racket.

    Truck seized over 'munitions of war,' 5 forgotten bullets

    Gerardo Serrano ticked off the border crossing agents by taking some photos on his phone. So they took his pickup truck and held onto it for more than two years.

    Only after Serrano filed a federal lawsuit did he get back his Ford F-250. Now he wants the Supreme Court to step in and require a prompt court hearing as a matter of constitutional fairness whenever federal officials take someone's property under civil forfeiture law.

    The justices could consider his case when they meet privately on Friday.

    It's a corner of the larger forfeiture issue, when federal, state or local officials take someone's property, without ever having to prove that it has been used for illicit purposes.

    Since 2000, governments have acquired at least $68.8 billion in forfeited property, according to the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm that represents Serrano and tracks seizures. The group says the number "drastically underestimates forfeiture's true scope" because not all states provide data.

    Serrano's troubles stemmed from some pictures he took along the way of a long trip from his home in Tyner, Kentucky, to visit relatives, including a dying aunt, in Zaragosa, Mexico. The photo-taking attracted the attention of U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in Eagle Pass, Texas.

    When Serrano refused to hand over the password to his phone, the agents went through the 2014 silver pickup truck in great detail. They justified its seizure by saying they found "munitions of war" inside — five forgotten bullets, though no gun.

    Serrano, 62, initially took a gun, for which he has a permit, but a Mexican cousin warned him not to bring it into Mexico. He ditched the weapon, but forgot about the few bullets the agents eventually found.

    A one-time Republican candidate for Congress, Serrano recalled being surprised at his treatment at the border in September 2015.

    "I deleted the photos, but I'm not giving you my phone," Serrano said.

    Told to park the truck, he said, he complained a bit before one agent reached into the pickup, opened the door, unfastened Serrano's seat belt and yanked him out of the vehicle.

    "I got rights, I got constitutional rights and he snaps back at me, 'You don't have no rights here. I'm sick and tired of hearing about your rights.' That took me aback," Serrano said.

    He was handcuffed and held for several hours, refusing to unlock the phone or answer any questions. Eventually, he was told he could go, but without his truck.

    "I said, 'How am I going to get home?' There's this smirk I can't forget. 'We don't care how you get home,'" Serrano said.

    He left the border station on foot, called a relative who lived nearby and hung around the area for several weeks, hoping to reclaim the pickup truck. Serrano finally rented a car and returned home. He continued to make $673 monthly payments on the seized truck.

    Serrano might get some support from at least one justice. While an appeals court judge in New York, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote an opinion requiring New York City to hold prompt hearings when police seized cars. "It is this intermediate deprivation, lasting months or sometimes years without any prompt hearing before a neutral fact-finder, that we deem constitutionally infirm," Sotomayor wrote in 2002.

    The Supreme Court took up the issue of whether governments must hold a reasonably quick hearing following a seizure once before, in a case from Chicago in 2009. But the court dismissed the case because the seized vehicles all had been returned by the time the case was argued.

    The Biden administration is urging the court to reject the case, saying there was nothing wrong with the initial seizure of the pickup and arguing that Serrano's claims ended when the vehicle was returned to him.

    But Serrano's lawyers contend that the court should confront the issue because otherwise governments will continue to hold property for long periods and return it only to evade a judge's review.

    "The rampant due process violations associated with modern civil forfeiture warrant review," they said in a high-court filing.

    Serrano did get to see his aunt on the 2015 trip. Cousins drove across the border and took him to her. "When I went back home, three days later they called me and said she died," he said.

    https://www.stripes.com/news/us/truck-seized-over-munitions-of-war-five-forgotten-bullets-1.669391
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2021, 03:39:08 PM
    This must be another one of those "split second decisions" these "brave heroes" have to make every day while they "fear for their lives"....

    They fractured the arm of a 73 year old woman with dementia who weighed just 80 lbs... These uniformed thugs should be sent to the electric chair.


    Loveland police face federal civil rights lawsuit over arrest of 73-year-old woman

    A Loveland law office has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department over the arrest of a 73-year-old Loveland woman last summer that the woman’s attorney called “a nightmare.”

    According to a press release from attorney Sarah Schielke, the Life and Liberty Law Office filed the lawsuit and initiated the case Wednesday, alleging excessive use of force against the department and officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali and Sgt. Phil Metzler for the arrest of Karen Garner on June 26, 2020.

    The arrest left Garner with a fractured arm and dislocated shoulder, the suit says.

    As of 6 p.m. Wednesday, the Loveland Police Department had not provided an official comment on the case.

    The suit alleges that Garner, who is 5 feet tall and weighs 80 pounds, suffered a fractured upper arm and dislocated shoulder, along with other injuries.

    According to the suit, in the late afternoon of June 26, 2020, Hopp “violently assaulted Garner without provocation” as she was walking home from the east Loveland Walmart.

    The suit says Garner suffers from dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to communicate and understand. She had left the store at 1325 N. Denver Ave. without paying for $13.38 worth of items, according to the suit. Employees stopped her at the exit to retrieve the items but reportedly refused to let her pay for them.

    https://www.greeleytribune.com/2021/04/14/loveland-police-face-federal-civil-rights-lawsuit-over-arrest-of-73-year-old-woman/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Taffin on April 15, 2021, 03:59:51 PM

    F*ck ME that's awful, and seems totally outrageous

    And this bit choked me:  "The only living thing remaining inside was Deanna’s dog which was left deaf and blind from the explosions"

     :'( :'( :'(

    An innocent woman's home destroyed by cops who as usual are hiding behind "immunity".

    They fired tear gas, blew out the garage door and destroyed the fence. The family's dog was also left deaf and blind from the explosions.

    A SWAT team destroyed a Texas home and refused to pay for the damage. Now the homeowner is fighting back.

    Last summer, Vicki Baker woke up one morning to every homeowner’s worst nightmare: the night before, a fugitive had taken refuge in her second home, and after a standoff, the police SWAT team used tear gas grenades, explosives and an armored vehicle to utterly destroy the home. They called it “shock and awe.”

    The incident left Vicki in shock, too. When the smoke cleared, the home—which her daughter was living in and which was under contract to sell—was uninhabitable. The only living thing that survived the raid was her daughter’s dog, which was left deaf and blind from the explosions.

    Vicki, who had recently moved to Montana to retire, was left holding the bill. The city of McKinney and her homeowner’s insurance company told her that police had “immunity” and wouldn’t pay for a dime of the damage. A few days later, the buyer walked away and the sale fell through.

    All told, Vicki spent more than $50,000 and months of time to repair her home. She ran up debt on her credit cards, and when those ran out, she had to withdraw funds from her retirement account to afford the repairs. When she finally sold the home this winter, it was for substantially less than before the raid.

    https://ij.org/press-release/after-a-swat-team-destroyed-a-texas-home-it-refused-to-pay-for-the-damage-now-the-homeowner-is-fighting-back/


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 16, 2021, 12:07:46 PM
    Another cop gets a sweet plea deal. She was facing 40 years in prison but will get just 5 years.

    Former NYPD cop pleads guilty in alleged murder-for-hire plot to kill husband, boyfriend's daughter

    A former NYPD officer pleaded guilty Friday to an obstruction charge stemming from the murder-for-hire plot to kill her estranged husband and her boyfriend's teenaged daughter.

    Valerie Cincinelli paid her one-time boyfriend, John DiRubba, $7,000 to hire a hitman to kill estranged husband, Isaiah Carvalho, amid a bitter divorce and custody battle over their son.

    DiRubba went to the authorities when Cincinelli wanted to include DiRubba's 15-year-old daughter in the plot.

    "I deleted images on an iPhone with the Intent to obstruct a federal grand jury investigation into the murder for hire," Cincinelli said during the plea hearing. "I knew what I did was wrong, and I'm truly sorry, Your Honor."

    Had the case gone to trial, federal prosecutors said they would have introduced evidence that included audio and video recordings in which Cincinelli was overheard discussing the plot and an alibi.

    The defense hopes to get her released on bail while she awaits sentencing. Her plea agreement called for a sentence of about five years in prison.

    Federal prosecutors agreed not to ask for more than 60 months behind bars when she is sentenced on October 29.

    https://abc7ny.com/valerie-cincinelli-isaiah-carvalho-jr-murder-for-hire-former-nypd/10519130/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 22, 2021, 08:06:45 AM
    https://westchester.news12.com/former-police-officer-sentenced-for-selling-ghost-guns-to-outlaw-biker?fbclid=IwAR3jtlltHw5L3iKT5B-dFNEqpGwCzmU4lheJP1Mak-UHAsHg1iRNYmnsaEQ


     :o
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 22, 2021, 02:29:24 PM
    The police department and of course the police union tried to protect one of their own who now faces 33 charges including child sexual abuse and even rose up to be the the union's president.

    For years, the Boston Police kept a secret: the union president was an alleged child molester

    A Globe investigation has found that the Boston Police Department in 1995 filed a criminal complaint against him for sexual assault on a 12-year-old, and, even after the complaint was dropped, proceeded with an internal investigation that concluded that he likely committed a crime. Despite that finding, Rose kept his badge, remained on patrol for another 21 years, and rose to power in the union that represents patrol officers.

    Today Boston police are fighting to keep secret how the department handled the allegations against Rose, and what, if any, penalty he faced. Over the years, this horrific case has come full circle: The father who brought his daughter in last summer to report abuse by Rose was the boy allegedly abused at age 12 in the 1995 case. The department’s lack of administrative action back then may have left Rose free to offend again and again, from one generation to the next.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/04/10/metro/years-boston-police-kept-secret-union-president-was-an-alleged-child-molester/



    Boston Police Files on Ex-Officer's Child Sex Abuse Allegation Are Released

    Boston Police internal investigators found sufficient evidence in 1996 to support allegations that an officer sexually assaulted a minor, yet the officer remained on the force and was eventually returned to full duty, according to documents released Tuesday.

    The internal affairs file was ordered released by acting Mayor Kim Janey after The Boston Globe reported earlier this month that Patrick Rose, a retired officer and the one-time president of the Boston Patrolmen's Association, had been able to keep his badge despite a criminal complaint in 1995 for sexual assault on a 12-year-old child.

    The criminal complaint was eventually dropped, but the department's Internal Affairs Division concluded there was enough evidence to support the allegations, according to the documents. Then-Boston Police Commissioner Paul F. Evans was notified in a June 1996 memo of the results of the probe.

    Rose had been relieved of his weapon and placed on administrative duty, but was returned to full duty after an attorney for the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association wrote to the commissioner in October 1997 and threatened to file a grievance, according to the documents.

    Janey called it "deeply unsettling and entirely unacceptable" that Rose remained on the force for two decades and eventually became head of the police union.

    "What's more, Rose was allowed to have contact with young victims of sexual assault during the course of his career, and we now know that he allegedly went on to assault several other children," she said in an emailed statement. "His alleged behavior is disgusting, and the apparent lack of leadership shown by the department at the time is extremely troubling. This culture of secrecy cannot be tolerated."

    Rose now faces 33 charges involving six alleged victims. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyer says he maintains his innocence.

    https://www.nbcboston.com/news/local/boston-police-files-on-ex-officers-abuse-allegation-to-be-released-tuesday/2359558/



    Boston Police Commissioner knew of allegations against former officer Patrick Rose Sr., but patrolman was allowed to keep his job amid union pressure, internal documents show

    Even after Boston Police Department investigators informed then-Commissioner Paul F. Evans in 1996 that there was credible evidence supporting allegations that one of the department’s officers had sexually assaulted a child, that officer was allowed to keep his job, according to internal documents released by Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey.

    The officer, 66-year-old Patrick M. Rose Sr., has since been charged with molesting multiple children. The internal affairs documents released on Tuesday show that Boston Police Patrolman’s Association — the union Rose would later become president of — threatened to file a grievance on his behalf.

    The Boston Police Department had reassigned Rose to administrative duty and confiscated his weapon after the allegations were sustained by the internal affairs division of the department. He was allowed to stay on the force — often sent to respond to cases involving children, according to the Globe.

    Janey said it is “deeply unsettling and entirely unacceptable that Rose remained on the force for two decades,” enabling his ascent to the top of the police union.

    What’s more, Rose was allowed to have contact with young victims of sexual assault during the course of his career, and we now know that he allegedly went on to assault several other children,” Janey said, in a statement.

    https://www.masslive.com/boston/2021/04/boston-police-commissioner-knew-of-allegations-against-former-officer-patrick-rose-sr-but-patrolman-was-allowed-to-keep-his-job-amid-union-pressure-internal-documents-show.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 22, 2021, 04:24:30 PM
     >:(


    The police department and of course the police union tried to protect one of their own who now faces 33 charges including child sexual abuse and even rose up to be the the union's president.

    For years, the Boston Police kept a secret: the union president was an alleged child molester

    A Globe investigation has found that the Boston Police Department in 1995 filed a criminal complaint against him for sexual assault on a 12-year-old, and, even after the complaint was dropped, proceeded with an internal investigation that concluded that he likely committed a crime. Despite that finding, Rose kept his badge, remained on patrol for another 21 years, and rose to power in the union that represents patrol officers.

    Today Boston police are fighting to keep secret how the department handled the allegations against Rose, and what, if any, penalty he faced. Over the years, this horrific case has come full circle: The father who brought his daughter in last summer to report abuse by Rose was the boy allegedly abused at age 12 in the 1995 case. The department’s lack of administrative action back then may have left Rose free to offend again and again, from one generation to the next.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/04/10/metro/years-boston-police-kept-secret-union-president-was-an-alleged-child-molester/



    Boston Police Files on Ex-Officer's Child Sex Abuse Allegation Are Released

    Boston Police internal investigators found sufficient evidence in 1996 to support allegations that an officer sexually assaulted a minor, yet the officer remained on the force and was eventually returned to full duty, according to documents released Tuesday.

    The internal affairs file was ordered released by acting Mayor Kim Janey after The Boston Globe reported earlier this month that Patrick Rose, a retired officer and the one-time president of the Boston Patrolmen's Association, had been able to keep his badge despite a criminal complaint in 1995 for sexual assault on a 12-year-old child.

    The criminal complaint was eventually dropped, but the department's Internal Affairs Division concluded there was enough evidence to support the allegations, according to the documents. Then-Boston Police Commissioner Paul F. Evans was notified in a June 1996 memo of the results of the probe.

    Rose had been relieved of his weapon and placed on administrative duty, but was returned to full duty after an attorney for the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association wrote to the commissioner in October 1997 and threatened to file a grievance, according to the documents.

    Janey called it "deeply unsettling and entirely unacceptable" that Rose remained on the force for two decades and eventually became head of the police union.

    "What's more, Rose was allowed to have contact with young victims of sexual assault during the course of his career, and we now know that he allegedly went on to assault several other children," she said in an emailed statement. "His alleged behavior is disgusting, and the apparent lack of leadership shown by the department at the time is extremely troubling. This culture of secrecy cannot be tolerated."

    Rose now faces 33 charges involving six alleged victims. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyer says he maintains his innocence.

    https://www.nbcboston.com/news/local/boston-police-files-on-ex-officers-abuse-allegation-to-be-released-tuesday/2359558/



    Boston Police Commissioner knew of allegations against former officer Patrick Rose Sr., but patrolman was allowed to keep his job amid union pressure, internal documents show

    Even after Boston Police Department investigators informed then-Commissioner Paul F. Evans in 1996 that there was credible evidence supporting allegations that one of the department’s officers had sexually assaulted a child, that officer was allowed to keep his job, according to internal documents released by Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey.

    The officer, 66-year-old Patrick M. Rose Sr., has since been charged with molesting multiple children. The internal affairs documents released on Tuesday show that Boston Police Patrolman’s Association — the union Rose would later become president of — threatened to file a grievance on his behalf.

    The Boston Police Department had reassigned Rose to administrative duty and confiscated his weapon after the allegations were sustained by the internal affairs division of the department. He was allowed to stay on the force — often sent to respond to cases involving children, according to the Globe.

    Janey said it is “deeply unsettling and entirely unacceptable that Rose remained on the force for two decades,” enabling his ascent to the top of the police union.

    What’s more, Rose was allowed to have contact with young victims of sexual assault during the course of his career, and we now know that he allegedly went on to assault several other children,” Janey said, in a statement.

    https://www.masslive.com/boston/2021/04/boston-police-commissioner-knew-of-allegations-against-former-officer-patrick-rose-sr-but-patrolman-was-allowed-to-keep-his-job-amid-union-pressure-internal-documents-show.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 25, 2021, 08:04:51 PM
    This KY man was wrongly jailed for 14 months. Then they billed him for his stay.

    A Winchester factory worker spent 14 months locked in jail on child porn charges before prosecutors agreed to drop the case because repeated searches of his apartment and digital devices failed to turn up evidence against him.

    But as David Allen Jones finally walked free, his life in ruins, the Clark County Detention Center handed him a bill for $4,008. Citing a 2000 state law, the jail demanded that Jones help pay for the cost of his incarceration.

    On Wednesday, the Kentucky Supreme Court will be asked to decide if that’s constitutional. Jones is suing Clark County and its jailer, Frank Doyle, to ask that his bill be dismissed.

    Jones’ lawyers call the jail’s actions “an affront to the bedrock American principle that a citizen is presumed innocent until proven guilty.”

    “The government can’t punish people unless and until they are found guilty of the crimes they are alleged to have committed. Yet Kentucky counties have for years routinely kept the money they confiscate from persons on admission to their jails, allegedly to offset the costs of their confinement, after the charges against such persons have been dismissed or they have been acquitted,” Jones’ lawyers wrote in their briefs for the high court.

    So far, however, the justice system has mostly ruled against Jones. Last year, the Kentucky Court of Appeals said it was proper for jails to bill prisoners for their confinement even if they are never convicted of any crime.

    “The Constitution does not guarantee that only the guilty will be arrested,” U.S. District Judge Robert Wier wrote two years ago, dismissing a separate malicious prosecution lawsuit that Jones filed against Clark County, seeking damages from the episode.

    That second suit has since been reinstated by a federal appeals court and is now scheduled for trial in June.

    https://www.kentucky.com/news/politics-government/article250794574.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2021, 12:24:59 AM
    DC cop cars totaled after officers drag race in NE, says commander

    2 D.C. police cars were totaled after officers decided to drag race each other, according to an internal email obtained exclusively by FOX 5’s Lindsay Watts.

    "Yesterday two 6D scout cars were totaled because officers decided instead of fighting crime, patrolling their beats, or engaging the community – they decided to drag race each other on Anacostia Avenue at 5 pm in the evening," reads the email from 6D Commander Durriyyah Habeebullah.

    Sources say the email was sent to command staff following the crash Thursday.

    DC Police would not provide the incident report Sunday because the department only provides traffic reports through FOIA.

    Sources tell FOX 5 the officers involved, who are new to the department, started racing each other on Anacostia Ave. NE near Kenilworth Park & Aquatic Garden and reports indicate they were traveling at least 60 mph.

    https://www.fox29.com/news/dc-cop-cars-totaled-after-officers-drag-race-in-ne-says-commander
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2021, 02:37:38 PM
    This must be another one of those "split second decisions" these "brave heroes" have to make every day while they "fear for their lives"....

    They fractured the arm of a 73 year old woman with dementia who weighed just 80 lbs... These uniformed thugs should be sent to the electric chair.


    Loveland police face federal civil rights lawsuit over arrest of 73-year-old woman

    A Loveland law office has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department over the arrest of a 73-year-old Loveland woman last summer that the woman’s attorney called “a nightmare.”

    According to a press release from attorney Sarah Schielke, the Life and Liberty Law Office filed the lawsuit and initiated the case Wednesday, alleging excessive use of force against the department and officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali and Sgt. Phil Metzler for the arrest of Karen Garner on June 26, 2020.

    The arrest left Garner with a fractured arm and dislocated shoulder, the suit says.

    As of 6 p.m. Wednesday, the Loveland Police Department had not provided an official comment on the case.

    The suit alleges that Garner, who is 5 feet tall and weighs 80 pounds, suffered a fractured upper arm and dislocated shoulder, along with other injuries.

    According to the suit, in the late afternoon of June 26, 2020, Hopp “violently assaulted Garner without provocation” as she was walking home from the east Loveland Walmart.

    The suit says Garner suffers from dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to communicate and understand. She had left the store at 1325 N. Denver Ave. without paying for $13.38 worth of items, according to the suit. Employees stopped her at the exit to retrieve the items but reportedly refused to let her pay for them.

    https://www.greeleytribune.com/2021/04/14/loveland-police-face-federal-civil-rights-lawsuit-over-arrest-of-73-year-old-woman/




    Just when you thought it doesn't get any worse. The "brave heroes" celebrating the abuse of a frail 73 year old woman weighing just 80 lbs and laughing when they hearing her arm break.

     Life without parole or death penalty is the only way to deal with these sick violent criminals. But of course they haven't even been charged or arrested even though this happened almost 1 year ago and only now is there any information released.


    New information released on Karen Garner incident; officers seen laughing over her arrest in newly released video

    Officer Austin Hopp, the Loveland Police Department officer who arrested Karen Garner in 2020 can be seen laughing with other police officers in newly released video footage as he reviews body camera footage from her arrest - an arrest the has prompted a civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department and several of its employees.

    Early in the video, Blackett can be heard asking if Hopp read Garner her Miranda rights when arresting her.

    "Nope, I did not", he responds.

    Later in the released footage, the officers are seen re-watching Hopp's body camera footage together while laughing about the incident. As Hopp watches his body camera footage, he can be heard laughing and "celebrates" with Jalali and Blackett.

    In the video, Jalali can be heard saying that "bodycams are my favorite thing to watch". Just minutes later she can be seen pulling her hat down over her face saying "I hate this".

    "This is great", Hopp responds.

    "Ready for the pop? Hear the pop?" Hopp can be heard saying in the video in regards to the alleged dislocation of the 73 year old woman's shoulder.


    According to the release, during the first hour Garner was in custody she can be heard saying:
    "they hurt my shoulders" 22 times
    "they hurt my wrists" 13 times
    "they keep hurting" 8 times
    "it hurts" 8 times".

    Garner was allegedly not given any medical treatment while at the Loveland Police Department.

    https://www.reporterherald.com/2021/04/26/new-information-released-on-karen-garner-incident-officers-seen-laughing-over-her-arrest-in-newly-released-video/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2021, 02:34:40 AM
    Declassified FISA Opinion Shows More FBI Abuses

    The FBI Continued to Spy on Americans Without a Warrant.

    A FISA Court opinion and order declassified today reveals continued FBI abuses of “raw FISA-acquired information.” After a DOJ National Security Division review, the FISA Court noted “the FBI’s failure to properly apply its querying standard when searching Section 702-acquired information was more pervasive than was previously believed.”

    This opinion includes these findings:

    April 2019 - July 2019: An FBI technical information specialist was involved in “Compliance incidents” by conducting 124 queries of Section 702-acquired information on (1) Volunteers who had requested to participate in the FBI’s “Citizens Academy”; (2) Persons who needed to enter the field office to perform repairs; and (3) Persons who reported they were victims of a crime.

    August 2019 - October 2019: An FBI Task Force Office “conducted approximately 69 queries using names and identifiers of individuals…” The redactions keep secret the identity of the victims.

    Other Violations:

    One FBI intelligence analyst “conducted 110 queries for analytic paper.”

    Another analyst conducted improper queries for “ongoing vetting of confidential human sources” as well as “overly broad queries” and “mistakenly failed to opt out of querying against raw FISA-acquired information.”

    Judge James Boasberg, who presides over the FISA Court, found little issue with these abuses. In fact, Boasberg concluded:

    “[T]he Court is willing to again conclude that the improper queries described above do not undermine its prior determination that, with implementation of the documentation requirement, the FBI’s querying and minimization procedures meet statutory and Fourth Amendment requirements.”

    However, Boasberg then concludes that the government has reported numerous incidents involving searches of FISA information without warrants.

    In other words, the FBI is using FISA acquired information to investigate domestic crimes - not matters of foreign intelligence. These included investigations of “health-care fraud, transnational organized crime, violent gangs, domestic terrorism involving racially motivated violent extremists, as well as investigations relating to public corruption and bribery.”

    “Public corruption and bribery.” I highlight that last part because it means the FBI continued to improperly use FISA-acquired information to spy on government officials.

    As we previously reported, Boasberg declined to sentence former FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith to prison - not even a day - after Clinesmith altered a CIA email and lied about it to others within the FBI in furtherance of a Carter Page FISA renewal. The FISA heightened duty of candor doesn’t come with heightened punishments for violating that duty.

    After the latest revelations of abuse and unaccountability, perhaps it’s time for FBI Director Wray, Judge Boasberg, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to go.

    https://technofog.substack.com/p/declassified-fisa-opinion-shows-more
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2021, 04:49:39 PM

    This guy seems to have quite a history: several accusations of racketeering, theft, retaliating against people who sued him, shooting a woman in the abdomen while "practicing police tactics", arresting the wife of a man who was also running for sheriff over emails she sent.

    5 stars and stripes... He must think he is a Field Marshall.

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/news-daily.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/88/b88cef2a-0f27-5817-8f90-6ef21a342181/5c9d19b524eb8.image.jpg?resize=387%2C407)

    And here he is without with any of the stars while being booked in jail:

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/04/27/22/42289306-9517495-image-a-7_1619558120714.jpg)

    Let's see if he'll be treated the same way he treated others.
     

    Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill indicted for alleged civil rights abuses

    A federal grand jury indicted Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill for alleged civil rights abuses to detainees in Clayton County Jail.

    Hill faces four counts of deprivation of federally protected rights.

    FOX 5's Aungelique Proctor has learned the indictment cites the sheriff's office's use of restraint chairs against four inmates. The indictment also alleges the sheriff ordered his employees to use excessive force at the jail last year.

    "The indictment alleges specifically, that without justification, Hill ordered his employees to strap his detainees into a restraint chair and keep them there for hours in violation of their constitutional rights," said Kurt R. Erskine, acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia.

    Erskine said Hill deprived the detainees of due process because the force was so excessive it amounted to punishment. Erskine said each charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison if it is found beyond a reasonable doubt that the use of force caused pain and bodily injury.

    "Badges and guns don’t come with the authority to ignore the Constitution," said Christopher Macrae, FBI Special Agent in Charge. "They come with the responsibility to protect it from anyone who would violate it, especially another public servant."

    Erskine said the federal investigation is still open.

    https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/clayton-county-sheriff-victor-hill-indicted-for-alleged-civil-rights-violations
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 05, 2021, 04:18:18 PM
    Your car is spying on you, and a CBP contract shows the risks
    A “vehicle forensics kit” can reveal where you’ve driven, what doors you opened, and who your friends are.


    U.S. Customs and Border Protection purchased technology that vacuums up reams of personal information stored inside cars, according to a federal contract reviewed by The Intercept, illustrating the serious risks in connecting your vehicle and your smartphone.

    According to statements by Berla’s own founder, part of the draw of vacuuming data out of cars is that so many drivers are oblivious to the fact that their cars are generating so much data in the first place, often including extremely sensitive information inadvertently synced from smartphones.

    Indeed, MSAB marketing materials promise cops access to a vast array of sensitive personal information quietly stored in the infotainment consoles and various other computers used by modern vehicles — a tapestry of personal details akin to what CBP might get when cracking into one’s personal phone. MSAB claims that this data can include “Recent destinations, favorite locations, call logs, contact lists, SMS messages, emails, pictures, videos, social media feeds, and the navigation history of everywhere the vehicle has been.” MSAB even touts the ability to retrieve deleted data, divine “future plan,” and “Identify known associates and establish communication patterns between them.”

    The kit, MSAB says, also has the ability to discover specific events that most car owners are probably unaware are even recorded, like “when and where a vehicle’s lights are turned on, and which doors are opened and closed at specific locations” as well as “gear shifts, odometer reads, ignition cycles, speed logs, and more.” This car-based surveillance, in other words, goes many miles beyond the car itself.

    iVe is compatible with over two dozen makes of vehicle and is rapidly expanding its acquisition and decoding capabilities, according to MSAB.

    MSAB spokesperson Carolen Ytander declined to comment on the privacy and civil liberties risks posed by iVe. When asked if the company maintains any guidelines on use of its technology, they said the company “does not set customer policy or governance on usage.”

    The people behind CBP’s new tool are well aware that they are preying on consumer ignorance. In a podcast appearance first reported by NBC News last summer, Berla founder Ben LeMere remarked, “People rent cars and go do things with them and don’t even think about the places they are going and what the car records.” In a 2015 appearance on the podcast “The Forensic Lunch,” LeMere told the show’s hosts how the company uses exactly this accidental-transfer scenario in its trainings: “Your phone died, you’re gonna get in the car, plug it in, and there’s going to be this nice convenient USB port for you. When you plug it into this USB port, it’s going to charge your phone, absolutely. And as soon as it powers up, it’s going to start sucking all your data down into the car.”

    In the same podcast, LeMere also recounted the company pulling data from a car rented at BWI Marshall Airport outside Washington, D.C.:

    “We had a Ford Explorer … we pulled the system out, and we recovered 70 phones that had been connected to it. All of their call logs, their contacts and their SMS history, as well as their music preferences, songs that were on their device, and some of their Facebook and Twitter things as well. … And it’s quite comical when you sit back and read some of the the text messages.”


    MSAB’s technology is doubly troubling in the hands of CBP, an agency with a powerful exception from the Fourth Amendment and a historical tendency toward aggressive surveillance and repressive tactics. The agency recently used drones to monitor protests against the police murder of George Floyd and routinely conducts warrantless searches of electronic devices at or near the border.

    https://theintercept.com/2021/05/03/car-surveillance-berla-msab-cbp/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 11, 2021, 11:16:05 AM
    The FBI Seized Heirlooms, Coins, and Cash From Hundreds of Safe Deposit Boxes in Beverly Hills, Despite Knowing 'Some' Belonged to 'Honest Citizens'
    https://reason.com ^ | ERIC BOEHM | 5.10.2021 10:15 AM
    Posted on 5/11/2021, 1:53:07

    Victims of the FBI's constitutionally dubious raid say they've been told to come forward and identify themselves if they want their stuff back.

    Dagny discovered that the FBI had seized the contents of her safe deposit box—about $100,000 in gold and silver coins, some family heirlooms like a diamond necklace inherited from her late grandmother, and an engagement ring she'd promised to pass down to her daughter—almost by accident.

    She'd been asked by a friend to recommend a convenient and secure location for keeping some valuables. Dagny searched Yelp to find the phone number for U.S. Private Vaults, a Beverly Hills facility where she'd rented a safe deposit box since 2017. That's when she saw the bad news.

    "Permanently closed."

    After a brief moment of panic, some phone calls, and several days, Dagny and her husband Howard (pseudonyms used at their request to maintain privacy during ongoing legal proceedings) figured out what happened. On March 22, the FBI had raided U.S. Private Vaults. The federal agents were armed with a warrant allowing them to seize property belonging to the company as part of a criminal investigation—and even though the warrant explicitly exempted the safe deposit boxes in the company's vaults, they were taken too. More than 800 were seized.

    Howard tells Reason there was no attempt made by the FBI to contact him, his wife, or their heirs—despite the fact that contact information was taped to the top of their box. Six weeks later, the couple is still waiting for their property to be returned. (Both individuals are supporters of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website.)

    The FBI and federal prosecutors have "no authority to continue holding the possessions of some 800 bystanders who are not alleged to have been involved in whatever USPV may have done wrong," Benjamin Gluck, a California attorney who is representing several of the people caught up in the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults, tells Reason.

    Legal efforts to force the FBI to return the items seized during the March 22 raid have so far been unsuccessful, but at least five lawsuits are pending in federal court.

    A federal grand jury indicted U.S. Private Vaults (USPV) on counts of conspiracy to distribute drugs, launder money, and avoid mandatory deposit reporting requirements.

    In legal filings, federal prosecutors have admitted that "some" of the company's customers were "honest citizens," but contend that "the majority of the box-holders are criminals who used USPV's anonymity to hide their ill-gotten wealth."

    Whatever the original motivation for the raid, the FBI's seizure of hundreds of safe deposit boxes held by U.S. Private Vaults raises serious Fourth and Fifth Amendment issues. In order to have the contents of their boxes returned, federal authorities are asking owners to come forward, identify themselves, and describe their possessions. Some owners may be unwilling to do that—U.S. Private Vaults allowed anonymous rentals of safe-deposit boxes—while others may rightfully object to being subjected to the scrutiny of federal law enforcement when they have done nothing wrong.

    "The constitution does not abide guilt by association," argues Robert Frommer, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm, in an op-ed published by The Orange County Register.

    "What the government has done here is completely backward," writes Frommer. "The government cannot search every apartment in a building because the landlord is involved in a crime. After all, when somebody rents an apartment, that apartment is theirs."

    Indeed, the unsealed warrant authorizing the raid of U.S. Private Vaults granted the FBI permission to seize the business's computers, money counters, security cameras, and "nests" of safe deposit boxes—the large steel frames that effectively act as bookshelves for the boxes themselves.

    Importantly, the warrant "does not authorize a criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safe-deposit boxes," according to a copy of the warrant contained in court filings. The warrant also states that it "authorize the seizure of the nests of the boxes themselves, not their contents."

    But the FBI's own policies seem to have allowed a roundabout legal rationale for seizing the boxes as well. Agents are required to take into custody any property that could otherwise be stolen or left "in a dangerous manner" after carrying out a warrant. To put it in the context of a simpler situation: If the FBI seized a truck carrying cargo, it would not simply dump the cargo on the side of the road. Instead, there is a specific procedure for law enforcement to follow, which involves identifying and notifying rightful property owners, as well as securing the property.

    In court filings, however, Gluck and other attorneys representing anonymous plaintiffs argue that the seizure of the nests "does not appear to be the government's true purpose here."

    "A reasonable person could easily conclude that taking and searching the contents of the boxes was the true purpose of the USPV seizure, not just an unintended but unavoidable byproduct as the government seeks to portray and justify it," they write.

    Now that the FBI has nearly 1,000 safe deposit boxes in its custody, anyone who comes forward to identify themselves and claim their possessions risks becoming the target of a criminal investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California told the Los Angeles Daily Journal, a legal industry publication, last month that "each box is being considered on a case-by-case basis, and we will investigate the boxes, or claims made on them" to determine if "the contents are related to criminal activity."

    Attorneys for the plaintiffs argue that this amounts to an admission that prosecutors intend "to use any information gleaned in the claims process in order to conduct criminal investigations." U.S. Private Vaults had assured its customers that their anonymity would be protected, and people could have valid, non-criminal reasons for wanting to keep their identities a secret.

    The rights violations are bad enough, but the FBI raid seems to have had serious procedural shortcomings as well. One 80-year-old woman represented by Gluck—and identified in court documents only as "Linda R."—may have lost a significant portion of her life savings due to what legal filings say are shoddy inventories of the safe deposit boxes' contents.

    In a lawsuit filed on April 26, Linda R.'s attorneys argue that the FBI "failed to account for or return" 40 gold coins worth an estimated $75,000 that had been stored in a safe deposit box housed at U.S. Private Vaults. Department of Justice documentation detailing the contents of Linda's box makes note of "miscellaneous coins" without any specific amounts or other identification of the coins—Linda's attorneys note that the description could apply to everything from a pair of pennies to a box full of 1933 double eagle gold coins, some of the rarest and most valuable coins ever minted. For now, it remains unclear whether the government even possesses an accurate accounting of what was in her safe deposit box when it was seized.

    Despite the broad claims of criminality from prosecutors, Linda has been charged with no crimes but may have lost tens of thousands of dollars of her retirement savings anyway. Even if the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults eventually uncovers criminal activity relating to some of the safe-deposit boxes stored there, that hardly seems to justify the potential losses incurred by innocent bystanders like Linda, who kept her retirement savings there because she distrusted the banking system, according to court filings.

    "It was improper that the government seized these possessions in the first place, unconscionable that they are using them as hostages to pressure owners to divulge private information, and outrageous that they apparently treated the possessions so carelessly that they seem to have lost at least some of them," Gluck tells Reason.

    Jeffrey B. Isaacs, an attorney for another anonymous customer of U.S. Private Vaults—identified in court records as "James Poe"—tells the Los Angeles Times that the FBI's raid is "as illegal a search and seizure as I've ever seen."

    For Dagny and Howard, the situation seems particularly cruel. They'd rented the box at U.S. Private Vaults after having their home burgled several years ago. They have the key and rental agreement for the box—and, Howard notes, they paid for the box with a credit card, hardly the sort of thing you'd do if you were trying to hide your identity from the feds or engage in criminal conduct. None of that has made a difference so far.

    Because this time, the burglars wore badges.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2021, 11:29:51 AM
    The FBI Seized Heirlooms, Coins, and Cash From Hundreds of Safe Deposit Boxes in Beverly Hills, Despite Knowing 'Some' Belonged to 'Honest Citizens'
    https://reason.com ^ | ERIC BOEHM | 5.10.2021 10:15 AM
    Posted on 5/11/2021, 1:53:07

    Victims of the FBI's constitutionally dubious raid say they've been told to come forward and identify themselves if they want their stuff back.

    Dagny discovered that the FBI had seized the contents of her safe deposit box—about $100,000 in gold and silver coins, some family heirlooms like a diamond necklace inherited from her late grandmother, and an engagement ring she'd promised to pass down to her daughter—almost by accident.

    She'd been asked by a friend to recommend a convenient and secure location for keeping some valuables. Dagny searched Yelp to find the phone number for U.S. Private Vaults, a Beverly Hills facility where she'd rented a safe deposit box since 2017. That's when she saw the bad news.

    "Permanently closed."

    After a brief moment of panic, some phone calls, and several days, Dagny and her husband Howard (pseudonyms used at their request to maintain privacy during ongoing legal proceedings) figured out what happened. On March 22, the FBI had raided U.S. Private Vaults. The federal agents were armed with a warrant allowing them to seize property belonging to the company as part of a criminal investigation—and even though the warrant explicitly exempted the safe deposit boxes in the company's vaults, they were taken too. More than 800 were seized.

    Howard tells Reason there was no attempt made by the FBI to contact him, his wife, or their heirs—despite the fact that contact information was taped to the top of their box. Six weeks later, the couple is still waiting for their property to be returned. (Both individuals are supporters of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website.)

    The FBI and federal prosecutors have "no authority to continue holding the possessions of some 800 bystanders who are not alleged to have been involved in whatever USPV may have done wrong," Benjamin Gluck, a California attorney who is representing several of the people caught up in the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults, tells Reason.

    Legal efforts to force the FBI to return the items seized during the March 22 raid have so far been unsuccessful, but at least five lawsuits are pending in federal court.

    A federal grand jury indicted U.S. Private Vaults (USPV) on counts of conspiracy to distribute drugs, launder money, and avoid mandatory deposit reporting requirements.

    In legal filings, federal prosecutors have admitted that "some" of the company's customers were "honest citizens," but contend that "the majority of the box-holders are criminals who used USPV's anonymity to hide their ill-gotten wealth."

    Whatever the original motivation for the raid, the FBI's seizure of hundreds of safe deposit boxes held by U.S. Private Vaults raises serious Fourth and Fifth Amendment issues. In order to have the contents of their boxes returned, federal authorities are asking owners to come forward, identify themselves, and describe their possessions. Some owners may be unwilling to do that—U.S. Private Vaults allowed anonymous rentals of safe-deposit boxes—while others may rightfully object to being subjected to the scrutiny of federal law enforcement when they have done nothing wrong.

    "The constitution does not abide guilt by association," argues Robert Frommer, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm, in an op-ed published by The Orange County Register.

    "What the government has done here is completely backward," writes Frommer. "The government cannot search every apartment in a building because the landlord is involved in a crime. After all, when somebody rents an apartment, that apartment is theirs."

    Indeed, the unsealed warrant authorizing the raid of U.S. Private Vaults granted the FBI permission to seize the business's computers, money counters, security cameras, and "nests" of safe deposit boxes—the large steel frames that effectively act as bookshelves for the boxes themselves.

    Importantly, the warrant "does not authorize a criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safe-deposit boxes," according to a copy of the warrant contained in court filings. The warrant also states that it "authorize the seizure of the nests of the boxes themselves, not their contents."

    But the FBI's own policies seem to have allowed a roundabout legal rationale for seizing the boxes as well. Agents are required to take into custody any property that could otherwise be stolen or left "in a dangerous manner" after carrying out a warrant. To put it in the context of a simpler situation: If the FBI seized a truck carrying cargo, it would not simply dump the cargo on the side of the road. Instead, there is a specific procedure for law enforcement to follow, which involves identifying and notifying rightful property owners, as well as securing the property.

    In court filings, however, Gluck and other attorneys representing anonymous plaintiffs argue that the seizure of the nests "does not appear to be the government's true purpose here."

    "A reasonable person could easily conclude that taking and searching the contents of the boxes was the true purpose of the USPV seizure, not just an unintended but unavoidable byproduct as the government seeks to portray and justify it," they write.

    Now that the FBI has nearly 1,000 safe deposit boxes in its custody, anyone who comes forward to identify themselves and claim their possessions risks becoming the target of a criminal investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California told the Los Angeles Daily Journal, a legal industry publication, last month that "each box is being considered on a case-by-case basis, and we will investigate the boxes, or claims made on them" to determine if "the contents are related to criminal activity."

    Attorneys for the plaintiffs argue that this amounts to an admission that prosecutors intend "to use any information gleaned in the claims process in order to conduct criminal investigations." U.S. Private Vaults had assured its customers that their anonymity would be protected, and people could have valid, non-criminal reasons for wanting to keep their identities a secret.

    The rights violations are bad enough, but the FBI raid seems to have had serious procedural shortcomings as well. One 80-year-old woman represented by Gluck—and identified in court documents only as "Linda R."—may have lost a significant portion of her life savings due to what legal filings say are shoddy inventories of the safe deposit boxes' contents.

    In a lawsuit filed on April 26, Linda R.'s attorneys argue that the FBI "failed to account for or return" 40 gold coins worth an estimated $75,000 that had been stored in a safe deposit box housed at U.S. Private Vaults. Department of Justice documentation detailing the contents of Linda's box makes note of "miscellaneous coins" without any specific amounts or other identification of the coins—Linda's attorneys note that the description could apply to everything from a pair of pennies to a box full of 1933 double eagle gold coins, some of the rarest and most valuable coins ever minted. For now, it remains unclear whether the government even possesses an accurate accounting of what was in her safe deposit box when it was seized.

    Despite the broad claims of criminality from prosecutors, Linda has been charged with no crimes but may have lost tens of thousands of dollars of her retirement savings anyway. Even if the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults eventually uncovers criminal activity relating to some of the safe-deposit boxes stored there, that hardly seems to justify the potential losses incurred by innocent bystanders like Linda, who kept her retirement savings there because she distrusted the banking system, according to court filings.

    "It was improper that the government seized these possessions in the first place, unconscionable that they are using them as hostages to pressure owners to divulge private information, and outrageous that they apparently treated the possessions so carelessly that they seem to have lost at least some of them," Gluck tells Reason.

    Jeffrey B. Isaacs, an attorney for another anonymous customer of U.S. Private Vaults—identified in court records as "James Poe"—tells the Los Angeles Times that the FBI's raid is "as illegal a search and seizure as I've ever seen."

    For Dagny and Howard, the situation seems particularly cruel. They'd rented the box at U.S. Private Vaults after having their home burgled several years ago. They have the key and rental agreement for the box—and, Howard notes, they paid for the box with a credit card, hardly the sort of thing you'd do if you were trying to hide your identity from the feds or engage in criminal conduct. None of that has made a difference so far.

    Because this time, the burglars wore badges.

    Gestapo tactics. These thugs don't give a fuck about the Constitution.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 12, 2021, 10:59:01 AM
    Even after being convicted for murder, a cop still gets paid vacation.

    Officer convicted of murder still gets paid in Alabama

    An Alabama police officer convicted of murder for shooting a suicidal man who was holding a gun to his own head has been taken off duty but will continue to be paid, the city of Huntsville said.

    Officer William Darby, who was initially placed on desk duty following the killing of Jeffrey Parker in 2018, can't continue working as an officer because of the conviction and went on leave Monday, city spokeswoman Lucy DeButy told news outlets.

    "This is the normal process until formal proceedings under the City of Huntsville’s personnel policies and procedures are complete,” she said in a statement. Darby was freed on $100,000 bond soon after the verdict on Friday.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/officer-convicted-murder-paid-alabama-77620115
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2021, 11:32:48 AM
    He was "caught on camera physically abusing a 2 year old child.  Miller punctured the child with an unknown object". Not only that but the accused cop works at the unit which is supposed to investigate exactly these types of crimes.


    GBI Arrests Savannah Police Department Detective in Child Abuse Investigation

    On Saturday, May 15, 2021, at approximately 9:23 p.m., the Georgia Bureau of Investigation was requested by the Savannah Police Department to assist with a child abuse investigation.

    The preliminary investigation reveals that while off duty, Savannah PD SVU Detective Vincent Miller, age 32, of Savannah, GA, was at a neighbor’s house when he was caught on camera physically abusing a 2 year old child.  Miller punctured the child with an unknown object.

    Miller was arrested and charged with one count of first degree Cruelty to Children.

    The investigation is active and ongoing.  Once the investigation is complete, it will be submitted to the Chatham County District Attorney’s Office for prosecution.

    https://gbi.georgia.gov/press-releases/2021-05-17/gbi-arrests-savannah-police-department-detective-child-abuse

    (https://kubrick.htvapps.com/htv-prod-media.s3.amazonaws.com/images/miller-vincent-john-jpg-1621265374.png?resize=660:*)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2021, 11:40:48 AM
    Despite these failures, police dogs are upheld as some infallible gold standard for detecting anything from drugs to guns to electronics.

    The Police Dog Who Cried Drugs at Every Traffic Stop

    Don't blame Karma. The police dog simply followed his training when he helped local agencies impound vehicles that sometimes belonged to innocent motorists in Republic, Washington, an old mining town near the Canadian border.

    As a drug detection dog, Karma kept his nose down and treated every suspect the same. Public records show that from the time he arrived in Republic in January 2018 until his handler took a leave of absence to campaign for public office in 2020, Karma gave an "alert" indicating the presence of drugs 100 percent of the time during roadside sniffs outside vehicles.

    Whether drivers actually possessed illegal narcotics made no difference. The government gained access to every vehicle that Karma ever sniffed. He essentially created automatic probable cause for searches and seizures, undercutting constitutional guarantees of due process.

    Similar patterns abound nationwide, suggesting that Karma's career was not unusual:

    Lex, a drug detection dog in Illinois, alerted for narcotics 93 percent of the time during roadside sniffs, but was wrong in more than 40 percent of cases.

    Sella, a drug detection dog in Florida, gave false alerts 53 percent of the time.

    Bono, a drug detection dog in Virginia, incorrectly indicated the presence of drugs 74 percent of the time.


    Despite the frequent errors, courts typically treat certified narcotics dogs as infallible, allowing law enforcement agencies to use them like blank permission slips to enter vehicles, open suitcases, and rummage through purses.

    The Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm, shows a financial motive for the snooping in its 2020 report, Policing for Profit. Local, state, and federal agencies have raked in more than $68.8 billion in proceeds since 2000 through a process called civil forfeiture.

    The money making scheme, which allows the government to seize and keep assets without a criminal conviction, often starts with a police search, which requires probable cause, which often comes with a K-9 sniff. Institute for Justice clients in Wyoming, Oklahoma, and elsewhere all lost cash and had to fight to get it back after police dogs gave false alerts outside their vehicles.


    Some handlers jokingly refer to their K-9 partners as "probable cause on four legs." But Wendy Farris, a real estate agent from Great Falls, Montana, did not laugh when Karma gave an alert outside her red Toyota Prius on August 17, 2018.

    Her ordeal, which led to a civil rights lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, started with a birthday party invitation. Farris promised her grandson that she would attend his celebration in Oregon, so she packed her car and hit the road.

    Rather than drive directly to the event, she made plans to visit a friend near Republic. While there, the friend's estranged daughter called for help, explaining that she was living on the streets in California and wanted to come home.

    Farris agreed to go with her friend on a rescue mission—more than 1,300 miles round trip with few breaks—leaving both women exhausted and sleep-deprived when they returned to Washington with the contrite daughter. Despite the fatigue, Farris remained determined to attend her grandson's party, so she got back in her car and headed south alone.

    Predictably, she almost immediately felt drowsy and decided to park in a safe spot and rest at the junction of U.S. Route 20 and state Route 21 in Republic. A Ferry County sheriff's deputy found Farris asleep behind the wheel and ordered her to submit to a field sobriety test. Farris, who had no prior arrests and doesn't drink, had not consumed any drugs or alcohol (which a blood test later confirmed) yet the deputy arrested her on suspicion of driving while intoxicated and called a K-9 unit to the scene.

    That's when Karma showed up with his handler, Loren Culp, who served as Republic's police chief until the city dissolved its department in November 2020. Culp led Karma on a leash around Farris' vehicle twice. Then Culp paused and pointed to a rear panel with the palm of his hand, and Karma sat down—his trained final response indicating the presence of drugs.

    The alert gave Culp and the deputy probable cause to impound the vehicle, while Karma got to chew on his favorite toy as a reward for his work. The only unhappy person at the scene was Farris, who knew her car contained no alcohol, drugs, drug residue, paraphernalia, or weapons. A search at the impound yard turned up $4,956 in cash but nothing illegal.

    Rather than release Farris and apologize, the county locked her up and held her over the weekend without charges.
    She eventually got her cash and vehicle back, but she missed her grandson's party. Instead of birthday cake and ice cream, she got jail food and a bill for hygiene supplies.

    Motorist Fares I. Said met a similar fate after an encounter with Karma. When a Washington State Patrol officer clocked Said going 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, the officer pulled him over. When Said acted "suspicious and evasive" in answering questions, the officer called Culp and asked for K-9 backup.

    Karma circled the Jeep and sat down. Based on the alert, the police impounded the vehicle. A search later produced "several $100 bills" but no drugs or paraphernalia. Said, who lived at the time in Lynnwood north of Seattle, was innocent but got stuck with impound fees and an eight-mile walk back to town.

    Social Media Darling

    Overall, the police found drugs in 29 percent of the vehicles that Karma flagged during his time in Republic. Other vehicles contained paraphernalia, bringing Karma's combined score to 64 percent.

    The result would be respectable (better than a coin toss!) if it were based on a random sample of vehicles. But the police do not work that way. When they deploy a drug dog at a traffic stop, they often have prior knowledge or suspicion that a search will produce something interesting.

    Many motorists in Republic made things easy for officers. One SUV driver admitted to using heroin and having needles in her vehicle. The owner of a Ford Expedition confessed to meth and marijuana use, and the arresting officer seized drug paraphernalia from the man's pockets prior to Karma's arrival on the scene.

    In nearly every case, officers had probable cause to conduct searches without a narcotics sniff. Yet Culp led Karma on a leash around the vehicles anyway, and then bragged on Facebook about the dog's uncanny ability to find drugs.

    "Once again Karma's nose knows where the drugs are," Culp wrote on his Facebook page following a November 2018 stop.

    What Culp failed to mention was that prior to Karma's involvement, the driver had led police on a chase, crashed his Toyota RAV4 at the Ferry County Fairgrounds and fled on foot—leaving his girlfriend behind. Search and seizure of the vehicle were inevitable even without Karma's nose.

    The real confirmation of the dog's detective skills would have come from walking around a drug-free vehicle and not giving a trained final response. Karma failed this test every time. When he had a chance to stop the impound of an innocent owner's vehicle, his success rate was zero percent.

    Born To Please

    False alerts, which create problems for people like Farris and Said, sometimes have nothing to do with a dog's nose. Brain scientist Federico Rossano, who studies animal communication with humans at the University of California, San Diego, says dogs have an innate sense of loyalty that can override their sense of smell.

    "The tendency of producing signals even when they detect nothing comes from the desire to please the human handler," he says.

    Essentially, intelligent animals pick up subtle cues from their handlers and respond. Rossano says the communication often occurs by accident without anyone being aware.

    Clever Hans, a horse celebrated in the early 1900s for his math ability, provides the most prominent example. The proud owner truly believed that Hans could solve arithmetic problems, but skeptics later proved that the horse merely was responding to facial expressions and body language from his human companion.

    A 2011 study from the University of California, Davis, shows how cues can influence drug detection dogs. When human handlers believed that narcotics were hidden in test areas, their canine partners were much more likely to indicate the presence of drugs—even when no drugs actually existed.

    Police participants did not like the implications. But rather than using the findings to improve their training techniques, they denounced the study and refused further cooperation.

    They preferred a 2014 study from Poland, which eliminated the potential for false positives. Rather than simulating real-world conditions, researchers ensured that every test included measurable quantities of narcotics.

    Participating dogs had no opportunity to sniff drug-free vehicles and communicate a lack of odor. The only correct answer was an indication for drugs. Karma could have aced such a test simply by sitting down every time. He would have looked like a prodigy, but a broken dial stuck on "alert" would have achieved the same result.


    Something like this might have happened with Karma. Culp reports on Facebook that his dog passed his training with "zero misses" in 2018 and again in 2019. Culp cites the perfect scores as evidence of Karma's skills, but law enforcement consultant Mary Cablk sees a red flag.

    "That's a problem," she says. "It shouldn't be like that."

    Cablk, who studies narcotics detection at Desert Research Institute in Nevada, says effective training must mimic real-world conditions as much as possible. If dogs have certain error rates in the field, they should have similar error rates in experimental environments.

    "In training if a dog is perfect and never misses, and never is recorded to make a mistake, then there are a couple of problems," Cablk says. "Either the training is not rigorous or the recordkeeping is bad."

    Courts tend to overlook the complexities when evaluating evidence from a dog sniff, but Cablk recently testified in a Utah case that put K-9 teams on alert. Rather than accepting all training programs as equal and infallible, a federal judge looked deeper and raised serious concerns about shortcuts in Utah.

    Other jurisdictions could benefit from this type of scrutiny, although increased oversight would not affect Culp and Karma. Both have moved on to new opportunities. After losing in 2020 as the Republican gubernatorial nominee, Culp filed paperwork to challenge Rep. Dan Newhouse to represent Washington's 4th Congressional District. Meanwhile, Karma moved to private security with Spokane-based Phoenix Protective Corporation.

    https://reason.com/2021/05/13/the-police-dog-who-cried-drugs-at-every-traffic-stop/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2021, 11:39:57 PM
    Amazon’s Ring is the largest civilian surveillance network the US has ever seen

    One in 10 US police departments can now access videos from millions of privately owned home security cameras without a warrant.

    In a 2020 letter to management, Max Eliaser, an Amazon software engineer, said Ring is “simply not compatible with a free society”. We should take his claim seriously.

    Ring video doorbells, Amazon’s signature home security product, pose a serious threat to a free and democratic society. Not only is Ring’s surveillance network spreading rapidly, it is extending the reach of law enforcement into private property and expanding the surveillance of everyday life. What’s more, once Ring users agree to release video content to law enforcement, there is no way to revoke access and few limitations on how that content can be used, stored, and with whom it can be shared.

    Ring is effectively building the largest corporate-owned, civilian-installed surveillance network that the US has ever seen. An estimated 400,000 Ring devices were sold in December 2019 alone, and that was before the across-the-board boom in online retail sales during the pandemic. Amazon is cagey about how many Ring cameras are active at any one point in time, but estimates drawn from Amazon’s sales data place yearly sales in the hundreds of millions. The always-on video surveillance network extends even further when you consider the millions of users on Ring’s affiliated crime reporting app, Neighbors, which allows people to upload content from Ring and non-Ring devices.

    Then there’s this: since Amazon bought Ring in 2018, it has brokered more than 1,800 partnerships with local law enforcement agencies, who can request recorded video content from Ring users without a warrant. That is, in as little as three years, Ring connected around one in 10 police departments across the US with the ability to access recorded content from millions of privately owned home security cameras. These partnerships are growing at an alarming rate.

    Data I’ve collected from Ring’s quarterly reported numbers shows that in the past year through the end of April 2021, law enforcement have placed more than 22,000 individual requests to access content captured and recorded on Ring cameras. Ring’s cloud-based infrastructure (supported by Amazon Web Services) makes it convenient for law enforcement agencies to place mass requests for access to recordings without a warrant. Because Ring cameras are owned by civilians, law enforcement are given a backdoor entry into private video recordings of people in residential and public space that would otherwise be protected under the fourth amendment. By partnering with Amazon, law enforcement circumvents these constitutional and statutory protections, as noted by the attorney Yesenia Flores. In doing so, Ring blurs the line between police work and civilian surveillance and turns your neighbor’s home security system into an informant. Except, unlike an informant, it’s always watching.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/may/18/amazon-ring-largest-civilian-surveillance-network-us
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2021, 12:25:53 PM
    Facial recognition, fake identities and digital surveillance tools: Inside the post office's covert internet operations program

    The post office’s law enforcement arm has faced intense congressional scrutiny in recent weeks over its Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP), which tracks social media posts of Americans and shares that information with other law enforcement agencies. Yet the program is much broader in scope than previously known and includes analysts who assume fake identities online, use sophisticated intelligence tools and employ facial recognition software, according to interviews and documents reviewed by Yahoo News.

    Among the tools used by the analysts is Clearview AI, a facial recognition software that scrapes images off public websites, a practice that has raised the ire of privacy advocates. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service uses Clearview’s facial recognition database of over 3 billion images from arrest photos collected from across social media “to help identify unknown targets in an investigation or locate additional social media accounts for known individuals,” according to materials reviewed by Yahoo News.

    Other tools employed by the Inspection Service include Zignal Labs’ software, which it uses to run keyword searches on social media event pages to identify potential threats from upcoming scheduled protests, according to Inspection Service documents. It also uses Nfusion, another software program, to create and maintain anonymous, untraceable email and social media accounts.

    The Inspection Service’s expansive surveillance program has raised concerns among lawmakers and privacy and civil liberties experts, and the use of sophisticated software tools raises even more questions.

    https://news.yahoo.com/facial-recognition-fake-identities-and-digital-surveillance-tools-inside-the-post-offices-covert-internet-operations-program-214234762.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2021, 12:03:52 AM
    This must be another one of those "split second decisions" these "brave heroes" have to make every day while they "fear for their lives"....

    They fractured the arm of a 73 year old woman with dementia who weighed just 80 lbs... These uniformed thugs should be sent to the electric chair.


    Loveland police face federal civil rights lawsuit over arrest of 73-year-old woman

    A Loveland law office has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department over the arrest of a 73-year-old Loveland woman last summer that the woman’s attorney called “a nightmare.”

    According to a press release from attorney Sarah Schielke, the Life and Liberty Law Office filed the lawsuit and initiated the case Wednesday, alleging excessive use of force against the department and officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali and Sgt. Phil Metzler for the arrest of Karen Garner on June 26, 2020.

    The arrest left Garner with a fractured arm and dislocated shoulder, the suit says.

    As of 6 p.m. Wednesday, the Loveland Police Department had not provided an official comment on the case.

    The suit alleges that Garner, who is 5 feet tall and weighs 80 pounds, suffered a fractured upper arm and dislocated shoulder, along with other injuries.

    According to the suit, in the late afternoon of June 26, 2020, Hopp “violently assaulted Garner without provocation” as she was walking home from the east Loveland Walmart.

    The suit says Garner suffers from dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to communicate and understand. She had left the store at 1325 N. Denver Ave. without paying for $13.38 worth of items, according to the suit. Employees stopped her at the exit to retrieve the items but reportedly refused to let her pay for them.

    https://www.greeleytribune.com/2021/04/14/loveland-police-face-federal-civil-rights-lawsuit-over-arrest-of-73-year-old-woman/




    Just when you thought it doesn't get any worse. The "brave heroes" celebrating the abuse of a frail 73 year old woman weighing just 80 lbs and laughing when they hearing her arm break.

     Life without parole or death penalty is the only way to deal with these sick violent criminals. But of course they haven't even been charged or arrested even though this happened almost 1 year ago and only now is there any information released.


    New information released on Karen Garner incident; officers seen laughing over her arrest in newly released video

    Officer Austin Hopp, the Loveland Police Department officer who arrested Karen Garner in 2020 can be seen laughing with other police officers in newly released video footage as he reviews body camera footage from her arrest - an arrest the has prompted a civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department and several of its employees.

    Early in the video, Blackett can be heard asking if Hopp read Garner her Miranda rights when arresting her.

    "Nope, I did not", he responds.

    Later in the released footage, the officers are seen re-watching Hopp's body camera footage together while laughing about the incident. As Hopp watches his body camera footage, he can be heard laughing and "celebrates" with Jalali and Blackett.

    In the video, Jalali can be heard saying that "bodycams are my favorite thing to watch". Just minutes later she can be seen pulling her hat down over her face saying "I hate this".

    "This is great", Hopp responds.

    "Ready for the pop? Hear the pop?" Hopp can be heard saying in the video in regards to the alleged dislocation of the 73 year old woman's shoulder.


    According to the release, during the first hour Garner was in custody she can be heard saying:
    "they hurt my shoulders" 22 times
    "they hurt my wrists" 13 times
    "they keep hurting" 8 times
    "it hurts" 8 times".

    Garner was allegedly not given any medical treatment while at the Loveland Police Department.

    https://www.reporterherald.com/2021/04/26/new-information-released-on-karen-garner-incident-officers-seen-laughing-over-her-arrest-in-newly-released-video/




    It took almost a year to charge these violent thugs... Quite certain they won't get their arms broken when they're arrested.

    Karen Garner Arrest: 2 Former Loveland Police Officers, Austin Hopp, Daria Jalali, Face Charges

    Two former Loveland police officers are facing charges relating to the arrest of Karen Garner last summer. Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali are facing charges related to the 73-year-old’s arrest in June 2020.

    Garner is living with dementia and experienced a broken arm, separated shoulder and sprained wrist during the arrest.

    Hopp is facing charges of felony assault, causing serious bodily injury, attempting to influence a public servant, and misconduct. Jalali is facing charges of failing to report use of force, failing to intervene and misconduct.

    Both Hopp and Jalali resigned April 30 along with officer Tyler Blackett, who was not charged.

    https://denver.cbslocal.com/2021/05/19/austin-hopp-daria-jalai-loveland-police/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on May 20, 2021, 11:20:02 AM
    And we know how hopeless, useless and fragile dementia patients are. Heck, we have one trying to run the country.

    (https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FFZiUL0O.jpg&f=1&nofb=1)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2021, 12:36:20 PM
    When stopping innocent motorists he would often turn off his body camera, plant drugs and then conveniently turn on the camera again after he "discovered" the drugs.

    Former deputy Zachary Wester convicted on drug planting charges, taken to jail in handcuffs

    (https://www.mypanhandle.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2020/12/wester.jpg?w=1280&h=720&crop=1) (https://heavy.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/zach-wester-feature-copy-e1563061446502.jpg?quality=65&strip=all&w=780)

    Nearly three years after former North Florida deputy Zachary Wester first faced suspicions that he secretly planted drugs on innocent motorists, jurors convicted him on numerous charges in the crooked cop case.

    A six-person jury on Tuesday split its decision, finding Wester guilty on 19 counts involving three of his alleged victims and not guilty on 48 other counts involving the other nine victims.

    The jury announced its decision after deliberating more than seven hours Monday and Tuesday. In all, Wester was convicted on charges of racketeering, official misconduct, fabricating evidence, false imprisonment and possession of controlled substances and drug paraphernalia.

    https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/local/2021/05/18/zachary-wester-verdict-update-trial-drug-planting-case-court-jury-guilty-not/5143472001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 21, 2021, 11:21:40 AM
    "I can't breathe".

    Apparently this only works for certain categories of people so don't expect any rioting, looting or "peaceful" protests.

    'You shouldn't be able to breathe,' officer tells man before he dies

    He repeatedly told deputies he could not breathe.

    But the deputies and police officers he struggled with taunted him until he died.

    An exclusive NewsChannel 5 investigation is raising questions about the death of William Jennette last May inside the Marshall County Jail in Lewisburg, Tennessee.

    His daughter has filed a lawsuit against the county, the city of Lewisburg and several officers for the "beating, suffocation and resultant death" of Jennette.

    Video obtained by NewsChannel 5 Investigates shows three Marshall County jailers called for police back-up on May 6 of last year after Jennette refused to get into a restraint chair.

    When Lewisburg Police Officer Christopher Stallings ran into the room, Jennette yelled that corrections officers were trying to kill him.

    Officers wrestled Jennette to the floor where he died minutes later.

    Jennette screamed for officers to get off his back. He was face down on the floor in handcuffs continuing to struggle.

    "Go get leg restraints before you do anything else, go get leg restraints," an officer said as officers were on Jennette's back.

    Seconds later, Jennette said for the first time he could not breathe.

    But a female officer was not sympathetic.

    "You shouldn't be able to breathe, you stupid bastard," she exclaimed.

    Officers stayed on Jennette's back and even bent his legs to his back, until finally one officer said be careful of suffocating him.

    "Easy, easy -- remember asphyxiation, guys."

    Another officer responded, "That's why I'm not on his lungs, to let him breathe."

    Jennette's last words were: "I'm good."

    But an officer with his knee on Jennette's back talked back to him.

    "No, you ain't good. You're going to lay right there for a f*****g minute," the officer said.

    The autopsy listed the cause of death as "acute combined drug intoxication" with meth in his system.

    But it also listed "asphyxia" as a "contributory cause of death" and ruled it a homicide.

    https://www.newschannel5.com/news/newschannel-5-investigates/you-shouldnt-be-able-to-breathe-officer-tells-man-before-he-dies

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 28, 2021, 04:07:48 PM
    Fired and rehired by the same department 6 times. Now he has been fired a 7th time.

    ‘I’ve lost count.’ Notorious Opa-locka police sergeant German Bosque fired for 7th time

    German Bosque, the Opa-locka police sergeant who became notorious for repeatedly getting fired and getting his job back, has been canned yet again.

    “I’ve lost count. I don’t know if it was the seventh or eighth time,” Bosque said when reached on Wednesday evening. “It’s a wrongful termination. Again, I’ll be getting my job back again.”

    It’s actually the seventh time Bosque has been fired in the nearly 28 years he’s worked for Opa-locka police. The Herald-Tribune found that of Bosque’s 40 internal affairs complaints, 16 of them were for battery or excessive force. He’s been arrested three times. Once, before he was a cop. Another time in Broward County and a third time in 2013 for his alleged actions while on duty against the youth counselor. He was acquitted or the cases were dropped all three times.

    In the most recent case, prosecutors said, Bosque in August 2011 punched the youth counselor after responding to a domestic dispute. Soon after, the man showed up at the police station to file a complaint. A dispatcher summoned Bosque, who was alleged to have grabbed the man’s cellphone, hurled it across the police lobby, pushed him up against the wall and handcuffed him.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/article251706088.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 04, 2021, 10:59:29 AM
    In Police State USA, even reading a news story is a suspicious activity.

    USA Today fights subpoena aimed at readers of Florida FBI shooting story

    Newspaper publisher Gannett is fighting an effort by the FBI to try to determine who read a specific USA Today story about a deadly shooting in February near Fort Lauderdale, Fla., that left two FBI agents dead and three wounded.

    The subpoena, served on Gannett in April, seeks information about who accessed the news article online during a 35-minute window starting just after 8 p.m. on the day of the shootings. The demand — signed by a senior FBI agent in Maryland — does not appear to ask for the names of those who read the story, if the news outlet has such information. Instead, the subpoena seeks internet addresses and mobile phone information that could lead to the identities of the readers.

    The information being sought “relates to a federal criminal investigation being conducted by the FBI,” the subpoena says.

    In a filing in U.S. District Court in Washington, lawyers for Gannett said the demand violates the First Amendment. They also complained that the FBI appears to have ignored the Justice Department’s policy for seeking information from the media.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/03/usa-today-subpeona-florida-shooting-491847
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2021, 05:08:27 AM
    https://dnyuz.com/2021/06/08/the-criminals-thought-the-devices-were-secure-but-the-seller-was-the-f-b-i

    Holy smokes. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 09, 2021, 10:37:53 AM
    Hitting and overturning the car of a pregnant woman while she was trying to find a safe spot to pull over. Another "brave hero".

    Woman files lawsuit hoping for policy change surrounding PIT maneuvers

    A Central Arkansas woman wants a policy change after she claims a State Police trooper negligently used a PIT maneuver, causing her car to overturn on the interstate.

    Several recent FOX 16 Investigates uncovered how troopers are using PIT maneuvers more often, sometimes leading to deadly wrecks.

    In July 2020 Nicole Harper was driving home on I-67/167 outside Jacksonville when Senior Cpl. Rodney Dunn clocked her speeding.

    Dunn says she fled, Harper clams she was trying to find a safe place to stop on a section of interstate that has a reduced shoulder. Dash camera video from Dunn’s patrol car showed Harper pulled into the right lane, slowed down, and turned on hazards.

    Less than 2 minutes after turning on his blue lights, Dunn performed a PIT maneuver, which caused Harper’s car to crash into the concrete median and flip.

    “In my head I was going to lose the baby,” said Harper, who was pregnant with her daughter at the time of the crash.

    Dunn’s body mic recorded him talking with Harper after the crash.

    “Why didn’t you stop?” Dunn questioned.

    “Because I didn’t feel it was safe,” Harper said.  Dunn responded, “well this is where you ended up.”

    Harper went on to say, “I thought it would be safe to wait until the exit.” Dunn said, “no ma’am, you pull over when law enforcement stops you.”

    The PIT happened less than a mile from where the next exit and where the interstate shoulder widens.

    In May Harper filed a lawsuit against Arkansas State Police, claiming the PIT maneuver was negligent and excessive use of force.

    The lawsuit points to the dash camera video, arguing it showed how Harper signaled she wanted to stop.

    “I feel like I had heard that’s what you do, you slow down, you put your flashers on and you drive to a safe place,” Harper explained.

    Turns out that’s textbook what to do according to State Police’s “Driver License Study Guide.” Under “What to do When You Are Stopped,” number 1 says to use, “emergency flashers to indicate to the officer that you are seeking a safe place to stop.”

    State Police turned down several requests for interviews about what happened in Harper’s case and about PITs in general. State Police Director Col. Bill Bryant sent a statement saying in every case it’s up to the driver to stop.

    https://www.fox16.com/news/investigates/fox-16-investigates-woman-files-lawsuit-hoping-for-policy-change-surrounding-pit-maneuvers/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 21, 2021, 06:49:33 AM
    The FBI’s Mafia-Style Justice: To Fight Crime, the FBI Sponsors 15 Crimes a Day
    THE RUTHERFORD INSTITUTE ^ | 06/20/2021 | John W. Whitehead & Nisha Whitehead
    Posted on 6/21/2021, 12:40:59 AM by SeekAndFind

    “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.”

    - Friedrich Nietzsche

    Almost every tyranny being perpetrated by the U.S. government against the citizenry - purportedly to keep us safe and the nation secure - has come about as a result of some threat manufactured in one way or another by our own government.



    Think about it.

    Cyberwarfare. Terrorism. Bio-chemical attacks. The nuclear arms race. Surveillance. The drug wars. Domestic extremism. The COVID-19 pandemic.

    In almost every instance, the U.S. government (often spearheaded by the FBI) has in its typical Machiavellian fashion sown the seeds of terror domestically and internationally in order to expand its own totalitarian powers.

    Who is the biggest black market buyer and stockpiler of cyberweapons (weaponized malware that can be used to hack into computer systems, spy on citizens, and destabilize vast computer networks)? The U.S. government.

    Who is the largest weapons manufacturer and exporter in the world, such that they are literally arming the world? The U.S. government.

    Which country has a history of secretly testing out dangerous weapons and technologies on its own citizens? The U.S. government.

    Which country has conducted secret experiments on an unsuspecting populace—citizens and noncitizens alike—making healthy people sick by spraying them with chemicals, injecting them with infectious diseases and exposing them to airborne toxins? The U.S. government.

    What country has a pattern and practice of entrapment that involves targeting vulnerable individuals, feeding them with the propaganda, know-how and weapons intended to turn them into terrorists, and then arresting them as part of an elaborately orchestrated counterterrorism sting? The U.S. government.

    Are you getting the picture yet?

    The U.S. government isn’t protecting us from terrorism.

    The U.S. government is creating the terror. It is, in fact, the source of the terror.

    Consider that this very same government has taken every bit of technology sold to us as being in our best interests—GPS devices, surveillance, nonlethal weapons, etc.—and used it against us, to track, control and trap us.

    So why is the government doing this? Money, power and total domination.

    We’re not dealing with a government that exists to serve its people, protect their liberties and ensure their happiness. Rather, these are the diabolical machinations of a make-works program carried out on an epic scale whose only purpose is to keep the powers-that-be permanently (and profitably) employed.

    Case in point: the FBI.

    The government’s henchmen have become the embodiment of how power, once acquired, can be so easily corrupted and abused. Indeed, far from being tough on crime, FBI agents are also among the nation’s most notorious lawbreakers.

    Whether the FBI is planting undercover agents in churches, synagogues and mosques; issuing fake emergency letters to gain access to Americans’ phone records; using intimidation tactics to silence Americans who are critical of the government, or persuading impressionable individuals to plot acts of terror and then entrapping them, the overall impression of the nation’s secret police force is that of a well-dressed thug, flexing its muscles and doing the boss’ dirty work.

    For example, this is the agency that used an undercover agent/informant to seek out and groom an impressionable young man, cultivating his friendship, gaining his sympathy, stoking his outrage over the injustices perpetrated by the U.S. government, then enlisting his help to blow up the Herald Square subway station. Despite the fact that Shahawar Matin Siraj ultimately refused to plant a bomb at the train station, he was arrested for conspiring to do so at the urging of his FBI informant and used to bolster the government’s track record in foiling terrorist plots. Of course, no mention was made of the part the government played in fabricating the plot, recruiting a would-be bomber, and setting him up to take the fall.

    This is the government’s answer to precrime: first, foster activism by stoking feelings of outrage and injustice by way of secret agents and informants; second, recruit activists to carry out a plot (secretly concocted by the government) to challenge what they see as government corruption; and finally, arrest those activists for conspiring against the government before they can actually commit a crime.

    It’s a diabolical plot with far-reaching consequences for every segment of the population, no matter what one’s political leanings.

    As Rozina Ali writes for The New York Times Magazine, “The government’s approach to counterterrorism erodes constitutional protections for everyone, by blurring the lines between speech and action and by broadening the scope of who is classified as a threat.”

    This is not an agency that appears to understand, let alone respect, the limits of the Constitution.

    Just recently, it was revealed that the FBI has been secretly carrying out an entrapment scheme in which it used a front company, ANOM, to sell purportedly hack-proof phones to organized crime syndicates and then used those phones to spy on them as they planned illegal drug shipments, plotted robberies and put out contracts for killings using those boobytrapped phones.

    All told, the FBI intercepted 27 million messages over the course of 18 months.

    What this means is that the FBI was also illegally spying on individuals using those encrypted phones who may not have been involved in any criminal activity whatsoever.

    Even reading a newspaper article is now enough to get you flagged for surveillance by the FBI. The agency served a subpoena on USA Today / Gannett to provide the internet addresses and mobile phone information for everyone who read a news story online on a particular day and time about the deadly shooting of FBI agents.

    This is the danger of allowing the government to carry out widespread surveillance, sting and entrapment operations using dubious tactics that sidestep the rule of law: “we the people” become suspects and potential criminals, while government agents, empowered to fight crime using all means at their disposal, become indistinguishable from the corrupt forces they seek to vanquish.

    To go after terrorists, they become terrorists. To go after drug smugglers, they become drug smugglers. To go after thieves, they become thieves.

    For instance, when the FBI raided a California business that was suspected of letting drug dealers anonymously stash guns, drugs and cash in its private vaults, agents seized the contents of all the safety deposit boxes and filed forfeiture motions to keep the contents, which include millions of dollars’ worth of valuables owned by individuals not accused of any crime whatsoever.

    It’s hard to say whether we’re dealing with a kleptocracy (a government ruled by thieves), a kakistocracy (a government run by unprincipled career politicians, corporations and thieves that panders to the worst vices in our nature and has little regard for the rights of American citizens), or if we’ve gone straight to an idiocracy.

    This certainly isn’t a constitutional democracy, however.

    Some days, it feels like the FBI is running its own crime syndicate complete with mob rule and mafia-style justice.

    In addition to creating certain crimes in order to then “solve” them, the FBI also gives certain informants permission to break the law, “including everything from buying and selling illegal drugs to bribing government officials and plotting robberies,” in exchange for their cooperation on other fronts.

    USA Today estimates that agents have authorized criminals to engage in as many as 15 crimes a day (5600 crimes a year). Some of these informants are getting paid astronomical sums: one particularly unsavory fellow, later arrested for attempting to run over a police officer, was actually paid $85,000 for his help laying the trap for an entrapment scheme.

    In a stunning development reported by The Washington Post, a probe into misconduct by an FBI agent resulted in the release of at least a dozen convicted drug dealers from prison.

    In addition to procedural misconduct, trespassing, enabling criminal activity, and damaging private property, the FBI’s laundry list of crimes against the American people includes surveillance, disinformation, blackmail, entrapment, intimidation tactics, and harassment.

    For example, the Associated Press lodged a complaint with the Dept. of Justice after learning that FBI agents created a fake AP news story and emailed it, along with a clickable link, to a bomb threat suspect in order to implant tracking technology onto his computer and identify his location. Lambasting the agency, AP attorney Karen Kaiser railed, “The FBI may have intended this false story as a trap for only one person. However, the individual could easily have reposted this story to social networks, distributing to thousands of people, under our name, what was essentially a piece of government disinformation.”

    Then again, to those familiar with COINTELPRO, an FBI program created to “disrupt, misdirect, discredit, and neutralize” groups and individuals the government considers politically objectionable, it should come as no surprise that the agency has mastered the art of government disinformation.

    The FBI has been particularly criticized in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks for targeting vulnerable individuals and not only luring them into fake terror plots but actually equipping them with the organization, money, weapons and motivation to carry out the plots—entrapment—and then jailing them for their so-called terrorist plotting. This is what the FBI characterizes as “forward leaning—preventative—prosecutions.”

    Another fallout from 9/11, National Security Letters, one of the many illicit powers authorized by the USA Patriot Act, allows the FBI to secretly demand that banks, phone companies, and other businesses provide them with customer information and not disclose the demands. An internal audit of the agency found that the FBI practice of issuing tens of thousands of NSLs every year for sensitive information such as phone and financial records, often in non-emergency cases, is riddled with widespread violations.

    The FBI’s surveillance capabilities, on a par with the National Security Agency, boast a nasty collection of spy tools ranging from Stingray devices that can track the location of cell phones to Triggerfish devices which allow agents to eavesdrop on phone calls.

    In one case, the FBI actually managed to remotely reprogram a “suspect’s” wireless internet card so that it would send “real-time cell-site location data to Verizon, which forwarded the data to the FBI.”

    The FBI has also repeatedly sought to expand its invasive hacking powers to allow agents to hack into any computer, anywhere in the world.

    Indeed, for years now, the U.S. government has been creating what one intelligence insider referred to as a cyber-army capable of offensive attacks. As Reuters reported back in 2013:

    Even as the U.S. government confronts rival powers over widespread Internet espionage, it has become the biggest buyer in a burgeoning gray market where hackers and security firms sell tools for breaking into computers. The strategy is spurring concern in the technology industry and intelligence community that Washington is in effect encouraging hacking and failing to disclose to software companies and customers the vulnerabilities exploited by the purchased hacks. That's because U.S. intelligence and military agencies aren't buying the tools primarily to fend off attacks. Rather, they are using the tools to infiltrate computer networks overseas, leaving behind spy programs and cyber-weapons that can disrupt data or damage systems.

    As part of this cyberweapons programs, government agencies such as the NSA have been stockpiling all kinds of nasty malware, viruses and hacking tools that can “steal financial account passwords, turn an iPhone into a listening device, or, in the case of Stuxnet, sabotage a nuclear facility.”

    In fact, the NSA was responsible for the threat posed by the “WannaCry” or “Wanna Decryptor” malware worm which—as a result of hackers accessing the government’s arsenal—hijacked more than 57,000 computers and crippled health care, communications infrastructure, logistics, and government entities in more than 70 countries.

    Mind you, the government was repeatedly warned about the dangers of using criminal tactics to wage its own cyberwars. It was warned about the consequences of blowback should its cyberweapons get into the wrong hands.

    The government chose to ignore the warnings.

    That’s exactly how the 9/11 attacks unfolded.

    First, the government helped to create the menace that was al-Qaida and then, when bin Laden had left the nation reeling in shock (despite countless warnings that fell on tone-deaf ears), it demanded—and was given—immense new powers in the form of the USA Patriot Act in order to fight the very danger it had created.

    This has become the shadow government’s modus operandi regardless of which party controls the White House: the government creates a menace—knowing full well the ramifications such a danger might pose to the public—then without ever owning up to the part it played in unleashing that particular menace on an unsuspecting populace, it demands additional powers in order to protect “we the people” from the threat.

    Yet the powers-that-be don’t really want us to feel safe.

    They want us cowering and afraid and willing to relinquish every last one of our freedoms in exchange for their phantom promises of security.

    As a result, it’s the American people who pay the price for the government’s insatiable greed and quest for power.

    We’re the ones to suffer the blowback.

    Blowback is a term originating from within the American Intelligence community, denoting the unintended consequences, unwanted side-effects, or suffered repercussions of a covert operation that fall back on those responsible for the aforementioned operations.

    As historian Chalmers Johnson explains, “blowback is another way of saying that a nation reaps what it sows.”

    Unfortunately, “we the people” are the ones who keep reaping what the government sows.

    We’re the ones who suffer every time, directly and indirectly, from the blowback.

    Suffice it to say that when and if a true history of the FBI is ever written, it will not only track the rise of the American police state but it will also chart the decline of freedom in America: how a nation that once abided by the rule of law and held the government accountable for its actions has steadily devolved into a police state where justice is one-sided, a corporate elite runs the show, representative government is a mockery, police are extensions of the military, surveillance is rampant, privacy is extinct, and the law is little more than a tool for the government to browbeat the people into compliance.

    This is how tyranny rises and freedom falls.

    We can persuade ourselves that life is still good, that America is still beautiful, and that “we the people” are still free. However, as science fiction writer Philip K. Dick warned, “Don’t believe what you see; it’s an enthralling—[and] destructive, evil snare. Under it is a totally different world, even placed differently along the linear axis.”

    In other words, as I point out Battlefield America: The War on the American People, all is not as it seems.

    The powers-that-be are not acting in our best interests.

    “We the people” are not free.

    The government is not our friend.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2021, 09:53:53 AM

    Supreme Court Restricts Police Powers To Enter A Home Without A Warrant

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that police cannot enter a home without a warrant when pursuing someone for a minor crime.

    By a unanimous vote, the court declared that police violated the rights of a California man by pursuing him into his garage for allegedly playing loud music while driving down a deserted two-lane highway late at night.

    Writing for the court majority, Justice Elena Kagan said police had no right to enter the man's home without a warrant for such a trivial offense.

    "On many occasions, the officer will have good reason to enter – to prevent imminent harms of violence, destruction of evidence, or escape from the home," she wrote. "But when the officer has time to get a warrant, he must do so – even though the misdemeanant fled."

    The court's ruling came in the case of Arthur Lange, who was playing loud music in his car late one night, at one point honking his horn several times. A California highway patrol officer, believing Lange was violating a noise ordinance, followed him, and when the motorist slowed to enter his driveway, the officer put on his flashing lights.

    Lange, who later said he didn't notice the police car, drove into his garage. The officer, in "hot pursuit," got out of his car and put his foot under the closing garage door sensor to force the door open again. He had no warrant to enter the home, but once inside, he said, he smelled liquor on Lange's breath and arrested him, not only for the noise violation, but also for driving under the influence.

    Lange appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, contending that the officer had no right to enter his home without a warrant and that the DUI evidence had been illegally obtained.

    The Supreme Court has long held that police may conduct a warrantless search when pursuing a fleeing felon. The question in Lange's case was whether police are free to do the same thing when pursuing someone suspected of a minor offense like playing loud music.

    https://www.npr.org/2021/06/23/999913516/supreme-court-restricts-police-powers-to-enter-a-home-without-a-warrant
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 23, 2021, 10:28:33 AM
    Man sues 7 L.A. County sheriff’s deputies, alleging he lost sight in one eye after vicious Inglewood beating

    A lawsuit against seven Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies accused them of beating a man dozens of times in the face, leaving him with broken bones and loss of sight in one eye, his attorneys announced Monday.

    Christopher Bailey has filed a civil rights lawsuit against the deputies and the Sheriff’s Department over the May 2020 beating in the Los Angeles suburb of Inglewood, he and his lawyers said at a press conference in Century City.

    Bailey was returning home from work as a mail-sorting contractor for the U.S. Postal Service when his car was pulled over at around 2 a.m. for allegedly straddling a lane.

    Attorneys for Bailey said he was attacked even though he complied with deputies’ orders, although a police report said he resisted arrest.

    “He sustained 64 to 86 total body and face hits. He was pummeled in the face approximately 35 to 44 times,” attorney Toni Jaramilla said during a news conference.

    Bailey lost teeth, suffered broken bones in his face and can’t see out of his left eye, Jaramilla said.

    Bailey was charged with three felony counts of resisting arrest but the charges were later dropped, his attorneys said. They want the deputies criminally charged.

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/man-sues-7-l-a-county-sheriffs-deputies-alleging-he-lost-sight-in-one-eye-after-vicious-inglewood-beating/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 24, 2021, 05:37:20 AM
    FBI tears innocent New Yorker’s life into shreds after Jan. 6
    New York Post ^ | June 23, 2021 | Miranda Devine
    Posted on 6/24/2021, 8:17:07 AM by karpov

    Joseph Bolanos was a pillar of his community. President of his Upper West Side block association for the past 23 years, he looked out for his neighbors during the pandemic. He dropped off masks and kept extra heaters in his rent-controlled apartment for seniors. He raised morale with a weekly street dance to show his support for essential workers.

    A Red Cross volunteer after the 9/11 attacks, the 69-year-old security consultant once received a police commendation for heroism after saving a woman from being mugged.

    Unmarried, and caring for his 94-year-old mother, he was a well-loved character in the quiet residential area.

    But now his neighbors think he is a domestic terrorist.

    Yes, he attended then-President Donald Trump’s rally in Washington, DC, on Jan. 6, but he never entered the Capitol. He was in a friend’s room at the JW Marriott a 30-minute walk away when the Capitol breach occurred.

    Nonetheless, he was raided in February by the FBI anti-terrorism task force, handcuffed, paraded and detained for three hours while his apartment was ransacked and all his devices confiscated. Four months later, he hasn’t been charged and doesn’t have his devices back, but his neighbors are shunning him, and he’s had two strokes from the stress.

    “It’s destroyed my reputation,” he says. “I’m not a violent invader . . . I do not condone the criminality and violence on [Jan. 6] whatsoever.”

    The FBI told Bolanos he was raided because of a tip to the Jan. 6 hotline from a neighbor who said he had overheard him “boasting” about being at the Capitol.

    An FBI agent phoned Bolanos the Sunday after the riot and left a message. He returned the call the next day, but never heard back.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on June 25, 2021, 12:58:33 AM
    FBI tears innocent New Yorker’s life into shreds after Jan. 6
    New York Post ^ | June 23, 2021 | Miranda Devine
    Posted on 6/24/2021, 8:17:07 AM by karpov

    Joseph Bolanos was a pillar of his community. President of his Upper West Side block association for the past 23 years, he looked out for his neighbors during the pandemic. He dropped off masks and kept extra heaters in his rent-controlled apartment for seniors. He raised morale with a weekly street dance to show his support for essential workers.

    A Red Cross volunteer after the 9/11 attacks, the 69-year-old security consultant once received a police commendation for heroism after saving a woman from being mugged.

    Unmarried, and caring for his 94-year-old mother, he was a well-loved character in the quiet residential area.

    But now his neighbors think he is a domestic terrorist.

    Yes, he attended then-President Donald Trump’s rally in Washington, DC, on Jan. 6, but he never entered the Capitol. He was in a friend’s room at the JW Marriott a 30-minute walk away when the Capitol breach occurred.

    Nonetheless, he was raided in February by the FBI anti-terrorism task force, handcuffed, paraded and detained for three hours while his apartment was ransacked and all his devices confiscated. Four months later, he hasn’t been charged and doesn’t have his devices back, but his neighbors are shunning him, and he’s had two strokes from the stress.

    “It’s destroyed my reputation,” he says. “I’m not a violent invader . . . I do not condone the criminality and violence on [Jan. 6] whatsoever.”

    The FBI told Bolanos he was raided because of a tip to the Jan. 6 hotline from a neighbor who said he had overheard him “boasting” about being at the Capitol.

    An FBI agent phoned Bolanos the Sunday after the riot and left a message. He returned the call the next day, but never heard back.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    I'm sure there's two sides to every story.  He sounds suspect to me.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2021, 01:54:12 PM
    Once again the killers will not pay a dime out of their pockets or face a single day in prison for killing a man in his home who "dared" to ask the uniformed thugs for a warrant. This particular thug didn't care much for warrants or laws as his violent history shows.

    As usual the killer resigned before he was fired and was then hired by another police agency.

    Harnett County Sheriff's Office insurer will pay $6 million to 6 families to settle excessive force suit

    The insurer for the Harnett County Sheriff's Office agreed Wednesday to a $6 million settlement with six families who had charged the office with a pattern of excessive use of force, according to Raleigh-based attorney Robert Zaytoun, who represents the plaintiffs.

    The lawsuit was filed by the family of John David Livingston – shot and killed by a Harnett County deputy in November 2015 – and five others who alleged excessive use of force by the department.

    “This went all the way up to the top. It was condoned, it was enabled, at the highest reaches of the Harnett County Sheriff's Office," Zaytoun said, calling it "an anti-rogue law enforcement case."

    The award of $6 million is the full amount of insurance coverage the sheriff's office carries. The suit outlines 43 causes of action against the defendants – Deputies Nicholas Kehagias, Michael Klingman, John Werbelow, John Knight, Sheriff Wayne Coats and former Sheriff Larry Rollins.

    Coats, the current sheriff, issued a statement of support for the law enforcement officers who were his co-defendants. "This settlement is not in any way an admission of guilt to any actions of the deputies. Although I was not the sheriff at the time of the incidents, I still support the men that were involved and I believe they acted appropriately," he said.

    https://www.wral.com/harnett-county-sheriffs-office-settles-lawsuit-alleging-excessive-use-of-force-with-6-families-for-6-million/19730952/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 28, 2021, 05:06:15 PM
    ments.

    Key Witness Against Julian Assange ADMITS He Lied Repeatedly To Frame The WikiLeaks Founder
    enVolve ^
    Posted on 6/28/2021, 7:57:21 PM by A.M. Smith

    A crucial witness who was used to establish the deep state’s case against Julian Assange has confessed to lying in order to frame the WikiLeaks founder.

    Sigurdur Ingi Thordarson said to journalists at Grabien that he lied about Assange to get the Department of Justice and FBI off his back so he could perform criminal crimes without fear of repercussions.

    Thordarson is accused of defrauding WikiLeaks after promising to sell the organization’s products. He then approached the federal government in the hopes of becoming an informant and saving his own skin.

    Additionally, “according to a psychiatric assessment presented to the court Thordarson was diagnosed as a sociopath, incapable of remorse but still criminally culpable for his actions,” Stundin reported, and this was an individual who has been tasked with building the case against Assange for the feds.

    (Excerpt) Read more at en-volve.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 06, 2021, 02:40:50 PM
    Not much media coverage so far for the death of this young man.

    (https://s3.amazonaws.com/CFSV2/obituaries/photos/10239/814498/60dcee092cca8.jpeg)


    Family demands justice after teen fatally shot by Lonoke County sheriff's deputy

    Members of the Lonoke community are outraged and demanding answers after the death of a teenage boy at the hands of a Lonoke County sheriff's deputy.

    Arkansas State Police reported that 17-year-old Hunter Brittain was pulled over for a traffic stop around 3 a.m. at a local auto shop. That's when Sgt. Michael Davis reportedly pulled out a gun and shot the teenager.

    State police said in a news release that the circumstances of the traffic stop and what may have led up to the deputy firing his gun will be documented in an investigation, which is still ongoing.

    Jesse said that Hunter had been up all night trying to fix his truck’s transmission to get to work at 6 a.m. Family members said his car was rolling backwards and Hunter pulled out an oil jug to stop the vehicle from running into the cop car.

    Now Jesse and family want justice.

    “Justice looks like this officer getting what’s coming to them, just like any one of us would if we shot and killed somebody,” Jesse said.

    https://www.katv.com/news/local/family-demands-justice-after-teen-fatally-shot-by-lonoke-county-sheriffs-deputy
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Body-Buildah on July 06, 2021, 02:47:25 PM
    Only whiny, BLM libturdz get justice, not white folks...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2021, 11:40:12 AM

    The Capitol Police, Armed With $2 Billion in New Funding, Expanding Operations Outside of D.C.

    https://greenwald.substack.com/p/the-capitol-police-armed-with-2-billion

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 10, 2021, 12:36:56 PM
    The Capitol Police, Armed With $2 Billion in New Funding, Expanding Operations Outside of D.C.

    https://greenwald.substack.com/p/the-capitol-police-armed-with-2-billion
    m
    Unbelievable.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 12, 2021, 08:28:49 PM
    Capitol Police to use Army surveillance system on Americans to ‘identify emerging threat’

    U.S. Capitol Police will begin fielding military surveillance equipment as part of sweeping security upgrades as the force becomes “an intelligence-based protective agency” after the Jan. 6 attack.

    Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin recently approved a Capitol Police request for eight Persistent Surveillance Systems Ground - Medium (PSSG-M) units. The system provides high-definition surveillance video and is enabled with night vision. The system does not include facial recognition capabilities, the Pentagon said.

    “This technology will be integrated with existing USCP camera infrastructure, providing greater high definition surveillance capacity to meet steady-state mission requirements and help identify emerging threats,” the Pentagon said.

    The technology allowed U.S. troops fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to monitor large areas 24/7 through extremely high-resolution cameras.

    Some privacy rights advocates have raised concern that Capitol Police are getting into the business of spying on Americans.

    In a wartime application, the persistent surveillance units were mounted on tethered blimps. The data could be stored, combined with sensor data from other platforms, and later referenced or rewound to track individuals or groups.

    The military could use the system to develop “pattern of life” analyses on suspected enemy combatants or intelligence targets in war zones. It could determine, for example, who was responsible for placing an improvised explosive device.

    A federal appeals court ruled last month against the Baltimore Police Department’s use of persistent surveillance technology similar to the Pentagon’s Gorgon Stare, which incorporates wide-area motion imagery pods mounted on aircraft. The system allowed police to track hundreds of moving targets at once throughout a large geographical footprint. The court said the program was unconstitutional and violated the Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure.

    https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2021/jul/10/capitol-police-use-army-surveillance-system-americ/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 13, 2021, 01:37:05 PM
    https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/american-arrested-haitian-presidents-killing-had-us-law-enforcement-ties-source-2021-07-12/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2021, 01:53:35 PM
    The rise of an American secret police force

    Law enforcement is a state right.

    Our founders knew that concentrating too much power in any one federal agency – especially a law enforcement agency – could lead to a tyrannical police state. It was one of their greatest fears. After all, they knew a thing or two about tyranny, and it was something they wanted to avoid at all costs.

    As a result, today’s federal law enforcement agencies have very limited authority and very specific missions: Border Patrol patrols the borders, of course; DEA investigates narcotics; and the ATF enforces archaic alcohol, tobacco, firearms and explosives laws. The FBI has by far the broadest powers, but it too is constrained by a very specific set or rules and guidelines from the U.S. Attorney General – a process called predication. Contrary to what’s depicted on television, before FBI special agents can swoop in and take over a case, they must first have a federal predicate – they must believe that a federal crime or national security threat exists before they can investigate.

    All of these federal agencies are transparent and accountable to the public, although some more so than others. They’re all subject to the federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), which was signed into law in 1966, and they routinely publish annual reports as well as internal investigations by their inspectors general.

    All federal law enforcement agencies keep the public informed of their activities – all except one.

    If you want to create a secret police force, the U.S. Capitol Police would be a good choice, since they’re already halfway there. The agency has scant oversight. It’s shrouded in secrecy and refuses to change.

    The United States Capitol Police (USCP) is part of the legislative branch, which is exempt from FOIA requirements. Because they report to Congress, the USCP believes they too are exempt from FOIA. I should point out by way of comparison that even the CIA is subject to FOIA. Additionally, the USCP publishes no annual reports, and even the findings of its own inspector general are kept secret and not made public.

    The mission of the USCP is to “Protect the Congress – its members, employees, visitors, and facilities – so it can fulfill its constitutional and legislative responsibilities in a safe, secure and open environment,” so you would think that the agency would focus its enforcement efforts in Washington, D.C., but that is no longer the case.

    Congress is now seeking to nationalize the USCP by creating “field offices” in different states. Two field offices are planned for now, but more are coming. 

    “The new USCP field offices will be in the Tampa and San Francisco areas. At this time, Florida and California are where the majority of our potential threats are,” the agency announced in an email last week.

    These new field offices will be used to “investigate threats” made against members of Congress, Acting USCP Chief Yogananda Pittman announced last week.

    Clearly, Pittman and the agency she heads are reeling from the events of Jan. 6. In her press release titled: “After the Attack: The Future of the U.S. Capitol Police,” Pittman spells out some of the changes that have already taken place. While the chief announced the acquisition of two new “wellness support dogs” – Lila and Filip – a “pivot towards an intelligence-based protective agency,” the purchase of new riot helmets, shields and less-than-lethal munitions, she did not identify the types of threats her officers will investigate in their newly created regional offices.

    The one thing that is clear, given the USCP’s penchant for secrecy, the public will never know what they’re up to.


    History of secrecy

    Demand Progress is a left-of-center internet-activist nonprofit 501(c)4, which advocates for online freedom, civil liberties and transparency in government, among other things.

    In June of last year, the group sent a letter to the chairs and ranking members of USCP’s congressional oversight committees, calling for greater transparency and accountability within the agency.

    It noted the cozy and “often personal” relationship that exits between the USCP and their congressional protectees. “This is a relationship that arises from privilege, and we would hope that all interactions with the USCP would go as smoothly as those they have with elected officials and senior staff.”

    The letter also pointed out that the USCP, “provides little public information about its activities; is under no statutory obligation (such as a Freedom of Information law) to answer record requests from the public; does not publish an annual report on its activities; does not publish reports from its oversight body, the Capitol Police Board, nor the USCP Inspector General; does not proactively publish its annual statistical summary of complaints drawn from Office of Professional Responsibility records; and only began in December 2018 publishing sparse information concerning its weekly arrests. The agency issued only 15 press releases in 2019; has never used its Twitter account; and, while we have been able to determine there is a daily Department News Summary, that document has not been made available despite our requests. In addition, repeated efforts to meet with Capitol Police Chief Steven A. Sund concerning the USCP’s agenda have been rebuffed, and the Public Information Office is unhelpful and unresponsive.”

    The USCP’s media office did not return calls and emails seeking their comments for this story, either.

    Demand Progress also found that “the USCP routinely goes beyond the mission of protecting Congress, both in terms of the people they interact with and the role that they play. Capitol Police officers make arrests on and off the Capitol complex, with nearly 10% of annual arrests made at Union Station; a significant number of arrests are for traffic violations or drug use; and the majority of ‘incidents’ occur outside of business hours. When the USCP is acting in a law enforcement capacity, it should be held to similar standards as other law enforcement agencies. When it acts like a federal agency, it should be held to account like all federal agencies.”

    The group called on USCP to publish annual reports similar to local police departments, to create a FOIA process, to publish Inspector General reports, to publish its internal complaint process and to start using its social media accounts.


    Takeaways

    To be clear:

    The USCP operates in secret.

    The USCP is not accountable to the public.

    The USCP has little oversight, given its “personal relationship” with Congress.   

    The USCP has a history of operating outside of its scope – such as making drug arrests off capitol grounds.

    The USCP will soon be operating in many states with a mandate that’s nebulous at best.

    If you add all of these factors together, you end up with a secret police force that is ripe for abuse – a team of modern-day witch hunters willing to do whatever the politicians in charge desire.

    It all comes down to whom they consider a threat.

    We all know what the Biden/Harris administration and Democratic congressional leaders think of gun owners. Once you disagree with their gun-confiscation plans you’re labeled a “violent extremist.” Are we now going to become the subject of secret police investigations? Will our calls, emails and get-togethers be monitored? Are our civil rights up for violating? How would we even know? You can’t FOIA the USCP for documents bearing your name like you can the FBI and local law enforcement.

    I am less concerned about civil rights abuse from the federal law enforcement agencies that are part of the Justice Department – except for ATF, of course – because there are usually enough safeguards in place to prevent their misuse. Besides, I’ve seen firsthand how the Justice Department reacts when news of an agency with a pattern and practice of civil rights abuse is published. I’ve personally watched the DOJ take over the prison system and a state mental hospital in Delaware, as well as the entire police department of a U.S. Territory, once their civil rights abuse was revealed. But that’s the Justice Department. The USCP reports to Congress, which has a rather contemptuous history of allowing civil rights abuse to fester until it can no longer be ignored.

    And the sad part is that this whole crazy scheme isn’t even necessary. Local law enforcement is handled best by local officers, certainly not secret federal police.

    The bottom line is this: America was founded on personal freedoms and individual liberties. We certainly don’t need to create an American version of the KGB, Stasi or Mukhabarat.

    If you think this is too farfetched or that it can’t happen here, wait till one of Joe Biden’s door-to-door goons asks to see your vaccine passport. Maybe that will change your mind.

    Nowadays, it seems Orwell got nearly everything right except the title, which he only missed by 37 years.

    https://www.saf.org/the-rise-of-an-american-secret-police-force/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 14, 2021, 01:39:47 PM
    Not enough.

    Sheriff’s Deputy Sentenced to More Than 12 Years in Prison for Planting Drugs on Innocent People

    Fired Jackson County deputy Zachary Wester, 28, was sentenced on Tuesday to more than a decade in prison for planting drugs on innocent people during traffic stops.

    With 58 days of jail credit, Wester has to spend a total of 12 years, six months, and eight days locked up on charges including racketeering, official misconduct, perjury, fabricating evidence, possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia, and false imprisonment.

    Prosecutor Tom Williams requested 15 years behind bars, with defense lawyer Ryan Davis working toward the minimum sentencing of 81.4 months.

    Wester was originally charged with planting drugs on 12 people, but he was only convicted on three cases: that of Joshua Emmanuel, Teresa Odom, and Steven Vann. His M.O. was to pretend to smell drugs, then act like he legitimately found meth or marijuana in the victim vehicles, prosecutors said.

    Jackson Circuit Court Judge James Goodman mentioned receiving a letter each from Odom and Vann. These were not read in court. Neither were the dozens of letters written on Wester’s behalf. Goodman said the number was closer to 50.

    https://lawandcrime.com/live-trials/live-trials-current/zachary-wester/fired-sheriffs-deputy-sentenced-to-more-than-12-years-in-prison-for-planting-drugs-on-innocent-people/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2021, 09:22:50 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2021, 10:45:54 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2021, 11:54:13 AM


    As usual, it's always a "botched" investigation or raid, a "mistake", an "error",  an "oversight", a "misstatement", an "omission". They ignored the abuse and then lied to cover up for themselves and both the FBI and DOJ are complicit. But of course none of them will go to prison.


    Inspector General Says F.B.I. Botched Nassar Abuse Investigation

    The Justice Department’s inspector general released a long-awaited report on Wednesday that sharply criticized the F.B.I.’s handling of the sexual abuse case involving Lawrence G. Nassar, the former doctor for the U.S.A. Gymnastics national team and Michigan State sports, which led to Mr. Nassar’s continued abuse of girls and women.

    Mr. Nassar, who is serving what amounts to life in prison, has been accused of abusing hundreds of female patients — including the Olympic champion Simone Biles and a majority of the last two United States women’s Olympic gymnastics teams — under the guise of medical treatment.

    The report, citing civil court documents, said that 70 or more young athletes had been sexually abused by Mr. Nassar between July 2015, when U.S.A. Gymnastics first reported allegations against Mr. Nassar to the F.B.I.’s Indianapolis field office, and August 2016, when the Michigan State University Police Department received a separate complaint.

    John Manly, a lawyer for many of the victims, said that number is likely even higher — about 120 patients, including one as young as 8 years old.

    “This is a devastating indictment of the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice that multiple federal agents covered up Nassar’s abuse and child molestation,” Mr. Manly said. “They’ve failed these women. They’ve failed these families. No one seems to give a damn about these little girls.”

    The inspector general’s report said senior F.B.I. officials in the Indianapolis field office failed to respond to the allegations “with the utmost seriousness and urgency that they deserved and required” and the investigation did not proceed until after a September 2016 report by The Indianapolis Star detailed Mr. Nassar’s abuse.

    F.B.I. officials in the office also “made numerous and fundamental errors when they did respond” to the allegations and failed to notify state or local authorities of the allegations or take other steps to address the ongoing threat posed by Mr. Nassar, the report said.

    According to the report, the special agent in charge of the Indianapolis field office, W. Jay Abbott, lied to the inspector general’s office numerous times when it asked him about the Nassar inquiry.

    Mr. Abbott gave false statements “to minimize errors made by the Indianapolis Field Office in connection with the handling of the Nassar allegations,” the report said.

    It also said Mr. Abbott violated F.BI. policy when he spoke with Steve Penny, then the president and chief executive of U.S.A. Gymnastics, about potential job opportunities with the U.S. Olympic Committee, even as the two discussed the allegations against Mr. Nassar. Mr. Abbott later applied for a job at the U.S.O.C., but twice lied to the inspector general about seeking that job.

    The Justice Department declined to prosecute Mr. Abbott, who retired in January 2018, and an unnamed supervisory special agent in Indianapolis in September 2020, according to the report.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/sports/olympics/fbi-nassar-report.html

    https://oig.justice.gov/reports/investigation-and-review-federal-bureau-investigations-handling-allegations-sexual-abuse
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2021, 12:52:03 PM
    There is not a single Govt agency in DC that functions properly.   

    As usual, it's always a "botched" investigation or raid, a "mistake", an "error",  an "oversight", a "misstatement", an "omission". They ignored the abuse and then lied to cover up for themselves and both the FBI and DOJ are complicit. But of course none of them will go to prison.


    Inspector General Says F.B.I. Botched Nassar Abuse Investigation

    The Justice Department’s inspector general released a long-awaited report on Wednesday that sharply criticized the F.B.I.’s handling of the sexual abuse case involving Lawrence G. Nassar, the former doctor for the U.S.A. Gymnastics national team and Michigan State sports, which led to Mr. Nassar’s continued abuse of girls and women.

    Mr. Nassar, who is serving what amounts to life in prison, has been accused of abusing hundreds of female patients — including the Olympic champion Simone Biles and a majority of the last two United States women’s Olympic gymnastics teams — under the guise of medical treatment.

    The report, citing civil court documents, said that 70 or more young athletes had been sexually abused by Mr. Nassar between July 2015, when U.S.A. Gymnastics first reported allegations against Mr. Nassar to the F.B.I.’s Indianapolis field office, and August 2016, when the Michigan State University Police Department received a separate complaint.

    John Manly, a lawyer for many of the victims, said that number is likely even higher — about 120 patients, including one as young as 8 years old.

    “This is a devastating indictment of the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice that multiple federal agents covered up Nassar’s abuse and child molestation,” Mr. Manly said. “They’ve failed these women. They’ve failed these families. No one seems to give a damn about these little girls.”

    The inspector general’s report said senior F.B.I. officials in the Indianapolis field office failed to respond to the allegations “with the utmost seriousness and urgency that they deserved and required” and the investigation did not proceed until after a September 2016 report by The Indianapolis Star detailed Mr. Nassar’s abuse.

    F.B.I. officials in the office also “made numerous and fundamental errors when they did respond” to the allegations and failed to notify state or local authorities of the allegations or take other steps to address the ongoing threat posed by Mr. Nassar, the report said.

    According to the report, the special agent in charge of the Indianapolis field office, W. Jay Abbott, lied to the inspector general’s office numerous times when it asked him about the Nassar inquiry.

    Mr. Abbott gave false statements “to minimize errors made by the Indianapolis Field Office in connection with the handling of the Nassar allegations,” the report said.

    It also said Mr. Abbott violated F.BI. policy when he spoke with Steve Penny, then the president and chief executive of U.S.A. Gymnastics, about potential job opportunities with the U.S. Olympic Committee, even as the two discussed the allegations against Mr. Nassar. Mr. Abbott later applied for a job at the U.S.O.C., but twice lied to the inspector general about seeking that job.

    The Justice Department declined to prosecute Mr. Abbott, who retired in January 2018, and an unnamed supervisory special agent in Indianapolis in September 2020, according to the report.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/sports/olympics/fbi-nassar-report.html

    https://oig.justice.gov/reports/investigation-and-review-federal-bureau-investigations-handling-allegations-sexual-abuse
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 15, 2021, 01:02:33 PM
    And the criminal probably got a fat pension for life. 

    As usual, it's always a "botched" investigation or raid, a "mistake", an "error",  an "oversight", a "misstatement", an "omission". They ignored the abuse and then lied to cover up for themselves and both the FBI and DOJ are complicit. But of course none of them will go to prison.


    Inspector General Says F.B.I. Botched Nassar Abuse Investigation

    The Justice Department’s inspector general released a long-awaited report on Wednesday that sharply criticized the F.B.I.’s handling of the sexual abuse case involving Lawrence G. Nassar, the former doctor for the U.S.A. Gymnastics national team and Michigan State sports, which led to Mr. Nassar’s continued abuse of girls and women.

    Mr. Nassar, who is serving what amounts to life in prison, has been accused of abusing hundreds of female patients — including the Olympic champion Simone Biles and a majority of the last two United States women’s Olympic gymnastics teams — under the guise of medical treatment.

    The report, citing civil court documents, said that 70 or more young athletes had been sexually abused by Mr. Nassar between July 2015, when U.S.A. Gymnastics first reported allegations against Mr. Nassar to the F.B.I.’s Indianapolis field office, and August 2016, when the Michigan State University Police Department received a separate complaint.

    John Manly, a lawyer for many of the victims, said that number is likely even higher — about 120 patients, including one as young as 8 years old.

    “This is a devastating indictment of the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice that multiple federal agents covered up Nassar’s abuse and child molestation,” Mr. Manly said. “They’ve failed these women. They’ve failed these families. No one seems to give a damn about these little girls.”

    The inspector general’s report said senior F.B.I. officials in the Indianapolis field office failed to respond to the allegations “with the utmost seriousness and urgency that they deserved and required” and the investigation did not proceed until after a September 2016 report by The Indianapolis Star detailed Mr. Nassar’s abuse.

    F.B.I. officials in the office also “made numerous and fundamental errors when they did respond” to the allegations and failed to notify state or local authorities of the allegations or take other steps to address the ongoing threat posed by Mr. Nassar, the report said.

    According to the report, the special agent in charge of the Indianapolis field office, W. Jay Abbott, lied to the inspector general’s office numerous times when it asked him about the Nassar inquiry.

    Mr. Abbott gave false statements “to minimize errors made by the Indianapolis Field Office in connection with the handling of the Nassar allegations,” the report said.

    It also said Mr. Abbott violated F.BI. policy when he spoke with Steve Penny, then the president and chief executive of U.S.A. Gymnastics, about potential job opportunities with the U.S. Olympic Committee, even as the two discussed the allegations against Mr. Nassar. Mr. Abbott later applied for a job at the U.S.O.C., but twice lied to the inspector general about seeking that job.

    The Justice Department declined to prosecute Mr. Abbott, who retired in January 2018, and an unnamed supervisory special agent in Indianapolis in September 2020, according to the report.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/sports/olympics/fbi-nassar-report.html

    https://oig.justice.gov/reports/investigation-and-review-federal-bureau-investigations-handling-allegations-sexual-abuse
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 17, 2021, 01:17:55 PM
    Slap on the wrist as usual, just a few months in prison. This line of work seems to attract many sadistic and violent individuals.

    Rockland officers who beat porcupines sentenced to jail time

    Two former Rockland officers were sentenced Thursday for beating porcupines to death on several different occasions while on duty.

    Addison Cox, 28, of Warren, and Michael A. Rolerson, 31, of Searsmont, were sentenced in Knox Superior Court on misdemeanor charges of cruelty to animals and night hunting, according to court documents. Both officers pleaded guilty.

    Cox was sentenced to 90 days in jail, with all but 10 suspended. He was fined $1,000 and was placed on administrative release for six months, during which he is barred from applying for jobs  in law enforcement and must complete 100 hours of community service, court documents state.

    Rolerson was sentenced to 270 days in jail, with all but 20 days suspended. He was also fined $1,000 and placed on probation for six months. The terms of his probation require that he give up his Maine Criminal Justice Academy Credentials.

    Cox will serve his jail time on the weekends, and Rolerson is expected to begin his sentence in January, according to court documents.

    Rolerson received a heavier sentence than Cox because he was the senior officer and killed more animals, District Attorney Natasha Irving said. Prosecutors agreed to reduce the charges to misdemeanors in part because both men were military veterans who had served active duty, Irving said.

    https://bangordailynews.com/2021/07/15/news/rockland-officers-who-beat-porcupines-sentenced-to-jail-time/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 17, 2021, 01:25:51 PM
    NO PRISON TIME....

    Kansas City officer sentenced for possession of child pornography

    (https://fox4kc.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2021/07/Spilker.jpg?w=740&h=416&crop=1)

    A former Kansas City police officer has been sentenced for multiple charges in connection with possessing child pornography.

    Vincent A. Spilker, 30, was sentenced Thursday by a Jackson County judge after pleading guilty in February to two counts of possession of child pornography.

    The state of Missouri asked for 10 years in prison for Spilker. His defense attorney asked for probation.

    On Thursday, the judge sentenced Spilke to probation. If he violates probation over the next five years he would face 10 years in prison. He will be required to comply with the following probation conditions: Enter and complete sex offender treatment, register as a sex offender, be subject to internet monitoring, abide by sex offender requirements and have no unsupervised contact with children under 18 years of age.

    https://fox4kc.com/news/former-kansas-city-officer-sentenced-for-possession-of-child-pornography/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 18, 2021, 06:13:42 PM
    And another one...

    AG arrests ‘John Doe 44,’ a Picayune police sergeant accused of child sex crimes

    A Picyaune police sergeant fired from his job Wednesday has been arrested in a child exploitation case after the FBI asked for the public’s assistance in identifying him.

    Joshua Christopher Stockstill, 29, has been arrested on child exploitation charges, the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office has confirmed: 4 counts of distribution, one count of lustful touching, and 1 count of production.

    The arrest came hours after the FBI released a photo and information Wednesday about a child exploitation case and sought the public’s help in identifying Stockstill, described in the news release as “John Doe 44.”

    https://www.sunherald.com/news/local/crime/article252828318.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 19, 2021, 01:44:19 PM
    Are the police chief and the city complicit in supporting a convicted murderer in uniform?

    Huntsville still paying police officer convicted of murder two months ago

    The records show that Darby has been on sick leave since a jury found him guilty two months ago. He is off work under the Family and Medical Leave Act, a federal law requiring employers to allow workers unpaid extended time off for medical or family reasons.

    The most recent pay records, from mid-June, show that Darby is paid about $2,162 before taxes every two weeks.

    The city also appears to have asked other police officers to donate accrued sick leave while Darby awaits sentencing.

    https://www.al.com/news/2021/07/huntsville-still-paying-police-officer-convicted-of-murder-two-months-ago.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 21, 2021, 06:20:18 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 21, 2021, 06:40:05 AM
    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/kenbensinger/michigan-kidnapping-gretchen-whitmer-fbi-informant


     >:( :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 22, 2021, 10:32:20 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 23, 2021, 01:02:22 PM
    Another "brave hero" attacking a 75 year old man. As usual the taxpayers will probably foot the bill.

    Body cam shows Colorado police officer use Taser on 75-year-old man, place knee on his neck

    An Idaho Springs police officer issued no warnings to a 75-year-old man before shocking him with a Taser and later placing his knee on the unconscious man’s neck, newly released body camera footage of the incident shows.

    The 75-year-old, Michael Clark, was living independently at the time of the incident but now resides in a nursing facility after suffering health complications following the incident, according to his attorney, Sarah Schielke.

    Schielke released the body camera footage Thursday after receiving it from the district attorney’s office.

    Nicholas Hanning, the officer who used the Taser on Clark, was fired from his job July 13 and is facing an assault charge for his actions. The other officer on scene, Ellie Summers, remains employed by the Idaho Springs Police Department.

    https://www.denverpost.com/2021/07/22/idaho-springs-nicholas-hanning-body-camera/



    The "brave hero":

    (https://denver.cbslocal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/15909806/2021/07/Nicholas-Hanning-charged-Idaho-Springs-Officer-from-5th-Judicial-DA.png)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 23, 2021, 08:24:55 PM
    "Fidelity"

    "Integrity"


    FBI assistant director faulted for misconduct around romantic relationship

    A senior FBI official violated agency policies in her handling of a romantic relationship with a subordinate, according to findings of the Justice Department’s inspector general, and the bureau’s disciplinary office is now weighing what, if anything, to do about the findings, according to current and former law enforcement officials familiar with the matter.

    Jill C. Tyson, who has a close working relationship with FBI Director Christopher A. Wray in her role as assistant director for congressional affairs, was criticized in a report issued Thursday by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz.

    The inspector general did not name Tyson, but concluded that “the Assistant Director was engaged in a romantic relationship with a subordinate and failed to timely report the relationship, in violation of FBI policy.”

    Multiple people familiar with the matter, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive personnel issue, said the person in question is Tyson, one of the few women in a senior leadership role at the FBI.

    The inspector general investigation “also found that the Assistant Director allowed the relationship to negatively affect an appropriate and professional superior-subordinate relationship and to disrupt the workplace by interfering with the ability of other FBI employees to complete their work, and that the Assistant Director participated in a hiring or organizational decision involving the subordinate, all in violation of FBI policy.”

    Tyson referred questions to the FBI press office, which declined to comment. A spokeswoman for the inspector general also declined to comment.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/jill-tyson-fbi-investigation/2021/07/23/9794cf32-ebc6-11eb-97a0-a09d10181e36_story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2021, 02:43:10 PM
    19 months of paid vacation.

    Didn't work a single day in 2020.

    Still gets "officer of the year 2020" award...


    Officer of the Year in El Monte didn’t work a single day in 2020

    'He did not perform anything in 2020, so how does he get awarded when there were other deserving officers?' asked one city councilman

    Detective Eric Walterscheid stood at a podium before the El Monte City Council during its last meeting in June, touting the work of Officer Carlos Molina before honoring him as the Police Officers Association’s Officer of the Year for 2020.

    With about a dozen rank-and-file officers looking on, the police union president said of Molina: “He’s been with us for 21 years. I remember when he first walked into the detective bureau — his leather was squeaking. I read his reports. I said, ‘Go into detectives! You’re an excellent investigator!’ He never looked back.”

    But Molina seemed an odd choice for the honor, primarily because he didn’t work a single day in 2020. He spent the entire year on paid administrative leave that ultimately lasted 19 months — from September 2019 to April 2021, according to Tom Madruga, a contract attorney for the city.

    Molina, a detective at the time, was placed on leave because he spent a year working on a child abuse investigation that yielded little work product, sources close to the investigation said on condition of anonymity. Additionally, he charged the city for 42 hours of overtime pay — equating to more than $4,400 — during that period.

    Moilna was probing the alleged physical abuse of 23-month-old Britalin Vasquez at the hands of her mother, Donica Vasquez, and stepfather, Oswaldo Eduardo Chan. Molina’s investigation spanned from Oct. 24, 2018, to Oct. 1, 2019, when the case was yanked from him and turned over to Detective Pedro Yanez.

    Yanez closed the case in 44 days, submitting it to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office on Nov. 13, 2019. Meanwhile, the administrative investigation was launched into Molina’s handling of the case. Although he was allowed to return to the force after 19 months off the job, he was reassigned as a patrol officer. The administrative investigation is still pending arbitration, according to sources close to the case.

    https://www.sgvtribune.com/2021/07/18/officer-of-the-year-in-el-monte-didnt-work-a-single-day-in-2020/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 28, 2021, 01:52:22 PM
    "NY's finest".

    NYPD cops fired for alleged ‘shocking professional and sexual misconduct’ with teen

    Two NYPD cops raped a vulnerable teen member of the police youth program, cruelly taking advantage of the underage girl to “satisfy their depraved interests,” an internal department judge has ruled.

    The officers’ “shocking professional and sexual misconduct” included behavior from one of them that “would cause any responsible adult, let alone a parent, to recoil in horror,” the NYPD judge wrote in a scathing ruling made public last week.

    Then-Officers Sanad Musallam and Yaser Shohatee “targeted’’ the girl, who was 15 at the time and a member of the NYPD’s Explorers program, according to the disciplinary documents.

    Musallam and Shohatee, now 34 and 41, respectively, separately raped her amid dozens of phone chats and hundreds of text exchanges, which included “sexually explicit” photos, between 2015 and 2016, the records claim.

    The judge, Assistant Deputy Commissioner of Trials Paul Gamble, recommended dismissing both cops after finding them guilty of the encounters and other internal misconduct charges in a 41-page ruling that forcefully rejected the officers’ narrative.

    Both cops had denied the allegations and remained on the force at full pay until they were fired March 25, three weeks after Gamble’s ruling — and four years after the allegations were reported to the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office and the NYPD’s Internal Affairs Bureau, according to disciplinary and payroll records.

    Neither officer was ever criminally charged, with the case falling apart after the teen refused to continue to cooperate with investigators, said a spokesman for the DA’s office.

    The accusations were never before made public.
    The NYPD began posting the outcomes of their internal trials earlier this year following a related court battle.

    https://nypost.com/2021/07/27/two-nypd-cops-fired-over-alleged-sexual-misconduct-with-teen/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 03, 2021, 05:16:05 PM
    Idaho man fatally shot in own backyard after officer mistakes him for suspect, police say

    A police officer in Idaho fatally shot a man who was in his own backyard on Monday after mistaking him for a suspect on the loose in the neighborhood and believed to be armed, authorities said.

    Idaho Falls police did not immediately identify the victim or the officer involved in what Chief Bryce Johnson called a "devastatingly tragic" incident.

    The incident began just after midnight in Idaho Falls when a deputy from the Bonneville County Sheriff's Office pulled over a vehicle and saw a male passenger wearing a black shirt get out and flee into a residential neighborhood, the police statement said.

    Idaho Falls police officers and Bonneville County sheriff's deputies began searching the neighborhood for the suspect, authorities said.

    The deputy who had stopped the vehicle spoke with the driver, who identified the suspect as 22-year-old Tanner J.N. Shoesmith, the sheriff's office said in a news release. Deputies learned Shoesmith had multiple active warrants for his arrest, including for felony battery on an officer, resisting or obstructing arrest, and providing false information to law enforcement.

    As the search continued, police said a resident told officers they spotted the suspect run through a backyard and believed that he had a gun.

    Meanwhile, the driver who had stayed in the vehicle showed officers a message they received from the suspect that showed his GPS location, police said. The GPS appeared to show the suspect in a backyard of a nearby residence. Officers and deputies then surrounded the home.

    "Due to the information that the suspect may be armed, and a prior history of violence when interacting with police officers, law enforcement personnel entered the location with their service weapons drawn," the police statement said.

    Officers said they heard yelling when approaching the home and found a man wearing a black shirt and wielding a gun in the yard. They told the man to drop the gun, according to the statement.

    "We do not currently have the answers as to what exactly occurred during these moments," Johnson said. "We do know that during this interaction, an Idaho Falls police officer discharged his service weapon, firing one shot which struck the man."

    Johnson said officers and first responders attempted life-saving measures but they were unsuccessful.

    Officers and deputies determined that the man who had been shot was not the suspect but actually the resident of that address.

    After the shot was fired, Shoesmith was again spotted running through the area, police said. Officers tracked him to the yard of a nearby home and found him hiding in a shed.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/idaho-police-shoot-man-backyard-mistaken-identity-suspect-search


    The cop was not arrested when he killed the poor man, neither was he arrested after being indicted.

    (https://s3-assets.eastidahonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/19144356/Cerdas-IFPD.jpg) (https://s3-assets.eastidahonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/10203910/Joe-Johnson-GoFundMe.jpg)


    I.F. police officer who shot man in backyard indicted for manslaughter

    A grand jury has indicted an Idaho Falls Police officer for shooting a man who was in his own backyard during a February manhunt.

    Elias Aurelio Cerdas, a 26-year-old officer who graduated from training less than a year before the shooting, was indicted Friday for felony involuntary manslaughter. The Feb. 8 shooting left Joseph “Joe” Johnson, a father of four, dead behind his house.

    Cerdas was not arrested after being charged but issued a summons for his arraignment at the Bonneville County Courthouse on Aug. 23. The Idaho Attorney General’s Office is prosecuting the case after the Bonneville County Prosecutor’s Office handed the case over for unspecified reasons.

    https://www.eastidahonews.com/2021/08/i-f-police-officer-who-shot-man-in-backyard-indicted-for-manslaughter/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 05, 2021, 04:15:14 AM
    https://freebeacon.com/politics/infrastructure-bill-would-require-alcohol-monitors-for-all-new-cars


    Holy F.   This is not good. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 05, 2021, 12:32:58 PM
    Terrifying. The more he complained, the crazier he was deemed and the more drugs he was fed. This is horror movie material.

    Of course don't expect the cops, the hospital staff or his useless public defenders to go to prison - or be locked up in a mental hospital.


    Hawaiian homeless man arrested in case of mistaken identity spent years in mental hospital: report

    Hawaii officials wrongly arrested a homeless man for a crime committed by someone else, locked him up in a state hospital for more than two years, forced him to take psychiatric drugs and then tried to cover up the mistake by quietly setting him free with just 50 cents to his name, the Hawaii Innocence Project said in a court document asking a judge to set the record straight.

    A petition filed in court Monday night asks a judge to vacate the arrest and correct Joshua Spriestersbach's records. The filing lays out his bizarre plight that started with him falling asleep on a sidewalk. He was houseless and hungry while waiting in a long line for food outside a Honolulu shelter on a hot day in 2017.

    When a police officer roused him awake, he thought he was being arrested for the city's ban on sitting or laying down on public sidewalks.

    But what he didn't realize was that the officer mistook him for a man named Thomas Castleberry, who had a warrant out for his arrest for violating probation in a 2006 drug case.

    It's unclear how this happened as Spriestersbach and Castleberry had never met. Spriestersbach somehow ended up with Castleberry as his alias, even though Spriestersbach never claimed to be Castleberry, according to the Hawaii Innocence Project.

    Spriestersbach's attorneys argue it all could have been cleared up if police simply compared the two men's photographs and fingerprints.

    Instead, against Spriestersbach's protests that he wasn't Castleberry, he was eventually committed to the Hawaii State Hospital.

    "Yet, the more Mr. Spriestersbach vocalized his innocence by asserting that he is not Mr. Castleberry, the more he was declared delusional and psychotic by the H.S.H. staff and doctors and heavily medicated,"
    the petition said. "It was understandable that Mr. Spriestersbach was in an agitated state when he was being wrongfully incarcerated for Mr. Castleberry’s crime and despite his continual denial of being Mr. Castleberry and providing all of his relevant identification and places where he was located during Mr. Castleberry’s court appearances, no one would believe him or take any meaningful steps to verify his identity and determine that what Mr. Spriestersbach was telling the truth – he was not Mr. Castleberry."

    No one believed him — not even his various public defenders — until a hospital psychiatrist finally listened.

    All it took were simple Google searches and a few phone calls to verify that Spriestersbach was on another island when Castleberry was initially arrested, according to the court document.

    The psychiatrist asked a detective to come to the hospital, who verified fingerprints and photographs to determine the wrong man had been arrested and Spriestersbach spent two years and eight months institutionalized, the petition said, noting that it wasn't hard to determine the the real Castleberry has been incarcerated in an Alaska prison since 2016.

    According to records, a 49-year-old man named Thomas R. Castleberry is in the Spring Creek Correctional Facility in Seward, Alaska. His relatives couldn't be reached for comment. The Alaska public defender listed for him declined to comment Tuesday.

    The Hawaii Innocence Project document also claims Spriestersbach had ineffective counsel: the Hawaii public defender's office.

    Police, the state public defender's office, the state attorney general and the hospital "share in the blame for this gross miscarriage of justice," the petition said.

    Hawaii Public Defender James Tabe, Gary Yamashiroya, special assistant to the attorney general and Matt Dvonch, a spokesman for the Honolulu prosecuting attorney's office, declined to comment Tuesday.

    Once the fingerprints and photographs were verified, officials moved quickly, but secretly, to release Spriestersbach in January 2020, the petition said.

    "A secret meeting was held with all of the parties, except Mr. Spriestersbach, present. There is no court record of this meeting or no public court record of this meeting. No entry or order reflects this miscarriage of justice that occurred or a finding that Mr. Spriestersbach is not Thomas Castleberry," the court document said.

    His lawyers said officials didn't think anyone would believe Spriestersbach or no one would care about the homeless man who fell asleep waiting for food, only to wake up to a living nightmare.

    Spriestersbach, 50, who lives with his sister in Vermont, declined to comment for this story.

    His sister, Vedanta Griffith, spent nearly 16 years looking for him. He moved to Hawaii with Griffith when her husband was stationed on Oahu with the Army in 2003. He moved to the Big Island and then disappeared, while suffering mental health issues, she said.

    "Part of what they used against him was his own argument: ‘I’m not Thomas Castleberry. I didn’t commit these crimes. ... This isn’t me,’" she told The Associated Press. "So they used that as saying he was delusional, as justification for keeping him."

    After his release, he ended up at a homeless shelter, which contacted his family.

    "And then when light is shown on it, what do they do? They don’t even put it on the record. They don’t make it part of the case," Griffith said. "And then they don’t come to him and say, ‘We are so sorry’ or, how about even ‘Gee, this wasn’t you. You were right all along.’"

    Spriestersbach now refuses to leave his sister’s 10-acre property.

    "He’s so afraid that they’re going to take him again," Griffith said.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/hawaiian-homeless-man-mistaken-identity-case
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 06, 2021, 12:11:35 PM

    Spokane police officer awaiting trial for rape charges arrested again for allegedly raping another woman

    A fired Spokane Police officer awaiting trial for allegedly sexually assaulting a victim of domestic violence was arrested Wednesday on new charges after another woman reported he raped her while on duty.

    Nathan Nash, 38, faces charges of second-degree rape and unlawful imprisonment in the new case, the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office reported in a news release.

    He was first arrested in 2019 and was soon fired by the Spokane Police Department.

    Both sexual assault victims told investigators that Nash responded to their calls for police assistance, then later followed up with them alone. It was during these “follow-ups” that Nash sexually assaulted them, the victims told detectives. Julie Humphreys, a spokesperson for the Spokane Police Department, said it’s not uncommon for officers to follow up on an investigation alone, but corporals would typically be the ones to take pictures for evidence.

    https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2021/aug/04/spokane-detectives-arrest-former-officer-in-sexual/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2021, 07:05:36 PM
    They should receive no less than life in prison. But as usual it's unlikely they will spend even 1 day in prison.

    Three ex-Philly homicide detectives charged with perjury for their testimony during the retrial of an innocent man

    Three former longtime Philadelphia homicide detectives were charged Friday with perjury after a grand jury concluded they lied on the witness stand during a landmark 2016 murder retrial that threatened to send an innocent man back to prison for life.

    The allegations, unveiled in a presentment filed by the District Attorney’s Office, represent an extraordinary development in a city that has seen dozens of old homicide convictions overturned in recent years — but no significant legal repercussions for the police or prosecutors involved in building those cases. Many of them have since been accused of misconduct in court documents filed by District Attorney Larry Krasner.

    The grand jury’s findings mark a stunning turnabout for Martin Devlin, Manuel Santiago, and Frank Jastrzembski, who each served more than 25 years in the Philadelphia Police Department. Devlin for years was viewed as a star investigator in one of the nation’s most violent cities, specializing in cold cases and complex investigations that no one else could crack.

    But in recent years, questions have emerged about the detectives’ investigative practices, mostly during the 1990s. Krasner’s Conviction Integrity Unit has helped overturn at least five cases the detectives worked on, saying the convictions were marred by coerced confessions, fabricated or hidden evidence, or secret deals with key witnesses.

    Marissa Bluestine, the former head of the Pennsylvania Innocence Project and assistant director at the Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice at University of Pennsylvania, said personal accountability for such crimes by law enforcement is rare. The statute of limitations for criminal charges often runs out, she said, and police and prosecutors are typically shielded from personal liability in civil litigation due to qualified immunity laws.

    https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia-homicide-detectives-perjury-devlin-santiago-jastrzembski-20210813.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 16, 2021, 02:11:07 PM
    Arrested and jailed without charges for 27 days and they even cut off water supply in her cell. Were they trying to kill this old woman? Had a public defender and judge not noticed she might have stayed in jail and died forgotten and alone. It appears the "sheriff" then tried to bribe the woman to cover up his crimes.

    Arizona’s ‘drinking toilet water’ jail lawsuit ends

    An Arizona grandmother has settled a lawsuit with Gila County after she was forced to drink toilet water in jail.

    Tamara Barnicoat, 63, said she received $130,000 in the case, which stemmed from her 2019 detention. Barnicoat, who is diagnosed with mental illness, said she was delusional at the time of her jailing, which prevented her from advocating for herself. Her lawsuit detailed several civil rights violations.

    In one interview, Gila County Sheriff Adam Shepherd admitted that Barnicoat had been subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. Such punishment is a violation of the 8th Amendment.

    Globe officers arrested Barnicoat in October 2019 after she threw a cup of water, claiming it was poison, on a car wash employee.

    Inside the Gila County Jail, Barnicoat said she did not get her medication nor mental health treatment.

    At first, Barnicoat was locked in an isolation cell. A detention officer shut off water to her cell. Violating jail policy, nobody turned the water back on for at least two days. Isolated and dehydrated, Barnicoat resorted to drinking from the toilet. Jail employees, and even the sheriff, confirmed this account through written reports and interviews with ABC15.

    While jailed, no criminal charges were filed against Barnicoat, but she was not released for 27 days. At that point, her public defender and a judge noticed, and the judge ordered her immediate release. Barnicoat also sued her public defender, Ray Geiser, and they reached a separate settlement.

    Several weeks after ABC15’s initial report on Barnicoat, a sheriff’s official came to her house with a check for $7,500 and a written agreement not to pursue future legal claims, according to court documents.

    Barnicoat’s civil lawyers, Robert Campos and Kevin Garrison, later argued that the agreement should be null-and-void. They said the sheriff’s office, which had previously traumatized Barnicoat in jail, was now taking advantage of the mentally ill woman, who did not have a lawyer to help her understand the documents.

    After Barnicoat filed a notice of claim, a precursor to a lawsuit, with a $500,000 settlement request, her old criminal case suddenly resurfaced. The Gila County Attorney used the original police report about water throwing to charge her with trespassing, disorderly conduct, and assault.

    After ABC15 reported on what many saw as retribution, the criminal case was transferred to an outside county attorney who dropped all the charges.

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/arizonas-drinking-toilet-water-jail-lawsuit-ends
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 20, 2021, 03:32:55 PM
    Skip to comments.

    US Capitol cop who shot dead Ashli Babbitt is EXONERATED in internal investigation of the shooting
    UK Daily Mail ^ | 08/20/2021 | CHRISTOPHER EBERHART
    Posted on 8/20/2021, 5:54:43 PM by DFG

    The Capitol Police officer who fatally shot Ashli Babbitt during the January 6 Capitol riot has been exonerated following an internal investigation, according to reports.

    Babbitt, 35, was the only person killed on January 6 when the officer - who hasn't been named - opened fire at a mob of Trump supporters as they stormed through the Rotunda.

    The commander of the Capitol Police's Office of Personal Responsibility says 'no further action will be taken in this matter,' according to a memo obtained by NBC News.

    In April, the Department of Justice said it wouldn't be filing charges against the officer, so the conclusion of the internal probe ends the official investigation.

    Babbitt's family told The Washington Examiner earlier this month that they plan on filing a $10million wrongful death lawsuit, claiming a plainclothes officer didn't issue a verbal command.

    (Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk .
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 21, 2021, 04:49:59 AM
    Tucker Carlson sees coverup plot behind announcement FBI found little evidence of coordination among Jan. 6 demonstrators
    American Thinker ^ | 21 Aug, 2021 | Thomas Lifson
    Posted on 8/21/2021, 7:28:12 AM by MtnClimber

    In the penultimate segment of the Friday edition of Tucker Carlson Tonight, he asked, “Why is the FBI exonerating people?” And there is a very disturbing answer.

    Most conservative commentators have reacted with glee to a report from Reuters that:

    The FBI has found scant evidence that the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol was the result of an organized plot to overturn the presidential election result, according to four current and former law enforcement officials.

    “FBI Destroys Insurrection Narrative,” headlined Legal Insurrection. And it’s hard to avoid a sense of triumph that a ridiculous slur against Trump supporters, a plot worthy of comparison to the Reichstag Fire in its effort to discredit opposition, has been repudiated, albeit anonymously from 4 sources.

    But Tucker Carlson, the most important conservative commentator of the moment, takes his reasoning a full step farther. In the penultimate segment of the Friday edition of Tucker Carlson Tonight, he asked, “Why is the FBI exonerating people?”

    After reviewing the months of the 180 degrees opposite narrative, put out by the FBI and broadcast by the progressive media, that an organized insurrection took place, he suggests a sinister motive behind the leaked story to Reuters. “If there was organization going on, some of it came from the feds.”

    As has often been the case, the FBI placed informants, or perhaps agents provocateur is the better term, among the demonstrators. In fact, there are upwards of 20 unindicted co-conspirators from the January 6 incident, and a good number of these may have been ringleaders on the FBI payroll, escaping prosecution for acts that were worse than the crimes for which others have been prosecuted.

    (Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2021, 12:25:51 PM
    Cops kill an innocent father but it is simply called an "officer-involved shooting". As usual the name of the killer has not been released yet.


    Police shoot and kill bystander while firing at suspect in Santa Barbara County

    A police officer in Guadalupe, Calif., shot and killed a bystander while firing at a suspect over the weekend, Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office officials said.

    The shooting happened around 9:40 p.m. Saturday in the small town of Guadalupe, 10 miles east of Santa Maria, the Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Sunday.

    Officers with the Guadalupe Police Department responded to Birch and Obispo streets after a suspect wanted on an outstanding felony warrant was spotted, authorities said. A bystander — 59-year-old Juan Luis Olvera-Preciado — was sitting in his car when police began firing at the suspect. It was not immediately clear what prompted police to open fire.

    Olvera-Preciado was struck and pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-08-23/california-police-kill-bystander-while-shooting-at-suspect
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2021, 12:30:02 PM
    Get ready for the hagiographic interview of the "hero". It would be interesting to see if his identity matches a name that has been floating for a while (Byrd).


    The police officer who shot and killed Capitol rioter Ashli Babbitt will reveal his identity in a Lester Holt interview

    The Capitol Police officer who shot and killed Ashli Babbitt during the January 6 riot at the US Capitol will reveal his identity in an interview with NBC News' Lester Holt airing Thursday.

    "Speaking out and revealing his identity publicly for the first time, the officer will share his perspective on the events of that day, including the aftermath of the deadly insurrection and the threats he has received," NBC News said in a press release announcing the upcoming interview.

    The interview with air Thursday night at 6:30pm E.T. on "NBC Nightly News," which is anchored by Holt. Other portions of the officer's interview will air on other NBC News platforms, including on "TODAY" and on MSNBC.

    https://www.businessinsider.com/cop-who-killed-ashli-babbitt-identity-nbc-interview-2021-8
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2021, 10:14:22 PM
    This attack was not investigated until after the victim filed a lawsuit, that is 536 days (!) after the incident and to cover up the crimes the footage was classified as a "citizen encounter". As usual the cop resigned so he can work for another department.


    White Louisiana trooper seen pummeling black man repeatedly with flashlight: 'Pain compliance'

    (https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2021/08/1862/1048/AP21237162500759.jpg?ve=1&tl=1)

    Graphic body camera video kept secret for more than two years shows a Louisiana State Police trooper pummeling a black motorist 18 times with a flashlight — an attack the trooper defended as "pain compliance."

    "I’m not resisting! I'm not resisting!" Aaron Larry Bowman can be heard screaming between blows on the footage obtained by The Associated Press. The May 2019 beating following a traffic stop left him with a broken jaw, three broken ribs, a broken wrist, and a gash to his head that required six staples to close.

    Bowman's encounter near his Monroe home came less than three weeks after troopers from the same embattled agency punched, stunned, and dragged another Black motorist, Ronald Greene, before he died in police custody on a rural roadside in northeast Louisiana. Video of Greene’s death similarly remained under wraps before AP obtained and published it earlier this year.

    Federal prosecutors are examining both cases in a widening investigation into police brutality and potential cover-ups involving both troopers and state police brass.

    State police didn’t investigate the attack on Bowman until 536 days after it occurred — even though it was captured on body camera — and only did so weeks after Bowman brought a civil lawsuit.

    The state police released a statement Wednesday saying that Jacob Brown, the white trooper who struck Bowman, "engaged in excessive and unjustifiable actions," failed to report the use of force to his supervisors, and "intentionally mislabeled" his body camera video.

    Before resigning in March, Brown tallied 23 use-of-force incidents dating to 2015 — 19 of them targeting black people, according to state police records.

    Aside from the federal investigation, Brown faces state charges of second-degree battery and malfeasance in Bowman’s beating. He also faces state charges in two other violent arrests of black motorists, including one he boasted about last year in a group chat with other troopers, saying the suspect is "gonna be sore" and "it warms my heart knowing we could educate that young man."

    On the night Bowman was pulled over for a traffic violation, Brown came upon the scene after deputies had forcibly removed Bowman from his vehicle and taken him to the ground. The trooper later told investigators he "was in the area and was trying to get involved."

    Wielding an 8-inch aluminum flashlight reinforced with a pointed end to shatter car glass, Brown jumped out of his state police vehicle and began bashing Bowman on his head and body within two seconds of "initial contact" — unleashing 18 strikes in 24 seconds, detectives wrote in an investigative report.

    "Give me your fucking hands!" the trooper shouted. "I ain't messing with you."

    Bowman tried to explain several times that he was a dialysis patient, had done nothing wrong, and wasn't resisting, saying, "I'm not fighting you, you're fighting me."

    Brown responded with: "Shut the fuck up!" and "You ain’t listening."

    Bowman later can be heard moaning, still on the ground. "I’m bleeding!" he said. "They hit me in the head with a flashlight!"

    Brown, 31, later said Bowman had struck a deputy and that the blows were "pain compliance" intended to get Bowman into handcuffs. Investigators who reviewed Brown’s video months after the fact determined his use of force was not reasonable or necessary.

    Brown did not respond to several messages seeking comment.

    Bowman, 46, denied hitting anyone and is not seen on the video being violent with officers. But he still faces a list of charges, including battery of a police officer, resisting an officer and the traffic violation for which he was initially stopped, improper lane usage.

    Brown not only failed to report his use of force but mislabeled his footage as a "citizen encounter" in what investigators called "an intentional attempt to hide the video from any administrative review."

    Bowman’s defense attorney, Keith Whiddon, said he was initially told there was no body-camera video.

    Robert Tew, the district attorney in Monroe, declined to discuss Brown’s case or anything to do with the state police. "We’ll see what the DOJ has to do," he said during a brief interview outside his home.

    Bowman himself hadn’t seen the footage until recently, when prosecutors from the U.S. Justice Department showed it to him and his civil attorney.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/white-louisiana-trooper-seen-pummeling-black-man-flashlight-pain-compliance

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 26, 2021, 03:11:43 PM
    ip to comments.

    FBI Agent, Army Reserves Col. charged with sex crimes against children
    mypanhandle ^ | 08/26/2021
    Posted on 8/26/2021, 6:05:46 PM by devane617

    An FBI agent who investigated sex crimes against children has been arrested and charged with multiple sex crimes against children across several states, according to the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office.

    Deputies said Supervisory Special Agent David Harris was tasked with investigating crimes against children, including child pornography. But in February of this year, he was accused of exposing himself to a 14-year-old girl in a “lewd and lascivious manner,” while on vacation in St. George Island

    The investigation began in Franklin County but because of Harris’ role in the FBI, his status as a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves, and the locations of the witnesses, victim(s), and suspect the Department of Justice and the Office of Inspector General joined the case.

    “In the course of this investigation, evidence was obtained that led to other felony crimes committed by Harris of a sexual nature with minors and adults in the States of Louisiana and Texas, five jurisdictions and three states in all,” deputies wrote. “Records were obtained from Harris’ issued government electronic devices finding conversation excerpts from Harris claiming his sexual preference to underage females and admitting to his exploits (including the St George Island incident).”

    Harris, 51, is now in jail in Louisiana and “faces a string of criminal charges — including indecency with a child, crimes against nature and sexual battery,” deputies wrote.

    Harris was arrested earlier this summer in Ascension Parish and is being held without bond. Harris also has outstanding arrests warrants pending from East Baton Rouge and Orleans Parish. He also has an outstanding arrest warrant out of Tyler, Texas. Investigators said evidence in Texas suggested that crimes go back for several years.

    Franklin County deputies added that Harris has been fired by the FBI.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2021, 05:58:42 PM
    Once again the FBI somehow gets "unauthorized access" to data they were not allowed to.

    Meanwhile the FBI regularly arrests people who are claimed to have gained "unauthorized access" to data.

    Palantir glitch allegedly granted some FBI staff unauthorized access to a crypto hacker's data

    Peter Thiel's AI company Palantir, whose clients have included the CIA and US immigration agency ICE, is back in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. A new report claims a glitch in its secretive software program used by the FBI allowed unauthorized personnel to access private data for more than a year. According to The New York Post, the mishap was revealed in a letter by prosecutors in the Manhattan federal court case against accused hacker Virgil Griffith. Palantir denied the claims in a statement and said the fault was caused by the FBI's incorrect use of the software.

    Griffith was arrested in 2019 for allegedly providing North Korea with information on how cryptocurrency and blockchain tech could help it to evade US sanctions. The incident in question revolves around the alleged hacker's social media data, obtained through a federal search warrant in March 2020. According to the letter, the Twitter and Facebook information was uploaded to Palantir's program through the default settings, effectively allowing unauthorized FBI employees to access it

    Between May 2020 to August 2021, the material was accessed four times by three analysts and an agent. The FBI case agent assigned to Griffith's case was alerted to the issue by a colleague earlier this month, according to the letter. Those who accessed the info reportedly told prosecutors that they did not recall using it in their investigations.

    https://ph.news.yahoo.com/palantir-glitch-allegedly-granted-fbi-131557110.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 26, 2021, 08:13:47 PM
    The All-Seeing "i": Apple Just Declared War on Your Privacy

    By now you've probably heard that Apple plans to push a new and uniquely intrusive surveillance system out to many of the more than one billion iPhones it has sold, which all run the behemoth's proprietary, take-it-or-leave-it software. This new offensive is tentatively slated to begin with the launch of iOS 15⁠—almost certainly in mid-September⁠—with the devices of its US user-base designated as the initial targets. We’re told that other countries will be spared, but not for long.

    You might have noticed that I haven’t mentioned which problem it is that Apple is purporting to solve. Why? Because it doesn’t matter.

    Having read thousands upon thousands of remarks on this growing scandal, it has become clear to me that many understand it doesn't matter, but few if any have been willing to actually say it. Speaking candidly, if that’s still allowed, that’s the way it always goes when someone of institutional significance launches a campaign to defend an indefensible intrusion into our private spaces. They make a mad dash to the supposed high ground, from which they speak in low, solemn tones about their moral mission before fervently invoking the dread spectre of the Four Horsemen of the Infopocalypse, warning that only a dubious amulet—or suspicious software update—can save us from the most threatening members of our species.

    Suddenly, everybody with a principled objection is forced to preface their concern with apologetic throat-clearing and the establishment of bonafides: I lost a friend when the towers came down, however... As a parent, I understand this is a real problem, but...

    As a parent, I’m here to tell you that sometimes it doesn’t matter why the man in the handsome suit is doing something. What matters are the consequences.

    Apple’s new system, regardless of how anyone tries to justify it, will permanently redefine what belongs to you, and what belongs to them.

    How?

    The task Apple intends its new surveillance system to perform—preventing their cloud systems from being used to store digital contraband, in this case unlawful images uploaded by their customers—is traditionally performed by searching their systems. While it’s still problematic for anybody to search through a billion people’s private files, the fact that they can only see the files you gave them is a crucial limitation.

    Now, however, that’s all set to change. Under the new design, your phone will now perform these searches on Apple’s behalf before your photos have even reached their iCloud servers, and—yada, yada, yada—if enough "forbidden content" is discovered, law-enforcement will be notified.

    I intentionally wave away the technical and procedural details of Apple’s system here, some of which are quite clever, because they, like our man in the handsome suit, merely distract from the most pressing fact—the fact that, in just a few weeks, Apple plans to erase the boundary dividing which devices work for you, and which devices work for them.

    Why is this so important? Once the precedent has been set that it is fit and proper for even a "pro-privacy" company like Apple to make products that betray their users and owners, Apple itself will lose all control over how that precedent is applied. ​​​​​​As soon as the public first came to learn of the “spyPhone” plan, experts began investigating its technical weaknesses, and the many ways it could be abused, primarily within the parameters of Apple’s design. Although these valiant vulnerability-research efforts have produced compelling evidence that the system is seriously flawed, they also seriously miss the point: Apple gets to decide whether or not their phones will monitor their owners’ infractions for the government, but it's the government that gets to decide what constitutes an infraction... and how to handle it.

    For its part, Apple says their system, in its initial, v1.0 design, has a narrow focus: it only scrutinizes photos intended to be uploaded to iCloud (although for 85% of its customers, that means EVERY photo), and it does not scrutinize them beyond a simple comparison against a database of specific examples of previously-identified child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

    If you’re an enterprising pedophile with a basement full of CSAM-tainted iPhones, Apple welcomes you to entirely exempt yourself from these scans by simply flipping the “Disable iCloud Photos” switch, a bypass which reveals that this system was never designed to protect children, as they would have you believe, but rather to protect their brand. As long as you keep that material off their servers, and so keep Apple out of the headlines, Apple doesn’t care.

    So what happens when, in a few years at the latest, a politician points that out, and—in order to protect the children—bills are passed in the legislature to prohibit this "Disable" bypass, effectively compelling Apple to scan photos that aren’t backed up to iCloud? What happens when a party in India demands they start scanning for memes associated with a separatist movement? What happens when the UK demands they scan for a library of terrorist imagery? How long do we have left before the iPhone in your pocket begins quietly filing reports about encountering “extremist” political material, or about your presence at a "civil disturbance"? Or simply about your iPhone's possession of a video clip that contains, or maybe-or-maybe-not contains, a blurry image of a passer-by who resembles, according to an algorithm, "a person of interest"?

    If Apple demonstrates the capability and willingness to continuously, remotely search every phone for evidence of one particular type of crime, these are questions for which they will have no answer. And yet an answer will come—and it will come from the worst lawmakers of the worst governments.

    This is not a slippery slope. It’s a cliff.

    One particular frustration for me is that I know some people at Apple, and I even like some people at Apple—bright, principled people who should know better. Actually, who do know better. Every security expert in the world is screaming themselves hoarse now, imploring Apple to stop, even those experts who in more normal circumstances reliably argue in favor of censorship. Even some survivors of child exploitation are against it. And yet, as the OG designer Galileo once said, it moves.

    Faced with a blistering torrent of global condemnation, Apple has responded not by addressing any concerns or making any changes, or, more sensibly, by just scrapping the plan altogether, but by deploying their man-in-the-handsome-suit software chief, who resembles the well-moisturized villain from a movie about Wall Street, to give quotes to, yes, the Wall Street Journal about how sorry the company is for the "confusion" it has caused, but how the public shouldn't worry: Apple “feels very good about what they’re doing.”

    Neither the message nor the messenger was a mistake. Apple dispatched its SVP-for-Software Ken doll to speak with the Journal not to protect the company's users, but to reassure the company's investors. His role was to create the false impression that this is not something that you, or anyone, should be upset about. And, collaterally, his role was to ensure this new "policy" would be associated with the face of an Apple executive other than CEO Tim Cook, just in case the roll-out, or the fall-out, results in a corporate beheading.

    Why? Why is Apple risking so much for a CSAM-detection system that has been denounced as “dangerous” and "easily repurposed for surveillance and censorship" by the very computer scientists who've already put it to the test? What could be worth the decisive shattering of the foundational Apple idea that an iPhone belongs to the person who carries it, rather than to the company that made it?

    Apple: "Designed in California, Assembled in China, Purchased by You, Owned by Us."

    The one answer to these questions that the optimists keep coming back to is the likelihood that Apple is doing this as a prelude to finally switching over to “end-to-end” encryption for everything its customers store on iCloud—something Apple had previously intended to do before backtracking, in a dismaying display of cowardice, after the FBI secretly complained.

    For the unfamiliar, what I’m describing here as end-to-end encryption is a somewhat complex concept, but briefly, it means that only the two endpoints sharing a file—say, two phones on opposite sides of the internet—are able to decrypt it. Even if the file were being stored and served from an iCloud server in Cupertino, as far as Apple (or any other middleman-in-a-handsome-suit) is concerned, that file is just an indecipherable blob of random garbage: the file only becomes a text message, a video, a photo, or whatever it is, when it is paired with a key that’s possessed only by you and by those with whom you choose to share it.

    This is the goal of end-to-end encryption: drawing a new and ineradicable line in the digital sand dividing your data and their data. It allows you to trust a service provider to store your data without granting them any ability to understand it. This would mean that even Apple itself could no longer be expected to rummage through your iCloud account with its grabby little raccoon hands—and therefore could not be expected to hand it over to any government that can stamp a sheet of paper, which is precisely why the FBI (again: secretly) complained.

    For Apple to realize this original vision would have represented a huge improvement in the privacy of our devices, effectively delivering the final word in a thirty year-long debate over establishing a new industry standard—and, by extension, the new global expectation that parties seeking access to data from a device must obtain it from that device, rather than turning the internet and its ecosystem into a spy machine.

    Unfortunately, I am here to report that once again, the optimists are wrong: Apple’s proposal to make their phones inform on and betray their owners marks the dawn of a dark future, one to be written in the blood of the political opposition of a hundred countries that will exploit this system to the hilt. See, the day after this system goes live, it will no longer matter whether or not Apple ever enables end-to-end encryption, because our iPhones will be reporting their contents before our keys are even used.

    I can’t think of any other company that has so proudly, and so publicly, distributed spyware to its own devices—and I can’t think of a threat more dangerous to a product’s security than the mischief of its own maker. There is no fundamental technological limit to how far the precedent Apple is establishing can be pushed, meaning the only restraint is Apple’s all-too-flexible company policy, something governments understand all too well.

    I would say there should be a law, but I fear it would only make things worse.

    https://edwardsnowden.substack.com/p/all-seeing-i
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 28, 2021, 04:58:58 PM
    Are the police chief and the city complicit in supporting a convicted murderer in uniform?

    Huntsville still paying police officer convicted of murder two months ago

    The records show that Darby has been on sick leave since a jury found him guilty two months ago. He is off work under the Family and Medical Leave Act, a federal law requiring employers to allow workers unpaid extended time off for medical or family reasons.

    The most recent pay records, from mid-June, show that Darby is paid about $2,162 before taxes every two weeks.

    The city also appears to have asked other police officers to donate accrued sick leave while Darby awaits sentencing.

    https://www.al.com/news/2021/07/huntsville-still-paying-police-officer-convicted-of-murder-two-months-ago.html

    About time.

    But notice the disturbing mindset: despite murdering an old man by shooting him in the face with a shotgun, even overriding a senior officer at the scene who was trying to de-escalate, the prosecutors still make excuses saying no one in their office wants to prosecute a cop.

    Keep thinking that these thugs care about "justice" or "protecting and serving".


    William Ben Darby, Huntsville officer convicted of murder, sentenced to 25 years for shooting Jeff Parker

    (https://kubrick.htvapps.com/htv-prod-media.s3.amazonaws.com/images/huntsville-police-officer-william-ben-darby-mugshot-1620412024.png?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&resize=660:*)

    William Ben Darby, the Huntsville police officer convicted of murder for shooting and killing Jeff Parker, was sentenced today to 25 years in prison.

    Court security officers took 28-year-old Darby to the Madison County jail from Circuit Judge Donna Pate’s courtroom after the hearing. Darby is not eligible for an appeal bond, so he will begin serving his sentence immediately.

    A Madison County jury on May 7 found Darby guilty of murder for shooting and killing Parker, a 49-year-old man threatening suicide, three years ago.

    Robert Tuten, Darby’s defense attorney, said they will appeal the case immediately.

    “This is obviously an extremely important case — not only for Ben and his family, not only for the Parker family — but for law enforcement in the state of Alabama,” Tuten said at a press conference after the hearing. “This case is going to have a huge impact on how police officers enforce the law and how they do their jobs.”

    Tim Gann, chief deputy district attorney in Madison County, said no one in his office wanted to prosecute a police officer.

    “I think that’s the worst thing we face is making that decision,” he said, “because we do understand it’s a dangerous job, we do understand that they’re in harms way.”

    https://www.al.com/news/2021/08/william-ben-darby-huntsville-officer-convicted-of-murder-sentenced-to-25-years-for-shooting-jeff-parker.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 01, 2021, 02:33:25 PM
    About time.

    Notice also: "The report even suggested investigators designed questions to help exonerate the officers involved." That's some "back the blue" shit there.

    Police Officers, paramedics indicted on 32 counts in Elijah McClain’s death

    Three officers and two paramedics have been indicted on 32 counts by a grand jury in the death of Elijah McClain. The charges come two years after the 23-year-old was placed in a carotid hold by Aurora officers – which deprives oxygen from a person’s brain – and injected with the powerful sedative ketamine by paramedics. McClain died six days after the incident.

    A 157-page independent investigation outlined several missteps in the police department’s handling of the internal investigation into what happened. The report even suggested investigators designed questions to help exonerate the officers involved.

    Gov. Jared Polis issued an executive order in June 2020, assigning Attorney General Phil Weiser as a special prosecutor to investigate McClain’s death.

    The investigations “need to be thorough. They need to inspire public confidence,” Polis said at the time. “I’m confident that the process is in place to do so with a special prosecutor. These are decisions that need to be well done rather than done too quickly.”

    Weiser made the announcement on the indictment Wednesday morning. Each of the five defendants face one count of manslaughter and one count of criminally negligent homicide.

    The indictment is against Aurora police officers Nathan Woodyard and Randy Roedema, former Aurora police officer Jason Rosenblatt, and Aurora Fire Rescue paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Peter Cichuniec for their alleged conduct on the night of Aug. 24, 2019 that resulted in the death of McClain.

    Weiser said officers Rodema and Rosenblatt also face a count of second-degree assault with the intent to cause bodily injury and caused serious bodily injury to McClain. Both also face one count of a crime of violence.

    In addition to the manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide charges, paramedics Cooper and Cichuniec also face one count of second-degree assault with intent to cause bodily injury and caused bodily injury. As well as one count of second-degree assault for recklessly causing serious injury by means of a deadly weapon– ketamine.

    The paramedics also face one count of second-degree assault for a purpose other than medical or therapeutic treatment intentionally causing stupor unconsciousness or other physical or mental impairment or injury to McClain by administering ketamine without consent.

    https://kdvr.com/news/local/colorado-ag-to-make-announcement-wednesday-on-elijah-mcclain-grand-jury-investigation/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 02, 2021, 12:35:54 PM
    Another case of the biggest organized crime syndicate in the US.

    A former Marine was pulled over for following a truck too closely. Police took nearly $87,000 of his cash

    The Nevada trooper first told Stephen Lara the highway patrol was educating drivers “about violations they may not realize they’re committing,” and that he’d been pulled over for following a tanker truck too closely. Eventually the trooper admitted having an ulterior purpose: stopping the smuggling of illegal drugs, weapons and currency as they crossed the state.

    Lara — a former Marine who says he was on his way to visit his daughters in Northern California — insisted he was doing none of those things, though he readily admitted he had “a lot” of cash in his car. As he stood on the side of the road, police searched the vehicle, pulling nearly $87,000 in a zip-top bag from Lara’s trunk and insisting a drug-sniffing dog had detected something on the cash.

    Police found no drugs, and Lara, 39, was charged with no crime. But police left with his money, calling a Drug Enforcement Administration agent to coordinate an “adoption,” which allows federal authorities to seize cash or property they suspect is connected to criminal activity without levying criminal charges.

    “I left there confused. I left there angry,” Lara said in an interview with The Washington Post. “And I could not believe that I had just been literally robbed on the side of the road by people with badges and guns.”

    It was only after Lara got a lawyer, sued and talked with The Washington Post about his ordeal that the government said it would return his money.

    Asked for comment on this story Tuesday, spokespeople for the Justice Department, DEA and Nevada Highway Patrol all declined. But Wednesday, after this story first published online, DEA spokeswoman Anne Edgecomb said the agency had made a decision to return Lara’s money and Justice Department spokesman Joshua Stueve said the government “is reviewing existing policy on adoptive forfeitures.”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/stephen-lara-nevada-asset-forfeiture-adoption/2021/09/01/6f170932-06ae-11ec-8c3f-3526f81b233b_story.html



    In case you are wondering about who advocated for and supported this sort of government-run crime spree: current President, Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.

    S.948 - Comprehensive Forfeiture Act of 1984
    Sponsor: Sen. Biden, Joseph R., Jr. [D-DE] (Introduced 03/24/1983)

    https://www.congress.gov/bill/98th-congress/senate-bill/948
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 03, 2021, 02:03:59 PM
    Australia debuts 'Orwellian' new app using facial recognition, geolocation to enforce quarantine

    The government of South Australia, one of the country's six states, has implemented a new policy requiring Australians to use an app with facial recognition software and geolocation to prove that they are abiding by a 14-day quarantine for travel within the country.

    While a conservative expert described the policy as "Orwellian," he told Fox News that it represents an improvement over the current COVID-19 policy. Australians voluntarily choose the quarantine app over alternative quarantine measures.

    Australia has banned international travel, unless residents have a permit to leave the country. The country has also severely restricted domestic travel. Residents must spend 14 days in quarantine upon return.

    Steven Marshall, premier of the state of South Australia, launched the quarantine app policy in late August. Residents returning from New South Wales and Victoria, two other Australian states, may spend their 14 days in post-travel quarantine at home, rather than in a hotel, so long as they download and use the "Orwellian" app, developed by the South Australian government, ABC News Australia reported.

    The app uses geolocation and facial recognition software to track those in quarantine. The app will contact people at random, asking them to provide proof of their location within 15 minutes.

    https://www.foxnews.com/world/australia-debuts-new-orwellian-app-using-facial-recognition-geolocation-to-enforce-quarantine


    Well surely something like that could never happen in the "land of the free"....

    Federal Use of Facial Recognition Technology Expanding: GAO Report

    A recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) survey shows that at least 10 federal agencies have plans to expand their use of facial recognition technology over the next two years—a prospect that alarms privacy advocates who worry about a lack of oversight.

    The GAO released the results of a survey of 24 federal agencies, finding that 18 of them use facial recognition technology. Fourteen of those agencies use the tech for routine activity, such as unlocking agency-issued smartphones, while six reported using facial recognition software for criminal investigations and five others use the technology for surveillance, the Aug. 24 report found.

    “For example, [U.S. Department of Health and Human Services] reported that it used an FRT system (AnyVision) to monitor its facilities by searching live camera feeds in real-time for individuals on watchlists or suspected of criminal activity, which reduces the need for security guards to memorize these individuals’ faces,” the GAO said. “This system automatically alerts personnel when an individual on a watchlist is present.”

    According to the GAO, at least 10 government agencies plan to expand their use of facial recognition technology through 2023. To do so, many agencies are turning to the private sector.

    For example, “[the] U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations reported it began an operational pilot using Clearview AI in June 2020, which supports the agency’s counterterrorism, counterintelligence, and criminal investigations,” the GAO said.

    “The agency reported it already collects facial images with mobile devices to search national databases and plans to enhance searches by accessing Clearview AI’s large repository of facial images from open sources to search for matches.”

    The GAO’s Aug. 24 report follows June research that focused specifically on law enforcement’s use of facial recognition technology. The GAO’s June report revealed the vast troves of data held by federal law enforcement, including 836 million images held by the Department of Homeland Security alone.

    The June report also revealed the lack of oversight regarding facial recognition technology. According to the report, 13 of the 20 federal law enforcement agencies that use the technology didn’t know what systems they use.

    “For example, when we requested information from one of the agencies about its use of non-federal systems, agency officials told us they had to poll field division personnel because the information was not maintained by the agency,” the report said.

    “These agency officials also told us that the field division personnel had to work from their memory about their past use of non-federal systems and that they could not ensure we were provided comprehensive information about the agency’s use of non-federal systems.”

    The lack of oversight of the government’s use of surveillance technology is an issue that has drawn the attention of lawmakers from both sides of the aisle. Democrats have largely focused on the racial disparities in the accuracy of facial recognition, while some Republicans have expressed concerns about domestic surveillance.

    Michigan resident Robert Williams, a black man who was wrongly arrested in January after Detroit police incorrectly identified him as a felon based on shoddy facial recognition technology, testified about such problems at a U.S. House Judiciary Committee hearing.

    https://www.theepochtimes.com/federal-use-of-facial-recognition-technology-expanding-gao-report_3970284.html

    https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-21-518.pdf
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 04, 2021, 11:43:23 AM
    The FBI employed pedophiles to investigate other pedophiles? Not uncommon for pedophiles and child abusers to work in law enforcement and other positions of authority to facilitate their vileness.


    FBI agent who investigated sex crimes against children is charged for sex crimes against children

    (https://www.gannett-cdn.com/presto/2021/08/27/PTAL/71fc9750-f6c3-4399-999c-eae47a5ccbb0-David_Harris.jpg?width=1320&height=824&fit=crop&format=pjpg&auto=webp)

    An FBI agent assigned to investigate crimes against children was arrested for alleged sex crimes across three states that included minors.

    David Harris, 51, of Prairieville, Louisiana, was arrested earlier this summer on sexual assault and related charges involving a number of victims dating back to 2016, according to the Franklin County Sheriff's Office and media reports.

    He is facing additional charges involving a girl he victimized while he was vacationing on St. George Island, Florida.

    Harris, who worked as a supervisory special agent with the FBI, was fired during the course of multiple investigations involving victims in Louisiana, Texas and Florida.

    On Thursday, Franklin County Sheriff A.J. "Tony" Smith  announced that an arrest warrant was issued for Harris' arrest over allegations reported to the Sheriff's Office in February.

    "Records were obtained from Harris' issued government electronic devices finding conversation excerpts from Harris claiming his sexual preference to underage females and admitting to his exploits (including the St. George Island incident)," the Sheriff's Office said.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/31/fbi-agent-charged-sex-crimes-against-children-florida/5663692001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 08, 2021, 12:26:30 PM
    The whistleblower cop who revealed the abuse was arrested and faces up to 20 years in prison. This department should be treated like any other criminal organization.

    Illinois attorney general will investigate department that retaliated against police whistleblower

    State Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Wednesday that his office launched a sweeping investigation into possible systemic civil rights violations by the Joliet Police Department, where a video leaked by a whistleblower last year showed officers slapped a man, restricted his breathing and demeaned him as he was dying of a drug overdose.

    Raoul's announcement came 20 months after the death of 37-year-old Eric Lurry, and a day after USA TODAY published an investigation detailing how law enforcement officials  kept information about the case under wraps for months and retaliated against the veteran officer who exposed the video.

    Raoul said his office will conduct a civil patterns and practices investigation into Joliet police but it won't make any specific findings about Lurry's death or about the alleged retaliation against Sgt. Javier Esqueda, who was arrested on official misconduct charges for leaking video of Lurry's death in custody to a television reporter. Esqueda could face a maximum 20 years in prison.

    Raoul's investigation into Joliet marks the first time such an investigation has happened on the state level. Lawmakers in Illinois empowered Raoul's office to pursue these kinds of probes as part of a larger police reform bill enacted in July.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/investigations/2021/09/08/illinois-attorney-general-to-investigate-joliet-police-civil-rights-violations/5714588001/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 09, 2021, 07:40:23 AM
    The ruiner in chief.


    " According to CNN, the Biden Admin will no longer allow workers to get tested weekly instead of taking the vaccine. Instead, he's signing an executive order Thursday requiring all workers to get the vaccine or face indefinite suspension.

    What's more, Biden's order will extend to employees of government contractors. "




    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/biden-eliminates-testing-opt-out-requiring-all-public-workers-and-contractors-get
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2021, 04:15:14 PM
    Big Brother is watching.


    Fury as Biden tries to let IRS snoop on your bank accounts, Venmo, PayPal and crypto deals in plan that could 'violate the Fourth Amendment'

    One key prong of President Biden's plan to bankroll Democrats' $3.5 trillion budget plan is to monitor every inflow and outflow of an individual's bank account.

    The Biden administration says such surveillance would target audits and prevent tax evasion, but some are concerned that it might run up against the Fourth Amendment and those who can't afford to fight tax audits or move their money into offshore accounts. 

    The proposal would require banks to report to the IRS every deposit and withdrawal from an account, including transactions from Venmo, PayPal, crypto exchanges and the like in an effort to fight tax evasion. The IRS would know how much money is in an individual's bank account in a given year, whether the individual earned income on that account and exactly how much was going in an and out.

    Biden, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, IRS chief Charles Rettig and a number of Democrats in the Senate, most especially Elizabeth Warren, are pushing for the deep dive into individual financial transactions as part of an $80 billion plan to enforce tax compliance.

    Patrick Hedger, vice president of policy at the Taxpayers' Protection Alliance, warned that such a proposal could violate the Fourth Amendment, which protects citizens from search and seizure without probably cause.

    'The IRS is first and foremost, a law enforcement agency, and the Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures in pursuit of, of looking for wrongdoing and criminal actions, so I think this is going to run into severe Fourth Amendment headwinds,' Hedger told DailyMail.com.

    Other parts of the plan include setting up a global minimum corporate tax rate  of 15% and a system that prevents multinational companies from registering profits in the lowest-tax jurisdictions and raising taxes on the rich.

    A Treasury Department report from May claimed that the tax gap totaled nearly $600 billion in 2019 and would rise to $700 trillion over the next decade if left unchecked, roughly 15% of taxes owed.   

    The IRS estimates that compliance on taxes due on wages is 99% while compliance on 'less visible' sources of income is only 45%.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9973671/Bidens-plan-let-IRS-SNOOP-bank-accounts.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 09, 2021, 04:17:05 PM
    The ruiner in chief.


    " According to CNN, the Biden Admin will no longer allow workers to get tested weekly instead of taking the vaccine. Instead, he's signing an executive order Thursday requiring all workers to get the vaccine or face indefinite suspension.

    What's more, Biden's order will extend to employees of government contractors. "




    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/biden-eliminates-testing-opt-out-requiring-all-public-workers-and-contractors-get

    Same Biden, same (?) handlers, different day. Biden (https://www.businessinsider.com/biden-covid-19-vaccine-will-not-be-mandatory-in-us-2020-12) in December 2020 on mandatory vaccines:

    "I don't think it should be mandatory, I wouldn't demand it be mandatory. But I would do everything in my power – just like I don't think masks have to be made mandatory nationwide – I'll do everything in my power as president of the United States to encourage people to do the right thing and when they do it demonstrate that it matters,"
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 16, 2021, 10:36:47 PM
    No justice for Justine Damond. Don't expect any riots or looting. She was a white woman killed by a black cop.

    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor's murder verdict reversed over Justine Damond Ruszczyk's death

    (https://e3.365dm.com/19/05/2048x1152/skynews-mohamed-noor-justine-damond_4655359.jpg)

    The family of an Australian woman fatally shot by a police officer in 2017 has responded to the Minnesota Supreme Court's decision to reverse the man's third-degree murder conviction, saying they are "heartbroken" the "depraved and senseless shooting" does not count as murder.

    In 2019, Mohamed Noor was convicted of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Justine Damond Ruszczyk, a dual US-Australian citizen who had called 911 to report a possible sexual assault behind her home.

    Noor, who is no longer a police officer, was sentenced to 12 and a half years on the murder count but was not sentenced for manslaughter.

    The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed the third-degree murder conviction, saying the charge did not fit the circumstances in the case.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-16/mohamed-noor-minneapolis-shooting-justine-damond-ruszczyk/100465680
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 16, 2021, 10:48:32 PM
    Funny how the headline mentions "Tesla driver" but doesn't mention the power-tripping crossing guard, a black woman who lied and of course is not being identified. She probably hoped she would get an easy pay day by playing the victim.

    The driver should sue the city, the police department, the prosecutors and of course the lying Shaniqua though it's unlikely she will go to prison and pay out of her own pocket.


    Tesla driver arrested, spent night in jail for allegedly hitting crossing guard -- video shows different story

    Maryland police arrested a Tesla driver last week for allegedly hitting a crossing guard with his car before fleeing the scene – but video from a neighbor’s security camera seems to call those charges into question.

    The incident happened Thursday morning in Glen Burnie, a suburb south of Baltimore. A female crossing guard with the Anne Arundel County Police stopped traffic so three students could cross the street.

    Police said an "impatient" driver in a blue Tesla assaulted the crossing guard by driving his vehicle toward her, "intentionally striking her leg, causing a minor injury."

    The driver, whom they identified as 32-year-old Joseph Hernandez, then fled the scene, police said. A nearby officer noted the driver’s license plate and Hernandez was arrested.

    Hernandez was put in handcuffs in front of his girlfriend and her child before he was taken to jail, WJLA reported. He is charged with failure to render aid to an injured person, reckless driving, and negligent driving as well as second-degree assault.

    Hernandez has said all the charges against him are completely false – and footage from a neighbor's security camera seems to back him up.

    It shows Hernandez pull up to a crosswalk in the blue Tesla. The crossing guard gestures for him to move up so another car can pass. She appears to back into his car while motioning for three students to cross the street.

    Hernandez inches the car backward and it appears that he and the crossing guard exchange words. He drives away and the security guard appears unharmed.

    WJLA questioned the crossing guard Tuesday morning about her claims. She said, "everything speaks for itself. I know what took place."

    The station reported that the crossing guard told them off-camera the blue Tesla didn’t exactly "hit" her, but "touched her body, the back of her leg."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/tesla-driver-arrested-spent-night-jail-allegedly-hit-crossing-guard-video-different-story

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 20, 2021, 11:42:06 AM
    And another one of those finest people.


    Jersey City cop pleads guilty to charge of attempted sex with minors, faces 8 years in prison

    A 34-year-old Jersey City police officer pled guilty to a charge he traveled to Atlantic City to sexually assault two underage girls, Acting Attorney General Andrew J. Bruck said Thursday.

    Stephen T. Wilson, 34, of Bayonne, had been charged with one count of second-degree attempted aggravated sexual assault in Atlantic County. Under his plea agreement, the state will recommend Wilson be sentenced to eight years in state prison.

    He will also be required to register as a sex offender under Megan’s Law and will be subject to parole supervision for life, the AG’s office said.

    Wilson reportedly used a chat app with other adults told him they’d provide him access to children he could sexually assault, reports said. The Attorney General’s Office said Wilson, who was suspended after his Feb. 26 arrest, traveled to Atlantic City to meet adults he met on an incest chat app, who offered him access to underage girls, ages 8 and 10, in exchange for $200. When he was nabbed, he reportedly had condoms and more than $500 in cash on him.

    https://www.nj.com/hudson/2021/09/jersey-city-cop-pleads-guilty-to-sex-with-minors-charge-faces-8-years-in-prison.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 22, 2021, 12:21:26 AM
    A headline from another website sums it up nicely:

    Feds decide Feds won’t charge undercover armed Fed discovered at Fed rally


    Federal officer arrested at Capitol rally won’t be charged

    A federal law enforcement officer was arrested carrying a gun at Saturday’s rally at the U.S. Capitol billed to support the suspects charged in January’s insurrection but will not be prosecuted.

    The 27-year-old New Jersey man is an officer with U.S. Customs and Border Protection. He was arrested by Capitol Police for illegally possessing a gun on the grounds of the Capitol after people in the crowd reported seeing him with a handgun and notified nearby officers.

    His arrest and presence at the event were surprising because the rally was billed as an event to support those who have been charged in January’s riot.

    https://apnews.com/article/arrests-riots-capitol-siege-gun-politics-us-customs-and-border-protection-f35fb9ad54ac0babf710e87eaec8a4b1



    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 27, 2021, 07:10:32 AM
    http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/federal-authorities-safety-box-seizures-owners-fight-back

    What a fng disgrace. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 27, 2021, 11:05:04 AM
    Kidnapping, assassination... Just another day for the government and its goons.


    Kidnapping, assassination and a London shoot-out: Inside the CIA's secret war plans against WikiLeaks

    In 2017, as Julian Assange began his fifth year holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London, the CIA plotted to kidnap the WikiLeaks founder, spurring heated debate among Trump administration officials over the legality and practicality of such an operation.

    Some senior officials inside the CIA and the Trump administration even discussed killing Assange, going so far as to request “sketches” or “options” for how to assassinate him. Discussions over kidnapping or killing Assange occurred “at the highest levels” of the Trump administration, said a former senior counterintelligence official. “There seemed to be no boundaries.”

    The conversations were part of an unprecedented CIA campaign directed against WikiLeaks and its founder. The agency’s multipronged plans also included extensive spying on WikiLeaks associates, sowing discord among the group’s members, and stealing their electronic devices.

    While Assange had been on the radar of U.S. intelligence agencies for years, these plans for an all-out war against him were sparked by WikiLeaks’ ongoing publication of extraordinarily sensitive CIA hacking tools, known collectively as “Vault 7,” which the agency ultimately concluded represented “the largest data loss in CIA history.”

    President Trump’s newly installed CIA director, Mike Pompeo, was seeking revenge on WikiLeaks and Assange, who had sought refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy since 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden on rape allegations he denied. Pompeo and other top agency leaders “were completely detached from reality because they were so embarrassed about Vault 7,” said a former Trump national security official. “They were seeing blood.”

    The CIA’s fury at WikiLeaks led Pompeo to publicly describe the group in 2017 as a “non-state hostile intelligence service.” More than just a provocative talking point, the designation opened the door for agency operatives to take far more aggressive actions, treating the organization as it does adversary spy services, former intelligence officials told Yahoo News. Within months, U.S. spies were monitoring the communications and movements of numerous WikiLeaks personnel, including audio and visual surveillance of Assange himself, according to former officials.

    This Yahoo News investigation, based on conversations with more than 30 former U.S. officials — eight of whom described details of the CIA’s proposals to abduct Assange — reveals for the first time one of the most contentious intelligence debates of the Trump presidency and exposes new details about the U.S. government’s war on WikiLeaks. It was a campaign spearheaded by Pompeo that bent important legal strictures, potentially jeopardized the Justice Department’s work toward prosecuting Assange, and risked a damaging episode in the United Kingdom, the United States’ closest ally.

    The CIA declined to comment. Pompeo did not respond to requests for comment.

    “As an American citizen, I find it absolutely outrageous that our government would be contemplating kidnapping or assassinating somebody without any judicial process simply because he had published truthful information,” Barry Pollack, Assange’s U.S. lawyer, told Yahoo News.

    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/kidnapping-assassination-and-a-london-shoot-out-inside-the-ci-as-secret-war-plans-against-wiki-leaks-090057786.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 29, 2021, 09:21:23 AM
    https://news.trust.org/item/20210928025122-5mqe6

    CRAZY! 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 29, 2021, 10:46:29 AM
    Another "brave hero" attacking a 75 year old man. As usual the taxpayers will probably foot the bill.

    Body cam shows Colorado police officer use Taser on 75-year-old man, place knee on his neck

    An Idaho Springs police officer issued no warnings to a 75-year-old man before shocking him with a Taser and later placing his knee on the unconscious man’s neck, newly released body camera footage of the incident shows.

    The 75-year-old, Michael Clark, was living independently at the time of the incident but now resides in a nursing facility after suffering health complications following the incident, according to his attorney, Sarah Schielke.

    Schielke released the body camera footage Thursday after receiving it from the district attorney’s office.

    Nicholas Hanning, the officer who used the Taser on Clark, was fired from his job July 13 and is facing an assault charge for his actions. The other officer on scene, Ellie Summers, remains employed by the Idaho Springs Police Department.

    https://www.denverpost.com/2021/07/22/idaho-springs-nicholas-hanning-body-camera/



    The "brave hero":

    (https://denver.cbslocal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/15909806/2021/07/Nicholas-Hanning-charged-Idaho-Springs-Officer-from-5th-Judicial-DA.png)

    (https://i.ytimg.com/vi/kvTMICY40Hk/maxresdefault.jpg) (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/09/29/15/48548447-10041453-image-a-5_1632924722074.jpg)



    Once again the uniformed criminal gangs abuse the weak and the disabled. The same cops who attacked and abused that 75 year old man, now attacked a deaf man. Such "brave heroes"... Because of these career criminals the deaf man spent 4 months in jail until suddenly the charges against him were dropped.


    Deaf Colorado Man Sues Police After Being Wrongfully Arrested And Jailed For 4 Months

    A deaf man is suing two Colorado officers who banged his head against the concrete and tasered him for “resisting arrest” after not realizing he couldn’t hear their instructions.

    Brady Mistic was sentenced to four months in prison on charges of second-degree assault on a police officer and resisting arrest following the violent arrest in September 2019. The charges were ultimately dismissed and Mistic was released, the lawsuit said.

    Now Mistic is suing officers Nicholas Hanning and Ellie Summers, seeking unspecified compensation for pain and suffering, as the officers failed to issue a “warning or attempted communication” before knocking him to the ground. He is also suing the City of Idaho Springs and the Clear Creek County Board of Commissioners.

    Hanning was fired from the department in July in connection with another violent arrest, while Summers currently remains on active duty.

    The incident began on September 17, 2019, when Mistic was arrested for allegedly running a stop sign.

    According to the indictment, Mistic did not realize he had done anything illegal and entered the parking lot of a laundromat, got out of his car and started walking towards the building. After his arrest, he lost his car.

    He was unaware that Hanning and Summers had pulled up behind him until he saw the flashing lights of their police vehicle.

    Mistic, who cannot read lips and can only form a few words verbally, relies on American Sign Language to communicate. He attempted to use his hands to communicate with the officers, but to no avail, the lawsuit alleges.



    https://whatsnew2day.com/deaf-colorado-man-sues-police-after-being-wrongfully-arrested-and-jailed-for-four-months/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 02, 2021, 09:50:10 PM
    As expected, they don't care about due process or laws, they outright ignore them.

    Inspector General Audit Finds "Widespread" Problems With FBI's FISA Applications

    Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz issued a report (pdf) on Sept. 30 on the FBI’s applications to surveil U.S. citizens, finding “widespread” failure that “raises serious questions” and criticizing agents for not fixing flaws spotted in previous audits.

    The inspector general (IG) reviewed about 7,000 applications for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants—the same used to surveil former Trump campaign aide Carter Page in 2016—and found that the agency had failed to follow key rules, the Woods Procedures, in the program. In December 2019 review, Horowitz discovered 17 significant errors and omissions in the FISA surveillance application targeting Page.

    The most recent audit of the agency’s Woods Procedures—rules that the FBI follows to ensure that FISA applications are “scrupulously accurate”—found sweeping “non-compliance” that “raises serious questions about the adequacy and execution of the supervisory review process in place at the time of the applications we reviewed,” Horowitz said, stating that the FBI’s quality-control officials apparently missed these problems.

    His office also identified 183 FISA applications that had a missing or incomplete Woods file, which is a document meant to ensure the accuracy of statements made to the secretive FISA court. The report also found hundreds of other cases where there were instances of noncompliance with the agency’s Woods procedures.

    “A failure to adhere to the Woods Procedures … could easily lead to errors that do impact probable cause—and therefore potentially call into question the legal basis for the government’s use of highly intrusive FISA warrants,” Horowitz wrote.

    Horowitz recommended that the FBI attempt to make “additional efforts to communicate and emphasize to its workforce the importance” of the bureau’s own standards when applying for FISA warrants.

    In a statement released after Horowitz’s report, the FBI told media outlets on Sept. 30 that it appreciated the IG’s “determined focus on the FBI’s FISA process, especially given the significant changes and policy enhancements that we have worked to make in concert with, and in many instances, prior to the issuance of this most recent OIG Audit Report.”

    The federal law enforcement bureau will accept Horowitz’s recommendations detailed in the report and has adopted about half of them already, according to the statement. FBI officials didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The audit report is an extension of a report that was issued by Horowitz in March 2020, when he reviewed 29 FISA applications. According to that report, the inspector general couldn’t review four of the applications because the FBI wasn’t able to locate them. Of the 25 he could review, all of them had flaws—209 errors in total, Horowitz said.

    “Our testing of FISA applications … identified apparent errors or inadequately supported facts in all of the 25 applications we reviewed, and interviews to date with available agents or supervisors in field offices generally have confirmed the issues we identified,” he said in his March report.

    Horowitz lamented in the Sept. 30 audit that the FBI hasn’t taken his earlier report seriously.

    “In response to the findings in our December 2019 FISA report and March 2020 [report], the FBI Director publicly acknowledged the seriousness of the identified problems and announced numerous steps the FBI was undertaking to address them,” he said.

    “However, we believe certain public statements from the FBI and NSD in 2020 failed to recognize the significant risks posed by systemic non-compliance with the Woods Procedures, and during our audit, some FBI field personnel minimized the significance of Woods Procedures non-compliance.”

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/inspector-general-audit-finds-widespread-problems-fbis-fisa-applications
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 05, 2021, 07:15:51 PM
    FBI raids NYPD sergeants' union headquarters

    The FBI made an early morning visit to the headquarters of the NYPD sergeants' union.

    Multiple sources tell NY1’s Dean Meminger this is part of an ongoing investigation into the Sergeants Benevolent Association and its controversial president Ed Mullins.

    The FBI would only say there is an investigation. A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney in Manhattan would only say that a "law enforcement action" was being conducted at the location.

    One source with knowledge of the probe tells NY1 that the FBI and federal prosecutors in Manhattan are looking into possible mismanagement of funds.

    Mullins, who is fiery and often takes extreme positions to defend his members, is also currently in trouble with the police department.

    He is facing a departmental disciplinary trial for releasing information on social media about Mayor Bill de Blasio’s daughter’s arrest during a Black Lives Matter protest.

    He has also used foul language to describe the former city health commissioner, Dr. Oxiris Barbot, and Bronx Rep. Ritchie Torres.

    His police departmental trial will resume later this month.

    https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2021/10/05/fbi-sba-raid
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2021, 08:40:26 PM

    Once again the uniformed criminal gangs abuse the weak and the disabled. The same cops who attacked and abused that 75 year old man, now attacked a deaf man. Such "brave heroes"... Because of these career criminals the deaf man spent 4 months in jail until suddenly the charges against him were dropped.


    Deaf Colorado Man Sues Police After Being Wrongfully Arrested And Jailed For 4 Months

    A deaf man is suing two Colorado officers who banged his head against the concrete and tasered him for “resisting arrest” after not realizing he couldn’t hear their instructions.

    Brady Mistic was sentenced to four months in prison on charges of second-degree assault on a police officer and resisting arrest following the violent arrest in September 2019. The charges were ultimately dismissed and Mistic was released, the lawsuit said.

    Now Mistic is suing officers Nicholas Hanning and Ellie Summers, seeking unspecified compensation for pain and suffering, as the officers failed to issue a “warning or attempted communication” before knocking him to the ground. He is also suing the City of Idaho Springs and the Clear Creek County Board of Commissioners.

    Hanning was fired from the department in July in connection with another violent arrest, while Summers currently remains on active duty.

    The incident began on September 17, 2019, when Mistic was arrested for allegedly running a stop sign.

    According to the indictment, Mistic did not realize he had done anything illegal and entered the parking lot of a laundromat, got out of his car and started walking towards the building. After his arrest, he lost his car.

    He was unaware that Hanning and Summers had pulled up behind him until he saw the flashing lights of their police vehicle.

    Mistic, who cannot read lips and can only form a few words verbally, relies on American Sign Language to communicate. He attempted to use his hands to communicate with the officers, but to no avail, the lawsuit alleges.



    https://whatsnew2day.com/deaf-colorado-man-sues-police-after-being-wrongfully-arrested-and-jailed-for-four-months/


    Fucking utter Khunts.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 05, 2021, 08:43:39 PM
    No justice for Justine Damond. Don't expect any riots or looting. She was a white woman killed by a black cop.

    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor's murder verdict reversed over Justine Damond Ruszczyk's death

    (https://e3.365dm.com/19/05/2048x1152/skynews-mohamed-noor-justine-damond_4655359.jpg)

    The family of an Australian woman fatally shot by a police officer in 2017 has responded to the Minnesota Supreme Court's decision to reverse the man's third-degree murder conviction, saying they are "heartbroken" the "depraved and senseless shooting" does not count as murder.

    In 2019, Mohamed Noor was convicted of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Justine Damond Ruszczyk, a dual US-Australian citizen who had called 911 to report a possible sexual assault behind her home.

    Noor, who is no longer a police officer, was sentenced to 12 and a half years on the murder count but was not sentenced for manslaughter.

    The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed the third-degree murder conviction, saying the charge did not fit the circumstances in the case.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-16/mohamed-noor-minneapolis-shooting-justine-damond-ruszczyk/100465680


    Exactly- Why no full scale riots
    & 24/7 MSM Coverage of her Murder .
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2021, 03:35:11 PM
    Kidnapping, assassination... Just another day for the government and its goons.


    Kidnapping, assassination and a London shoot-out: Inside the CIA's secret war plans against WikiLeaks

    In 2017, as Julian Assange began his fifth year holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London, the CIA plotted to kidnap the WikiLeaks founder, spurring heated debate among Trump administration officials over the legality and practicality of such an operation.

    Some senior officials inside the CIA and the Trump administration even discussed killing Assange, going so far as to request “sketches” or “options” for how to assassinate him. Discussions over kidnapping or killing Assange occurred “at the highest levels” of the Trump administration, said a former senior counterintelligence official. “There seemed to be no boundaries.”

    The conversations were part of an unprecedented CIA campaign directed against WikiLeaks and its founder. The agency’s multipronged plans also included extensive spying on WikiLeaks associates, sowing discord among the group’s members, and stealing their electronic devices.

    While Assange had been on the radar of U.S. intelligence agencies for years, these plans for an all-out war against him were sparked by WikiLeaks’ ongoing publication of extraordinarily sensitive CIA hacking tools, known collectively as “Vault 7,” which the agency ultimately concluded represented “the largest data loss in CIA history.”

    President Trump’s newly installed CIA director, Mike Pompeo, was seeking revenge on WikiLeaks and Assange, who had sought refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy since 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden on rape allegations he denied. Pompeo and other top agency leaders “were completely detached from reality because they were so embarrassed about Vault 7,” said a former Trump national security official. “They were seeing blood.”

    The CIA’s fury at WikiLeaks led Pompeo to publicly describe the group in 2017 as a “non-state hostile intelligence service.” More than just a provocative talking point, the designation opened the door for agency operatives to take far more aggressive actions, treating the organization as it does adversary spy services, former intelligence officials told Yahoo News. Within months, U.S. spies were monitoring the communications and movements of numerous WikiLeaks personnel, including audio and visual surveillance of Assange himself, according to former officials.

    This Yahoo News investigation, based on conversations with more than 30 former U.S. officials — eight of whom described details of the CIA’s proposals to abduct Assange — reveals for the first time one of the most contentious intelligence debates of the Trump presidency and exposes new details about the U.S. government’s war on WikiLeaks. It was a campaign spearheaded by Pompeo that bent important legal strictures, potentially jeopardized the Justice Department’s work toward prosecuting Assange, and risked a damaging episode in the United Kingdom, the United States’ closest ally.

    The CIA declined to comment. Pompeo did not respond to requests for comment.

    “As an American citizen, I find it absolutely outrageous that our government would be contemplating kidnapping or assassinating somebody without any judicial process simply because he had published truthful information,” Barry Pollack, Assange’s U.S. lawyer, told Yahoo News.

    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/kidnapping-assassination-and-a-london-shoot-out-inside-the-ci-as-secret-war-plans-against-wiki-leaks-090057786.html


    After the revelations that the US planned to kidnap and even assassinate Assange, which received very little media coverage in the US, a convicted pedophile who is one of the FBI's key witnesses in their case against Assange has been imprisoned in Iceland.

    Key witness in Assange case jailed in Iceland after admitting to lies and ongoing crime spree

    Sigurdur Thordarson, a key witness for the FBI against Julian Assange, has been jailed in Iceland. The notorious alleged hacker and convicted pedophile was remanded to custody in Iceland’s highest security prison, Litla Hraun, on September 24.  Þórðarson´s lawyer, Húnbogi J. Andersen, confirms that he is in custody. Thordarson was given immunity by the FBI in exchange for testimony against Julian Assange.

    Thordarson was arrested the same day he arrived back in Iceland from a trip to Spain, and was subsequently brought before a judge after police requested indefinite detention intended to halt an ongoing crime spree. The judge apparently agreed that Thordarson’s repeated, blatant and ongoing offences against the law put him at high risk for continued re-offending.

    Thordarson is a key witness for the United States Justice Department according to documents presented to a UK court in an effort to secure the extradition of Julian Assange. He was recruited by US authorities to build a case against Assange after misleading them to believe he was previously a close associate of his. In a recent interview with Stundin he admitted to fabricating statements to implicate Assange and contradicted what he was quoted as saying in US court documents.

    https://stundin.is/grein/14117/sociopathic-witness-assange-case-jailed-iceland-after-admitting-lies-and-ongoing-crime-spree/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 09, 2021, 09:49:00 PM
    U.S. Supreme Court Concurs: Trouble Understanding Police Orders Constitutes Resistance, Justifies Use of Excessive Force

    The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to overturn a lower court ruling that justifies the use of excessive force by police on people who don’t understand police orders. Attorneys for The Rutherford Institute and the Supreme Court Clinic at the University of Texas School of Law had asked that Oklahoma police be held responsible for brutalizing an African-American man who, despite complying with police orders during an arrest, was subjected to excessive force and brutality, including being thrown to the ground, tasered, and placed in a chokehold that rendered him unconscious and required his hospitalization for three days. The petition in Edwards v. Harmon argued that Jeriel Edwards was not only deprived of his Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force but also his right to have a jury decide, based on video of his arrest, whether the officers’ actions were clearly unreasonable.

    Affiliate attorneys Erin Glenn Busby, Lisa R. Eskow, and Michael F. Sturley of the University of Texas School of Law Supreme Court Clinic, and Andrea and Wyatt Worden of The Worden Law Firm assisted in the defense of Edwards’ Fourth Amendment rights.

    “If you ask police what Americans should do to stay alive during encounters with law enforcement, they will tell you to comply, cooperate, obey, not resist, not argue, not make threatening gestures or statements, avoid sudden movements, and submit to a search of their person and belongings,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “The problem is what to do when compliance is not enough. How can you maintain the illusion of freedom when daily, Americans are being shot, stripped, searched, choked, beaten and tasered by police for little more than daring to frown, smile, question, challenge an order or merely exist?”

    On October 25, 2016, Jeriel Edwards was sitting in his car in the parking lot of a Muskogee Wendy’s restaurant in Muskogee, Okla., when he was approached by a police officer and ordered to put the car in park and provide his identification. According to body and dashboard camera video, the officer then ordered Edwards to exit the vehicle and remove his hands from his pockets. Edwards complied with all of the officer’s orders. A second Muskogee police officer arrived at the scene. Edwards was ordered to face the vehicle and place his hands behind his back. One officer grabbed Edwards’ right arm while the other officer shoved his head into the corner of the car door. Edwards was then slammed to the pavement. As the officers pushed Edwards’ head and neck to the ground, they also placed a knee on his body to pin him to the ground. Edwards repeatedly asked why the officers were abusing him, but got no answer. Instead, the first officer fired a taser at Edwards as he lay on the ground. A third officer arrived on the scene and made two striking motions at Edwards, the impact of which can be heard on the body camera video. A fourth officer arrived at the scene and put Edwards in a chokehold. As the four officers dragged Edwards to the ground, another joined the fray and held Edwards down by digging his knee into his body. Edwards lost consciousness en route to the hospital, where he was admitted to the ICU. Despite this brutality, the trial court granted summary judgment for the police in Edwards’ excessive force lawsuit against them without even allowing Edwards a trial to have a jury consider the evidence, a ruling which was affirmed on appeal.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/u.s_supreme_court_trouble_understanding_police_orders_justifies_use_of_excessive_force
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 26, 2021, 06:48:48 PM
    Armed goons terrorizing a poor innocent woman with her newborn and as usual they try to blame her.


    U.S. Marshals approach wrong apartment, force mother and baby out at gunpoint

    A Bradenton woman is still confused, upset, and terrified after U.S. Marshals appeared at her front door and entered – armed and without a warrant – Friday morning.

    Staples was napping with her 3-month-old daughter when she opened the app.

    "When I clicked on it, there was two men standing there in bulletproof vests with guns pointing at my door," Staples said.

    "U.S. Marshals. Come to the door!" a marshal can be heard yelling in the video from her doorbell camera.

    The group from the U.S. Marshals Florida Caribbean Regional Fugitive Task Force was looking for a suspect wanted by the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office for homicide.

    "Tell him to come out with his hands up," one of the officers yells to the camera. "We know he’s in there.  The place is surrounded."

    Staples responded, "Nobody’s in here!  Ok? Hold on, hold on, hold on, I’m coming."

    "I was scared, I didn't really know what to do. I didn't want to open the door, but I was more scared that if I didn't open the door, they were going to come in," Staples said.

    When she cracked her door, she says the marshals ushered her out, leading her down the breezeway.

    "There was probably seven or eight guys out there with guns. Three of them run in my apartment with no warrant or anything and are just running around," she said.

    Staples says the encounter only lasted about three minutes. She says the marshals left as quickly as they came.

    The U.S. Marshals Service told FOX 13 News that Staples’ apartment was never their target, but the team saw a man matching the suspect’s description near her unit. In a statement, the U.S. Marshals Service said the man entered the breezeway adjacent to Staples’ unit. They claim they were "engaged by a woman in [Staples’ unit]" but that officers never entered her unit.

    "If the resident had not made contact with the team through the Ring doorbell, the team would not have had any contact with anyone at [Staples' apartment]," the agency said.

    However, the video from Staples’ doorbell camera shows U.S. Marshals appear to have approached the door and then held the door open before realizing they were at the wrong apartment.

    https://www.fox13news.com/news/video-u-s-marshals-approach-wrong-apartment-force-mother-and-baby-out-at-gunpoint

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 27, 2021, 01:31:45 PM

    The Sharon Hill police officers who shot an 8-year-old girl at a football game acted with recklessness, a lawsuit says

    The family of 8-year-old Fanta Bility, who was killed by police at a football game in Sharon Hill in August, has sued the borough and the police officers who opened fire, accusing them of excessive force in responding to reports of a shooting and saying the department has a history of improperly training its staff.

    In a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday, attorney Bruce L. Castor said the girl’s family “seeks answers and damages for the tragic and unnecessary death ... and the injury and trauma inflicted on others as a result of the misconduct of Sharon Hill Police officers.”

    An attorney representing Sharon Hill, its police department, and the three officers, Robert DiDomenicis, declined to comment Tuesday.

    Fanta and her family were leaving a football game at Academy Park High School on Aug. 27 when police shot at a vehicle driving near the stadium, authorities said. One of the bullets missed the vehicle and struck Fanta in the back. She died a short time later at the scene in her mother’s arms, Castor said in the lawsuit.

    He said the officers were “deliberately indifferent and reckless” that night, and that the borough and its police chief had given the officers “tacit approval” to behave in that manner.

    https://www.inquirer.com/news/fanta-bility-lawsuit-sharon-hill-police-shooting-football-game-20211026.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on October 31, 2021, 10:59:55 PM
    Why Many Police Traffic Stops Turn Deadly

    “Open the door now, you are going to get shot!” an officer in Rock Falls, Ill., shouted at Nathaniel Edwards after a car chase.

    “Hands out the window now or you will be shot!” yelled a patrolman in Bakersfield, Calif., as Marvin Urbina wrestled with inflated airbags after a pursuit ended in a crash.

    “I am going to shoot you — what part of that don’t you understand?” threatened an officer in Little Rock, Ark., adding a profanity, as she tried to pry James Hartsfield from his car.

    The police officers who issued those warnings had stopped the motorists for common offenses: swerving across double yellow lines, speeding recklessly, carrying an open beer bottle. None of the men were armed. Yet within moments of pulling them over, officers fatally shot all three.

    The deaths are among a series of seemingly avoidable killings across the United States. Over the past five years, a New York Times investigation found, police officers have killed more than 400 drivers or passengers who were not wielding a gun or a knife, or under pursuit for a violent crime — a rate of more than one a week.

    Most of the officers did so with impunity. Only five have been convicted of crimes in those killings, according to a review of the publicly reported cases. Yet local governments paid at least $125 million to resolve about 40 wrongful-death lawsuits and other claims. Many stops began with common traffic violations like broken taillights or running a red light; relative to the population, Black drivers were overrepresented among those killed.

    The recurrence of such cases and the rarity of convictions both follow from an overstatement, ingrained in court precedents and police culture, of the danger that vehicle stops pose to officers. Claiming a sense of mortal peril — whether genuine in the moment or only asserted later — has often shielded officers from accountability for using deadly force.

    In case after case, officers said they had feared for their lives. And in case after case, prosecutors declared the killings of unarmed motorists legally justifiable. But The Times reviewed video and audio recordings, prosecutor statements and court documents, finding patterns of questionable police conduct that went beyond recent high-profile deaths of unarmed drivers. Evidence often contradicted the accounts of law enforcement officers.

    Dozens of encounters appeared to turn on what criminologists describe as officer-created jeopardy: Officers regularly — and unnecessarily — placed themselves in danger by standing in front of fleeing vehicles or reaching inside car windows, then fired their weapons in what they later said was self-defense. Frequently, officers also appeared to exaggerate the threat.

    In many cases, local police officers, state troopers or sheriff’s deputies responded with outsize aggression to disrespect or disobedience — a driver talking back, revving an engine or refusing to get out of a car, what officers sometimes call “contempt of cop.”

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/31/us/police-traffic-stops-killings.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on November 03, 2021, 03:36:14 PM
    Domestic terrorism.

    Jailed, innocent, in labor – and shackled

    January 7, 2020, began like any other evening at their Dayton, Minn., home. Faris Hussien sat in his living room playing video games on his laptop; his wife, Sara, 9-months-pregnant with their first child, cooked in the kitchen.

    Due in only two weeks, they dreamt of how they would welcome their son into the world. Her husband would be by her side to comfort her, with their family close by, ready to bring him back to a home filled with everything their new baby could possibly need.

    “We were so excited to be a family,” Faris said.

    Then they heard what sounded like a boom at their front door.

    The night would end with 26-year-old Sara alone in the Hennepin County jail, booked for a crime she did not commit, weeping in searing pain and in labor.

    Her 26-year-old husband sat behind bars in another part of the jail, arrested after he says he defended his wife and unborn child against what he thought were home invaders.

    Instead, they turned out to be police, raiding his home because they wrongly suspected he was working with a small-time shoplifter.
    After Sara said she spent the next day and a half begging jail guards for help, her water broke. Then, records and interviews show, she was taken to a hospital shackled to the ambulance gurney and then to a hospital bed.

    The American Medical Association calls restraining pregnant women during the birthing process “barbaric.” An expert who reviewed the case says it was a clear violation of state law.

    In 2014, the Minnesota legislature made it illegal for jails and prisons to restrain pregnant women unless they were safety and security risks.


    Full story:

    https://www.kare11.com/article/news/investigations/jailed-innocent-in-labor-and-shackled/89-185601ee-702c-4ec3-a6c7-5ed3f7266b03

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 09, 2021, 06:39:39 AM
    James O’Keefe: “10 FBI Agents... handcuffed me and threw me against the hallway... partially clothed in front of my neighbors.”
    https://100percentfedup.com ^ | Nov 8, 2021 | Staff
    Posted on 11/9/2021, 9:32:44 AM by Red Badger

    On Saturday morning, James O’Keefe was awoken to the FBI banging on his door to conduct a predawn raid at his home as a continuation of an investigation surrounding Ashley Biden’s diary. O’Keefe was thrown against a wall, handcuffed, and forced to allow the confiscation of many confidential reporter notes and source identities.

    In a Fox News interview, O’Keefe described the events of this raid:

    “There were 10 FBI agents with a battering ram… they turned me around, handcuffed me, and threw me against the hallway. I was partially clothed in front of my neighbors. They confiscated my phone, they raided my apartment. On my phone were many of my reporter’s notes, a lot of my sources unrelated to this story, and a lot of confidential donor information to our news organization”.

    James O’Keefe explains the predawn raid on his house Saturday morning. pic.twitter.com/0isPUgPiNu

    — The Dirty Truth (Josh) (@AKA_RealDirty) November 9, 2021

    Latest: James O'Keefe: "10 FBI Agents... handcuffed me and threw me against the hallway... partially clothed in front of my neighbors." [VIDEO AT LINK........]

    Watch the full interview here.

    The raid on O’Keefe’s house followed a series of FBI raids on former and current Project Veritas journalists just days prior.

    The FBI has reportedly been conducting these searches to recover a diary that is rumored to belong to Ashley Biden, which O’Keefe insists his organization turned over to law enforcement after being unable to verify the journal’s validity.

    O’Keefe has expressed his concern for the extreme and unprecedented violation of his First Amendment rights. “Journalists everywhere have to rise up,” implored O’Keefe in his Fox News interview, “because we broke no laws here. If they can do it to me, they can do it to anybody.”

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 12, 2021, 12:45:13 PM
    Following FBI's Political Raid On James O'Keefe, Contents Of His Privileged Communications With Lawyers Are Leaked to New York Times
    Ace of Spades ^ | November 12, 2021 | Ace
    Posted on 11/12/2021, 1:23:17 PM by Mount Athos

    And note-- O'Keefe is in a lawsuit with the New York Times.

    The FBI launched a political raid on Project Veritas' offices, and the personal homes of James O'Keefe and his reporters -- with battering rams at the ready -- and then not only seized his private, confidential, protected communications with counsel, but then immediately leaked them to the corporation they are politically allied with whom James O'Keefe is suing.

    The New York Times immediately ran a hit piece which they intend to help their court case, claiming that James O'Keefe talked to his lawyers about how to avoid breaking the law in his sting operations. In other words -- he sought legal advice as to how to... act lawfully while committing acts of non-state-approved journalism.

    By the way, if you're going to secretly record anyone, you must consult a lawyer -- or at least understand the law keenly yourself -- to know if you are in a one-party or two-party consent state. If you're in a two-party consent state, you cannot record someone without their permission.

    So yes -- you need a lawyer to advise you of such matters.

    The New York Times -- again, being sued by James O'Keefe and Project Veritas in a case that the courts refuse to dismiss, which is going to trial -- spins this as "James O'Keefe has a long history of using lawyers' advice to help him skirt the law," or that sort of terminology.

    The NYT, who themselves literally have an entire law firm on retainer to advise them in such matters, casts mere consultation with lawyers as some kind of shady criminal conspiracy.

    And this was leaked to them by the FBI, after an illegal, political raid.

    And these raids are all about Joe Biden directing the FBI to harass anyone who had contact with... his druggie self-confessed nymphomaniac daughter's lost diary! Something the federal law enforcement agencies have absolutely no jurisdiction over!

    This.

    Is.

    Not.

    America.

    Not anymore.

    This is straight-up fascism.

    This cannot go on much longer.

    And what cannot go on, will not.

    A court has ordered the FBI to stop extracting data from James O'Keefe's phones. Perhaps some judges and government officials are not yet part of the fascist takeover of what was once America.

    Here's the NYT, "talking its book," prepping the jury pool with the gift it got from its buddies at the Democrat Armed Enforcement Squad at the DOJ:

    Mark Mazzetti @MarkMazzettiNYT Project Veritas has long occupied a gray area between investigative journalism and political spying, and documents reveal how much the group has worked with lawyers to gauge how far its practices can go before breaking the law. W/⁦@adamgoldmanNYT⁩ https://nytimes.com/2021/11/11/us/politics/project-veritas-journalism-political-spying.html?referringSource=articleShare Sean Davis @seanmdav You clowns worked hand in glove with the corrupt spies and left-wing con artists on the most fraudulent political smear operation in American history--the Steele dossier--and you have the audacity to cast stones at someone else�s journalism? You people belong in Gitmo.

    Will Chamberlain @willchamberlain If the New York Times has these memorandums -- why wouldn't it also have PV's privileged communications that relate directly to PV's lawsuit against the Times?

    This is just a massive, massive scandal

    Sean Davis @seanmdav The FBI is a corrupt, criminal organization that has no valid reason for existing.

    I went to follow Drew Hernandez -- the videographer and commentator who appeared at the trial yesterday as a surprise (?) witness -- and I found, happily, that I was already following him.

    Here's his advice:

    Drew Hernandez @DrewHLive Pay attention to so called conservatives/patriots that don't report on James O'Keefe being targeted by the FBI

    Excellent advice.

    Though I'm pretty sure I can predict the entire list.

    And they're not conservative. They're Conservative, Inc., and they're liberal grifters.

    I think he might be talking about fed plants, though.

    Defund the FBI.

    Disband it.

    Start a new agency.

    Follow Malone's rules -- if the barrel is filled with rotten apples, pick fresh apples off the tree.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 15, 2021, 09:07:00 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 24, 2021, 04:38:16 AM
    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/22/us/parkland-shooting-victims-settlement.html?searchResultPosition=1


    horrible! 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 20, 2021, 06:06:59 AM
    https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/19/what-the-us-government-does-with-its-secret-bitcoin-stockpile.html


    wow
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Gregzs on January 04, 2022, 07:08:33 PM
    Police Set Dog On Uber Driver Who Missed Rental Car Payment
    Ali Badr was unarmed, barefoot, and complying with police when their dog mauled his right arm

    Last year, we told you about the 165 Hertz customers who were arrested for stealing cars that they had lawfully rented. The months they spent in prison, and their desperation in getting recompense from the company, could make you shy away from ever renting a car again. But if their stories didn’t, one out of San Ramon, CA might: An Uber driver whose late rental payment caused him to be mauled by a police dog.

    Ali Badr, an Oakland resident, lost his car when Uber fares dried up during the Covid-19 pandemic. To keep some form of driving income, he found a car rental service called CarMommy, catering to rideshare drivers. The company rented him a Camry for the last four months of 2020, but by the end of that contract Badr had fallen behind on payments. He claims he spoke with the company, and told them he would pay up.

    Instead of waiting for that payment, CarMommy reported the Camry stolen. When an automated license plate scanner saw Badr and the Camry driving to a gas station, six police vehicles swarmed the car. Officers drew their guns, took cover behind their vehicles, and barked orders as Badr, barefoot, exited the vehicle. Less than ten seconds later, a K9 unit was sinking its teeth into his right arm.

    The San Francisco Chronicle spoke with Badr, his attorney, and the San Ramon police department, and obtained both photos of Badr’s injuries and body cam footage of the traffic stop. In the footage, Badr appears to be complying with every command given by police — despite the department’s later recommendation to the District Attorney’s office that he be charged with resisting arrest.

    The Marshall Project spent a year investigating use of police dogs in the U.S., and found that K9 units are “frequently used in minor cases,” including traffic stops. The investigation also found that police dog injuries are often serious, and can even be fatal — a harsh contrast to the severity of the crimes for which they’re used.

    Because of their potential for danger, the San Ramon police department requires approval from a commander and an audible warning to the suspect before releasing a dog. Badr claims that warning never came, and there certainly isn’t one to be heard in the body cam footage.

    Badr has filed suit against both the San Ramon police and the rental car company, but no amount of financial compensation will fix what Badr claims is “extensive and permanent damage” from the dog’s bite. He was never charged with a crime.

    https://jalopnik.com/police-set-dog-on-uber-driver-who-missed-rental-car-pay-1848300142
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 11, 2022, 09:56:29 AM
    The Likely Cause of the Media Blackout on Imploding Whitmer Kidnapping Plot
    American Greatness ^ | January 10, 2022 | Julie Kelly
    Posted on 1/11/2022, 12:05:41 PM by Heartlander

    The Likely Cause of the Media Blackout on Imploding Whitmer Kidnapping Plot
    It is impossible to report on the Whitmer case without connecting it to January 6. So rather than do its job, the national news media is completely ignoring this sensational story.
    Once upon a time in America, a high-profile federal prosecution imploding amid credible accusations of FBI entrapment would earn wall-to-wall headlines in the national news media. A wife-beating FBI agent who used at least one criminal informant and a dozen more government assets to concoct a plot to abduct a sitting governor—intended to create damaging headlines for an incumbent president right before Election Day—would receive nonstop coverage on cable and broadcast news outlets.

    Social media would be flooded with all the juicy details. Names like “Richard Trask” and “Stephen Robeson” would be household names.

    But none of that is happening with the Justice Department’s rapidly crumbling case against several men arrested for allegedly conspiring to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer from her vacation cottage in the fall of 2020. Defense attorneys have made a strong case that without the FBI’s guiding hand—and deep pockets courtesy of American taxpayers—the scheme never would have materialized past random social media chatter.

    “[The] undisputed evidence . . . establishes that government agents and informants concocted, hatched, and pushed this ‘kidnapping plan’ from the beginning, doing so against defendants who explicitly repudiated the plan,” five defense attorneys wrote in a December 25 motion, one of several defense filings that details proof of an elaborate FBI operation to lure their clients into the abduction caper.

    And the bad actors in the government’s script keep finding themselves in more trouble.

    Richard Trask, the lead FBI agent on the case, was fired for physically assaulting his wife in a drunken rage following a swinger party last summer. Body-camera footage made public last month shows a shirtless and clearly inebriated Trask being arrested by local police. (He was not charged with driving under the influence.)

    A Michigan news station recently unearthed Trask’s Trump-hating rants posted on social media in 2020. “If you still support our piece of shit president you can fuck off,” Trask wrote on Facebook at the same time he was “investigating” threats against Whitmer. Trask said he hoped people who support Trump “burn in hell.”

    Two other FBI agents working with Trask at the Detroit FBI field office who handled multiple informants also have been dismissed from the case; FBI agent Jayson Chambers is accused of running a security business on the side and FBI agent Henrik Impola is accused of committing perjury in another case. The Justice Department just notified the court that Trask, Chambers, and Impola are no longer on the government’s witness list.

    And just when it looked like things couldn’t get worse for prosecutors, Stephen Robeson, a main informant and convicted felon, has been charged with committing two other crimes while directing the Whitmer kidnapping ruse. Prosecutors last week accused Robeson of acting as a “double agent.” Prosecutors said Robeson “broke an agreement with the FBI by offering charity money to buy weapons to be used in attacks, illegally obtained weapons, and offered personal equipment, including a drone, to aid in committing domestic terrorism.”

    Not only is Robeson off the government’s witness list but the Justice Department is fighting to stop defense attorneys from presenting damning evidence of Robeson’s involvement during the trial scheduled to begin in March.

    All of this salacious drama should be front-page news. After all, when the Justice Department announced the kidnapping charges in a press release on October 8, 2020, it was a bonanza for the corporate media right before Election Day. The shocking news resulted in widespread condemnation of Donald Trump, blamed once again for promoting violence against his political opponents and emboldening so-called “militia” groups loyal to him.

    Whitmer made an emotional statement the day the charges were announced, accusing Trump of encouraging “domestic terrorists” who tried kill her; Joe Biden, quickly siezing on the politically advantageous moment, blasted Trump’s “dog whistles” to violent extremists.

    Dozens of articles and columns were posted at the New York Times, the Washington Post, Politico, and other influential publications in a matter of hours. “A thwarted plot could thwart Trump,” two Politico reporters predicted. Mary McCord, a former Obama Justice Department official and perpetual Trump antagonist, had a New York Times column ready to go on the very same day her former employer publicly revealed the plot. (McCord now is advising the January 6 select committee.)

    The Washington Post published a guest column by Whitmer herself on October 9, repeating her allegations that Trump was responsible. In fact, Whitmer made the media rounds for days, conveniently playing the victim to Trump’s villain as early voting was underway in her swing state.

    “It’s incredibly disturbing that the President of the United States, 10 days after a plot to kidnap, put me on trial and execute me, 10 days after that was uncovered, the President is at it again and inspiring and incentivizing and inciting this kind of domestic terrorism,” Whitmer complained on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

    CNN ran numerous articles about the thwarted plot. Jake Tapper confronted both Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, and Lara Trump with accusations that the president was responsible for the alleged attack. “Why does he continue to use such heightened rhetoric at a time when her life was literally in danger, according to the FBI?” Tapper asked Lara Trump on October 18.

    Considering all the histrionics and allegations that Trump incited a potential domestic terror attack—attempted murder, even!—it seems that these same journalists would eagerly cover all the evidence emerging in the case ahead of the March 8 trial. But the Whitmer kidnapping plot hasn’t just been memory-holed by the national media, it faces what one can only assume is a coordinated and intentional news blackout. Tapper, a copious tweeter, has not tweeted anything about the Whitmer kidnapping ruse since October 2020. CNN, the Washington Post, the New York Times, and Politico haven’t published any news about the Whitmer case in months.

    MSNBC aired one interview last month on recent defense motions to dismiss the case on grounds of entrapment; former prosecutor Joyce Vance opined that there is a “zero chance” a Michigan judge will drop the federal charges.

    The last time the New York Times printed Richard Trask’s name was in October 2020 after he testified that rogue “militia groups” were involved in the kidnapping plot. Ditto for October 2020 mentions in Politico and CNN. Trask’s name is dying in darkness over at the Washington Post, which has never published his name in any Whitmer-related article. Apparently a federal cop who nearly strangled his wife to death after a swinger party then received a slap-on-the-wrist sentence for the assault is of no interest to the otherwise man- and cop-loathing reporters and columnists at the nation’s most influential news organizations.

    To its credit, BuzzFeed is the only outlet on the Left that has relentlessly covered the government’s imploding prosecution. BuzzFeed reporters Ken Bensinger and Jessica Garrison have produced a string of detailed investigative reports worthy of awards despite an obvious political slant.

    So, why the media blackout? Because the news media know that any coverage of the FBI-concocted plot to “kidnap” Gretchen Whitmer will bolster suspicions that the FBI played a key if not primary role in the events leading up to, and including, January 6. After all, the Justice Department continually ties the two events together, describing both as acts of “domestic terror” and blaming President Trump for both.

    The head of the Detroit FBI field office was promoted to the D.C. FBI field office one week after the Whitimer kidnapping arrests were announced in October 2020; Steven D’Antuono now is in charge of the same office that deployed agents to Capitol grounds on January 6 and is aiding the prosecution of more than 700 Americans arrested for participating in the protest.

    It is impossible to report on the Whitmer case without connecting it to January 6. So rather than do its job, the national news media is completely ignoring this sensational story. Too many “insurrectionists” to smear and destroy, apparently.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 11, 2022, 12:02:23 PM
    https://uproxx.com/edge/pokemon-go-lapd-robbery-officers-fired


    Typical 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2022, 10:07:01 PM
    Most have heard of George Floyd by now but who knows or remembers Tony Timpa?

    He was killed by cops despite pleading for help more than 30 times. After killing him the cops laughed and joked.

    But his death didn't matter since he was white. No riots, no looting, no beating up innocent bystanders, no taking down statues. Very few even know his name.

    Now to add insult to injury, his killers enjoy the travesty known as "qualified immunity".

    Federal judge tosses excessive force suit against five Dallas officers in Tony Timpa case

    A federal judge in Dallas has thrown out an excessive force lawsuit filed against five Dallas police officers who handcuffed and pinned a mentally ill man to the ground shortly before he died.

    In a 27-page ruling, U.S. District Judge David Godbey granted the officers’ motion for summary judgment in the case of Tony Timpa. The unarmed Rockwall man died in 2016 from “sudden cardiac death due to the toxic effects of cocaine and physiological stress associated with physical restraint,” court records show.

    Godbey based his decision, signed Monday, on the controversial doctrine of qualified immunity. Under that standard, Timpa’s family had to identify a specific case in the Fifth Circuit court of appeals that clearly established that the officers’ conduct at the time was unconstitutional.

    A private security guard handcuffed Timpa before Dallas officers arrived. Timpa was unarmed, in shorts and barefoot. The responding officers mocked the 32-year-old as he screamed for his life, with one officer’s knee pinned in his back for about 14 minutes as he lay face down in the grass, according to court records. They joked after he became unresponsive that he was going to be late for school, the lawsuit says.

    The officers involved were Dustin Dillard, Raymond Dominguez, Kevin Mansell, Domingo Rivera and Danny Vasquez.

    Three of the officers later faced misdemeanor deadly conduct charges in connection with the death.

    But last year, Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot dismissed the charges against Dillard, Mansell and Vasquez. Creuzot said he met with three medical examiners who told him they did not believe the officers acted recklessly.

    All but one of the five officers remain on the force, a police spokeswoman said Tuesday. Mansell retired in August 2019, the spokeswoman said.

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2020/07/07/federal-judge-tosses-excessive-force-suit-against-five-dallas-officers-in-tony-timpa-case/




    Similar case to George Floyd with the cops kneeling on his neck until he died. Some key differences though: unlike Floyd, Tony Timpa wasn't black, he wasn't a career criminal, it took 3 years for the footage of the killing to be released (probably because it contradicted the cops' lies), the cops laughed and joked when they killed him and there was no looting or rioting afterwards. Very few people have even heard of Tony Timpa.

    Even though the cops killed Tony Timpa in 2016, 4 years before Floyd, until now they were protected by the shameful immunity their ilk enjoys. Of course it's unlikely they will face execution or life in prison for killing Timpa. Even back then the cops faced only misdemeanor charges which were then dismissed by the DA, a Democrat elected on a "justice reform" platform.


    (https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/comp-1564687849.png)

    Dallas officers don’t have qualified immunity in Tony Timpa case

    A federal appeals court says four Dallas police officers are not protected from liability for the 2016 death of a man in their custody.

    Tony Timpa was in a prone position and subdued by Dallas officers for more than 14 minutes. The appeals court says he was no longer resisting after nine minutes and that the continued use of force was not only excessive but ultimately deadly.

    The ruling means a handful of Dallas police officers will now have to face federal civil rights violation charges in the death of Timpa.

    https://www.fox4news.com/news/dallas-officers-dont-have-qualified-immunity-in-tony-timpa-case
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2022, 10:16:17 PM
    NO PRISON for cop for repeatedly raping a child.... 

    "Back the blue"....


    Byrnes Mill reserve officer gets probation for sodomy charge

    A former Byrnes Mill reserve police officer has been sentenced to probation for sodomizing a boy he met on a dating app.

    Ryan Shomaker, 48, of Washington, Mo., pleaded guilty to second-degree sodomy in Jefferson County on Dec. 2, and he pleaded guilty to the same charge in St. Louis County on Nov. 22.

    On Dec. 2, Jefferson County Div. 5 Circuit Judge Victor Melenbrink sentenced Shomaker to seven years in prison in the Jefferson County case, and St. Louis County Circuit Judge Joseph Dueker sentenced Shomaker to seven years in the St. Louis County case. However, but both sentences were suspended and Shomaker was placed on five years’ probation, court records show.

    The molestation began February 2014 when the victim was 13, and continued until sometime in 2018, the probable-cause statement in the case said.

    https://www.myleaderpaper.com/news/police_fire/former-byrnes-mill-reserve-officer-gets-probation-for-sodomy-charge/article_d30884fe-5ba7-11ec-a6af-0bc82561b139.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 18, 2022, 08:13:24 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 21, 2022, 05:19:33 PM
    Tennessee judge accused of illegally jailing children announces retirement

    A judge in Tennessee has announced her sudden retirement after being accused of illegally arresting and jailing more than a thousand children – even in cases where no crime was committed.

    Judge Donna Scott Davenport, who has served in Rutherford County’s juvenile court since 2000, announced in a statement on Tuesday that she will step down rather than seek reelection when her current eight-year term ends in September. The judge made no mention of the controversies swirling around her and instead claimed the court had “positively affected the lives of young people and families in Rutherford County” during her two-decade tenure.

    Judge Davenport’s announcement is a marked turnaround as she had been seeking reelection. Her sudden change of heart came just one day after state lawmakers filed a joint resolution to impeach the judge and remove her from the bench over allegations she illegally jailed children.

    A bombshell investigation by ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, released in October, found that the judge introduced an “always arrest” policy within the county’s juvenile justice system, where children were routinely arrested and jailed in juvenile detention center.

    Once there, Rutherford County Juvenile Detention Center Director Lynn Duke introduced a “filter system” to determine which children should continue to be detained in the detention center before the youths then appeared before Judge Davenport. The judge, who is the only juvenile judge in the county, had also appointed the director to that position.

    The ProPublica probe found that, under her watch, children were jailed in 48% of all cases referred to juvenile court in Rutherford County. By contrast, across the state of Tennessee, children were jailed in just 5% of cases. Many of the children impacted were also black and, in many cases, no crime had been committed, the investigation found.

    In December, a lawsuit brought by children incarcerated under the judge’s system was settled for around $6m.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/tennessee-judge-davenport-retires-children-jail-b1997449.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2022, 01:34:58 PM
    Another "back the blue" moment...

    This young man gave the cops his name, social security number and card and still that was not enough. The cops didn't give a fuck when they arrested a 25-year-old black man instead of a 51 year old white man of taller stature. Of course don't expect these cops to go to jail, like this young man, or to pay out of their pockets.

    Man sues Las Vegas, Henderson Police after being misidentified as ex-felon twice his age

    A 25-year-old black man is suing two police agencies in Nevada after he was misidentified as a white ex-felon nearly twice his age, arrested, and held for 6 days in jails in two Las Vegas-area jurisdictions.

    Shane Lee Brown claims civil rights violations, false imprisonment, negligence, and other wrongful conduct by Las Vegas and Henderson police and their top officials and seeks at least $50,000 in damages. His attorney, E. Brent Bryson, accuses police and corrections officers of failing to perform “any due diligence” — including comparing photos, fingerprints, dates of birth, physical descriptions, or criminal identification numbers — following his client’s arrest.

    https://news3lv.com/news/local/man-sues-las-vegas-henderson-police-after-being-misidentified-as-ex-felon-twice-his-age
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 27, 2022, 04:15:48 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 03, 2022, 02:05:33 PM
    "Bureau says sophisticated hacking tool was never used in support of any investigation". Suuuure...


    FBI confirms it obtained NSO’s Pegasus spyware

    The FBI has confirmed that it obtained NSO Group’s powerful Pegasus spyware, suggesting that it bought access to the Israeli surveillance tool to “stay abreast of emerging technologies and tradecraft”.

    In a statement released to the Guardian, the bureau said it had procured a “limited licence” to access Pegasus for “product testing and evaluation only”, and suggested that its evaluation of the tool partly related to security concerns if the spyware fell into the “wrong hands”.

    The bureau also claimed it had never used Pegasus in support of any FBI investigation. “There was no operational use in support of any investigation, the FBI procured a limited licence for product testing and evaluation only,” it said.

    https://www.theguardian.com/news/2022/feb/02/fbi-confirms-it-obtained-nsos-pegasus-spyware
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 10, 2022, 04:42:15 AM
    DHS Warns Americans That Dropping COVID Restrictions Might Lead To ‘Acts Of Violence’ By ‘Extremists’
    Daily Caller ^
    Posted on 2/10/2022, 1:37:45 AM by TigerClaws

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) warned Americans on Monday that as COVID-19 restrictions are dropped, there is an increased risk for “acts of violence” such as mass shootings.

    “The United States Remains in a heightened threat environment fueled by several actors, including an online environment filled with false or misleading narratives and conspiracy theories,” the DHS warned.

    “As COVID-19 restrictions continue to decrease nationwide, increased access to commercial and government facilities and the rising number of mass gatherings could provide increased opportunities for individuals looking to commit acts of violence to do so, often with little or no warning,” the bulletin says.

    “Meanwhile. COVID-19 mitigation measures – particularly COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates – have been used by domestic violent extremists to justify violence since 2020 and could continue to inspire these extremists to target government, healthcare, and academic institutions that they associate with those measures,” it continues.

    The DHS also warned that some extremists are “spreading false and misleading narratives about 5G cellular technology.” (RELATED: New York Rep. Maloney Says Government Is Ready ‘To Give People Their Lives Back,’ Thanks Biden)

    Several blue states recently announced the end of certain coronavirus restrictions as cases fall. New Jersey announced the end of its mask mandate for school children, while New York is slated to end its indoor mask mandate Wednesday.

    The DHS warned in August that individuals opposed to COVID-19 related restrictions could pose a terrorist threat, warning the risk of attacks were “exacerbated by impacts of the ongoing global pandemic, including grievances over public health safety measures and perceived government restrictions.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 11, 2022, 09:26:06 AM
    CIA collecting bulk data on Americans without oversight, senators say

    Two US senators have asked the Central Intelligence Agency to release the details of a secret bulk data collection program that has apparently ensnared Americans.

    Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) wrote the director of national intelligence and the CIA (PDF), asking them to declassify a review of a CIA program known as “Deep Dive II,” the details of which were redacted from their letter. The letter was written in April 2021 but was classified until yesterday.

    The secret CIA program is operated under the authority of Executive Order 12333, which former President Ronald Reagan issued in 1981. It has been used to justify bulk data collection of people in the US, including phone calls, SMS messages, and, until recently, email metadata. That practice was limited by a 2015 reauthorization of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, known as FISA, which banned the bulk collection of phone and SMS metadata by the FBI.

    “FISA gets all the attention because of the periodic congressional reauthorizations and the release of Department of Justice, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and FISA Court documents,” Wyden and Heinrich said in a statement. “But what these documents demonstrate is that many of the same concerns that Americans have about their privacy and civil liberties also apply to how the CIA collects and handles information under executive order and outside the FISA law. In particular, these documents reveal serious problems associated with warrantless backdoor searches of Americans, the same issue that has generated bipartisan concern in the FISA context.”

    The CIA’s bulk data collection program, the senators wrote, has been “secretly conducted” and is done "outside the statutory framework that Congress and the public believe govern this collection, and without any of the judicial, congressional, or even executive branch oversight that comes with FISA collection.

    “This basic fact has been kept from the public and from Congress. Until the [Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board] report was delivered last month, the nature and full extent of the CIA’s collection was withheld even from the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.”

    In a statement issued to the Associated Press, the CIA did not deny that it was collecting data on Americans or clarify its legal justification. “CIA recognizes and takes very seriously our obligation to respect the privacy and civil liberties of US persons in the conduct of our vital national security mission,” Kristi Scott, the agency’s privacy and civil liberties officer, said in the statement. “CIA is committed to transparency consistent with our obligation to protect intelligence sources and methods.”

    Wyden and Heinrich are asking the CIA to disclose what type of relationship it has with its sources and what legal justification it thinks it has to conduct such an operation. They also want to know what types of records were collected, how they’re stored, who has access to them, and how many Americans had their records collected and retained.

    “Each of these matters has been the subject of extensive declassifications with regards to NSA’s and FBI’s FISA collection; there is no reason why CIA’s activities cannot be equally transparent,” they wrote.
    The government only disclosed in 2017 the attorney general’s guidelines that the CIA is supposed to follow when conducting a program under Executive Order 12333.

    In a set of recommendations that were declassified yesterday and made by the civil liberties oversight board, the CIA admits that “it is still in the process of implementing” those guidelines. Currently, one of the “checks” against abuse of that authorization is a pop-up box that reminds analysts that a tool is only to be used to collect foreign intelligence and is not to be used on US persons. It does not require them to “memorialize the justification” so it could be reviewed during an audit.

    Wyden and Heinrich say that the CIA should exhibit greater transparency or else risk undermining the long-term credibility of the entire intelligence community. “This declassification is urgent,” the senators wrote. “It is critical that Congress not legislate without awareness of a [redacted] CIA program.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 16, 2022, 10:19:32 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 17, 2022, 04:29:38 PM
    Facial recognition firm Clearview AI tells investors it’s seeking massive expansion beyond law enforcement

    The facial recognition company Clearview AI is telling investors it is on track to have 100 billion facial photos in its database within a year, enough to ensure “almost everyone in the world will be identifiable,” according to a financial presentation from December obtained by The Washington Post.

    Those images — equivalent to 14 photos for each of the 7 billion people on Earth — would help power a surveillance system that has been used for arrests and criminal investigations by thousands of law enforcement and government agencies around the world.

    And the company wants to expand beyond scanning faces for the police, saying in the presentation that it could monitor “gig economy” workers and is researching a number of new technologies that could identify someone based on how they walk, detect their location from a photo or scan their fingerprints from afar.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2022/02/16/clearview-expansion-facial-recognition/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 21, 2022, 10:31:23 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 21, 2022, 11:29:58 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2022, 01:31:41 PM
    Remember this case? What do these violent gang members need to do to go to prison? They abuse, kidnap, shoot, kill innocent people, the elderly, the deaf, even children and they still somehow manage to avoid harsh punishment.
    This particular one will not stay a single day in prison, but he has to write an essay. Is this elementary school or what?
    He shot at a harmless innocent man, a caretaker, who, probably knowing that an encounter with the criminal gang can turn fatal, laid flat on the ground with his hands up and begged the gang members not to shoot but to no avail.

    (http://fojusi.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/ggdg-25.jpg)

    North Miami Police Officer Avoids Prison in Caretaker Shooting

    A North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker won't be spending time in prison.

    At a hearing Wednesday, Officer Jonathan Aledda was sentenced to one year of administrative probation and told he must complete 100 hours of community service related to the developmentally disabled. Aledda also must write an essay about better radio communication at police scenes.

    Prosecutor Don Horn said: "His conduct was gross and flagrant, his course of conduct that day showed reckless disregard for human life. It showed reckless disregard for the safety of persons exposed to his dangerous effect. It showed grossly careless disregard for the safety and welfare of the public."

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/North-Miami-Police-Officer-Avoids-Prison-in-Caretaker-Shooting-512174221.html

    What a travesty.

    Appeals Court Overturns Conviction of North Miami Cop in 2016 Caretaker Shooting

    An appeals court has granted a new trial for a North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker back in 2016.

    In a ruling released Wednesday, Florida's Third District Court of Appeals overturned the 2019 conviction of Officer Jonathan Aledda in the shooting of Charles Kinsey.

    At his first trial, Aledda was acquitted on one of the negligence counts but the case ended in a hung jury and mistrial on the other three counts.

    At a second trial, a jury acquitted Aledda on the attempted manslaughter charges but found him guilty of the one negligence charge.

    The appeals court's ruling said the trial court erred in not allowing Aledda's SWAT commander to testify about the training Aledda received.

    "We conclude that the trial court erred by not allowing Aledda – charged by the State with culpable negligence for his assessment of and response to a crime scene – to introduce testimony regarding how Aledda was trained to assess and respond in such circumstances," the ruling stated.

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/appeals-court-overturns-conviction-of-north-miami-cop-in-2016-caretaker-shooting/2692373/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 03, 2022, 11:00:59 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 08, 2022, 07:59:07 AM
    Secret Surveillance Program Collects Americans’ Money-Transfer Data, Senator Says

    A law-enforcement arm of the Department of Homeland Security participated in a secret bulk surveillance program that collected millions of records about certain money transfers of some Americans without a warrant, according to officials and a U.S. senator.

    The surveillance program, overseen by investigators with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, collected records of any money transfer greater than $500 to or from Mexico, Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.) said in a letter sent to the DHS inspector general. It also collected information on domestic or international transfers exceeding $500 to or from the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/secret-surveillance-program-collects-americans-money-transfer-data-senator-says-11646737201
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 08, 2022, 10:48:30 AM
    Settlements top $1M for much-sued NYPD sergeant accused of unwarranted stops, arrests and raids

    An NYPD sergeant has hit a less than enviable milestone — lawsuits against him have topped the $1 million mark in settlements, the Daily News has learned.

    Sgt. David Grieco, nicknamed “Bullethead” by his detractors, has been sued 46 times — believed to be near the top of the list for the most-sued cop — with 24 lawsuits thus far settled. The city has paid out $1,066,750 in taxpayer money to those who have accused him of unconstitutional street stops, illegal arrests and raids without warrants.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-bullethead-lawsuit-figure-nypd-20220306-vzmqnuvssnf47neai7nacqzdve-story.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 08, 2022, 01:35:29 PM
    Settlements top $1M for much-sued NYPD sergeant accused of unwarranted stops, arrests and raids

    An NYPD sergeant has hit a less than enviable milestone — lawsuits against him have topped the $1 million mark in settlements, the Daily News has learned.

    Sgt. David Grieco, nicknamed “Bullethead” by his detractors, has been sued 46 times — believed to be near the top of the list for the most-sued cop — with 24 lawsuits thus far settled. The city has paid out $1,066,750 in taxpayer money to those who have accused him of unconstitutional street stops, illegal arrests and raids without warrants.

    https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-bullethead-lawsuit-figure-nypd-20220306-vzmqnuvssnf47neai7nacqzdve-story.html


    And Still employed ?

    Article won't display in the UK  🤷🏻‍♂️
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2022, 10:56:27 AM
    Another man killed by the "brave heroes". As usual, the cops investigated themselves and cleared themselves of any wrongdoing.

    Video key in CPSO deputy's criminal case, wrongful death lawsuit filed by man's sons

    An encounter between a 68-year-old man and a Caddo Parish sheriff’s deputy went from cooperative to contentious as the man became irritated with a search of his property for a fugitive who wasn’t there – ending with the man handcuffed by a visibly upset deputy and placed in a patrol vehicle, where he collapsed and later died of a medical condition.

    That all according to video from deputies' body cams, which will be key in a criminal case against the deputy and in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the man’s two sons.

    Deputy Ryan Chapman, 36, faces charges of malfeasance in the death of William Walls of Keithville. Caddo prosecutors say he went into Walls’ home without a warrant and had no probable cause to take Walls into custody that day, instead using detention as a bargaining chip to find the fugitive.

    Chapman has pleaded not guilty, saying he and fellow deputies were dealing with an unruly man who had become a distraction and threatened their safety while they searched for the fugitive.

    https://www.ktbs.com/news/3investigates/video-key-in-cpso-deputys-criminal-case-wrongful-death-lawsuit-filed-by-mans-sons/article_d893f67c-9e52-11ec-a425-9749d0b9e390.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 10, 2022, 09:09:31 AM
    Another child raping cop gets ZERO prison time and will not even have to register as a sex offender.

    "Back the blue"....

    Judge Allows Former Deputy Accused of Raping 14-Year-Old Girl to Avoid Prison and Sex Offender Status

    (https://am24.mediaite.com/lc/cnt/uploads/2022/03/Brian-Beck-Mugshot-1.jpg)

    After striking a plea deal with prosecutors, a onetime Tennessee sheriff’s deputy who was accused of repeatedly raping a 14-year-old girl over a period of 20 months will serve no time in prison and does not have to register as a sex offender.

    Brian O. Beck, 47, pleaded guilty to a single count of aggravated assault on Monday, according to court records filed in Shelby County Court. That plea was part of a deal between Beck and prosecutors, a member of the Shelby County District Attorney General’s Office confirmed to Law&Crime.

    The judge in the case suspended Beck’s nominal four-year prison sentence and said the defendant would instead serve three years probation, a sentencing order provided to Law&Crime by the prosecutor’s office indicates. If Beck fails to live up to the terms of his probation, he could be incarcerated for the aforementioned four-year term, according to the probation order itself and a statement from the prosecutor’s office to a local television station. The order also requires Beck to serve 150 hours of community service, submit to random drug screening, and have no contact with the victim.

    The document says “the defendant is not likely again to engage in a criminal course of conduct” — at least “to the satisfaction of the Court” — and that “the ends of justice and the welfare of society do not require that the Defendant shall presently suffer the penalty imposed by law by incarceration.” Beck will also not have to register as a sex offender, according to the order.

    https://lawandcrime.com/crime/judge-allows-former-deputy-accused-of-raping-14-year-old-girl-to-avoid-prison-and-sex-offender-status/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 12, 2022, 07:51:53 AM

    Weissport police chief charged with rape of a child

    A Carbon County police chief and his friend have been charged in the alleged rape and sexual assault of a girl when they were teenagers.

    Weissport Police Chief Brent Getz , 27, was arrested Tuesday night on a number of charges, including rape of a child.

    According to court paperwork, Getz and a friend raped and sexually assaulted a girl numerous times from 2005 through early 2012, when she was 4-11 years old.

    https://www.wfmz.com/news/crime/weissport-police-chief-charged-with-rape-of-a-child/article_ee792479-2f64-5233-92ba-71a94d617c5d.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: chaos on March 12, 2022, 11:33:47 AM
    Weissport police chief charged with rape of a child

    A Carbon County police chief and his friend have been charged in the alleged rape and sexual assault of a girl when they were teenagers.

    Weissport Police Chief Brent Getz , 27, was arrested Tuesday night on a number of charges, including rape of a child.

    According to court paperwork, Getz and a friend raped and sexually assaulted a girl numerous times from 2005 through early 2012, when she was 4-11 years old.

    https://www.wfmz.com/news/crime/weissport-police-chief-charged-with-rape-of-a-child/article_ee792479-2f64-5233-92ba-71a94d617c5d.html
    Kill them both.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 16, 2022, 06:00:46 AM
    James O’Keefe Releases Video Footage of Armed FBI Agents Raiding Project Veritas Journalist’s Home
    American Greatness ^ | 15 Mar, 2022 | Debra Heine
    Posted on 3/16/2022, 7:41:12 AM by MtnClimber

    Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe released video footage from last November, showing armed FBI agents raiding and ransacking an employee’s home. The Feds raided two of O’Keefe’s employees’ homes on November 4, on the orders of federal prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. They raided O’Keefe’s apartment in Mamaroneck, N.Y., a couple of days later in connection with Ashley Biden’s allegedly stolen diary.

    O’Keefe contends that he and his journalists were targeted because of their investigative journalism.

    The footage begins with the FBI banging loudly on the door, and with the startled journalist responding shakily, “I’m sorry, what is this regarding?”

    “This is a search warrant, just open up!” the agent barked. After the journalist opened the door, the agent hollered: “Let me see your hands, let me see your hands!”

    As the Feds filed into the home, the lead agent told the journalist that another agent would have to sit with him while the team searched his home “for our safety and for yours.” He said the journalist did not have to speak to the agent, and that he wasn’t being detained.

    “We just want to see you calm, and then … are you okay with that?” the agent said. He told the journalist that another team of FBI agents was on the way.

    O’Keefe said this invasion of his employee’s constitutional rights should “send shivers down the spines of every journalist around the country.”

    “What you’ve just seen is an effort by the government to intimidate and silence us as journalists,” O’Keefe declared. “But Project Veritas will never be silenced. The 1st Amendment protects journalists and all people who speak out. We will stand firm to vindicate our own 1st Amendment rights, fight for the rights of our fellow journalists,

    (Excerpt) Read more at amgreatness.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2022, 09:42:54 AM
    James O’Keefe Releases Video Footage of Armed FBI Agents Raiding Project Veritas Journalist’s Home
    American Greatness ^ | 15 Mar, 2022 | Debra Heine
    Posted on 3/16/2022, 7:41:12 AM by MtnClimber

    Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe released video footage from last November, showing armed FBI agents raiding and ransacking an employee’s home. The Feds raided two of O’Keefe’s employees’ homes on November 4, on the orders of federal prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. They raided O’Keefe’s apartment in Mamaroneck, N.Y., a couple of days later in connection with Ashley Biden’s allegedly stolen diary.

    O’Keefe contends that he and his journalists were targeted because of their investigative journalism.

    The footage begins with the FBI banging loudly on the door, and with the startled journalist responding shakily, “I’m sorry, what is this regarding?”

    “This is a search warrant, just open up!” the agent barked. After the journalist opened the door, the agent hollered: “Let me see your hands, let me see your hands!”

    As the Feds filed into the home, the lead agent told the journalist that another agent would have to sit with him while the team searched his home “for our safety and for yours.” He said the journalist did not have to speak to the agent, and that he wasn’t being detained.

    “We just want to see you calm, and then … are you okay with that?” the agent said. He told the journalist that another team of FBI agents was on the way.

    O’Keefe said this invasion of his employee’s constitutional rights should “send shivers down the spines of every journalist around the country.”

    “What you’ve just seen is an effort by the government to intimidate and silence us as journalists,” O’Keefe declared. “But Project Veritas will never be silenced. The 1st Amendment protects journalists and all people who speak out. We will stand firm to vindicate our own 1st Amendment rights, fight for the rights of our fellow journalists,

    (Excerpt) Read more at amgreatness.com ...

    The usual BS.

    The way some media (CNN, New York Times) seemed to have advance knowledge of FBI raids as well as information (or even access) on items and documents that were seized by the regime's goons is very concerning.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 16, 2022, 09:55:39 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 16, 2022, 09:07:56 PM
    This happened less than 2 months before George Floyd's death. Of course there was no rioting, no looting, no burning, no beatings, no killings, no hashtags from the blue checkmark mob, no media coverage. Why would that be?

    Moreover, the state of California fought to not have the video released. Why would they try to block the release of the video?


    Family suing in death of California man who officers restrained calls for charges

    (https://media-cldnry.s-nbcnews.com/image/upload/t_fit-1500w,f_auto,q_auto:best/rockcms/2022-03/220315-Edward-Bronstein-chp-snip-ac-1107p-8d8c41.jpg)

    The family of a California man suing over his 2020 in-custody death called Tuesday for charges against the officers, and released video showing the man repeating “I can’t breathe.”

    Edward Bronstein, 38, died early March 31, 2020, after the California Highway Patrol sought to take a blood sample following a traffic stop for allegedly driving under the influence, according to lawyers for the family and court documents.

    The family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in December 2020, but they also want Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón to file criminal charges against the officers.

    In video, which was ordered released by a federal judge and shown at a news conference Tuesday, Bronstein is told there’s a court order for a blood draw before five officers hold him down at a CHP garage in Altadena, in the Los Angeles area.

    Bronstein, who is handcuffed, is heard asking why they need to draw blood. Officers tell him the draw is a court order and if he doesn’t agree, he will be restrained.

    As officers move to restrain him he says “I’ll do it willingly” repeatedly and is told to calm down and “too late,” the video shows. Bronstein screams and says, “I can’t breathe,” repeatedly before falling silent, and the procedure continues.

    “Not one officer took the action to pull the others off of him. Pull him to the side, do something to give him air,” the family's attorney Michael Carrillo said. “... When they finally flip him over, he’s lifeless.”

    The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office ruled Bronstein’s cause of death as “acute methamphetamine intoxication during restraint by law enforcement” and the manner as “unknown,” according to online records and court documents filed by the state opposing the release of the video at this time.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-suing-death-california-man-officers-restrained-calls-charges-rcna20211

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 22, 2022, 11:27:38 AM
    https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/22/project-veritas-feds-secretly-accessed-emails-00019247

     >:( :(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 22, 2022, 12:50:09 PM
    This happened less than 2 months before George Floyd's death. Of course there was no rioting, no looting, no burning, no beatings, no killings, no hashtags from the blue checkmark mob, no media coverage. Why would that be?

    Moreover, the state of California fought to not have the video released. Why would they try to block the release of the video?


    Family suing in death of California man who officers restrained calls for charges

    (https://media-cldnry.s-nbcnews.com/image/upload/t_fit-1500w,f_auto,q_auto:best/rockcms/2022-03/220315-Edward-Bronstein-chp-snip-ac-1107p-8d8c41.jpg)

    The family of a California man suing over his 2020 in-custody death called Tuesday for charges against the officers, and released video showing the man repeating “I can’t breathe.”

    Edward Bronstein, 38, died early March 31, 2020, after the California Highway Patrol sought to take a blood sample following a traffic stop for allegedly driving under the influence, according to lawyers for the family and court documents.

    The family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in December 2020, but they also want Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón to file criminal charges against the officers.

    In video, which was ordered released by a federal judge and shown at a news conference Tuesday, Bronstein is told there’s a court order for a blood draw before five officers hold him down at a CHP garage in Altadena, in the Los Angeles area.

    Bronstein, who is handcuffed, is heard asking why they need to draw blood. Officers tell him the draw is a court order and if he doesn’t agree, he will be restrained.

    As officers move to restrain him he says “I’ll do it willingly” repeatedly and is told to calm down and “too late,” the video shows. Bronstein screams and says, “I can’t breathe,” repeatedly before falling silent, and the procedure continues.

    “Not one officer took the action to pull the others off of him. Pull him to the side, do something to give him air,” the family's attorney Michael Carrillo said. “... When they finally flip him over, he’s lifeless.”

    The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office ruled Bronstein’s cause of death as “acute methamphetamine intoxication during restraint by law enforcement” and the manner as “unknown,” according to online records and court documents filed by the state opposing the release of the video at this time.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-suing-death-california-man-officers-restrained-calls-charges-rcna20211




    The Cops Murdered Him & They & Their Corrupt Bosses know it.
    The Scumbag bastards of course They wouldn't want to release the Video... FFS That says Everything.

    Policing is corrupt.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 22, 2022, 02:03:06 PM
    Not much media coverage so far for the death of this young man.

    (https://s3.amazonaws.com/CFSV2/obituaries/photos/10239/814498/60dcee092cca8.jpeg)


    Family demands justice after teen fatally shot by Lonoke County sheriff's deputy

    Members of the Lonoke community are outraged and demanding answers after the death of a teenage boy at the hands of a Lonoke County sheriff's deputy.

    Arkansas State Police reported that 17-year-old Hunter Brittain was pulled over for a traffic stop around 3 a.m. at a local auto shop. That's when Sgt. Michael Davis reportedly pulled out a gun and shot the teenager.

    State police said in a news release that the circumstances of the traffic stop and what may have led up to the deputy firing his gun will be documented in an investigation, which is still ongoing.

    Jesse said that Hunter had been up all night trying to fix his truck’s transmission to get to work at 6 a.m. Family members said his car was rolling backwards and Hunter pulled out an oil jug to stop the vehicle from running into the cop car.

    Now Jesse and family want justice.

    “Justice looks like this officer getting what’s coming to them, just like any one of us would if we shot and killed somebody,” Jesse said.

    https://www.katv.com/news/local/family-demands-justice-after-teen-fatally-shot-by-lonoke-county-sheriffs-deputy

    This young man's killer got away with negligent homicide (a misdemeanor!) instead of felony manslaughter so he will only get a year in prison, a $1000 fine and after that he can work as a cop again.

    As it often happens in these cases, the cop's bodycam only started recording after the killing, and this was not the first time this happened with this particular cop. This was also the reason why the cop was fired, not because he killed the young man but because he didn't film the killing.

    Don't expect any rioting or looting of course.


    Deputy Michael Davis sentenced to a year in jail for fatal shooting of Arkansas teen Hunter Brittain

    (https://www.fox16.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/84/2021/09/210917_Michael-Davis_booking-photo.jpg?w=1280)

     A former Lonoke County sheriff’s deputy who was convicted of negligent homicide Friday morning in the fatal shooting of teen Hunter Brittain has been sentenced to one year in jail and ordered to pay a $1,000 fine.

    Michael Davis was charged with felony manslaughter Sept. 17 following the death of Brittain, 17, of McRae, during an early morning traffic stop June 23. The charges were brought by special prosecutor Jeff Phillips of the 5th Judicial District. Negligent homicide is a misdemeanor.

    Following a brief sentencing hearing, Davis was sentenced to the maximum of one year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

    Family members were told not to make a statement until their attorney was present, but the family has been adamant since the charge was filed that they wanted a felony charge for the purpose of keeping Davis from ever working as a law enforcement officer again.

    https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2022/mar/18/jury-convicts-ex-deputy-michael-davis-of-negligent-homicide-in-shooting-of-arkansas-teen-hunter-brittain/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2022, 10:48:48 AM
    It might have been funny if there wasn't a man killed. This cop had been fired twice but still managed get hired again and then she sued claiming "racial and gender-based discrimination"... And how did she pass any sort of physical fitness tests? She can hardly walk (watch video at 0:48).


    State authorities release video of fatal police shooting in Georgetown County

    (https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/postandcourier.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/e/8c/e8cfa386-89dc-11ec-9d5a-abc928c0919b/620413a5730f5.image.jpg?crop=439%2C459%2C15%2C7&resize=439%2C459&order=crop%2Cresize) (https://abcnews4.com/resources/media2/16x9/full/1050/center/80/413360a9-8f16-461c-bf63-3ed33f70de64-large16x9_thumb_36496.png?1644582178529)

    State authorities released dashboard camera video that shows former Hemingway police officer Cassandra Dollard slipped and fell before fatally shooting a motorist last month in rural Georgetown County.

    The State Law Enforcement Division released the footage March 21 of Robert Langley Jr.’s killing after The Post and Courier filed a request for it under the S.C. Freedom of Information Act.

    Dollard is charged with voluntary manslaughter on allegations she unlawfully shot the 46-year-old man after a high-speed chase early Feb. 6.



    https://www.postandcourier.com/news/state-authorities-release-video-of-fatal-police-shooting-in-georgetown-county/article_a170c16a-a4a2-11ec-a0ca-ab1ca17e4438.html



    How did twice-fired police officer keep getting hired in South Carolina?

    https://www.wnct.com/news/southeast-region/how-did-twice-fired-police-officer-keep-getting-hired-in-south-carolina/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 23, 2022, 10:51:03 AM
    Look at how the cops fabricated "evidence" and made up all sorts of lies to to entrap this woman and destroy her life. But of course "qualified immunity" protects this criminal gang.

    Quote
    “Now, there’s no question in my mind that that happened. I’m being honest. No question in my mind that something did happen,” the detective tells Villarreal. “How bad it was? How many times it was?”

    Villarreal responds, saying nothing happened. Minutes later, the detectives claimed to have video of Villarreal and the client in her car.

    “Is there any reason why we would have video of you and [the student] in your car?” the detective asks.

    “No,” she replied.

    There was no reason because according to Geller, that video did not exist.


    Charges dropped against former North Las Vegas teacher accused of sexually assaulting teen

    Prosecutors have dropped all charges against a former behavioral therapist who was accused of sexually assaulting a 15-year-old client who has autism.

    Amy Villarreal, 30, said the allegations, which included taking the student off school property and raping him on two occasions, were false.

    https://www.8newsnow.com/i-team/i-team-charges-dropped-against-former-north-las-vegas-teacher-accused-of-sexually-assaulting-teen/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 24, 2022, 02:07:26 AM
    Criminal gangs.

    Inspector general identifies 41 sheriff’s deputies who allegedly belong to gang-like groups

    The top watchdog for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has identified more than 40 alleged members of gang-like groups of deputies that operate out of two sheriff’s stations.

    In a letter dated Monday, Inspector General Max Huntsman said his office has compiled a partial list that includes 11 deputies who allegedly belong to the Banditos, which operate out of the East L.A. sheriff’s station, and 30 alleged Executioners from the Compton sheriff’s station.

    He wrote that the list is based on information gleaned from investigations conducted by the Sheriff’s Department. Huntsman did not name the deputies and said his office has identified additional possible members from other sources.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-03-22/sheriff-deputies-executioners-banditos
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2022, 06:18:00 AM
    Yikes

    Criminal gangs.

    Inspector general identifies 41 sheriff’s deputies who allegedly belong to gang-like groups

    The top watchdog for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has identified more than 40 alleged members of gang-like groups of deputies that operate out of two sheriff’s stations.

    In a letter dated Monday, Inspector General Max Huntsman said his office has compiled a partial list that includes 11 deputies who allegedly belong to the Banditos, which operate out of the East L.A. sheriff’s station, and 30 alleged Executioners from the Compton sheriff’s station.

    He wrote that the list is based on information gleaned from investigations conducted by the Sheriff’s Department. Huntsman did not name the deputies and said his office has identified additional possible members from other sources.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-03-22/sheriff-deputies-executioners-banditos
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 24, 2022, 12:36:21 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2022, 06:05:40 PM


    Justice Department Accused of Assault on Free Speech and Free Press in the Project Veritas Case

    I previously wrote about deep concerns over the FBI investigation of Project Veritas over the missing diary of Ashley Biden, daughter of President Joe Biden. The use of the FBI in a case involving a missing diary is itself difficult to square with its priorities, let alone the different treatment given the New York Times.  Now, counsel for Project Veritas has filed a motion detailing what could be a very serious violation of court orders as well as an attack on free speech and free press.

    There has been relatively little attention to the extraordinary efforts of the Biden Justice Department in pursuing those connected with the disappearance of the diary of the President’s daughter. The concern is that the FBI is acting like a Praetorian Guard in acting on what is a crime ordinarily handled on a local level.

    The controversy over Ashley Biden‘s diary began during her father’s campaign for the presidency in 2020. Like her brother Hunter, Ashley has struggled with addiction and was living in a two-bedroom house in Delray Beach, Fla., with a friend. According to the New York Times, she decided to go to Philadelphia but to leave some belongings in two bags in the Delray house. The owner later allowed a friend named Aimee Harris and her two children to move in. The Times strongly suggests that Ms. Harris searched the possessions, noting that she was hard up for money and was also a Trump supporter. The Times then simply says “exactly what happened next remains the subject of the federal investigation.”

    Project Veritas and its founder, James O’Keefe, maintained that they were given the diary by a “tipster” but decided not to use it. Indeed, the group later turned over the material to law enforcement.

    As noted by the New York Times, court records show that on Oct. 12, 2020, O’Keefe told Project Veritas staff that said they would not publish a story about the diary. He explained that, while they had “no doubt the document is real,” he was concerned that publishing the diary would be seen “as a cheap shot.”

    Now we have new details of the lengths that the government has gone in this case, including allegedly evading a court order to protect the confidentiality of journalistic and attorney-client material.

    In its 45-page court filing, counsel accused the Department of Justice of such circumvention after Microsoft recently revealed that the DOJ had previously seized Project Veritas documents from a cloud account using a warrant. I testified on such abuses recently in Congress.

    The Project describes the investigation as “retributive” on behalf of the Biden Administration. It did so with “extreme measures that violate the First Amendment and corrode freedom of the press,” according to the filing.

    Judge Torres appointed a special master, retired U.S. District Judge Barbara S. Jones, to protect confidential information on Dec. 8, 2021 in the Southern District of New York. The court specifically recognized that “potential First Amendment concerns that may be implicated by the review of the materials seized from Petitioners.” However, the letter from Project Veritas counsel states:

    “We have recently learned, however, that the government already had in place mechanisms for circumventing these protective processes and invading the First Amendment and attorney- client privileges of Project Veritas and its journalists, the existence of which the government concealed from counsel for Project Veritas and its journalists and, we believe, from this Court. We have discovered that from November 2020 to April 2021, the government used compulsory demands, including secret warrants and 18 U.S.C. § 2703(d) orders, to obtain voluminous materials from Microsoft, the email services provider used by Project Veritas, spanning the email accounts of eight journalists and Project Veritas’s Human Resources Manager.

    It appears that the government misled this Court by omission, failing to disclose during the briefing and arguments over the appointment of a Special Master that the government had already obtained through these surreptitious actions many of the privileged communications this Court charged the Special Master with protecting. The government’s clandestine invasions of journalist’s communications corrode the rule of law.”

    That is a familiar pattern and was discussed at the prior congressional hearing.

    Some of the search demands clearly would implicate areas that the court previously sought to protect with the appointment of Judge Brown as special master. That includes:

    According to court papers attached to the letter, here is some of what the feds were after:

    b. Evidence of communications regarding or in furtherance of the Subject Offenses, such as communications with or regarding Ashley Biden, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. (and representatives thereof), and/or Ashley Biden’s associates regarding her stolen property.

    c. Evidence of the location of Ashley Biden’s property and the location of the user of the Subject Account at times relevant to the Subject Offenses, such as communications that reference particular geographic locations or refer to the property being located in a particular place.

    d. Evidence of the identity and locations of potential co-conspirators, such as communications with other individuals about obtaining, transporting, transferring, disseminating, or otherwise disposing of Ashley Biden’s stolen property, including but not limited to communications reflecting the knowledge of co-conspirators that the property obtained from Ashley Biden had been stolen, and communications that contain personally identifiable information of co-conspirators and references to co-conspirators’ places of residence or locations at particular points in time.

    e. Evidence regarding the value of any of Ashley Biden’s stolen property, such as communications about the resale or market value of any of the items stolen from her, or any plans to sell or market the same.

    f. Evidence of steps taken in preparation for or in furtherance of the Subject Offenses, such as surveillance of Ashley Biden or property associated with her, and drafts of communications to Ashley Biden, President Biden, and Ashley Biden’s associates regarding her stolen property and communications among co-conspirators discussing what to do with her property.

    Any search of those sweeping terms would net confidential and privileged information.

    Putting aside the concerns over a crackdown on a journalistic organization, there remain unanswered questions over why this extraordinary effort was launched by the FBI over a missing diary.

    The concerns over the Project Veritas investigation continue to mount, but neither Congress nor the media have demanded answers from the Biden Administration.

    https://jonathanturley.org/2022/03/23/justice-department-accused-of-major-assault-on-free-speech-and-free-press-in-the-project-veritas-case/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 25, 2022, 06:17:08 PM
    The prosecutor who hired this goon dropped all felony charges just before the trial started and he got zero prison time after pleading to misdemeanor evidence tampering. A black former-FBI cop now turned "investigator" who tried to destroy a Republican governor gets all felony charges dropped and receives zero prison time. That damned white supremacy and systemic racism...

    (https://cms.zerohedge.com/s3/files/inline-images/William-Tisaby-700x420.jpg?itok=MI6l5KPW)

    Btw, the prosecutor who hired him and is now facing a hearing about her actions is the same one who went after the McCloskeys:

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2020/08/st-louis-01.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=744)


    Ex-FBI agent, who investigated former Missouri Gov. Greitens, pleads guilty before start of trial

    The investigator who played a key role in former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens' resignation in 2018 pleaded guilty to misdemeanor evidence tampering on Wednesday, a day before jury selection was set to start in his trial on seven felony counts including perjury.

    Prosecutors dropped the felony charges against private investigator William Tisaby, replacing it with the one misdemeanor. Tisaby received a suspended sentence of one year of probation.

    Tisaby's trial was set to unfold as Greitens is running for U.S. Senate and amid allegations of abuse from his ex-wife.

    Tisaby was indicted in 2019 on six counts of perjury and one count of evidence tampering, crimes prosecutors say he committed while investigating allegations that Greitens took a compromising photo of a woman and threatened to use it as blackmail.

    The charges stemmed from Tisaby's statement that he had not taken notes in an interview with the woman when a video later showed that he had, and his statement that he hadn't received notes from the prosecutor's office before he interviewed the woman when a document later showed that he had.

    In a related case, a hearing is set April 11 over the fate of St. Louis prosecutor who hired Tisaby. Missouri's chief disciplinary counsel has accused Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner of concealing evidence that might have helped Greitens.

    If the charge is sustained, she could face a wide range of penalties, the worst possibility being revocation of her law license. Unlike Tisaby, Gardner has not been criminally charged and has maintained she did nothing wrong.

    https://www.stripes.com/theaters/us/2022-03-23/perjury-trial-nears-ex-fbi-agent-investigated-former-missouri-gov-greitens-5448761.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 30, 2022, 11:09:43 AM
    How does the FBI 'lose' a laptop like Hunter Biden's? An FBI official told Rep. Matt Gaetz he had no idea where the Hunter Biden laptop is. Funny how they keep "losing" such things
    American Thinker ^ | 03/30/2022 | Monica Showalter
    Posted on 3/30/2022, 1:55:51 PM by SeekAndFind

    Some things don't make sense.

    That brings us to some testimony from the FBI's assistant director for cyber-security, who told Congress's Rep. Matt Gaetz that he had no idea where Hunter Biden's laptop, entrusted to FBI custody, actually is.

    According to the Post Millennial:

    "Who has it?" Gaetz asked.

    "I don't know who has it," said [FBI Assistant Director for the Cyber Division Bryan] Vorndran.

    "What now you're telling me right here is that as the Assistant Director of FBI Cyber, you don't know where this is, after it was turned over to you three years ago?" Gaetz said.

    "Yes, sir. That's an accurate statement," Vorndran responded.

    "How are Americans supposed to trust that you can protect us from the next Colonial pipeline if it seems you can't locate a laptop that was given to you three years ago from the First Family, potentially creating vulnerabilities for our country?" Gaetz asked.

    "Sir, it's not in the purview of my investigative responsibilities," Vorndran said.

    "But that is shocking that you wouldn't, as the Assistant Director of Cyber, know whether or not there are international business deals, kickbacks, shakedowns, that are on this laptop that would make the First Family suspect to some sort of compromise," said Gaetz.

    Vorndran should be embarrassed.

    The whereabouts of this laptop are something he should know.  Even if he doesn't have it, he should know who does have it because it's a computer matter that likely affects his job of protecting the country from cyber-attacks.


    (Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2022, 12:54:11 PM
    Another one of those "finest" of people who was supposed to protect children.


    Cottage Grove cop assigned to Park High School admits to sexually touching 7 students

    (https://i1.wp.com/www.twincities.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/peltonmugImage-2.png?fit=620%2C9999px&ssl=1)

    Cottage Grove police officer Adam G. Pelton, assigned to Park High School has pleaded guilty to sexually touching seven female students and soliciting one teen multiple times for nude photos.
    Pelton has been a licensed law enforcement officer since 2009. He began working at Park High School during the 2018-19 school year after holding the same post at Cottage Grove Middle School starting in January 2017.

    Reports from several students of "inappropriate sexual contact" initiated by Pelton prompted authorities to ask the Apple Valley Police Department to investigate. Students alleged that Pelton repeatedly initiated hugs from them that led to him touching their buttocks over their clothing.

    Most of these interactions occurred in Pelton's private school office, which lacked video surveillance. Several students also reported that Pelton would often call or refer to them as "beautiful" and "sweetheart." One of them disclosed that he told her that if he were her age, he would date her.

    When questioned, Pelton denied touching the buttocks of any student. He also initially denied asking any student for nude pictures, but he later said he did "as a joke."

    https://www.startribune.com/ex-cottage-grove-cop-assigned-to-park-high-school-admits-to-sexually-touching-7-students/600160321/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 07, 2022, 10:24:09 AM
    Gangs will go to any level to cover up their activities. Their latest devious method:

    Santa Ana police officers blast Disney tunes at scene to avoid YouTube video recording

    A video posted on YouTube shows Santa Ana police officers waking up a neighborhood during an investigation Monday night as they blasted Disney music from one of their patrol vehicles to stop a YouTuber from recording on scene.

    In the video, an officer said they were at a scene near West Civic Center Drive and North Western Avenue for a vehicle theft investigation.

    The first song heard playing in the video is "You've Got a Friend in Me" from the Disney/Pixar film "Toy Story."

    It was almost 11 p.m. when "We Don't Talk About Bruno," "Un Poco Loco," and other Disney hits filled the air. At one point, the YouTuber is heard telling officers to "have respect for the neighbors."

    The music drags on, waking up people in their homes, including children and Councilmember Jonathan Hernandez.

    Hernandez is seen in the video speaking with one of the officers.

    "Why are you doing this," Hernandez asked.

    "Because they get copyright infringement," the officer replied.

    The YouTuber is heard in the recording saying it's because "he knows I have a YouTube channel." That channel is called Santa Ana Audits.

    On Wednesday, it had more than 3,500 subscribers and appeared to focus on recording SAPD officers on scene, a right protected by the First Amendment as long as there is no interference with police work.

    Eyewitness News reached out to professor of music and copyright at Berklee Online Dr. E. Michael Harrington, who said the incident got into copyright law.

    "I've been reading about it and seeing it on YouTube," Harrington said. He was talking about officers playing music without purchasing the rights to it, a tactic to discourage recording.

    "I think it's clearly illegal because it is a public performance," Harrington said of the officers playing the music loud enough for the public to hear.

    In addition, when the videos are shared, the person posting it risks fines or even getting banned from the streaming or social media platform.

    "YouTube has bots that go around and they match the song they're hearing, and then if that's on YouTube and it wasn't cleared, then the music, the song recording and the copyright, they get taken down, and then the person [who] posted it, who is trying to be a good citizen to say, 'Watch what this cop did or cops, they should be prosecuted,' that person now gets a copyright strike for doing an act that's far more important than what the cops are doing," Harrington said.

    https://abc7.com/santa-ana-police-officers-youtube-video-disney-music-during-investigation/11718827/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2022, 11:47:44 AM
    https://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/2022/04/2-men-acquitted-in-alleged-plot-to-kidnap-michigan-gov-gretchen-whitmer-jury-deadlocks-on-other-2.html


    Good!   
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 08, 2022, 12:20:18 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 13, 2022, 11:44:18 AM

    The cop was not arrested when he killed the poor man, neither was he arrested after being indicted.

    (https://s3-assets.eastidahonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/19144356/Cerdas-IFPD.jpg) (https://s3-assets.eastidahonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/10203910/Joe-Johnson-GoFundMe.jpg)


    I.F. police officer who shot man in backyard indicted for manslaughter

    A grand jury has indicted an Idaho Falls Police officer for shooting a man who was in his own backyard during a February manhunt.

    Elias Aurelio Cerdas, a 26-year-old officer who graduated from training less than a year before the shooting, was indicted Friday for felony involuntary manslaughter. The Feb. 8 shooting left Joseph “Joe” Johnson, a father of four, dead behind his house.

    Cerdas was not arrested after being charged but issued a summons for his arraignment at the Bonneville County Courthouse on Aug. 23. The Idaho Attorney General’s Office is prosecuting the case after the Bonneville County Prosecutor’s Office handed the case over for unspecified reasons.

    https://www.eastidahonews.com/2021/08/i-f-police-officer-who-shot-man-in-backyard-indicted-for-manslaughter/

    And as expected the cop who murdered that innocent father in his home and forever ruined the family gets away with ZERO PRISON TIME.

    As the cop's trial went on the judge halted the trial (!) and dismissed that case as long as the cop completes 100 hours of "firearm, use of force and supervised patrol training in the next year". Insane. What a travesty.


    Idaho Falls police officer ‘very relieved’ after judge dismisses case against him

    Day two of a trial for an Idaho Falls police officer accused of shooting and killing a man last year took an unexpected turn.

    After a 90 minute delay, the jury entered the courtroom. District Judge Darren Simpson convened the proceedings by announcing the case against Elias Cerdas is dismissed on the condition that Cerdas complete 100 hours of firearm, use of force and supervised patrol training in the next year.

    “During that time, he (Cerdas) will be on modified duty, which he is currently on,” Simpson said. “At the time it is completed, the case would be dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can not be refiled.”

    If Cerdas does not complete the training in that timeframe, the case can be refiled and the trial would resume.

    https://www.eastidahonews.com/2022/04/idaho-falls-police-officer-very-relieved-after-judge-dismisses-case-against-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 13, 2022, 12:00:46 PM
    Terrible

    And as expected the cop who murdered that innocent father in his home and forever ruined the family gets away with ZERO PRISON TIME.

    As the cop's trial went on the judge halted the trial (!) and dismissed that case as long as the cop completes 100 hours of "firearm, use of force and supervised patrol training in the next year". Insane. What a travesty.


    Idaho Falls police officer ‘very relieved’ after judge dismisses case against him

    Day two of a trial for an Idaho Falls police officer accused of shooting and killing a man last year took an unexpected turn.

    After a 90 minute delay, the jury entered the courtroom. District Judge Darren Simpson convened the proceedings by announcing the case against Elias Cerdas is dismissed on the condition that Cerdas complete 100 hours of firearm, use of force and supervised patrol training in the next year.

    “During that time, he (Cerdas) will be on modified duty, which he is currently on,” Simpson said. “At the time it is completed, the case would be dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can not be refiled.”

    If Cerdas does not complete the training in that timeframe, the case can be refiled and the trial would resume.

    https://www.eastidahonews.com/2022/04/idaho-falls-police-officer-very-relieved-after-judge-dismisses-case-against-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 13, 2022, 01:23:50 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2022, 01:02:13 PM
    The usual government racket. The "sheriff" and his goons should've been rounded up on RICO charges.


    The Feds Will Return More Than $1 Million in Marijuana Money That California Cops Stole From Armored Cars

    The federal government has agreed to return more than $1 million that California sheriff's deputies stole from an armored-car company that serves state-licensed marijuana businesses. The partial settlement of a lawsuit that the Institute for Justice filed on behalf of the Pennsylvania-based company, Empyreal Logistics, embodies a notable irony: The Justice Department is returning money earned by businesses that federal law still treats as criminal enterprises, thereby defeating San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus' attempt to evade California law, which does not allow forfeiture of the money that his deputies seized because it came from businesses that the state views as perfectly legitimate.

    San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies stopped Empyreal vans three times in November, December, and January, making off with about $700,000 the first time and about $350,000 the second time. During the third stop, they came away empty-handed because the van was carrying rolls of coins that had nothing to do with the cannabis industry. Since the marijuana businesses whose proceeds the deputies seized are legal in California, Dicus handed the loot over to the FBI, hoping to ultimately keep up to 80 percent of the money through federal forfeiture under the Justice Department's "equitable sharing" program.

    That "adoption" fell through after Empyreal sued the Justice Department, the FBI, and the Drug Enforcement Administration, arguing that federal forfeiture of the money would violate a congressional spending rider that bars the Justice Department from interfering with state medical marijuana programs. The company said much of the money came from medical marijuana dispensaries.

    https://reason.com/2022/04/14/the-feds-will-return-more-than-1-million-in-marijuana-money-that-california-cops-stole-from-armored-cars/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 19, 2022, 11:57:38 AM
    Another man who spent decades in prison because cops fabricated evidence. How many others like him out there? The cop should have been given the death penalty and the city council who defended him should have rotted in prison for life.

    No surprise that the original prosecutor was Nifong, the same scumbag who dragged the Duke lacrosse players through the mud on bogus rape charges.


    NC man exonerated on murder charge after 21 years wins $6M lawsuit but city refuses to pay

    A Durham, North Carolina man who won a $6 million lawsuit after being wrongfully convicted on two murder charges will likely never see the money after the Durham City Council decided against paying him.

    Darryl Anthony Howard, who was exonerated in 2016 and pardoned in 2021 by Gov. Roy Cooper after serving 21 years of an 80-year jail sentence, was awarded $6 million by a federal grand jury in December, according to The News & Observer.

    Howard had been convicted in 1995 on two counts of second-degree murder and one count of arson, though a judge vacated the convictions and ordered Howard's release because of DNA evidence unavailable at the time.

    The jury also found that Howard's wrongful convictions were a result of retired detective Darrell Dowdy fabricating evidence and performing an inadequate investigation.

    In a series closed-door session meetings between December and February, however, the Durham City Council voted against paying the judgment on Dowdy's behalf. The city also expects Howard to pay the legal fees of the two city employees who were dismissed from the case, according to legal documents.

    Howard and his attorney found the city's decision concerning, especially after it paid more than $4 million defending Dowdy.

    Former prosecutor Mike Nifong, who originally handled Howard's case, was disbarred for lying and misconduct in the case of rape accusations against Duke University lacrosse players who were later found innocent.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/nc-man-exonerated-on-murder-charge-wins-6m-lawsuit-but-city-refuses-to-pay
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 20, 2022, 11:02:06 AM


    Another conspiracy theory set up by the government collapses.


    Prosecutor withdraws from Whitmer kidnap plot case after jury acquits two defendants, deadlocks on others

    One of the lead prosecutors in the case centered on an alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer withdrew from the matter days after two defendants were acquitted. A mistrial was declared for two others when a jury could not reach a decision.

    In a Tuesday court filing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Roth informed the court that he was stepping down from the case, local WZZM reported. He and his office declined to provide a reason. Roth had delivered the opening statement in the case against Adam Fox, Barry Croft Jr., Daniel Harris, and Brandon Caserta. In that statement, he alleged that the four defendants recruited others in a plot to break into the governor’s home, tie her up, and abduct her. Roth told the jury that the four men were looking to create a "war zone here in Michigan."

    On April 8, the jury announced that they had found Harris and Caserta not guilty, but they could not reach a verdict for Fox or Croft. While federal prosecutors indicated that they were interested in pursuing a second trial for Fox and Croft, they have yet to file a notice with the court.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/prosecutor-withdraws-from-whitmer-kidnap-plot-case-after-jury-acquits-two-defendants-deadlocks-on-others
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 22, 2022, 12:18:14 PM
    http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/they-left-us-at-the-disposal-of-a-predator-how-the-fbi-failed-us-gymnasts/ar-AAWsIKc

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2022, 11:36:30 AM
    It's almost an epidemic now with all these "brave heroes" raping and abusing children. The most disgusting thing is that the other cops, and of course the union he was the president of, ignored or covered up his vile crimes. That's some serious "back the blue" shit.

    He got off very lightly, as usual, just 10-13 years in prison for raping several children multiple times for decades.



    Disgraced Police Union President Pleads Guilty To Raping Children For Decades As Department Covered For Him

    (https://themindunleashed.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/bostom.jpeg)

    Last year, documents were released detailing the abuse and cover-up of said abuse carried out by Patrick M. Rose Sr., the former president of the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association and Boston PD detective. Rose was charged with molesting children, and the documents prove the department knew, and allowed him to continue to serve in their ranks and even engage with children.

    Rose was originally charged with 33 counts in connection with the rape and abuse of at least six children in the 1990s. Some of the charges included statutory rape and indecent assault and battery on a child. This week, Rose pleaded guilty to rape charges involving the horrific and repeated rape of multiple young children.

    “Some of these victims describe being sexually assaulted upwards of 200 times,” said Assistant District Attorney Audrey Mark.

    Rose’s victims were sometimes 6, 7 or 8 years old, prosecutors said, and he raped the six victims in his West Roxbury home over the course of 30 years until 2020.

    “By virtue of his position, he had their trust, and he violated it over and over. He violated their bodies. And these children, and these adult survivors will live with that trauma for the rest of their lives,” Mark said after the court listened to victim impact statements.

    “I am so sorry to each and every one of you. Please try to accept that I am solely responsible, and not let your hatred destroy who you are or each other,” the disgraced police union boss said as he was shackled in the courtroom on Monday.

    Unfortunately, despite the nature of his charges, Rose was only sentenced to 10-13 years in prison, followed by 10 years of probation.

    Absent from the guilty plea were any mentions of the documents which showed that his fellow cops allowed Rose’s abuse to go on for decades.

    The documents were redacted copies of internal affairs investigations into Rose. Last year, Boston Mayor Kim Janey’s office said the information was released to shed light on the baffling case of how Boston’s top cop was allowed to go on abusing children for decades.

    “It is appalling that there was a documented history of alleged child sexual abuse, yet this individual was able to serve out his career as an officer and eventually become the head of the patrolmen’s union for several years,” she said at the time. “Under no circumstance will crimes of this nature be tolerated under my administration, and we will not turn a blind eye to injustices as they arise.”

    The evidence surfaced in 1995 when the Boston police department filed a criminal complaint against Rose for sexual assault on a 12-year-old boy. Despite the evidence, Rose managed to get the case against him dropped. An internal affairs investigation would later conclude that Rose indeed committed the crime, however, he kept his badge and remained a cop for the next 20 years — continuing to abuse children over the course of the following two decades.

    As MassLive reports, even after Boston Police Department investigators informed then-Commissioner Paul F. Evans in 1996 that there was credible evidence supporting allegations that one of the department’s officers had sexually assaulted a child, that officer was allowed to keep his job, according to the documents.

    Janey said it is “deeply unsettling and entirely unacceptable that Rose remained on the force for two decades,” enabling his ascent to the top of the police union.

    https://ussanews.com/2022/04/26/disgraced-police-union-president-pleads-guilty-to-raping-children-for-decades-as-department-covered-for-him/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 26, 2022, 05:17:18 PM

    Drunken off-duty NYPD cop allowed to do yoga as part of punishment


    A vacationing NYPD cop who got “belligerent” with officers in California after drunkenly wandering onto a highway dodged possibly being fired — and instead was allowed to do yoga as part of her punishment.

    The behind-the-scenes deal was new NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell’s first act of leniency involving departmental discipline.

    Off-duty Harlem cop Catherine Lamonica, 38, was at dinner with two friends in San Francisco on April 10, 2021, when she ditched her pals to continue on to a nearby bar, according to NYPD disciplinary documents obtained through the state Freedom of Information Law.

    About an hour later, Lamonica called her friends and told them she was heading back to their hotel. She turned off her phone when she started walking because it was at 1 percent battery life, the documents say.

    It isn’t clear how far Lamonica walked, but after about an hour, she turned on her phone again for directions to the hotel — and the device allegedly sent her straight onto Interstate 80, according to the papers.

    Multiple people called 911 reporting that “a female was walking in the freeway,” and, when California Highway Patrol responded to the scene, they found the officer “standing in the median center divider looking over the railing by the concrete,” the records say.

    “Officers removed Office Lamonica, place[d] her in handcuffs for everyone’s safety, placed her in their police vehicle and transported Officer Lamonica to their headquarters,” documents say. Once in custody, Lamonica “refused to comply with the Officers[sic] request allowing them to speak to the NYPD Supervisor while on the phone, because she wanted to make the notification to her command and operations first,” the records say.

    The Big Apple cop was “belligerent, argumentative and discourteous” to the Highway Patrol officers — and when reporting her arrest to her NYPD supervisor, she accused the California cops of assaulting her, according to records. Lamonica later admitted the officers acted “reasonably” because an intoxicated pedestrian on the freeway created a “dangerous situation for everyone,” the documents say.

    The West Coast cops then took Lamonica to San Francisco General “because [she] was intoxicated, could not care for herself.”

    The trio of California charges filed against Lamonica — for public intoxication, pedestrian prohibited on restricted freeways and failure to obey signs — were eventually dropped by a local assistant district attorney because her “office doesn’t file infractions,” the NYPD’s internal records say.

    https://nypost.com/2022/04/26/drunken-off-duty-nypd-cop-allowed-to-do-yoga-as-part-of-punishment/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 27, 2022, 06:14:39 AM
    Was she hot?   :D

    Drunken off-duty NYPD cop allowed to do yoga as part of punishment


    A vacationing NYPD cop who got “belligerent” with officers in California after drunkenly wandering onto a highway dodged possibly being fired — and instead was allowed to do yoga as part of her punishment.

    The behind-the-scenes deal was new NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell’s first act of leniency involving departmental discipline.

    Off-duty Harlem cop Catherine Lamonica, 38, was at dinner with two friends in San Francisco on April 10, 2021, when she ditched her pals to continue on to a nearby bar, according to NYPD disciplinary documents obtained through the state Freedom of Information Law.

    About an hour later, Lamonica called her friends and told them she was heading back to their hotel. She turned off her phone when she started walking because it was at 1 percent battery life, the documents say.

    It isn’t clear how far Lamonica walked, but after about an hour, she turned on her phone again for directions to the hotel — and the device allegedly sent her straight onto Interstate 80, according to the papers.

    Multiple people called 911 reporting that “a female was walking in the freeway,” and, when California Highway Patrol responded to the scene, they found the officer “standing in the median center divider looking over the railing by the concrete,” the records say.

    “Officers removed Office Lamonica, place[d] her in handcuffs for everyone’s safety, placed her in their police vehicle and transported Officer Lamonica to their headquarters,” documents say. Once in custody, Lamonica “refused to comply with the Officers[sic] request allowing them to speak to the NYPD Supervisor while on the phone, because she wanted to make the notification to her command and operations first,” the records say.

    The Big Apple cop was “belligerent, argumentative and discourteous” to the Highway Patrol officers — and when reporting her arrest to her NYPD supervisor, she accused the California cops of assaulting her, according to records. Lamonica later admitted the officers acted “reasonably” because an intoxicated pedestrian on the freeway created a “dangerous situation for everyone,” the documents say.

    The West Coast cops then took Lamonica to San Francisco General “because [she] was intoxicated, could not care for herself.”

    The trio of California charges filed against Lamonica — for public intoxication, pedestrian prohibited on restricted freeways and failure to obey signs — were eventually dropped by a local assistant district attorney because her “office doesn’t file infractions,” the NYPD’s internal records say.

    https://nypost.com/2022/04/26/drunken-off-duty-nypd-cop-allowed-to-do-yoga-as-part-of-punishment/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2022, 04:21:36 PM


    Entrapment, intimidation, lies and deceit are just part of the FBI's modus operandi.


    Marjorie Taylor Greene confronts DOJ about alleged 'entrapping' of defendants in Gov. Whitmer kidnapping plot

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., is seeking answers from the Justice Department (DOJ) on whether the FBI "entrapped" defendants in the Gov. Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping plot and whether the high-profile charges in Michigan were politically motivated to hurt former President Trump before the 2020 presidential election.

    Greene on Wednesday sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray that backs defense lawyer claims that four defendants charged with conspiring to kidnap Whitmer were steered by undercover FBI agents and informants.

    "The American people deserve a transparent justice system and law enforcement that keeps them safe, not entraps them in serious criminal activity in order to sway the outcome of a democratic election," Greene and 11 other GOP lawmakers wrote in a letter obtained by Fox News Digital.

    After a 20-day trial, two of the four men were acquitted on April 8 of a conspiracy to kidnap Whitmer. Jurors couldn't reach a verdict on charges against two other defendants, resulting in a mistrial. Their lawyers alleged entrapment, and the federal judge in the case allowed jurors to consider whether the FBI engaged in the prohibited practice of cajoling or tricking individuals into committing crimes.

    Spokespeople for both the FBI and the Justice Department confirmed receipt of the GOP letter but declined to comment further.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene-confronts-doj-whitmer-kidnapping-plot
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2022, 03:16:34 PM

    FBI Conducted Potentially Millions of Searches of Americans’ Data Last Year, Report Says

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation performed potentially millions of searches of American electronic data last year without a warrant, U.S. intelligence officials said Friday, a revelation likely to stoke longstanding concerns in Congress about government surveillance and privacy.

    An annual report published Friday by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence disclosed that the FBI conducted as many as 3.4 million searches of U.S. data that had been previously collected by the National Security Agency.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/fbi-conducted-potentially-millions-of-searches-of-americans-data-last-year-report-says-11651253728
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2022, 12:05:59 PM
    Another incident with Capitol Police.

    Robert Byrd, Ashli Babbitt's killer just happened to "forget" his weapon inside the US Capitol but he wasn't fired or charged.

    Remember, only cops are "trained professionals" who know how to handle firearms, unlike the plebs whose gun rights are slowly diminishing.


    Capitol Police officer suspended after accidentally discharging gun in Cannon Office Building

    A Capitol Police officer accidentally discharged their firearm Tuesday morning in the Cannon House Office Building, three sources familiar with the matter said.

    After Roll Call first reported the incident, the department confirmed the incident.

    https://rollcall.com/2022/05/03/capitol-police-officer-accidentally-discharged-gun-in-cannon-office-building-sources-say/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 03, 2022, 04:28:12 PM
    CDC Tracked Millions of Phones to See If Americans Followed COVID Lockdown Orders

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) bought access to location data harvested from tens of millions of phones in the United States to perform analysis of compliance with curfews, track patterns of people visiting K-12 schools, and specifically monitor the effectiveness of policy in the Navajo Nation, according to CDC documents obtained by Motherboard. The documents also show that although the CDC used COVID-19 as a reason to buy access to the data more quickly, it intended to use it for more general CDC purposes.

    Location data is information on a device’s location sourced from the phone, which can then show where a person lives, works, and where they went. The sort of data the CDC bought was aggregated—meaning it was designed to follow trends that emerge from the movements of groups of people—but researchers have repeatedly raised concerns with how location data can be deanonymized and used to track specific people.

    The documents reveal the expansive plan the CDC had last year to use location data from a highly controversial data broker. SafeGraph, the company the CDC paid $420,000 for access to one year of data to, includes Peter Thiel and the former head of Saudi intelligence among its investors. Google banned the company from the Play Store in June.

    The CDC used the data for monitoring curfews, with the documents saying that SafeGraph’s data “has been critical for ongoing response efforts, such as hourly monitoring of activity in curfew zones or detailed counts of visits to participating pharmacies for vaccine monitoring.” The documents date from 2021.

    Zach Edwards, a cybersecurity researcher who closely follows the data marketplace, told Motherboard in an online chat after reviewing the documents that “The CDC seems to have purposefully created an open-ended list of use cases, which included monitoring curfews, neighbor to neighbor visits, visits to churches, schools and pharmacies, and also a variety of analysis with this data specifically focused on ‘violence.’” (The document doesn’t stop at churches; it mentions “places of worship.”)

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/m7vymn/cdc-tracked-phones-location-data-curfews
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 11, 2022, 12:17:55 PM
    Another "brave hero" terrified by a 75 year old woman with dementia.

    Las Cruces releases police body cam video of moment when 75-year-old woman was shot, killed

    The city of Las Cruces has released more body cam footage which shows the moment when a police officer shot and killed a 75-year-old woman who was holding two knives in her hands on April 16.

    The woman killed, Amelia Baca, had dementia, according to her family. Police were called after she allegedly was threatening members of the family.

    In the video, the first officer who approaches the door tells two family members who were with Baca to step out of the house. As the two women exit the house, one tells the officer Baca is holding knives, is mentally ill and asks him not to shoot her.

    An officer's body camera captures Baca holding a kitchen knife in each hand. The officer commands Baca multiple times to drop the knives, but she doesn't. The officer, the women and Baca all appear to yell for 40 seconds, then the video provided by the city blurs the final couple of seconds before Baca is shot.

    The city has yet to release the name of the officer who fired the fatal shots.

    https://kvia.com/news/new-mexico/2022/05/10/watch-las-cruces-releases-police-body-cam-video-of-moment-when-75-year-old-woman-was-shot-killed/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 18, 2022, 12:52:57 PM
    Attempted murder.

    Victim ‘cooked alive’ after Osceola deputy’s Taser sparked fire at gas pump

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2022/05/18/13/57971093-10829061-image-a-9_1652878620518.jpg)

    The electric discharge from an Osceola County deputy firing his Taser caused a fire that injured three deputies and caused another man to be burned on more than 75% of his body, according to a report completed by the state fire marshal this week.

    The report says Osceola County deputies were in a vehicle pursuit attempting to stop a man on a dirt bike prior to the fire on Feb. 27 at a Wawa in Orange County located at John Young and Central Florida parkways. Surveillance video from the incident shows an Osceola County deputy tackling a man, identified as Jean Louis Barreto Baerga, filling up his dirt bike with gas.

    The fire caused minor injuries to two deputies, and third-degree burns to another deputy. According to the fire marshal’s report, Barreto Baerga was burned on 76% of his body and was not expected to survive.

    The sheriff’s office previously refused to answer whether a Taser was used in the incident.


    https://www.wftv.com/news/local/osceola-county/osceola-county-deputys-taser-caused-gas-station-fire-that-injured-man-3-deputies-report-says/




    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2022, 08:55:39 PM
    A cop mother tazing her 3 sons. No surprise here. Of all professions, cops are at the top for domestic violence and abuse.


    Texas Deputy Used Boyfriend’s Department-Issued Taser to ‘Drive-Stun’ Her Three Young Boys: Prosecutors

    A now-former deputy constable in Texas was arrested earlier this week for allegedly using her stun gun on her three minor children, according to court documents obtained by Law&Crime.

    Xochitl Ortiz, 34, stands accused of three counts of felony injury to a child under the age of 15 over the allegations. The alleged victims are her three minor children, all boys, aged 8, 11, and 12.

    https://lawandcrime.com/crime/fired-texas-deputy-used-boyfriends-department-issued-taser-to-drive-stun-her-three-young-boys-prosecutors/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2022, 03:39:17 PM
    Most have heard of George Floyd by now but who knows or remembers Tony Timpa?

    He was killed by cops despite pleading for help more than 30 times. After killing him the cops laughed and joked.

    But his death didn't matter since he was white. No riots, no looting, no beating up innocent bystanders, no taking down statues. Very few even know his name.

    Now to add insult to injury, his killers enjoy the travesty known as "qualified immunity".

    Federal judge tosses excessive force suit against five Dallas officers in Tony Timpa case

    A federal judge in Dallas has thrown out an excessive force lawsuit filed against five Dallas police officers who handcuffed and pinned a mentally ill man to the ground shortly before he died.

    In a 27-page ruling, U.S. District Judge David Godbey granted the officers’ motion for summary judgment in the case of Tony Timpa. The unarmed Rockwall man died in 2016 from “sudden cardiac death due to the toxic effects of cocaine and physiological stress associated with physical restraint,” court records show.

    Godbey based his decision, signed Monday, on the controversial doctrine of qualified immunity. Under that standard, Timpa’s family had to identify a specific case in the Fifth Circuit court of appeals that clearly established that the officers’ conduct at the time was unconstitutional.

    A private security guard handcuffed Timpa before Dallas officers arrived. Timpa was unarmed, in shorts and barefoot. The responding officers mocked the 32-year-old as he screamed for his life, with one officer’s knee pinned in his back for about 14 minutes as he lay face down in the grass, according to court records. They joked after he became unresponsive that he was going to be late for school, the lawsuit says.

    The officers involved were Dustin Dillard, Raymond Dominguez, Kevin Mansell, Domingo Rivera and Danny Vasquez.

    Three of the officers later faced misdemeanor deadly conduct charges in connection with the death.

    But last year, Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot dismissed the charges against Dillard, Mansell and Vasquez. Creuzot said he met with three medical examiners who told him they did not believe the officers acted recklessly.

    All but one of the five officers remain on the force, a police spokeswoman said Tuesday. Mansell retired in August 2019, the spokeswoman said.

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2020/07/07/federal-judge-tosses-excessive-force-suit-against-five-dallas-officers-in-tony-timpa-case/



    And once again killers are rewarded.


    Dallas police promote officer who pinned Tony Timpa to ground before he died in 2016

    The Dallas Police Department promoted the officer who pinned Tony Timpa to the ground for nearly 14 minutes before his 2016 death, drawing criticism from an attorney representing Timpa’s family.

    Dustin Dillard was elevated this week to the rank of Sr. Cpl., a role that involves training rookie officers. He was celebrated among dozens of other officers Tuesday at the Dallas police promotional ceremony, where he shook Chief Eddie García’s hand and posed for pictures in a video posted on Facebook by the department. The chief then patted Dillard on the arm.

    He’s one of four officers facing excessive force accusations in a civil rights case about Timpa’s death. The city is representing Dillard and the three other officers — Raymond Dominguez, Kevin Mansell and Danny Vasquez — and in late April appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to prevent the case from being heard by a jury.

    All but one of the officers remain with the department. Mansell retired in August 2019.

    Geoff Henley, an attorney representing Timpa’s family, said relatives are frustrated with how long the lawsuit has stretched on, which he said has made it difficult for them to move forward. He said the family “will be angry to hear” about the promotion.

    https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2022/05/25/dallas-police-promote-officer-who-pinned-tony-timpa-to-ground-before-he-died-in-2016/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2022, 11:59:03 AM
    Student calls to 911 in Uvalde
    Twitter/ Nyslimes ^ | 5/27/2022 | Mike Baker
    Posted on 5/27/2022, 2:00:30 PM by mooncoin

    Student calls to 911:

    12:03—whispered she's in room 112

    12:10—said multiple dead

    12:13—called again

    12:16—says 8-9 students alive

    12:19—student calls from room 111

    12:21—3 shots heard on call

    12:36—another call

    12:43—asks for police

    12:47—asks for police



    ________________________ __________

    FNG worthless cowards
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2022, 02:44:09 PM
    Student calls to 911 in Uvalde
    Twitter/ Nyslimes ^ | 5/27/2022 | Mike Baker
    Posted on 5/27/2022, 2:00:30 PM by mooncoin

    Student calls to 911:

    12:03—whispered she's in room 112

    12:10—said multiple dead

    12:13—called again

    12:16—says 8-9 students alive

    12:19—student calls from room 111

    12:21—3 shots heard on call

    12:36—another call

    12:43—asks for police

    12:47—asks for police



    ________________________ __________

    FNG worthless cowards

    Police failed the children once again. Now the cops and their worshippers are frantically trying to find any excuse for their cowardice and incompetence. Imagine being a parent outside the school while your child is being murdered and the coward cops just sit on their ass and threaten you or taze you if you try to save your child.

    But don't expect accountability, only the same old BS excuses:
    "Mistakes were made."
    "We couldn't have known."
    "We had to make a split second decision."
    "Hindsight is 20/20."
    "Got to make it home at the end of the shift."

    etc

    Unfortunately many people still believe that cops are there to "serve and protect" whereas the courts have ruled that cops have no duty to protect you, and this has been shown many times in practice. Add in the cop unions who will fight tooth and nail to defend the cowards, the abusers and the killers (that's how 2 of the cowards of Broward were reinstated with back pay).
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2022, 02:45:05 PM
    Authorities investigating if retired federal agent knew of Buffalo mass shooting plans in advance

    Law enforcement officers are investigating whether a retired federal agent had about 30 minutes advance notice of a white supremacist's plans to murder Black people at a Buffalo supermarket, two law enforcement officials told The Buffalo News.

    Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

    https://buffalonews.com/news/local/authorities-investigating-if-retired-federal-agent-knew-of-buffalo-mass-shooting-plans-in-advance/article_bd408f18-dd39-11ec-be53-df8fdd095d6f.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 27, 2022, 05:31:01 PM
    Not surprising

    Authorities investigating if retired federal agent knew of Buffalo mass shooting plans in advance

    Law enforcement officers are investigating whether a retired federal agent had about 30 minutes advance notice of a white supremacist's plans to murder Black people at a Buffalo supermarket, two law enforcement officials told The Buffalo News.

    Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

    https://buffalonews.com/news/local/authorities-investigating-if-retired-federal-agent-knew-of-buffalo-mass-shooting-plans-in-advance/article_bd408f18-dd39-11ec-be53-df8fdd095d6f.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 27, 2022, 06:02:40 PM
    New Documents Illuminate the President’s Secret, Unchecked Emergency Powers

    Bush-era records released under the Freedom of Information Act raise concerns about the powers presidents might claim during crises, from suspending habeas corpus to implementing an internet kill switch.


    In 2004, high-rank­ing staffers in the George W. Bush admin­is­tra­tion spear­headed a holistic review of the pres­id­ent’s emer­gency powers. Their goal was to refresh a set of secret plans known as “pres­id­en­tial emer­gency action docu­ments,” or PEADs, the continu­ity-of-govern­ment play­book that emerged under Pres­id­ent Dwight Eisen­hower as a response to the threat of nuclear war.

    Those docu­ments had been revised previ­ously, but they took on new signi­fic­ance in the wake of 9/11. Their review was, as one Bush offi­cial saw it, an “urgent and compel­ling secur­ity effort, espe­cially in light of ongo­ing threats.”

    In response to Free­dom of Inform­a­tion Act requests, the George W. Bush Pres­id­en­tial Library turned over to the Bren­nan Center more than 500 pages gener­ated during this review and subsequent reviews in 2006 and 2008. (Another 6,000 pages were with­held in full because they are clas­si­fied.) The released records shed troub­ling new light on the powers that modern pres­id­ents claim they possess in moments of crisis — powers that appear to lack over­sight from Congress, the courts, or the public.


    Controlling commu­nic­a­tions

    At least one of the docu­ments under review was designed to imple­ment the emer­gency author­it­ies contained in Section 706 of the Commu­nic­a­tions Act. During World War II, Congress gran­ted the pres­id­ent author­ity to shut down or seize control of “any facil­ity or station for wire commu­nic­a­tion” upon proclam­a­tion “that there exists a state or threat of war involving the United States.”

    This fright­en­ingly expans­ive language was, at the time, hemmed in by Amer­ic­ans’ limited use of tele­phone calls and tele­grams. Today, however, a pres­id­ent will­ing to test the limits of his or her author­ity might inter­pret “wire commu­nic­a­tions” to encom­pass the inter­net — and there­fore claim a “kill switch” over vast swaths of elec­tronic commu­nic­a­tion.

    And indeed, Bush admin­is­tra­tion offi­cials repeatedly high­lighted the stat­ute’s flex­ib­il­ity: it was “very broad,” as one offi­cial in the National Secur­ity Coun­cil scribbled, and it exten­ded “broader than common carri­ers in FCC [Federal Commu­nic­a­tions Commis­sion] juris[diction].”


    Deten­tion author­ity

    The records indic­ate that at least one pres­id­en­tial emer­gency action docu­ment pertained to the suspen­sion of habeas corpus. An internal memor­andum from June 2008 specified that a docu­ment under the Justice Depart­ment’s juris­dic­tion was “still being revised by OLC [Office of Legal Coun­sel], in light of recent Supreme Court opin­ion.” Examin­ing the Court’s rulings over the previ­ous months, it is evid­ent that this must refer to the land­mark decision in Boumediene v. Bush, which recog­nized Guantanamo Bay pris­on­ers’ consti­tu­tional right to chal­lenge their deten­tion in court. This strongly suggests that the early–­Cold War PEADs purport­ing to suspend habeas corpus had survived, at least in some form, and were part of the Bush admin­is­tra­tion’s review.

    The result of the admin­is­tra­tion’s post-Boumediene revi­sion is unknown. Signi­fic­antly, though, it does­n’t appear that any emer­gency action docu­ments were with­drawn or cancelled. To the contrary, eight PEADs were added, bring­ing the total number to 56.


    Inhib­it­ing the right to travel

    Restrict­ing the use of U.S. pass­ports — a repor­ted feature of some early pres­id­en­tial emer­gency action docu­ments — remained on the table as of 2008. Records gener­ated by the Bush admin­is­tra­tion’s review high­lighted a provi­sion of law from 1978 that allows the govern­ment to curtail inter­na­tional move­ment based on “war,” “armed hostil­it­ies,” or “immin­ent danger to the public health or the phys­ical safety of United States trav­el­lers.”

    Although pres­id­ents have used this stat­ute to ban travel to Lebanon, Iraq, Libya, and North Korea, a more sweep­ing abrog­a­tion of the right to travel would repres­ent a stark break from modern histor­ical prac­tice.

    https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/new-documents-illuminate-presidents-secret-unchecked-emergency-powers
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on May 27, 2022, 08:08:01 PM
    Student calls to 911 in Uvalde
    Twitter/ Nyslimes ^ | 5/27/2022 | Mike Baker
    Posted on 5/27/2022, 2:00:30 PM by mooncoin

    Student calls to 911:

    12:03—whispered she's in room 112

    12:10—said multiple dead

    12:13—called again

    12:16—says 8-9 students alive

    12:19—student calls from room 111

    12:21—3 shots heard on call

    12:36—another call

    12:43—asks for police

    12:47—asks for police



    ________________________ __________

    FNG worthless cowards

    Just an observation but your timeline is pretty meaningless without the transcripts from the dispatchers and the cops. Knowing this page like I do, I don't expect a response from Skeletor, he never responds to critiques.. he just lays out the propaganda and mover on.. but for those with a lick of sense... the timeline is meaningless.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 28, 2022, 02:00:54 AM
    Just an observation but your timeline is pretty meaningless without the transcripts from the dispatchers and the cops. Knowing this page like I do, I don't expect a response from Skeletor, he never responds to critiques.. he just lays out the propaganda and mover on.. but for those with a lick of sense... the timeline is meaningless.

    Um - the head of the police department said they made the wrong calls and decisions.   This fiasco is a disgrace and the entire PD should be disbanded and fired.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 28, 2022, 02:50:24 AM
    Just an observation but your timeline is pretty meaningless without the transcripts from the dispatchers and the cops. Knowing this page like I do, I don't expect a response from Skeletor, he never responds to critiques.. he just lays out the propaganda and mover on.. but for those with a lick of sense... the timeline is meaningless.

    Why Do you use the term propaganda in reference to what skeletor post ??
    Are they not mostly News media articles / clips or statements.

    Clearly you do not like police criticism & always defend police behaviour ,
    isn't that extreme bias & narrow mindedness Not to be able accept & admit
    often times cops get it totally wrong & their behaviour is awful & folk are needlessly
    Killed or injured.

    As in any job there are bad workers & arseholes & in jobs with Authority this
    is often worse as it brings these tendencies out in some as they think they are
    above & beyond reproach.

    other than that - long time no posting -
    & hows life with you? have you completed your European trip.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 28, 2022, 02:56:25 AM
    A cop mother tazing her 3 sons. No surprise here. Of all professions, cops are at the top for domestic violence and abuse.


    Texas Deputy Used Boyfriend’s Department-Issued Taser to ‘Drive-Stun’ Her Three Young Boys: Prosecutors

    A now-former deputy constable in Texas was arrested earlier this week for allegedly using her stun gun on her three minor children, according to court documents obtained by Law&Crime.

    Xochitl Ortiz, 34, stands accused of three counts of felony injury to a child under the age of 15 over the allegations. The alleged victims are her three minor children, all boys, aged 8, 11, and 12.

    https://lawandcrime.com/crime/fired-texas-deputy-used-boyfriends-department-issued-taser-to-drive-stun-her-three-young-boys-prosecutors/

    Fcuking lovely Mother.
    She should be tasered repeatedly for a month at least.

    FFS & she was a cop !!!
    Just think how she behaved if she treated her children like that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 31, 2022, 05:38:09 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2022, 05:34:28 AM
    Larry Nassar survivors seeking over $1 billion from FBI for not intervening in abuse
    ESPN ^ | 6/7/2022 | ASSociated
    Posted on 6/8/2022, 8:26:29 AM by God luvs America

    DETROIT -- Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles and dozens of other women who say they were sexually assaulted by Larry Nassar are seeking more than $1 billion from the FBI for failing to stop the convicted sports doctor when the agency first received allegations against him, lawyers said Wednesday.

    There is no dispute that FBI agents in 2015 knew that Nassar was accused of assaulting gymnasts, but they failed to act, leaving him free to continue to target young women and girls for more than a year.

    "It is time for the FBI to be held accountable," said Maggie Nichols, a national champion gymnast at Oklahoma from 2017 to 2019.

    Under federal law, a government agency has six months to respond to the tort claims filed Wednesday. Lawsuits could follow, depending on the FBI's response.

    The approximately 90 claimants include Biles, Aly Raisman and McKayla Maroney, all Olympic gold medalists, according to Manly, Stewart & Finaldi, a California law firm.

    "If the FBI had simply done its job, Nassar would have been stopped before he ever had the chance to abuse hundreds of girls, including me," said former University of Michigan gymnast Samantha Roy.

    Indianapolis-based USA Gymnastics told local FBI agents in 2015 that three gymnasts said they were assaulted by Nassar, a team doctor. But the FBI did not open a formal investigation or inform federal or state authorities in Michigan, according to the Justice Department's inspector general, an internal watchdog.

    Los Angeles FBI agents in 2016 began a sexual tourism investigation against Nassar and interviewed several survivors but also didn't alert Michigan authorities, the inspector general said.

    (Excerpt) Read more at espn.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 08, 2022, 11:05:28 AM
    Teacher wounded in Uvalde shooting says he will never forgive police
    MSN ^ | June 7, 2022 | Brittany Shammas
    Posted on 6/7/2022, 8:36:30 PM by Tired of Taxes

    A teacher wounded in last month’s mass shooting at a Texas elementary school said he will never forgive law enforcement for waiting more than an hour to stop the gunman who killed 19 students and two teachers.

    Arnulfo Reyes, hospitalized after being shot twice during the May 24 massacre at Robb Elementary School, spoke of his anger toward police during an emotional interview that aired Tuesday. He described feeling abandoned by officers who stood in a hallway even as students begged for help in repeated calls to 911.

    “After everything, I get more angry, because you have a bulletproof vest. I had nothing! I had nothing,” a crying Reyes said in a segment broadcast on “Good Morning America.” “You’re supposed to protect and serve. There is no excuse for their actions.”

    (SNIP)

    In his interview with ABC, Reyes detailed the horror that unfolded in his classroom as he and his students hid under tables waiting for help. The fourth-grade English and language arts teacher said May 24 was “going to be a good day,” with students receiving awards during a ceremony at the school.

    Some of the students went home after the ceremony. But 11 stayed at school, and Reyes put on a movie for them in Room 111. Suddenly, shots rang out.

    “The kids started asking out loud, ‘Mr. Reyes, what is going on?’ ” he recalled. “And I said, ‘I don’t know what’s going on, but let’s go ahead and get under the table. Get under the table and act like you’re asleep.’ ”

    He was gathering them under the table when he turned and saw the gunman.

    (SNIP)

    He fell to the floor and decided, “I’m going to act like I’m asleep also.” He said the Lord’s Prayer and the Hail Mary and “prayed and prayed...

    (Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on June 08, 2022, 10:45:45 PM
    Um - the head of the police department said they made the wrong calls and decisions.   This fiasco is a disgrace and the entire PD should be disbanded and fired.

    ^Defund the police supporter^
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 09, 2022, 05:48:30 AM
    ^Defund the police supporter^

    No - cops need to be trained better, and be held to higher standards on a regular basis.  Being a fat as f lazy bastid is standard fare for most govt workers, should never be for cops, fireman, military, EMT
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2022, 02:17:49 PM
    Houston Forces Private Businesses to Install 24/7 Citywide Digital Surveillance Cameras for Warrantless Access by Police

    The Rutherford Institute is calling on the City of Houston to address glaring constitutional concerns relating to a recently adopted ordinance that requires private businesses to install citywide digital surveillance cameras that can be accessed by police without a search warrant.

    The Exterior Security Cameras Ordinance, adopted by the Houston City Council on April 20, 2022, requires private businesses to purchase and install digital surveillance cameras that carry out round-the-clock, citywide surveillance on the populace while “allowing” police to access the footage at any time, for any reason, and without the need of a court-issued warrant.

    In a letter to the Houston City Council, Rutherford Institute attorneys warn that the City’s thinly veiled attempt to evade oversight and accountability for Fourth Amendment violations by forcing a quasi-private/public arrangement on private businesses regarding the ownership and governance of digital surveillance cameras will not likely hold up to judicial scrutiny.

    On April 20, 2022, the Houston City Council passed an ordinance ostensibly aimed at addressing “an increase of violent crimes due to the pandemic, social anxiety and economic uncertainty, open carry law and a strained criminal justice system resulting in a criminal backlog of cases.”

    The Exterior Security Cameras Ordinance requires certain private businesses (all bars, nightclubs, sexually-oriented businesses, convenience stores and game rooms inside city limits) to work in consultation with the Houston Police Department in order to install digital surveillance cameras that record the exterior property areas at all times. Business owners must bear the costs of the cameras, ensure the cameras are in proper working order, maintain recordings for at least 30 days, and provide video footage within 72 hours to police upon their request without a search warrant.

    The Ordinance is slated to take effect mid-July. Failure to comply with the Ordinance is a punishable offense for business owners with fines up to $500 per day. However, as The Rutherford Institute warns, by lodging the responsibility for the cameras with private businesses, the City is proceeding as if it is not bound by the warrant requirements of the Fourth Amendment, giving police carte blanche access to the surveillance footage from these digital cameras. Consequently, the Ordinance does not require a judge or magistrate to confirm that the police demand for video footage is supported by probable cause of criminal activity under oath, it does not limit the scope of the video footage which can be requested by the police in order to prevent obtaining extra and unnecessary video footage, and it does not require the crime to be violent or even serious in relation to the Ordinance’s stated goal of reducing violent crime. The Ordinance also fails to limit the use and further dissemination of the video footage by the police.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/houston_forces_private_businesses_to_install_24_7_citywide_digital_surveillance_cameras_for_warrantless_access_by_police
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 16, 2022, 01:26:30 PM
    A police department engaging in international arms trafficking?


    Miami Police Try Hard to Explain How It’s Legal for Them to Ship Guns to Ukraine…and Fail Miserably

    The Miami Police Department currently has no export licenses or permit to ship firearms to the Ukraine, but they’re working on getting them, or at least they claim they are.

    In a story published Wednesday, we revealed how the department has a gun buyback scheduled for Saturday, which they’re calling “GUNS 4 UKRAINE.” Miami Police spokeswoman Officer Kenia Fallat said that the weapons collected at the buyback will be shipped to the Ukraine for use in their ongoing war against the Russian military.

    Their plan was fraught with legal entanglements, since shipping firearms to a foreign country without the proper paperwork violates federal law, specifically the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, known as ITAR. The plan also violates state law, specifically, Florida Statute 790.08, which regulates what police can do with firearms or other weapons that come under their control. Shipping guns to a foreign military is not one of the options allowed by the statute.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/miami-police-try-hard-to-explain-how-its-legal-for-them-to-ship-guns-to-ukraine-and-fail-miserably/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2022, 09:47:37 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 20, 2022, 02:27:36 PM
    A police department engaging in international arms trafficking?


    Miami Police Try Hard to Explain How It’s Legal for Them to Ship Guns to Ukraine…and Fail Miserably

    The Miami Police Department currently has no export licenses or permit to ship firearms to the Ukraine, but they’re working on getting them, or at least they claim they are.

    In a story published Wednesday, we revealed how the department has a gun buyback scheduled for Saturday, which they’re calling “GUNS 4 UKRAINE.” Miami Police spokeswoman Officer Kenia Fallat said that the weapons collected at the buyback will be shipped to the Ukraine for use in their ongoing war against the Russian military.

    Their plan was fraught with legal entanglements, since shipping firearms to a foreign country without the proper paperwork violates federal law, specifically the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, known as ITAR. The plan also violates state law, specifically, Florida Statute 790.08, which regulates what police can do with firearms or other weapons that come under their control. Shipping guns to a foreign military is not one of the options allowed by the statute.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/miami-police-try-hard-to-explain-how-its-legal-for-them-to-ship-guns-to-ukraine-and-fail-miserably/


    Fucking bunch of idiots- They got zero clue about the Laws- No real surprise is it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 22, 2022, 09:55:24 AM
    Officer husband of slain Uvalde teacher was detained, had gun taken away after trying to save wife
    KSAT.COM ^ | june 21 2022 | mary patton
    Posted on 6/22/2022, 10:53:50 AM by Presbyterian Reporter

    Shocking testimony from the Texas DPS director on Tuesday has revealed even more insight into the “abject failure” of response to the Uvalde shooting that occurred on May 24.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Director Col. Steven McCraw revealed that the husband of slain elementary teacher Eva Mireles tried to save her but was barred from doing so.

    Ruben Ruiz is a police officer for the school district and was on the scene after the gunman entered the school and opened fire.

    McCraw said Mireles called Ruiz and told him that “she had been shot and was dying.”

    “And what happened to him, is he tried to move forward into the hallway,” McCraw said. “He was detained and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene.”

    McCraw didn’t say who specifically detained Ruiz.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 22, 2022, 12:50:03 PM
    The Federal Bureau of tweets: Twitter is hiring an alarming numbers of FBI agents

    Twitter has been on a recruitment drive of late, hiring a host of former feds and spies. Studying a number of employment and recruitment websites, MintPress has ascertained that the social media giant has, in recent years, recruited dozens of individuals from the national security state to work in the fields of security, trust, safety and content.

    Chief amongst these is the Federal Bureau of Investigations. The FBI is generally known as a domestic security and intelligence force. However, it has recently expanded its remit into cyberspace. “The FBI’s investigative authority is the broadest of all federal law enforcement agencies,” the “About” section of its website informs readers. “The FBI has divided its investigations into a number of programs, such as domestic and international terrorism, foreign counterintelligence [and] cyber crime,” it adds.

    When asked to comment by MintPress, former FBI agent and whistleblower Coleen Rowley said that she was “not surprised at all” to see FBI agents now working for the very tech companies the agency polices, stating that there now exists a “revolving door” between the FBI and the areas they are trying to regulate. This created a serious conflict of interests in her mind, as many agents have one eye on post-retirement jobs. “The truth is that at the FBI 50% of all the normal conversations that people had were about how you were going to make money after retirement,” she said.

    Many former FBI officials hold influential roles within Twitter. For instance, in 2020, Matthew W. left a 15-year career as an intelligence program manager at the FBI to take up the post of senior director of product trust at Twitter. Patrick G., a 23-year FBI supervisory special agent, is now head of corporate security. And Twitter’s director of insider risk and security investigations, Bruce A., was headhunted from his role as a supervisory special agent at the bureau. His resumé notes that at the FBI he held “[v]arious intelligence and law enforcement roles in the US, Africa, Europe, and the Middle East” and was a “human intelligence and counterintelligence regional specialist.” (On employment sites such as LinkedIn, many users choose not to reveal their full names.)

    Many of those listed above were active in the FBI’s public outreach programs, a practice sold as a community trust-building initiative. According to Rowley, however, these also function as “ways for officials to meet the important people that would give them jobs after retirement.” “It basically inserts a huge conflict of interest,” she told MintPress. “It warps and perverts the criminal investigative work that agents do when they are still working as agents because they anticipate getting lucrative jobs after retiring or leaving the FBI.”

    https://www.mintpressnews.com/twitter-hiring-alarming-number-spooks-secret-agents/281114/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 28, 2022, 10:48:55 AM
    No justice for Justine Damond. Don't expect any riots or looting. She was a white woman killed by a black cop.

    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor's murder verdict reversed over Justine Damond Ruszczyk's death

    (https://e3.365dm.com/19/05/2048x1152/skynews-mohamed-noor-justine-damond_4655359.jpg)

    The family of an Australian woman fatally shot by a police officer in 2017 has responded to the Minnesota Supreme Court's decision to reverse the man's third-degree murder conviction, saying they are "heartbroken" the "depraved and senseless shooting" does not count as murder.

    In 2019, Mohamed Noor was convicted of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Justine Damond Ruszczyk, a dual US-Australian citizen who had called 911 to report a possible sexual assault behind her home.

    Noor, who is no longer a police officer, was sentenced to 12 and a half years on the murder count but was not sentenced for manslaughter.

    The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed the third-degree murder conviction, saying the charge did not fit the circumstances in the case.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-16/mohamed-noor-minneapolis-shooting-justine-damond-ruszczyk/100465680

    And the killer is now out on the streets again. Don't expect any riots or looting.


    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk released from jail

    The former Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk after she rang to report a possible rape behind her home has been released from prison on parole.

    Mohamed Noor, 36, walked free on Monday, just months after his murder conviction was overturned and he was sentenced instead on a lesser charge.

    His release comes just 18 days shy of the fifth anniversary of the 2017 fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk, a 40-year-old dual US-Australian citizen and yoga teacher who was engaged to be married to US citizen Don Damond.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-28/minneapolis-mohamed-noor-released-jail-shooting-justine-rusczyzk/101188614
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 28, 2022, 11:50:18 AM
    And the killer is now out on the streets again. Don't expect any riots or looting.


    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk released from jail

    The former Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk after she rang to report a possible rape behind her home has been released from prison on parole.

    Mohamed Noor, 36, walked free on Monday, just months after his murder conviction was overturned and he was sentenced instead on a lesser charge.

    His release comes just 18 days shy of the fifth anniversary of the 2017 fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk, a 40-year-old dual US-Australian citizen and yoga teacher who was engaged to be married to US citizen Don Damond.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-28/minneapolis-mohamed-noor-released-jail-shooting-justine-rusczyzk/101188614

    not a freaking peep from the left. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on June 29, 2022, 11:54:44 AM
    And the killer is now out on the streets again. Don't expect any riots or looting.


    Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk released from jail

    The former Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot unarmed Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk after she rang to report a possible rape behind her home has been released from prison on parole.

    Mohamed Noor, 36, walked free on Monday, just months after his murder conviction was overturned and he was sentenced instead on a lesser charge.

    His release comes just 18 days shy of the fifth anniversary of the 2017 fatal shooting of Justine Ruszczyk, a 40-year-old dual US-Australian citizen and yoga teacher who was engaged to be married to US citizen Don Damond.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-28/minneapolis-mohamed-noor-released-jail-shooting-justine-rusczyzk/101188614

    Absolutely Fucking Ridiculous & sickening
    WTF has Happened to any kind of Fair & decent Justice in America.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 30, 2022, 04:37:23 AM
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/unsolved-murders-crime-without-punishment


    Wow. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 06, 2022, 05:58:23 AM
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/unsolved-murders-crime-without-punishment


    Wow.


    The map with statistics !!!
    Some states are well below 50% !!  RI is 21% 
    sheesh they only catch those that give themselves up or are Caught doing the Murder - A Serial Killers Paradise.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 06, 2022, 10:02:12 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 07, 2022, 09:42:15 PM
    Rogue Cops: The Supreme Court Is Turning America Into a Constitution-Free Zone

    By John W. Whitehead & Nisha Whitehead


    The Supreme Court has spoken: there will be no consequences for cops who brutalize the citizenry and no justice for the victims of police brutality.

    Although the Court’s 2021-22 rulings on qualified immunity for police who engage in official misconduct were largely overshadowed by its politically polarizing rulings on abortion, gun ownership and religion, they were no less devastating.

    The doctrine of qualified immunity was intended to insulate government officials from frivolous lawsuits, but the real purpose of qualified immunity is to ensure that government officials are not held accountable for official misconduct.

    In Egbert v. Boule, the Court gave total immunity to Border Patrol agents who beat up a bed-and-breakfast owner, in the process carving out a massive exception to the Fourth Amendment for border police (and by extension, other federal police) who unconstitutionally use excessive force. As journalist Ian Millhiser concludes, “Egbert v. Boule is a severe blow to the proposition that law enforcement must obey the Constitution.”

    In Cope v. Cogdill, the Court let stand a Fifth Circuit ruling that granted qualified immunity to jail officials who watched a suicidal inmate strangle himself without intervening or calling for help. Likewise, in Ramirez v. Guadarrama, the Court let stand a lower court ruling granting qualified immunity to police officers who fired their tasers at a suicidal man who had doused himself in gasoline, causing the man to burst into flames.

    Both Cope and Ramirez move the goal posts for the kind of misconduct that merits qualified immunity, suggesting that even sheer incompetence is excusable when it involves a cop.

    It’s a chilling reminder that in the American police state, ‘we the people’ are at the mercy of law enforcement officers who have almost absolute discretion to decide who is a threat, what constitutes resistance, and how harshly they can deal with the citizens they were appointed to ‘serve and protect.”

    This is how unarmed Americans keep dying at the hands of militarized police.

    Under the guise of qualified immunity, there have been no consequences for police who destroyed a private home by bombarding it with tear gas grenades during a SWAT team raid gone awry, or for the cop who mistakenly shot a 10-year-old boy after aiming for and missing the non-threatening family dog, or for the arresting officer who sicced a police dog on a suspect who had already surrendered.

    Qualified immunity is how the police state stays in power.

    Although the U.S. Supreme Court recognized in Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982) that suing government officials for monetary damages is “the only realistic avenue” of holding them accountable for abusing their offices and violating the Constitution, it has ostensibly given the police and other government agents a green light to shoot first and ask questions later, as well as to probe, poke, pinch, taser, search, seize, strip and generally manhandle anyone they see fit in almost any circumstance, all with the general blessing of the courts.

    Whether it’s police officers breaking through people’s front doors and shooting them dead in their homes or strip searching motorists on the side of the road, these instances of abuse are continually validated by a judicial system that kowtows to virtually every police demand, no matter how unjust, no matter how in opposition to the Constitution.

    Make no mistake about it: this is what constitutes “law and order” in the American police state.

    These are the hallmarks of a police state: where police officers, no longer mere servants of the people entrusted with keeping the peace, are part of an elite ruling class dependent on keeping the masses corralled, under control, and treated like suspects and enemies rather than citizens.

    Unfortunately, we’ve been traveling this dangerous road for a long time now.

    A review of critical court rulings over the past several decades, including rulings affirming qualified immunity protections for government agents by the U.S. Supreme Court, reveals a startling and steady trend towards pro-police state rulings by an institution concerned more with establishing order, protecting the ruling class, and insulating government agents from charges of wrongdoing than with upholding the rights enshrined in the Constitution.

    Indeed, as Reuters reports, qualified immunity “has become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and deny victims their constitutional rights.” Worse, as Reuters concluded, “the Supreme Court has built qualified immunity into an often insurmountable police defense by intervening in cases mostly to favor the police.”

    For instance, police can claim qualified immunity for warrantless searches. In Anderson v. Creighton, the Supreme Court ruled that FBI and state law enforcement agents were entitled to qualified immunity protections after they were sued for raiding a private home without a warrant and holding family members at gunpoint, all in a search for a suspected bank robber who was not in the house.


    Police can claim qualified immunity for using excessive force against protesters. In Saucier v. Katz, the Court ruled in favor of federal law enforcement agents who forcefully tackled a protester as he attempted to unfurl a banner at Vice President Gore’s political rally. The Court reasoned that the officers acted reasonably given the urgency of protecting the vice president.


    Police can claim qualified immunity for shooting a fleeing suspect in the back. In Brosseau v. Haugen, the Court dismissed a lawsuit against a police officer who shot Kenneth Haugen in the back as he entered his car in order to flee from police. The Court ruled that in light of existing case law, the cop’s conduct fell in the “hazy border between excessive and acceptable force” and so she did not violate clearly established law.


    Police can claim qualified immunity for shooting a mentally impaired person. In City of San Francisco v. Sheehan, the Court ruled in favor of police who repeatedly shot Teresa Sheehan during the course of a mental health welfare check. The Court ruled that it was not unreasonable for police to pepper spray and shoot Sheehan multiple times after entering her room without a warrant and encountering her holding a knife.


    Police officers can use lethal force in car chases without fear of lawsuits. In Plumhoff v. Rickard, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that police officers who used deadly force to terminate a car chase were immune from a lawsuit. The officers were accused of needlessly resorting to deadly force by shooting multiple times at a man and his passenger in a stopped car, killing both individuals.


    Police can stop, arrest and search citizens without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. In a 5-3 ruling in Utah v. Strieff, the U.S. Supreme Court effectively gave police the go-ahead to embark on a fishing expedition of one’s person and property, rendering Americans completely vulnerable to the whims of any cop on the beat.


    Police officers can stop cars based on “anonymous” tips or for “suspicious” behavior such as having a reclined car seat or driving too carefully. In a 5-4 ruling in Navarette v. California, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that police officers, under the guise of “reasonable suspicion,” can stop cars and question drivers based solely on anonymous tips, no matter how dubious, and whether or not they themselves witnessed any troubling behavior. Then in State v. Howard, the Kansas Supreme Court declared that motorists who recline their car seats are guilty of suspicious behavior and can be subject to warrantless searches by police. That ruling, coupled with other court rulings upholding warrantless searches and seizures by police renders one’s car a Constitution-free zone.


    Americans have no protection against mandatory breathalyzer tests at a police checkpoint, although mandatory blood draws violate the Fourth Amendment (Birchfield v. North Dakota). Police can also conduct sobriety and “information-seeking” checkpoints (Illinois v. Lidster and Mich. Dep't of State Police v. Sitz).

    Police can forcibly take your DNA, whether or not you’ve been convicted of a crime. In Maryland v. King, a divided U.S. Supreme Court determined that a person arrested for a crime who is supposed to be presumed innocent until proven guilty must submit to forcible extraction of their DNA. Once again the Court sided with the guardians of the police state over the defenders of individual liberty in determining that DNA samples may be extracted from people arrested for “serious” offenses. The end result of the ruling paves the way for a nationwide dragnet of suspects targeted via DNA sampling.


    Police can use the “fear for my life” rationale as an excuse for shooting unarmed individuals. Upon arriving on the scene of a nighttime traffic accident, an Alabama police officer shot a driver exiting his car, mistakenly believing the wallet in his hand to be a gun. A report by the Justice Department found that half of the unarmed people shot by one police department over a seven-year span were “shot because the officer saw something (like a cellphone) or some action (like a person pulling at the waist of their pants) and misidentified it as a threat.”


    Police have free reign to use drug-sniffing dogs as “search warrants on leashes.” In Florida v. Harris, a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court determined that police officers may use highly unreliable drug-sniffing dogs to conduct warrantless searches of cars during routine traffic stops. The ruling turns man’s best friend into an extension of the police state, provided the use of a K-9 unit takes place within a reasonable amount of time (Rodriguez v. United States).


    Not only are police largely protected by qualified immunity, but police dogs are also off the hook for wrongdoing. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of a police officer who allowed a police dog to maul a homeless man innocent of any wrongdoing.


    Police can subject Americans to strip searches, no matter the “offense.” A divided U.S. Supreme Court actually prioritized making life easier for overworked jail officials over the basic right of Americans to be free from debasing strip searches. In its 5-4 ruling in Florence v. Burlington, the Court declared that any person who is arrested and processed at a jail house, regardless of the severity of his or her offense (i.e., they can be guilty of nothing more than a minor traffic offense), can be subjected to a strip search by police or jail officials, which involves exposing the genitals and the buttocks. This “license to probe” is now being extended to roadside stops, as police officers throughout the country have begun performing roadside strip searches—some involving anal and vaginal probes—without any evidence of wrongdoing and without a warrant.


    Police can break into homes without a warrant, even if it’s the wrong home. In an 8-1 ruling in Kentucky v. King, the U.S. Supreme Court placed their trust in the discretion of police officers, rather than in the dictates of the Constitution, when they gave police greater leeway to break into homes or apartments without a warrant. Despite the fact that the police in question ended up pursuing the wrong suspect, invaded the wrong apartment and violated just about every tenet that stands between us and a police state, the Court sanctioned the warrantless raid, leaving Americans with little real protection in the face of all manner of abuses by police.


    Police can use knock-and-talk tactics as a means of sidestepping the Fourth Amendment. Aggressive “knock and talk” practices have become thinly veiled, warrantless exercises by which citizens are coerced and intimidated into “talking” with heavily armed police who “knock” on their doors in the middle of the night. Andrew Scott didn’t even get a chance to say no to such a heavy-handed request before he was gunned down by police who pounded aggressively on the wrong door at 1:30 a.m., failed to identify themselves as police, and then repeatedly shot and killed the man when he answered the door while holding a gun in self-defense.


    Police can carry out no-knock raids if they believe announcing themselves would be dangerous. Police can perform a “no-knock” raid as long as they have a reasonable suspicion that knocking and announcing their presence, under the particular circumstances, would be dangerous or futile or give occupants a chance to destroy evidence of a crime (Richards v. Wisconsin). Legal ownership of a firearm is also enough to justify a no-knock raid by police (Quinn v. Texas). For instance, a Texas man had his home subject to a no-knock, SWAT-team style forceful entry and raid based solely on the suspicion that there were legally-owned firearms in his household. The homeowner was actually shot by police through his closed bedroom door.


    Police can recklessly open fire on anyone that might be “armed.” Philando Castile was shot and killed during a routine traffic stop allegedly over a broken taillight merely for telling police he had a conceal-and-carry permit. That’s all it took for police to shoot Castile four times in the presence of his girlfriend and her 4-year-old daughter. A unanimous Supreme Court declared in County of Los Angeles vs. Mendez that police should not be held liable for recklessly firing 15 times into a shack where a homeless couple had been sleeping because the grabbed his BB gun in defense, fearing they were being attacked.


    Police can destroy a home during a SWAT raid, even if the owner gives their consent to enter and search it. In West v. Winfield, the Supreme Court provided cover to police after they smashed the windows of Shaniz West’s home, punched holes in her walls and ceilings, and bombed the house with so much tear gas that it was uninhabitable for two months. All of this despite the fact that the suspect they were pursuing was not in the house and West, the homeowner, agreed to allow police to search the home to confirm that.


    Police can suffocate someone, deliberately or inadvertently, in the process of subduing them. “I can’t breathe” has become a rallying cry following the deaths of Eric Garner and George Floyd, both of whom died after being placed in a chokehold by police. Dozens more have died in similar circumstances at the hands of police who have faced little repercussions for these deaths.

    Clearly, as I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People and in its fictional counterpart The Erik Blair Diaries, the system is rigged.

    Because the system is rigged, because the government is corrupt, and because the U.S. Supreme Court has consistently chosen to protect the police at the expense of the people, we are dealing with a nationwide epidemic of court-sanctioned police violence carried out with impunity against individuals posing little or no real threat.

    This is how “we the people” keep losing.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/rogue_cops_the_supreme_court_is_turning_america_into_a_constitution_free_zone
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 10, 2022, 02:28:53 PM
    As soon as the cop realizes he pulled over the head of the state police his body camera is "mysteriously" turned off. The dash cam caught them shaking hands and the police chief is let off without a ticket within just 30 seconds.

    According to another news station the state police chief was doing over 90 mph on a road section that he himself urged his goons to crack down on speeding.



    ‘Well I’ll be...’ reaction from La. state trooper as he realizes he’s just pulled over head of LSP for speeding

    The head of Louisiana State Police (LSP) was stopped for speeding along a dangerous stretch of a Louisiana interstate last month, a state police spokesman confirmed Thursday, July 7.

    Col. Lamar Davis was driving an unmarked Louisiana State Police vehicle to a meeting in Lake Charles when an LSP trooper pulled him over on June 28 on the Atchafalaya Basin Bridge along Interstate 10 near Ramah.

    Louisiana State Police Captain Nick Manale, head of LSP Public Affairs, said the responding trooper “utilized his discretion and did not issue a citation” to Davis.

    Manale said the responding trooper did not make any notes about how fast Davis was driving in the 60-mile-per-hour zone when he was stopped just after 1 p.m. that day.

    Late Thursday evening, July 7, Louisiana State Police released both the trooper’s limited body camera footage as well as a snippet of video captured from the trooper’s dash cam recorder.

    However, the body camera footage that was released cuts off as soon as the trooper exits his vehicle and recognizes that the motorist he has just pulled over is his boss, Colonel Lamar Davis.

    The dash cam footage, which does not have audio, shows the trooper and Davis talking for a few seconds between their two vehicles before the two shake hands. Within 30 seconds of first exiting his vehicle, Davis steps back inside his vehicle and prepares to drive off.

    https://www.fox8live.com/2022/07/08/well-ill-be-reaction-state-trooper-he-realizes-he-has-just-pulled-over-head-state-police-speeding/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 11, 2022, 11:23:25 AM
    As soon as the cop realizes he pulled over the head of the state police his body camera is "mysteriously" turned off. The dash cam caught them shaking hands and the police chief is let off without a ticket within just 30 seconds.

    According to another news station the state police chief was doing over 90 mph on a road section that he himself urged his goons to crack down on speeding.



    ‘Well I’ll be...’ reaction from La. state trooper as he realizes he’s just pulled over head of LSP for speeding

    The head of Louisiana State Police (LSP) was stopped for speeding along a dangerous stretch of a Louisiana interstate last month, a state police spokesman confirmed Thursday, July 7.

    Col. Lamar Davis was driving an unmarked Louisiana State Police vehicle to a meeting in Lake Charles when an LSP trooper pulled him over on June 28 on the Atchafalaya Basin Bridge along Interstate 10 near Ramah.

    Louisiana State Police Captain Nick Manale, head of LSP Public Affairs, said the responding trooper “utilized his discretion and did not issue a citation” to Davis.

    Manale said the responding trooper did not make any notes about how fast Davis was driving in the 60-mile-per-hour zone when he was stopped just after 1 p.m. that day.

    Late Thursday evening, July 7, Louisiana State Police released both the trooper’s limited body camera footage as well as a snippet of video captured from the trooper’s dash cam recorder.

    However, the body camera footage that was released cuts off as soon as the trooper exits his vehicle and recognizes that the motorist he has just pulled over is his boss, Colonel Lamar Davis.

    The dash cam footage, which does not have audio, shows the trooper and Davis talking for a few seconds between their two vehicles before the two shake hands. Within 30 seconds of first exiting his vehicle, Davis steps back inside his vehicle and prepares to drive off.

    https://www.fox8live.com/2022/07/08/well-ill-be-reaction-state-trooper-he-realizes-he-has-just-pulled-over-head-state-police-speeding/




    Ahh its okay They're all in the same Corrupt Gang !!
    That speeding Bollocks only applies to those Not in The Gang.

    Is it any wonder cops have no Support / Trust -
    The Biggest & best equipped Corruption gang Going.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on July 11, 2022, 11:30:15 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 13, 2022, 11:36:37 AM
    No warrant required, just a "good-faith determination" by the company....


    Amazon admits to giving Ring camera videos to police without permission

    Amazon has provided footage from Ring video cameras to police without permission from owners or a court warrant 11 times this year, the company acknowledged in a letter to Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.)

    Brian Huseman, Amazon’s vice president of public policy, said in the letter dated July 1 that Ring complied with those requests from law enforcement after making a “good-faith determination” about risk.

    Markey had written to Ring last month asking the company to clarify its relationship with American police and to commit to some policy reforms, including never allowing immigration enforcement to request recordings and committing to not incorporating voice recognition tech into its products.

    Huseman declined to commit to any of the requests and disclosed that Ring now lets 2,161 police departments use its Neighbors app, five times more than it did in November 2019. Law enforcement officials can use the app to issue alerts and request videos.

    “As my ongoing investigation into Amazon illustrates, it has become increasingly difficult for the public to move, assemble, and converse in public without being tracked and recorded,” Markey said in a statement.

    “We cannot accept this as inevitable in our country,” the Massachusetts lawmaker continued. “Increasing law enforcement reliance on private surveillance creates a crisis of accountability, and I am particularly concerned that biometric surveillance could become central to the growing web of surveillance systems that Amazon and other powerful tech companies are responsible for.”

    https://thehill.com/policy/technology/3557545-amazon-admits-to-giving-ring-videos-to-police-without-permission/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 15, 2022, 04:58:37 PM
    The same agencies that will relentlessly go after people for "lying to investigators" or "conspiring to tamper with evidence" are now destroying evidence once again claiming that data was lost during a migration operation. Remember how lawyers and other staffers on Mueller’s investigation of the Trump–Russia conspiracy theory “accidentally” wiped their phones after the Justice Department IG discovered anti-Trump texts on FBI agent Peter Strzok’s government-issued phone?


    Secret Service under pressure over erased texts and Jan. 6 actions

    The revelation of erased Secret Service text messages from Jan. 5 and 6, 2021, is putting the agency in hot water, renewing questions about how forthcoming it has been in investigations into the Capitol attack, as well as the actions and motivations of agents.

    The spat came to light after the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Office of Inspector General notified lawmakers that it was unable to obtain “many” of the messages from those days due to a “device-replacement program.”

    The episode has raised questions about the intent of the agency, with the government watchdog alleging they have long struggled to get information from the Secret Service, while others argue at a minimum the erasure appears to violate laws on retaining records.

    The agency is trying to stomp out the flames, asserting that the information was not deleted intentionally after it had received a request to turn the records over, and that the device migration operation was underway before it had received a request to turn over the information.

    https://thehill.com/homenews/house/3561718-secret-service-under-pressure-over-erased-texts-and-jan-6-actions/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 18, 2022, 01:27:34 PM
    New Records Detail DHS Purchase and Use of Vast Quantities of Cell Phone Location Data

    Today, the ACLU published thousands of pages of previously unreleased records about how Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and other parts of the Department of Homeland Security are sidestepping our Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable government searches and seizures by buying access to, and using, huge volumes of people’s cell phone location information quietly extracted from smartphone apps.

    The records, which the ACLU obtained over the course of the last year through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit, shed new light on the government’s ability to obtain our most private information by simply opening the federal wallet. These documents are further proof that Congress needs to pass the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act, which would end law enforcement agencies’ practice of buying their way around the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.

    ICE’s and CBP’s warrantless purchase of access to people’s sensitive location information was first reported by The Wall Street Journal in early 2020. After the news broke, we submitted a FOIA request to DHS, ICE, and CBP, and we sued to force the agencies to respond to the request in December 2020. Although the litigation is ongoing, we are now making public the records that CBP, ICE, the U.S. Secret Service, the U.S. Coast Guard, and several offices within DHS Headquarters have provided us to date.

    The released records shine a light on the millions of taxpayer dollars DHS used to buy access to cell phone location information being aggregated and sold by two shadowy data brokers, Venntel and Babel Street. The documents expose those companies’ — and the government’s — attempts to rationalize this unfettered sale of massive quantities of data in the face of U.S. Supreme Court precedent protecting similar cell phone location data against warrantless government access.

    https://www.aclu.org/news/privacy-technology/new-records-detail-dhs-purchase-and-use-of-vast-quantities-of-cell-phone-location-data
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 19, 2022, 11:54:54 AM
    A cop parks his car in the emergency room ambulance bay. After an ambulance arrives and a paramedic unloads a patient and tries to check him in, the cop proceeds to attack the paramedic and arrests her because he claimed the paramedic dinged his car's door... These people think they own the land and can do whatever they want and that their perceived "disrespect" of their "authority" trumps everything else, even the lives and wellbeing of others. What the fuck was the cop doing in the emergency ambulance bay? And why did he disrupt a paramedic who was caring for a patient?

    Of course it's not the first time cops attack paramedics, we have seen them before choking paramedics or tazing people while paramedics treat them. They don't care about interfering with a paramedic, they think they're above everyone else. It's possible they see it as a challenge to their "authority" when EMTs or firefighters try to do their duty and save lives. Maybe the next time a cop gets injured the EMTs should take their sweet time or refuse to treat the cops. But unlike cops, who have no duty to protect you, the paramedics don't have that option.

    As usual the attacker is now receiving paid vacation.



    RPD Investigator suspended with pay following dispute with EMT in ambulance bay

    A Rochester Police investigator has been put on desk duty following an altercation with an EMT outside and inside the emergency department at Strong Memorial Hospital.

    The investigator’s car was parked in the ambulance bay in front of the emergency room when an EMT hit it while opening her door to unload a patient.  Sources tell News10NBC that the investigator insisted on getting her identification, she insisted on bringing the patient inside first. News10NBC Investigative Reporter Jennifer Lewke was able to get an exclusive video of what happened from there. 

    The incident happened on Monday.  The ambulance bay in front of the emergency room is typically reserved for ambulances only but the investigator was parked there, planning to go inside for a case.  Sources tell News10NBC that’s when the EMT from Monroe Ambulance got out to unload the patient and hit the police car with her door.

    The investigator asked for identification but the EMT was intent on getting her patient inside first.  She kept moving with the man on a stretcher and when she was at the check-in desk, she was approached by the investigator, her arm pulled behind her back and cuffed before forcefully being taken outside to a police car. 

    https://www.whec.com/rochester-new-york-news/exclusive-rpd-investigator-on-desk-duty-following-dispute-with-emt-in-ambulance-bay/6526199/?cat=565

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 20, 2022, 11:46:41 AM
    A cop parks his car in the emergency room ambulance bay. After an ambulance arrives and a paramedic unloads a patient and tries to check him in, the cop proceeds to attack the paramedic and arrests her because he claimed the paramedic dinged his car's door... These people think they own the land and can do whatever they want and that their perceived "disrespect" of their "authority" trumps everything else, even the lives and wellbeing of others. What the fuck was the cop doing in the emergency ambulance bay? And why did he disrupt a paramedic who was caring for a patient?

    Of course it's not the first time cops attack paramedics, we have seen them before choking paramedics or tazing people while paramedics treat them. They don't care about interfering with a paramedic, they think they're above everyone else. It's possible they see it as a challenge to their "authority" when EMTs or firefighters try to do their duty and save lives. Maybe the next time a cop gets injured the EMTs should take their sweet time or refuse to treat the cops. But unlike cops, who have no duty to protect you, the paramedics don't have that option.

    As usual the attacker is now receiving paid vacation.



    RPD Investigator suspended with pay following dispute with EMT in ambulance bay

    A Rochester Police investigator has been put on desk duty following an altercation with an EMT outside and inside the emergency department at Strong Memorial Hospital.

    The investigator’s car was parked in the ambulance bay in front of the emergency room when an EMT hit it while opening her door to unload a patient.  Sources tell News10NBC that the investigator insisted on getting her identification, she insisted on bringing the patient inside first. News10NBC Investigative Reporter Jennifer Lewke was able to get an exclusive video of what happened from there. 

    The incident happened on Monday.  The ambulance bay in front of the emergency room is typically reserved for ambulances only but the investigator was parked there, planning to go inside for a case.  Sources tell News10NBC that’s when the EMT from Monroe Ambulance got out to unload the patient and hit the police car with her door.

    The investigator asked for identification but the EMT was intent on getting her patient inside first.  She kept moving with the man on a stretcher and when she was at the check-in desk, she was approached by the investigator, her arm pulled behind her back and cuffed before forcefully being taken outside to a police car. 

    https://www.whec.com/rochester-new-york-news/exclusive-rpd-investigator-on-desk-duty-following-dispute-with-emt-in-ambulance-bay/6526199/?cat=565



    And That's The Level of Cop's another, Billy Big Bollocks Bully
    FFS why park in an emergency bay The Twat-
    No need for any of his OTT actions Did He think she was going to Run away.

    He should have them Sunglasses inserted sideways up his Arse & Then dropped off to The lions That Disposed of The Poachers.
    Best Outcome All Round.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 24, 2022, 01:19:25 PM
    An example of how cops will lie and make up their own "facts", laws and edicts that they think others must comply with.


    "Why are you chasing him?"

    "He's under arrest"

    "For what?"

    "For trespassing and for, uh, disorderly conduct"

    "It's not disorderly conduct"

    "When he's in front of the business yelling 'Fuck everybody' "

    "It's public property, freedom of speech. Relax"

    "And he refused to give me his ID, which he's required to do"

    "For what?"

    "So I can issue him a citation for trespassing"

    "It's not trespassing"


    (at that point the camera's audio is turned off, apparently the cop didn't want any more humiliating audio to be captured)



    Viral Video Shows Protester Tased For A 'Fuck Bad Cops' Sign

    A TikTok video that recently went viral shows a police officer chasing and attempting to tase a protester, before being dressed down by a superior. The incident took place in 2016, and Reason documented the ensuing lawsuit, which led to the protester receiving a $175,000 settlement from the city.

    In July 2016, Chris Dickey, a police officer in Commerce City, Colorado, approached two men who were protesting outside the Adams County Human Services building. They wore neon yellow shirts and held placards, bearing the phrases Blues Live Murder and Fuck Bad Cops. Dickey told the men they were on private property and needed to leave. The protesters disagreed, saying the building was public property, and refused to provide identification on request. Dickey moved forward to arrest them, but tripped; one of the protesters, Joshua Condiotti-Wade, panicked and ran. Dickey chased after him, pulling his taser and activating it. When Condiotti-Wade did not fall, another officer joined the chase and activated his taser as well.

    The chase lasted around 40 seconds. It ended when Dickey's commander, Mark Morgan, arrived on the scene and questioned what was happening. Dickey protests that Condiotti-Wade is under arrest for disorderly conduct and trespassing, but at every step, Morgan counters: "It's not disorderly conduct," "It's public property," and "[It's] freedom of speech. Relax," he says.

    https://reason.com/2022/07/21/viral-video-shows-protester-tased-for-a-fuck-bad-cops-sign/




    This is not the only incident with this cop. Taxpayers have been forced to pay $1 million (and probably more) because of this scumbag. After the above mentioned incident he was involved in this incident where they attacked and abused a diabetic man:

    $825,000 Settlement After Police Beat, Tase, Pepper Spray Diabetic Man
    https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/825000-settlement-police-beat-tase-pepper-spray-diabetic-man/



    After several lawsuits he was eventually fired. But as it usually happens, police departments can't let such a talent go to waste so he was hired by the Elbert County Sheriffs Department and was then involved in this incident:

    Mother of veteran killed by Elbert County deputies sues, claims son was suffering from PTSD and seeking help
    https://www.denverpost.com/2019/04/15/elbert-county-taser-death-veteran-lawsuit/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 25, 2022, 08:56:04 PM
    Remember this story? No prison for the cop who killed this poor woman, despite the fact that there were warning signs about his behavior before he killed her...

    Ex-Florida officer who fatally shot retired librarian during drill gets no jail time

    A former Florida police officer who fatally shot a 73-year-old retired librarian during a demonstration for the public in 2016 will not serve jail time. Then-officer Lee Coel was performing in a "shoot/don't shoot" exercise with the Punta Gorda Police Department in the summer of 2016 when he shot Mary Knowlton, who had volunteered to participate.

    She was struck by the fatal bullet in front of about three dozen people, including Knowlton's husband of 55 years, who were at the citizen police academy watching the drill about police use of firearms.

    Coel, who was charged the following year with felony manslaughter with a firearm, accepted a plea deal this week, sparing him from serving jail time, according to NBC affiliate WBBH. The deal stipulates that he spend 10 years on probation. He had faced up to 30 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ex-florida-officer-who-fatally-shot-retired-librarian-during-drill-n1068046

    As if zero prison time was not enough, the killer now wants his probation to end after just a quarter of its duration and without having paid any restitution to the family of the woman he killed. The family mentioned he hasn't even directly apologized to them.

    Would an ordinary person who "accidentally" shot and killed a cop get zero prison time? Probably wouldn't even make it to court alive.

    (Oddly enough, no rioting or looting for the poor woman's death.)


    (https://cdn.winknews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/LeCoelandMaryKnowlton.jpg)

    Lee Coel files to end 10-year probation early for death of Mary Knowlton

    Former Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel, who shot and killed an elderly woman during a demonstration in 2016, filed in May for early termination of his probation.

    Lee Coel was sentenced to 10 years probation and to pay restitution after a plea deal was reached to avoid trial and jail time. Coel shot and killed retired librarian Mary Knowlton during a “Shoot Don’t Shoot” demonstration with the Punta Gorda Citizens Academy.

    https://www.winknews.com/2022/07/14/lee-coel-files-to-end-10-year-probation-early-for-death-of-mary-knowlton/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on July 25, 2022, 10:04:58 PM
    As if zero prison time was not enough, the killer now wants his probation to end after just a quarter of its duration and without having paid any restitution to the family of the woman he killed. The family mentioned he hasn't even directly apologized to them.

    Would an ordinary person who "accidentally" shot and killed a cop get zero prison time? Probably wouldn't even make it to court alive.

    (Oddly enough, no rioting or looting for the poor woman's death.)


    (https://cdn.winknews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/LeCoelandMaryKnowlton.jpg)

    Lee Coel files to end 10-year probation early for death of Mary Knowlton

    Former Punta Gorda police officer Lee Coel, who shot and killed an elderly woman during a demonstration in 2016, filed in May for early termination of his probation.

    Lee Coel was sentenced to 10 years probation and to pay restitution after a plea deal was reached to avoid trial and jail time. Coel shot and killed retired librarian Mary Knowlton during a “Shoot Don’t Shoot” demonstration with the Punta Gorda Citizens Academy.

    https://www.winknews.com/2022/07/14/lee-coel-files-to-end-10-year-probation-early-for-death-of-mary-knowlton/

    An Absolute Khunt
    He should be banged up at the least

    Justice !!!  What Kind of Justice for that Woman's Family 🤬🤬🤬

    Police / Law Enforcement just one Big Gang of Crooked Criminals looking after each other.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2022, 10:57:34 AM
    This must be another one of those "split second decisions" these "brave heroes" have to make every day while they "fear for their lives"....

    They fractured the arm of a 73 year old woman with dementia who weighed just 80 lbs... These uniformed thugs should be sent to the electric chair.


    Loveland police face federal civil rights lawsuit over arrest of 73-year-old woman

    A Loveland law office has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Loveland Police Department over the arrest of a 73-year-old Loveland woman last summer that the woman’s attorney called “a nightmare.”

    According to a press release from attorney Sarah Schielke, the Life and Liberty Law Office filed the lawsuit and initiated the case Wednesday, alleging excessive use of force against the department and officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali and Sgt. Phil Metzler for the arrest of Karen Garner on June 26, 2020.

    The arrest left Garner with a fractured arm and dislocated shoulder, the suit says.

    As of 6 p.m. Wednesday, the Loveland Police Department had not provided an official comment on the case.

    The suit alleges that Garner, who is 5 feet tall and weighs 80 pounds, suffered a fractured upper arm and dislocated shoulder, along with other injuries.

    According to the suit, in the late afternoon of June 26, 2020, Hopp “violently assaulted Garner without provocation” as she was walking home from the east Loveland Walmart.

    The suit says Garner suffers from dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to communicate and understand. She had left the store at 1325 N. Denver Ave. without paying for $13.38 worth of items, according to the suit. Employees stopped her at the exit to retrieve the items but reportedly refused to let her pay for them.

    https://www.greeleytribune.com/2021/04/14/loveland-police-face-federal-civil-rights-lawsuit-over-arrest-of-73-year-old-woman/




    As usual the sadistic female cop gets only 45 days in prison. Her smug look on the mug shot speaks volumes. Still, 45 days would be enough to get her own arms broken in prison but she will likely enjoy protection not afforded to other prisoners. The other cop (with whom she was romantically involved with as well) received only 5 years in prison when the original charges called for a mandatory 10 years and up to 32 years in prison.  Sentences like this do nothing to stop this abuse and send a signal that cops remain a privileged class when the commit crimes. Remember, these sadistic pieces of shit were laughing and fist bumping watching footage of themselves breaking this poor old woman's arm.


    Second Loveland officer gets jail time for arrest of older woman with dementia

    Another former Loveland police officer will spend time behind bars for her role in the violent arrest of a 73-year-old woman with dementia.

    Daria Jalali was sentenced to 45 days in jail by a Larimer County judge on Friday after pleading guilty to failing to intervene in the use of excessive force in June. She will serve an additional three years of parole following her release. The sentencing is the latest development in the legal saga stemming from the 2020 arrest of Karen Garner, which was captured on body-worn camera and widely circulated online.

    https://www.cpr.org/2022/08/05/second-former-loveland-officer-gets-jail-time-for-arrest-of-karen-garner-older-woman-with-dementia/


    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2022/08/08/16/61181081-11086137-image-m-39_1659971605905.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 08, 2022, 11:05:06 AM
    Now the gang members are attacking military personnel.

    Lawsuit claims Windsor police officers drew guns, pepper-sprayed uniformed Army officer during traffic stop

    Two Windsor police officers are facing a civil lawsuit that alleges they acted aggressively towards a minority, uniformed Army officer during a traffic stop.

    The lawsuit was filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for Eastern Virginia in Norfolk.

    Documents from the lawsuit claim officers Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker (the defendants) pulled over a newly-bought SUV for not having a rear license plate on December 5, 2020.

    They approached with guns pointed at the car, gave opposing instructions to a uniformed soldier behind the wheel, and then pepper-sprayed him -- all while threatening him with different charges and levels of violence for noncompliance.

    Nazario says once he was out of the vehicle, after being sprayed, the officers struck him multiple times, handcuffed him, and interrogated him.

    The documents say the officers ended up letting Nazario go after threatening to charge him with obstructing justice, eluding police, and assaulting a law enforcement officer (with the intent of derailing Nazario's military career).

    https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/local/lawsuit-claims-windsor-police-officers-drew-guns-pepper-sprayed-uniformed-army-officer-during-traffic-stop/291-713b97e3-a415-4b27-b11c-37620a9eb4ef

     


    The cops even get away with attacking uniformed military officers.


    Virginia police officer shouldn't face criminal charges for pepper-spraying Army lieutenant: Prosecutor

    A former Virginia police officer accused of pepper-spraying, striking and handcuffing a U.S. Army lieutenant should not be criminally charged – but should be investigated further – in connection with the 2020 traffic stop, a special prosecutor has ruled.

    Caron Nazario, who is Black, was pulled over in the Virginia town of Windsor in December 2020, but was never charged. Details and video from the traffic stop surfaced in April 2021 after Nazario sued in federal court, alleging that his constitutional rights were violated.

    "Although I find the video very disturbing and frankly unsettling, Gutierrez's use of force to remove Nazario did not violate state law as he had given multiple commands for Nazario to exit the vehicle," special prosecutor Anton Bell said in his report, dated July 29 and posted online by Nazario's attorneys.

    "The problematic issue, however, were Gutierrez's statements throughout the entire ordeal, which would lead a reasonable person to wonder whether underlying bias was at the root of how and why Nazario was treated in like manner," Bell wrote.

    Tom Roberts, another attorney representing Nazario, told The Associated Press that a judge or a jury, not a special prosecutor, should have determined whether Gutierrez violated the law.

    "All too often, when it comes to law enforcement violating the laws, we see our Commonwealth’s Attorneys fail to apply the same zeal at prosecuting law enforcement as they do with other offenders," Roberts' firm said in a statement.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/former-virginia-police-officer-shouldnt-face-criminal-charges-pepper-spraying-army-lieutenant-prosecutor
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2022, 05:48:35 AM
    First Photo: Agent With Machine Gun Photographed Outside Of Trump's Palm Beach Resort Mar-a-Lago During FBI Raid
    https://radaronline.com ^ | Aug. 8 2022 | Staff
    Posted on 8/9/2022, 8:34:54 AM by Red Badger



    This was the scene outside the Palm Beach resort Mar-a-Lago owned by Donald Trump on Monday night soon after the former president revealed the FBI had launched a raid on his property.

    The image, snapped by local media WPTV, show what appears to be a plain-clothed Secret Service agent with his weapon — an automatic machine gun — as he paraded outside the property.

    An unmarked vehicle is also in the picture exiting Mar-a-Lago.

    Radar has confirmed the FBI notified its counterparts at the Secret Service that a warrant would be executed and Secret Service facilitated access to the property without issue.

    Trump was not at home during the time.

    It’s understood the ex-president was either in New York City or at his New Jersey golf club, Bedminster, as the search warrant was executed.

    It did not stop him from revealing the unprecedented law enforcement action via a statement on his social media platform just before 7 p.m ET.

    "These are dark times for our nation, as my beautiful home, Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents. Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before," he said.

    Trump did not specify why the FBI was searching his estate.

    But as Radar reported, the search warrant focused on seizing classified documents the former president was supposed to turn over to the National Archives.

    Trump is at the center of two criminal probes: the investigation into Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, and the probe of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

    A source with knowledge of the circumstances of the raid said “whatever the FBI uncovered, it could ultimately lead to unsuspected new evidence in both of the investigations.”

    “However, any decision to launch a raid like this is not ever made without the full consent of the nation’s top law enforcement official,” the insider told RadarOnline.com

    “That is Attorney General Merrick Garland and in order for Garland to give the green light on a raid of this magnitude, he needs to be convinced that his deputies had enough evidence of the commission of a criminal offense," the source added. “It’s not just Garland’s view, either. A judge would have had to view the search warrant request from the Department of Justice and issued the order to search for and seize property.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2022, 05:50:06 AM
    End of the Republic-With the FBI raid on Trump’s home, America has fallen into the abyss.
    Frontpagemagazine ^ | Aug 9, 2022 | Robert Spencer
    Posted on 8/9/2022, 8:06:45 AM




    When the FBI raided Donald Trump’s home on Monday, a key aspect of what made the United States of America great and free has been lost, and likely cannot be recovered. John Adams and Thomas Jefferson detested one another for years before their eventual reconciliation, but neither one used the agencies of the U.S. government to hound, persecute or discredit the other. Other bitter political opponents throughout the history of the republic have never before used the government’s own mechanisms of justice to do injustice to their foes. Joe Biden, Merrick Garland and their henchmen have brought America to a new phase of its history, and it is not likely to be one that is marked by respect for the rule of law or defense of the rights of individual citizens. Instead, we are entering an ugly age of authoritarianism, in which the brute force of the state is used to bend the people to the will of the tyrant.

    Trump announced on Monday, “These are dark times for our Nation, as my beautiful home, Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents. Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before. After working and cooperating with the relevant Government agencies, this unannounced raid on my home was not necessary or appropriate.”

    The 45th president is not given to understatement, but the FBI raid on his home is much more than just unnecessary and inappropriate. It is criminal. The FBI that was heavily involved in trying to frame and destroy Trump in the Russian Collusion hoax is now trying once again to destroy him, apparently by claiming that he improperly took classified material from the White House. They never cared when Hillary Clinton misused classified material on a grand scale; what is the difference? They’re also likely trying to find something to link him more firmly to the January 6 “insurrection” that never was. The Left’s January 6 narrative has been full of holes from the beginning: Trump told the demonstrators to proceed peacefully, the people who entered the Capitol had no weapons, and no one had sketched out any kind of plan to do what the Left continues to claim that Trump was trying to do all along, overthrow the government and rule as a dictator.

    But Joe Biden’s handlers are desperately afraid that Trump will return to the White House on January 20, 2025 and that things will go harder for them next time than they did during his first term. They’re afraid that a vengeful Trump will do a genuine and thorough housecleaning of the desperately corrupt and compromised Washington bureaucracy, and that many of them will, quite justly, end up out of power, and some of them will, even more justly, end up in prison. So they’ve determined to pre-emptively do the same to Trump. If they can’t actually find anything to prosecute him for (and Lord knows they’ve tried, this is the most investigated and poked and prodded and scrutinized man in American history, and still those who hate him have nothing), then at very least they hope to taint Trump so completely in the eyes of the distracted and indifferent public that they will have a fighting chance in 2024.

    This is banana republic stuff. This is the kind of thing that moved Woodrow Wilson to intervene militarily in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua, explaining: “We are friends of constitutional government in America; we are more than its friends, we are its champions. I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men.” Wilson was an authoritarian scoundrel and one of the worst presidents we have ever endured, but much as he hated Theodore Roosevelt and feared that he would be reelected to the presidency in 1920 (instead, Roosevelt died in 1919), Wilson never had rogue government agents raid Roosevelt’s home looking for something they could use to pin some crime on him.

    Merrick Garland recently signaled that something like this was in the offing, when he emphasized that no one was above the law and anyone could be prosecuted. No one is above that law, that is, except Hillary Clinton, and Hunter Biden, and all the FBI officials who have been implicated in the Russian Collusion hoax, and all the other Leftists who have escaped and will continue to escape prosecution because they hold what the elites consider to be acceptable political opinions.

    The two-tier justice system that aggressively prosecutes conservatives while turning a blind eye to Leftists who have committed similar or worse crimes is now out in the open. Trump did nothing, but the FBI will find some crime for which the Justice Department will prosecute him. Hillary Clinton and Hunter Biden did a great deal, but none of it matters to corrupt officials who share their worldview.

    The lesson is clear: in America today, in the corrupt kleptocracy of Joe Biden, you have to have the right opinions. Then all doors will open for you and you can even break laws with impunity, and have no fear of prosecution. But if you dare to dissent from the opinions of the elites, prepare to be hounded by the new super-IRS and the weaponized FBI, and you’ll face raids, and prison, and who knows what else is coming.

    Many conservatives are saying that this ensures Trump’s victory in 2024. But what makes them think that this corrupt regime will allow the man whom they fear and hate above all others return to the White House? It’s clear now. They will stop at nothing.

    This is no longer a republic, except of the banana variety. It may be a republic again someday, but for now, the great American experiment is over. Born July 4, 1776 in Philadelphia, died August 8, 2022, in Mar-A-Lago, at the hands of Joe Biden, Merrick Garland, and Christopher Wray.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2022, 07:27:48 AM
    White House Claims It Was Blindsided By FBI Raid On Trump’s Mar-A-Lago: Reports
    The Daily Wire ^ | Aug 9, 2022 | By Greg Wilson
    Posted on 8/9/2022, 10:24:20 AM by Red Badger

    The White House claims it only learned of the FBI’s stunning raid on former President Trump’s home in Florida on Twitter, at the same time the media did, according to multiple reports.

    As improbable as it may seem that the Department of Justice would execute a search warrant on a former president and political opponent of the administration without Biden’s knowledge, that’s what New York Times reporter Jonathan Martin tweeted Monday night. Trump was not home during the raid at the mansion known as Mar-a-Lago.

    “Senior White House officials found out about the FBI’s Mar a Lago raid on Twitter, had no notice, per source familiar,” Martin tweeted.

    CBS News reporter Ed O’Keefe said a top Biden official told him the same thing.

    “No advance knowledge. Some learned from old media some from social media,” O’Keefe quoted a senior administration official when asked about the raid.

    The dramatic raid was initially announced by Trump himself, in a lengthy statement decrying what he characterized as a political move.

    “These are dark times for our Nation, as my beautiful home, Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents,” Trump wrote. “Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before.”

    Other conservatives, including many not aligned with the 45th president, said the raid sets a dangerous precedent.

    The search was reportedly for material that Trump brought with him to Mar-a-Lago after he left the White House in 2021, according to reports. Trump allegedly delayed returning more than a dozen boxes of material to the National Archives which included documents that were reportedly marked as classified.

    Republican strategist Scott Jennings, on a CNN panel hours after the raid, said the political implications of Biden’s Justice Department raiding his predecessor cannot be ignored.

    “I mean, they’ve raided the guy’s house,” said Jennings. “There’s no reconciliation here when you raid somebody’s house. And so because of the political implications of that, I’m curious to know about what did the White House know?”

    David Axelrod, former top adviser to President Obama, said Attorney General Merrick Garland has gone beyond the point of no return, at least politically.

    “He has crossed a rubicon here — if you are going to prosecute a former President of the United States, you’d better be pretty darn sure that you have an open-and-shut case,” Axelrod said.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2022, 07:59:56 AM
    ABOUT THE JUDGE WHO SIGNED OFF ON THE MAR-A-LAGO RAID
    Miami Herald via Telegram ^ | August 9, 2022 from November 28, 2018 | The General
    Posted on 8/9/2022, 10:14:27 AM by

    As reported in the Miami Herald on November 28, 2018:

    "Bruce Reinhart once quit his job as a U.S. Attorney to work for Jeffrey Epstein, the multimillionaire accused sex trafficker who was being targeted in a probe by the U.S. Attorney's office."

    BREAKING: Judge Bruce E Reinhart, magistrate judge for the Southern District of Florida, used to work for Jeffrey Epstein and was the one who signed the warrant to green light FBI raid on Trump.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2022, 08:02:02 AM
    https://issuesinsights.com/2022/08/10/welcome-to-bidens-police-state-part-iii


    Horrible. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2022, 08:19:58 AM
    FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago puts U.S. on precipice
    American Thinker ^ | 10 Aug, 2022 | Eric Utter
    Posted on 8/10/2022, 7:46:19 AM by MtnClimber

    Who, again, is conducting the insurrection?

    The Biden FBI’s needless and over-the-top raid on former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home is the latest act in history’s longest coup. It is part of a real insurrection, an insurrection that both swept an established, duly elected (and successful) government out of power and then attempted to intimidate, “cancel,” and terrorize that government’s supporters. It was -- and is -- an insurrection against the American people and American values.

    If it ultimately proves successful, it is the end of the republic.

    The same FBI and DoJ that have been trying to get Trump since the day he took office, even signing off on fake documents/dossiers, has now crossed the Rubicon and taken an enormous risk. Logically, one would assume they wouldn’t have done so unless they knew the outcome. Would they plant material in Mar-a-Lago? Finally successfully frame him? Sentient observers must now believe that this administration -- as evidenced by its FBI -- would do anything to keep Trump from running for president again in 2024. Anything.

    Tragically, the Obama-Biden administration was successful at “fundamentally transforming” America’s intelligence and law-enforcement agencies, weaponizing them and siccing them on anyone who could stand in the way of their pathological need to retain and enhance their power, i.e. American citizens like President Trump and his supporters.

    Last year, the Obama-Biden FBI raided U.S. Private Vaults, a private Beverly Hills-based safe deposit box storage business, in order to seize safe deposit boxes and assets belonging to hundreds of people who were not even suspected of having committed any crimes. The motivations and intentions behind the raid are being kept confidential at the request of federal prosecutors. And most of us are aware of the persecution of innocent Americans who were

    (Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2022, 10:49:17 AM
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-fbis-dangerous-donald-trump-search-mar-a-lago-merrick-garland-justice-department-11660074118?st=t3fjw73hp1rc3vh&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 10, 2022, 10:51:15 AM
    End of the Republic-With the FBI raid on Trump’s home, America has fallen into the abyss.
    Frontpagemagazine ^ | Aug 9, 2022 | Robert Spencer
    Posted on 8/9/2022, 8:06:45 AM




    When the FBI raided Donald Trump’s home on Monday, a key aspect of what made the United States of America great and free has been lost, and likely cannot be recovered. John Adams and Thomas Jefferson detested one another for years before their eventual reconciliation, but neither one used the agencies of the U.S. government to hound, persecute or discredit the other. Other bitter political opponents throughout the history of the republic have never before used the government’s own mechanisms of justice to do injustice to their foes. Joe Biden, Merrick Garland and their henchmen have brought America to a new phase of its history, and it is not likely to be one that is marked by respect for the rule of law or defense of the rights of individual citizens. Instead, we are entering an ugly age of authoritarianism, in which the brute force of the state is used to bend the people to the will of the tyrant.

    Trump announced on Monday, “These are dark times for our Nation, as my beautiful home, Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents. Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before. After working and cooperating with the relevant Government agencies, this unannounced raid on my home was not necessary or appropriate.”

    The 45th president is not given to understatement, but the FBI raid on his home is much more than just unnecessary and inappropriate. It is criminal. The FBI that was heavily involved in trying to frame and destroy Trump in the Russian Collusion hoax is now trying once again to destroy him, apparently by claiming that he improperly took classified material from the White House. They never cared when Hillary Clinton misused classified material on a grand scale; what is the difference? They’re also likely trying to find something to link him more firmly to the January 6 “insurrection” that never was. The Left’s January 6 narrative has been full of holes from the beginning: Trump told the demonstrators to proceed peacefully, the people who entered the Capitol had no weapons, and no one had sketched out any kind of plan to do what the Left continues to claim that Trump was trying to do all along, overthrow the government and rule as a dictator.

    But Joe Biden’s handlers are desperately afraid that Trump will return to the White House on January 20, 2025 and that things will go harder for them next time than they did during his first term. They’re afraid that a vengeful Trump will do a genuine and thorough housecleaning of the desperately corrupt and compromised Washington bureaucracy, and that many of them will, quite justly, end up out of power, and some of them will, even more justly, end up in prison. So they’ve determined to pre-emptively do the same to Trump. If they can’t actually find anything to prosecute him for (and Lord knows they’ve tried, this is the most investigated and poked and prodded and scrutinized man in American history, and still those who hate him have nothing), then at very least they hope to taint Trump so completely in the eyes of the distracted and indifferent public that they will have a fighting chance in 2024.

    This is banana republic stuff. This is the kind of thing that moved Woodrow Wilson to intervene militarily in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua, explaining: “We are friends of constitutional government in America; we are more than its friends, we are its champions. I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men.” Wilson was an authoritarian scoundrel and one of the worst presidents we have ever endured, but much as he hated Theodore Roosevelt and feared that he would be reelected to the presidency in 1920 (instead, Roosevelt died in 1919), Wilson never had rogue government agents raid Roosevelt’s home looking for something they could use to pin some crime on him.

    Merrick Garland recently signaled that something like this was in the offing, when he emphasized that no one was above the law and anyone could be prosecuted. No one is above that law, that is, except Hillary Clinton, and Hunter Biden, and all the FBI officials who have been implicated in the Russian Collusion hoax, and all the other Leftists who have escaped and will continue to escape prosecution because they hold what the elites consider to be acceptable political opinions.

    The two-tier justice system that aggressively prosecutes conservatives while turning a blind eye to Leftists who have committed similar or worse crimes is now out in the open. Trump did nothing, but the FBI will find some crime for which the Justice Department will prosecute him. Hillary Clinton and Hunter Biden did a great deal, but none of it matters to corrupt officials who share their worldview.

    The lesson is clear: in America today, in the corrupt kleptocracy of Joe Biden, you have to have the right opinions. Then all doors will open for you and you can even break laws with impunity, and have no fear of prosecution. But if you dare to dissent from the opinions of the elites, prepare to be hounded by the new super-IRS and the weaponized FBI, and you’ll face raids, and prison, and who knows what else is coming.

    Many conservatives are saying that this ensures Trump’s victory in 2024. But what makes them think that this corrupt regime will allow the man whom they fear and hate above all others return to the White House? It’s clear now. They will stop at nothing.

    This is no longer a republic, except of the banana variety. It may be a republic again someday, but for now, the great American experiment is over. Born July 4, 1776 in Philadelphia, died August 8, 2022, in Mar-A-Lago, at the hands of Joe Biden, Merrick Garland, and Christopher Wray.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 11, 2022, 08:43:12 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 11, 2022, 08:45:25 AM
    Eric Trump Recalls Odd Thing FBI Did During Raid
    Townhall ^ | |Posted: Aug 10, 2022 8:30 PM | Sarah Arnold
    Posted on 8/11/2022, 9:05:27 AM


    Former President Trump’s son Eric Trump reveals key details on the FBI’s raid of Mar-a-Lago.

    Trump told the Daily Mail that the FBI refused to to hand over the search warrant for their raid on the Florida residence.

    He also recalled about 30 FBI agents kicking his attorney off the property.

    “So they showed it to her from about 10 feet away. They would not give her a copy of the search warrant,” Trump said.

    “There’s 30 agents there… They told our lawyer … you have to leave the property right now. Turn off all security cameras,” Trump said.

    He said that the former president’s attorney Christina Bobb was forced to stand at the end of the Mar-a-Lago’s driveway during the raid.

    Calling the event another “coordinated attack” on his father, Trump said Bobb was confused why a lawyer for the person's home being raided by the FBI was not able to see or obtain a copy of the search warrant.

    He questioned whether a real warrant even existed, saying that he would be “thrilled” to know.

    "When I arrived and kind of announced myself as the legal representation for President Trump. I asked to see a copy of the warrant,” Bobb recalled.

    She said that once she was able to see the warrant, it was partly sealed which made it impossible for her to read why the judge granted a raid on the property.

    “Initially they refused and said, 'You know, we don't have to show it to you.' And there was a little bit of an exchange about whether it was appropriate to withhold the warrant when you're searching the residence of the former president, who's likely to be the Republican nominee in the next election, though they conceded and let me see it, they did not give me a copy of it right away, but they did let me see it,” Bobb said.

    Additionally, Trump insisted that there was no way President Joe Biden was clueless about the raid despite what the White House is claiming.

    This comes as the Department of Justice is facing calls to explain why they searched the grounds of Mar-a-Lago. Both Republicans and Democrats are calling the raid “illegal” and an “abuse of power.”
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 12, 2022, 05:50:07 AM
    https://issuesinsights.com/2022/08/12/defund-the-fbi


     :)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 13, 2022, 12:17:34 PM
    USA offers foreign states access to 1.1 billion biometric “encounters” in return for reciprocal database access

    The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is touting ‘Enhanced Border Security Agreements’, offering access to its vast biometric databanks in exchange for other states reciprocating. Reports suggest the UK is already participating, although there is no official confirmation of this. In the EU the proposals have caused a furore amongst privacy-minded MEPs. A document produced by the DHS, obtained by Statewatch, shows what the USA is offering foreign states.

    The document (pdf), entitled ‘DHS International Biometric Information Sharing (IBIS) Program’ and with the sub-heading ‘Enhanced Biometric Security Partnership (EBSP)’ is effectively a sales pitch to potential “foreign partners”.

    The IBIS Program, it states, provides “a scalable, reliable, and rapid bilateral biometric and biographic information sharing capability to support border security and immigration vetting,” which:

    “…creates value for the United States and its partners by detecting fraud, identifying transnational criminals, sex offenders who have been removed from the United States, smugglers of humans and narcotics, gang members, terrorists and terrorist-related information, and the travel patterns of criminals.”

    270 million identity records

    It does this by providing “partners” with access to vast quantities of data held by the DHS, namely the IDENT/HART database, “the largest U.S. Government biometric database and the second largest biometric database in the world, containing over 270 million identities from over 40 U.S. agencies.”

    These include “the U.S. Departments of State, Justice, and Defense, and state and local law enforcement entities,” says the document.

    States that wish to participate must first negotiate an “Enhanced Border Security Agreement (EBSA) or similar agreement,” which provides “a flexible but enduring framework to facilitate information exchange for criminal, border and national security, immigration, and counterterrorism purposes”.

    Participating states may then submit biometrics to the DHS through “a secure encrypted gateway called the Secure Real Time Platform (SRTP)”. The document notes that this can be done “at high volumes (up to millions of transactions each year)”.

    In response to a successful search “DHS can immediately provide available and sharable associated biometric, biographic, derogatory, and other encounter information to the partners,” a process that the DHS boasts does not require any manual intervention – for example, to check whether legal requirements have been fulfilled.

    The quid pro quo, of course, is reciprocal access to the databases of partner states:

    “In turn, DHS may submit biometrics to IBIS partner countries to search against their biometric identity management systems in order for partner countries to provide DHS with sharable biographic, derogatory, and encounter information when a U.S. search matches their biometric records. This high-volume matching and data exchange is accomplished within minutes and is fully automated; match confirmation and supporting data is exchanged with no officer intervention.”

    As Pirate Party MEP Patrick Breyer pointed out after a meeting of European Parliament civil liberties committee members with the DHS:

    "Millions of innocent Europeans are listed in police databases and could be exposed to completely disproportionate reactions in the USA. The US lacks adequate data and fundamental rights protection. Providing personal data to the US exposes our citizens i.e. to the risk of arbitrary detention and false suspicion, with possible dire consequences, in the course of the US “war on terror”. We must protect our citizens from these practices."

    https://www.statewatch.org/news/2022/july/usa-offers-foreign-states-access-to-1-1-billion-biometric-encounters-in-return-for-reciprocal-database-access/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 15, 2022, 11:26:43 AM
    TRUMP: FBI took my passports in Mar-a-Lago Raid
    Truth Social ^
    Posted on 8/15/2022, 1:52:00 PM

    Wow! In the raid by the FBI of Mar-a-Lago, they stole my three Passports (one expired), along with everything else. This is an assault on a political opponent at a level never seen before in our Country. Third World!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 15, 2022, 12:29:42 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 16, 2022, 12:01:02 PM
    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2022/08/16/fbi-wanted-michigan-police-to-allow-armed-protesters-inside-the-state-capitol-n2611770

     :( >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 19, 2022, 10:11:19 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 19, 2022, 10:22:07 AM
    https://thefederalist.com/2022/08/19/think-the-fbi-deserves-the-benefit-of-the-doubt-this-laundry-list-of-corruption-should-make-you-think-again

    YUP!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 19, 2022, 04:16:03 PM
    Former FBI agent pleads guilty to destroying records in connection with former state senator's trial
    KNWA Fayettesville ^ | C.C. McCandless
    Posted on 8/19/2022, 7:05:27 PM by NoLibZone

    FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) - On August 17, a former FBI agent signed a plea agreement, admitting that he destroyed records on a computer hard drive.

    A criminal information filing in the Western District of Arkansas Federal Court states that Robert Cessario “did corruptly alter, destroy, and mutilate an object, that is, a computer hard drive” in 2017. The hard drive he destroyed contained records pertaining to the federal prosecution of former Arkansas State Senator Jon Woods of Springdale.

    Woods was found guilty of corruption in May 2018 and sentenced to 18 years and four months in prison. After he began serving his sentence in a Texas prison, Woods sent a letter to then-President Donald Trump volunteering to help build a proposed border wall. The names and signatures of 80 inmates volunteering were included in the letter.

    Ex-Arkansas senator seeks retrial of corruption conviction The August 17 plea agreement states that Cessario was a special agent with the FBI and was “one of the primary agents investigating, and assisting in the prosecution of, defendants in United States vs. Woods, et al.”

    In my capacity as a special agent and as part of the investigation, I obtained recordings from a cooperating defendant. I placed these recordings on a government computer that had been issued to me for use in conducting covert operations that would not be traceable to a government computer. I knew that these recordings pertained to the prosecution in United States vs. Woods, et al.

    I took the computer to a commercial computer business and paid that company to “wipe” the computer. I personally performed another procedure to “wipe” the computer. I erased the contents of the computer hard drive knowing that the Court had ordered that the computer be submitted for a forensic examination. I did so with the intention of making the contents of the computer’s hard drive unavailable for forensic examination.

    I am guilty of the violation alleged. Robert Cessario, in his August 17 plea agreement signed in Federal Court His August 17 court appearance took less than 20 minutes. Cessario was issued a $5,000 bond and he awaits sentencing.

    He faces up to 20 years in prison followed by up to three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 25, 2022, 12:52:58 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2022, 06:20:08 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2022, 09:00:25 AM
    Mark Zuckerberg’s Admission Of FBI Meddling In 2020 Election Is Even Bigger Than It Seems: It was the FBI and not just social media that stole the election from Donald Trump.
    The Federalist ^ | 08/30/2022 | Margot Cleveland
    Posted on 8/30/2022, 11:43:50 AM by SeekAndFind

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s admission reveals a deeper scandal: It was the FBI and not social media that stole the election from Donald Trump.
    Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s admission last week that the FBI pushed the social media giant to censor Russian misinformation — and thus the Hunter Biden laptop story, as that’s how the agency and Democrats characterized it — shortly before the November 2020 election is but a breadcrumb of a bigger scandal: the widespread interference by the FBI in the 2020 presidential election with the potential that the bureau coordinated its efforts with the Biden campaign.

    When asked during a Thursday podcast with Joe Rogan how Facebook handles controversial news, such as the Hunter Biden laptop story, Zuckerberg stopped his host to provide a backdrop to Facebook’s decision to decrease distribution of the scandal.

    “The FBI basically came to us, some folks on our team, [saying,] ‘Hey just so you know, you should be on high alert,” Zuckerberg told Rogan. According to Zuckerberg, the bureau told Facebook that “we thought there was a lot of Russian propaganda in the 2016 election” and that “we have it on notice that basically there’s about to be some kind of dump similar to that so just be vigilant.”

    As Zuckerberg told “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast audience, “Hey, look, if the FBI — which I still view as a legitimate institution in this country, it’s a very professional law enforcement — they come to us and tell us we need to be on guard about something, I want to take that seriously.” So, when the New York Post broke the Hunter Biden laptop story on October 14, 2020, Facebook treated the story as “potentially misinformation, important misinformation” for five to seven days while the tech giant’s team could determine whether it was false.

    During that time, Facebook decreased its distribution of the story by making the story rank lower in the news feed. “You could still share it, you could still consume it,” Zuckerberg explained, but “fewer people saw it than would have otherwise.” And while he would not quantify the impact, the Facebook founder said the decreased distribution was “meaningful.”

    In a follow-up, Rogan asked if the FBI had specifically said “to be on guard about that story,” meaning the laptop story. After originally responding, “no,” Zuckerberg corrected himself, saying, “I don’t remember if it was that specifically, but it basically fit the pattern.”

    Whether the FBI identified the Hunter Biden laptop story as the about-to-drop Russian misinformation, however, is irrelevant because the warning the bureau provided Facebook proved specific enough for the Big Tech company to censor distribution of the New York Post’s story. And, contrary to fake intel the FBI provided Facebook’s team, the laptop was not Russian disinformation but a true and devastating story showing Joe Biden had lied to the American public when he claimed in September of 2019 that he had never discussed his son’s foreign business dealings. Information on the laptop further implicated the Democrat presidential candidate in a pay-to-play scandal involving Russia, Ukraine, and China.

    The implications flowing from Zuckerberg’s revelation are huge and raise a litany of questions that demand answers.

    We Need Answers
    First, it is implausible to believe Facebook is the only Big Tech company contacted by the FBI with a warning about Russian disinformation and the bureau’s expectation being that tech executives would then censor the Biden scandal. Rather, it is only reasonable to believe the FBI issued similar false warnings to Twitter and other outlets.

    And while Facebook only limited distribution, Twitter completely censored the story, preventing it from being shared at all on the platform. Twitter also temporarily locked Trump’s campaign account to prevent the then-president from sharing the laptop story and suspended the New York Post’s account.

    Did the FBI’s warning prompt Twitter’s censorship as it had Facebook’s? What other Big Tech companies did the FBI contact to paint the Hunter Biden laptop story as misinformation? What network and cable news outlets received a similar message? What about print and legacy media companies? Who within the FBI issued the warnings? With whose knowledge? With whose authorization? Or by whose directive?

    A second component to the scandal concerns the FBI’s interactions (or lack thereof) with the Biden campaign. According to John Paul Mac Isaac, the owner of the Delaware laptop repair shop where Hunter Biden abandoned his laptop in mid-2019, the former’s father approached the FBI on October 8, 2019, on his behalf to alert the FBI to the laptop’s existence. During that meeting, Isaac’s father claimed he told the agent there was pornography on the laptop as well as information about “dealing with foreign interests, a pay-for-play scheme linked to the former administration, lots of foreign money.”

    Isaac’s father left the local FBI office believing the bureau was uninterested in the laptop, but then two months later, in December of 2019, two federal agents appeared at Isaac’s Wilmington repair store with a subpoena and seized the laptop. Isaac had previously made a copy of the hard drive, however, and later provided the copy to Rudy Giuliani who, in turn, gave a copy to the New York Post, prompting the stories the FBI then tried to censor by falsely flagging it as Russian disinformation.

    What the FBI did with the laptop after taking possession of it remains unknown, although FBI whistleblowers now claim that “local FBI leadership told employees ‘you will not look at that Hunter Biden laptop.’” Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson revealed the whistleblowers’ claims in a letter he sent to the inspector general of the Department of Justice last week. That letter further stated that the “whistleblowers allege that the FBI did not begin to examine the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop until after the 2020 presidential election — potentially a year after the FBI obtained the laptop in December 2019.”

    If, as the whistleblowers allege, the FBI did not review the content of Biden’s laptop until after the 2020 presidential election, that constitutes yet another scandal because from what Isaac’s father conveyed to the agent in October of 2019, the laptop represented a national security threat.

    The FBI and the intelligence community cannot possibly defend the country from threats if it blinds itself to what those threats are. Nor could the intelligence community properly provide Joe Biden with a defensive briefing if agents remained ignorant of the content of the laptop. And as I previously reported, that content included the revelation by Hunter Biden that he believed Russians had stolen a second laptop with material that put him at risk for blackmail. So if the whistleblowers’ claims prove true, the FBI and the intelligence community put the election of Joe Biden above America’s national security.

    Either way, the FBI lied to Facebook and presumptively Twitter and many other media outlets. If the FBI had analyzed the laptop, it knew it was not Russian disinformation; if agents had not yet assessed the material, it had no basis to claim it was Russian disinformation.

    What Did the Big Guy Know?
    The question remains, though: What did the FBI tell Joe Biden about the laptop?

    While it would be completely inappropriate for the FBI to bury the laptop and withhold a defensive briefing from the Democrat presidential candidate, it is possible the FBI took that tack to provide Biden with plausible deniability. But once the FBI knew the story was about to break, what did the bureau do, besides lying to Big Tech companies that the story represented Russian disinformation?

    And we know from the Post’s October 14, 2020, story on the Hunter Biden laptop that the FBI had foreknowledge of the Post’s plan to run the story, as did Hunter Biden and the Biden campaign. “The FBI referred questions about its seizure of the laptop and hard drive to the Delaware US Attorney’s Office, where a spokesperson said, ‘My office can neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation,’” the Post reported. The Post added that “Hunter Biden’s lawyer refused to comment on the specifics but instead attacked Giuliani,” and “the Joe Biden campaign did not return requests for comment.”

    After the Post reached out to the FBI and Biden for comment on the story, did the FBI tell Biden how it came to possess Hunter’s laptop and that it appeared legitimate? Or did agents lie to Biden?

    Here, a comment Biden made in crosstalk during his October 22, 2020, presidential debate with Trump in Nashville proves intriguing.

    After Biden intoned that the election was about the character of the country, Trump countered, “If this stuff is true about Russia, Ukraine, China, other countries, a wreck — if this is true, then he’s a corrupt politician. So don’t give me the stuff about how you’re this innocent baby. Joe, they’re calling you a corrupt politician.”

    “It’s the laptop from hell, the laptop from hell,” Trump continued.

    Biden initially countered by pointing to the “50 former national intelligence folks who said that what this, he’s accusing me of is a Russian plan.” “Four, five former heads of the CIA, both parties, say what he’s saying is a bunch of garbage,” Biden claimed.

    “You mean, the laptop is now another Russia, Russia, Russia hoax?” Trump barked.

    At this point, the crosstalk escalated, but Biden could be heard saying, “That’s exactly what — that’s exactly what I was told.”

    Was Biden lying? Or did someone tell Biden that the laptop was Russian disinformation? Did the FBI and intelligence community lie to the Democrat candidate about the authenticity of the laptop, rather than provide Joe Biden with a proper defensive briefing? If so, who lied? Who knew of the lie? Who approved the lie or directed it?

    And what about Hunter? Did Biden ask his son about the laptop? What did Hunter say? Did Biden know the FBI was lying about it being disinformation and just go along with that narrative?

    These questions barely scratch the surface, with more serious questions concerning whether the FBI plotted with the Biden campaign to push the Russian disinformation narrative and to seek censorship of the story. And before writing that off as a crazy conspiracy theory, remember that it was Zuckerberg — the Zuck Bucks king — who revealed that the FBI had approached him and warned that the about-to-be dumped story was Russian disinformation. So we know the FBI holds responsibility for pushing the disinformation canard to Big Tech, we just don’t know whether agents coordinated the plan with the Biden campaign.

    A review of contemporaneous reporting also reveals that the intelligence community pushed the Russia disinformation narrative through leaks to the New York Times and Washington Post.

    The same day the story broke, in reporting on the Hunter Biden laptop article published by the Post, the New York Times reported that “some security experts expressed skepticism about the provenance and authenticity of the emails,” citing “United States intelligence analysts.”

    According to the Times, American intelligence analysts had contacted Burisma — the Ukrainian energy company at which Hunter served a lucrative gig on the board of directors — to learn more about a purported hack of Burisma by “the same Russian GRU unit that was one of two groups that hacked the Democratic National Committee in 2016.” The Times reported that the intelligence analysts “had picked up chatter that stolen Burisma emails would be leaked in the form of an ‘October surprise.’”

    Citing its American intelligence sources, the Times then claimed that “among their chief concerns … was that the Burisma material would be leaked alongside forged materials in an attempt to hurt Mr. Biden’s candidacy — as Russian hackers did when they dumped real emails alongside forgeries ahead of the 2017 French elections — a slight twist on Russia’s 2016 playbook when they siphoned leaked D.N.C. emails through fake personas on Twitter and WikiLeaks.”

    The speed with which the New York Times spun the Hunter Biden laptop story, and the assist by the unnamed “U.S. intelligence analysts” suggests a coordinated effort by individuals in the intelligence community to protect Biden’s candidacy by framing the New York Post’s coverage as Russian disinformation.

    Less than a week after the New York Post broke the laptop story, the Washington Post likewise bolstered the disinformation narrative based on FBI leaks. “What’s more, numerous news outlets have now reported that the FBI is examining whether the material from Hunter Biden (which supposedly includes salacious stuff) is linked to a Russian disinformation effort,” the Washington Post reported on October 20, 2020, adding that “intelligence officials had previously warned that Giuliani is a conduit for such disinformation.”

    The FBI and U.S. intelligence analysts’ peddling of the Russia disinformation narrative to the New York Times and Washington Post further expands the deep state’s culpability in interfering in the 2020 election and also leads to more questions.

    Who provided the media outlets with leaks to spin the Hunter Biden laptop scandal as Russian disinformation? Who knew of the leaks, and who approved them or directed them? And did the FBI and intelligence community coordinate with the Biden campaign in pushing the Russia disinformation narrative to the legacy media?

    How Deep Does the Corruption Go?
    Other questions concern what prompted “more than 50 former senior intelligence officials” to sign “on to a letter outlining their belief that the recent disclosure of emails allegedly belonging to Joe Biden’s son ‘has all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.’” Did the FBI or other members of the intelligence community help coordinate that letter?

    Given the FBI took the initiative to prompt Facebook and almost certainly other media outlets to censor the Hunter Biden story, it’s entirely reasonable to think the same deep-state liars would round up former members of the cabal to sign the letter to further the disinformation narrative.

    If so, did Joe Biden or his campaign know about the efforts? Or did the Biden campaign merely exploit what the FBI was doing behind the scenes?

    And make no mistake, even if Biden’s team did not conspire with the FBI to cause the censorship of the Hunter Biden laptop story, it exploited the FBI’s gratuitous interference in the election, with the Biden campaign pointing to social media’s censorship as proof that the story was disinformation.

    “Well, look, I think Twitter’s response to the actual article itself makes clear these reported allegations are false and are not true, and I’m glad to see social media companies to take responsibility to limit misinformation,” campaign press secretary Jamal Brown said shortly after the story broke.

    Biden likewise hid behind the spin pushed by the 50-plus former national intelligence agents that framed the laptop as Russian disinformation, as demonstrated by his debate performance highlighted above.

    Whether Biden coordinated with those former deep-staters, or they conspired with the FBI, merits investigation as well because, at the end of the day, the burying of the Hunter Biden laptop story cost Trump the election.

    As the Washington Times reported earlier this year after the New York Times belatedly acknowledged the authenticity of the laptop: “Trump pollster John McLaughlin found that 4.6% of Biden voters would have changed their minds if they had known about it, easily enough to flip results in key states. Another survey by The Polling Company showed that even more Biden voters in seven swing states — 17% — would have switched their votes if they had been aware of the laptop and other stories.”

    Those poll results confirmed what many conservatives had long thought — that by censoring the laptop story and the Biden family’s pay-to-play scandal, Big Tech stole the election from Donald Trump.

    But Zuckerberg’s admission on Thursday that Big Tech throttled the story at the behest of the FBI reveals a deeper scandal: It was the FBI and not social media that stole the election from Donald Trump.
    Margot Cleveland is The Federalist's senior legal correspondent. She is also a contributor to National Review Online, the Washington Examiner, Aleteia, and Townhall.com, and has been published in the Wall Street Journal and USA Today.
    Cleveland is a lawyer and a graduate of the Notre Dame Law School, where she earned the Hoynes Prize—the law school’s highest honor. She later served for nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk for a federal appellate judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Cleveland is a former full-time university faculty member and now teaches as an adjunct from time to time.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2022, 10:36:09 AM
    Top FBI Agent Resigns after Allegedly Thwarting Hunter Biden Investigation: Report
    National Review ^ | 8/30/2022 | Caroline Downey
    Posted on 8/30/2022, 1:31:19 PM


    A top FBI agent based in Washington, D.C., reportedly resigned from his position last week after being accused of attempting to thwart a criminal investigation into Hunter Biden.

    Timothy Thibault, an FBI assistant special agent in charge, was escorted out of the Washington field office by at least two “headquarters-looking types” last Friday, sources told the Washington Times on Monday.

    Thibault had already been on leave since FBI director Christopher Wray revealed during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this month that he found the whistleblower claims against the agent and his colleague, FBI supervisory intelligence analyst Brian Auten, “deeply troubling.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...


    ________________________ ____________


    Prime and the libs are still utterly clueless as to what happened here. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 30, 2022, 11:15:32 AM
    Top FBI Agent Resigns after Allegedly Thwarting Hunter Biden Investigation: Report
    National Review ^ | 8/30/2022 | Caroline Downey
    Posted on 8/30/2022, 1:31:19 PM


    A top FBI agent based in Washington, D.C., reportedly resigned from his position last week after being accused of attempting to thwart a criminal investigation into Hunter Biden.

    Timothy Thibault, an FBI assistant special agent in charge, was escorted out of the Washington field office by at least two “headquarters-looking types” last Friday, sources told the Washington Times on Monday.

    Thibault had already been on leave since FBI director Christopher Wray revealed during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this month that he found the whistleblower claims against the agent and his colleague, FBI supervisory intelligence analyst Brian Auten, “deeply troubling.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...


    ________________________ ____________


    Prime and the libs are still utterly clueless as to what happened here.

    Nah They Know all right - Only they'll Play dumb / Deflect it / blame Donald / Waffle on & on - He was only involved with Children & Cocaine what he do so
    Wrong will Likely be Their defense of him.

    When Everyone & their Dog Knows he's a crooked / Depraved / Scumbag of
    a person - its Got Fuck all to do with politics or who his dad is,
    Leave them 2 factors out about him & no one would defend / stand up for Him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2022, 06:08:07 AM
    Utah FBI employee arrested on suspicion of multiple counts of child sex abuse
    KSL TV (Utah) ^ | 08/29/2022 | LARRY D. CURTIS
    Posted on 8/31/2022, 8:26:14 AM by DFG

    A Utah man, who is also an employee of the FBI, has been arrested on suspicion of child sexual abuse.

    Robert Alexander Smith, 65, was arrested at his home in Stansbury Park and booked into the Tooele County Jail after an investigation by the county sheriff’s office that included interviews with up to five minor girls who said they were victims of Smith.

    “He was booked on four counts of aggravated sex abuse of a child without incident,” court documents state.

    Smith is an employee of the FBI. In a statement, the FBI said the possible misconduct has been referred to the bureau’s internal affairs department in the following statement:

    “We are aware of the arrest of an FBI employee. The FBI takes allegations of misconduct very seriously. As such, the incident has been referred to the FBI’s Internal Affairs Section. We cannot comment further on an ongoing personnel matter.”

    Smith’s specific role with the FBI was not immediately clear.

    An affidavit of probable cause filed in 3rd District Court in Tooele said the Tooele County Sheriff’s Office received a report of a possible sex offense case that involved several girls. In June one girl spoke to the person who filed the complaint to report something “very uncomfortable.” The girl told the trusted person that Smith had touched her sexually, multiple times, two years before she spoke up about it. She said she was 6 or 7 years old when the abuse took place.

    (Excerpt) Read more at ksltv.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2022, 01:29:57 PM
    http://thehill.com/opinion/finance/3620665-the-irs-will-be-more-like-the-nsa-after-bidens-changes


     >:( :( 

    Horrible 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 02, 2022, 08:07:48 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 13, 2022, 06:58:34 AM
    Intimidation: FBI Turns Up on Doorstep of Trump Supporter Who Wasn't Even at the US Capitol on January 6
    Red State ^ | 09/12/2022 | Nick Arama
    Posted on 9/13/2022, 12:34:47 AM by SeekAndFind


    Tucker Carlson and Lisa Gallagher. (Credit: Columbia Bugle)

    We’ve been reporting on the efforts of the federal law enforcement bureaucracy to harass and target Trump allies with reported FBI raids on the homes of supporters to execute search warrants, and the DOJ dropping subpoenas on people.

    Now one New Jersey woman, Lisa Gallagher, has come forward saying that the FBI showed up on her doorstep the morning after Joe Biden delivered his “anti-MAGA” speech. Gallagher is not a “Trump ally” — she’s just a regular person and Trump supporter. She appeared on Tucker Carlson Tonight on Monday to share the story.

    Tucker Carlson Discussing The FBI’s Raid Of Trump Supporter Lisa Gallagher In His Monologue

    “The point was to use government agents to intimidate enemies of the Regime.”

    “This is Soviet and there is no other word for it.” pic.twitter.com/GVdQ9aFSrw

    — The Columbia Bugle 🇺🇸 (@ColumbiaBugle) September 13, 2022

    Tucker Carlson Interviews Trump Supporter Lisa Gallagher About Being Raided By The FBI Over The False Report That She Was At The Capitol On January 6th

    Lisa: “After seeing Joe Biden’s speech the night before I thought oh my God this is political, and I was frightened.” pic.twitter.com/vwNEyynGrj

    — The Columbia Bugle 🇺🇸 (@ColumbiaBugle) September 13, 2022

    Gallagher said she was terrified when federal agents showed up on her doorstep. She said that although she knew she had done nothing wrong, she had watched Biden’s speech the night before, so she thought this was political. She explained that the FBI agents told her they had received an anonymous tip that she was at the Capitol on January 6. She invited them into her home and showed them her calendars to show that she hadn’t been at the Capitol on that day.

    Now, if this is all true, this is a frightening thing. At this point, after two years, they have to know of anyone who did anything at the Capitol on Jan. 6. Are they truly trying to chase down people because of a random tip from someone? That’s terrifying not only because of the intimidation involved from the FBI, but that anyone could now turn in someone they don’t like with such a seemingly flimsy accusation. That is the kind of thing that happens in fascist and Communist nations.

    Where are the Republicans calling all this out? The Republicans have been silent since on the stories of the subpoenas and the raids. Now, this isn’t even a “Trump ally,” but just a regular person. They should be even more concerned about that kind of action. Yet they seem very quiet. You don’t stop it by being quiet. You stop it by asking questions and demanding answers. You stop it by shining a bright light on it.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 13, 2022, 07:25:14 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 16, 2022, 07:59:17 AM
    Facebook spied on private messages of Americans who questioned 2020 election
    New York Post ^ | 9/14/2022 | Miranda Devine
    Posted on 9/15/2022, 11:53:52 AM by Tench_Coxe

    Facebook has been spying on the private messages and data of American users and reporting them to the FBI if they express anti-government or anti-authority sentiments — or question the 2020 election — according to sources within the Department of Justice.

    Under the FBI collaboration operation, somebody at Facebook red-flagged these supposedly subversive private messages over the past 19 months and transmitted them in redacted form to the domestic terrorism operational unit at FBI headquarters in Washington, DC, without a subpoena.

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 19, 2022, 08:09:21 AM
    HORRIBLE !

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 24, 2022, 02:40:34 AM
     to comments.

    FBI misled judge who signed warrant for Beverly Hills seizure of $86 million in cash
    latimes.com ^ | September 23, 2022 | MICHAEL FINNEGAN
    Posted on 9/23/2022, 9:14:56 PM by lowbridge

    The privacy invasion was vast when FBI agents drilled and pried their way into 1,400 safe-deposit boxes at the U.S. Private Vaults store in Beverly Hills.

    They rummaged through personal belongings of a jazz saxophone player, an interior designer, a retired doctor, a flooring contractor, two Century City lawyers and hundreds of others.

    Agents took photos and videos of pay stubs, password lists, credit cards, a prenuptial agreement, immigration and vaccination records, bank statements, heirlooms and a will, court records show. In one box, agents found cremated human remains.

    Eighteen months later, newly unsealed court documents show that the FBI and U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles got their warrant for that raid by misleading the judge who approved it.

    They omitted from their warrant request a central part of the FBI’s plan: Permanent confiscation of everything inside every box containing at least $5,000 in cash or goods, a senior FBI agent recently testified.

    The FBI’s justification for the dragnet forfeiture was its presumption that hundreds of unknown box holders were all storing assets somehow tied to unknown crimes, court records show.

    It took five days for scores of agents to fill their evidence bags with the bounty: More than $86 million in cash and a bonanza of gold, silver, rare coins, gem-studded jewelry and enough Rolex and Cartier watches to stock a boutique.

    (Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 26, 2022, 04:37:00 AM
    Did the FBI Finally Go Too Far?
    American Thinker ^ | 26 Sep, 2022 | Jack Cashill
    Posted on 9/26/2022, 7:35:22 AM


    On reading about the Saturday arrest of pro-life activist Mark Houck, I thought the author at this alternative site had to be exaggerating. It struck me as beyond belief that two dozen or so armed FBI agents would swarm the house of a Catholic father of seven, rifles drawn, and arrest him in front of his weeping children for anything short of murder.

    I have had to recalibrate my belief system. The “crime” fell quite a bit short of murder. On October 13, 2021, Houck brought his 12-year-old son with him for his weekly sidewalk counseling outside of a Planned Parenthood abortion clinic in Philadelphia. A volunteer escort at the abortion clinic reportedly called Houck’s son a “fag” among other insults and threatened him. Houck pushed the man away from his son, and the man fell. Houck, the founder of an organization that promotes Christian virtue among men, was not charged with a crime.

    However petty the incident, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, had Houck seized at gunpoint nearly a year later and bragged about the arrest. Said PR hack Jennifer Crandall in a press release, Houck “assaulted a man because he was a volunteer reproductive health care clinic escort.”

    Before proceeding, this sentence needs parsing. The most problematic word is “because.” Houck has had hundreds of opportunities to assault escorts if their offense in his eyes was to be an escort. Although the press release claims two incidents on that same day with the man, Houck had no prior or subsequent altercations.

    Then there is the Orwellian phrase “reproductive health care clinic escort.” Ms. Crandall is somehow fusing the “reproductive rights” euphemism favored by abortion activists with the function of the escort, whose mission, of course, is to assure that no reproduction takes place on his watch.

    (Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 26, 2022, 04:53:44 AM
    https://www.npr.org/2022/06/13/1104823285/treasure-hunters-fbi-gold-civil-war


     >:(
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 27, 2022, 12:13:40 PM
    FBI Changes Total Number of Documents Seized From Trump’s Estate
    Epoch Times ^ | September 26, 2022 | By Zachary Stieber
    Posted on 9/27/2022, 2:33:01 PM by Red Badger

    The FBI on Sept. 26 changed the total number of documents it said it seized from former President Donald Trump’s estate.

    Sixty-three additional documents or photographs without classification markings were taken from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort than previously listed by the FBI, according to an updated inventory list.

    The revised inventory was submitted to the federal court in southern Florida on orders from U.S. District Judge Raymond Dearie, a Reagan appointee who was inserted into the case as a special master, or an independent third party to handle disputes and other matters.

    Dearie ordered a government official “with sufficient knowledge of the matter” to submit a declaration or affidavit stating whether the detailed property inventory released on Sept. 2 “represents the full and accurate extent of the property seized from” Trump’s home in August when FBI agents executed a search warrant there.

    An FBI supervisory special agent, whose name was redacted, fulfilled the order. The agent, based in Washington, said he or she leads a squad of special agents, intelligence analysts, and other personnel in carrying out counterintelligence and espionage investigations, and that their team executed the warrant.

    The earlier inventory was performed by the agent and workers under their direction but, wanting to make sure the inventory was accurate, “I and FBI personnel working under my direction conducted an additional review and recount of the Seized materials in order to make this declaration,” the agent told Dearie.

    That resulted in some “minor revisions,” the agent acknowledged.

    SCRIBD DOCUMENT AT LINK...........

    An Epoch Times review of the earlier and current inventory list showed the differences included 63 non-classified documents or photographs being added to the total the FBI said it seized. Additionally, the new list contains two fewer magazines/newspapers/press articles and two fewer empty folders with “CLASSIFIED” banners.

    Some of the boxes seized from Trump’s home were said to contain more documents now; others were said to contain fewer.

    The update, if accurate, means the government seized over 11,200 non-classified materials from Mar-a-Lago.

    The agent said he or she declared, under the penalty of perjury, that they were “not aware of” any documents or other materials seized from Trump’s home that are not listed in the updated inventory, with the exception of materials taken by the government’s filter team.

    That squad was focused on identifying and segregating materials they thought could fall under attorney-client privilege.

    A spokesman for Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The updated inventory excludes documents marked classified, based on a recent appeals court order that blocked Dearie and Trump’s lawyers from reviewing the said documents. The earlier inventory listed 103 documents with classification markings.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 27, 2022, 03:39:05 PM

    Free Republic
    Browse · Search      News/Activism
    Topics · Post Article
    Skip to comments.

    FBI Seized $86 Million In Raid On Innocent Americans’ Safe Boxes After Duping Judge For Warrant
    The Federalist ^ | SEPTEMBER 27, 2022 | Evita Duffy
    Posted on 9/27/2022, 11:42:29 AM by george76

    ‘The government’s theory is that having cash makes you a presumptive criminal, and I think every American should be worried about that.’

    There is no denying anymore that our federal agencies have weaponized their power against the political adversaries of the left. But if you think the feds’ abandonment of all standards only affects outspoken critics of the regime, think again. More allegations of FBI corruption and hubris are coming to light after a lawsuit last week revealed FBI agents misled a judge so they could illegally seize and withhold property from innocent American citizens.

    Agents took more than $86 million in cash, jewelry, and gold from 1,400 safe deposit boxes during the raid of a Beverly Hills vault company in March 2021. Lawyers representing a group of deposit box owners claim their items were illegally taken and not returned to them more than a year after the raid of the Beverly Hills, California, branch of U.S. Private Vaults.

    Seizing Innocent Americans’ Assets..

    This past March, a year after the raid, the owners of U.S. Private Vaults pleaded guilty to conspiracy to launder drug money. However, the hundreds of citizens whose assets were seized by the FBI are not suspected of any crimes, according to court documents.

    Deposit box holders whose property was taken sued the bureau for violating their rights. Robert Frommer, a lawyer with the Institute for Justice, the libertarian, nonprofit law firm that filed the suit, said in the court papers: “We brought suit on behalf of seven clients, but we were representing a class of at least 400 people. What we’ve been trying to show for the past several months is that the government’s actions violated the search-and-seizure protections of the US Constitution in the Fourth Amendment.”

    According to Los Angeles Magazine, federal agents “manhandled the personal belongings” of box holders and “made video and photo records of customers’ most sensitive documents: pay stubs, password lists, credit cards, a prenuptial agreement, immigration and vaccination records, bank statements and a will all made it into government databases, court docs show.” The feds also found cremated human remains (“we presume of a legally interred person,” LA Magazine notes) while snooping in one person’s box.

    Jennifer and Paul Snitko were two of those people who kept items at the Beverly Hills U.S. Private Vaults. The couple placed wills, backup hard drives, old family watches, and Paul’s flight log in their deposit box until their personal possessions were seized during the raid. The couple kept their valuables in the vault because they live in a fire-prone area and worried they could miss taking some of their important belongings during California’s frequent fire evacuations.

    ...

    Jennifer and Paul are just two of many people who had no idea that U.S. Private Vaults might have been breaking the law since the establishment had been open for years and was a member of the Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce.

    After the raid, the feds demanded that box holders submit to an investigation before having their possessions returned. “It was scary to learn that we had to submit our personal information,” said Jennifer with tears in her eyes. “We didn’t do anything wrong.”

    Minutes after Jennifer and Paul announced a lawsuit with the Institute for Justice, an FBI agent reached out, saying their belongings would be returned. However, other box holders have still not received their property back. And as the Institute for Justice points out, the government had no right to seize their property and force them to prove their innocence in the first place.

    FBI Misleads Judge Kim to Obtain a Warrant..

    Agents appeared to have gotten their warrant to raid the vault by neglecting to tell U.S. Magistrate Judge Steve Kim, who signed the warrant, that they intended to keep all the assets found in every safe deposit box containing $5,000 or more in cash and valuables.

    The failure on the part of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles to reveal the plan to confiscate private citizens’ belongings in the warrant application was revealed in FBI documents and depositions of agents in the aforementioned lawsuit. Agents further defied restrictions set in the warrant by Kim when they searched through box holders’ belongings for evidence of crimes. The warrant explicitly noted that it “does not authorize a criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safety deposit boxes,” but only allowed the FBI to look inside in order to identify the owners and return their property to them, Institute for Justice reported.

    “The government did not know what was in those boxes, who owned them, or what, if anything, those people had done,” wrote Frommer. “That’s why the warrant application did not even attempt to argue there was probable cause to seize and forfeit box renters’ property.”

    FBI Tries Skirting Judge Klausner’s Orders..

    Three months after the raid, in June 2021, U.S. District Judge R. Gary Klausner issued a temporary restraining order, stopping the FBI’s attempt to keep the property it seized from 369 of the safe deposit boxes because investigators had not proven that the box owners had committed any crimes.

    “This notice, put bluntly, provides no factual basis for the seizure of Plaintiffs’ property whatsoever,” stated the judge in his ruling, citing the Fifth Amendment’s protection against the seizure of property without due process.

    But the FBI wants to hold onto the fortune it acquired from the raid. Last Friday, prosecutors “filed complaints to confiscate money from more box holders,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

    Three months after Klausner’s ruling, the government asked a judge to let it keep $154,600 in cash from one box holder and $330,000 from another because a drug-sniffing dog alerted to the money and both owners had “applied unsuccessfully for state licenses to sell marijuana.”

    U.S. attorneys suggested that shows “the funds are drug-related,” but as Los Angeles Magazine said, “at least two other vaults were used by licensed marijuana sellers… [so] the scent could have spread from any of the cash in the bank where the government was storing all of its questionably confiscated bonanza.”

    The government also wants to keep $960,100 and $519,000 in cash it took from the boxes of two brothers based on its belief that one of them had “been in contact with” suspected armed robbers — an attempt their lawyer calls “an appalling and unconstitutional abuse of power.”

    Prosecutors accused the owner of a box holding $900,000 of being “either a top-level drug trafficker or money launderer” because the man bundled his cash in assorted rubber bands, tape-wrapped paper, bank bands, and shopping bags.

    The feds were reportedly forced to give back the $57,000 life savings of unemployed chef Joseph Ruiz after insisting there was no way he could have legally saved up that kind of cash. Ruiz proved otherwise.

    As Los Angeles Magazine’s Ian Spiegelman reported, the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office have denied they “misled the judge or ignored conditions of the warrant, saying agents had no obligation to tell Judge Kim they planned to ransack the privately-rented boxes under the umbrella theory that every customer was a black market mastermind.” According to FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller, the warrants were executed legally “based on allegations of widespread criminal wrongdoing.”

    U.S. Private Vaults closed down, and only the owners have been charged and fined for laundering drug money. Not one person involved has been sent to prison.

    The FBI’s Laundry List of Malfeasance..

    While the FBI PR team is stridently maintaining the agency’s innocence, the American people have no reason to believe them. We already know lying to judges isn’t outside the FBI’s wheelhouse after it launched the Russia collusion hoax against President Donald Trump by lying to the FISA court about the credibility of Christopher Steele, author of the debunked Steele dossier.

    The FBI, under the purview of Biden-appointed Attorney General Merrick Garland, appears to have entirely discarded all semblance of integrity by now. Last Friday, pro-life activist and Catholic father of seven Mark Houck was arrested by what his wife described as a swarm of 25 to 30 FBI agents — for alleged “FACE Act” violations — at his home while his traumatized children looked on “screaming.”

    Houck isn’t the only prominent conservative who has received a personal FBI visit. Last month, the FBI raided the Mar-a-Lago home of former President Donald Trump. The government is also targeting the former president’s advisers and outspoken supporters, such as Rudy Giuliani, Jeff Clark, and Mike Lindell.

    Last week, a whistleblower came forward alleging that the FBI is moving its agents off of child sexual abuse cases to instead pursue its Jan. 6 witch hunt. The FBI’s 2022 budget has its largest funding increase request under the category of combatting “domestic terrorism,” a label the left uses to smear its ideological opponents at will. A notable example occurred last year when the FBI launched investigations into “terrorist” parents who express concerns at local school board meetings.

    Earlier this month, it was revealed that for years the FBI has been secretly pressuring Americans into signing forms that relinquish their constitutional right to own, purchase, or even use firearms.

    The agency also interfered in the 2020 election by preemptively branding the Hunter Biden laptop story as Russian disinformation for Facebook (and likely other platforms) to censor.

    It has yet to be seen whether the FBI will return all the savings of the innocent Americans caught up in the U.S. Private Vaults raid, or whether taking money from people with baseless allegations is a new funding tactic for the feds.

    Lawyers representing the box holders are insistent this is a case all Americans need to pay attention to. “The government’s theory is that having cash makes you a presumptive criminal,” said Ruiz’s lawyer, “and I think every American should be worried about that.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on November 02, 2022, 08:45:39 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 20, 2022, 10:19:38 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 20, 2022, 10:30:24 AM
    Latest ‘Twitter Files’ show FBI bullied executives over not reporting ‘state propaganda’ enough
    nypost ^ | 12/19/2022 | allie griffin
    Posted on 12/19/2022, 1:37:03 PM by bitt

    VIDEO

    The FBI repeatedly grilled Twitter execs about censorship on the social media platform in the summer of 2020 — insisting that the company provide more information about removing “state propaganda” from the site, according to the latest Twitter Files release.

    The agency’s Foreign Influence Task Force — which deals with cyber threats — interrogated Twitter on its reporting about official state media actors’ use of the site, according to emails unearthed by independent journalist Matt Taibbi in what he dubbed the “Twitter Files Supplemental” Sunday night.

    San Francisco FBI agent Elvis Chan pressured former Twitter trust and safety chief Yoel Roth in July 2020 for more information about how they prevented bad actors from using the platform, according to screengrabs of email correspondence posted by Taibbi.

    Chan was not satisfied with Twitter’s indication that it “had not observed much recent activity from official propaganda actors on your platform,” the emails show.

    Roth, in return, commented on the persistence of the agency, stating that he was “perplexed” by the probing inquiry.



    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on December 21, 2022, 06:07:18 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on December 21, 2022, 12:06:21 PM
    Clearly CIA & FBI are anti Free Speech & Anti America

    Both should be disbanded.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 16, 2023, 06:18:18 AM
    Ex-Virginia police chief, cops accused of covering up sex-trafficking ring, procuring prostitutes: reports
    Fox News via MSN ^ | 15-Jan-23 | Danielle Wallace
    Posted on 1/16/2023, 3:46:36 AM by Erik Latranyi

    The former police chief of Fairfax County, Virginia, and three ex-officers are on trial for allegedly covering up a sex trafficking ring, as one of the victims – an illegal immigrant – took the stand accusing the four law enforcement members of being clients of the prostitution enterprise they allegedly allowed to operate.

    A federal jury in Alexandria, Va., this week heard testimony from a woman, identified as Jane Doe, during a civil trial against four former members of the Fairfax County Police Department: the former Chief Edwin Roessler, James Baumstark, a former captain who is now the deputy chief in Asheville, North Carolina, and officers Michael Barbazette and Jason Mardocco, FOX 5 DC reported. None of the four men have been criminally charged, and a lawyer for Roessler and Baumstark dismissed the allegations as "preposterous."

    The woman testified that she was lured from Costa Rica by Hazel Sanchez to come to Virginia to work as a nanny and high-end escort who would spend time with wealthy clients but did not necessarily have to have sex with them. Instead, according to Sanchez’s 2019 guilty plea, women were forced to have sex with as many as 17 men a day, including being subjected to dangerous and degrading sex acts.

    (Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 18, 2023, 12:06:20 PM
    FBI's record of policing itself against China's spies is abysmal, new book SpyFail reveals
    American Thinker ^ | 01/18/2023 | Monica Showalter
    Posted on 1/18/2023, 1:41:13 PM b

    The news is full of tut-tutting about the terribleness of President Trump, and now Joe Biden, supposedly mishandling a few classified documents by having them in their possession, which is usually a matter of them wanting to write their memoirs, so far as we know.

    Now a new book came out yesterday by James Bamford, called SpyFail, telling us how little care the FBI has taken with its own classified documents.  Its clumsy maneuvers, bad personnel hiring practices, and misplaced priorities pretty well gave away the store of U.S. secrets targeting China.

    According to BusinessInsider, which ran a long and interesting book excerpt by Bamford himself:

    The FBI's website carries a stark warning. "The counterintelligence and economic espionage efforts emanating from the government of China," it says, "are a grave threat to the economic well-being and democratic values of the United States. Confronting this threat is the FBI's top counterintelligence priority." But far worse is the threat to the lives of scores of courageous Chinese agents who have volunteered to spy for the U.S. within their own country. Over the past decade, more than a dozen agents recruited by the CIA have been killed or imprisoned.

    And it now turns out that it was an alleged Chinese spy within the FBI's own counterintelligence division who may have been largely responsible. A spy whose activities went undetected for upwards of two decades, until his quiet arrest in 2020. Currently in a Hawaiian jail, his little-known case is wrapped in layers of secrecy as he awaits trail. Now in his new book, "SPYFAIL: Foreign Spies, Moles, Saboteurs and the Collapse of America's Counterintelligence," author James Bamford peels back many of those hidden layers.


    (Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 09, 2023, 10:29:52 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2023, 12:25:55 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 06, 2023, 12:00:12 PM
    The FBI interrogated a Delta pilot for an hour in his hotel bathroom, thinking he was part of a training exercise. He wasn't.
    Not The Bee ^ | Apr 6, 2023 | Staff
    Posted on 4/6/2023, 2:30:32 PM by Red Badger

    It's a time-honored rule: When staying in a hotel, always check to make sure you've got the right room number.

    That goes double if you're breaking down the door:

    NY POST Tweet:

    FBI agents handcuff, interrogate Delta pilot after entering wrong hotel room in training mishap https://trib.al/MIS6uvn

    A Boston hotel guest was awakened in the middle of the night by federal agents who barged into his room, handcuffed him, threw him into the shower and interrogated him for an hour — before they realized they had entered the wrong room.

    So it seems these consummate professional were engaged in a training exercise in which they were supposed to barge into the hotel room, toss a paid actor into the bathroom, and grill him for a while.

    I don't exactly know why this is part of the FBI's training repertoire. What exactly is this supposed to teach the agents? How to interrogate a dude on the payroll? There's no field application there. It's kind of beyond me.

    Also beyond me is how federal agents could do something as basically stupid as get the wrong room number. But they did:

    They pushed into the room, handcuffed the pilot and reportedly put him in the shower, according to the station.

    Then the agents interrogated the man, said to be in his 30s, for nearly an hour until they realized they had the wrong guy.

    You just have to imagine how that poor guy felt being on the receiving end of what he imagined was a legitimate FBI interrogation.

    And you just got to love picturing the other guy waiting in his hotel room for the FBI agents to show up, wondering where the heck they were.

    Let's hope this guy parlays his troubles into a hefty payout from the dunderheaded FBI!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2023, 10:08:24 AM
    As usual the killers and their accomplices have not been named and are enjoying paid vacation.


    Body camera footage shows police in New Mexico going to wrong address and fatally shooting homeowner

    Police released body camera footage and 911 audio on Friday of officers fatally shooting a homeowner after they responded to the wrong house for a domestic violence call.

    Farmington Police officers killed Robert Dotson, 52, when he answered the door with a handgun on April 5 at about 11:30 p.m., police initially said.

    The newly released videos show the unidentified officers immediately opening fire after Dotson opened the door with the gun. Officers opened fire again after a woman was heard in the video screaming. Police previously said the woman, Dotson's wife, returned fire to the officers. She was not injured.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/04/15/new-mexico-police-release-body-cam-showing-fatal-shooting-wrong-address-robert-dotson/11670184002/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 27, 2023, 03:12:32 PM
    Jordan says FBI should be kicked out of probes into US citizens flagged in FISA investigations

    Brooke Singman
    Thu, April 27, 2023

    House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan argued Thursday that the FBI should no longer play any role in looking into American citizens who get flagged during investigations into non-U.S. citizens, in light of evidence that a substantial portion of these FBI "queries" are made in error.

    The subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government Surveillance held a hearing on how to fix the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), and how this law "designed to protect Americans has been weaponized against them."

    Section 702 of FISA allows the government to conduct targeted surveillance of non-U.S. persons located abroad to acquire foreign intelligence information. When U.S. citizens are flagged as part of these investigations, the FBI takes over the process of querying them for possible security reasons.

    However, both Republicans and Democrats used the hearing to note that these FBI queries have become a problem. For example, Ranking Member Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., said that last year alone, the FBI used "personal identifiers" to query U.S. citizens "nearly 3.4 million times," while other lawmakers pointed out that up to 30% of those queries were conducted "in error."

    In the subcommittee hearing, Jordan questioned Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz and other witnesses about how many Americans have been queried as part of 702 investigations into non-U.S. citizens, but they said they had no answer.

    "And then approximately 10,000 people at the Justice Department have the ability to query this incidental collection database without any probable cause," Jordan said. "And we know, as Ranking Member Nadler said earlier, there were 3.4 million queries of this database and 30% of those were in error."

    Jordan said a "simple" solution would be to "require probable cause if you’re going to query this database on American citizens," something that witness Sharon Franklin, the chair of the U.S. Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, said she supported.

    "How about if we just get the FBI out of the business altogether—what if the FBI can’t query this database? " Jordan asked. "If the FBI can’t query this database on American citizens?"

    https://news.yahoo.com/jordan-says-fbi-kicked-probes-174853520.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 29, 2023, 02:28:40 PM
    Is the FBI censoring content on social platforms at the behest of a foreign regime?


    How The FBI Helps Ukrainian Intelligence Hunt ‘Disinformation’ On Social Media

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation pressures Facebook to take down alleged Russian “disinformation” at the behest of Ukrainian intelligence, according to a senior Ukrainian official who corresponds regularly with the FBI. The same official said that Ukrainian authorities define “disinformation” broadly, flagging many social media accounts and posts that he suggested may simply contradict the Ukrainian government’s narrative.

    “Once we have a trace or evidence of disinformation campaigns via Facebook or other resources that are from the U.S., we pass this information to the FBI, along with writing directly to Facebook,” said llia Vitiuk, head of the Department of Cyber Information Security in the Security Service of Ukraine.

    "We asked FBI for support to help us with Meta, to help us with others, and sometimes we get good results with that,” noted Vitiuk. “We say, 'Okay, this was the person who was probably Russia's influence.'"

    Vitiuk, in an interview, said that he is a proponent of free speech and understands concerns around social media censorship. But he also admitted that he and his colleagues take a deliberately expansive view of what counts as “Russian disinformation.”

    “When people ask me, ‘How do you differentiate whether it is fake or true?’ Indeed it is very difficult in such an informational flow,” said Vitiuk. “I say, ‘Everything that is against our country, consider it a fake, even if it's not.’ Right now, for our victory, it is important to have that kind of understanding, not to be fooled.”

    https://www.leefang.com/p/how-the-fbi-helps-ukrainian-intelligence
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2023, 10:32:22 AM
    FBI and CIA need to go away.   So far 2 elections in a row they rigged it. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2023, 10:40:34 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 16, 2023, 11:50:00 AM
    FBI and CIA need to go away.   So far 2 elections in a row they rigged it.

    Got to wonder who they are actually working for - it certainly doesn't appear its for
    The greater good of the American people.

    CIA seem to be a law unto themselves- wreaking havoc all over America
    & the rest of the world.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2023, 11:54:51 AM
    Got to wonder who they are actually working for - it certainly doesn't appear its for
    The greater good of the American people.

    CIA seem to be a law unto themselves- wreaking havoc all over America
    & the rest of the world.

    JFK laid it out specifically clear in his secret societies speech before he was killed. 

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2023, 11:57:43 AM
    MTG Calls Out DC US District Attorney For His Malicious Prosecutions Of Jan. 6th Defendants Including Matthew Perna (RIP)
    Twitter ^ | May 16 | Columbia Bugle
    Posted on 5/16/2023, 2:55:47 PM by RandFan

    @ColumbiaBugle

    Rep. @mtgreenee Calls Out DC US District Attorney Matthew Graves For His Malicious Prosecutions Of January 6th Defendants Including Matthew Perna

    -Matthew Perna had no criminal record.

    -Peacefully entered the Capitol through an open door.

    -Stayed inside roughly 20 minutes and never assaulted anyone or damaged any property.

    Right before his sentencing DA Graves intervened and asked the Judge to delay the sentencing so they could seek more prison time for Matthew Perna.

    Two weeks later Matthew Perna committed suicide. He was 37 years old.

    (Excerpt) Read more at twitter.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 16, 2023, 12:31:47 PM
    MTG Calls Out DC US District Attorney For His Malicious Prosecutions Of Jan. 6th Defendants Including Matthew Perna (RIP)
    Twitter ^ | May 16 | Columbia Bugle
    Posted on 5/16/2023, 2:55:47 PM by RandFan

    @ColumbiaBugle

    Rep. @mtgreenee Calls Out DC US District Attorney Matthew Graves For His Malicious Prosecutions Of January 6th Defendants Including Matthew Perna

    -Matthew Perna had no criminal record.

    -Peacefully entered the Capitol through an open door.

    -Stayed inside roughly 20 minutes and never assaulted anyone or damaged any property.

    Right before his sentencing DA Graves intervened and asked the Judge to delay the sentencing so they could seek more prison time for Matthew Perna.

    Two weeks later Matthew Perna committed suicide. He was 37 years old.

    (Excerpt) Read more at twitter.com ...

    If what you say about him is accurate, Matthew Perna should not have pleaded guilty to obstruction of Congress (a felony), and three related misdemeanors. He was not in custody while awaiting sentencing. He hung himself in the garage.

    Mark Roderick Aungst who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol  died by suicide. He was 47 years old.

    One other person who pleaded guilty to charges relating to the Capitol riot committed suicide.

    Four officers who responded to Capitol riot have died by suicide.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 16, 2023, 01:26:20 PM
    If what you say about him is accurate, Matthew Perna should not have pleaded guilty to obstruction of Congress (a felony), and three related misdemeanors. He was not in custody while awaiting sentencing. He hung himself in the garage.

    Mark Roderick Aungst who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol  died by suicide. He was 47 years old.

    One other person who pleaded guilty to charges relating to the Capitol riot committed suicide.

    Four officers who responded to Capitol riot have died by suicide.


    Why all the suicides ??
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2023, 01:41:37 PM
    The criminal government racket continues.


    'LEGAL THEFT': Texas police seized man's life savings. Now the state is putting his cash on trial

    Ameal Woods set off for Houston in May 2019 to buy a second tractor-trailer and expand his trucking business. His family had saved more than $40,000 to make the dream a reality, but as Woods drove through Harris County, red and blue lights flashed behind him.

    A sheriff's deputy accused Woods of following a truck too closely. The deputy didn't give him a ticket, but he did take all of Woods' cash.

    This week, the state of Texas is heading to court to make sure Woods never gets his life savings back. A deputy seized Woods' money in a process known as civil asset forfeiture. It's meant to punish and deter criminal activity by depriving criminals of property that is used in or acquired through illegal activities. But critics say it's often abused by police and prosecutors and treats anyone who carries a large amount of cash as guilty.

    The deputy said Woods' cash was connected to drugs, but he was never ticketed, cited or arrested for a crime, argue lawyers for the nonprofit Institute for Justice, which is representing the Mississippi native.

    The trial starts Monday in Harris County – four years and one day after the seizure – in State of Texas v. Approximately $41,680.00. Under civil asset forfeiture, the seized cash is on trial, no criminal conviction is required. The government just has to prove that the property was linked to criminal activity, Tully said.

    "I think it is fair to call this practice legal theft," he said, adding that the courts have means of seizing money from those convicted of crimes, such as requiring them to pay restitution to victims.

    The state argues there was probable cause to seize the cash and that the money was either gained from committing a crime or intended to be used to commit a crime, such as drug dealing or money laundering.

    The deputy who stopped Woods wrote in court documents that Woods "was acting overly nervous and uncomfortable and displaying signs of stress such as labored breathing" during the stop, did not state the exact amount of money he was carrying when asked, and had the money stored in two duct-taped bundles.

    "I was starting to believe that Woods was involved in criminal activity, particularly money laundering," the deputy wrote at one point, later adding that Woods could be "involved in the transport of money connected to drug trafficking."

    The Institute for Justice says Woods' case isn't unique and that police in Texas' most populous county regularly ask drivers if they have cash in their cars. The police department gets to keep whatever money its officers seize.

    "In the Harris County case, it went directly to the budgets of the sheriff's department and the district attorney's office," Tully said. "So, you have prosecutors and you have law enforcement who both personally profit from taking this money."

    At least 113 civil forfeiture petitions filed by county prosecutors since 2016 are "based on a form affidavit written by an officer who was not present at the time and place of seizure," the nonprofit law firm wrote in a court filing.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/legal-theft-texas-police-seized-mans-life-savings-now-state-putting-cash-trial
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 16, 2023, 01:48:51 PM
    FBI and CIA need to go away.   So far 2 elections in a row they rigged it.

    Alas they won't. Even in the worst and most obvious cases they never admit wrongdoing, they claim it was a mistake and they learned from it and took nebulous "corrective actions" (that somehow don't prevent the same crimes for reoccurring). Arrests, asset seizure, imprisonment and execution are only for the serfs.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 16, 2023, 01:53:54 PM
    Alas they won't. Even in the worst and most obvious cases they never admit wrongdoing, they claim it was a mistake and they learned from it and took nebulous "corrective actions" (that somehow don't prevent the same crimes for reoccurring). Arrests, asset seizure, imprisonment and execution are only for the serfs.

    And many here are still in denial! 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 16, 2023, 03:09:24 PM
    JFK laid it out specifically clear in his secret societies speech before he was killed.

    Can you point me in right direction to find these.
    Thanks 👊🏻

    Long time I've been baffled by the actions of CIA in particular
    As they seem anti American in so many ways.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 16, 2023, 04:36:12 PM

    Why all the suicides ??

    Some folks are unable to cope with the consequences of their actions. If I was convinced, I would be spending the next 20 years of my life in prison, I might commit suicide. Others are mentally fragile and something (we don't know what), pushes them over the edge.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 05:18:01 AM
    Can you point me in right direction to find these.
    Thanks 👊🏻

    Long time I've been baffled by the actions of CIA in particular
    As they seem anti American in so many ways.

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 10:54:00 AM
    Former CIA Acting Director Michael Morell Interfered in the 2016 and 2020 Elections...The deep state has been caught red-handed once again.
    National File ^ | May 16, 2023 | by CHARLES DOWNS
    Posted on 5/17/2023, 1:51:47 PM by Red Badger

    VIDEOS AT LINK..............

    A video that Hillary Clinton tweeted on October 31st, 2020, shows Ms. Clinton giving a 2016 speech in Ohio that accused Donald Trump of being a Russian asset. During her address, Clinton cited former CIA Acting Director Michael Morell’s assessment at the time that Vladimir Putin was manipulating Trump. In a speech in Ohio that took place just days before the 2016 election, Hillary Clinton said, “Michael Morell, who ran the CIA and grew up just a few miles from here, says Putin is manipulating Donald to make Donald the Kremlin puppet and it seems to be working. Donald has singled to Putin he will let Russia do whatever it wants…. And it gets worse the U.S. intelligence community has confirmed that Russia is directing cyber attacks in the United States to influence our election.”

    National File previously reported on an April 2023 interview where Freedom Caucus Rep. Matt Gaetz said that Mike Morell played a major role in crafting the intel letter that falsely stated that Hunter Biden’s laptop was Russian disinformation.

    “So people know who Mike Morell is former Deputy Director of the CIA, former Acting Director of the CIA,” Gaetz explained in the interview.

    “[Morell] wanted to be Joe Biden’s CIA Director, got a phone call from Tony Blinken who was representing the Biden campaign saying ‘Gee Mike doesn’t this Hunter Biden laptop look like Russian disinformation?’ Morell testifies that it triggers him to be the ring leader of an enterprise to put together a letter for the specific purpose of use of Joe Biden in the presidential debate,” Gaetz said.

    Morell and the rest of the Deep State actors used the same playbook in 2020 as in 2016 that goes by the overall false theme that “Russia will do whatever it takes to get Donald Trump elected President of the United States.” Many suspect the Deep State will use the same playbook against Trump again in 2024.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on May 17, 2023, 11:10:08 AM
    FBI and CIA need to go away.   So far 2 elections in a row they rigged it.

    Rigged! Lmfao. 🤣
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 11:23:48 AM
    Rigged! Lmfao. 🤣

    What would you call it? 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 11:27:52 AM
    Can you point me in right direction to find these.
    Thanks 👊🏻

    Long time I've been baffled by the actions of CIA in particular
    As they seem anti American in so many ways.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 12:07:26 PM
    Don’t Miss The Most Damning Durham Finding
    Federalist ^ | MAY 17, 2023 | BY: MARGOT CLEVELAND





    FBI/WIKIPEDIA/PUBLIC DOMAIN

    Special Counsel John Durham declared the DOJ and FBI’s hearts and minds corrupted.

    Monday’s special counsel report detailed extensive evidence of Department of Justice and FBI misconduct concerning the launch and handling of the Crossfire Hurricane investigation, and equally overwhelming proof of partisan motives and double standards. While the facts are critical of both the bureau and the DOJ, more scandalous is John Durham’s conclusion that the inexcusable targeting of a political opponent cannot be prevented absent a curing of the corrupted hearts and minds of law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

    Durham’s 306-page report opened with an executive summary capsulizing the results of the special counsel’s four-year investigation into the intelligence activities and investigations arising out of the 2016 presidential campaigns. While calling the findings “sobering,” and previewing the widespread misconduct on which the body of the report elaborated, Durham’s introductory comments emphasized he “does not recommend any wholesale changes in the guidelines and policies.”

    It is here that Durham made his damning indictment of the DOJ and the FBI when he stressed that “the answer is not the creation of new rules but a renewed fidelity to the old.” Ultimately, he continued, justice “comes down to the integrity of the people who take an oath to follow the guidelines.” And “the promulgation of additional rules and regulations to be learned in yet more training sessions would likely prove to be a fruitless exercise if the FBI’s guiding principles of ‘Fidelity, Bravery and Integrity’ are not engrained in the hearts and minds of those sworn to meet the FBI’ s mission of ‘Protect[ing] the American People and Uphold[ing] the Constitution of the United States.’”

    For the many details that followed — every misstep retraced and every inexplicable and unreasonable action condemned — that conclusion dwarfed them all. From the hurried opening of a full investigation of a presidential campaign based on unanalyzed and uncorroborated information to the fraudulent use of FISA warrants to the disregard of exculpatory evidence, Crossfire Hurricane represented a perfect storm of failures.

    But what should terrify the country is not the catalog of malfeasance the special counsel recited — for mistakes and even gross failures can be corrected — but that Durham warned of corrupted hearts and minds, unfaithful to the people and their Constitution.

    Telling too was that Durham opened and closed his 300-plus page report on the Russia-collusion hoax with homage to Attorney General Edward H. Levi. Appointed attorney general not long into President Ford’s term, Levi was “credited with restoring order after Watergate.” Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia would later say of Levi, he “brought the department through its worst years.”

    But it was not merely Watergate. As Scalia detailed, “it was a bad time not only because of the disgrace of Watergate, which had affected the department most deeply, but there were also problems at the F.B.I.” At the time, the FBI had been conducting domestic surveillance operations, and under Levi’s leadership, regulations were put into place to limit the bureau’s abuse.

    That history makes even more pronounced Durham’s introductory reminder that “the integrity of the people who take an oath to follow the guidelines and policies currently in place, guidelines that date from the time of Attorney General Levi,” is what ensures “the rule of law is upheld.”

    Likewise, Levi’s role in reforming the FBI and bringing the DOJ out of the shadow of the Watergate scandal gives profound meaning to Durham’s decision to close the special counsel’s report like this:

    ‘Nothing,’ former Attorney General Levi warned, ‘can more weaken the quality of life or more imperil the realization of the goals we all hold dear than our failure to make clear by words and deed that our law is not the instrument of partisan purpose.’

    For all the misconduct the special counsel exposed, it was Levi’s warning that Durham left us. And that, I fear, is the most significant revelation to come from the investigation: that after four years of inspecting the underbelly of the FBI, Durham saw a creature reminiscent of the one running wild under Nixon.

    Sadly, Durham’s words are unlikely to resonate with Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray. For they stand idly by while history repeats itself with the favoritism previously shown to Hillary Clinton now being bestowed on Hunter Biden and the Biden family. But the special counsel’s entreat could still succeed from the bottom up if the honorable and faithful men and women of the FBI join the ranks of whistleblowers and revolt against those leaders corrupted in heart and mind.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 17, 2023, 03:19:03 PM
    What would you call it?

    I must agree with the multitude of judges who dismissed the lawsuits claiming the election was rigged. Has any judge ruled it was rigged? 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 03:24:55 PM
    I'd call it not rigged.


    You are part of the cult.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 17, 2023, 03:29:37 PM

    You are part of the cult.

    And what 'cult' would this be? It is much more likely that by definition you are who is part of a political cult.

    https://medium.com/@gpavela/nine-signs-youve-become-part-of-a-political-cult-bb2cd8967eb3
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 17, 2023, 03:30:56 PM
    And what 'cult' would this be? It is much more likely that by definition you are who is part of a political cult.

    https://medium.com/@gpavela/nine-signs-youve-become-part-of-a-political-cult-bb2cd8967eb3

    Durham proved that this thing was a hoax.   

    And yet you still bury your head in the sand.  F you pedophile.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: AbrahamG on May 17, 2023, 03:59:56 PM
    Durham proved that this thing was a hoax.   

    And yet you still bury your head in the sand. F you pedophile.

    Come a little more unhinged why don't you.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 17, 2023, 05:44:53 PM


    Thanks
    👍🏻
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2023, 10:21:44 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 18, 2023, 12:51:48 PM
    Durham proved that this thing was a hoax.   

    And yet you still bury your head in the sand.  F you pedophile.

     ::) ::) ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 18, 2023, 01:01:11 PM

    Fixed:
    Ohio Representative Jim Jordan is facing backlash after a report found that three witnesses who testified before his "weaponization" committee have ties to former President Donald Trump and numerous conspiracy theories.

    The hearing came one day after the FBI said it revoked the security clearances of three agents who either attended the January 6 2021, riot at the US Capitol or espoused alternate theories about the Capitol attack, according to a letter the FBI sent the subcommittee on Wednesday, a copy of which was obtained by CNN. At least two of those agents – Marcus Allen and Steve Friend – were among the individuals testifying before the panel on Thursday.
    https://www.cnn.com/2023/05/18/politics/whistleblower-hearing-jim-jordan/index.html

    Whistleblowers my eye.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 18, 2023, 05:19:07 PM
    ::) ::) ::)

    Mueller also found there was zero evidence remember you senile old fool ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 19, 2023, 02:57:56 PM
    FBI and CIA need to go away.   So far 2 elections in a row they rigged it.

    Secret courts, secret police and warrantless surveillance in the "land of the free".


    FBI improperly used warrantless search powers more than 278,000 times in 2021, FISA court filing reveals

    The FBI improperly used warrantless search powers against U.S. citizens more than 278,000 times in the year ending November 2021, according to an unsealed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) filing.

    U.S. citizens covered in that improper effort included people involved in the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021; George Floyd protesters during the summer of 2020; and donors to a failed congressional candidate, the filing said.

    Section 702 of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) allows the government to conduct targeted surveillance of non-U.S. persons located abroad to acquire foreign intelligence information. When U.S. citizens are flagged as part of these investigations, the FBI takes over the process of querying them for possible security reasons.

    The court filing, which spanned 127 pages, was unsealed Friday by the FISC, but was filed in April 2022.

    In the year ending November 2022, the FBI conducted a total of about 204,000 queries, a 94% drop from the previous year's reporting period when it conducted nearly 3.4 million.

    The filing released on Friday detailed a number of the improper queries, including a batch query for "over 19,000 donors to a congressional campaign."

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fbi-improperly-used-warrantless-search-powers-278000-times-2021-fisa-court-filing-reveals
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 20, 2023, 11:29:41 AM
    95 year old women suffering from dementia are becoming a menace against the frail vulnerable cops worldwide it seems. Moreover, the police refuse to release bodycam footage and the "Police Commissioner" even states she doesn't need to see it.


    Outcry as Australian police Taser 95-year-old care home resident

    An elderly Australian woman with dementia is in hospital with life-threatening injuries after being Tasered by police at a care home.

    Officers were called to Yallambee Lodge in Cooma, New South Wales (NSW), after reports that 95-year-old Clare Nowland was carrying a knife.

    The early morning incident has sparked outcry, over what advocates say was a disproportionate response.

    The New South Wales police chief has said an investigation is under way.

    Ms Nowland was found "armed" with a steak knife at the care home - which is in the town of Cooma about 114km (71 miles) south of Canberra - in the early hours of Wednesday morning, Assistant Police Commissioner Peter Cotter told media on Friday.

    Two officers and care home staff tried to de-escalate the situation, before she began approaching police - "it is fair to say at a slow pace" - and was Tasered.

    "She had a walking frame. But she had a knife," he said.

    Family friend Andrew Thaler claimed Ms Nowland was struck twice - in the chest and the back - before she fell, suffering a fractured skull and a serious brain bleed.

    Her family are already grieving as they do not expect her to survive
    , he told BBC News.

    Australian police say they will not release bodycam footage of the moment an elderly woman with dementia was Tasered by an officer. NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said she was "not sure" why there were calls for the footage to be released.

    "I am not sure why they want to see it," she told reporters at a press conference.

    "Body-worn video is subject to legislative requirements around the surveillance devices act and other things, so it is not routine and we don't intend to release it, unless there is a process at the end of this that would allow it to be released."

    Ms Webb said she had not seen the video but had heard audio from the footage. She said she does not "see it necessary" for her to view it.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65642974
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 21, 2023, 05:43:12 AM
    95 year old women suffering from dementia are becoming a menace against the frail vulnerable cops worldwide it seems. Moreover, the police refuse to release bodycam footage and the "Police Commissioner" even states she doesn't need to see it.


    Outcry as Australian police Taser 95-year-old care home resident

    An elderly Australian woman with dementia is in hospital with life-threatening injuries after being Tasered by police at a care home.

    Officers were called to Yallambee Lodge in Cooma, New South Wales (NSW), after reports that 95-year-old Clare Nowland was carrying a knife.

    The early morning incident has sparked outcry, over what advocates say was a disproportionate response.

    The New South Wales police chief has said an investigation is under way.

    Ms Nowland was found "armed" with a steak knife at the care home - which is in the town of Cooma about 114km (71 miles) south of Canberra - in the early hours of Wednesday morning, Assistant Police Commissioner Peter Cotter told media on Friday.

    Two officers and care home staff tried to de-escalate the situation, before she began approaching police - "it is fair to say at a slow pace" - and was Tasered.

    "She had a walking frame. But she had a knife," he said.

    Family friend Andrew Thaler claimed Ms Nowland was struck twice - in the chest and the back - before she fell, suffering a fractured skull and a serious brain bleed.

    Her family are already grieving as they do not expect her to survive
    , he told BBC News.

    Australian police say they will not release bodycam footage of the moment an elderly woman with dementia was Tasered by an officer. NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said she was "not sure" why there were calls for the footage to be released.

    "I am not sure why they want to see it," she told reporters at a press conference.

    "Body-worn video is subject to legislative requirements around the surveillance devices act and other things, so it is not routine and we don't intend to release it, unless there is a process at the end of this that would allow it to be released."

    Ms Webb said she had not seen the video but had heard audio from the footage. She said she does not "see it necessary" for her to view it.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65642974


    WTF !! The cop that Tasered her should be Tasered 100x & then kicked out,
    as for the Police Cover up of not wanting to release the video footage,
    Utter Scumbag Khvnts.
    FFS a 95 yr old woman with zimmer frame & they cannot deal with her.

    Disgusting
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: SOMEPARTS on May 21, 2023, 12:16:47 PM
    "In a unanimous decision, the US Supreme Court ruled last week that it's legal for the IRS to secretly obtain the bank records of third parties who are not under investigation, when seeking a summons for banking records believed to be relevant to the tax delinquency of another person."



    Understand that the burden of innocence has changed in less than a decade. Now it's totally fine to go and look for crimes that people have not committed. This is just another way to target those who are on the "bad list". The Bolsheviks would blush.


    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/supreme-court-irs-can-obtain-bank-records-3rd-parties-not-under-investigation
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 23, 2023, 11:08:29 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on May 23, 2023, 01:06:48 PM
    Mueller also found there was zero evidence remember you senile old fool ?

    The Mueller Report did not find any evidence of collusion, but did find two main efforts by the Russians to interfere in the 2016 presidential campaign, (according to William Barr's conclusions).

    "...according to a summary of the conclusions delivered by the - Attorney General William Barr to the Congress. But one of the key questions of Robert Mueller's investigation was into the nature of Russian interference in the 2016 election."

    https://www.npr.org/2019/03/24/706385781/mueller-report-finds-evidence-of-russian-collusion
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 24, 2023, 12:36:40 PM
    http://thehill.com/opinion/criminal-justice/4017284-durham-report-the-fbi-is-as-bad-as-you-feared-maybe-worse

    "Recall that the Mueller report, from Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller, looked into whether there were Russian government efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election, including if there were any coordinated efforts with members of the Trump campaign. Mueller found no such evidence." 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 24, 2023, 07:58:26 PM
    95 year old women suffering from dementia are becoming a menace against the frail vulnerable cops worldwide it seems. Moreover, the police refuse to release bodycam footage and the "Police Commissioner" even states she doesn't need to see it.


    Outcry as Australian police Taser 95-year-old care home resident

    An elderly Australian woman with dementia is in hospital with life-threatening injuries after being Tasered by police at a care home.

    Officers were called to Yallambee Lodge in Cooma, New South Wales (NSW), after reports that 95-year-old Clare Nowland was carrying a knife.

    The early morning incident has sparked outcry, over what advocates say was a disproportionate response.

    The New South Wales police chief has said an investigation is under way.

    Ms Nowland was found "armed" with a steak knife at the care home - which is in the town of Cooma about 114km (71 miles) south of Canberra - in the early hours of Wednesday morning, Assistant Police Commissioner Peter Cotter told media on Friday.

    Two officers and care home staff tried to de-escalate the situation, before she began approaching police - "it is fair to say at a slow pace" - and was Tasered.

    "She had a walking frame. But she had a knife," he said.

    Family friend Andrew Thaler claimed Ms Nowland was struck twice - in the chest and the back - before she fell, suffering a fractured skull and a serious brain bleed.

    Her family are already grieving as they do not expect her to survive
    , he told BBC News.

    Australian police say they will not release bodycam footage of the moment an elderly woman with dementia was Tasered by an officer. NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said she was "not sure" why there were calls for the footage to be released.

    "I am not sure why they want to see it," she told reporters at a press conference.

    "Body-worn video is subject to legislative requirements around the surveillance devices act and other things, so it is not routine and we don't intend to release it, unless there is a process at the end of this that would allow it to be released."

    Ms Webb said she had not seen the video but had heard audio from the footage. She said she does not "see it necessary" for her to view it.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65642974

    The poor old woman died. Her attacker gets paid vacation as usual.

    95-year-old woman Tasered by police in Australia dies

    A 95-year-old woman who was Tasered by police at an Australian care home, sparking a public outcry, has died.

    Clare Nowland was critically injured after police responded to reports she was wandering around the home with a steak knife at about 04:00 last Wednesday.

    New South Wales Police (NSW) said she died "surrounded by family and loved ones".

    The officer who Tasered Mrs Nowland has been charged with assault. The 33-year-old senior constable will face court in early July on charges of recklessly causing grievous bodily harm, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, and common assault. He remains suspended from duty with pay while investigations continue.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65696475
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on May 24, 2023, 09:21:38 PM
    The poor old woman died. Her attacker gets paid vacation as usual.

    95-year-old woman Tasered by police in Australia dies

    A 95-year-old woman who was Tasered by police at an Australian care home, sparking a public outcry, has died.

    Clare Nowland was critically injured after police responded to reports she was wandering around the home with a steak knife at about 04:00 last Wednesday.

    New South Wales Police (NSW) said she died "surrounded by family and loved ones".

    The officer who Tasered Mrs Nowland has been charged with assault. The 33-year-old senior constable will face court in early July on charges of recklessly causing grievous bodily harm, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, and common assault. He remains suspended from duty with pay while investigations continue.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65696475

    Sad sad news

    That scumbag cop should be up on murder charges .
    I'm sure his girlfriends & senior Scumbags will do all they can to
    Cover for him. 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬

    If it were my mother/ grandmother he'd be a Hunted man.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2023, 05:32:44 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 26, 2023, 11:27:50 AM


    (https://compote.slate.com/images/2afa6536-4016-44fa-958c-ecff8c38d5f1.jpeg?width=780&height=520&rect=1560x1040&offset=0x0)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on May 26, 2023, 11:50:27 AM
    Supreme Court sides with woman after county sold her condo over tax bill, keeping all the money
    CBS ^ | 5/26/23
    Posted on 5/26/2023, 2:28:04 PM by EBH

    The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday in favor of a 94-year-old Minneapolis woman, giving her a new chance to recoup some money after her county kept the entire $40,000 when it sold her condominium over a small unpaid tax bill.

    The justices ruled that Hennepin County in Minnesota violated the constitutional rights of the woman, Geraldine Tyler, by taking her property without paying "just compensation."

    "The County had the power to sell Tyler's home to recover the unpaid property taxes. But it could not use the toehold of the tax debt to confiscate more property than was due," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court.

    Tyler, who now lives in an apartment building for older people, owed $2,300 in unpaid taxes, plus interest and penalties totaling $15,000, when the county took the title to her one-bedroom apartment in 2015. The county said she did nothing to keep her residence and the apartment sold the next year.

    "Today's decision is a major victory for property rights in the United States," Christina Martin, the PLF attorney who argued the case before the Court, said in a statement. "This decision affirms that property rights are fundamental and don't depend solely on state law. The Court's ruling makes clear that home equity theft is not only unjust, but unconstitutional."

    (Excerpt) Read more at cbsnews.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on May 31, 2023, 04:57:38 PM
    I doubt the coward of Broward will be punished as he deserves. The Supreme Court, along with inventing the ridiculous concept of "qualified immunity", has previously ruled that police have no duty to protect and in the rare cases cops end up in court they are usually treated very leniently.


    Parkland officer accused of failing to confront school shooter faces trial

    Jury selection is set to begin Wednesday in the trial of a former school resource officer charged with felony child neglect for allegedly failing to confront the Parkland school shooter.

    Scot Peterson was assigned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas in Parkland as a school resource officer when a gunman opened fire at the South Florida high school on Feb. 14, 2018, killing 14 students and three staff members.

    Peterson, 60, was terminated from his position and charged with multiple counts of child neglect in 2019 after an internal investigation found that he retreated while students were under attack.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/parkland-officer-accused-failing-confront-school-shooter-faces/story?id=99702049
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 06, 2023, 10:59:37 PM
    The tiktok generation.

    Nearly a Third of Gen Z Favors the Government Installing Surveillance Cameras in Homes

    In a newly released Cato Institute 2023 Central Bank Digital Currency National Survey of 2,000 Americans, we asked respondents whether they “favor or oppose the government installing surveillance cameras in every household to reduce domestic violence, abuse, and other illegal activity.” Not surprisingly, few Americans—only 14 percent—support this idea. Three‐​fourths (75 percent) would oppose government surveillance cameras in homes, including 68 percent who “strongly oppose,” while 10% don’t have an opinion either way.

    However, Americans under the age of 30 stand out when it comes to 1984‐​style in‐​home government surveillance cameras. 3 in 10 (29 percent) Americans under 30 favor “the government installing surveillance cameras in every household” in order to “reduce domestic violence, abuse, and other illegal activity.” Support declines with age, dropping to 20 percent among 30–44 year olds and dropping considerably to 6 percent among those over the age of 45.

    We don’t know how much of this preference for security over privacy or freedom is something unique to this generation (a cohort effect) or simply the result of youth (age effect). However, there is reason to think part of this is generational. Americans over age 45 have vastly different attitudes on in‐​home surveillance cameras than those who are younger. These Americans were born in or before 1978. Thus the very youngest were at least 11 before the Berlin Wall fell. Being raised during the Cold War amidst regular news reports of the Soviet Union surveilling their own people may have demonstrated to Americans the dangers of giving the government too much power to monitor people. Young people today are less exposed to these types of examples and thus less aware of the dangers of expansive government power.

    It is also possible that increased support for government surveillance among the young has common roots with what Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt describe in the Coddling of the American Mind: young people seem more willing to prioritize safety (from possible violence or hurtful words) over ensuring robust freedom (from government surveillance or to speak freely).

    https://www.cato.org/blog/nearly-third-gen-z-favors-home-government-surveillance-cameras-1
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Moontrane on June 06, 2023, 11:45:21 PM
    I doubt the coward of Broward will be punished as he deserves. The Supreme Court, along with inventing the ridiculous concept of "qualified immunity", has previously ruled that police have no duty to protect and in the rare cases cops end up in court they are usually treated very leniently.


    Parkland officer accused of failing to confront school shooter faces trial

    Jury selection is set to begin Wednesday in the trial of a former school resource officer charged with felony child neglect for allegedly failing to confront the Parkland school shooter.

    Scot Peterson was assigned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas in Parkland as a school resource officer when a gunman opened fire at the South Florida high school on Feb. 14, 2018, killing 14 students and three staff members.

    Peterson, 60, was terminated from his position and charged with multiple counts of child neglect in 2019 after an internal investigation found that he retreated while students were under attack.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/parkland-officer-accused-failing-confront-school-shooter-faces/story?id=99702049

    Going from memory here, but I recall that a bunch of business owners sued the LAPD for pulling back after the Rodney King riots started, but they lost.

    That Florida officer AND the three sheriff deputies that arrived should all get inoperable and painful brain, stomach, and colon cancers.

    I don't see a criminal case, though.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 09, 2023, 12:55:51 PM
    Police Kill Couple's Dog After Being Sent to Wrong Home
    Newsweek ^ | GERRARD KAONGA ON 6/07/23 | GERRARD KAONGA ON 6/07/23
    Posted on 6/9/2023, 1:49:40 PM by nickcarraway

    Police in Waco have apologised after shooting and killing a Texas couple's dog after being directed to the wrong house after a 911 call.

    The black Labrador, Finn, was shot by police last Saturday after the dog "acted aggressively" towards police and lunged at an officer, according to the department.

    The dog's owners, couple Cassandra Page and Matt Vasquez, have disputed this claim by the police however. Vasquez has said it is "absolutely incorrect" Finn was aggressive and said the dog was just curious about the officers, according to a Waco Tribune-Herald report.

    The couple are now considering legal action against the Waco Police Department and have asked for body-cam footage of the incident to get a greater understanding of what happened, according to the newspaper.

    Page described Finn as good natured, light-hearted, curious and very loyal. She also said the couple have barely slept or eaten since the incident.

    The police department ended up at the wrong address after its dispatch system autocorrected an address in the 3200 block of North 20th A Street.

    A woman had called 911 reporting a burglary in progress at this address. However police arrived one street over at the 3200 block of North 20th Street. The police clarified in a statement that due to the autocorrect, the "A" in "A Street" was removed.

    "Our officers acted in good faith to the dispatched address. When officers arrived at the 3200 Block of N. 20th, they saw the backdoor ajar which corroborated information received in the initial call," the Waco Police Department said.

    "Officers announced their presence, and shortly thereafter multiple dogs came toward officers who retreated. One dog who acted more aggressively lunged at our officer, retreated, and then lunged at the officer again.

    (Excerpt) Read more at newsweek.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 12, 2023, 02:41:38 PM
    U.S. Spy Agencies Buy Vast Quantities of Americans’ Personal Data, U.S. Says

    The vast amount of Americans’ personal data available for sale has provided a rich stream of intelligence for the U.S. government but created significant threats to privacy, according to a newly released report by the U.S.’s top spy agency.

    Commercially available information, or CAI, has grown in such scale that it has begun to replicate the results of intrusive surveillance techniques once used on a more targeted and limited basis, the report found.

    “In a way that far fewer Americans seem to understand, and even fewer of them can avoid, CAI includes information on nearly everyone that is of a type and level of sensitivity that historically could have been obtained” through targeted collection methods such as wiretaps, cyber espionage or physical surveillance, the report concluded.

    The report was commissioned by Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines after Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.) requested that the intelligence community detail and make public how it uses commercially available data. Ms. Haines agreed to the request during her 2021 confirmation hearing. The report was completed in January 2022; it was released to the public last week.

    The report showed that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence appeared unaware which federal intelligence agencies were buying Americans’ personal data, Wyden said, reflecting the need for stronger oversight and transparency from within the executive branch. He said legislation also was needed to establish guardrails on U.S. government purchases, rein in data brokers that collect and sell the data and protect the data from being used by foreign adversaries. Like the U.S., other countries are widely thought to be acquiring commercial data sets for intelligence purposes, current and former U.S. officials have said.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-spy-agencies-buy-vast-quantities-of-americans-personal-data-report-says-f47ec3ad
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 13, 2023, 04:32:29 PM
    As much as I'm not a fan of bible thumpers and street preachers, this is insane. These cops should have been forcefully detained and arrested and thrown in prison.


    Man arrested while citing Bible verse in protest of Pride event, then video evidence sinks case

    Charges were dropped against a self-professing Christian "street preacher" who was arrested while citing the Bible in protest of an LGBTQ Pride event in Reading, Pennsylvania, authorities said.

    Damon Atkins was arrested June 6 for "disorderly conduct, engaged in fighting," but the charges were dropped after an official review of video evidence, the Berks County District Attorney's Office said in a press release.

    "The charges were withdrawn after the District Attorney’s Office reviewed the videos of the incident along with applicable case law," the statement said.

    Berks County Commissioner Christian Leinbach had told the Lancaster Patriot that he believed the arrest of Atkins was "unlawful" and "could open the City of Reading and their police department to legal action."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/man-arrested-citing-bible-verse-protest-pride-event-video-evidence-sinks-case
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 14, 2023, 04:47:51 AM


    How dare anyone talk bad about the LGBTQ!@#$%%^123&^BFRF654 Cult ! 

    As much as I'm not a fan of bible thumpers and street preachers, this is insane. These cops should have been forcefully detained and arrested and thrown in prison.


    Man arrested while citing Bible verse in protest of Pride event, then video evidence sinks case

    Charges were dropped against a self-professing Christian "street preacher" who was arrested while citing the Bible in protest of an LGBTQ Pride event in Reading, Pennsylvania, authorities said.

    Damon Atkins was arrested June 6 for "disorderly conduct, engaged in fighting," but the charges were dropped after an official review of video evidence, the Berks County District Attorney's Office said in a press release.

    "The charges were withdrawn after the District Attorney’s Office reviewed the videos of the incident along with applicable case law," the statement said.

    Berks County Commissioner Christian Leinbach had told the Lancaster Patriot that he believed the arrest of Atkins was "unlawful" and "could open the City of Reading and their police department to legal action."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/man-arrested-citing-bible-verse-protest-pride-event-video-evidence-sinks-case
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 14, 2023, 02:40:33 PM
    Don't expect riots or looting, the victim wasn't black. Of course the cops don't care about the assault or the law and they even protect the assailants by not releasing their names.


    Video shows a man held down by police in a Kansas City Walmart

    Dayton Borisouth said he was trying to do a good deed by helping his uncle jumpstart his car outside of a Kansas City, Kansas Walmart. He had no idea it would soon become the worst day of his life.Borisouth, who lives in KCK, said he ran inside the store on Parallel Parkway to purchase a frozen pizza to take home to his wife and 2-year-old daughter for dinner.

    What should have been a quick grocery grab soon turned violent when an off-duty Kansas City, Kansas police officer working security approached Borisouth, 24, as he was leaving self-checkout in early June. Instead of checking his receipt, Borisouth says the officer became aggressive, wrestling him to the ground and slamming his head into the floor.

    At that point 2 more on-duty Kansas City, Kansas officers arrived for back up. Things almost turned deadly when an officer placed his knee on the back of Borisouth’s neck, a restraint technique banned by many police departments after the death of George Floyd in 2021.

    https://fox4kc.com/news/video-kansas-city-kansas-police-officer-puts-knee-on-mans-neck-at-walmart/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 15, 2023, 12:18:33 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 16, 2023, 09:05:30 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 16, 2023, 09:31:12 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 20, 2023, 10:29:31 AM
    What could possibly go wrong?


    SAF Sues PA Sheriff to Stop Warrantless ‘Safe Storage’ Searches of Gun Owners’ Homes

    The Second Amendment Foundation today filed a challenge of Pennsylvania’s promulgated firearms regulation and its enforcement by the Pennsylvania State Police and Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, which includes warrantless searches.

    SAF is joined by Shot Tec, LLC and a private citizen, Grant Schmidt. They are represented by attorneys Joshua Prince and Dillon Harris, Civil Rights Defense Firm, of Bechtelsville, Pa. Defendants are Col. Christopher Paris, commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police (PSP) and Montgomery County Sheriff Sean Kilkenny, in their official capacities. The action was filed in the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

    The petition challenges Col. Paris and the PSP’s “interpretation, implementation and enforcement” of the firearms regulation “which is being enforced” by Kilkenny, according to the court filing. The petition alleges that Sheriff Kilkenny “has implemented a policy…which he contends, based on the PSP’s promulgation and implementation of (the regulation) permit him, in the absence of probable cause and a warrant and in violation of…the Pennsylvania Constitution, to come into those…homes or business.”

    Plaintiffs further assert this inspection enables the sheriff to impose sanctions against holders of state licenses to sell firearms “for not having ‘safe storage’” in the event of an emergency when the PSP has “failed to promulgate any regulations addressing what constitute ‘safe storage’ or sufficient safeguards…when the General Assembly only delegated to the PSP the ability to establish such standards.”

    “The State Assembly has never enacted a law allowing for warrantless searches of licensees, but the state police promulgated a regulation requiring licensees to submit to such searches, which are now planned by the sheriff’s department,” said SAF Executive Director Adam Kraut. “We believe there are grave constitutional issues involved in this scheme, particularly when an administrative agency simply waives an individual’s constitutional rights by implementing a regulation without any framework from the legislature. Equally troubling is the Sheriff’s assertion that he would revoke a license from and individual asserting their right to be free from unlawful searches and seizures. We have filed this petition to ensure constitutional rights are respected.”

    SAF founder and Executive Vice President Alan M. Gottlieb observed, “No statute should allow carte blanche regulations to be imposed by any law enforcement agency because of the inherent danger of overstepping legal authority and constitutional protections which must be protected in a free society. We’re seeking a remedy from the court to stop this, especially when warrantless searches are involved.”

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/saf-sues-pa-sheriff-to-stop-warrantless-safe-storage-searches-of-gun-owners-homes/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 20, 2023, 11:00:44 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 24, 2023, 04:47:42 PM
    "But I’m okay giving up some of that freedom".

    Well he can give up all of his freedoms, but since he's a cop he'll probably keep his freedoms and take them away from others.
    He goes on to say several other things such as:
    "Ultimately, law enforcement, we are the experts. We're the subject matter experts at protecting America."
    "Anything that we do, ultimately, we give up something to have that protection."
    "We are going to have to give up some things. And I think there are some things that we can give up for a safer community."




    Tulsa Top Cop: I’m a Second Amendment Guy…But Giving Up Some of That Freedom Is Fine

    Ultimately, I’m a Second Amendment guy. I own guns of course. But I’m okay giving up some of that freedom, right? We had to give up some of that freedom after 9/11. I’m okay with waiting three days, five days, or whatever to get my firearm if I go out and purchase another firearm. So I’m okay with a pause to allow for weapons to be purchased and allow the government and the gun companies to look at the background and do a thorough check before that gun goes to someone.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/tulsa-top-cop-im-a-second-amendment-guybut-giving-up-some-of-that-freedom-is-fine/

    https://www.publicradiotulsa.org/local-regional/2023-06-08/tulsa-police-chief-suggests-nation-transform-response-to-gun-violence
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on June 29, 2023, 03:55:30 PM
    A travesty but unfortunately not surprising, as the Supreme Court has shamefully ruled that cops have no duty to protect. Hopefully everyone shuns the Coward of Broward anywhere they see him but even then I doubt he'll care with a $104,000 annual pension.


    Florida jury finds former Parkland school resource officer not guilty on all counts

    A Florida jury has found former Parkland school resource officer Scot Peterson not guilty on all counts.

    Peterson faced seven counts of felony child neglect and was the first law enforcement officer in the U.S. to face criminal charges stemming from his alleged inaction during an active school shooting. He was also charged with three counts of misdemeanor culpable negligence in relation to the adults shot in the building. Additionally, he was charged with perjury for allegedly lying to detectives.

    Peterson would have faced prison time and a loss of his $104,000 annual pension if convicted of the child neglect charges.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-jury-finds-former-parkland-school-resource-officer-not-guilty-all-counts
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on June 30, 2023, 04:35:37 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 01, 2023, 01:11:52 AM
    Police lieutenant confirmed he put his 3-year-old son in jail cell for struggling with potty training

    A police lieutenant in Daytona Beach Shores, Florida, admitted to an investigator for the state’s Department of Children and Families that he and the child’s mother put their 3-year-old son in a jail cell on back-to-back days because the child was having trouble with potty training.

    He said he told his son that he was a cop and that he takes bad boys to jail who don’t follow the law, according to a video shared with Law&Crime on Thursday.

    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/police-lieutenant-confirmed-he-put-his-3-year-old-son-in-jail-cell-for-struggling-with-potty-training/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 03, 2023, 11:37:40 PM
    A travesty but unfortunately not surprising, as the Supreme Court has shamefully ruled that cops have no duty to protect. Hopefully everyone shuns the Coward of Broward anywhere they see him but even then I doubt he'll care with a $104,000 annual pension.


    Florida jury finds former Parkland school resource officer not guilty on all counts

    A Florida jury has found former Parkland school resource officer Scot Peterson not guilty on all counts.

    Peterson faced seven counts of felony child neglect and was the first law enforcement officer in the U.S. to face criminal charges stemming from his alleged inaction during an active school shooting. He was also charged with three counts of misdemeanor culpable negligence in relation to the adults shot in the building. Additionally, he was charged with perjury for allegedly lying to detectives.

    Peterson would have faced prison time and a loss of his $104,000 annual pension if convicted of the child neglect charges.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-jury-finds-former-parkland-school-resource-officer-not-guilty-all-counts

    I side with you on this one. Sometimes the job demands cops put their life on the line.. That's what has been expected since police reform in the last 100 years. Yes, it is absolutely scary, yes, you may die, but the entire job is founded on the principle you are willing to sacrifice your life for your fellow citizens. We all hope it never comes to that, but that is the expectation and right so. I was personally disgusted with his inaction. I've personally put my life on the line and was fortunate to have survived as have many of my ex co workers. So this cowardice pisses me and those who would have gone in tremendously
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Coach is Back! on July 03, 2023, 11:55:20 PM
    I side with you on this one. Sometimes the job demands cops put their life on the line.. That's what has been expected since police reform in the last 100 years. Yes, it is absolutely scary, yes, you may die, but the entire job is founded on the principle you are willing to sacrifice your life for your fellow citizens. We all hope it never comes to that, but that is the expectation and right so. I was personally disgusted with his inaction. I've personally put my life on the line and was fortunate to have survived as have many of my ex co workers. So this cowardice pisses me and those who would have gone in tremendously

    Unfortunately, it comes down to training. Unless you’re a full time tactical SWAT unit that trains almost everyday, you’re (or whoever) not ready to enter an active shooter situation. That being said, what little training a patrol cop or SRO has is almost useless UNLESS they keep up with ongoing training. Bottom line.

    Like Uvalde, this SRO was a coward and he was a coward because he was too lazy to train for his job and the possibilities of what could happen, as rare as it is.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on July 04, 2023, 12:13:50 AM
    Unfortunately, it comes down to training. Unless you’re a full time tactical SWAT unit that trains almost everyday, you’re (or whoever) not ready to enter an active shooter situation. That being said, what little training a patrol cop or SRO has is almost useless UNLESS they keep up with ongoing training. Bottom line.

    Like Uvalde, this SRO was a coward and he was a coward because he was too lazy to train for his job and the possibilities of what could happen, as rare as it is.

    Thank you for your well-respected input in the area of Law Enforcement protocol. Since at least 2000 Active shooter drills have been standard. Training is NOT or never has been an option for officers. You go.. and if you are a good officer you go with a positive attitude.

    The standard protocol has evolved over the years from waiting for at least 5 officers to arrive on scene to "Immediately upon hearing gunfire, take steps to engage the shooter". So while I get that you are trying to defend the officer, I applaud that because too little of that exists these days, that officer in that year, would have received enough training to engage the suspects.

    He would have and likely will be viewed by his fellow officers as a coward. And if I was a parent of a slain child I woud be outraged
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 21, 2023, 05:42:15 PM
    'Kansas two-step' highway patrol technique ruled unconstitutional for marijuana vehicle searching

    The Kansas Highway Patrol (KHP) has been ordered to stop its infamous "two-step" technique by a federal judge, who said it violated people's Fourth Amendment rights. The technique centered around vehicle searching for marijuana in Kansas from out-of-state drivers, mostly from Colorado and Missouri — states where pot is legal. It is illegal to possess marijuana in Kansas.

    In the order filed Friday, U.S. District Judge Kathryn H. Vratil wrote that patrol’s tactics in traffic stops violated the Constitution's Fourth Amendment, which protects individuals from "unreasonable searches and seizures." 

    The "two-step" is a technique, allegedly taught to officers by KHP Superintendent Herman Jones, where officers end a routine traffic stop, begin to return to their cruiser and then turn around to begin a separate effort to gain entry into a vehicle and search for marijuana.

    Since marijuana is illegal in Kansas, but legal in Colorado and Missouri, officers were often successful finding the drug and charging the driver.

    "The war is basically a question of numbers: stop enough cars, and you’re bound to discover drugs," the opinion, brought by the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas (ACLU) and Spencer Fane LLP, said. "And what’s the harm if a few constitutional rights are trampled along the way."

    The opinion said that the KHP "has waged war on motorists — especially out-of-state residents traveling between Colorado and Missouri on federal highway I-70 in Kansas." "All drivers on I-70 have moving targets on their backs," the opinion said.

    The plaintiffs, represented by the ACLU and Spencer Fane LLP, are Blaine Shaw, Joshua Bosire, Mark Erich, Samuel Shaw and Shawna Maloney. The individuals filed Shaw v. Jones in 2020 challenging KHP’s practice of routinely and illegally stopping and detaining motorists with out-of-state license plates and its use of the Two-Step maneuver.

    On Monday, they shared in a testimony Monday how they felt exploited and intimidated by KHP troopers.

    Maloney, who is from Colorado, recalled in her testimony of her fear after troopers used the tactic to search her family’s RV as they were on a cross-country vacation in March 2018. The predawn search on Interstate 70 turned up nothing illegal.

    Maloney said that the trooper gave her family a warning, then took a few steps back toward his vehicle before returning with more questions, dash camera footage shown in court showed. Eventually, the trooper said the family was being detained. A K-9 dog sniffed the RV’s exterior, and three troopers searched the interior.  Nothing was found and after about 40 minutes, the family was allowed to leave. Maloney said troopers damaged the toilet, dumped out clothes and left the bathroom door hanging off its frame, among other damage.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/kansas-two-step-highway-patrol-technique-ruled-unconstitutional-for-marijuana-vehicle-searching
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on July 29, 2023, 01:09:34 PM
    U.S. Spy Agencies Buy Vast Quantities of Americans’ Personal Data, U.S. Says

    The vast amount of Americans’ personal data available for sale has provided a rich stream of intelligence for the U.S. government but created significant threats to privacy, according to a newly released report by the U.S.’s top spy agency.

    Commercially available information, or CAI, has grown in such scale that it has begun to replicate the results of intrusive surveillance techniques once used on a more targeted and limited basis, the report found.

    “In a way that far fewer Americans seem to understand, and even fewer of them can avoid, CAI includes information on nearly everyone that is of a type and level of sensitivity that historically could have been obtained” through targeted collection methods such as wiretaps, cyber espionage or physical surveillance, the report concluded.

    The report was commissioned by Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines after Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.) requested that the intelligence community detail and make public how it uses commercially available data. Ms. Haines agreed to the request during her 2021 confirmation hearing. The report was completed in January 2022; it was released to the public last week.

    The report showed that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence appeared unaware which federal intelligence agencies were buying Americans’ personal data, Wyden said, reflecting the need for stronger oversight and transparency from within the executive branch. He said legislation also was needed to establish guardrails on U.S. government purchases, rein in data brokers that collect and sell the data and protect the data from being used by foreign adversaries. Like the U.S., other countries are widely thought to be acquiring commercial data sets for intelligence purposes, current and former U.S. officials have said.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-spy-agencies-buy-vast-quantities-of-americans-personal-data-report-says-f47ec3ad

    US Spies Are Buying Americans’ Private Data. Congress Has a New Chance to Stop It

    A "must-pass" defense bill wending its way through the United States House of Representatives may be amended to abolish the government practice of buying information on Americans that the country’s highest court has said police need a warrant to seize. Though it’s far too early to assess the odds of the legislation surviving the coming months of debate, it’s currently one of the relatively few amendments to garner support from both Republican and Democratic members.

    Introduction of the amendment follows a report declassified by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence—the nation’s top spy—which last month revealed that intelligence and law enforcement agencies have been buying up data on Americans that the government’s own experts described as “the same type” of information the US Supreme Court in 2018 sought to shield against warrantless searches and seizures.

    A handful of House lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats alike, have declared support for the amendment submitted late last week by representatives Warren Davidson, a Republican from Ohio, and Sara Jacobs, a California Democrat. The bipartisan duo is seeking stronger warrant requirements for the surveillant data constantly accumulated by people’s cellphones. They argue that it shouldn’t matter whether a company is willing to accept payment from the government in lieu of a judge’s permission.

    “Warrantless mass surveillance infringes the Constitutionally protected right to privacy,” says Davidson. The amendment, he says, is aimed chiefly at preventing the government from “circumventing the Fourth Amendment” by purchasing “your location data, browsing history, or what you look at online.”

    A copy of the Davidson-Jacobs amendment reviewed by WIRED shows that the warrant requirements it aims to bolster focus specifically on people’s web browsing and internet search history, along with GPS coordinates and other location information derived primarily from cellphones. It further encapsulates “Fourth Amendment protected information” and would bar law enforcement agencies of all levels of jurisdiction from exchanging “anything of value” for information about people that would typically require a “warrant, court order, or subpoena under law.”

    https://www.wired.com/story/ndaa-2023-davidson-jacobs-fourth-amendment/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 04, 2023, 01:52:57 PM
    Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Challenge to Asset Forfeiture Scheme Where Police Seize and Keep Cars, Cash & Homes of Innocent Owners

    The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal challenging a modern-day form of highway robbery which empowers police to seize and keep private property (cash, jewelry, cars, homes, and other valuables) they “suspect” may be connected to a crime.

    In Culley v. Marshall, The Rutherford Institute, ACLU, and Cato Institute joined in an amicus brief to argue against the government’s use of delaying tactics in asset forfeiture proceedings which make it difficult for individuals innocent of any wrongdoing to timely recover their property—especially cars and cash—seized by police who stand to profit from the forfeiture.

    Civil asset forfeiture is a practice where government agents (usually the police) seize private property they “suspect” may be connected to criminal activity, then whether or not any crime is actually proven to have taken place, the government keeps the citizen’s property, often divvying it up with the local police who did the initial seizure. Relying on the topsy-turvy legal theory that one’s property can not only be guilty of a crime but is guilty until proven innocent, government agencies have eagerly cashed in on this revenue scheme, often under the pretext of the War on Drugs. By asserting that someone’s property, a building or a large of amount of cash for example, is tied to an illegal activity, the government—usually, the police—then confiscates the property for its own uses, and it’s up to the property owner to jump through a series of legal hoops to prove that the property was not connected to criminal activity or that the owner had no involvement or knowledge of the criminal activity. But challenging these “takings” in court can cost the owner more than the value of the confiscated property itself.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/supreme_court_agrees_to_hear_challenge_to_asset_forfeiture_scheme_where_police_seize_and_keep_cars_cash_homes_of_innocent_owners
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 04, 2023, 08:24:55 PM
    About damn time.


    Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Challenge to Asset Forfeiture Scheme Where Police Seize and Keep Cars, Cash & Homes of Innocent Owners

    The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal challenging a modern-day form of highway robbery which empowers police to seize and keep private property (cash, jewelry, cars, homes, and other valuables) they “suspect” may be connected to a crime.

    In Culley v. Marshall, The Rutherford Institute, ACLU, and Cato Institute joined in an amicus brief to argue against the government’s use of delaying tactics in asset forfeiture proceedings which make it difficult for individuals innocent of any wrongdoing to timely recover their property—especially cars and cash—seized by police who stand to profit from the forfeiture.

    Civil asset forfeiture is a practice where government agents (usually the police) seize private property they “suspect” may be connected to criminal activity, then whether or not any crime is actually proven to have taken place, the government keeps the citizen’s property, often divvying it up with the local police who did the initial seizure. Relying on the topsy-turvy legal theory that one’s property can not only be guilty of a crime but is guilty until proven innocent, government agencies have eagerly cashed in on this revenue scheme, often under the pretext of the War on Drugs. By asserting that someone’s property, a building or a large of amount of cash for example, is tied to an illegal activity, the government—usually, the police—then confiscates the property for its own uses, and it’s up to the property owner to jump through a series of legal hoops to prove that the property was not connected to criminal activity or that the owner had no involvement or knowledge of the criminal activity. But challenging these “takings” in court can cost the owner more than the value of the confiscated property itself.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/supreme_court_agrees_to_hear_challenge_to_asset_forfeiture_scheme_where_police_seize_and_keep_cars_cash_homes_of_innocent_owners
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 04, 2023, 10:21:02 PM
    Unfortunately, it comes down to training. Unless you’re a full time tactical SWAT unit that trains almost everyday, you’re (or whoever) not ready to enter an active shooter situation. That being said, what little training a patrol cop or SRO has is almost useless UNLESS they keep up with ongoing training. Bottom line.

    Like Uvalde, this SRO was a coward and he was a coward because he was too lazy to train for his job and the possibilities of what could happen, as rare as it is.

    Just hush... You have NO clue what it's like to be a cop.. You repeat "swat" swat "swat".. They come from the ranks.. go through training and yes, more training and specialized training than the average Joe. But regular officers have trained on active shooters since at least Columbine. I've seen it evolve over the years from wait for the 1st 5 officers to immediately engage the perpetrator if you hear shots. 10-1 that coward had training but put himself above the lives of those inside. It had nothing to do with laziness because I have seen with my own eyes officers that braved the possibilty of being shot, that did what they needed to do. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 05, 2023, 02:35:43 AM
    Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Challenge to Asset Forfeiture Scheme Where Police Seize and Keep Cars, Cash & Homes of Innocent Owners

    The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal challenging a modern-day form of highway robbery which empowers police to seize and keep private property (cash, jewelry, cars, homes, and other valuables) they “suspect” may be connected to a crime.

    In Culley v. Marshall, The Rutherford Institute, ACLU, and Cato Institute joined in an amicus brief to argue against the government’s use of delaying tactics in asset forfeiture proceedings which make it difficult for individuals innocent of any wrongdoing to timely recover their property—especially cars and cash—seized by police who stand to profit from the forfeiture.

    Civil asset forfeiture is a practice where government agents (usually the police) seize private property they “suspect” may be connected to criminal activity, then whether or not any crime is actually proven to have taken place, the government keeps the citizen’s property, often divvying it up with the local police who did the initial seizure. Relying on the topsy-turvy legal theory that one’s property can not only be guilty of a crime but is guilty until proven innocent, government agencies have eagerly cashed in on this revenue scheme, often under the pretext of the War on Drugs. By asserting that someone’s property, a building or a large of amount of cash for example, is tied to an illegal activity, the government—usually, the police—then confiscates the property for its own uses, and it’s up to the property owner to jump through a series of legal hoops to prove that the property was not connected to criminal activity or that the owner had no involvement or knowledge of the criminal activity. But challenging these “takings” in court can cost the owner more than the value of the confiscated property itself.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/supreme_court_agrees_to_hear_challenge_to_asset_forfeiture_scheme_where_police_seize_and_keep_cars_cash_homes_of_innocent_owners

    Seriously WTF - The cops are behaving as bad as criminals. Unfurling believable !!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 05, 2023, 12:12:21 PM
    Seriously WTF - The cops are behaving as bad as criminals. Unfurling believable !!

    This has been going on for decades. The cops can often keep the money that they steal "seize" so they have a strong incentive to continue this criminal activity.

    But I am not too optimistic about the Supreme Court, they have regularly made shameful rulings to suit the government. They ruled previously that civil asset forfeiture is not unconstitutional, that cops have no duty to protect you, the internment of Japanese Americans was constitutional and of course they concocted the ridiculous concept of "qualified immunity" which to this days shields countless cops from being punished for their crimes. Maybe this iteration of the SCOTUS will see things differently.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 06, 2023, 02:01:11 PM
    This has been going on for decades. The cops can often keep the money that they steal "seize" so they have a strong incentive to continue this criminal activity.

    But I am not too optimistic about the Supreme Court, they have regularly made shameful rulings to suit the government. They ruled previously that civil asset forfeiture is not unconstitutional, that cops have no duty to protect you, the internment of Japanese Americans was constitutional and of course they concocted the ridiculous concept of "qualified immunity" which to this days shields countless cops from being punished for their crimes. Maybe this iteration of the SCOTUS will see things differently.

    Reading that its wrong on so many aspects, hard to believe that its all legal & above
    Board in a supposedly 1st world nation.

    Of course the biggest criminal gang is going to do everything to protect one
    Of their members. Its sickening & what you'd expect in a 4th world tin pot country.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 06, 2023, 09:39:12 PM
    Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Challenge to Asset Forfeiture Scheme Where Police Seize and Keep Cars, Cash & Homes of Innocent Owners

    The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal challenging a modern-day form of highway robbery which empowers police to seize and keep private property (cash, jewelry, cars, homes, and other valuables) they “suspect” may be connected to a crime.

    In Culley v. Marshall, The Rutherford Institute, ACLU, and Cato Institute joined in an amicus brief to argue against the government’s use of delaying tactics in asset forfeiture proceedings which make it difficult for individuals innocent of any wrongdoing to timely recover their property—especially cars and cash—seized by police who stand to profit from the forfeiture.

    Civil asset forfeiture is a practice where government agents (usually the police) seize private property they “suspect” may be connected to criminal activity, then whether or not any crime is actually proven to have taken place, the government keeps the citizen’s property, often divvying it up with the local police who did the initial seizure. Relying on the topsy-turvy legal theory that one’s property can not only be guilty of a crime but is guilty until proven innocent, government agencies have eagerly cashed in on this revenue scheme, often under the pretext of the War on Drugs. By asserting that someone’s property, a building or a large of amount of cash for example, is tied to an illegal activity, the government—usually, the police—then confiscates the property for its own uses, and it’s up to the property owner to jump through a series of legal hoops to prove that the property was not connected to criminal activity or that the owner had no involvement or knowledge of the criminal activity. But challenging these “takings” in court can cost the owner more than the value of the confiscated property itself.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/supreme_court_agrees_to_hear_challenge_to_asset_forfeiture_scheme_where_police_seize_and_keep_cars_cash_homes_of_innocent_owners

    Agree, this is an overreach and an embarrassment to most of the cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 06, 2023, 09:40:03 PM
    This has been going on for decades. The cops can often keep the money that they steal "seize" so they have a strong incentive to continue this criminal activity.

    But I am not too optimistic about the Supreme Court, they have regularly made shameful rulings to suit the government. They ruled previously that civil asset forfeiture is not unconstitutional, that cops have no duty to protect you, the internment of Japanese Americans was constitutional and of course they concocted the ridiculous concept of "qualified immunity" which to this days shields countless cops from being punished for their crimes. Maybe this iteration of the SCOTUS will see things differently.

    I think you are right. And I am glad the Supreme Court is looking into it.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 06, 2023, 10:00:26 PM
    Agree, this is an overreach and an embarrassment to most of the cops.

    Okay good to hear.

    Only did most cops stand up & challenge it or  just keep quiet & go along with it. ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 06, 2023, 10:31:36 PM
    Okay good to hear.

    Only did most cops stand up & challenge it or  just keep quiet & go along with it. ?

    No clue. Just went off the post.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 06, 2023, 10:37:36 PM
    No clue. Just went off the post.

    If you have No Clue,

    You said most cops found it an embarrassment??
    How did you reach that conclusion then ?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on August 06, 2023, 10:48:48 PM
    If you have No Clue,

    You said most cops found it an embarrassment??
    How did you reach that conclusion then ?

    Wow! That is pretty impressive! Good call! What
    I was commenting on, and didn’t bother to offer supporting information because frankly I didn’t think anyone cared but kudos to you

    So from about 2008- 2016 I found myself dealing with seizure laws. Not because I wanted to but because sometimes you’re assigned to jobs.
    During about four of those years I was privvy to the asset forfeiture numbers of a few high profile departments or organizations within our department. Highway Interdiction, Gang Unit and Narcotics..

    I erroneously based my response on real world attitudes among the rank and file officers of my department during that time over asset forfeiture laws. Forgive me if I spoke out of turn Illuminate
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 06, 2023, 10:59:01 PM
    Wow! That is pretty impressive! Good call! What
    I was commenting on, and didn’t bother to offer supporting information because frankly I didn’t think anyone cared but kudos to you

    So from about 2008- 2016 I found myself dealing with seizure laws. Not because I wanted to but because sometimes you’re assigned to jobs.
    During about four of those years I was privvy to the asset forfeiture numbers of a few high profile departments or organizations within our department. Highway Interdiction, Gang Unit and Narcotics..

    I erroneously based my response on real world attitudes among the rank and file officers of my department during that time over asset forfeiture laws. Forgive me if I spoke out of turn Illuminate

    I didn't say you spoke out of turn, I just asked questions to your answer.

    They're attitude in private, Hmmm okay - only they didn't have the balls or back bone to stand up
    & speak out ??

    Great - 🤦🏻‍♂️



    All it takes for evil to Prevail
    Is for good men to stand by & watch & say or do Nothing.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 07, 2023, 01:11:12 PM
    Treasure hunter accused FBI of a 'major cover up' claiming agents made off with missing $500M in Civil War gold in middle of the night after he found long-lost burial site
    daily mail ^
    Posted on 8/6/2023, 10:59:35 PM by algore

    A treasure hunter has accused the FBI of a 'major coverup' after it allegedly made off with $500million worth of buried Civil War gold.

    Dennis Parada believes he located a burial site around halfway up a mountain in western Pennsylvania laden with Civil War treasure, before the FBI dug up the goods under the cover of darkness.

    The detectorist claims he alerted authorities to the possible haul after ground-testing suggested the Dents Run site was filled with gold.

    The FBI then commissioned its own tests that suggested vast amounts of the metal could be below the surface.

    The agency claims that when it dug up the site in 2018, it came up empty.

    Parada insists the feds made off with the gold during a nighttime dig, depriving him of a hefty finder's fee.

    Warren Getler, co-author of 'Rebel Gold' and a former reporter who helped Parada identify the site, told The Wall Street Journal he had 'come to the unavoidable conclusion that the FBI did take the treasure under cover of darkness.'

    Parada said it smacked of a 'major coverup.'

    He and his son Kem, who together comprise the treasure hunters firm Finders Keepers, sued the FBI last year seeking enforcement of a Freedom of Information Act request.

    They now allege the FBI has failed to turn over certain records and doctored photos to conceal a night dig.

    Treasure hunters have long sought lost rebel treasure, but less attention has been paid to Union gold.

    Parada's interest was piqued by an article in Treasure magazine in 1974 that said a Union caravan with gold bars was ambushed in Elk County, Pennsylvania.

    (Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 09, 2023, 11:47:00 AM
    FBI Agent Who Spearheaded False ‘RussiaGate’ Trump Connection To Plead Guilty For Illegally Working For Russian Oligarch
    One America News ^ | August 8, 2023 | Brooke Mallory
    Posted on 8/9/2023, 2:32:09 PM by Navy Patriot

    Charles McGonigal, a former FBI agent who helped lead the investigation into Trump-Russia connections, is expected to plead guilty to charges of unlawfully working for a Russian oligarch.

    In an ironic turn of events, one of the individuals who worked tirelessly to take down former President Donald Trump by falsely accusing him of secretly collaborating with Russian officials and hackers was, in fact, the one engaging with influential Russians at the time.

    McGonigal, 54, a former top FBI counterintelligence agent based in New York, was charged in January with money laundering and violating United States sanctions by working for a Russian oligarch and business magnate named Oleg Deripaska.

    (Excerpt) Read more at oann.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 09, 2023, 02:40:32 PM
    FBI Agent Who Spearheaded False ‘RussiaGate’ Trump Connection To Plead Guilty For Illegally Working For Russian Oligarch
    One America News ^ | August 8, 2023 | Brooke Mallory
    Posted on 8/9/2023, 2:32:09 PM by Navy Patriot

    Charles McGonigal, a former FBI agent who helped lead the investigation into Trump-Russia connections, is expected to plead guilty to charges of unlawfully working for a Russian oligarch.

    In an ironic turn of events, one of the individuals who worked tirelessly to take down former President Donald Trump by falsely accusing him of secretly collaborating with Russian officials and hackers was, in fact, the one engaging with influential Russians at the time.

    McGonigal, 54, a former top FBI counterintelligence agent based in New York, was charged in January with money laundering and violating United States sanctions by working for a Russian oligarch and business magnate named Oleg Deripaska.

    (Excerpt) Read more at oann.com ...

    No doubt Pedo Pete will step in & appoint him to some high rank
    job going after Donald.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 25, 2023, 01:33:08 PM
    This happened in "the land of the free". Unless these uniformed criminals end up in prison and pay out of their own pockets, nothing will change.

    Rutherford Institute Calls Foul After Police Twice Arrest the Wrong Man and Hold Him in Jail for Three Days Before Verifying His Identity

    The Rutherford Institute is calling on the U.S. Supreme Court to hold police accountable for misidentifying and wrongly arresting an innocent man twice in five years, then jailing him for three days before taking a few minutes to verify his identity.

    Although David Sosa shares the same name as a man from another state named in an outstanding warrant more than 20 years old, he has a different date of birth, height, weight, and social security number, and did not have any tattoos, unlike the suspect listed in the warrant. Nevertheless, police failed to take the necessary, fundamental steps to confirm Sosa’s identity before arresting and jailing him. Weighing in before the Supreme Court in Sosa v. Martin County, Florida, The Rutherford Institute warns that if police are not held accountable for violating Sosa’s rights, then nothing will deter law enforcement officers from wrongfully arresting him over and over again or from committing similar reckless behavior toward other innocent citizens.

    “What this case shows is that we have no real due process,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “If the powers-that-be want to lock you up, then you’ll be locked up, whether you’re innocent or guilty, with no access to the protections our Constitution provides.”

    In 2014, David Sosa was stopped for a traffic violation by a sheriff’s deputy for Martin County, Florida, which is where Sosa lived. Sosa worked in research and development of airplane engines. The deputy discovered an arrest warrant for a “David Sosa” from 22 years earlier out of Texas for selling crack cocaine. Even though Sosa had a different date of birth, height, weight, and social security number, and did not have any tattoos as listed for the accused in the warrant, the deputy arrested him anyway. After three hours, the sheriff’s department confirmed Sosa was not the same person named in the warrant and released him.

    However, 4 years later, another deputy from the same department made a traffic stop on Sosa and found the same outstanding warrant. Once again, despite the identifying information on the warrant not matching his description and Sosa informing the deputy about the previous misidentification incident, the deputy arrested Sosa on the same warrant. But this time the jail held Sosa for three days before taking just a few minutes to run his fingerprints to confirm his identity and release him.

    After his release, Sosa sued the sheriff’s department for violations of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be free from unreasonable seizure and to not be deprived of liberty without due process, but the trial court ruled that the deputies had not violated Sosa’s rights and dismissed the case. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the case, likewise ruling that Sosa’s constitutional rights were not violated. Sosa and The Rutherford Institute have now asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case and reverse the lower court rulings to hold the police accountable.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/rutherford_institute_calls_foul_after_police_twice_arrest_the_wrong_man_and_hold_him_in_jail_for_three_days_before_verifying_his_identity

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on August 25, 2023, 07:55:39 PM
    This happened in "the land of the free". Unless these uniformed criminals end up in prison and pay out of their own pockets, nothing will change.

    Rutherford Institute Calls Foul After Police Twice Arrest the Wrong Man and Hold Him in Jail for Three Days Before Verifying His Identity

    The Rutherford Institute is calling on the U.S. Supreme Court to hold police accountable for misidentifying and wrongly arresting an innocent man twice in five years, then jailing him for three days before taking a few minutes to verify his identity.

    Although David Sosa shares the same name as a man from another state named in an outstanding warrant more than 20 years old, he has a different date of birth, height, weight, and social security number, and did not have any tattoos, unlike the suspect listed in the warrant. Nevertheless, police failed to take the necessary, fundamental steps to confirm Sosa’s identity before arresting and jailing him. Weighing in before the Supreme Court in Sosa v. Martin County, Florida, The Rutherford Institute warns that if police are not held accountable for violating Sosa’s rights, then nothing will deter law enforcement officers from wrongfully arresting him over and over again or from committing similar reckless behavior toward other innocent citizens.

    “What this case shows is that we have no real due process,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “If the powers-that-be want to lock you up, then you’ll be locked up, whether you’re innocent or guilty, with no access to the protections our Constitution provides.”

    In 2014, David Sosa was stopped for a traffic violation by a sheriff’s deputy for Martin County, Florida, which is where Sosa lived. Sosa worked in research and development of airplane engines. The deputy discovered an arrest warrant for a “David Sosa” from 22 years earlier out of Texas for selling crack cocaine. Even though Sosa had a different date of birth, height, weight, and social security number, and did not have any tattoos as listed for the accused in the warrant, the deputy arrested him anyway. After three hours, the sheriff’s department confirmed Sosa was not the same person named in the warrant and released him.

    However, 4 years later, another deputy from the same department made a traffic stop on Sosa and found the same outstanding warrant. Once again, despite the identifying information on the warrant not matching his description and Sosa informing the deputy about the previous misidentification incident, the deputy arrested Sosa on the same warrant. But this time the jail held Sosa for three days before taking just a few minutes to run his fingerprints to confirm his identity and release him.

    After his release, Sosa sued the sheriff’s department for violations of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be free from unreasonable seizure and to not be deprived of liberty without due process, but the trial court ruled that the deputies had not violated Sosa’s rights and dismissed the case. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the case, likewise ruling that Sosa’s constitutional rights were not violated. Sosa and The Rutherford Institute have now asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case and reverse the lower court rulings to hold the police accountable.

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/rutherford_institute_calls_foul_after_police_twice_arrest_the_wrong_man_and_hold_him_in_jail_for_three_days_before_verifying_his_identity

    Imbecilic cops playing at being god.

    They should be arrested & banged & made to pay out of their own pocket
    Compensation to him.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 30, 2023, 09:54:40 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on August 30, 2023, 12:55:53 PM
    The uniformed bozos arrested this poor guy claiming he murdered his girlfriend and charged him with a half-dozen crimes and threw him in jail for 3 weeks. As if grieving for his girlfriend's death wasn't enough, these scumbags accused him of killing her and rushed to arrest him and put out a BS press releasing lamenting "domestic violence". As it often happens though, facts prove cops wrong and her death was ruled a suicide. Now they're trying to cover up their laziness and crimes by claiming "there is an ongoing investigation".

    I hope the fella sues all the cops and prosecutors involved in this travesty but even then I doubt he will get anything. Even if he does, once again the taxpayers will foot the bill, not the cops.


    Murder charges dropped against jailed Colorado man after autopsy determines girlfriend's actual cause of death

    A Colorado man who spent more than three weeks in jail on murder and other charges has been cleared after the El Paso County Coroner's Office uncovered evidence that the girlfriend he was accused of strangling had actually hanged herself.

    Miles Kirby, a 29-year-old from the City of Fountain, told investigators on July 27 that he'd found his girlfriend, Joslyn Teetzel, hanging from a beam in their backyard shed.

    But they accused him of staging the scene, arrested him and charged him with a half-dozen crimes, including first-degree murder, tampering with human remains and destroying evidence, court records show.

    Kirby eventually posted $100,000 bond on Aug. 18 and was ordered to stay away from the children that he shared with Teetzel. Then on Monday, one week after a forensic pathologist ruled Teetzel's death a suicide by hanging, the case against him was dismissed.

    "If the Fountain Police Department just did the minimal amount of investigation before charging someone with first-degree murder, they would have found out that this was a suicide," Kirby's lawyer, Daniel Kay, said at a news briefing broadcast by the Colorado Springs-based KKTV.

    In addition to video evidence the coroner's office recovered that showed Teetzel going to the shed alone hours before her boyfriend went in the following morning, there was other evidence that she was suicidal, Kay said: journals, a prior hospitalization and a prior attempt.

    "So there was a wealth of information, if they just would've investigated the case and not rushed to the conclusion that Miles was guilty," he added.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/murder-charges-dropped-against-jailed-colorado-man-after-autopsy-determines-girlfriends-actual-cause-death
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on August 31, 2023, 06:00:06 AM
    Family of Theodore Deschler killed by FBI in pre-dawn raid demand answers saying law enforcement haven't explained why he was shot dead
    UK Dakily Mail ^ | 8/31/2023 | Alex Hammer
    Posted on 8/31/2023, 8:07:11 AM by fruser1

    A family is seeking answers after FBI agents killed their relative in a predawn raid, claiming the victim, a disabled vet, had been unarmed when he was shot.

    Previously, the suspect, 45-year-old Theodore 'Teddy' Deschler, was arrested as a suspect after a fatal stabbing at a Tennessee gas station in May - but as for why he was targeted this month by FBI SWAT agents, feds have so far kept silent.

    'Teddy was a 100% disabled veteran,' he added, speaking to the outlet on August 20.

    He went on to concede of his sibling - who reportedly served for eight years from 1996 to 2004 - 'He had problems. He had severe PTSD. He had depression but he was getting help for it, but this was senseless.'

    'He didn't have a weapon on him,' Russell recalled, a day before erecting an online fundraiser for what he bill as the 'severe destruction of [his] elderly Mothers home.'

    'He was just trying to get out of the house because it was filled with tear gas,' he claimed.

    'You couldn't see,' he continued, despite not being present at the time of the fatal shooting.

    He added: 'The height of the door and where Teddy was standing when they shot him and killed him, you couldn't see if he was armed or not.

    (Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 02, 2023, 04:59:31 PM
    He should have been paid way more (out of the cops' pocket) and the cops sent to prison.

    Notice how these gang members were fully aware of their crimes and even threatened to take away the man's child.

    But unfortunately most people don't have the time or money to go against criminal gangs with more money and resources, along with the fear of harassment and retaliation.


    Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment

    Delaware State Police have agreed to pay $50,000 to resolve a federal lawsuit filed by a man who said troopers violated his constitutional rights by preventing him from warning motorists about a speed trap.

    A judgment was entered Friday in favor of Jonathan Guessford, 54, who said in the lawsuit that police unlawfully prevented him from engaging in peaceful protest by standing on the roadside and holding up a small cardboard sign reading “Radar Ahead!”

    After Guessford raised a middle finger at troopers while driving away from an initial encounter, he was stopped and cited for “improper use of a hand signal.” The charge was later dropped.

    The cell phone video shows troopers approaching Guessford, who was standing in a grassy area next to the shoulder of Route 13 north of Dover. Douglas told Guessford that he was “disrupting traffic,” while Gallo, based on a witness report, said Guessford was “jumping into traffic.”

    “You are a liar,” Guessford told Gallo.

    “I’m on the side of the road, legally parked, with a sign which is protected by the First Amendment,” he told troopers.

    Dascham video shows Douglas twice lunging at Guessford to prevent him from raising his sign. Gallo then ripped it from his hands and tore it up.

    “Could you stop playing in traffic now?” Gallo sarcastically asked Guessford.

    As Guessford drove away, he made an obscene hand gesture at the troopers. Dashcam video shows Douglas racing after him at speeds of more than 100 mph in a 55 mph zone, followed closely by Gallo and Box.

    Box told Guessford he was engaging in “disorderly conduct” and opened the front passenger door of Guessford’s vehicle.

    “Take it to court. That’s what I want you to do,” Box replied after Guessford told troopers he was going to take legal action. Box also threatened to charge Guessford with resisting arrest.

    “We’re going to take you in. We’re going to tow the car, and we’ll call social services for the kid,” Box said, referring to Guessford’s young son, who was with Guessford and witnessed his profanity-laden tirade against the officers. “It’s not a threat, it’s a promise,” Box added.

    Box’s dashcam audio also captures his subsequent phone call with a supervisor, Lt. Christopher Popp, in which Box acknowledges that citing Guessford for his hand gesture is “pushing it.”

    “You can’t do that,” Popp tells Box. “That will be dropped.”

    “Yeah, it’s gonna get dropped,” Box replies. “I told (Douglas) it’s definitely going to get thrown out. … I said, ‘Ah, that’s not really going to fly, buddy.’”

    Douglas is heard saying that even if the charge would be dropped, it at least “inconvenienced” Guessford.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/delaware-man-police-blocked-warning-speed-trap-wins-50k-judgment-rcna103118
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Gym Rat on September 03, 2023, 07:29:11 AM
    Cops are some of the most brain dead losers in existence...

    The "great cop" is a rare occurrence...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 03, 2023, 12:04:51 PM
    He should have been paid way more (out of the cops' pocket) and the cops sent to prison.

    Notice how these gang members were fully aware of their crimes and even threatened to take away the man's child.

    But unfortunately most people don't have the time or money to go against criminal gangs with more money and resources, along with the fear of harassment and retaliation.


    Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment

    Delaware State Police have agreed to pay $50,000 to resolve a federal lawsuit filed by a man who said troopers violated his constitutional rights by preventing him from warning motorists about a speed trap.

    A judgment was entered Friday in favor of Jonathan Guessford, 54, who said in the lawsuit that police unlawfully prevented him from engaging in peaceful protest by standing on the roadside and holding up a small cardboard sign reading “Radar Ahead!”

    After Guessford raised a middle finger at troopers while driving away from an initial encounter, he was stopped and cited for “improper use of a hand signal.” The charge was later dropped.

    The cell phone video shows troopers approaching Guessford, who was standing in a grassy area next to the shoulder of Route 13 north of Dover. Douglas told Guessford that he was “disrupting traffic,” while Gallo, based on a witness report, said Guessford was “jumping into traffic.”

    “You are a liar,” Guessford told Gallo.

    “I’m on the side of the road, legally parked, with a sign which is protected by the First Amendment,” he told troopers.

    Dascham video shows Douglas twice lunging at Guessford to prevent him from raising his sign. Gallo then ripped it from his hands and tore it up.

    “Could you stop playing in traffic now?” Gallo sarcastically asked Guessford.

    As Guessford drove away, he made an obscene hand gesture at the troopers. Dashcam video shows Douglas racing after him at speeds of more than 100 mph in a 55 mph zone, followed closely by Gallo and Box.

    Box told Guessford he was engaging in “disorderly conduct” and opened the front passenger door of Guessford’s vehicle.

    “Take it to court. That’s what I want you to do,” Box replied after Guessford told troopers he was going to take legal action. Box also threatened to charge Guessford with resisting arrest.

    “We’re going to take you in. We’re going to tow the car, and we’ll call social services for the kid,” Box said, referring to Guessford’s young son, who was with Guessford and witnessed his profanity-laden tirade against the officers. “It’s not a threat, it’s a promise,” Box added.

    Box’s dashcam audio also captures his subsequent phone call with a supervisor, Lt. Christopher Popp, in which Box acknowledges that citing Guessford for his hand gesture is “pushing it.”

    “You can’t do that,” Popp tells Box. “That will be dropped.”

    “Yeah, it’s gonna get dropped,” Box replies. “I told (Douglas) it’s definitely going to get thrown out. … I said, ‘Ah, that’s not really going to fly, buddy.’”

    Douglas is heard saying that even if the charge would be dropped, it at least “inconvenienced” Guessford.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/delaware-man-police-blocked-warning-speed-trap-wins-50k-judgment-rcna103118

    Where's our Resident Cop defender
    See No Evil
    Hear No Evil
    Speak No Evil

    Ag007

    Those Scumbags should be Flogged Publicly & made to pay His compensation
    out of their pockets & Never be allowed to work as Cops again.
    Khvnts all of them.

    A fuck big criminal gang.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 05, 2023, 01:04:29 PM
    LEAK: Jack Smith to Indict Trump Again – Special Counsel Investigates Fundraising, Breach of Voting Machines
    Gateway Pundit ^ | Sep. 5, 2023 2:40 pm | By Cristina Laila
    Posted on 9/5/2023, 3:56:07 PM by Red Badger

    Special Counsel Jack Smith is gearing up to indict President Trump out of DC again, according to a new report by CNN.

    Jack Smith has expanded his investigation into Trump’s effort to challenge the 2020 election and is focusing on Trump’s fundraising efforts.

    President Trump raised millions of dollars after the 2020 election to investigate rampant Democrat vote fraud.

    Jack Smith is also investigating how the money was used to inspect the voting machines.

    A non-profit run by Sidney Powell hired forensic investigators to inspect voting machines in four swing states: Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Arizona.

    Fulton County DA Fani Willis indited Trump and 18 of his associates on similar charges of computer trespass for daring to look at the voting machines.

    CNN reported:

    Special counsel Jack Smith is still pursuing his investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election a month after indicting Donald Trump for orchestrating a broad conspiracy to remain in power, a widening of the probe that raises the possibility others could still face legal peril.

    Questions asked of two recent witnesses indicate Smith is focusing on how money raised off baseless claims of voter fraud was used to fund attempts to breach voting equipment in several states won by Joe Biden, according to multiple sources familiar with the ongoing investigation. In both interviews, prosecutors have focused their questions on the role of former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell.

    According to invoices obtained by CNN, Powell’s non-profit, Defending the Republic, hired forensics firms that ultimately accessed voting equipment in four swing states won by Biden: Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Arizona.

    Jack Smith indicted Trump on 37 federal counts in Miami in June.

    Trump was charged with 31 counts of willful retention of national defense information and 6 other process crimes stemming from his conversations with his lawyer.

    Walt Nauta, a Mar-a-Lago aide, was indicted along with President Trump as a co-conspirator.

    Last month Jack Smith hit Trump with 3 additional charges in the investigation into classified documents stored at Mar-a-Lago.

    The superseding indictment, filed in the Southern District of Florida, claims Trump was part of a scheme to delete security footage from Mar-a-Lago.

    Earlier this month Trump was hit with 4 counts in Jack Smith’s January 6 case up in DC: Conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of and attempt to obstruct an official proceeding, and conspiracy against rights.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 06, 2023, 10:30:41 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 07, 2023, 05:23:45 AM
    The FBI and its history of entrapment
    twitter.com ^ | KanekoaTheGreat
    Posted on 9/7/2023, 7:51:08 AM by RandFan

    @KanekoaTheGreat

    In 2012, Judge Napolitano reported that 17 out of 20 terrorist plots thwarted by the FBI were actually "planned, plotted, controlled, and carried out by the federal government itself."

    "The feds found young Muslim men. Loners who were bitter at America. They befriended them, cajoled them, and persuaded them...

    In all of these cases, agents worked undercover and portrayed themselves to the targets as Arabs of like un-American mind.

    In some cases, the feds used third parties to act as middlemen.

    The third parties were typically persons who had been convicted of crimes and who, in return for leniency at their own sentencings, were willing to work with the same feds who prosecuted them to help them entrap whomever else those feds were pursuing...

    None of this keeps us safe. All of this makes us less free, as any of us can be entrapped.

    We are fools if we praise the government for exposing a plot of its own creation and saving us from a danger that never existed..."

    Why do we pay the government to trick us into believing it is keeping us safe?

    (Excerpt) Read more at twitter.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2023, 11:13:47 AM
    Minority Report was way ahead of its time.


    Tech company boasts its AI can predict crime with social media policing while fighting Meta in court

    A tech company that boasts about its ability to use artificial intelligence to predict crime is in the midst of a privacy lawsuit with Meta, formerly Facebook, that wants it banned from the social media platform.

    The New York City and Los Angeles police departments, two of the U.S.'s largest police agencies, are among a growing list of law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and around the world to contract with Voyager Labs.

    In 2018, the New York Police Department agreed to a nearly $9 million deal with Voyager Labs, which claims it can use AI to predict crimes, according to documents obtained by the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project (STOP), The Guardian reported.

    The company bills itself as a "world leader" in AI-based analytics investigations that can comb through mounds of information from all corners of the internet – including social media and the dark web – to provide insight, uncover potential risks and predict future crimes.

    But Meta says in a federal lawsuit that Voyager Labs created at least 55,000 fake accounts on Facebook and Instagram to collect personal data "to uncover … behavior patterns," "infer human behavior" and "build a comprehensive presence" on their target(s).

    That includes 17,000 fake accounts after Meta revoked Voyager Labs' access after filing the federal lawsuit on Jan. 12.

    Essentially, Voyager Labs can use someone's social media history to retrace anyone's steps and potentially predict their next movements, according to Meta.

    An NYPD spokesperson told Fox News Digital in an email that it "uses social media analytics tools to aid personnel in uncovering information relevant to investigations and to address public safety concerns."

    That includes gun violence and "various other threats against people, places and events," according to an NYPD spokesperson, who specifically said the department "does not use features that would be described as predictive of future criminality."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/tech-company-boasts-its-ai-can-predict-crime-with-social-media-policing-while-fighting-meta-in-court
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 12, 2023, 12:33:45 PM
    Not only did the cops kill this poor woman but the scumbag laughing about her death is the vice president of the cop union. No surprise that union scum are the worst.

    Notice how pieces of shit like him treat people they are supposed to "serve and protect": "She was 26 anyway, she had limited value". I wonder how he'd react if one of his children or relatives was killed by a gang who then laughed and insulted the dead.

    Remember a former VP saying "Police officers in this country are the best of us"?


    Police officer laughs about woman struck and killed by patrol car in shocking bodycam video

    Shocking body cam footage shows a police officer laughing about a woman who was struck and killed by a patrol car in Seattle.

    Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, was killed in January on a crosswalk near her university campus after she was struck by a patrol car while police were responding to an overdose in the South Lake Union neighborhood.

    Seattle Police said the officer driving the patrol vehicle was responding to a priority-one call when the incident happened. The officer was going 74mph in a 25mph speed zone.

    Police ruled the incident was an accident, and returned the unnamed officer to duty shortly after.

    Authorities are now investigating bodycam footage released by Seattle Police on Monday from the incident which shows officer Daniel Auderer — who is also the vice president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild — insulting and laughing about the 23-year-old student.

    In the footage, Mr Auderer can be heard saying: “There is initially – he said she was in a crosswalk, there is a witness that said, ‘No she wasn’t,’ but that could be different, because I don’t think she was thrown 40 feet, either.”

    Mr Auderer can then be heard saying: “She is dead,” before laughing.

    He continues: “No, it’s a regular person – yeah, yeah, just write a check, just, yeah,” before laughing again.

    “$11,000. She was 26 anyway, she had limited value,” he says.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/seattle-police-jaahnavi-kandula-bodycam-footage-b2409895.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 12, 2023, 12:38:44 PM
    Sickening   

    Not only did the cops kill this poor woman but the scumbag laughing about her death is the vice president of the cop union. No surprise that union scum are the worst.

    Notice how pieces of shit like him treat people they are supposed to "serve and protect": "She was 26 anyway, she had limited value". I wonder how he'd react if one of his children or relatives was killed by a gang who then laughed and insulted the dead.

    Remember a former VP saying "Police officers in this country are the best of us"?


    Police officer laughs about woman struck and killed by patrol car in shocking bodycam video

    Shocking body cam footage shows a police officer laughing about a woman who was struck and killed by a patrol car in Seattle.

    Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, was killed in January on a crosswalk near her university campus after she was struck by a patrol car while police were responding to an overdose in the South Lake Union neighborhood.

    Seattle Police said the officer driving the patrol vehicle was responding to a priority-one call when the incident happened. The officer was going 74mph in a 25mph speed zone.

    Police ruled the incident was an accident, and returned the unnamed officer to duty shortly after.

    Authorities are now investigating bodycam footage released by Seattle Police on Monday from the incident which shows officer Daniel Auderer — who is also the vice president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild — insulting and laughing about the 23-year-old student.

    In the footage, Mr Auderer can be heard saying: “There is initially – he said she was in a crosswalk, there is a witness that said, ‘No she wasn’t,’ but that could be different, because I don’t think she was thrown 40 feet, either.”

    Mr Auderer can then be heard saying: “She is dead,” before laughing.

    He continues: “No, it’s a regular person – yeah, yeah, just write a check, just, yeah,” before laughing again.

    “$11,000. She was 26 anyway, she had limited value,” he says.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/seattle-police-jaahnavi-kandula-bodycam-footage-b2409895.html


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on September 18, 2023, 05:29:44 AM
    Horrible

    http://www.declassified.live/p/another-whitmer-fednapping-case-goes
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 18, 2023, 11:32:31 AM
    Once again cops get away without prison or any meaningful punishment. This cop locked a woman in handcuffs and then put her inside a police car parked on the train tracks. The train hit the car and the victim was left with traumatic brain injury, punctured lung, broken ribs and more. Throughout this ordeal, the cop was on paid vacation.

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/09/NYPICHPDPICT000039760880.jpg)

    (https://media.9news.com/assets/KUSA/images/3d134742-8583-4abf-9aea-df541855cbb4/3d134742-8583-4abf-9aea-df541855cbb4_1920x1080.jpg)

    Colorado police officer who put handcuffed woman in car hit by train avoids jail

    A police officer in the US state of Colorado - who locked a handcuffed woman in a police car that was then hit by a freight train - has avoided jail.

    Jordan Steinke was sentenced to 30 months on supervised probation, after being found guilty of reckless endangerment and assault in July.

    She was acquitted of criminal attempt to commit manslaughter.

    The 29-year-old, who lost her job over the incident, has been ordered to perform 100 hours of community service.

    The woman who was placed in the car, Yareni Rios-Gonzalez, suffered serious injuries in the crash, including a brain injury.

    https://news.yahoo.com/us-ex-police-officer-put-023510891.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2023, 09:43:36 PM
    Where's our Resident Cop defender
    See No Evil
    Hear No Evil
    Speak No Evil

    Ag007

    Those Scumbags should be Flogged Publicly & made to pay His compensation
    out of their pockets & Never be allowed to work as Cops again.
    Khvnts all of them.

    A fuck big criminal gang.

    I don't come to this page anymore Illuminati. The main reason is, Skeletor rarely if ever(never) responded to my rebuttals on the posts I commented on. His M.O. is to post and forget about it. That's cool, that's his thing. My thing is opening a dialogue to discuss maybe why something happened.

    Also, I don't believe I am a cop defender. I built a career and suffered some consequences which I have told you about, holding cops responsible. I guarantee you I hate bad cops more than you do as I have invested 34 years of my life to law enforcement. I have faced the blue wall of silence, so I feel I have been tested by fire more than once

    In all the pages on this thread, there are a great many that are exactly as Skeletaor portrays them. There are a LOT of examples of bad, corrupt, criminal behaviors here that have no defense, they are what they are. There are a lot that are not what is reported. I used to spend a great deal of time researching the posts here.. but I found that when the initial reports and subsequent reports and ultimate conclusion contradicted the initial posting where made aware to the OP no acknowledgement was done, no retractions..

    So in summary, whatever post you just named me in turns out to be true.. I don't doubt it. Having been in that world 34 years I know bad cops exist. Hell, I sent you a book on Corruption of the noble cause. If that doesn't tell you I'm not a "Resident Cop Defender" I don't know what would. I feel a bit slighted by your post, it's like you and I have never had a conversation. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 18, 2023, 09:51:44 PM
    I don't come to this page anymore Illuminati. The main reason is, Skeletor rarely if ever responded to my rebuttals on the posts I commented on. His M.O. is to post and forget about it. That's cool, that's his thing. My thing is opening a dialogue to discuss maybe why something happened.

    Also, I don't believe I am a cop defender. I built a career and suffered some consequences which I have told you about, holding cops responsible. I guarantee you I hate bad cops more than you do as I have invested 34 years of my life to law enforcement. I have faced the blue wall of silence, so I feel I have been tested by fire more than once

    In all the pages on this thread, there are a great many that are exactly as Skeletaor portrays them. There are a LOT of examples of bad, corrupt, criminal behaviors here that have no defense, they are what they are. There are a lot that are not what is reported. I used to spend a great deal of time researching the posts here.. but I found that when the initial reports and subsequent reports and ultimate conclusion contradicted the initial posting where made aware to the OP no acknowledgement was done, no retractions..

    So in summary, whatever post you just named me in turns out to be true.. I don't doubt it. Having been in that world 34 years I know bad cops exist. Hell, I sent you a book on Corruption of the noble cause. If that doesn't tell you I'm not a "Resident Cop Defender" I don't know what would. I feel a bit slighted by your post, like you and I have never had a conversation.

    Fair points 👊🏻

    For me its not only there's so many bad / evil cops
    It's that they're protected by other cops & do not face the proper consequences
    of their awful behaviour  - That Boils Me.

    Hey , You've slighted me on many occasions in the recent past.

    How many times Have I stated on here to others that I had time for you & a Level of Respect.
    ??


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Agnostic007 on September 18, 2023, 10:03:34 PM
    Fair points 👊🏻

    For me its not only there's so many bad / evil cops
    It's that they're protected by other cops & do not face the proper consequences
    of their awful behaviour  - That Boils Me.

    Hey , You've slighted me on many occasions in the recent past.

    How many times Have I stated on here to others that I had time for you & a Level of Respect.
    ??

    about the same I've defended you. And yes, I have been hard on you recently but only when I felt the bond was broken. You and I see many things differently, some things the same. But I feel we share a bond, I confided in you, you confided in me, and while I would still call my mother out if I thought she was wrong, there are 10 options to how I would do that. I try and match those options to the situation.

    The cops thing.. while I have vast insight into procedure, tactics and process.   I have limited insight into every department in the country. At AUstin, we had a policy that if you lied during an incident, if you came clean upon investigation you would get suspended but you would keep your job. ( varies as to the incident and the lie but the bottom line was if you told the truth your job could be save. BUT.. if you lied to cover for another officer, you were done. This came about around 2005.
    As I once confided to  you, as a Sergeant, I voted to fire an officer because he had said his siren was on prior to a collision and the evidence indicated his overheads were on but not his siren. Some might think that a small thing but for me, truth has always mattered and the evidence from eyewitnesses was that his lights were on but no siren. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on September 18, 2023, 10:13:53 PM
    about the same I've defended you. And yes, I have been hard on you recently but only when I felt the bond was broken. You and I see many things differently, some things the same. But I feel we share a bond, I confided in you, you confided in me, and while I would still call my mother out if I thought she was wrong, there are 10 options to how I would do that. I try and match those options to the situation.

    The cops thing.. while I have vast insight into procedure, tactics and process.   I have limited insight into every department in the country. At AUstin, we had a policy that if you lied during an incident, if you came clean upon investigation you would get suspended but you would keep your job. ( varies as to the incident and the lie but the bottom line was if you told the truth your job could be save. BUT.. if you lied to cover for another officer, you were done. This came about around 2005.
    As I once confided to  you, as a Sergeant, I voted to fire an officer because he had said his siren was on prior to a collision and the evidence indicated his overheads were on but not his siren. Some might think that a small thing but for me, truth has always mattered and the evidence from eyewitnesses was that his lights were on but no siren.

    I've said it before & I'll say it again here
    If only Many many more Cops were as honest as you
    Then policing would be in a far better state than it is now & many more folk
    Would have some higher level of trust & respect.

    The level of policing over here is also appalling.
    Its awful & rightly so vast majority have no faith / trust or respect for cops
    Many bought it upon themselves & their supposed higher-ups haven't helped
    With the cover ups & out right lies.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on September 25, 2023, 06:39:22 PM
    Very disturbing incident and shows how much a cop can mess up a person's life if he wants to. He even managed to involuntarily commit the poor woman to a hospital for 5 days. I hope the cop (and the person recording and any others who aided him in his criminal scheme) gets life in prison but he will probably get away with very little, if any, prison time.


    Pennsylvania cop arrested for improperly committing ex-girlfriend to mental facility

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/09/25/13/75798523-12556677-Ronald_Keith_Davis_37_is_accused_of_strangling_his_girlfriend_be-a-4_1695646764603.jpg)

    A married Pennsylvania State Police trooper is facing false imprisonment charges after he allegedly violently detained his ex-girlfriend and committed her to a mental health treatment program under bogus claims.

    Ronald Davis, 37, was arrested Thursday on accusations he abused his authority to carry out the twisted takedown that left his former girlfriend improperly stuck in a medical facility for multiple days, the Dauphin County District Attorney’s Office said.

    Davis reportedly told her: “I know you’re not crazy, I’ll paint you as crazy” leading up to the forced medical treatment, the victim claimed, according to court documents released by the district attorney’s office.

    His quest to have his ex committed began on Aug. 21 when he sought help from fellow troopers because he said the victim — identified by the district attorney as M.F. — had mental health problems, according to an affidavit of probable cause.

    On advice from state police, Davis, off duty at the time, contacted county officials via his police email account and identified himself as a trooper, to obtain an order after he submitted purported texts from her in which she threatened suicide, according to the court docs.

    Once he got the order approved, the trooper went after the woman, whom he had dated for about four months, before uniformed troopers reached her, authorities alleged.

    “I’ll take care of it myself,” he allegedly said.

    Davis, who prosecutors said is married with a family, is facing charges of:
    felony strangulation
    unlawful restraint
    false imprisonment
    simple assault
    recklessly endangering another person
    official oppression

    https://nypost.com/2023/09/24/pa-state-police-trooper-ronald-davis-tackled-ex-to-ground-dauphin-da/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 05, 2023, 07:51:21 AM
    "The Biden FBI has 'quietly created a new category of extremists that it seeks to track and counter: Donald Trump's army of MAGA followers' ahead of the 2024 election, according to prolific (and well connected) anti-war journalist and political commentator, William Arkin, who has previously reported on the FBI's efforts to "Fight MAGA Terrorism."



    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/fbi-creates-maga-extremist-category-targets-trump-supporters-ahead-2024-election
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on October 25, 2023, 01:02:22 PM
    DHS sued over college program that linked conservative groups to neo-Nazis
    The New York Post ^ | 10/25/2023 | Josh Christenson
    Posted on 10/25/2023, 1:18:22 PM by thegagline

    The Heritage Foundation is suing the Department of Homeland Security for withholding information about a grant of more than $350,000 it gave to a university program that linked the conservative group, Fox News and the Republican Party to militant neo-Nazis, according to a copy of the filing exclusively obtained by The Post.

    Heritage filed the civil suit on Tuesday in Washington, DC, federal court, alleging that DHS failed to comply with a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request about $352,109 provided to the University of Dayton for research on “domestic violence extremism and hate movements.”

    “DHS repeatedly failed to respond to Plaintiffs’ FOIA Request seeking information about how DHS views Heritage,” lawyers Joseph Edlow and Samuel Dewey stated in the filing.

    “Plaintiffs are thus left with no remedy but this lawsuit to determine if DHS in facts [sic] believes Heritage, Fox News, and others to be worthy of being lumped in the same group as Nazis.” *** Heritage, Fox News, the Republican National Committee and the National Rifle Association, among others, were included on the same pyramid with known hate organizations such as the neo-Nazi paramilitary group The Base and the white supremacist website The Daily Stormer.

    Breitbart News, PragerU, Turning Point USA, the Christian Broadcasting Network, the American Conservative Union and the nonpartisan outlet Quillette were also placed on the pyramid next to the far-right groups.

    ***

    Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has made the Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention Grant Program a “high priority” of his tenure, according to another internal memo obtained by MRC.

    During his time in office, President Biden has overseen more than 80 grants at DHS to combat domestic extremism, shelling out a total of $40 million in taxpayer money. ***

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: deadz on October 27, 2023, 03:11:00 PM
    Never trust a cop!
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on October 28, 2023, 05:30:11 AM
    Very disturbing incident and shows how much a cop can mess up a person's life if he wants to. He even managed to involuntarily commit the poor woman to a hospital for 5 days. I hope the cop (and the person recording and any others who aided him in his criminal scheme) gets life in prison but he will probably get away with very little, if any, prison time.


    Pennsylvania cop arrested for improperly committing ex-girlfriend to mental facility

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/09/25/13/75798523-12556677-Ronald_Keith_Davis_37_is_accused_of_strangling_his_girlfriend_be-a-4_1695646764603.jpg)

    A married Pennsylvania State Police trooper is facing false imprisonment charges after he allegedly violently detained his ex-girlfriend and committed her to a mental health treatment program under bogus claims.

    Ronald Davis, 37, was arrested Thursday on accusations he abused his authority to carry out the twisted takedown that left his former girlfriend improperly stuck in a medical facility for multiple days, the Dauphin County District Attorney’s Office said.

    Davis reportedly told her: “I know you’re not crazy, I’ll paint you as crazy” leading up to the forced medical treatment, the victim claimed, according to court documents released by the district attorney’s office.

    His quest to have his ex committed began on Aug. 21 when he sought help from fellow troopers because he said the victim — identified by the district attorney as M.F. — had mental health problems, according to an affidavit of probable cause.

    On advice from state police, Davis, off duty at the time, contacted county officials via his police email account and identified himself as a trooper, to obtain an order after he submitted purported texts from her in which she threatened suicide, according to the court docs.

    Once he got the order approved, the trooper went after the woman, whom he had dated for about four months, before uniformed troopers reached her, authorities alleged.

    “I’ll take care of it myself,” he allegedly said.

    Davis, who prosecutors said is married with a family, is facing charges of:
    felony strangulation
    unlawful restraint
    false imprisonment
    simple assault
    recklessly endangering another person
    official oppression

    https://nypost.com/2023/09/24/pa-state-police-trooper-ronald-davis-tackled-ex-to-ground-dauphin-da/



    Yet another fine example of a Power crazed deviant cop+
    deserves to be baseball batted for 7hrs at least.  ;D
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 12, 2024, 09:58:06 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2024, 12:29:10 PM
    Look at all those armed cops storming the house, is this the Bin Laden raid?

    The mother was cuffed and dragged out of her home while her baby suffered burns and suffocated.

    But you know what they say, "If she has done nothing wrong she has nothing to worry about".


    Family says toddler hospitalized after Elyria police raid home in mistaken identity case

    A family said Elyria police raided their home in a case of mistaken identity and injured a 17-month-old toddler born with severe health complications.

    “The baby is now in the ICU. He’s got burns all over him, inside of his lungs are burned,” said Reida Jennings, who rents the home raided by police. “He’s already a special-needs baby. He’s a trach baby. He was on his ventilator, they let the baby lay there for about 35 to 45 minutes in the smoke.”


    https://fox8.com/news/family-says-toddler-hospitalized-after-elyria-police-raid-home-in-mistaken-identity-case/

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 17, 2024, 12:46:11 PM
    An Idealistic Cop, a Forbidden Ticket and a Police Career on the Brink

    Mathew Bianchi took routine traffic stops seriously and handed out tickets regardless of people’s connections within the Police Department. He says he was punished for it.

    A red Mazda sped past a police officer’s unmarked car stationed at a tree-lined Staten Island intersection. The officer inside, Mathew Bianchi, clocked the Mazda at well over the limit and prepared to make a stop at a nearby streetlight. But the car blew through a red light. Bianchi turned on his siren.

    Behind the wheel was a woman in her late teens or early 20s. As Bianchi began to explain why he had stopped her, she handed him a card.

    The police unions distribute the wallet-sized courtesy cards — sometimes referred to as “get out of jail free” cards — to members, who in turn pass them out to friends and family. Bianchi had been instructed to let card carriers off without a ticket.

    By the time he pulled over the Mazda in November 2018, drivers were handing Bianchi these cards six or seven times a day. But this woman’s card was a little older, a little tattered-looking. It was difficult to make out the contact information of the officer who had given it to her, which is usually written on the card’s back. So Bianchi did the wrong thing, which is to say, the right thing: He wrote the woman a ticket.

    Though Bianchi didn’t know it then, he had just begun what would become a yearslong struggle to do the job the way he thought it should be done. He had inherited his moral obligations — and a strong dose of stubbornness — from his grandmother, who raised him on Staten Island. But he had no family in the Police Department, and no one who could tell him what to do when its leadership began to turn against him.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/16/nyregion/mathew-bianchi-nypd-traffic-tickets.html
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 19, 2024, 08:40:06 PM
    The "brave heroes" waited over 1 hour to enter the classroom while children were being murdered but they were quick to to stop and threatened to taze any parents who wanted to would go inside and save their kids instead of waiting for the cowards to react.

    Of course the DOJ and their goons are the last ones who should be talking about accountability, failures and pointing fingers.


    DOJ's Uvalde report finds "unimaginable failure" in school shooting response

    A federal report investigating the police response to the May 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, found multiple failures by officers that allowed the attack to continue even as police were at the school.

    The report, conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing, known as the COPS Office, looked at thousands of pieces of data and documentation and relied on more than 260 interviews, including with law enforcement and school personnel, family members of victims, and witnesses and survivors from the massacre. The team investigating visited Uvalde nine times, spending 54 days on the ground in the small community.

    In a news conference after the release of the report, Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said the law enforcement response was an "unimaginable failure," and that "a lack of action by adults failed to protect children and their teachers."

    In the report, much of the blame was placed on former police chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District, , who was terminated in the wake of the shooting, although the report also said that some officers' actions "may have been influenced by policy and training deficiencies."

    Here are some other takeaways from the 600-page report:

    The report found that police were on the scene within minutes of the attack being reported, and 11 officers went into the school three minutes after arriving on the scene. Five went toward the classroom, but all of the officers retreated for cover after initial shots.

    After three attempts to approach the classrooms where 19 students and two teachers were killed, the focus shifted from stopping the shooter to evacuating other rooms, the report said.

    The report found there was "a great deal of confusion, miscommunication, a lack of urgency and a lack of incident command."

    The report referred to this response as a critical failure, stating that several officers acted consistently with accepted practices before retreating after hearing gunfire. Police also focused more on additional SWAT tactical officers arriving, a strategy that the report said should not delay a response. Since the Columbine school shooting, a "fundamental precept" of active shooter response "must be to immediately neutralize the subject," according to the report.

    "Everything else, including officer safety, is subordinate to that objective," the report said.

    The report stated that Uvalde Police Department acting chief Mariano Pargas, who has since resigned from his position, was in the "best position to start taking command and control and start coordinating with approaching personnel," but Arredondo wound up in charge of the scene. Arredondo has previously said he did not know he was in charge of the scene.

    The report found that the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District did not have an active shooter policy, but did have a policy specifically related to incident command roles and responsibilities.

    Twenty-seven minutes after the second round of gunshots and 75 minutes after officers first entered the building, the classroom doors were opened, the report said, and two minutes later, police entered the classroom. Responding officers included members of the Border Patrol Tactical Unit, the Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue Unit, and deputies from Uvalde and Zavala counties.

    The shooter fired 45 rounds "in the presence of officers" before being killed, the report said.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/texas/news/uvalde-school-shooting-doj-report-takeaways-failure/

    https://www.justice.gov/storage/Critical-Incident-Review-Active-Shooter-at-Robb-Elementary-School-20240118.pdf

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2022/07/uvalde-shooting-video-010.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 20, 2024, 12:12:17 AM

    And liberal idiots still believe in gun control.


    The "brave heroes" waited over 1 hour to enter the classroom while children were being murdered but they were quick to to stop and threatened to taze any parents who wanted to would go inside and save their kids instead of waiting for the cowards to react.

    Of course the DOJ and their goons are the last ones who should be talking about accountability, failures and pointing fingers.


    DOJ's Uvalde report finds "unimaginable failure" in school shooting response

    A federal report investigating the police response to the May 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, found multiple failures by officers that allowed the attack to continue even as police were at the school.

    The report, conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing, known as the COPS Office, looked at thousands of pieces of data and documentation and relied on more than 260 interviews, including with law enforcement and school personnel, family members of victims, and witnesses and survivors from the massacre. The team investigating visited Uvalde nine times, spending 54 days on the ground in the small community.

    In a news conference after the release of the report, Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said the law enforcement response was an "unimaginable failure," and that "a lack of action by adults failed to protect children and their teachers."

    In the report, much of the blame was placed on former police chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District, , who was terminated in the wake of the shooting, although the report also said that some officers' actions "may have been influenced by policy and training deficiencies."

    Here are some other takeaways from the 600-page report:

    The report found that police were on the scene within minutes of the attack being reported, and 11 officers went into the school three minutes after arriving on the scene. Five went toward the classroom, but all of the officers retreated for cover after initial shots.

    After three attempts to approach the classrooms where 19 students and two teachers were killed, the focus shifted from stopping the shooter to evacuating other rooms, the report said.

    The report found there was "a great deal of confusion, miscommunication, a lack of urgency and a lack of incident command."

    The report referred to this response as a critical failure, stating that several officers acted consistently with accepted practices before retreating after hearing gunfire. Police also focused more on additional SWAT tactical officers arriving, a strategy that the report said should not delay a response. Since the Columbine school shooting, a "fundamental precept" of active shooter response "must be to immediately neutralize the subject," according to the report.

    "Everything else, including officer safety, is subordinate to that objective," the report said.

    The report stated that Uvalde Police Department acting chief Mariano Pargas, who has since resigned from his position, was in the "best position to start taking command and control and start coordinating with approaching personnel," but Arredondo wound up in charge of the scene. Arredondo has previously said he did not know he was in charge of the scene.

    The report found that the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District did not have an active shooter policy, but did have a policy specifically related to incident command roles and responsibilities.

    Twenty-seven minutes after the second round of gunshots and 75 minutes after officers first entered the building, the classroom doors were opened, the report said, and two minutes later, police entered the classroom. Responding officers included members of the Border Patrol Tactical Unit, the Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue Unit, and deputies from Uvalde and Zavala counties.

    The shooter fired 45 rounds "in the presence of officers" before being killed, the report said.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/texas/news/uvalde-school-shooting-doj-report-takeaways-failure/

    https://www.justice.gov/storage/Critical-Incident-Review-Active-Shooter-at-Robb-Elementary-School-20240118.pdf

    (https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2022/07/uvalde-shooting-video-010.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 21, 2024, 02:05:41 PM
    And liberal idiots still believe in gun control.


    Libtards are a Huge part of the Problem 🤬🤬🤬
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on January 21, 2024, 02:20:15 PM

    Libtards are a Huge part of the Problem 🤬🤬🤬

    Which problem?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 21, 2024, 02:28:52 PM
    Which problem?

    Most of them
    It'd be a very very long list & of course you'd deny all of them.

    Oh & men cannot Biologically become women & vice versa 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on January 21, 2024, 04:01:52 PM
    Most of them
    It'd be a very very long list & of course you'd deny all of them.

    Oh & men cannot Biologically become women & vice versa 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣

    Show me the list and I will decide who is to blame for said problems. My guess is that it is people in general, both left and right.

    Who said men can become biological women and women can become biological men?

    A person with XX chromosomes usually has female sex and reproductive organs, and is therefore usually assigned biologically female. A person with XY chromosomes usually has male sex and reproductive organs. But this doesn't end here. Because there are men with XX chromosomes and women with XY chromosomes. This can happen, when a gene on the Y chromosome ends up on an X chromosome, causing that X chromosome to function more like a Y. The term “sex chromosomes” is really something of a misnomer. Confused yet?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2024, 06:55:39 PM
    Show me the list and I will decide who is to blame for said problems. My guess is that it is people in general, both left and right.

    Who said men can become biological women and women can become biological men?

    A person with XX chromosomes usually has female sex and reproductive organs, and is therefore usually assigned biologically female. A person with XY chromosomes usually has male sex and reproductive organs. But this doesn't end here. Because there are men with XX chromosomes and women with XY chromosomes. This can happen, when a gene on the Y chromosome ends up on an X chromosome, causing that X chromosome to function more like a Y. The term “sex chromosomes” is really something of a misnomer. Confused yet?

    What the heck are you going on about? If you have nothing on topic to add to the conversation, butt out with your irrelevant comments.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 23, 2024, 06:57:50 PM
    Nothing will change unless there are arrests, convictions and imprisonments.


    Federal Appeals Court Slams FBI’s Actions In Security Deposit Box Raid

    This morning, a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel unanimously ruled against the government in a long-running class action lawsuit from the Institute for Justice (IJ) on behalf of people who rented security deposit boxes at US Private Vaults. The decision slammed the FBI for overstepping its authority when it opened up hundreds of renters’ boxes, conducted criminal searches of them all, and attempted to permanently keep everything in the boxes worth more than $5,000, all without charging any box renter with a crime.

    “Today’s opinion draws a line in the sand, to ensure something like this never happens again,” said IJ Senior Attorney Rob Johnson. “If this had come out the other way, the government could have exported this raid as a model across the country. Now, the government is on notice its actions violated the Fourth Amendment.”

    Judge Milan D. Smith, writing for the court, likened the FBI’s actions to the abuses that motivated the Bill of Rights: “[T]he government failed to explain why applying the inventory exception to this case would not open the door to the kinds of ‘writs of assistance’ the British authorities used prior to the Founding to conduct limitless searches of an individual’s personal belongings. It was those very abuses of power, after all, that led to adoption of the Fourth Amendment in the first place.”

    “We knew that what the FBI did to us and so many others was wrong and today’s decision is a validation,” said Jennifer Snitko. “It took courage for Paul and I to be among the first people to stand up publicly and call out the government but we are proud to have fought for our rights. This is a good day for our country and the principle that the government’s power to search our property has limits.”

    For years, the FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) insisted that they did nothing wrong at US Private Vaults. Even though the warrant authorizing the raid only permitted the FBI to open boxes to identify their owners and safeguard the contents, agents rummaged through hundreds of boxes, ran currency they found in front of drug sniffing dogs, and made copies of people’s most personal records. The DOJ then filed a massive administrative forfeiture claim to take more than $100 million in cash and other valuables, again, without charging any individual with a crime.

    “The government promised the magistrate that it would not conduct a criminal search or seizure of the boxes,” said IJ Senior Attorney Robert Frommer. “After years of litigation, today’s opinion shows that not to be true. The government lied to justify its forfeiture scheme, and in the end the lie was its undoing.” 

    https://ij.org/press-release/federal-appeals-court-slams-fbis-actions-in-security-deposit-box-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on January 23, 2024, 10:20:00 PM
    What the heck are you going on about? If you have nothing on topic to add to the conversation, butt out with your irrelevant comments.

    Yep - its Prime being his usual stupid self - he knows perfectly well what I was on about , he just has to play dumb
    & write a load of no related nonsense, as though that's some kind of back up to his being dumb.  ::)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 24, 2024, 11:06:16 PM
    Facial recognition technology causes man’s false arrest for Sunglass Hut, Macy’s robberies leading to jail gang rape

    A Texas man filed a lawsuit against the owners of Sunglass Hut and Macy’s after he was falsely identified as a violent armed robber through facial technology.

    Harvey Murphy was arrested in October 2022 for the armed burglary of a Huston-area Sunglass Hut store after a facial recognition device identified him as the burglar. The only problem? Murphy was in Sacramento, California at the time of the crime—thousands of miles away.

    Making matters worse, Murphy, now 61, says he was brutally sexually assaulted in jail just hours before he was set to be released after the charges against him were dropped. In a lawsuit filed last week, Murphy claims that his arrest was the result of gross negligence from the facial recognition company—and he demands $10 million in damages to compensate for his wrongful imprisonment. 

    https://reason.com/2024/01/24/man-sues-sunglass-hut-after-faulty-ai-facial-recognition-tech-led-to-wrongful-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on January 25, 2024, 11:22:06 AM
    Horrible. 

    Facial recognition technology causes man’s false arrest for Sunglass Hut, Macy’s robberies leading to jail gang rape

    A Texas man filed a lawsuit against the owners of Sunglass Hut and Macy’s after he was falsely identified as a violent armed robber through facial technology.

    Harvey Murphy was arrested in October 2022 for the armed burglary of a Huston-area Sunglass Hut store after a facial recognition device identified him as the burglar. The only problem? Murphy was in Sacramento, California at the time of the crime—thousands of miles away.

    Making matters worse, Murphy, now 61, says he was brutally sexually assaulted in jail just hours before he was set to be released after the charges against him were dropped. In a lawsuit filed last week, Murphy claims that his arrest was the result of gross negligence from the facial recognition company—and he demands $10 million in damages to compensate for his wrongful imprisonment. 

    https://reason.com/2024/01/24/man-sues-sunglass-hut-after-faulty-ai-facial-recognition-tech-led-to-wrongful-arrest/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on January 26, 2024, 05:47:43 PM
    As long as there is no accountability and meaningful punishment and imprisonment, things like this will continue.

    NSA purchase of Americans’ personal data from brokers is illegal, senator says

    Sen. Ron Wyden on Thursday asserted that National Security Agency’s (NSA) purchase of Americans’ internet records from data brokers is illegal based on a recent Federal Trade Commission ruling.

    The Oregon Democrat released documents showing senior defense officials acknowledging they buy commercial data, including internet metadata and information associated with phones located inside the U.S. The officials said they do not buy location data.

    Wyden said the NSA has fought the public release of the information for three years, and the agency only agreed to it after he placed a hold on the nomination of incoming NSA director, Lt. General Timothy Haugh.

    In releasing the documents, Wyden again demanded the Biden administration prohibit intelligence agencies from buying personal data that has been procured from data brokers. He cited a recent Federal Trade Commission (FTC) order outlining that data brokers must get Americans’ informed consent before peddling certain data to U.S. military customers without consumers’ informed consent.

    https://therecord.media/nsa-purchases-american-personal-data-from-brokers-wyden
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2024, 05:47:42 AM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 14, 2024, 08:28:33 AM
    CIA and foreign intelligence agencies illegally targeted 26 Trump associates before 2016 Russia collusion claims: report
    nypost ^ | 2/13/2024 | victor nava
    Posted on 2/13/2024, 11:14:11 PM


    The US Intelligence Community asked foreign spy agencies to surveil 26 associates of Donald Trump in the run-up to the 2016 election, which triggered the allegations that the former president’s campaign had been colluding with Russia, according to a report.

    Former CIA Director John Brennan identified and presented the targets to the US’s intelligence-sharing partners in the so-called “Five Eyes” agencies – the intelligence-gathering organizations in the US, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand – according to a report published Monday on Michael Shellenberger’s Public Substack.

    The report by independent journalists Shellenberger, Matt Taibbi and Alex Gutentag has not been confirmed by The Post.

    They cite multiple unnamed sources, including ones close to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, led by Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio).

    Turner’s office did not respond to The Post’s request for comment.

    The US intelligence community had “identified” the 26 Trump associates “as people to ‘bump,’ or make contact with or manipulate,” one source told the outlet.

    In spy-speak, “bumping” is when a reason is manufactured to meet with a target of interest in order to develop a relationship that could lead to intelligence.

    “They were targets of our own IC and law enforcement — targets for collection and misinformation,” the source said.

    Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters intelligence apparatus, or GCHQ, was making contacts with Trump’s associates as early as March 2016, according to the report.

    “They were making contacts and bumping Trump people going back to March 2016,” a source told the outlet. “They were sending people around the UK, Australia, Italy — the Mossad in Italy. The MI6 was working at an intelligence school they had set up.”

    A GCHQ spokesperson told the outlet that claims it was “asked to conduct ‘wire tapping’ against the then president-elect are nonsense.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 14, 2024, 11:43:40 AM
    Florida Cop shoots his own car after thinking an acorn was gunfire. He even yelled "I'm hit" even though no one attacked him. Thankfully he didn't kill anyone.


    Florida deputy fires weapon after mistaking sound of acorn hitting patrol car for gunshot

    A Florida deputy is seen firing his weapon repeatedly at his patrol vehicle after mistaking the sound of an acorn hitting the roof of the car for a muffled gunshot, according to video released alongside a sheriff's office investigation.

    Newly released body camera footage of the November 2023 incident shows the dramatic moments the Okaloosa County deputy shot at his patrol vehicle while a handcuffed suspect was inside.

    "I'm hit! I'm hit!" the deputy, Jesse Hernandez, can be heard yelling, though no one was shooting at him.

    As he stumbled to the ground, Hernandez yelled "Shots fired!" four times, according to the video and an internal investigation conducted by by the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office of Professional Standards. He then opens fire on his vehicle.

    A sergeant with the sheriff's office also fired her weapon multiple times at the patrol vehicle, believing Hernandez was in danger, according to the report.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/deputy-fires-weapon-after-mistaking-acorn-for-gunshot/story?id=107229338


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 15, 2024, 05:48:41 AM
    Sources Say U.S. Intelligence Agencies Tasked Foreign Partners With Spying On Trump’s 2016 Campaign
    the federalist ^ | 02/15/2024
    Posted on 2/15/2024, 8:45:47 AM by devane617

    The U.S. Intelligence Community asked fellow members of the “‘Five Eyes’ intelligence alliance to surveil Trump’s associates and share the intelligence they acquired with US agencies,” sources told a small team of independent reporters who broke the story yesterday.

    In “CIA Had Foreign Allies Spy on Trump Team, Triggering Russia Collusion Hoax, Sources Say,” journalists Michael Shellenberger, Matt Taibbi, and Alex Gutentag reported that top-line takeaway, along with several other key details. According to the authors, “multiple credible sources,” said that “the United States Intelligence Community (IC), including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), illegally mobilized foreign intelligence agencies to target Trump advisors long before the summer of 2016.”

    (Excerpt) Read more at thefederalist.com ...
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Taffin on February 15, 2024, 10:52:27 AM
    Florida Cop shoots his own car after thinking an acorn was gunfire. He even yelled "I'm hit" even though no one attacked him. Thankfully he didn't kill anyone.


    Florida deputy fires weapon after mistaking sound of acorn hitting patrol car for gunshot

    A Florida deputy is seen firing his weapon repeatedly at his patrol vehicle after mistaking the sound of an acorn hitting the roof of the car for a muffled gunshot, according to video released alongside a sheriff's office investigation.

    Newly released body camera footage of the November 2023 incident shows the dramatic moments the Okaloosa County deputy shot at his patrol vehicle while a handcuffed suspect was inside.

    "I'm hit! I'm hit!" the deputy, Jesse Hernandez, can be heard yelling, though no one was shooting at him.

    As he stumbled to the ground, Hernandez yelled "Shots fired!" four times, according to the video and an internal investigation conducted by by the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office of Professional Standards. He then opens fire on his vehicle.

    A sergeant with the sheriff's office also fired her weapon multiple times at the patrol vehicle, believing Hernandez was in danger, according to the report.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/deputy-fires-weapon-after-mistaking-acorn-for-gunshot/story?id=107229338




     :o

    Wow that's staggering - based on a single noise they both completely emptied their weapons at the patrol car with some poor handcuffed fucker in there but he was OK?  Guy needs to buy a Lotto ticket.  Were they trained by Imperial Stormtroopers or something..?  I wonder how many bullets that is in total, and whether they tried to find where they all ended up?
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 15, 2024, 11:21:20 AM
    Doesn't matter if you test 0 for drinks or drugs, the cops will still illegally arrest you and then sue you as well.


    Iowa Cops Arrested a Sober College Student for Driving Intoxicated. His Lawsuit Is Moving Forward

    An Iowa college student was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated, even though he showed no physical signs of intoxication and a breathalyzer test showed a blood-alcohol level of 0.00. The man has now sued the officer who falsely arrested him—and as part of a lengthy legal battle, a federal court has ruled that the case can go forward.

    In August 2022, 19-year-old Tayvin Galanakis was driving late at night in Newton, Iowa, when he was pulled over by local police officers Nathan Winters and Christopher Wing. According to body camera footage, Winters almost immediately began interrogating Galanakis about his alcohol consumption.

    When Galanakis denies drinking, Winters replied "What do you mean none?" In response, Galanakis suggested that he take a breathalyzer test. However, Winters instead subjected Galanakis to a series of field sobriety tests. While Galanakis appears sober, Winters claims he failed the tests. Finally, Winters gives Galankis a breathalyzer test that shows that Galanakis is completely sober. But instead of letting Galankis go, Winters then shifted to quizzing Galanakis about how much marijuana he had smoked.

    "I've had no weed tonight," Galanakis told Winters. "I blew a zero so now you're trying to think I smoked weed? That's what's going on. You can't do that, man. You really can't do that."

    Galanakis was arrested and taken to a local police station, where he underwent further drug testing, all of which came back negative. Soon after his arrest, Galanakis published body camera footage from the incident. The lightly edited footage sparked intense backlash online and eventually gained more than 2 million views on YouTube.

    Last week, a federal judge ruled that Galanakis' case could go forward, finding that a reasonable juror "could conclude that Winters violated Galanakis's clearly established constitutional rights."

    Judge Stephen H. Locher found that Winters had no probable cause to arrest Galanakis because his "speech and movements were not even remotely consistent with someone under the influence of a controlled substance." Adding, "Galanakis insisted almost from the first moment that he wanted to blow into a breathalyzer, which would be a remarkable act of bravado for someone under the influence."

    However, the ruling isn't a complete victory for Galanakis. Locher found that Galanakis' comments that Winters "is on the slow side of the spectrum" and "is not fit mentally for the job and physically" weren't defamatory. However, Locher did find that Winters could continue suing Galanakis for defamation over Galanakis' comment that Winters was "convicted" of domestic abuse. While Winters' ex-girlfriend received a domestic abuse restraining order and submitted an affidavit alleging abuse, Winters has never been charged, much less convicted of domestic abuse.

    https://reason.com/2024/02/14/iowa-cops-arrested-a-sober-college-student-for-driving-intoxicated-his-lawsuit-is-moving-forward

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on February 15, 2024, 12:30:30 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on February 22, 2024, 04:54:10 PM
    "The alleged thief was in uniform and driving a police cruiser during her shoplifting spree. "


    Columbus police officer arrested for allegedly shoplifting on duty

    https://www.wcbi.com/columbus-police-officer-arrested-for-allegedly-shoplifting-on-duty/

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/02/22/19/81594617-13114587-image-m-12_1708630245624.jpg) (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/02/22/19/81594461-13114587-image-a-10_1708630230748.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 03, 2024, 11:05:11 AM
    Not only did the cops kill this poor woman but the scumbag laughing about her death is the vice president of the cop union. No surprise that union scum are the worst.

    Notice how pieces of shit like him treat people they are supposed to "serve and protect": "She was 26 anyway, she had limited value". I wonder how he'd react if one of his children or relatives was killed by a gang who then laughed and insulted the dead.

    Remember a former VP saying "Police officers in this country are the best of us"?


    Police officer laughs about woman struck and killed by patrol car in shocking bodycam video

    Shocking body cam footage shows a police officer laughing about a woman who was struck and killed by a patrol car in Seattle.

    Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, was killed in January on a crosswalk near her university campus after she was struck by a patrol car while police were responding to an overdose in the South Lake Union neighborhood.

    Seattle Police said the officer driving the patrol vehicle was responding to a priority-one call when the incident happened. The officer was going 74mph in a 25mph speed zone.

    Police ruled the incident was an accident, and returned the unnamed officer to duty shortly after.

    Authorities are now investigating bodycam footage released by Seattle Police on Monday from the incident which shows officer Daniel Auderer — who is also the vice president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild — insulting and laughing about the 23-year-old student.

    In the footage, Mr Auderer can be heard saying: “There is initially – he said she was in a crosswalk, there is a witness that said, ‘No she wasn’t,’ but that could be different, because I don’t think she was thrown 40 feet, either.”

    Mr Auderer can then be heard saying: “She is dead,” before laughing.

    He continues: “No, it’s a regular person – yeah, yeah, just write a check, just, yeah,” before laughing again.

    “$11,000. She was 26 anyway, she had limited value,” he says.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/seattle-police-jaahnavi-kandula-bodycam-footage-b2409895.html



    The cops did say the poor woman had "limited value" and unfortunately the police/prosecution/court syndicate confirmed it. This is how they treat "ordinary" people, but if it's one of their ilk that is affected they raise hell.


    Police officer gets traffic infraction for fatally hitting college student at 63 mph

    The police officer who fatally struck a college student while driving almost three times the speed limit was charged Friday with a traffic infraction, according to local articles out of Seattle, Washington.

    Prosecutors said that there’s no evidence that Officer Kevin Dave was impaired or driving recklessly when hitting Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, reported The Seattle Times. They previously said there would be no criminal case.

    The King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office previously said that there’s not enough evidence to show that Dave was driving “consciously disregarding safety,” according to Seattle ABC affiliate KOMO.

    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/police-officer-gets-traffic-infraction-for-fatally-hitting-college-student-at-63-mph/

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/81983073-13151681-Some_rights_groups_and_locals_have_lashed_out_against_the_city_a-a-8_1709487136439.jpg) (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/75344285-13151681-Detective_Daniel_Auderer_is_a_drug_recognition_officer_who_was_a-a-19_1709486351534.jpg)

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 03, 2024, 12:32:24 PM



    Terrible.   The govt never accountability.




    The cops did say the poor woman had "limited value" and unfortunately the police/prosecution/court syndicate confirmed it. This is how they treat "ordinary" people, but if it's one of their ilk that is affected they raise hell.


    Police officer gets traffic infraction for fatally hitting college student at 63 mph

    The police officer who fatally struck a college student while driving almost three times the speed limit was charged Friday with a traffic infraction, according to local articles out of Seattle, Washington.

    Prosecutors said that there’s no evidence that Officer Kevin Dave was impaired or driving recklessly when hitting Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, reported The Seattle Times. They previously said there would be no criminal case.

    The King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office previously said that there’s not enough evidence to show that Dave was driving “consciously disregarding safety,” according to Seattle ABC affiliate KOMO.

    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/police-officer-gets-traffic-infraction-for-fatally-hitting-college-student-at-63-mph/

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/81983073-13151681-Some_rights_groups_and_locals_have_lashed_out_against_the_city_a-a-8_1709487136439.jpg) (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/75344285-13151681-Detective_Daniel_Auderer_is_a_drug_recognition_officer_who_was_a-a-19_1709486351534.jpg)
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on March 08, 2024, 12:50:33 PM
    https://www.wsj.com/politics/national-security/u-s-spy-agencies-know-our-secrets-they-bought-them-791e243f


    Not mentioned in the SOTU address for obvious reasons. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on March 09, 2024, 08:20:24 PM
    The cops did say the poor woman had "limited value" and unfortunately the police/prosecution/court syndicate confirmed it. This is how they treat "ordinary" people, but if it's one of their ilk that is affected they raise hell.


    Police officer gets traffic infraction for fatally hitting college student at 63 mph

    The police officer who fatally struck a college student while driving almost three times the speed limit was charged Friday with a traffic infraction, according to local articles out of Seattle, Washington.

    Prosecutors said that there’s no evidence that Officer Kevin Dave was impaired or driving recklessly when hitting Jaahnavi Kandula, 23, reported The Seattle Times. They previously said there would be no criminal case.

    The King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office previously said that there’s not enough evidence to show that Dave was driving “consciously disregarding safety,” according to Seattle ABC affiliate KOMO.

    https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/police-officer-gets-traffic-infraction-for-fatally-hitting-college-student-at-63-mph/

    (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/81983073-13151681-Some_rights_groups_and_locals_have_lashed_out_against_the_city_a-a-8_1709487136439.jpg) (https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/03/03/17/75344285-13151681-Detective_Daniel_Auderer_is_a_drug_recognition_officer_who_was_a-a-19_1709486351534.jpg)


    He'd be a dead Khvnt walking if it were my relative - more folk should take the law into their own hands
    & deal with such scum of the earth scumbags.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2024, 09:08:51 PM
    Not enough and of course the intruders will not spend a day in prison or pay out of their own pockets. Imagine if the poor woman tried to defend herself or if the intruders claimed to "fear for their lives".

    Notice also that the cops managed to convince a judge to sign/rubberstamp a warrant to send SWAT to destroy not just a garage but an entire house just for a stolen car with a phone.



    78-Year-Old Grandmother Awarded $3.8 Million After Illegal SWAT Raid

    A 78-year-old woman whose home was mistakenly raided by a Denver SWAT team will now receive a nearly $3.8 million payout. The large sum comes as a result of a 2020 Colorado law that banned qualified immunity protections for police officers in the state, making civil rights lawsuits against police significantly more likely to succeed.

    On January 4th, 2022, Ruby Johnson, a retired postal worker, was sitting in her Denver home when she heard a police airhorn loudly commanding that she leave her home with her hands up. Johnson, who had recently showered and was only wearing a bathrobe, left her house to find a Denver SWAT team gathered outside her door.

    The SWAT team had been sent to Johnson's home as part of an effort to recover a vehicle that had been stolen the previous day. According to Johnson's lawsuit, the stolen car had an iPhone inside, and the Find My app feature indicated that the phone was near Johnson's house.

    While the police officers had obtained a warrant to search Johnson's home, they did so using an affidavit that allegedly provided "false characterization" of how reliable the Find My app is, overstating how sure the police could be that the iPhone—and the truck—would be at Johnson's house.

    According to Johnson's lawsuit, after receiving this warrant, the SWAT team aggressively searched her home, causing considerable damage to her belongings. Making matters worse, even though Johnson gave police her garage door opener and told them how to enter the garage's front door, police used a battering ram to enter the garage, destroying the door and door frame. Ultimately, the SWAT team found no sign of the truck or any other criminal activity. The officers left and later told Johnson's children that the department wouldn't pay Johnson for the considerable damage caused to her home.

    On Monday, the ACLU of Colorado announced that Johnson had been awarded $3.76 million, including $1.26 million in compensatory damages and $2.5 million in punitive damages. In a press release, the ACLU largely credited the passage of a 2020 law that revoked police qualified immunity protections—which typically prevent law enforcement from being sued for Constitutional violations—for the victory.

    https://reason.com/2024/03/06/78-year-old-grandmother-awarded-3-8-million-after-illegal-swat-raid/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 09, 2024, 09:12:07 PM
    Government Tries to Sidestep Accountability for Violating Citizens’ First Amendment Right to Political Expression Critical of Biden and Trump

    The Rutherford Institute is challenging attempts by the government to sidestep accountability and avoid having to make financial restitution for violating the citizenry’s First Amendment right to political expression, including the right to criticize Presidents Biden and Trump.

    Although a Florida state circuit court found that government officials in the City of Punta Gorda acted unconstitutionally when it fined two protesters a total of $3000 for displaying political messages stating “F@#k Biden,” “F@#k Trump,” and “F@#k Policing 4 Profit” in violation of the city’s sign ordinance, the court refused to make the government pay for any of the expenses required to challenge the City’s actions in court. On appeal in Massey v. City of Punta Gorda, Fla. and Sheets v. City of Punta Gorda, Fla., Florida’s Sixth District Court of Appeal affirmed the lower court’s refusal without providing any written opinion. Rutherford Institute attorneys warn that shielding the government from accountability will both encourage government entities to violate the constitutional rights of its citizens and discourage citizens from challenging such violations.

    “The right of political free speech is the basis of all liberty. No matter what their political persuasion might be, every American has a First Amendment right to protest government programs or policies with which they might disagree,” said constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People. “As the Supreme Court recognized, laws of this sort empower the government to suppress unpopular ideas or information and manipulate the public debate through coercion, which is exactly the kind of tyranny the First Amendment was intended to prohibit.”

    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/government_tries_to_sidestep_accountability_for_violating_citizens_first_amendment_right_to_political_expression_critical_of_biden_and_trump
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 20, 2024, 12:38:50 PM
    Supreme Court hears case of Texas grandmother thrown in jail after criticizing city government

    Supreme Court justices heard arguments Wednesday in the case of a former Texas councilwoman who was jailed after criticizing a city manager and will now consider whether she can sue city leaders for politically motivated retaliation.

    Sylvia Gonzalez is suing Castle Hills Mayor JR Trevino and other officials, alleging they plotted to have her arrested as retaliation for criticizing the city manager, violating her right to freedom of speech. She is represented by the Institute for Justice, a nonprofit, public interest law firm.

    The city officials invoked qualified immunity, a defense commonly used to shield government officials from liability unless it can be proven that they violated a clearly established constitutional right.

    Gonzalez won a seat on the Castle Hills City Council in 2019. The then-72-year-old retiree immediately championed a nonbinding petition calling for city manager Ryan Rapelye's replacement, citing ongoing complaints from residents that he ignored their concerns, particularly when it came to the condition of their streets.

    Debate over the issue grew heated, extending Gonzlez' first meeting as a councilwoman through the following day. At the end of the second day, Gonzalez said she straightened up some papers strewn across her dais, put them in her binder, and went to talk to a constituent.

    A police officer interrupted to tell Gonzalez that Trevino wanted to speak with her, court documents allege. Trevino asked where the petition was and asked Gonzalez to look in her binder, saying he could see a clip inside.

    Gonzalez said she didn't realize she'd accidentally put the petition in the binder and handed it over. Two months later, she was arrested on a charge of tampering with a public document. She spent the day in jail and had her mugshot splashed across the evening news. The district attorney's office later dropped the charge, but Gonzalez' brief political career was over.

    Her lawsuit accuses Trevino and former Castle Hills Police Chief John Siemens of using the briefly missing petition to launch a criminal investigation. After two other officers found no reason to arrest Gonzalez, Bidwell said the chief assigned his friend Alexander Wright to take over as a "special detective."

    Rather than seek a summons for the nonviolent misdemeanor, the special detective took the unusual step of asking for an arrest warrant and going straight to a judge
    — instead of the Bexar County District Attorney's Office — to do so, the lawsuit claims.

    "They wanted to punish me, and they wanted to make sure I went to jail. And they did a good job," Gonzalez said.

    She sued Trevino, Siemens, Wright and the city in 2020, alleging they deprived her of her rights under the First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution.

    The Supreme Court is considering whether a previous case, Nieves v. Bartlett, can be used to shield Castle Hills officials. The Nieves case involved police officers making "split-second decisions," Bidwell said, arguing the same protection from First Amendment lawsuits should not be extended to other government officials who, in this case, took weeks before obtaining an arrest warrant.

    Yet, much of attorney Lisa Blatt's argument in defense of the Castle Hills officials centered around protecting police officers.

    "If you accept the plaintiff complaint, the officer will always lose," Blatt told the justices. The officer "literally can never arrest without worrying about getting sued."

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals previously ruled that Gonzalez could not prove her arrest was retaliatory because she could not cite cases in which other individuals had not been arrested for actions similar to hers.

    Some Supreme Court justices pushed back on that logic.

    Justice Neil Gorsuch pointed out that there are hundreds of thousands of federal crimes and statutes on the books and that he "can't imagine how many there are at the state and local level."


    https://www.foxnews.com/media/supreme-court-hears-case-texas-grandmother-thrown-jail-criticizing-city-government
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 21, 2024, 11:50:20 AM
    That's rich coming from the government whose gangs of uniformed thugs routinely object to being filmed and will attack or arrest people for doing so, all the while their bodycams conveniently "malfunction" when the footage would incriminate them.


    How long can law enforcement secretly film the front of your home without a warrant?

    Answer: As long as they want.

    Turns out, the front of your house is not considered private. A federal court recently ruled that law enforcement officers were within their rights to film the front of a man’s house without his knowledge for two months straight.

    The ruling was made in the case U.S. vs. Hay, in which Army veteran Bruce Hay was found guilty of lying about his disability status in order to receive benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). After receiving a tip that Hay was not being truthful about his disability status, VA officers set up a camera across the street from his home and filmed for 15 hours a day for 68 days in a row. They did not have a search warrant.

    The video footage was enough to find him guilty on 16 charges, but Hay appealed because the filming had been done without a warrant. However, the U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on Tuesday that because “video cameras proliferate throughout society, regrettably, the reasonable expectation of privacy from filming is diminished.” So since cameras are everywhere now, it seems you can only expect privacy inside your home with the curtains drawn.

    https://www.govtech.com/question-of-the-day/how-long-can-law-enforcement-secretly-film-the-front-of-your-home-without-a-warrant
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Taffin on March 30, 2024, 02:12:40 PM
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on March 30, 2024, 02:46:52 PM


    "This cop was given a 5 day suspension for this incident."

    An ordinary person would go to prison if he pointed a gun at someone and threatened them.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2024, 12:20:52 PM
    A 15 year girl that was reported kidnapped by her father, was shot dead by the the "trained professionals" despite "complying" with their "commands".


    Gunfire From Deputies Killed Teen Who Had Been Reported Kidnapped, Video Shows

    Newly released footage and audio recordings from a vehicle pursuit in September 2022 show that a 15-year-old girl who had been kidnapped by her father was fatally shot by gunfire from deputies as she followed their instructions to exit her father’s truck.

    The girl, Savannah Graziano, was fatally shot on Sept. 27, 2022, off Interstate 15 in San Bernardino County, one day after the California Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert that said her father, Anthony Graziano, 45, was believed to have abducted her, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.

    The Sheriff’s Department did not initially disclose exactly how Savannah or Mr. Graziano had been killed, and said at the time that it was possible that Savannah might have participated in the shooting.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/02/us/kidnapped-teen-shot-california-police.html

    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 02, 2024, 01:08:19 PM
    And yet they want to disarm us 

    A 15 year girl that was reported kidnapped by her father, was shot dead by the the "trained professionals" despite "complying" with their "commands".


    Gunfire From Deputies Killed Teen Who Had Been Reported Kidnapped, Video Shows

    Newly released footage and audio recordings from a vehicle pursuit in September 2022 show that a 15-year-old girl who had been kidnapped by her father was fatally shot by gunfire from deputies as she followed their instructions to exit her father’s truck.

    The girl, Savannah Graziano, was fatally shot on Sept. 27, 2022, off Interstate 15 in San Bernardino County, one day after the California Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert that said her father, Anthony Graziano, 45, was believed to have abducted her, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.

    The Sheriff’s Department did not initially disclose exactly how Savannah or Mr. Graziano had been killed, and said at the time that it was possible that Savannah might have participated in the shooting.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/02/us/kidnapped-teen-shot-california-police.html


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 02, 2024, 10:30:26 PM
    Very typical attitude from her. Of course just firing her is not enough, she needs prison.




    Federal lawsuit filed against fired Palm Beach Gardens police officer who pulled gun on unarmed man

    https://www.wptv.com/news/region-n-palm-beach-county/palm-beach-gardens/federal-lawsuit-filed-against-fired-palm-beach-gardens-police-officer-who-pulled-gun-on-unarmed-man
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 03, 2024, 10:30:13 AM
    'FBI violated American citizens' 4A rights 278,000 times': Bureau blasted over attempt to put gloss on Section 702
    The Blaze ^ | April 1, 2024 | Joseph Mackinnon
    Posted on 4/3/2024, 10:04:41 AM by Twotone

    The FBI is attempting to rehabilitate the public image of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act as Congress has until April 19 to reauthorize it. The bureau recently posted a video to X that features FBI Director Christopher Wray attempting to put a gloss on Section 702 as part of this monthslong campaign.

    The bureau's timely propaganda did not escape the attention of critics on X, where the post received a community note that read, "The FBI violated American citizens' 4A rights 278,000 times with illegal, unauthorized FISA 702 searches."

    Among the critics was Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), who wrote, "FBI just got called out in a community note on X. Congress — take note. FISA 702 has been used for warrantless surveillance of U.S. citizens HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of times. Yet FBI demands 702 be reauthorized by April 19 WITHOUT a warrant requirement for searches of U.S. citizens."

    "Many in Congress will want to reauthorize FISA 702 — which is set to expire April 19th — either without modification or (more likely) with fake reforms that fail to impose a warrant requirement for searches directed at Americans," added the senator.

    Section 702 is a provision of FISA enacted by Congress in 2008 that enables the state to spy on foreign nationals located outside the U.S. with the compelled aid of electronic communication service providers.

    This was the law exploited by the FBI to spy on members of the Trump campaign in 2016 without probable cause.

    According to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Congress enacted Section 702 in order to "address a collection gap that resulted from the evolution of technology in the years after FISA was passed in 1978."

    "Many terrorists and other foreign adversaries were using email accounts serviced by U.S. companies," claimed the ODNI. "Because of this change in communications technology, the government had to seek individual court orders, based on a finding of probable cause, to obtain the communications of non-U.S. persons located abroad."

    Supposedly, going through the courts proved too costly "because of the resources required and because the government couldn't always meet the probable cause standard, which was designed to protect U.S. persons and persons in the U.S."

    While 702 targets must be foreign nationals believed to be outside the U.S., the FBI readily admits that "such targets may send an email or have a phone call with a U.S. person."

    As a consequence, multitudes of American citizens have been subjected to warrantless surveillance and have had their phone calls, text messages, emails, and other communications tapped and stored.

    Blaze News previously reported that during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in June 2023, the FBI admitted there had been at least 278,000 "unintentional" back-door search queries of the 702 database for the private communications of Americans between 2020 and 2021 alone.

    Among those Americans caught up in the warrantless searches were Jan. 6 protesters, 19,000 donors to a congressional campaign, and BLM protesters.

    The Hill reported that long after the FBI ran numerous searches of people suspected of partaking in the Jan. 6 protests, the Department of Justice concluded the bureau had not met the standard required for such a search.

    Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) asked FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate at the June 2023 hearing, "Your institution is the one that, according to the court, the FISA court, ran 278,000 unwarranted — probably illegal — queries on Americans, right? That was your institution, correct?"

    Abbate responded, "With respect to the compliance incident, yes."

    Wray sang praises to Section 702 when testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee in December and did so again before the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on March 11.

    In his March 11 testimony, Wray stated, "The FISA Court itself most recently found 98% compliance and commented on the reforms working. The most recent Justice Department report found the reforms working, 99% compliance. And so, I think legislation that ensures those reforms stay in place but also preserves the agility and the utility of the tools, what we need to be able to protect the American people."

    The FBI's March 25 social post containing an excerpt from Wray's testimony was not well-received.

    Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.) wrote, "The FBI was correctly called out in a community note for lying about its unconstitutional, warrantless surveillance of Americans. Congress must eliminate FISA abuse and protect the American people's privacy."

    Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) tweeted, "The FBI has been corrected in community notes and rightfully so."

    FBI whistlelower Steve Friend reiterated that the FBI "violated constitutional rights and abused FISA Section 702 over 278,000 times in a single year."

    Sen. Lee emphasized that he and Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin (D) have introduced a bill that would reauthorize 702 but in a fashion that would supposedly safeguard American privacy and liberties.

    Their so-called Security and Freedom Enhancement Act would require intelligence agencies to obtain a FISA Title I order or a warrant prior to accessing the contents of Americans' communications collected under Section 702.

    "While only foreigners overseas may be targeted, the program sweeps in massive amounts of Americans' communications, which may be searched without a warrant. Even after implementing compliance measures, the FBI still conducted more than 200,000 warrantless searches of Americans' communications in just one year — more than 500 warrantless searches per day," said Durbin.

    Durbin figured this legislation would make reauthorizing Section 702 palatable.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: illuminati on April 03, 2024, 02:19:29 PM
    A 15 year girl that was reported kidnapped by her father, was shot dead by the the "trained professionals" despite "complying" with their "commands".


    Gunfire From Deputies Killed Teen Who Had Been Reported Kidnapped, Video Shows

    Newly released footage and audio recordings from a vehicle pursuit in September 2022 show that a 15-year-old girl who had been kidnapped by her father was fatally shot by gunfire from deputies as she followed their instructions to exit her father’s truck.

    The girl, Savannah Graziano, was fatally shot on Sept. 27, 2022, off Interstate 15 in San Bernardino County, one day after the California Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert that said her father, Anthony Graziano, 45, was believed to have abducted her, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.

    The Sheriff’s Department did not initially disclose exactly how Savannah or Mr. Graziano had been killed, and said at the time that it was possible that Savannah might have participated in the shooting.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/02/us/kidnapped-teen-shot-california-police.html



    The Cops that shot her should also be shot. End of.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 04, 2024, 11:28:43 AM
    Police tased a Marin man suffering a seizure. A lawsuit says officers fabricated charges to cover it up

    In the early hours of Aug. 29, 2022, San Anselmo resident Alice Frankel awoke to strange noises coming from the man who was then her fiance and is now her husband. When she turned on a light, she said, Bruce Frankel’s arms were stiffly extended, his legs were shaking, his eyes were rolled back and his mouth foamed.

    She called 911, worried he was dying. A neurologist would later diagnose Bruce Frankel with epilepsy and say he had suffered a grand mal seizure.

    But instead of helping him, police officers who were dispatched to the home restrained him in his bedroom, shocked him with a Taser and then justified their use of force by arresting him on fabricated charges, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Marin County Superior Court.


    https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/marin-seizure-police-taser-19375569.php


    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 09, 2024, 11:45:10 PM
    Congress one step closer to reauthorizing controversial federal surveillance tool

    Congress is now one step closer to extending the life of a key federal government surveillance tool known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). A bill to reauthorize FISA’s Section 702 passed through the House Rules Committee on Tuesday night, the final hurdle for a piece of legislation before it’s considered House-wide. It passed in a 9 to 2 vote.

    Section 702 is a provision that allows the federal government to conduct warrantless surveillance of a foreign national outside the U.S. if they’re suspected of ties to terrorism — even if the person on the other end of the communications is an American citizen. National security hawks and members of the intelligence community have called it a critical tool for preventing another 9/11-style attack. But critics, which include both conservatives and progressives, have been seeking to limit its scope after reported instances of abuse to collect data on Americans.

    The Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act, a compromise bill between the House Judiciary Committee and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, is aimed at curbing instances of abuse by instituting safeguards on accessing Section 702-collected data, particularly if it involves a U.S. citizen.

    Under terms agreed upon in the Rules Committee, the House will vote on an amendment backed by the Judiciary Committee to ban warrantless searches of U.S. citizens before voting on the final bill.

    A GOP lawmaker opposed to the amendment told Fox News Digital on Tuesday evening, "That would effectively kill 702, if that passed."

    Not included in the final bill was an amendment sought by privacy hawks, led by Rep. Warran Davidson, R-Ohio, which would have forced the federal government to seek a warrant before buying U.S. citizens' data from third-party brokers.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/congress-one-step-closer-reauthorizing-controversial-federal-surveillance-tool
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2024, 11:51:01 AM
    No surprise there, they want to investigate themselves so they can clear themselves of any wrongdoing while also having the authority to investigate and charge everyone else.


    DeSantis signs controversial bill banning civilian boards from investigating police misconduct

    Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a controversial bill Friday stripping civilian oversight boards of their power to investigate police misconduct.

    The bill, HB 601, instead allows local chiefs of police agencies to create their own “civilian oversight” boards composed of three to seven members, all appointed by the chief or sheriff. But these boards can only review policies and procedures, not oversee use-of-force complaints or internal affairs investigations.

    The new legislation “puts the kibosh on these extrajudicial investigations against law enforcement,” DeSantis said at a news conference at the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, describing the boards as “stacked with activists.” “You have review boards, that’s fine, but it’s got to be done in ways where you have the Sheriff or Chief of Police appointing people,” the governor said. “It can’t be people that have an agenda.”


    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/04/12/desantis-signs-controversial-bill-banning-civilian-boards-from-investigating-police-misconduct/
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Soul Crusher on April 15, 2024, 12:05:06 PM
    No surprise there, they want to investigate themselves so they can clear themselves of any wrongdoing while also having the authority to investigate and charge everyone else.


    DeSantis signs controversial bill banning civilian boards from investigating police misconduct

    Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a controversial bill Friday stripping civilian oversight boards of their power to investigate police misconduct.

    The bill, HB 601, instead allows local chiefs of police agencies to create their own “civilian oversight” boards composed of three to seven members, all appointed by the chief or sheriff. But these boards can only review policies and procedures, not oversee use-of-force complaints or internal affairs investigations.

    The new legislation “puts the kibosh on these extrajudicial investigations against law enforcement,” DeSantis said at a news conference at the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, describing the boards as “stacked with activists.” “You have review boards, that’s fine, but it’s got to be done in ways where you have the Sheriff or Chief of Police appointing people,” the governor said. “It can’t be people that have an agenda.”


    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/04/12/desantis-signs-controversial-bill-banning-civilian-boards-from-investigating-police-misconduct/

    “You have review boards, that’s fine, but it’s got to be done in ways where you have the Sheriff or Chief of Police appointing people,” the governor said. “It can’t be people that have an agenda.”




    Sigh.  Bad look for DeSantis there altogether. 
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Primemuscle on April 15, 2024, 03:16:07 PM
    You are exactly right. DeSantis must believe the police in Florida have something to hide. Otherwise, why would he ban investigations into police misconduct? Portland police does not have a pristine record devoid of police misconduct. Currently Portland has the IPR which is an independent, civilian oversight agency tasked by Portland City Council to investigate and monitor allegations of misconduct. This is better than nothing at all.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2024, 04:10:51 PM
    You are exactly right. DeSantis must believe the police in Florida have something to hide. Otherwise, why would he ban investigations into police misconduct? Portland police does not have a pristine record devoid of police misconduct. Currently Portland has the IPR which is an independent, civilian oversight agency tasked by Portland City Council to investigate and monitor allegations of misconduct. This is better than nothing at all.

    More wishy-washy BS like those magical police departments we often hear about but never actually see where the only "bad apple" -who only shows up once every 5 years- is quickly taken care of by the "good" cops before he even commits a crime. Funny how many more of the actual "bad apples" go on to different police departments or are simply never caught/fired/imprisoned/executed.

    These boards have no bite. At best they might submit a report and then the Police Internal Affairs Department or some "independent" police-controlled board decides what to do about it. In the example of a shithole like Portland, the IPR submits a report to another board called the PRB, a 5 person board (3 of which are cops and only 1 from the IPR) which decides on the case. And even then it is up to the "chief" of police to make the ultimate decision. So, not very "independent". And this is not unique to Portland, most places with some façade of "civilian overview" are similar. And that is not even scratching the surface on how these processes are heavily in favor of cops.
    Title: Re: Police State - Official Thread
    Post by: Skeletor on April 15, 2024, 04:14:17 PM
    Another "immunity" travesty... You see police arresting homeowners who confront squatters and here the constables wrongfully evicted a blind man and his two daughters who were renting the house. Only criminals seem to have "rights" these days and "law enforcement" is all too happy to aid and abet them or just don't care.


    Court Fails to Hold Constables Accountable for Wrongfully Evicting Blind Man, Leaving Him Homeless During a Snowstorm

    The U.S. District Court for Delaware has refused to hold government officials accountable for knowingly enforcing an eviction order against the wrong person: a blind man, who was then left homeless with his daughters during a snowstorm. In granting constables quasi-judicial immunity from claims of constitutional violations, the district court dismissed the lawsuit filed in Murphy v. Delaware, Justices of the Peace on behalf of William Murphy and his daughters.

    William Murphy, a blind, 52-year-old widower and his two daughters, aged 17 and 11, moved to Wilmington, Del., in order to be closer to other family members. Murphy and his daughters moved into a 775-square-foot rowhouse on Nov. 17, 2020, under a one-year rental lease for $750 per month along with rental assistance from Social Services. The landlord complained about a delay with receiving the partial rent payment from Social Services, and in Feb. 2021, the water and electricity to the home were shut off in violation of state law and the landlord allegedly made a veiled threat. Then, on the morning of Feb. 11, during a bitterly cold snowstorm, constables arrived at the Murphy home, ordered them to vacate the premises, and gave the family 30 minutes to collect their belongings and leave.

    Even though the person named in the eviction Order was someone other than Murphy, and despite Murphy showing proof of a signed lease in good standing, Murphy and his daughters were still ordered to leave the home, unable to take most of their personal possessions with them, and were left to challenge the wrongful eviction in court. One week later, a state magistrate judge found the Murphys had been unlawfully ousted from their home and that the landlord had weaponized a writ of eviction for a previous female tenant to wrongfully evict Murphy and his daughters.

    Because the error should have been obvious to the constables, who nevertheless proceeded with enforcing the eviction, The Rutherford Institute then filed a federal civil rights complaint in Delaware district court in March 2021, demanding that Delaware officials cease their “evict first, ask questions later” practice and institute reforms to ensure that future eviction procedures respect the due process rights of those involved. The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the lawsuit, which Institute attorneys plan to appeal.


    https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/on_the_front_lines/court_fails_to_hold_constables_accountable_for_wrongfully_evicting_blind_man_leaving_him_homeless_during_a_snowstorm